Every time this topic comes up I say the same thing, but it bears repeating.
The final redpill on this topic that brought me across the diving line was simply watching home movies from when I was a child and noticing the demographics of the people in the town my parents still live in and how different they are now versus then.
Just casual things like "oh nearly everyone in my class was white; that probably wouldn't be the case anymore." "I don't remember this many white people at this amusement park when I was older." And so on.
And they're just tapes of random people out in public in my Anytown, USA home town: these aren't professional movies with casts where you could claim "well the casting directors were biased/racist". They're just moments of time (mostly) captured by my dad.
It's so obvious no one acting in good faith would be incapable of seeing the difference.
True, and I think the more sources of footage where it's obvious the better. But still I like home movies because it's just everyday slice of life footage taken by amateurs: the cameraphone recordings of their day.
You can't argue "Well the Blacks/Hispanics couldn't afford the concert tickets! And the cameraMEN wouldn't film them if they could" when it's just footage taken at your local city park by some rando with a camcorder.
Every time this topic comes up I say the same thing, but it bears repeating.
The final redpill on this topic that brought me across the diving line was simply watching home movies from when I was a child and noticing the demographics of the people in the town my parents still live in and how different they are now versus then.
Just casual things like "oh nearly everyone in my class was white; that probably wouldn't be the case anymore." "I don't remember this many white people at this amusement park when I was older." And so on.
And they're just tapes of random people out in public in my Anytown, USA home town: these aren't professional movies with casts where you could claim "well the casting directors were biased/racist". They're just moments of time (mostly) captured by my dad.
It's so obvious no one acting in good faith would be incapable of seeing the difference.
Music concert crowd footage from the 70s and 80s makes it clear as day.
/so much damage done in just 40 years.
True, and I think the more sources of footage where it's obvious the better. But still I like home movies because it's just everyday slice of life footage taken by amateurs: the cameraphone recordings of their day.
You can't argue "Well the Blacks/Hispanics couldn't afford the concert tickets! And the cameraMEN wouldn't film them if they could" when it's just footage taken at your local city park by some rando with a camcorder.