I remember hearing something along those lines from him repeatedly, yes. To the students at the time. If you mean some comment he made after, no, the doco is mostly all focused on the events as they happened.
You're not going to get any arguments about Weinstein from me, but thats also part of the point. It was a struggle session to drag people like Weinstein and the admin further. Weinstein isn't good, he was an evergreen professor aftercall, I don't know why anyone expects much from him. But he did somewhat resist the struggle session, unlike george the other primary target of it. And its fascinating to watch it play out.
Eh, credit where credit is due -- Weinstein went down to the Darian Gap and has been sounding the alarm about the illegal invasion, and he was one of the first people questioning the wisdom of injecting an MRNA sequence into people that causes their bodies to produce a toxin.
I don't listen to his Dark Horse podcast often but I do listen when he's a guest on something that I do follow. His main problem is that I don't think he can quite let go of the fact that, despite him seeing all of the contradictions, that his entire world view was built on lies.
This is a fascinating bit of history, from a former student of theirs (who now does some quite interesting interviews, most of them are with gender critical feminists, but he does have some properly dissident people on with good microphones too, there are a few Curtis yarvin ones and the like)
It's a slower documentary, but it needs to be, because this was not a 1 day protest. This was something that built and built over days, destroying an org. Look at the google sit in and firing the other day. This is what they were trying to pull there, but they had not subverted the rest of the leadership quite enough onto their side of that faction war.
It really shows a struggle session play out, there's a really sad moment where a kind of dim student (who doesn't belong at college really it sounds like) is being all sweet and willing to hear Bret Weinstein out, but then gets dragged away and put up for a public humiliation ritual. I remember seeing laughter at the supposed activist online for being illiterate, but that was actually the point. The activist deliberately gave this dissenting dyslexic a complex text and forced her to read it aloud, publicly, to humiliate her. It's all very reminiscent of what happened in china, the communists are still going by the same playbook.
Its a unique look into the inner workings of those events, and a reminder at how we're not just looking at queer freaks making characters ugly. These companies and institutions are encountering actual Chinese style struggle sessions to force that kind of stuff, and this is what is coming on a larger scale. It's also a great look at the most pathetic of man, an absolute gamma, and how they constantly mock him as he capitulates, enforce speech codes on him live in a humiliating way, and how the whole thing could have been averted with just a modicum of strong leadership.
Really worth your time if you fancy watching a proper doco rather than a 10 sec tiktok clip or a 20 min youtube brief analysis. And it's broken into 15 min chapters anyway
Oh yeah there's some good ones for sure. Not all mind, I find it's a bit hit and miss with the interviewees, but the good ones are really good.
He's so calm, it's almost like ASMR sometimes. Which is a good style, much as I like some gay frog screaming and ranting, its tiresome when everyone is ranting.
For those on the precipice of this rabbit hole, keep in mind this is a long playlist of long videos. It very firmly documents and names the devil, but is a hard watch.
I made it to vid 10/11 about a year and a half ago, and had to stop watching because of I veered out of sadness and disbelief into anger as I watched.
Necessary videos, good to view, but hard to finish.
I followed it closely when it happened so I already know how things played out. Although I did get a chuckle re-watching Weinstein attempt to reason with a group of retards who were foaming at the mouth.
Ok yeah you're right it is not specifically a Chinese communist thing, but a communist in general thing.
But the Chinese ones had a particular emphasis on public humiliation and were less formal with famous scenes of men with dunce hats, and in speaking in generalities, the humiliation rituals of struggle sessions are more commonly associated with china, sure.
Does it include the part where Brett Weinstein said he agreed with what the SJWs' goals and only disagreed with their methods?
I remember hearing something along those lines from him repeatedly, yes. To the students at the time. If you mean some comment he made after, no, the doco is mostly all focused on the events as they happened.
You're not going to get any arguments about Weinstein from me, but thats also part of the point. It was a struggle session to drag people like Weinstein and the admin further. Weinstein isn't good, he was an evergreen professor aftercall, I don't know why anyone expects much from him. But he did somewhat resist the struggle session, unlike george the other primary target of it. And its fascinating to watch it play out.
