Sunday, 31 May 2020

∞ Dicktionary


Anti-Semites 

DISinformation 
DIP - Deceptive Imagery Persuasion ..
DISrupter-in-Cheat Religion ..

Hypocrisy 

Resisting Intolerant Extremism

Toxic Masculinity

"Woke" [Weakist] DISeducation
College Cultism ..
Decolonize - Anti-Liberal Vendetta ..
Newspeak ..

"Woke" [Weakist] Reverse Racism

"Woke" [Weakist] Equivocation
"Accountability" - Wokish [Weakist] Equivocation .."Colonization / Decolonization" - WiPE ..
Opinions ..
Wasted Talent ..

White Supremacy 

Newspeak

1984: A Guide to Newspeak > .
The Dystopian World of 1984 Explained - AlternateHistory > .

Newspeak is the fictional language of Oceania, a totalitarian superstate that is the setting of the 1949 dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, by George Orwell. In the novel, the Party created Newspeak  to meet the ideological requirements of Ingsoc (English Socialism) in Oceania. Newspeak is a controlled language of simplified grammar and restricted vocabulary designed to limit the individual's ability to think and articulate "subversive" concepts such as personal identity, self-expression and free will. Such concepts are criminalized as thoughtcrime since they contradict the prevailing Ingsoc orthodoxy.

In "The Principles of Newspeak", the appendix to the novel, Orwell explains that Newspeak follows most of the rules of English grammar, yet is a language characterised by a continually diminishing vocabulary; complete thoughts are reduced to simple terms of simplistic meaning. The political contractions of Newspeak—Ingsoc (English Socialism), Minitrue (Ministry of Truth), Miniplenty (Ministry of Plenty)—are described by Orwell as similar to real examples of German and Russian contractions in the 20th century. Like Nazi (Nationalsozialist), Gestapo (Geheime Staatspolizei), politburo (Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union), Comintern (Communist International), kolkhoz (collective farm), and Komsomol (Young Communists' League), the contractions in Newspeak, often syllabic abbreviations, are supposed to have a political function already in virtue of their abbreviated structure itself: nice sounding and easily pronounceable, their purpose is to mask all ideological content from the speaker.

The word "Newspeak" is sometimes used in contemporary political debate as an allegation that one tries to introduce new meanings of words to suit one's agenda.

Thursday, 28 May 2020

"Accountability" - Wokish Equivocation

ώ Accountability: A Translation from the Wokish | James Lindsay > .

https://newdiscourses.com/tftw-accountable/ .
https://newdiscourses.com/translations-from-the-wokish/ .

Comment:
Themes of CRT as listed in "Critical Race Theory: An Annotated Bibliography", 1993, by Delgado and Stefancic: 
1. Critique of liberalism 
2. Storytelling/"naming one's own reality" (anti-objectivism; rejection of quantitative/scientific data) 
3. Revisionist interpretations of American civil rights law and progress (1619 project; anti-incrementalism) 
4. Greater understanding of the underpinnings of race and racism ("systemic" racism found everywhere they look) 
5. Structural Determinism (where anti-meritocracy comes from) 
6. Race, sex, class and their intersections ("intersectionality"/queer theory) 
7. Essentialism and anti-essentialism (identity politics) 
8. Cultural nationalism/separatism (including "black insurrection")

Alt "Right" - WiPE

ώ Woke in Plain English: "Alt Right" or "Far Right" - DrPB > .

"Antiracism" - Wokish Equivocation

ώ Antiracism: A Translation from the Wokish | James Lindsay > .
Ẃokish Equivocation - Blake >> .

The opposite of “racist” isn’t “not racist.” It is “anti-racist.” What’s the difference? One endorses either the idea of a racial hierarchy as a racist, or racial equality as an antiracist. One either believes problems are rooted in groups of people, as a racist, or locates the roots of problems in power and policies, as an anti-racist. ...

This definition, which does not merely mean “against racism,” as one might assume of the term, is absolutely standard in Social Justice. In fact, it reflects the core tenet of critical race Theory that racism is ordinary and pervades everything. ...

In critical race Theory, it is simply impossible for racism to be absent from any situation. One may be actively racist by perpetuating racial prejudice and discrimination against non-white people (particularly black people), or passively racist by failing to notice racism in oneself or others and thus failing to address it. Both of these are bad. ...

