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5 Feet of Fury

Kathy Shaidle's blog. Est. 2000

“What the Gender-Identity Revolution Has in Common with 1960s’ Drug Culture”

February 16, 2017 By Kathy Shaidle

(This is why the movie Blue Sunshine was such a lost opportunity; a movie about delayed-reaction acid could have said so much about the long term damage done by hippie philosophies and actions…)

Anyway, Scott Beauchamp writes:

This lineage, traced from Stirner through Nietzsche and Foucault to modern-day emotivism, can be seen in full flower in the “otherkin” movement, which is the next logical step of identity solipsism. A VICE article describes otherkin as “people who identify as partially or entirely nonhuman. A dragon, a lion, a fox—you name it—there is probably someone out there who feels like they are more these things than they are human.” Of course, such persons can only assert that they “feel like a fox.” Such feelings can’t be verified or described. As Wittgenstein said, if a lion could speak, we wouldn’t be able to understand him. Neither can people who claim to be otherkin understand what a fox feels like. Nor can “voidkin,” who literally identify as void, understand what nothingness feels like or know if absence indeed has any consciousness at all. These emotivist reveries, the “cloudkin” who thinks he’s a cloud and the acid seeker who, ironically enough, also imagines herself as a cloud, engage in the furthest thing from political action. They’re abdicating the common objective world that binds us together, in favor of fantastical reveries.

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