> It’s a blind spot in DEI and intersectionality; the idea that an oppressed class can also be an oppressor class, and that it’s not an attribute of the perpetrator’s class at all, but in fact, situational and individual.
what's really bleakly funny is that you're right - that's how it's taken, but that's actually a major _point_ of intersectionality.
Well, "DEI" in the end is the neoliberalization of (the capitalist-corporate-compatible parts of) intersectionality, so it's not really surprising that something of significant value was lost in the appropriation.
what's really bleakly funny is that you're right - that's how it's taken, but that's actually a major _point_ of intersectionality.