draft: against white feminism.
This commit is contained in:
parent
926faa4793
commit
d073e77e2d
82
against-white-feminism.ms
Normal file
82
against-white-feminism.ms
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1,82 @@
|
||||
.so macros.ms
|
||||
.TL
|
||||
Against White Feminism
|
||||
.AU
|
||||
Rafia Zakaria
|
||||
.AU
|
||||
.ft CW
|
||||
summarised by
|
||||
.ft
|
||||
Philippe Pittoli
|
||||
.
|
||||
.AB no
|
||||
The book talks about Rafia Zakaria and her hate of whiteness in feminism (which is completely different from white women, as she promises).
|
||||
|
||||
.INFORMATIONS \\*[WEBSITE]/against-white-feminism.pdf \\*[EMAIL]
|
||||
.AE
|
||||
.TWO_COLUMNS
|
||||
.NH
|
||||
Summary
|
||||
.PP
|
||||
Rafia is a woman of color, single mother and she has a difficult story to tell.
|
||||
|
||||
In the first 10 pages, we learn that she can be at a party with
|
||||
.I "other privileged white women"
|
||||
and still whine about trivial stuff, like
|
||||
.B "being asked her story" .
|
||||
Yes, Rafia can be with white feminists, invited at their table, drink and share a good moment with them, being asked to talk about herself and she will still be bitching about not having a chance to talk.
|
||||
Even
|
||||
.B before
|
||||
they had the chance to even say a freaking word she knew she hated them.
|
||||
|
||||
The more the author talks about how
|
||||
.I whiteness
|
||||
is the worst, the more we discover she actually is incredibly ignorant, self-absorbed and
|
||||
.B obsessed
|
||||
with identity.
|
||||
That's just plain racism, and without much anything else.
|
||||
There isn't much substance here.
|
||||
Talking about a social issue, describing a problem affecting people, isn't the subject of the book.
|
||||
For Rafia, the problem is white women doing stuff, whatever they are actually doing, without kissing some black women butts by giving them their job.
|
||||
|
||||
Let's take an example.
|
||||
At some point, Rafia described a few things about feminism, notably that they don't take the word of a victim of abuse as an ultimate truth.
|
||||
For any sane person, this is completely normal.
|
||||
Someone subjected to fearful or painful situations may not be thinking clearly.
|
||||
Furthermore, people sometimes lie, exaggerate or diminish the importance of some parts of a story, even real victims.
|
||||
But for Rafia this is a problem with
|
||||
.I whiteness
|
||||
in feminism, because apparently this could have been different with other people in charge, people of color, with a different perspective on things.
|
||||
The author would like you to ignore the
|
||||
.B "massive implications"
|
||||
of taking the word of people for granted, and persuade yourself that white women are the worst.
|
||||
|
||||
Here is a brief summary of the general idea being the book:
|
||||
.CITATION1
|
||||
Let's put blacks and asian women on stage regardless of what they have to say, or if they have any talent.
|
||||
As long as it is different from what white women have to say on the matter, this is fine.
|
||||
Also, bitching about white women (oops, I mean
|
||||
.B whiteness )
|
||||
is great, so buy my $15 rant.
|
||||
.CITATION2
|
||||
.NH
|
||||
Conclusion, my point of view
|
||||
.PP
|
||||
This book is an excellent example of the worst; identity politics at its finest.
|
||||
The author advocates for a massive societal shift, mostly towards an
|
||||
.UL "absurdly dangerous"
|
||||
new system.
|
||||
For example, by throwing away the benefit of the doubt, a pilar of any free society.
|
||||
|
||||
As a fun note, I don't call myself feminist (and I have my reasons\*[*]).
|
||||
.FS
|
||||
Mainly because I think everybody has their own definition, so this doesn't say much about the person.
|
||||
Let's just throw away labels when they aren't useful, and in this case I do think they are actually harmful.
|
||||
.FE
|
||||
Though, often in the book the author talked about why
|
||||
.I "whiteness feminism"
|
||||
was a problem, and the more she described it, the more I found myself rooting for them.
|
||||
Some of the "problems" were actually just good practices, and I'm glad to know that, even today, feminism isn't just a bunch of stupid hysterical cunts.
|
||||
|
||||
In the end, this book was entertaining to me.
|
||||
I knew I wouldn't find anything convincing, but seeing adult people being this cringeworthy, selfish and childish is, at small dosage, an enjoyable experience.
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user