So IRL in real normie spaces, especially around non-whites, people refuse to accept the idea that there is a lot of racism against whites in the world, and that anti-white racism is actually very dangerous.
They cling very hopefully to these beliefs which buttress a certain ideology of American anti-racist political correctness
- racism is a caucasian construct a.k.a. in non-white countries people are highly cooperative with foreign people
- to be afraid of anti-white racism is some kind of ill-motivated trick to deny white racism
- to voice fear of anti-white grudge-related racism is also a trick to justify your own racism, and in reality “everybody” knows that non-whites are benevolent and merciful and just are dying to cooperate with whites and put the past behind us all
- while anti-white racism might exist, it’s no big deal, and the chances of whites being seriously hurt by anti-white racism is super-small, compared to the significant chance (and major world problem) of white-on-nonwhite racism
The implications of these politcally-correct ideas is that the general society is not allowed to focus on the challenges that modern white people face in the world, not permitted to validate white people’s racial anxieties, and the world must be incredibly hypervigilant about rooting out and destroying every last shred of white racism.
Videos like the above, IMO, are useful in such debates. Will they change the culture? No! Not soon at least. But we need to be able to defend our beliefs and to justify the feelings that we have rightfully developed through our excellent analysis of people’s words, tones, and actions.
The world wants to gaslight us in many ways for questioning the politically correct culture. We should not allow them to intimidate us and to create self-doubt.