Learned an important thing today (race isnt real and irrelevant, everyone needs to see this)

D

Deleted member 3789

I Am The Truth
Joined
Nov 3, 2019
Posts
6,681
Reputation
8,614
I learned some very groundbreaking shit today. I learned that race is something that cant be understood. Look

Fucking brutal. How do you Europeans cope realizing that you are the very thing you bully all the time? You were curries once. And they were Africans once... You all go back to other races, so how can you be racist?

Racism makes no sense if everyone is a human. Just let go the racism boyo. Dont be racist
 
  • Ugh..
Reactions: MiroslavBulldosex
No superior Mulattos anymore

as equal as Indians :cry:
 
Thats not true, brother

why?

because that would mean mulattos are the same as curry filth

thats like saying lions are equal to insects

it just doesnt add up
 
Jfl at this cope
 
  • +1
Reactions: SHARK
Thats not true, brother

why?

because that would mean mulattos are the same as curry filth

thats like saying lions are equal to insects

it just doesnt add up
True brother. Mulatto have wayyy better genetic than curries
 
  • JFL
Reactions: Deleted member 3990
I have to put you on ignore jfl
 
All bullshit to discredit our beautiful white skin. In fact there's enough evidence that god sent us to enrich this planet with our beautiful people.
 
All bullshit to discredit our beautiful white skin. In fact there's enough evidence that god sent us to enrich this planet with our beautiful people.


Got any citations cause most scholars agree race is a social construct and i'm not appealing to consensus either it gives you a good guide line though that if even scholars can't distinguish who is more able you ? who most likely is a basement dwelling neet or a fucking wage cuck

But the claim that white skin isn't a mutation is not belief it is objectively wrong and against the facts.
 
Got any citations cause most scholars agree race is a social construct and i'm not appealing to consensus either.

But the claim that white skin isn't a mutation is not belief it is objectively wrong and against the facts.
Your fucking race bait posts (in fact all doesn't Matter the skin)pisses me Off that's why. You think i wasn't shitposting when i wrote that? I'm neither of those things but keep crying. You ethnics are pissed when White people are racist against you but when it's the opposite it's totally fine for you. Bunch of fucking hypocrites
 
Thats not true, brother

why?

because that would mean mulattos are the same as curry filth

thats like saying lions are equal to insects

it just doesnt add up
cope more you bhenchod
 
Your fucking race bait posts (in fact all doesn't Matter the skin)pisses me Off that's why. You think i wasn't shitposting when i wrote that? I'm neither of those things but keep crying. You ethnics are pissed when White people are racist against you but when it's the opposite it's totally fine for you. Bunch of fucking hypocrites



A i wasn't even the person who posted that original post op.


2nd it wasn't race bait you fucking faggot most scholars don't even agree on race.

3RD Your projecting hard every time you speak i have never once called indians or blacks superior qoute me where i have said that but you have reacted like i was offending the white race by simple defending the jews from baseless conspiratorial attack.

4TH i can prove historical racism with actual events that occured within the past.


