A Straight Line from the Tulsa ‘Massacre’ to Unite the Right
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the latest episode of Radio Renaissance.
I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance, and with me is my indispensable co-host, and it is as always a great honor to speak with you on this occasion.
We'd like to begin with a listener comment.
As usual, we love to hear from our listeners, and this person sends us an alert.
He says, keep an eye on the reparations legacy project.
Its motto is Reparations are not a favor or an act of charity.
They are about returning stolen wealth.
And you, ladies and gentlemen, and you probably are hearing about it for the first time here, have a chance to join the Reparations Legacy Project's virtual conference on June 12th.
2021 in just a few days.
You can register online and this will be a call to all white people with access to social, financial, and generational wealth to pay reparations.
The keynote speaker will be Omari Yeshitela, of whom I'm hearing for the first time, who is the chairman of the African People's Socialist Party.
Now, I don't know if they've ever run any candidates.
I don't know if they have any elective office, but O'Malley is the chairman, and you can hear his wisdom by registering for their June 12th seminar.
So, thank you, listener.
We like to have these alerts as sorts of things we should keep an eye on.
But I would like to begin this podcast by talking about what has now become the most important event in American history, and that is the events that took place 100 years ago in Tulsa.
They used to be called the Tulsa Riots, but now they have been elevated to be called the Tulsa Massacre, as if there was no resistance whatsoever, and it was white people rampaging through the city, massacring resistless, virtuous, and probably hands folded in prayer, Africans.
In any case, in a speech commemorating the 100th anniversary, there he was, our president, Joe Biden, in Tulsa.
He urged Americans to address the racism that fueled the attack, which he said remains, quote, a stain on the soul of America.
He said what happened in Greenwood, that was the black area, that was burned rather severely, I'm afraid to say.
What happened in Greenwood was an act of hate and domestic terrorism with a through line that exists today still.
In other words, the evil impetus of Greenwood exists today still.
And he compared what happened in Tulsa to the quote white supremacists.
Who marched in the far-right Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia four years ago, and our president said, just close your eyes and remember what you saw in Charlottesville four years ago on television.
Neo-Nazis, white supremacists, the KKK coming out of those fields at night with lighted torches, veins bulging as they were screaming.
Those are the very words he's used before.
So he's, he is being a plagiarist, but only of himself.
The president then noted remarks from Viola Fletcher, age 107, one of the last living survivors of the Tulsa episode, who said she was so saddened to see pro-Trump rioters storm the Capitol on January 6th.
The president said, she said it reminded her of what happened here in Greenwood a hundred years ago.
I'm sure it did.
And then Joe Biden called the people of January 6th, a mob of violent white extremists.
Now he also said, As I said in my address to the Joint Session of Congress, according to the intelligence community, terrorism from white supremacy is the most lethal threat to the homeland today.
Not ISIS, not Al Qaeda, white supremacists.
Now, this is of course, right there in Tulsa, reminding people what the real danger of the country is, but I would say that given the staggering increases in violent crime over the past two years and a near-record homicide rate in Tulsa itself, it seems a little odd to call white supremacy the most lethal threat.
But that is the view of our fearless leader, Joe Biden.
And I wonder who he considers white supremacists, all of these dangerous people.
All Republicans?
Who are these white supremacists?
I think you just hit the nail on the head of the new term it's going to be.
It's white extremists.
That's starting to slip into the nomenclature.
And I think that accurately, in their eyes, describes what they saw on January 6th.
That's for sure, and January 6th is the direct lineal and emotional and ideological descendant of what happened in Tulsa 100 years ago.
Now, more about Oklahoma and Tulsa.
There was to be a cornerstone event of the Tulsa Race Massacre, as they keep calling it, a commemoration that was to be called Remember and Rise.
It was touted as a headlining occasion featuring the Grammy award-winning singer John Legend.
I'm sure he is an African-American.
He is.
And it was to include the influential, likewise African-American, Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams.
This was going to be an all-star, all-African cast.
However, legal representatives of the three living survivors, They approached the Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission, there is such a thing by the way, about including them.
Now, they just wanted a bit in exchange.
They wanted $100,000 each for the three of them and $2 million as a seed fund for a reparations coalition fund.
Well, the Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission agreed.
However, at the last minute, The lawyers representing the survivors suddenly asked to change the agreement.
They said they need $1,000,000 per survivor.
They upped the ante tenfold and a mere $50,000,000 for the fund.
So, I guess they wanted Remember and Rise to become Remember and Cash In.
Remember and Rise is probably something you could easily trademark, so why wouldn't they go ahead and just figure out a way to, from an intellectual property standpoint, cash in on that?
I mean, have you seen the amount of books that have been written about this in the past five years?
Oh, as I say, it's become the most important event in American history, maybe world history.
Well, apparently there are limits to the idiocy of white people, and the Commission said no.
To this shakedown.
I mean, at the last minute after everything, they were already selling tickets for this event.
And these folks up in Chicago, no, not a hundred thousand apiece, a million apiece.
And so John Legend and Stacey Abrams had to stay home, the poor dears.
Now, I don't know how much they were going to be paid.
Now, I looked up this Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission.
I mean, it sounds like a great celebration, doesn't it?
The Centennial Commission?
When did we ever have Centennial Commissions of things we're supposed to be ashamed of?
But that's the new America.
In any case, the mission statement of the organization, and this struck me as quite hilarious, is, and I quote, The 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission will leverage the rich history surrounding the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.
They're going to leverage the rich history By facilitating actions, activities, and events that commemorate and educate all citizens.
Well, I guess for the blacks, leveraging that rich history was going to be leveraging it into a rich payday.
It's all about the Benjamins, baby.
But what an expression.
The rich history of the Tulsa Race Massacre?
What kind of talk is that?
Well, what kind of talk is that?
You have to have now every month, you have to have some form of an event from America's past to shame white America present so that in the future, all we think about is how awful our ancestors were.
