I believe you meant to say "differently pigmented". Racist.
Either sounds way better than "brown people" imo, which oddly enough appears to be a-ok on A+.
I believe you meant to say "differently pigmented". Racist.
emptyell said:Do we really need a trigger warning on discussion of 'geek' as a pejorative?
Of course the reason it is no longer so pejorative is that now many of the richest and most powerful people in the world are nerds and geeks. This is not so much a reclamation as a tranisition in the balance of power. Once we have achieved true racial, gender, ability (etc) egalitarianism slurs will largely lose their impact. Until then they will remain a tool of oppression.
Reclamation, it seems to me, is just a way for oppressed groups to diminish and ameliorate the effect of slurs on themselves personally. It does not seem to me to be a way to rehabilitate the words or make them acceptable in the mouths of oppressors. The only way to do that is to truly address the imbalance of power. After that some of the words may retain some descriptive value (nerd and geek seem likely candidates) but others such as the N, F and T words seem better destined to become historical relics and the R word can be limited to descriptions of mechanical and chemical processes.
Setar said:not only that, but geekdom itself is heavily imbued with both class and able privilege. for class privilege, "geek" pursuits tend to require quite a bit of money, especially when they first appear -- release-day consoles/games and state-of-the-art gaming PCs aren't really things that poor people can afford much (most early "geeks" cut their teeth at universities, because otherwise they'd never have had access to early computers -- things were too big, too expensive, or both, for most anyone other than universities, government agencies and large corporations to own); other pursuits such as tabletop games also tend to require a fair amount of investment in order to play reasonably well. for able privilege, "geeks" tend to think they're smarter than everyone else (mainly 'cause that's the geek stereotype, and geeks tend to do well at 'academic' pursuits due to interests) full stop.
IME the bullying geeks tend to face either has to do with non-NTness, which is ableism...or (more rarely) it has to do with geeks themselves being classist ableist douchewads. it rarely, if ever, has to do with geeks just being geeks.
and, as a proud nerd/geek, I will tell you that for the reasons stated above geeks are not a marginalized group.
ceepolk said:yeah, I don't see geeks being denied jobs and rights.
SubMor said:It's not an exercise that can accomplish what you're trying to use it for. "Geek" has never been (for lack of a better word) tainted in the way that bigoted slurs have.
ceepolk said:I just have a problem with discussing the rights of fictional theoretical beings while actual sentient, sapient, existing beings suffer.
ceepolk said:but that's not where the thread is. It's in atheism plus instead of the general discussion forums. the placement in a principal topic forum just lends more weight to the idea that it's more interesting or neat to talk about the rights of sophisticated, expensive computers than it is to talk about oh, disabled poor trans women of colour.
ischemgeek said:As a final note: All of what Onamission5 and Mocha said about erasure. If you ask for feedback and then ignore it, that's erasure and in this context dovetails heavily with societal ableism and fatphobia. Have you noticed that the people who you respond to in depth in this thread tend to be those who have not explicitly self-identified as overweight, chronically ill or disabled? I've noticed. I'm not saying that's purposeful: our society has ableism and fatphobia imbedded in it heavily and nobody is immune. I'm saying it's something that you should be mindful of, since that sort of pattern is microaggressive to the already-marginalized and also reinforces their marginalization by effectively excluding and erasing their voices in a discussion about them.
Onamission5 said:Except, when working within a frame which focuses on social justice models, personal experiences with one's own medical condition or of a client within the medical system matter. By failing to acknowledge the personal, you're placing emphasis on the medical and treating the medical as if it overrides the needs and experiences of the patient, when, according to a SJ model, it is in the best interest of both patients and medical establishments if doctors listen to and serve the needs of the patient. The primary thing a medical model does is diagnose and treat medical conditions. It does not usually treat whole people, nor does it place much if any emphasis on the patient's wellbeing outside of what a doctor has determined their clinical condition to be and how "compliant" a client is with the doctor's instructions-- whether that diagnosis is accurate or not, whether the instructions actually address the patient's issues or not. That is a 'doctors first' attitude. What is being presented to you is an emphasis on placing patients and clients first, and you're not acknowledging that.
When someone tells you how they have been treated by doctors and you respond by saying things like "most doctors X" you are A) erasing the personal experiences of the people in this very thread and replacing those experiences with the voice of the medical establishment with you as the spokesperson and B) assuming a position of authority over the people who have outed themselves as clients of medical practices. You need to listen. Listen to the personal, internalize the personal, because it is through the personal that people who are clients and patients experience your field. Ideally, you need to address the personal. At the very bare bones, bottom of the barrel least, you need to acknowledge that it exists rather than reflexively defending the medical model and emphasizing the clinical.
This thread is focused on why patients matter. You keep shifting the focus to doctors. You're erasing people. You need to stop doing that.
I believe you meant to say "differently pigmented". Racist.

Okay, two threads really pissed me off.
I have pretty much the same attitude towards smokers, by the way.
In there catchall Does The Moderation Suck thread, Serene asks why he/she got moderated for posting a question about racism in the Zimmerman "affair" (as one of their mods calls it) thread. He's mod-splained that said thread is no place for a discussion on racism!!?? The theme of the thread is "I don't care what the verdict is, SYG and Zimmerman and everyone who supports either SYG or Zimmerman are racists". Apparently if you want to ask a question about racism you're supposed to find some other thread and just accept that the in crowd has already declared this to be an issue of racism andcomment onagree with that.
Marsha, the poster who had the audacity to not stick to the SJ medical model got a 7-day ban for not toeing the party line re: racism in their Zimmerman thread. As usual, ceepolk wins the thread by complaining/whining that other mods don't have her back by banning Marsha before she got around to seeing the need. Fortunately for her, all the other mods immediately jump up and do what she wants, imposing the temp ban and then apologizing to ceepolk for not having done it earlier.
Marsha joined on June 21, 2013, so she almost made it a month before her temporary banning. Frankly, I'm surprised.
I have pretty much the same attitude towards smokers, by the way.
As a smoker, I agree with your post. It's my fault and my fault only that I have this habit/addiction and as much as I want to blame advertising ( or something ) for my taking up this habit, deep down I know that the decision to smoke is/was mine, and only mine, to make.
Hummm...the law says I can't smoke in restaurants, outdoor patios, less than 10 feet from a doorway or air intake and may soon prohibit me from smoking in parks. Can I claim that being a smoker is an axis I'm oppressed on ?
Nice to see they're applying their usual levels of skepticism over there.
1- "It's clearly a race issue and it's a disgrace!"
2- "I see no evidence of that."
Mods - "How dare you ask for evidence, you racist. Banned."
That place is safe from what, exactly???
That place is safe from what, exactly???
They actually put in a mod-box in the Zimmerman thread with their usual discussion shut-down explanation that A+ is not a 101-level space and adding that discussion on whether it was racist is unacceptable and won't be allowed. I can't fathom why you even have a discussion forum if discussion is not permitted.
Does being obese counter my white heterosexual male privilege? I always struggle with privilege math. It probably only applies when white heterosexual males are fatsplaining to me.
It doesn't "counter" anything, but is is an area where a lot of people face marginalization. I wouldn't be surprised if you encountered things like people making unjustified negative assumptions about you or criticizing you without justification.
What I've seen a lot of people not get in this discussion is that the problem is not with generic public health advice like saying it's good for people to eat a reasonable amount of healthy food or engage in an appropriate amount of exercise, the problem comes when people express vitriol towards people based on weight.