Settings

Theme

The 9th Circuit Upholds Professor's Right to Mock 'Land Acknowledgments'

reason.com

26 points by osnium123 a month ago · 2 comments

Reader

lubujackson a month ago

I will just say this trend of "land acknowledgements" feels like the worst flotsam of liberalism - it is performatively solumn, prescriptive "on behalf" of some marginalized people, but ultimately meaningless. It feels like the liberal version of a "thoughts & prayers" response.

It is especially misguided since the acknowledged "true owners" of the land usually didn't subscribe to the concept of land ownership. The whole concept is just weird and I don't understand the objective. To be appreciative of the land's history? Why would this be required in a college course syllabus?

I say this as a liberal in SF who is part Native American - who the hell wanted this?

  • osnium123OP a month ago

    It can be performative and helps show that one is aligned with prevailing political orthodoxy.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection