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One of the most evil "woke" doctrines

I wrote a year ago about the show South Park and how it's strange how the creators are completely irreverent towards almost every single sociopolitical and religious ideology and are clearly not afraid of the backlash and being called names... with one quite prominent exception, which has been quite clearly over the entire history of the series: They quite clearly appear to be morbidly afraid of being deemed racists. They don't care if they are deemed homophobes, transphobes, islamophobes, or whatever, but one accusation is quite clearly off limits: Racists.

They are, in fact, apparently so afraid of that label that in that particular regard they are outright far-lefist "woke" to the extreme, embracing the entire far-leftist ideology and doctrine on that particular subject.

Perhaps the epitome of this, the culmination, the moment when they fully revealed and declared themselves to be 100% extreme far-leftists when it comes to race, was an episode where Stan's father uses the "n-word" in a TV show (where the correct answer would have actually been "naggers"), and the rest of the episode is pretty much dedicated to Stan trying to make amends and understand why Token is so immensely hurt by it.

What makes it particularly obnoxious is that in the show, said character is the son of a rich family who has always lived a privileged wealthy life, and it has never been shown or even implied in any way, shape or form that he has ever experienced or seen any discrimination or prejudice, or anything that would explain why he feels so hurt. And he doesn't even try to explain it.

The end of the episode is some of the absolute cringiest I have ever seen in any piece of fiction: Stan declares to Token almost with joy having had a great epiphany: Finally he understands that he doesn't understand, and will never understand, what Token is going through and is feeling. He doesn't need to be explained it, and he does not need to understand it, and he outright cannot understand it. At last, Token smiles.

This is, of course, not something that the show creators invented. It just parrots one of the core ideologies of the American far-leftist activist academia that has existed for decades.

It's astonishing how utterly, horrendously evil that ideology is. It's inhumane. And it's deeply, deeply racist. It's very much on par with, and in some ways even worse than the archetypal racist ideology that bona fide white supremacists believe (ie. that white people are somehow genetically superior, black people are genetically inferior, and thus white people are above black people, an elite class, superior, and black people have no hope of ever reaching that level because they are genetically flawed.)

What the concept distilled by that South Park episode is saying is this:

"You, as a black person, are disadvantaged, oppressed and hurt, and will always be. You have deep wounds that can never heal, will never heal, and will exist forever, and that makes you inferior in society. It doesn't matter who you are or what your background is, you are still the victim of oppression, and any reminder of this fact is like a stab wound.

It doesn't matter if you are one of the richest people in the country, grown up in a rich family in the richest part of the country, lived an absolutely privileged life where you have not seen a single day of hardship, and have never experienced even a single instance of oppression, discrimination or prejudice, that doesn't make one iota of a difference: You are still oppressed, you are still a victim, you are still marginalized, you are still inferior in this society, you are still carrying the deep wound of the past, a wound that will never heal, a wound that you are cursed to carry for the entirety of your life.

And the thing is, you don't even need to understand nor explain why. You don't need to understand nor explain how this works, or where it's coming from, or why you are a victim, or even what you are a victim of. A sign of oppression, like someone using an offensive word, even if it isn't targeted at you (or at anybody for that matter) is deeply hurtful, and you don't need to understand nor explain why. It is a matter of fact, a law of nature, and it just exists and doesn't require an explanation or understanding. You are a perpetual victim, and you don't need to explain yourself.

In fact, this is so unique to black people that white people are physically incapable of understanding it. You don't need to explain it to them because they cannot understand it. They are genetically incapable of understanding it, so even an attempt at an explanation is completely futile. The best white person is the one who has come to the realization that he cannot understand it, and stops asking, and simply accepts it without question, without scrutiny, without skepticism, without requiring any explanations or rationale."

This ideology is so utterly evil because it's designed to keep black people mentally enslaved, to keep them "prisoners" of the victimhood status that the woke academia has invented for them. To keep them subjugated to the holy victim status, which they can never escape, never get out of. Perpetual victimhood, without even the need of understanding why or how it works. The ideology is essentially saying to black people: "You are the victim of oppression, and you will always be a victim of oppression, and you cannot escape it. You are trapped there forever, and there's nothing you can do about it. You can only learn to accept that status."

Black people who accept this notion are indeed oppressed. By the notion itself! It keeps them down, it keeps them in a perpetual mental prison that they cannot escape. It indoctrinates them into being perpetual victims, perpetually condemned to accepting their inferior status in society, and blaming others for it.

This ideology is so astonishingly evil that it's beyond belief. At least white supremacists generally can't convince black people of their alleged inferiority. The far-leftist activist academia can.

It's appalling that the creators of South Park subscribe to this. 

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