Why liberal white women pay a lot of money to learn over dinner how they're racist

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/feb/03/race-to-dinner-party-racism-women

A growing number of women are paying to confront their privilege – and racism – at dinners that cost $2,500

Freshly made pasta is drying on the wooden bannisters lining the hall of a beautiful home in Denver, Colorado. Fox-hunting photos decorate the walls in a room full of books. A fire is burning. And downstairs, a group of liberal white women have gathered around a long wooden table to admit how racist they are.

White women, on the other hand, are uniquely placed to challenge racism because of their proximity to power and wealth, Jackson says. “If they don’t hold these positions themselves, the white men in power are often their family, friends and partners.”

It seems unlikely anyone would voluntarily go to a dinner party in which they’d be asked, one by one, “What was a racist thing you did recently?” by two women of color, before appetizers are served. But Jackson and Rao have hardly been able to take a break since they started these dinners in the spring of 2019. So far, 15 dinners have been held in big cities across the US.

The women who sign up for these dinners are not who most would see as racist. They are well-read and well-meaning. They are mostly Democrats. Some have adopted black children, many have partners who are people of color, some have been doing work towards inclusivity and diversity for decades. But they acknowledge they also have unchecked biases. They are there because they “know [they] are part of the problem, and want to be part of the solution,” as host Jess Campbell-Swanson says before dinner starts.

Campbell-Swanson comes across as an overly keen college student applying for a prestigious internship. She can go on for days about her work as a political consultant, but when it comes to talking about racism, she chokes.

“I want to hire people of color. Not because I want to be … a white savior. I have explored my need for validation … I’m working through that … Yeah. Um … I’m struggling,” she stutters, before finally giving up.

Across from Campbell-Swanson, Morgan Richards admits she recently did nothing when someone patronizingly commended her for adopting her two black children, as though she had saved them. “What I went through to be a mother, I didn’t care if they were black,” she says, opening a window for Rao to challenge her: “So, you admit it is stooping low to adopt a black child?” And Richards accepts that the undertone of her statement is racist.

As more confessions like this are revealed, Rao and Jackson seem to press those they think can take it, while empathizing with those who can’t. “Well done for recognizing that,” Jackson says, to soothe one woman. “We are all part of the problem. We have to get comfortable with that to become part of the solution.”

Carbonara is heaped on to plates, and a sense of self-righteousness seems to wash over the eight white women. They’ve shown up, admitted their wrongdoing and are willing to change. Don’t they deserve a little pat on the back?


Erika Righter raises her tattooed forearm to her face, in despair of all of the racism she’s witnessed as a social worker, then laments how a white friend always ends phone calls with “Love you long time”.

“And what is your racism, Erika?” Rao interrupts, refusing to let her off the hook. The mood becomes tense. Another woman adds: “I don’t know you, Erika. But you strike me as being really in your head. Everything I’m hearing is from the neck up.”

Righter, a single mother, retreats before defending herself: “I haven’t read all the books. I’m new to this.”

A lot of people hate Saira Rao.

“The American flag makes me sick,” read a recent tweet of hers. Another: “White folks – before telling me that your Indian husband or wife or friend or colleague doesn’t agree with anything I say about racism or thinks I’m crazy, please Google ‘token,’ ‘internalized oppression’ and ‘gaslighting’.”

She wasn’t always this confrontational, she says. Her “awakening” began recently.

After Rao’s mother died unexpectedly a few years ago, she moved to Denver from New York to be around her best friends – a group of mostly white women from college. She wasn’t new to being the only person of color, but she was surprised to notice how they would distance themselves whenever she’d talk frankly about race.

Then, fuelled by anger at Trump’s election after she’d campaigned tirelessly for Hillary Clinton, Rao ran for Congress in 2018 against a Democratic incumbent on an anti-racist manifesto, and criticized the “pink-pussy-hat-wearing” women of the Democratic party. It was during this campaign Rao met Jackson, who works in real estate. Jackson recalls her initial impressions of Rao as “honest, and willing to call a thing a thing”.

