Taylor Dysart, a doctoral candidate at Penn,
authored a column in which she claimed that the Canadian truckers’ Freedom
Convoy “has surprised onlookers in the United States and Canada,” in large part
“because the action seems to violate norms of Canadian ‘politeness.’“ She then
opined, “But the convoy represents the extension of a strain of Canadian
history that has long masked itself behind ‘peacefulness’ or ‘unity’: settler
colonialism.” Huh?
Sadly, she wasn’t done. She stated, “The history of
Canadian settler colonialism and public health demonstrates how both overt
white-supremacist claims and seemingly more inert nationalistic claims about
‘unity’ and ‘freedom’ both enable and erase ongoing harm to marginalized
communities.” Huh?
She added, “The
primarily White supporters of the Freedom Convoy argue that pandemic mandates
infringe upon their constitutional rights to freedom. The notion of ‘freedom’
was historically and remains intertwined with Whiteness, as historian Tyler
Stovall has argued. The belief that one’s entitlement to freedom is a key component of White supremacy. This explains why the Freedom Convoy members see
themselves as entitled to freedom, no matter the public health consequences to
those around them.”
Yes, how dare the
Freedom Convoy members think they are “entitled” to freedom! It’s not like they
have inalienable rights granted by their Creator or something! They only have
the rights that the government says they have…or don’t have! Period. Leftists somehow
believe they are entitled to determine what freedom other
people have. Revolting assumed privilege.
“Public
health consequences?” We have seen the consequences of being locked down and
enslaved for all of history. And they are despair, disease, and death.
Dysart referenced
Stovall because his book, “White Freedom: The Racial History of an Idea,” supports
her insane belief that the notion of freedom is actually racist. The book discusses “how the Statue of
Liberty—a gift from France to the United States and perhaps the most famous
symbol of freedom on Earth—promised both freedom and whiteness to European
immigrants.” So, Lady Liberty is racist, too. And probably sexist. (I always
suspected her.)
The assertion that one’s “entitlement to freedom” is
a “key component of White supremacy” seems illogical at best. Slaves in the
American South dreamed of freedom, cherished freedom, and believed they were entitled
to it, and I’m pretty sure most of them weren’t White Supremacists.
Come to think of it, I doubt that Martin Luther King thought
he was giving a shout out to White Supremacy when he joyously spoke of a day
when Black people were “Free at last, free at last. Thank God almighty we are
free at last.”
But,
as Mark Steyn recently noted, “Physical lockdown seems to have
inculcated in the citizenry a psychological lockdown that will be far harder to
lift.” He referenced a CBC show, Cross-Country Check-Up, to which
he said “the word ‘freedom’” itself “is now suspect.”
According to Steyn, the host(s)
of the nation-wide open-line radio show opined:
As demonstrations against
COVID-19 restrictions continue across Canada, the word freedom is on the lips
and placards of many protesters. Often associated with protests and rallies in the
United States, the term has taken hold among protesters who are part of the
Freedom Convoy, which rolled into Ottawa in late January and has become
entrenched in the city's downtown.
For many, freedom is a
malleable term — one that's open to interpretation. That flexibility, in
part, has fueled its growth among certain groups, said Barbara Perry, director
of the Centre on Hate, Bias and Extremism at the Oshawa-based Ontario Tech
University. It's also a term that has thrived among far-right groups,
said Perry, one of a number of experts who say the presence of far-right groups
in Canada is growing.
Freedom is a “malleable” term/concept? I’m pretty
sure the slaves on Southern plantations and those held in German concentration
camps or Japanese prisons during World War II would disagree.
Freedom has “thrived” among “far-right”
groups? Freedom is a far-right notion? No wonder far-right groups have
grown.
It has come to this. As George Orwell knew it could. Freedom
is fascist. Freedom is slavery.
If freedom is now considered problematic
by the Centre on Hate, Bias and Extremism, no one can tell me we aren’t
in real trouble.
But many apparently now do
consider a love of freedom an example of Hate, Bias and Extremism. For example, students and faculty at the University of
Nevada, Reno (UNR) have demanded a new mask mandate be put in place after the statewide mandate was recently lifted
by Nevada Governor Steve Sisolak. And various reports indicate that many
Democrats don’t want to relinquish their masks, don’t want life to go back to normal with the waning of the coronavirus plandemic
pandemic.
In urban areas of the formerly
United States, particularly on both coasts, an astounding number of people seem
to enjoy being masked up and locked down, seem to take pride in showing
their reflexive compliance to Big Brother, seem to value being submissive and
subjugated. They seemingly revel in their subjugation and thrive on being
disciplined by their sadomasochistic rulers. They have taken subservience to a
new and troubling level and elevated obedience to a virtue. Incomprehensibly, to
many in Canada—and the U.S., the land of the formerly free and erstwhile brave--
freedom is out, passé, just another word for nothing left to lose.
Freedom is a “far-right
concept” now, according to some. Think about that. Freedom is a word primarily
associated with radical, right-wing extremists and white supremacy?! How preposterous
and revolting is that assertion? What does it say about those on the left? What
does it say about those who don't purport to value (others’) freedom?
Note to all the virtue-signaling wokesters
out there: You have the right to prostrate yourself to anybody you like. You
can genuflect to your government, take a knee before a Karen. You can submit to
your spouse…or your dominatrix. You can subjugate yourself to anyone or anything
or any cause you like, but you have no damn right to keep the rest of us
enslaved as well. Or to even suggest that we should join you in your
prostration.
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