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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 2, 2023

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It's because companies are (de facto) legally required to fire racists, but they're not required to fire Marxists. In fact, firing a Marxist for merely being Marxist would be illegal in California.

California has a state law against firing people for their political beliefs, but it didn't protect James Damore, who was fired in compliance with the law against creating a hostile work environment for protected groups.

It all adds up.

This is actually a good example for why Hanania's case is overstated. Civil Rights law doesn't explain the behavior of Jews in enshrining their war-era mythos as the most important event in world history. You should read Kevin MacDonald's Culture of Critique to appreciate that these laws and social collective consciousnesses are also themselves downstream of the latent tendencies of people and not just laws that exogenously drop from the ether.

I of course agree that culture is influenced by politics, with Civil Rights law being a good example, but to say that public perception of fascism compared to communism is due to California state law is an example of Hanania's case failing to generalize to extremely important cultural movements that are the wellspring of what we now call "woke" ideology.