A Quote by Rostam Batmanglij

I want to live in a world that is less white supremacist, straight supremacist, male supremacist. — © Rostam Batmanglij
I want to live in a world that is less white supremacist, straight supremacist, male supremacist.
White supremacist? Let's see: if you have a guy who was married for 13 years to an Asian woman and who has two lovely Asian daughters, wouldn't that disqualify him from membership in the white supremacist club?
White nationalism is in fact white supremacy. It's understandable that white supremacists would want to be called nationalists, but that doesn't make them any less supremacist.
I'm certainly not a white supremacist.
I wouldn't argue that Mitt Romney is a white supremacist.
The U.S. was founded as a white supremacist nation; that's just what it is.
Racism is not just slavery and Jim Crow. It is the daily violence that is enacted on our communities each and every day we live in this White supremacist society.
Talking of white supremacist violent types, I was in America, recently.
The American imagination has never been able to fully recover from its white-supremacist beginnings.
There was such hostility to the idea of a banjo being a black instrument. It was co-opted by this white supremacist notion that old-time music was the inheritance of white America.
For a woman to be a lesbian in a male-supremacist, capitalist, misogynist, racist, homophobic, imperialist culture, such as that of North America, is an act of resistance.
The goal of my work is to make visible the inevitable racist assumptions held, and patterns displayed, by white people conditioned from living in a white supremacist culture.
If your response to the first black president is to say they weren't born in this country... you might be a white supremacist.
You are not going to destroy this imperialist white supremacist capitalist patriarchy by creating your own version of it.
It's hard to imagine that there are people in the country that have types of hateful, inexcusable, racist, white supremacist views.
I do know that a law professor there [in Columbia University] published an article calling me a white supremacist.
I think there are no good people at a white supremacist rally, and apparently that's just a real controversial take.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!