"I've never been more gaslit in my entire life..." - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More: Difference between revisions
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During the conversation, both Kormantine and Pixie claim that renewable energies are liable to take off some time in the not-to-distant future, thereby eliminating the country's need for fossil fuels and making any arguments for oil pipelines in the nation irrelevant. Destiny counters that such assertions are unfounded, and that anyone who suggests entirely replacing a nation's dependence on fossil fuels with renewable energies is unserious. Kormantine responds "I know you're not fucking talking right now... what do you know about my country?", to which Destiny sarcastically concedes that it may be possible that Canada has access to some secret alternative energies that nobody else in the world has. Kormantine goes on to assert that Canada is doing fine with their current exports, Destiny responds "doing fine isn't enough with everybody dawg". Before he can continue, Kormantine takes issue with Destiny's use of the word "dawg", and informs Destiny "you don't know me like that". | During the conversation, both Kormantine and Pixie claim that renewable energies are liable to take off some time in the not-to-distant future, thereby eliminating the country's need for fossil fuels and making any arguments for oil pipelines in the nation irrelevant. Destiny counters that such assertions are unfounded, and that anyone who suggests entirely replacing a nation's dependence on fossil fuels with renewable energies is unserious. Kormantine responds "I know you're not fucking talking right now... what do you know about my country?", to which Destiny sarcastically concedes that it may be possible that Canada has access to some secret alternative energies that nobody else in the world has. Kormantine goes on to assert that Canada is doing fine with their current exports, Destiny responds "doing fine isn't enough with everybody dawg". Before he can continue, Kormantine takes issue with Destiny's use of the word "dawg", and informs Destiny "you don't know me like that". | ||
{{quote box|quote=[https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=698 '"Being friendly, don't mean you're my fucking friend... That goes for some individuals in this stream... Being polite, and joking about certain shit that you know damn well you couldn't walk into a room full of people of color and joke like that, or say something like that... It's a whole lot of that."'' ]|name=James Cole Cash|float=right}} | {{quote box|quote=[https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=698 '"Being friendly, don't mean you're my fucking friend... That goes for some individuals in this stream... Being polite, and joking about certain shit that you know damn well you couldn't walk into a room full of people of color and joke like that, or say something like that... It's a whole lot of that."'' ]|name=James Cole Cash|float=right}} | ||
While | While this topic proved to be uneventful overall, it did provide a glimpse into the true motives of certain panelists participating in the discussion. Of note: | ||
* [https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=155 2:35] When prompted to provide an intro, Cole states that he runs the "ghetto-news-network" and represents the "gangsta-left". In defining the "gangsta-left", Cole explains that he "doesn't play nice" nor "engage in civility, and will "call [anyone] out for actin' foul". | * [https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=155 2:35] When prompted to provide an intro, Cole states that he runs the "ghetto-news-network" and represents the "gangsta-left". In defining the "gangsta-left", Cole explains that he "doesn't play nice" nor "engage in civility, and will "call [anyone] out for actin' foul". | ||
* [https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=631 10:31] When asked about his feelings about the Canadian Election, Cole explains that the election taught him that Canadians are "very friendly" about their racism. Kormantine agrees with this, caveating that this racism tends to diminish when "black folks" confront white people about this racism. | * [https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=631 10:31] When asked about his feelings about the Canadian Election, Cole explains that the election taught him that Canadians are "very friendly" about their racism. Kormantine agrees with this, caveating that this racism tends to diminish when "black folks" confront white people about this racism. | ||
Revision as of 19:14, 7 December 2024
On October 22, 2019 Destiny participated in a political panel hosted by MindWaves. The panel featured Hasan Piker, TheSerfsTV(AKA Lance), Pxie, Ahrelevant, Bastiat, Kormantine and Cole James Cash.[1][2]
Four topics were discussed during the panel, among these topics included a recent Canadian Election, usage of the n-word in private, the 2020 Democratic primary
, and Mark Zuckerberg's
secret meetings with Conservatives. The second topic, usage of the n-word in private, took up the bulk of the podcast's time and was by far the most tumultuous of the topics discussed. The fallout of this topic produced a meme, a manifesto, and resulted in Destiny and Hasan cutting ties with one another.
First topic: Canadian Elections
Following a brief introduction from each panelist regarding their political affiliations and streams, Mindwaves presented the first topic: What does each panelist believe will be the fallout of a recent Canadian Election?
