How the Radical Left Teaches Racism to Kids

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This video discusses the UK's Channel 4 and how they discuss "controversial" topics with children.

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I see a lot of people in the comments writing applications for the Oppression Olympics by saying my Japanese example doesn't count because black people were slaves for longer and the Japanese got reparations. Yes, the good old "Your bad experience doesn't count because my bad experience was worse." A GREAT way to show empathy and compassion to people who have been wronged. But since we are going to play that game, why don't we go over a little history lesson?

First of all, only some of the Japanese people got reparations. A few thousand dollars does not make up for all of the farmland and property stolen. Particularly when it comes to the sentimental value of the property owned. Second, something I cut for time was that Japanese people had their country bombed into oblivion during WWII and TONS of Japanese people fervently did not support World War II. These people had their homes destroyed, family members killed, crops burnt down, and tons of them starved to death because of the war. A few decades later, Japan became one of the most economically successful countries ever. But I guess that was only a few years of bad times so surely that doesn't count. Well, how about we talk about the Warring States Period (Sengoku no Jidai). That was like 150 years of Japanese people being murdered constantly by different warlords, I believe until eventually all of the warlords killed each other. The surviving warlord (Tokugawa?) immediately took country and subjected Japanese people to incredible amounts of tyranny that was not that unlike slavery. That was another 150 year period.

A number of people in the comments have pointed out the irony of the Irish-looking kid with red hair being at the front of the line in this video. Do you have any idea what the British did to the Irish? Even in America, the Irish were subject to racism with tons of businesses that wrote signs saying "Irish need not apply." Meaning that they refused to hire Irish people. Speaking of white slavery, it turns out that white people were slaves in America at the same time black people were slaves. They just had a different name for it. They called it "indentured servitude." What they would do is find people who wanted to go to America and trick them into slavery by saying they would take them to America if they agreed to work on a farm for a few years. Well, when many of them went to work on the farms they would find that MYSTERIOUSLY the terms of the agreement would change to the point that they basically were never allowed to leave the farms and their debt was never paid.

So please, miss me with this racist BS that black people are the only race to have ever gone through hard times. Hard times have happened to almost every race; if not all of them. If you want this crap to stop then instead of fighting about who is more oppressed, how about we band together and stop the people who are harming us?

ThinkBeforeYouSleepYT
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Imagine trying to guilt trip children on things they have no control over. These people are morally depraved.

quinty
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I read a story by a black, female pop star, who actually said that she didn't really think about racism or being treated differently because of her colour until someone told her that it is harder for her because she is black. She then said she felt isolated and that the fans did not see her on stage and she suddenly realised how difficult it was. This millionaire pop star, part of a 50% POC, all female pop group didn't realise it was hard or feel discriminated against, until she was told that she was... Guess that says it all.

initialyze
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I'm white and get asked almost all the time, where I come from. It's not a racial question. People are just genuinely curious about your story.

Dcook
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I like how Henry said, "the questions, the way they were worded..." that's exactly right. They worded the questions purposely that way.

bayouboi
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I watched this before and how ridiculous this is. It's not racist to have good parents that sacrificed for me to have a better start

masonmorizio
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There's been a lot of uploads lately I'm very glad

xboop
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“Racism is not dead, but it is on life support – kept alive by politicians, race hustlers and people who get a sense of superiority by denouncing others as ‘racists’”
— Thomas Sowell

JKB-qpsf
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During undergrad, our sociology professor decided to take the class outside. He had us do a similar exercise to the one Channel 4 did with these kids, but rather than it being a race he had us close our eyes and move forward every time we answered yes to a question. Being young adults who've actually gone through some struggles at this point, we opened our eyes to see that people from all colors, INCLUDING whites, were towards the front. As a "minority" myself, this was eye opening as it showed me how we all face challenges in life no matter our skin color. Boy will I miss that professor. He taught us to always approach things from an unbiased and fair point of view.

mhmd
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As a white guy, I loved having my black babysitter in my early childhood. She taught me a lot about manners and respect as a young boy, and her discipline was more strict than my mom's, so I knew I'd get a whooping from her or my mom if I misbehaved too badly, lol. She taught me about not being so picky with my food and to be grateful for the things I'm given because there's always someone worse off. Her son was my best friend for a long time. He taught me to dance. I wish I remembered him, but it feels like a lifetime ago.

I loved my best friend in HS who was a black kid. He lived with me for a couple of months because his mom was going through a hard time. I loved having him around because we got along and thought similarly. Then we grew up and moved on with our lives. Idk where he's at now, though.