The antiracism approach would start from the following assumption, as phrased by critical race educator Robin DiAngelo (author of White Fragility): “the question is not ‘did racism take place?’ but rather, ‘how did racism manifest in this situation?’” (Source.) ...

Antiracism is the name for the practice she is expected to undertake under a Critical Social Justice paradigm in order to critically examine herself, the interaction, her past behaviors, her privilege and positionality within society (and its relevance—see also, intersectionality), as well as her motivations (including, especially, unconscious ones), and to find that racism and then abhor it so that she might fulfill her pledge to “do better.” To fail to do this is taken as a form of complicity—another manifestation of her racism—which is in need of critical examination under an antiracism program, and is very deeply Theorized as such (see also, white equilibrium, white fragility, white comfort, white innocence, white ignorance, racial contract, anti-blackness, active ignorance, pernicious ignorance, willful ignorance, false consciousness, and internalized dominance).

Social Justice scholars, including DiAngelo, indicate that antiracism is a “practice” that requires a “lifelong commitment to an ongoing process” of fighting systemic racism (see also, praxis). This process expects people to constantly reflect upon the ways in which they, and others, support, or are complicit in, “whiteness,” “anti-blackness,” “racism,” and “white supremacy,” as these terms are understood from within the context of critical race Theory and critical whiteness studies. ...

The system itself can be “racist” even if there are no racists within that system (see also, systemic power). An antiracist has the obligation of searching for instances of racism that confirm the systemic “reality” of racism, internally, with others, and in society and its various forms of representation.

While critical race Theorists and educators like Robin DiAngelo distinguish between “active racism” and “passive racism,” they indicate (e.g., in Is Everyone Really Equal?) that it is not possible to be passively antiracist. There is only active antiracism. In fact, to be passively antiracist would be to be passively racist, instead! Thus, the requirement to be an activist, both in the inward, soul-searching sense of the word and in the usual outward sense, is absolute and non-negotiable.

Active ignorance; Anti-blackness; Bias; Call out; Center; Close reading; Complicity; Consciousness raising; Critical; Critical consciousness; Critical race Theory; Dismantle; Do better; Equality (ideology); Equity; False consciousness; Impact versus intent; Implicit bias; Internalized dominance; Intersectionality; Mask; People of color; Pernicious ignorance; Position; Praxis; Privilege; Problematize; Racial contract; Racism (systemic); Social Justice; System, the; Systemic power; Theory; White; White comfort; White equilibrium; White ignorance; White innocence; White fragility; White supremacy; Whiteness; Whiteness studies; Willful ignorance; Woke/Wokeness

Tuesday, 26 May 2020

"Cis" - WiPE

ώ 
Woke in Plain English: "Cis" - DrPB > .
Ẃokish Equivocation - Blake >> .

"Colonization / Decolonization" - WiPE

Decolonize Explained: A Deep Dive Into Decolonization - Part 1 | Dr. Bruce Gilley > .Awaking to Problematic Wokeness - Blake >> .

"Critical Race Theory" - Wokish Equivocation, WiPE

ώ
 Critical Race Theory: A Translation from the Wokish | James Lindsay > .
Woke in Plain English: "Critical Race Theory" - DrPB > .
Ẃokish Equivocation - Blake >> .

"The critical race theory (CRT) movement is a collection of activists and scholars engaged in studying and transforming the relationship among race, racism, and power. The movement considers many of the same issues that conventional civil rights and ethnic studies discourses take up but places them in a broader perspective that includes economics, history, setting, group and self-interest, and emotions and the unconscious. Unlike traditional civil rights discourse, which stresses incrementalism and step-by-step progress, critical race theory questions the very foundations of the liberal order, including equality theory, legal reasoning, Enlightenment rationalism, and neutral principles of constitutional law."


In international relations, the liberal international order (some times referred to as the rules-based or the US-led international order) describes a set of global, rule-based, structured relationships based on political liberalism, economic liberalism and liberal internationalism since the late 1940s. More specifically, it entails international cooperation through multilateral institutions (like the United Nations, World Trade Organization and International Monetary Fund), and is constituted by human equality (freedom, rule of law and human rights), open markets, security cooperation, promotion of liberal democracy, and monetary cooperation. The order was established in the aftermath of World War II, led in large part by the United States.

The nature of the liberal international order, as well as its very existence, has been debated by scholars. The LIO has been credited with expanding free trade, increasing capital mobility, spreading democracy, promoting human rights, and collectively defending the West from the Soviet Union. The LIO facilitated unprecedented cooperation among the states of North America, Western Europe and Japan. Over time, the LIO facilitated the spread of economic liberalism to the rest of the world, as well as helped consolidate democracy in formerly fascist or communist countries.