Bastiat, being of the opinion the election will likely be to the economic detriment of Canadians, argues the election has prevented the establishment of oil pipelines across the country. Kormantine takes issues with this, asserting that these pipelines would likely never have been established anyways as the Canadian government never received the consent of First Nations
to establish such infrastructure, and repeatedly requests for Bastiat to stop arguing in hypotheticals. Bastiat counters that this argument is not hypothetical, points out that the land has already been set aside to lay such pipelines, and informs Kormantine that Trudeau
had recently blocked a pipeline bill for $4.5 billion.
During the conversation, both Kormantine and Pixie claim that renewable energies are liable to take off some time in the not-to-distant future, thereby eliminating the country's need for fossil fuels and making any arguments for oil pipelines in the nation irrelevant. Destiny counters that such assertions are unfounded, and that anyone who suggests entirely replacing a nation's dependence on fossil fuels with renewable energies is unserious. Kormantine responds "I know you're not fucking talking right now... what do you know about my country?", to which Destiny sarcastically concedes that it may be possible that Canada has access to some secret alternative energies that nobody else in the world has. Kormantine goes on to assert that Canada is doing fine with their current exports, Destiny responds "doing fine isn't enough with everybody dawg". Before he can continue, Kormantine takes issue with Destiny's use of the word "dawg", and informs Destiny "you don't know me like that".
While this topic proved to be uneventful overall, it did provide a glimpse into the true motives of certain panelists participating in the discussion. Of note:
- 2:35 When prompted to provide an intro, Cole states that he runs the "ghetto-news-network" and represents the "gangsta-left". In defining the "gangsta-left", Cole explains that he "doesn't play nice" nor "engage in civility, and will "call [anyone] out for actin' foul".
- 10:31 When asked about his feelings about the Canadian Election, Cole explains that the election taught him that Canadians are "very friendly" about their racism. Kormantine agrees with this, caveating that this racism tends to diminish when "black folks" confront white people about this racism.
- 22:39 Cole requesting to move on to the next topic.
Given the apparent desire of some panelists(primarily Cole James Cash) to move on from the subject, the Election discussion only made up the first thirty minutes of the four hour panel.
| Discussion Timestamps | |
|---|---|
| |
Second topic: N-Word in private
| I gotta take a break from the insanity. Holy shit. I've never been gaslight so fucking hard before in a conversation. Like, oh my god, fucking Hasan and that J. Cole dude, and Andre, like all in here, like fucking riling on me so fucking hard. Making it insanely fucking personal, ad-homing the fuck out of me.... Holy shit, I have never been gaslight so fucking hard in a conversation in my fucking life. This is insane. I don't even know if the 1v5 conversations gaslight me this fucking hard. Holy fucking shit. |
| — Destiny three hours into the panel |

Following the uneventful conclusion to the discussion on Canadian Elections, Mindwaves introduces the next topic: Usage of the n-word in private. The topic was allegedly introduced following requests from both Cole and Kormantine prior to the beginning of the podcast, as they were both seemingly eager to confront Destiny on the subject.[3][4] Upon introducing the topic, several members of the panel, Destiny included, can be heard laughing. Of note, Cole James Cash can be heard verbally celebrating the topic's announcement, and Kormantine states "that's the only one I came here for... let's fuckin' go".
