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Notes -
On Substack, someone shared a clip where Charlie Kirk is on a campus and a person approaches him asking him in a rather hostile tone of voice why he's there, and claims that his presence on the campus constitutes "emotional violence".
People often point out when woke people use hyperbolic framings like this, in order to mock them for their perceived emotional fragility: "poor little snowflake, you think words are violence, boo hoo!" I don't think that at all. After all, if you've collapsed the distinction between words and violence (never mind words: if you've declared that a person being physically present on a location without opening his mouth can be an act of "violence"), it logically implies that you are entitled to respond with violence. They've reinvented the concept of fighting words using the idiom of therapy-speak. This is a particularly frightening component of the woke worldview which, in my view, does not get nearly enough attention.
All of this is doubly ironic, of course, because woke people for the most part ridicule the idea of needing a firearm for home defense and mock conservatives who think they're entitled to shoot anyone who trespasses on their property.
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