@atedani_ You have to swim parallel to the shore to swim out of the rip current. Obviously easier said then done but you cannot panic or you’ll waste energy.
@RealMattCouch The reason white parents aren’t having that conversation about what to do when pulled over is because they would already know or behave respectfully.
@RealMattCouch The reason white parents aren’t having that conversation about what to do when pulled over is because they would already know or behave respectfully.
This woman says, “I’m just gonna come right out and say this as a White girl.
It is not the color of your skin that we are tired of.
It is your culture.
It is the way you behave.
And you can call me racist all you want to.
We are tired of the loud, violent ghetto culture that seems to be primarily from people of color.
It is not the color of your skin”.
For years, White people have been fed a false narrative that tells us to ignore pattern recognition and to go against our gut instinct to stay away from things that harm us because it’s considered ‘racist’.
Pattern recognition is not racism.
It’s a fundamental part of our biological makeup.
The terms ‘racist’ and ‘White supremacy’ have been weaponized against White people to stop us from being proud of our history/culture and to make us feel shame and guilt for the past.
And they call us ‘racist’ to justify their violence against us
We don’t care if we’re called racist anymore.
Preserving our safety and way of life is all that matters now.
🎥Credit TikTok: autumnwitbeck
When first-worlders hold stereotypes about other groups, they're grounded in cold, hard pattern recognition: statistical realities, observable behaviors, crime data, cultural outcomes, and decades of repeated experience.
When third-worlders hold stereotypes about other groups, they're delusional, cartoonish caricatures wildly exaggerated or outright fabricated, propelled by raw seething inferiority, tribal insecurity, envy, and a desperate need to externalize their own civilizational failures.