Destiny's position
| Main Article: Destiny’s Position on the N-Word |
Destiny argues that if one is not racist, is in a private setting, and is among individuals they know are not racist, making edgy jokes for shock value does not necessarily make them racist. Destiny posits a healthy engagement with such edgy-jokes is possible, much like it is possible for individuals to engage in violent video games without becoming violent themselves.[5]
Throughout the podcast, several of Destiny's fellow panelists question why Destiny would make his stance on the n-word in private known to the public. They argue stating as much would negatively influence individuals who would otherwise be unable to separate the "shock-value" element of such humor from the "racial-element", and thereby causing these individuals to become racist. [6][7] In response, Destiny contends that individuals in his audience who consume the array of progressive-orientated and inclusive topics he typically discusses, would not typically fall in the category of individuals taking such jokes beyond their shock value.[8]
| Destiny's position timestamps | |
|---|---|
| |
Destiny vs. Cole James Cash
Heading into the topic, the initial discussions were quite contentious. To start, Destiny and Cole spend some time holding a fairly unproductive exchange between one another. Following this exchange, Mindwaves would go on to criticize Cole and Kormantine for requesting the topic be placed on the list, and directly chides Cole for being inflammatory. Exchanges like this occurred several times during the first hour of the podcast:
| Timestamp | Exchange |
|---|---|
| 28:49 | Cole requests for Destiny to "Look at the camera when you speak boy". Destiny retorts: "Don't call me boy mother fucker I don't know who the fuck you are". |
| 29:57 | Cole informs Destiny he is displaying "a lot of Yakubian |
| 31:28 | Cole implicitly threatens Destiny, and asks if he's going to TwitchCon. Destiny mocks Cole for this threat, and accuses him of being a wannabe gangster and cringe. |
| 32:22 | Ahrelevant provides his input on the topic, asserting he is fine with Destiny saying the word in private. Cole responds that Ahrelevant needs to "spend time with [his] own people". Mindwaves steps in, and ridicules Cole of accusing Ahrelevant of "not being black enough" to have an opinion. |
| 34:34 | Cole informs Destiny that he is "not built" to be stating such statements publicly as his "heart pumps Kool-Aid". |
| 55:32 | Cole interjects shortly after Destiny accuses Kormantine of engaging in a non-sequitur to inform Destiny that Kormantine did not engage in the logical fallacy. Destiny responds by asking Cole to define what a non-sequitur is, Cole is unable to respond, and Destiny requests for Cole to "shut the fuck up". |
On the assertions made by Cole that Destiny deemed warranted a response, Destiny informs Cole that he makes jokes in private with friends he knows are not racist. Destiny continues, explaining to Cole that he has no right to dictate what is said in those private conversations.
Throughout the duration of Cole's short-lived time on the podcast, he is repeatedly scolded by Mindwaves and several other members of the panel for the brash and brazen method he went about discussing the presented topic with Destiny, especially given that the topic was suggested by Cole himself. Several of these interactions between Cole and Destiny typically involved him implicitly threatening Destiny in some manner, accusing Destiny of never stepping foot outside, requesting for Destiny to take a shower, or stating Destiny lacks empathy. This was routinely met with Destiny accusing Cole of being an "internet tough guy", and mocking Cole for the lack of meaningful contributions to the topic. Furthermore, any earnest response Destiny attempted to give to Cole was routinely interrupted by Cole himself. This continues for some time before Cole exits the podcast in frustration after being repeatedly warned by Mindwaves to engage in the discussion meaningfully. Shortly following Cole's departure, Hasan takes his stead. Later on in the discussion, Kormantine, TheSerfs, and Hasan would go on to claim that Cole left following the abusive behavior exhibited by Destiny and MindWaves during the panel.[citation needed]
| Discussion Timestamps, Destiny vs Cole | |
|---|---|
| |
Destiny vs. Kormantine
| '"Your blackness does not make you answerable here my brother." |
| — Kormantine to Ahrelevant |
In comparison to Cole James Cash, Kormantine took a relatively more subtle approach in his criticisms of Destiny's position. Kormantine's primary argument being that several studies have proven a real social harm arises from individuals sharing/overhearing racial-charged jokes in private. He contends that several white individuals in America tend to not have African Americans in their social groups, and as such, nobody to inform these individuals to not make such racially charged jokes. He continues, pointing out that this occurs even with white people who do have black people in their friends groups. He provides the example of Destiny's ending of his friendship with Trihex over his decision to use the n-word in private, and accuses Destiny of being racist/emotionless.

Although Kormantine initially seemed open to discussing the subject, his argumentative tactics made panelists feel like they were being "talked at" rather than engaged in a genuine conversation.[10] Tactics such as appeals to his own authority, requesting for only black members of the panel be permitted to speak on the subject, interrupting individuals, and an overall questionable engagement with several of the analogies/hypotheticals posited, were oftentimes met with reprehension by Destiny and many of the other panelists.
