He said there's an «
illusion of exclusion» to the offering.
Not exact matches
«Others become scapegoats,» writes Miroslav Volf in
Exclusion and Embrace: A Theological Exploration
of Identity, Otherness and Reconciliation, «concocted from our own shadows as repositories for our sins and weaknesses [and fears] so we can relish the
illusion of our sinlessness and strength.»
It is a model pioneered in the 1990s in Houston and now widely recognized as a fraud — what Walter Haney, a researcher
of evaluation systems, called an «
illusion arising from
exclusion.»
Instead, Simpson uses the dialogue between
illusion and pure form as a way
of challenging the neutrality
of architectures
of exclusion that reduce migrants, the homeless, the elderly, the disabled and the marginalised to «bare life».
This week's Middle Seat looked at
exclusions and
illusions in travel insurance, a timely topic right now given fears
of terrorism, war and hurricanes.