Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the latest episode of Radio Renaissance.
My name is Jared Taylor.
I'm with American Renaissance, and with me is the indispensable Paul Kersey as our co-host.
So delighted to have you with me on this occasion.
It is a great honor and a privilege for us to speak to you, and I'm sure Mr. Kersey feels exactly the same way.
Well, Mr. Taylor, I'd be remiss if we didn't mention we're one week out for the election, so by the time this podcast is up, that countdown clock is on, When we come next week, odds are we won't know a winner yet because of this whole ballot and this polling situation with the mail-in ballots, Mr. Taylor, but I'm going to go on record real quick.
President Trump will be reelected.
I will know the winner by the time we come back because I already know the winner, Joe Biden.
So, the first thing I'd like to do is thank an anonymous listener in Britain who sent us £80 sterling in the mail.
This is the only way that we communicate with him because we have no return address, no email address.
So thank you, sir, for your support.
And we thank all of you all around the world who have helped us with contributions and who have sent in comments and questions.
Now, the big news the last few days has been the frisky time that our African-American fellow citizens have been having in the city of brotherly love.
It all started on Monday afternoon with what's called a police-involved shooting.
I love that phrase.
Another police-involved shooting.
This time, the martyred victim was Walter Wallace Jr., a 27-year-old black man who was waving a knife around and ignored orders to drop the weapon and died of a case of very sudden acute lead poisoning.
Well, as a result, Monday night, what were meant to be peaceful protests, of course, turned into the usual rioting and looting, which led to the arrest of at least 91 people, 76 of whom were charged with commercial burglary.
I'm glad to see that happening.
That's another name for looting.
But 30 officers were injured, no fewer than 30, most of them from being struck by projectiles, bricks, rocks, anything that those fellows can lay their hands on.
I haven't really followed these riots as much as I usually do because they're coming so commonplace that it's hard to distinguish them, Mr. Taylor, but I'd like to point out that some of the video from Philadelphia looks like what you would imagine from You never saw the film, but World War Z was set in Philadelphia, the opening scenes of the zombie apocalypse, and you see just chaos breaking out.
And with the cops, they're overwhelmed.
I encourage all of our listeners, if you haven't seen the videos of that first night, track it down and watch as the cops are just overwhelmed by these numbers, these hordes.
There were an estimated 1,000 people.
Yes, that's a lot of folks.
And of the 30 officers who were injured, one was a 56-year-old woman.
She was hospitalized with a broken leg after she was intentionally run down by someone driving a pickup truck.
Well, that's how you get justice for Walter Wallace.
Run-down police officers with a pickup truck.
Well, The second night was just as frisky.
In the case of a Walmart store, looters broke in through the roof.
And in the process they busted the water pipes and the store was completely flooded.
Stem to stern, left to right.
But the fact that it was flooded didn't bother anybody.
They looted it anyway.
In the front door, in the back door, in the side doors.
A journalist who was there actually was being shown around by some of the Walmart folks.
People were still running in and out of the store.
And all the looting along Aramingo Avenue in the Port Richmond neighborhood.
I had never heard of Aramingo Avenue, but apparently it is a commercial thoroughfare.
All of the stores looted one after another, and the people who lived there described it as a total loss.
People ran out of stores with their arms full of stolen merchandise, and as one person said, every time they see cops they leave, but once the cops leave they come right back.
TVs, all kinds of things.
There was a store that had been boarded up as a precaution.
A store known as Five Below.
I don't know what one can buy at a Five Below, but the looters ripped the boards off and looted that place.
Stem to stern, just as well.
Anything they could get their hands on.
In the case of a certain Henry Jiang, I suspect he is not founder, he is not descended from Mayflower stock, but Henry Jiang arrived to find that his nail salon and spa had been destroyed.
Terrible, said he.
I wonder if he is beginning to think maybe he came to the wrong country.
Well, all I can think about Philadelphia is this is a city, what was it, in 2018, where one of the black council members pushed for this removal of all the plexiglass because it was an insult to blacks because they were in primarily areas where these Asian business owners We're trying to make an honest dollar through some commerce, and they had plexiglass to protect the employees.
And that was an insult.
Convenience stores, yes, they had the plexiglass to protect the people behind the counter.
And I believe they were forced to remove the plexiglass.
They were.
That was, you know, you just cannot insult the brothers that way.
Well, and according to a journalist who was on the scene, He said, looters were shooting looters.
Yes, this is exciting.
11 people just last night, 11 people were shot, including a 15 year old girl.
Well, maybe she was getting more than her share and somebody decided that it was time for her to be a little bit more modest in her looting.
Reportedly, on another occasion, a 50-year-old man had filled his car to the brim with looted stuff.
Somebody walked up with a gun and stole his car and all his loot.
Very exciting.
Now, there were, just last night, 81 arrests, 53 for burglary, 23 officers were arrested.
And so, overall, since Monday, that makes 172 arrests, 53 officers injured.
That's a pretty substantial body count for officers.
Now, Fox News had an intriguing headline this morning from Action News, the TV station in Philadelphia, and the headline read as follows.
Seven more ATM explosions across Philadelphia under investigation.
They said between Tuesday night and early Wednesday morning, there were seven ATM explosions.
These incidents followed at least 10 ATM explosions that occurred late Monday into early Tuesday.
That seems to me a total of 17 explosions of ATMs.
I had no idea those machines were so dangerous.
Approach them with caution, ladies and gentlemen.
ATMs, especially in Philadelphia, they just explode on you.
If you look in the fine print, no looky here, I was wrong.
A description of one incident was, police said a group of males used an unknown device to cause the explosion.
No arrests were made.
No arrests made.
So 17 explosions.
No, no, apparently it's not some design flaw in the ATMs, but this headline, ATM explosions.
Great.
So, what's happening is people are running around blowing up ATMs.
That's just a new sport in Philadelphia.
