A Quote by Ann Coulter

The Klan sees the world in terms of race and ethnicity. So do Liberals — © Ann Coulter
The Klan sees the world in terms of race and ethnicity. So do Liberals
In spite of the huge diversity in Malaysia in terms of religion, culture, race, ethnicity and so forth, we've really gone very far in developing this country.
Conservatives divide the world in terms of good and evil while liberals do it in terms of the rich and poor.
I believe all Southern liberals come from the same starting point--race. Once you figure out they are lying to you about race, you start to question everything.
Cultural inequality is not grounded in race or ethnicity.
I'm conscious of my race and ethnicity in the legislature - it's hard not to be.
When he was not talking about race, David Duke was a very pleasant guy to talk to. He was a very nice conversationalist. He seemed like a regular guy on the phone when the subject wasn't on race and on Jews and ethnicity.
All too often we think of community in terms of being with folks like ourselves: the same class, same race, same ethnicity, same social standing and the like..I think we need to be wary: we need to work against the danger of evoking something that we don’t challenge ourselves to actually practice.
Everyone, especially minorities of race and ethnicity, now live under a surveillance panoptican.
We see ourselves in terms of yesterday and today. Our Heavenly Father sees us in terms of forever.
In that sense, Obama is America's first postmodern president. If his predecessors tended to see the world in terms of good and evil, Obama sees the world in terms of victims and victimizers - with the United States often in the role of victimizer. In that view, long favored by the academic left that shaped a young Barack Obama, American foreign policy is one long train of abuses, marked by casual aggression and eager imperiousness.
We all have preconceptions of people based on what we have been told about them and their race and ethnicity.
Television, I'm afraid, has isolated us more than race, class, or ethnicity.
Well, I had nightmares when I was doing the Klan story all the time. I had a recurring nightmare of basically being exposed as a Jew inside the Klan compound.
I knew as much about the Klan, if not more than many of the Klan people that I interviewed. When they see that you know about their organization, their belief system, they respect you.
I decided to go around the country and sit down with Klan leaders and Klan members to find out: How can you hate me when you don't even know me?
Who’s to say that it takes something like a drug to mess with your perception of reality? How did Hitler deceive a nation? How can one group of people look at the world and see one thing, and another see something completely different? One sees a town, another sees a desert. One sees beauty, another sees chaos.” The skin of this world,” he said quietly.
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