Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to what we hope will be a weekly resumption of the immensely popular podcasts that I, Jared Taylor, and Paul Kersey of Stuff Black People Don't Like used to have and were interrupted for reasons beyond our control.
So, this is another episode of Radio Renaissance, and I'm delighted to welcome Paul Kersey back into the studio for what we hope will be again a weekly podcast on the events of the week.
So, delighted to have you here amongst us again.
I can't tell you how excited I am because we're having this conversation with not just each other but with the listening audience a week after what has to be, in your estimation, the most successful, exciting, and uplifting motivational conference you have been a part of since you founded the New Century Foundation.
Would that be presumptuous to say?
No, no. It was really a great conference.
And it was our 15th after going through many, many conferences since 1994.
And this was unquestionably the best attended.
It had the youngest audience and it was just electric with excitement and optimism.
And this was the conference also in which the other side was the most violent and the most in our face.
I think this is not an accident.
They see just how much success we have, how much our movement is moving forward, and they are terrified by this and want to stop it any way possible.
You know, it's fascinating. American Renaissance did a fantastic study that showed all of the violence largely committed by Antifa.
Against Trump supporters.
And I believe Ann Coulter linked it out in one of her columns.
And it's a piece that I recommend all of your listeners go take a look at.
Because as you and I both know, the Antifa are nothing more than the shock troops of the establishment.
You know, we want to pretend that hashtag resist is somehow this...
A great courageous crusade against Trumpism, which has somehow been elevated to what all the elite and all of all the institutions somehow also believe.
When actuality, it is the Antifa who are the militant wing of the establishment.
And what's happening at the AR conference, what's happened at events at Berkeley, which birthed the guy, the base stick man, and all these figures who have stood up to the Antifa, that is where you're seeing that...
Courage is contagious.
And at your event, seeing all or hearing about all the young people who showed up in the face of the vast consequences of being at an event and people no longer having that fear, I think is the right word to say, that there used to be, to even be associated with Our ideas, which again, we know that there is a push to try and silence our ideas throughout social media by deplatforming.
But guess what's happening?
People are finding these ideas anyway.
And it's just so fascinating and so exciting because you fought so hard for so long.
Since the New Century Foundation was founded, and I would say that the conference in Tennessee in 2017 was truly a glimpse of what a renaissance is going to look like.
Oh, I think certainly so.
One person has described me, I saw this on the internet just a year or two ago, he was praising Jared Taylor as a guy who has been standing up for white people before it was even cool.
Well, I like to think that it's becoming cool.
And one thing that is significant about this conference is for the first time we actually had to turn away people.
We had to turn away people because we met the legal fire code limit on the size of the audience.
We had to stop it at 300.
We turned away probably 100 or 150 people.
This is really tragic in a way.
We could have had 450 people there.
more than the people who showed up. Also, one of the things that you weren't able
to do was to utilize new technology and actually broadcast the speeches. I know
that initially you had said that the great people over Heinrich, they were
going to be able to broadcast. They had some problems that kept them from being
able to be there to showcase these incredible speeches in this conference.
But that's something that I think you want to do moving forward.
Red Ice Media was there at the previous conference.
And yes, it would have been delightful to have them there, but they had some kind of scheduling conflict, but we'll certainly hope to have them next year.
So, yes, it was a great conference.
We will look forward to an even better conference next year, and we're looking around for venues that could hold the larger numbers we are sure that we could attract.
Well, Mr. Taylor, I'd love to say one more thing about Red Ice Media.
They've done such a phenomenal job of documenting this burgeoning worldwide awakening that's happening, that for 60, 70, 80 years, every institution in the West has been fighting to keep this from happening.
24-7, 365.
We're going to get to what that actually means in a few minutes when we talk about some of the cultural aspects of what's happening through Hollywood and through streaming services.
So that's a tease. But I just really want to commend the people at Red Ice and all their listeners who make their ability to travel to document and to broadcast out to an even larger audience.
They're one of the organizations that, of course, all these groups that monitor Yes, all of our videos of the conference speeches will go up in a few days.
And so people will see just what it was they missed.
And I apologize to the 150 people who wanted to be there.
