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I've never met right-wingers who were as openly racist as the ones I found on Voat and now Poal.

And I grew up in a very conservative household, went to a conservative church believed the Bible was inerrant and all that. I grew up in a conservative Christian community, and know many many people who are conservative Christians who are against racism. They are against racism because they believe it is against the Bible's teachings.

Then I go exploring online after seeing censorship on Reddit, and find outright racists who believe that black people are inferior and that the Jews are the reason for all the problems in the world.

I am trying to understand this group of people. Many of them seem non-Christian or atheist, but some self-identify as Christian.

I have a few questions:

  • Do you call yourself a Christian?
  • How many of you go to churches that believe/are fine with outright racism?
  • Do you simply hide your beliefs really well, mostly live in the South/areas where it is accepted, etc.?
  • Did you grow up with these beliefs, or did your ideas change later in life?

Thanks.

I've never met right-wingers who were as openly racist as the ones I found on Voat and now Poal. And I grew up in a very conservative household, went to a conservative church believed the Bible was inerrant and all that. I grew up in a conservative Christian community, and know many many people who are conservative Christians who are against racism. They are against racism because they believe it is against the Bible's teachings. Then I go exploring online after seeing censorship on Reddit, and find outright racists who believe that black people are inferior and that the Jews are the reason for all the problems in the world. I am trying to understand this group of people. Many of them seem non-Christian or atheist, but some self-identify as Christian. I have a few questions: * Do you call yourself a Christian? * How many of you go to churches that believe/are fine with outright racism? * Do you simply hide your beliefs really well, mostly live in the South/areas where it is accepted, etc.? * Did you grow up with these beliefs, or did your ideas change later in life? Thanks.

(post is archived)

[–] [deleted] 8 pts

I've never met right-wingers who were as openly racist as the ones I found on Voat and now Poal.

Probably because we're not going around calling everyone 'niggerfaggot' in real life. We're over the top here because it's fun, and because the truth about race is as unutterable in most of public life as saying "biden didn't win 80 million votes." Race is just one narrative upon which everyone has been fed a load of bologna.

Then I go exploring online after seeing censorship on Reddit, and find outright racists who believe that black people are inferior and that the Jews are the reason for all the problems in the world.

Most are aware that ghettoized whites exist and are intolerable, and that the jews (who are overwhelmingly overrepresented in every consequential institution) are invariably aided and abetted by whites. Nobody's going to say that whites are perfect, but at the end of the day you have to take your own side whether we're "superior" or not— we have a right to exist that is being denied to us. Blacks are pro-black, jews are pro-jew, despite the worst behavior of their racial groups. If nobody is pro-white, we're finished.

Do you call yourself a Christian?

I used to be an outright atheist, thanks mostly to the same social engineering programs that teach everyone "we're all equal." But I've come to see the need both in public life and my own life for a connection with the numinous. Otherwise one is left to modern decadence, and various sorts of enslavement. There exists a manichean dimension to life. Christianity is one manifestation of these aspects of life that transcend the temporal. It's one of the things that makes civilization and life beyond mere "consumer existence" possible, so I'm for it as a public institution, but I tend to agree less with its claims as they become more specific to particular branches of Christianity, or more rooted in historical narratives.

How many of you go to churches that believe/are fine with outright racism?

I was interested in attending a church, for a time if only for the cultural value of, say, a Latin Mass. I found that nearly all local churches boast of nonwhite pastors. Most have female administration. Some have pro-gay sentiments on their branding and several donate to "pay africans to breed"-style causes. I imagine most church-goers as being sheltered to the point of being totally divorced from the realities of what they are promoting, and the type of future they're creating for their descendents.

I have to wonder if being singled out by shutdown policies has helped any of them understand that these issues don't exist in isolation. It's not like I'd even want them to be the sorts of fulminating racists you see here; I want them to acknowledge that "the system" despises them, and has largely succeeded in uprooting them from public life.

Do you simply hide your beliefs really well, mostly live in the South/areas where it is accepted, etc.?

One must learn to tell the truth without being a retard about it. Obviously, people are deeply conditioned to think "well, we're all apparently equal and my family has never been dispensed with by a gang of South African farm-raiders, so I'll just go along with the narrative." People are also conditioned to think less about rational arguments, and more about emotional ones— if you want someone to plug his ears and ignore the facts of the situation, just remind him that he'll be ostracized for holding the wrong opinions, or even just acklowledging that "13 do 50."

Did you grow up with these beliefs, or did your ideas change later in life?

I was a smug internet atheist for most of my life. I joined voat because it became clear that reddit, twitter, et al were no longer consonant with my basically libertarian view that legal speech should be allowed on such platforms, regardless of who it offends. Instead, we started getting privileged classes. When corruption is exposed among the pseudo-elites, it's squelched. Race turned out to just be another topic about which we aren't allowed to tell the truth without some sort of consequence.

Have a nice day.

PS. Epstein didn't kill himself.