But, as a consequence, Philadelphia is going to issue a citywide curfew today, tonight, to stop this second night of protest and looting.
And so, you are not supposed to be out frisking about after 9 p.m.
You know, we're not mentioning some of the more important details, Mr. Taylor, about Walter Wallace.
Is that the guy's name?
Walter Wallace Jr.
Well, you know, the fact is, I don't care very much about Walter Wallace.
He was swinging a knife around, and he got what he deserved.
But, tell us more about Walter Wallace.
Well, he got what he deserved.
You're correct, because he did have a knife, and he was using it as a weapon to antagonize the police.
So yes, great job, Philadelphia.
He was threatening their lives.
So great job, Philadelphia Police.
However, he was an aspiring rapper, a spry 27 years old.
He had seven children.
He was arrested just this past March after he allegedly threatened his child's mother over the phone saying, quote, I'll shoot you in that house up, end quote.
In 2019, he was charged with resisting arrest by, quote, kicking the windows and door panels of a police patrol car.
In 2016, during a robbery, he allegedly grabbed a woman by the neck and held what she believed to be a gun to her head, according to court documents.
Last but not least, in 2013, Wallace's mother had a protective order against him, which he allegedly violated when he, quote, threw water in her face and punched her in her face and threatened to return and shoot her, end quote, according to court records.
So this is why all those ATMs are being blown up.
This is why Five Below, why Walmart, why all these stores, including that, I believe it was an Asian entrepreneur immigrant who had a nail salon.
Nail and hair salon.
There you go.
That's why all of this is happening, not far from where Constitution was signed back in 1789.
Or 1790.
No, 17... That's not about right.
Well, sorry, ladies and gentlemen, if we got that wrong.
In any case, that's where it was drafted and signed.
But, well, as a matter of fact, as I said, all of this stuff is so drearily familiar.
Not just what happened, but the kind of guy who is now a martyr.
The kind of guy in whose name we are marching for freedom, marching for justice, but all is going to be well in no time at all.
Do you know why?
I don't know why.
Because Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have issued a statement.
They have expressed their sense of grieving, quote, for all those suffering the emotional weight of learning about another black life in America lost.
Walter Wallace's life, like too many others, was a black life that mattered to his mother, to his family, to his community, to all of us.
Somehow Kamala and Joe have left out the people that you were talking about who were threatened, etc.
Then they go on to say, they hear they're standing up for law and order, they say, attacking police officers and vandalizing small businesses which are already struggling during a pandemic does not BEND THE MORAL ARC OF THE UNIVERSE CLOSER TO JUSTICE.
Well, you know, as soon as you start talking about bending the moral arc of the universe closer to justice, you know, that stops those looters and rioters right in their tracks.
Everybody freezes because that, of course, is the holy words from Martin Luther King, I believe.
Martin Luther King, of course, yes.
Bending the moral arc!
Oh boy!
So that'll take care of the problem.
As soon as you evoke good ol' MLK and start talking about the moral arc, then we're okay.
But, in the meantime, a few sympathetic little friskinesses broke out.
One in New York, Tuesday night, as demonstrators gathered in Brooklyn.
They shattered windows, they lit fires, they sprayed graffiti all over a police van, and there were 30 arrests!
In Washington, D.C.
also, there was a bit of a knees up.
They had a good time there, all protesting this Walter Wallace guy who is yet another martyr to American racism.
But yes, I'm sure that the words of Joe and Kamala will solve, that will be oil on troubled waters, and we won't have to worry about any more of this.
I think I'll be counting on the curfew rather than Joe and Kamala.
Yeah, the governor of Pennsylvania, as we are speaking, just declared a national emergency for Philadelphia.
He, of course, earlier today, I believe he said that there were peaceful protests going on.
Never mind the fact that, what, 57 police have been deliberately injured, and as you noted, one was in their 50s, and they were targeted by being run over in a vehicle.
Pretty nice.
And then, you know, 11 people shooting each other?
That's all very peaceful, too.
So, there you go.
Now, I'd heard some rumor about the National Guard being called out, but we will mention the National Guard a little bit later in this podcast.
So, moving from Philadelphia to San Francisco, I'd like to announce, with great sadness, that the Walgreens at Van Ness and Eddy Street in downtown San Francisco is getting ready to close.
It is the third Walgreens to close down this year.
So what is happening?
Is that the third Walgreens in San Francisco?
Yeah, I'll beg your pardon.
Yes, that's an important point to clarify.
An important correction, yes.
It came after, quote, months of seeing its shelves repeatedly cleaned up by brazen shoplifters.
One customer told the San Francisco Chronicle, they decided to look into this.
All of us knew it was coming.
You can see people clearing off shelves and placing the goods into a backpack.
Because there's no police, no politicians, no one's interested in enforcing the law because there's no point in it.
Shoplifting is now, thanks to the DA, it's a non-violent misdemeanor that carries a maximum sentence of six months, but If you're caught, the police just issue you a ticket.
They don't call you.
They don't take you in.
They issue you a ticket, and you're supposed to show up later and maybe or maybe not get sentenced for something, but nobody bothers because the procedure is so loose and so ineffective.
So, if you call up the police, they won't bother.
They won't even bother to come because it's a waste of time for everyone.
So, when the San Francisco Chronicle visited the Walgreens right down there in downtown San Francisco, they noticed, and I quote, aisle after aisle of nearly empty shelves.
And they noticed that beauty products seemed to be a favored target.
What type of beauty product, I must ask?
Because San Francisco, if memory serves, is roughly 7% African American, or as you would
call them, Mr. Taylor, our dusky brethren.
Well, I just don't know.
But, you know, beauty products are pretty expensive, so that may be it.
The sort of price per pound on cosmetics is pretty high, so maybe that's why.
If I could throw out one more anecdote.
Just a minute, let me finish with this one here.