>>Racism against Native Americans: with the Europeans’ arrival on North America’s shores and their systematic plan to subdue and conquer its land, came racism and bigotry against Native Americans. Europeans believed the original inhabitants of America were heathens and savages who needed to be civilized through Christianity and European culture. This led to genocide, mass murder, stolen land, attempts to wipe out Native American traditions, as well as forced assimilation through institutions like residential schools and the establishment of “Indian reservations”. As well, media portrayal of this continent’s first inhabitants as bloodthirsty savages helped justify European abuses against Native Americans. The long-term effects, among others, of this treatment include the fact that today, Native Americans have the highest suicide rate of any group in the United States, according to the National Institute of Mental Health.
Racism against African-Americans: many of the Africans brought to America starting in the 17th century arrived as slaves, kidnapped from their homelands in various parts of Africa. A number of them were known to be royalty and literate. African men, women, and children were stripped of their names and identities, forced to “Christianize”, whipped, beaten, tortured, and in many cases, lynched or hanged at the whims of their white masters, for whom slavery was key to maintaining their vast properties and land. Families were separated through the process of buying and selling slaves. While not all Africans in America were slaves, a large number were, particularly in the southern states. For those Africans in America who were free, discriminatory laws that barred them from owning property and voting, for example, as well as the belief in the intrinsic inferiority of dark-skinned peoples by the dominant white majority, held them back from full equality in the United States.
Although slavery was ultimately outlawed and laws prohibiting discrimination against African-Americans passed, racism against this community remains and is manifested in more subtle ways today. For example, the Washington, DC, Fair Employment Practices Commission has found that blacks face discrimination in one out of every five job interviews. The American Sociological Association notes that, “today employers use different phases of the hiring process to discriminate against minorities (e.g., recruiting from primarily white schools instead of through job training programs) and offer higher status jobs and pay to white employees. Reports of job discrimination against African Americans are correlated with darker complexion, higher education, immigrant status, and young age.”.
Japanese-Americans: with Japan’s December 1941 bombing of Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, racism against Japanese-Americans intensified. Like Muslims after the 9/11 attacks, Japanese-Americans were targets of harassment, discrimination, and government surveillance. Members of the community lost homes, jobs, and businesses. But the worst blow was the February 1942 Executive Order signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt that authorized the internment of Japanese-Americans. They were now deemed enemies of the state. Over half of the 120,000 Japanese-Americans sent to the camps were born and raised in the U.S. and had never set foot in Japan. Half of those sent to the camps were children.
The Executive Order allowed for the forced exclusion of Japanese-Americans from certain areas to provide security against sabotage and espionage and property. Some of those imprisoned died in the camps due to a lack of proper medical care. Others were killed for not obeying orders.
According to a 1943 report published by the War Relocation Authority, which ran the camps, Japanese-Americans were housed in "tarpaper-covered barracks of simple frame construction without plumbing or cooking facilities of any kind." These overcrowded accommodations were bleak and surrounded by barbed wire. President Roosevelt himself called them "concentration camps."
Jewish -Americans: Although Jews first arrived in America over 300 years ago and enjoyed a certain level of religious freedom, anti-Semitism was acceptable and common socially, as well as legally in some cases. For example, some states in the late 18th century barred those who were not Christian from voting or holding public office. However, these barriers were later removed, especially with the enactment of the Bill of Rights.
As well, during the Holocaust in Europe during the 1940s, a ship of over 900 primarily German Jewish refugees was denied permission to land on U.S. soil, based on the exclusionary Immigration Act of 1924. Only one-third of the passengers, who were forced to return to Europe, survived the genocide of Jews on the continent at the time.
The Ku Klux Kan, one of the most virulent and violent hate groups in America, did not just direct their rage at African-Americans. Jews were also a target.
As well, discrimination against Jews was practiced in some cases in the workforce, and they were not permitted entry into a number of resort areas and social clubs. Colleges also practiced discrimination by limiting their enrolment. In a number of cases, Jews were forbidden from buying certain types of property.
<<<




This evil shit can be proven with historical can you show me actual ethnics putting whites into torture camps ? because your attempt to equivocate is equivocation fallacy.


4th point suck my dick op your iq is below Marianas trench
 
A i wasn't even the person who posted that original post op.


2nd it wasn't race bait you fucking faggot most scholars don't even agree on race.

3RD Your projecting hard every time you speak i have never once called indians or blacks superior qoute me where i have said that but you have reacted like i was offending the white race by simple defending the jews from baseless conspiratorial attack.

4TH i can prove historical racism with actual events that occured within the past.