You talk about Selma.
I think that's the march that, of course, John Lewis led across Edmund Pettus Bridge.
That was in, what, February?
You've got Juneteenth coming up.
You've got the Tulsa race right now, which is also in June, so you've got June's covered twice.
Well, summer was a busy time.
I'm sure at some point we'll go back and we'll figure out a way to commemorate the 1943 riot in Detroit, We'll figure out a way to commemorate what happened in the 1960s.
You pick your city in the 1960s of the riots.
And this is our rich history.
We're going to leverage our rich history to make white people feel as bad as possible.
But I'm not finished with Oklahoma.
I'm not finished with Tulsa.
This, I think, is one of my favorite little stories about the event.
On the 100 year anniversary, hundreds of black men and women from across the country gathered and staged an armed march through the city.
They were all dressed in black and a lot of them were carrying ARs.
They looked like a pretty tough bunch.
And they said, we're pushing death to white supremacy, death to capitalism, death to imperialism, and death to fascism.
We're pushing an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a head for a head, and a life for a life.
This is some guy shouting through a megaphone.
He says, they, and we know who they are, put us through vicious suffering, vicious oppression.
And once they are buried, we must bury them, dig them up again, and kill them again.
Quoting Khalid Mohammed.
Yes.
Very pleasant thought.
Yes.
Now once they're dead, that's not good enough.
You've got to dig them up and kill them again.
Another speaker took the microphone and said, this time, the time is coming when rat-tat-tat, black people will kill everything white in sight.
That's got kind of a nice rhyme to it.
It'll come rat-tat-tat and black people kill everything white in sight because of all you've done to us, all of what you've done in the 6,000 year span and killing 600 million of us and 408 years in particular.
Where did that 600 million figure come from?
Well...
I'm a little bit vague on that.
I suspect he's a little vague on that too, but 408 years in particular out of the 600 million.
So, as he says, it's time to give those crackers hell.
Wakanda, here we come!
We have been warned.
We have been warned.
Now, this is a list of some of the participants.
There was the Huey P. Newton Gun Club.
You know about Huey P. Newton?
Ah, Black Panther indeed.
Black Panther, yes.
There was the Elmer Geronimo Pratt Gun Club.
I think he too was a Black Panther.
Then the new Black Panther Party for Self-Defense.
The Fred Hampton Gun Club, yet another Black Panther.
Then the new Black Liberation Militia and the Panther Special Operations Command.
Well, that sounds pretty spooky, doesn't it?
Sounds like we've got our priorities wrong when we're talking about who's the actual threat to the homeland.
I mean, if you had any of these organizations that were Positioned as white leaning.
That's right.
They would basically be staffed entirely with FBI informants.
I'll say, yes.
Can you, can you imagine, can you imagine the Nordic Special Operations Command?
Oh boy.
As I like to say.
The Kiwi Long Brigade.
Yes, yes.
But see what I'm wondering is where was NFAC?
You know what NFAC stands for?
I don't.
No, sure you don't.
That's the No Fucking Around Coalition.
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
Those guys.
They show up everywhere.
They were in Minneapolis.
They weren't there.
They were in Louisville.
They were at Stone Mountain.
I wonder if there's been a little disagreement.
Recall what happened in Louisville.
One of the guys inadvertently fired off one of his rifles.
Two of them did.
Two of them did?
Yes, yes, yes.
No, and actually, well, no, I think two were hit and they were, all these white paramedics said, you know, rushed them out to the hospital.
But in any case, now, believe it or not, Washington Post had an extremism effort.
I'm sorry, an extremism expert who was in Tulsa and who wrote about the event.
And guess what she called it?
Guess what she called this little rally?
A peaceful protest.
A Second Amendment rally.
A Second Amendment rally?
Okay.
Well, I'm so glad the Washington Post is concerned about our Constitution.
Isn't it nice to have the Washington Post recognizing that when people walk around armed, it's a Second Amendment rally?
Not one of the choice and, I think, pungent quotes that I just gave you.
Well, the Second Amendment only matters when it can be used as a buttress to remind people what happens when black hands have black guns, rat-a-tat-tat, white flight no more.
Well, white flight in just one direction, and you end up six feet under.
But, Mr. Kersey, you have good news for us.
Greater Idaho is on the march.
Well, I think one of the reasons why we're seeing a lot of these counties and some of these states beginning to figure out what's happening is Kind of because of what you just said.
Critical race theory of these states that are dominated by one large municipality.
I'm talking about Oregon.
I'm talking about Washington.
I'm talking about states that have that area like Seattle or that area like Portland.
Several counties in the state of Oregon are looking to leave the state and become part of Idaho.
These people are tired of the policies enacted by Ted Wheeler, the mayor of Portland, as we've seen.
What?
For 150, 170 days in a row, federal buildings attacked, people being shot.
I think Portland quintupled the number of homicides from the previous year.
It's unbelievable the violence we're seeing in Portland.
Well, as Business Insider reports, Greater Idaho took one step closer to being a real thing as five more counties voted to explore leaving Oregon for Idaho.
That's right.
Seven rural Oregon counties have voted in favor of this effort to become part of Idaho, and organizers of Greater Idaho Movement says more counties could soon have the option on their ballots, on the ballots in those counties.
The trouble is, of course, it's not up to just those counties.
The state legislature is going to have to approve, and you would think that all of those people in Portland would say, yippee!
Let the Twisted Sisters go!
No, because a lot of the people who live in Portland are realizing we want to continue to have our views, but it is getting kind of dangerous here.
We can go buy four or five homes in these small little rural areas.
We can work remotely.
And, you know, we'll bring our politics with us and then pretty soon, you know, they can have their leftists who burn down and attack and set up these autonomous zones.
But, you know, we'll still take our policies and we'll advocate for them now and rule Oregon.