While the Chronicle was at the store, they themselves, the reporter himself, watched a guy with a mask walk in.
He took two shelves worth of merchandise, shoved it into a bag, and sauntered out the door with a hey 90-90 and a hot cha-cha.
That's the way it works.
And Walgreen Corporate, they had a comment.
This is about the toothless, most gutless, spineless comment.
They said, organized retail crime in San Francisco has increased the challenge for all retail, and Walgreens is not immune to that.
They didn't say, what the hell are the police, are the government, are the city fathers doing?
This is outrageous!
No, no.
We are not immune either.
Mealy-mouthed bunch of garbage.
And so, you know, they talk about how our African-American fellow citizens live in food deserts.
Well, now with no Walgreens, sounds to me like you're going to be in a drug desert, at least for tetracycline and aspirin.
Over-the-counter drugs.
Well, except for certain kinds of drugs.
And now if you want cocaine, heroin, meth, I mean, San Francisco is a veritable archipelago of oases.
No, no drug desert there.
But if you want a Walgreens, tough.
So, I'm sorry, you were about to... No, no, you didn't.
What made me laugh about this whole story is thinking about the products that are stolen, these beauty products, because in 2018, there was an African-American woman.
Her name was Essie Grundy.
She filed a federal lawsuit against Walmart.
She said that several times in her local store in Paris, California, she observed that, quote, the hair and body products meant for African-Americans had been locked away behind glass shelves, segregated from products for non-African-Americans, end quote.
Now, of course, it turned out that these products had a higher rate of What's called shrinkage?
Yes, it was being stolen, whether it was by an employee or whether it was by a consumer.
During this whole George Floyd madness this summer, on June 12, 2020, Walmart, CBS and the aforementioned Walgreens They ended the practice of locking up black beauty products.
You know, you could always see those images of all the products that are for white women's hair or, you know, white men.
They were always just free to grab, no problem, but you would see plexiglass protecting black consumer products when it comes to When it comes to black women's hair and all those products, because those had the highest rate of being thieved, being stolen, being improperly procured without purchase.
So again, this stuff, as we continue to cocoon in this wonderful diversity, it is fascinating to see how corporate America Well, they bend a knee, but at the same time, they close their doors when it becomes too... Well, see, that's what happens.
Because they're not allowed to take the precautions they need.
They can't lock up the high-shrinkage goods.
They can't be in a city where people say, if you shoplift, you go to jail.
And so, they mealy-mouthed close their doors.
They don't really fight back.
They just move elsewhere.
And then, our poor darlings are left with food deserts and drug deserts.
Maybe even shoe store deserts.
When you go all in on the blacks, it's not uncommon to be financially in the red.
Oh dear, well said.
Well said, but better not said.
Now, here's another great story.
This is very encouraging, makes me patriotic.
The Texas National Guard said Monday, That Governor Greg Abbott is sending 1,000 troops to five of the state's biggest cities to handle any outbreaks of violence or unrest on election day.
Now doesn't that make you believe in the democratic process?
He's worried, and I think rightly so, that depending on the outcome there could be a certain amount of unhappiness.
My personal view is that it's, of course, if Donald Trump wins, the other side will, no matter how soundly he wins, and maybe you're right, maybe he just trounces Uncle Joe, but if that were to happen, I think the other side will express itself in a very undemocratic way, and Greg Abbott is preparing for that.
Elsewhere, the National Guard has designated contingency response units, one in Alabama and the other in Arizona, that are on alert to deploy rapidly.
Augment forces in other states as need be.
In June of just this year, that was just somehow coincidentally after the death of St.
George, 86,400 soldiers were deployed.
That was the maximum deployment.
Did you realize that were that many soldiers deployed?
This is the National Guard.
And that's far more than the approximately 50,000 that were deployed in response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
So this is... That mind-blowing statistic!
Yes, yes.
This is a national catastrophe.
It's worse than a hurricane.
Now... And a hurricane usually only lasts about three days, and there's about a week of cleanup, getting all the debris, the trees that are down.
Well, in the case of Katrina, there were... it was more than just trees.
It was a real problem.
Well, because as you famously pointed out in your essay, Africa was in our midst, and a natural disaster brought about that calamity for all to see.
Except we all closed our eyes very tightly afterwards.
Now, the idea that we need soldiers to keep the peace after an election, this sounds like a Pervolta or Uganda or Haiti or Honduras, but that is the reality of America.
It's the reality of diversity.
But now, however, If this is going to be the case, if they have to send in the National Guard, they better not send in the Air Force National Guard because it is so hideously, pathetically white.
It would just be useless, right, with the Air Force being so white as it is.
Well, that's a great segue.
That's a great introduction to a story that is near and dear to my heart.
I have a lot of friends who have been officers who have done things, done great things, and In the Air Force, and this op-ed was at Yahoo.
It was by Major General Ed Thomas.
He is, get this Mr. Taylor, I'm only going to use up one to this episode, but I have to use it.
This is one of those.
Get this items.
Yeah, you need to, you need to get, you need to understand this one.
He's the commander of Air Force Recruiting Service.
So a major general, that's a high rank, high, high rank there.
So he's writing this, the headline, Had a lot of people send this to me.
They said, you got to check this out.
You know, once again, it's one of these two white stories.
I don't think we're going to talk about it, but Time Magazine had a story about how the veterinarian industry is hideously white.
Oh, that's the latest crisis that has been unearthed.
If your dog dies too bad, we got to find a black vet.
You've got to find a black vet.
But anyways, 86% of Air Force pilots are white men.
Here's why this needs to change.
That was the headline of this op-ed by Major General Ed Thomas.
I'm only going to read a few choice paragraphs from it and we can discuss it.
It opens up with this, quote, The tragic death of George Floyd and recent events have fueled widespread protests and a renewed call for racial equality nationwide.
Amid this, our country has been compelled to reflect on issues that are often uncomfortable, and leaders have been driven to examine their organizations in ways like never before.
