Why do we give words so much power? Words are just words and nothing more. So why do we make such a fuss as a society over made up words that started from slang?
Recently liberals are pointing fingers at Republicans, blaming them for putting a negative spin to the word ‘woke’.
After the results of the Virginia election, Democrat strategist James Carville blamed “stupid wokeness” for his party’s disappointing loss. In an interview with PBS Newshour, the long-time Democrat strategist said that some of his party’s ultra-progressive policies had a “suppressive effect across the country on Democrats.”
“Some of these people need to go to a woke detox center or something,” he added.
New York Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez took a different approach, saying Democrats’ losses on election day were due to “trying to run a fully 100% super moderated campaign.”
When Ocasio-Cortez’s comments were branded as advocating for “woke” policies, she balked, tweeting “How can news outlets even attribute words to me I didn’t say? … Said nothing about ‘wokeness’ which is a term almost exclusively used by older people these days by the way.”
Despite her and other Democrats’ current contempt for the word, New York-based writer David Marcus said being woke was once seen by the left as a positive thing. “You go back 12, 13 years … it was definitely something that people on the left would use in an approving way,” he said in an interview.
However, this has become not the case and the media is continuously placing blame on Republicans for the terms downfall.
As far back as 2018, an NPR opinion said it was time to put the word “woke” to sleep due to the “muddling” of the definition.
“Words that begin with a very specific meaning, used by a very specific group of people, over time become shorthand for our politics, and eventually move from shorthand to linguistic weapon. Or in the case of woke, a linguistic eye-roll,” the piece read.
A New York Times columnist declared that “Republicans want to recast ‘wokeness’ as progressive politics run amok,” saying the term “has been referred to in the most hyperbolic language imaginable, from ideology to religion to cult.”
“No wonder young people are abandoning the word,” the piece continued. “Opponents to the idea are seeking to render it toxic.”
An article in The Guardian sought to explain “How the word ‘woke’ was weaponized by the right,” saying the word is “used as a stick … often wielded by those who don’t recognize how un-woke they are, or are proud of the fact.”
A Washington Post columnist claimed “the word ‘woke’ once meant something, kind of. But now it’s just an empty, all-purpose insult hurled by conservative propagandists, anti-vaccine fabulists, lazy journalists and people who don’t want to know our history.”
Despite the media’s claims, Marcus told Fox News Digital the left’s disavowal of the word had to do with “so many excesses,” and the “commoditization of the concept.”
“There are all of these companies whose job it is to go into schools and corporations and do these anti-racist woke trainings,” he said. “I just think that the term has become associated with something that a lot of people now see as corrupt or involved with some sort of perverse interests in terms of the money that can be made through it.”
Marcus cited research done by Manhattan Institute senior fellow and City Journal contributing editor Christopher Rufo, who has written extensively about the infiltration of progressive training and policies into corporate America.
Rufo has brought attention to corporations like AT&T and Walmart for their policies, including White employees at AT&T being “tacitly expected to confess their complicity in ‘white privilege’ and ‘systematic racism’” or be “penalized in their performance reviews.
Walmart, according to internal documents Rufo obtained from a whistleblower, “launched a critical race theory training program that denounces the United States as a ‘white supremacy system’ and teaches White, hourly wage employees that they are guilty of ‘white supremacy thinking’ and ‘internalized racial superiority.’”
These findings are part of the left wanting to get away from the term woke, Marcus said, but despite the media’s push to stop use of the word it will be an issue for Democrats in the 2022 midterm elections and beyond.
“I think that especially people who are running in tighter races are going to have to address the excesses. They’re going to have to find a middle ground,” he said. “If the Democrats don’t find a way to address this and reel it back in a little bit, I think they’re going to be in trouble.”