There seems to be a bit of divergence between your title (“locally woke, globally anti-woke”) and the rest of the post (locally woke in some locales, locally anti-woke in some others, really nothing about “globally” at all).
[EDIT to note that the title has now been changed.]
From the title I was expecting something quite different (e.g., an argument that “woke” norms are best when interacting directly with others, but “anti-woke” norms make for better public policy). That’s not to say that there’s anything wrong with the actual post—but I think it could use either a different title, or some content that connects more with the title. E.g., maybe the point is that the communities you’re physically part of—geographically local—tend to be more conservative ones in which you look “woke”, while the purely-online ones tend to be more progressive ones in which you look “anti-woke”; though that would feel more like “woke offline, anti-woke online” or something, and in any case seems more specific to the details of your personal circumstances than is necessary, since the general phenomenon you’re talking about can apply to pretty much anyone.
[EDITED to add:] Though it might well be true that most online communities are quite progressive and most small local communities are quite conservative, in which case the specific situation you describe might generalize fairly widely. That seems anecdotally plausible but I’d want to see more actual evidence before actually believing it with any confidence.
There seems to be a bit of divergence between your title (“locally woke, globally anti-woke”) and the rest of the post (locally woke in some locales, locally anti-woke in some others, really nothing about “globally” at all).
[EDIT to note that the title has now been changed.]
From the title I was expecting something quite different (e.g., an argument that “woke” norms are best when interacting directly with others, but “anti-woke” norms make for better public policy). That’s not to say that there’s anything wrong with the actual post—but I think it could use either a different title, or some content that connects more with the title. E.g., maybe the point is that the communities you’re physically part of—geographically local—tend to be more conservative ones in which you look “woke”, while the purely-online ones tend to be more progressive ones in which you look “anti-woke”; though that would feel more like “woke offline, anti-woke online” or something, and in any case seems more specific to the details of your personal circumstances than is necessary, since the general phenomenon you’re talking about can apply to pretty much anyone.
[EDITED to add:] Though it might well be true that most online communities are quite progressive and most small local communities are quite conservative, in which case the specific situation you describe might generalize fairly widely. That seems anecdotally plausible but I’d want to see more actual evidence before actually believing it with any confidence.
Fair point, edited title to match.