Taichiliberal
Shaken, not stirred!
Oh, so white people never called white criminals thugs and gangsters etc?
Bullshit. Read a history book.
And these rappers who glorify gangsters (Gangsta Rap - their words, not ours) and murder each other over "beefs" are only trying to spread positivity....????
Puh-lease.
As far as "woke" is concerned, we all know what we mean by it.... political correctness and pandering to groups who've painted themselves as victims and treating them like precious, fine crystal artifacts that might shatter if you offend them.
You fucks are in the minority and you're never going to succeed in running over the majority with your broken down bullshit hooptie of a false narrative.
Fuck off.![]()
What I take umbrage with:
As far as "woke" is concerned, we all know what we mean by it.... political correctness and pandering to groups who've painted themselves as victims and treating them like precious, fine crystal artifacts that might shatter if you offend them.
That is the "definition" given by hysterical right-of-center liberals & conservatives, MAGA mooks, teabaggers, neocons, fibbertarians and alt-right rummies.
Here's what the Oxford English Dictionary says:
Woke
Woken is the usual past participle of the verb wake in modern English, but in some historical and contemporary varieties the past tense form woke is also used as a past participle. Participial use of woke in some African-American varieties of English has generated an adjectival meaning that has recently become prominent in general American use, prompting the addition of a new entry for woke as an adjective. The original meaning of adjectival woke (and earlier woke up) was simply ‘awake’, but by the mid-20th century, woke had been extended figuratively to refer to being ‘aware’ or ‘well informed’ in a political or cultural sense. In the past decade, that meaning has been catapulted into mainstream use with a particular nuance of ‘alert to racial or social discrimination and injustice’, popularized through the lyrics of the 2008 song Master Teacher by Erykah Badu, in which the words ‘I stay woke’ serve as a refrain, and more recently through its association with the Black Lives Matter movement, especially on social media.
This well established but newly prominent usage of woke has become emblematic of the ways in which black American culture and language are adopted by non-black people who don’t always appreciate their full historical and cultural context. It is therefore of particular interest that the earliest citation for woke, adj. in the figurative sense comes from a 1962 article by the African-American novelist William Melvin Kelley in the New York Times, entitled ‘If you’re woke, you dig it’, which describes how white beatniks were appropriating black slang at the time. The article was illustrated with a cartoon of lexicographers struggling to understand ‘today’s Negro idiom’ (1962 N.Y. Times 20 May, p. 45).
Because of the term’s prominence in today’s popular culture, as well as the role it seems to have played in the 1960s and 70s, the OED Appeals Program is currently seeking any contextual evidence (i.e. not from a glossary or definition) of woke meaning ‘well informed’ or ‘alert to racial or social discrimination and injustice’ that dates from earlier than 2008.
Or you might prefer this explanation from Merrian-Webster: https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/woke-meaning-origin
Hope this helps.