SDP leader William Clouston talks to academic Joanna Williams author of the book "How Woke Won"

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июн 2024
  • 00:00 Introduction
    00:11 What is Woke?
    01:40 If you fixate on differences you’ll never bring people together.
    02:50 It makes conflict inevitable.
    04:55 How Far would you trace this back?
    05:50 Cultural Appropriation.
    09:03 Is Wokery and Woke very elitist?
    12:00 What’s the Utility of Woke? - Middle class status appropriation and divide & rule.
    18:20 Are people powerless?
    19:44 Education - The Production Line of this stuff
    30:00 There is a non-governing elite that runs everything.
    38:39 The Acceptance of differences.
    46:00 How did you survive writing that book?
    47:30 The End

Комментарии • 18

  • @RichardEnglander
    @RichardEnglander Год назад +15

    William is the only leader who understands these problems and who realises how insidious it all is.
    I really would like to see an SDP government

    • @nowherepeople3431
      @nowherepeople3431 Год назад +4

      100 percent. One of the most thoughtful and insightful politicians I’ve come across.

    • @Elizabeth-jd3mn
      @Elizabeth-jd3mn Год назад +6

      I'm beginning to agree and wouldn't be averse to shifting my vote and take a risk.

  • @kayedal-haddad
    @kayedal-haddad Год назад +6

    Love SDP Talks!

  • @MarkMackenzievortism
    @MarkMackenzievortism Год назад +3

    Enjoyed the conversation. Thank you.

  • @cameroncredle5726
    @cameroncredle5726 Год назад

    Oh my gosh, this gives me hope.

  • @nowherepeople3431
    @nowherepeople3431 Год назад +1

    High and low status opinions. Luxury beliefs etc. There is so much power in this concept. It drives everything.

  • @eddampier
    @eddampier Год назад +3

    'How Woke Won' is a really interesting read. Good to see a critique of the movement coming from the left.

  • @dominicrooney5638
    @dominicrooney5638 5 месяцев назад

    William is into hard bop! 😎

  • @davidbettney785
    @davidbettney785 Год назад

    A shall be buying this book. Great interview :)

  • @nowherepeople3431
    @nowherepeople3431 Год назад +2

    “Acute noticing” uh oh, I don’t think we’re allowed to do that lol.

  • @bobbyunavailable
    @bobbyunavailable Год назад

    You have my vote.

  • @brianfairclough4109
    @brianfairclough4109 Год назад +6

    William. Let the poor woman finish a sentence.

    • @benphilips9918
      @benphilips9918 10 месяцев назад

      Yes!! Someone needs to tell him!

  • @nowherepeople3431
    @nowherepeople3431 Год назад +3

    Umm, Orban is not a “controversial figure”. We’re having a conversation about “woke” and we’re already disavowing one of the few western leaders who have challenged this insanity. 🤦‍♀️

  • @burleybater
    @burleybater Год назад +1

    I've always thought that the core of meaning in same sex attraction is the sex itself. Not some conceptualized disjointed and disconnected psychological and academic notion of identitarianism - but actual sex.
    Whose core expression is a fundamental and behavioral stick-to-it-ness of exactly what one is attracted to and why. Not to mention the how of it which is pretty germane to the issue.
    So when politics says you've got your sexual urges all wrong, it kind of winds up in that same hit zone as the classic narcissistic fixation on a self-absorption with one's attraction quotient - literally not being able to understand or accept the fact that a person as an example of objectified desire is just not interested.
    And it is not their destiny in life to help you understand the reasons why.
    Which is what every single trans (enormously tilted in trans women) fixation on what is curiously, a thing more like straight hetero (the irony should escape no-one) than anything else.
    But beyond all that. Identity as a ruling modifier for any code of behavioral definition becomes endlessly fascinating in those who don't actually claim any. Not by skin, politics, belief, sexuality, culture, or most any other measurable category.
    Otherwise it's a branded product on a shelf, forever confined by a consumer grab at a recognizable devotion to not only cookie-cutter exact sameness, but also that "you owe me as a loyal and consistent consumer" pack of demands as authoritarian and exacting as it gets.
    Now imagine yourself as the product. And your fellow "identity mob" as the consumers. That's my point.
    I still find myself wondering just what it is that attracts some people toward an instinctive autonomy in life. The wisdom (often stumbled upon early in life) that there will one day wind up being pretty much only two choices: a brutally cruel oversized chunk of one's time on earth spent arguing, debating, fighting, all because one tends to disagree with a conventional (or its very opposite) point of view. Or on the other hand, with considerable foresight, the realization that it is indeed a good thing to avoid that altogether, and just abide by one's disagreement for the most part, as silently and profoundly as some wild and solo thing out in the wilderness whose passage leaves no tracks, or evidence of its existence.
    There are still endless opportunities to socially voice one's opinions and disagreements without having to make it a life-consuming trap.
    I never was a joiner. The only thing I ever joined was the Boy Scouts for three years of my young life. I had a ball.
    But all this does not at all preclude a social life. On the contrary. One may find that their social opportunities skyrocket when they approach the society of people with an open mind and a clear heart. No Herculean efforts to have to hold up the weight of absolute and fundamental ideology of any kind.
    So in a nutshell - I guess I always saw woke as a kind of tradeoff - the entire sum total of all the beauty and wonder of the world, and what's in it, and how it all works - traded for a kind of religious baptism by fire in a devout need to "change" (?) the world for the better, apparently. How noble. The urge to mess and meddle rings hollow. Brings to mind all those glass houses I once heard about that people just seem to constantly forget they shouldn't live in. Not with all those stones about...
    (Love the book, by the way.)

  • @user-in7qr7ly5x
    @user-in7qr7ly5x Год назад

    жаль английского не знаю(