The most controversial moments of the panel occurs following Kormantine's attempt at having a discussion moment with fellow African American panelist Ahrelevant. Upon discovering that Ahrelevant shares Destiny's perspective on edgy language(including the n-word) in private contexts, Kormantine informs Ahrelevant he is not black enough to stand by Civil Rights
protestors or hold the conversation.[11] Following this statement, Destiny temporarily cut his audio from the podcast and stated the following to his stream:
| I'm actually so insanely fucking triggered on this podcast. I actually can't take it. This dude is like the biggest fucking piece of shit in the whole world. Holy shit. This guy literally fucking throws around the fact that he's black and gives him authority to talk. I try like really hard not to do like the horseshoe theory thing, but this is literally like... what Candace Owens argues against. That like somebody like this would exist. Would draw on black people to be like "oh he supports this argument he's black!" But as soon as the black person disagrees he'll be like "Oh you know... well like now you're bullshit"... When the last black guy was here, and he was acting crazy, this guy is like "Oh he's black he's got a good reason for it". But now that another black guy is here and disagrees with him: "Oh well this black guy? Your blackness doesn't matter, you didn't read what I did". |
| — Destiny on Kormantine's behavior |
| Discussion Timestamps, Destiny vs Kormantine | |
|---|---|
| |
Grievances with the subject
Despite previously celebrating the topic's announcement and proclaiming it's the topic he joined the panel for, Kormantine goes on to questions the presence of the topic. At the onset of the discussion, Kormantine asks Mindwaves: "Did you get what you were looking for out of this?" Mindwaves retorts that Kormantine and Cole came to him with the subject, which Kormantine denies. Kormantine goes on to describe the perceived incentives of certain individuals in the panel, and why a productive conversation could never be had; Ahrelevant being incentivized to agree with Destiny, Destiny being incentivized to maintain his position, and Mindwaves being incentivized to hold this conversation. Despite this, Kormantine remained in the call for the duration of the topic's discussion. Kormantine would go on to lament how the topic, and Destiny's position, would work to alienate persons of color, and dissuade them from being willing to participate on the platform.
During the panel, Kormantine took particular issue with the white individuals on the show attempting to voice an opinion on the subject, and demanded the conversation be kept between the black members of the panel.[12] [13] This was much to the chagrin of fellow African American panelist Ahrelevant, who accused Kormantine of effectively "silencing 75% of the panel".[14]
Appeals to authority
Throughout the panel, Kormantine would frequently attempt to leverage his credentials to speak on certain portions of the topic from a position of authority.[15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22] During these bouts, Kormantine would claim to study the subject for a living, point to several pieces of literature(both physical and digital) which he alleges back his argument, and chide others in the panel who he deemed to be not well read enough on the subject at hand to voice a valid opinion.
Race-play vs Racial Humour

At one point during the discussion, Ahrelevant asks Kormantine if he believes race-play to be something two consenting adults should be allowed to do. Kormantine answers in the affirmative, but argues a distinction is at play between a consenting adult wanting to do something versus feeling the need to do something to feel accepted by the "dominant class"(referring to white people). Ahrelevant then likens this to the topic at hand, explaining while one would have to make a better vetting process for the individuals they choose to make those edgy jokes around, the same process could apply to individuals making edgy-jokes in private. Kormantine then denies the comparison altogether, arguing adults consenting to kinks in a relationship is not equivalent to adults consenting to jokes.
The question is posited to Kormantine once more, and Kormantine argues if a black individual in such a scenario were to consent he sees no issue. However, he caveats that he would question why a white person in such a scenario would have such a kink. Kormantine goes on to maintain that the two subjects are incompatible, and accuses Destiny and Ahrelevant of "smashing together incomparable social issues". Kormantine goes on to explain there is not a historical subordination of an entire class of women such that they are treated as property, and argues that there are women who participate in the patriarchy "furthering that project". He points to the wife of a slave owner receiving her husband's property upon his death as an example. He continues, arguing that rape-play example is irrelevant given that both the man and the women in such a scenario are part of a dominant class. Destiny takes great issue with Kormantine's assertion, and argues that women have seen similar oppression historically such as a lack of voting rights, sex-slave trade, and being married off to families.
Defining "Black"
At one point during the conversation, Kormantine asks for Destiny to define what a "black" is. Destiny responds it is a social construct for the way a person tends to look. In return, Kormantine responds that's not true. Upon hearing his disagreeal Destiny repeatedly requests for Kormantine to explain what part is not true, Kormantine hesitates, and Destiny continues to pressure Kormantine to issue a response for some time. Several times throughout thi exchange, Destiny, poking fun at Kormantine making similar assertions earlier, would state something like: "The fact that came out of your mouth tells me you're lying about this, you're not educated. I've read studies and books and know you're wrong, i'm sorry man". Statements like this were met with much controversy both during and after the podcast, as many people would point to this quote as Destiny deriding Kormantine's educational background(despite Kormantine doing the same to several of his fellow panelists up until this point).
