Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance.
Whose lives matter?
We know black lives matter.
People have been shouting about that for years.
And, as the Huffington Post explains, every time you say all lives matter, you are being an accidental racist.
Maybe even a deliberate racist.
Hispanic lives matter, too.
The whole country is in a fury because people found out that Hispanics who cross the border illegally are treated like the lawbreakers they are, and they are separated from children.
Now, even the most crazed liberals must realize that if no one took those children on a dangerous trip across the desert and broke into our country, they'd all still be together.
But the lives of Hispanic illegal immigrants and their families clearly matter.
Well, what about the victims of violent illegal immigrants?
In March, President Trump reported that in last year alone, immigration authorities arrested illegals with 48,000 charges or convictions for assault, 11,000 for sex crimes, and 1,800
for murder and homicide.
That's just one year's worth of arrests.
I don't see much outrage.
Families have been separated, all right, forever by death.
When Donald Trump was campaigning in 2016, he sometimes brought a group with him called Angel Mothers.
They were women whose children had been killed by illegal immigrants.
And Donald Trump used this as a warning about the terrible cost of uncontrolled borders.
Well, here's what Mark McKinnon Senior correspondent for the British Globe and Mail tweeted at one of those rallies.
Trump surrounded on Phoenix stage by angel moms who say their kids were murdered by illegal immigrants.
This is pretty much a hate rally.
Rania Kalik, an American journalist who covered a different Trump rally, said this.
What the hell is going on?
Those moms Trump brought on stage are like a hate group.
I'm not easily shocked, but when grieving mothers are called a hate group, we're dealing with something extraordinary.
The most famous victim of an illegal alien was Kate Steinling, who was shot dead on San Francisco's Pier 49, out for a walk with her father.
Her killer, Jose Zarate, was an illegal immigrant from Mexico who had been deported five times, but was back in the U.S. living in a sanctuary city.
Some reporters were outraged, not that Kate had been killed, but because Donald Trump talked about her.
Slate called it the exploitation of beautiful Kate.
Now, beautiful Kate is in quotes not because Slate thought she was beautiful, but to criticize Donald Trump for saying she was beautiful.
The nationalist group Identity Europa set up a memorial for Kate.
The city of San Francisco destroyed it, saying that it was, quote, Now, Trayvon Martin got very different treatment.
He was a young black man who attacked George Zimmerman and was then shot in self-defense.
A jury said it was justifiable use of force.
There was a memorial for Martin, and the city did take it down after a few months.
You know what they did with it next?
Now, there's a life that matters.
Same with Michael Brown of Ferguson, Missouri, who got high on marijuana, assaulted a convenience store clerk, and attacked a white police officer.
Even Barack Obama's Justice Department found that the shooting was justified.
Ferguson left up the memorial to Brown and approved a permanent bronze marker in his memory.
Another life.
Well, here's one that doesn't.
A year ago, Justine Daymond, who wasn't threatening anybody, was shot and killed by Mohamed Noor, a Somali immigrant who became a Minneapolis police officer.
And the same group, Adedity Europa, put up a memorial to her.
The city tore it down, and the mayor-elect called it"disgusting." And when a black person dies in police custody, it's likely to be a huge scandal.
You've probably heard of Eric Garner, Tamar Rice, Freddie Gray, Sandra Bland.
Well, you've never heard of Daniel Shaver.
Here he is on the right with his family.
This is a still from a police body cam from last year showing Shaver begging for his life before he was shot five times and killed.
You can find the whole video on YouTube, and it is gruesome.
I don't know for the life of me how the officer got off, but I can tell you one thing.
If Shaver had been black or Hispanic, you would for sure know his name.
Well, every year, according to FBI statistics, there are about 600,000 interracial crimes of violence involving blacks and whites.
85% of the time, it is blacks attacking whites.
That means a black person is roughly 27 times more likely to attack a white person than vice versa.
A Hispanic is about 8 times more likely to attack a white than the other way around.
These lopsided figures never get wide publicity.
Never. And even when there are especially horrible black-on-white crimes, such as the 2007 rape, torture, and murder of Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom, it's just local news.
And this is what black columnist Leonard Pitts said about anyone who thought that this sickening crime deserved a little bit more coverage.
I have four words for them and any other white Americans who feel themselves similarly victimized
Well, almost every institution in America knows which lives matter.
Take Yale University.
In 2015, it launched a five-year, $50 million initiative to increase faculty diversity.
That means trying to hire anybody but white men.
That same year, Computer giant Intel said it would allocate $300 million for workplace diversity.
Between 2013 and 2016, Google spent $265 million trying to hire anybody, anybody who wasn't a white man.
So, whose lives matter?
Do you remember Martin O'Malley?
He is a former governor of Maryland who wanted to be the Democratic nominee for president in 2016.
At a campaign rally, blacks started shouting,"Black lives matter!" He replied,"Black lives matter, white lives matter, all lives matter!" Well, he was shouted right off the stage.
Later he apologized and said,"That was a mistake on my part.
I didn't mean to be insensitive." So, whose lives matter?