That opening line! It's perfect. Let's look at disadvantage and poverty as issues on their own.
@AlexSmith-gr4hp
6 жыл бұрын
To answer Emily's question, how would a person feel hired under a quota. My sister got a plum job from an all women short list after a previous short list was rejected for having all men. Her explanation "I would have gotten the job anyway". Even though the first short list was rejected? So the answer is cognitive dissonance.
@phantomkate6
6 жыл бұрын
Alex Smith Yeah, I think you're spot on there. I think I've seen this with university application acceptances as well. Obviously I can't say with 100% certainty--but if it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and can't grasp the course material or write a coherent paper...the admissions office was trying to get more ducks into the program.
@rwatertree
6 жыл бұрын
I got mine :)
@kyriss12
6 жыл бұрын
In some cases the cognitive dissonance is has to be the equivalent of sticking their fingers in there ears and screaming Lalalalala. I'm getting welding certification from a trade school in Omaha. There were only 2 girls in my class and both of them were grabbed up by a by an offshore rig, fast tracked though a underwater welding certification, and practically got to write the terms of their own contracts. One girl thought she was just that awesome, the other realized she would probably be sitting on a bench the entire time, and derided to go for something within her range.
@alex-qd6of
6 жыл бұрын
kyriss12. Maybe they're better than you, and you're looking for an excuse. Women don't make less competent welders than men, after all.
@kyriss12
6 жыл бұрын
Allow me to repeat myself, a company from half way across the country came to small trade school in the corn belt and only recruited the girls in the class. They then proceeded to let said girls with only a single quarter worth of schooling negotiate the type of contract you would normally only see given to veteran master in the top of his trade. I am in no way bitter since I have no delusions of my skill seeing as I just started, and would rather not do anything as insane as underwater welding. However I highly doubt that the handful of girls in the school who were just starting out, were more qualified then all of the guys who were close to finishing a four year welding associates degree. And at no point did I ever imply women were automatically worse welders than men you ass.
@jamesmatthew1903
6 жыл бұрын
I once had an Asian professor that said on the first day of class (thick Chinese accent)"prease excuse me if I forget your names, all white people look alike."
@luceafarul579
6 жыл бұрын
James Matthew lol. Whites are actually the most heterogeneous group in terms of physical appearances. If I encounter that professor I would definitely challenge that, especially: so are you saying you REALLY can’t tell a brunette and a blond apart? Or a brown eyed person from a blue eyed person? Be honest please. I’ll be VERY interested in what he has to say about that.
@jamesmatthew1903
6 жыл бұрын
I graduated years ago so no follow up lol but so far as I can tell he was totally serious when he said it. No one laughed and there was no follow up. He was super foreign, like fresh off the boat so he have a grasp of western humor, much less the English language.
@breezyveezy1
6 жыл бұрын
James Matthew omg hahahahaha!
@jamesmatthew1903
6 жыл бұрын
No one was outraged lol, most just weren't sure if he was kidding. I laughed. He was prob thinking 'xexexe stupid round-eyes think I can't tell difference'
@monsterrex999
6 жыл бұрын
When you look at people of other colors, if you don't look at them deliberately, you do look at them, whether they're Asian or African American or Latino.
@ztamizzen
6 жыл бұрын
If my great-great-grandparent was a servant (slave) of a richer man 200 years ago I do NOT deserve compensation. Which actually happened. They made it out of it, so fuck it. we are strong. Be proud.
@ztamizzen
6 жыл бұрын
Andy Jones I'm sorry massa. I will do better next time, if I even get a chance. 😭
@k4yser
6 жыл бұрын
Nor does anyone ever ask how live was for European ancestors 200 yrs ago in Europe. As if it has been great over here..
@serenab5311
6 жыл бұрын
Nate Cole and it's also strange they forget that prior to slaves the English kidnapped over 100,000 vagrant children off the streets of England, most of whom died on the trip over, in chains.
@cs_fl5048
4 жыл бұрын
“Is diversity our strength? Or anybody’s strength, anywhere in the world? Does Japan’s homogeneous population cause the Japanese to suffer? Have the Balkans been blessed by their heterogeneity - or does the very word “Balkanization” remind us of centuries of strife, bloodshed and unspeakable atrocities, extending into our own times? Has Europe become a safer place after importing vast numbers of people from the Middle East, with cultures hostile to the fundamental values of Western civilization?” “Can you cite one speck of hard evidence of the benefits of "diversity" that we have heard gushed about for years? Evidence of its harm can be seen - written in blood - from Iraq to India, from Serbia to Sudan, from Fiji to the Philippines. It is scary how easily so many people can be brainwashed by sheer repetition of a word.” “To be sensitive, as ideologically defined, requires that one not merely accept but “affirm” other people’s way of life or even “celebrate” diversity in general. Like other demands for “sensitivity,” this demand offers no reason-unless fear of being disapproved, denounced, or harassed is a reason.” ― Thomas Sowell
@franciscomoutinho1
6 жыл бұрын
To me, the most shocking thing about such quotas people, is that they think that the job/position is for the benefit of the person occupying it and not the benefit of society. You shouldn't want a doctor, teacher or CEO to occupy a position for their own benefit 1st, but to benefit the patients, students and stockholders.
@taishici5
6 жыл бұрын
franciscomoutinho1 - in the cases I have seen in the private sector, this isn’t true
@rkcraig348
6 жыл бұрын
Oh hell yeah! I've been reading Coleman Hughes on Quillette. Absolutely a brilliant young mind. This young man is going places. Great get here Tim. Looking forward to this interview.
