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Feb. 8, 2018 - Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor
56:42
Pelosi Grandson Wishes He Were Guatemalan
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another edition of Radio Renaissance.
I'm your host, Jared Taylor, with American Renaissance, and with me is Paul Kersey.
And Paul Kersey, as usual, is very excited about this upcoming new movie called Black Panther.
Which, by strictly an accident of timing, I'm sure, is to be released right in the middle of what used to be called February, but is now known as Black History Month.
And Mr. Kersey has been bombarding me with these over-the-top reviews.
Apparently, we are all to be told, even before the movie comes out, just how just spectacularly wonderful it is.
And GQ, someone named Olive Pametsi, says this about it.
This film is more than an exercise in diversity for Hollywood.
It's a lesson on how to recover and move forward from society's mistakes.
So I guess this is curing our wicked racist past.
She goes on to say, Black Panther isn't just leveling our representation in Hollywood.
It's inspiring the next generation of real-life heroes and that's what makes this film truly magnificent.
Now, before the film's even out, how does she know that it's inspiring anybody?
Well, what's crazy about the way that Black Panther is being positioned, it's going to be a blockbuster.
There's no doubt about this.
Blacks are going to go out and see this.
We know that there's a movement afoot for black celebrities, wealthy blacks, to buy tickets.
I think I read a story where this one black celebrity is going to buy out a theater in Mississippi so she can be surrounded by brown people when she sees it.
And you look at this solidarity and this excitement that blacks are feeling for a movie that is only possible because, as we were joking not too long ago, because of visual effects specialists, primarily white visual special effects, VSX technicians and engineers, putting together this Wakanda.
You're going to hear a lot about that word, by the way.
File that in your memory.
Wakanda is going to become Wakanda forever.
This is something that is a rallying cry and we're going to get into this probably next week, the week after.
I'm telling you guys, listen to this.
This is going to be, you are going to be inundated, saturated and overwhelmed with this notion that Black Panther is not only going to be a front-runner for Best Picture next year, but that it should sweep the Oscars.
This is what movies should be.
I mean, Time Magazine is devoting a cover to this movie.
And the cover says, The Revolutionary Power of Black Panther.
The article is written by a black man by the name of Jamil Smith.
And he writes about the film that Quote, one that reflects the importance of representation in our culture is long overdue.
Black Panther is poised to prove to Hollywood that African American narratives have the power to generate profits from all audiences and, more important, that making movies about black lives is part of showing that they matter.
Unquote.
Now, I know a lot about pop culture.
I watch a lot of movies, Mr. Taylor.
In another life, I probably would have been someone who would have had something to do with Hollywood and be involved in the movie making business in some capacity.
There are countless films made each year that are all about showing not only that black lives matter, but that black lives are superior to all other lives, that the black experience is far more important than any other experience, and more importantly, I don't think you can actually say that there's ever been a white movie made in the past 50 years that was specifically geared to the white audience, that was marketed specifically to white people, and that was all about creating this idea that we need to bolster the self-esteem of Caucasians.
We already know that blacks have a toxic level of self-esteem, and this movie, as Rolling Stones movie reviewer Peter Travers talks about, it is basically showing... let me get this word correct, because you were kind of shocked by the language that he used.
He stated that Quote, not just a correction for years of diversity neglect, it's a big budget blockbuster that digs into the roots of blackness itself.
Of blackness itself.
In Get Out, Jordan Peele satirized white appropriation of black culture.
Here, Ryan Coogler, the director, makes black identity invincible.
Well, I don't understand how you dig into the roots of blackness itself by going to an imaginary country that never existed in Africa.
Are those the roots of black fantasy?
But I gather in your view, now you've paid much more attention to this movie than I have, but are we not to believe that this Wakanda, this wonderful Wakanda full of high-tech gizmos and advanced technology, that this is, we're to believe that this is the way Africa would have been had the white man not come and colonized and destroyed the place.
Isn't that what we're supposed to believe?
That's exactly correct.
The other day they had the premiere of the film on January 31st and believe it or not
two of the black actors in the film one who plays the king he's an actual
African I can't remember his name
He basically said that if it weren't for colonization, you know, this movie is destroying stereotypes.
If it weren't for colonization, we would have this technology.
He said, we built the pyramids, we built this stone monolith or megalith in Zimbabwe, I can't remember what it's even called.
Great Zimbabwe.
Yeah, his name is John Connie.
He plays King T'Chaka in the movie, and he basically said, and TMZ reported this, the Black Panther movie shows Africa's potential, if not for slavery.
Now, another actress... Wait, wait, wait.
Once again, if the white man hadn't come and taken all these black people and turned them into slaves, Wakanda is what we would have in Africa today.
That's really the point that this guy's trying to make?
That's really the point he's trying to make.
This is on video.
You can go to SBPDL.com and you can actually read the article.
Where it says this.
One of the main black actresses in the film, her name is Lupita Nyong'o.
I probably butchered her surname.
But she hopes that black people, when they see Black Panther, will help them envision what Africa would look like if it had never been colonized.
Mr. Taylor, here's what she said.
And this is somebody who has been up for major awards.
She is a highly sought after actress for films, regardless of the subject.
She said this.
She explains that the fictional nation Wakanda is, quote, such an exciting world to be in, like none other we've ever seen.
Going on to say, it's what Africa would look like if it were not colonized.
