Can we just call the SJW movement what it is? A campaign to eliminate white, straight males -- particularly their right to have sex?
Tweet by misogynist gamester Mark Kern
SJW. Social Justice Warrior, according to Roosh, who is prone to hysterics:
Social justice warriors believe in an extreme left-wing ideology that combines feminism, progressivism, and political correctness into a totalitarian system that attempts to censor speech and promote fringe lifestyles while actively discriminating against men, particularly white men. They are the internet activist arm of Western progressivism that acts as a vigilante group to ensure compliance and homogeny of far left thought.
I could be a
Social Justice Warrior. Ixnay on the political correctness, totalitarianism, censorship, homogeneousness, compliance stuff though. I might on occasion pull off some vigilante stuff and I would definitely have to be classified as fringe.
How can you be both homogeneous and fringe at the same time, though? That's kind of a stupid contradiction.
But, on the right to have sex, particularly what looks like the belief of straight, white men that they have an absolute right to have sex with whomever whenever they please -- below:
Alas, one must address Gamestergate:
Since the campaign was launched by a young software developer who published a 9,000 word blog post smearing his ex-girlfriend—a post which led to a mob of harassment and accusations that she had slept with a games journalist for favorable reviews of her game (she hadn’t)—most people, including Wikipedia and almost all media outlets, are not sympathetic to the “actually it’s about ethics” framing.
That camp, composed largely of people who spend their time posting on niche forums, like Reddit’s KotakuInAction, chose a telling group to represent them at SPJ’s afternoon panel: Christina Hoff-Sommers, an author and scholar at the American Enterprise Institute who’s critical of modern feminism; Milo Yiannopolous, a writer at Breitbart with a history of unflattering comments about gamers and a poor record of journalistic ethics, who most recently accused Black Lives Matter activist Shaun King of lying about his race to get a scholarship (he wasn't); and Cathy Young, a contributing editor at the libertarian magazine, Reason.
Wow! You talk about your lies and insinuations!
Lies. Insinuations. Rights.
Absolute rights if you are a white, straight man.
It boggles.
It also evokes memories of the straight, white male backlash against the Social Purity Movement in the UK in the 19th century when straight, white men got hysterical about losing their absolute right to have sex with underage females and women who had been coerced into prostitution because of economic inequality.