Sorry, I wasn't clear enough. I meant concrete examples of academics who profess that all white people are sexist/racist. — Πετροκότσυφας
The one is an example of a practice which aims to prevent what is understood as marginalisation. — Πετροκότσυφας
I'd like to see how it is presented, analysed and argued by those that hold this view, not just your interpretation of it. — Πετροκότσυφας
I didn't understand from the video that the point of it all is for people from a "traditionally marginalised background" to speak last. What I understood is that they make sure that people from these groups get the chance to speak (and theoretically be heard) by moving some of them up in the list. If, say, you have in the list fifteen middle-class, white, male speakers and one working-class, black, female speaker, and if she originally was last in the queue of speakers, she'll be put, for example, somewhere in the middle, so that it will be ensured that she gets to speak and she's not among those that might lose their chance to speak, due to -say- time restrictions. I generally don't see how that's something revolutionary; it does not sound that far from quotas systems. — Πετροκότσυφας
I didn't express any personal opinion on it, either positive or negative. I wrote that it "aims to prevent what is understood as marginalisation.". Understood by its practitioners, obviously; you clearly don't share their understanding. I guess that this practice is preferred by those who want to actively promote and incentivise greater integration of the groups they perceive as marginalized. In general I think that's fine and worthy of support - the details of how exactly it's going to be implemented depend on the occasion. — Πετροκότσυφας
You have to understand that identity becomes credential; belonging to a marginalized group means you should get to speak first because your lived experiences directly reflect the systemic colonialism and patriarchy, and that is the boogieman we're here to fight. White men feeling like they are entitled to speak before other people is a part of the racist system that keeps women and people of color oppressed; white men don't actually have the right to speak publicly about the issue of racism or sexism because by definition they are a part of the problem. — VagabondSpectre
The problem with that is that things like race or sexual orientation are not nearly as strong an indicator as the actual individuals traits. You get much more mileage asking about peoples experiences based on their actual experiences rather than the experiences you think (or even they think) they have had based on their race, gender or whatever other immutable trait they might posses. — DingoJones
You say its simple, but that is becuase you have made it that way, you just judge everything through the lense of immutable traits, a label that satisfies some but is not actually all that accurate (only in the most superficial ways). People are much more than these immutable traits, but if one views them as individuals then that will greatly hamper the outrage agenda and virtue signalling VagabondSpectre is talking about here. — DingoJones
Also, your anecdotal experience of how you are treated by certain kinds of people (whom I would just call people, your specificity seems totally irrelevent to me) is not really addressing whats being discussed here. — DingoJones
In American political discourse there is absolutely no desire to achieve any kind of consensus or reconciliation. The main objective is simply to win the argument by taking power.Disagreements can be reconciled, but outrage prefers revenge. By simplifying and polarizing, we seem to have lost the resolution required to navigate our differences, along with the emotional will to do so. — VagabondSpectre
It's the political rhetoric of today. Just like the "mushroom cloud" was earlier. Totally obvious for Trump to start talking about caravans as he has done earlier. And for ignorant simple people it's very effective."The caravan" is another concrete and more recent example of how a narrow world view can be hijacked via outrage inducing rhetoric, to the detriment of all. — VagabondSpectre
Intersectionality is nothing more than a call to listen to people's testimony from different backgrounds to learn about those groups. Nothing essential about this call changes when those groups are typical social demographics.
Intersectionality is rooted in noticing that people from different backgrounds tend to have different experiences and think differently.
Put in a bit of effort to listen to people's perspectives, exposing yourself to backgrounds from a different part of the system we're all in and maybe you'll notice structural differences. — fdrake
I agree entirely! This is precisely why you ask people what they think. That's how we end up noticing social patterns when we're not part of them. Why would you ever think I would disagree with this so much that it's a counterpoint? — fdrake
It's supposed to undermine the idea that people who believe in intersectionality are belligerent and unresponsive to cis white blokes. It's a case of not everyone is like that, and no part of believing in intersectionality commits one to behaving like a close minded ass. People turn to intersectionality precisely to try and avoid being a close minded ass. — fdrake
Two things. First, perhaps a differentiation between intersectionality and weaponized intersectionality. If all you mean is listening/understanding people, then Ill just keep calling that listening/understanding to people and you can call it intersectionality. If the idea is to listen to people based on the immutable characteristics like race or gender then I think its at best naive to the reality of how that is being used as a weapon by the aforementioned victim/outrage movement/culture. — DingoJones
Let's imagine that we're trying to find out about something that happened in our social circle one night. It makes sense to ask people who were there.
Let's imagine that we're trying to find out about how people from different backgrounds feel about stuff. It makes sense to ask them.