Oh, well, I think what they're really worried about is somebody to fix the plumbing and make sure the electricity
continues to run It's those white people those blue-collar white people know
how to do those things, but ideally they should say yes Yes, yes, we and I you and I disagree off you go
But they will I think they will never do that no matter how desperately the rural
Oregonians want to be on the same topic just briefly the Washington Post had a piece where they discussed what's
happening in Atlanta we've talked about this before in my opinion this will be
the Moment we start to see things because Buckhead is the most
affluent part of Fulton County They provide, I think, 65% to 70% of the taxes for Fulton County that are redistributed to the heavily black areas.
If you recall, President Trump made fun of John Lewis's district.
That's in Fulton County.
That was back in 2017.
That was actually one of his best moments as a president, was when he made fun of John Lewis.
Well, Buckhead, the crime in Atlanta is at levels never before seeing their articles about running gun battles on I-85,
I-75, and 285. It is getting bad.
Buckhead, their city leaders finally are saying, let's go ahead, let's do what Sandy Springs,
let's do what Dunwoody, let's do what Brookhaven have done, and let's create our own city
municipality so we get to keep the tax dollars. I have said many times, separation is the only
solution and these are important first steps.
And I agree.
The things are getting so out of hand and insane that even white people are beginning to wake up.
But I have another piece of good news.
Justice has been done.
You may recall Last year, July 3rd, a white 12-year-old street performer was doing some urban dancing that I would not say harked back to the age of Mendelssohn.
But this was in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, and while he was busy performing, and this is caught on video, a dark-colored sport utility vehicle came to a stop.
A man, a heavily melanin-enhanced man, came out of the vehicle, approached the 12-year-old and slugged him.
Kaboom!
Knocked him down and then runs off into the automobile.
This was captured on Facebook Live and the video was viewed a million times.
Do you remember seeing that video?
It was really, he walloped him!
There are so many of these videos on Facebook Live that I'll have to ask for forgiveness.
I don't think I've seen this one.
This one was just extraordinary.
He's out there doing his little boogaloo and pretending to be something other than a European.
But, and rather successfully I would say, this guy comes out and lays into him.
He suffered a concussion and he suffered dizziness for quite some time afterwards.
Well, Almost a year later, Cedric Charles Moore Jr.
has been sentenced to seven years in prison for this attack.
Seven years!
He's going to do a hard time.
He pled guilty to second degree assault.
I just wanted to add this to a little Philip.
It's not all bad news.
This guy who behaved in such a despicable way is going behind bars.
I suspect it will not be his first time.
But now you had something to tell me about California, if I'm not mistaken.
Well, on that same token, what we were talking about of these white people who are abandoning these failed utopias when these policies aren't active.
Well, something fascinating happened in California.
This one caught my eye.
The subject line was fascinating.
Costly and competitive, the price some pay to leave California.
Moving trucks and trailers in high demand.
You can actually go online, you can find places to see what a U-Haul would cost you to go from one place to another, one city to another.
And it's fascinating because it is very hard to find people who are actually trying to take a U-Haul into California right now, into Chicago.
It's cheap.
You want to head that way?
Yeah, it's not hard to get to some of these places.
New York City, you know, Minneapolis.
I'm sure you'd be fascinated.
They might pay you to take a trailer.
Exactly.
So, as the cost of living gets more competitive in California, so does the price to leave the state.
The cost of living?
Is that what they're talking about?
Exactly.
The failed policies of the left.
So, every person has a reason.
Jen Jones has three.
Politics have one.
Cost of living is another, but the main factor is my parents are older.
She's making the move to a brand new home near Austin, Texas.
Much of her stuff is already there, though getting the rest of her things to arrive is kind of a challenge.
The reason is?
She says, I'm at my wit's end with everything going on.
It was just another blow.
The blow, she references, is because she got an email That when she went to pick up her U-Haul trailer it had been cancelled days before the move because they didn't have an adequate supply.
Now for those of you guys who are wandering across the pond around the world, well wait a second.
How does U-Haul work in America?
It's a supply chain.
It's like just-in-time inventory.
You're renting stuff that you have on hand or that you know you have on hand and if nobody is bringing their U-Hauls from other states Or they're staying within the interstate of California, you have no supply.
That's right.
Everything's headed out.
Exactly.
If demand is that high, then you basically have to find ways, cost-effectively, to bring these things back in and then rent them.
But because you have to bring them in from another state, whether it's Texas, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, there's a cost with returning that vehicle, whether it's by train, etc., etc.
From a supply standpoint, it's stretched thin because everybody is leaving this mass exodus of California.
She chose not to get the trailer locally because there weren't any available.
The difference in the cost, a trailer from U-Haul in Sacramento would have cost her $749.
She found one a moment later in South Lake Tahoe for a little bit less, but again, The point is you're having this mass excess of people to a
point where financial expert Sanjay Varshney, he's been tracking California's excess for
years.
He said desperate times call for desperate measures.
Increasingly, many are attempting to escape the state.
It's getting more dire.
Quote, moving out is becoming extremely expensive because there's a rush to the exit.
Maybe you're going into some other rural area where one may be sitting in the lot and you'll get lucky.
The trend, he said, has picked up such speed that the price to get out of the golden state is Again, more costly and competitive.
So for anybody out there thinking of a business, there you go.
Help facilitate the escaping of Californians from, what was it, Victor Davis Hanson?
I think it was Mexifornia was the book that came out in 2003.
But now the people who are in the neighboring states don't want Californication coming their way.
It's gotten so crazy that there's actually a Facebook group of people who are leaving California.
That's what it's called.
She's trying to give these people advice because, again, it's so hard to get out.
You know, you can find places to go, but how do you get all your stuff there?
Well, you know, it looks to me that people are going to have to start leaving Connecticut, too.
You know why?
Why is that?
Terrible things are happening there.
Terrible things.
Amazon was building a facility.
A huge, huge facility.
It was a 3.6 million square foot facility in Windsor, Connecticut.
Amazon says it's re-evaluating its contractors at the construction project after an eighth noose was found on the site Wednesday a week ago.
