The majority of the people in the US need to accept that 30-40% of the population wants a dictatorship, wants fascism as long as the right people in their minds are being oppressed/punished/murdered/disappeared/tortured.
They don't care what laws are broken. They don't give a shit about the constitution. They don't even care about the economy which is baffling. They have racist fantasies that are being played out, or are deluded that they will somehow be insiders in all this.
Facts don't matter. Corruption doesn't matter. Hypocrisy doesn't matter. They call themselves Christians, but everything in their actions and hearts is the opposite of the teachings of the person they pretend to worship. Stop trying to convince them with logic. They have to come to it on their own and regardless they need to be stopped. Keep fighting for the rights of all. Keep your minds and hearts strong.
University of Toronto Prof. Judith Taylor mimicked the unilateral, bullying behaviour of fictional Coach Eric Taylor and real-life Supreme C
Imitating white male swagger can help women understand its durable power and sway. I know, because I tried it.
A few years ago, my sociological imagination awoke when watching Friday Night Lights, the once-popular teen drama about football in Texas, in response to the figure of Coach Taylor, a handsome, mostly angry, but putatively good-hearted leader.
Coach Taylor and I could not be more different. He is a short-tempered, unilateral man of few words, who doesn’t believe anyone deserves an explanation. As a professor, I explain my decisions, grading, data and assigned readings to a fault. In seminars, I ensure each student is heard, and has a full chance to participate and be part of the scholarly conversation. If students seek my counsel, I follow up with more readings or questions to make sure I have helped them.
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Imagine then, my puzzlement watching a leader whose monosyllabic brevity accrues such respect. Paper and pen in hand, I observed Coach Taylor, making note of his phrases. In coaching meetings he would end conversations with the sentence, “We’re not going to do that.” He responded to student concerns with “Nope. Not gonna do it” or “You’re better than this!” “Stay away from dumb, gentlemen,” and “Don’t quit.”
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[While trying to effect male power in an experiment,] I noticed many things. I wasn’t co-operating, I was dictating, and I used a lot less energy. No one asked followup questions, there was less negotiation, and I didn’t lose time wondering if everyone was OK with the decisions. Students were more productive, and I was more effective at getting what I wanted. I will never forget that my colleagues, with PhDs and argumentation in their bones, dropped a proposal after I uttered five words. Adopting white male southern swagger was pretty darn effective for getting my way.
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I was reminded of my experiment watching Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh speak in favour of his own confirmation. Kavanaugh was a lot like Coach Taylor: rageful, monosyllabic, sentimental about alcohol, and used to being in charge. Kavanaugh was incredulous, imperious, sneering, prideful and monstrous in his unilateralism. He interrupted Democratic senators, he rolled his eyes, sobbed, raged. He failed to exhibit judicial temperament, but he also failed at basic collegiality and respect.
And that might be why he was ultimately confirmed. Rage and entitlement are the purview of white men and the measure of their legitimacy. If you doubt this, imagine Ruth Bader Ginsburg dancing Kavanaugh’s dance, and still getting confirmed. Bullying is the most traditional and respected form of masculinity.
Ken Ofori-Atta’s lawyers are dictating the pace - Baffour Awuah tells OSP - Nsemkeka
Ken Ofori-Atta’s lawyers are dictating the pace – Baffour Awuah tells OSP – Nsemkeka
The Manhyia South MP says the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) is allowing former Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta and his legal team to take control of the ongoing investigation.
Nana Agyei Baffour Awuah, speaking on PM Express on Joy News, said the OSP must reassess its strategy.
He believes the current…