No, no, no, no, no. Old conservative men are the hypocrites. They're so Islamophobic yet, not all Muslims are terrorists and 1000 years ago, Christians did crusades.
The classic crusade argument. What makes it even more funny, even putting the fact that is an obviously out of date example, is that the first crusade was called as a Christian retaliation to Muslim aggression in Turkey, Iberia and elsewhere, iirc.
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Oh he knows, this line right here "What makes it even more funny" indicates that the person he's replying to is already poking fun at it and he's responding to pile on.
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Shadilay my brothers and sisters. With any luck we will throw off the shackles of normie oppression. We have nothing to lose but our chains! Praise Kek!
THE MOTTO IS "IN KEK WE TRUST"
Indeed, and when people do legit use the crusades thing though...it is also all kinds of hilarious. If you need to dip back to the Crusades to find something bad Christians did in comparison to Islam...there is a problem.
On top of that, you really wouldn't have to go back all the way to the crusades to find abhorrent Christian behavior. So it's more just being lazy, shouting "crusades!" is the new "racism!" shout.
__________________ Chicken Boo, what's the matter with you? You don't act like the other chickens do. You wear a disguise to look like human guys, but you're not a man you're a Chicken Boo.
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Discrimination was absolutely a problem with earlier feminists movements, as it was with literally any social movement ever.
There were many feminists who excluded black women, just as they were many civil rights fighters who excluded black women from their push for equality.
The African-American Civil Rights Movement faced accusations of being un-American, so it barred from participation other groups deemed un-American, including Communists and homosexuals, even though the original organizer of the movement was himself both a Communist and a homosexual. In fact, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was strategically chosen to replace him, because he was a Christian pastor, which would make it difficult for opponents to criticize him. The movement continued to accept his contributions—he continued to organize actions behind the scenes, and he wrote some of Dr. MLK, Jr.'s speeches—while not allowing people like him to participate.
Similarly, the Women's Liberation Movement faced accusations of hating men, so it barred from participation Lesbians, who were also seen as hating men.
It is called political expediency, but in life, people are often faced with the choice of being right or doing what works, and often times, doing what works means picking the battles they can win.