Not exact matches
Imagine a video of Chesterton confronting a social
justice warrior, a postmodernist, or that girl at Yale
who was screaming at the professor.
People
who can unironically use the term «social
justice warrior» as an epithet hate this commercial.
I have found many people
who are called to surrogacy are
warriors for social
justice.
There's a strange thing that's happened on social media recently - almost everyone
who isn't a brand or PR manager has become an identity - driven social
justice warrior.
Follow Afro Samurai as he fights to become the number one
warrior, a title currently held by
Justice, the man
who killed Afro's father when he was a child.
He is — I am sorry to have to inform those people
who will be sorry to hear this — a social
justice warrior.
She goes from merely complaining about social
justice to becoming a real
warrior who, along with her second banana, Tony, metes out
justice to those
who have ruined the world for people like her (and «us»).
Native American
warrior Tonto (Johnny Depp),
who rides by his side insuring
justice in the wild west, may be the best person to explain the legend of the Lone Ranger.
This solo spin - off movie in the DC Universe is set during World War I stars Gal Gadot (from Batman v Superman: Dawn of
Justice) as the Amazonian princess -
warrior Diana
who becomes Wonder Woman.
This fourth installment was again produced, written and directed by Oscar - winner George Miller (for Happy Feet)
who tapped Tom Hardy to replace disgraced Mel Gibson in the title role as Max Rockatansky, the highway patrol officer - turned - intrepid road
warrior given to dispensing a grisly brand of vigilante
justice.
Tonto (Johnny Depp), a spirit
warrior on a personal quest, joins forces in a fight for
justice with John Reid (Armie Hammer), a lawman
who has become a masked avenger.
Who: Johnny Depp, Armie Hammer, William Fichtner and Helena Bonham Carter What: Native American
warrior Tonto recounts the untold tales that transformed John Reid, a man of the law, into a legend of
justice.
«To me, being a
warrior for social
justice means doing whatever it takes to change the odds for kids
who are stuck in failing school systems,» she says.
That feature is what lost the support of longtime social -
justice warrior (and founder of the pro school choice Black Alliance for Educational Options) Howard Fuller,
who in July shocked many allies by stating his opposition to the Nevada plan: «Parental choice should be used principally as a tool to empower communities that face systemic barriers to greater educational and economic opportunities... I could never approve of a plan that would give those with existing advantages even greater means to leverage the limited number of private school options, to the detriment of low - income families.»
Many teachers now take their cue from the likes of National Education Association Executive Director John Stocks
who, at the recent NEA convention, told his flock that teachers need to become «social
justice warriors.»
I really do not like this sheep mob of social
justice warriors that we are creating,
who are determined to stone anyone and everyone to death for any stupid human behaviour that doesn't perfectly fall in line with the mass - prescribed and oppressive, and almost emotionless and robotic in nature, social «normal» as it has been dictated to us in recent times.
The term «social
justice warrior» (SJW) has become a dirty phrase to describe anyone
who fans see as changing a game or movie to allow for more inclusiveness to the Continue Reading»
An Aboriginal man
who grew up on the far north coast of NSW and a descendant of the reprehensible slave trade with connections to the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, Sol Bellear AM was a true activist and
justice warrior for First Nations people.