Nooses left in several locations at the Amazon facility have now brought the project to a standstill for a second time.
They shut down this huge construction project Now, after closing the facility last week, the week before, I'm reading from a news story, but it really means two weeks ago, to let law enforcement investigate the discovery of seven nooses.
They found them all at once.
Amazon reopened, only to find an eighth noose.
So the company shut it all down again as the investigation continued.
Amazon had put up security cameras around entrances and on different floors.
The FBI is joining state and local police in investigating the matter and the NAACP is in contact with Amazon and law enforcement daily.
Amazon spokesman Kelly Nantell said, we are assessing the performance and management of our developer and general contractor.
Is it somehow the contractor's fault?
I guess so.
Then it goes to say that the project was shut down out of a concern for people's safety.
Listen to this.
Scott X. S. Dale.
I guess X is his slave name.
President of the Connecticut NAACP said, it's a direct threat on your life.
He said at a news conference.
And Amazon is offering a $100,000 reward if it leads to the arrest and conviction of the people responsible.
Conviction.
Now, more than... I mean, this is serious business, Mr. Kersey.
And as I said, it should be enough to drive people clear out of the state of Connecticut so bad.
More than 100 employees at the construction site have been interviewed.
More than 100.
And the site's contractor, R.C.
Anderson, began hiring private security duty officers to monitor the site day and night, and Amazon has hired private security of itself.
That place must be as safe as Fort Knox.
Well, where's the FBI?
We know the FBI... Well, the FBI's there.
Okay, okay, good, good.
They're all part of it.
Don't worry, don't worry.
The FBI is on the case, on the case.
And all these agencies are in daily contact with NAACP.
Now, the state police says our major crimes, Eastern District detectives are assigned to it.
Major crimes.
Then he goes on to say the Kinetic Intelligence Center is monitoring.
I guess this is terrorism after all.
Well, but we already know that that's the most important thing to stamp out, as President Biden said in Tulsa.
And Governor Ned Lamont of Connecticut condemned the discovery of the nooses.
Now that's interesting phrasing, condemned the discovery.
I guess they hadn't been discovered to be okay.
Saying that they are a racist provocation of the worst type.
Well, I can think of something worse than that in any case.
It just breaks my heart that's still going on.
So, Governor Lamont and Lieutenant Governor Susan Byswitch later released a joint statement calling the incidents disgusting and hateful.
Well, after the second shutdown, the site reopened the next day, but Windsor Town Council Member Nuchet Black One of our African-American fellow citizens was opposed.
She says, leave the site shut down.
Let the FBI and the police do what they need to do.
As a woman of color, leave it shut down to figure out and provide real concrete answers.
So, too bad.
Can you imagine what it costs in, I don't know, delay time?
The contractor time to shut down work on a 3.6 million dollar square foot building, but this lady says keep it, keep it.
Is this a data center or a distribution center?
This is a distribution center.
Okay.
It's huge.
It's gonna be, it's gonna supply jobs in the area.
Oh gosh, yeah.
You would think that they would have massive security.
They'd have cameras everywhere trying to capture this.
They have cameras everywhere.
Now, the fact is I've actually seen a photograph of the latest and greatest news.
How's it look?
It looks, what it is, is an electrical cord.
It looks like an extension cord, an orange extension cord with a loop tied in one end.
There's a loop tied in at each end.
It does not look the least bit to me like a noose.
And the famous first seven nooses, I'd like to see a photograph of them, but I guess that's classified information.
What was the NASCAR driver, the black guy, Bubba?
Bubba something.
Bubba Smith, Bubba Bart, Bubba whatever.
How many FBI agents went to actually track that down?
I can't remember.
20?
No.
As the state police say, our major crimes division is on it.
In any case, now, over just Memorial Day weekend, something just as bad happened at Central Connecticut State University.
The NAACP chapter noticed an American flag hanging from a construction crane from Memorial Day,
but at the end of the cable of the construction crane was what he called a noose.
Well, following complaints, campus officials apologized and promised to take the fending
cable down as soon as possible.
Although, in an email message to the entire Connecticut State University community, President Zulma Toro, Zulma Toro, I wonder where Zulma is from?
She said, it's not a noose, it's a standard steel cable loop hanging from the end of the cable because that's what you loop things on when you want to lift things up and lower them down.
And it turned out that a construction crew working at the campus hung an American flag from the crane's cable to recognize Memorial.
Can't do that.
Well, still, Vice President for Student Affairs John Tully said, and I quote him, the perception of its noose-like appearance is concerning.
We were speaking to people last night who certainly felt pain.
We feel that pain, and our president has issued a statement expressing our concern, and we are working diligently to get it down.
But you see, it was in the middle of Memorial Day.
They couldn't dig up a crew, a crane operator, to pull the thing down so it was there all memorial, that horrible, wicked, noose-like thing.
But the point is, it doesn't make a bit of difference what it really was.
It's what our pets think.
That's what makes the difference.
Perception's reality.
And when the 1619 Project says that white racism has been pervasive from the moment that blacks were brought to this country, you marinate in that.
I mean, it goes back to that quote from Tulsa, 600 million of our brothers, they probably believe this idea that the slave owners, when the ships would come to Africa, if one of them died, they were so overcrowded.
That there are so many bodies flying out, falling out of the boats.
The shark migrations where they eat.
Have you ever heard this?
No, I've never heard this.
There are people who postulate that you can still, that sharks from Atavistic, they know where to feed because that's where on the trip over from Africa.
They allude to that actually I think in Black Panther, the Killmonger character.
But people will still say there are so many bodies thrown overboard that sisters that the aquatic ancestors of, of, of, I guess,
fish of sharks that once ate well from 1618 to, you know, the 1860.
You know, this is a little known fact, but the Emory University statement that it's a
quite an interesting database on the transatlantic slave trade points out the number of slaves
who died.
It was something like 12%, 15%.
