Steve Sailer asks if love is colorblind.
00:00 Your swiping is racist, https://nypost.com/2021/02/19/heres-why-racism-is-rampant-on-dating-apps/
15:00 Anna Khachiyan, Ep. #017 of The Portal (with Eric Weinstein) – Reconstructing The Mystical Feminine, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gs8NGrWs3mc
43:20 The Homosexuals (CBS Reports 1967 episode), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWNEdoXo0Yg
51:30 What is liberalism? https://www.pscp.tv/w/1ynJOBWoyyyGR
1:13:15 Scott Greer: R.I.P. Rush Limbaugh, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AvS2_n19Ql0
1:32:00 Racism in entertainment
1:39:00 Dooovid joins
1:40:00 The “Jewish Blackness” Thesis Revisited, https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/9/7/222/htm?fbclid=IwAR36inml5RedtUMFT_aeMvBAMCCF_MR0WtjWr-CIz8pY92ch8YReQne9i0g
1:41:00 The Curse of Ham: Race and Slavery in Early Judaism, Christianity, and Islam (Jews, Christians, and Muslims from the Ancient to the Modern World) , https://www.amazon.com/Curse-Ham-Slavery-Christianity-Christians/dp/0691123705
1:42:00 Early Jewish and Christian Views of Blacks, https://glc.yale.edu/sites/default/files/files/events/race/Goldenberg.pdf?fbclid=IwAR0Be01ujwx-Fdf6TYfZEnDl8Eck8a4NNm3DXJCbIEk4T7vUR-s9Xytbzq4
2:13:30 Canada Charges A Political Party’s Leader With Promoting Anti-semitism, https://vosizneias.com/2021/02/22/in-a-first-canada-charges-a-political-partys-leader-with-promoting-anti-semitism/
2:31:50 Tucker Carlson on Naomi Wolf and over-reaction to Covid
2:44:30 Lorraine C. Minnite – The Myth of Voter Fraud, https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=1207
In a new book, “The Dating Divide: Race and Desire in the Era of Online Romance,” sociologists Jennifer Lundquist, Celeste Vaughan Curington and Ken Hou-Lin show how online dating sites exacerbate racial divisions.
They found that race-related “preference” filters on digital dating platforms help foster racist attitudes — especially toward black women.
Black women had a hard time matching on dating apps, as did black and Asian men.
(The 2014 study also found that preferring to date within one’s race was fairly common. For instance, black women preferred to date black men at a rate surpassed only by Asian women’s preference for Asian men.)…
The authors found that racial filtering on mating forums exposed black women to more exclusion and rejection than white, Latina and Asian female daters. Black women were the most likely to be excluded from searches, as well as the most likely recipients of offensive messages.
While plenty of people have “a type” when it comes to dating, the researchers found that filtering for race also let “people feel free to express their biases and racial misogyny towards women of color in a way they typically wouldn’t in a face-to-face encounter,” Lundquist said.
…So, how did users go from being ignored to harassed? One possible explanation: When the average dating-app user doesn’t see black women because of the filters they’ve set, you end up with a higher percentage of users seeking black women as a “fetish.”
For Nicole, a 39-year-old Afro Caribbean single mother from Brooklyn, receiving overly sexual overtures from non-black men on apps has become an unwelcome norm.
“Right off the bat these guys are approaching me with, ‘Hey, sexy chocolate,’ or ‘I love your beautiful black body. Can you twerk?,’” the registered nurse told The Post.
Nicole and other black daters who’ve endured racist attitudes while online dating declined to share their full names with The Post for privacy reasons.
“I’m on these apps hoping to find a meaningful relationship and these guys are treating me like a sex object before even extending a proper ‘Hello,’” the Brooklyn resident added.
The authors found that black women on matchmaking platforms must frequently contend with racist stereotypes such as the sexually insatiable “Jezebel,” which has roots in slavery, and the “angry black woman” — a belief that black women are innately unruly and ill-tempered.
“We talked to a number of educated black women who were thriving in their careers and looking for comparable partners,” Curington told The Post. “But there’s a disconnect between who they are in real life versus the Jezebel stereotype they’re being subjected to online.”