8 thoughts on “Jesus Jones Could Have Used a Lesson in Intersectionality With ‘Right Here, Right Now’

  1. Despite (unwillingly) hearing this awful song thousands of times I never caught these reference before. Knowing this doesn’t make me want to hearing anymore than I did already.

  2. Today for the first time, I heard the lyrics carefully and realized the context of the song. That’s the reason I ended up in this page. Great reflection, feels a bit disgusting to hear that song now.

  3. This song isn’t at all about Tracy Chapman, and any references to that are race baited and foolish. Stop starting something that doesn’t exist just because you want to virtue signal

  4. “Stop starting something that doesn’t exist just because you want to virtue signal”

    Back at ya, stupid. “Virtue signaling” as you call it exists on all sides of any issue. You’re “virtue signaling” here because apparently you have nothing to complain about in your life, and so you apply your weak logic to all peoples. You hate people who protest against things they see & experience in THEIR lives…

    Which begs the question, if your life is so perfect, why are you on here whining like a little bitch?!? (Yes, that’s exactly what you’re doing. You little bitch.).

  5. The dumbest take I’ve ever read on anything ever.
    Communism was an erosive cancer that encouraged youth to hate themselves, with the solution being to vandalize property, murder everyone in power in their countries, and collectively shoot themselves in the feet. All in the vague promise they’d be able to scarf drugs and listen to cool music, with the tacit approval of an underclass they imagined would see them as heroes.
    Meanwhile, behind the Iron Curtain, life sucked, propped up by extreme oppression gate kept by secret police.
    No one wants that shit back.

    The fall of Communism was the greatest moment since the end of World War II. Commu

  6. John, may I point you to the sentence, “No one is saying that Edwards was wrong to want to celebrate that moment in time, but…”

    So, yes, the fall of communism was overall a good thing, but you fell into the same trap that Edwards did in looking at this from a single point of view, which is what the article is ultimately about: just because life is good for some (or even a lot of) people, it doesn’t mean it’s good for everyone.

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