@rkcraig348
6 жыл бұрын
Thomas Sowell is one of my all-time favorite writers and I would definitely say Mr. Hughes here has tremendous potential to reach such a status.. Sky's the limit IMO
@andyjones7121
6 жыл бұрын
rkcraig348 Any links to anything he does? Articles, YT videos, etc? I definitely like this guy. Never heard of him, but I'm interested in more.
@rkcraig348
6 жыл бұрын
Here's a link to his articles on Quillette: quillette.com/author/coleman-cruz-hughes/ And here he is on Twitter: twitter.com/coldxman Enjoy! Dude is a talented writer, but I of course encourage you come to your own conclusions.
@estebannemo1957
5 жыл бұрын
rkcraig348 I wouldn’t say he’s brilliant. Certainly smart and well spoken. So far he hasn’t expressed any original ideas. The attention comes because he’s precocious and because he talks about subjects white guys cant because of PC reasons. When he doesn’t talk about race, he seems like any other smart guy who listens to the “right” podcasts and reads the right books.
@thoughtexperiment95
6 жыл бұрын
Diversity is social engineering
@johnnysmit1315
6 жыл бұрын
Thought Experiment AND...???
@snuffsan
6 жыл бұрын
diversity is code for anti-white
@hansnielsen6280
6 жыл бұрын
Böbb : Exactly! Like “Inclusion” and “Tolerance”
@michawill6599
5 жыл бұрын
Exactly, when whites were illegal immigrants in Africa, impirically overpowering, yet uninvited, they created the foundation and legacy for diversity problems worldwide. We were doing very well without you thanks. And before you start that, "then go back" crap - do whites fancy going back to pre-slavery times (and giving back gains from the era)? Didn't think so. Our spirit is strong, accept don't hate. Stop objectifying, appropriating, killing, programming and blaming us. We're already positively diverse thanks.
@octoslut
5 жыл бұрын
@@snuffsan nope it's a code for communism my comrade
@AbsoluteDakka
6 жыл бұрын
Tim, this could be one of your best videos ever (in my opinion). Coleman was an outstanding guest, he added a ton to the conversation. Thank you so much.
@Dahuiism
4 жыл бұрын
Imagine if the NFL, NBA, all pro sports had a quota to fill the league with a minimum percentage of Asian, Hispanic, middle eastern?
@stonedtimpool4934
6 жыл бұрын
I'm 1/164th Asian so affirmative action directly affects me
@kokofan50
6 жыл бұрын
You need to smoke more then come back.
@anevilrotisserie9136
6 жыл бұрын
Stoned Tim Pool You know next time a activist decides to slander Tim pool I hope they use that picture of him. XD
@Jonas-1A
6 жыл бұрын
That cracked me up! When are your versions of the merch coming out btw?
@johnnysmit1315
6 жыл бұрын
Stoned Tim Pool U JOKE BUT FOR REAL WE NEED RACIAL TESTS FOR DIVERSITY
@immortalnub
6 жыл бұрын
I am, like, 20% weed duuuude...
@Bikerbob59
6 жыл бұрын
I want my Castle and land back in Scotland then.
@leebrown3208
5 жыл бұрын
go get iy ass hole
@jasonspringer2983
5 жыл бұрын
@Gerrylynn Mako that's what he's saying. If everyone deserves something that was taken from their ancestors at some point in history then we're going to get back the things taken from our ancestors at some point in history right?
@CoolioAintGotShiONMe
5 жыл бұрын
Neil Mo lol, Scotland fought for their own independence from England however lost - their royalty married into England’s royals and thus became apart of the English kingdom
@andyfletcher3561
4 жыл бұрын
@ No, they are Scotts that are a part of the UK at this point in time by choice. By conquest initially. If you are going to choose to insert yourself into a conversation for the purposes of correction, at least TRY to be factual in your correction. Jeez, just watch "Braveheart" and you will at least have a clue to what you should have learned in grade school history and geography.
@EVALLOYD
4 жыл бұрын
@@andyfletcher3561 Hi there! I'm Scottish and we're called Scots. In 2014, when the referendum took place for Scotland's independence 55.3% voted to remain part of the UK, 44.7% to leave. When the Brexit vote took place and the majority of the votes were for leaving the EU, although in Scotland the majority voted to remain as did Northern Ireland, the Scottish first minister, Nicola Sturgeon, wanted to put the Scotland's independence vote back in the forefront and if independence obtained, to remain in the EU. I believe Sturgeon is advocating for another referendum in the months to come. Wait and see.
@fiatvoluntastua9183
6 жыл бұрын
Diversity isn’t equal rights. It’s Special Treatment
@LarsAgerbk
6 жыл бұрын
Amen!
@conspiracyoccultilluminati6512
6 жыл бұрын
PREFERENTIAL treatment, to be more precise.
@taishici5
6 жыл бұрын
Not sure the phrasing is correct there. "Diversity" isn't the same thing as a program that attempts to force diversity. Diversity itself has many great benefits - if you work in product design it's just obvious. And diversity goes way beyond just race or gender - its diversity of opinions, backgrounds, life experiences, world views, SO many other things.
@conspiracyoccultilluminati6512
6 жыл бұрын
"Diverse" SOCIETIES are inherently unstable and collapse upon themselves fairly quickly. Homogeneous societies are the most stable. No diverse society has ever been successful and never will be.