It’s that brashness that led to Race for Dinner. Rao is done with affability. “I’d spent years trying to get through to white women with coffees and teas – massaging them, dealing with their tears, and I got nowhere. I thought, if nothing is going to work, let’s try to shake them awake.”

The genesis of Race to Dinner wasn’t straightforward. Months after a dinner discussion about race with a white friend of Jackson’s went south, Rao bumped into that friend, who had started reading Reni Eddo-Lodge’s Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race.

“She told me that the dinner had changed everything for her, and asked if we could do another,” says Rao. The friend invited other guests, Rao reluctantly agreed, then hated that second dinner, too. But then white women began flooding her inbox asking her to do it again.

In the beginning, Rao’s dinner-party tone was much more argumentative. But it left her looking less like a human and more like some kind of real-life trolling bot. Women at the dinners were always crying. Some of those dinners got out of hand – attendees have tried to place their hands on Jackson and Rao, and racial slurs have been thrown around.

“My blood pressure went up. I’d work myself up into a frenzy at every dinner. I realized [that] if I walk away feeling I am going to have a stroke, we should try a different tactic,” Rao says.

I’d work myself into a frenzy. I realized: if I walk away feeling I'm going to have a stroke, we should try a different tactic

Susan Brown attended one of those earlier dinners. She says she felt like Rao and Jackson were angry at her the whole time, without ever learning why. She found Rao needlessly provocative and mean-spirited, unaware of her own class privilege, and divisive. She felt the dinner set her up to fail.

Another previous attendee, who did not want to be named, says she found Rao to be dogmatic, and presented a distorted depiction of history, leaving out facts that do not fit her narrative. At one point, she referred to Rao as “the Trump of the alt-left”.

But even for those who complained, something has changed. Brown read White Fragility – a book released last year that posits every person partakes to some degree in racism and needs to confront that – and realized many of the things she was commending herself for needed to be re-evaluated. The book is now assigned reading for women before they can attend a dinner.

The woman who compared Rao to Trump went to a city council meeting to speak up about the death of a young black man in her area. She attributes that specifically to Jackson’s call for solidarity.

In recent months, Jackson and Rao changed the model. They didn’t want to just have women rely on them to shout at them for being racist and then go home.

“We began to expect more of them,” says Rao. That meant asking the women to speak up. To own their racism. It meant getting them to do the required reading, as well as follow-up discussions, where they decide how to do better anti-racist work.

In the conversation that followed the dinner, Campbell-Swanson, who couldn’t get her racist thoughts out, committed to writing a journal, jotting down daily decisions or thoughts that could be considered racist, and think about how to approach them differently.

Lisa Bond, who was hired because Rao and Jackson thought there would be instances when participants would feel more comfortable expressing their feelings to another white woman, says this will help her see how unmonitored thoughts can lead to systemic racism. “If our ability to spot these things increases, our ability to challenge it will increase,” says Bond.

Bond says about 65% of participants engage meaningfully in post-dinner conversations with her. But weren’t these women already doing the work? Don’t they want to speak to those women who have no intention of challenging themselves?

“There are so many people worse than us,” says Bond. “I have gotten to the point where I no longer try to pay attention to what someone else is doing. I don’t talk about the 53% [who voted for Trump] because I’m not one of them.”

What is in her power, she says, is forcing herself to talk to her sister, who did vote for Trump, even when it gets difficult. She emphasizes this work has to continue, no matter who is president.

“If Trump were impeached tomorrow and we got a new president, a lot of white liberal people will go back to living their lives just as before, and that’s what we have to prevent,” she says. “All that’s happened is we can see racism now, while before we could cover it up. That’s why we need these dinners. So when we get a new person in racism is not as obvious, we won’t just crawl back to being comfortable.”
 
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Now this is interesting, I googled "Saira Rao" and "Susan Brown" together, and it came up with this

Nothing of interest there, just an overpiced journal thing, but my gut instinct made me go to the trusty ole wayback machine and run the google URL through it to see what the page was a few years ago


Turns out Rao and Susan Brown were both fellow members of this "women entrepreneur" group, which seems to have completely rebranded itself as a fucking diary vendor in the past few years.


