Have You Noticed How the Term 'Hate' Has Changed?
The definiton of the word has been expanded and made vague at the same time
When I was growing up the term ‘hate’ meant something very specific. A specific, intense, or extreme emotional and psychological response to a person, place, or object causing one to feel incensed, repulsed even murderous in some cases. The sectarianism in Northern Ireland for example. That was hate. In other words, to imply a desire to hate something was akin to an extreme and very specific behavioral and emotional state.
In recent years the term ‘haters’ has come into vogue in that there is no more criticism or objective analysis. You are now expected to either love something or then it is surmised that therefore you must ‘hate’ it.
In the past when someone might state. “The new Tool album is not good at all and here is why?” Such a commentary was looked up as either valid or not justified and that was that. These days this is considered ‘hate’. So the question must be asked; since when did the term lose its specific meaning?
The answer is politics and globalist agendas. No one is allowed to question government policy as this is now considered ‘hate’ and not critique. Whole sways of people can be declared a ‘hate group’ and deemed to be involved in ‘hate speech’ when it is nothing of the sort. Often these people who have the finger pointed at them in this regard have no hatred inside them. They are merely asking questions and looking for valid answers. So, therefore, declaring them a ‘hate group’ instantly dehumanizes these people and all their other concerns and criticisms can then be declared ‘hate speech’, and then the Hate Speech Laws are introduced…
An example of how personal preference and choice are now deemed to be hatred:
___________
Pagan Anarchist Thomas Sheridan is an Author, Artist, Film Maker, and Satirist who has spent a life from Wall Street to the Jungles of South Asia attempting to discover the emerging—often elusive—mythology of modern humans within the present technology-saturated era. Heavily inspired by the work of Carl Jung, Bruno Bettelheim, and Joseph Campbell, Thomas Sheridan has developed ‘Monomythic’ tool kits—which draw upon all the mythologies of the world. So as to demonstrate that on a personal and collective level; these legends and stories contain within them a subconscious lexicon of wisdom and symbols that can help all of us overcome the personal and greater challenges we encounter in everyday life. By not giving birth and nurturing these timeless archetypes within us all, modern humans are at a loss when it comes to achieving personal and social Individuation. Or a rounding out of one’s purpose in life. Their dharma. Their Monomyth. Inside all of us resides a wizard, a warrior, a bard, and a knight and by tapping into the power of these archetypes one can have a more fulfilling and creative life. Every challenge is a quest. Every situation is a saga. Every moment is an adventure.
BUY ME A COFFEE IF YOU LIKE: HERE
CONTACT AND DETAILS
https://linktr.ee/thomassheridan
Whats creepy for me is that the picture in the poster looks like a child .
Omg you really nailed this. The reference to trans hatred is spot on. Hatred is a truly visceral emotion. Preference and indifference have lost their meaning and nuance in this political climate.