@taishici5
6 жыл бұрын
Isn't the West pretty diverse?
@thel1355
6 жыл бұрын
If "Diversity" is worth anything, it must mean that there are substantive differences between groups. If there are substantive differences between groups (e.g. values, interests, worldview, norms, mores, etc.), then why would anyone expect "proportional representation" in any industry, hobby, or occupation? If "Diversity" means anything, it must mean that people make different choices, pursue different ends, have different talents and interests, and value different activities. Therefore, to think that every corner of society should exhibit "proportional representation" is absurd. You can't get uniform outputs from diverse inputs.
@victoriamarulanda5639
5 жыл бұрын
I still don’t understand what happened to MLK’s dream of: “People should be judged by the content of their character and no their skin color.”
@artemprotectron
6 жыл бұрын
Baizuo Baizuo Baizuo! I don't know, it's got a good ring to it.
@schmiddy8433
6 жыл бұрын
I really like this guy, very articulate, kinda reminds me of Thomas Sowell from his hay days on television
@conspiracyoccultilluminati6512
6 жыл бұрын
"Articulate Black Man"= CLICHE ALERT!
@schmiddy8433
6 жыл бұрын
No I mean in comparison to 99% of the population he is well spoken and he talks about the same issues that Thomas Sowell did.
@conspiracyoccultilluminati6512
6 жыл бұрын
Do a google search of "articulate black man" and check out the results....
@schmiddy8433
6 жыл бұрын
No its nothing to do with his race and everything to do with the fact that he's very careful with his words, doesn't jump headlong into presumptions, and backs up all of his claims with relevant statistics and studies.
@StrategicWealthLLC
6 жыл бұрын
@@conspiracyoccultilluminati6512 - If you stare into the abyss long enough, the abyss begins to stare back.
@smgofdvld
6 жыл бұрын
Coleman !👏👏
@johnnysmit1315
6 жыл бұрын
smgofdvld UNCLE TOM NIGGA
@johnnysmit1315
6 жыл бұрын
Fintan HOW BOUT DIS. IT'S A LIL NICER. HE IS A HOUSE NIGGA
@adamcoleman6541
6 жыл бұрын
Johnny Smit I believe 100 percent that you are not a white teenager posing as a black man
@johnmahoney6663
6 жыл бұрын
I love how in this country, a guy like Coleman can come out of nowhere, and be so right on. Love it.
@WreckItRolfe
6 жыл бұрын
*Gone* too far? They *are* too far.
@JohnDoe-ff2fc
5 жыл бұрын
poor Emily. she wanted to join the conversation but often times blocked out. she needs to not be so timid
@ghostbeetle2950
6 жыл бұрын
Real good talk there, people! Thank you for this, and thank you for introducing me to Coleman Hughes! Awesome!
@MrThankman360
6 жыл бұрын
Let be clear, the bakeries don't refuse to serve gay people, they just refuse to make a cake for a gay wedding. For a union that goes against their particular religion. It's small, but it's a difference. Personally, I think they should make it in capitalistic terms, money is green no matter who gives it, but to order a baker to provide a cake to a customer they don't want to could cross a line. It's tricky. We should be very careful when comparing the plight of black people 50 years ago to how a very tiny minority of people treat gay people in 2018.
@williameblen3474
5 жыл бұрын
It came out that for that story they had to call different bakeries for two days before they found one apposed to the concept.
@kimbohlin4383
6 жыл бұрын
You should take a deep dive into Sweden and our crazy world (because "we" live in our own world... Not the world we all inhabit). We have doctors without license, but that's OK, somehow. We have female fire fighters who can't do their job properly (capable and non capable, and I agree 100%. If they're capable, there is no problem. But there is this test they have to take, which involves forcing down a locked door. Which is a semi common thing to happen in real life, if someone is asleep or something similar. There is a set time in which they have to force open the door within... I think it's like 3-4min or so. Females got it open in 11 minutes! Yet, that's OK, cuz they're "diverse"). We have female prison guards. Again, a big, strong, trained guard who is female, that's fine. But we've had a case where they hired this small girl (I think she was about 160cm tall), no muscles and basically no training. What happened? She was killed. Because she was small, couldn't defend herself and the violent criminals inside took her weapons (baton and spray i think) and she died as a result. These are three examples of professions where they either jeopardize their own or other peoples lives, in the name of "feminism and equality". Everything is about equal outcome here, everything is else is racist, misogynistic and pure hate. As I said, we live on the same planet, but not in the same world.
@Fedorevsky
6 жыл бұрын
We have similar problems in Norway and even the US have some of these problems already. The US also has female prison guards for example. I saw it on a documentary from a the most dangerous high security prison in the US where this little scrawny Hispanic woman was just starting her new job. She was talking about her size possibly being a problem and that she was afraid every day at work. She was extremely small and super skinny. Probably like 40 kilos (85 pounds). She would have trouble with other women in a women prison. The inmates wouldn't do anything she said. She had this little super feminine delicate voice and the prisoners would just look at her funny when she tried to boss them around. Not only was she too small physically she was also psychologically wrong for the job. She had no ability to sound tough. She sounded like a 10 year old girl and was very passive and constantly had a frightened look on her face. I wonder if she is still alive.
@hansnielsen6280
6 жыл бұрын
My country (Denmark) is unfortunately heading in the same direction but at a slower pace. PC-culture and progressivism poisons everything.
