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834

I'm in New York city for a week and it's shocking to experience the city today. I'm thinking this is my last visit. Of course, it's extremely expensive and that's always been the case. What's new is the experience here. Every business you patronize is staffed with non whites, gays with trans sprinkled in. I even had, what appeared to me as a trans women, strike up a conversation with me to fully round out my experience.

Museums

When I visit new york, I usually enjoy visiting various museums to see what's trendy. "The New Museum", Guggenheim and MOMA are good for this. They're going to exhibit trendy shows and artists. Museums are typically a place to escape diversity: non white people tend not to attend because museums typically cost $20 (That's a lot of drug/alcohol money) and they're not interested in art. I noticed more non whites than usual this visit, however the proportion of non whites to whites was about 2-3%. The age demographic was under 40. I was older than most of the attendees. Given that demographic, you'd expect to find art that represents the audience. No, what I saw were angry artists exhibiting ugly, images and instalations. Much of the work was incomprehensible just looking at it. You had to read the artist statements and they could mostly be summarized as "The plight of the person of color living in a white controlled world and their anguish/dispare". My own thought was these works were commissioned by Klaus Schwab and the statements were likely written by someone else. Who knows. Back to the audience at the museum, most of the audience was white. Therefore, these installations were directed towards us. Just like EVs, it didn't matter what we liked or not, this is what you're going to see. Now, I've just saved you hundreds of dollars and kept you from getting angry at curators for imposing this shit on you. On the other hand, maybe you want to discover this first hand. Good for you. Then I visited the MET. They have an interesting fee structure: $30 to enter unless you're stupid enough to live in the city proper, then the fee shifts to pay anything you want. In spite of this fee structure, I noticed the ratio of non whites to whites to be less than 1%. The age demographic was up to 80 or 90. The staff was 99% non white, of course. The exhibits were still mostly classic museum fare with special exhibits in line with the anti-white narrative.

Restaurants

The restaurant scene is really fucked up. I spent a lot of time searching for something that didn't assault my senses in every way. I generally try to explore different restaurants because there are so many. I know the classics I like and it's nice to discover a new one from time to time. The worst is the Times Square area. Lots of interesting looking restaurants. I went walking down E 32nd st and started reading menus, then went inside. I found the music to be an assault to the ears. It's what you'd expect at a 20 something night club. They didn't hold back on the volume either. I had to actually enter 6 different restaurants before I found one where the music didn't make me go deaf right away. The food was OK, not great, just OK. The bill wasn't so bad considering it was central Manhattan. When I looked at the clientele, I was certainly not their intended customer. Most patrons were my children's age. I quickly decided not to try and experiment any more. From now on, it's uninspiring old school restaurants at stuffy uninspiring hotels. I will recommend the Waverly Inn. It's an old classic, food is decent and it has a a quote from Donald Trump on the menu that's funny.

Broadway shows

I had hoped to attend a Broadway show while in the city. Sadly, every show I noticed there was either a Disney production or some other assault against white America. There was a Neil Diamond show that looked promising but after reading some of the reviews, decided it wasn't worth paying hundreds of dollars to watch. All the off Broadway shows were not targeting me as a democratic. Totally uninteresting as an uninspiring white male.

Comedy

Going to New York is not complete until you've paid $15 to see the Broadway Comedy Club show. With a name like that, you may think you're going to see top comics. In one word... no. It's really a shithole down in the basement of a crappy building. The only redeeming part of the experience is the 2 drink minimum will only set you back $18. One comic actually managed to make me laugh twice. The rest of the time, I fake laughed as a courtesy.

Marijuana

If you like to smoke weed, New York City is for you. The smell of weed permeates every nook and cranny of the city. I mean everywhere. In a few cases, it was so strong, I started coughing. Going in a crowded elevator is the worst!

The MTA

The most surprising part of my trip was the subway or MTA. It actually didn't suck. My expectations were pretty low and they were able to substantially exceed my poor expectations. Mostly it had to do with their payment system being able to use my credit card without requiring me to load my MTA card first. They even have a feature where they only bill your card for $35 max per 7 days. Now, you don't need to try to figure out how to use their ticket machines. Instead, all you do is walk up to the gate, tap your credit card and gate opens. Shocker!

My Uber driver

Normally, while in the city, I take the MTA. But one day it was raining, so I decided to take Uber so I didn't get too wet. This time, there was no problem with Uber and I had an interesting talk with the driver too. Of course, he was a non white but I asked him what he thought about New York. He said he liked it and liked Eric Adams. I didn't get into the political views but was surprised he liked the guy. Apparently, Adams is an ex-cop and he promised to ramp up police presence in the city.

I could go on, but this post is already long.

