#100hardtruthsMain MenuPledges and lists written over the first 100 daysA path through the primer focusing on the several pledges and lists of hardtruths I wrote during the first 100 days of the Trump administration24 #100hardtruths authored by invited contributorsA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths written by scholars, artists, activists, and friendsArt Answers to Phony QuestionsA path through the primer focusing on speaking hardtruths about and through poetic, abstract, formally reflexive, non-indexical Art FormsVirality is VirilityA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths that connect a macho growing of digital stature to real world violenceFake News R UsA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths that reveal our complicitySome #100hardtruths on Digital Media LiteracyA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths about reading, writing, participating and understanding Digital Media LiteracySome #100hardtruths on RacismA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths about ethnicity, nationality, zenophobia, immigration and racismSome #100hardtruths on SexismA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths about gender, sexuality, sexism, and misogynySome #100hardtruths on ImagesA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths about photography, visibiity, and the power of imagesSome #100hardtruths on the LawA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths about legislation, (il)legality, public institutions, and the power of the LawSome #100hardtruths on AdvertisingA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths about corporate greed, getting eyeballs to content, the monetization of the Internet and AdsSome #100hardtruths of the InternetA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths that attempt to reveal the structure, logic, uses and power of the InternetSome #100hardtruths on Freedom of ExpressionA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths about journalism, freedom of speech, and the power of ExpressionSome #100hardtruths on and through Film and VideoA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths about or spoken through film and video35 #100hardtruths highlighting the work of othersA path through the primer focusing on hardtruths produced by journalists, scholars, artists, activists found onlineCreditsAbout the makers of this Scalar book.Old home page that links to WordpressSome #100hardtruths in poetryPoems that were produced as a result of radical digital media literacy workshopsSome hardtruth poem responses and readingsAlexandra Juhaszf60e7beb550e75bc077d6722b27684bbbb62d0deXiomara Liana Rodrigueze692622823dfcb5652df57e66962e293d1913569Craig Dietrich2d66800a3e5a1eaee3a9ca2f91f391c8a6893490
12017-10-23T18:57:50-07:00#73, it’s about xenophobia, racism, and sexism6April 1, 2017plain2019-07-25T15:28:16-07:00This #100hardtruths was shared with me by my friend, the writer Jay Fisher:
“During and after the election a myth developed that Trump’s support was driven by a surge of disaffected white working class voters. It turns out Trump’s supporters on average have more money than Clinton’s, the truly poor favored Clinton, and even amongst working class voters it was the better off half of the working class who tended to support Trump. The difficult reality is that, both in the U.S. and Europe, the rise of the far right (and some leftwing populism) is not about economics, it’s about xenophobia, racism, and sexism. Indeed, counter to what progressives might like to imagine, there is good evidence that the stronger the social safety net, the more economically secure the white working class, the more extreme their right wing politics gets. A strong social safety net fosters a diverse and equal society. People on the right would rather forgo their own economic benefit, than lend help to ‘those people.’ Hence, as hard as it might be for some to imagine, Bernie Sanders’ promise of universal healthcare and free education, were it to come to pass, may well have further enraged and empowered the politics of the right.
There is also a much less discussed religious dimension to this. Right-wing jurisprudence calls for a ‘religious freedom,’ which always gives deference to the asserted beliefs of individuals (e.g. the idea that providing contraception to employees of a business violates the religious beliefs of the business owner) regardless of the beliefs of others, the harm it does to others, and, crucially, whether or not the asserted religious exception appears earnest in the slightest. Trump’s Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch has taken such positions in his own judicial opinions. This jurisprudence is a backdoor for codifying (mainly) christian values into U.S. law. While brilliantly masquerading as ‘religious freedom,’ this position runs counter to the basic tenet of the separation of Church and State, whose sole purpose is to guarantee the religious freedom of all people, by avoiding the establishment of a state religion. So it would be nice if it were true that our problems are in essence economic, since as a country we would only have to address issues of economic disaparity, which anyone can empathize with and understand. But if the struggle is about a christian white majority seeing that demographic shifts have tipped the balance of its majority status (this happened during the Obama presidency) and hence wanting to reassert and bolster its socio-cultural dominance, then that will be a much more formidable difference to overcome, for those who favor diversity, immigration, and inclusiveness. Trumpian ‘populism,’ ‘free trade,’ ‘manufacturing,’ ‘healthcare,’ ‘working class,’ ‘jobs,’ these are code words for reasserting white christian patriarchal socio-cultural dominance. Perhaps these terms, along with the myth of a forgotten white working class that rose up to support Trump, have been latched onto all the more strongly after the election (even though the myth of Trump’s working class support had been debunked during the election), because the truth of a rising tide of xenophobia, racism, and sexism, independent of economic conditions, is a much uglier truth to swallow. Yet, unless people on the right (and some on the left) can be convinced that they really do want to live in a multicultural, multiethnic, race and gender, immigration based melting pot, with sexual equality to boot, then we will be hard pressed to address the economic disparities that affect all of us.”
12019-07-25T15:24:58-07:00It’s About Xenophobia, Racism and Sexism2Poets of Coursegallery2019-07-25T15:26:26-07:00They don't like you because you're different if you don't look alike, you don't speak their language. “We are not the same so you don't get respected” your complaints and your feelings or always neglected. Uneducated and superior, that's what they are “You can't sit in our parks or come to our bars”. “We don't need you here why don't you just leave?” Innocent souls wondering “Oh God, why me?” They say just stay in the kitchen where you belong. Clean up all my filth while you sing a song. Real-life Cinderella, a slave to the Man. Doing what she's taught, working hard as she can. We all deserve love and want to be heard. All it takes is some kindness and some heartfelt words Make the world better and always spread love so that we never ever have to worry about all of the above. -Jessica L.