In Search Of Racism
Behind the Green Door
2025-05-02
Something that has gone largely unnoticed is that the people who used to litter the streets screaming “racism” have disappeared. They have not gone away, but they have suddenly been marginalized. They spend their days on sites like Bluesky wondering why no one seems to care what they have to say anymore. The sites that used to pay for them to be pests are no longer interested in their material.
One possible reason for this is that racism may have run its course. This novel moral concept that emerged a century ago may have finally burned itself out in the last great moral panic. White people are no longer concerned that their observations of the world may be at odds with the morality of these strange people who demanded we worship a violent drug addict like George Floyd.
It is hard to imagine, given that racism as a sin has been with us since anyone can remember, but it is a novel concept. A century ago, few people would have understood the word at all, much less incorporated the concept. Even fifty years ago it was possible to dismiss the idea. In the long history of human civilization, this weird idea is nothing more than a strange middle-class fad.
The fad may have come to an end. Trump whacking away at things like affirmative action and disparate impact, with little howling from any one could signal something bigger than the death of the racism concept. It may signal the end to the long experiment to overcome the natural diversity of man. The search for racial equality, like the search for bigfoot, may be a fool’s errand coming to an end.
This Week’s Show
Contents
Comments (Historical)
The comments below were originally posted to thedissident.substack.com.
Transcript
The transcript below was generated by Substack.
Welcome to my back porch.
I'm doing this at dusk, I guess.
I wonder how it's going to look.
I'm just kind of curious.
It's eight o'clock right now.
So I'm just kind of curious to see how it'll look.
I'm thinking about doing the Wednesday show with Paul from back here, and that's at 8 o'clock.
I'm not sure if the lighting is enough.
I don't know.
We'll see.
I mean, I can put my laptop out here and set up the camera, and I don't know.
It could be something different.
It could be terrible, but we'll find out.
If you see this video and it looks okay, then maybe I'll give it a shot this week.
But anyway,
I think that everyone has probably been talking about the white woman who got
caught saying the magic word.
And I'm pretty sure that that's going to be the topic of Tuesday's Twitter space
with Paul Kersey.
If you haven't noticed yet,
the last couple of weeks,
I have been participating at Tuesday at 8 o'clock Eastern time in a Twitter space.
Paul Kersey set this up.
And the first one was me and Peter Brimelow and Don Lyman, I think his name is.
He used to write for V-Dare and now he does Border Hawk, I think.
And he's actually got a press pass for the White House now.
I'm not sure what that means, but he's got a press pass for the White House.
But anyway, that was the first one.
And then the last week was Jerry Taylor was on and Brimelow and myself and Paul Kersey.
And it was a fun show.
You know,
it's very spontaneous because,
at least for me it is,
I have no idea what the topic is.
But my guess is this week it's going to be this.
I'm going to go out on a limb and say it's going to be about this white woman who gets caught.
Well, she didn't get caught.
She knew what she was doing and she just didn't care.
And that, I think, is the first bit of the story that hasn't been discussed.
You know,
a lot of people,
you know,
want to pretend that,
oh,
she probably uses that language all the time.
And she was just,
she was waiting her whole life to get filmed doing this and that kind of business.
I didn't see it that way.
Look, I've been around a lot.
I've been around people who use Gulliver language.
And she looked like someone who was exasperated to me.
You know, she just got tired of it.
And look,
if you are living in Minnesota,
you have every reason to think that you shouldn't have to be hassled by Somalis.
I mean, it's just insane that we've imported these people into this country.
I mean,
you don't get farther away from the average American than Somalia or Eritrea or
Mauritania or any of these East Africans.
They are completely different than West Africans.
They don't look like our normal black people.
They don't act like our normal black people.
They're just completely different.
So you bring over these completely alien people from,
and by the way,
they have the lowest measured IQ of any human group on earth.
I think other than the ABOs in Australia, that they're actually slightly dumber.
But you're talking about populations that have average IQs in the low 70s.
That's borderline retarded.
I had a Somali cab driver,
taxi driver in Finland,
and he was so stupid he couldn't read his own GPS.
To try and get these people employed,
the Finns put these Somalis into taxis,
and they give them these little tom-toms,
or what do they call it?
I forget who makes it.
These handheld GPS devices.
The guy couldn't work it.
He was just a moron.
He could barely drive.
You know,
these people have no way to function in our societies except for they're incredible scammers.
And that's the other thing.
And I think that's part of that exasperation from this woman is that these guys,
they thought they were scamming the system.
You know,
oh,
we're going to get this woman saying the magic word and we get to play the race
card and we'll get rich.
I mean, that's what they were thinking about.
It hasn't worked that way, which is really quite a thing.
But, you know, it's this exasperation.
These people come over from Africa and they want to play the race card.
It's like, no, you don't get to do that.
You know,
black people in America,
the former slaves,
we tolerate that to a certain degree because,
well,
their ancestors didn't come here by choice.
You know, it's not as if they emigrated here knowing what the rules were.
They came here and then the rules were obviously under slavery.
Rules were pretty clear.
And then after that,
You know, they didn't get a choice in the matter.
They didn't get to participate in it.