She hopes that the audience leaves, obviously talking about blacks when she's talking about the audience, leaves thinking about what if, quote, they can be citizens of Wakanda.
Unquote.
Now guys, the reason why I think this movie is so important, I know a lot of people listening to this are probably like, why are you guys talking about Black Panther?
Why are you talking about this movie so much?
When you look at the reviews over at Rotten Tomatoes, it's got a 99% fresh rating by the top rated movie reviewers.
It's being lionized on the cover of Time magazine as this some sort of revolutionary moment.
What we're seeing is And Mr. Taylor has written about this before.
We are seeing toxic levels of black self-esteem along with the projection of their subconscious views of what blacks would really be attaining were it not for the pernicious influence of white people.
They really believe that Wakanda is what they would have created were it not for the insidious white man.
It's true.
Inhibiting their evolution as a people.
Well of course Arabs were taking slaves out of Africa far before white people ever showed up.
But I guess we're to be blamed no matter what.
This idea, of course, that blacks built the pyramids, there was just a recent DNA study that found that ancient Egyptians, as we would all imagine, were very closely related to the ancient peoples of the Middle East.
That's exactly what we would assume.
In fact, there are mummies that are so well preserved you can count their nostril hairs for heaven's sake.
They just do not look like Africans.
And this was a study of preserved Egyptian bodies from about 2000 BC up until about 400 AD.
And they found that current-day Egyptians have a much greater ag mixture of black.
Sassaharan black than the ancient Egyptians.
But the idea that black people built the pyramids, this is just something that they seem to have latched on to, just like Wakanda.
And I guess they will believe this, whatever the evidence is.
Well, if you go back and look at that quote where she said, this is where the black actress says, this is a world they've never seen before, a black advanced civilization.
I know you got in a lot of trouble when you wrote about what happened in New Orleans, when you wrote that amazing line, about what happens when civilization, when Western
civilization or any civilization for that matter falls into the hands of a majority black population to be
the caretakers of, to maintain the infrastructure even if they inherit it as we've seen in
places like Detroit, Camden, Baltimore, and if we even go to the African nation of Liberia where we,
you know, the American Colonization Society where repatriated blacks set up a society for
themselves governed specifically by black people, for black people, and of black people.
Same thing with Haiti.
I mean, we are at such an interesting moment where, going back to Donald Trump's comments about a shithole country, you know, a lot of the marketing now is trying to say, Mr. Taylor, you know, This white president is saying something along the lines of, hey, all of Africa is a shithole, but we've got Wakanda.
Again, this fictional country is standing in as a facsimile for what they truly believe would exist were it not for Caucasians.
The power of fantasy is enormous.
To continue with this Peter Travers review of the movie in Rolling Stone, he says it is significant not just as an example of invincible black identity, as you call it, but also, he says, as a movie itself.
It is an exhilarating triumph on every level, from writing, directing, acting, production design, costumes, music, special effects, you name it.
Apparently it is a brilliant movie in every dimension.
So, you know, maybe this may be the first movie I go to see in a theater in the last 20 years.
But I suppose, be there or be square, huh?
It's going to make a lot of money because, again, you've got 40 million blacks in the country.
They're going to go see it probably multiple times.
And I don't think it's going to do well overseas, especially in China,
where the latest Star Wars, The Last Jedi movie, bombs so significantly because of what they stated,
really unattractive actors and actresses.
Black-centric films don't do well overseas.
And in this case, I think we're going to see it do phenomenal business in America.
Well, Mr. Kerzing, have you said all you wish to say about Wakanda and Black Panther.
I've said all I want to say, but I just want everybody to listen to this to really start to pay attention to the way this is marketed and the way that this is being You know, proliferated on the internet, and the way that blacks respond to it.
This is going to be an interesting sociological experiment.
Well, I respect your courage in making such a clear prediction that this is going to be a cultural phenomenon of that sort.
It already is.
It already is.
I mean, go back to the story we talked about two weeks, three weeks ago.
Black party viewing parties.
That anticipation was in January, but now it's building to a crescendo, and it is going to be Fascinating to watch.
They're going to be revenue figures.
They're going to be box office figures.
We'll see.
We'll see.
Maybe you're right.
Maybe you're right.
Well, I can tell you one person who's probably for sure going to go see it, and that must be Nancy Pelosi.
Nancy Pelosi, the other day she got on the Senate floor and she made this long filibustering speech in defense of the so-called dreamers.
She really wants them to be legalized and she thinks it's a terrible pity that they were not going to be legalized.
But in the midst of this speech about the dreamers, She said this about her grandson on his sixth birthday.
And I find this, even coming from Nancy Pelosi, I'm a little bit surprised by this, but I'll read it verbatim.
She says, he's Irish, English, whatever, whatever, and Italian.
And when he had his sixth birthday, he had a very close friend whose name is Antonio.
He's from Guatemala and he has beautiful tan skin and beautiful brown eyes and the rest.
Well, this was such a proud day for me because when my grandson blew out the candles on his cake, they said, did you make a wish?
And he said, I wish I had brown skin and brown eyes like Antonio.
Then she went on to say, so beautiful, so beautiful.
The beauty is in the mix.
The face of the future for our country is all American.
Good grief!
Nancy Pelosi is proud that her grandchild wishes that he was something other than white.
