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Still Learning's avatar

I would rather hear the "but wait ... I don't think *my* behavior has ever been " statement from someone at least beginning to understand their privilege than any of the approaches John Connolly has taken here:

- this is an opportunity for me to promote myself

- try to degrade accomplishments by attacking them

- make up sideways arguments that aren't on point

- don't answer direct questions

- tone policing

etc.

I have no doubt as to which of Katherine and John Connolly has more diagnosable behavioral problems.

Katherine - it would be interesting if you reframed your challenge as "I'm willing to get diagnosed by a repetuable behiavor specialist if you will do the same."

Generally I prefer to think of people as uninformed about their privilege, which is often invisible to people who have it. This helps me be more empathetic/compassionate towards them. But there are some folks I will always struggle to respect / empathasize with and I think you've just surfaced one such person to me.

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Erin Brophey's avatar

He thinks in hierarchy.

I see his thoughts as:

“Professional musicians are entitled to more opinions than amateur musicians”

“Better professional musicians have better opinions.”

“Some people have better observations than others. My observations are better than yours”

“Men are have better opinions than irrational women.”

This mindset is steeped in everything he states.

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