@kimbohlin4383
6 жыл бұрын
Eventually there has to be a point in which a large majority understands that this is definitely the wrong way to go. But when this point is, and how damaged the society will be by that point is another question. And will there be a point in time that the damage done is so large we cannot go back to the more "normal" way, a way acknowledge the differences between the genders, "celebrates" them for what they are instead of arguing that they're evil or some other strange thought? The further we go into this madness, the harsher the response will be when the tipping point comes. I don't see any way there will be a good outcome for this insanity. It's really sad if you think about it.
@taishici5
6 жыл бұрын
Kim Bohlin - do you have links for any of these cases of the unlicensed doctors, incapable fire fighters, and small girl prison guard?
@kimbohlin4383
6 жыл бұрын
@@taishici5 it's been reported in the news, and right now, on me. No. I don't have any links. But I could easily do a Google search and get multiple results. Easily.
@debraleonelli6457
6 жыл бұрын
Terrific interview Tim! Coleman is such a delight to listen to 🌟
@AsharRM
3 жыл бұрын
Just saw Coleman Hughes on the Mikhaila Peterson podcast with legendary JBP. Coleman is exceptionally talented and articulate 💪🏻
@Rokabur
6 жыл бұрын
More time on homework? When I was in public school, I spend 4-6 HOURS almost every single school night just doing homework. I'd get home from school, start doing homework, take a break for supper, finish up my homework for the day and then go to bed an hour later.
@asaenvolk
6 жыл бұрын
most kids only do an hour or so
@Rokabur
6 жыл бұрын
Hard to do it in an hour when EVERY CLASS has homework because the teacher dis-allowed you to actually work on anything during class.
@asaenvolk
6 жыл бұрын
perhaps, but most people simply do not do that much homework.
@julies8813
6 жыл бұрын
Back then my day and time I spent about 3-4 hours on home work/ study. Few times over night for exams.
@luceafarul579
6 жыл бұрын
Most homework are just busywork to get you into the rhythms of working. They don’t help with learning at all.
@Timitsu
6 жыл бұрын
Great talk guys! Just one thing that I would like to stress: at one point you said that marking people with an Asian background down on things like courage and likeability is racist. Social behaviour is not determined by one's race, as I'm sure you'll agree. So judging people "on the content of their character" is not racist, even if most people that display certain cultural behaviours happen to belong to a certain race due to historical-geographical reasons. I lived in Japan for 3 years and if you're going to be the loud, assertive and outspoken westerner over there, a lot of people will dislike you for that. That's not racist. The majority of people in Japan simply prefer to interact with people who speak in a more indirect, composed manner so it only makes sense that they take that into account when they are admitting you to a certain school or when they are hiring you. Similarly, Americans are free to reward certain behaviours over others, as people can change their behaviour depending on what society deems desirable. You cannot change your race though, so judging people on that is obviously immoral.
@Richusbabe
4 жыл бұрын
I think what happened was, they were ONLY grading Asians on those kinds of parameters. Im not sure. I think the colleges were coming up with different litmus tests for Asians, in order to satisfy the Affirmative Action protocols and admit fewer Asians than are naturally qualified
@Richusbabe
4 жыл бұрын
Also... i think they are being sardonic many times when they say such and such things are racist
@kenhagler7166
6 жыл бұрын
I can't remember where I read it now, but within the past few months I read about a college where there were black people complaining that black Americans who were actually from Africa shouldn't be considered "African Americans" for the purpose of affirmative action, because they were able to get into colleges on their own merit, and therefore were filling up much of the affirmative action quota for black people.
@JonathanRossRogers
6 жыл бұрын
It is encouraging to hear that most people who might benefit from racial preferences don't want them. That should be the strongest argument for ending them.
@megabussurvivor3685
6 жыл бұрын
So good of Penguin to broadcast their new quality policy. Gonna save me a ton of time and money
@hosmerhomeboy
6 жыл бұрын
I was brought on to a site to install some reinforcing steel. After two days my contract manager got a letter saying my crew was "not diverse". He was forced to renegotiate the deal with me and replace my experienced (mostly white) crew with a crew of minorities that had never worked any sort of physical labor at all. He continued to get harassed by management for having hired me, as his crew was already not hitting the diversity quota's, and I was an additional white male. Thing is, not one of those other people had the ability to do the job, and even if they could, we had a contract. He nearly lost his job over that, but it's ok since he hit the schedule. Since I trained some minorities to do my job for that company, I will never again work for that company. In addition, I can no longer work for many of the larger corporations now that there is a minority crew available. I am often brought in for my experience, but they never want me to bring a crew.
@jonathanhoward9533
6 жыл бұрын
Coleman Hughes seems like an intelligent brother. This was a great conversation and he said what I think clearly.
@indiasing8535
6 жыл бұрын
O thank God for common sense. I am Asian but every time I raise these points, I get accused of internalised racism!! I want to be seen, acknowledged, respected, promoted for my competency . I get accused of internalised racism if I dare to question the SJW's beliefs. Real racism then does not get taken seriously. Creating guilt through historical guilt will shut up dialogue, create anger and then hate causing more division and hatred. Lets work together people!
@OldBillOverHill
6 жыл бұрын
I got to be the token poor white boy in a high school pre-engineering seminar at CU. The black guys felt sorry for me cause I really was dirt poor.
