The White Liberal Paradox: Kurtis Conner, Kuncan Dastner & Racial Commentary

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  • Опубликовано: 14 май 2024
  • At least on a bi-annual basis, a (white) influencer’s old Tweets or, in this case, an old image resurfaces online that showcases some past bigoted behaviors. When this occurs, commentary/ video essay channels push out videos discussing the event , condemning it (depending on what side on RUclips you’re on) and critiquing the apology. Notably, most of the commentary geared at condemnation is led by other white influencers-and while this is not inherently an issue for me, I believe there are so many things that go unsaid. When we’re talking about these sorts of bigoted acts-things that have been normalized in our cultures-there is much more to contend with than just that one influencer themselves.
    Long-time friend of Kurtis Conner, Dean Hebscher has recently come under fire (again) due to a 2014 photo featuring himself in a wildly inappropriate and derogatory costume being unearthed. Many fans of Kurtis began to question his integrity for keeping a friend who seems to have some problematic tendencies. In response to this, commentator Kuncan Dastner (Duncan) created a video analyzing the connection between friends, personal responsibility and integrity.
    In this video, we will utilize Duncan’s video as a way to explore some of my issues with how situations like this are often addressed. Join the conversation, and enjoy!
    Other Required Readings:
    Nickisnotgreen’s Response to the SuperMega Controversy is…Interesting • Nickisnotgreen’s Respo...
    Colleen Ballinger: When the Mask Slips • Colleen Ballinger: Whe...
    Patience Xina: Moderatism as a Disguise for Conservatism? • Patience Xina: Moderat...
    Noah Samsen, Patience Xina & The Little Mermaid Debacle • Noah Samsen, Patience ...
    Unpacking iDubbbz's Apology • Unpacking iDubbbz's Ap...
    Have video ideas or suggestions? Email me! unpoeticjusticecontact@gmail.com
    Information regarding the discrimination of Romani people
    www.errc.org/roma-rights-journ...
    Please check the sources document below for all materials mentioned in the video
    docs.google.com/document/d/1V...
    Video Chapters
    0:00 Introduction
    2:48 Individualized Racism v Cultural Racism
    11:51 Marginalized People’s “Silence”
    28:06 Assuming Responsibility
    34:05 White Liberal Paradox
    35:58 Conclusion
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Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @UnpoeticJustice
    @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +4812

    Hey guys! In this video, I reference the term "g*psy" when discussing a trend centered on the appropriation of Romani culture in the United States. You guys have been absolutely wonderful with this correction: this term is considered a slur. My initial understanding was that it's considered derogatory when used towards or against a Romani person, but you guys have emailed me additional articles and op-eds surrounding the discussion of the term in and of itself. My apologies towards Romani people and anyone who may have been offended. Thank you guys for keeping me honest and correcting my ignorance. It's always appreciated.
    It's kind of ironic because it goes to the core of this video: we are all ignorant to something, and the people graciously expanding our limited understandings is how we achieve change and growth.

    • @CreativeC13
      @CreativeC13 5 месяцев назад +190

      I feel like opions on that term are always so conflicting. I've met so many people irl who are fine with it/use it self referentially.

    • @deadlymelody27
      @deadlymelody27 5 месяцев назад +83

      ​@CreativeC13 yes in the UK its used, along with traveller, depending if its romani or irish travellers. So its a bit confusing. Also our country as a whole looks down on irish travellers specifically and it all seems to get mixed in together with a lot of hate and prejudice against them here.

    • @notyourdaughter666
      @notyourdaughter666 5 месяцев назад +161

      this is how you do an apology. not berating yourself and making yourself victim, not doubling down. just a nice respectful apology where you adresses what you learned instead.

    • @Cjiscj777
      @Cjiscj777 5 месяцев назад +48

      Speaking on the majority, We're a resilient people and words do not bother us usually. There are a lot of people claiming to be Romani now because of white guilt. LOL! Many of us are pale so, I don't understand that. It's how we are treated, that can be a problem. Should someone scream "gypsy scum" at me, I keep walking, as they are clearly suffering and need help. The more we react negatively to the word, the more people use it against us.

    • @minniemin1324
      @minniemin1324 5 месяцев назад +19

      😂😂😂 this isn't kindergarten. I have more problems in life than worrying about a "slur" said from a random person who I don't know and will never care to know

  • @ARareAndDifferentTune_13
    @ARareAndDifferentTune_13 5 месяцев назад +8068

    That woman using a really gross slur for Chinese people while talking about not being offended by Jenna’s video was WILD

    • @cacography
      @cacography 5 месяцев назад +870

      yeah, gosh. she just blurted that out so casually.

    • @iibifuro
      @iibifuro 5 месяцев назад +205

      I gagged!!!!

    • @hanacinnabun
      @hanacinnabun 5 месяцев назад +178

      i suppose she could be ignorant to the power of that word? but yeah, it WAS shocking for sure
      Edited (for context):
      First of all, I am East Asian myself.
      Secondly, I am not saying it was acceptable, an excuse, or that she shouldn’t be held accountable - just that ignorance could be why she felt so comfortable throwing that word around.
      Acknowledging ignorance doesn’t mean we are justifying it or normalizing it. We are just humanizing it, and acknowledging that individuals shouldn’t be shunned for life if they make a genuinely ignorant mistake. *(*The premise of this video*)*
      That doesn’t mean they are absolved of responsibility, just that we shouldn’t dehumanize, and hate that person for the rest of their lives because they didn’t know better.
      I understand the odds that she probably knew the power of the word she was using, but on the off chance she didn’t - THAT’s what my comment was meant to point out.

    • @squirrelsinmykoolaid
      @squirrelsinmykoolaid 5 месяцев назад +526

      ​@@hanacinnabunNah she should know better. Idk where she grew up but from my experience growing up mainly around Black folks in the states (as one myself) we didnt go around casually referring to Asians as that slur.
      There is anti-Asian bigotry of course but the worst stuff I heard was mistaking every east asian person for "Chinese", not throwing around racial slurs like they are legit ethnicity labels. 😫

    • @sour_dough_bread
      @sour_dough_bread 5 месяцев назад +201

      @@hanacinnabunwow. even if she was ignorant to the nature of the word, you wouldnt be offering someone saying the n-word the same grace. pretty telling how society couldn’t care less about Asian people.

  • @joeq3838
    @joeq3838 5 месяцев назад +5722

    I’m white and non-American (I’m not even a native English-speaker), so please correct if I’m wrong, but isn’t Duncan’s mindset of “I’ve done nothing wrong, my parents raised me right” extremely dangerous? Because no matter how good your values are, we live in a society. I know I’ve always been careful, but I know I’ve said hurtful things because I wasn’t aware they were hurtful and course corrected. And I’ve called out people on things they never thought were offensive, and they course corrected. And I’m always trying to keep me on check. Duncan’s narrative that he’s perfect and has never failed, makes me think he’s convinced he can do no wrong (which usually means they will do it).

    • @TheMakotta
      @TheMakotta 5 месяцев назад +688

      It is ! When he said he'd never done anything wrong in his life that would lead him to be canceled, I didn't believe him. When someone says that, it's almost impossible that they're right... Everyone was once young and stupid. And I get the impression that he's taking the liberty of talking about a subject he feels superior to because he's "never done anything wrong". I consider my parents to have raised me well, but they have their faults. My father is homophobic and borderline racist, but that wasn't wrong to me because nobody blamed him and he was suppose to be a "perfect" human to lil me. I grew up repeating words that I didn't understand and that most likely hurt people's feelings. Now I'm 24 and I understand the impact of my mistakes. If I follow Duncan's logic, well... that makes me a bad person and I should stay in the shadows forever. Wtf o.o How are people supposed to grow up if they don't get a "second chance"? His video is so odd..

    • @samkadel8185
      @samkadel8185 5 месяцев назад +603

      Yeah he is also implying that if you were raised by shitty people, you can never grow past it. His take on that feels really classist. Like, if your early education was bad, you don't *deserve* to grow and must always be subservient to those who are better than you.

    • @SpiritBox01
      @SpiritBox01 5 месяцев назад +144

      This is a good observation. I don't want to be like "this is the perfect look at it from a white perspective" but this is really quite the good, constructive look at it. It's an internalizing of these structures and believing he on his own can make a change. Which is unrealistic because it's systematic. In essence it's an element of the white saviour belief, and him having that could greatly harm any proper acknowledgement of his own wrongdoings before or even to come

    • @AM-tl1xi
      @AM-tl1xi 5 месяцев назад +126

      Non English native speaker and also white here!
      My parents were leftists (well my mom is, my father was a mystery, guy sure enjoyed his conspiracy theories) but they were not perfect (glad he was absent so I’m not wearing a tinfoil hat rn). My mom taught me about the importance of democracy and women’s rights and I’ve taught her to be more intersectional.
      All I kept thinking was “you’ve done nothing wrong YET”. Because things change and especially online very quickly so what once was considered “right” can be dug up a few years later and be used as criticism.

    • @hheeaavvyygguuttss2038
      @hheeaavvyygguuttss2038 5 месяцев назад +178

      Yeah that was very bad argument. Even if your parents raised you “right” we ALL have blind spots and harm is inevitable. It’s such a stagnant mindset.

  • @blackfrost9011
    @blackfrost9011 5 месяцев назад +5742

    Kuncan really said “I have thoroughly investigated myself and concluded that I have never done anything offensive.”

    • @danic2514
      @danic2514 5 месяцев назад +310

      And we should believe him because? 💀💀💀

    • @nas5276
      @nas5276 5 месяцев назад

      That’s the point of these white liberal “saviors”

    • @keira-fleur
      @keira-fleur 5 месяцев назад

      right. white people usually don't realize when they've offended or hurt people of marginalized groups bc of their own privilege. just bc he never did blackface or said any slurs doesn't mean that there's absolutely no one he's ever hurt in his whole damn life

    • @shokre312
      @shokre312 5 месяцев назад +406

      I've only had exposure to Dean and Kurtis before this video and I've never been a huge fan of Dean whatsoever, but I think I am more offended by this boy's self aggrandized ego. The unsubstantiated moral high horse is so ick 🤢

    • @mcbby7
      @mcbby7 5 месяцев назад +367

      When I watched Duncan's video, I kept waiting for him to use a qualifier like "I've never offended anyone (on a large, public scale)" or "I've never done anything wrong (and had photo/text evidence survive)" but no, he really just said he's never offended anyone or done anything wrong

  • @Cryptidmama424
    @Cryptidmama424 5 месяцев назад +605

    That woman not even flinching while casually using c***k to refer to Asian people is…. Wow. That gave me a double take

    • @idontknow898
      @idontknow898 3 месяца назад +40

      RIGHT?? Like I had to rewind, that caught me totally off guard oml

    • @atmmachine11
      @atmmachine11 3 месяца назад

      Its a very common double standard I see with Americans. Oppressed groups oppressing other oppressed groups and thinking its okay.

    • @aubreyirene4059
      @aubreyirene4059 8 дней назад +6

      No literally... I was like??? Also her saying "black face was not a thing back then". UHHH yes it was cause people did and it's in textbooks.

  • @gilly_axolotl
    @gilly_axolotl 5 месяцев назад +5617

    Holy shit i cant even take that clip of dean apologizing seriously 😂. I felt like my man was struggling to even conceptualize what he was apologizing for

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +1044

      😭 He does seem confused lmaoo

    • @ember9361
      @ember9361 5 месяцев назад +464

      he's made a severe
      and continuous
      lapse in his judgment (

    • @tgpsao
      @tgpsao 5 месяцев назад +161

      I was only listening when the clip played so I deadass thought it was satire until I looked at the screen and dropped my jaw 😂

    • @f0nk3m0n
      @f0nk3m0n 5 месяцев назад +28

      Its so uncomfortable 😫😫

    • @em-qd7wp
      @em-qd7wp 5 месяцев назад +31

      @@ember9361 right like that's not what lapse means? also why do influencers always say that when it has not landed once

  • @kiatorrette5631
    @kiatorrette5631 5 месяцев назад +3687

    "We can _pretend_ that we're equals legally, but culturally....you know where you belong"
    I appreciate this line. Cause folks looove to act like the entire legal system has panned out to be fair to everyone
    "I'm sick of black people always complaining about civil rights as if we aren't experiencing the BEST era of equality ever"
    As if........most of the people in the prison system aren't black folks 😑

    • @pinkimietz3243
      @pinkimietz3243 5 месяцев назад +91

      And all of them are poor.

    • @dani4157
      @dani4157 5 месяцев назад

      But more of the crime in America is statistically caused by black people so wouldn't it make sense that prisons are filled with them? Or does American prisons need to hit a diversity quota?

    • @leavemeal0ne378
      @leavemeal0ne378 5 месяцев назад +56

      ​@@NotVille_are you demented

    • @chickpea
      @chickpea 5 месяцев назад

      it's a bot @@leavemeal0ne378

    • @queendee8809
      @queendee8809 5 месяцев назад +85

      @@leavemeal0ne378is a bot, ignore it lol

  • @chunkyboiii3747
    @chunkyboiii3747 4 месяца назад +1489

    I'm Indian and my sister who's an English major has so many instances in class where all the white people will look at her as if she's an authority on black media because she's usually the only colored person in her classes. She told me about this time when they were reading HP Lovecraft and pretty much everyone in class was SUPER vocal about how they found his racism offensive and how they were morally against him and all that. And my sister, who loves HP Lovecraft's work, was super confused because she's like "Hey, most writers that are universally loved were pretty racist. Like Shakespeare and Charles Dickens and stuff, so why is this one different?" And everyone got really quiet and changed the subject. This happens to her on average like 3 times a week.

    • @solarprogeny6736
      @solarprogeny6736 4 месяца назад +81

      Lovecraft's work has enjoyed a pretty big following on the internet and is often cited as a source of inspiration for movies and video games. I think he's much more of a pop culture icon for a lot of people than Shakespeare or Dickens. So that might be why the white kids were acting so outraged by him specifically, it's because his work has pervaded mainstream, contemporary media that they enjoy in a way that Shakespeare and Dickens don't anymore

    • @drewpeacock9087
      @drewpeacock9087 4 месяца назад +47

      ​@solarprogeny6736 Shakespeare still influences modern media far more, it's just less directly/further down the line. But yeah Lovecraft is definitely directly referenced as an inspiration more.

    • @adamhaggstrom7598
      @adamhaggstrom7598 4 месяца назад +6

      The number one academic scholar of Lovecraft happens to be Indian

    • @UrsusCanis
      @UrsusCanis 3 месяца назад

      Well, a huge amount of Lovecraft's work is euphemistic in nature for uh, 🤡the horrors of race-mixing🤡 So, that's why.

    • @ami2474
      @ami2474 3 месяца назад +90

      HP Lovecraft's application to his local chapter of the KKK was denied because he was so terrible that he'd make them look bad. He didn't think of colored people as human. It's not comparable to other writers who were racist simply because of their surroundings. Lovecraft was a good writer but, damn, he was racist

  • @tgpsao
    @tgpsao 5 месяцев назад +5909

    You pointing out the use of “they” during apologies intended for white audiences was gold!!! I always knew something rubbed me the wrong way about that phrasing you absolutely nailed it 💅🏼✨🫡

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +903

      I don't understand why people like Dean don't catch things like that at least while their editing 😭 Like, at least address the apology to the people who were used as the butt of your "joke"

    • @kalisederoche
      @kalisederoche 5 месяцев назад +138

      wow this is such a great point. implicit bias

    • @talonhammer
      @talonhammer 5 месяцев назад +167

      In addition to not framing the apology towards the harmed party (Black people) the use of they ALSO seems to 'other' himself from that party, imo. It's a two-fer. I might not have picked up on this without the note!

    • @saranaila5905
      @saranaila5905 5 месяцев назад +19

      I thought that was one of her weaker arguments. And I agree with a lot.

    • @joelleweetjewel9948
      @joelleweetjewel9948 5 месяцев назад +107

      I feel like within the context of what he said, "they" made sense tho? If he said "black people are not costumes, _you_ are not characters" it'd be a lot stranger, right?

  • @booksvsmovies
    @booksvsmovies 5 месяцев назад +5844

    I'm so glad I'm not the only one who found elements of Duncan's video very strange. His whole section about people with racist past should never have public lives just didn't feel rooted in any meaningful analysis of harm. Trust me I'm not caping for white people who had a racist phase in high school but I mean we live in a world where people literally convicted of hate crimes are movie stars. To act as if every former edgy white boy shouldn't make youtube videos feels kinda absurd.

