Monday, December 10, 2018

Why ‘No Hate Here’ signs are actually pretty hateful

Why ‘No Hate Here’ signs are actually pretty hateful
"My walks with my dog take me to a quiet off-street, with middle-class houses made expensive because they’re inside the Beltway.
Why ‘No Hate Here’ signs are actually pretty hatefulTheir owners are mostly youngish attorneys who work as assistant-deputy-director-somethings in some government department or other.
Two of the homes feature “No Hate Here” signs.
What’s up with that, you might wonder. 
This is a peaceful, upscale, decidedly un-diverse neighborhood.
The greatest threat to suburban peace is the lone homeowner whose lawn looks a tad overgrown. There’s nothing to suggest that anyone is a racist or bigot.
So again: What’s going on?
Someone came up with the label “virtue signaling” to describe the psychological impulse behind these signs.
The idea is that people who put them up want to tell you how noble they are.
But that doesn’t sound right. Virtue-signalers aren’t in any way in doubt about their own virtue.
What they really want to do is signal how depraved others are.
It’s about vice signaling, not virtue signaling..."
Read all.

No comments: