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Alexander Raynor's avatar

Anyone who uses the term 'woke right' is outing themselves as some recent leftist-turned-centrist who wants to gate-keep and box out authentic conservative voices, similar to how William F. Buckley did during his time at National Review. Since the term term "woke" is unpopular at the moment, they use that label to tarnish their competition. In practice, it ends up being clumsy, confusing, and less effective than if they just called the conservatives they didn't like "nazis" all along.

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Demosphachtes's avatar

Beyond the fact that this Lindsay character has long displayed the only sure sign of being a golem of the liberal consensus (he has, namely, blocked me on Twitter), and that I, being an outsider and thus seeing it from without, am more inclined to lend an ear to Hofstadter's point that anti-urban paranoia is indeed a defining characteristic of American conservatism (only exceptionally pronounced in American conservatism, I should say, as I recognise it readily in European conservatism as well), an ear which I lend without incautiously foregoing the recognition of the... let us say suspect nature and context of his work, I feel a label such as "woke" is far too dull to wound at this point. What does "woke" amount to as a weapon? It seems meekly deployed for the benefit of an internal audience. That "fascists" need to be tarred with the brush of "woke" is more illustrative of how badly the left wore out the "fascist" label than it is anything new in the realm of intra-right tendencies. It is mere grasping, and "woke" is weak. No one will remember its name.

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