This is the best we can do.
So, also, I think it was great to have had a bunch of young people, not only in the audience, but young people who have never had a platform at American Renaissance before.
People like Martin Lichtmetz, the first German speaker we've had, the first representative from Austria or Germany.
It was great to see the kind of Headway they're making.
Julian Langness also, a new young rising star.
He gave the after-dinner speech.
He got a standing ovation.
I thought he gave a great talk.
And he represents the kind of new confidence we have of young people who think that the millennial generation is going to be the next greatest generation because they're going to save our civilization.
And as I said in my talk, Having been doing this for 27 years, believe it or not, for maybe the first 20 years, I felt as though I was just sort of making a record.
As the great Frenchman Guillaume Fay has said, it's important to put these things on the record so that future generations will know that not every one of us was a coward and a fool.
I felt I was just making a record.
Now it's different.
We have a chance. We have a fighting chance.
And it's great to feel this kind of optimism.
You know, in a book, you guys, the New Century Foundation put out, it's called A Race Against Time, Racial Heresies for the 21st Century.
It collects a number of the speeches that have been given at the AR conference, as you just mentioned, over the past 20, 25 years.
And one that's always stuck with me was by Sam Dixon, a certain trumpet at the 1996 conference in Louisville.
And he ends it by saying, I'd like to read this, quote, We will not equivocate.
We will not excuse. We will not retreat a single inch.
And we will be heard.
End quote. The importance of that ending to Sam's fantastic address, as he always has, he ends his conferences, each one you've ever held, is that you have persisted, Mr.
Taylor. And persistence is, I would believe, 90% of the battle.
Because eventually, there is going to be a silver lining to persisting through the darkness.
Pardon these bad metaphors, but...
Everyone out there listening, if you've ever felt discouraged, if you've ever felt that you're hitting your head against a wall, think about what Mr.
Taylor just said and trying to create a historical framework for future generations to see that some people tried to stand against the madness.
Well, guess what? People are beginning to stand in larger and larger numbers.
talking about Laura Southern, people who are out there trying to do these Defend Europe
events when it comes to the boats to try and stop the NGOs that are bringing over these
– they're African refugees at this point.
They're not African refugees, Mr. Taylor.
They're colonizers.
Yes.
We saw a report from Europe that only 1% of the people who are coming to Italy are actually
Syrian refugees.
So guys, everyone out there listening, guys and gals, you're not alone.
And I think that that's the takeaway from the 2017 American Renaissance Conference.
Well, all meetings of this kind, I think, are going to be increasing dramatically in numbers, whether they are public, whether they are private.
And we have a profound advantage, Mr.
Kersey, and that is that we are right.
We not only understand race, we understand human nature, we see history in a way that is correct, and what we are doing is absolutely morally unimpeachable, and I believe that those aspects of our struggle will guarantee eventual victory.
You were on CNN recently, and you brought up an important point about, well, If you live in this liberal mindset, then obviously everything can be explained away.
If all things are equal, if equality exists, if egalitarianism is true, then that means that the reasons that blacks and Hispanics continue to fail to live up to the standards that whites have set governing every institution, whether it's academics, whether it's credit scores, whether it's Home ownership, anything that we can measure, then that means that white supremacy is the only logical answer.
A white supremacist society, dictated down from the very top, is the only logical answer to explain in an egalitarian society why any inequality would still exist.
And as you stated to CNN, to the lady who interviewed you, that's not the case.
We know quite clearly that our society, going back to Shelley v.
Kramer in 1948, going back to the Civil Rights Act in 1964, going back to all the things that have happened to create state-enforced equality or even state-enforced discrimination against whites.
We know that to be the opposite case.
And as you said, we are on the right side.
We're not advocating anything else except for the promotion of our interests.
As, hey, our president said, everyone has a right to self-determination.
Right, Mr. Taylor? Even white people.
Even white people. Which is, of course, the most dangerous idea on the planet right now.
That's right. But it's an idea that is breaking through in a remarkable way, in an unprecedented way.
And I think this is a good point to move to.
