Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor - Where Europe is Still European Aired: 2021-01-24 Duration: 06:42 === Inspiring Trip to Eastern Europe (05:44) === [00:00:03] Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance. [00:00:08] I just got back from an inspiring trip to Eastern Europe. [00:00:12] I was invited to help celebrate the 101st anniversaries of the re-establishment of Lithuania and Estonia as independent nations at the end of the First World War. [00:00:22] In both countries, I spoke at identitarian conferences put on by nationalists who are serious about keeping their countries exactly as they are. [00:00:32] Unquestionably European. [00:00:34] I also took part in torchlight marches. [00:00:37] It is deeply moving to march with men and women who love their countries and understand the threats they face. [00:00:46] In Lithuania, the identitarian group Kryptis held an international conference the day before Independence Day. [00:00:53] This was the first such conference ever held in Lithuania. [00:00:57] The country hasn't needed conferences like that because it's overwhelmingly white. [00:01:02] I saw only one non-white person the whole time I was there. [00:01:06] But wide-awake Lithuanians know they have to fight immigration before it begins. [00:01:13] And that's why here I am telling them what they already know. [00:01:16] Don't make the mistakes we did. [00:01:19] The next day was the torchlight march. [00:01:22] These are increasingly popular expressions of European nationalism. [00:01:26] And the usual loonies say that they are Nazi, fascist, etc. [00:01:31] Well, this was only the second torchlight march for Lithuania, and last year there were only 300 people. [00:01:37] This year the organizers handed out 1,400 torches, and there were plenty of people marching without them. [00:01:45] Kryptis was delighted with the turnout. [00:01:48] Here is dramatic footage taken at the head of the march. [00:02:00] It is thrilling to march with men and women, young and old, singing patriotic songs and chanting the name of their country, Lietuva, Lietuva. [00:02:13] I learned one phrase in Lithuanian, Teguvoya Lietuva, which means Long Live Lithuania. [00:02:21] Lithuanians were delighted to hear that from an American. [00:02:26] The next week, I was in Estonia, which has a stronger nationalist movement. [00:02:30] I spoke at the third conference organized by Blue Awakening, which is the youth group of the Conservative People's Party of Estonia. [00:02:38] You can find all the conference talks on YouTube if you search for the word Ethnofutur and the Roman numeral 3. Here is a clip from my talk. [00:02:49] So, if Estonia wishes to be Estonian, [00:02:55] My country will oppose you. [00:02:57] If you wish to commit suicide, my country will hand you all the poisons you need and encourage you to drink them. [00:03:05] One speaker was Ruben Kellopp, who gave an excellent talk at the 2016 American Renaissance Conference. [00:03:12] And he's running for the Estonian Parliament as a candidate for the Conservative People's Party. [00:03:17] And he has a good chance of winning. [00:03:19] He told me that having spoken at an AMRAN conference is no obstacle to his political career. [00:03:25] Their conference was at a first-class hotel, and there were no demonstrators. [00:03:31] The next day was the torchlight parade, the sixth organized by the Conservative People's Party. [00:03:37] Most estimates put the marchers at 8,000, well up from the 5,000 last year. [00:03:43] Here's a clip from the start of the march. [00:03:46] Flags flying. [00:03:47] Marchers singing. [00:03:49] The banner reads Esti Est, which means for Estonia. [00:03:54] The banner reads Est, which means for Estonia. [00:04:08] As it wound through the streets, the march seemed interminable. [00:04:13] ACS! ACS! [00:04:17] ACS! ACS! [00:04:22] The evening ended in Freedom Square. [00:04:25] Freedom Square. [00:04:56] The march wound by a ragged band of counter-demonstrators. [00:05:00] Their signs were in Lithuanian, but I couldn't make out one word, all right. [00:05:06] Racism. Yes, even in Estonia, there are goofballs who think it's racist for Europeans to have countries of their own. [00:05:14] And for now, Lithuanians and Estonians have their own countries, and they are gems. [00:05:21] The old town of Vilnius is almost like a movie set. [00:05:25] It couldn't be more charming and quaint. [00:05:28] The same is true for Tallinn. [00:05:31] You can imagine Hansel and Gretel feeling right at home. === Race Against Time (01:09) === [00:05:35] And wherever you look, white people, men and women alike, slim, handsome, well-dressed. [00:05:43] And Estonia has a government that seems to understand that Estonia must remain Estonian. [00:05:49] Imagine living in a country where an Amran conference speaker is in a competitive race for parliament with the backing of a mainstream party. [00:05:57] The Lithuanian government has a few squishes who think modernity means swallowing the European Union's poisons. [00:06:05] But the Baltic countries, all of Eastern Europe really, has a good chance of staying European. [00:06:12] It's truly a race against time. [00:06:15] Forty-five years of Soviet rule kept these countries poor, but it also spared them from the equality uber alis mentality that is destroying the West. [00:06:26] Will Eastern Europe be seduced by the glitz and tinsel of the West and get a pat on the head from Angela Merkel when it lets in swarms of Muslims? [00:06:36] Or can it leave a continent to their grandchildren that their grandparents would recognize and be proud of?