This to me is really quite incredible, but I think that this is the logical consequence of this notion that we really are to become this hippie happy melting pot in which we all have brown skin, we all have at least one Korean grandparent.
I believe she really must think that this is the ideal future.
Anything too white is automatically not legitimate in the eyes of our cultural elite.
We know this for a fact.
This is something that permeates every aspect of our lives and now it's trickling down into the dreams and the visions our children and grandchildren are going to have for the future.
If this happened, I mean, it might have happened.
To me, it sounds like an anecdote that... Oh, I bet she didn't make this up.
Really?
You think she might have made this up?
To me, I think that this is... I'm a little incredulous as to this story.
It doesn't pass the smell test.
I mean, who in the world... I mean, again, we were talking earlier about a piece in The Baltimore Sun by the editorial page director, just as a quick juxtaposition.
And the piece, she's a white woman and she was talking about how her daughter is one of the only whites at a school and they were talking about black
history and stuff and she came home and told her I wish I were african-american mommy and and you know, she's
under five as well and you think about You think about the the inculcation and the level of of
animus toward white people that exist in education perhaps And that's why this story is believable.
It is believable.
Look, if you go to school and all the heroes are Rosa Parks, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Wakanda, and all the great inventors are black people, you're obviously going to think there's something wrong with you if you're white, and you're going to want to be part of the club, part of the in crowd.
No, I don't think she invented this, and I think she's genuinely happy that her grandchild wishes that he was something other than white.
Now, in the same speech, she went on to say something else I find absolutely incredible.
She was talking about these so-called dreamers.
And she then addressed herself to the parents, the dreamers of course.
These people were brought to the United States illegally when they were children by illegal border crossers themselves.
She says, thank you for bringing these dreamers to America.
We're in your debt for the courage it took For you to take the risk physically, politically, in every way to do so.
Good grief!
Here is a woman who is thanking illegal border crossers.
What possibly can she be thinking here?
On this occasion, I can't help wondering whether she is just trying to drum up more votes from the coming majority, or whether she genuinely thinks That it is a service to America that we should bow down on our knees and kiss the feet of these people who illegally crossed the border and brought in more illegal immigrants.
Does she really believe that?
She does.
I think they actually do believe this now because if you look at the way the Washington Post or whatever news article it was did an analysis of Donald Trump's immigration that said America will stay majority white for five more years if this actually is implemented.
As if that's a bad thing.
As if that is an unforgivable sin that America would be white because all of the master nations that are elite and that the newspaper editors have done everything they can to at first cover up the racial transformation of the country by the 1965 Immigration Act to, oh you're just a bigot if you dare oppose the racial transformation that's happening to you can't do a damn thing to stop it.
Sit back, relax, and you better hope that your grandchildren want to be Guatemalans too or else we're going to put them in a concentration camp and we're going to force them to want to become Guatemalans with brown eyes and brown skin.
I know that sounds, you know, a little outlandish to a lot of people, but guys, we are in such a strange world where every movie reviewer is being forced to say that this Black Panther movie is the greatest thing ever.
It is a Sovietization of America to want to sanctify and create a religion out of anything but whiteness.
And I'm reading this Nancy Pelosi story and knowing that she spent eight hours, this is the longest duration a member of Congress has ever stood up at one time to give a speech.
Is that true?
It's true.
It's on Droid's site right now.
She was up for eight hours.
I know she was up there filibustering away, but I didn't realize she spent eight hours doing it.
And she was advocating not on behalf of American rights, but for the rights of non-citizens, of non-Americans.
I mean, I think back to Robert Heinlein's great book, Starship Troopers.
It's the most formidable piece of fiction I've ever read, because it talks about how rights are irrelevant.
All that matters is duty.
And you realize that to Nancy Pelosi, The only duty she has now is to eradicating the America of my ancestors.
Of your ancestors, Mr. Taylor.
Of your ancestors, listeners.
Because she cares so much about America's brown future.
As if this is inevitable.
As if this is something... It's almost like that great quote, Mr. Taylor.
When Bobby Knight got in trouble for saying, hey, if you're getting raped, you might just as well sit back and enjoy it.
And that's what's happening to white America.
You know, that's it.
No other analogy.
She genuinely seems to say that it's not something that is inevitable and therefore we should accustom ourselves to it.
This idea that her grandchild wants to be Guatemalan.
This is a great and positive thing, in her view.
Anyway, these are the people who are leading our country.
Leading our country, and this country that so many black people would describe as white supremacist.
In fact, you're probably not aware of this, but just later on this afternoon, I'm supposed to debate a black guy, and the question is, is America a white supremacist country?
He's going to argue that it is.
Isn't that interesting?
Well, it was once.
It was once, but it's been dismantled.
It's been dismantled so that we can create Wakanda.
Yeah.
Well, okay, Nancy, you're going to go down in history as a great leader of the defeat of the decline of America, but I would like to contrast Nancy Pelosi With someone by the name of Mette Frederiksen.
Now, she's a Dane, and she is a member of Denmark's largest political party, the Social Democrats.
Now, Social Democrats are usually pretty lefty types, you know.
Well, lately, well, just earlier this week, she said that her party wants to introduce a cap on non-Western asylum speakers.
She's basically talking about non-whites.
Yes.
She says, we want to introduce a cap on those who can come to Denmark.
