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July 12, 2018 - Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor
57:59
“The End of the World as We Know It”
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Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, to today's edition of Radio Renaissance.
I'm Jared Taylor, and with me in the studio is our regular and stalwart guest, Paul Kersey.
Before we begin, I would like to remind our listeners that our suit against Twitter is proceeding apace.
After Judge Harold Kahn in San Francisco rejected Twitter's attempt to have our case dismissed, he gave Twitter 30 days to reply to the charges, and those 30 days are coming very rapidly to a close.
At that point, The real fight begins.
That includes discovery, in which we get to look at Twitter's documents, we get to depose their witnesses, find out what their policies are about censorship, and this could result in all kinds of fascinating and potentially embarrassing things, at least for Twitter, certainly not for us.
And this will eventually lead to trial.
Now, this is the part that really requires work.
So far, we have been filing papers, but this will mean going out to San Francisco, deposing people, hiring court reporters, travel, accommodation, and much as I hate to rattle the tin cup, this is one occasion in which I will do so vigorously.
So in your mental mind, in your mind, hear that jingling and please be generous.
Please help us in this fight.
This is the fight that could change the internet and get people like us back on the air.
And if we don't fight, the entire internet could eventually be shut down to dissidents like ourselves.
Now, the donations that people will make, Mr. Taylor, I believe are tax deductible, correct?
That is correct.
Is there a special thing people need to fill out if they send in a check?
No, if you send a check, simply make it to American Renaissance or New Century Foundation, as you wish.
And also, donations can be made at amren.com.
There's a tab for contributions and donations.
And please be generous.
This is really crunch time.
There will come a time, I believe, when we will have very exciting news to announce.
But to get to that exciting news, this is the long, hard slog.
And it's not just you returning to Twitter.
It is a shield, a shelter from the censorship that unfortunately has been so damning to our side since, goodness gracious, I guess, the arrival of Trump on the scene.
That's exactly right.
This is what Judge Harold Kahn called the epitome of a public interest lawsuit.
The other side was attempting to have this dismissed.
He said, absolutely not.
You could not get a case in which somebody is speaking up for an entire class.
Of people who appear to have suffered at the hands of this tyrannical organization, and he thought that the way Twitter has behaved with respect to people like us is unconscionable.
So yes, this is for the entire world, in fact.
And this is something that I've often said.
Even honest liberals should support this suit, because the shoe could be on the other foot someday.
And if you genuinely believe that the United States is a country that should encourage Genuinely encourage diverse views.
Unless you want the entire United States to be a safe space and trigger warnings before we open our mouths, and that's the way we're headed, you should support our suit.
In any case, the paid political announcement has been concluded and we will move on.
And as Mr. Kersey was pointing out, the The judicial scene may be poised to change in interesting ways.
I must say, though, that it could be changing in ways that are not necessarily favorable to our suit against Twitter.
In fact, the political implications of the changes in the Supreme Court Well, the thing that we should start out with, we're not going to talk about President Trump's nominee to replace the retiring Judge Kennedy.
I, of course, am referring to Brett Kavanaugh.
Because we don't really need to discuss who and what he represents when you just look at what his opposition says in regards to him, Mr. Taylor.
And as House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said of Kavanaugh's nomination, it is, quote, a destructive tool on a generation of progress for workers, women, LGBTQ people, communities of color, and families.
You know Mr. Taylor, Pat Buchanan wrote a very fantastic piece of his fellow Catholic who was nominated for this position saying that this Could represent the end of the war in court, the judicial activism we hear so much about.
Now, of course, I wouldn't be so much opposed if we actually had judges who were actually going out and engaging in a form of activism that might interpret the Constitution as it was originally framed by our founders.
But that's a conversation for another day.
Reading some of the more unhinged commentary from elected senators now, Senator Richard Blumenthal attributed to the nominee a, quote, very extreme hostility to many of the precious rights and liberties that make our nation great, end quote.
Now, what are those rights and liberties that he's talking about?
It makes you wonder.
What is the extreme hostility he has shown?
But this is just a kind of knee-jerk, spout-anything to get the Democrats all riled up.
Yes, it's quite astonishing.
And if you go further on this, former Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe, he says that Judge Kavanaugh's nomination, quote, will threaten the lives of millions of Americans for decades to come.
End quote.
What does that mean?
And it's funny, here's a guy, Mr. Taylor, who in a different era would have been a lock for a Run at the presidency.
Terry McAuliffe is part of the Clinton machine.
He's a guy who cut his teeth in one of the most important states, Virginia.
A very powerful position.
The governor of Virginia is an unbelievable powerful position.
You only get to be one term as the governor of the great state of Virginia.
And here's a guy though, because of this immense push, as we've talked about what happened Two weeks ago in the podcast we did where we talked about our great friend up in New York.
Her name escapes me right now.
I've tried to forget it.
Oh, Alexandria.
Alexandria Ocasio.
Yeah, our Latina princess.
Yes.
She's supplanted men like McAuliffe, who spent their entire lives dedicated to bringing about that supplanting, that moment where non-whites took the reign, took the baton, and never looked back.
And said, hey, you're not going to get a statue, Mr. McAuliffe.
No?
You spent your entire life making this moment happen.
And now here's a guy, like I said, all he can do is speak these ridiculous platitudes that come out to threaten millions of Americans.
