
Unjust
Social Justice and the Unmaking of America
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Narrated by:
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Chris Abell
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By:
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Noah Rothman
About this listen
Social justice is not justice - it is a dogma that divides society into identity groups and foments division, anger, and desire for vengeance.
Unfortunately, social justice has permeated America, and as it turns out, it is not a philosophy that appeals to the better angels of our nature. In practice, social justice is outright disdainful of the kind of blind, objective justice toward which Western civilization has striven since there was such a thing as Western civilization. Its advocates would argue that blind justice is not justice at all and that objectivity is a utopian objective, a myth clung to by naive children.
The social justice creed is shaping our every daily interaction. It influences how businesses structure themselves. It is altering how employers and employees interrelate. It has utterly transformed academia. It is remaking our politics with alarming swiftness. And there are consequences for those who transgress against the tenets of social justice and the self-appointed inquisitors who enforce its maxims.
In Unjust, Commentary, magazine associate editor Noah Rothman deconstructs today's out-of-control social justice movement and the lasting damage it has had on American politics, culture, and education and our nation's future.
©2019 Noah Rothman (P)2019 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Very informative
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Good but selective arguments
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The problem I, as a conservative had, was the slight bias. Establishing anti white racism in one chapter only to deny it in the next is strange. Trumps affiliation with alt-right and their supposed connection to nazis, is strongly hinted, as well as Trump affiliation to KKK. This is where the bias shines through, especially when murders commited by BLM or Antifa are not linked to a democratic policy.
Likewise the auther accepts “white suppremacy” labels attached to Trump, without adressing - thruthfully- Trumps policies, which in general are mainstream.
However, this takes little away from what I think overall is well researched book.
And a great reading
Interesting “neutral” analysis of an anti trump thinker
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A good case against a growing problem
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Balance. Finally.
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