And she focused particularly on asylum seekers from Africa.
Those are the ones that are bothering her the most.
And this proposed reform would have any asylum seeker who comes, what they call, spontaneously to Denmark, that means they show up in Denmark claiming asylum, they would not be allowed to stay at all.
They would ship them out of Europe entirely and build camps, probably in North Africa, while their case was examined.
She says, for a country of 5.7 million people, we no longer have the means to integrate foreigners Now, she's not talking about Western foreigners.
She's talking about non-white foreigners.
Quite clearly.
Yes, yes.
And then she goes on to say, the population in Denmark has changed rapidly in a short time.
In 1980, 1% of the Danish population was not of Western origin.
Today, it is 8%.
And she says, clearly she's saying, look, all these non-whites are a problem.
I think this is remarkable, and I think it's quite wonderful.
So I think she is an edifying and important contrast to Nancy Pelosi, who is one of our great and admired leaders.
And this Mette Frederiksen, just for your information, ladies and gentlemen, she is a former employment and justice minister.
She's had a cabinet-level post and, and I think this is very important, she holds a degree in African Studies.
This is somebody who knows what she's talking about.
I suspect that in her private thoughts, the idea that some of these countries could be described in not very flattering and vulgar terms is probably not too surprising.
I'm of the mind that a lot of the future leaders and this global Awakening of white identity that's erupting around us.
It is.
Cat's out of the bag, guys.
It's going to happen regardless of what transpires to try and inhibit and impede the growth.
You're going to see a lot of lefties who had dedicated their lives to uplifting everyone, who really believed in humanity, who really believed in the egalitarian myth.
You probably just read about that German asylum worker who said she's leaving Germany because it's no longer a safe place to live.
She's going to Poland.
This is a story that I've seen all over the internet.
This is the type of stuff that it's going to become quite clear that this egalitarian fantasy in Europe has failed.
Well, you know, there was a recent development in the Netherlands.
I forget the fellow's name, but he is a parliamentarian.
And he got up and he said, look, we have to start talking seriously and openly about racial differences in IQ.
Did you see that story?
I did, I did.
He's been roundly criticized, but then there are voices that are up saying, well, hold on, hold on.
What are the facts on this?
What are the facts?
And there are some, there are actually some Dutch researchers who've looked into this, and they're going to be interviewed.
This could be a breakthrough in the Netherlands in terms of talking openly about this very important subject.
Reality has a well-known racial bias, and equality is a true social construct, and Wakanda isn't real, folks.
This is the world we're supposed to believe in, the latter part.
That equality is the reality of nature, and that Wakanda would be real were it not for evil white people exploiting the richness and the vastness of African ingenuity.
Well, in the Netherlands, what we can envisage, and it's not entirely out of the question, would be the equivalent of a congressman making a formal declaration on this point and then maybe even holding hearings. Can you imagine
that? Holding hearings on what's the evidence for or against and what's
the genetic component to this racial difference, these racial differences in IQ.
In any case, my fingers are crossed. We'll see how this goes. It could
very well be completely snuffed up but so far as I can tell this
parliamentarian in Netherlands is sticking to his guns. He's not backing down.
He said look, look, there's some facts here we need to investigate. Well not
just that but the the individual in Denmark that you were mentioning.
It's these ideas that are given legitimacy.
Again, all of our ideas are anathema in the United States, in France, in Germany, and in England.
They can't be stated because we've already had the debate on that.
Case closed.
You're not allowed to articulate this on national television, on cable television.
You're not allowed to have any access to editorial pages.
This debate is over.
It's done with.
But you know what?
In these other countries where they've been homogenous for Since their inception, you pointed out 1%, 8% foreign born.
They see the reality.
It's just like in Australia, where the Australians are finding out that, I don't remember what nation it was, where there's a large, maybe it's Ugandans, I don't know, there's a lot of them who are committing an unbelievable amount of the home invasions.
And Australians are starting to talk about, in this one province or city in Australia, why is it that all these blacks, these Africans, are committing all this crime?
When pattern recognition is allowed to Percolate is allowed to make its way known and be discussed openly as opposed to ridiculed with, hey, that's racist, you can't talk about it.
Social policy can change for the better.
Well, it can.
It can.
And, no, that's what we always try to hope for, that pattern recognition be something that be considered legitimate, not just in certain fields, but in all fields.
And, well, when it comes to pattern recognition, actually, there's a February 1st Wall Street Journal story.
About the events in Mizzou, University of Missouri.
This was something that took place in 2015.
I think a lot of our listeners are familiar with the eruptions that took place on campus having to do with alleged racism and which led eventually to the resignation of both the president and the chancellor of the university.
And some of our listeners may recall that at the center of this controversy was a graduate student by the name of Jonathan Butler.
And he had made a number of claims.
Then he went about racism on campus, so-called, and how the campus was just ignoring the concerns of blacks, and it was just horrible.
And he went on a hunger strike and said he would starve himself until the president resigned.
Well, the Wall Street Journal, to their credit, They looked into his claims.
At one point he said, and they quote one of the claims that he made in a public speech.
Jonathan Butler, black, he says, Being on campus, I've seen the n-word spray-painted on my door.
I've experienced white students who have jumped me during President Obama's election night.
I was jumped by three white students on campus.
And he said this behavior is allowed to be going on on campus.
Let me make that very clear.
