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- Embed this notice@Humpleupagus @DireGoy I wasn't entirely disagreeing with you, past the political part. It's perhaps political in function, but I don't think it's an overtly political act. People's feelings have been hijacked, for lack of better words. The moment they come up against some rule, they start doing a check list. "Can I think of a good reason for this rule? Does this rule hurt someone specifically? Does this rule protect someone that's not me?" If none of those pass, then the rule gets attacked from all sides.
Looking at normie politics, this is how, both a left and a right, look at gay marriage. Liberals say "love is love", it's a compassion thing. For conservatives it's "I personally don't like it, but I also don't want anyone telling me what to do, so I won't tell them what to do". Both have basically same outcome of bringing down social norms. They also do this automatically, almost without thinking. It's not in a political in this sense, but literally a virtue. The same way you might say stealing is wrong. Basically, it is itself a social norm.
I get where this comes from on the Jewish part. It's not a product of the people themselves (no one would ever willingly do this to themselves), but from outsiders detached from the well being of society as a whole. Jews may very well control the culture, to the point where we may as well say the dominant culture is Jewish, but it's also obscured to the point where most people don't realize this. They should, but they don't.