Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Posters do you understand there are trolls on here? That any douche nozzle can come in and make digs at either side just to keep this divisive stuff going? Is this a troll fighting a troll? Why does anyone engage with trolls? Two posters are so busy with I know you are but what am I, I can’t tell who is for and who is against the meme. Why even keep at it? Make your point and move on. You won’t persuade everyone and the people who continue to wage war are trying to get a rise out of you. You’re handing it to them.
My view: Karen is unquestionably misogynistic. I don’t like when anyone uses it. IRL the users are almost always men and of those men, a majority are white.These are facts. Another fact is that white incels are all over these boards. Stop rising to the bait.
White women try to shift any criticism of them onto “white males” and “incels,” but the white woman victimhood stereotype was already universally recognized. It didn’t start with the “Karen” meme. It’s been around for a long time.
Yep.
No. Karen has never been about white women’s victimhood. It’s always been about shutting down a woman of any race who gets out of line. That’s how social media has always used it. Trying to redefine it, as part of some sort of retaliation for racism, doesn’t work for this reason. Call a white woman who’s a racist just that. But don’t try to redefine a meme that everybody else has always used to shut white women down.
Anyone who has worked in customer service or retail jobs, whether they are male, female, black, white, etc. has had to deal with Karens on a daily basis. The most difficult and demanding customers are usually entitled middle-aged white women. That’s where the stereotype comes from. It’s has nothing to do with men trying to “shut women up.” That’s just you pretending to not understand and, yet again, play the victim.