2aguy
Diamond Member
- Jul 19, 2014
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Ami Horowitz does it again...he goes to left wing college students, asks them about segregation on college campuses....and they are all for it. He then goes to Black neighborhoods, asks them the same questions, and they tell him the left wingers are racists.
Who agrees with the Left Wing Social Justice Warriors....why, the kkk, of course....and we know this because Ami goes and asks the klan....and they feel the same way as the left wing college kids...
WATCH: Ami Horowitz Asks Students About Colleges Racially Segregating Students, Then Asks KKK Leader
"Colleges are creating separate housing, graduations, and even gyms for black students and other minorities," Horowitz explains. "So I went to Columbia University to find out what students think about this."
The students, who are mostly white females, all seem enthusiastic about the idea of encouraging the separation of students by race.
"Would you support segregated housing for black people?" Horowitz asks two female students.
"I think a lot of schools have interest housing, where black students, students of color can live together," one replies.
"Separate from white people?" Horowitz asks for clarification.
"Yeah, that’s like a normal thing at most campuses, I think," she replies.
But when Horowitz walks "outside the campus bubble" to a neighborhood a few blocks away, the responses change dramatically. In fact, Horowitz notes that he found "unanimous" agreement off campus that segregating people by race is retrograde.
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"Why? Are you going back in time?" says an African American woman. "Why are you separating? We’re all together." Asked if she thinks it’s racist to do that, she says emphatically, "I would think."
"I don’t understand the logic there," says an African American man. "It’s obviously terrible to separate people by race,” he says, exclaiming later, "Separating people by race at the gym? I don’t even understand that … So white people don’t get their feelings hurt when they get dunked on?"
"I feel like that’s basically segregation," says a young black man. "We should all graduate together."
"I feel like that’s segregation and that shouldn’t be happening," says another African American male. "Discrimination might not be the ultimate goal, but people take it that way… It’s all about social skills, and if you can’t converse with people that are not the same skin color as you, then there’s no reason for you to be social at all."
Horowitz goes on to provide some historical context to the segregation discussion, explaining the impact of the landmark Supreme Court decision Brown vs. Board of Education that overturned the policy of "separate but equal," the insidious rationale behind segregating people by race.
But increasingly on college campuses, Horowitz demonstrates that you can find many people who are actually embracing a form of "separate but equal" in these "woke," racially divisive policies.
To drive home just how backward this thinking is, Horowitz interviews a member of the racist KKK who celebrates colleges promoting segregating by race.
Who agrees with the Left Wing Social Justice Warriors....why, the kkk, of course....and we know this because Ami goes and asks the klan....and they feel the same way as the left wing college kids...
WATCH: Ami Horowitz Asks Students About Colleges Racially Segregating Students, Then Asks KKK Leader
"Colleges are creating separate housing, graduations, and even gyms for black students and other minorities," Horowitz explains. "So I went to Columbia University to find out what students think about this."
The students, who are mostly white females, all seem enthusiastic about the idea of encouraging the separation of students by race.
"Would you support segregated housing for black people?" Horowitz asks two female students.
"I think a lot of schools have interest housing, where black students, students of color can live together," one replies.
"Separate from white people?" Horowitz asks for clarification.
"Yeah, that’s like a normal thing at most campuses, I think," she replies.
But when Horowitz walks "outside the campus bubble" to a neighborhood a few blocks away, the responses change dramatically. In fact, Horowitz notes that he found "unanimous" agreement off campus that segregating people by race is retrograde.
---
"Why? Are you going back in time?" says an African American woman. "Why are you separating? We’re all together." Asked if she thinks it’s racist to do that, she says emphatically, "I would think."
"I don’t understand the logic there," says an African American man. "It’s obviously terrible to separate people by race,” he says, exclaiming later, "Separating people by race at the gym? I don’t even understand that … So white people don’t get their feelings hurt when they get dunked on?"
"I feel like that’s basically segregation," says a young black man. "We should all graduate together."
"I feel like that’s segregation and that shouldn’t be happening," says another African American male. "Discrimination might not be the ultimate goal, but people take it that way… It’s all about social skills, and if you can’t converse with people that are not the same skin color as you, then there’s no reason for you to be social at all."
Horowitz goes on to provide some historical context to the segregation discussion, explaining the impact of the landmark Supreme Court decision Brown vs. Board of Education that overturned the policy of "separate but equal," the insidious rationale behind segregating people by race.
But increasingly on college campuses, Horowitz demonstrates that you can find many people who are actually embracing a form of "separate but equal" in these "woke," racially divisive policies.
To drive home just how backward this thinking is, Horowitz interviews a member of the racist KKK who celebrates colleges promoting segregating by race.