Debunking Buzzfeed's 'People Try To Live Without Black Inventions'

A good doctor does not fall in love with a single tool. Sometimes the patient needs a knife. Sometimes a bandage. Sometimes a pill. The skill is not in owning the tools—it is in knowing when to use each one, and just as importantly, when not to. In modern culture, we’ve made the mistake of turning tools into doctrines. Diversity, equity, and inclusion were, at their best, instruments—useful in specific conditions, at specific times, to correct specific imbalances. But when a tool becomes universal, it stops being medicine. A scalpel used everywhere becomes butchery. A bandage applied to every wound traps infection. A pill taken without diagnosis poisons more than it heals.

The real problem is not the tool, but the loss of judgment. When one side applies the same remedy to every problem, it creates harm. When the other side responds by burning down the entire medical kit, it creates a different kind of harm—and in doing so, often restores faith in the very tool it sought to destroy. This is how overcorrection breeds revival. What is missing is not a better ideology, but a return to humanism—the quiet, disciplined practice of asking what the patient in front of you actually needs. The original Star Trek understood this. Its diversity was not a prescription forced onto every situation, but a natural outcome of a broader commitment to human dignity. The lesson is simple, and difficult: tools are not truths. Use them well, or they will use you.

@citizencanada scholx


https://joe-average123.blogspot.com/2026/04/debunking-buzzfeeds-people-try-to-live.html


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Dave Mason and is Fascist buddies.