Borat has a great admiration for Joseph Stalin, who he describes as being both "strong" and "powerful".
Borat strongly dislikes Jews. He visited a bar in Tucson, Arizona where he sang a song about problems in his country, but the subject quickly changed from transportation to Jews, with the lyrics "Throw the Jew down the well/so my country can be free./You must grab him by his horns,/then we have a big party." Rather than reacting in shock or disgust, the crowd at the bar gleefully sang along and clapped with the beat, as per Borat's instructions. While taking a self-defense class, Borat asked the instructor to teach him how to defend against the 'Jew Claw,' and then he made a claw with his hand and had the instructor defend himself against it. (Cohen, who portrays Borat, is Jewish.)
He was shocked to discover that American women have the right to vote; on said discovery, he recited the 'chain of importance' - "God, man, horse, dog, woman, then rat, then small krutzouli" - to a female voter.
Borat has a dislike of those of African descent, whom he refers to as 'chocolate-faces'.