What a lot of people don't understand is SJWs and CRT were boiling under the surface in academia for decades. What's different now is that it is becoming mainstream and turning into policy? People didn't pay attention much when it wasn't negatively affecting their lives.

 
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This applies to a lot more than just SJWs. Political movements that win go on to write the history of their movements, and they usually portray themselves as bigger underdogs than they actually were- by the end, at least. That's true of the civil rights movement of the '60s. By the late 1960s the activists had nearly all of the elite media, academia, the federal government, and the professional-managerial class on their side, and they were up against some heavily outgunned state and local officials in the South. But the average high school kid today thinks that most white people supported Jim Crow until MLK and Rosa Parks showed up.

The more you study history, the more you realize that things have been a lot more progressive for a lot longer than the average person realizes.

 

The average white person didn’t support Jim Crow.  The average white Southerner did, so did the politicians that they elected.  Southern Democrats formed an integral part of the New Deal coalition, which passed tons of important legislation, and Civil Rights was swept under the rug to keep it together.  Eventually the pressure grew too strong and Johnson signed the bill and blew up the coalition, and created the fault lines in politics that exist today. 

 
Drumpfy

The average white person didn't support Jim Crow.  The average white Southerner did, so did the politicians that they elected.  Southern Democrats formed an integral part of the New Deal coalition, which passed tons of important legislation, and Civil Rights was swept under the rug to keep it together.  Eventually the pressure grew too strong and Johnson signed the bill and blew up the coalition, and created the fault lines in politics that exist today. 

Southern Democrats were the wealthy southern elites/plantation owners who actually had influence. Stuff like poll taxes/grandfather clause/literacy tests etc. prevented poor rural workers (white or black) from voting, so it's not accurate to say "the average white Southerner" supported segregation. Moreso, the elite white Southerner did.

Array
 

This is fundamentally true. You can easily peel back the moralist sticker on most social movements and see the motivation behind them has been the low-level class war that's been raging in America for several decades.

Broadly speaking, the coalitions are as follows:

The Double Horseshoe Theory of Class Politics - The Bellows

Historically this has been the right side vs. the left side, but it's been shifting to the top vs. the bottom.

"Work ethic, work ethic" - Vince Vaughn
 

"Professional Managerial Class"

are you a Marxist or a right winger with a fondness for anti-liberal /r/stupidpol types? Doubt anyone else would use that phrase, though they should. I'm in the latter group but I think the right has quite a bit to learn from the Old Left / Dirtbag Left / renowned Marxist scholar Nick Mullen. The pivot towards populism has been a welcome change on the right, but the Old Left has made similar arguments for decades. They bring a great descriptive understanding of the world even if their proscriptive solutions are usually a disaster. 

 

+1 Fritz the Cat is a great movie

But the type of moral busybody extremist mentality of SJWs can be traced all the way back to colonial days. Quakers and Puritans were considered to be extremist little shits back in their day.

"Work ethic, work ethic" - Vince Vaughn
 

This movie doesn’t seem appealing to watch.

"If you always put limits on everything you do, physical or anything else, it will spread into your work and into your life. There are no limits. There are only plateaus, and you must not stay there, you must go beyond them." - Bruce Lee
 

I remember watching videos of those SJW’s in the 60’s. Civil rights and all that crap. God I hate those kinda people.

 

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