
An old video of controversial influencer Andrew Tate is going viral online, showing him making provocative remarks about Indians during a profanity-filled rant on Western masculinity and dating culture.
In the clip, Tate claimed that “Indians are better than white people,” while criticizing what he described as the decline of young men in the West. The video, which has garnered nearly two million views, features him praising Indian men for their resilience and strong family structures, even in difficult economic conditions.
In the widely shared video, Tate argued that Indians are unfairly mocked online. He contrasted this with what he portrayed as the failures of young white men, accusing them of loneliness, consumerism, and dependence on modern financial systems. He mocked Western men for lacking families while praising Indian men for having children despite hardship.
“Everyone makes fun of Indians. Everyone clowns on them. Oh, you're Indian. Yeah, he's Indian, but he has kids. You don't. You're a 28-year-old white male making fun of an Indian. Indian has babies. You ain’t got shit. You got a dog and a 401k and an entitled b**h girlfriend who takes selfies all day. You think you’re f**g beating the Indian?” Tate said in the viral clip, before continuing with a series of explicit and offensive remarks.
The rant later expanded into a broader attack on Western dating culture, with Tate using crude insults to target women, relationships, and modern lifestyles. While he framed his comments as a defense of Indians against online ridicule, critics have pointed out that the remarks were filled with racial stereotypes, vulgar language, and sweeping generalizations.
The resurfaced clip has also renewed scrutiny over Tate’s past comments about India, which often struck a very different tone. In earlier podcasts and social media posts, he had repeatedly mocked India and Indians using stereotypes related to poverty, hygiene, and infrastructure. Those remarks had previously drawn backlash from Indian users and anti-racism advocates, who accused him of promoting casual racism and cultural ignorance.
Many social media users now see Tate’s latest remarks less as genuine praise for Indians and more as another attempt to provoke outrage while attacking Western society and modern masculinity.