One of the most remarkable things that I think has showed up in presidential politics lately And that is Donald Trump's endorsement of the Senate bill that is being proposed by David Perdue of Georgia and Tom Cotton.
It's known as the RAISE Act, which would completely revamp our immigration system.
And it's long, long overdue.
Just a couple of things that it would do.
It would cut legal immigration from 1 million to 500,000.
I think that's a good first step.
And the lottery system, and this chain migration of extended family members, even elderly family members who just go on Social Security the moment they set foot in the United States, prioritize high-skill, college-educated, English-speaking people just the way they do in Australia and Canada.
I mean, these are obvious steps for a nation to take if it considers immigration as something that is not some sort of gift To the failed, wretched refuse of the entire world, but as something that is in the benefit of the United States.
I mean, all I can think of is the crops right into the field, Mr.
Taylor, based on our new immigration policy that we're not going to prioritize cheap labor and an endless supply of cheap labor to provide agriculture with basically slaves to ensure that instead of creating automation and, you know, just as the mechanical sharecropper.
Made black labor obsolete in the early 20th century, which of course created the great migration of blacks to the northern cities.
We're at a place, and I know you know this, where automation is going to make a lot of the jobs that people in this country are already competing with immigrants, both illegal and legal.
Going to make a lot of those jobs obsolete.
That's right. And I am sure that in the wake of the furious media reaction to this entirely and utterly sensible rejigging of American immigration policy, they're going to find some expert who's going to explain patiently and painstakingly that people who are illiterate and people who speak no English are much better for America than English speakers with PhDs.
I'm sure we're going to find experts who can explain that to us.
Not only that, Mr. Taylor, but illiterate, Illiterate individuals in Africa and other nations, they're more American than you or I. Oh yes, oh yes.
Anyone who manages to break the law and come into the United States is expressing the American spirit far more authentically than a direct descendant of Thomas Jefferson or George Washington.
I think this is a wonderful first step, but we must bear in mind that if we do have a point system of the kind that is implemented by Australia and Canada, one that is completely racially blind, we could end up with an Asian overclass.
This is by no means the solution to the American racial problem.
We're seeing that in Canada and Australia already.
Exactly. I'm not even sure what they were doing for a couple months with the healthcare situation when, you know, let it collapse, let it fall.
The point is this is immensely popular because it gets people who have gone to all those events and who chanted build the wall, build the wall, build the wall.
This is one of the reasons why Donald Trump is president.
To follow through like this and then to unleash some of his most powerful allies, like Stephen
Miller, to go out there and to address the media and to calmly, coolly, and in an erudite
manner shout down the cosmopolitans within the White House press corps.
Yes, it was remarkable. During that press conference, Miller himself said that public support is immense on this.
He's absolutely right.
Immigration is a deeply personal issue for Americans, as he said.
And then, of course, you have Glenn Thrush, the New York Times, who claims that all of these people, all of these immigrants who don't speak English, who don't understand the American system, they're so wonderful in America, they're good for the economy.
He cited George Borjas of Harvard.
That was great. He even cited Steve Camerata of the Center for Immigration Studies.
I think Steve Camrata is actually a national treasure.
That guy looks into the data and it's on the basis of that kind of study that Steve Miller pointed out that it would be great if we have an immigration system in which 50% of the immigrants don't go on some kind of mean testage program.
I mean, this is so obvious.
So obviously an interest of Americans that it is, I think this will smoke out the people who must hate America if they really think that the old system was good for us and the new system that's being proposed is bad.
This will bring them out from cover.
they will have to show their true colors.
As James Kirkpatrick said at VDARE, in a very important article,
journalists are there to police the narrative.
And we saw that with Jim Acosta when he challenged Stephen Miller,
and he basically said, this is un-American, haven't you ever read the founding document
that's on the Statue of Liberty?
The Emma Lazarus poem, which was put up in 1903, which coincidentally, 21 years later,
the Immigration Act of 1924, which was largely motivated by Madison Grant
and Luther Stoddard, that was passed, which basically made it impossible for non-Caucasians
to even immigrate to the United States.
So I don't understand, did the...
Did the New Colossus—is that the poem?
Is it called the New Colossus?
I think it's the New Colossus, yes.
