I'm seeing her get a lot of praise, but this Lily Gaddis woman did a pretty poor job in this clip of defending our position.
We aren't saying the n-word because of "free speech" - that is entirely arbitrary. This is not controversy for the sake of controversy, it's a racial double standard which we are refusing to submit to any longer.
Blacks clearly aren't offended by the n-word, because they use it incessantly. They're "offended" by White people using it, because getting everyone to sympathise with their taking "offense" reinforces their victimhood status and legitimates aggression and violence against White people.
Meanwhile, White people aren't allowed to be offended by the countless examples of Black incivility otherwise we get called "racist" - so Blacks are supposedly entitled to our civility and sensitivity, but have absolutely none to offer in return for it (one questions if they're even capable of it at all).
In short, we are breaking the taboo because it is an antiwhite taboo, a taboo which subordinates White sensitivities to Black sensitivities.
By rejecting it, we're asserting ourselves as Whites - we get to determine the moral and cultural standards of our own societies because we built them. If Blacks want to determine the moral and cultural standards of society, they should leave and go back to Africa.
The word itself is etymologically derived from the Latin term for Black, it's not inherently derogatory, they only make it such by taking offense, and offense they take for contrived selfish and vindicative reasons anyway. White people who are sick of playing this stupid game are therefore invited to break the taboo with us.
It's good to see discussions like this going mainstream, but we need to coach our dumbass e-girls better in how to handle themselves on large platforms. We need to hold frame here.
Stephen Miller's pro-White, pro-American law group America First Legal is escalating the fight against the judiciary by directly suing the Supreme Court leader. If AFL wins this would set a precedent to knock down, sue and even punish judges for interference.