I'm in New York city for a week and it's shocking to experience the city today. I'm thinking this is my last visit. Of course, it's extremely expensive and that's always been the case. What's new is the experience here. Every business you patronize is staffed with non whites, gays with trans sprinkled in. I even had, what appeared to me as a trans women, strike up a conversation with me to fully round out my experience. ## Museums When I visit new york, I usually enjoy visiting various museums to see what's trendy. "The New Museum", Guggenheim and MOMA are good for this. They're going to exhibit trendy shows and artists. Museums are typically a place to escape diversity: non white people tend not to attend because museums typically cost $20 (That's a lot of drug/alcohol money) and they're not interested in art. I noticed more non whites than usual this visit, however the proportion of non whites to whites was about 2-3%. The age demographic was under 40. I was older than most of the attendees. Given that demographic, you'd expect to find art that represents the audience. No, what I saw were angry artists exhibiting ugly, images and instalations. Much of the work was incomprehensible just looking at it. You had to read the artist statements and they could mostly be summarized as "The plight of the person of color living in a white controlled world and their anguish/dispare". My own thought was these works were commissioned by Klaus Schwab and the statements were likely written by someone else. Who knows. Back to the audience at the museum, most of the audience was white. Therefore, these installations were directed towards us. Just like EVs, it didn't matter what we liked or not, this is what you're going to see. Now, I've just saved you hundreds of dollars and kept you from getting angry at curators for imposing this shit on you. On the other hand, maybe you want to discover this first hand. Good for you. Then I visited the MET. They have an interesting fee structure: $30 to enter unless you're stupid enough to live in the city proper, then the fee shifts to pay anything you want. In spite of this fee structure, I noticed the ratio of non whites to whites to be less than 1%. The age demographic was up to 80 or 90. The staff was 99% non white, of course. The exhibits were still mostly classic museum fare with special exhibits in line with the anti-white narrative. ## Restaurants The restaurant scene is really fucked up. I spent a lot of time searching for something that didn't assault my senses in every way. I generally try to explore different restaurants because there are so many. I know the classics I like and it's nice to discover a new one from time to time. The worst is the Times Square area. Lots of interesting looking restaurants. I went walking down E 32nd st and started reading menus, then went inside. I found the music to be an assault to the ears. It's what you'd expect at a 20 something night club. They didn't hold back on the volume either. I had to actually enter 6 different restaurants before I found one where the music didn't make me go deaf right away. The food was OK, not great, just OK. The bill wasn't so bad considering it was central Manhattan. When I looked at the clientele, I was certainly not their intended customer. Most patrons were my children's age. I quickly decided not to try and experiment any more. From now on, it's uninspiring old school restaurants at stuffy uninspiring hotels. I will recommend the Waverly Inn. It's an old classic, food is decent and it has a a quote from Donald Trump on the menu that's funny. ## Broadway shows I had hoped to attend a Broadway show while in the city. Sadly, every show I noticed there was either a Disney production or some other assault against white America. There was a Neil Diamond show that looked promising but after reading some of the reviews, decided it wasn't worth paying hundreds of dollars to watch. All the off Broadway shows were not targeting me as a democratic. Totally uninteresting as an uninspiring white male. ## Comedy Going to New York is not complete until you've paid $15 to see the Broadway Comedy Club show. With a name like that, you may think you're going to see top comics. In one word... no. It's really a shithole down in the basement of a crappy building. The only redeeming part of the experience is the 2 drink minimum will only set you back $18. One comic actually managed to make me laugh twice. The rest of the time, I fake laughed as a courtesy. ## Marijuana If you like to smoke weed, New York City is for you. The smell of weed permeates every nook and cranny of the city. I mean everywhere. In a few cases, it was so strong, I started coughing. Going in a crowded elevator is the worst! ## The MTA The most surprising part of my trip was the subway or MTA. It actually didn't suck. My expectations were pretty low and they were able to substantially exceed my poor expectations. Mostly it had to do with their payment system being able to use my credit card without requiring me to load my MTA card first. They even have a feature where they only bill your card for $35 max per 7 days. Now, you don't need to try to figure out how to use their ticket machines. Instead, all you do is walk up to the gate, tap your credit card and gate opens. Shocker! ## My Uber driver Normally, while in the city, I take the MTA. But one day it was raining, so I decided to take Uber so I didn't get too wet. This time, there was no problem with Uber and I had an interesting talk with the driver too. Of course, he was a non white but I asked him what he thought about New York. He said he liked it and liked Eric Adams. I didn't get into the political views but was surprised he liked the guy. Apparently, Adams is an ex-cop and he promised to ramp up police presence in the city. I could go on, but this post is already long.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

Great post. As a former NYC native - hell, I lived near East 32nd for a while - it saddens me to know how far the place has sunk. I haven't been back in years. Probably since the early deBlasio days.

[–] 1 pt

Very sad. At this point, I go there as a pitty tour just to see how progressivism is going. Not well, I'm afraid. On a bright note, Krispy Kreme is still roughly the same. :)

[–] 1 pt

Very sad. At this point, I go there as a pitty tour just to see how progressivism is going. Not well, I'm afraid.

I have some family and a few friends who are still there. Each and every one of them has plans to leave as soon as it becomes feasible.

On a bright note, Krispy Kreme is still roughly the same. :)

Krispy Kreme will survive a nuclear bombardment and still taste the same! :-)

[–] 1 pt

interesting read, thanks for the write up

[–] 0 pt

You're welcome. My pleasure.