Do you know the number of crew who died on those ships?
No, how many?
It was about 10 to 12% too.
Just being on board was dangerous.
And of course, slaves are a valuable cargo.
It makes no sense to have tossed them overboard to feed sharks.
Be that as it may.
Now, this is under the category, Whitey Just Can't Get It Right.
And it's yet again a university story.
On Wednesday, that was a week ago, the Chancellor of Rutgers University in New Brunswick, Christopher Malloy, released a statement condemning anti-Semitism.
Which reportedly spiked all across the country during and after the fighting in Israel and Gaza.
And he told students who had been affected by anti-Semitism and discrimination on campus to contact the university administration for healing and therapy and all those things that the university is so good at providing today.
Well...
The next day, the school's Students for Justice in Palestine, they released a lengthy statement condemning what the Chancellor had said.
And so that day, the very next day after the Students for Justice in Palestine had said their piece, Chancellor Malloy released a second statement apologizing for the first one.
And he promised, quote, to make sure that our communications going forward are much more sensitive and balanced.
In hindsight, it's clear that the message failed to communicate support for our Palestinian community members, and we sincerely apologize for the hurt that this message has caused.
Oh boy, Whitey just can't get it right.
But diversity is our strength, right?
I swear to you.
That's what they say over and over and over again ad nauseum.
But you know, I guess today's good grovel is tomorrow's grievous affront.
No matter which way our pets tell us to dance, the white man just can't get the steps right.
This, I thought, was just hilarious.
Liberalism just closing like a vice on these people.
But I believe you have good news.
King County, King County, Washington is going to solve the gun problem.
Yeah, you know, King County puts out some pretty good data where they break out in King County.
For those who have a long memory, we talk about it a lot.
That's Seattle.
Famously, it was once named for a white man.
They retconned it back in the late 70s, 80s to actually say, you know what, let's just name it after Martin Luther King.
Did he ever even come to Seattle?
Who cares?
We're going to rename it because they could see the writing on the anti-white wall.
of where things were going, they want to get a jump on things. So in the history books, as cities
and buildings are renamed for non-whites that were once honoring whites, they can say,
we were the first, we set the precedent. We were decades ahead of you.
Oh, I'm sure they weren't the first, but they were in the vanguard.
Well, King County Executive Dow Constantine and the King County Board of Health have declared
Friday, June 4th, as King County Regional Community Safety and Well-Being Day in
in recognition of the rising rates of gun violence And they've launched a program, a pilot program.
I believe these are going to replace the police in Seattle.
It's the King County Regional Peacekeepers Collective, RPKC.
It's got a very nice Bolshevik, almost Marxist sounding ring to it.
To commemorate the declaration to the launch, the Regional Peacekeeper Collective hosted a couple of community events.
Like COVID-19, youth gun violence is a fatal epidemic.
It's clear from the data that community-based gun violence and firearm-related homicide has continued to rise over the past years.
these kicked off in May of 2020.
Like COVID-19, youth gun violence is a fatal epidemic.
It's clear from the data that community-based gun violence and firearm-related homicide has continued
to rise over the past years.
King County is on course for yet another deadly record-setting year for gun violence.
They actually mentioned a couple things in this that I thought were interesting.
Start.
Black, Latinx, and indigenous young people in King County are disproportionately being exposed to gun violence.
Exposed, yeah.
Yes, they're being exposed.
Yes, like some truant running around and exposing themselves indecently.
That's just what's happening.
Just somebody is randomly firing at them.
Not just as perpetrators, but as victims and bystanders as well.
So I thought that was interesting that they actually threw that in there.
Not just as perpetrators.
Yes.
According to King County data, shots fired data, the total number of shots fired incident was up
about 25% from the prior year and up an astonishing 27% from the four-year average from Q1 2017 to
2020. And of that, of the firearm shooting victims, 80% were male, 42% were between the
ages of 18 and 24, 78% were people of color.
Why is that interesting?
Because people of color are a tiny minority in King County, are they not?
Yes.
Black African residents are roughly 6.8% of the total population, yet they're the highest represented demographic, roughly 50% for firearm homicide victims.
Now remember, this report let slip That it was the perpetrators as well.
I know, that's very unusual.
They're always described as the victims on the assumption that, well, unspoken ideas.
It's Klansmen and Hoods running around shooting them.
But be that as it may, do we have figures for Hispanics?
We don't have those broken out.
I will find those.
But in the planning development for the long-term regional plan, we learned that what they're going to do to try and prevent young people from dying is that the immediate responsive go-first strategy To address the current rise in gun violence.
So, this Regional Peacekeepers Collective is going to deliver support and provide services for those highest risk young people, families impacted most.
Obviously, of course, this is all going to go to primarily people of color because there's just an inadequate supply of white people going around exposing young white people to gun violence.
Now, why I think this is really fascinating is because we talked about Portland.
Portland is seeing an unbelievable surge in fatal and non-fatal shooting.
You see these counties that want to leave.
Now if you know anything about Washington, eastern Washington, it borders Idaho.
It's very conservative.
Far different people out there than there are in... Some of them would like to join greater Idaho too.
I think we're going to see in the next four years a major shift in the thinking.
It's funny, this is something that Henry Wolfe actually and I talked about.
He was talking about what a post-Trump country was going to look like, and that would be Right-leaning people, conservatives, white advocates, people who are forced into white advocacy, people who are forced into thinking about terms racially, when all you want to do is believe that America still exists.
As Gregory Hood would tell you, wake up from that dream.
Sorry.
Wolf used to argue it would be a more libertarian standpoint of this idea of separation, legally, and start to see that.
And I think that that's why going back, pointing out what's happening in Buckhead, pointing out this push now for greater Idaho.
I think you'll start seeing it in places like New York.
I think you'll see it in places like Illinois.
It would be fascinating to see some counties in southern Illinois say, we'd like to join Missouri.
Yes, and there's always been this standing invitation from West Virginia to a number of Western Virginia counties to join up the state.