What?
What does that even mean?
Threaten the lives of millions of Americans.
I mean, surely he doesn't think that there's going to be some sort of Plague loosed upon the land that's going to slaughter us by the millions, but certainly that's the way he's talking.
And here's Senator Bernie Sanders.
He says that if he is actually confirmed, quote, it will have a profoundly negative effect on workers' rights, women's rights, and voting rights for decades to come.
And then, of course, Chuck Schumer, he says, I will oppose Judge Kavanaugh's nomination with everything I have.
The stakes are simply too high for anything else.
Well, Senator Kamala Harris, the next candidate for the next Democratic nominee for president for the Democratic Party, I'm willing to bet, she came out and said, Quote, we're looking at the destruction of the Constitution of the United States, end quote.
Again, here's a guy, Brett Kavanaugh, we're not going to talk about his pedigree, his credentials, but I think that he is a guy who simply wants to interpret law as he stated, not make law.
And I don't think that's the destruction of the Constitution of the United States as Senator Harris No, when you think about it, these things are just extraordinary.
Anyone who, in fact, reads the Constitution with some eye to what the framers originally had in mind, in her mind, that is a destruction of the Constitution.
I think the great Joe Sobern.
He used to talk about how all of these liberals, they refer to the Constitution as a living document.
In other words, they can interpret it however they choose.
And he says, to call it a living document is an excuse to treat it as a dead letter.
Oh, Joe Sobern was one of the wittiest, cleverest guys that's ever been my privilege to know.
I always liked his simple pronouncement.
Anything called a program is probably unconstitutional.
You see that attributed to so many people when in fact it's really, hey, it's Joe Sobern, a guy who was non-personed.
Decades ago, by Conservatism Inc.
Yes, yes.
Conservatism Inc.
is always devouring its most talented, its most thoughtful, its most provocative members, but that seems to be what we're left with.
But then I think, you know, it's NPR's Nina Totenberg, the legal correspondent.
She's been in that slot for decades now.
Whenever you hear about anything having to do with the law, it's Nina Totenberg explaining to us what to think.
She says that a Kavanaugh justice would be, quote, the end of the world as we know it.
Well, I feel fine, to quote REM.
The NAACP goes one step further, saying in a press release put out that, quote, our civil rights hang in the balance, end quote.
Again, you and I were joking before we started.
All right, well, if we're going to have a reversal of, say, the horrible decision on restrictive covenants back in 1947 that opened the floodwaters to the destruction of freedom of association, I'm all for that.
That's a fantastic thing.
So am I.
It sounds as though our civil rights might hang in the balance.
The freedom of association, the right of white people to express preferences for living amongst people like themselves.
Isn't that a civil right?
Apparently not.
But people are talking primarily, I think here, about Roe v. Wade.
That's what really excites people.
And what was this, 1973, that decision that determined that.
And once again, Joe Sobern had a typically insightful view of Roe v. Wade.
He was, of course, a Catholic and he was against abortion.
But he thought, he said, the extraordinary thing about this is the Supreme Court got up on its hind legs and decided every single state got it wrong.
And this is something that I think you would find have great difficulty discovering anything in the Constitution that says anything at all about abortion.
Surely that is something, if you believe in federalism at all, that should be left up to the states.
But a right to privacy.
That was what it was based on.
A right to privacy?
Good grief!
Now, if I have a right to privacy, I would think that I have the right not to tell the government every single penny I earned.
Whether I made a gain or a loss on my investments.
I've got to tell them every single thing about all that.
Don't I have any privacy there?
This right to privacy.
Good grief!
And of course, if Roe v. Wade is overturned, And I really do honestly think that this is a matter for the states.
It will go back to the states.
I don't think the Supreme Court, if it decides anything about Roe v. Wade, is going to say, well, we just abolish...
Abortion.
Under any circumstance.
They're not going to do that.
They're simply going to say that this is a matter for the states.
At least, that's my assumption.
Who knows?
Even if it ever comes up.
But no, this is the end of the world as we know it, says Nina Totenberg.
Well, Nina, baby, If it's the end of the world as we know it, you know, you, like all the people who were promising to leave the country when Donald Trump was elected, including Justice Ginsburg.
She was going to go to New Zealand, she promised, I gather.
She's still around.
In any case, if it's the end of the world as we know it, she is free to leave.
The one interesting aspect out of all of this, you haven't seen too many pieces.
Describing the unbearable whiteness of Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominees.
Yet.
Imagine if Ginsburg Who's 85 years old and looks to be in wretched health.
It's almost as if there's a great H.P.
Lovecraft fictional story where one of the guys who lives above the other gentleman has developed some sort of mechanism where he cools the room to stay alive.
And he's really 200 years old and then when the coolant breaks, his body just kind of dissolves.
It's a wonderful short story, but when you look at Gainsbourg, imagine If within this first portion of Trump's administration or in a potential next four years, President Trump has the opportunity to appoint yet another.
Yes, a third justice.
A third white justice because everyone on the list, they're primarily, I think they're overwhelmingly white people.
And that to me, that's when you would really see the long knives of the left come out.
You know, I think people might riot.
They might say, well, this is it.
This is just a usurpation of power.
The Constitution is wrong.
He doesn't have the right to appoint justices.