I've grown up not really understanding racial differences and just seeing people's morality. If you're a good person, we'll get along. Skin color doesn't define how good of a human being you are.

ygjfzke
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My mum is a teacher and they genuinely showed her this video as part of racial sensitivity training. Thank god she doesn't buy into this shit...

toxictyco
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I'm a black American and I simply hate the african-american victim crowd. If you're a black man and you make something of yourself, they are the first to bring you down or try to trip you up. I joined the Navy and built my life off the things I learned from my time there. My family is a military family. I've found white people in America gave me respect for being in the Navy. Blacks have been the ones trying to drag me down, asking me "why I'm serving the white man, " and then also asking me for free handouts/money. America doesn't oppress blacks. Blacks in America have gotten drunk off handouts from the Democrat party and their culture has been corrupted. At the end of the day, I've started to understand just how legal Mexican immigrants feel when they look at illegal ones.

oldgamesinvestigator
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This video just makes me sad. They've just taught these kids racism.

I'm black and for the longest time until my senior year of high school, my friends were every color but black. Mainly because the other black kids were obnoxious and rude, while I was a quiet nerd who liked drawing and still watched cartoons (My mom didn't want me watching 106 and park.) because of this I was bullied by the other black kids and just felt for the longest time that I didn't fit in with them. My best-ish friend from 4th to 8th grade was white.

There was a church youth summer camp thing that I was enrolled in and I was the only black kid there (for a minute). The only way I felt ostracized was because there was a sizable amount of asshole kids who talked back to the adults and bullied each other.

I never felt any less than because I was the only black person doing this or that.

sachicocoa
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Being a black guy myself, I've never had a problem with racism. Now I would never say that no one else experiences this stuff but it allowed me to reflect on how the hypothetical racial epidemic torwards a particular group is grossly exaggerated. I was mostly a loner kid and its not like my own race always treated me like a human, in fact if I did experience anything racist, it was by my own race. Heard stuff like "Oreo" a couple of times in middle school. But I would just do my own thing and observe others, stuff like that caused me to have a very objective view on humanity, that's why I was never clannish or boastful about my heritage, it never interested me. In fact, the irony is that Whites and Asians were kinder to me than Blacks or Latinos were, which just reinforced the notion that we are all humans with good and bad individuals, race is irrelevant, but culture, no one wants to talk about that, lest you make someone "uncomfortable".


It's is unfortunate how gullible and psychotic the black community is now, others have realized it long ago, prepare to get shamed lest you try to bring it up, like the single motherhood rates or delinquency, which have expanded out of the black communities now by the way, its like when they want to implement something to destroy soyciety and the human condition, it all starts in the black community like an experiment. Then it spreads everywhere else. The leftists types, I can't tell if they are very stupid or secretly malicious, they definitely aren't helping by throwing money and food at the problem until it expands like a giant balloon. No one actually wants to fix anything, they just want to put a bandaid over it and whine for media attention. People will do devilish things for social points, it's incredible.

FeralRavage
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It pain me a lot to see children being taught to hate each other, yet i'm powerless to do anything to help them

lqt-xinim
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That kid was still pretty smart. He also noticed that he was only on the front because of the questions that were asked.

debonairlivestreams
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Growing up as a white girl in inner city NYC, I was the minority. I can't tell you how many times I was denied opportunities because of my skin color. My black and Hispanic peers, despite having lower grades and lower SATs, easily got into Ivy League colleges.

margaretandersen
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While I was recording this I had to change some of my language towards the end. I realized that while Channel 4 told us they would be asking questions, in reality none of the things they said were actual questions. They were statements or prompts. I kept some of the language the same so it wouldn't be confusing but please do well to not be like Channel 4. Understand the difference between a question and a statement.

ThinkBeforeYouSleepYT
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The real irony here is that if the kids had been allowed to actually just run the race, they still would not all end up equally. Some of those kids are faster than the others. And yet too often people assume that the starting conditions must have been unfair if the results are unequal. Your example about Japanese-Americans is spot on. There are simply too many things that influence outcomes to pin group disparities on any one factor. Saying that all group disparities are the result of racism is just as false as what Progressives used to say in the early 20th century--that all group disparities come from genetic predispositions.

They created a totally fabricated scenario and then told the kids, 'the world is like this.' They provided absolutely no real evidence for this assertion. In fact, if they had just let the kids run the race the way the kids wanted to do it, they were all on the same line. The kids f**ing know how a race works. And they would have had fun doing it. Instead of raising a generation of kids ready to compete with each other as equals, they've now made them all artificially self-conscious, thus perpetuating racial animosity. F**ing bravo, Channel 4.

brianensign
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I recently turned 18 and as an official adult, I can say, I’ve never really experienced racism growing up. I thought I did, because my entire family is black and grew up in times where racism was very prominent, but in my case, I’ve never struggled for equality. There have been times where I was at an advantage over my white peers, too. I’ve never been denied any rights or even privileges just because I’m black. I only felt out of place because of the people around me talking about it all the time

crescentblueee