I think it'd be a great idea.
But what are some of the concrete measures that this task force is going to take to improve gun safety?
Isn't there something like a raffle of a gun safe or something?
Isn't that one of the things you're going to do?
That's the real problem, you know.
The boys in the hood just don't have any gun safes.
They don't secure their weapons.
They give them all gun locks and all of a sudden they won't be used anymore.
Yeah, you know, you've got your normal things of prevention, of common language practices, protocols, co-created accountability measures to provide a comprehensive model of care and support for the highest at-risk youth.
What the heck does that mean?
I don't know.
They're going to teach proper gun safety and clean your weapons after a little target practice?
No, I mean, All of this, all of this hot air, what does it mean in really concrete terms?
That's what I want to know.
We have these task forces, we have these initiatives, we're going to do this, we're going to do that, and of course nothing changes because these people are going to shoot each other no matter what.
Well here's, and this is, if you actually look what they're talking about, it's the It's got an acronym, as they all do.
I'm not sure where this one comes from.
Violence Intervention Prevention and Restoration, IPR.
Basically, it's as if they're there to stop retaliation because it's rigorous intervention for those directly involved, secondary prevention for younger siblings, follow-up care and support for family restoration and healing.
So basically, it's like, okay, we know we can see there's going to be violence.
What we're going to try and do is make sure that There's not this idea of revenge and, again, these anti-civilizational concepts that destroy family, that destroy the ability for social capital to flourish, which is... Good luck.
Yeah, and again, this is just King County.
This is happening in, oh my gosh, how many cities, how many municipalities?
It would be interesting to see if there was some sort of rigorously constructed comparison to see what effect those things have at all.
I think the only effect is that A lot of alleged peacemakers, most of whom, perhaps all of whom are people of color, end up with a fat paycheck.
I hate to be cynical, but I suspect that's going to be the result.
But now, Mr. Kersey, you and our listeners are going to be in deep mourning because a terrible act of discrimination has now become law.
Florida's governor, Mr. DeSantis, has signed a bill barring transgender females from playing on public school teams intended for girls.
In Florida, says he, girls are going to play girl sports and boys are going to play boy sports, says Ron DeSantis, as he signed the bill into law, what I'm sure a very heterosexual flourish.
The law, however, would not bar athletes born as females from playing in boys' or men's teams.
Isn't that just cuddly?
So, if you want to be a lady wrestler on the boys' team, if you're good enough, hey, have at it.
Now, the new law will face legal challenges.
And this is the aspect that just leaves me goggling.
Of course, I goggle practically every day these days.
It could impose severe financial consequences on Florida because the NCAA, that's the National Collegiate Athletic Association, right?
For me, a non-sportsman, I think it's pretty good for me to know that.
I think that is.
Which oversees college athletics as threatened to relocate key games from states that discriminate against transsexuals.
Wow.
And something called the Human Rights Campaign said it would challenge the Florida law in court as having been based on a false discriminatory premise that threatens the well-being of transgender children.
Now, I'd be curious to know what the legal basis for this is.
But anyway, I mean, these legal guys can think up as, you know, as... Oh, gosh.
The governor of Alabama who ran and got shot, how am I going to think of his name?
George Wallace.
George Wallace.
He said there's so many laws in Washington, and this was decades ago, that you could find one to indict a ham sandwich if you wanted to.
So they'll find one of these ham sandwich indicting laws to say that this is discrimination.
In any case, Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Montana, Tennessee, and West Virginia have already passed similar legislation and South Dakota is about to sign an executive order to keep what used to be men out of women's sports.
Now, the Idaho law, the first of its kind, was enacted last year and is now, according to this article, mired in legal challenges.
Of course!
A lot of lawyers will get very rich, a lot of billable hours.
You know, I think the ultimate question should be, instead of trying to combat it legally and through legislation, is where is all this madness coming from?
What is forcing kids to even think about this type of stuff?
That's not for us to talk about, but that should be where smart people are saying, Hey, quit attacking the, you know, the outgrowth.
But in the meantime... What's the roots of this?
Of course, that is a deep, deep question.
What has driven America utterly and completely bejabbers and insane?
That's a big question perhaps for another podcast.
But a state senator, a state senator in Florida who has opposed it by the name of Shervin Jones says this is yet another hate-driven attack Hate-driven attack from the government and Republican legislators, and it's insulting that they've staged this morning's photo op on the first day of Pride Month.
Now, you know, Pride Month.
May is Pride Month.
I thought every month is Pride Month.
No, no, no, no.
They have a special month.
May, June, July, August, September.
No, no.
May is even more Pride Month in that case.
And on Tuesday, that was just yesterday, President Joe Biden issued a proclamation to mark the start of Pride Month, urging Congress to protect lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and queer people from discrimination by passing new laws.
Well, when every corporation has changed their avatar on Twitter, Mr. Taylor, to represent the rainbow flag in celebration of Pride Month, I'd say that it's very difficult to call this a marginalized community when it seems as if every corporation placates every act.
Well, justice will not be done until the White House gets a new paint job and is referred to as the House of Many Colors.
Only then.
Only then.
That wouldn't be enough.
Well, you're right.
I'm sorry.
I'd like to make one fun observation.
When you were in high school, wouldn't you have given anything to have gone into the girls' locker room?
Isn't that like how many movies have been made about that very act?
Now all you have to do is say, hey, listen, I'm transgender.
I want to be on the girls' gymnastics team or I want to be on the girls' soccer team.
You know what?
I really want to be a cheerleader.
I can't do flips or anything, but I identify as a female and I'm going to go and I'll hold the girls up.
Can I change with them?
I'm a girl.
Well, you know, all of these records that have been set by transgender athletes, so-called, the one that really strikes me, there are some MMA fighters Mixed martial arts fighters that once were men.
And I remember on one famous occasion, some woman got her skull cracked, fractured, and knocked out by an ex-man who walloped her.