This is allowed to be going on.
Well, the Wall Street Journal took the trouble.
To look into all the records of vandalism on campus, any kind of police report anywhere in any jurisdiction about this sort of thing happening, and they found absolutely nothing.
And they said that all acts of vandalism are officially recorded, and for him to claim that the campus is allowing this to happen would have to mean that he'd reported it.
Correct.
Otherwise, if this just happened and he never reported it, how can the campus be blamed for this?
We have to allow, because you guys did the amazing study, the hate crime hoax map, which everybody listen, you need to see this, you need to share with your friends, because this situation at the University of Missouri was a transformative moment in the awakening that is happening.
A lot of people looked at this who had prior, probably been liberal on race, but they looked at the reaction and the way that black unity in the face of so many highly questionable details, as the Wall Street Journal
found out, were all untrue.
A lot of people, this was a turning point for them.
I won't name some of the names, but I know that some big people out there who have influence,
this was a moment that set them on a different trajectory, Mr. Taylor.
Well, the trouble is, the trouble is, and let us hope that the Wall Street Journal will recognize
a certain pattern here, too.
Because the next time something like this comes up, can we count on the Wall Street Journal to be skeptical about it?
At the time, the Wall Street Journal certainly was not.
They jumped on the bandwagon along with everybody else, talking about how all of these horrible racist events were being ignored and swept under the carpet by the university.
The other noteworthy event that was supposed to have proven that the University of Missouri was just this hotbed of Klansmen was when the president of the student body, his name was Page, I believe.
Peyton Head.
I'm sorry, yes, Peyton Head.
Peyton Head.
He claimed that he had been off campus someplace and a bunch of white guys driving by in the back of a pickup truck had called him the N-word.
And this was reported as gospel truth all over the place, too.
My suspicion is that he invented that.
Now, he's president of the student body.
He's a black guy, an openly gay black guy, president of the student body.
And he went on to claim that this was the kind of thing that he faced every day of his life.
And that for people to not stand up against this kind of violence, he used the word violence, was just unforgivable.
That the university was permitting this kind of violence.
Well, he didn't even claim that anybody laid hands on him.
He made a claim that somebody called him the n-word.
And we have no proof of this, no witnesses, just his claim.
But this and these other incidents that apparently were cooked up, we don't know for sure, but for which there is no corroborating evidence, this was all at the heart of a campus-wide hysteria.
White faculty, white students, all of them demonstrating, whooping and hollering in solidarity with this black guy who is going to go on a hunger strike.
And this all went on until the president and chancellor actually resigned and were replaced by two blacks.
Well, the repercussions of this, of course, have been that the University of Missouri saw massive enrollment decline.
They shuttered a number of the dormitories.
They've seen a substantial decline in charitable donations to the school, which, of course, are tax deductible.
Wealthy alumni would be falling over themselves to make these tax-deductible donations.
Which, by the way, you can make a tax-deductible donation to American Renaissance anytime you want.
Just go to amrin.com to make that donation.
But my point is this.
The burden of proof never is on blacks.
Black bodies have a force field where anything they say is the gospel truth.
It's going to be reported, as we see with every hate crime hoax that the hate crime hoax map documents at amrin.com.
We live in a society where all of the past transgressions, real make-believe, mythical of white people to hold back blacks from creating Wakanda, have enabled blacks like Peyton Head and like this Butler chap to make whatever claim, however fantastical about white people, it's going to be taken as truth and it will take years for the actual facts to come out when no one pays attention.
But the ramifications, the repercussions, Harm everyone.
Missouri is a different place now.
The University of Missouri is a different school because of this insanity that was allowed to take root.
See, I think your point is a very good one.
All of this happened in 2015.
Why is the Wall Street Journal finally looking into this in 2018?
Three years later, we're finally getting to the bottom of this.
I mean, it is important that they did so.
And let's hope that they are waking up to some of these patterns that do not look very good when you look at them closely.
But, oh, and another little picante detail about this Eric Butler guy.
He was one who was raving about white privilege and all of these horrible things that had made the campus so unwelcoming to black people.
It turns out that his father Eric Butler was the vice president of the Union Pacific Railroad, and in 2014, according to the railroad's SEC filings, Daddy made $8.4 million.
So this is a guy who comes from genuine privilege.
I mean, I'm not saying that Daddy didn't deserve to make $8.4 million.
The point is, this guy is walking all around campus complaining about white privilege, and he comes from Well, a background that is certainly not deprived.
And the other thing that the Washington Journal found was not only that his claims of having the N-word painted on his door and being jumped by whites, there's absolutely no corroborating evidence for that, but this so-called hunger strike of his.
They found evidence that food was being smuggled into his tent when he was supposed to be living on orange juice or whatever it was.
And that people who were closely involved did say that, well, yes, he was having at least one meal a day.
So even the hunger strike was a fraud.
And that when he finally came out of the tent, after the president announced that he was going to resign, he comes out, you know, supported on both sides by people with this haggard look.
All of that, too, could have just been pure play acting.
Well, the real story that we can surmise from Mr. Butler's tale is why in the world is someone whose dad makes close to $9 million a year going to the University of Missouri?
No offense to denigrate that fine institution, but you'd imagine that a black individual who came from that type of privilege and avarice Would have had the ability to find an affirmative action position at one of the more prestigious universities in the East Coast, perhaps?
