New Insights about White Supremacy
There’s an angle to the accusation of ‘White Supremacy’ that I had never previously understood. Namely, that non-white women feel Western societies put white women on a pedestal. In other words, the root cause for accusations of White Supremacy is that many non-white women experience jealousy—because men of all races find them less attractive.
It turns out that white people experience the strongest dating preference for members of their own race, whereas non-white people are more likely to desire to date outside of their group. Although women of any race desire same-race relations more than men, most non-white (Western) men have a preference for white women. And in those cases where non-white women do date outside of their race, they prefer lighter-skinned options.
In other words, in the minds of many ‘minorities’ living in the Western world, they equate “whiteness” not only with greater economic success and privilege but also with greater beauty and sexual attraction. And whenever black and brown women lose out in the looks department, that’s when they feel discriminated against on the basis of the “color of their skin” (but not their beauty, of course).
Consequentially, when minorities say this or that setting is “too white”, perhaps they mean non-white women aren’t getting the attention they crave. Anywhere in nature, it is understandable that males will feel more motivated to compete for more attractive female mates. In Western nations, founded and populated by a majority of white people, it is clear that white women are winning over more competitors.
Now, if you’re a white man, and if you prefer dating within your own race, you are now confronted with millions and millions of immigrants pouring over into your countries, and if a majority of said immigrant men also have a preference for white women, then you are confronted with an overwhelming competitive force.
How should white men deal with the fact that the majority of the non-white world seems to prefer being with white women? You can only respond by trying to keep the non-white men out of your social circles, or by preventing them from having access to economic means. In other words, one important way to try to retain access to white women is to discriminate against non-white men.
Media conspirators are also working hard to try to change the dynamic, namely by promoting black women over white women. This is why, after all, filmmakers decided to make a “documentary” about a Nigerian-German black Cleopatra. But when the film bombed, because firstly it wasn’t historically accurate (Egyptian were never Negroid blacks), and secondly because perhaps people don’t find a black woman as attractive as a white woman, black women flung their accusations of racism across the globe.
Indeed, instead of having men compete for them, as white women do, black women have to compete themselves. That is why, behind the scenes, we see such a power struggle launched by black women and their allies, especially in the media. Black women’s extreme jealousy has been the driving force behind making Disney characters black (Ariel, Snow White, and so on).
If they can’t win in the looks department, they can win in the bullying race.
Black women are, in fact, considered least attractive by men of all races, including by black men. Black men have a preference for white women if they can get one. If black women aren’t desired, no wonder they turn to a form of competition of their own.
Black women are engaged in a death struggle with white women: like the jealous witch from Snow White, the only way black women can outcompete white women is by banning white women (from culture and society) and by defaming white men. In fact, black women are convinced that white women aren’t really more beautiful but that white beauty is a product of White Supremacy.
Of course, it’s the other way around. White women are winning the economic competition precisely because most men find them most beautiful.
In conclusion, any accusation of “White Supremacy” is really rooted in Black Jealousy.