"Cultural Appropriation" - WiPE

.Woke in Plain English: "Cultural Appropriation" - DrPB > .

"Cultural Relativism" - WiPE

ώ
 Woke in Plain English: "Cultural Relativism" - DrPB > .

Monday, 25 May 2020

Decolonize - Anti-Liberal Vendetta

"Democracy" - Wokish Equivocation

ώ Democracy: A Translation from the Wokish | James Lindsay > .

"Discourse" - WiPE

ώ Woke in Plain English: "Discourse" - DrPB > .

"Diversity" - Wokish Equivocation

ώ Diversity: A Translation from the Wokish | James Lindsay > .
Ẃokish Equivocation - Blake >> .

In Wokish “Diversity” means more than just acknowledging and/or tolerating difference. Diversity is a set of [CRT-dictated] conscious practices that involve:
  • Understanding and appreciating interdependence of humanity, cultures, and the natural environment;
  • Practicing mutual respect for qualities and experiences that are different from our own;
  • Understanding that diversity includes not only ways of being but also [particularly dangerous] ways of knowing;
  • Recognizing that personal, cultural and institutionalized discrimination creates and sustains privileges for some while creating and sustaining disadvantages for others;
  • Building alliances across differences so that we can work together to eradicate all forms of discrimination. [But not, apparently, differences of opinion expressed by individuals in designated out-groups, such as whites, males in power positions, writings by white historic individuals in power positions, prominent females who understand that there are two biological sexes and that youth are too inexperienced, and thus identity-labile, to make life-changing physical decisions about hormone levels and genitalia].
Other ώokish terms: Ally/Allyship; Bias; Critical; Desegregation; Discourses; Disrupt; Diversity; Dominance; Epistemic injustice; Epistemic oppression; Epistemic violence; Equity; Exclusion; Gender; Hegemony; Identity; Knowledge(s); Lived experience; Marginalization; Meritocracy (ideology); Master’s tools; Minoritize; Misogyny; Objectivity; Oppression; Position; Positivism; Privilege; Problematize; Queer; Racism (systemic); Realities; Reality; Science; Social Justice; Standpoint epistemology; Systemic power; Theory; Tolerance; Truth; Ways of knowing; White; Whiteness;

Sunday, 24 May 2020

"Equity" - Wokish Equivocation

ώ Equity: A Translation from the Wokish | James Lindsay > .
Ẃokish Equivocation - Blake >> .

In Critical Social Justice, the meaning of “equity” takes pains to distinguish itself from that of “equality.” Where equality means that citizen A and citizen B are treated equally, equity means “adjusting shares in order to make citizens A and B equal (along lines concocted by SJWs.” In that sense, equity is something like a kind of “social communism”—the intentional redistribution of shares, not necessarily along lines of existing economic disparity, but in order to adjust for and correct current and historical injustices—both realistic injustices and those imagined by the various critical theories (specifically, Theory—see also, critical race Theory, queer Theory, gender studies, fat studies, disability studies, and postcolonial Theory). In the CRT model, “equity” requires providing some ["victim"] identity groups [non-white, non-cis-female] additional privileges in order to redress the perceived imbalance.

Other ώokish terms: Ally/Allyship; Bias; Critical; Desegregation; Discourses; Disrupt; Diversity; Dominance; Epistemic injustice; Epistemic oppression; Epistemic violence; Equity; Exclusion; Gender; Hegemony; Identity; Knowledge(s); Lived experience; Marginalization; Meritocracy (ideology); Master’s tools; Minoritize; Misogyny; Objectivity; Oppression; Position; Positivism; Privilege; Problematize; Queer; Racism (systemic); Realities; Reality; Science; Social Justice; Standpoint epistemology; Systemic power; Theory; Tolerance; Truth; Ways of knowing; White; Whiteness;

Wednesday, 20 May 2020

"Identity" - Wokish Equivocation


"Inclusion" - Wokish Equivocation

ώ Inclusion: A Translation from the Wokish | James Lindsay > .
Ẃokish Equivocation - Blake >> .

