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{{a|g|[[File:Bring back our girls.jpg|thumb|any sign yet?]]}} | {{a|g|[[File:Bring back our girls.jpg|thumb|any sign yet?]]}} | ||
[[ | A form of [[preaching to the choir]], only with added moralising, [[virtue-signalling]] is making a statement that ''looks'' brave but is not, predominantly to garner approval. The best way of doing that is to make your “brave” stance to an audience of credulous [[libtard|libtards]] whom you know will uniformly agree with it. | ||
Social media | Social media are intrinsically excellent for virtue signaling, because it costs nothing to make a statement, and you can choose & filter your audience (or it chooses and filters you) based on pre-determined proclivities. | ||
The cause célèbre of virtue signaling followed Boko Haram’s kidnapping of 276 girls from a Secondary School in Nigeria in 2o14. This was a categorically horrific act, to which most of the networked world responded, on Twitter, with the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls, often accompanied by a photo of individual (the most famous was Michelle Obama), moon faced, holding up the hashtag on a piece of paper. Everyone joined in. Easy, cheap, filling oneself with a sense of lofty righteousness and achieving precisely nothing. | The cause célèbre of virtue signaling followed Boko Haram’s kidnapping of 276 girls from a Secondary School in Nigeria in 2o14. This was a categorically horrific act, to which most of the networked world responded, on Twitter, with the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls, often accompanied by a photo of individual (the most famous was Michelle Obama), moon faced, holding up the hashtag on a piece of paper. Everyone joined in. Easy, cheap, filling oneself with a sense of lofty righteousness and achieving precisely nothing. |