"white fragility can kiss my ass. Your white tears aren't sacred, this land is."
-Masuma Khan
I was listening to a radio show today and it was an interview with a member of a student Union, the subject people was people who weren't white making discriminatory statements against white people and then being disciplined.
The incident they were discussing took place at Dalhousie university they also discussed an incident that the student being interviewed was involved in perhaps at Ryerson university or Laurentian I'm not sure.
What struck me as ridiculous was how they framed their argument in support of Masuma Khan and defense of her own discriminatory behavior this was constantly referencing her own intersectional status.
She and Masuma Khan were "Racialized" while the people they were discriminating against were "Privileged".
I now see why the Left is so paranoid about dog whistling they do it all the time!
So now when a leftist wants to let their racial hatred out without having to face up to the evil in their own hearts they can describe themselves as "Racialized" . The term excuses them of all crimes because they suffer from oppression everyday! Any bad will be blamed on "muh internalized oppresion".
While when they label a person "Privileged" you can take that to mean an evil devil who is oppressing you right now without even trying or even knowing about it.
Lawyer 'surprised' by university's actions
Dalhousie's vice-provost of student affairs, Arig al Shaibah, found there was enough of a basis to the complaint to conduct an investigation, according to Khan's lawyer, who has taken on the case pro-bono.
>It was the university's position that the complaint was founded and that Masuma's Facebook post constituted personal harassment under their policy, and that she should have known that her post would have been demeaning to people who identify as white," Nijhawan said.
The university moved to a formal discipline process after Khan rejected their informal resolution, Nijhawan said.
"I'm surprised, I have to say, that a university is taking this position against a student considering how entrenched and really well-established the right to free speech — especially political speech — [is] on university campuses," she said.
"I don't think that there was anything offensive about what Masuma said — even if she did swear."
Lawyer Nasha Nijhawan has taken on the case pro-bono, saying free speech is an established, entrenched right on university campuses.