Here's the relevant excerpt from THE RIGHT SIDE OF HISTORY (p.199).
In Shapiro's words, Crenshaw:
1) coined intersectionality to describe a coalition of victims 2) said the level of difficulty in someone's life is tied to the number of victim groups they are a member of
3) argued the more you have been victimized, the more your opinion about institutional bigotry ought carry weight 4) conceded the goal "is to bully those who aren't members of these intersectional groups."
The problem? This bears almost no resemblance to Crenshaw's thinking.
Let's just look at the paper where Crenshaw first coined the term, back in 1989 (which you should read!)
Intersectionality is an *analytical method*. It's a call to think about *the interaction* of different "isms," if you will, rather than treating them as discrete.
For example, Crenshaw points to a court case where black women were bringing a class action discrimination case.
The court dismissed the suit on the grounds that even though "black people" and "women" were protected from discrimination, "black women" - as a class - were not.
Crenshaw's argument is:
1) there is a blind spot in the way people think about bigotry - people don't consider the *intersection* of racism/sexism/etc 2) that blind spot manifests itself in the law 3) we need a new analytical method
That was a really good point at the time!
Crenshaw explicitly repudiates the idea that this is a "theory of everything."
It's an *analytical lens* through which to view certain legal/social phenomena.
Not some rallying cry to bully people into checking their privilege.
Let's review the excerpt from THE RIGHT SIDE OF HISTORY again. Notice anything missing?
I do.
Where's the footnote in the first paragraph?
It couldn't be that he's just pulling this all out of his ass, could it?
The only footnote in this excerpt is to a Washington Post op-ed written by Crenshaw in 2015.
Weird that Shapiro wouldn't cite the 1989 article where she coined the term.
Even weirder is that it's not clear he even read the op-ed he cited!
Crenshaw's op-ed:
1) explains the GM case she talked about 20 years ago 2) explains that intersectionality is an "analytic sensibility, a way of thinking about identity and its relationship to power."
It's right there, @benshapiro! There's no need to straw man her arguments!
What of Crenshaw "acknowledging" that the "actual goal" is to "bully those who aren't members of these intersectional groups" (whatever that means)?
Turns out she said nothing of the sort.
Her point is that people who experience discrimination can also be privileged!
That seems like a good point - and one that is PARTICULARLY relevant given the events of the last few days.
Jussie Smollett may well have experienced discrimination. Who would say he isn't privileged?
Amazing that the geniuses inside the Biden White House haven't figured out that they need to move heaven and earth to solve the supply chain issues that are leaving grocery stores without meat and produce
"The economy is good, look at these graphs!"
Dude I can't buy chicken at the grocery store your graph is stupid
Trump 2024: Make Chicken Available At The Grocery Store Again
Also note how the piece has exactly *nothing* to say about Veritas being subject to an FBI raid for practicing *actual* journalism
I remember @adamgoldmanNYT gleefully reporting about how James O’Keefe got dragged from his apartment in handcuffs, but all of a sudden a judge says “hey you can’t just publish your adversary’s privileged info” and NOW there’s a threat to the First Amendment