Well, already we have people saying that because he is under criminal investigation by a special prosecutor, that should mean that he doesn't have the right to appoint justices.
That's a complete, fantastical misreading of the Constitution.
People are already saying that.
But we shall certainly see.
Yeah, as far as Justice Ginsburg is concerned, it makes me think of the picture of Dorian Gray.
She's the painting.
Maybe somewhere out there, there's somebody else that hasn't gone in that direction.
But yeah, poor Justice Ginsburg.
I'm sure she's going to hang on for dear life, quite literally, to thwart the appointment of number three.
Correct.
But we'll just have to see.
The other side, as I've said, you know, these quotations from people, it's just so extraordinary.
It reminds me of all of the heavens will fall predictions about a potential Donald Trump presidency.
You will recall, of course, all of the people who said that this will lead to fascism.
I remember an author for New Yorker saying that this could potentially mean that the American experiment is a failure if Donald Trump is elected.
I really ought to accumulate a list of some of these just utterly, utterly It's just exaggerated.
The world is coming to an end.
Predictions about Donald Trump.
It would make amusing reading.
There was one that was so egregious it sticks with me.
Someone came out and said that it's going to become open season on people of color.
If President Trump gets elected this is a sign that it's all right.
It's fine.
And of course today I just What is that goofy GOP consultant Rick Wilson who he's apparently a campaign consultant and I don't think he has any victories to his name but he came out and said that Trump supporters want to repatriate or deport anyone whose skin color is darker than a latte and it's this type of language again he's trying to ingratiate himself with the left because again these
These members of Conservatism Inc, these cucks, believe that this Trump phenomenon is a passing thing.
Well, guess what guys?
It's not.
You're going to see more and more in this upcoming election and then heading into 2020, the Trumpian language is the dominant force in politics, at least from the right, because immigration is such a vital issue and it's going to become even increasingly so.
Well, we will certainly see.
But this idea that Trump has turned loose all of the forces of evil, that was once again the result when California released a report on hate crimes.
And it noted that hate crimes were up 17% this year over the previous year.
And immediately, right in the body of the LA Times report on this, they said, this is clearly due to the kind of fanaticism and bigotry that Donald Trump has unleashed upon the land.
Then, when you read further into this, there has been a steady increase since 2014.
Before Donald Trump had even announced, for heaven's sake.
And to my satisfaction, I actually looked into the comments in the LA Times report.
Every single one of them made that point.
Nobody was buying this.
Nobody.
Nobody.
And so, it is very encouraging to me to see that despite the fact that the mass media is in lockstep on all these things, More and more Americans are waking up.
They see through this baloney.
Absolutely through this baloney.
Which is why more and more of these online newspapers, as their circulation plummets and they put more and more money into the digital format, also do away with comment sections.
That's exactly right.
Because the comment sections were the true opportunity to learn.
Real Americans actually have a chance to critique their rulers and their masters and their tutors.
But, you know, moving on to our next item here.
We learned an interesting new word, at least I did.
This is a new one on me.
There is a defect on the left known as performativeness.
Now, I learned about this because there had been a violent far-left gathering of Antifa.
And they were battling the Nazis, or so they thought.
And caught on video was a Hispanic female member of the group who was scolding a white man.
And she was complaining that he was indulging in white performativeness.
Now, by that apparently she means that he's just showing up as a poser.
He's not really doing what he's supposed to.
He's not punching Nazis, as she said.
She says, I'm seriously telling you to do your work.
Punch a Nazi.
Stop being performative.
Punch a Nazi if you want to be an ally.
And this guy starts groveling and defending himself.
And he says, I've been fighting for months.
I've been fighting for months.
You know, I'm on your side.
Well, this Hispanic woman then says, Whatever the case, you're still white.
You're still responsible.
This is your fault.
You're inherently racist.
It's in your blood.
It's in your DNA.
Good grief.
Now, these are the people who are supposed to be the Rainbow Coalition fighting against racism.
And this Hispanic woman is telling a... I don't know what sort of background they might have had together, but here's a guy.
He's wearing a bandana over his face.
He's all dressed in black.
He looks like he's nothing he'd rather do than punch a Nazi.
And she is telling him, you're still white.
You're still responsible.
This is your fault.
You're inherently racist.
It's in your blood.
It's in your DNA.
He's just pantomiming the antifascist platitudes as opposed to doing the necessary work to bring about this world that the people of color believe they're going to inherit when white people, regardless of their political bent, Well, I hope we see more of this.
castrate themselves basically and fall to the ground and allow this new world
to be ushered in. And fascinating word I think we're gonna see more of this.
Well I hope we see more of this. This must have been, to use a trendy word, I hope
this might have been a transformative moment for this guy.
Here he is.
I suspect he is sincerely trying to work for equality and the idea that anything should be in anyone's blood is absolute anathema to him.
He thinks we're all the same under the skin.
And here is this Hispanic woman telling him that you are inherently racist.
Good grief!
I hope they have this kind of division all the time.
Here's the question for you, Mr. Taylor.
How long until Starbucks introduces performativeness into their lectures and their curriculum on race betterment for their employees?
Or the proper racial mindset that one must display to be a barista at Starbucks?
Well, good question.
Good question.
And when you talk about this performativeness, it applies, it seems to me, to practically every prominent white anti-racist.
Say Hillary Clinton.