@karenkaren3189
4 жыл бұрын
I spent my whole working life in health care. It’s probably one of the most meritocratic of workplaces, and the most diverse. When your basic mission is to take care of every human being, whatever their race, ethnicity, religion, etc., it has the function of focusing your mind and heart in the right place. Basically I worked in hospitals from the mid 1970’s to just earlier this year, when I retired. Diversity training only reached my hospital system in the last ten years, and it was pretty benign. I remember one staff meeting where one of the nurse educators handed us each a copy of a little manual about respect for all races, ethnicities, etc. It seemed rather silly because she was talking to a group of nurses who looked like the United Nations. ( I worked in a major teaching hospital that attracted people from all over the world). Most of us just smiled and nodded, glanced through the pamphlet once and tossed it in the back of our lockers. After that we had a mandatory annual online course. I could click through it in about five minutes and take the post test. I don’t remember being offended as a white person.😆
@MasterJuru
6 жыл бұрын
”白左“ I speak Chinese, let me correct you guys on the pronunciation. It's like this "Bye-Zwhoa" (like "bye-bye", and a surprised "whoa" with a "Z" in front)
@ryanboggs8685
5 жыл бұрын
对
@MasterJuru
3 жыл бұрын
@ not chinese
@philipfoster7269
6 жыл бұрын
I was on a dating web site here in the UK and I saw a profile that stipulated ‘NO BREXIT SUPPORTERS’. So much for accepting different points of view.
@andyjones7121
6 жыл бұрын
This guy is a genius! I'm surprised I never heard of him, but I have a feeling everyone will know who he is soon.
@Richusbabe
4 жыл бұрын
Watching in 2020.... and I've now watched countless Hughes interviews. I wish more people knew of his philosophy and work! I know a GREAT number of people, who are otherwise intelligent, thoughtful people, who are blindsided by the current culture wars. I can only hope that someday they hear interviews like this and take a look in the mirror. The real issue is, we're turning our backs on reasoned arguments and using selective understanding modes. (One day it's listen to science, next day it's feelings are everything and facts don't matter. Like with the James DeMore paper.) Civil discourse, on every level with every subject, is priceless. We're going backwards into Mccarthyism with cancelling people and blacklisting provocative individuals. I don't watch much tv, but I'm assuming Coleman gets next to no airtime on broadcast television, as a result of catering to the lowest common denominator :(
@Dragonblaster1
6 жыл бұрын
Coleman is so refreshing. So eloquent, so logical, so calm. This man neither needs nor wants to hold out his hand as a dispossessed victim. The SJWs would doubtless call him an "Uncle Tom" because they would rather see him as a semi-literate social slave, pat his fuzzy little head and say, "There, there, you poor, oppressed person. I'm so guilty for your marginalisation. It's all white people's fault because of slavery. We'll get you into Harvard!" "I don' wanna go t' Harvard." (head pat) "Oh, we've put your mind in chains as well as your body. You _will_ go to Harvard! No, no, that's it. I insist!" "OK, I'se goin'" (SJW basks in the warm glow of self-righteousness)
@peppybocan
6 жыл бұрын
I hope Emily wont get oppressed again :D
@hansdampf4377
6 жыл бұрын
I'm now 58 seconds in, so far she was allowed to state her name+designation -> looks good:-)
@TentaclePentacle
6 жыл бұрын
Emily is a robot, robots don't get rights.
@sststr
6 жыл бұрын
I'd love to "oppress" Emily... *nudge*nudge*wink*wink* Say no more!
@P3rformula
6 жыл бұрын
Maybe everytime she speaks up, Tim kicks her under the table until she shuts up. It's very troubling to imagine this... :(
@serenab5311
6 жыл бұрын
P3rformula her opinions are usually far more left than his, I think she doesn't say much bc she doesn't agree.
@koanbonwa
6 жыл бұрын
I agree with the Editor of Time. That cover is the perfect symbol for this moment in time. Photoshopped images on a red background with the stamp of the institution above, the only statement on the left, "Welcome to America". Nailed it.
@Hotislandoffshore
6 жыл бұрын
Coleman Hughes is amazing!
@nightcall7398
4 жыл бұрын
I'm glad you got Coleman Hughes on the show!!!!!
@daynonkane
6 жыл бұрын
I like this guest. solid arguments and well spoken !
@eddiechi1
6 жыл бұрын
Tim, enjoy viewing your videos whenever I get a chance, was not familiar w/ Coleman Hughes before this vid but glad I took 90 minutes to indulge, thx for the introduction, much appreciated. -- Also, as a white kid from the east side (near Hegewisch) "I haven't been arrested yet" was common lingo for us teens trying to gauge street cred even back in the 80's ....
@Zidana123
6 жыл бұрын
A young philosophy major who's concerned with practicalities rather than flying off into the clouds? Rare sight indeed!
@pouncepounce7417
3 жыл бұрын
Fund daycares in poor areas where kids can go and have an healthy meal and help with study for school. Problem solved. That would be my afimartive action.
@Saddamuel
6 жыл бұрын
As a Jewish man I insist that Penguin Random House accurately "represent" me in my Jewishness and maleness. As we all know, publishing is majority female at every level and Jews are vastly over-represented. We need diversity and so I expect to see a lot of policies that privilege male and non-Jewish applicants such as white men and other under-represented minorities in publishing. I understand some women and Jews will see this as opportunities being taken away from us but nothing could be further from the truth. It's simply opening up opportunities to marginalized people outside of the tribe! So when you aren't eligible for a promotion on account of your Jewishness, don't complain and instead praise the diversity!
