... A part of me wants to argue with you just for the sake of arguing, but you've got a point. Internet activism might be easier, but.. well thats it. It is easier and these problems are anything but easy.Johnny Novgorod said:Nonviolent civil disobedience, peaceful boycotting, organize marches & protests, found organizations, actively produce and distribute pamphletary literature... that's social activism. You live for it and oftentimes you die for it.Gorrila_thinktank said:I think it might be talking on forums for now, but sometimes talking leads to action right?Johnny Novgorod said:So many people disappointed with "social justice", wow.
Did anybody complaining about social justice here actually fight for something, or are we just talking about internet forums?
Just to clarify, what do you mean by fighting for something? I want to get a better hold on what you mean before I write anything to address your perceived condescension.
Anonymously posting on public forums and forwarding hashtags in your spare time isn't social activism. That people can become somehow "disillusioned" with social justice because they've spent too much time on the internet - well, it's hard to take that seriously.
But I think we can both firmly agree that internet hack-tavism is fighting the proper fight.