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Jan. 14, 2021 - Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor
59:41
If You Can’t Get Them on Domestic Terrorism Try Seditious Conspiracy
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Today is January 14th, Year of Our Lord 2021, and that means it is eight days since the momentous events that took place on Capitol Hill.
This has been an extraordinary week.
As you probably all know, Donald Trump has been plunged into the internet gulag.
He has been apparently completely silenced on all his platforms, and In the old days, you used to be able to talk to 88 million followers, just the way Louis Farrakhan and even O.J.
Simpson talked to their followers.
But now he can speak only if CNN and New York Times permit him to speak.
That's how he gets out to the general public.
So, it's getting crowded in the Gulag.
We may be running out of bread and water here.
But in a way, this is good for we racial dissidents because ordinary people, ordinary Republicans are swarming into it along with people like myself.
But the aspect of the reaction to the Capitol takeover that most strikes me is the extraordinary diligence with which the Justice Department and the FBI are seeking these people out.
The probe to find the people who were there is apparently one of the most expensive and expansive criminal investigations in the history of the Justice Department.
As a spokesman pointed out, the scope and scale of this investigation in these cases is unprecedented.
We're going to have, I believe, hundreds of criminal cases.
And as you who are listening probably know, the FBI and the Justice Department have been soliciting tips from the public.
If you know of any of these horrible people who walked into the Capitol, then turn them in.
And a number of cases have already been taken, already been charged, And people are talking a great deal about domestic terrorism.
Now, the curious thing about domestic terrorism is that there is a federal definition for it, but it's not a crime.
The federal definition is an activity that involves acts dangerous to human life that are in violation of the criminal laws and appear to be intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population or to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion.
It's dangerous to human life, influencing a policy of government.
Now, the people who were at the Capitol, no doubt, wanted to influence government policy.
But as far as I can tell, very few of them did anything that was dangerous to human life.
The only dangerous thing to human life that Ashley Babbitt did, for example, the young lady who was shot, was to stop a bullet.
She endangered no one's life.
But the reason why it seems to me so many people are jabbering about domestic terrorism, even though it's not against the law, is because they are appalled at the idea that these Trump supporters, these people whom they hate with the most, the greatest ferocity, may be guilty of nothing more than breaking an ad ring or trespassing.
That they can't stand.
There is, in fact, a far more serious consideration, and that is the charge of seditious conspiracy.
This really is a crime, and it is a crime that is defined in a way that strikes me as extremely dangerous.
Let me read from the definition.
It is if two or more persons conspire to overthrow, put down, or to destroy by force the government of the United States.
That's pretty serious.
I don't think anybody can be argued to have tried that.
Or to levy war against them.
Nobody's done that.
Or to oppose by force the authority thereof.
Well, then that gets a little bit ambiguous.
Or by force to prevent, hinder, or delay the execution of any law.
What I'm afraid of is that some of the people who occupy the Capitol are going to be caught up on this idea of to oppose by force the authority of the government, or by force to prevent, hinder, or delay the execution of any law.
There may be some way to twist this thing, which is obviously supposed to stop people who are trying to forcibly overthrow the government, try to put them behind bars for a maximum of 20 years.
They can go up to 20 years for this.
Now, furthermore, you don't even have to do any of these things.
All you have to do is conspire to do them.
And the Justice Department is making a very concerted attempt to try to work out how they can charge these people with precisely that.
It's just extraordinary, and I do not need to point out to our well-informed listeners just how much of a stark contrast this is with the way people who tried to invade the federal courthouse in Portland, who took over part of the city of Seattle, who burned down a police precinct in Minnesota, all of these actions have been sort of dismissed as either youthful hijinks or certainly in the service of a wonderful objective.
Social justice.
Social justice.
Yes, indeed.
That's what it was for.
But because these white people who marched into the Capitol, because they are not going in the direction that we're all supposed to be in lockstep, they're going to throw the book at them, and they're going to try to lock them up.
I don't suppose anybody will be sentenced to a 20-year prison term, but this is such a startling, breathtaking contrast with the way they just barely slapped them on the hands.
Mr. Taylor, there are two moments that we have to talk about briefly, and that is the occupation of the police precinct in Seattle during the, what was the term, CHAZ.
The CHED or the CHAZ.
Yeah.
The Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone.
The Autonomous Zone that people thought was just a joke.
However, they did erect barriers, they erected walls, they had their own, let's call it what it was, a militia.
I believe that actually two black people were shot in the Jazz Zone.
One of them died.
Two black teenagers.
I thought that both of them had died, but in any case there's been hardly any investigation.
They kept the police out!
They kept the police out and they occupied the police precinct in the Autonomous Zone for 30 days.
There was a post-mortem done by the New York Times which they admitted how violent it was and how the area where the Autonomous Zone was erected was a area. A lot of businesses and finally they just said, guys,
we're private citizens trying to operate. We're the people who create tax revenue for you.
Let's do something here.
What is happening? You've just gone ahead and given the monopoly on violence over, not
from the state, and you handed it over to this autonomous zone. Now the incident though
this autonomous zone. Now the incident though that I think is the most shocking comparison
that I think is the most shocking comparison is the May 31st attempt to penetrate the White
is the May 31st attempt to penetrate the White House walls, the fence at the White House,
House walls, the fence at the White House, where more than 60 secret service agents were
where more than 60 Secret Service agents were injured.
About 15 of them were seriously injured and went to the emergency room during this unbelievable
melee, this battle of the White House. I mean I guess that was the first time that someone
tried to storm the White House since what, it was burned down in 1812, the original one? I
mean it's just, it's so galling because you didn't, and again, you know you and I before
Charlottesville, we both said don't go people, what the heck, you know.
There's no point in going to any of these things anymore because they're just basically setups.
You had the incident where you talk about what the DOJ is doing.
Remember, the FBI The FBI sent 15 agents to investigate the Talladega noose with Bubba Wallace, where they thought, oh my gosh, there's this picture, this is horrible.
Well, it turns out that 15 FBI agents were able to discern, Mr. Taylor, that this noose had been there since 2019.
And it wasn't.
They're talking about the stock car driver.
The NASCAR incident.
But the FBI sent 15 agents.
I believe that they sent, what?
30 plus agents down to Samford, Florida to investigate Zimmerman back in 2012.
That's right.
To find, did he ever say a forbidden word?
Did he ever have a forbidden thought?
Yes, and they were unable to find that.
But with that kind of manpower, you'd think you could indict a ham sandwich, which is the way George Wallace used to talk about the federal government.
But yes, this is, as this Justice Department guy says, the scope and scale of this investigation is unprecedented.
Trying to find these guys who simply, a lot of them as I say, just walked through an open door.
Have there ever been, and now there are rewards, did you know the DC police is offering up to $1,000 reward?
If you can identify one of the people who was actually in the Capitol?
Went to the Capitol?
Yes.
None of this was ever done for the people who looted, who burned things down, this Chaz thing in Seattle, the people who burned down the police precinct in Minnesota.
These people, gosh, well that's all rather too bad.
I suppose some of them have been arrested and indicted and some of them made due time, but Nothing like this all points alert.
It's as if these people walked in were Osama Bin Laden.
They're going to track them down to the ends of the earth, bring them back and hang them.
It's just extraordinary.
But these are the times in which we live and, well, there's just a vindictiveness about it that I find appalling.
the utter vindictiveness of trying to impeach a president who's only got seven days left in office.
They're going to impeach Donald Trump for the second time.
It's impossible to remove him within seven days, but they would have had the satisfaction of impeaching him.
And apparently one of the things they want to do is once they've impeached him,
they can have a second vote and then deny him any qualification to hold federal office again.
Now, if they do that, are they not saying we know better than the will of the people?
He can't run for the Senate, for example, if they do that.
But isn't this saying, we know better than the people of the United States?
These are our elected representatives, but they're saying, no, no, if we decide we don't like this guy, we're going to make sure he never runs again.
One thing that I'm concerned about is all the Republicans who are turning tail and who are, some of them have already voted to impeach him.
Ten of them did, that's right.
Yes.
Some of them may very well decide, well yeah, it'd be better if that guy can never run again.
It'll make things a whole lot easier for us if we have any kind of presidential ambitions or any kind of ambitions at all.
Just keep this guy out of politics forever.
So that kind of crass political motivation may be part of any Republican cooperation with this undertaking.
The whole thing is just so viciously vindictive, I find it appalling.
Well, he got banned by Snapchat, along with everything else.
His YouTube channel, I believe, was...
That's right.
His credit card processor abandoned him.
He had stores on Shopify that were selling Trump material, Trump merchandise.
Also, his campaign fundraising site can't process credit cards anymore.
They can't send out emails either.
They can't communicate that way.
You know, the fascinating thing about all of this is he's being digitally erased from Home Alone 2, this simple cameo.
in a children's Christmas movie. He's in this pretty funny scene where he tells the home alone
child, Kevin MacAllister, played by Macaulay Calkin, where to go to get to the front desk.
There's a petition to have him digitally erased. Now there's a chilling book called
The Commissar Vanishes, where it talks about those who fell out of favor with the Soviet ruling party.
We'll see.
But now it well, but you know all the other reactions to this capital take.
time. Oh it happened a lot and this is what's gonna happen to all of Trump's
family. I don't well maybe it's maybe his family but I doubt they will airbrush
him out of a movie but we'll see we'll see but it well but you know all the
other reactions to this Capitol take it's just extraordinary. Airbnb
according to an outfit in Beaumont Texas called 12 news a TV station let me
Let me read to you an article about Airbnb.
Just a few sentences from it.
First of all, it starts like this.
One week after a rally in support of President Donald Trump turned into a violent siege of the United States Capitol building that left six people dead.
Left six people dead.
Now, it's as if the people who took over the building killed six people.
Of course, one of the people dead was Ashley Babbitt, who was shot by Capitol Guard.
And one of the people died, apparently, from injuries suffered by resisting this group.
And the other three that we know about were medical emergencies.
They had heart attacks.
They're all Trump supporters.
All Trump supporters.
Now, six people died.
Where's the sixth?
You know who the sixth is?
The sixth person is a guy in Georgia, I believe it was, who was indicted, who committed suicide.
So now, they're counting him as a casualty of this takeover.
Yes, a violent siege of the United States Capitol building that left six people dead, as if they roared in and slaughtered six people.
This is just such a slanted and really dishonest reporting.
And again, like you said, the only person who was shot was Ashley Babbitt, a 14-year Air Force veteran.
That's right, that's right.
She's the only one who was actually murdered outright.
Although we don't know about this Brian Sicknick guy.
They say somebody hit him in the head with a fire extinguisher.
And if that's the case, then he was murdered.
But a lot of this is still very murky.
But Airbnb announced that it will block or cancel any reservations made on its platform during the week of the presidential inauguration.
They won't let you stay there.
They say, we are aware of reports emerging yesterday afternoon regarding armed militias and known hate groups that are attempting to travel and disrupt the inauguration.
Now, I've, I bet a lot of this is just idle chatter, the idea of people actually going to the inauguration and trying to do some sort of armed uprising.
I think the chances of that are slim to absolute zero.
But here Airbnb is saying they won't, they won't let anybody stay in the whole area for a week.
It's just remarkable.
