Jordan Peterson criticises identity politics, and I think he is broadly right to, although some vulnerable groups do need collective representation. What are your thoughts? — bert1
Criticizing identity politics tout court, as Peterson often does, is crap, and done from a privileged vantage point of being a white male. — Maw
I've had a bad conscience since my last thread in which I made a casual unfunny dig at republicans by putting them somewhere half way on a scale of 'degrees of consciousness'. — bert1
I've picked on a group of people, — bert1
it's OK to criticise individuals, or better, their opinions, values and actions, but criticising groups of people is potentially dangerous. — bert1
some vulnerable groups do need collective representation. — bert1
Criticizing identity politics tout court, as Peterson often does, is crap, and done from a privileged vantage point of being a white male. — Maw
↪Buxtebuddha The privilege is that everyone else's problems are identity politics. While "my" problems are simply politics. — Maw
↪Maw As in, the black gay female needs uplifting while the white straight male needs shaming and segregating? Is that right? — Buxtebuddha
Identity politics have existed since the Roman Republic. They have since been vital in supplying universal suffrage, civil rights, LGBT rights, worker's rights, woman's rights, etc. Criticizing identity politicstout court, as Peterson often does, is crap, and done from a privileged vantage point of being a white male. — Maw
Genocide starts in the waters of hate and psychopathy. — Buxtebuddha
Do you really think that posting on the internet fuels some sort of intense madness? I presume most people have their big boy pants on and won't jump off a cliff based on criticism from invisible internet strangers.
My son, this is not a sin and therefore can not be forgiven. You are being too sensitive. Now, get out of the confessional; there is a long line of people who have real sins to confess and for which severe penance will be required. — Bitter Crank
As a homosexual, I would much prefer people reference us as "a group of perverted, immoral, disgusting, monsters, a genuine threat to the American Way of Life" (or Turkish, Russian, North Korean, Saudi Arabian, Ugandan... WOL) than have them say that about me personally. While we certainly are a collective threat to American manhood and empire, I am as pure as the driven snow. — Bitter Crank
As another example, those who relate to the black victim herd, can find a way to accept restitution for slavery, even though this all happened a century before they were born. Again, an attachment to that herd, extrapolates the ego beyond their own reality. — wellwisher
Are you suggesting that events are isolated and none have any influence on how the future pans out? — Pseudonym
There are many ways to address the psychological without necessarily seeing a psychiatrist.I don't understand what you're finding so hard to comprehend about this that you think anyone who feels affected by slavery needs a psychiatrist — Pseudonym
There are many ways to address the psychological without necessarily seeing a psychiatrist. — raza
Many people are poor. Many people suffer a poverty of consciousness. Life is difficult most of the time for most of the population of the entire world.The point is, what in all of this is 'psychological'. People who have been affected by slavery as a consequence of their heritage tend to be poorer with fewer social and educational opportunities. How are they 'psychological'? — Pseudonym
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