Intersectionality Leads To Ignoring Anti-Semitism. Here's Why.

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
Herein lies the problem for those in the Jewish community who embrace intersectionality: the very tenets of intersectionality tend toward downplaying and pooh-poohing anti-Semitism. That’s because intersectionality posits that all inequality is the result of power hierarchies reflecting differential privilege of group identities. If one group is more powerful than another in some way, that’s because the group has benefitted from a power hierarchy. The intersectional coalition is directed at destroying the hierarchy, which is presumed to be based on maintenance of white, male, straight power.

But this sort of thinking – attempting to explain all inequality by reference to the hidden workings of a nefariously powerful group – tends to cross over with anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitism is based around the assumption that a powerful cabal of Jews stand behind world events: they’re the communists and the capitalists, the nationalists and the internationalists, the globalists and the sectarians.

In areas where Jews are successful, then, anti-Semitism and intersectional theory often merge. Many Jews have white skin; many Jews are highly educated and wealthy; the state of Israel is disproportionately powerful. This means that in the intersectional hierarchy, Jews stand near the top when it comes to privilege. And this means that anti-Semitism is only objectionable when expressed by white supremacists – by members of a group even more privileged than the Jews. When anti-Semitism is expressed by others in the intersectional hierarchy, however, that’s not anti-Semitism at all: it’s just a normal form of intersectional thinking.


https://www.dailywire.com/news/38455/intersectionality-leads-ignoring-anti-semitism-ben-shapiro
 
Last edited:
Top