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +1129

      Hard agree ❤️ We can't fight intolerance with intolerance

    • @handsoaphandsoap
      @handsoaphandsoap 5 месяцев назад +780

      It feels very holier than thou. “I would never have done the racist thing so he should’ve also known not to do the racist thing and therefore he shouldn’t have a public platform”. Not all people are born into the same environment where you have immediate access to progressive ideas. Speaking from my own experience, I live in a fairly progressive country politically speaking and when I was younger I didn’t know any better than that we had it all figured out. But as I grew up I realized how little I knew about how racism manifests in the world because while we’re progressive, we’re also overwhelmingly white. There weren’t enough voices speaking out about the blatant racism present in our society and those that were there were drowned out by an ocean of white liberalism. So I wouldn’t be surprised if I partook in racist action in my past that I simply wasn’t made aware of.

    • @booksvsmovies
      @booksvsmovies 5 месяцев назад +440

      @@handsoaphandsoap 100% it's this weird purity testing bullshit that at the end of the day doesn't actually address racism. Ultimately I care more about how people move in the world right now than the stuff they did in the past.

    • @Bkgiest
      @Bkgiest 5 месяцев назад +129

      I'm black and unoffemded😂😂 no seriously tho a guy like this Duncan guy is an over correction, but this is rare. Edgelords being sliced by their own edginess seems to happen once a week. My question is since they've shown their ass, what have they done to show growth? Often there's nothing tangible to show.

    • @Kendallhess
      @Kendallhess 5 месяцев назад +69

      I thought I was the only one!! LOL It's so important to call out people while leaving them room to grow and learn from their mistakes!:)

  • @Idkelk132
    @Idkelk132 5 месяцев назад +1836

    This type of moral absolutism reminds me of how ppl on TikTok are saying if your family members have problematic opinions you should cut contact immediately and if you don’t you’re bigoted and wrong… no matter who they are or how bad their opinions are

    • @nomoretwitterhandles
      @nomoretwitterhandles 4 месяца назад +274

      This exactly. The idea that you can't even trust the people you love to change is like saying nobody is capable of change. Absurd as hell....

    • @elliott614
      @elliott614 4 месяца назад +58

      Some people on the internet are saying something absurd?😮

    • @elliott614
      @elliott614 4 месяца назад +84

      Perpetually online people are not most people

    • @Rikken552
      @Rikken552 4 месяца назад +26

      Sounds genuinely cultish

    • @djon3043
      @djon3043 4 месяца назад

      Yeah, this is a legitimate cult/abuser tactic. Isolate people from any outside voices that don’t conform with the cult or abusers ideology.
      It’s also just gross when the left pretends like we’re the only side sitting on all the facts. We are also going to have our own biases and the only way to realize them is by speaking with people who disagree with us. Full stop. There is no other way.

  • @bobanoda
    @bobanoda 4 месяца назад +612

    Toxic Jenna fans who say she did absolutely nothing wrong ironically dismiss all the growth she went through over the years. I genuinely believe (as someone who watched her since I was in middle school) that she actually changed, which is something that a lot of “cancelled” RUclipsrs haven’t done. She deserves the critique and she deserves to have had the opportunity to change, which she did. I hope I worded this as well as I needed to. Really appreciate your insight on this! A lot of people on the internet seem to be allergic to nuance 😭 edit: okay what the flip is duncan going on about rn 😭😭😭 “I don’t go to parties i am not racist I am a perfect white boy”

    • @bluezoomc
      @bluezoomc 3 месяца назад +31

      Totally agree about Jenna. I think she’s a great example of what it actually means to learn. She also demonstrated her learning in the video, not hiding from what she did but instead showing it and why it was wrong

    • @squimo40
      @squimo40 27 дней назад +11

      Yeah, I don’t really like the narrative that “she was FORCED to apologize because of CANCEL CULTURE,” basically painting her as a victim with no agency. People trying to defend her in that way end up shooting themselves in the foot because it takes away the fact that she actually CHOSE to make the apology. I’m east asian (idk if that means anything lol, I know I can’t speak for everyone) and I felt like Jenna’s apology was one of the few actually genuine ones on youtube.

  • @13821080
    @13821080 5 месяцев назад +2969

    In Duncan’s video it almost felt like he seemed more upset that Dean was choosing to be in the public eye despite his racists past than he was upset at the racist acts themselves

    • @cbnz2929
      @cbnz2929 5 месяцев назад +172

      Yeeee, I smell a sense of guilt in Duncan somewhere lol

    • @Molly-iw1rc
      @Molly-iw1rc 5 месяцев назад +12

      This comment fr

    • @apathybronson
      @apathybronson 5 месяцев назад

      He's not mad the guy was racist he's mad the guy gives another bad name to white men

    • @JeanPaulBeaubier
      @JeanPaulBeaubier 5 месяцев назад +222

      It seems like some sort of weird jealousy thing/he's mad he's not getting rewarded for doing the bare minimum... Like he's mad that they're both creators and he's been working hard to be not racist or something, when it turns out you can be racist and also still be a creator.

    • @cbnz2929
      @cbnz2929 5 месяцев назад +45

      @MrJeanPaulBeaubier totes. Unfortunately all of the comments on that video are in support of him. Maybe because he threatened to block any dissenters lol yikers

  • @SuperNuclearUnicorn
    @SuperNuclearUnicorn 5 месяцев назад +1087

    That clip of the woman reacting to Jenna and going "blackface didn't even exist back then" ("then" being like 2010) cracked me up. Like I'm sorry what? Blackface was just invented because everyone is so sensitive?

    • @lainadelpay
      @lainadelpay 5 месяцев назад +149

      Like racism didn’t exist prior to 2010? I needed her to be fr

    • @haggisa
      @haggisa 5 месяцев назад +92

      She doesn’t seem like the brightest bulb…

    • @Nononostoplooking
      @Nononostoplooking 9 дней назад

      that actually had my eyes popping out of my head 😭 how do you live that blindly yk

  • @Jkdabomb10A
    @Jkdabomb10A 5 месяцев назад +180

    White person here. Thank you for pointing out when Dean says “they” in the apology. I didn’t catch that when I first watched it, and it makes it clear he’s talking to a white audience. It’s an important detail to call out, and for me it’s helpful because I can think about my own implicit biases when I watched the apology the first time. Great video! 💙

  • @KuncanDastner
    @KuncanDastner 5 месяцев назад +2669

    (I usually watch videos discussing myself through my hands with my anxiety amped all the way up, but I was so engrossed in this video I'd already subscribed when I reached the 50% mark and remembered I was about to be brought up involved)
    I can't thank you enough for making this video, this is the criticism I always try and seek out, and I appreciate all the steps you took in dissecting what I said and contextualizing with your broader points! You are absolutely correct in my tone of 'zero exceptions' I took in this video because I was thinking of public figures like Kurtis and Dean relying on those, and you were right to stretch that apart to include interpersonal friendships and helping others grow. I do also see how the entire bit I speak on myself reflecting can come across as extremely self-condemning, I wish I had emphasized the point of it being an exercise I wanted to see more of with creators and friends, and not a "Me Me Me" intermission.
    Short story long - thank you for making these points highlighted to me, and I want to dedicate myself towards unlearning those personal heated emotions I had on display. To Justice - if you want to reach out via social media or even email and discuss these ideas further with me, I am more than willing to listen to more of what you have to say. And for everyone else - even just replying to this comment with advice or suggestions on what I can do better would mean a lot to me, I'm going to do my best to read them all.
    Again- thank you. I'm staying subscribed too, so I can't wait for the next one! - K

    • @viagraREAL
      @viagraREAL 5 месяцев назад +130

      💀

    • @auditoryoddity7060
      @auditoryoddity7060 5 месяцев назад +414

      It's great that you took this video to heart, but maybe the comments of another RUclipsr's video aren't the best place to do your self-reflection and unlearning. Any time I've tried to do my growing/ self-reflecting publicly in real time I've gotten caught up on my own self image more than actually solidifying my understanding of why I needed to unlearn what I did. Maybe that's just a me thing, but just remember actual change is more important than proving right away that you're trying really hard to and will. Best of luck however you proceed.

    • @IzzyKindaFizzy
      @IzzyKindaFizzy 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@auditoryoddity7060⬆️

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +1513

      I don't think many people would seek out content about themselves so that is highly commendable.
      As for your tone, it seems to have positively reached many people (I've seen your comment section, lol). But as we all know, I was personally offput by it. So, sometimes is comes down to a personal choice of keeping a tone that may be authentic to you or attempting to please a critical crowd. I would recommend the former, but clarify your meaning and try to address counter arguments at the same time. If your perspective is "blackface has no nuance", then I would recommend expanding on "why". Your platform captures a totally different audience from mine, so that's why I think it's imperative to keep your tone, just with some caveats. My audience is notably highly cynical and a bit pessimistic, which probably matches my vibes. Yours seems more sentimental, and I think you should 100% retain that.
      Our goals are, inevitably, the same: encourage people to think of things from a different perspective. We have different styles of doing that, and that's okay. But I assume you're good person, your audience knows you're a good person, you never need to tell us, and I do understand that the intent of was self reflection. But the notions of your caring about this subject showed throughout your video. You have nothing to prove because it was already shown. At least to me, and many members of your audience.

    • @ArturGlass.C
      @ArturGlass.C 5 месяцев назад +146

      Definetely agree this is probably not the best place to get advice on this. But as I've seen other comments and it was my thoughts too. I know you said you struggled with mental illness before esp anxiety, do you know if you got OCD as well ?
      Because if you do lots of us with OCD seemed to see your "reflection exercise" as more in more line with intrusive thoughts and ruminations than something that could be productive. Introspection in general is good but the way you described it, if it's recurring I would genuinely advise looking into it and if moral OCD is a thing you can potentially recognize. I know I have it and it tends to associate fear or stress to just having strong opinions on matters concerning racism and systemic issues in general. Which can encourage avoidance of the topics overall or to compulsively pile on or demonstrate with evidence or emotional intensity how strongly I feel about something. It is because I genuinely care but it's also because I feel I need to prove to myself that I care. Which is fine in theory but in a practical sense, that tends to be when mistakes are made cuz anxiety and fear can alter perception and understanding, having good judgement or making sure to consider the bigger picture.
      If that don't apply to you, don't take it, but it's just a thought and could be a lead I guess.
      Other than that maybe just in general make it more clear things are your perspective and opinions and therefore suggestions ? Not really a universal truth/"right take" on things, you're just passionate so you're gonna come accross as passionate. I think that vibe didn't really hit in that video.

  • @Ruenne
    @Ruenne 5 месяцев назад +2444

    i wonder if Duncan would have the same stance of 'if you've ever done something racist, never be a public figure' if it was about someone who's not white? as a taiwanese person, i know first hand how racist asian parents can commonly be (very). is he gonna start cancelling the majority of asian influencers (especially if they're close to their culture and/or born in their home country)? lol

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +1142

      That's the exact point that I want to see people grapple with: all racially marginalized groups have in-group biases, and those biases can sometimes lead to prejudices towards others being formed. Does that mean they should be unable to have a platform? It's such a ridiculous thought to me that is clearly led by the perception that only white people have room to learn and grow

    • @VagabondRetro
      @VagabondRetro 5 месяцев назад +114

      ​@@UnpoeticJusticeI'm white but have grown up in many environments where most people weren't, and I've never understood the mentality that some liberal white people have when dealing with racial and/or caste bigotry from minorities. I grew up in India and our landlords who were otherwise very nice people and not even Hindu's treated the other, lower caste, tenants as stupid, lazy children that were beneath them for no reason other than that was how the society operated when they were children. It just reeks of ignorance and lack of actual interest in fighting prejudice when white liberals have such visceral reactions to white, straight and male bigotry, know all the "right" terminology and ideas around it, but don't have any knowledge of nor any interest in other forms of prejudice whatsoever.

    • @randomusername3873
      @randomusername3873 5 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@VagabondRetroit's called racism

    • @novakitty1619
      @novakitty1619 5 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah it was weird to me that he said that

    • @kittenbouquet
      @kittenbouquet 5 месяцев назад +11

      I'm white and liberal, and there's a sort of guilt we feel about being white so we get mad at other white people who seem to take advantage of their whiteness to do stupid shit. So, I assume he wouldn't.

  • @loserlesbian0
    @loserlesbian0 5 месяцев назад +874

    16:14 I'm not even done with the video but the fact that this woman said blackface was a new thing we magically came up with is mind boggling. I get it was a while ago but could she not just look something up beforehand?She doesn't have to feel offeneded but she's basically inforcing a bad mindset by saying it didn't exist before the 2000s.

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +194

      Keep in mind her video is from 3 years ago so she's probably gained more knowledge on the topic, but yeaaaah 😅

    • @SuperNuclearUnicorn
      @SuperNuclearUnicorn 5 месяцев назад +92

      ​@@UnpoeticJustice I just can't fathom not knowing that blackface has been a thing for a long long time. Even over here in Australia where we don't have the same history with blackface I feel like you'd be hard pressed to find someone who doesn't know what it is and that it has been around for a while

    • @emptyacc5093
      @emptyacc5093 5 месяцев назад +46

      ​@SuperNuclearUnicorn some of us genuinely arent taught it in school, either. i never knew what blackface was or the history of it until i became an adult and saw people talking about it on youtube when shane was being called out before and im 28 now.
      edit to add; i grew up in america also, specifically the state of texas.

    • @mariya_tortilla
      @mariya_tortilla 5 месяцев назад

      I grew up in MI and somehow i even knew about it as a kid. Maybe its a north vs south thing.@@emptyacc5093

    • @mor4ls47
      @mor4ls47 5 месяцев назад +21

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@emptyacc5093unfortunately we can't just assume everything we were taught in school is everything there is to know. never been to a texas school, but i imagine the curriculum is similar. i was taught that columbus discovered america, the trail of tears was barely spoken about, the tulsa race massacre was never spoken about (& i'm from oklahoma, attended oklahoma schools) so if those things weren't talked about, i would be naive to believe american school systems in the south would ever teach me about blackface.

  • @gooseherdez336
    @gooseherdez336 5 месяцев назад +785

    I would never trust anyone who boldly claims "I have never done anything wrong". We can't control the circumstances in which we are born, we have the burden of our culture and station imposed from the moment we first breathe, and through education and life experiences we learn to be better, and making mistakes is a big part of that.

  • @shakahbrah7934
    @shakahbrah7934 5 месяцев назад +271

    growing up with european parents in america, i didn’t realize how baked-into-our-language-habits romani hate was. i was saying slurs as synonyms for other words with no thought behind it because i genuinely didn’t realize they were referring to any group of people specifically, let alone derogatorily (especially the word that means “to steal/trick”). when i got to college and continued using the word casually, my best friend paused uncomfortably and told me it was a slur. my head was spinning from realizing i’d unknowingly perpetuated that for twenty years, and my whole idea of who i was as an accepting and kind person started to crack. honestly, in retrospect, that’s what i’m most embarrassed by, because the impact was not even remotely supposed to center around me. we all have to learn, teach others that taught us incorrectly, and move forward. that will mean infinitely more to romani people than me becoming a self-flagellating recluse. to continue centering *yourself* rather than centering *education, harm reduction, and empathy* is the trap all productive lefties have to figure out.

  • @ischristinaok
    @ischristinaok 5 месяцев назад +1412

    as a person who watched a lot of kurtis videos during quarantine and watches a lot duncan videos currently (they help me get through daily tasks. i also felt like Duncan kinda missed the mark and i commented this back then when his video came out. the idea that someone who does anything racist or problematic is irredeemable and can’t pursue a comedy career makes me laugh. it’s not fair and it’s not how real life works. i love duncan a lot but he missed a few marks

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +404

      Fortunately, there's always room for growth 😊

    • @tsuki3752
      @tsuki3752 5 месяцев назад +21

      that’s what i felt too. hope he reflects and learns

    • @weirddd469
      @weirddd469 5 месяцев назад +13

      I feel like a lot of RUclipsrs go through similar stuff like this in their careers. I really do hope he reflects on that

    • @Random-sk6hm
      @Random-sk6hm 4 месяца назад +10

      Fr, everyone has made mistakes and can learn and grow. I've made homophobic comments/jokes in the past while growing up, then later realised that I'm gay myself. I suppose there's a sort of poetic justice in my situation. In general however, we all have unconscious bias (even the most 'socially concious' people) and are ignorant about something. The beauty of society and education is that we can learn about others' experiences and continue to grow. I've no doubt that Dean regrets his past comments and will continue to develop himself.

