Sunday, October 25, 2020

When An Unstoppable Force Meets An Immovable Object

 Something's got to give.  It was almost her own psyche.

Joanne has the story of an autistic woman who, upon entering Stanford, swallowed the woke victimhood Kool-aid hook, line, and sinker (to mix some metaphors).  In her own words, she became a zealot.  

In her first year at Stanford, which was “centering the marginalized,” Wallace dedicated herself to fighting systemic ableism, which she believed threatened the lives of disabled people.

Then came a competing zealotry.  Which one would win out?

Black Lives Matter ended her obsessive victimhood, writes Wallace. Instead, she spiraled into “self-loathing,” crippled by racial guilt.

Fortunately she was able to come back from the brink:

A friend sent her a link to James Lindsay’s anti-woke site, New Discourses. She started reading dissident ideas and questioning her beliefs. Wallace moved away from autism advocacy. “I could no longer ignore the fact that my obsession with justice hadn’t made me a good advocate; it had made me unbearable,” she writes.

Good Lord, how many people today need to read and consider the implications of that last sentence?

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