Destiny vs. Hasan
Upon entering the call, Hasan is greeted jovially by Destiny. The two exchange some pleasantries regarding a hot-chip challenge Destiny had participated in, and briefly discuss their diminished communications as of late. Following this, Mindwaves Provides Hasan the opportunity to ask Destiny a few questions.
| Timestamp | Hasan's Question | Destiny's response |
|---|---|---|
| 1:23:04 | Why do you not want people to say the n-word in public? | Destiny believes one should stay away from certain forms of racist humor in public, as it can further or embolden racist thought, hijacked by people with racist thoughts, and be used to further their own racist beliefs. |
| 1:24:54 | Do you feel like discussing this position in public undermines your entire view? | Destiny argues that a miserable difference exists between proclaiming one tells edgy-jokes in private versus actually saying the edgy-jokes in public. Destiny likens this to informing someone they have sex with their partner versus graphically describing the acts. |
| 1:25:35 | Did you feel the need to elaborate on this position out of fear of someone leaking your use of this language in private? | Destiny replies that he has no worries regarding potential leaks, and explains that this is the stance he has had on language for several years. He continues, arguing that the only reason this is now up for debate is because he has a "whole new group of people" attacking him. Destiny concludes by stating the two areas he polices are, how people vote and how people act in public. |
| 1:31:58 | Hasan reiterates his prior question, asking Destiny if he believes announcing his use of edgy-language in private to the public may undermine his position on edgy-language in public. | Destiny explains that there is not likely genuinely racist people out there who stopped using racist language because of his point of view. |
| 1:41:44 | Hasan asks for Destiny to share a joke he would share in private using the n-word. | Destiny provides two different examples:
He explains that all these jokes lose their impact if the racial term isn't used. |
| 1:47:43 | Hasan questions why Destiny doesn't lie about saying the n-word in private if his ultimate goal is harm reduction and to avoid normalizing such language. | Destiny responds his ultimate goal is not harm reduction, but rather to see arguments to their logical conclusion with harm reduction being a byproduct of some of his positions. |
| 2:01:12 | Hasan asks Destiny if there's any use of the n-word bleeding into the public damaging his brand/reputation, and therefore not allowing him to maximize his own personal pleasure. | Destiny agrees that this is possible, but he values his independence above all. |
Following each question,the exchange becomes progressively more heated as Destiny discovers that Hasan has joined the panel to assist Kormantine. To start, Hasan laudes Kormantine for his debate performance up until this point, and accuses Destiny of being unable to empathize with Kormantine's position on the subject due to his whiteness. Destiny counters there is no need for him to empathize in this case, as he doesn't say the n-word around Kormantine, and it is not Kormantine's business what he says in private.
The exchange continues, as Hasan accuses Destiny of emboldening alt-right rhetoric and "bellitting black people" with his position. Hasan continues, and argues that Destiny has used argumentative tactics to enrage his debate opponents during the podcast. Destiny takes great issue with this framing, and informs Hasan that his debate opponents(primarily Kormantine and Cole), have routinely showcased a poor faith engagement with the topic and overall rude behavior to himself and members of the panel.
Throughout the discussion, Hasan's primary contention is that Destiny should never have announced his private use of the n-word to the public, and that his doing so runs the risk of normalizing the word. He further argues it to be counterintuitive to Destiny's larger body of progressive work, and damaging to Destiny's otherwise progressive brand. When presented with these arguments, Destiny would posit he values his independence above all else, and would not capitulate or lie about a position he has held for years.
| Discussion Timestamps, Destiny vs Hasan | |
|---|---|
| |
Accusations of belittling black people
At one point during the conversation, Hasan accuses Destiny of embolding racist individuals through his position, and belittling black people. Hasan would later deny saying as much, then doubled-down on the position when presented with the clip.