Plenty of private schools would love to have, you know...
I'm sure.
I don't have an answer for that question, but I feel sure that he got a very, very cushy birth at the University of Missouri for his graduate studies in whatever they were.
I'd be curious to know what Eric Butler is up to now these days, but he probably has a great career ahead of him.
Because anybody who can combine this kind of play-acting with an apparent genius for making white people feel guilty, that guy's got a big future ahead of him.
But let's see.
Again, let us hope that the people who noticed this will continue to notice similar patterns.
But just one last commentary on the Mizzou situation.
And that is the extent to which the campus as a whole was in a complete uproar about these probably fabricated incidents.
The idea that on the basis of the claims of these two black guys that the whole campus was just drenched in hatred for blacks and that white people fall for this.
This is the over and over again story that just leaves me baffled and I hope, I hope that some people have learned some lessons and will not fall for it again.
Well there is no white solidarity and pride for the accomplishments of the past of your ancestors.
There's only white solidarity and guilt.
And what can we do to rectify any inequity that ever prohibited blacks from attaining some position of power, privilege, or even a modicum of success in life?
And that's why you joking about Daddy making $8.4 million in 2014 is such a pertinent and powerful point.
I mean, this guy, again, this guy lived a life that For the majority of human beings, we'll never be able to have that type of home life when it comes to the amount of money that's flowing around.
And what this has done, the University of Missouri, that's the situation that the Wall Street Journal editors have to ask themselves.
This could have all been done back when this story broke.
All this reporting could have been done.
Nobody did that.
Nobody dared.
There were a few people online who questioned the whole poop swastika, and they became heroes.
And they've reinvented themselves because of this.
I'm thinking of a guy named Clay Travis at Outkick the Coverage.
He's become a very important voice of sanity.
I just have to add, yes, that was another one of the incidents that was supposed to prove that Mizzou was this terrible place that somebody discovered a swastika Scrawled onto the mirror of a restroom, presumably by somebody with his own feces.
We never saw a photograph of this thing.
Perhaps it happened, perhaps it didn't.
But in any case, the perpetrator was never found, and as we know, it is very common for this sort of thing to be a stunt that is put on by people who want to call attention to this alleged racist atmosphere, and there's not enough of it, so they fabricate it.
We don't know, but yes, that was another alleged incident that proved this place was so inhospitable to blacks.
But, in any case, yes, let's hope at least a few people have learned their lessons.
But you know, what creates the atmosphere where this kind of hysteria can take place is what we were just discussing earlier, the atmosphere in which people not even five or six years old, we were talking about this earlier, Nancy Pelosi's grandchild, this other person whose own child was saying that they wanted to be something other than white.
When you get that kind of indoctrination at that age, and then you go to university, and there's another story out recently that Columbia University is promising to spend $100 million on diversity.
American University is going to spend $120 million on diversity in just the next two years.
You get marinated in this atmosphere of this frantic search for anything that's not white, this glorification for anything that's not white, and you get this kind of extraordinary madness of crowds in which even the most threadbare story of oppression can completely send an entire campus into hysteria.
That's what happened to us.
Well, one of the crazy things, Mr. Taylor, I know we're going to switch gears, but I do just want to point out, you know, sometimes I do want to give a shout out to some of the better people on Twitter.
I know you're currently fighting to restore Twitter access.
Perhaps you're going to fight, hopefully, what happened.
But there's one gentleman on Twitter, if you guys are following, Tolerant Fellow.
He's phenomenal and he put out a tweet today that I think Exituates the points that we're making about how white children are being taught to hate themselves and how they wish to be Guatemalans or African-Americans.
And he pointed out that the head of cultural heritage now in Sweden is a Pakistani, Mr. Taylor.
In Canada, someone who has that similar role, let me actually tell you what it is.
My computer just reset.
Just give me one second here.
In Canada, the individual who has that similar role is a Somali.
And Germany, the person who's actually in charge of immigration, is a Turk.
And when you think about who we're putting in charge of such important positions, and I remember I just read a story where the guy who was just named the head of cultural heritage in Sweden has no knowledge whatsoever of Sweden's history.
Gosh, I was just telling you this encouraging story from Denmark, but it looks as though insanity is spreading there.
Well, of course, we know that insanity has been spreading there for years.
We'll see.
It is a real worldwide battle between insanity and suicide and what we hope will be some kind of rekindling of white racial awareness.
But here in the United States, the U.S.
Olympic team It was news to me that the United States Olympic Committee has a Director of Diversity and Inclusion.
Apparently, we have had one of these since 2013.
No, 2012.
And a fellow named Thompson, Jason Thompson, was hired for this job in 2012, right when the position was created.
And the USOC saw that there was room for improvement at every level, not just athletes,
but coaches, officials who run the national governing bodies,
and executives who work for USOC.
So now they have got this guy whose job it is to make sure that from the athletes, front office,
back office, everybody, we have to have inclusion.
And apparently, the Winter Olympics are just the worst, of course.
Who was that?
Brian Gumbel?
Back in 2006, Brian Gumbel famously said, how can we believe these are the best athletes in the world when there is a paucity of blacks?
That's right.
He didn't use the word hideously white, but he said something like, oh, he had some sort of adverb in front of white.
How can these white people really be... I don't think it was aggressively white, but just anyone who uses the word.
