Powers Decoded | Systems • Class • Truth

7.1K posts

Powers Decoded | Systems • Class • Truth

Powers Decoded | Systems • Class • Truth

@PowersDecoded

Class, Power and Systems explained plainly. Value truth over comfort. Reposts + analysis. ⚖️

United States Entrou em Eylül 2023
475 Seguindo74 Seguidores
Lex
Lex@LexDiamonds__·
It’s really a simple truth but y’all not gonna like it. Gay men don’t have children or build families, letting them in your ranks opposes no threat to this system. Those men are already considered emasculated so they’re not seen as out group males.
Zion 🇸🇩@afroanalytic

The “antiblack misandry” thesis collapses the moment you introduce sexuality. Black gay boys outperform straight Black boys despite greater marginalization, which means the mechanism is not hostility to boys—it’s something else entirely. The recent research on sexuality, race & educational outcomes completely shatters this thesis. Black gay high school boys outperform straight black boys while experiencing worse discrimination & mental health challenges in school than straight boys.  Antiblack misandry can’t explain this because the theory would have to incorporate heteronormativity/masculinity norms, not just “misandry.” Gay boys outperform straight boys & often close gender gaps. In some cases, gay boys match or even EXCEED the educational outcomes of straight girls, despite greater marginalization. Misandry can’t explain that, because the framework would imply gay boys would actually perform worse—they perform exceptionally well even amidst structural homophobia & mental health challenges.  Aside from this afro-androcentric and misogynoiristic erasure of black girls as also targeted racial victims of the school to prison pipeline and racist school practices, this is why believers in “antiblack misandry” or black male studies have to believe white boys & men are victims of “misandry” as well.  Every intra-racial gender disparity they point to is mirrored in some way across all or most other races—-with racism exacerbating it for non-whites. white, asian, black boys all perform worse than their same-race girl counterparts in school. In the same groups, the men are more incarcerated than women, & are murdered more than women.  Somehow, misandry only explains these BLACK intra-racial gender disparities in education, imprisonment, etc, but not the other intra-racial gender disparities. This is analytically incoherent in both social science & philosophy.  Across races, the gender gap persists, but within that gap sexuality reorganizes outcomes. Antiblack misandry can’t explain that, unless misandry overall can explain the same disparities among nonblacks.  If (straight) boys across all races are experiencing negative disparities in education, & schools are structurally antiblack, then black boys will be on the antiblack end of negative gendered disparities. Black feminists already taught us how to analyze compounded social locations.  What must also be taken into account is the feminization of literacy in the late 20th century, adolescent masculinities’ cultural (in)compatibility with “good student” conduct, and for black boys what Vershawn Ashanti calls the “sociolinguistics of racial performance” and its irreconcilable conflict between racial authenticity and white standards of conduct.  “Misandry” is being used to misname the consequences of patriarchal masculinity itself. If boys who deviate most from dominant masculinity outperform those who conform to it, then the problem is not hostility to boys——-its the structure of masculinity itself.

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Powers Decoded | Systems • Class • Truth
@Slowburnt2 @LexDiamonds__ Cool, so we’re clear now you just made up the ‘femininity reduces penalties’ claim and tried to pin it on me. Your argument about masculinity is fine, but it doesn’t contradict the mechanism I described: racialized threat and gender-norm policing
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Powers Decoded | Systems • Class • Truth
@Slowburnt2 @LexDiamonds__ which is the claim you tried to slide in. Shifting definitions mid-thread doesn’t change the fact that the mechanisms I cited (radicalized threat and gender-norm policing) still explain why boys perceived as feminine face increased harassment and scrutiny. Again, are you okay?
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@Slowburnt2 @LexDiamonds__ Oh okay, so I see the backpedal now. Your original claim about masculinity doesn’t magically validate the inference you tried to pin on femininity. I never argued against your masculinity point, I was pushing back on the implied idea that femininity reduces negative outcomes,
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@Slowburnt2 @LexDiamonds__ Sure, if you want to split hairs, but that’s exactly why your original claim fails. You implied femininity reduces penalties or makes boys seem less disruptive, a claim that requires data showing positive outcomes. There’s no evidence for that.
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@Slowburnt2 @LexDiamonds__ racialized threat and gender-norm policing still explain why boys perceived as feminine face more harassment and negative attention. Keep shifting the claim, but the data on observable outcomes still backs my point, not yours. It was nice chatting with you though.
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@Slowburnt2 @LexDiamonds__ Again, goalpost moving. Your claim started as femininity reduces penalties or signals less disruption. You’ve now shifted to masculinity increases scrutiny. That’s not the same argument, and it doesn’t contradict the mechanism I described:
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Powers Decoded | Systems • Class • Truth
@Slowburnt2 @LexDiamonds__ (1/2) That’s fine, but my point is about causal mechanisms for teacher perceptions and outcomes, not the broader universe of all possible factors. The literature I cited isolates two empirically supported mechanisms that directly explain disparities in treatment and outcomes:
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Slowburnt
Slowburnt@Slowburnt2·
@PowersDecoded @LexDiamonds__ That's fine because I'm not limiting my scope to academic performance as it relates to threat response, discipline or harassment. I'm talking about how gender perceptions impact academic performance.
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@Slowburnt2 @LexDiamonds__ Im aware of that and that’s exactly why my mechanism still stands. I’m not denying that perceptions exist; I’m highlighting the empirically supported pathways through which those perceptions translate into structural outcomes, namely, racialized threat and gender-norm policing.
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@Slowburnt2 @LexDiamonds__ Exactly, this is why your claim doesn’t hold without data. Femininity increases harassment or negativity’ is not the same as it lowering academic penalties or signaling less disruption. I’m asking for empirical evidence showing that the types of harassment or negativity
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