Recently a "woke" far-leftist university professor had an interview in some online show (called "The Root"), where she completely openly expresses her racial prejudice and hatred of white people (all white people). You can see an excerpt of the video in this Michael Knowles video (where he comments on that clip).
I'm going to transcribe what the university professor is saying in that clip, with my comments:
"I think that white people are committed to be villains in the aggregate, right?"
This is 100% racist rhetoric. She's bunching all white people, every single one of them, the hundreds of millions of white people from all around the world, from different countries, cultures, backgrounds and beliefs into the same category, and assigning blame to all of them. It doesn't matter who you are, where you are from, what your cultural background is, what your principles and politics are, or what you believe, if you are "white" (by some definition) then you are in this group and you are assigned blame.
This is exactly the same kind of racist rhetoric as the more archetypal sentiments like "all black people are savages and violent criminals" or "black people are intellectually inferior". If someone says such things in all seriousness, we tend to consider that kind of thinking abhorrent and that person disgusting.
The same attitude should be held against these racist university professors. It doesn't matter which race they are attacking, it's abhorrent, disgusting and very dangerous.
"The real sort of issue here, you know, I have heard people say it, is... one I think white people viscerally fear is not that white people don't know, right, what they have done. They know! They fear that there's no other way to be human but the way that they are human..."
"They know what they have done"... This is just astonishing collective blaming and generalization.
She is speaking as if all white people are the same collective, and they all behave the same, and have all behaved the same, and they all think the same, and they all do the same things, and they all know the same things. And this way of "being human" is unique to white people (and shared by all white people), and distinct from non-white people, and that white people cannot understand that there are other ways to "be human" than theirs.
This is not just completely insane and doesn't make even a shred of common sense, it's actually disgusting and abhorrent racist rhetoric.
"... so you talk to white people and you really want to have a reckoning about it they say stuff like, you know, it's just human nature. If y'all had all this power you would have done the same thing."
I am quite certain that not a single white person (or any other person for that matter) has ever said anything like that. This is literally the first time in my life that I hear such a claim, that "white people" say things like that.
Except, maybe, some bona fide neonazi white supremacists who actually believe that the white race is literally superior to all other races in all aspects, that other races are inferior, and that white people should dominate other races. In other words, people who actually do believe that white people somehow are much more powerful than other races, and have fully embraced such a concept. Maybe some of those people might say something akin to that.
This professor seems to seriously think that all white people are like that.
"And it's like no, that's what white humans did. White human being thought there's a world here and we own it. Prior to them black and brown people have been sailing across oceans interacting with each other with centuries without total subjugation, domination and colonialism."
This is exactly the kind of historical revisionism I have written past blog posts about (such as here and here). This professor is quite clearly the kind of deeply brainwashed social justice warrior who seriously believes that white people were the only people who engaged in "subjugation, domination and colonialism", and that prior to that, non-white people never did such things. This is extraordinarily blatant and egregious historical denialism and revisionism, and it's so obviously false that it shouldn't even have to be stated.
Pretty much every single large group of humans that has ever existed has engaged in war, conquest, pillaging, raping, slavery, mass murder, invasions, subjugation, domination and colonialism. (Perhaps the only limiting factor has been how large the group was, and how militarily advanced, compared to their enemies.)
Also note that she doesn't say "people of this and that region", or "this and that nation", or "this and that tribe". She bunches all "black and brown" people into one giant collective, and asserts that they all behaved in the same way.
This kind of extremely racist rhetoric, especially from universities, must stop. This kind of rhetoric is extremely dangerous. When it continues for long enough, and enough people start believing it, that only leads to discrimination, persecution, lynching, civil wars, oppression, gulags and concentration camps. History has shown this time and again.
It has to be stopped before it gets out of hand.
Comments
Post a Comment