I like the word.
I'm someone who likes to learn new words, and paucity is a fantastic word.
Of course, I believe that white people have created civilizations that rival Wakanda because there's been a paucity of blacks involved in the building of these civilizations.
Mr. Taylor, I'd like to point out before we continue about this U.S.
Olympics story, the NFL is 70% black.
The NBA is 74% black.
You've never, not once, not once seen any journalist question the lack of not just white people, but any other race participating in those sports.
However, the Major League Baseball, there are constantly articles written about how white Major League Baseball is.
How there's a lack, there's a paucity of blacks.
And that there used to be more blacks.
And we have to wring our hands over the fact that there are not as many blacks as there used to be.
Oh yes, this is a terrible thing.
And that, of course, is the idea about the Olympic team.
The Olympic team, as this Jason Thompson, Director of Diversity and Inclusion, says, we have to have a team that looks like America.
And he goes on to point out that Team USA, the 243 athletes, A largest team of any nation sent to the Winter Olympics, and of that group, 10, only 10, are black.
4%, of whom 5 are bobsledders.
Now, another 10 are Asian-Americans.
Well, 4%?
Well, Asian-Americans are 5% of the population.
4%?
That's not too bad.
Looks like America from the Asian point of view.
And then, somebody pointed out that the U.S.
sent more than 550 athletes to the Summer Games in Rio.
And of that number, 125 were black.
That is to say, 23%.
Well, wait a minute.
If 4% is no good, because that doesn't look like the real 13% in the United States, is 23% is that good?
Because that's more than the 13%.
Now, are we going to have tryouts in which we just do it by quota, for heaven's sake?
You know, most people have this utterly naive idea that the idea is to send the team that has the best athletes.
Is that so crazy?
Am I some sort of deluded guy to think that they're supposed to be sending the best guys and not necessarily people that look like America?
That's a Eurocentric view of merit.
We live in a society that has overcome systemic inequalities and implicit bias, and we now have a more enlightened view of the athletes that should be representing us.
In not just the Winter Olympics, but in any endeavor, whether it's chess, whether it's whether it's polo, whether it's classical music, you know, whether it's white people in class, not enough black people in classical music.
Where are the classical music composers and directors?
Oh, my God, they've been kept up by systemic racism, white supremacy.
Oh, boy.
You've probably noticed a more, you know, jovial atmosphere in this podcast.
It's because sometimes the delusions are becoming so shocking.
I mean, Mr. Taylor, I'm just, I was looking at Twitter again.
I've got to just tell you this real quick.
So, on a day when a white South African boar An Afrikaner, a couple days ago, launched the largest civilian payload on a spaceship out of Earth's atmosphere into space with Falcon Heavy.
I'm talking about Elon Musk.
He's an African American.
He's an immigrant.
I guess he is.
He's an African American.
He's an immigrant.
He's also a white guy.
At the same time, this is happening, one of the most incredible achievements of the past 50 years, 60 years.
Because America decided to give up NASA and space exploration because we decided diversity was more important.
At that same time, back in South Africa, where we're supposed to believe blacks would have Wakanda were it not for white people, Cape Town is running out of water in this post-apartheid world controlled by black economic empowerment and blacks.
Yet a white guy who was allowed to escape this dream utopia actually is reinvigorating The white man behaving like a white man.
that's just such a fun little, you know, juxtaposition for us because we need to
have good news and I think that is good news. Yes, yes, yes, that is good news.
The white man behaving like a white man. Occasionally it actually happens still
but if we can get back to this USOC business, the Olympics.
Now, I was unaware that there's something called the Ted Stevens Act, an act of Congress.
It requires that each sports governing body and the USOC to send a report to Congress and the President every four years, detailing the participation of minorities and women and people with disabilities.
As if the Olympic team has this criminal record of discrimination against people with disabilities?
Well, you know, again, I just have this idea that we're supposed to have the best athletes.
Is that so wrong?
There's not one person in the world who would say that the original dream team in 1992, the basketball team, that had such people as Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Isaiah Thomas, That it was too white.
I believe Larry Bird, Chris Mullinex, and Christian Laettner were on the team.
There were three white guys.
But nobody said, hey, we want to send our best team.
This is the dream team.
It was based on merit.
These are the best players in the NBA.
Yeah, let's send them.
No one said, hey, let's send a bunch of four foot five illegal alien Guatemalans that Nancy Pelosi's nephew Our grandson wants to be the future of America.
In no one's dreams is that the vision for the future of a dream team, except for, I guess, Nancy Pelosi's grandson.
And Ted Stevens, apparently.
Who, mind you, was a Republican from Alaska.
Right, right.
Well, it's white Republicans from Alaska who are the most deluded when it comes to race.
People who live in the whitest possible states are the ones who really think that it must be wonderful to be living surrounded by blacks and Hispanics.
Oh, well.
Now, apparently, USA bobsledding, that is one of the Olympic teams that has been particularly good at recruiting blacks because, as they point out, what they do is they deliberately look for people who are great in track and field and football because that's what you need.
You need this explosive sprinting power.
You burst out of the starting blocks, whatever it is, with a bobsled, and you hop into that bobsled.
What you need is just the kind of power that West Africans have.
Quick, fast twitch muscles.
