Archived Tweets / Research Data
Codes & Themes w/wo Theoretical Memos
(derived through a process of inductive, qualitative, data analysis)
Archived on 10 June 2023 at 2:30pm [URL redacted]
@JasminNicoli [name pseudonymized] [ontology] [35]: Today in New York: pedo flags, garbage & homeless on every corner. Oh, and a bunch of hotels here in Midtown accommodate only illegal migrants at $500/day - covered by our #NYC taxes. Took these pics today. 👇 #woke #globalists #LGBT #transgender #priDEMONth #BoycottPrideMonth [URL redacted]
#ToponymAmericaNorthUSNewYorkNYC #PhenomnImmigration #OtheringElitesGlobal #IdentityLGBTQIA #IdentityLGBTQIATrans #EventLGBTQPrideMonth #PhenomnMisdirectionScapegoating #PhenomnResponsibilityBlamingVictim
Supplementary #NewspaperUKBrdshtTheGuardianAmandaAbrams "Around 2020, the use of unhoused began growing exponentially, according to Google Trends. Today, in mainstream articles and conversations, it's synonymous with - and for many people, preferable to - homeless. While governments don't yet widely employ it, some grassroots groups and scholars use it exclusively. Critics have derided the new word as clunky and unfamiliar, potentially the product of woke virtue signaling. But those who have adopted it say it's for the same reasons OSL originally did: to lessen stigma and to highlight that those lacking permanent roofs over their heads may still have communities or physical spaces they consider home. And with the country currently in the midst of an intractable housing crisis, there's another reason for the popularity of unhoused: the word's root emphasizes that the problem is a structural one linked to a lack of affordable housing, not a personal weakness." https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jul/20/homeless-unhoused-houseless-term-history #OrgUSOperationSackLunchOSLAKAOSLServesBeverlyGraham
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