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Champions of Equestria

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Description

In the book the Capacity Contract, author Stacy Clifford Simplican outlines two basic “political communities” in political communities today. The Community of Strength and the Community of Vulnerability. The Community of Strength is the political community in which membership is defined by what someone can do, or their physical capacity. The Community of Vulnerability is the political community in which membership is open to those who feel vulnerable in society, and seeks to form a community of solidarity to address the source of that vulnerability. The Community of Strength is typical of the liberal political circuits and anything to the right, and is exemplified in the way the news media approaches such subjects as immigrants and how much in tax dollars they can produce or how much tax money will need to be spent, or the skills they have. The Community of Vulnerability is emphasized on the left and is emphasized in such things as civil rights movements, or early-age Trade Unions (before they become so big they become in someways a Community of Strength, emphasizing the skills and capacity of its members).
 
PhilosophyTube rundown  
Pete Seeger is also relevant

Comments

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redweasel
Duck - "someone befriended them, saved them, coaxed them out of their shell, and showed them that sex is nothing to be afraid of. I’m kind of envious of that rape victim"

Fuzzbutt
that’s actually really interesting, because you’d think a community of strength would just destroy any community of vulnerability, and yet the latter do exist, and continue to exist. there are some unexpected and critical weaknesses inherent to a community of strength, such as the requirement for the proof of strength leading to infighting, and sabatoge, or the wasted effort from constant fear and insecurity of being one step away from ejection and exile.
 
and really, do the strong need a community? if they’re already strong, why keep making communities to make them stronger?
 
it’s a mystery to me why everyone just without question assumes that the winner always gets to play the next round of a video game, when the loser’s the one who needs the practice.