The Air Force in many ways is no different, but as a warfighting organization, we cannot afford to squander this moment because our future and national security Depends on it in quote now, of course you would think that when it costs millions to train a pilot to go through flight training to go through to you know to whittle down the pool to Recruit and then you know, they're gonna spend it what I think pilots it's four to six years a commitment This is this is a huge deal.
You don't want a You want equality in the cockpit.
You want merit in the cockpit.
You want the top, the tippy top, regardless of race.
And you know what?
As it turns out, in the Air Force, 86% of the pilots turn out to be white men despite all the efforts for the past 30 years to diversify the cockpits of the United States Air Force.
That's obviously a case of entrenched white supremacy.
This is implicit bias, systemic racism.
Explicit bias.
Exactly.
It's not implicit, it's explicit.
So here's where it gets really strange though.
I'm going to skip a couple paragraphs and I'm going to get to this one.
Before I even took command of my service's recruiting efforts this spring, Air Force leadership made it clear to me that improving diversity would be on the top of my to-do list.
Hey, again, it doesn't matter.
It's an all-volunteer force.
It doesn't matter.
It's diversity.
You know, too many white people.
Hey, you're a white... and by the way, Major General Ed Thomas is a white guy.
He's a white man.
Let's get back to it here.
Quote, and recent national events only serve as an accelerant as we take aim and tackle this vexing issue.
Here we go.
Here we go, guys.
Quote, Pentagon leaders didn't need to explain the why, although General David Goldfein, our former Chief of Staff, did that in calling diversity a warfighting imperative.
Could you repeat that?
Just the last part there.
General Goldfein, former Chief of Staff, He called diversity, quote, a war-fighting imperative, end quote.
Huh.
In other words, our bullets will not leave the barrel unless we've got diversity.
We will be defeated on the battlefield unless we are diverse.
So those all-white guys who hit the beaches on Iwo Jima, they were a bunch of wusses and pussies because they did not have this war-fighting diversity?
Is that what he's saying?
Exactly.
Diversity is a war-fighting imperative, which of course, last time I checked, have we even won a war since... Since we became diverse?
Yeah!
Since we integrated the military in 1948?
Yeah, 1948 was Truman's executive order, correct?
Yeah, but no, no, all those all-white Confederates and Yankees, you know, at Gettysburg, they just did not have that.
They must have been just such ineffectual losers and weaklings.
Well, here's here's one more quote from the piece and we'll move on.
Quote, Air Force Chief of Staff General Charles Q. Brown Jr., the first African American to
lead any branch of the military, has called on us to accelerate change or risk losing
ground to Russia and China, both of which are integrating potential game-changing technologies
like artificial intelligence and hypersonic flight.
We need both the best technologies and the best people to win.
Improving our diversity falls squarely in Brown's mandate."
Yeah, and the Chinese, they are really getting diverse too.
They're putting women in the cockpit, they're going out and hiring Uyghurs, and who knows what other Muslims, and oh boy, they're gonna have a... and the Russians too, you know, they're gonna make sure we've got lots of Chechens in the... oh man!
You know, the fact is, they must just be laughing at us.
Oh, the Russian generals, the Chinese generals, their wargaming basically is nothing more than, let's just wait a couple more years as the diversity in the United States continues to rise, as these mandates, as the, what was the quote, by warfighting imperative diversity becomes the primary mission of the US Air Force, Navy, Coast Guard, Marines, Army.
The point is this.
We already have the best technology.
We already have the best people when it comes to pilots.
The problem is the technology is created primarily by white scientists, by white engineers, by white R&D, and the pilots flying these planes, regrettably, as it says.
I mean, just listen to this quote again.
We are in a I don't want to quote James Kirkpatrick because it sounds too blackpill, but we really are a conquered people when you have a headline like this by the Major General Ed Thomas, who commands Air Force Recruiting Service.
And that headline is, 86% of Air Force pilots are white men.
Here's why this needs to change.
Yeah, now if you were a white Air Force pilot, wouldn't that just thrill you?
Or if you were a white guy and you thought you'd make a great pilot, you've got the message, haven't you?
You better peddle your talents elsewhere.
Well, you know, the idea that George Floyd and everything that happened after that has really put an impetus to this.
I have another example of that.
An equally, I think, disgusting example in its own way.
The head of the endowment, the 31.2 billion dollar endowment at my alma mater, Yale University, is run by a guy named David Swenson.
Well, just the other day he told dozens of firms that manage Yale's money that he was going to assess them on their progress in increasing the diversity of the investment staff.
And if they aren't, Sufficiently diverse in terms of women and other pets, then he's gonna pull the money from them.
They're not gonna get the business.
Now, why did he suddenly decide this?
He said, the Black Lives Matter movement has had a galvanizing effect on him and his team.
He said he was astonished and heartened by the movement's impact and this made him make this move.
Now, in other words, the fact that there were people out there rioting, burning, looting, that changed his mind.
About something that he's obviously been thinking about for a long time.
But to me, it is spectacularly pathetic.
The fact that you have all these people running around looting and burning, in some cases killing people.
And so that's what made him decide.
That's what sets policy in his mind.
But that is what is setting policy all across the United States.
This really is a very, very sad state of affairs.
But that's the way it works.
Now, moving on, the Southern Poverty Law Center.
How much money have you given to that endowment?
How much money have you donated to your alma mater?
You know, I used to give money.
For a few years after I graduated, when they asked me for money, I would give as I was able.
I guess about after five years of that, I wrote back and I said, I will not give Yale a dime until it stops discriminating against white people.
And since then I have given nothing and they continue to discriminate.
So if they want any money from me, they better stop.
But I don't think that's going to happen in my lifetime.
But as I say, moving along to the Southern Poverty Law Center, those of you who pay attention to this sort of thing know that they have something called the hate map.
