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silvat | 5 years ago
I have only come across the great replacement theory twice and both times it was in this exact context. Somebody being accused of dogwhistling to it. Small sample size for sure, but also a strange phenomenon no?
I think what you are engaging in is quite dangerous and I believe it must come from a real ignorance of the other side's way of thinking.
You think, to have those opinions, they must have some underlying racist beliefs, and lo and behold, you find the evidence in the most innocuous of places.
This is McCarthyism 2.0.
woodruffw|5 years ago
Once again: it’s patterns of phrases and contexts. Dogwhistles only work because of plausible deniability and people like you.
> I have only come across the great replacement theory twice and both times it was in this exact context.
This is a testament to ignorance, not the evidence that you think it is. The existence of this conspiracy theory is well attested online, as are its standard dogwhistles.
> This is McCarthyism 2.0.
If “McCarthyism 2.0” means “having some private schlub call you out on your pseudonymous account for being racist (or playing into racist language),” then the real McCarthyism must have been a real cakewalk. Funnily enough, that’s not how I learned about it.
silvat|5 years ago
I would like to ask you, do you think that somebody could write the article and not have the beliefs you are asserting?
Imagine if I am pushing for some version of universal health care. Most of the rhetoric around such a topic will refer to things like equality, private industry exploiting the people and the poor getting the worst of it. All fairly standard and not necessarily untrue. What would you say to somebody that claims this to be dog whistling to communists. You say, 'no of course that's not he means. He means what he says'. Then they say he's using code words that give these fair normal statements a double meaning that are a signal to those in the know.
I don't see what you can do about this situation. This kind of tactic is really shady. You pass them an unprovable accusation that they can't even defend. But the accusation is usually of something so slanderous that, even if they are absolved of guilt, a certain amount of damage is already done.