| Timestamp | Description |
|---|---|
| 1:32:37 | Hasan asserts that genuinely racist individuals may feel emboldened by Destiny's position and "bellitting of black people". Hasan continues, and argues that Destiny has used argumentative tactics to enrage his debate opponents during the podcast. Destiny takes issue with this, and argues his opponents have been the inflammatory ones. |
| 2:46:23 | Hasan states he has been trying to be nice to Destiny throughout the conversation, Destiny denies this and points to earlier in the call when Hasan accused him of belittling black people in private. Hasan denies this too, and Destiny has to stop himself from calling Hasan dumb before asking Hasan to restate his stance. |
| 2:59:10 | Hasan laments Destiny's chat referring to him as bad faith. Destiny shares the clip of Hasan implying he was belittling black people, and accuses several individuals in the call of gaslighting him. |
| 2:59:56 | Hasan doubles down on his accusation of Destiny belittling black people. An increasingly frustrated Destiny offers to explain the situation to Hasan "real slow":
|
| 3:00:55 | Destiny accuses hasan of joining the call explicitly to accuse him of "saying the n-word over and over again in private". Hasan offers to pull back this accusation if Destiny says otherwise, to which Destiny responds "I love black people". |
Praising Kormantine
Throughout the discussion, Hasan levied no major criticisms towards Kormantine nor engaged in any substantive discussion with the content creator beyond offering praise or backing his arguments.
| Timestamp | Hasan's praise for Kormantine |
|---|---|
| 1:22:17 | After yet another heated exchange between Destiny and Kormantine, Hasan compliments Kormantine on his "incredible [debate] performance". Hasan goes on to and informs Kormantine he has not lost the debate despite losing his cool. |
| 1:33:46 | Hasan informs Destiny that he has no way of empathizing with Kormantine's position on the subject. Destiny counters there is no need for him to empathize in this case, as he doesn't say the n-word around Kormantine, and it is not Kormantine's business what he says in private. |
| 2:14:35 | Kormantine informs Ahrel: "Your blackness does not make you answerable here my brother". Destiny takes great issue with this statement, Hasan attempts to defend Kormantine. |
| 2:26:32 | Seeing Kormantine and Destiny embroiled in a heated exchange, Hasan jokes that Destiny is going to say the n-word several times in private after this conversation. |
| 2:53:21 | Mindwaves apologizes to Kormantine for the call becoming a "shit-show", and allows him to say his farewell. Hasan says his farewell to Kormantine, and the two agree to talk about the discussion offline. |
Hasan's use of Soviet Iconography
During the conversation, Bastiat, Ahrel, and Destiny point to the irony of Hasan lambasting Destiny for his use of edgy language in private while Hasan "fetishizes" Soviet iconography on his stream.
| Timestamp | Description |
|---|---|
| 2:02:18 | Bastiat points to the irony of Hasan deriding Destiny for his private language while he uses Communist Russia symbology in his stream. Destiny agrees with Bastiat's perspective, and states he's now sold on Neoliberalism. |
| 2:35:13 | Ahrel draws a parallel between Hasan’s use of Soviet imagery and his stance that Destiny should avoid publicly stating he uses the n-word in private. Hasan counters that the difference between his and Destiny's perspective, asserting that destigmatizing the hammer and sickle is far more conducive to progressive ideals than normalizing the n-word. Bastiat takes issue and accuses Hasan of wishing to destigmatize mass murder. Ahrel also takes issue, and asks Hasan if he thinks people from Ukraine may take issue with the destigimization of such iconography. Hasan counters: "Do you think black people feel some type of way about the US flag?" |
Sexual acts in private vs Edgy Language in private
At one point during the conversation, Ahrel asks Hasan if he believes it to be morally okay for couples to perform rape-play,race-play or bdsm in private. Hasan answers in the affirmative and states he would even be okay with Destiny referring to his hypothetical black girlfriend as the n-word when they have sex. A visibly frustrated Destiny laughs and thanks Hasan for making his argument to say the n-word in private, and Hasan denies doing so.[27]
TheSerfs
TheSerfs AKA Lance had a relatively passive engagement with the topic throughout most of the panel.
| Timestamps | |
|---|---|
| |
Podcast Exit
While Lance was silent throughout much of the topic, he still agreed with Kormantine and Cole's perspective on the subject. Before he can leave, Destiny asks Lance a question: "Do you think Kormantine made a good faith approach to this conversation?" Lance replies, stating that he feels Destiny acted in bad faith by being condescending and calling Kormantine stupid. Destiny took issue with this, and requests for Lance to "get fucked". [28]
Ahrelevant
Throughout the topic, Ahrelevant was more or less in agreement with the totality of Destiny's position and is fine with the word being used in private. This was much to the chagrin of those opposed to the word's use in private, and resulted in Kormantine questioning Ahrel's "blackness" at one point.