Did that poem's power and potency go into a moratorium during that 1924 Immigration Act that lasted until 1965?
Well, it was great that Steve Miller—I mean, Steve Miller, I think, could not have done better.
I mean, that is one stand-up white man, if you ask me.
And people all complain about how, you know, certain orientations, people who are Jewish really can't speak for us.
I think this Jewish guy is doing more for the white man than just about anybody I can think of.
Let's go back to a conversation you and I had last September.
People were still worried Trump wasn't gonna win.
If you go back and listen, I said all along Trump was going to win.
After his speech in Arizona on August 31st, 2016, you can go look at sbpdl.com right now.
I wrote, President-elect Trump's first action must be to remove the poem by Emma Lazarus on the Statue of Liberty.
That is the most symbolic action to show people that this idea of Steve Saylor's Zero Amendment, that...
This poem supersedes all of their liberties and rights because every biped living in another country's right to be an American.
They're an American yearning to be free.
That's just not the case.
Steve Miller is a hero, as you asserted, regardless of what you stated.
it. I think that that is a slap in the face of someone who has done more to advance our
interests through Jeff Sessions when he worked for Jeff Sessions and who is seen as a number
of profiles on Mr. Miller. He's said this is all about what happened to California.
That's his motivation. He saw his state, his community at a micro level be erased. And
now as it now in a position where he's gone from being an aide to a senator, probably
the most important senator of the past 50 years, Jeff Sessions, he's now in a position
in the Trump administration to have a macro impact on immigration.
Unbelievable. No, I think what he's doing is great.
When people bring up this Emma Lazarus sonnet, I always ask them, do you really want the wretched refuse of their teeming shores?
Wretched refuse? No.
Sorry. I mean, it's all these people that the New York Times and the Washington Post are going to say, oh, these people need kidney transplants.
The only way they can get them is if we let them into the United States.
Sorry. There are millions of people out there in these failed countries that need kidney transplants.
Billions. Billions. There are, on the other hand, some of the United States who need them.
Americans first, for heaven's sake.
The wretched refugees, no thank you.
We don't want them. Americans don't want them.
Who needs them? Have you been to Ellis Island?
I have. There's a museum there that documents how the wretched refugees were quarantined.
When they arrived. And, you know, there's a famous poem, of course, a short story by H.P. Lovecraft called The Horror at Red Hook, which talks about how people would evade the authorities at Ellis Island and they'd sneak in through illegal immigration, basically. That's what the poem, The Horror at Red Hook, the story by H.P. Lovecraft, The Horror at Red Hook, is all about.
And he basically is talking in that story about how it was great that the state...
At the time, which was actually actively promoting the interest of Americans, would quarantine people to find out if they had any diseases, if they were unfit to be granted entry into the United States.
And of course, when you go see this museum, you're supposed to feel sorry that we would ever have enacted such sensible medical procedures and practices or procedures to Keep these communicable diseases out of the United States that would have negatively impacted Americans.
Supposedly, you're supposed to walk away from it feeling guilt and feeling this deep sense of...
It was so unfair.
Yeah. Animosity toward the white people who came before you, who dared put their posterity's interest ahead of...
The swamping of America. And it's not very well known, or certainly not well publicized, but enormous numbers were turned back.
If they were found to be defective in some way, if they were found...
Some of them had communist backgrounds, or some of them had political backgrounds, for political views unacceptable.
They had diseases that weren't acceptable.
No, we sent them back.
We had a very, very sensible position in those days.
In any case, another event that, well, there have been, as you suggested in your little teaser comment, there have been a number of media events or movie, television episodes.
Every time we see this attempt to rewrite American history, to make white people feel guilty about what's going on.
But tell us about some of the things that you've been observing.
Well, there's one that I do want to bring up because it made a lot of people upset.
It's not listed here, but just a quick thing.
There's a movie coming out today.
It's based on a popular series by Stephen King called The Dark Tower.
Now, in this, it's a huge budget film with Idaris Elba as the gunslinger, Roland.
In the book, his whiteness is a central plot point.
They've, of course, cast a black guy.