I would hate it if I had, if I were a a partner with Airbnb and I had, I thought it was going to
be this amazing place that I could rent out for $3,000 a night. You would think that there'd
actually potentially be a lawsuit there.
You sure think there would?
They sure think they would.
Because that's a lot of potential lost revenue there.
It's a great deal of lost revenue for the people who actually are the clients, who are the people who actually let properties out.
Now, apparently now there is a huge motion to get Muriel Bowser, who has the authority to declare a state of emergency and forbid hotels to rent out rooms.
Just the amount of paranoia about this is extraordinary, despite the fact that there can be 15,000 National Guard troops marching around the Capitol.
Well, they closed the National Mall on Inauguration Day.
Basically, you know, again, if this guy got 80 million votes, you know, that's the worst thing about all of this.
There were legitimate questions to be asked regarding the integrity of the elections.
Which was why this was so important, which is why now they're trying to make such an example of Ted Cruz and Senator Josh Hawley, where they're going to be potentially added to the no-fly list.
I mean, it's just, you're looking at this and you're asking yourself... It's hysteria.
It's addictive hysteria.
Yeah, and you thought 2020, we lost our mind.
You wrote that great piece.
I dare say, hey, hold my beer 2020.
Well, you know, the way I see it is January 6th and what happened is really part of 2020 psychologically.
But, you know, I could be wrong.
2021 could be worse than ever.
No, it's extraordinary.
But 15,000 National Guard troops, you know, you hear the expression too little too late.
Well, this is too much too late.
It's overkill.
Were there that many troops guarding Washington, D.C.
during the War of Northern Aggression?
Don't know.
I don't know.
That's a good question.
That's a good question.
When Jubal Early came by probing the defenses, I wonder if there are 15,000 Yankees.
I just don't know, but that's a good question.
But, you know, there's an extraordinary poll, a McLaughlin poll of 800 voters in battleground states, including both parties, and they determined that 70% of the voters think that big tech has too much power to censor and should be regulated.
Moreover, 60% of voters, both Democrat and Republican, this is supposed to be a representative sample, say that impeaching Trump is a waste of time and money and, this is the most amusing, when they asked favorable ratings for Congress, 28%.
28%. Donald Trump, 49%.
Ha ha ha! He's got 20% higher ratings than Congress.
And what they're saying is to disqualify him from running again would just be pure viciousness and thwart the will of the people.
Now, there was a case of a black federal judge by the name of Al C. Hastings.
He was removed from office by impeachment because you have to impeach a federal judge back in 1989.
Later on, he ran for Congress and he was elected.
Of course, he was celebrated at the time when he was appointed by Jimmy Carter as the first black judge on the Florida federal bench, but out he went under ignominious circumstances.
Now, in connection with all of this business of the election and the reactions to it, I believe Representative Barry Moore had a bit of a tangle with the Thought Police.
Just briefly, I saw this story at AlabamaAL.com.
Newly elected Republican Alabama Congressman, Mr. Moore, he deleted his personal Twitter account following two controversial tweets that appeared subsequent to the events of last Wednesday.
The AL.com reporter says, quote, to inject a racial element into Wednesday's mob assault on the U.S.
Capitol, end quote.
Now, this story was published January 7th, so it had yet been turned into an insurrection, in the words, a violent insurrection.
It was just, at this point, it was just a mob assault.
But here's what he said.
A journalist noted, and they said that, journalist Jamie Dupree said, well, Mr. Moore commented that, quote, we have more arrests for stealing a podium on January 6th than we do for stealing an election on November 3rd, and went on to say that Atlanta, Philadelphia, and Detroit would be places I'd recommend you start.
And the other, Mr. Moore, bravely referenced the case of the aforementioned Ashley Babbitt, the 14-year Air Force veteran who was shot by a still undetermined and unnamed Capitol Police officer while she was among people trying to force their way into the House chamber.
He said this in the tweet, quote, I understand it was a black police officer that shot the white female veteran.
You know, that doesn't fit that narrative.
Doesn't fit the narrative?
That doesn't fit the narrative.
So, his account was initially suspended.
He was suspended for this?
He was suspended for this, and later he deleted it.
His chief of staff, Sean Atien, said that after the account was suspended, Moore deleted it, quote, because of the censorship of conservative voices he saw happening, end quote.
He's still active with his official at Rhett Barrymore account.
But, again, he dared point out the emperor has no clothes when it comes to this double standard.
So he simply pointed out that Ashley Babbitt was a white woman shot by a black cop, and that does not fit the narrative, and he was suspended.
Yeah, again, quote, you know that doesn't fit the narrative, end quote.
And he's right!
Ashley Babbitt had this I can't remember who said it, but think of this that actually happened in the White House on May 31st, when these people tried to storm the White House in honor of George Floyd.
Say a White Secret Service agent shot and killed a black individual.
We would know more about that person than we would Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, Trayvon Martin, and Michael Brown combined, because they would have been Murdered by the state when they were simply trying to enact social justice and forced Donald Trump orange man bad to confront white privilege implicit bias systemic racism Yada yada yada because we're on the right side of history.
Mr. Taylor.
Don't you know that that moral art will never stop bending?
It's a bend over white man.
Well, of course, my favorite is, did we mention him last week?
Hank Johnson, the black congressman who thought that Guam might capsize if we put a few more troops on it.
Yes, he explains to Al Sharpton, I guess they're good buddies, but they had some sort of radio discussion in which he explained that if this heroic black policeman had not shot Ashley Babbitt, That the mob would have come in and lynched all of the congressmen that looked like him.
He thinks it was a lynch mob.
And that this heroic shot fired by this guard stopped the lynch mob.
That's what these people seem to think.