Let's imagine that we're trying to find out about the possibility of really different experiences from different backgrounds. Yeah, still makes sense to ask them. They might even reveal things that we wouldn't even have thought of, maybe even couldn't in some cases. — fdrake
How about assessing working conditions in an office? Let's ask all the people. Should we only ask men when sexual harassment of women is one of the reasons the office is being externally assessed? No, that's freaking stupid. — fdrake
Why does it make sense to ask the people who were there and experienced stuff we wanted to find out about in any of the cases above? Well, because we want to know what events are relevant to them, if there are any patterns in those events, and how those events propagate through time - how they might stay as norms and so on. Fundamentally, the analysis of social circumstances begins with testimony of those people in them. Structure comes later. — fdrake
So what's intersectionality? Really. It's the apparently outrageous idea that since people from different backgrounds often have different experiences, it makes sense to get their testimony about it before trying to find any underlying patterns. — fdrake
Applying intersectional methodology is nothing more than common sense applied to using testimony to study social circumstances. It does not mean that a person is automatically right in their descriptions of those social circumstances.
Also btw, as a cis white bloke, the intersectional feminists and trans folk I've spoken to have always been very receptive to my ideas, and they usually have something interesting to say. Especially postcolonial feminists. Maybe it's you? — fdrake
Also, I dont turn to intersectionality, am I a close minded ass? — DingoJones
Don't get all fragile and guilt ridden at this stage of the game. Enjoy your upper hand while you still have it. The brown hordes are on the move. — Bitter Crank
It doesn't seem likely to me that a major reason why Occupy failed was intersectionalism. It looks to me that it failed because it had lots of complaints but almost no tangible political goals, and it lost its momentum to move towards those goals by failing to exploit whatever asymmetries of organisation they could. They experimented like the small 60 and 70's communes, which had already failed to produce an anticapitalist politics for similar reasons. — fdrake
Whenever someone is excluded based on their identity, it makes sense to ask in what contexts are they excluded, and why they are excluded. Even if we grant that the concerns of white cis men are diminished in relevance compared to anyone outside of that category in intersectionalist movements and circles, it doesn't mean that white cis men are excluded from anything else. The 'divisive rhetoric' doesn't so much divide the populace as unite us into causes along identity lines. You can't have it both ways; that the rhetoric is divisive but nevertheless produces a unified front of outraged sheeple from all backgrounds. — fdrake
Another major point, which I'm surprised that you're not tackling given how you've researched intersectionalism and privilege, is that privilege is a structural property rather than agent based one. The popular sense of privilege is rooted in two different types of privileges: spared injustice privileges and unjust enrichment privileges. Spared injustice privileges are like the disproportionate number of blacks in prison - white people and neighbourhoods are largely spared this injustice. Unjust enrichment privileges are like the rising tide failing to raise all boats when an economy grows - the rich get richer and the poor get poorer and this isn't fair. — fdrake
So we can't say that me, personally, as a white bloke, mistreats blacks, women and other identity categories just because I'm white. It's more statistically that I have less shit to deal with. — fdrake
Regardless of how much effort I put into my arguments and how reasonable they appear, the selection criterion referenced in the OP will allow anyone to say 'yes, but this is quite reasonable, we weren't talking about that'. The people who believe in this stuff generally aren't idiots you know, most people aren't. — fdrake
Oh, I see! I also see, I think, why I didn't understand the stack the way you do. Because your understanding doesn't seem to be reflected by the video. Maybe you should have used another example. Nevermind though, I'll do my own research! — Πετροκότσυφας
Having a full discussion about these issues is a very large undertaking because of their loaded complexity, but to put in brief: institutional power structures service and disservice individuals far less rigidly on the basis of race or sex than inter-sectional theorists would have us believe. This is a thread I wrote regarding the issue of racism in police violence against blacks, which would constitute a spared injustice privilege for whites in the eyes of an inter-sectional feminist. That specific alleged privilege is loaded with complexity, engenders outrage when accepted, and is difficult to explore and discuss (exploring and discussing the entire gamut of privilege would be unending). I actually reject that discriminatory institutional practices are the main perpetuators of demographic inequalities in contemporary western society. For example, for white inmates and impoverished white families, there is no institutional lever they can pull to elevate themselves; the concept of white privilege to them, is quite alien. In a nut shell, I think the main error is confusing raw statistical outcomes with intent or design in institutional practices. I contend that impoverished white families are having about as hard of a time escaping poverty as impoverished black families are having, and the main forces which actually keep them poor have very little, if anything, to do with race or gender or identity. By assuming from the get go that all statistical disparities are caused by discriminatory institutional practices we're disregarding the many other circumstantial factors which contribute to contemporary statistical outcomes, in all their exhaustive complexity. — VagabondSpectre
In a nut shell, I think the main error is confusing raw statistical outcomes with intent or design in institutional practices.
