Quote (IceMage @ Sep 27 2020 12:28pm)
It's a phrase meant to invoke a victim mentality... as if these people are being held down by the powerful. The original members of this stupid label are Joe Rogan, who has an insanely popular podcast and just got paid 100m+ by Spotify. Ben Shapiro, who trends top 5 on Facebook everyday, has a very successful website, and gets spots on the most popular news network in the country. There's others as well.
The most offensive part of it is calling these guys intellectual. Rogan says himself that he's an uninformed idiot... Shapiro moves closer and closer to Trump in order to keep his business viable. He's in the business of attacking the worst arguments from the left. Sophisticated political observers from the right typically move on from the Shapiros of the world onto more serious avenues.
As far as the darkies, there's value in getting the perspective of the people listed. McWhorter writers articles for The Atlantic, a center-left magazine and news site. I've seen some of the others on Fox News and testifying in front of Congress. Dark web usually implies you have to jump through a bunch of hoops to get the content... not in this case.
That's a smear of how the label started. Eric Weinstein coined the phrase to simply describe a group of people who would have civil conversation regardless of their differences. Most of them had experience with mobs trying to 'cancel' them in some way.
Bret Weinstein is probably the one who suffered clear victimization at Evergreen. He's also the most progressive 'member' as far as I can tell.
Shapiro had much of his advertising pulled due to twitter mob. He weathered that easily and likely profited largely off of it.
Rogan has been targeted for his opinions often obviously.
IDW fits these personalities perfectly if you use the original intent.
I will listen to anything with Mcwhorter tbh. His conversations with Loury are some of the best.