About "All Lives Matter", I would say the difference is that it was an obvious negation of "Black Lives Matter". Opposing it was the right thing to do, because it specifically denied the all issues faced by Black people here in America which were summed up by "Black Lives Matter" - the statement essentially said that Black people in America did not face any issues different from any other Americans, something that is obviously untrue.Linguoboy wrote: ↑Mon Apr 17, 2023 2:39 pm Let's take another similar slogan: "All Lives Matter". I don't think this was necessarily created by trolls, but definitely trolls took it and ran with it. Leftists "took the bait" (according to your analysis) by opposing this slogan[*]. And what, ultimately, has been the result? Did they come out worse for it?
I don't think they did. I rarely hear this slogan any more. I guess trolls have tired of it. But also a lot of those using it ignorantly because they didn't understand how it was problematic have had that explained to them and have stop using it as a result. This would never have happened if leftists had "just ignored it".
[*] Those I would argue that the ones who really took the bait were the centrists who ended up adopting it--something which also happened with "It's okay to be white".
That said, I think "All Lives Matter" fizzled out precisely because it was such an obvious, and rhetorically empty, attempt to negate "Black Lives Matter" that the only people who would really use it would be the right themselves, yet it would have little propagandistic value in and of itself even for the right. The phrase has no meaningful content of its own outside of said negation.
Of course, you could say the same thing about "it's okay to be white", but the difference is that that is not an obvious negation of anything else, and its only really relevant in terms of those who are spreading the phrase. One can negate "All Lives Matter" specifically because it itself is an obvious negation of "Black Lives Matter" - doing so obviously does not mean that one believes that "No Lives Matter" (except to Cthulhu-worshippers) - but negating "it's okay to be white" is easily construed by certain kinds of people as saying "it's not okay to be white", which is precisely what the people using the phrase want to hear from you.