    • @Pillemir
      @Pillemir 4 месяца назад

      didn’t know duncan before this video and i gotta say his vibes are so off?? he seems like really annoying (i obviously don’t know him and he can be great but his whole vibe was just giving high horse white person trying to lecture everyone)

  • @Dzaeli
    @Dzaeli 5 месяцев назад +3433

    In my friend group, we call other white people like Duncan "morally lucky". They didn't grow up with overtly racist ideas and have never had to unpack it and confront their own beliefs. They can't imagine that there's any nuance, because they wouldn't do something obviously racist, and by extension they usually don't understand the more insidious and subtle types of racism that they likely did grow up with. My family casually used slurs, so how can I blame my 8 year old self for doing the same? When I was 18 and knew slurs weren't okay, but I was still saying problematic shit, does that mean I'm condemnable for life? I don't think the right answer is never be a public figure, atone in silence, never say why. I don't think it's enough. You should be working to dismantle the system that lead you to do something you no longer agree with, and be honest about it.

    • @crashtestbunny6649
      @crashtestbunny6649 5 месяцев назад +208

      Thank you, will start using this term to describe this phenomenon! The social standards for the “friendly unproblematic white boy” are so low…

    • @berickslime6718
      @berickslime6718 5 месяцев назад

      Yes, work to the dismantle that system directly to white people like yourself and had your upbringing. Call out your parents and family members! Black people are tired of hearing how you used to be racist but had the luxury to grow out of it. The black people affected by racists peers in their youth have to carry that bullshit with them. If you are not racist now, then it should be reflected in your behavior NOW. We don't want to hear about you being privileged enough to be able to mature from being a racist youth!

    • @berickslime6718
      @berickslime6718 5 месяцев назад +129

      I can never forget the 1st time I was called the n-word or had something fucking racist said to me because people like you being "edgy and joking". So as I am corncerned you should be condemned for life because of it. Black people do not care about your personal growth journey and how you grew up surrounded by racist family members. It's truly exhausting listening to the same story over and over again. Just be better and focus all of that energy trying to convince black people you have changed and actually try to change the people who instilled those values in you in the 1st place.

    • @Dzaeli
      @Dzaeli 5 месяцев назад +356

      @@berickslime6718 honestly this comment wasn't about my own journey or convincing anyone I'm a good person. Just about Duncan's limited perspective. You don't have to forgive anyone or anything, you never have to be friends with me. For the record I never called anyone the n-word, I said it in contexts I thought "weren't racist" and learned better as soon as I was able. I don't doubt that I hurt people. I knew kids who said it and meant it and I don't associate with them. But I'm never going to say things I did as a literal child define me forever. Hate me or don't, that's your right.

    • @safeforwork8546
      @safeforwork8546 5 месяцев назад +207

      @@berickslime6718 You are currently condemning an 8 year old.

  • @WesleyLindsey
    @WesleyLindsey 5 месяцев назад +543

    My issue with 99% of the cancel culture situations is that people that act like they’re in good faith say they want “accountability” but yet there never seems to be an end to someone getting dragged. Accountability inherently has an end point. You get a traffic ticket, you pay it and you go on about your life. The end. Someone will purposely dig up something stupid from a decade ago, wave it in someone’s face and say “well how do we know they’ve changed?”. Maybe it’s the fact that they haven’t had anything recent to hold them accountable for? Most of this stuff is stupid. I mean, can you name one apology video where people are tearing it to shreds? It’s evident that this “accountability culture” is a huge overcorrection.

    • @Kuromikinnie
      @Kuromikinnie 5 месяцев назад

      Calling racism is not cancel culture the shit don’t exist. Another racist dog whistle, Next

    • @antonioalbul00
      @antonioalbul00 5 месяцев назад

      @@Kuromikinnie your white guilt is showing, how about treating poc people like people instead of soft uwu babies who can't make their own decisions so you speak over them

    • @shananelson2567
      @shananelson2567 5 месяцев назад +14

      Perfectly said!

    • @berickslime6718
      @berickslime6718 5 месяцев назад

      I can never forget the 1st time I was called the n-word or had something fucking racist said to me because people being "edgy and joking". So as far as I am concerned those things should never be forgotten by the perpetrators.
      Also if that stops you from actively striving to deconstruct your racist past then you are still POS. Many white people try to hold POC hostage with their change. For example, "if you don't be nice and sympathetic to me if I make a mistake, then I am not going to do anything to improve myself".

    • @KaiM6969
      @KaiM6969 4 месяца назад +19

      Conflating anti blackness to paying a parking ticket is wild.

  • @emoscreamhoe
    @emoscreamhoe 5 месяцев назад +175

    This video kind of gave me an aha moment toward the part where Duncan was talking about how people with controversial pasts should basically never show their face again.
    It reminded me of how most men kind of know that when it comes to misogyny that they're more fit to combat it and reprimand other men for committing it, but it's more advantageous for them not to because it creates a comparison for them to be seen in a better light.
    I think a lot of white leftists do the same thing. Rather than actually wanting to hold other white folks accountable for and combat racism, they'd rather accost them and exile them socially because it's more beneficial to to just seem like the better white person/making white people look better overall. Even though statistically when these types of people are exiled and isolated they tend to fester and deepen in their bigotry. Much how unchecked misogynists feel as though they can continue what they do because no man tells them otherwise.
    Both groups are not aiming to solve a problem by any means or see growth, they just want to make sure themselves and people like them come out on top no matter what. even if it's to the detriment of the people they claim to care so much about. It's purely optics for them.

  • @johnmanpls5577
    @johnmanpls5577 5 месяцев назад +287

    the way pearlswirl casually said the c-slur for Asian people….

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +90

      I literally have no background on her, but the video was from 3 years ago so maybe she's taken on a different perspective or value in her more recent content

    • @buzzfeedhater
      @buzzfeedhater 5 дней назад +1

      The same can be said for dean? Or does racism for anyone other than black people doesn't bother you? ​@@UnpoeticJustice

  • @mango_frog
    @mango_frog 5 месяцев назад +1963

    i’m happy i found your channel, I watch kurtis conner and a lot of other ‘leftist’ commentators and you help me see different perspectives without having to go to the complete opposite side

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +692

      I appreciate that! I never try to tear down another creator even when I'm disagreeing with them or their approach, so I'm glad that's coming thru a bit since I share audience members with people I've critiqued, like Kuncan Dastner and nickisnotgreen.

    • @leynadevine
      @leynadevine 5 месяцев назад +17

      exactly my thoughts too!! so glad i found this

    • @bonitogeneration
      @bonitogeneration 5 месяцев назад +338

      i don’t think i would go as far as calling kurtis a “leftist creator” though, he has left leaning values but doesn’t make explicitly political content

    • @emzetkin1100
      @emzetkin1100 5 месяцев назад

      Eh, the complete opposite side is trying to establish the Fourth Reich, their opinions don't matter.

    • @LethalLemonLime
      @LethalLemonLime 5 месяцев назад

      I don't think any of those people are leftists...

  • @russianbear5576
    @russianbear5576 5 месяцев назад +246

    this is really well done, as a white person i tend to assume that the melodramatics of white ppl being called out is the typical "white ppl tears and self-flagellation to avoid accountability" but I think your take on unreasonable remorse for being born as white is really poignant and insightful. There is absolutely an element of white culture that makes individuals regret being born into a place of privilege because that is easier than contending with how their position has served them from birth. i really like your style and insights, your words are going to stick with me for decades

  • @awesomeraingirl
    @awesomeraingirl 5 месяцев назад +82

    I love the way you talked about the problem with "all or nothing" thinking. As someone who has been chronically online since I was a teen, I definitely fell into that line of thinking for a few years. Hearing your added thoughts about it, and the concept of goodness, was a lightbulb moment for me. Your thoughts helped me understand a lot of my own issues with myself and my social connections in the time that I've been trying to move away from the all or nothing thinking.

  • @lukesguywalker
    @lukesguywalker 5 месяцев назад +2383

    The Jenna Marbles thing was incredibly frustrating for me because I kept seeing people who were NOT OF THE GROUPS she was apologizing to rushing to tell her she was fine. I had a friend who was very dear to me say, "Of all the people RUclips fans could cancel, why Jenna?" But she wasn't being cancelled. I appreciated her apology as someone who was affected and was just glad to see that she wasn't trying to hide it. But they immediately got mad at us for "ruining it" which was hurtful. Idk. This doesn't make much sense bc I just woke up lol, but I wish people would think about how their rush to dismiss the "necessity" of her apology could make others feel

    • @MichelleOnSL
      @MichelleOnSL 5 месяцев назад

      your one of the 10 people jenna marbles offended with a joke? so you did ruin it then? nice. guess we shouldnt make jokes about people that arent the same race as us, matter of fact we shouldnt live with them or breed with them either i guess, i guess our cultures should stay our own then and only whites can joke about white people and so on so forth.

    • @soupsalamamder
      @soupsalamamder 5 месяцев назад +296

      this is exactly why I've held the "not my apology to accept" stance

    • @chickensalad3535
      @chickensalad3535 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@soupsalamamderA very silly stance.

    • @soupsalamamder
      @soupsalamamder 5 месяцев назад +345

      @@chickensalad3535 if someone punches my friend and apologizes, should i take that apology? even though I'm not the one affected? thats pretty silly 🪿

    • @chickensalad3535
      @chickensalad3535 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@soupsalamamder Yeah, you should decide for yourself.

  • @MareTigeress2
    @MareTigeress2 5 месяцев назад +1087

    Kuncan was stroking his own ego for wayyy too long. Like, why did he have to include himself talking about how *not* racist he is…bro do that in the privacy of your own home, no one wants to see that.

    • @vvitch-mist20
      @vvitch-mist20 5 месяцев назад +141

      I hate when people act like that. Not being racist is baseline shit, don't pat yourself on the back for that lol.

    • @Lumina_Solaris
      @Lumina_Solaris 5 месяцев назад +16

      Like, not digging deep into it, it gives me the sus vibes

    • @Lumina_Solaris
      @Lumina_Solaris 5 месяцев назад +1

      @MareTigeress2 Also, like, I clicked on your pic to see the pup, and, holy shit, we have a lot of common channels.

    • @tzf04.
      @tzf04. 5 месяцев назад +55

      that section really bothered me... i feel like that did not need to be included at all, why on earth did he keep repeating that he had never done anything offensive.. ?? usually when someone repeatedly tells you how "good" they are... they really aren't :(

    • @sootekken
      @sootekken 5 месяцев назад +52

      @@tzf04.to me it felt like fear, like the whole situation bothered him personally to the point he was trying to convince himself he wouldn’t ever be viewed in a similar way. I can see how he would spiral to trying to convince himself he’s not like Dean or other people who have been blatantly racist, but it’s not a good thing to put in a video I don’t think

  • @alis.5564
    @alis.5564 5 месяцев назад +281

    I found Kuncan's video genuinely triggering because it sent me into a spiral of obsessively examining my past, and i couldnt finish it. It was the opposite of productive analysis. Finding this video was genuinely cathartic. Thank you.

    • @talkgoodenglish7500
      @talkgoodenglish7500 3 месяца назад +37

      I know this comment is old but I wanted to thank you for making it because that's how I felt too: triggered. It spoke to a very dark and unhealthy part of me, the part that engages in perpetual shame over past mistakes. I found it genuinely upsetting to hear him talk about how the only response to any misstep is to go into hiding forever. Not only because I think he's wrong but also because it sounds like a voice from within myself that I know is unhealthy.

    • @lachanclita5907
      @lachanclita5907 3 месяца назад +15

      @@talkgoodenglish7500DUDE FR AND IM NOT EVEN WHITE

    • @TheOceanBearer
      @TheOceanBearer 2 месяца назад +3

      @talkgoodenglish7500 I wholeheartedly empathize.

  • @wtfjackaboy
    @wtfjackaboy 5 месяцев назад +118

    The whole white guilt section was very interesting, and it does feel to me that Duncan’s video seemed to be desperately trying to prove that he’s “white boy of the year” rather than actually discuss the problems that needed to be discussed (although this is only based on the clips shown, I haven’t actually watched his full video). No one is really being helped by him patting himself on the back and saying “look at me I’ve never done anything racist ever, therefore I have all authority over who is good and who is bad” which is funny because just managing to go through life without saying anything racist does not mean you can understand all the nuances and arguments that come with this topic.

  • @3MpA7hY
    @3MpA7hY 5 месяцев назад +584

    I'm really glad you mentioned kuncan Dastner, that part of his original video was really weird, honestly his whole vibe of that video was so uncomfortable, especially as a POC woman, it reminded me of the occasional white guy I'd meet and him trying to convince me he's "one of the good ones." and the whole "I've never done anything wrong" comes off as...i don't know like he's trying to hide something? like he's projecting, and maybe he's not? but it was weird

    • @annamelvina216
      @annamelvina216 5 месяцев назад +66

      It's very "holier than thou" if nothing else.

    • @drawingsticks5333
      @drawingsticks5333 5 месяцев назад +32

      My very first istinctive response was "Do you want a cookie?".
      Frankly can't decide if it's better or worse if he is lying or he genuinely believes all of that.

    • @kymarsinspace
      @kymarsinspace 5 месяцев назад

      Exactly!!!!!!!

    • @Isabel-sr8ep
      @Isabel-sr8ep 5 месяцев назад +3

      It’s like the movie get out in a way I can’t explain lol

    • @zorro......
      @zorro...... 5 месяцев назад +6

      It's been a hot sec and I watched it while putting on makeup so maybe I wasnt focused. But I think it was just a personal reflection on his own journey and questions starting a youtube channel - had he done or said anything publicly that could get him in hot water down the line? Fortunately for him, the answer was no, but the point of the discussion was also - if he had done such a thing, what then? is it redeemable? when do you put it all out on the table? having to apologize for the longdead past seemed just as bad as opening your youtube channel with "hey guys, welcome to my channel! when I was 9, I used slurs"
      But thats just how i understood the segment.

  • @andromediia
    @andromediia 5 месяцев назад +921

    Your pointing out of white people using “they” when referring to black people, which makes it clear that the person speaking isn’t intending their message to be *towards* black people, (implying that in their minds they are speaking to an audience of other white people) was really eye opening and I feel should have been obvious to me, now thinking about it in hindsight.
    I can see other instances of this same concept as well, not just in apologies, but in general (ie reminds me of male church leaders using “they” when referring to women, even when speaking *to* a audience of women and men. I always remember the gross feeling of a pastor seemingly preaching only to other men despite the whole church being there lol)
    It’s a subtle look at who their content is subconsciously intended for, and reveals hidden biases *even* if there are no ill intentions.
    I’ll be mindful of it from now on, coz I certainly didn’t like it when I experienced it lol.

    • @kseniav586
      @kseniav586 5 месяцев назад +44

      Yesss I was like OH THIS IS WHY IT SOUNDS SO FAKE

    • @danle7022
      @danle7022 5 месяцев назад +1

      but they/ them

    • @randomusername3873
      @randomusername3873 5 месяцев назад +7

      Didn't you say "their" content in this post?

    • @allaboutthemurzic
      @allaboutthemurzic 5 месяцев назад +9

      Theres all ethnicities that refer to other ethnicities as “they/them” including black people

    • @chickenpermission1671
      @chickenpermission1671 5 месяцев назад +3

      How are people supposed to reference a group they’re not a part of then?

  • @chindu5645
    @chindu5645 4 месяца назад +73

    When this video first popped up on my Recommended, I was really scared to watch it 'cause I had no clue about the whole Dean situation with Kurtis Conner, and I'm a happy citizen of Kurtistown, so I was really worried that something would be revealed to me that would make me regret my citizenship.
    But I really appreciate how you went over the whole controversy and the even bigger response, and the even bigger-er culture that lends itself to controversies like these. I found that at my own pace, I was easily able to follow you and your points, and came to the realization that I really valued your input on the situation!
    Keep making great content like this! I'm glad that I decided to overcome my concern and enlighten myself.

    • @nnyji
      @nnyji 3 месяца назад +2

      Same! Had me worried lol 😓

  • @PeanutHead411
    @PeanutHead411 5 месяцев назад +334

    Duncan spews ‘white savior’ vibes …and you can’t tell me Dean didn’t have someone back there holding up flash cards for him lmao

  • @niyamii848
    @niyamii848 5 месяцев назад +287

    I agree 100% with the "black people are not a monolith," thing. I think a lot of people hear that and think that it only means that "my opinion about race cannot be wrong because there are black people that agree with me." However, that ignores that black people can also have bigoted and ignorant opinions, like all people can. This is why the "this person is a grifter because they are a part of marginalized group X and have a worldview that does not support marginalized group X." It feels incredibly tokenizing.

