This award-winning Canadian 1981 short film is a chilling exposé of the anti-White hatred festering in academia, long before it became mainstream. At its centre is Louis Feldman, a Jewish sociology professor at the University of Toronto, caught on camera unleashing a venomous tirade against White people, calling them “slime,” “ogres,” “monsters,” and “sub-humans.” But the real revelation? Feldman’s Communist ties. When pressed, he arrogantly tries to shut down the interview, only to accidentally admit his ideological allegiance. The film masterfully exposes how Marxist-Jewish academics like Feldman manipulate racial tensions, orchestrating far-left mobs (Trotskyites, radicals) to attack White identity. Decades later, Feldman’s tactics—dehumanization, academic subversion, racial incitement—have metastasized into full-blown anti-White movements like BLM (a Marxist-Jewish project), whose leaders openly call Whites “genetic defects.” Hate isn’t just history—it’s a playbook. And it confirms who really controls the narrative of “hate” in the West.