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Does That Black Guy Believe That He’s Oppressed and I’m a Racist?…the Divisive and Destructive Question Pushed by the Left for Their Own Gain

The insidious question planted in the mind of any non-black by CRT, and just like the fake news, the leftists know most people aren’t going to take the time to look past the headline.  It’s evil and demented, and it needs to stop.  It creates extreme anxiety among all of our youth constantly straining to hope they haven’t offended anyone, and it prevents communication between otherwise reasoning, thinking adults.

 

To hell with critical race theory, used by Hitler to turn the Germans against the Jews.

 

Enough.

3 replies on “Does That Black Guy Believe That He’s Oppressed and I’m a Racist?…the Divisive and Destructive Question Pushed by the Left for Their Own Gain”

When did Americans become so afraid of getting out of line, stepping on toes, scared of being offensive when no offense is meant?

I’m not a milquetoast or a ninny. I don’t go out of my way to be rude or offensive, but neither do a self-censor out of fear of ruffling someone’s tender feelings. Their over-sensitivity isn’t my problem. It’s theirs.

I’ve been thinking. I think most people feel the same way. Oversensitivity is the problem of the “victim” not ours for sure. In my opinion, this has been largely decided.
Yet we haven’t come to a general consensus as in person communication is suppressed and there’s no material benefit to speaking out. It begs the question are we now just deciding everything through comment sections?
How did we tag the complainer as “Karen,” for instance?

I think it does have something to do with reliance on virtual communication, especially the age groups that have grown up with it. In an anonymous environment, people can say anything no matter how crude, rude or insulting it might be. Perhaps those who have experienced that as their primary means of communication and due to lack of experience also think that face to face conversation will invite the same reaction, and to avoid confrontation, a conciliatory cautious response is safer. I don’t know. I always liked the name Karen. Kind of sad it’s been co-opted as a meme.

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