So we can tell, I say tolerate.
People,
white people tend to tolerate it because they think,
well,
it's better than the alternatives.
You know, let black people play the race card every once in a while.
But when you're talking about Somalis or Ghanaians or Nigerians,
I mean,
who are we kidding here?
If you really think white people in America are racist, go back to Africa.
I mean, that's a rational and reasonable thing to say.
They should go back if that's how they feel.
So these guys playing a race card.
I think just pisses people off.
And I think you saw some of that with this woman.
She probably has run into this many times.
She gets preached from the televisions, local TV, local news.
You can be sure that they've got some retarded Somali that's on the local news
doing the weather or something.
Minnesota is the place that had the Somali policeman who just decided to execute a
white woman on the street and got a light sentence because basically they argued
that he was just too dumb to understand what he was doing.
And I think that's what you saw there, exasperation.
And I thought when she started using that word, what she was doing was cathartic.
It was all coming out.
She was feeling good about it.
She was feeling good because she got to say the N-word.
She was feeling good because finally she could just blow it all off.
And you can't blame her for it.
I mean, again, I think a lot of people are just sick of this.
Now, the other thing that's kind of amazing about all this is that
She hasn't gotten buried yet.
And I think, you know, the response is from somewhat legitimate people.
You're looking at people who are associated with legitimate news sites or organizations.
They're kind of saying,
you know,
let's let's just take it easy on her or there's just being quiet and you get some
cucks in there for sure.
But.
You know, so that's a surprise.
You know, it's, again, another example of how things have changed.
But,
you know,
of course,
the three quarters of a million dollars,
I think that's purely in response to the money being raised for the black kid who
murdered that white boy in North Carolina.
I mean, I think that's clearly it.
I mean,
people are just so pissed off about that,
so offended by it,
rightly so,
that this is an opportunity to kind of just put,
you know,
put a finger in the eye of these people.
And, you know, there's some simp money in there, too.
I mean, look, this woman's not
She's not attractive.
I don't find her attractive, but some people obviously do.
So she'd get some simp money too.
And if she was 400 pounds on a big ward on her nose,
she probably wouldn't be getting the same amount of money as she's getting now.
It's just the reality of it.
But there's something also,
I think,
is that I think the whole racism thing,
it may have petered out.
We may have, surprise, surprise, we may have come to the end of it somehow or other.
And I think it reminds me of something that Charles Murray said 20 years ago, 25 years ago.
And he was advancing this argument in favor of not race realism, but more biological realism.
Hey,
let's accept the fact that certain populations have certain limitations and we
should try and just account for that to try and make them better,
not measure them against the white population.
And his argument,
one of his arguments is that,
look,
this egalitarian roadward going down is going to fail.
And when it fails,
the economic elites are probably going to become even more racist than the people
they're accusing of being racist now.
And I think that's true.
And look, I think the whole word racism has just lost all of its sting.
I think people are just sick of it.
They don't want to hear about it anymore.
And when they do hear people use it, they just get angry.
at the person using it and i think that's part of what's happening here is that you
know look i mean trump's been what did an eo on disparate impact an eo on
affirmative action he repealed you know these six what 60 year old executive orders
on hiring and contracting by the government hardly any pushback
You know, the war on some of these elite colleges over DEI.
I mean, that's, again, the pushback is there.
I mean, they're going to sue and try and keep their billions.
But you're not seeing any public outcry about this stuff.
You know, the general public is like, yeah, it's about time.
Now, it's not all puppies and rainbows, I think.
there's still a lot of cucks out there.
And you see the conservatives,
you know,
the conservatives are all trying to pile in on this and saying,
oh,
this is just like,
this is every bit as bad as all the money pouring into the black kid who stabbed
the white kid in the heart.
I mean,
the absurdity of that,
you know,
that somehow or other using rude language,
which is really what we're talking about here,
just being rude,
versus homicide,
you know,
intentional homicide.
I mean,
a kid brought a knife to this track,
the field event,
probably because he thought he was going to use it.
Maybe not necessarily thought he was going to use it on that white kid,
but,
you know,
it's close enough.
It's second degree murder easily.
You can't compare the two,
but they're going to,
you know,
it's because,
well,
what about our principles?
And, you know, we have to stand up for this.
And this woman, you know, she's not the exemplar and blah, blah, blah.
And it's always an excuse not to do anything.
I mean,
really,
an issue like this is where you see that their vaunted principles are really just
an excuse not to do anything.
Because, you know, if you care about something, you're willing to sacrifice for it.
You're willing to fight for it.
They're never willing to fight for their principles or sacrifice anything for it.
They just talk about them.
And certainly when something like this comes up, they're not going to risk anything.
In fact, they'll go the other way.
They'll join the bad guys.
And you see some of that, but not a ton, you know, not a ton of it.
And that's another little green shoot there that I think this whole issue so far,
you know,
it points to,
you know.
I mean, look, a lot of bad stuff could come out.
You can find out their boyfriend's black and one of her kids are black or something.
I mean, who knows?
But right now,
it's one of those times where you think,
geez,
you know,
maybe there's a little,
maybe things are getting better.
All right.
I think that's enough.
I'll see you next time.

