Trevor Noah asks Professor Princeton if he has "right move" in the United States

Former "Daily Show" host Trevor Noah asked Princeton professors if the integration in the United States was the "right move."

"Do you think integration is the right move?" Noah asked his "What is now?" podcast Thursday.

"No, I don't. I don't think it's actually not that controversial," said Ruha Benjamin, a professor of African American Studies in Princeton.

"Apartheid and integration are not the only options. Like in these two options. Integration seems to be more progressive. Of course, we don't want isolation. But when you are integrated, enter a culture of supremacist culture, this It is a culture that feeds on hierarchy, feeds on insecurity and anxiety.”

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Trevor Noah appears to object to integration in Thursday’s podcast. (Kevin Mazur/Getty Images from Record Academy)

Noah raised the topic of integration in a wider educational discussion and talented and talented program. The comedian said that when raising the question, he separated apartheid from other forms of oppression and social illnesses victimized by the Jim Crow era, including the inability to open a bank account.

According to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, apartheid was formally banned in the United States. Before the mission passed, black Americans were unable to eat in the same restaurant or send their children to white Americans in many parts of the country.

Noah elaborates on why he thinks integrating the United States is a wrong course of action because he feels implicit trust in an all-black environment.

“When I started tying multiple things together with anyone, Noah said.

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Trevor Noah is the former host of the Daily Show. (Comedy Center)

Noah cites Finland, a country that Benjamin touts superior to the rest of the world in terms of testing because its society is "homogeneous". Later, he listed some cultural understandings found among people of the same race, and understanding Noah clearly believed that cultural understandings between different races were impossible.

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"Have you been to Finland? It's very homogeneous. I've been to Finland, you know, who is in Finland? The Finnish people. That's it. That's it. Because they are all Finnish, there's an idea, 'No,' We all go in the same direction… Now, even if you yell at me, I know what your yell means, just as Italians know what it means to yell in Italy.”

Noah said that schools in Finland have achieved success due to cultural homogeneity. (Roni Rekoma/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Benjamin claims she is currently under probation from Princeton as he joins an anti-Israel takeover of a teacher observer in Israel, who claims he is “imagined” and national identity is not “given God.” The professor called on people to “transgender” their self-concepts to make their national identity more inclusive.

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“Expanding our imagination is to recognize everything that has been made, but seems to be unchanged, fixed… and ask yourself how else can we connect to make my sense of unity, I want My kids’ stuff, I want my neighbor’s kids, too,” she said.

David Spector is a reporter for Fox News Digital. Stories tips can be sent to David.spector@fox.com.