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WORDS ON THE STREET

<script async src="https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js?client=ca-pub-6077932889256660"      crossorigin="anonymous"></script> Words on the Street demonstrate how a philosophical position, aside from Marxism, perpetuates the growing concern for social justice.  This philosophy interns a great degree of resentment on the part of the ancestors and histories of peoples that have been overlooked for far too long. It is only with the deepest sentiments that this philosophy places us at a point in the life of ideas stemming from real lived and felt experiences. Postcolonial philosophy, again not Marxism, puts forth the gauntlet of reckoning which drives the words on the street. It trickles out of the academy into public policy and onto the streets, where many protest nonviolently and violently. If anyone believes that violence is the answer to social justice, they have heard this diatribe in the halls of town councils and policy-maki