@roderik4
5 жыл бұрын
"if we're all gonna be judged by the misunderstandings of our argument, then none of us will escape hanging" -- Coleman Hughes - 2019
@Chris-or7it
5 жыл бұрын
Most minority or "disadvantaged" students feel entitled to the affirmative action benefits. I teach college biology and the university has one of the worst graduation rates due to affirmative action in admissions and graduation policies/politics.
@thenrepeat9124
5 жыл бұрын
How horrible that a group of people can suck the joy and sense of accomplishment from a career like teaching. I teach music one-one but wouldn't last a week in a classroom full of prideful underachievers. I salute you!
@kassandrapatrick9064
6 жыл бұрын
Fantastic discussion. So many articles were brought up. Guess I have a lot of reading to do. Thanks for this, Tim.
@peil2451
6 жыл бұрын
Excellent discussion.
@klaus9688
4 жыл бұрын
Coleman Hughes is such a smart person to listen to, it is truly a blessing he engages in this whole discourse. I wish more people would listen. Thanks to all 3 of you for your conversation.
@jemase7931
6 жыл бұрын
Most people who aren't qualified would rationalize away being chosen over a better qualified person in because they don't want to admit that they aren't up to snuff.
@kylemacmillan652
6 жыл бұрын
The problem with some of those tests that you talked about Tim is that the requirements are vastly different. Most places use the Cooper standard. For the 18-29 Men have to run a maximum 12:53 mile and half while women have to do it under 15:14. Men have to do 27 push ups minimum women have to do 14 regular or 22 modified.
@JonathanRossRogers
6 жыл бұрын
31:55 I think it's possible to acknowledge that slavery has contributed to poverty of descendants of slaves today without prescribing a solution. Poor Black people aren't necessarily worse off than poor White people, but the reasons they're poor may be different. Unfortunately, it's hard to have honest discussions about reasons for poverty as long as people assume certain causes must result in certain policies. It's similar to how so many political conservatives seem to oppose the idea of climate change because they don't want more government regulation. I don't want more government regulations, but I see that as a completely separate question from whether climate change is occurring and to what extent the change results from human activity.
@Dr.Frankensteen
3 жыл бұрын
Need to have Coleman back on your podcast
@steviebob4
6 жыл бұрын
Tim's growing himself a second beanie for his lips.
@donaldduck7628
6 жыл бұрын
Things like the inheritance gaps between, for instance, blacks and whites, has much deeper roots than most people think. It wasn't about just inheriting a house, but centers more on cultural differences between groups. Back in the 60's, which would be the group that would be handing down any wealth accumulation by now, from within the black community, would opt for a different allocation of resources than today. There was a term which was accounted for by the people who would distribute welfare, to recipients, of the "Welfare Cadillac". There was much criticism in the day, that people on the highest levels of economic distributions from the state, would opt to purchase "top of the line" Cadillac vehicles, even when they resided in what most considered hovels, for homes. It became quite normal to see a woman drive to the store with 7 kids in tow, spending hundreds of dollars in food stamps, and load up the latest and most expensive Cadillac. The social workers of the day would vehemently defend this apparent dichotomy by saying that the blacks of the day had different social values, such that they tended to spend their resources provided, into their car, rather than into their domicile. It was not uncommon for a black family to purchase a brand new Cadillac every two to three years. At the time, it was claimed that blacks tended to spend much more time in their cars, than in their homes. I never was able to find that tidbit of research cited, but it was quite often cited when questions arose in those days. Of course cars do not last nearly as long as houses, and they rarely pass down in any value sense. It does however show how inherited wealth can significantly diminish generationally as a function of acculturation and choices made. Such choices carry through generationally, and keep people in economic traps of their own design. I'm sure any number of SJW types have popped a cork by this time, and I'm not saying everyone black owned a new Cadillac, but it was prevalent enough that it was taken into account by government social workers as normal, and it raised itself as an issue on many occasions. My point isn't the government subsidy for poor people in the day, but the present day comparisons of wealth distribution differentials cannot be ascribed to simple context, because of cultural preferences made in the past, that don't translate to future generations advantages. Do we really pay for the poor choices of peoples in the past? Do we blame other people for what was allowed to stand as a cultural differential?
@shartnitazodkeesian4018
6 жыл бұрын
"What you're saying is, we're trying to get laid" And then the girl at the table starts sweating
@Rick_Cleland
6 жыл бұрын
Huh? I missed that bit.
@shartnitazodkeesian4018
6 жыл бұрын
Its just a joke. Tim or Coleman make mention that some author talked about humans speaking about morals and such is actually the same as apes trying to mate. So all of it is just complex mating strategy. Which then sorta implies that since Molly is the only female at the table, that Tim and Coleman are in competition to sexually appeal to her.
@AllinAllisAllweAllare
6 жыл бұрын
This topic reminds me of a similar situation happening with air traffic controllers abandoning skills for diversity in a career with serious responsibility
@stampybear5042
6 жыл бұрын
Reminder that socialism always ends in starvation and genocide.
@m.rivers9201
6 жыл бұрын
Coleman Hughes, Please write a Book! People need to hear you!! 1st Black person I have seen with actual solutions to bring us all together as Americans!!
@mercury7216
6 жыл бұрын
It isn't hard to understand, really it isn't. It's about oppression vs oppressed, and any minority must be powerless by that measure. The genius of it is that it creates dependency on a central ideology. The American Constitution is a direct antidote to dependency - providing it's taught in schools as such.