And it shows all the organizations that it calls hate groups.
Now, for years, this fabled and storied hate map included black separatist groups, such as the Nation of Islam, but also some other rather exciting-sounding people.
The Great Millstone, for example, which has 30 branches according to the SPLC.
There's the Israel United in Christ, about 40 branches.
The Israelite School of Universal Practical Knowledge and the United Kingdom of Israel.
It's all this, I guess, this black Israeli.
They think they're the chosen people.
They're the true descendants of Shem, Ham, Japheth.
I don't really understand this stuff, but in any case... The true tribe.
The true tribe, indeed.
They are the chosen people.
But just a few weeks ago the SPLC announced that it's going to drop black separatist listings as a qualification for those who hate They explained, they explained, black separatist groups land on the SPLC's hate map because they propagate anti-semitic, anti-LGBTQ, and male supremacist views, not because they oppose a white supremacist power structure.
In other words, just because they are black and they may hate white people, that doesn't make you a hate group.
You have to also Repeat that!
or LGBTQXYZ or women.
They were unexplained.
This is a new policy for them because they got woke by the rioting too.
The Black Separatist Listing created a false equivalency of equal hate on both sides.
But the hate is not equal.
Black separation, Black separatism was born out of valid anger.
Repeat that.
Repeat that.
Black, the R, they're talking about their own Black Separatist Listing was created out
of a, it created a false equivalency of equal hate on both sides, but the hate is not equal.
Black separatism was born out of valid anger.
against very real historical and systemic oppression.
Wanting separation from a society that's historically and systematically oppressed black communities isn't extremism.
Black separatism isn't extremism.
Black dissent isn't black violence.
I'm quoting them.
And so they say from now on if you hate white people and they go on to say that These black groups can be virulently anti-white.
Virulently!
That sounds like hatred to me.
But as far as they're concerned, it's not hatred.
They can't be a hate group unless you can also determine that they hate Jews or gays or women or something.
So that means you can have a black group, it can hate all white people and want them all dead.
Maybe even kill a few.
But if the group is silent on the subject of women or Jews or homosexuals, they're not a hate group.
They get a pass.
They're not a hate group.
Yeah.
Hating white people is not hate because it's born out of valid anger.
What do you think about that?
I think quite clearly hating white people is what unites the Coalition of the Fringes that is the Democratic Party right now, and it's also what unites all of the elite, whether it's the people who are in charge of Yale's endowment, because you don't want to be seen as having any skepticism toward our new zeitgeist.
See, I don't think it's fair to say that the guy who runs the Yale endowment, the Swenson guy, I don't think he hates white people.
I think a lot of people don't really hate white people.
Angela Merkel doesn't hate white people.
Hillary Clinton doesn't hate white people.
Sometimes they act as though they do, but they're all wrapped up in this religion, this new religion of wokeness and white privilege and all that.
But in any case, To me, it's interesting and significant.
The SPLC has finally come clean.
They said, hating white people is not hate.
I'm glad they have finally put that right on the line.
It unites post-America Americans, and as Peter Brimelow talked about, the historic American nation, I think we see next week, in the coming days, I can tell you, I was in one of America's biggest cities this week, and they're already preparing for massive riots.
They've got all of the shops, the nice shops.
It looks like a hurricane's about to hit.
Well, a hurricane is about to hit.
A hurricane is about to hit!
But speaking of hate, on August 19th, back last summer, 53-year-old Christine Summers, she was a trucker.
She was calling 9-1-1.
And she told a dispatcher that she had seen a black man walking on the interstate she'd been driving and she thought she might have hit him.
Well, while she was still on the phone with the dispatcher, Christine Summers got out of the truck to investigate.
And the dispatcher then heard her begin to scream, get away from me!
And the line went dead, and she was found dead that very same day on the side of Interstate 59 slash 20 in Birmingham, Alabama.
Charles Gibson, age 39, was arrested and charged with murder.
And in a hearing last week, we learned something about Mr. Gibson.
He told officers who arrested him that he had, quote, killed a white lady and that President Trump had made him do it.
And one of the arresting officers said at the hearing that was just this last week that Mr. Gibson seems to be very disgruntled with our race.
As a white person, he felt we were there to hurt him.
But, don't forget, Donald Trump made him do this.
And no matter how hard he hates white people, he's not a hater.
The SPLC says so.
So, I guess I feel like Jesus loves me, you know?
The Bible tells me so.
The SPLC tells me so.
He was not a hater.
But anyway, let us leave poor Christine Summers to rest in peace, if she possibly can, while the world utterly ignores this black guy who, hopped up by this constant, constant provocation against white people, decided to take it out on this poor white lady.
She was a wife, she was a mother, and she was a grandmother, and she's seen pictures of her family.
It's a very sad story.
It's a terrible story, but of course it is lost into the obscure corners of the internet because the killer was black and she was white.
But there's a story that you have dredged up from the obscure corners of the internet about the free money.
Being distributed in Compton.
There's no such thing as a free lunch, and there's no such thing as a free money, but... Oh, yeah!
You know, if you play your cards right, if you're one of our African-American fellow citizens, I think they're pretty good at drumming up the free money.
Well, here's the headline, and we'll just roll with some of the punches here quickly.
Compton Pilot Program will guarantee free recurring cash payments to hundreds of its low-income residents.
Compton, of course, famously was the home to George Bush at one point.
That's where President Bush, 41, yeah, 41, that's right.
President Bush was 41 because his son was 43. So the city of Compton is launching a pilot program
that will guarantee free recurring cash payments with no strings attached to 800 of its low-income
residents.
The launch of the Compton Pledge is a guaranteed income program that Seeks to challenge the racial and economic injustice plaguing both welfare programs and economic systems, end quote, was announced by Mayor Aja Brown.
I guess that's how we're going to pronounce it.
A-J.
A-J-A.
Brown.
Aja.
