"I Feel Unsafe" Is Not an Argument There is a sentence that has learned to end conversations. It arrives in a committee room in the late afternoon, or in an email marked confidential, or in a complaint that has passed through three offices before it reaches you. Someone has made a claim. Someone else, rather than answering the claim, says they feel unsafe, and the room rearranges itself around the words. What was an argument a moment ago becomes a matter of management. Chairs are pulled back. Voices drop. The inconvenient question is folded away, gently, the way you fold away something that has embarrassed everyone by being said. I have watched this happen many times now. I have come to understand it as a small ceremony of our age. And it needs to be called out for what it is. A strategy for suspending argumentation. Let me state the thing plainly. A feeling is real, and I am not in the business of doubting anyone's interior weather. But a feeling is not a verdict, a...
The Margins Review · Culture-Centered Approach
The culture-centred blog of Mohan J. Dutta — Massey University, Aotearoa. Home of The Margins Review: critical intellectual opinions from Aotearoa to the world.