Social Justice Warriors - Now With Less Feminism Sperging

It goes without saying but it's all such bullshit. I grew up in a pretty poor, fairly mixed area and even here, outside of the US or any other English speaking country, we still used "classroom management". Why? Because kids are fucking pricks, that's why. Nothing middle-class nor white about it. If a kid doesn't behave well you tell them a few times to stop it but, guess what, if they keep on being absolute cunts you have to punish them, not cuddle them and tell them it's not their fault.
 
It goes without saying but it's all such bullshit. I grew up in a pretty poor, fairly mixed area and even here, outside of the US or any other English speaking country, we still used "classroom management". Why? Because kids are fucking pricks, that's why. Nothing middle-class nor white about it. If a kid doesn't behave well you tell them a few times to stop it but, guess what, if they keep on being absolute cunts you have to punish them, not cuddle them and tell them it's not their fault.
In America, behaving properly is "being white" and blacks aren't required to do it.
 
I have to read a fun article for my class about Thomas Jefferson tomorrow.
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This is how we end up with kids throwing desks across rooms and other dumb shit that happens in classrooms regularly these days.


What does this have to do with Thomas Jefferson? Other than he owned slaves and supposedly banged one that had a baby which was also supposedly his. That’s quite a stretch though.
 
I have so many questions...
I do love the subtle racism of suggesting that acting polite, studious, obedient, and non-disruptive are considered the normal for Whites but not for Blacks. Again, Asians are throwing the spanner into the works with this one because they seem to thrive under "White, middle-class behaviour norms".
 
wouldn't work unless you're a student
Kind of pathetic they restricted it that way.
I have so many questions...
I do love the subtle racism of suggesting that acting polite, studious, obedient, and non-disruptive are considered the normal for Whites but not for Blacks. Again, Asians are throwing the spanner into the works with this one because they seem to thrive under "White, middle-class behaviour norms".
It's a shame when acting 'normal' is seen like this.
 
I'm more reminded of Cersei's speech to Septa Unella at the end of season 6 of GoT. It really highlighted how petty and vindictive she was.
The thing about Cersei was she could be very petty and was very vindictive, but the people she tortured the most were people who had caused her specifically great harm. Septa Unella's punishment was horrendous, but after what she put Cersei through it was understandable. Same with Ellaria Sand and her daughter, where she's twisting the knife but also murdering the daughter of the woman who murdered hers.

SJWs don't have nearly that level of personal slights that they're reacting against. Their versions of being brutalised are much more in line of having been insulted, not fully accepted 100% of the time, and/or projecting onto other people negative opinions of themselves. Their traumas are usually mild compared to the violence they wish upon their 'oppressors' - especially the commonly white middle-class saviours who are so prevalent in trying to demand everyone behave according to their morals.

There's also often real trauma in there, sure. But they have the vindictiveness of Cersei without the specificity of targets - all white people, all men, all straights, all cis, all are to blame for their problems. Cersei's revenge was against individuals; the people we document in threads like these want revenge against classes of people, inevitably based on one of the immutable characteristics like race or gender that they'll call you a bigot if you were to judge people on them the same way they do.

I don't know - I just think Cersei was a great character for being terrible, while these interchangeable NPCs don't deserve to be considered nearly as complicated or interesting even if they superficially share many of the same emotions, even though they're real people and she's fictional.
 
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