Aja.
Who knows?
Mayor Brown, we'll call him.
The program is going to begin later this year with a select group of pre-verified residents who will receive monthly cash payments over a 24-year, two-year period.
Or 24-month, two-year period.
Over a two-year period, so over 24 months, precisely.
A spokesperson for one of the organizations partnering with the program told CNN they have not determined the exact amount of cash payments, quote, beyond the range of a few hundred dollars.
So, you know, $200 for a year, that's $2,400 right there.
So for two years, if it's $200 a month, you're looking at for two years, $4,800.
$2,400 right there.
So for two years, that could be, if it's $200 a month, you're looking at for two years, $4,800.
Yeah, it could be a lot more.
So the Compton Pledge will be available to, quote, irregularly or informally employed residents,
immigrants of varied legal status, and the formerly incarcerated, end quote.
What are your thoughts?
Well, where's the money coming from?
As you pointed out, there's no such thing as free money.
Is this tax money?
I hope not, but it could be.
Maybe it's some 501c3 who's kicking in the money?
Well, here we go.
I'll give you the answer.
The program has raised over $2.5 million in private donations and in-kind contributions.
This money will go to the Fund for Guaranteed Income, a registered public charity with, quote, the vast majority channeled directly to the cash transfer recipients, end quote, according to the program's fact sheet.
So, we do know that in 2019, Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs, we've talked about this gentleman before on this podcast.
Gentlemen, loosely used.
He launched the Stockton Economic Empowerment Demonstration, SEEDS, a nice acronym, the first guaranteed income program in the country.
SEEDS gave 125 Stockton residents $500 a month for 18 months.
And in June of this year, Tubbs also created the Economic Security Project, a group that funds guaranteed income projects.
He also created the Mayors for Guaranteed Income, which is a consortium of 25 mayors who are pushing for these kinds of pilot programs.
The pity of it is, this stuff has been going on for longer than our listeners probably realize.
There was a time when, 20 years ago, there was money set aside for students For poor people who actually made it to their doctor's appointments.
There was even money for children who brushed their teeth.
Small amounts of money.
And all of this stuff, it is started with great fanfare, and you never hear how the program ends.
Someday, it would be very interesting to look up their seeds, maybe two years from now, and find out if there are any real consequences.
Did these people walk around for two years, this two-month program, with nicer sneakers, with better clothes, and then went right back to their same old habits?
Cleaner teeth?
Maybe cleaner teeth?
Fewer cavities with that catch?
Well, uh...
We'll see.
Paying people to do the ordinary things that we're all supposed to do, it is, to me, utterly insane.
This is what you learn from Mama and Daddy.
That's assuming you have a Mama and a Dada.
That's even more of an exoticism in certain neighborhoods to have a Daddy.
Well, let's move on to Inside Higher Education.
It is a quite well-regarded publication, and we usually don't give source material on these podcasts, but I thought that this article was sufficiently interesting so that I will tell our listeners.
This was from October 20th of this year, an article called, What Happens Before College Matters in Inside Higher Ed.
And it quotes a certain Leila Morsi, who says in the United States, we have a racial caste system.
And that's one of the problems with education.
Now, she teaches at Flinders University in Australia.
So I guess she should know.
She can look all the way across the Pacific and determine that we have a racial caste system in the United States.
And this article also quotes someone by the name of Damien Sojoiner.
An associate professor of anthropology at the University of California, Irvine, who says, education has been a very, very violent place for black students, with no elaboration.
I mean, what's this?
White people, I suppose, white teachers and white classmates are stabbing them, beating them up.
It's been a very, very violent place.
All these resource officers that are forced into all these schools that are diverse, they're the ones who are inflicting this violence, I guess.
I guess it is.
I guess it is.
Well, every time you walk through a metal detector, I guess that's violence being inflicted on black students.
Now, Sojoiner, strange name if you ask me, he says black students are held back through various enclosures.
Which Sojourner describes as ways to corral black freedom, especially if those freedoms run counter to state desires.
Now, what does that even mean?
Is that the freedom to beat each other up, run up and down the hall, swear at the teachers?
Yes, those freedoms do run counter to state desires.
But all of this rubbish, corral black freedom, they're all in these poor enclosures.
Well, Kevin Clay, An assistant professor of education at Virginia Commonwealth University says black communities need to reclaim their K-12 schools.
What does that mean?
Take them over completely?
Is that segregation?
Buy and buy me if that's what they want to do.
Throw whitey out?
I don't know.
I think that's what it means.
This whole article is one example after another of these just cuckoo crazy things.
But here's Priscilla Mayowa.
She moved to the United States from Nigeria to go to high school.
She said she experienced many microaggressions from her teachers.
Now, she is a student at Bemidji State University in Minnesota.
I didn't know Minnesota had a Bemidji State University, but it does.
And she says she expects to feel unwelcome.
She also says she struggles with imposter syndrome.
Do you know about imposter syndrome?
I don't.
No, what's imposter syndrome?
Imposter syndrome, it is the constant feeling of doubt about her skills, talents, or accomplishments.
She has a persistent internalized fear of being exposed as a fraud in a white academic environment.
And that insecurity combined with the different treatment by instructors has hurt her learning experiences.
Now, what she was on to say strikes me as absolutely remarkable.
She's being quoted here.
Sometimes I don't turn in work early because I'm scared that my teacher will judge me for it.
She says that she would sometimes rather not turn in anything at all because at least that's what her teachers expect.
Is that about the cuckoo-est thing you've ever heard?
No, it's not.
It's actually not, Mr. Taylor, because you just told a story how 20 years ago People who probably were similar to this girl were paid to brush their teeth and to turn their homework in.
So it's not that cuckoo.
But here she's saying, she's saying, because I'm this African woman, my teachers don't expect me to turn in my papers.
So I'm just not because I'd rather not disappoint them.
Well, what the heck?