As for exactly what kind of organisation this was, here is their pitch


"Savor Success Circles, virtual masterminds for women entrepreneurs with 5, 6, 7-figure businesses.
Match to a Circle of 4 members with an amazing community.

Do you sometimes find it lonely "at the top"?
Do you find yourself struggling with how to handle employees?

Are you ready to scale?

Are you passionate about sharing your "lessons learned" so others don't make the same mistakes, too?
Do you crave connecting with other accomplished women who get you?
Do you feel like you don't always fit in your community because others don't understand the pressures you have?
Did you know that a community of successful 6-7-8-figure women-led masterminds exists?
Welcome Home. You are not alone.

WHAT IS SAVOR SUCCESS CIRCLES?

  • Virtual masterminds of 4-6 women matched based on revenue and like-minded goals.
  • Weekly virtual check-ins with business lessons from founder Angela Jia Kim to get rich content and engage with your Circle to give/get feedback.
  • Partner Calls + Video Masterminds to access the braintrust and rolodex of high-level women for mutual win/win.
“The focus of this particular women’s network is accountability. Join a [Savor] Circle and push each other to achieve through meeting benchmarks—together.”
— Forbes

DO YOU DARE TO TAKE THE RIDE OF YOUR LIFE?
When I first launched Savor Beauty, my organic skincare line, I craved a posse of smart and savvy women who learned from and lifted each other up. So I created the 7-Figure Club in 2009, and many of us are still together today.
I wanted to bottle this up and give thousands of other women the opportunity to mastermind within a structured method to stimulate, inspire and give a kick in the ass.
“I dare you to give and get support so you can fly higher than you ever imagined.”
— Angela Jia Kim, Savor founder

WHO IS SAVOR CIRCLES FOR?
  • Are you a 5-6-7-8 figure majority woman-business owner? We match you accordingly.
  • Or are you a Startup with major potential? Applicants are considered on a case-by-case basis. (After all, we all started at $0 at one point; commitment is what matters!)
  • Do you believe in "Give, Give, Get"? When you teach and give to others, you breathe life into yourself.
  • Do you feel lonely "at the top" and crave support from other high-powered women?
If you answered Yes to the above questions, you are likely to thrive in Savor Circles.

WHERE DOES IT ALL HAPPEN?
  • Mastermind via video in a private "Virtual Cafe" that's just for your Circle.
  • Check-ins are forum-style for weekly co-learning, accountability, and building relationships.
  • Connect with all Savor Circle members in a private Facebook group.
  • Attend a Savor event in New York City together! All Circle members are welcome, free of charge.
  • Annual gathering at the Savor Life Summit to connect, learn and refresh at a business + spa retreat.
DO YOU DARE TO TAKE THE RIDE OF YOUR LIFE?

When I first launched Savor Beauty, my organic skincare line, I craved a posse of smart and savvy women who learned from and lifted each other up. So I created the 7-Figure Club in 2009, and many of us are still together today.
I wanted to bottle this up and give thousands of other women the opportunity to mastermind within a structured method to stimulate, inspire and give a kick in the ass.
“I dare you to give and get support so you can fly higher than you ever imagined.”
— Angela Jia Kim, Savor founder

WHO IS SAVOR CIRCLES FOR?
  • Are you a 5-6-7-8 figure majority woman-business owner? We match you accordingly.
  • Or are you a Startup with major potential? Applicants are considered on a case-by-case basis. (After all, we all started at $0 at one point; commitment is what matters!)
  • Do you believe in "Give, Give, Get"? When you teach and give to others, you breathe life into yourself.
  • Do you feel lonely "at the top" and crave support from other high-powered women?
If you answered Yes to the above questions, you are likely to thrive in Savor Circles.

