22 Replies to ““Diversity is not a strength, but a political time bomb.””

    1. Interesting. I’m on Telus home wifi.

      The video is just about unwatchable as it’s taken me 5 minutes to get to the 1 minute mark in the video with many slow “loading” circles. I paused for a bit and went to another linked video from another site that was hosted on YouTube. The YouTube video the same resolution played without a hitch and with no in-video delays.

      Is Telus throttling Bitchute?

      1. Sadly no. I’m seeing the issues here as well.

        I suspect it’s a combination of attacks and just the massive influx of people that has escalated in these last few days since Youtube/Twitter/Facebook mass censorship campaign began. Many of the videos now get easily thousands of views where before they were lucky to get a few hundred.

        1. Too bad. The presentation and option to play at 1.25 or 1.5 times the speed is far superior to the options on GooTube. I guess it will take some time before they can upgrade their hardware (and connection/bandwidth?) to adjust.

          1. They’re the victim of their own success, they will improve and ad money will flow, having an alternative to censortube is very needed.

    1. My immediate thought as well. When do the Clintons and the UN start flyovers to “Free” the Muslim invaders?

      I’m not a Buddhist… but I would defend a Buddhist’s Right to retain his culture and religious beliefs against all comers. Why can’t the Muslims and their sycophants? Yes … the WAR on Christianity has extended to a WAR on all non-Muslims. This is what happens when you allow leftists to take power.

  1. I learned from William F. Buckley that the Left ALWAYS destroys language FIRST before they promote their ideology, thus “diversity” went from referring to viewpoints to skin color.

  2. Loved the “Burma Shave” roadside advertising signs for their shaving cream back in the day.

    Oh, wait, never mind……………………….

    1. In a related story … the NFL halftime “entertainment” is a bit too … urban … for my taste. So I think I’ll clean the garage instead

  3. Some useful background here for people unfamiliar with the internal issues in Myanmar but I’m not exactly sure what the main thesis is here or that it is proven it all. He keeps repeating that diversity is bad and that’s why the military coup happened but it is more simply explained by the fact that the latest election would have reduced the power of the generals significantly and eroded the protections the military built into the constitution to protect its power. I’m open to being persuaded that the military staged the coup for altruistic reasons but the timing and evidence suggests it is just as, if not more, likely it was a last ditch effort to maintain its power.
    The secondary point that Myanmar has institutions to weak to support a democracy may or may not have merit but it isn’t explored in any detail and it belies the fact that other British colonies had a very solid infrastructure on which to build democracies.

    1. His thesis was that Burma has been culturally divided for as long as it was viewed as a unity – beginning with British Colonialism.
      If you are au courant on Myanmar you will know that this is a fact.
      Things are not getting better and the migrating and aggressive Rohinga are emboldening and agitating some of the other ethnic minority groups. The Rohinga are from the religion of peace.
      It has no democratic history and peace has always been maintained by force.
      China will have its way.

  4. In a number of third-world countries (including Canada/Turdopia), the military serves as a safety net for when the ‘legitimate’ government proves itself too incompetent and-or corrupt to run the country, and adult supervision is therefore required.

    In this country, the military’s top brass vetoed the liberal plan to actively train the Chinese Communist Army on our soil, and I’d imagine there are librano chinaphiles STILL upset about that…

  5. These fououououkkking Jigger and Gook countries should stop changing their names every fortnight
    It’s hard to keep up

  6. What ever you think about such places, the underlying problem is still the same, the clash of Islam to other religions. The so called “religion of peace” even wars against their own or other factions within the larger Muslim community. That is actually fortunate for the rest of us. If they were a totally cohesive group, they would turn their full attentions toward the rest of the world, eyeballing everywhere as a goal to create their planned world wide caliphate. They’ve been working that angle since the 1920’s, and are making slow but steady progress, and idiots like Biden and Turdo support the “diversity” they bring, because they are too stupid to recognize the overwhelming threat they are to the rest of the planet. The Muslim brotherhood realized they could not win the global caliphate with war. Each time they attempted this, they were eventually defeated. Now the plan is to migrate and out breed, and take over the planet by Muslim volume. With idiots running the western countries, the brotherhood plan is working. Even the seemingly minor or obtuse items such as using religious persecution and anti Islamaphobia acceptance by our stupids, are part of the plan. The fact that most of the planet does not want the Muslims running the show, is of no consequence to the Muslims, for they want the rest of the planet, and if the west continues to slumber and not take note or action to circumvent this slow deliberate revolution, the Muslims will eventually realize their dream of a global caliphate, and then we’ll all be needing to submit to the religion of peace! Winston Churchill and Enoch Powell were right!

  7. Canada’s religious freedom envoy denounces treatment of Rohingya Muslims
    May 6, 2015

    OTTAWA — Canada’s religious freedom ambassador denounced Wednesday the persecution of Muslims in Myanmar and urged Canadian businesses eager to find opportunities in that resource-rich country to respect human rights.

    Ambassador Andrew Bennett said he also delivered his concerns about the well-document persecution of the Rohingya Muslim population directly to Myanmar government officials, including the country’s foreign affairs minister.

    “Now really is the moment for a more inclusive process that brings all religious and ethnic communities together so that they can contribute to the country’s development,” Bennett, who was on a lengthy trip to the south Asian country, told The Canadian Press in an interview from Yangon.

    Bennett’s comments are significant on a couple of levels.

    They serve as a rebuttal to critics of the Harper government, who have contended that the office was geared towards protecting the rights of Christian minorities.

    https://www.ctvnews.ca/world/canada-s-religious-freedom-envoy-denounces-treatment-of-rohingya-muslims-1.2362062?cache=yes%3Fautoplay%3Dtrue

    1. Typical Liberal bafflegab from Bennett. Her lengthy trip was likely a stay at the high end Radisson, in a room with a view. Photo ops with pigeons?

  8. BPS is great. Been following him for years. ‘Alt-right blogger’, lol – a vegetarian, small-l liberal expat who believes in universal health care. Some Nazi he is!

Navigation