Andrew Tate is facing brutal outrage online after sharing a post widely condemned as racist towards Indian women, prompting sharp criticism, memes, and a flood of rebuttals from social media users. In the post, Tate shared a clip of an Indian woman casually shopping and added a caption implying that Indian women are inherently unattractive. Many viewers called the remark xenophobic, unnecessary, and rooted in racial bias. His comment was seen as a deliberate attempt to mock the woman’s appearance and stereotype an entire community, leading to immediate backlash across platforms.
Andrew Tate’s post triggers instant uproar
Tate’s caption, which attempted to mock the appearance of Indian women as a whole, was described by commentators as overtly racist and needlessly demeaning. The fact that he used an unsolicited clip of an unsuspecting woman only intensified criticism, with users accusing him of exploiting a stranger for online clout.Social media platforms quickly filled with condemnation. Thousands of users flooded the thread with rebuttals, memes and fact-checks dismantling his claim. Many questioned why Tate, who often lists himself as a champion of traditional values, chose to punch down at a woman who did nothing but appear in a public space.
Social media reactions
Social media users wasted no time in pushing back against Tate’s remark. Some of the most viral responses included:“Indian women wouldn’t even look at you, baldie. Worry about yourself first.”“Imagine calling someone ugly while filming strangers without consent. Peak insecurity.”“Tate talking about attractiveness is the funniest thing on this app today.”“Indian women are winning Miss Universe and Miss World. What exactly is Tate winning?”“It is always the men rejected by women who turn into self-appointed beauty experts.”“He mocked a random woman and got ratioed into oblivion. Internet justice delivered.”“An average Indian man has more IQ than your whole bloodline combined.”
Debate over racism, misogyny and double standards
The controversy has reignited conversations about how influencers routinely target non-Western women with reductive beauty stereotypes. Critics argued that Tate’s post was not just about appearance but about reinforcing a racial hierarchy embedded in many online beauty discourses.Others noted the hypocrisy of Tate, who frequently speaks about attractiveness, genetics and masculinity, resorting to a sweeping, unsubstantiated generalisation about an entire ethnic group. Commentators said the episode exposed how easily misogyny and racial bias can be masked as humour or simply an opinion.


