Many may find it hard to believe the teaching of hatred against white people now occurring in the USA.
- “No race is inherently superior to another race”;
- “An individual, by virtue of his or her race or sex, does not bear responsibility for actions committed in the past by other members of the same race or sex”;
- “An individual should not be made to feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress on account of his or her race.”
“A bill pushed by Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis that would prohibit public schools and private businesses from making white people feel ‘discomfort’ when they teach students or train employees about discrimination in the nation’s past …”—The Associated Press (emphasis added)“The right likes to talk so much about, you know, snowflakes. It seems like they may be raising snowflakes because if they think people are going to be uncomfortable by the actual facts—facts are uncomfortable.”—CNN’s Don Lemon“Ron DeSantis and his GOP allies are pushing a bill … that would prohibit public schools [from making] white people squirm. Those poor, wittle babies.Their feelings are hurting. Some poor, wittle white people are uncomfortable about the hundreds of years of racism and hate that built this nation.”—Laura Washington, Chicago Sun-Times
“[H]e’s trying to make it illegal, Governor Ron DeSantis, to teach history that would make white people uncomfortable. Does that law include saying you can’t make black people feel uncomfortable or indigenous people? The history of indigenous and African Americans could make one uncomfortable? Is that illegal too, or is it just white people?”—MSNBC’s Joy Ann Reid
- Ryan Anderson’s When Harry Became Sally: Responding to the Transgender Moment—might make transgenders uncomfortable.
- Jared Taylor’s If We Do Nothing, as well as two books he contributed to: Race Against Time and Face to Face With Race—might make black people uncomfortable.
- The Kindle edition of the widely praised 1973 dystopian novel by French author Jean Raspail, Camp of the Saints—might make third worlders uncomfortable.
- David Cole’s rollicking autobiography, Republican Party Animal—makes Debra Messing uncomfortable.