“I don’t have other high-end businesswomen friends in my country town that I live in. It is nice to have contact with other women who are in the same boat as me, but also stretch me. This experience has been priceless!”
— Elizabeth, Founder of Doodlebug Dog Walker, LLC

WHERE DOES IT ALL HAPPEN?
  • Mastermind via video in a private "Virtual Cafe" that's just for your Circle.
  • Check-ins are forum-style for weekly co-learning, accountability, and building relationships.
  • Connect with all Savor Circle members in a private Facebook group.
  • Attend a Savor event in New York City together! All Circle members are welcome, free of charge.
  • Annual gathering at the Savor Life Summit to connect, learn and refresh at a business + spa retreat.


“My Savor Circle came right out of the gate with incredible feedback and insights on our very first call. Within the first month of working together, I graduated from being a one-woman branding expert to CEO of a full-service branding and marketing agency with a team. ”
— Brandi, Founder of Hum Creative

HOW DO I APPLY?

Step 1: Application
Complete your application
to be considered. $149 Application Fee, refunded if we cannot find a match.
Step 2: The Interview
The match team handpicks candidates to invite for an interview.
It's an opportunity for us to get to know you and your business.
Step 3: Match Day!
Matching begins
with a Drafting process by Savor Circle Presidents + Savor HQ. Learn more in FAQ

"I founded and grew the Kohana Coffee brand from $400K to over $100M while being in Circles. I learn from the comments of others in the checkins and help others with all of my heart. I consider this my Harvard MBA. ”
— Victoria, Founder of Kohana Coffee and Alliance Abroad Group

WHEN DOES THE NEXT ROUND BEGIN?
Savor Success Circles runs in 90-day increments. Applications close two weeks before the start of a round.

July 30, 2018
Apply by: July 15
Oct. 29, 2018
Apply by: Oct 14
Jan. 28, 2019
Apply by: Jan. 13
April 29, 2019
Apply by: April 14

“Savor Circles attracts the smartest and most amazing women of high caliber. Thanks to Circles and the brilliant women, I’m kicking butt and taking names. I’m closing the year 13% up from last year. Thank you!”
— Lilly, Founder and CEO of Lilly Ferrick, LLC

THE INVESTMENT
Success Circles:
$197/month
6-Figure Circles: $247/month
7-Figure Circles: $297/month
A minimum three-month commitment is required. There is a $149 application fee.

“A word of wisdom - You get back what you put out. If you are on the fence about joining, DO IT. I made back 14 TIMES of additional PROFIT what the investment is and can’t rave enough about this wonderful program!”
— Elizabeth, Founder of Doodlebug Dog Walker, LLC

“Through my Circle I saw my products launch at Anthropologie... I never had the guts to dream that big. I now have two other large stores on point to launch us in May. I am totally prepared and excited at the prospect. My company growth in web sales tripled all with spending less on advertising and my finances of the company are in the best place they have ever been. ”
— Cynthia, Founder and CEO of Violets are Blue Skincare
TLDR its a blatant fucking "improve your business portfolio and network with awesome new people by paying over a fucktunne of money in exchange for these here magic beans" grift, and one which involves a bunch of rich women paying through the nose to meet up with eachother under the pretense of it being some empowering and woke event.....wait a minute this seems strangely familiar....

I wonder why they seem to have completely shelved this bold project in favor of selling journals you can get on amazon for five bucks....so much so that they have completely dropped all mention of this previous business strategy of theirs....

I dunno, I just find it really fuckin peculiar how all these women seem to have known eachother for years and have been helping eachother out with various grifts for all that time both in politics and business.
 
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Am I alone in thinking that KF is one of the few bastions of sanity on the Internet?

When I posted this article I had no idea how deep the roots of this race-baiting fraudster and her ilk went.

Edit: I had two separate ideas in the same post so have separated them into separate paragraphs for clarity.
 
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Now this is interesting, I googled "Saira Rao" and "Susan Brown" together, and it came up with this

Nothing of interest there, just an overpiced journal thing, but my gut instinct made me go to the trusty ole wayback machine and run the google URL through it to see what the page was a few years ago


Turns out Rao and Susan Brown were both fellow members of this "women entrepreneur" group, which seems to have completely rebranded itself as a fucking diary vendor in the past few years.


