Social Justice? Here’s What It Is

When we initially heard the term social justice, we thought of justice in the way we learned the term, meaning people are treated equally and fairly in the law enforcement and prosecution arena – the justice system. Simple, right?

The term “social justice” became the mantra for protesters after the George Floyd death in 2020.

The were violent riots in the streets of Minneapolis and many other cities around the country calling for social justice.

Whether we agreed or not, we all thought the protests were about treating the Floyd death at the hands of the police in a fair and equitable manner.

We thought of justice, and the addition of the word social – social justice – was just ignored.

If it hasn’t occurred to you yet, the protests in the name of “social justice” meant a whole lot more than what we assumed it was on the surface.

What we didn’t realize was that “social justice” had been around for a while and that there was a whole menagerie of ideology associated with the term. It has been taught in most colleges and universities for many years – some even have whole departments dedicated to it. There’s a whole curriculum developed for the K-12 system as well – and some of our public-school systems have adopted it.

So, what is it? What is meant when the term ‘social justice’ is used?

What follows is a summary of what I picked up from various web sites on the subject.

  • Social justice is justice in relation to a fair balance in the distribution of wealth, opportunities, and privileges within a society.
  • Social justice is the process of ensuring that individuals fulfill their societal roles and receive their due from society.
  • Social justice assigns rights and duties in the institutions of society, which enables people to receive the basic benefits and burdens of cooperation. The relevant institutions often include taxation, social insurance, public health, public school, public services, labor law and regulation of markets, to ensure distribution of wealth, and equal opportunity.
  • Social justice is invoked today while reinterpreting historical figures such as Bartolomé de las Casas, in philosophical debates about differences among human beings, in efforts for gender, ethnic, and social equality, for advocating justice for migrants, prisoners, and the environment.
  • Social justice has at least three common elements can be identified in the contemporary theories about it: a duty of the State to distribute certain vital means (such as economic, social, and cultural rights), the protection of human dignity, and affirmative actions to promote equal opportunities for everybody.
  • Social justice is used to refer to social, political, and economic institutions, laws, or policies that collectively afford such fairness and equity and is commonly applied to movements that seek fairness, equity, inclusion, self-determination, or other goals for currently or historically oppressed, exploited, or marginalized populations.
  • 10 examples of social justice:
  1. Climate Justice
  2. Refugee Crisis
  3. Healthcare
  4. Racial Justice
  5. LGBTQIA+ Oppression
  6. Speciesism
  7. Ageism
  8. Sizeism
  9. Hunger and Food Insecurity
  10. Equity

So, you get the idea. Social justice is/was the driving force behind the ‘defund the police’ fiasco and now the transgender mess.

Social justice defines ‘woke.’

Social justice is about socialism. “Justice” is the method by which socialism is to be sold to the public. Socialism is ‘justice’ for all; therefore, it is good.

It’s about changing our culture to one where the individual is entitled to a whole host of benefits provided by the state in exchange for paying the ‘dues’ of dominance and control by it.

There’s a whole generation that has been taught that ‘social justice’ is contrary to what the US has called justice.

They’re being taught that everyone except straight white males are victims of straight white males. And as victims everyone except straight white males are owed something: reparations, subsidies, tax credits, migrant green cards, drug paraphernalia, a room at a 5-star hotel, good jobs, promotions, food stamps, a cabinet seat, a seat on the Supreme Court, etc. White supremacy is the country’s major problem.

We’re to focus on the elements of social justice and its advocates when taking a class, when we enter the voting booth. Forget the failing economy, inflation, soaring electrical generation costs and prices, corporate profits, wages not keeping up and falling, illegal immigration stampedes, crime exploding to the point where we now have organized mass shoplifting, unsafe streets, runaway car jackings and assaults, cashless bail, failing public schools.

Equity rules. That means merit doesn’t.

Oh, and while we’re changing our culture to consider criminals as victims, eliminate justice system consequences for crime and empty our jails – and throw in the proposition that our kids need to learn to appreciate and be taught by drag queens.

Ah yes, social justice. The elite, ruling class will survive and flourish by exceptions to the new culture.

Good luck.

***************

Have a great and prosperous week.

Hug somebody.

References:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_justice

https://genv.org/social-justice-examples/

https://www.masterclass.com/articles/what-is-social-justice

https://www.humanrightscareers.com/issues/social-justice-101-meaning-principles-facts-and-examples/

SPIDER Bites

This week’s trivia question: What musician was awarded the first gold record? This might test your age. The answer to last week’s – youngest golfer ever to win the U.S. Junior Amateur title: Tiger Woods. In 1991 at the age of 15 Woods won his first of three consecutive junior amateur titles.

After years of putting together the required $1B, then development and construction, Brightline opened high-speed rail service between Miami and Orlando Friday. As a private endeavor, I hope this service is highly successful. The Orlando station is next to Terminal C at the airport. Miami’s station is downtown. A standard one-way ticket between Miami and Orlando starts at $79 and goes up to $149 for a premium seat. A family of four can buy tickets for the whole family for $199 one way. The time for the trip is three hours with intermediate stations in Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach. Future plans will connect Orlando and Tampa.

Senate leader Charles Schumer removed any dress code for wear on the Senate floor – to accommodate John Fetterman’s shorts and hoodie. No shoes, no shirt, no problem. The message is everyone should live by the lowest denominator.

President Biden, via edict, basically removed all of New Mexico from fossil fuel exploration and development for 50 years last week. It’s in line with his desire we buy only electric cars fueled by solar and wind. Hello? as gas prices spike again. Time to sell more emergency reserve oil?

Hunter Biden filed suit against the IRS last Monday, claiming the agency is behind “unlawful disclosure of Mr. Biden’s confidential tax return information” to the media. Let’s see, the IRS whistleblowers testify before a Congressional committee, the media picks it up, and the IRS whistleblowers get sued. Distraction attempt, personified. But I guess if you have the money….

The Federal Reserve passed on raising the interest rates again Thursday. It’s already risking a recession to try to control inflation.

The UAW strike against certain automakers’ selected operations is forcing those companies to lay off even more employees. Ford reached tentative agreement with the union in Canada.

Exxon Mobile announced its intent to capture CO2 from the atmosphere last week. It joins Occidental Petroleum which is building its first of a planned 100 plants with the intent to draw a half a million tons of CO2 from the air annually and then pump that CO2 into its oil fields in Texas, where it will release trapped oil and increase production. The pumped CO2 will remain stored underground. Neither company has expressed any interest in electric charging stations. It’s the free market folks. It really is wonderful.