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In Episode 37, Karen and Jonelle pull back the curtain on coded language—those seemingly harmless words that hide bias in plain sight. They introduce the CODE scan (Context, Othering, Denied specifics, Echo) as a quick litmus test for spotting dog-whistles in conversation. Real-world examples abound: a car-dealer who calls residents “weird,” Maude Littleton’s smear of the Jewish Levy family at Monticello, and political catchphrases like “merit-based” or “DEI” that quietly signal who belongs and who does not. Soft language, they warn, can grease the wheels of oppression—440 anti-DEI bills have advanced across 42 states while many voters miss the subtext. The hosts challenge white women to trade passive-aggressive niceties for precise, courageous speech, because clarity—not comfort—opens the door to genuine inclusion.
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By Jonelle + KarenIn Episode 37, Karen and Jonelle pull back the curtain on coded language—those seemingly harmless words that hide bias in plain sight. They introduce the CODE scan (Context, Othering, Denied specifics, Echo) as a quick litmus test for spotting dog-whistles in conversation. Real-world examples abound: a car-dealer who calls residents “weird,” Maude Littleton’s smear of the Jewish Levy family at Monticello, and political catchphrases like “merit-based” or “DEI” that quietly signal who belongs and who does not. Soft language, they warn, can grease the wheels of oppression—440 anti-DEI bills have advanced across 42 states while many voters miss the subtext. The hosts challenge white women to trade passive-aggressive niceties for precise, courageous speech, because clarity—not comfort—opens the door to genuine inclusion.
Calls to Action
We would love to hear from you! Contact us at [email protected]
Support the show