She claims to be anti-racist as can be, but look where she lives.
Look at the way she lives her life.
I bet that her dinner parties are not the least bit diverse.
All of these phony race diversity lovers Look at how they actually live.
If you want to accuse somebody of performativeness, every one of them, where do they send their children to school?
Who do their children marry?
I mean, this is such a joke, but performativeness is such a clumsy word.
I don't think I'm going to adopt this, but I think these Antifa are onto something.
They just got it the wrong way around.
It's a five-syllable word.
Come on, guys.
Get it down to two syllables so we can actually have some fun with it.
But again, you're right.
It's a transformative moment for this guy.
And think about this.
As we're doing this podcast, there are a handful of other podcasts on the so-called dissident right that advocate for beleaguered whites worldwide.
Think about how many of these Antifa meetings are going on in the city where you're listening to this, dear listener.
There are probably radically left-wing meetings, state-sponsored in some cases, or at least with significant money from foundations that are happening, As you're listening to this in your own municipality and at these meetings, let's hope that there is some performativeness going on where white people who are attending these are being accused of merely pantomiming their egalitarian mindset and attitude and not going the full length to, as you said, punch a Nazi.
That's right.
They've got to punch a Nazi.
I bet, as I say, this poor guy probably is dying to punch a Nazi.
That's what he would love to do.
But I guess since he doesn't have blood on his hands, you know, he's just performative.
But now, here's another what could have been a transformative moment, I hope, for the people who were involved in the Democratic primary.
This was in the first congressional district of Colorado.
Here is a woman by the name of Saira Rao.
She is the daughter of two immigrants from India.
Well, she failed in her bid to unseat Representative Diana DeGette, who is the incumbent Democrat.
She got 31% of the vote, but she is hopping mad.
She thinks that she has been betrayed by white people.
Not enough white people voted for her.
And she says she has given up on white people.
Now, and she goes on to say, it's incumbent on white people and not people of color to solve the problem, just as it's incumbent on men to solve sexism.
In other words, if white people don't vote for her, the great brown hope, it's their problem.
She went on to say that whites suffer from white fragility.
And by that she means, if you tell white people you are a white supremacist, whether you like it or not, If they complain and say they are not, that's just an example of white fragility.
Correct.
Wow.
It's axiomatic that you're a white supremacist if you're white, regardless of your political bent.
And this is what she is saying.
That's right.
And she got 31% of the vote, too.
I mean, she's a complete neophyte.
To come right out of nowhere and get 31% of the vote?
That's not bad.
That's not bad.
But then she also said that it's impossible for any non-white to be racist.
It makes black and brown people cringe for white people to tell them they're being racist, she says.
Wow.
Now, see, I hope again that this is another transformative moment.
How many of the white people who either voted for her or against her?
I don't care.
How many of them thought to themselves, well, wait a minute, Saira, what's going on here?
And to me, it's particularly illuminating that a woman who is an Indian American Should be complaining this way of all the people of color who are constantly whining about oppressive America and the legacy of this and the legacy of that.
Boy, Indian Americans seems to me have about the least to complain about.
Weren't you pointing out, aren't they probably the highest earning group?
I mean, either they are ahead of Jews, they're number two after Jews in the United States.
I've seen some studies.
Obviously, I've heard from a number of people the racial chauvinism that Indians show toward Americans.
It's quite alarming.
I've heard this from a number of people who work in the IT industry.
But yeah, when you look at studies, it's shocking.
The median income, the yearly household income for Indians, it is, in a lot of ways, it dwarfs even whites.
Oh, it's right at the top.
When you break it out and you look at it, in some cases I have seen studies that show that Indians are the highest earners, like you pointed out, even greater so than than Jewish Americans.
So this is one of those stories, though.
Let this story replicate all across the country.
That's right.
That's right.
Let white people see this kind of absolute spoil sport racial chauvinism of these newcomers telling us how to run our country and telling us that if we don't vote for them, it is the fault of... and she's going to give up on white people, she says.
Well, thanks.
You go right ahead.
Please give up on us.
Not only give up on us, but why don't you go back to a place where there are too many white people, except when they come over to see what could be an example of Western Europe and the United States' future, unless we do nothing.
You know, there are certain parts of the country still where if you apply for college admission and you're an Indian-American, you get affirmative action benefits for that.
A brown face, a non-white face, you would add very much to the diversity of a lot of Midwestern or even campuses in the western part of the United States where there aren't that many Indians.
Well, she's given up on white people.
Well, maybe white people give up on you!
Shall I ever think of that?
Well, there's a really good quick anecdote we can tell.
The story of the actress Mindy Kaling.
She was in The Office.
She's been in Ocean's 8.
She's a voice of a couple Disney characters.
She's Indian.
And her brother, did not get into medical school.
So what does he do?
He pretends he's black.
Yes, yes, that's right.
He gets in, and with the same grades, he gets into the school that he wanted to get into, and then he wrote a book bragging about it, basically.
He never apologized or groveled and said, oh gosh, I'm sorry.
He was able to legitimately pass as a black American, and I guess he utilized black and brown privilege in a lot of ways.
At the same time.
That's right.
That's right.
I can't remember what medical school it was he was applying to, but depending on the region of the country, Indians do get affirmative action preferences.
Maybe it's certainly not as much as blacks do, but yes, they're considered a wonderful and beautiful addition to campus diversity.
