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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 13, 2023

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I want to identify and discuss a stealth-CW trick that I find particularly irritating: the use of (predominately left-leaning) CW positions used as examples in some other piece of work. I mostly notice this in technical articles: you might be reading an article about writing a program that prints to the console, and the example code will say something like:


print 'Eat the rich'  # or some other lefty slogan

I find this quite insidious: it normalizes left viewpoints in a way that's hard to argue against. If you try to say anything, you risk being accused of derailing the discussion with irrelevant politics or otherwise being a Bad Person who violates the norms of a forum. Has anyone seen any examples of this and/or successful arguments deployed against it?

This looks like an inversion of complaints leftists make about benign looking statements which normalise cis/heteronormative/patriarchal/religious/reactionary worldviews etc.

It is very easy to make people look ridiculous when they make complaints about this stuff, and yet they win eventually. Each time it happens supporters and detractors will come out of the woodwork and just shout at each other unproductively, so I'm guessing that the value is more in testing the waters and counting allies, like raising a flag, and then using this info to guide moderator decisions.

So It doesn't look to me like there's anything productive to gain from fighting here, the battles that determine the outcome of these battles are elsewhere.

Good observation, and adds another layer to the fork. If you complain about this behavior, not only are you derailing the main conversation, but you end up accepting the leftist frame of "microaggressions matter". And for many people "my rules > your rules applied fairly > your rules applied unfairly" is not a convincing argument.