  • @furuyawn
    @furuyawn 5 месяцев назад +472

    will never fail to be impressed by how succinctly yet thoroughly you're able to word your thoughts and points.

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +38

      I appreciate that! I try to get better with every video ❤️

    • @furuyawn
      @furuyawn 5 месяцев назад +8

      @@UnpoeticJustice you're doing a fantastic job! i genuinely look forward to seeing what you'll make next and how your scripting will continue growing from here. ☺️👍

    • @asuka_the_void_witch
      @asuka_the_void_witch 5 месяцев назад

      @@UnpoeticJusticethat's based fr

    • @kdog8658
      @kdog8658 5 месяцев назад +3

      Fr its like if i never smoked pot and still had my entire vocabulary on hand , it fills me with awe and envy

    • @sumayyahadetunmbi4347
      @sumayyahadetunmbi4347 5 месяцев назад

      Fr

  • @marnenotmarnie259
    @marnenotmarnie259 5 месяцев назад +37

    i can't get over "blackface didn't exist back then"

  • @Primalintent
    @Primalintent 5 месяцев назад +16

    This situation reminded me of a former coworker I had who I slowly became friends with. One day she brought up some kind of conspiracy theory and not being a fan of discussing them, I joked "Not a fan of most conspiracy theories because if you dig too far they just become about how the Jews are behind it." She, however, then springboarded on there to regurgitate some surface-level takes from the anti-Semitic iceberg.
    Now, I am partially descended of Jewish people, but I didn't really lay into her, partly because I was the elder of us, and partly because the naive earnestness she expressed her "worries" about Jewish elites seemed genuine. Rather than call her personally out for it, I instead asked her if she'd be okay with me telling her a bit of history. She said yeah, so I told her a summary of the history of anti-Semitism in Europe and its colonies.
    The destruction of the temple, the diaspora, the pogroms, the "Red Jew" conspiracies of the late Medieval period, the Spanish Inquisition, its manifestations in Colonialism, the Zionist conquest of Palestine, and finally the lead into WWII and the Nazis. One thing I stressed was the convenience of Jewish people as a target, their unique culture, different-but-similar religion, and languages leading to an alienation that made them easy enemies for the powerful to just straight up lie about.
    I don't know if she "really" changed, but when I finished she said "wow, that's a lot" and then every shift after that she'd come over and ask an additional question about Jewish history or another similar subject. I do genuinely think that hearing it, in person, from someone she knew and not from a stranger making a comment was a big help to her not dismissing the information.
    She never said anything anti-Semitic, but I moved away a few months later so who knows, maybe she's back to it. Hard to tell, but I'd prefer that.

    • @NylaTheWolf
      @NylaTheWolf 3 месяца назад +2

      I do hope she changed for the better! It's really cool that you took the time to do that

  • @sethtorres5202
    @sethtorres5202 5 месяцев назад +359

    I think people change one of two ways. Either by slowly walking of the path they were heading on as the work on themseleves/their situation. OR by suddenly being shocked an rapidly making the adjustment. Sometimes it takes time for people to see past their biases or change their mind othertimes something drastically changes their worldview. Take a drinking problem for example. Sometimes people need years of rehab, sometimes they get into a scary situation (drunk driving accident, blacking out and waking up injured, etc) and immediately say "This has to stop, I quit"

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +58

      Well said!

    • @sethtorres5202
      @sethtorres5202 5 месяцев назад +11

      @@UnpoeticJustice Thank you!

    • @xbluebirdx
      @xbluebirdx 5 месяцев назад +14

      Very true. In my own experience, I have mainly experienced truly transformative and radical change in the latter way. It feels a lot like someone dousing you in cold water.

  • @doodle3446
    @doodle3446 5 месяцев назад +619

    Not me just now finding out about happening, I'll watch Kurtis every once in a while but never really kept up with his friend group or associates. Also goodness gracious it felt like Kuncan was being held at gunpoint in those clips bless his heart.

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +154

      Ya'll are killing me with these comments 😭🤣🤣

    • @stuckinthelazycorneragain4016
      @stuckinthelazycorneragain4016 5 месяцев назад +6

      Same lol. I have watched a few of his videos from time to time but never really followed him so this was interesting to see.

    • @constanzanavarro821
      @constanzanavarro821 4 месяца назад +4

      I really like Kurtis and I’ve been watching it for years but I can’t stand Dean, he’s always doing something shitty

    • @ReiAnikaAyanami
      @ReiAnikaAyanami 4 месяца назад +3

      i really like kurtis but i don't really keep up with his friends (i only know jacob bc he appeared in kurtis' videos) and wow did dean's tweets punch me in the face with how bigoted they were 😭

  • @Funnylittleman
    @Funnylittleman 5 месяцев назад +170

    I’ve never watched your channel before and I’m going to be totally honest, as a Kurtis fan I went in with my defenses up. I’m glad I really listened to what you had to say. I couldn’t agree more. Everyone has been ignorant in the past, no one is without “sin” so to speak. There are plenty of genuinely good people who just need a little guidance and room to grow. There are also people who don’t have growth in them, of course, but I refuse to write off every person who are capable of more with the right perspective.

    • @zandikhetwayo7444
      @zandikhetwayo7444 4 месяца назад +16

      As a Kurtis Conner fan I’ve been feeling uncomfortable with how he talks and jokes about religious people, makes me uncomfortable 😭😭

    • @Spent_Jungus
      @Spent_Jungus 4 месяца назад

      I used to watch Kurtis. He's a total cuck🤷🏿‍♀️🙅🏿‍♀️

    • @cubonefan3
      @cubonefan3 4 месяца назад

      @@zandikhetwayo7444lmao then don’t watch him, you religious slob

    • @memopmeowmeko8571
      @memopmeowmeko8571 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@zandikhetwayo7444Dude me too😅 I watch other creators who make similar jokes in a way where they aren't just dogging on Christianity they way he does it is just so uncomfortable for me

    • @natasha5553
      @natasha5553 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@zandikhetwayo7444 womp womp

  • @rsiogjtsjiflgtksjfijgsrljhlf
    @rsiogjtsjiflgtksjfijgsrljhlf 5 месяцев назад +192

    I'm white, and I also think I might have something called real event ocd. When I was watching Duncans videos all the parts about how you basically don't deserve to be a public figure if you're not a perfect person kinda bothered me. Basically, real event ocd is like an extreme obsession/guilt over something thats happened in the past, I feel like acting like people can't change or be forgiven really isnt helping anybody or any cause.
    I was giving him the benefit of the doubt and assumed I was just being over sensitive cause of my own guilt. The event I feel guilty over wasn't anything racist, but even seeing something related to past mistakes can make me start feeling bad again. Anyways, I thought I was overreacting and forgot about the video until now, and I just thought I'd say this since people are agreeing that those parts of the video were weird.
    The part where he said like if you're preaching goodness and people find out you've done bad things in the past then everything you've said was a lie especially annoys me, cause he's acting like you have to be a perfect person to want to do good and move forward. Like I said I feel like lingering on the past isn't gonna help anybody who wants to move forward. I'm not specifically talking about the Kurtis/Dean situation but just Duncans mindset.

    • @spockezri
      @spockezri 5 месяцев назад +39

      i have ocd too!!! the video parsed as totally normal to me at first because i'm like well yeah obviously no one should exist if they're not perfect

    • @duskicakruskica
      @duskicakruskica 5 месяцев назад +26

      yes! Fellow OCD sufferer, textbook purity OCD. For a long time, I stopped myself when THINKING bad about my friends, even incidentally. It was because I took the 'your thoughts are who you are' way too literally. Also, when I realized what other people are thinking of, well... 😂

    • @chocomelo454
      @chocomelo454 4 месяца назад +7

      yeah. i mean jm not specifically that but ky OCD works similarly. makes it hard for me to actually talk to people about bad things ive done, and instead kinda present myself as a perfect person.

    • @ssnowstarr4985
      @ssnowstarr4985 4 месяца назад +11

      Wait, I had no idea this was an OCD thing. I have OCD (various forms) but I had no clue that that was one facet of it. There's some things I've done that other people have told me are bad, yet not irredeemable, but I think about them every single day and punish myself for them because I believe that my life is ruined and all I have left is to punish myself. I'm going to have to look this up, this might mean something very important to me

    • @Violent4rain
      @Violent4rain 4 месяца назад +7

      I have the exact same thing. I've always had ocd, and it can be a killer. For me it's taken on many different forms, but recently it's been more and more like what you've described above. The absolute and overwhelming fear of being irredeemable. I'm sorry you struggle with it too, but it is nice to know I'm not alone

  • @justinwatson1510
    @justinwatson1510 5 месяцев назад +435

    The background music in Duncan's video when he was talking about guilt was an interesting choice. I have spent time in a psych ward and that was the kind of background music they would play for guided meditations.

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +163

      Stooooop 😭 You made me snort laugh my Pepsi, omfg ☠️

    • @Regene2383
      @Regene2383 5 месяцев назад +4

      should've gotten sprite smhmh lol@@UnpoeticJustice

    • @emmersksksksk
      @emmersksksksk 5 месяцев назад +5

      it kind of sounded like the twilight soundtrack to me for some reason,,, 👀

    • @waverlyaltis7171
      @waverlyaltis7171 5 месяцев назад +17

      I recognized some as music from the Mario franchise (I recognized a bit from super Mario odyssey). I don’t know, but I always thought it was kind of funny to use video game music as the background for a serious topic lol

    • @lousielouise8716
      @lousielouise8716 5 месяцев назад +7

      I think some of it is also from old Animal Crossing games?

  • @arielc8502
    @arielc8502 5 месяцев назад +451

    Loved your analysis. I honestly found Duncan’s video sort of unnerving, if you follow his all or nothing thinking to it’s natural conclusion he’s basically saying, “if you’ve ever made a mistake you need to shun yourself from society. Only the people who’ve passed the purity test deserve a platform/can exist in the public eye.” Also his comment about being raised right with good values rubbed me the wrong way. Not everyone has the privilege of being born into the perfect circumstances. Very Calvinist in thought lol

    • @talonhammer
      @talonhammer 5 месяцев назад +44

      CALVINIST. omg that's apt

    • @annabelle4655
      @annabelle4655 5 месяцев назад +28

      I was like "oh he must have been raised Catholic" bc that's def a whole new level of guilt 😭 calvinist! Fr

    • @Diana-mu7pc
      @Diana-mu7pc 5 месяцев назад +14

      @@annabelle4655 as someone raised Catholic (with a lot of Guilt™ to this day) I definitely don't relate to whatever Duncan is on, loooool, but his video did come across as, frankly, religious in its tone, especially when he was talking about shame, atonement, and the precarity of forgiveness. Calvinist! Someone do a background check on him to confirm lmao

  • @ArsenicCatnip06
    @ArsenicCatnip06 5 месяцев назад +585

    i was laughing so hard about the "ive never done anything wrong" thing. im disabled and this is what every abled person sounds like when i say they shouldnt call me a cripple lol

    • @user-yp6yr9te7l
      @user-yp6yr9te7l 4 месяца назад +3

      never say they shouldn't call you such and such. that almost never works. what works is finding some imperfections they have and call them that name. lol. I always canvass a room of people for their shortcomings. Some people are clumsy. Others are slow. Some have bad hair. Some wear glasses. Some obviously need to get laid. Making those observations give you your arsenal. the best defense is a good offense. And when someone's imperfections aren't obvious, you make them up on the spot, naturally. Or you can always talk about their mother, or how they're actually getting laid a tad too much for anyone's benefit. Okay maybe that last one is a bit too far. Don't go too far. lol

    • @ChangedMyNameFinally69
      @ChangedMyNameFinally69 4 месяца назад +1

      Sadly some disabled people like being called weird regressive terms

    • @ArsenicCatnip06
      @ArsenicCatnip06 4 месяца назад +11

      @@ChangedMyNameFinally69 literally. i lose a bit of faith in our community every time i hear the term "aspie"

    • @ChangedMyNameFinally69
      @ChangedMyNameFinally69 4 месяца назад +3

      @@ArsenicCatnip06 Any video about "politically correct" language regarding disabled people and you see this, just saw a comedian complain about this because they have a disabled brother, and I see it on places like Tumblr and Twitter too. Makes me wonder how many of them aren't lying so they can keep using outdated terms. Trans people have this issue too, so much self-loathing in these communities.

    • @mosquitopyjamas9048
      @mosquitopyjamas9048 3 месяца назад +1

      @@ChangedMyNameFinally69dammit, if only they knew better

  • @jane-mulcahy
    @jane-mulcahy 5 месяцев назад +40

    Thank you for this!! I clicked because I hadn't actually heard about the Kurtis-Dean situation and wanted to know more, but I'm so glad I stayed to hear your nuanced commentary. I do think Kurtis's responses on Reddit are a little lacking; it's strange that he would go straight to defending Dean's actions and weak apologies as opposed to what he has more of a right to defend IMO: that his and Dean's friendship is ultimately their business and that they've probably handled this privately to an extent that we don't (and don't necessarily deserve to) know about. It doesn't make Dean's actions okay, but the expectation that Kurtis would loudly, publicly, unconditionally stop being friends with the guy feels like it comes from a parasocial place.
    I don't watch a lot of Duncan's content, I'm sure he's generally fine, but omg the clips you showed are very strange. As a white person, I really recognize the tone of the beginning of his video. Some white people (probably myself at times) feel the need to be SO overcompensatory when talking about race. When in reality, like you said, it kind of just serves to recenter themselves and their emotional response. In a way, that section + his bizarre assertion that anyone who's done anything problematic shouldn't pursue visible careers sort of makes it feel like he's trying to establish himself as an authoritative voice about race/how we should address racism, which I guess I think is a boundary we should try not to cross as white creators.
    And then that portion about how he was just blessed enough to never be racist in his life is so tone deaf. I also think/hope I've never done anything egregiously, obviously offensive, but it's so ignorant to assume that you've just magically gone through life without ever doing or saying anything remotely racist, or that you never will. (Also is he implying that like... being socially awkward = no opportunities to be racist?? Such a weird moment in general) We've all been influenced by the systems we live under. It's presumptuous to assume that we've never said/done anything we didn't realize was offensive. It seems insidious to give yourself a sort of 'I could never be racist' blanket, because I'd think it would make it difficult for you to recognize if/when you've messed up.
    Sorry for the long comment, great video!

  • @lilamasand5425
    @lilamasand5425 5 месяцев назад +1162

    okay but why did Duncan make it sound like having racist behavior in your past is the same thing as killing a man 😭 I knew that white leftists were like this TO A POINT but that straight up kind of scared me. "the entire time you've been known, you're guilty" and the idea that you're always hoping that no one will find out and carrying it with you all the time....the guilt that he expects someone would feel is so wildly out of proportion with the "crime". it kind of implies that Duncan is under the impression that he has a perfect past and has never done anything wrong or to be ashamed about. it's not helpful to anyone to take on these sky-high standards of morality. does he believe that doing something like Dean's blackface means that you SHOULD feel guilty and horrible about it for the rest of your life, like on a daily basis? truly a bit baffling.
    I think white leftists adopted this very severe and no-tolerance, no-discussion-allowed stance for bigoted behavior as a way of "uplifting the voices of marginalized people", like they believe they're doing it "for the community", but this seems like it has morphed into something deeply personal and honestly unrelated to what marginalized people actually want or believe. I totally agree with your point that it gives people an out to not actually express their opinion on subjects regarding race, and I think there's a real fear of being a "bad ally".
    to some extent I get that content creators might feel conflicted when a bunch of people are asking them (or telling them that they absolutely need to) talk about a certain situation that they might not feel comfortable addressing, but in general I feel like if you don't have a fully-formed opinion beyond the classic leftist racism-is-bad talking points, it might be better to sit that discussion out. there's always a balance of using your voice to spread awareness about important issues while also not becoming a police force that takes any opportunity to lambast others in a totally un-nuanced way.

    • @faeriegraver
      @faeriegraver 5 месяцев назад +117

      I love the word "wokescold" as a description of people who disparage others for not reaching a standard of being woke enough, liberal enough, leftwing enough, for responding to issues in a way that they view as "wrong" or "not good enough", and they essentially gatekeep this "correct" way of thinking and being.
      It doesn't help that so many people are very fake online. So they might be overblowing situations online for whatever reason, when they don't actually feel exactly that way IRL.