Eh, credit where credit is due -- Weinstein went down to the Darian Gap and has been sounding the alarm about the illegal invasion, and he was one of the first people questioning the wisdom of injecting an MRNA sequence into people that causes their bodies to produce a toxin.
I don't listen to his Dark Horse podcast often but I do listen when he's a guest on something that I do follow. His main problem is that I don't think he can quite let go of the fact that, despite him seeing all of the contradictions, that his entire world view was built on lies.
It's a Jewish thing like Bill Maher does where they "investigate" issues pretending to be ignorant to what caused them.
"Weinstein"
That's all you need to hear.
This is a fascinating bit of history, from a former student of theirs (who now does some quite interesting interviews, most of them are with gender critical feminists, but he does have some properly dissident people on with good microphones too, there are a few Curtis yarvin ones and the like)
It's a slower documentary, but it needs to be, because this was not a 1 day protest. This was something that built and built over days, destroying an org. Look at the google sit in and firing the other day. This is what they were trying to pull there, but they had not subverted the rest of the leadership quite enough onto their side of that faction war.
It really shows a struggle session play out, there's a really sad moment where a kind of dim student (who doesn't belong at college really it sounds like) is being all sweet and willing to hear Bret Weinstein out, but then gets dragged away and put up for a public humiliation ritual. I remember seeing laughter at the supposed activist online for being illiterate, but that was actually the point. The activist deliberately gave this dissenting dyslexic a complex text and forced her to read it aloud, publicly, to humiliate her. It's all very reminiscent of what happened in china, the communists are still going by the same playbook.
Its a unique look into the inner workings of those events, and a reminder at how we're not just looking at queer freaks making characters ugly. These companies and institutions are encountering actual Chinese style struggle sessions to force that kind of stuff, and this is what is coming on a larger scale. It's also a great look at the most pathetic of man, an absolute gamma, and how they constantly mock him as he capitulates, enforce speech codes on him live in a humiliating way, and how the whole thing could have been averted with just a modicum of strong leadership.
Really worth your time if you fancy watching a proper doco rather than a 10 sec tiktok clip or a 20 min youtube brief analysis. And it's broken into 15 min chapters anyway
I didn't realize that Benjamin Boyce was an Evergreen student himself.
I think he'd definitely evolved somewhat from that time, but yeah
Definitely adds to this doco, helping put it into context and giving you the details 'on the ground'
He wasn't just a student there himself, he was a student there at the time of the events IIRC.
Nice, I’ve enjoyed Benjamin Boyce’s channel for quite a while, he does some excellent interviews.
Oh yeah there's some good ones for sure. Not all mind, I find it's a bit hit and miss with the interviewees, but the good ones are really good.
He's so calm, it's almost like ASMR sometimes. Which is a good style, much as I like some gay frog screaming and ranting, its tiresome when everyone is ranting.
He interviewed Null from Kiwifarms a while back.
Was interesting to hear a long-form interview with Josh with someone from outside the Sektur.
For those on the precipice of this rabbit hole, keep in mind this is a long playlist of long videos. It very firmly documents and names the devil, but is a hard watch.
I made it to vid 10/11 about a year and a half ago, and had to stop watching because of I veered out of sadness and disbelief into anger as I watched.
Necessary videos, good to view, but hard to finish.
I started watching it but it's too frustrating.
I followed it closely when it happened so I already know how things played out. Although I did get a chuckle re-watching Weinstein attempt to reason with a group of retards who were foaming at the mouth.
The activists accidentally show how diversity is cancer. It destroys everything.
Is this diversity? I thought this whole episode was more about an imposed orthodoxy of Marxist ideology.
“Diversity” in almost any modern context should be understood to mean “anti-white racial Marxism.”
Shot/starved by another communist?
Ok yeah you're right it is not specifically a Chinese communist thing, but a communist in general thing.
But the Chinese ones had a particular emphasis on public humiliation and were less formal with famous scenes of men with dunce hats, and in speaking in generalities, the humiliation rituals of struggle sessions are more commonly associated with china, sure.