Social Justice Warriors - Now With Less Feminism Sperging

I guess in this context the fat ass on the right makes it a "diverse" photo shoot.

"Mmm... we need a diverse photo about the empowerment of black females... Because, as small dicked white jews, we need to get that money from clicks. What speaks about black beauty?"

"Well Goldburger - How about we put a bunch of models and one chubby woman in front of a bunch of gang graffiti and standing on a pile of urban ruble?"
 
I know we laugh about people being thin skinned, but this seems kind of offensive? Like "Black Women would've never modelled together before if it wasn't for us"

Like where the fuck have you been? In your gated communities not seeing how the rest of the population lives?

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Wait, are they for real wearing kente cloth as bathing suits?

The cultural appropriation warriors should be out in force. Kente is ceremonial cloth created by Ashanti men (only men), and each color pattern is symbolic. In Ashanti culture, people don't just wear kente any time because it's pretty, and they don't wear kente prints. Those things would be disrespectful. It's worn to funerals, baptisms, and other ceremonial functions. If it would be appropriate for you to be wearing a bikini to an occasion, it's in no way respectful for kente cloth to figure into your outfit choice.

There's no way any of the women in that photo shoot are actually Ashanti, so This photo shoot, on a "cultural appropriation" level, is like having three women who are descended from, IDK, Cherokee Indians dress in a ceremonial headdress from the Sioux for a lingerie shoot.

This is another example of how the culture warriors of today are secretly huge racists. The example I gave above with Indian cultures is something liberals would be up in arms over, everyone competing to talk about who needed to get fired first. But these are black women and they're wearing African prints, so it's all ok, right? Black people are a monolith for the modern liberal crowd, or a mascot. The modern left is so US-centric that I would guess they could name at least a dozen American Indian tribes, but would have a seriously difficult time naming more than one or two African cultures (they might do mildly better at African countries, but that's not great, because those national borders are highly colonialist and developed to keep African language/cultural groups from becoming powerful). They'll make fun of people who believe Africa is a country, but deep down, that's exactly the belief they hold.
 
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How is photographing them surrounded by graffiti and the rubble of a destroyed building not racist?!? Implication is that the blacks destroyed the place. Were "anti-racist" whites/Jews responsible for this..? I can't picture actual blacks being that dumb. Someone else put them up to this..?
 
Empowering Media...Honestly, if you need to watch "Empowering" or "Representative" media to feel good about yourself...Maybe the problem isn't society. Maybe you're just a weak spineless person, to begin with. Someone who needs to consume disposable media that"Empowers" and "Represents" you to get through the day instead of taking strength through real substantial things in your life. If that's the case then the problem is you being a complete consumerist pussy instead of our society being discriminatory. But what do I know? I'm just a Straight White Male.
I see this shit a lot in this black nerd facebook group. Like they act like blacks aren't represented enough. they even as far as wanting Japan to put more black people in anime. Cause anime characters look "too white". They also make a big deal about supporting black creators and such. if it fails, it's our fault. "Yall don't support us that why we can't have nothing"

Fuck outta here. whatever happen to supporting something based on merit?
 
Here's a little something on a soyboy wanting to challenge war movies that are too macho (given that 12 Strong is out).
What gets me is that he starts off talking about how movies are steering clear of sex given the whole #MeToo movement and then he moves on to attacking other movies that "distort how men behave." Because apparently movies about sex distort how men and are comparable to war movies.

His reasoning is stupid too. He keeps saying men and boys are influenced by what they see in entertainment, ignoring the fact that there's a difference between fact and fiction. I grew up watching the Rambo films and even though they entertained me I never wanted to go out and do the things John Rambo did because I knew he was just a character in an action movie. Furthermore, he keeps using "masculinity" as a pejorative, suggesting that there's something inherently wrong with wanting to be manly (not surprising given the SJW view on males).
 
His reasoning is stupid too. He keeps saying men and boys are influenced by what they see in entertainment, ignoring the fact that there's a difference between fact and fiction. I grew up watching the Rambo films and even though they entertained me I never wanted to go out and do the things John Rambo did because I knew he was just a character in an action movie. Furthermore, he keeps using "masculinity" as a pejorative, suggesting that there's something inherently wrong with wanting to be manly (not surprising given the SJW view on males).
They're have yet to learn that.
 
I think this guy is batshit insane, but Publisher's Weekly is lionizing him. "Decolonize our shelves." Really?

And shouldn't booksellers try to put books on their store shelves that might, y'know, sell? :\


WI13: Junot Diaz Urges Booksellers to Walk the Talk on Diversity
By Claire Kirch |
Jan 25, 2018

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Photo: Claire Kirch
Junot Diaz, Wednesday's WI13 keynote speaker.

WI13 keynote speaker Junot Diaz delivered a blistering political statement on Wednesday morning, in what will surely enter the annals of Winter Institute history. Diaz denounced the nativism of white conservatives who catapulted Donald Trump into the White House, as well as the hypocrisy of white liberals, in the publishing industry and beyond, who do little more than talk about promoting diversity.

Quoting Malcolm X, Diaz said that people of color always know where they stand with white conservatives, who don’t hide their beliefs. However white liberals, he said, “lure” people of color to them by pretending to be their allies. The liberals, he went on, then fail to support people of color in substantive ways.

Diaz, whose family came to the U.S. from the Dominican Republic in 1974, said that, as an immigrant kid he was always "caught between the world outside and my books. Caught between the wolf [white conservatives] and the fox [white liberals]. And it’s true what Malcolm said: they’ll both eat you.”

Racists in the community he grew up in “would call you spic or the N-word all day long.” Even at school, his fellow students would hurl racial slurs at people of color and teachers “wouldn’t bat an eye.” It was an “utter onslaught.”

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Admitting that he and his friends were desperate to find some respite from the daily abuse, Diaz said that while some of them turned to music or sports, or “[lost] it completely,” he “found books,” thanks to his elementary school librarian. She took Diaz on a tour of the school library and told him that “all the books on the shelves were mine.” Books, Diaz said, saved his life by providing “shelter against a white world that sometimes felt like it was trying to destroy me.”

“In a better world,” Diaz said, “that is where this story would end.” The books he read, though, reinforced the messages he was receiving in his community. From Laura Ingalls Wilder writing that there were “no people, only Indians” on the plains, to J.R.R. Tolkien's comparing black people to trolls, books reinforced Diaz's sense of being an outsider.

“Kids like me did not exist in the literature," he said. "What kid doesn’t want to see themselves represented in the literature they’re reading?"

While praising the fact that there is more attention being paid to diversity in the publishing industry, Diaz said that it’s not enough. Criticizing the book industry for being a business where predominantly white gatekeepers publish predominantly white authors, Diaz said there needs to be a diversification of “our publishing infrastructure.” The book world, he declared, has to resist “white supremacy’s cruelest enchantment: that whiteness is at the heart of absolutely everything.”

It's imperative for booksellers and librarians, who are on the front lines, Diaz said, to “stop talking about diversity and start decolonizing our shelves." Noting that indie booksellers’ profit margin is low, Diaz explained that “every little bit counts,” and suggested that the indies might do such things as form book clubs “where each month a new book about immigrants is featured.”

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Photo: Claire Kirch
Díaz with Mitchell Kaplan, owner of Books & Books in Miami, after the breakfast keynote.
 
I think this guy is batshit insane, but Publisher's Weekly is lionizing him. "Decolonize our shelves." Really?

And shouldn't booksellers try to put books on their store shelves that might, y'know, sell? :\
Any bookseller that takes business advice from Ben Kingsley Martinez deserves the fate awaiting them.
 
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