But speaking of another primary election, we spoke earlier about Seth Grossman.
That he had won the Republican nomination in New Jersey's 2nd District.
Well, now the Republican Party has officially withdrawn their backing for this guy.
So he's battling alone without the support of his party.
People are telling him to withdraw from the race.
Not as though they've got anybody to replace him with, but the Republicans say when they gave official notice that he was not their boy, they said, bigotry has no place in society.
Well, what was it?
What was it that this poor guy had done?
You know, it's fascinating because I think we should tease a little more before we get there.
All right, let's tease a little more.
This is an area, this is a district that President Trump won by four points in 2016.
It's been in Republican hands since 1994 when a Republican won.
The gentleman is retiring.
So, it's been held for 24 years, so you're talking about a number of election cycles, continuously in Republican control.
Now that the Republicans never tried to groom someone else for this, that's an indictment of their pathetic realization of having long-term plans in place to prepare for an eventuality like this.
Now, Seth Grossman, once again, as we mentioned, he's a guy who's running a tough campaign, but as you pointed out, the Republican Party actually stated in an announcement, they said, quote, bigotry has no place in society, unquote.
Throwing Grossman and the seat to the Democrats.
Exactly.
Throwing the seat to the Democrats, they're throwing Grossman to the wolves.
Yes.
As you stated, let's get to that point.
What was that article that brought such condemnation upon this poor, poor, poor gentleman?
Apparently the last straw was that back in 2014, this is four years ago, it has been discovered that he posted on his Facebook page an article called, Confessions of a Public Defender.
Now, this is an article that he got by way of Alan West.
Alan West, the black Florida congressman who was in Washington 2011 to 2013, who circulated this article.
I actually remember when he did this.
Yes.
I believe I called your assistant, the great Henry Wolfe, and I said, hey, you're not going to believe who's using his social media to promote arguably one of the most important pieces you guys have ever published.
Yes, it was quite astonishing.
And so, this fellow, poor Seth Grossman, did not realize that this, in fact, was something that had appeared originally on American Renaissance.
When Alan West circulated it all around, lots of people picked it up.
It became one of our very best, most widely read pieces.
And it is an extraordinary piece.
I urge all of our listeners to go to the AMRAN page and look up Confessions of a Public Defender.
And this is a guy, he had to write it under a pseudonym, of course, but he's still a liberal.
He's very much a liberal.
But after years and years and years of taking these charity cases, being paid by the government to defend blacks, I mean, he's defended Hispanics, he's defended Asians, he's defended whites, but this guy's capable of pattern recognition.
And the things he writes are really, really quite extraordinary and well worth reading.
And Alan West, who is not a stupid guy, he recognized How well he had portrayed certain underclass blacks.
And Allen West, one of these guys, he says, stop whining.
You guys need to pull up your pants.
And you black people stop, stop complaining and stop behaving this way.
In any case, this article does contain the following passage.
And the author of Confessions of a Public Defender says, My experience has taught me that blacks are different by almost any measure to all other people.
They cannot reason as well.
They cannot communicate as well.
They cannot control their impulses as well.
They are a threat to all who cross their paths, black and non-black alike.
Now, it's only that last sentence, that they are threatened all across their paths, that has been widely circulated, and that was enough for the Republicans to say, no, this guy does not stand for us.
Despite the fact that, again, this poor guy, Seth Grossman, who, he's not an absolute nobody.
He has held municipal and county elected seats.
He's a lawyer.
He is a radio commentator.
He has written articles for local newspapers.
I think he's got a regular editorial stance.
He's a fairly established guy.
He's an accomplished guy that the Republicans should be happy to have on their team to spearhead a message of positivity and of realism when it comes to the demographic changes transpiring in this district that have basically made it at a point where it is going to be in democratic control because of the racial transformation that's occurred and what's fascinating about this wonderful quote that you just stated they are a threat to all who cross their paths black and non-black alike and what you pointed out about impulse control that was written in this
In this piece, Confessions of a Public Defender.
We're not going to talk about it at length, but I think we'd be remiss if we didn't bring up what's going on in Haiti right now.
Where there is a, what, oil prices are surging.
Gasoline prices.
Gasoline prices are surging, so violence and anarchy has broken out.
Four straight days of looting, riots.
Good grief!
I've seen photographs of completely burned down and demolished gas stations.
Now that's going to make it really easy to get gas, isn't it?
The price is only going to go further up because you have no means of distributing the petrol.
You know, it's really fascinating.
There was a story out of Georgia where there was some church group that was hiding.
I saw this on Zero Edge.
They basically had to take cover because these people who were coming down out of the generosity and altruistic nature of their religion and just being humanitarians, decided they want to come to Haiti, spread the gospel, spread hope to a nation that Conan O'Brien had said really didn't need it.
Haiti's great!
You know, Haiti doesn't need to be made great again.
Haiti's already great, was what Conan O'Brien, that white man, if there ever was a white man... Now obviously he's not in Haiti right now, but the article in Zero Hedge pointed out that these These individuals from Georgia, this church group, had to seek shelter and hide because they were being targeted by these roving bands of Haitians.
When law breaks down and you're in an overwhelmingly black area, watch out.
Watch out, because you could very well be a target.
