This interview is great and really gives so much additional depth to your fantastic article!
As of me writing this post Shiloh Hendrix has raised north of 700K in her GiveSendGo fundraiser.
The significant sociocultural & political dynamic & vibe shift this represents is imho enormous and I agree that it’s poorly understood, certainly by the overwhelming majority on the establishmentarian / totalitarian left.
I see what @John Carter & others are seeing - what the Shiloh Hendrix fundraiser is poised to do is publicly destroy the talismanic power imbued with utterance of the Word Of Power (the N-word) - and an entire, ideological enforcement regime, literally a thought control system - that goes along with it.
This regime has existed in one form or another for many decades now & think it’s fair to characterize it as a “boomer-era, post-civil rights regime” ideology the idea that whites are uniquely evil, that any and all racial disparaties that disadvantage nonwhites are the result of white racism or “white supremacist power structures,” etc.
What I want to focus on is a very persistent blind spot about this that I’ve detected on X, & it appears to be overwhelmingly amongst those I’d characterize as representating frustrated, surplus “counter-elites” on the Dissident Right.
The blind spot takes the following form: that of urging others on the Dissident Right to “condemn (the) racism” embodied in the Shiloh Hendrix case & with some sense of implied urgency “move on,” (nothing to see here! move along!). They seem uncomfortable.
The absurdity of imbuing some heretofore inconsequential person who by dint of the presence of a camera & the technology of the internet w/ the historical, anthropological & sociological baggage of the evils of “racism” because she blurted out a racial slur aside, I see this discomfort as betraying some kind of deep seated anxiety & fear.
The Chris Rufos, James Lindsays, Chris Wrights of the world, & others, many of whom were recognizably moderate Democrats of yesteryear, IMHO want to return the West to “colorblind equality,” to the aspirational, lofty & romanticized promises of MLK, judging people by the “content of their character & not the color of their skin.”
I’ll try & go more into detail about this later but I think these types fear the loss of this regime & the loss of the power of it’s ideological enforcement technologies nearly as much as any totalitarian leftist. Perhaps this is borne of a fear of the unknown, or the idea that losing this regime (which I agree is dying with the Baby Boomers) means some unspeakable chaos is dead ahead.