As for exactly what kind of organisation this was, here is their pitch


"Savor Success Circles, virtual masterminds for women entrepreneurs with 5, 6, 7-figure businesses.
Match to a Circle of 4 members with an amazing community.

Do you sometimes find it lonely "at the top"?
Do you find yourself struggling with how to handle employees?

Are you ready to scale?

Are you passionate about sharing your "lessons learned" so others don't make the same mistakes, too?
Do you crave connecting with other accomplished women who get you?
Do you feel like you don't always fit in your community because others don't understand the pressures you have?
Did you know that a community of successful 6-7-8-figure women-led masterminds exists?
Welcome Home. You are not alone.

WHAT IS SAVOR SUCCESS CIRCLES?

  • Virtual masterminds of 4-6 women matched based on revenue and like-minded goals.
  • Weekly virtual check-ins with business lessons from founder Angela Jia Kim to get rich content and engage with your Circle to give/get feedback.
  • Partner Calls + Video Masterminds to access the braintrust and rolodex of high-level women for mutual win/win.

— Forbes

DO YOU DARE TO TAKE THE RIDE OF YOUR LIFE?
When I first launched Savor Beauty, my organic skincare line, I craved a posse of smart and savvy women who learned from and lifted each other up. So I created the 7-Figure Club in 2009, and many of us are still together today.
I wanted to bottle this up and give thousands of other women the opportunity to mastermind within a structured method to stimulate, inspire and give a kick in the ass.

— Angela Jia Kim, Savor founder

WHO IS SAVOR CIRCLES FOR?
  • Are you a 5-6-7-8 figure majority woman-business owner? We match you accordingly.
  • Or are you a Startup with major potential? Applicants are considered on a case-by-case basis. (After all, we all started at $0 at one point; commitment is what matters!)
  • Do you believe in "Give, Give, Get"? When you teach and give to others, you breathe life into yourself.
  • Do you feel lonely "at the top" and crave support from other high-powered women?
If you answered Yes to the above questions, you are likely to thrive in Savor Circles.

WHERE DOES IT ALL HAPPEN?
  • Mastermind via video in a private "Virtual Cafe" that's just for your Circle.
  • Check-ins are forum-style for weekly co-learning, accountability, and building relationships.
  • Connect with all Savor Circle members in a private Facebook group.
  • Attend a Savor event in New York City together! All Circle members are welcome, free of charge.
  • Annual gathering at the Savor Life Summit to connect, learn and refresh at a business + spa retreat.
DO YOU DARE TO TAKE THE RIDE OF YOUR LIFE?

When I first launched Savor Beauty, my organic skincare line, I craved a posse of smart and savvy women who learned from and lifted each other up. So I created the 7-Figure Club in 2009, and many of us are still together today.
I wanted to bottle this up and give thousands of other women the opportunity to mastermind within a structured method to stimulate, inspire and give a kick in the ass.

— Angela Jia Kim, Savor founder

WHO IS SAVOR CIRCLES FOR?
  • Are you a 5-6-7-8 figure majority woman-business owner? We match you accordingly.
  • Or are you a Startup with major potential? Applicants are considered on a case-by-case basis. (After all, we all started at $0 at one point; commitment is what matters!)
  • Do you believe in "Give, Give, Get"? When you teach and give to others, you breathe life into yourself.
  • Do you feel lonely "at the top" and crave support from other high-powered women?
If you answered Yes to the above questions, you are likely to thrive in Savor Circles.

“I don’t have other high-end businesswomen friends in my country town that I live in. It is nice to have contact with other women who are in the same boat as me, but also stretch me. This experience has been priceless!”
— Elizabeth, Founder of Doodlebug Dog Walker, LLC

WHERE DOES IT ALL HAPPEN?
  • Mastermind via video in a private "Virtual Cafe" that's just for your Circle.
  • Check-ins are forum-style for weekly co-learning, accountability, and building relationships.
  • Connect with all Savor Circle members in a private Facebook group.
  • Attend a Savor event in New York City together! All Circle members are welcome, free of charge.
  • Annual gathering at the Savor Life Summit to connect, learn and refresh at a business + spa retreat.



