Gad Saad
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Well, if you internalize that parasitic idea that it is not appropriate to ever judge the cultural practices of another culture,
then that renders you impotent when you're making judgments about who should be let into your country, about whether you want an increase of people who hold those views or not.
Therefore, that leads to the suicidally empathetic position that all immigrants are equally likely to assimilate within the American ethos or the Western ethos.
So we started off with internalizing a parasitic idea called cultural relativism, and that lays the foundation for then the suicidal empathy of open borders.
And I mean, if it were only that you don't speak English, I mean, to me, that's bad enough and that you're not going to be part of the fabric of the greater society.
That's not an existential threat.
But if you're then going to be advocating for many of the cultural beliefs that are perfectly antithetical to the whole society, then we have a problem.
And you and I have talked, you know, very often about, you know, Islam and so on.
Some people, I think, I mean, I wonder what you think about this.
Do you think more Americans are willing to have a honest and open conversation about this issue or are most still sort of the proverbial ostrich and they think it's gauche to talk about religion?
So I've got a whole verbatim transcript between a street interviewer.
You know these guys that just take someone off the street and they tape it?
So he goes and intercepts this woman who's at a, I guess, like a Free Free Palestine rally.
And he says, oh, you're for Palestine?