She should be paid for it.
You're right.
Peg did not turn in her papers.
Then Ms.
Mayowa says, I'm used to the fact that this country is racist.
So, yet another just completely crazy person being quoted in this article.
Then there's this guy named Anthony Abraham Jack.
He's an assistant professor of education at Harvard, and he wants to do away with what he calls the hidden language of academia.
Well, again, what do these things even mean?
He says a practice as simple as defining what office hours are can help decode the language that more privileged students take for granted.
In other words, if you say, well, office hours on Tuesdays, 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m., That is so complicated, that is so tricky, that's so weird that you have to decode this academic language for people who are not privileged white people who understand language like that.
If they can't understand that, they sure don't deserve to be in college.
He also says, colleges need to invest in mental health services, particularly diverse counselors and ones who are trained to be trauma-informed.
Trauma-informed.
You're supposed to be... In other words, if you are not white and you're at university, you are subject to so much pressure, you could be losing your mind.
You need trauma-informed, culturally responsive, diverse counselors who look like you, who can hold your hand and make sure you make it to your next class.
But I saved my favorite to the end.
Her name is Ebony McGee.
Now, all these people are quoted in this one single remarkable article.
She is an associate professor of education at Vanderbilt.
She is hesitant to propose too many solutions because it shouldn't be the responsibility of black people to find the answers, she says.
She says, white people aren't stupid.
You got us into this mess.
Why is it our job to get us out?
Good grief!
In other words, you know, my mama is a crack hoe, my daddy's in jail, my brother got snuffed out in a gang shootout, sis had three illegitimate children by the time she was 18, but that's your problem, Whitey!
You got us into this problem, you get us out.
Well, Ebony McGee, that's my girl.
Well, let's find out about her.
She left a career in electrical engineering during a PhD in mathematics.
Okay.
Mathematics education, sorry, not mathematics.
Okay.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, yeah.
I was about to say, wow.
Yeah.
At the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Now you, you, you, you wicked stereotyper, you.
No, I'm not a stereotype, I was about to say.
Why is she working at Raytheon or Lockheed?
No, no, mathematics education.
Oh, okay.
And then she got a Spencer Postdoc Fellowship at the University of Chicago, a National Science Foundation Postdoc Fellowship at Northwest, and with funding from six NSF grants, she's founded her own little faculty initiative.
Well, white people have certainly solved her problems.
So, why can't white people solve the crack-hole problem?
I don't know.
Isn't that logical?
Good lord.
Well, anyway.
Now, Chase is going to get to work.
Chase, the bank, they are going to get to work and bail out Ebony McGee's family and friends because they have committed no fewer than $30 billion over the next five years to break down barriers of systemic racism.
I have to ask you, say that one more time.
How much money?
$30 billion.
$30 billion over how long a period?
Five years.
So you're talking about $6 billion a year.
$6 billion a year.
In these trying times, they're going to spend $6 billion a year to originate more mortgages for black and latinx households.
Latinx, by the way.
And they're going to help black and latinx households get lower mortgage payments when they refinance.
They're going to provide additional loans to small businesses and majority black and latinx communities.
I'm quoting from their press release.
And they will finance additional affordable housing units in underserved communities.
I guess they got tired of using this phrase, Black and Latinx, so they came up with another word.
Yes.
Do you have any chase in your portfolio?
I do not.
I hope not.
Well, I guess S&P 500 probably has chase.
Probably.
Anyway, now here's a bit of a detail.
It'll make $40,000 home mortgage loans for Black and Latinx households.
And to do this, the firm is committing $8 billion That's $8 billion.
It will also help an additional 20,000 black and Latinx households achieve lower mortgage payments by providing up to $4 billion in refinance loads and more free money.
Free money for down payments.
Chase has doubled its homebuyer assistance grant.
This is grants!
Money, cash on the barrelhead, to $5,000 in majority black communities.
If you are black, you can get $5,000 just kicked in by the bank to go into your down payment.
Your down payment on a house, obviously, that of course they're going to say, because of redlining, houses in this area are less value, you know, they don't appreciate, and you know, the home value in this black zip code is You know, one-fifth of what it would be if it was all white zip code.
I mean, this is insane.
Funny thing about that, isn't it?
You know, funny thing about that.
And then, another press release.
Chase is adding 100 branches in Black and Latinx community and hiring home lending advisors to help boost access to mortgages for Black and Latinx customers.
Now, does that mean if you walk into one of those home lending advisors and you're white, are they going to say, get lost, honky?
I mean, this is for black and latinx customers.
This, to me, it really sounds like a perfect grounds for a lawsuit.
Oh, a massive lawsuit.
I mean, think about... I just don't get it.
How can you do this?
How can you say, okay, $30 billion and it's all going to go to the black and latinx folks?
No white people apply.
I guess not, but there you go.
I encourage, once this is actually implemented, I'm sure if we look back a year from now, a lot of those chase Branches that are opening up in the black and brown primary, you know, majority communities, they'll be closed, just like the Walgreens in San Francisco, because, again, at the end of the day, the almighty dollar is what defines corporate America.
But you see, it doesn't.
That's the point.
That's the amazing thing about this.
Presumably, they're in business to make money, just like the guy who runs the Yale Endowment Fund.
Shouldn't he be taking Yale's endowment and giving it to the people who perform the best?
No, he isn't going to give it to people who hire the most people who don't look like him.
Well, of course, in a sane society, we should be paying people to have more children who are actually able to take care of those children.
We should be subsidizing large families.
We should be encouraging what Steve Saylor calls a sailor strategy.
This is what a sane government, this is what a sane elite that actually cared about that phrase for our posterity.
Mr. Kersey, This is America.
You use the word sane government.
You use the word sane elite.
You go brush your teeth.
I'll pay you five dollars.
What if I turn the homework into the five?
Yes.