And this is all supposed to be great stuff?
This is the Brave New World?
Now Trump, of course, he did not officially recognize Pride Month during his four years in office.
I guess that was part of his immense, deep, unfathomable bigotry.
But, so it sounds as though that what we really need is more bias training, and the ABA is marching into the breach.
Oh, the ABA knows where things are headed.
Everybody knows where things are headed.
So, the American Bar Association is considering changes to its rules for approved law schools, including required anti-bias training and mandatory acknowledgement of Gender Identity, just in time for Pride Month.
An April 30 memo from the ABA Standards Committee recommends several updates to the group's standards and rules of procedure for approval of law schools.
Documents suggest changing Standard Theory 3 to include, quote, a new section requiring law schools to provide training and education on bias, cross-culture competency, and racism, end quote.
Such programs would have to occur at the start of the program Such programs would have to occur at the start of the program of legal education and at least once again before graduation.
So at the beginning, and hey, make sure that you've learned it all, make sure you know exactly what I's to cross, you know, or I's to dot, T's to cross, LGBTQ's to It's a diversity and inclusion merit badge.
additional whatever additional letters added by that point.
So this would be a requirement to be recognized as a legitimate law school.
Approval?
Yeah, they'd have to.
But they've not done this yet.
They're just they're just mulling this.
Like the Boy Scouts in their Black Lives Matter merit badge.
This is what the ABA is thinking.
It's diversity.
It's diversity and inclusion merit badge.
I mean, don't go overboard here, Mr. Kersey.
Yeah.
So it's it's interesting.
It does point out that it's unclear how such changes would affect law schools that have both been approved by the American Bar Association and subscribed to Christian convictions, such as Liberty University School of Law or Baylor School of Law.
But as we know, Christian convictions in contemporary church, as Sam Francis so famously noted in many of his pieces on the Baptist Church, they're fluid.
I'm afraid they are.
They're not.
They're not immutable.
They're fluid.
That's right.
So, they're nebulous.
Okay, so I guess it's very clear.
If you can't establish a law school unless you have diversity training and anti-bias training, I should think if you're an existing law school, they could lift the certification.
They could.
But they're just thinking about this, right?
They are.
They're thinking about it.
There's one more thing I'd recommend.
There's a new requirement To comply with the new requirement for diversifying the students, faculty, and staff and create an inclusive and equitable environment enumerated in Standard 206, the document recommends, quote, providing need-based or diversity scholarships to students, setting and publishing goals related to diversity and inclusion, i.e.
less white students, i.e.
more non-white students, and, quote, creating pool and yield-building efforts and initiatives designed to attract, Well, you can't learn law unless you have diverse people sitting in class and teaching you.
Why do you need not apply?
Well, you can't learn law unless you have diverse people sitting in class and teaching you.
That's all there is to it.
But now, it seems to me as though New York University, let's see, the ABA itself needs anti-bias training
or at least maybe New York universities do.
New York universities, it seems to me, are exercising bias in the most ferocious way.
Haven't they got this accounting program that's available only to non-whites?
Oh, do I have that story?
Do you have that story?
Yes, I do have that story.
I didn't know I was going to be called back-to-back.
Thanks.
Yeah, so there's a summer accounting program for high school students sponsored by several New York universities.
It doesn't permit white students to apply.
That's right.
As you said, why do you need not apply?
Career opportunities in the accounting profession program, which is sponsored by the New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants, CPAs, and the Moynihan Scholarship Fund.
Going to introduce 250 promising underrepresented high school students to the accounting profession.
In addition to virtual sessions about forensic accounting, interviewing skills, public speaking, networking, and an accounting profession overview, which will feature a panel discussion with experts and the Now I've actually read articles which talk about the
overwhelming whiteness of the CPA profession.
So that's one of the reasons why, yeah, that and the financial industry.
So nine institutions of higher education in New York including Ithaca College, Medgar
Evers College.
Wasn't that the guy who died in Mississippi?
That's the guy.
I didn't realize he had a college named after him.
Well, George Floyd soon will, I imagine.
Rochester Institute of Technology, St.
John's, Siena, SUNY New Paltz, SUNY Oswego, the University at Buffalo, and West Chester Community College are listed as hosts for the program, which is free of charge for students.
Online application for the program, however, does not include an option for white students to apply.
Although the application form includes options for Hispanic, Black, Asian, and Native American students, all capitalized mind you, conspicuously absent is even a lowercase option for white.
Not even available!
And five of the schools that are participating in the program are public universities funded by New York State.
Now the curious thing here, ABA is all worried about anti-bias training.
It seems to me, here are perfect targets for anti-bias training.
Isn't this the most obvious form of bias?
Well, I guess not.
It's in-your-face discrimination.
It sure is.
Well, while we continue in New York State, but moving downstate to Manhattan, A man sucker punched an Asian woman in the face as she walked down a Manhattan street.
This was just a few days ago.
The victim was knocked smack cold, rushed to the hospital for treatment, but apparently is going to survive.
Surveillance camera captured the attack, which shows the woman falling to the sidewalk.
I just like a sack of potatoes.
This is another very considerable wallop.
Well, a bystander ran to nearby police precinct to alert officers who were able to track down Alexander Wright, age 48.
He was, well, I just won't go into it, but you can expect, you can, he fits a pattern.
And Wright was arrested shortly after the unprovoked attack, which took place in broad daylight on a Monday afternoon.
As it turns out, Alexander Wright was arrested eight times last year.
Eight times.
For randomly assaulting people and setting fires.
And this violent incident comes as attacks against Asians and Asian Americans surge in New York City with, according to the New York Post, at least 86 anti-Asian hate crimes reported to authorities this year, as opposed to only 19 in the same year, 2020.
86 opposed to 19.
And, of course, there is a very, very clear pattern of perpetrator.
But, as Mr. Kersey, you and I know, and our listeners know, the fault is white supremacy.
Of course.