My suspicion is that if these people who were cowering in the back, you remember there was some video of some black congresswoman praying and they were all terrified, my guess is that if they had had any authority over the Capitol Police, they would have ordered them to shoot to kill.
I've absolutely no doubt about that.
And these are people who despise the police ordinarily.
They're just all racist.
All cops are bastards.
All cops are bastards.
What?
24-7, 365.
Except... Except the Capitol Police, if they are guarding... Except for four hours.
Except if they're guarding, protecting our precious lives.
Our precious lives.
And this is something I wrote about in a long piece for American Renaissance, but when the session was gaveled back under order, Nancy Pelosi called it, the temple, our temple of democracy has been desecrated.
I like that.
A temple of democracy.
Are they gods in this temple?
Or is she just a priestess?
That's what I'd like to know in this temple.
And then Vox, later on, they described it even better, I thought.
They called it the fortress of democracy.
Yeah, isn't that the kind of place where you would expect barons to be ruling serfs in a fortress?
But that's what they call it.
Yes, if they are brushed up against a little mob violence for the hint of it, boy, do they become law and order backers.
They become hanging judges.
They want them shot dead and convicted for 20 years.
It's extraordinary.
But on this subject, Ricky Jones, a professor at the University of Louisville, wrote what strikes me as a rather remarkable op-ed piece in the Courier-Journal.
Do tell us about it.
And of course, the Courier-Journal is a Gannett-owned newspaper.
They're in Louisville.
This is one of those pieces where you find out, Mr. Taylor, just how crowded that gulag is getting.
He wrote that Republicans should, quote, shut up about the Capitol Hill attack unless they denounce their former support for Trump.
He said basically that all Republicans are guilty of the Capitol attack.
All guilty?
Yes.
The University of Louisville professor Ricky Jones wrote in the op-ed and the aforementioned Louisville Courier-Journal that Republicans should be forced to shut the hell up, that, quote, Republicans, you should not be allowed to speak about being shot by President Donald Trump or the recent right-wing raid in the Washington, D.C.
for your words ring hollow.
He's the chair of the Pan-African Studies Department at the University of Louisville.
Quote, you should all be forced to shut the hell up unless whatever you have to say begins with, I'm sorry.
You should not be allowed to condemn Trump or attempt to distance yourself from him unless you begin with, I have helped him and I'm sorry.
Quote, end quote.
I think that's called a struggle session, is it not?
Well, close to it.
It reminds me of some guy.
I can't remember who it was.
He said, every conversation about race between a black person and a white person should begin with a white person's cry for forgiveness.
That's where it starts.
A couple more interesting quotes from this book, Ed.
Please, yes.
Let's see here.
Quote, you should all apologize because you're all guilty.
He then went on to quote from University of Connecticut Professor Jeffrey Ogbar's assertion that Trump is, quote, a pathological liar who, quote, assembled a collection of unqualified, corrupt, and odious characters and whose administration And he then said, Jones said, that Trump is, quote, a liar, a racist, a demagogue, and a madman.
But you Republicans, you so-called conservatives, were just fine with it.
You loved it all.
Yes, you loved him deeply, supported him unfailingly, demonized anybody who opposed him, and rode shotgun with that maniac for the last four years.
Don't stop now.
Keep writing.
He then went on to blame Republicans for gaslighting, quote, those racist, neo-Confederate foot soldiers for years.
And to finish it off, he said this.
You are their benefactors.
You are their champions.
You are their friends.
Their acts are your responsibility and your shame, end quote.
Again, I remember when then-Senator Kamala Harris was talking about how great all these riots were across the country, and she was tweeting out support for them.
And where you can actually go to do what, Mr. Taylor?
You can contribute to the funds for bail for these, uh, I think she contributed herself, did she not?
She did.
She kicked in dough to make sure these people could be sprung immediately, no matter what they did.
These were riots for social justice.
Oh, goodness, truth and beauty.
I mean, again, Washington DC is a ghost town now.
Buildings were, you know, it took, it took four or five, no, wait a second here.
It took six decades.
After the riots in 1968, for a lot of Washington D.C., Mr. Taylor, to come back, to start to gentrify, to start to actually see property values just shoot up beyond your wildest dreams, places where white people, where pale faces would never step, now you see beautiful, blonde women jogging in skin-tight spandex.
But you know what?
That's all gone now, because the violence, all these little mom-and-pop little shops, all these coffee places, all these good little Delicatessen's, these restaurants, they're all boarded up, they're all shut down because in the name of George Floyd back in late May and in June, there were massive riots that took place.
Statues were pulled down.
Well now, now, of course, make no mistake, any threat to the peace and tranquility is going to come from these armed white patriot groups.
That's not Black Lives Matter, you know.
The 15,000 troops that are there, they're not to protect against Black Lives Matter, they're to protect against wicked people like me and you.
Do you remember right before the election in November, Washington D.C.
and major cities across the country were boarding up.
It was as if a hurricane was getting ready to hit the whole country.
Trump supporters.
Oh no, oh no.
It was because of what happens if Orange Man Bad wins again.
We cannot let this happen.
We will do a coup by any means necessary.
Well, but see, they had no confidence in the coup by any means necessary.
They were worried it might just happen.
They were really worried.
Yes, indeed.
Well, of course, oh, let's throw a little, here's a shout out for Ben and Jerry.
Ben and Jerry, the people who invented ice cream, of course.
They issued a statement that called the violence at the Capitol, quote, a riot to uphold white supremacy.
That's another big take on it.
I have not seen the slightest evidence that there was any kind of racial consciousness at all among those people.
Not one.
Not one.
Somebody did wave a confederate flag and boy did he get a lot of photography.
But the idea that somehow a riot uphold white supremacy Ben and Jerry, they said, the white mob that made its way to the dais of the U.S.