He actually, in the book, it's basically based off of Clint Eastwood, the Stephen King character, the gunslinger.
It's quite clear that he's a white guy with blonde hair and steel blue eyes.
That sounds like a Nazi to me.
And he actually faces racism from blacks within the character.
It's an incredible plot point.
I've had a lot of people tell me this, so I wrote something about it.
This movie is going to bomb.
It's going to thankfully, I believe, derail the idea that Idris Elba is going to be the next James Bond.
There's been a big push to have a black James Bond, and he was going to be the one they wanted to push.
But the fact is, if he can't helm a $100-plus million franchise called The Dark Tower, which has a big built-in audience, Hard to give the mantle of Sean Connery and Roger Moore's, you know, eponymous James Bond to him.
So I'm excited about that.
I'm glad the Dark Tower, there's been a big backlash by Stephen King fans to the casting.
And Stephen King said, hey, I don't care.
You know, tone deaf to his audience.
But the one that I think we need to talk about, you know, Detroit comes out today.
Catherine Bigelow, she of course did Zero Dark Thirty.
She did The Hurt Locker. She's a pretty big, big name director.
And it's a glorification of the 1967 uprising.
You know... Blacks in Detroit call it an uprising.
If you actually look at what they're talking about in Detroit, they all look at it.
Kwame Kilpatrick, the disgraced former Detroit black mayor who's now in jail for more than a score of years, they used to always brag about this uprising because Detroit...
Mr. Taylor, it's 2017 right now and Detroit is roughly 7% white.
In 1917, Detroit was, I'm not making this up, 98% white.
In 1950, you're still talking about a city that's about 84% white.
By 1973, six years after the uprising, as blacks call it, Coleman Young was able to be elected and they were then able to implement a complete black power style government, city government, that was able to benefit only blacks.
And the white population just plummeted.
They left. We don't need to get into that because Detroit is a true example of Black Power being the ultimate EMP once instituted onto a city.
I mean, anyways, my point is this.
Catherine Bigelow and liberal reviewers, they made this movie, and reviewers are just so excited about this film.
Well, it's an opportunity to show just the utterly depraved anti-white bigotry of white men.
That is just the emotion that art and theatre are supposed to epitomize today.
And I'm sure as a white woman, She realized that she was going to be criticized for doing a movie about black characters.
And so, of course, I'm sure that all the blacks are heroic.
All the whites are just cruel and horrible.
This is the message.
And I would be curious to know how many anti-white crimes of violence will stem directly from this movie.
Remember Mississippi Burning.
When that first came out, this is another one about wicked, wicked white people mistreating noble black people.
There were a number of attacks on whites of audiences streaming out of the movie.
They'd find a white guy. This is revenge!
There were documented cases of this.
I suspect that we'll be having some of these, whether they're documented or not.
What's fascinating, after Hidden Figures came out, we have not seen any documented cases, Mr.
Taylor, of black women suddenly enrolling in advanced mathematical courses, trying to get a degree in astrophysics.
In fact, our space program still has to hitch a ride with the Russians to get to space.
No, it's the exact opposite of the impact.
But to close out our Detroit conversation, I've read some reviews that state that the first 30 minutes of the film are actually quite...
It's devastating in terms of the narrative of it being white racism that was the justification for the riot.
Obviously, everyone listening to this knows that Detroit at the time still had a white mayor and the police force had a subdivision in the police force called Stop the Robberies, Enjoy Safe Streets, called Stress.
They basically were trying to target these speakeasies, these blind pigs, and they would raid them.
That was an unlicensed bar that blacks would have after hours where they'd go and drink and, you know.
Have fun. And, you know, Detroit's crime rate was rising, and rightfully so, the city government was trying to keep a tax base within the city so that what happened to Detroit subsequently when whites left didn't happen.
So you actually have, you know, a white middle class and you actually have businesses.
And this stress unit, which is, it's an awesome name if you think about it, that the police were actually dedicated to protecting the interests of white business owners and white citizens.
It was just also, you know, also the black middle class.
Let's just be honest. If you have equity in a home and you're a black homeowner in the middle class, do you want to see it fall 50, 60, 70%?
