Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
September 29, 2015
Carrie Weisman (who is presumably either Chinese or Japanese or something), has a message for all the racists who don’t want to have sex with Black people: it’s time to stop the hatred, and spread your legs for some colorful lovin.
She is also – somewhat weirdly – concerned that there is not enough interracial gay sex happening.
Shallowness in online dating manifests in different ways, but is mostly about appearance. Fat people are ridiculed all the time. The plight of bald men has been well articulated by the likes of Larry David and Louis CK. And of course, anytime we talk about appearance, race will eventually come into play. Online dating apps provide fertile ground for these kinds of appearance-based biases to take root. And that’s starting to spark some very important discussions around dating and identity.
OK Cupid co-founder Christian Rudder once told NPR, “Black users, especially, there’s a bias against them. Every kind of way you can measure their success on a site — how people rate them, how often they reply to their messages, how many messages they get — that’s all reduced.”
More recently, talk of sexual racism has exploded within the gay community, and a number of men using apps like Grindr and Scruff have come forward to discuss the race-based profiles they encounter.
…
LGBT lifestyle expert Mikey Rox told AlterNet, “You don’t have to engage with anybody on these apps. You can choose to not respond to them. Why do you have to go out of your way to potentially hurt someone’s feelings?” In that sense, Rox says, stating a specific racial preference in one’s profile just isn’t necessary.
It’s hard to say why such overt prejudices seem so prevalent on gay dating apps in particular. Maybe it’s easier to be more direct in places where gender divisions don’t exist. Maybe others feel that maintaining certain formalities simply isn’t necessary.
It is obviously because gays are a protected group and so are allowed the privilege to be openly racist. Just like Moslems, as a protected group, are allowed the privilege to be against gays.
Not rocket science, Jew.
So yes, if you don’t want to date a black person, you don’t have to. If you don’t want to date a white person, you don’t have to. But it is worth asking why those so committed to racialized dating feel the way they do. Kristen Martinez, a Seattle-based psychotherapist specializing in LGBT issues, says, “If you dig a little deeper into these motivations, you may start to notice some racist undertones to why you prefer certain ethnic groups over others.”
There you go. Just come out with it, Jew: not wanting to have sex with Blacks is pure hatred.
An Australian study cited in a recent article by the Daily Beast, suggests, “Sexual racism… is closely associated with generic racist attitudes, which challenges the idea of racial attraction as solely a matter of personal preference.”
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LeNair Xavier, 44, tells AlterNet, “It’s offensive in general, but it’s even more offensive when I see a person who comes to my neighborhood — which when I was growing up was primarily black, and is just now getting gentrified — and writes a profile that says something like ‘no blacks.’”
“That comes from the whole attitude of white entitlement or white privilege. It’s like, you’re going to bring that to Bedstuy, Brooklyn? Of all places. Are you serious?”
We’ve reached a point in time where diversity has become something to celebrate. If there’s one thing our techno-based society offers, it’s access to different values, different identities and different cultures. So why do some seem so resistant to embrace them?
Yes, goyim. Embrace the diversity. With your sex organs.
It’s 2015, goyim: time to start having sex with Blacks.
Hey Jew @carrieweisman, how do they feel about interracial dating in your homeland? Why are you pushing it on us? pic.twitter.com/6c6BosdsUx
— Andrew Anglin (@stormer9k) September 29, 2015