— Brandi, Founder of Hum Creative

HOW DO I APPLY?

Step 1: Application
Complete your application
to be considered. $149 Application Fee, refunded if we cannot find a match.
Step 2: The Interview
The match team handpicks candidates to invite for an interview.
It's an opportunity for us to get to know you and your business.
Step 3: Match Day!
Matching begins
with a Drafting process by Savor Circle Presidents + Savor HQ. Learn more in FAQ

"I founded and grew the Kohana Coffee brand from $400K to over $100M while being in Circles. I learn from the comments of others in the checkins and help others with all of my heart. I consider this my Harvard MBA. ”
— Victoria, Founder of Kohana Coffee and Alliance Abroad Group

WHEN DOES THE NEXT ROUND BEGIN?
Savor Success Circles runs in 90-day increments. Applications close two weeks before the start of a round.

July 30, 2018
Apply by: July 15
Oct. 29, 2018
Apply by: Oct 14
Jan. 28, 2019
Apply by: Jan. 13
April 29, 2019
Apply by: April 14

“Savor Circles attracts the smartest and most amazing women of high caliber. Thanks to Circles and the brilliant women, I’m kicking butt and taking names. I’m closing the year 13% up from last year. Thank you!”
— Lilly, Founder and CEO of Lilly Ferrick, LLC

THE INVESTMENT
Success Circles:
$197/month
6-Figure Circles: $247/month
7-Figure Circles: $297/month
A minimum three-month commitment is required. There is a $149 application fee.


— Elizabeth, Founder of Doodlebug Dog Walker, LLC

“Through my Circle I saw my products launch at Anthropologie... I never had the guts to dream that big. I now have two other large stores on point to launch us in May. I am totally prepared and excited at the prospect. My company growth in web sales tripled all with spending less on advertising and my finances of the company are in the best place they have ever been. ”
— Cynthia, Founder and CEO of Violets are Blue Skincare
TLDR its a blatant fucking "improve your business portfolio and network with awesome new people by paying over a fucktunne of money in exchange for these here magic beans" grift, and one which involves a bunch of rich women paying through the nose to meet up with eachother under the pretense of it being some empowering and woke event.....wait a minute this seems strangely familiar....

I wonder why they seem to have completely shelved this bold project in favor of selling journals you can get on amazon for five bucks....so much so that they have completely dropped all mention of this previous business strategy of theirs....

I dunno, I just find it really fuckin peculiar how all these women seem to have known eachother for years and have been helping eachother out with various grifts for all that time both in politics and business.
So basically this whole thing is LuLaRoe but with white cis hetero oppressors?
 
Am I alone in thinking that KF is one of the few bastions of sanity on the Internet? When I posted this article I had no idea how deep the roots of this race-baiting fraudster and her ilk went.
Bitch Im just in shock how a smelly nigger like me who is three fifths of the way through an extra large sausage roll and wearing nothing but thermal socks and a fleecy poncho managed in the space of five minutes to do better journalistic investigation than the specimen who got paid to write the article for the Guardian

I mean jesus fucking christ people, the google search bar aint hard to use....just do the barest freakin minimum snooping around and you will be amazed at what you might find if you use quotation marked searches

So basically this whole thing is LuLaRoe but with white cis hetero oppressors?

Its part of the general realm of "grifting off dumb rich boomers and dumb boomber businesses who dont know shit and will throw any spare change at something which uses the right buzz word" which encompasses everything from motivational speaking to crystal healing to sensitivity lectures to literal magic beans which aims to throw as much cheaply made/run shit at the millionaire wall as possible in the hope something gets a couple of shekels and that it all eventually adds up

Its basically the rich people version of automated junk emails trying to sell everything imaginable from muscle-increasing asian hornet honey to hot granny dick rubs
 
Is this old or has the same idea just resurfaced again somewhere else? I swear I've heard of almost exactly this a few years ago.
There was another thread about this less than a year ago. I remember hearing about other things like this where people would meet to confess their privilege sins to POCs but I don't think they were tied to Rao's gal pals.

