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Andile Ngcizela's avatar

There are three great pieces waiting to be written from that second-to-last paragraph alone:

1. "Modern movements also tend to eschew centralized leadership and hierarchy..."

-This is perhaps the biggest failure of modern activism. Without effective leadership, nothing gets done, no one goes to institutions of power to negotiate change. Added to this, I suspect many who would do a good job in leading modern activist movements are smart enough to know that they will fail at maintaining the impossible standards of moral perfection that would be expected of them because they are human beings who will say whatever the new wrong word or phrase might be on any given day. They may also know that participation in the eventual arduous struggle sessions for their wrong-speak isn't worth their time, no apology would ever suffice and the "error" would be held over their heads until they left the movement.

2. "They became decentralized mass movements that descended from noble causes into cudgels for the vengeful and unwell."

-Yes. I'd add more, but I don't have anything useful to say beyond that this is worth exploring further.

3. "For many activists in the present era, activism is less about the cause itself and more about serving as a kind of replacement for religion, community, or psychological help."

- I'd also add that it serves as a new kind of self-promotion for individuals who wish to advertise their liberal or conservative bona fides to their friends and the public at large on social media. It's less about the cause and more about being seen as one who is associated with a noble cause, and by extension as a noble person of good merit, irrespective of how successful you are at representing that cause.

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Dani Leis's avatar

Jamie Paul is one of my favorite writers. Really hit a nerve with this one.

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