| Timestamps | |
|---|---|
| |
Pxie
Throughout the discussion, Pxie aligned more closely with those critical of Destiny's use of edgy language in private. Like others on the panel, she believed that Destiny's public acknowledgment of using such language in private undermined his stance on the harmful nature of "edgy words." That said, Pxie's neutral approach to engaging with Destiny's position, combined with her overall kinder demeanor, fostered a more constructive exchange of ideas compared to the more confrontational tone adopted by some of the other panelists.
| Timestamps | |
|---|---|
| |
Third Topic: Democratic Primary
Following the n-word in private discussion, Mindwaves introduced the next topic: The 2020 Democratic primary. This discussion was significantly less eventful than the prior topic, and resulted in a relatively more productive discussion concerning the viability of certain candidates. During this segment, Destiny and Hasan briefly debated whether Joe Biden was receiving an unfair proportion of media coverage relative to Bernie Sanders. Hasan being of the opinion that the media was purposely denying Senator Sanders media coverage. Destiny, however, dismissed the idea of any pressure to suppress reporting on Sanders, arguing that such interference would have been reported on by now. Destiny goes on to argue that Senator Sanders already has significant media engagement.
| Timestamps | |
|---|---|
| |
Fourth Topic: Mark Zuckerberg's secret meetings with Conservatives
The panel briefly discusses some meetings held by Mark Zuckerberg and conservative politicians.
| Timestamps | |
|---|---|
| |
References
- ↑ Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More [YouTube video]. YouTube. Retrieved November 27, 2024, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hodq77NShaA
- ↑ MindWavesTV. (2019, November 3). Big Brain Podcast Ep. 11 ft. Destiny, Hasan Piker, The Serfs, ActualJake, Cole James Cash & more [YouTube video]. YouTube. Retrieved November 27, 2024, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHkH9TthrmU
- ↑ Twitter. (2019, October 24). Archive.is. https://archive.is/lVDgU https://wiki.destiny.gg/view/File:ColeTweet2.jpg
- ↑ Twitter. (2019, October 24). Archive.is. https://archive.is/nuvuF https://wiki.destiny.gg/view/File:ColeTweet1.jpg
- ↑ Destiny states his stance on the n-word in private. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=2764
- ↑ Kormantine questions Destiny making his stance known to the public. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=2713
- ↑ Pxie questions Destiny making his stance known to the public. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=1970
- ↑ Destiny explains why his left-leaning audience would be able to have a healthy engagement with racially charged jokes. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=3031
- ↑ https://archive.is/lVDgU
- ↑ Destiny request for Kormantine to stop "talking at" him. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=3261
- ↑ Kormantine tells Ahrel he's not black enough to stand beside Civil Rights protestors. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=8011
- ↑ Kormantine requests for the white individuals on the panel to stop talking and let the African Americans speak on the subject. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=4077
- ↑ Kormantine argues he would be able to have a discussion on this topic with Ahrelevant given that he is a fellow African American. He continues, asserting that white people are unable to be challenged by African Americans without getting frustrated. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=3992
- ↑ Ahrel takes issue with Kormantine effectively silencing 75%(all the white people) of the panel. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=4352
- ↑ Kormantine appeals to his own authority on the topic 1. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=3005
- ↑ Kormantine appeals to his own authority on the topic 2. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=2240
- ↑ Kormantine appeals to his own authority on the topic 3. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=2713
- ↑ Kormantine appeals to his own authority on the topic 3. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=3064
- ↑ Kormantine appeals to his own authority on the topic 4. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=3261
- ↑ Kormantine appeals to his own authority on the topic 5. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=2240
- ↑ Kormantine appeals to his own authority on the topic 6. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=3261
- ↑ Kormantine appeals to his own authority on the topic 7. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=4721
- ↑ https://archive.is/nuvuF
- ↑ https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=5557
- ↑ https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=4937
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hodq77NShaA&t=7338s
- ↑ Sexual acts vs Edgy Language, Hasan (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=9910
- ↑ Lance exits the podcast, Destiny tells him to get fucked. Destiny. (2019, October 27). “I’ve never been more gaslit in my entire life...” - Destiny Debate ft. Hasanabi, TheSerfsTV, & More. YouTube.https://youtu.be/Hodq77NShaA?t=10601