    • @silverdrag0n_
      @silverdrag0n_ 5 месяцев назад +103

      its giving me puritan vibes

    • @3.6-57
      @3.6-57 5 месяцев назад +6

      exactly my thoughts!!

    • @booksvsmovies
      @booksvsmovies 5 месяцев назад +118

      I fully agree. When he talked about how he didn't go to parties when he was in high school so he definitely never did anything racist was eyebrow raising raising.

    • @TheStorytellersBox
      @TheStorytellersBox 5 месяцев назад +7

      holy heck yes!! that’s what it sounded like

  • @talonhammer
    @talonhammer 5 месяцев назад +972

    I havent watched this yet, but I want to say I like Duncan well enough but his segment where he obsessively thought about every potential bad thing he'd ever done for like days, then *encouraged his audience to do the same* made me tremendously uncomfortable. If youre reading this, especially if you have any anxiety disorder or OCD, please please do not follow that advice. It's extremely unhealthy and unhelpful.
    Okay, on with the video! Love your channel! ✌
    EDIT: omg thank you all for the likes, never gotten this much attention on a comment before ❤ And the video was phenominal, great job Justice!

    • @nessie7306
      @nessie7306 5 месяцев назад +196

      Feel like if you have anxiety and/or OCD you probably already do this all the time. While yes, regretting past behavior is normal, especially if you have hurt people, obsessing over every little thing is going to drive you insane - and away from the point! It's not about feeling like shit every day you're alive, it's about doing better every day and becoming a better person.
      Using regret of past actions as motivation to improve is good, in my opinion. But isolating yourself from everyone and punishing yourself for past actions does NOTHING - And honestly it seems very catholic to me.

    • @nessie7306
      @nessie7306 5 месяцев назад +135

      Like you did one irredeemable thing and now you're damned to eternal torment in hell. You must repent every day and pray for forgiveness. That's catholicism. Not leftism.

    • @talonhammer
      @talonhammer 5 месяцев назад +58

      ​@@nessie7306 for sure and a lot if people do it, it's especially dangerous to encourage it and treat it like a good thing to do! Also totally agree, it has notes of fatalism and catholic guilt all over it

    • @arielc8502
      @arielc8502 5 месяцев назад +151

      As someone with OCD when he said that I was like…this is THE most unhealthy advice you could possible give lmao like introspection is one thing but constantly ruminating FOR DAYS looking for something to condemn yourself with forever is not actually productive or helpful. And he doesn’t seem to offer solutions if you do remember something worthy to condemn. No growth, no rehabilitation, no empathy just endless shame and guilt.

    • @cassie6985
      @cassie6985 5 месяцев назад +15

      Yes to this and alll of the replies

  • @dawert2667
    @dawert2667 5 месяцев назад +108

    Scorning and ostracizing people because of their mistakes is a good way to generate extreme behavior and a pretty bad way to accomplish anything helpful. Forgiveness is the first step towards healing, because it is the acknowledgement that things can improve. Without it we are trapped where we are.

    • @berickslime6718
      @berickslime6718 5 месяцев назад +12

      This forgiveness rhetoric is tired. Black people do not care about your personal growth journey, how you grew up surrounded by racist family members, or white guilt. It's truly exhausting listening to the same story over and over again. Just be better and focus all of that energy trying to convince marginalized people you have changed and actually try to change the people who instilled those values in you in the 1st place.
      If feeling forgiveness and sympathy for having racial transgressions is more important to than actually focusing on changing, than you never grew at all to begin with.

    • @Leig5H0T
      @Leig5H0T 4 месяца назад

      ​@@berickslime6718i do.

    • @NoodleNerd
      @NoodleNerd 4 месяца назад +2

      Also Forgivness is not the first step towards healing, Catharsis is.

    • @itschad493
      @itschad493 4 месяца назад +3

      @@berickslime6718 as someone who replied to you in this very comment section: "if someone is condemned for life full stop what’s the point in trying to convince you that they’ve changed?"

  • @cecilbenderman6240
    @cecilbenderman6240 5 месяцев назад +78

    I haven't seen anyone else point it out, so I just feel I have to. That word you used at 31:50 is a slur for Rromani people. I know that that's such a small thing to focus on, but I feel it's important to point out, because Rromani people have been saying for literal decades that that word is a slur and is offensive, and people still continue to use it. I love your analysis throughout the entire video and it honestly did change my mind about a few things (particularly it made me think deeper about that "all or nothing" mindset you mentioned) but I feel it's important to point out that that is an actual, literal slur that has been used for centuries to hurt and dehumanize Rromani people.

    • @minametoni
      @minametoni 5 месяцев назад +14

      glad to know I wasn't the only one to catch this and point it out, i hope more people become aware that is a slur and stop using it

    • @noaccount9795
      @noaccount9795 3 месяца назад +3

      My horse is a gypsy cob. That’s her breed. I’m not Romanian but have been told I can’t say her breed cause it’s a slur. But I assumed it was an identity as they are Romanian horses

    • @cecilbenderman6240
      @cecilbenderman6240 3 месяца назад +7

      @@noaccount9795 Romanian and Rromani are not the same thing, and if u have been told to call her smth else than that breed by Rromani people then u absolutely should because, again, it is a slur

    • @noaccount9795
      @noaccount9795 3 месяца назад +4

      @@cecilbenderman6240 breeds are pretty old so they wouldn’t be renamed. My point is was it always a slur or is this new? Like queer used to be a slur but isn’t now

    • @cecilbenderman6240
      @cecilbenderman6240 3 месяца назад

      @@noaccount9795 ohhh i get ya! yah its always been considered a slur. the word comes from a word for thief and it was (and still is) used to demonize and demean Rromani people, the same way queer was for queer people and the n word was and still is for Black people. the reason its so commonly in use is because its still considered to be societally acceptable to be racist towards Rromani people

  • @malikibeats
    @malikibeats 5 месяцев назад +810

    i dont watch kuncan but it seems odd for a leftist creator to be so weird about reform

    • @jaqsre
      @jaqsre 5 месяцев назад

      sadly, this mindset will make people more right leaning because if we don’t welcome them when they show change, the other side will accept them and accept them as they once were. it makes the leftist movement useless or even a result of more right wing individuals

    • @theelectricant98
      @theelectricant98 5 месяцев назад +158

      He's a liberal / socdem type above all else I think, not any sort of radical and he works under the same punitive, individualist framework as the average person

    • @chickensalad3535
      @chickensalad3535 5 месяцев назад +8

      @@theelectricant98He’s definitely radical.

    • @oggyboggy8692
      @oggyboggy8692 5 месяцев назад +137

      @chicken Then he's not actually thought deeply about his ideology. It's not cohesive with how punitive he is and how he doesn't consider how we all, him included, pick up discriminatory behaviour just by living in a discriminatory society

    • @PERRIERTASTESLIKEPISS
      @PERRIERTASTESLIKEPISS 5 месяцев назад +36

      @@theelectricant98you don’t have to have radical takes to be a leftist.

  • @Wren0phie
    @Wren0phie 5 месяцев назад +289

    The Romani consider G*psy to be a slur. I asked a Romani influencer about it years ago. The account that answered is gone now, but I do remember the gist of their response. While there are those who call themselves g*psies with, the majority of Romani groups consider the word to be an ethnic slur.
    I believe there are two broad categories of peoples (with each containing several ethnically distinct groups) that are labelled Roma/G*psy, with one being okay with the latter term, and the other not. However as I cannot fully confirm this with a cursory search, take this info with a grain of salt.
    I remember not being sure if the word was a slur for many years, so when I became active in a couple communities of Romani influencers, I was sure to ask.
    Also, sorry if this sounds upset or mean. I am trying not to, I am just autistic. I find the video to be wonderful. It recontextualized aspects of Kuncan Dastner's video. Specifically his bit about blackface. I had already felt weird about his conclusion on what one should do if they've erred, but I hadn't considered the way his view of acceptable behavior/forgiveness was impacting the way he talked about blackface itself. I really like your style of delivery, and I made sure to leave a like 😊

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +148

      Oooh, I didn't realize the word in and of itself was a slur. The works I've read indicated that calling a Romani person the term was derogatory. I'll have to read up more, thank you for pointing this out! ❤️

    • @nacoleacosta
      @nacoleacosta 5 месяцев назад +87

      ​@@UnpoeticJusticeFlorian on RUclips is Romani and has several videos on this.

    • @tree9273
      @tree9273 5 месяцев назад +17

      @@nacoleacostayes, he's really good

    • @kseniav586
      @kseniav586 5 месяцев назад +41

      Thanks for pointing this out. I live in Russia and the slur is the only way most people recognise these ethnic groups, so when I say "Romani" almost no one understands what that means, which is awful and makes everything more complicated. And not all Romani in Russia agree whether this word should be replaced or not.

    • @kseniav586
      @kseniav586 5 месяцев назад +4

      Wait, is there a difference between a slur and a degoratory word? (I'm not a native speaker) Shouldn't one avoid both?@@UnpoeticJustice

  • @tp2005
    @tp2005 5 месяцев назад +7

    One of your concluding points, about how conservatives tend to remove all blame from systems and place them on individuals, while many people on the left tend to the opposite of removing blame from individuals to place it squarely on systems and abstract concepts, stopped me dead in my tracks.
    This is something that has annoyed me about online leftist discourse for years now and you spelled it out so perfectly! I think people tend to focus on the abstract as an out from having to take individual accountability for much of anything. But the reality is, systems are built and sustained by individual actions that compound on each other. Therefore, if we truly want to dismantle oppressive systems, we have to step out of our own egos and be able to address individuals and the real concrete actions they commit. Without that, the status quo continues.

  • @leticiamaranhao412
    @leticiamaranhao412 4 месяца назад +9

    Your points about cultural racism, white guilt and the white liberal paradox are so great. I remember myself as a tween in the 2010s when I was first fiding out about social justice and prejudice, mostly through RUclips and through a very online, very engaged and short tempered friend at school. I had very low self-esteem and me being white quickly became an easy channel for self-flagellation; I remember genuinely feeling so awful about it and about being blessed with such an easi(er) life. I remember first finding out about the concept of 'blackface' and not understanding what exactly was the harm on doing it. I discussed with my friend and she called be a "racist bigot" and said I should be ashamed of myself. I felt extremely hurt. I hid from her at school the next days out of shame and avoided discussing anything related to social justice out of fear of showing ignorance. I was just a 13 year old struggling to unpack the inevitable racist beliefs I had grown up with.
    Point is, even though white guilt is generally just virtue signaling, it doesn't take away from the fact that the current online discourse encourages self-beating and eternal condemnation rather than growth. Many of those white liberals with culturally racist ideas could unpack and be better, but end up shutting down and even participating in the online stoning of others who are more similar to them than they'd like to believe. More than anything, humans want to fit in, and that innate desire is fundamentally opposite to our ideal goals in identity politics.

  • @pineapplelolipop
    @pineapplelolipop 5 месяцев назад +1831

    As a white person who has worked on, and is actively working on unlearning racism, i found it kind of weird and uncomfortable that Duncan had this holier-than-thou attitude about his parents raising him with 'the right values'. Like okay, am I just irredeemable then because my mom spewed racist nonsense that I believed until I got older? Am I irredeemable because I had an "edgy(racist) teen phase" where I used slurs and didn't understand their impact?
    Edit: I'd like to point out that I'm not trying diminish the harm of my racist behavior. I just tried to use myself as an example of why this line of logic is working against white allies who have participated in racism in any capacity. Note taken about "edgy teen phase" having a certain set of diminishing connotations.

    • @lemonmeat
      @lemonmeat 5 месяцев назад +142

      when i was like 11 i said the N word a couple times alone because mfs told me "if it ends with an A it's funny and not racist" and that was the last so i guess im a demon now

    • @scarletsletter4466
      @scarletsletter4466 5 месяцев назад +76

      Nah, I’m Latina mixed so I can’t speak for fully blk folks but for ME the intention of the slur matters the most. If someone calls me a gusano knowing what that word means in the context of Cuban American history, like the way Hasan Piker used it against Destiny, I think they should be deplatformed. But if an ignorant person uses it, or it’s in a joke, I don’t really care. I also don’t care if you joke about Latinos building houses or landscaping, but if you assume every elderly Latina you see is a housekeeper, that is offensive

    • @caseyw.6550
      @caseyw.6550 5 месяцев назад +150

      ​@scarletsletter4466 Genuinely curious...how is joking about Latino people building houses and being landscapers ok, but housekeepers is not? They are all stereotypes. I don't think any of it is funny personally.

    • @mimi9306
      @mimi9306 5 месяцев назад +132

      To the people you hurt yeah you probably are. Slurs aren’t a mythical cloud. They’re real words with historical and present day discrimination attached for ppl they are aimed at.

    • @needlefrick6857
      @needlefrick6857 5 месяцев назад +38

      I don't think she is saying one is better than the other. She's using them all as examples of stereotypes that people shouldn't assume apply to all Latinos, but separates genuinely applying stereotypes to people from joking about them (at least that's what I understood). @@caseyw.6550

  • @sway_onthetrail
    @sway_onthetrail 5 месяцев назад +278

    Duncan going through the monologue about him wracking his brain if he ever said something offensive or offended someone had me scratching my head. People aren't perfect and people learn from mistakes. I am not saying that people start off actively prejudice, but we all start off ignorant and none of us truly know how our own actions are perceived. You can be racist, sexist, transphobic etc without being intentionally malicious and I think that's something a lot of people don't realize. I see that exact thing living in the south when I wear femme clothes all the time, even when people are trying to be supportive. The people who listen to other perspectives grow and the ones who don't repeat the same behavior.

    • @chris_troiano
      @chris_troiano 5 месяцев назад +37

      For real. I can’t imagine how any person could thoughtfully reflect on their whole life and decide they’ve never said or done anything potentially harmful. And from that, they’ve cleared the purity test required to exist online. It’s healthy to recognize past missteps and learn from them! I know not every racist action is equal in scale, but to not even acknowledge the tiniest missteps while racking your entire brain?

    • @lindsey4620
      @lindsey4620 5 месяцев назад +25

      Plus you’re not going to remember something if u think it is normal or unremarkable. Idk how many people decide consciously they are going to be actively racist

    • @scarletsletter4466
      @scarletsletter4466 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@lindsey4620when you step outside of the US (& maybe Canada), you encounter people who are openly & proudly racist. Stores in Asia may not even let you in if you’re black. And don’t get me started on antisemitism. I was with a group of finance students in France & we had some Orthodox Jews in our group, & certain restaurants wouldn’t even seat us. I’m not saying this makes creators like Jenna Marbles less offensive, but it’s worth acknowledging it’s a position of privilege to be offended about Jenna Marbles’ accidental “blkface” rather than have to worry about actual disparate treatment

    • @froggygirl999
      @froggygirl999 5 месяцев назад +5

      also you can be bigoted and GROW. myself when i was a tween i was incredibly transphobic, i had alot of internalised transphobia and homophobia. not that it excuses it but i was literally 11/12 and barely understood what i was saying anyways. and yet duncan would have me believe i dont deserve to ever venture into the light of day. anyways the kick is i now go by they them lol

  • @ilina1320
    @ilina1320 5 месяцев назад +70

    Kuncan's assertion that people who have done harm in the past are permanently spoiled and should simply hide their face ironically reminds me of how our punitive approach to justice reinforces white supremacy through the prison industrial complex. To him, it's more important that Dean simply 'disappears' to a degree rather than be meaningfully transformed and actionably work on repairing the harm he caused -- similar to how our broken justice system often does not provide real means of justice and transformation, only a sometimes temporary separation of those who have caused harm. As you eloquently pointed out, hiding could result in someone silently operating in a still misguided mindset and only continuing to cause harm. Because of that, this specific point by Kuncan felt especially misguided and even dangerous. Transformative justice has been part of indigenous cultures throughout the world and is a key force in dismantling white supremacist structures. It doesn't mean everyone should continue having a platform, but it does mean fighting the notion that removing someone from society (akin to what he's suggesting with Dean simply never interfacing with a public audience again) always leads to justice.
    Sidenote: This is the first video of yours I've watched and I'm thrilled. Thank you for your labor in providing such an incredible analysis! Instant subscribe!

