Review: SJWs Always Lie/Taking Down the Thought Police

I’m pretty sure I’m echoing the sentiments of others by saying this, but I wish I’d had this handbook many years ago. Much of what SJWs Always Lie reveals, I had learned on my own the hard way. Plus, I’ve been following Vox Populi for a couple years now so this wasn’t the first time I’ve encountered most of the author’s revelations.

Still, even though I had learned some dos and dont’s on my own, I hadn’t learned all of them. Nor had I discovered exactly WHY one should follow the dos and don’ts I’d learned.

One nice bonus in this book is a chapter-long summary of the whole #Gamergate saga. I’d put bits and pieces together from reading blog posts related to it; but it was nice to digest the entire history of it in one sitting. I suspect other readers would equally appreciate Day’s summary of the Hugo Awards/Puppies conflict. What both incidents teach us is that, even though entrenched throughout pop culture (and everywhere else), the SJWs can be pushed back if a few good men can only summon the courage and motivation to take off the kid gloves and fight.

Despite what I’ve learned from this book and personal experience, Day has helped me understand that I need to become more fluent in the form of communication Aristotle called the rhetorical (not exactly what we currently label rhetoric). Why? Because Aristotle and Day are absolutely correct: there are certain people whose minds you will never change by giving them information. I’ve run into them a lot, and was usually baffled by how futile my communication had been (speaking dialectic to those who couldn’t understand it).

This book is chock-full of insights and practical advice on what to do when you encounter an SJW.

Vox Day lays out the 8 stages of an SJW attack. In Stage One, he lists three subcomponents:

  1. self-appointed public defense;
  2. virtual victimhood, and
  3. creative offense-taking.

Even though I think I can think of examples of all three, it would have been nice had the author provided them himself.

Little stuff like that is really the only flaws I can point to in this book. And of course, whether or not they are truly flaws is subjective.

A pleasant side-effect of this book’s release is the number of parodies and counter-parodies now enjoying  some exposure on Amazon.

4 thoughts on “Review: SJWs Always Lie/Taking Down the Thought Police”

  1. Free speach is becoming sexy again. SJW are a dying species. More and more people find out what kind of character they have. If America re-charishes it’s most fundamental value – FREEDOM – than it can become strong again and respected. SJW are anti-americans! Who wants to have them around?

  2. The book is fantastic. I learned many of these things the hard way as well.

    The more I study men like Luther, the more I’m convinced that Day’s form of unapologetic rhetoric is the way forward with SJWs who are really just liars and snakes and treating them as good faith interlocutors is a dangerous mistake.

    Anyone who displays any part of the SJW faith is not to be trusted at all, despite how ‘nice’ they are on the surface.

    1. I’m learning how to spot SJWs early (be advised: there are plenty “conservatives” whose cognitive functions are indistinguishable from SJWs).

      Once identified, I wash my hands of them (unless I must deal with them due to work, family, etc.; then I only deal with them to the minimal degree necessary).

      Got a drive-by one star review from an SJW the other day on Amazon. Big surprise: an unverified purchase.

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