Edit:
So is this an actual Indian femcel monetizing her anger at Stacey for being desirable to men or is she a larping white lady

No, I'm pretty sure she's an actual Pajeeta (what is the actual female version of Pajeet?)
 
Is this old or has the same idea just resurfaced again somewhere else? I swear I've heard of almost exactly this a few years ago.
Probably because someone else in the rich-grift community did the same thing a while back and Rao was just waiting for people to forget about it before launching her own spin on the concept

So is this an actual Indian femcel monetizing her anger at Stacey for being desirable to men or is she a larping white lady
Everything I have seen points to her being an out and out con artist on the "selling nothing to rich people" circuit while living off her husbands paycheck, basically a more upmarket brianna wu

As such her actual beliefs and views and personal grudges are extremely hard to pin down, much like any other pathological grifter, as she likely doesnt truly believe in anything she spews other than generally enjoying the idea of being able to treat others like shit with impunity and to get paid for nothing
 
Bitch Im just in shock how a smelly nigger like me who is three fifths of the way through an extra large sausage roll and wearing nothing but thermal socks and a fleecy poncho managed in the space of five minutes to do better journalistic investigation than the specimen who got paid to write the article for the Guardian

I wasn't particularly interested in the scamsters profiled in the piece of crap article; rather, I was amused by the idiocy of the subject and thought it would amuse other Farmers.
 
I wasn't particularly interested in the scamsters profiled in the piece of crap article; rather, I was amused by the idiocy of the subject and thought it would amuse other Farmers.
The real question is, now that the con is officially in play and racking up media coverage, will anybody actually buy into it?

I mean its pretty fuckin cheap to get one's gal pals and fellow fraudsters to go along with play acting this shit in front of a proverbial camera and claiming "yes I totally paid a billion rubles for this honor and it was worth every kopek" so I doubt she will be particularly sore if nobody does fall for it, so if it works even a little then she is likely going to go into massive overdrive trying to squeeze every last drop of potential out of this scheme
 
The real question is, now that the con is officially in play and racking up media coverage, will anybody actually buy into it?

I think so. The Guardian published this unironically: ie the author (Poppy Noor, another race-baiting idiot) didn't write it in an editorial fashion as a means of pointing out how outrageously nonsensical the scheme is. Rather, I suspect that there was an element of "this is great; let's push it along", ie let's hear it for the brave Woman of Color telling white women how racist they are while getting the latter to pay an enormous amount of money for the privilege.

Why waste $2500 on an experience you can get for free by getting an account on Twitter and ResetERA?

Because you get sjw woke points for paying.

Is this old or has the same idea just resurfaced again somewhere else? I swear I've heard of almost exactly this a few years ago.

It's just a modern version of Radical Chic and Maumauing the Flak Catchers.

From wikipedia:
The first piece is set in the duplex on Park Avenue in Manhattan inhabited by conductor Leonard Bernstein, his wife the actress Felicia Cohn Montealegre, and their three children. Bernstein assembled many of his wealthy socialite friends to meet with representatives of the controversial Black Panthers and discuss ways to help their cause.[2] The party was a typical affair for Bernstein, a longtime Democrat, who was known for hosting civil rights leaders at such parties.[3]

The Bernsteins' usual staff of white South Americans served the party.[4] Some of the Bernsteins' typical friends in the arts and guests in journalism (including Oscar-nominated director Otto Preminger and television reporter Barbara Walters) are labeled the "radical chic", as Wolfe characterizes them as pursuing radical ends for social reasons, partially because organizations like the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People had become mainstream.[1] Wolfe's criticism is implicitly of the general phenomenon of white guilt and armchair agitation becoming facets of high fashion.[5]

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_Chic_&_Mau-Mauing_the_Flak_Catchers
 
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I am having trouble understanding why white liberal women woke enough to shell out $2500 to be insulted would be willing to eat in a house with fox-hunting photos decorating the walls.

You took the words from my mouth. It's a very strange detail in a story like this, and it feels really off that the reporter both has chosen to highlight this peculiar detail and simultaneously seems to think that it's completely normal.
 
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