    • @jcat5443
      @jcat5443 4 месяца назад +4

      This, exactly!!! As an abolitionist, you put it perfectly! Thank you for writing this comment

    • @jruns9730
      @jruns9730 3 месяца назад +1

      Fully agree

  • @klrl93
    @klrl93 5 месяцев назад +8

    So, I’m not an influencer, and I don’t want to be, but one thing about me is that I was super homophobic when I was younger, and that continued into my late teens. I didn’t stop and reevaluate until I was 19, when I had become close with someone who is gay. Suddenly, it dawned on me how shitty it was that I could marry the man I love, but he couldn’t do the same thing in most places. This was 3 years before the Supreme Court ruled on equal marriage. I have been very open and honest about my past homophobia because it has shown how I’ve grown and what I believe now. Duncan saying, “Don’t become an influencer if you’ve done something racist,” seems harsh, especially for people that have grown and learned more from the moment they did the really wrong thing. I’m always an advocate for just being open, just being honest, and understanding why some might be angry about it. In my experience, with my queer friends, they’ve understood I am not the person I was and I no longer hold those beliefs. Maybe I’m off base, I don’t know. Feel free to tell me if I’m wrong in any way.

  • @chloek1182
    @chloek1182 5 месяцев назад +76

    the dramatic red lighting for duncan's video 😭 an interesting choice

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +23

      Definitely startled me upon my first watch 😭

    • @boybutch
      @boybutch 5 месяцев назад +12

      i was like “girl i got astigmatism don’t do this to me” genuinely could barely see anything

    • @ReiAnikaAyanami
      @ReiAnikaAyanami 4 месяца назад +4

      nah seriously what on earth was that 😭 was he speaking from hell?

  • @kidsamsa
    @kidsamsa 5 месяцев назад +431

    So glad the YT algorithm recommended your video to me. A lot of the current era of white guy commentary channels have this very dogmatic approach to racism that, to me, is very weird and uncomfortable even as a white person. They claim to listen to marginalized people and confront their biases, but also have a standard that demands perfect allyship since birth, and that any advocacy done due to growth is deceptive. To claim you have always been the perfect ally is absolutely insane to me. Nobody is a perfect ally, even to communities they’re a part of for gods sake. To say “I’ve never been like tbat, my parents raised me different” only tells me you have not truly listened to marginalized people.

    • @nexithedestroyer
      @nexithedestroyer 5 месяцев назад +27

      That type of moral purity reminds me of the christian right. These people may have changed their views, but not their approach or attitude towards other people's shortcomings. I am assuming alot of these people grew up in Christian/catholic families or at least in very conservative environments, they disagreed with them but didn't question how their approach is not very different from the people they apparently have nothing in common with

  • @capitalpm71
    @capitalpm71 4 месяца назад +7

    "This was never a question of 'Should offensive content be allowed to exist?' It should always be the question of 'How do we reduce people's desires to create offensive content?'"
    Damn, that was so well put at 27:44. It really helps to reframe this from an individual problem with individual people to a problem with how the systems we interact with encourage and reinforce the racist outcomes we see. It doesn't excuse the individual actions, but it works to understand how they happened and how they can be preempted at a higher level.

  • @vichernandezii
    @vichernandezii 5 месяцев назад +37

    This is really sad to find out about Dean. I never really was a fan of Dean because of the way he talked on Kurtis’s and Jacob’s podcasts but I never knew he did something like this. I think they’re all still friends because they went to college together. That might change now.

  • @lonely_space_egg
    @lonely_space_egg 5 месяцев назад +231

    This was a very enlightening video, especially the segment on guilt at ~22:30. I have moral OCD which makes guilt a very powerful emotion for me, so I found Kuncan's video very convincing/persuasive. But your points are much more nuanced and less black-and-white. The way you describe tolerance - that tolerance doesn't necessitate forgiving and forgetting, but can be a tool and requirement for social progress - is something I'd never considered before, since I am so used to seeing "tolerance" invoked to give people a free pass rather than holding them to account. I think that black-and-white approaches, such as Kuncan's proposal of "Never show your face online if you've ever done something racist" can serve as a copout from the challenging reality that people can do harm and still grow from it. It keeps us from analyzing the actions of our favorite creators, and our own actions as well.
    Will have to watch more of your videos, you've got insightful, clear and concise commentary that makes for a perfect background while I work.

    • @h0t_pock3t
      @h0t_pock3t 5 месяцев назад +37

      That's how I felt too as someone who also has OCD, but you worded it all better than I could. I really like how she said everything.

    • @roseivy5956
      @roseivy5956 5 месяцев назад +39

      I have moral OCD too and that's exactly what watching those Kuncan clips reminded me of. I feel like this video called me out in the most productive way possible

    • @Naveen-tx8be
      @Naveen-tx8be 5 месяцев назад +5

      I feel like my brain must’ve filled in the nuance to his video, because I understood the message to mean “don’t be an online public figure if you’ve ever been publicly racist, unless you’re willing to own up to it and grow as a person”.

    • @jewelmine442
      @jewelmine442 5 месяцев назад +6

      As someone who also has Moral OCD, this video really spoke to me when contextualizing accountability and tolerance. I also thought that Kuncans video was persuasive, so to watch this it put my thoughts into a whole new view point. Subscribed immediately to her, this is great!

    • @chocomelo454
      @chocomelo454 5 месяцев назад +4

      mhm! my OCD, mostly intrusive thoughts, does make me quite anxious when I remember things j did that were bad. like how, as a kid, my friends said the n word so much and always excused it that I somehow believed it was okay and that I had to say it too to fit in with the times (I'm very disconnected from society) and that my hesitation towards it was somehow just me being reactive, even though all my friends were white.
      I figured out really quickly that, no, my gut feeling was right, because whenever it was said I'd go "this doesn't feel right, I don't think I should be saying this. why are we allowed to do this?" and stopped, and genuinely have been trying to educate myself but also educate people on how it's not okay still. so Duncan's vid made me a lil anxious about it - although I don't expect any sympathy about it that's just my two cents. I mean, I know that I've definitely grown a lot (probably because I'm not literally 11 with the mind of a 9 year old...) and that trying to learn and boost voices and charities if I can't donate for reperations cuz broke is a good start and that there is still more I can do, so uh. there's that!

  • @geniesloveme24
    @geniesloveme24 5 месяцев назад +453

    I’ll be honest… white folks like Duncan who talk about other white people being racist in an awkwardly intense way usually don’t hang out with many, if any, POC. You see a lot of similar attitudes among white (usually queer) Portland liberals.
    Note: I add the queer aspect because of the way many white people in marginalized groups, such as the lgbtq+ community, subconsciously absolve themselves of their white guilt by heavily othering themselves from straight/cis white people.

    • @carolinalopes7640
      @carolinalopes7640 5 месяцев назад

      Absolutely 0 reason for you to add the queer element bc white folks will always other themselves from their white guilt.

    • @colbyboucher6391
      @colbyboucher6391 5 месяцев назад +27

      Here's the part I don't get: People seem to simultaneously criticize "white guilt" and insist that people _should_ have "white guilt" actually. I'm just sitting here sipping something in the background watching the wheel go 'round and 'round. The only conclusion I can come to is to stop caring and continue not being an asshole.

    • @carolinalopes7640
      @carolinalopes7640 5 месяцев назад +109

      @@colbyboucher6391 i never seen anybody ever said any of that? white guilt is critized bc a lot of white folks wants to act only based on that, and not on care and need for change. what is being asked is to open up a book, a documentary and help the community, instead of solking up on your white guilt, bc that doesnt help anybody.

    • @ellismorten
      @ellismorten 5 месяцев назад +84

      @@colbyboucher6391 I don't know anyone who says you should have white guilt. unless you're conflating being anti-racist / self reflecting on one's own racism, with white guilt... but those two things are actually very different. I'd argue that white guilt holds white people back from being able to see the full scope of racism because we make the issue center on ourselves and our feelings, instead of doing the work to dismantle the racism that exists around and in us

    • @esayers
      @esayers 5 месяцев назад +19

      Lmao true, as a white queer leftist, this is so common it’s almost the majority of white queer liberals/leftists. This behavior also seems to correlate with introversion, poor social skills, and chronic online patterns.

  • @kaylabingus
    @kaylabingus 19 дней назад +7

    What's so frustrating about white guilt is that even when trying to advocate for POC, it's still all about the feelings of white people. You can say "Listen to black people" all you want, but you're still the one doing all the talking. That's why it's cringy.

  • @evanho4538
    @evanho4538 4 месяца назад +114

    Kurtis as an individual seems so hands off and more “live and let live” than he seems to let on on his channel. I really perceive his own personal politics to be a lot more relaxed than his audience expects them to be. Which is a tough place to be in for someone like him. Idk I could be wrong. But people condemning him for being friends with dean is so extra imo. Like deleting all his videos that have dean in them must’ve been a HUGE blow to their friendship and probably really hard for Kurtis /: idk I have just been watching him for so long that even I don’t agree with some of the more political takes he has! And I still watch him and he makes me laugh a lot. This was a great video though.

    • @skepticalshrek
      @skepticalshrek 3 месяца назад +5

      Wait did he delete all his videos with dean?! Holy cow- I didn’t know

    • @LUCKY-lf2jv
      @LUCKY-lf2jv 3 месяца назад

      @@skepticalshrekyeah i noticed this too because i’m only seeing reuploads of their videos and their podcast together hasn’t been touched in a year or so

    • @Alixir1228
      @Alixir1228 3 месяца назад +3

      Nah. The reason why I haven't watched Kurtis in years is because he directly attacked everyone who doesn't agree with ab*rtion and continued trashing them in a follow-up video when we made comments like "Hey, I'm a fan and we have different opinions and that's okay." Seems he only heavily supports an opinion that directly benefits him ie him not wanting a child.

    • @acidbunnyofficial
      @acidbunnyofficial 3 месяца назад

      @@Alixir1228is there a clip for this? or any kind of evidence?

    • @acidbunnyofficial
      @acidbunnyofficial 3 месяца назад

      @@Alixir1228is there a clip for this? or any kind of evidence?

  • @micheller3251
    @micheller3251 5 месяцев назад +824

    It's so weird to say that everyone who has had even a single problematic thought isn't deserving of remaining in the public space, even worse to say you wouldn't even keep them in your social circle. Sure, we all have our limits which depends on our own experience and personal sensibilities... but to pretend to only accept morally pure people around you just sounds delusional to me.

    • @StoutCorvus
      @StoutCorvus 5 месяцев назад +98

      That's because it is delusional lol

    • @deusex9731
      @deusex9731 5 месяцев назад +55

      Its also weird cause this very generation Had a very politically funny phase around 2016

    • @harborbenassa8756
      @harborbenassa8756 5 месяцев назад +106

      Honestly, the puritanical persona some creators put forth is off putting and makes me suspicious. Why is projecting perfection so important? What could they be hiding?

    • @kseniav586
      @kseniav586 5 месяцев назад

      yes, and it's precisely this kind of thinking that keeps the leftist internet running nowadays, kind of? put a creator on a pedestal, wait until they make any sort of moral mistake, then tear them down and move on to another one.

    • @tunalicous2089
      @tunalicous2089 5 месяцев назад

      Fucking exactly

  • @kaitlynm9463
    @kaitlynm9463 5 месяцев назад +289

    The purity Olympics going on is really concerning. I get why the overcorrection has happened but in their perspective there is zero incentive to ever accept responsibility. Why would you if you’re eternally doomed to being “problematic” ? I don’t care for the feelings of these particular individuals, but it completely removes the idea of rehabilitation and overcoming harmful perspectives, which just ends up hurting the marginalized groups they supposedly want to protect.

    • @emh1474
      @emh1474 5 месяцев назад +26

      I feel this. Like I definitely think it’s important to decenter, not demand forgiveness from the hurt party, and acknowledg that some consequences naturally come with negative action regardless of how much one has grown. But like online people really act like total condemnation motivates anyone to change, when in my life experience in the past I‘ve seen more people double down and get more entitled about their beliefs or wallow in self pity the more moral absolutism and “purity” I had about the issue. I saw more growth from people I told that they are not a bad person but the action or belief itself is hurtful. Like no one has to forgive people that hurt them or hold their hand or anything, but pretending like the person cannot progress after or grow to be better on their own feels so self righteous and doesn’t inspire faith in others or themselves.

  • @sarahwoods1967
    @sarahwoods1967 5 месяцев назад +31

    I remember watching Duncan's video and feeling so off about it. Especially that moment where he played dramatic music over clips of Dean talking about how he has lived his whole RUclips career with this unimaginable guilt. It genuinely felt satirical at first. Like I am not condemning Dean, but I doubt that he lived his life with this overbearing guilt or that he has even thought about this moment in his life much at all.

  • @gutwrenchingdeaths
    @gutwrenchingdeaths 4 месяца назад +17

    I don't know how to word this specifically, but I'm so blown away by how "efficient" (?) this video is. Like, now a days on RUclips videos like these are at least an hour long, but you communicated so much with so much depth in half that time. I have a learning disability so I'm always impressed by and grateful (?) for effective communication; I really can't overstate how much easier it makes comprehension. Really great video that brings up a lot of good points.

  • @fruit6946
    @fruit6946 5 месяцев назад +413

    Duncan's hard stance against maintaining relationships and his beliefs about his "clean past" make me somewhat question his intentions. Is he really cutting out bigotted people out of his life for the community or to protect himself from being associated with them?

    • @periwinkleadidas
      @periwinkleadidas 5 месяцев назад +39

      THIS. right here.

    • @axtiexe
      @axtiexe 5 месяцев назад +6

      thats something i thought about too.

    • @Beepboop6669
      @Beepboop6669 5 месяцев назад +8

      This is a really poignant distinction!

    • @luchirimoya
      @luchirimoya 5 месяцев назад +2

      Oof, good point

    • @jijitters
      @jijitters 4 месяца назад +14

      Not wanting to be associated with, or to directly associate with, bigoted people is a normal thing to want...

  • @getslimy
    @getslimy 5 месяцев назад +484

    Generally enjoy kuncan's takes and find his approach to be nuanced and empathetic- which is why his latest upload caught me off-guard. I certainly expected him to be critical of his subject, but was very thrown by his sweeping proclamation that no one who has done anything "problematic" can ethically pursue a career where they might be considered a public figure. I was left thinking, are we leftists or not, then, if we do not find genuine apology or work towards personal betterment to have redemptive potential? I don't think Dean's apology rose to the level of redemptive, but I'll set that example aside despite it being the focus of kuncan's video, because kuncan did make a sweeping, generalized statement about all creators and people that suggested one ignorant or even malicious act must forever outweigh all subsequent attempts toward personal betterment.
    If that's the case, if we accept that thesis, then do we no longer believe in rehabilitation or forgiveness *when it is earned back or worked for*? Logically following, do we just let people who don't care about integrity or personal betterment run the world, as we chase notions of "being a good person" by sinking into the shadows of self-flagellation for the rest of our lives?
    I was especially struck by the segment where kuncan asserts his right to be in the commentary space based on the fact that he's never done anything problematic, without acknowledging that "problematic" is subjective. Who is he to say that he has never hurt someone, even if he does not realize it? The fact that he's specifically a commentary youtuber (who, again, I think usually has empathetic views!) makes his point even more confusing to me- commentary is inherently subjective and controversial; what you say will always be questionable to someone somewhere, no matter what.
    Those were all the things on my mind about his video when yours popped up in my feed, and I was pleasantly surprised to see that you were covering it. I wondered if you would address all the thoughts above. I should have known, based on your previous work, that you'd cover all that and more, and much more eloquently than I could have hoped for from any other essayist. You call yourself a nihilist, but if that is the quality that makes your writing so precise and insightful, then I appreciate it.

    • @itisyerdad
      @itisyerdad 5 месяцев назад +68

      I mentioned this in another comment, but I don't think Duncan has particularly nuanced takes and it's one of the reasons I stopped watching him over a year ago. I found he was constantly looking for the worst possible interpretation of a situation and tries very hard to moralize everything. I think there are often great topics that he covers, but he has always had this all or nothing vibe to his work and I think if you re-watch some of his older videos, you'll see at least the DNA of this type of binary, lack of nuance in a lot of it.

    • @kseniav586
      @kseniav586 5 месяцев назад +29

      I think Duncan meant that he has nothing in his past that would *get him cancelled* rather than not doing anything wrong ever. These are two very different things. Not that that's better, though. It shows that he is aware of the vicious circle we on the leftist internet do, putting people on a pedestal and then tearing them down for any perceived or real transgression. "Chasing notions of being a good person", as you said.

