Social justice warrior perfectly explains what’s wrong with SJWs

A social justice warrior at Harvard University literally can’t even with social justice warriors.

Elizabeth Sun, through an op-ed titled “I am Not Your Enemy” for the school newspaper, The Harvard Crimson, put social justice warriors on blast for their treatment of conservatives and their pre-occupation in “witch-hunting for ‘fake liberals.'”

Sun, a Chinese American student who comes from the lower-middle class, said she found a home in the social justice community when she started out in the First-Year Urban Program (because “Freshman” is politically incorrect) donating food and debating privilege.

However, Sun admitted that the SJW movement isn’t perfect, and their standards are impossible to live up to.

To claim a place in this “accepting” community, I had to think perfectly, talk perfectly, act perfectly, live perfectly. There was no room for unintended marginalization, for career considerations that paid too high, for ignorance towards the ever-expanding set of causes that the social justice movement adopts. As much as I want to sympathize, too much of it is unacceptably exclusive.

Instead of focusing on the very real “bigots” of this world and tackling head-on the political structures of inequality, the loudest voices of the movement have become preoccupied with witch-hunting for “fake liberals.” There is this strange conviction that only the most extreme versions of a position can be true, and that all minor deviations, all attempts to compromise or to even consider the other side are forms of bigotry.

The result of this extremity is a tendency to prioritize flashiness over truth. It means that if, as a woman, you suggest that being careful with clothing, especially when walking by yourself, is a good way to reduce the risk of sexual assault, you will be immediately caricatured as blaming women for rape. It means that if you talk about the higher SAT and GPA scores needed for Asian-Americans in college applications in a debate about affirmative action, you will be immediately shut down as trying to pit minorities against each other.

Using exaggeration and shame to deny the tension of real nuances is both ignorant and irresponsible. No issue that deals with thousands of people can be so crudely simplified. And if my unwillingness to support these exaggerations earns me the ultimate disqualifier of “center-left,” that is the identity I want to embrace. Because this active polarization is more than a Harvard drama—it is a denial of humanity to the rest of this country.

Sun closed her op-ed by taking a stand that she cannot support the demonization of conservatives, particularly Donald Trump supporters, saying SJWs are “putting someone’s politics above their humanity.”

I don’t know about you, but Elizabeth Sun may be the “wokest” social justice warrior out there.

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