House of Representatives and the Senate is the ultimate embodiment of white privilege.
Now that I don't get either.
They're going to have the book thrown at them.
Some of those people are going to go to jail for years.
Their lives are ruined.
Probably a lot of people with no criminal record at all.
This is the first time they've ever come into contact with the police.
But that's the embodiment, the ultimate embodiment of white privilege.
They go on to say good ol' Ben and good ol' Jerry.
Black and brown people have long been exposed to white tyranny that was on display, full display, on the January 6th riot, and it's been going on since the founding of our nation.
It's the double standard that undergirds white supremacy in our nation.
Well, okay, black and brown people know all about it, but Ben and Jerry have figured it out too.
So there you go.
It was a riot to uphold white supremacy.
I guess they were there.
They must know.
They talked to the people.
They asked them.
Yeah, yeah, we're rioting to uphold white supremacy.
You know, I call on Ben and Jerry's to go ahead and divest themselves entirely from the company.
Last time I checked, Ben and Jerry are both white men.
So why are they...
Why are they getting to earn all this unearned privilege?
And why don't they just go ahead and say, no, we're going to give up our majority shares.
Sure.
Sure.
We, we, you know, we built, we built this company on the backs of black bodies and brown bodies, and we've been upholding the white patriarchy.
We've been upholding whatever whites, whatever these terms, these nebulous terms mean.
These two people should go ahead.
And because this temple of democracy was, as you said, I believe that's what, uh, that's what Nancy called it.
Yeah.
The temple of democracy.
You know what, they need to go ahead and they need to go and find, just walk into, uh, go to Hartford, Connecticut and just pick up, pick, pick two random black people off the street and they can be the new Ben and Jerry.
Well, they have done something almost as good.
They issued a flavor in honor of Colin Kaepernick.
So, they're doing their best, but come on, you can't ask them to give up their wealth and power.
No, no, no, no.
But they can spout about white supremacy and they can invent a flavor for Colin Kaepernick.
Now, the Biden DOJ, it's going to be a little bit different from the Trump DOJ.
On the other hand, given the enthusiasm with which the Trump DOJ has gone after these people who took over the Capitol, One wonders if there's much daylight between them, but as the Washington Post has explained, the Justice Department in the Biden administration is likely to increase resources for the Civil Rights Division and resume wide-ranging scrutiny of troubled police departments.
Troubled police departments.
You know, if they're troubled by anything, it's by extraordinary amounts of black crime, but they're troubled police departments.
And for Associate Attorney General, the third highest ranking official, Biden chose Vanita Gupta, the President of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.
Now, Vanita Gupta, she is the daughter of immigrants from India.
And she served as the Justice Civil Rights Division under Barack Obama.
And she is one of these ferocious anti-whites.
Anytime there's any disparity at all, she figures it's racism.
I tremble to think what she is going to do when she is in office.
But now the other appointment, and this was the person who's actually going to run the Civil Rights Division, is a black woman named Kristen Clark.
Now she is an extraordinary specimen as well.
She, her parents immigrated from Jamaica.
So we're having all of these this world contribution in the fight against white supremacy.
Now, the most colorful aspect of her background that I can dig up was something she did in 1994 when she was a Harvard undergraduate.
She wrote a letter to the Harvard Crimson, the school newspaper, in her capacity as the president of the Black Students Association.
And she wrote, human mental processes are controlled by melanin.
The same chemical which gives blacks their superior physical and mental abilities.
Well that's obviously true.
Well boy oh boy.
She goes on to say some scientists have revealed that most whites are unable to produce melanin because their pineal glands are often calcified or non-functioning.
Did you realize that there's a good chance, there's a good chance, Mr. Kersey, that your pineal glands are calcified, or non-functioning, and you just don't have this wonderful melanin.
I tame quite well for it, thank you.
Well, then I guess under certain circumstances, if you're exposed to enough sun, maybe that calcified, non-functioning pineal gland will sort of creak into a little bit of action.
She goes on to say, Melanin endows blacks with greater mental, physical, and spiritual abilities, something which cannot be measured based on Eurocentric standards.
Okie doke.
Now, this is a lady who's going to be running the Civil Rights Division, and she says that her job is simple.
She says she's going to end hate.
But I think she's off to a great start.
Really, a great start.
It's a term that's used to demonize and completely squelch any debate on any topic.
But you know, the point I would make is if you or I were to be talking about, I don't know, blonde hair or blue eyes, blue eyes, That is associated with the processes that gives us our superior physical and mental abilities.
If we'd said, oh, blue eyes endow whites with greater mental, physical, and spiritual capacities.
Good grief.
I mean, that would be called hate.
That would sure be called hate, but it's her job to end hate.
So God bless her and let's hope she succeeds.
No more hate.
No more hate.
Now, there was an interesting undertaking, one of these sting jobs put on by Mr. O'Keefe of this PBS lawyer.
Tell us about that.
I'll be brief.
Project Veritas does fantastic work.
They've been doing great work for close to a decade.
PBS top lawyer says that the government should build, quote, enlightenment camps, end quote, and remove children from Trump-supporting homes.
I pulled this, I think, from someone named Sarah Carter's website, right-leaning website, and they wrote this.
They kind of editorialized, but I'll be brief here.
This is what leftists, along with those supporting their agenda, think about Americans.
It's their own words.
He said this.
PBS principal counsel Michael Beller said this.
He was chatting with one of Project Veritas's undercover self-described guerrilla journalists and, you know, They got it on video, right?
They got it on video.
So he thinks he's just talking to a committed leftist, and he says this.
Again, this is PBS's former principal counsel, Michael Beller.
Quote, Americans are so fucking dumb.