The equity in your home, the value, depreciate that much once the transformation of your city from majority white to a black-ruled city?
I don't think so.
Well, I would be curious to know.
I haven't seen the movie. I haven't read detailed reviews of it.
But do they go into the fact that there were snipers who were shooting firemen?
I think two firemen actually died in the riots.
Do they talk about the fact that it was impossible to put out the fires that blacks are setting all over the city because of this?
People were throwing garbage cans off of roofs at them.
Does Catherine Bigelow, if that's her name, does she actually go into this stuff?
I rather doubt it. You hear...
Gunshots going off throughout the whole movie.
So if you don't know what that would represent, you don't realize that all these random gunshots being fired off are what you just said, the sniping that made things really dangerous.
But speaking of dangerous, this past week, Mr.
Taylor, I believe has been eye-opening in terms of the power of Twitter to attack an announcement.
And then to potentially get it derailed.
And I am, of course, talking about the immensely popular Game of Thrones.
The makers, some of the head writers, they pitched HBO a series.
And then HBO announced that they're going to make a movie.
I'm sorry. They're going to make a TV show, just like Game of Thrones, that's going to document a world, kind of like a man in Hightower on Amazon, where the Nazis and Japanese won World War II. But in this show that they want to make called Confederate.
It's a world where the Confederacy won the war between the states.
And there's been a huge backlash, Mr.
Taylor, against the two creators who pitched the show.
Their last names are Weiss and Benioff.
And they are being just taken over the coals for even daring to...
To pitch this. And the fact that HBO not only accepted the pitch, but they have greenlit production and they're in a pre-production phase, getting ready to ramp up.
And this is a multi, multi-million dollar endeavor that has created, as you note, social justice warriors on Twitter saying, no Confederate.
And of course, this would be an opportunity to describe the brutality and the viciousness of whites in an alternative future.
The one about Detroit, that's highlighting the brutality and viciousness of whites in the past.
So now this is another opportunity to highlight white viciousness and brutality.
But of course, the very idea of something about the Confederates having won.
I think the Washington Post just published a piece by a black woman That really says it all.
The title of it is, We Don't Need a TV Show About the Confederacy Winning.
In many ways, it did.
For heaven's sake, she thinks the Confederacy won anyway.
This is just astonishing, but this criticism, the idea of white people who are going to come up with a movie to bash whites, of course, but the mere fact, I suspect that here and there, they can't help but have depictions of the stars and bars and the Confederate battle flag.
Oh, no, no, no, no.
This is just impossible.
Even if the message is, once again, to tell black people, all your problems are the fault of these vicious white people.
Well, we've seen in a city like Jackson, Mississippi, the capital of Mississippi, which is now nearing 90% black.
Their current black mayor, Chokwe Lombabe Jr., his dad was part of the New Africa movement who wanted to carve out an African nation within the South.
During his campaign, he actually told the Gannett-owned newspaper in Jackson that, you know, how can we not have a movie theater in Jackson?
And if you think about what that comment represents, it basically means that...
A city that is almost nine-tenths black lacks the social capital and cohesion to produce a business climate conducive for a movie chain to move into and make money because there's no purchasing power.
It's not viable to even have a movie theater be opened in the capital city of Mississippi, which is almost 90% black.
Saying that the Confederates won I don't think anyone who joined the Army of Northern Virginia or who took up arms to try and contest Lincoln's invasion of the South would ever have said, watching the capital of Jackson, watching the capital of Mississippi become a 90% black city.
Of course, the author of this piece no doubt says that the Confederate ideas of white supremacy have survived the Confederacy, that they are imbued into the United States, North, South, East, and West.
So we live in a world that might as well be the world in which the Confederacy won.
Just this astonishing delusion that so many blacks have about the power of white viciousness and white racism.
It's extraordinary. Another interesting aspect of this Confederacy program is that the HBO people who announced it, they are backpedaling very rapidly, and they issued a press release saying the idea that we would be able to announce an idea that is so sensitive and requires such care in a press release was misguided on our part.
Here they said we're going to create this wonderful show.
Uh-oh, our press release was badly worded.
So that explains the problem.