But anyway, I'm going to walk off and make a cup of coffee while you tell our avid listeners about sports.
Let's just briefly do this because this is again, we mentioned that story about the U.S.
Air Force being 86% of the pilot's white, so it's obviously two white men.
And then a few white women too.
Yeah, I'm sure it's actually probably about 90% white.
Now, we teased that story from Time Magazine about how the veterinarian industry, my god, it's too white.
I encourage all of our listeners to track that story down and read it.
Again, Time Magazine wants your dog to die.
Here's the story that I saw that struck me as interesting.
This is from the 538 website, Nate Silver's site.
It's affiliated with the New York Times.
The story was, quote, the NHL says hockey is for everyone.
Black players aren't so sure.
The subhead was organizations of players and fans are trying to change the makeup and attitude of the overwhelmingly white league.
Now, Mr. Taylor, I've never heard any major periodical, any major corporate media conglomerate say that the NBA, which is 19% white, has a Problem with diversity because there aren't enough white
people.
Their makeup or attitude. No, no, that's just fine.
The NFL? About 27% white. Nobody ever says, God, you know what? We need more white cornerbacks.
Gosh, why aren't there more white people out there running the football as a tailback or
running back? Or we need more white wide receivers.
Come on, what's going on here?
No, it's actually we need more black quarterbacks, even though the league is almost 70% black.
There's an insufficient amount of black quarterbacks.
To the NHL, I'm just going to read the few quick headlines, a few quick paragraphs.
Quote, as Washington Capitals forward Devontae Smith-Pelly Well, that's not very nice.
At a penalty box during a game at Chicago's United Center in February 2018, he listened
as a group of white fans chanted, quote, basketball, basketball, basketball in his direction.
All right.
Okay.
Well, continue.
If I saw you in public, you look like you could be a good power forward, you know, maybe a shooting guard.
I'd shoot a basketball at you.
I suppose if I were bouncing a basketball around in the court and a bunch of black people walked up to me and said, astrophysics, astrophysics, astrophysics, should I be insulted?
Oh well.
Sorry.
Off we go.
Continuing.
So the Blackhawks fans taunting Smith-Pelly, who is black, were making their position clear.
Hockey isn't for everyone.
And especially not for black people.
I don't think that's nice.
But anyway.
No, again, the guy obviously has some talent.
He was an enforcer.
The point of the article is it just breaks down again all these players and there's small little anecdotes.
The league is, I want to say, it's like 96% white.
Sounds like it.
And it's made up of primary players from Canada, from Russia, from Finland, from, you know, the Eastern Bloc countries.
There are a lot of American players, but it really is a white sport.
A worldwide white sport.
And this article makes it clear that no, that's not good enough.
We need to get rid of that.
The other story, and I'll be quick and I'll be brief on the sports because I know we're running out of time.
Legendary women's WNBA star says that women's basketball isn't popular because players are predominantly black and LGBTQ.
Plus, now they don't elaborate on what that plus means.
I don't really care.
I don't really want to know too much about the other letters to be honest.
The Seattle Storm point guard Sue Bird says the WNBA does not receive the same coverage as U.S.
women's soccer due to player demographics and her girlfriend is the U.S.
women's national team captain for the women's soccer team Megan Rapinoe and she agrees.
The black girl Sue Bird said, I just want to get this quote out there because it's funny, She said that, uh, to be blunt, it's the demographics of who's playing.
Women's soccer players generally are cute little white girls, while WNBA players, they were all shapes and sizes.
A lot of black, gay, tall women.
There's maybe an intimidation factor and people are quick to judge it and put it down.
End quote.
Now, Mr. Taylor, I know you don't pay attention to the NBA, so I know it's not that much of a It's not too much of an exaggeration to say you've probably never watched a WNBA game.
Gosh.
Does that stand for Wisconsin Basketball Association?
That's the Women's National Basketball Association.
Oh, I beg your pardon.
It is basically subsidized by ESPN.
You know, we talked a couple weeks ago about how bad the NBA's finals ratings were.
Just imagine, I think that you could have a show dedicated to watching paint dry, and that would get higher Nielsen ratings than a WNBA game.
But I just thought this story was fascinating because, hey listen, cute little white soccer players, they are pretty cute.
So, let's put it that way.
Especially ones at the tippy-toppy college level.
Cute counts.
Well, let's leap the pond to Great Britain.
Remember the Manchester Arena attack that blast back in May 2013?
Ariana Grande concert, right?
Exactly.
It killed 22 people and injured 800.
Well, an inquiry is going on right now about it, and we've got testimony from Kyle Lawler, who was at that time an 18-year-old steward who had received training in what to look out for.
He had had a briefing on the terrorist threat.
He said it was severe.
It was highly likely.
The news was heavily reporting it, but why didn't he report bomber Salman Abedi, who was hiding near an exit?
He said Because I was scared of being branded a racist.
I was scared of being wrong.
And if I got it wrong and was branded a racist, I would get in trouble.
It made me hesitant to do, hesitant to overreact or judge someone by his race.
Now, if he had the time, at that time he saw this Abedi guy doing something very mysterious and suspicious right at the outside.
At that time, everybody was still inside the concert.
It was on their way out, the bomb exploded, and this could have been stopped.
But, the guy did not move, make a move, because he was afraid that if he called attention to this guy, he'd be a racist.
That's the kind of world we live in.
Not just in the United States, but in Great Britain as well.
9-11, same thing happened, I believe, at Boston's Lugan Airport.
Somebody said that they saw someone who fit the description to a tee of an Islamic terrorist.
It turned out to be Ada, I believe, or one of the guys who hijacked the planes.
Well, it couldn't do it.
It couldn't do it.
But that's the world we live in, and that's the world that we will continue to live in if there are not more people who wake up.
And that is part of our job, to wake you up wherever you are around the world.
And ladies and gentlemen, it has been our pleasure and honor to have your attention for this period.