Actually, lars, you have to learn to read Willdog very closely. His deep approach to society requires it, and if you don't spend a lot of time thinking about his deep reflections, you can miss it.
So here, for example, he actually wrote that "There are more whites than Asia,." There is, of course, only one Asia, while there are many whites. Like Shakespeare, Willdog leaves us wondering what he means by "whites"-- on superficial glance, maybe he's referring to white people, but on deeper reflection, maybe he's referring to shades of color that could be called white? Where does white end and sepia or cream begin? And how is it that our wordplay allows us to wonder about this for the word "white" and not for the word "Asia?" Is Willdgog making a sly reference to Wittgenstein's language games here?
Notice, too, his use of two pieces of punctuation after Asia. This iconoclastic grammar is present in a lot of Willdog's philosophical musings here: is he alluding through all his posts to Wittgenstein's argument that any private language understood only by one person must be incoherent?
Few of us recognize his genius, but once you do, it's impossible to ignore.