>>Racism against Native Americans: with the Europeans’ arrival on North America’s shores and their systematic plan to subdue and conquer its land, came racism and bigotry against Native Americans. Europeans believed the original inhabitants of America were heathens and savages who needed to be civilized through Christianity and European culture. This led to genocide, mass murder, stolen land, attempts to wipe out Native American traditions, as well as forced assimilation through institutions like residential schools and the establishment of “Indian reservations”. As well, media portrayal of this continent’s first inhabitants as bloodthirsty savages helped justify European abuses against Native Americans. The long-term effects, among others, of this treatment include the fact that today, Native Americans have the highest suicide rate of any group in the United States, according to the National Institute of Mental Health.
Racism against African-Americans: many of the Africans brought to America starting in the 17th century arrived as slaves, kidnapped from their homelands in various parts of Africa. A number of them were known to be royalty and literate. African men, women, and children were stripped of their names and identities, forced to “Christianize”, whipped, beaten, tortured, and in many cases, lynched or hanged at the whims of their white masters, for whom slavery was key to maintaining their vast properties and land. Families were separated through the process of buying and selling slaves. While not all Africans in America were slaves, a large number were, particularly in the southern states. For those Africans in America who were free, discriminatory laws that barred them from owning property and voting, for example, as well as the belief in the intrinsic inferiority of dark-skinned peoples by the dominant white majority, held them back from full equality in the United States.
Although slavery was ultimately outlawed and laws prohibiting discrimination against African-Americans passed, racism against this community remains and is manifested in more subtle ways today. For example, the Washington, DC, Fair Employment Practices Commission has found that blacks face discrimination in one out of every five job interviews. The American Sociological Association notes that, “today employers use different phases of the hiring process to discriminate against minorities (e.g., recruiting from primarily white schools instead of through job training programs) and offer higher status jobs and pay to white employees. Reports of job discrimination against African Americans are correlated with darker complexion, higher education, immigrant status, and young age.”.
Japanese-Americans: with Japan’s December 1941 bombing of Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, racism against Japanese-Americans intensified. Like Muslims after the 9/11 attacks, Japanese-Americans were targets of harassment, discrimination, and government surveillance. Members of the community lost homes, jobs, and businesses. But the worst blow was the February 1942 Executive Order signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt that authorized the internment of Japanese-Americans. They were now deemed enemies of the state. Over half of the 120,000 Japanese-Americans sent to the camps were born and raised in the U.S. and had never set foot in Japan. Half of those sent to the camps were children.
The Executive Order allowed for the forced exclusion of Japanese-Americans from certain areas to provide security against sabotage and espionage and property. Some of those imprisoned died in the camps due to a lack of proper medical care. Others were killed for not obeying orders.
According to a 1943 report published by the War Relocation Authority, which ran the camps, Japanese-Americans were housed in "tarpaper-covered barracks of simple frame construction without plumbing or cooking facilities of any kind." These overcrowded accommodations were bleak and surrounded by barbed wire. President Roosevelt himself called them "concentration camps."
Jewish -Americans: Although Jews first arrived in America over 300 years ago and enjoyed a certain level of religious freedom, anti-Semitism was acceptable and common socially, as well as legally in some cases. For example, some states in the late 18th century barred those who were not Christian from voting or holding public office. However, these barriers were later removed, especially with the enactment of the Bill of Rights.
As well, during the Holocaust in Europe during the 1940s, a ship of over 900 primarily German Jewish refugees was denied permission to land on U.S. soil, based on the exclusionary Immigration Act of 1924. Only one-third of the passengers, who were forced to return to Europe, survived the genocide of Jews on the continent at the time.
The Ku Klux Kan, one of the most virulent and violent hate groups in America, did not just direct their rage at African-Americans. Jews were also a target.
As well, discrimination against Jews was practiced in some cases in the workforce, and they were not permitted entry into a number of resort areas and social clubs. Colleges also practiced discrimination by limiting their enrolment. In a number of cases, Jews were forbidden from buying certain types of property.
<<<




This evil shit can be proven with historical can you show me actual ethnics putting whites into torture camps ? because your attempt to equivocate is equivocation fallacy.


4th point suck my dick op your iq is below Marianas trench
Niggaread
 

Similar threads

Daddy's Home
Replies
66
Views
1K
Outerz14
Outerz14
6ft4
Replies
12
Views
562
iambarrett
iambarrett
Rhino LeFort
Replies
30
Views
637
donkeyskin
donkeyskin
Haseeb
Replies
53
Views
1K
Haseeb
Haseeb

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top