Which is a wonderful segue into what Amazon, these streaming services, they've got a lot of capital right now and they're all trying, Netflix, Amazon, HBO, they're all trying to create series to get new subscribers.
So what Amazon has decided to do, coincidentally, is to create a series countering the Confederate HBO series.
You know, a series that has been announced.
This is actually going to be made.
It's going to be called Black America on Amazon.
USA Today writes, free slaves from their own country, New Colonia, out of the states of Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana were given as reparations for the country's original sin, these states, for an all-black nation.
The premise of the show is that this black nation within the states of Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana, they've been at peace with the United States for 20 years, following 150 years of continuous fighting.
But their newfound accord is endangered by an economic role reversal.
This African colony within the former Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana has emerged as a global power player, a titan, as
opposed to the United States which has fallen into economic, spiritual, and cultural decline.
This whole premise is so hilarious to me.
I wonder if even the screenwriters, even the scriptwriters and the promo writers, can they possibly believe their own baloney about this?
That somehow the freed African slaves in their three states have created this fantastic world, no doubt, of nuclear power, maglev, super-fast trains, this wonderful, powerful world, while the North, full of white people, is just falling into decline.
And we're no doubt depending on charity from our black neighbors.
They're keeping us alive.
They're keeping us literate.
Can they possibly believe their own baloney?
Yes. You have to go back to the fact that I did just bring up the fact that in the early 20th century, the mechanical sharecropper made black labor virtually obsolete in the South, which necessitated the black migration to the economically booming cities of Chicago, of Detroit, of Cleveland, of Newark, of Camden, of Baltimore, of New York City.
If you look at those cities that were helping the United States ascend to be the top economic power in the nation, they were almost all, at the turn of the century, up until 1920, 1930, 95% white or greater.
And the black population that was moving in was bringing vice crime, A depreciation of property values, which was the reason why you saw so many of these northern cities implement restrictive covenants, to try and protect the property values that had been established by whites.
Cleveland is one of the most fascinating cities because that was where...
That was where Rockefeller had a big presence.
And the first suburb of Cleveland was East Cleveland, which was this beautiful, beautiful city that in 1960 was 98% white.
And the black middle class started trying to move in.
There was a big push.
East Cleveland now, you look at some of these magnificent buildings that the Rockefellers, that all these captains of industry built.
They're in ruins. I seriously recommend everyone listening, go to Google Earth and just do a tour of East Cleveland.
Or you can go to Camden and you can look at some of these magnificent libraries that Andrew Carnegie built in these northern cities where we're told in this series on Amazon, the northern part of the United States where there were no blacks fell into economic decline and stagnation.
Well, in actuality, in Camden, you can take a look at this museum that Andrew Carnegie donated to the city.
And since 2010, it has been closed.
And the roof is caving in.
It is this amazing renaissance.
It is a gorgeous, ornate building.
And it's got a fence around it because the city, A, there's no clientele in the 95% city of Camden that wants to go to a public library.
B, there's no money in this 95% black and Hispanic city, this 5% white city now, to actually produce the taxes that are required to keep public spaces renovated and in quality shape for use by the citizens.
The people who were intended to use that donation by Andrew Carnegie have been replaced.
And once you replace a people, their civilization disappears rapidly.
And in the case of Camden and this gorgeous library, Mr.
Taylor, it's going to cave in on itself.
Yes, and it's this transformation that results in inevitable change every single time.
The liberals seem to be expecting that next time water is going to flow uphill, that somehow it's going to be different, that diversity will turn out to be a strength, but every time they're wrong.
And this leads us to, I think, one of the last points we're going to cover, and that is ironically, The travel advisory that has been issued by the NAACP this week covering the entire state of Missouri.
They say that for blacks, the state of Missouri is a very questionable place, and they suggest that you not visit.
This despite, as you just described, the kinds of transformation that blacks themselves bring, but Missouri is now in the crosshairs.
And they have given two reasons for this advisory.
Now, why Missouri? One might ask oneself.
Really, why Missouri?
Well, one of the reasons is that Missouri has just passed a new law, according to which, if you are fired and you claim that you were fired for racial reasons, if you go to court, in the past, you had to prove only that race was one of the contributing factors to your being fired.
