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cry-bullies

"Cry-bullies" is a derogatory term used to describe "social justice warriors" or activists who assemble to "bully" specified opposition targets. The word is derived from "cry-bully," a label coined by right-wing (Spectator UK) columnist Julie Burchill, who uses it to describe individuals who are a "hideous hybrid of victim and victor." Burchill's examples are arguably more bully than victim, however, and include ex-Top Gear host Jeremy Clarkson and self-proclaimed "Queen of all Media" Perez Hilton.

The plural "cry-bullies," unlike the singular "cry-bully," is used to anti-sympathetically identify groups of social activists who attempt to force change in the name of social justice "Cry-bullying" is a social justice swarming tactic that is done publicly (or through livestreaming and/or uploading to YouTube). Cry-bullying is a form of high-stakes, high-pressure social activism.

The term is used in the title of a video uploaded to YouTube showing Yale Professor Nickolas Christakis, a world-renowned sociologist and physician, "standing up to Cry-Bullies." In the footage, Christakis rejects the group's "bullying" tactics by explaining to its members how the protections granted by the United States Constitution's First Amendment apply not only to the group's right to free speech, but also to every other American citizen's, including his own.

"Yale Silliman College Master Christakis stands up to Cry-Bullies"

by Anon_Prof November 10, 2015

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