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He's legitimately the only person who understands how to defeat wokeness. His career being terminated would be sad for him, but not an absolute disaster for the movement, so long as someone with a cleaner history is able to pick up his talking points and run with them.
But I fear that that won't happen. We've gone decades without mass opposition to Griggs or the other excesses of the Civil Rights Act forming. It could take decades for another influential figure like Hanania to pick up the torch. (Yes, I know about Caldwell, but he never reached the popularity of Hanania.)
He believes wokeness is downstream from the civil rights act.
Seems plausible, though I haven't seen comparisons of legislation vs wokeness in other similar Anglo countries like Canada and Australia who have frequent first nations prayers before government meetings.
Or better yet - other entirely different non-Anglo countries, where they had BLM protests with scarcely any black people living there, chant about punching TERFS, etc...
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If only they were only before government meetings...
We also have e.g. a Racial Discrimination Act. I'm sceptical about the impact of legislation on culture, but the legislation exists.
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He talks about how wokeness is in large part the result of government policy and Supreme Court decisions, and how we can fight to overturn these.
To my knowledge, Caldwell is the only other one, but he never got as popular.
And this is precisely why I'm at a loss as to why he ever got popular. The same people telling me that politics is downstream from culture, who go on at length how the Constitution can't protect your rights because it will just get reinterpreted to take them away from you, who go as far to say the rule of law is a sham, etc., fell in love with the guy who thinks wokeness is baked into the Civil Rights Act and a handful of SC decisions...
Because he's deradicalizing us and giving us hope for a way out.
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