But as... Even when law is in place, Mr. Taylor, and you're in an overly black area, hey, watch out as well.
But as Saira Rao, as we pointed out earlier, she says non-whites cannot be racist.
They cannot be racist.
And so, you know, if you have been cornered by a black mob, and they have called you a white MF-er, and your throat is slit, and as your last drop of blood flows out of your body, you can at least say to yourself, but they weren't racist.
That'll be a great comfort to you, I'm sure.
Well, it won't be a great comfort to anyone who wants to know what's going on in some of these urban environments across the country.
Mr. Taylor, on Monday night of this past week, I believe that was July 9th, in Baltimore, Maryland, there was a candlelight vigil.
for a man who had been killed in West Baltimore.
West Baltimore is where a lot of the Freddie Gray riots, the worst of the worst happened back in 2015 when we saw the CVS that the black government spent so much time and effort to convince to move there burned down.
Well, so there's a vigil that's going on and there's all these people attending.
They're really sad because one of their family members, one of their friends, one of their homies, Had been gunned down on the streets, on the violent streets.
Well, guess what happens?
Five people attending this candlelight vigil were shot.
When a gunman opened fire on this crowd.
Right.
Right.
It's tragic.
It's just tragic.
You sometimes read accounts of this sort of thing happening at funerals.
People are there grieving about some man who has been shot, and an opponent shows up and starts blazing away in a funeral home.
Apparently, no one was killed, but five people stopped bullets.
Now, the irony here is that in this account that I read, nothing was ever said about race.
Nothing, I believe, had to be said about race.
But witnesses, according to the accounts I read, weren't able to give police a description of the shooter.
Well, you know, I wasn't even there.
But I can give a partial description.
I can tell you approximately how old he was.
I can tell you certainly what his race was.
I can tell you what his sex was.
I'm absolutely positive about these things.
But all these people were there who were grieving for a loved one, are unable to give police a description of the shooter.
I guess you're postulating that the shooter was between the age of 45 and 64, a white male, Oh, a white woman.
That's my assumption.
As you said, we talked about that extraordinary Washington Post story about a month ago where the writers lamented the low clearance rate for homicides across the country.
They were clustered largely in areas that were Not just predominantly black, but almost entirely black.
City across city across the country.
Talk about confirming pattern recognition.
And this is one of those areas, West Baltimore, is where a lot of these deaths, a lot of the non-fatal, fatal shootings are clustered.
And once again, as you pointed out, the article in the Baltimore Sun, or I don't know where this article was from, whether it was from one of the ABC, NBC, CBS affiliates, You know, I was thinking about this.
to give police a description of the shooter, primarily because they're there to protect black criminality
and to perpetuate itself.
You know, I was thinking about this.
If some guy shows up and starts blazing away, not everybody is going to say,
hmm, let's get a good look at this guy.
They're going to run for cover.
So there may be something to this in terms of not having gotten a good look at the guy.
I mean, I would not be sticking around taking a good look at him.
But in any case, this is just so standard.
So standard.
We'd have to know a few more details, but I'm afraid your assumptions are probably correct.
Maybe they did get a good look at him.
I suspect that before he started shooting, some of them had gotten a good look at him.
In any case, it's really tragic in a way.
These are black people shooting each other, and they are unwilling, for the most part, to take the most obvious, fundamental steps to solve the problem on their own.
But, you know, I want to get back very briefly to this Seth Grossman guy.
I'm quite fascinated by him because he's the fellow in the Republican who's running for Congress in New Jersey, who the Republican Party has essentially thrown to the wolves, as you say.
He said a couple of interesting things.
At one point he said that this whole idea about diversity is a bunch of crap.
He says diversity never made America great.
America is great despite diversity.
Wow!
That's heresy!
It's truth speaking of a ferocious and fascinating kind.
And then, also, the governor of New Jersey had just announced that every time the state police hire somebody, they were going to have to take diversity goals into consideration.
Meaning no white men apply.
Exactly.
Well, what does Seth Grossman say?
This is on his website.
This is on his campaign website.
Before Governor Murphy completely screws up the state police with his diversity quotas, why not try it on the Rutgers basketball team and see if it helps them win more games?
Yeah, I like this guy.
I really like this guy.
And despite all of the terrible opprobrium that he has suffered since it was discovered that he quoted something from American Renaissance, and he said these intolerably truthful things about diversity, who knows?
Maybe he'll win after all.
Maybe there are enough people out there who see through all the fog, but I'm going to keep an eye on him.
I hope he is an absolutely terrific upset.
If he were to win, that would be, in my opinion, a bigger story than the one of the Latino unseating the long-term white man in the New York district.
Was it Brooklyn?
Brooklyn.
Brooklyn Blancs.
It was split between the two.
But yeah, that would be an absolutely huge story.
Well, we'll see.
Apparently, even before he even won the primary, there was some consideration that this was one of the most vulnerable seats that might be flipped for a go-Republican or Democrat.
But anyway.
Yes, just wanted to add a few more points about good old Seth Grossman, who I'm certainly rooting for.
But then to move from New Jersey to Pittsburgh.
This is yet again a sad story.
It's something that goes back to April 26th and earlier.
There was a lovely statue of Stephen Foster that had sat in the shadow of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh ever since 1900, for more than 100 years.
And it was, well, it was a beloved statue up until maybe a decade ago when opposition started to rise.