It is white supremacy that makes this happen.
Now, murders have risen 70.8% this month compared to the same four weeks in 2020.
70.8%.
That's a lot.
20 70.8 percent that's a lot serious crime overall up 50 over the previous four weeks
but this is just one example And of course, that's what you're going to get when you have somebody who is arrested eight times during the previous year for various attacks and just turned loose over and over and over again.
Don't you, aren't you going to get the message that, hey, you can attack anybody you like.
But this time he chose wrong and he chose an Asian and then the hue and cry is up and into the slammer he goes.
I guess if it had just been a poor white person that would have made no difference because we are on the cue to make sure that Asians get good treatment.
He became a national news star.
Now I'd like to talk about Colonel Douglas McGregor.
Do you know that name?
I do know that name.
Well, this is a new one to me.
Colonel Douglas MacGregor, age 68, was appointed by Donald Trump last December for a three-year term on the advisory board of West Point.
What this does is provide independent advice to the president on morale, curriculum, discipline, and other matters.
It is, as I say, a three-year position, but he was already known for controversial remarks.
He has argued for the imposition of martial law at the U.S.-Mexico border and for orders to, quote, shoot people if necessary to stop illegal immigration.
Well, I guess as a colonel in the military, shooting people is what occurs to him as a solution to certain problems.
He's also criticized European countries for being too welcoming of what he calls Muslim invaders.
And in April, he said the Biden administration was deliberately working to outnumber the numbers of Americans of European ancestry.
He says their idea of control is to bring in as many people as they can as quickly as possible, preferably from Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, and some from parts of Asia.
Colonel McGregor said the idea is that they have to bring in as many non-Europeans in order to outnumber the Europeans of Americans of European ancestry.
That's what it's all about.
A deliberate policy to enact demographic change.
Pretty remarkable stuff.
He sounds like he might be a good speaker at an American Renaissance conference.
He also said a lot of criminals are among the migrants and undocumented immigrants coming in, adding that they would burden our economy.
He says they come in with already eradicated diseases.
Well, they're not if they bring them back.
Pregnant women coming in from Latin America, they can have their children here and have them declared immediate American citizens.
He says, again, this is all part of a grand plan.
This is what Mr. Biden and his supporters want.
They want another country.
They don't want the United States.
I think he's right on there.
They certainly don't want the United States.
Well, back in 1991, he was apparently a celebrated tank commander in the Gulf War.
But, and once again, I cannot disagree, he says the United States should immediately get out of Iraq, Afghanistan, and later on from Syria.
He says we've got no business there.
He retired from the army in 2004, and he has been a regular guest on Fox News.
He's written books on military history.
Another thing he said that shows deep, deep, deep insensitivity is, sure, let's put women into combat.
We're going to create a brave new world where everyone's the same.
Ah, that was deeply, deeply bad.
Well, White House spokesperson Andrew Bates commented on his remarks saying, These hateful and grotesque statements are antithetical to the values and character of our nation and armed forces.
Did you know that?
Ah, but they are now.
Yeah, I guess they are now.
Well, and moving on to Albemarle County, Virginia.
This is a, well, it's not exactly a rural county because Charlottesville and the University of Virginia are there, but it is certainly not part of Northern Virginia, this nexus of Marxism and liberalism that, along with the, you could call it the Northern Virginia-Richmond Axis that governs the country, much to the dismay of everybody else.
But Albemarle County, 2019, unanimously voted to adopt an anti-racism policy in the school board to dismantle individual, institutional, and structural racism that exists.
I guess they'd tracked it all down.
They'd found it.
They'd caught it red-handed.
And to establish a system of equity.
Now, this apparently is to be woven through all the classes in Albemarle County.
All of them.
Students are told that while there are many forms of privilege, White privilege is perhaps the most enduring throughout history.
Throughout history.
Got that?
I mean, even back in the Middle Ages when there were no non-whites around, white privilege was enduring, and it is without doubt the greatest privilege in the United States today.
Students are shown a video in which a biracial couple, mind you, partake in activity with a wife who's white, of course.
She checks her privilege while her husband, who is black, counts and enumerates bias-related incidents.
This is important for grade school students to know.
Albemarle County issues its white students a call to action in a video while simultaneously telling black students that they quote are shown over and over and over that their lives do not matter.
Really?
Yes.
Who shows them that I wonder?
It's just bewildering.
Where?
What?
Yes, who's doing this?
I guess Dr. Seuss books do that, you know?
We've discovered that they have been insidiously racist all these decades.
Dr. Seuss is surely doing it.
In any case, it tells white people not being racist isn't enough.
Now is the time to be anti-racist and to take action.
Now, I thought this was quite good.
A concerned parent told the news that when Principal Beth Costa, she is one of the principals of Albemarle schools, was asked, well, enumerate some of the racial discrimination going on in the school.
I mean, this is to find it and track it down and cure it and correct it.
She could not answer.
Couldn't answer, but it's still going to happen anyway.
It's still there.
It's still there.
But, and this is what she said, this is what she said.
The problem, we've been told, is the majority of our students are Caucasian, and that is the biggest problem we need to fix!
That's the problem!
That there's so many white kids in the schools!
Now, we can't find racism anywhere, but just the fact that there are a lot of white people in the school, boy oh boy, that is the problem that we need to fix.
Wow!
In a school system that has very few white people, in Baltimore City schools, I'm sure you know what they just did.
No, it isn't.
Everyone's going to go.
Everyone's going to pass.
Baltimore City schools are about 7% white, 92.8% non-white.
Haven't they been passing everybody for years?
In any case, Albemarle County, the county is 81% white, 81%, 10% black, 5% each Asian and Hispanic.
But they're ashamed of that.
They're ashamed of that.
Let me read this again.
The problem we've been told is the majority of our students are Caucasian, and that is the biggest problem we need to fix.
Oh dear.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, I don't think we're going to fix that problem anytime soon, but Albemarle County is beavering away trying to fix it.