@Noizemaze4
3 жыл бұрын
oh wow the studio back then
@AnthonyJerome
6 жыл бұрын
I sent your video to someone and they refused to watch it because you're "far right news". People really need to start fighting their biases and listening to one another.
@INatalkaI
6 жыл бұрын
I wasn't raised in the US, I immigrated here and I notice the whole thing with white people being afraid of saying "black" like a normal word. My husband who is American always shushes me quickly if I say "black people" or whatever in public and looks around, even though what I'm saying is completely innocuous. The programming runs deep.
@danteslament
6 жыл бұрын
Merit matters end of story.
@Crash103179
6 жыл бұрын
What world are you living in? Diversity runs on envy. Merit will get your head put on the chopping block. The Japanese compare it to a nail standing too tall, yet it's not a hammer you'll get, but an axe.
@huntergottahunt2412
6 жыл бұрын
Great video. I lived in the South, very, very poor people, poverty is-color blind. I’m glad to see this addressed.
@svengro5019
6 жыл бұрын
22:00 Yeah thats true. Lifting up a limp body is really hard to do. You have to take into account that it is soft in nature and hard to grab.
@TheRisky9
4 жыл бұрын
Many of the people offered book deals based on their ethnicity instead of their merit are often in denial. They won't believe that they really suck at writing. Many of us amateur writers aren't even looking for the professional markets anymore, because we can't write what we want. As a bisexual woman, I'm expected to make characters that represent the LGBTQ community, instead of characters that best represents the themes and ideas I want to express and not for some abstract progressive idea. I want to write about worlds that are inspired by 8th century Europe because that's what interests me. But, no, that's not diverse in the right ways. I'm sick of it. I'm sick of every little thing being analyzed by people who are such miserable people, they can't function unless entire world pays attention to them. I used to dream about million dollar contacts with publishers. I don't dream of that anymore. I dream of something moderately successful that I can slide under the nose of SJW's and hope I'm too insiginifcant for them to analyze my write for signs of internalized sexism.
@BlaineCraner
6 жыл бұрын
Let's see if somebody gets fired for saying "Nigeria".
@DingDong-gn7hj
4 жыл бұрын
I've already heard about diversity programs. But I don't get tired of listening more about it. Great interview. The more it is talked about the more people will see how to try to fix and repair the broken system.
@stanzavik
6 жыл бұрын
Tim's girlfriend rarely took her eyes off Hughes.
@SynnJynn
5 жыл бұрын
He has perfect features. Sometimes as an artist I catch myself staring at people because I trace or draw their features in my mind. 😂
@JohnDoe-ff2fc
5 жыл бұрын
I've a friend that teaches at a predominately Hispanic middle school. he told me that few parents can make it to parent-teacher nights because the parents are working either at night, 2 jobs or only 1 parent. that equates to parents not being able to take an active role in their children's schooling. I imagine that would be similar to other communities with the same situations.
@damnitjanet9450
6 жыл бұрын
Isn’t the military lowering physical fitness qualifications in the military?
@neeleyfolk
6 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the clear headed discussion. Nice to see young people not just screaming but critically thinking.
@gurugeorge
6 жыл бұрын
The essential problem is that Whites are unusual on the global scale, in that they socially glue themselves together more by adherence to abstract ideals (e.g. ringing ideals like liberty!, equality!, etc.) and less by means of kinship, clan and ethnicity, whereas for most other peoples in the world it's the other way round (they socially bond and self-organize more by kinship, clan and ethnicity, and to a _lesser_ extent by means of adherence to abstract ideals). It's a different _weighting._ (And there are various reasons for it, going back in the evolution of early European stock during the Ice Age, the history European thought, the history of reproduction styles, etc.). This means that Whites tend to police each other morally according to how well they adhere to abstract ideals, and the corollary of that is a habit of virtue signalling - and for a fact, it's a feature, not a bug, of White society under _normal_ conditions. It's one of the main reasons why White societies traditionally tended to be high-trust, fairly neat and tidy, fairly peaceful, etc. But this gave the radical Left a wedge to divide and conquer with. When you combine that proclivity with the Alinskyite tactic of "make them live up to their own ideals" and the rhetorical trick called "Motte & Bailey", you can whip Whites into such a frenzy of confusion that they virtue signal their adherence to the most nonsensical ideas (including the soft bigotry, the self-loathing, the tendency to be ok with the demographic decline of their people, etc.). It's actually the exploitation of a quirk of the White psyche (as all forms of rhetoric, persuasion and hypnotism are based on the exploitation of mental quirks). By contrast, other races and ethnicities would be largely immune to those tactics, because they get their sense of social place more from extended kinship, from clan and ethnicity, virtue signalling seems ludicrous and superfluous to them. It's not that they're totally unaware of ideals, rather it's that ideals aren't so central to their lives that their self-esteem hangs on it being known to everyone around them that they hold to the fashionable ideal of the day: the extended family, genetic closeness and tradition are more central. This is why White Nationalism is actually really important: Whites need to bring back into balance their tendency to virtue signal, with whatever natural level of ethnic solidarity they would otherwise have had, had this rhetorical trick not been played on them. Whites have been _atomized,_ they've been made to pedal too hard on their individualism, and made to forget about the raw, natural fact of strength in numbers; they need to think of themselves to some extent in a collective sense again, and start taking their own side more (not even necessarily as Whites per se, but even just in the traditional "national" senses - as being part of a chain of living beings with shared language and traditions, who were born for hundreds or thousands of years on the same soil, etc.).