    • @baby.yogurt
      @baby.yogurt 5 месяцев назад +24

      @@itisyerdad I agree, I stopped watching his videos a while back and have only clicked on a couple since then, I just found his commentary to be lacking insight and attention in necessary areas, while at the same time overcomplicating other areas of the subjects he talked about. ultimately I would leave a video of his and realize I hadn't learned anything and was disappointed in the lack of depth in his commentary

    • @ghoster7600
      @ghoster7600 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@itisyerdad I definitely agree on this. I had a hard time trying to formulated into a sentence.

    • @chickensalad3535
      @chickensalad3535 5 месяцев назад +2

      If someone no longer engages in such behavior and acknowledges their past mistakes,than they’re redeemed. It’s very simple.

  • @Legendary_Honey
    @Legendary_Honey 3 месяца назад +6

    My biggest problem with Duncan is that he lives in this world of his where change and growth does not exist. Forgiveness doesn't exist. That's an awful place to be. The ability to change is one of the most important things in the world, and it's a joyful occasion when you've made a change. I hope he is able to discover this.

  • @IGoByAlllexia
    @IGoByAlllexia 4 месяца назад +19

    Jfc the moment Dean said he'd immediately throw away a friend who made an off colour joke made me so sad. If you truly love someone enough for them to be your friend, you help them grow or understand what made them think these jokes are OK and what prompted them to make them and you help them see their biases. You don't just throw them away like an imperfect little toy

  • @schmowder1911
    @schmowder1911 5 месяцев назад +158

    I’ve heard people compare dogmatic political rhetoric to religious fundamentalism, but it often reminds of what I’ve heard from prosecutors. It’s the contempt for idea of rehabilitation. Most shit involving “good” v “evil” thinking makes me real uneasy. With some exceptions (namely, child exploitation is evil and those people can’t be rehabilitated)

    • @noireisbest6786
      @noireisbest6786 5 месяцев назад

      I can't speak for everyone, but at least for me, it's not really about good or evil, but whether the person in question is even interested in being rehabilitated at all. You have some people who will double or even triple down on their nonsense, go into the arms of people like The Daily Wire where they will continue to wail about how mean we were when a lot of people were either indifferent or providing them with help politely. Rehabilitation is 100% needed, but it does become tiring when you see someone screw up but then refuse to do that.

    • @lindsey4620
      @lindsey4620 5 месяцев назад +8

      Ikr it’s kinda puritanical

    • @smoppet
      @smoppet 5 месяцев назад

      The justice system loves this. "They're a psycho and nothing can fix them!" then they release the offender back into the wild to offend again. There is a better future than this...but the system doesn't want it.

    • @futuristic.handgun
      @futuristic.handgun 5 месяцев назад

      Totally agree!!

    • @lousielouise8716
      @lousielouise8716 5 месяцев назад +13

      You're so right. "Leftist guilt" to me resembles religious guilt, where homophobia, transphobia, racism, sexism, ableism, etc go from systemic issues into personal "sins." It just completely sidetracks any kind of productive discussion. People will f*ck up. That includes marginalized people. The whole "no forgiveness" thing, or worse, constant self-flagellation, leaves people who could be organizing, and *doing* something trapped in spirals of guilt and shame.

  • @kkimsey5866
    @kkimsey5866 5 месяцев назад +357

    This is so interesting. As an older white person who considers myself a leftist but isn't a content creator, I watched Duncan's video and thought something like, "huh, that's intense. I could never meet that standard myself and my family members surely couldn't.". I just figured it was a "(white) kids these days" thing 😂. Like, no white person born in the '80s could take this position. Especially not if they wanted to try and help/push their fellow white people to do/be better. I thought it was an age thing. I think your take is more well thought out though. And very helpful. Thanks!

    • @talonhammer
      @talonhammer 5 месяцев назад +98

      Nah, for sure he is just misguided on what allyship really looks like. Most younger people know people make mistakes and that's normal lol

    • @wrenmassey6876
      @wrenmassey6876 5 месяцев назад +39

      Exactly, you can't expect people to get better if you don't provide them space to grow

    • @clumsyninja925
      @clumsyninja925 5 месяцев назад +2

      What standard?

    • @kkimsey5866
      @kkimsey5866 5 месяцев назад

      @@clumsyninja925 the standard of never being able to be public or speak because you have done something racist. Like having to organize your whole life around the fact that in the past you said/did/acted racist. Welcome to white supremacy, right? Understanding that most white people raised and living in a white supremacist society will overtly hurt people with their racism at some point in their life means that we need a solution that allows for people to move forward and do better. The solution to systemic and individual racism cannot be that anyone who has been racist can never speak again. That doesn't mean people shouldn't be held accountable. The video says it better 😆👍 but that's what I mean when I say "that standard".

    • @Leig5H0T
      @Leig5H0T 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@clumsyninja925disappearing from public eye if you've had past mistakes

  • @amarazo8499
    @amarazo8499 2 месяца назад +9

    saying “blackface didn’t exist til now” feels not correct

  • @KaelWrit
    @KaelWrit 5 месяцев назад +19

    I stayed friends with someone for over a decade who had a racism problem, like many people from my old neighborhood; I was raised by racists myself, and had to unlearn and learn a lot. I thought I could change him and that he was changing. The thing is, sometimes when someone is racist like that, even if they do improve, racism isn't the only problem with them as a friend. In the end, my friend had other prejudices, and other issues, and it led him to being a bad friend on a more personal level towards me. And we will probably never know if Dean was a great friend or kinda not the best friend, but both are certainly possible. We do know he didnt really consider how his friends might be uncomfortable with his behavior like Blackface at a party, and people have said they were uncomfortable. He knows his friends are more progressive than him. So to me that shows he could be inconsiderate. Which, tbf, we all can. but maybe there are more reasons than their career that his friends like Kurtis were willing to end the friendship publicly.

  • @Jay-ze1ee
    @Jay-ze1ee 5 месяцев назад +161

    I wondered why the situation was leaving me feel like something was missing, after watching your video I realized I was missing a black perspective. I really appreciate your videos. They always challenge my bias. Thank you.

    • @Jay-ze1ee
      @Jay-ze1ee 5 месяцев назад +26

      I would also like to add that from my understanding the g slur used for roma and romani people is a slur.

    • @cacography
      @cacography 5 месяцев назад +2

      hopefully kuncan learns to include voices from the impacted community when he's commenting on bigotry. that's something i've always appreciated about foreign man.

  • @d.h.4778
    @d.h.4778 5 месяцев назад +90

    Thank you. I’m a white person in a small town, without much experience with anyone besides straight, white, cis people who hate any kinda difference and I don’t feel like a terrible person here. I’m 31 and just trying my best to unlearn everything this place has pounded into my head. I still really like Duncan, I just know he’s also not the person to get all the information on this situation from, because he’s white too. You always help me better understand from different perspectives as well, and help my black and white thinking see HOW and why everyone has different thoughts. I always get confused and don’t understand in the trans and disabled community how and why there’s such different opinions when most issues do honestly seem black and white to me, and being in those communities is honestly irritating sometimes because of it. Idk how what you worded just clicked or what exactly you said for it to do so, but thank you for always breaking it down to the bare minimum so I do understand and see everything you are explaining, as well as being able to help me understand things outside of what you are talking about that I didn’t understand before.
    I hope all of this made sense in the kindest way I could figure out how to word it. ❤

    • @tapijoz
      @tapijoz 5 месяцев назад +15

      As a white gay man, I first noticed how black feminist creators give me perspective that I could never get from anyone else, and therefore is very very valuable. And then I think I got a comparable insight to what it could mean to black viewers, since LGBT-creators have been very important for me lately for I share the perspective, and I really really do need it for being sane. So there is so much respect for me here, and I am all ears.

    • @d.h.4778
      @d.h.4778 5 месяцев назад +8

      @@tapijoz I’ve come to realize recently while ALL minority creators voices are very much important, black leftist women have an insight into the world and way of explaining that brings everyone more together and into the conversation in an incomparable way to anyone else. I don’t have the mental ability to look at others perspectives easily, and unless someone explains it to me very clearly, and not everyone can do that in a way that I don’t feel completely guilty for how and where in this mess of a country I was born.

    • @tapijoz
      @tapijoz 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@d.h.4778 I agree. I wanted to say something alike. Especially, because, after all, there are also black lgbt feminist creators. So I do agree that there can be so much that is brought together in a way that makes a lot of sense all over the spectrum of people.

    • @d.h.4778
      @d.h.4778 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@tapijoz unpoetic justice is definitely my favorite creator. She just has such a way with words. The world would be better if more people knew who she is and actually took the time to listen! And I can agree or disagree without hate, and then we can all talk about it. While I do think black leftist women need to be the forefront and most listened to in all of our political situations, I do feel she is a lot better than mostly anyone else I listen to. She cultivates engagement in a very different way than most. ❤️ I love that we’re all actually having conversations. Ya know?

    • @tapijoz
      @tapijoz 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@d.h.4778 Yes, definitely! Disagreeing is important and I have learned to also hold my own opinion and to form it, because of the healthy criticism. And there are days and situations that I have loved when I was wrong, because it made me progress. People shouldn’t fear it so much that they form a strong opinion RIGHT AWAY. Understanding takes time. Also there have been times I loved disagreeing, because I have learned and vice versa.❤️

  • @roseprints6795
    @roseprints6795 4 месяца назад +36

    i’ll be honest i clicked because i’ve always been a fan of kurtis and i wanted to see what he was responsible for. i stayed and subscribed because this video is so well done and educational. i can really tell how much time and effort was put into this creation, so much research was done!

    • @mewowow
      @mewowow 3 месяца назад +1

      same lmao

  • @groalerable
    @groalerable 4 месяца назад +9

    That guy telling people to hide if they ever did anything offensive just makes me scratch my head. Not everyone has to take a moment of harsh public criticism as world ending event.

    • @YouLaToya
      @YouLaToya 3 месяца назад

      Those are actually the type whites that concerns me more than the most flamboyant racist; the

  • @lexamona96
    @lexamona96 5 месяцев назад +168

    LOVED this breakdown Ty so much! So many points to add to:
    - the black women and men who weren’t offended and explained why is a gripe I’ve had for such a long time. Since we are Americans, there are black people who’ve never experienced racism to a degree to care or even know the history enough to care. I love and loved Jenna, but she made me proud pointing the problems out. She didn’t have to go, but that was her decision and no one should downplay the wrongdoings just because you don’t like her decision
    - I really liked Dean when I first got into Kurtis’ channel, but once that girl from the show they went on talked about his behavior afterwards, it was a wrap for me. To now learn of his past is just so damning. And yes, as teens especially in the 2010’s, nobody took racism as seriously as they should have to me. I had a “friend” at 15 show me a Shane video and it was blatant black face and he didn’t get that. He was Mexican and made jokes about his own race all the time but I didn’t agree with it and I never watched Shane’s stuff because of that ONE video so it has relentlessly baffled me that anyone likes him. However, I’m not going to leave any space in my mind for him and that’s my way of dealing
    - As a very optimistic person, I’ve always found all or nothing takes on racism very damaging as it fixes nothing. The Being offended “is your choice” thought process is so selfish and blatantly ignores the big picture. We should be aiming to be in a world where people CAN feel comfortable and not a target for racism in all spaces. And the Duncan dudes mentality of “If you ever been offensive just don’t be in this field” gives a sour taste in my mouth too. After that take I said out loud “how is anyone supposed to grow? Is acknowledgment and having an open discussion to learn from your peers not an option?” Life is complex, our history is complex, and we’ve all grown up in a weird ass country being taught wildly different things. We have got to be able to have some empathy, an open ear, and know that change takes everyone time but that means knowing why to change in the first place. I’m not surprised by really any white people who do something mildly racist at this point, but if I tell you that and you continue, you’re choosing to be an awful person
    - lastly lol, I’ve been a RUclips girly since 2008 y’all. I liked the likes of Tobuscus, Pewdiepie, Smosh, Philly D, Jenna, the key of awesome, etc. I had to discover all of them having content I felt offensive before and had to wrestle my feelings with. I stopped watching Toby cause his content lacked completed playthroughs, but on numerous vlogs he bragged about dating a black girl. “She was mixed but it counted!” Type shit. I was a teen so I was like…okay. Eww. But I never commented. Stopped watching pewds cause that N-bomb was said so hard bruh lol then he made fun of a deaf black woman because of her nail clicking.I was not a fan by that point but I wasn’t surprised because of the previous offense. And Smosh hit me in my CHEST when Ian and Anthony played that dumb 50 cent gangster game and weren’t laughing at the game, but more so the themes and characters actions I.e. black men. It made me uncomfortable and sad.they to me have definitely grown from that point themselves as well as made a cast of people who are diverse AND funny, not just a diversity hire type stuff.
    In the end it’s just plain lazy to me to not take context into account for these people as they navigate their wrongdoings. Deans apology wasn’t for the people he offended, so he’s going to continue to get flack as he should. But I hope as more RUclipsrs rise and fall, that people do think more critically about these issues and think to themselves how they can help make positive change, or protect their peace without harming another persons peace
    TLDR: Context matters heavy and with this platform being around since 2005, people have to be more critical in their takes when someones actions has been deemed offensive. Downplaying the victims of the offense is selfish and nihilist, and wanting to shun the person when it’s not that bad is not fixing anything (somebody arrest Shane though please gah damn).

    • @heyyitsjude
      @heyyitsjude 5 месяцев назад +19

      Can I just ask like, can a creator only learn and grow on platform? Like, because Jenna left the platform did she not learn and grow afterwards? RUclips, content, “influencing” is a job for these people. And can we not agree that no everybody needs to be one? That’s not saying they don’t deserve to learn and grow, but that literally there *can* be a standard? I feel like folks are centering this around how normal people should forgive each other for their past which I think is a different conversation than influencers who profit off of a vaguely progressive persona are actually not all that progressive - therefore exploiting their audience lol.

    • @kseniav586
      @kseniav586 5 месяцев назад +13

      Thanks for adding these points. The comments to Duncan's video are full of people eager to point out how they, too, have never done a problematic/racist thing in their entire lives. So they were probably, I don't know, reading bell hooks and getting a degree in Decolonisation while the rest of us punks were growing up on the channels you mentioned. Yet many of us have evolved past that and are actively trying to do better, shouldn't that matter for something?

    • @Aster_Risk
      @Aster_Risk 5 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@heyyitsjudeThank you. There is context in which I don't feel bad for not forgiving (for offenses that affect me) and not supporting someone. I do like to give people chances even if I don't want to be their friend or watch their content. Like, if I had a boyfriend who cheated on me I would want nothing to do with him, but I wouldn't wish a miserable life for him. I'd hope he would learn from the mistake and never do that to anyone else. Forgiveness and supporting rehabilitation doesn't have to mean being happy about it or overly invested.

    • @lexamona96
      @lexamona96 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@Aster_Risk I needed your comment to better understand the first one and I do agree! I have 3 ex best friends that I don’t wish ill Will on but they aren’t friends anymore for a reason and I never want to see them again. I’m constantly in shock that Chris Brown for example is still thriving when he is a serial abuser of women, especially dark skin black women. Not forgiving people is also a valid choice to protects ones peace

  • @andromedatriangle9988
    @andromedatriangle9988 5 месяцев назад +234

    Yeah the guilt spiral was giving social anxiety rather than like…mindfulness

    • @sootekken
      @sootekken 5 месяцев назад +27

      Definitely something that I think Duncan probably struggles with, I hope he’s been able to reflect better on it, because it feels like his own negative feelings are eating away at him and effecting his content.

    • @ernie39
      @ernie39 5 месяцев назад

      agreed

  • @dubjeezee
    @dubjeezee 5 месяцев назад +33

    Dude, you are gonna get a million+ subs eventually. This is some of the best commentary I have seen in a while. Also, I have never understood why black face was necessary to "cosplay" as black figures. I was Ricky Williams for Halloween one year (old football player who loved weed) and I just wore a Dolphins jersey and spent the whole party with a blunt on hand and everyone knew what time it was. It isn't that hard.

  • @fallpath8301
    @fallpath8301 3 месяца назад +2

    This is the first video of yours that I’ve watched. If I checked your subscriber count and it was like 3M I wouldn’t have been at all surprised. The quality of your editing and your writing is so high. Really great points that were so well made.