Inclusion, in the general sense of the word, means to welcome everybody (in context: into a particular space). That is, to be inclusive is not to exclude anybody. Exclusionary-CRT-inclusion, in a Critical Social Justice sense, refers to something subtly different that extends that idea in a particular way. It means to create a [preferentially] welcoming environment specifically for groups considered marginalized, and this entails the exclusion of anything [and any messenger] that could feel unwelcoming to any identity groups (see also, safe space). This is because everything in Critical Social Justice must be understood in terms of systemic power dynamics that it Theorizes characterize all of social, if not material, reality.
...
Exclusionary-CRT-inclusion is an expansive concept that could apply to silencing certain ideas like conservatism, meritocracy, or support for freedom of speech, usually in the name of safety and preventing the “trauma” or “violence” that such ideas could inflict upon progressives who see them as ideologies that perpetuate systemic harm.
...
On some occasions, to be inclusive of members of marginalized groups, inclusion has been used to justify excluding people considered privileged, like men, straight people, and white people, or to limit their numbers, seat them at the back of a gathering, or ask them to listen silently (see also, shut up and listen and progressive stack).

Other ώokish terms: Ally/Allyship; Bias; Critical; Desegregation; Discourses; Disrupt; Diversity; Dominance; Epistemic injustice; Epistemic oppression; Epistemic violence; Equity; Exclusion; Gender; Hegemony; Identity; Knowledge(s); Lived experience; Marginalization; Meritocracy (ideology); Master’s tools; Minoritize; Misogyny; Objectivity; Oppression; Position; Positivism; Privilege; Problematize; Queer; Racism (systemic); Realities; Reality; Science; Social Justice; Standpoint epistemology; Systemic power; Theory; Tolerance; Truth; Ways of knowing; White; Whiteness;

"Internalize" - WiPE

ώ
 Woke in Plain English: "Internalize" - DrPB > .

Saturday, 16 May 2020

"Minoritize" - WiPE

ώ 
Woke in Plain English: "Minoritize" - DrPB > .

Mutating Religiosity

When Christianity came to America, it became a business

Dr. Richard C. Halverson (1916-1995), chaplain to the U.S. Senate, was credited in 1984 for a speech before the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church:
“In the beginning the church was a fellowship of men and women centering on the living Christ. Then the church moved to Greece, where it became a philosophy. Then it moved to Rome, where it became an institution. Next it moved to Europe where it became a culture, and, finally, it moved to America where it became an enterprise.”
Leonard Ravenhill (1907-1994), an English Christian evangelist, has been infrequently credited with a similar line:
“A man came into my office from another nation and he dropped this in my ear, ‘Christianity began in Palestine and it became a religion; it was transferred to Greece and it became a philosophy; it was transferred to Europe-- to England-- it became a cult and it was transferred to America (and) it became big business.’”
Sam Pascoe is frequently credited with a similar quotation:
“Christianity started out in Palestine as a fellowship; it moved to Greece an became a philosophy; it moved to Italy and became an institution; it moved to Europe and became a culture; it came to America and became an enterprise." 
----
"One of the reasons some modern Christians have such difficulty understanding the teachings of Jesus is that they rip these teachings out of their own, original context and pretend they were delivered just recently, somewhere in North America." ~ Bart D. Ehrman .


Moronic UNpresident ..

Wednesday, 6 May 2020

"White Fragility" - WiPE

ώ Woke in Plain English: "White Fragility" - DrPB > .
Ẃokish Equivocation - Blake >> .

A Kafka trap is a fallacy where if someone denies being x it is taken as evidence that the person is x since someone who is x would deny being x. [Just as someone who isn't x would deny being x.] The name is derived from the novel The Trial by the Czech writer Franz Kafka.

This is fallacious is that it lumps together people who genuinely are not guilty of a perceived offense in with people who have committed the perceived offence and are trying to escape punishment.

"Whiteness" - Wokish Equivocation

ώ Whiteness: A Translation from the Wokish | James Lindsay > .
Ẃokish Equivocation - Blake >> .

["Whiteness" = resentful racist label intended to induce guilt and self-denial.]

"Woke" - WiPE

ώ Woke in Plain English: "Woke" - DrPB > .
Ẃokish Equivocation - Blake >> .

"In claiming the status of victim and by assigning all blame to others, a person can achieve moral superiority while simultaneously disowning any responsibility for one’s behavior and its outcome. The victims ‘merely’ seek justice and fairness. If they become violent, it is only as a last resort, in self-defense. The victim stance is a powerful one. The victim is always morally right, neither responsible nor accountable, and forever entitled to sympathy." - Ofer Zur