You know, most people are dumb.
Beller is just saying, then of course he goes on to talk about how, quote, kids who are growing up know nothing but Trump for four years.
You've got to wonder what their Trump-supporting children are going to be like.
They'll, Trump supporters, be raised in a generation of intolerant, Horrible, horrible kids.
And then, of course, he goes on to talk about how these people, they need to be registered and relocated to enlightenment camps.
And then, of course, their children procured.
Well, taken from them anyway.
Yes, procured and taken.
Well, gosh, I'm surprised PBS doesn't stand behind him four square.
I mean, this is surely what most of them think.
Nina, he's probably going to go on to a great career at CNN.
Dare I ask, dare I ask you, I'm going to put you on the spot here.
Before they rescind your Yale education, like they're trying to do with Ted Cruz's Princeton degree.
There's a push to try and get him to... The left has actually put out a petition to try and have, as they have for Hawley.
I think he did his undergrad at Stanford.
They're trying to get these schools to rescind the degrees that these guys earned.
Trump's had a couple of honorary degrees taken away, but they're actually going after Ted Cruz's
crazy world. But here's my question, and I'm sure every one of our listeners across the world is
thinking the same thing that I am.
So here we go.
Okay.
What percentage of the left do you believe if they had been sharing a drink with Michael Beller, the former PBS principal counsel, what percent do you think would shake their head and say, I agree with you.
Trump supporters should be put in enlightenment camps and their kids procured and taken away from them.
What percentage?
Oh, God.
See, that idea is so loathsome to me that my initial inclination would be to say 5%.
But I'm always being accused of being Dr. Pangloss.
I always think that people have good intentions.
It's always impossible for me to believe that people are outright lying and that they have such ill will, but I'm afraid the figure is higher.
Who knows?
I'm afraid the figure is probably much higher.
Now, it's a different question though.
If you say somebody's having a drink with this guy and they're having a friendly conversation.
He says, I think they ought to go to re-education camps or enlightenment camps.
I like that.
That's a new phrase, an exciting phrase.
You know, that's a good way of putting it.
That's, I'm sure, you know, if the Nazis had called their camps Enlightenment camps, you know, they would have just done so much better.
But in any case, Enlightenment camps.
If you're having a drink with a friendly guy and he says, I think they ought to go to Enlightenment camps, you might say, yeah, yeah, yeah, even if you didn't believe it.
So that's the way your question was phrased.
Now, how many people genuinely believe it?
That's a very tough question.
A very tough question.
It's also one that I don't like to even think about having to answer.
That we've reached a point now in our country where dialogue, you know, The one thing that I take away from this whole past week is that people were that desperate.
They thought that the country was on the verge of being taken, that it was going to be stolen.
You look at pictures of Ashley Babbitt, she's on that airplane, and there are a lot of people flying, I think she flew from San Diego, on the plane with her, who were going.
They had not met one another.
This was not planned.
This was spontaneous.
And you think about the fact that You know, now everybody is entrenched in their opinions,
their dogma, and they look at what happened and there's, again, they will take these numbers,
like you said, of these six people who died and they won't even think about, wait a
second, actually it was just Ashley Babbitt who was shot, these other people, you know.
Three of the people were Trump supporters who died of heart attacks, strokes, they had
underlying comorbidities.
And don't forget the Capitol Police officer who may have been killed.
He may, again, initially the stories were, yes, he was attacked and then they said, well,
hold on, this was actually a Trump supporting guy who, let's hold off here.
We don't know.
You know, that to me, here we are in 2021 and it is becoming increasingly obvious that
most people, they are incapable of having not just a rational conversation, but they
They become incapable of even opining with someone.
Unless they are in lockstep with their ideology.
And that to me, Mr. Taylor, is one of the reasons why the increasing polarization, big tech moves that we're seeing.
I mean, Donald Trump has now lost his personal banks.
Deutsche Bank.
I think there's a bank in Florida.
I forgot the name.
They're basically saying, yeah, you know what, we're not going to do business with this guy.
What you're basically doing is you're creating, and I've seen people talk about this, and this is not an endorsement at all, but I'm just pointing out that you're basically trying to unperson, how many votes did Donald Trump get in this past election?
70?
74.5 million.
I'm sorry, that is, and there are a lot of people probably who just, who were fed up with him and they didn't vote because they thought that, like in Ann Coulter.
You know, imagine if Ann Coulter actually used her platform to promote Dawn Woman, not have been so upset about everything that happened.
I mean, the point is this, this is, and we've talked about this before, you go back and listen to our archives, just when you think we've reached interesting times, as an old proverb says, they get more and more interesting.
And I guess I'm increasingly of the mind that I wish we didn't live in interesting times.
Every New Year's, I make a resolution.
I promise.
I refuse to be surprised or shocked by anything.
And then every New Year, I have to remake that resolution.
Anyway, now here's just a little bit of COVID news for you, and that is that the Indian Health Service, this is the outfit that distributes free medical care to Native Americans, it's treated like its own state for the distribution of COVID vaccines.
And, you may not be aware of this, across the country The Indian Health Service has plans to vaccinate more than 2 million Native Americans and Alaska Natives in the coming weeks.
That, and they're only about 2.9 million all told, so they are basically vaccinating everyone over the age of 16.
And one of our supporters who is part Indian and who gets notifications for these special handouts for Indians, he'd heard that he could make an appointment and go get himself vaccinated.
Apparently, anybody over the age of 16, if you're an Indian, you can march right in and get vaccinated.
This is not something that's been publicly announced.
But the word of mouth is out.
It's not even on the local health clinic website.
But yes, he called up and said, yeah, come on in.
We'll vaccinate you.
Doesn't make any difference how old you are, as long as you're over 16.
