Nick Fuentes
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And I think that when it becomes majority non-white, you're going to get a very different kind of country in every way.
And some people say, well, what if the person's skin was black or what if the skin was red or yellow or brown or whatever?
But I don't think that Indians or Amerindians, whatever you want to call them, I don't think they will be building skyscrapers.
I don't think they have liberalism, center-right liberalism.
Well, it wouldn't be the same nation is the point.
I wouldn't feel at home, let's say.
If Chicago was all Indians running around, I would be a minority and I would feel deeply uncomfortable because home for us is familiarity.
We like seeing familiar faces like our mom and dad and our uncles and grandparents.
We like the food and the culture we grew up with.
And if it's all Indians, well, they're going to be doing their Indian thing and it's their home
Not ours.
But that's the hypothetical.
If I were Indian, well done, I guess it would be the same.
If I'm a white person in a white country and I'm an Indian in an Indian country, I benefit.
But we don't have to look at a hypothetical because America was a white country and now it's gonna be a non-white country.
maybe maybe it's not so much about skin color but it's about like how the last 150 years of your ancestry has been treated i'd like to get your take on well i think it's um that is really the question because you have these persistent disparities in everything education wealth income and then crime and educational attainment all that kind of stuff and the question is why are these things the way they are and the answer is if everybody starts in the same way you know the kind of blank slate ism which says we're all born equal we're all the same
And we all end up every year in different places.
And let's say it's Asians on top, whites next, Hispanics, then blacks.
People say, well, something must have happened in the middle for these disparities to arise, which would be racism.
And I would say it's less interesting maybe how we got to an unequal position rather than first to say we are in an unequal position and say โ