@DevilsDeal
5 жыл бұрын
I especially loved the comment about about the chipao. I'm a white guy who's lived in Asia over a decade, and they LOVE it when I wear traditional Asian clothes, whether that's a yukata in Japan, or traditional Han clothes in China. Frankly, I point out that Asian American SJWs are ignoring the opinions of REAL Asians that consider it plus when any obvious foreigner is interested in their culture.
@blazetooth1
6 жыл бұрын
“Tim Pool, the new gatekeeper of the alt-right” - future headline on rightwingwatch 😂
@GeoffreyEwart
6 жыл бұрын
Coleman is in my tribe. I'm a 50 year old white guy from Idaho who is in financial ruins, but the important part of me is that I grew up on Captain Kirk and Magnum P.I. and have never considered judging others by anything other than how they treat me or the others that they interact with. I'm not really a Christian but support the general judeo-christian values of our society, therefor: God Bless the Intillectual Dark Web! (Oh, and Free Kekistan!)
@Unoraptormon
6 жыл бұрын
Please use 'Sameness'. "Sameness" mean 'equality of outcome'. It's the word we use in the Education field to distinguish between true 'equality' and 'equality of outcome'. I can send you pictures of my textbook pages that talk about it. Commenting because it bugs me when people say 'equality of outcome'.
@selectamark
3 жыл бұрын
Guys, great conversation and such pearls of wisdom. Shoutout from the Uk 🇬🇧
@ameliarhodes5000
6 жыл бұрын
I was a director at CNN in 97. I transitioned male to female and had my corrective needs met by the best medical care money could buy at the time. The hate and hostility, humiliation I face was not something that was possible for me to document. I didn't see how I could possible prevent it. Finally I was forced to leave. A short time later they laid off a lot of people I would have been out of the door regardless of transitioning. Many people we're unemployed. But my point is at the time I was a talented director. I'd rather be one of the people who was being paid for my talents. Now I hear more and more about how some minorities should be excused their violence because of discrimination and poverty. Many people like myself have faced discrimination and poverty like they will never know. AND we face these challenges without functional communities or resorting to violence. But if pussy hat wearing SJWs are going to tell me discrimination and poverty is reason enough for violence and taking what I want to take? Maybe it's time for me to follow suit!
@notbrad4873
4 жыл бұрын
I was hired by an Accommodations team that hires a lot of people with disabilities. I had trouble with the job transition and performance, and the manager still wanted to hire me. After accepting and some time passed I realized the manager recognized I have a cognitive disability. I'm a white guy and that felt terrible and degrading.
@winomaster
6 жыл бұрын
In my city a city employee at a public meeting used the term "niggardly" to refer to the city's spending policy. Blacks at the meeting jumped to their feet and complained about the use of the word. It was explained that the word was unrelated to the n-word...that the word ment cheap. The guy was fired and sued for his lost wages.
@als360
4 жыл бұрын
I'm a lefty progressive and Tim said something very important. The threshold or standard should not be lowered based on race or gender. I think that's 100% correct. From what I always understood was that Affirmative Action didn't mean you have to choose or hire someone of another race but you would have to make a conscious effort to include those races in your hiring process. No matter the race they still need to qualify
@alyswilliams9571
6 жыл бұрын
Really good talk from these three young people. Rising stars. Well done.
@hollyebn
2 жыл бұрын
Great interview, to bad that if it had occurred today (just 3 years later-insane) Mr. Hughes would immediately have been labeled a black white-supremacist and threatened for his ideas and words. Listening to this interview today is like hearing someone predict the future exactly. Heartbreaking! Thank you to all involved.
@BeenJamin87
5 жыл бұрын
@17:36 Tim said "ComicsGate"! Tim please interview Richard C Meyer or Ethan Van Sciver. EVS lives in Jersey and his comic, CyberFrog, has made over $850,000.
@BeenJamin87
5 жыл бұрын
#ComicsGate
@charlestruppi7793
4 жыл бұрын
Listening to this a year later. Amazing how prescient some of these thoughts were for what we’re seeing today. Amazing that it only took 12 months.
@Novous
4 жыл бұрын
why is this recommended TODAY instead of two years ago? the opening line is gold.
@jd.8019
6 жыл бұрын
Coleman Hughes is wise beyond his years. I only want to say I give him 100% support in his efforts.
@rinwesley3092
6 жыл бұрын
As someone raised in Compton, CA I can confirm that he is absolutely right at 50:55. Growing up there I never once feared the police, ever. The police were rarely seen.
@P3rformula
6 жыл бұрын
have this guest on again. He's chill, polite, and articulate.
@David-bz7pi
5 жыл бұрын
I really wish that dude had a KZitem channel. Absolutely brilliant and well read. I have tons of respect for him
@tpstrat14
6 жыл бұрын
At 25:30 “everything is breaking down. Everything is falling apart.” Yea it always is, always has been. So do your part to build it back up!
@devonferris
6 жыл бұрын
I love this Talk Panel Tim. Do more of these. Bring people in with other points of view.
@fiddlersontheramp5417
6 жыл бұрын
Jesus Christ this guy is 100% a 21/22 year version of Sam Harris, he has got so many similar mannerisms! What a legend:)
Пікірлер: 1,1 М.