SunnySara
New Member
It seems like a lot of hard line leftists that I've seen on these forums characterize western politics as indistinguishable from imperialism, fascism and maintained by an unbroken socio-sexual circuit that can only be described as "the patriarchy".
Okay, fair enough. It's a sector of perspective, which I respect and I can certainly see the parallels between these ideas and the way modern western democracy operates. But I've noticed over the last ten years that this line of thinking tends to be associated with idealism and a passionate irrationality that spills over into an individual's belief that their ideas are perfectly reasonable and that the status quo needs to be changed for its own good.
Okay, fair enough again. But considering the logistics of combatting something like "patriarchy" (which seems eerily similar to combatting terrorism - waging war on an ideology), I just don't see it. People seem to be banging on about how divided everyone is now but I think our lifestyles over the last 50 decades have been so sedentary that there will never be a strong enough movement to revolutionize the west into something that is supposedly better.
I agree that 1st world luxury is at the expense of the 3rd world, but who really cares?
I just want to enjoy life and take advantage of the opportunities it provides me.
I see no evidence for any universal social justice, so why bother?
Social justice, to me, is becoming more and more disconnected from basic human nature and, in fact, more of a manifestation of deeper psychological issues (physically ugly, uneducated, abused, whatever); the great dramatic irony is that, passionate allegiance to social justice in the west seems to come from a mentality that totally removes personal accountability and allows the individual to living in a bubble where all their distress is caused by literally the entire world around them.
Okay, fair enough. It's a sector of perspective, which I respect and I can certainly see the parallels between these ideas and the way modern western democracy operates. But I've noticed over the last ten years that this line of thinking tends to be associated with idealism and a passionate irrationality that spills over into an individual's belief that their ideas are perfectly reasonable and that the status quo needs to be changed for its own good.
Okay, fair enough again. But considering the logistics of combatting something like "patriarchy" (which seems eerily similar to combatting terrorism - waging war on an ideology), I just don't see it. People seem to be banging on about how divided everyone is now but I think our lifestyles over the last 50 decades have been so sedentary that there will never be a strong enough movement to revolutionize the west into something that is supposedly better.
I agree that 1st world luxury is at the expense of the 3rd world, but who really cares?
I just want to enjoy life and take advantage of the opportunities it provides me.
I see no evidence for any universal social justice, so why bother?
Social justice, to me, is becoming more and more disconnected from basic human nature and, in fact, more of a manifestation of deeper psychological issues (physically ugly, uneducated, abused, whatever); the great dramatic irony is that, passionate allegiance to social justice in the west seems to come from a mentality that totally removes personal accountability and allows the individual to living in a bubble where all their distress is caused by literally the entire world around them.