It's Okay to Be White



It's Okay to Be White was a poster campaign spearheaded by 4chan's /pol/ and other far-right groups, such as The Daily Stormer, in October 2017. This campaign counters the context of the perceived "reverse racism" and society trying to make a privileged majority "guilty", and it consoles the privileged majority: "it's okay to be white." By use of this loaded language, the campaign attempted to force critics to either accept the posters' message (despite being pushed by far-right white supremacist groups) or to say that "it's not okay to be white" (an obviously absurd and bigoted statement). The campaign has expected the posters to be taken down so "normies" can realize how the media hate white people and therefore try to recruit them to the white supremacist cause.

In October 2018, the phrase became notorious in Australia, where Pauline Hanson proposed a motion that the Senate acknowledge the "deplorable rise of anti-white racism and attacks on Western civilisation" and "that it is okay to be white". The motion was narrowly defeated, although it did receive the support of the deceptively-named Liberal Party.

Origins
On November 3rd 2017, Andrew Anglin of The Daily Stormer, a neo-Nazi and white supremacist webshite, wrote:

Note that Anglin is promoting that it is "okay to be white" while simultaneously endorsing for Jews, of whom many are white — 92% of United States Jews in 2020, for instance. It should be pretty clear that this troll campaign was disingenuous from the start.

Responses
In November 2017, posters saying "It's Okay to Be White" were found at Montgomery Blair High School in suburban Maryland. The school, knowing the real passive-aggressive motive behind the campaign, took down the posters before class began. The school officials cited it as a "part of a concerted national campaign to foment racial and political tension in our school and community". Rightfully so, given the white supremacist background of the campaign. The Daily Stormer and friends predictably characterized this move as a "man-hunt". Posters frequently argued that if the poster said "it's okay to be black", there wouldn't be a controversy — perhaps forgetting their response to "Black Lives Matter". They also expressed outrage that somehow saying "it's okay to be white" is unacceptable, which plays right into the strategy of this campaign.

The Concordia College took down one of the signs, citing that the posters violated the campus display policies. The school president Willaim Craft posted a response, which sounds very similar to responses to the frequent complaints Black Lives Matter receives:

Craft also cites another problem with the poster, that they do not identify the group behind the message, thus not allowing for more honest and open debates. The alt-right created this campaign not for open debate, but to provoke an emotional reaction and backlash against anti-racism.

Redux 2019: "Islam is Right About Women"
A similar poster campaign was conducted in September 2019 with the slogan "Islam is Right About Women". Posters hoisted on lampposts and telephone poles in Winchester, Massachusetts, received coverage in particular.

Taking down Dilbert
In February 2023, cartoonist Scott Adams of newspaper comic Dilbert encountered controversy after telling white people to "get the hell away" from black people, who he called a "hate group", based on a Rasmussen Reports poll finding that 53 percent of black respondents agreed with the phrase "it's okay to be white". Rasmussen has been criticized for push polling with questions "almost certainly calculated to demonstrate public support for the conservative position." Following public criticism of Adams's remarks, hundreds of newspapers stopped carrying Dilbert, including those in major markets such as The Washington Post and The Plain Dealer in Cleveland.