Editorial
Matt Walsh’s “Am I Racist?” movie is a trolling masterpiece, exposing the con-artists who are grifting the entire country and making a damn good living at it.
Based on Walsh’s movie, the most prolific con-artists pushing the narrative that America is inherently racist are over-educated liberal white women, although five liberal black women were also featured in the film.
If you believe the tripe these women are selling, then you agree that anyone born with pale (white) skin is racist simply for existing and forbidden from saying, “I am not a racist.”
You’re damned if you notice race and damned if you don’t. These con-artists demand white people ‘decentralize their whiteness’ and ‘make reparations to people of color.’
Several women have turned their race hustling con into an art form. For only $30,000, a group of white people can hire anti-racist grief expert Breeshia Wade to take them through a journey of processing their ‘white grief.’
For a mere $5,000, a group of white women can hire Regina Jackson and Saira Rao to host a dinner party. What are the hosts serving for dinner? Self-hatred. The two race-baiting women authored the book White Women: Everything You Already Know About Your Own Racism and How to Do Better, and you’d be surprised how many white women pay to be told they are racist pieces-of-s–t. This is how the progressive left views white Americans, and they especially target white American women who seem all too eager to subjugate themselves to the hate peddled by Jackson and Rao.
Walsh says the con is “selling a disease without a cure.” The race-baiting con-artists say there’s no way to actually eliminate the inherent racism embedded into the very fabric of America. In the movie, Rao says, “Republicans are Nazis…This country is not worth saving. This country is a piece of s–t.”
“Whiteness robs you of your brain,” quips Rao.
The humor in which Walsh exposes the outlandish anti-white racism is a stroke of genius, and his trolling so masterful that Robin DiAngelos, author of White Fragility, pays cash reparations to a black man in the middle of an interview. The interview itself cost Walsh $15,000; DiAngelos is living quite well off her grift.
“The demand for racism far exceeds the supply of racism,” Dr. Wilfred Reilly, author of Hate Crime Hoax, told Walsh. Reilly explained that not only are the number of hate crimes infinitesimal to overall crime, but the hyper focus on it removes all conversation on the record number of black-on-black crimes.
“Am I Racist?” skillfully exposes the hypocrisy and absurdity of the race-baiting anti-white left. The movie opened in theaters on Friday, September 13. Tickets can be found on the DailyWire website.