7 Comments

I love and enjoy your analysis. I know you probably have no margin in your day. But if you listen to podcasts The Rise and Fall of Mars Hill Church is a fascinating listen.

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But there is another problem with critical theory. You are the oppressor. Therefore you must listen. You are bad. It suppresses the desire to excel. You are the oppressed. Therefore you have a reason for your position. It suppresses the ability to excel. Critical theory creates in everyone mediocrity, failure, and the need for a savior. Then the government can be the savior.

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Is refuting critical race theory important? NO! they can not prove their assumptions. They can't do it with people that have a firm spine.0 Well I guess with weak men they would go unopposed.

That takes me back to Kopf's quote, Hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men, and weak men create hard times

FYI we are currently in the weak men stage. But more important is where we are as men today, whatever race, creed etc that you identify as, men are supposed to be leaders. And there are not a lot of real men out there.

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Good explanation but Erick your words can be twisted and contorted to say that what someone experiences is not at all true or did not happen. That is part of the problem...there are times where whites dont believe minorities when they say they are experiencing unfair treatment. Men dont believe women when they say they experience unfair treatment. That isn't to say that those people are always telling the truth about their treatment.....but this explanation can and will be used to mimic what many people pejoratively say, "playing the race card" post-modern vs post-racial. Things are definitely NOT post-racial, however I do dare to reckon that most people that oppose CRT also believe we live in a post-racial society.

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A very concise explanation of Critical Theory. I especially liked modern/postmodern comparison. I would recommend a book by James K. A. Smith: "How (Not) To Be Secular: Reading Charles Taylor." Taylor's book is seminal, but.... .dense and long (800+ pages). Thanks again for this Erick! I printed Keller's article!

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You need to included the recording you played on the radio that personified what you explained. You defined then recording was the perfect picture of it.

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