@toxify
Look. We don't have to go back and forth on this. And we don't have to agree.
My approach is to fight fascism and racism head on. That way when people are inevitably exposed to racist and fascist messaging, they are less susceptible. The systems of policing, written and TV news, and education, are much worse and more pervasive sources of racist and fascist acceptance than social media, and it is not even close. Those systems are what cause people to be susceptible to racism and fascism.
The other approach is to say that the latent racism and fascism is acceptable, just so long as we keep everyone on a chronological feed so that they never have the opportunity to click follow on their favorite nazi.
I think the second approach is beyond silly, and is a common approach taken by white people that don't want to address racism head on. It's a lazy way out, and it's not effective. Directly: I want there to be more white people that can see a racist on social media without wanting to follow them.
The problem is not algorithmic feeds. The problem is that most of y'all just accept that half of your families are super racist. And you know they're racist.
If your mom is racist? I don't want to fight algorithmic feeds. I want to fight your mom. Ideologically, of course. 🙂