Duvniask wrote:What I'm stating above is essentially a rather roundabout description of intersectionality, or the idea that people's advantages and disadvantages can intersect in uniquely different combinations: a poor white can be better off than a poor black, because they might not be beat up by the police or arrested as much on average, and a poor woman might end up financially worse off than a poor man due to gender roles that downplay women's role in the workplace. Obviously all of these people suffer the disadvantage of being poor, but their experiences are still different.
Intersectionality is stupid and anti worker as it divides those who have more in common with eachother based on their class than the rich assholes of their race/gender.
Who do you see push intersectionality the most? I’ll give you a hint it’s not the poor or working class.