We control what you think with Language |
Said and done |
Jargon, buzzwords, slogans |
Professional victim is a snarl word for someone who seems to be making their living off something negative that happened to them. It is commonly used to discredit feminism and social justice and the legitimate concerns brought to light by those movements. This is in essence an escape hatch to evade the necessarily uncomfortable questions brought up by those people.
The term "victim mentality" is also used in psychology, to denote an unrelated condition wherein people display low self-esteem, refuse to take personal responsibility, and see the world as always being "against them" (and thus the reason for their unhappiness).[1] However, in the absence of compelling evidence, accusing someone of being a "professional victim" is an appeal to motive fallacy.
What is supposed to categorize the people who this term is used on is the constant use of victimhood as advantageous to their own lives. For example: Anita Sarkeesian has been harassed out of everywhere and eventually went on to do several presentations, talks, and even got a spot on The Colbert Report about this subject.[note 1] Calling her a professional victim is essentially saying she is milking her harassment for personal gain.[note 2]
It typically works in a four stage cycle.
You know, they wouldn't be such professional victims if you didn't make them into one.
All of that said, there are people who are professional victims. Collecting insurance money is predicated on being the victim of some sort of mishap, which has proven to be quite tempting for many fraudsters. People with Münchausen syndrome by definition deliberately misrepresent themselves as victims, and often there is some personal gain to be had.[2] Then there are a few who knowingly and maliciously lie about themselves in various ways; Treva Throneberry, the con artist who got one person wrongfully convicted of statutory rape and multiple people wrongfully arrested for the same, was one such person.
These people, though, are not usually the ones people have in mind when bandying about the term "professional victim". Actively claiming to be a victim of something that didn't happen or intentionally harming oneself for the specific purpose of being a victim is one thing, getting oneself on the wrong side of vitriolic hatred simply for attempting to bring some sanity to a discussion is quite another. Given how simple this distinction is, it is unclear why so few people seem to grasp it. Oh well.
Donald Trump made this into his worldview.[3]
"Grievance group" or "grievance-mongerer" is another form of this trope, used frequently by Michelle Malkin.[note 3]
"Victim feminism" - used by feminist writer Naomi Wolf to describe women "seek[ing] power through an identity of powerlessness...on the basis of feminine specialness instead of human worth."[4]
In 2014, conservative columnist George Will of The Washington Post attracted controversy for suggesting that colleges grant rape victims "a coveted status that confers privileges".[5]
Arthur C. Brooks of the American Enterprise Institute wrote, in a New York Times essay: "...victimhood culture makes for worse citizens — people who are less helpful, more entitled, and more selfish."[6]