I do agree, but I believe there is something unique in the relationship between negativity/outrage and social media. I'll try not to bore you with causal explanations such as the psychological impact of negative and positive emotions from an evolutionary perspective (arguably, avoiding the "bad" is necessary while chasing the "good" is not) (Hey that wasn't so bad!), but it is fairly evident that the most popular bandwagons (or at least those which travel fastest, furthest, and crash hardest) tend to be fueled by anger and outrage. — VagabondSpectre
I would say that we're less able to identify what is politically meaningful where previously sympathy for victims and the ensuing outrage did help us to identify issues of merit. Now that all sides are victims, there's less sympathy to go around, and we're more liable to being hijacked by the polarized narratives which surround us. — VagabondSpectre
It's probably true that as individuals we're no more or less outraged than before, but group dynamics have changed thanks to hand-held social media; mobs form in a different manner. When a few million people are simultaneously incensed, even if each of them can only take a very small action, cumulatively it can amount to crucifixion. On the other hand, when were inundated with enraging click-bait, we have less time to take specific action. The result, I think, is that we're able to identify fewer issues of meaningful ethical concern, and of the issues which we do become concerned about (typically the most sensational) our responses come in inconsistent proportions. — VagabondSpectre
In the vulgar form of 'any injustice results from an institutional disparity' I agree, but I don't really think this is representative of intersectional thought. The entire point is to avoid reductionism of an account which renders that account unrepresentative for some groups of people. — fdrake
But that doesn't mean I believe there isn't a place for focussing on social issues that don't, at least at face value, relate to political economy meaningfully. I definitely think it's important to challenge norms when they're discriminatory or even just unpleasant for some of those involved. — fdrake
Also ironically, I generally see people getting butthurt over intersectional discourse as part of this politics of outrage. — fdrake
Some nebulous group of people without a modicum of objective social power dislikes my universal humanitarian outlook because it problematises 'universal' views on humanity is destroying discourse/society/politics! Is there really a better example of finding strange things to be a victim of? — fdrake
Is it? How would one measure such a thing to make it evident? And from a political perspective, if politics is about power, and anger makes a "bandwagon" popular quickly, makes it travel further, and have a bigger impact then . . . what exactly is wrong with it?
Would you rather a political agent travel slowly, affect a handful of people, and not have much of an impact? Or is it the particular policies that the anger is directed at that are actually the problem -- as in, you'd rather these (effects -- policies, actions, what-have-you) be slow, local, and disappear?
My suspicion is the latter. But then if that were the case then outrage and anger are not your object of criticism -- it's what the anger and outrage are doing. — Moliere
I understand that you believe this -- But why would you say this?
Polarization isn't the result of a lack of ability to identify issues. That would be uncertainty -- but polarization comes about because people have convictions of which they are certain, and said convictions are in opposition to one another.
So we have two common identities in the states right now which want different things, and the different things they want annul each other. To use a common point of dispute, and your terminology of victimhood -- abortion can be seen as an issue where the innocent are harmed; the innocent in one case are unborn babies, and in another are women. Neither side deserves to be harmed for what they are: the difference lies in how we look at the two groups, and that manner of looking aligns pretty strictly with the two popular US identities.
But that isn't an inability to identify what is politically meaningful. In fact, both sides know exactly what is meaningful, and exactly what they want. — Moliere
What are some common responses in light to a social media campaign? No-platforming and firings seem to be the most extreme things I see.
But this pales in comparison to, say, riots, assassinations, and civil war -- all of which have a history of happening in the United States before social media.
How groups interact have changed, sure. But what does that have to do with outrage? — Moliere
Causal reasons for difficulty are far more material. It's illness, lack of community, poverty, actions of other people to exclude people of a race, sex or gender, etc., lack of services, an environment in which people harm each others and a host of other events we could name. Privilege is just description of certain social relations and states formed out of those causes. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Disagreement can turn to polarization when for whatever reason both sides have sufficient emotional stake in their positions, and in the course of defending against attacks from the other side they are driven deeper into commitment or extremity. On the subject of abortion, as you say, there is outrage on both sides, certainty on both sides, which has largely been brought about thanks to the emotional arguments each side uses. The uncompromising certainty held by either side pretty much guarantees that reconciliation toward truth (in whichever direction it may lay) is not possible. — VagabondSpectre
I submit that the tendency of social and news media to favor that which outrages (because it gets more clicks and views) has altered our previous balance of emotions toward a state of stress, irritability, and resentment (being inundated with enraging click-bait which has been selected because it reinforces our preexisting biases, is a main culprit).
People react to new environments differently, some more extreme than others, but in general I do see a rise in stress (at least the "on-line" cross section of westerners), increasing polarization, shrinking will for empathy and bi-partisanship; general cantankerousness. — VagabondSpectre
And that time when an issue is no longer debatable is usually brought up immediately to rally one's side. Looking for compromise would be demeaning appeasement. It's a good tactic nowdays.There comes a time when an issue is no longer debatable -- where there isn't some compromise that will satisfy everyone involved enough to keep on getting along. There isn't some true belief with respect to how we should set up this or that law. There are convictions, and some of them cannot be reconciled. You either cross the picket line or you don't -- you either support the North or the South -- you either vote for Kavanaugh or you do not. — Moliere
There comes a time when an issue is no longer debatable -- where there isn't some compromise that will satisfy everyone involved enough to keep on getting along. — Moliere
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