In fact, the movie Cool Runnings, which is a comedy, it's based on a true story, and John Candy's character in the movie was actually someone who in the 1960s was advocating that we should be trying to find explosive-type athletes, black athletes, who could participate in this.
Now I think that there are plenty of Caucasians who have those capabilities, but again, due to this belief in the superiority of West Africans when it comes to, and of course, track and field results in the 100, quite clearly to confirm it.
Again, once again, you're using scientific analysis and the scientific method.
You've got a hypothesis.
Hey, guess what?
You experiment.
You come to your conclusions.
It's not hard.
That's a different kind of pattern recognition, you know.
It is!
That's why I didn't say pattern recognition.
That's testing a theory.
Yes.
So anyway, the bobsled people are going great guns when it comes to diversity, and so I suppose we have to applaud them.
Ted Stevens would be very, very proud.
And I guess we're going to finish up on what I would not consider a hugely important story, but what happened in Seattle.
It's significant, really, the kind of mentality that is increasingly pervasive.
There was this fellow named Julian Pailate Tuimaoga.
Now, Mr. Tuimauga, he is a Samoan, and apparently there was a black woman, I'm sorry, a black man who spent the night with his sister.
And apparently for Samoans, at least for Mr. Tuimauga, the idea of his sister sleeping with a black man was just too much for him, and he waylaid this guy on the way out of her apartment.
at 10 30 in the morning and attacked him with a baseball bat and called him all sorts of ugly names.
And apparently this guy is still fighting for his life.
He had an aluminum baseball bat.
He whacked him down to the ground and he continued to whack, whack, whack, whack, whack.
So this was, and as I say, he was saying unpleasant things about blacks that were witnessed by a Lyft driver.
So this made the news in a big way in the Seattle area.
Yet another case of racism.
Well, some of the enthusiasm for complaining about racism declined when it was learned that this guy was not a white man.
So people had to revise their view as to what in fact was going on.
This did not stop a black columnist for the Seattle Times named Jerry Page.
And what struck me as particularly significant was what he said.
He said, what I wish everyone would realize is the racism sprouting from white supremacist ideology is so pervasive that just about everyone is exposed to it.
Anyone can act in ways that support white supremacy or that reflect the views of the world it perpetuates.
Well, okay, now here's a Samoan who does not want his sister sleeping with a black guy, and if he gets angry about that, that's white supremacy.
The inventiveness of the left, of being able to blame absolutely everything on whites, is just an inexhaustible source of creativity, it seems to me.
But for black people to then say that, you know, I suppose he would also say that when Hispanics in Hawaiian gardens, or wherever it is that they decide to run blacks out of the neighborhood, that too is an example of white supremacy.
If blacks want to run Hispanics out of their neighborhood, that's white supremacy.
He would probably say that if the Burmese don't want the Rohingyas in their country and run them out of their country, that's white supremacy.
All of these people have been permeated by this terrible, terrible ideology of white supremacy.
But this kind of thing that I think, even just 10 years ago, 15 years ago, the idea that somebody commits a crime of this kind and a black person says, eh, blame white people.
I just don't think that would have gotten the kind of credibility.
I don't think that would have been published.
Maybe I'm wrong.
This stuff just seems to get worse and worse.
Well, I can remember when I came across a book, a remainder book called It's a book by Karl Rowan.
What was it, about America's upcoming Civil War or something?
Yes, America's coming race war, I believe.
Yeah, Rowan was I think a Washington Post columnist?
Maybe Star.
He was a very well respected, probably one of the, this is before my time, I just happened to see this book and the title caught my eye and I thought it was by a black guy.
I was like, I want to read this.
I remember thinking to myself, some of the things he said in that were really outlandish.
This guy was such a respected thought leader and wordsmith.
He was somebody who was setting a trendsetter when it came to to his columns and to being somebody who was so provocative.
He said things in that book that were on this level, but a lot of this vernacular hadn't permeated yet into all of American life.
Well, that's right.
We used to be accused of discrimination.
Now we're accused of racism, and now that has lost its sting.
So everything is white supremacy, white supremacy.
Well, I think that we've pretty much run out of time here.
We had a fun time and I hope everyone really enjoyed this.
And I do want to say one more thing.
Thank you to everybody who sent in emails asking about getting a signed copy because we live here.
Thanks to all of you who went on to Amazon and reviewed Mr.
Taylor's latest book, If We Do Nothing.
Yes.
We're up to, I think you're up to almost 20 reviews right now.
So hey, help us get over 20.
I'll be responding to everyone and let you know if you guys were, if you were one of
the individuals who will be getting a signed book.
But I would encourage you to go to Amazon and pick up a copy of If We Do Nothing.
If you haven't done that yet, leave a review.
Hey, you can leave a review for Because We Live Here as well.
But I really encourage you, Jared Taylor has, has sacrificed for so long and for so many
years If We Do Nothing as the ultimate collection of his writing.
Although I do believe that his impending review of Black Panther might be an interesting add-on
to the next printing.
I think that we are witnessing an unbelievably provocative historical moment where all of the elite are centered around this idea that, yeah, you know what?
Maybe there is some truth to this movie that if whites weren't involved, this is what would have been created.
When we have plenty of evidence to showcase in America that the great migration of blacks to northern cities didn't create Wakanda, it was nothing more than manifest destruction.
And with that, thank you very much, Mr. Kersey, and we will see you next week.
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