The "left" are getting scared about being caught on camera saying the things they say all of the time in person.
Archive: https://archive.today/pvurh
From the post:
>For rebel filmmaker Matt Walsh, it's the most striking scene in his new movie, Am I Racist? On one sofa sits Walsh, a hard-line conservative posing as a woke interviewer in a bid to lift the lid on the diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) industry. Across from him is Robin DiAngelo, the celebrated author of White Fragility, who made a fortune shaming white people for their inherent bigotry. Over the next nine, toe-curling minutes, Walsh escorts DiAngelo through a series of increasingly preposterous scenarios in the name of vanquishing racism.
The "left" are getting scared about being caught on camera saying the things they say all of the time in person.
Archive: https://archive.today/pvurh
From the post:
>>For rebel filmmaker Matt Walsh, it's the most striking scene in his new movie, Am I Racist?
On one sofa sits Walsh, a hard-line conservative posing as a woke interviewer in a bid to lift the lid on the diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) industry.
Across from him is Robin DiAngelo, the celebrated author of White Fragility, who made a fortune shaming white people for their inherent bigotry.
Over the next nine, toe-curling minutes, Walsh escorts DiAngelo through a series of increasingly preposterous scenarios in the name of vanquishing racism.
(post is archived)