And it is because here is Stephen Foster.
He's sitting in a chair and at his feet there is a black man.
Now the black man who is sometimes referred to as Uncle Ned, sometimes as Old Black Joe, he's barefoot and he's dressed in simple clothing and he's playing a banjo.
And Foster is in a suit and a necktie.
And this is considered outrageous because he's sitting at the white man's feet.
He's not as well dressed as the white man.
And some people have called this the most racist statue in America.
Oh, good grief.
But the person who commissioned this statue, before it was set up in 1900, he imagined Foster listening to this old black man play the banjo and getting inspiration For his own compositions.
And also, the people who were opposed to the removal of the statue, of which there were apparently no more than about a dozen, they said that the whole idea is that music transcends racial differences.
That here you have a poor black man and a wealthy white man, they are united by music.
But no, no, no, no.
Can't do that.
So, he had to go.
And the statue was taken away back on April 26th.
All 800 pounds of it.
They didn't let the public know.
And they did it right at daybreak.
And this despite the fact that even before they removed it, they had surrounded the statue, there's still photographs of this, with plaques that included photographs of half a dozen black women from Pittsburgh who were candidates to be honored with a statue in place of Stephen Foster.
This stuff had been sitting out there for months, but that's not good enough.
You've got to get rid of it.
Got to get rid of it.
Now, the reason this is in the news lately is that they've pretty much decided on who the top contender is.
The top contender You know, again, what is the purpose of getting rid of these statues?
There's a transcendent power in getting rid of these statues of dead white males because you get to transform the landscape and celebrating a woman of the importance of someone like Jean Hamilton Walls.
A PhD.
She lived from 1885 to 1978 and she is the first black woman to get an undergraduate degree from the University of Pittsburgh and later on, the first black woman to get a PhD.
She taught high school for a while and then she ran a local branch of the YMCA.
YWCA.
Oh, I'm sorry, the YWCA.
Now, they've not yet decided on her, but you know, that's where the city's leaning.
They've already decided a new location because the Foster area, which had been home to this statue for 118 years is now so tainted they're going to put it elsewhere the statue of miss or mrs jean hamilton walls once again we have to celebrate every achievement whether significant or insignificant of the first black to accomplish x we have to we have to memorize it
Like we used to memorize the presidents, or like we used to memorize the multiplication table, and division tables.
You have to, this is all that matters now.
This is all that's worthy of celebrating and commemorating as the first black who achieved X. It's just sad.
Here you've got Stephen Foster.
He's, at one time, he's known as the father of American music.
Now, I don't know if you young sprouts even know Stephen Foster songs anymore, but he was certainly a huge influence on American music.
But as soon as he's gone, they've got to have a black woman and try as they might.
The black woman that they can find is a woman who ran a local branch of the YWCA.
It's sad.
It's just sad.
And you wonder how people can have a straight face about this.
But this is the new America, I suppose.
You find a woman.
I suppose it was quite an accomplishment.
She was probably the first in her family to get an undergraduate degree and then a PhD.
I mean, that is something.
I'm surprised the NAACP hasn't put out an initiative where every local chapter will go and look at the streets in all the cities, every statue, every school that's named for an individual elementary school on up and create a database that shows just how racist the names of Every park, street, every statue, every school name, and start creating this database for EasyPress to say, we need to change the name of this high school in Montana because it's celebrating someone who once said this about, insert people of color.
Well, you know, the SPLC does have an exhaustive database of every statue, every school, and I believe every street that is named after a confederate.
But it's not going to, again, it's not going to stop there.
Stephen Foster was, you know, it's funny, the only the only time I've actually heard of Stephen Foster, there's a great line in the 1992 film Tombstone, where Val Kilmer's character, Oh my goodness.
I'm blanking on who... It's the story of Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday.
And Val Kilmer is playing Doc Holliday.
Powerful performance by Val Kilmer.
And he's playing on the piano a song.
And one of the characters walks up and says, Is that Stephen Foster you're playing?
And Val Kilmer, as Doc Holliday replies, No, it's Francis fucking Chopin.
It's a hilarious line.
But to confuse the two, it's one of these...
Hilarious scenes!
Because it's trying to show the sophistication of Doc Holliday versus the rudimentary knowledge of the cowboy gangs that they're fighting against.
But again, it's a throwaway line where you mention someone, as you said, who was perceived as the father of American music.
And now, he's a non-person.
His statue's gone.
And the idea that, you know, I've looked at, I've never actually seen the statue itself, but I looked at photographs of it very carefully, and there are a great many on the internet, and I invite our listeners to do so.
There is nothing demeaning about this black man.
He's quite a handsome black man with a nicely trimmed beard.
He's playing the banjo.
He is sitting at a lower level than Stephen Foster, and they're not dressed in the same way.
But there is clearly a rapport between the two.
And to think that for that reason, Stephen Foster has got to be thrown out the window along with... Nope.
There's, as you say, it's not going to end.
It's not going to end with them.
Well, it's not going to end for them.
And as we know, with what's going on in South Africa, where we keep hearing more and more horror stories, you know, Laura Southern just came out with that fantastic documentary.
You can access that if you just look up her on the internet.
She did a documentary on what's going on in South Africa and the murders of whites and not just farmers, it's whites.
