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We all know that there are language forms that are considered impolite and out of order, no matter what truths these languages might be carrying. If you talk with a harsh, urbanized accent and you use too many profanities, that will often get you barred from many arenas, no matter what you’re trying to say. On the other hand, polite, formal language is allowed almost anywhere even when all it is communicating is hatred and violence. Power always privileges its own discourse while marginalizing those who would challenge it or that are the victims of its power.

Junot Díaz
power violence language privilege marginalization

When all the public eye sees are headscarves instead of individual stories, our community is collectively tokenized. It creates the perception that opportunity is limited and only a rare few of us can make it. Whenever that happens to an already marginalized community, it pits its own members in a competition against one another instead of against the restrictive frameworks that put us in that position in the first place. The first hijabi whatever won't eliminate Islamophobia just as the first black president hasn't eliminated racism, though both are signifiers of some type of progress — symbols of ascending beyond adversity.

Amani Al-Khatahtbeh , in Muslim Girl: A Coming of Age Story
racism islam oppression muslim islamophobia marginalization tokenization

I write that crime is an unlawful act of violence that can be committed by anyone, and that punishment is the consequence designed for criminals who don't have the economic means to cover it up. Throughout history, men of wealth and power have been exempt from facing the consequences of their evil deeds. Crime, therefore, can be defined as an offense committed by an individual of inferior status in society. Punishment is a consequence forced on the perpetrator of the crime only if he occupies one of the lower steps of the social ladder

Mahbod Seraji , in Rooftops of Tehran
punishment politics crime marginalization social-inequality

Saying something is 'politically correct' is often a way of dismissing the voices of the oppressed.

DaShanne Stokes
prejudice lgbt racism lgbtq homophobia prejudices biased political-correctness oppression oppressed biases ethnocentrism racism-in-america racism-quotes politically-correct lgbt-quotes lgbt-rights dismissal racism-and-culture silencing-dissent biased-opinion oppression-quotes racism-quote marginalization politically-correct-culture politically-incorrect silencing ethnocentricity

When you're marginalized, there are no "them people," if we're all on the outskirts of the same margin.

Darnell Lamont Walker
lgbt bigotry racism race race-relations black-people minorities marginalized race-in-america marginalization

After centuries of marginalization and neglect, we need to cast our own movements, projects, and ideas as a battle for relevancy in the face of historical manipulation, exploitation, and oppression. We need to fight, tooth and nail, for equity in all areas of social life. One point to make clear, ethnic and racial minorities are not looking for scraps or a handout from the old paternalistic system but an equitable, stable, and leveled playing field.

Martin Guevara Urbina , in Twenty-first Century Dynamics of Multiculturalism: Beyond Post-racial America
fight equality manipulation neglect exploitation battle social-life multiculturalism oppression minorities marginalization

Geniuses are always marginalized to one degree or another. Someone wholly invested in the status quo is unlikely to disrupt it.

Eric Weiner , in The Geography of Genius: A Search for the World's Most Creative Places from Ancient Athens to Silicon Valley
genius status-quo revolutionary disruption marginalization

Most importantly, the epidemic was only news when it was not killing homosexuals. In this sense, AIDS remained a fundamentally gay disease, newsworthy only by the virtue of the fact that it sometimes hit people who weren't gay,

Randy Shilts , in And the Band Played On: Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic
gay-rights media marginalization aids-epidemic
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