“We should know by now that terms such as “rape culture” and “patriarchy” and “toxic masculinity” cannot be dismissed as academic jargon with no basis in reality.”
“We should know by now that terms such as “rape culture” and “patriarchy” and “toxic masculinity” cannot be dismissed as academic jargon with no basis in reality.”
Well I guess it’s my time to respond.
I’m guessing I’m one of those who refuse to “see the light”.
Well I guess it’s my time to respond.
“You can’t make it illegal to say because of the 1st amendment.”
Context deaf? That’s a thing? Hmm... I wonder how many other things I can apply this to.
And I’d agree. Outrage will happen, but I’ll be here with the arguments.
Looks like I’m going to have another field day here. This time arguing free speech.
Sure Kemuri, sure...
What do you mean the exception? Who told you this was the exception?
Hey man, I’m not the one telling people america is out to destroy black people.
“I’m speaking very generally here, but when I’m talking about poverty, I’m talking about poverty as it relates to the black community and the history and culture that surrounds it.”
“When it comes to certain aspects of black culture, that belongs to black people. Kind of like if your friends family invites you over for dinner, your not suddenly allowed to handle grandmas ashes.”
“Hey maybe we can do that when cops stop gunning down unarmed black men,”
“Some words already have power.”
“What you’re asking for is unrealistic”
“I’m black too, and all you’ve basically shown is you’re more or less in the sunken place.”
I don’t know, I’ve been having a pretty fun time responding to everyone who is challenging the guy.
Eh, kinda sounds fair. But I see all kinds of people peppering it in with their language. It seems more crude and foul mouthed than offensive.
*Hmm... bandwagon logical fallacy*