@ZackPreston
Zack Preston Rouse
@ZackPreston · 4:58

Rhetorical v Substantive Justice

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In our current social climate, with the social justice movement that we've had essentially the cultural Arab Spring that we've recently had during COVID and everything, we've had an adjustment to our lexical inventory, and some of it's really good and some of it's problematic. What's good is that there are certain words that we're not using anymore. There are certain ways of framing things that we're adjusting to be more respectful of people who need justice restored. And that's really great

Social justice

@SeekingPlumb

@ZackPreston

Great points, and I like the coined terms. Speaking of, I would love to hear more about the centrist fundamentalist, why you've dubbed this particular group with that label and what that particular label means to you. It sounds like another coined term, but maybe it's just what I'm not familiar with. And so this is why this is why I'm curious
@ZackPreston
Zack Preston Rouse
@ZackPreston · 2:39

@SeekingPlumb

Well, as far as I can tell, the demo Democrats, they tend to be okay with corporatism and that's, in a way, fundamentalist, because it's a capitalist fundamentalism that maintains itself and continues to basically, it's like, hey, as long as football continues to be on the TV and I have 35 choices of toothpaste on the shelves, I'm good. But we need to have social justice wording
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