The commercial starts with a black guy driving and Alicia Keyes in VO, talking about the smart drive app and who you want to drive like. So it shifts to who you don't want to drive like. The first guy is a white guy doing burnouts and donuts in an empty parking lot. The second person is a white women crying while driving, so she is swerving. The third person is a white man driving while doing business, and driving distracted. The commercial cuts back to the black driver, driving with hands at 10 and 2 and Alicia Keyes ends her VO to end the commercial.
I know the normies will say it's no big deal but come on it's two black people being critical of three white people. I don't think it wasn't intentional and was done on purpose to demoralize white people.
This type of programming works. This is why you're seeing so many White women get with black guys. White girls watch TV Shows and Commercial with these black guys and the White girls actually think this is how black men act. When in reality black men are written like White men and White men are written to be pathetic. The programming works. It is designed not just to demoralize Whites but to destroy them and harm them. You will be erased.
I just hate if you point something like this out to normies, you're the one with a problem.
One trick is you attack it from the other direction:
"Man this commercial is so true. White people are terrible drivers and blacks are awesome at it." If they push back you dont' break character and double down with something like "They wouldn't lie about it in TV commercials, there are laws against that kind of thing."
Basically out normie the normie. Pretend to be such a strong supporter of the narrative, but so obviously wrong, that the normie has to argue against you from the right. If he does do you give him a little ego massage by agreeing with him and saying something like "I think you are right, I never thought about it that way before."
gas gas gas, acelerationsim at work with this... the benifit is it can cause the targeted thing to overextend,