There is a state-sponsored program, a You won't like the word I'm going to use here, but I do believe that we are seeing the early stages.
Hey, Amnesty International said it.
There's a early stages of genocide in South Africa.
I don't think it was Amnesty International.
It was some other organization that actually tracks genocide.
And yes, I think they have genocide in five different stages, and they did officially say that it is in the first stage of what they consider genocide.
You know, I tried to get in touch with some of the people who are part of that organization.
There's a fellow who teaches at George Mason University right nearby, and I asked him to come on for a podcast or a video.
And he refused.
I was just interested in his reasoning, but I guess he didn't like the idea of talking about this sort of thing in the presence of someone like me who just poisons the air by breathing.
Well, but by doing that he validates the argument you're making.
By daring to even give them credence, by daring to listen.
That's why the left, that's why even the right, that's why Conservatism Inc.
cannot entertain anything that we're saying.
To do so, it gives it oxygen.
And if our ideas have just the slightest opportunity to spread, then you're really going to see the type of hysterics that we saw, and we continue to see, and we will persist in seeing when it comes to the nominee of the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh.
Yes.
Just imagine if somebody like a, if somebody like a Grossman got elected to Congress, the reactions that we'd see.
End of the world.
Exactly.
Because again, this is the type of guy who would immediately be The benefactor of just some hostile reports.
Think about some of the stories we read about Stephen Miller.
There was a story about Stephen Miller where someone back in a third grade class with him said that he said naughty words to him and that was the reasoning behind why he wants to build a wall and deport and I mean, again, we live in such hysterical times that it's always good to talk about things that are positive that are happening.
And that's why, when I mention what's happening in South Africa, Mr. Taylor, if you wouldn't mind taking it away, because I'll let you in with the good news.
Well, yes.
Well, I don't know if you recall this good news.
But apparently there's a delegation of 30 South African farming families that have arrived in Russia.
It's a very rich farm belt, which is the Stavropol region.
And they are apparently representing up to 15,000 Boers.
These are Afrikaners who are considering, these are farmers, who are considering emigrating to Russia.
And as the spokesman for this group that recently showed up in Russia, his name is Adi Slebus.
He told the media that the climate here in that region is temperate.
The land is created by God for farming.
All this is very attractive.
And each of these families, on average, is willing to bring in about $100,000 to lease land, to get set up.
And at this point, Russia has more than 90 million acres of unused farmland.
People are leaving the farms.
The Russian population is declining.
Yeah.
And ever since 2014, they have had a farmland giveaway program.
If they're willing to cultivate it, they're willing to give land away.
But these guys are willing not only to come and bring land, but bring money too to help things get going.
And of course, what the spokesman Adi Slebus explained, as for their reasoning, is that with this new South African government led by Cyril Ramaphosa, They are talking openly about taking land without compensation and this on top of all of these freelance murder operations that have been going on for of which the South African farmers are a target.
So it is good news in the sense that there is a country Not the United States.
That seems open to welcoming these very productive, very capable people who are clearly unwelcome in the land of their birth, the land of their ancestry, the land where they've been living for 300 years.
That is good news.
At the same time, it's not necessarily good news to think that things have turned so badly in South Africa.
I've always thought that if the South Africans had had a more sensible grand apartheid scheme, if they've been willing to divide the country in a more equitable way, they might have ended up with their own ethnostate.
But who knows?
Unfortunately, they still would have welcomed help.
Because as we know, unfortunately, South Africans don't want to make their own beds.
And the whole reason they gave up their country was because they wanted to play international rugby again.
And it really is that simple.
It really is that simple sometimes to describe why the proletariat will regrettably acquiesce when it comes to protecting their civilization versus Child's games being commemorated.
Yes, it's a very, very sad thing.
But, yep, I hope that many of them do have a brand new start.
But it's just going to show you.
It's just going to show you how desperate the situation is.
Correct.
Moving halfway, I mean, from the Southern Hemisphere to the Northern Hemisphere, there are probably very few places in the world that are further in terms of distance than Russia from South Africa, for heaven's sake.
And then to re-establish yourself in a brand new country, a very, very difficult language, one of the most difficult languages for English speakers, or I'm sure Dutch speakers, to learn.
This goes to show you just how desperate they are for a new beginning.
It's an exodus.
It's biblical.
It really is biblical.
And especially when you think about The deep religious nature that the Afrikaners have, their attachment to the land.
You think about going back to the Blood River and all the oath that they took.
Where if they were victorious, that day would always be celebrated.
They are leaving the country of their ancestors, their ancestors created, that was foolishly given away.
But you know what?
There's a sense of redemption in this, because if only a couple thousand, 15,000, if that's a start, and then people say, look what we've created in a year, look at the conditions you're facing, leave everything, because we've already got the infrastructure created, and we have a working relationship with this government that understands the demographic crisis they face.
Come on, you guys start coming now.
And then you start seeing a mass exodus of Afrikaners.
That to me is why this is one of those Yet again, a story where there is a long term hope being sown into the seed.
It's a seed being sown into the ground that I believe could could sprout into something very beautiful.
Quite beautiful.
We certainly wish them well, the Afrikaners and the Russians who are welcoming them.
In that respect, yes, this is a good news story.
Wish them well.
And we wish our listeners well.
Hey, for Jared Taylor, this is Paul Kersey.
Our time is up.
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