Now, the new law says that if you're going to claim racism, that has to be the motivating factor.
The explicit. The explicit factor, yes.
And also, the new law says that you cannot sue an individual, you have to sue the company.
Now, for this to be a motivating factor for this travel advisory is an odd thing.
You're not even supposed to visit the place.
They're not suggesting don't go and get a job in Missouri.
They're saying don't even visit because of this new law.
And then, as an afterthought, they have suggested it's because of the events at Mizu The University of Missouri in 2015, you remember what happened there.
Well, the whole poop swastika incident where student body president, black, it was a black homosexual by the name of Peyton Head, he claimed that he was called the N-word by this group of whites in a truck No evidence.
Again, everyone believed him.
I don't think anyone's even actually seen the poop swastika that perpetrated this two minutes of hate against Missouri, which of course has inevitably led to a...
I think a 45% decline in enrollment.
They've been closing, shuttering students.
They've closed seven dormitories because so many white people do not want to attend a college that is run by spineless, crawling losers.
Massive decline in donations to the athletic and the academic programs.
I think that attendance at the football games has gone down dramatically, which is a great thing because college football is the opiate of America.
In closing, I think that the main thing to say about the Missouri situation is when you try and do sensible things to protect employers from From these claims of discrimination that are costly, these lawsuits. Another reason why some form of tort reform is necessary, because when these frivolous lawsuits are filed, there should be a consequence if the judge and a jury finds them not culpable for what you've claimed in a court of law.
And in this case, this is a simple measure, because you have to think about how many What necessitated this change?
You have to wonder, going back and seeing, I wonder how backlogged some of these courts are for some of these claims if this was passed.
I mean, a restoration of a sane racial policy, the ability to, Mr.
Taylor, to just have the ability to freedom of association.
That's one of the main things that I advocate for because the ability to have freedom of association is the ability to discriminate.
Yes, we discriminate every moment of our lives.
That is the essence of choice.
Without discrimination, there is no choice.
But to return to this idea of the NAACP straight-facedly issuing travel advisories, I think our organization, New Century Foundation, we should issue travel advisories.
There are plenty of parts of the United States.
It would be easy to list them where we would suggest that people avoid.
I think that would be lots of fun.
I wonder if we could get the kind of sympathetic coverage in the media that the NAACP has gotten with this absolutely fantastic, hilarious travel advisory.
And back to what happened at Mizzou, this famous swastika drawn in feces on a bathroom door that, as you point out, it's really shady as to whether or not that ever happened.
It seems to me that turd drawings are not exactly an Aryan undertaking.
I find it a little difficult to imagine that some white guy actually did this.
My suspicion is that this was probably a hoax like so many of them.
But in any case, as you'll recall, the president of the university resigned, and I think the dean resigned, and they promised all sorts of spending on multiculturalism, and it was such a spectacular groveling that the fact that this has been met with fury by alumni, even by the state legislators who were wondering about what kind of university do we support, this is a wonderful sign.
People are sick and tired of this kind of belly crawling of white people.
And the fact that, no, Mizzou's enrollment is declining, this is absolutely wonderful.
But, of course, what happened here means that Missouri is a dangerous place for black people.
Well, actually... Steer clear.
Actually, it is. If you look at the crime stats for St.
Louis where the black-on-black homicide rate is I believe the highest in the
nation competing with when you do per capita the the non-fatal shooting and
the fatal I think I st. Louis is one of those cities that actually breaks down
crime by race So you can actually see the people who are arrested.
And I want to say that 98% of those who've been arrested for homicides over the past few years have been black.
And the city's 49% black, 43% white.
And of course they've got a low clearance rate because snitches get stitches.
But To close out the restoration, the return of Radio Renaissance, tell you what, next week, let's give a travel advisory and let's bring the reason why we're going to announce a travel advisory from the New Century Foundation.
I've got a few cities in mind.
I think we'd have to spend the whole program doing that.
In any case, Mr.
Kersey, I'm delighted to have you back in the studio.
It's been a great conversation and look forward to seeing you next week for our weekly roundup of the week's events.