Now, he made this, he tipped off one of the, he lives in Alaska by the way, he tipped off one of the Alaska local reporters and she wrote about it.
Everybody's all embarrassed, but this is just something that all of you out there should know.
If you're an American Indian, sign up right away.
If you want that virus, you don't have to wait.
You don't have to be a first responder or somebody over 75 or 65.
If you're over 16, the U.S.
government will vaccinate you for free.
You go to the head of the line.
I don't know if it's on the thing to talk about, but we should also point out in the same vein, COVID relief.
Biden went on and he talked about how minority-owned businesses, black-owned businesses, Hispanic-owned businesses, they're going to be, and women, female-owned businesses, they are at the forefront of the next wave of COVID relief, which I think the plan was leaked today.
You're talking about trillions of dollars.
This is going to be a Yeah, what happened back in, what was it, April?
You thought that was an injection of massive fiat currency into the economy?
Holy cow!
Well, and you mentioned minorities, you mentioned women.
Who gets left out?
The usual chumps!
People like you and me!
White men!
Oh my gosh, what if I claim to be LGBTQ++LSD?
Then do I get a jump?
Probably not even then.
As long as you're white and male, it doesn't make any difference.
Now, another little COVID story that caught my eye.
Did you realize that COVID research is going to have awful racist complications?
It's the Atlantic.
The Atlantic used to be a serious publication.
They wrote a big story about the enormous scientific effort that went into COVID research.
Finding the vaccine and all that sort of thing.
And many scientists are going to get a big career boost because of their papers.
However, and let me quote, American scientists of color found it harder to pivot than their white peers because of unique challenges that sapped their time and energy.
Black, Latino, and indigenous scientists.
How many indigenous, how many Eskimo scientists are there working on COVID?
I don't know.
But the ones who were, were most likely to have lost loved ones, adding mourning to their list of beauties.
Many grieved, too, after the killing of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, and others.
They often faced questions from relatives who were mistrustful of the medical system or were experiencing discriminatory care.
And so these poor young scientists, you see, because they were grieving about the death of George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery, they were not able to turn on a dime like their white peers or competitors and start writing award-winning articles about COVID.
This is just extraordinary.
You know, there is one silver lining in all of what's about to hit the United States of America when we have Biden inaugurated.
Today's the 16th.
He's four days away.
Okay, so my point is this.
We have some shocking legal cases coming up in regards to the one you just mentioned, Ahmaud Arbery.
We also have Brunswick, Georgia, and then I think we're going to see something very interesting.
There's going to be a lot of pressure by the Attorney General of Minnesota, Well, I just hope he's got very capable defense.
that case in Minneapolis, Officer Chauvin and the other officers, I'm sorry, ladies and gentlemen,
buckle up because there's no getting off this ride. Well, I just hope he's got very capable
defense. At this point with the fevered vindictus atmosphere, can you imagine what would go through
the head of any lawyer who's asked to defend Ahmed Arbery or even worse, Derek Chauvin?
Thank you.
You wouldn't, I mean, even the bravest lawyers are going to think twice about that.
What if he puts on a great defense?
And what were their names?
The McGroggles?
I can't remember.
That was a different, you're talking about pre-George Floyd, I'm sorry.
Father and son with their Scottish names.
What if they get off?
I mean, they'll be, they'll face trouble, but the guy who gets them off will be disbarred.
I think they're going to have a terrible time getting competent counsel.
But be all that as it may.
Yes, we are in for some very, very exciting times.
And by the way, did you know we just had another fake Latina unmasked?
She was Natasha Lysia Ora Bannon.
Where do they get these names?
43 years old, who, at least until she was unmasked, was the senior counsel of Latino Justice Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund.
She was also the president of the National Lawyers Guild.
At the time, she was touted as its first Latina president.
And she has publicly identified as Latina for years.
Say that one more time?
No, no.
Latina.
Although the specifics of her identity and origin have shifted over time.
At one time, she claimed to be Colombian.
Now she identifies as Puerto Rican.
As a woman, she is determined to aid the island and bring attention to the economic and humanitarian crises produced by Colonization.
By white people.
That's you and me.
That's you and me.
In any case, turns out she's white.
Oh, poor girl.
She grew up in Georgia, but she has affected one of these weird accents, just like Jessica Krug.
Remember her?
Another fake Latina.
And she admits, she admits that she is racially white.
She came clean, but she claims to have the right to choose her cultural identity.
And now, get this, she wants to use her privilege as a racially white person, her privilege, to help the BIPOCs.
Now, I don't quite understand it.
If she herself is claiming to be a BIPOC, how is she using the white privilege?
Well, she's claiming to be a Latina!
But that's a BIPOC!
I know, I'm sorry.
She's an ex-Latina!
I just don't get it.
I just don't get it.
It's just too deep for me.
But anyway, I understand that critical race theory is going to be back in vogue!
Yeah, well, we knew this was coming.
Donald Trump, this is one of the last things that he did with his very ham-handed, weird, defensive Americanism where he couldn't even point out who actually was being targeted by critical race theory.
It was odd the way he said, oh, they hate America.
No, they hate white America.
It's not that hard.
You couldn't figure it out.
I think we all overlooked, but a federal judge blocked President Trump's executive order against diversity training initiatives.
Not to allow grant funds to be used for diversity trainings and says federal contractors will not be permitted to inculcate divisive views in their employees, i.e.
views where white people are blamed for everything bad that's ever happened to a BIPOC.
Well, a federal judge blocked the Trump administration's executive order on December 22nd.
In the Northern District of California, Beth Labson Freeman. She was nominated by former President Obama
back in 2013. He said, uh, this person said that Trump's order offers quote, a gross
mischaracterization of the speech plaintiffs want to express and an insult to their
work of addressing discrimination and injustice for historically undeserved communities.