  • @sagemcmichael8320
    @sagemcmichael8320 5 месяцев назад +101

    One thing that I've noticed about this with ppl being so quick to condemn cancelled influencers past the point of redemption is that it really plays into ppls desire to watch others punished. A lot of ppl that consider themselves leftists and even prison abolitionists still use that framework of justice and punishment for how they interact with cancellations. Also I definitely get a holier than thou vibe from leftists that talk like that. A lot of white leftists subconsciously wanna signal to other leftists and visibly marginalized folks that they're "not like those other ignorant/racist white ppl"

    • @TeaghanYoung
      @TeaghanYoung 5 месяцев назад +7

      Agree!! This obsession with moral purity is so counterintuitive to progressive movements. White guilt SHOULD be processed, but I do think that work should be done privately and not in front of an audience. I can see people making the argument that it could be helpful to see someone go through the process of unpacking their white guilt (which is sort of what Duncan’s video feels like to me now), however the video itself is framed as a deep dive/critique of a situation that he wasn’t even involved in (other than being a viewer of Kurtis and co) so I don’t think that’s even a valid defense lol regardless of Duncan’s intent, the video comes off as a performance that really only serves to put him in a morally superior position to the people he’s critiquing. Like others here, I was irked by the section where he talks about how anyone who’s ever done something problematic should never take a public facing job?? That’s a wild take!!! And if his goal is to impart leftist values on to viewers, this rhetoric really fails to do that. This rhetoric falls way more in line with religious fundamentalists rather than leftists. I hope he watches this video and takes the criticism cause I’d love to see him grow from this type of thinking.

    • @bittywop
      @bittywop 5 месяцев назад +5

      Absolutely! It’s a bandaid. We can’t get rid of racism but we can get rid of (insert celebrity here). And then we can feel relief. But it’s false. I understand it because there’s so much that we have no control over and cancelling feels like the smallest bit of relief we get. But ultimately, it doesn’t solve things.

    • @ArturGlass.C
      @ArturGlass.C 5 месяцев назад +3

      TRUUUUUUE. I've noticed a penchant for punishment too or associating "punishment" to "justice" that rarely they put on questioning. I'm very passionate about rehabilitation and things concerning how abhorrent and exploitative the criminal justice system can be. And it's a huge discussion point in leftists politics in general but when I see influencers talk about this it's always "the prison complex is horrid conditions for criminals to live in", which is better than nothing but there's never discussion on reduced sentences, decriminalization, post-prison life and injustice especially in regards to access to work and housing.
      It's very selective and leads me to wonder if they're even pro-rehabilitation or if their ideal solution is legitimately "make prisons more liveable but keep them locked up". Which I probably don't need to tell anyone but is much more of a liberal take than a leftist.

  • @maribethmorgan7886
    @maribethmorgan7886 5 месяцев назад +279

    I grew up in an extremely Christian right wing household-I was not allowed to have social media, access to the internet without being monitored, and I was not allowed to listen to music/movies that were not religious. I grew up in a community that was mostly white. I was EXTREMELY homophobic, racist in ways I wouldn’t have even been aware of, xenophobic, and sexist. I was not even given the resources (like the internet or other friends) to learn about other perspectives until I moved away from my parents. The left will eat itself if it is unable to accept that people can change. We cannot say that education is poor in America, that Christianity and extremism is being taught in the classrooms, and that people are brainwashed AND AT THE SAME TIME expect every one on the left to be spotless. I understand not all change is genuine, and that it takes time, but I think there’s some cognitive dissonance on the left. We have to be accepting of some people’s pasts and focus on the change and the progress they have made. And I understand for each group that has been victimized by that behavior it can take time, but we can’t grow on the left by continuing to hold things against those who are trying to be better

    • @berickslime6718
      @berickslime6718 5 месяцев назад +34

      Black people do not care about your personal growth journey, how you grew up surrounded by racist family members, or white guilt about. It's truly exhausting listening to the same story over and over again. Just be better and focus all of that energy trying to convince marginalized people you have changed and actually try to change the people who instilled those values in you in the 1st place.
      Also, forget about left/right and focus on deconstructing the racism in your personal life and family members. This idea of formally racist people having a self-improvement journey that people have to be sympathetic is tired. Its like you hold being a better person as leverage for people to be nice to you for not being racist.

    • @Shirumoon
      @Shirumoon 5 месяцев назад +57

      ​@@berickslime6718 Yeah but that person cares about their personal growth journey and a lot of other white people can relate? Only a small amount of people are expecting to be given a proverbial trophy for deconstructing their past and upbringing but it is freaking difficult. And not just a white people thing. Black people can be and sometimes are homophones, migogynists, etc. Some deconstruct, some don't. I don't appreciate you expecting white people to not talk about their experience and to just simply cater to what one minority needs. Cause it's not simple and support is needed for that.

    • @nomoretwitterhandles
      @nomoretwitterhandles 4 месяца назад +10

      Same situation here. I wasn't extreme on any front and I knew all people deserved to be treated with respect, but I also didn't understand the gravity of casual bigotry, that "jokes" aren't just jokes, etc.
      I'm proud of myself for changing and becoming more active in fighting for civil rights. I'm not perfect, and to claim I am would be so damn ignorant. A lot of extremist left-wingers DEMAND perfection, which implies that nobody can ever grow or change, even after coming to the realization that words and actions do indeed matter. It's like, how the fuck are we supposed to change if we are not allowed to change? Where is the logic in this?
      This type of "It couldn't be me though" behavior is why I unsubbed from Kurtis Conner, it's why I avoid commentators like Duncan, and it's why I cannot stand casual extremists pandering to young and influential audiences. Speaking of which, I understand your point about extremist Christianity, but you have got to make that clear as plenty of Christians do NOT preach bigotry, nor do they preach in a school setting; religious discrimination towards one group, while PARTIALLY justified, will always lead to religious discrimination towards other groups. I cannot tell you how many anti-Christian Atheists I've seen who had also ended up being Islamophobic and Anti-Semitic. Always be cautious and focus on the problem. Extremism and religious discrimination is bad, but that doesn't mean religion itself is bad. That's a tricky pipeline.
      Point is, you are so right for everything else. We are human, we are prone to making mistakes, and it is our duty to correct those mistakes and try to keep an open mind. Lately all these (primarily white, though not exclusively white) creators and influencers will pretend like they're always right, that they're never wrong, and that everyone who disagrees is actually a secret bigot. Nobody considers nuance, context, or critical thinking anymore... and it fucking sucks no matter what you believe. Extreme leftist beliefs diminish the value of change.

    • @nomoretwitterhandles
      @nomoretwitterhandles 4 месяца назад +44

      @@berickslime6718 While that is understandable, you could not be further from the point of what they were trying to say. Nuance and context matters, no matter what your race is. Yes, I'm sure it is exhausting hearing these kinds of things... as an excuse. But OP is not excusing anything, they are not trying to praise themselves so they can be accepted by their black peers, nor are they trying to "tell the same story over and over again". They're just giving background for a point they are making, and the point is that extremist white liberalism is extremely damaging. It's like you didn't even read the title of the video, which is ABOUT white liberalism and its damage to actual activism.

    • @bunnyellabell
      @bunnyellabell 4 месяца назад +48

      ​@@nomoretwitterhandles if it helps, this person is just copy-pasting this response to nearly every comment like this. they don't want to actually have any discussion; they read "i am white and..." then hit paste.

  • @Alice-jq6rd
    @Alice-jq6rd 5 месяцев назад +23

    this was a really thought-provoking video. recently, i was confronted with a friend's transphobia. being gay (and my friend aware of this), i tried to show her the similarities between transphobia and homophobia. i was hoping i could show her how they stem from the same place, and lead her to see how accepting gay people while not accepting trans people is counterintuitive. instead, i discovered that she was quietly homophobic as well. i'm really struggling with how to deal with this. i believe in growth and change, but being directly in the firing line of someone i am friends with is new to me. it makes it a lot harder to gauge whether i think my friend is well-intentioned at heart when i am so emotional. this video gave me a lot to consider.

  • @Drowningindisappointment
    @Drowningindisappointment 2 месяца назад +4

    A close friend of mine grew up mormon, and if you don't know, the mormon organization has a big racism problem. Ocasionaly we'll be having a conversation and out of nowhere they'll say something anti-semetic, racist, or wildly islamaphobic, they don't realize that what they say is genuinely offensive. We'll point it out and talk through it and have conversations about how what she said is steeped in biggotry and hate.
    People sometimes wonder why I'm still friends with them when they hear the worst things she's said but and I always answer because I know that they are more than the bigotry that was engraned in them, I know that they genuinely want to get better and if we, as her friends, don't show her support and understanding when she fails, then she could fall right back into old patterns.

  • @gilly_axolotl
    @gilly_axolotl 5 месяцев назад +61

    Holy shit, kuncan gave a whole anime villian monologue

  • @Bkgiest
    @Bkgiest 5 месяцев назад +130

    Hoooo you threw Abba, Preach and those two ladies under the bus, then drove it over them😂. I'm glad you pointed this out because it helps to kill the "I've got a poc friend" narrative. I recall that being used heavily in the renaming of the Washington football team. Not so much friends, but certain indigenous groups who probably felt there were bigger fish to fry.

    • @UnpoeticJustice
      @UnpoeticJustice  5 месяцев назад +16

      😭😭

    • @alexxpanda6412
      @alexxpanda6412 5 месяцев назад +2

      As a aba and preach fan, this was hilarious! I love your video, it taught me a lot

  • @mamagamer9505
    @mamagamer9505 5 месяцев назад +4

    I am a birth doula and postpartum doula. The racism in healthcare is awful. I advocate the best I can for my clients and I look forward to learning more from you and your channel. I study and grow and try to create a safe space. This was excellent coverage and extremely informational. Thank you.

  • @synthiandrakon
    @synthiandrakon 4 месяца назад +10

    I feel like the response I've seen most often is that Jenna didn't have to leave and she could have just carried on and even I see a lot of puzzlement at why she didn't.
    One thing I appreciate about her apology and subsequent leaving is that it steps out of the mindset of self preservation. Most apologies on RUclips are made with the understanding that they have to continue doing RUclips. Something I feel is not present in most other jobs.
    It was nice to see someone realise "oh wait I don't have to continue doing this I can just get another job"

  • @lotusthemermaid
    @lotusthemermaid 5 месяцев назад +119

    Thank you for perfectly encapsulating why I unsubscribed from Duncan's channel. There was something so uncomfortably self-righteous and patronizing about the way he discussed social issues. It's not very realistic or very helpful.
    I KNOW I have a cringe internet history. I was raised in an unquestioningly conservative household. I was sheltered, ignorant, and prudish as a teenager and I've had an internet presence since I was a preteen.
    We have to allow room for people to grow, especially these days in which all of our growth is chronicled in snapshots on the internet.

    • @Dethisus
      @Dethisus 5 месяцев назад +19

      I'm in the same boat. Watching him recite how sanitized his life was kind of explained it though. Doesn't sound like he's met many marginalized people outside of online spaces...

    • @m00n.kitt3n.z00m
      @m00n.kitt3n.z00m 5 месяцев назад +7

      My face was contorted in cringe during all the clips from him. I unsubbed a while ago myself for the same reasons as you, but this was a whole new level 😳

  • @flegmon618
    @flegmon618 5 месяцев назад +180

    Unfortunately, I have dressed up as an indigenous american in my past. I was 6, it was 2001 and I was absolutely crazed about the concept of indigenous people. It was massively normalized where I live (not anywhere near america) and I think it still is way too normal now. I would not do it today and when I looked at the carnival pictures from that time, I cringed (way too hard haha). My parents allowed this while also teaching me about blackface, not to say the n-word or other hard slurs. The disconnect between the „obvious“ bad thing (racism) and essentially cosplaying as another minority or ethnicity being okay is kind of insane, now that I think about it.

    • @S3lkie-Gutz
      @S3lkie-Gutz 5 месяцев назад +55

      As a mixed indigenous person I really appreciate you being honest with the fact you did it, it really shows you're willing to accept accountability and grew character since then. And yeah I've seen that Europe and even Japan love to do redface a lot, my German friend told me about some of that being popular with carnivals over there. It also happens with Roma a lot, as one(Kalderash from my mom's side specifically) i see people saying obvious things like not saying the n-slur and stuff like that but will turn around and say "gypsy" and cosplay as vulgar caricatures of Romani women or dress in boho chic fashion, it really is a double standard and nobody really seems to pay attention to it or even care eit

    • @Faun_the_fae
      @Faun_the_fae 5 месяцев назад +45

      Yeah-my kindergarten class had us do this as a thanksgiving activity and “pick out native names”. I thought it was great as a kid but looking back I just go 😬

    • @flegmon618
      @flegmon618 5 месяцев назад +30

      @@S3lkie-Gutz "funny" that you mentioned Germany, as that is exactly where I live. Themes like "cowboy and indianer" are heavily romanticed here thanks to Karl May, who has never actually seen, let alone met, an indiginous person while writing his stories about them. He misrepresented basically everything about indiginous american culture, but his books are still considered classics by many in Germany. They are entertaining and well written, but have instilled a harmful stereotype over here for decades and sadly, that was/is the only exposure we got to indiginous culture over here. It is all we knew about it.
      I have to unlearn or correct my knowledge about indiginous people to this day. There are so many details and nuances I still don't understand, as their struggles are so far away from me and are not relevant in my day to day life. My cousins wife is american and very loud about indiginous topics (positively haha) and she is the only source I have. Most Germans have absolutely zero exposure to the reality. It is not in our news, social media or anywhere else, which makes it even harder to combat those stereotypes.

    • @sisuka6505
      @sisuka6505 5 месяцев назад +5

      I think the podcast Behind the Bastards covered Karl May, which explained some of the specifically German interested I've too noticed in emulating a very vague concept of American indigenous groups.

    • @alexhussey1308
      @alexhussey1308 5 месяцев назад +10

      @@S3lkie-Gutz That just reminded me of the little boy in Parasite and his fascination with native americans. I was confused and slightly shocked the first time I saw it in the movie because I wasn't expecting to see that in a korean film that takes place in asia. Reading these comments I'm realizing it makes total sense to see the "cowboy and indian" theme internationally with the spread of american media and culture, especially back in the day with westerns, and now I remember it in cowboy bebop. I'm still trying to figure out what its inclusion in parasite means as a plot device and/or if it should even be in the movie regardless of context. It also makes sense that a country being exposed to derogatory or even incomplete depictions of an ethnicity would leave a negative/incomplete perception of that ethnicity if that's the only thing the country is exposed to, though it's obviously on the individuals to not discriminate or participate in the mockery of those ethnicities. There's also that christmas holiday in the netherlands that has blackface, zwarte piet or black pete but I think that's more due to dutch imperialism in africa than a lack of exposure.

  • @veryreallykurt
    @veryreallykurt 5 месяцев назад +7

    thank you for handling this with the respect and consideration it deserves. i'm white and have never experienced racism, so i know it's not my place to speak on that, but as someone whose special interest is kurtis and is a huge fan of him, you captured my thoughts on accountability and responsibility perfectly. i do believe kurtis does bear some responsibility for giving dean a platform like duncan said in his video, and i will always hold him accountable for any poor choices he makes while also continuing to be a fan and hoping he continues to educate himself and show allyship. however, i appreciate that you looked at everyone's role in this in a respectful and empathetic way while also acknowledging the damage dean has caused by his actions, critiquing duncan's assertion that he's never done anything wrong and challenging the racism embedded in youtube and society on the whole. this was such a well thought out, nuanced video and you gained a new subscriber :) i hope i worded this right im sorry if it doesn't make sense 😭

  • @hannahmisko1490
    @hannahmisko1490 5 месяцев назад +5

    I’m glad to see a response to some of Duncan’s points, and I know this is a bit of a side tangent, but I always have to take loooong breaks in between viewing his videos because sometimes his point of view really reminds me and even sometimes triggers my symptoms of OCD. It’s impressive the level of discipline he seems to project in his videos, but I think you put it well when you underlined his guilt that drives these beliefs. OCD will latch onto things much smaller and unrelated to what Dean did, but describing the persistent feelings of guilt that should follow someone for having done something wrong in the past, as well as suggesting never stepping into the public light for having done potentially offensive things in the past sounds exactly like the dialogue in the mind of someone with OCD. The way he described never doing anything in his past as well as cutting out people without second thoughts as a kid really made him sound like he’s the concept of the superego more than a human being. Following that up with him trying to scrape through memories to see if he did anything “bad” once again harkens back to OCD. I always think that his solutions are like a perfect moral answer that sometimes lack realism, and that it must be nice to haven’t made any mistakes. Again, OCD can literally make me feel bad for using the wrong tone in one word of a sentence so the definition for “mistakes” is broad, but he felt a bit intense nonetheless.