Well, you know, I don't quite get it though.
He is the boss of the entire executive branch.
Can he not say, I don't want people to be trained on, I don't know, fluid dynamics or anything political at any rate?
If there are people who want to spend money on teaching them the history of the Indian subcontinent.
I mean, I think it seems to me it's in his power to decide what can be taught and what can't.
But be that as it may.
The September 22nd Executive Order, entitled Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping, noted concern over the notion that America is, quote, grounded in hierarchies based on collective social and political identities rather than in the inherent and equal dignity of every person as an individual.
The executive order went on to say that this ideology is rooted in the pernicious and false
belief that America is an irredeemably racist and sexist country, that some people, simply
on the account of their race or sex, are oppressors, and that racial and sexual identities are
more important than our common status as human beings and Americans."
And if you look at what the judge said, basically, gross mischaracterization, all they're doing
is addressing discrimination and injustice toward historically undeserved communities,
i.e. non-whites, so that invalidates any concern for what is being promoted, promulgated, and
possessing the country.
You know, you just were guilty of what was perhaps a slip of the tongue.
You talked about undeserved communities.
I think you meant to say underserved.
I did, my goodness.
Your white privilege is showing.
Undeserved communities?
It is undeserved.
You're right.
My eyes are a little bit bad.
You're right.
Undeserved.
Oh boy, hang in there.
Actually, the undeserved communities are white communities.
We're about to find out.
Well, here's another exciting thing that we can perhaps look forward to.
An article in The Nation.
Now that slip of the tongue gets you fired from a radio station or from TV.
Underserved.
Now get that into your head. Underserved.
Well, here's another exciting thing that we can perhaps look forward to.
An article in The Nation.
It's called Vote Reparations Would Empower Us to Replace Oppressive
Institutions with Life-Affirming Structures of Equality.
That's a whole big mouthful to explain the idea that they, this author, wants blacks to each have two votes.
I mean, why not five?
Why not ten?
In any case, this person who is an assistant professor at Washington and Lee University School of Law.
Washington and Lee.
School of Law.
This guy's a lawyer.
Brandon Hasbrook.
He says, one of the largest objections to monetary reparations is the impractability of implementing them on a scale that would meaningfully address the problem.
In other words, not enough dough.
Vote reparations, in contrast, would be a simple, low-cost way to begin to make amends.
It is a radical process of challenging injustices wherever and in whatever form they may appear.
Just imagine our country if our votes counted twice.
Oh, I can. I think of Detroit. I think of Flint. I think of Birmingham.
There you go.
There you go.
Well, we're going to count votes twice for blacks.
That's pretty exciting.
So I think we're going to finally, gosh, we are running out of time.
It always happens, doesn't it?
Let's see.
I like to talk about Portland.
You and I both have a few things to talk about Portland.
But you know that for 100 days, 150 days, I forget for how long, they had riots and riots every night.
Part of the problem is that District Attorney Mike Schmidt, right at the beginning, he said he was going to dismiss property crimes at protests saying that prior crackdowns added to social, racial, and injustice.
Now, I don't really get this because they were mostly white mobs, but if you go on smashing windows and tearing down traffic signs and setting dumpster fires, if the people crack down on that, you're going to get social and racial injustice.
Well now, he's finally decided in the new year that he's going to actually prosecute people for vandalism and for smashing windows.
Because Mayor Wheeler of Portland, he's got a bad problem because night after night you get these bands who cruise through the city smashing windows.
And some of his largest donors are these downtown property owners whose buildings have been damaged who knows how many times.
They're probably just permanently boarded up.
So finally he's trying to figure out what law enforcement tactics would discourage people.
Yeah, I'll be as brief as I can.
and repeatedly smash the windows.
Well, it seems to finally dawned on this Soros supported prosecutor, you arrest them.
That's how you do it.
You charge them with crimes.
It's just incredible.
And now I understand that they're trying to come up with ways to do something about this jump in murder.
Yeah, I'll be as brief as I can.
So basically one of the first things they did back in the early stages of the peace riots,
whatever weird word we're going to use to describe the shocking violence
that took place in the aftermath of George Floyd.
One of the things they did in Portland was they disbanded the so-called controversial gun violence reduction team.
You know why?
Because they primarily were in areas that were predominantly communities of color.
Because in Portland, even though it's only 6% black, just as in every city across the country where a racial pattern can emerge, It's kind of shocking that primarily blacks are responsible for both the shooting and the dying being shot across the country.
Well, here we go.
Last thing about Portland.
So, they're going to bring this back.
People are saying, wait, you know why they're saying this?
Because Portland saw a 150% increase in shooting injuries from 2019 to 2020.
What?
More than doubled?
More than doubled.
Oh, so they're actually going to bring back the gun violence prevention team and they're going to start arresting and charging people who break windows!
Yeah, they have to!
What an idea!
Good Lord!
Well, you know, that's a silver lining.
It seems like if you beat them hard enough, even these lunatics will see the light and decide that you have to get the guns out of the hands of black criminals and you better arrest people who are rioting.
Well, and the one thing to point out as we get ready to leave our audience is the way
that they still describe, quote, near nightly racial justice protests, end quote, as if
that somehow exonerates these violent individuals who held city after city after city after
city hostage.
And then, as you noted, the number of people who were actually loved without charges by
Mike Schmidt, there's an October 7th story in the Oregon Live, 666 people, that's a scary
number, had charges dropped without filing any charges.
Well, and this is all great reason to defund the police as they're discovering.
Well, Mr. Kersey, we have come to the end of our rope for the time being.
It's a metaphorical rope, but we'll see what happens next year.
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