Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, to the latest episode of Radio Renaissance.
I am Jared Taylor with American Renaissance, and today is June 8th, Year of Our Lord 2021.
And we're going to begin, as we often do, with a listener comment.
Again, we solicit listener comments eagerly, eagerly, and especially corrections.
Now, this is a, some would call it a minor correction, but it's important to get these things right.
And our listener says, in the episode before last, Mr. Taylor said $28 million twice when he should have said $27 million.
Now those really on-the-ball listeners out there, and perhaps I would include my indispensable co-host, understand what he was talking about.
That was the amount of money the city of Minneapolis handed over to the George Floyd family.
And I exaggerated by a million dollars.
It was 27, not 28.
So I'm delighted to be corrected.
In fact, I was just about to make that same mistake in a video that I was about to make.
So these corrections are extremely valuable and we're grateful for them.
For those of you with comments, stories you'd like to bring to our attention, and especially corrections, because we do not like to send errors out over the internet, please contact us at the Contact Us tab at amren.com, A-M-R-E-N.com, or you can write to Mr. Kersey at BecauseWeLiveHere at ProtonMail.com.
Yeah, and as Mr. Taylor so Astutely noted we love getting your stories your
corrections your thoughts But most importantly we just want to hear from you so we
can make sure that you get That awesome end of the week email now the last one that I
saw on the show. I gotta say I finally listened to a hood and
Chris Roberts Chris Roberts podcast
There was a fantastic one on Camp of the Saints.
If those listening to this are unaware that Hood and Roberts have a podcast, it is a must-listen, and I understand they're doing Star Trek Troopers pretty soon, so very excited to listen to that podcast.
Yes, a new undertaking by American Renaissance Enterprises, a worldwide headquarters here in Oakton, Virginia.
Now, we get complaints from people, and we understand complaints, and we will listen to them, we'll read to them all very carefully, but one of the frequent complaints is that we don't get good news on this program.
Well, this week we have good news.
A federal judge in Texas issued a preliminary ruling just last week, which found that the Biden administration's nearly $29 billion restaurant relief fund discriminates against white men.
Yes.
Shocking.
In an 18-page ruling, the judge ordered the Small Business Administration Relief Program to stop prioritizing funding applications for businesses owned by racial minorities and women.
The plaintiff, of course, was a white man.
U.S.
District Judge Reed O'Connor, an employee of former President George W. Bush, found that the plaintiff is, open quotes, experiencing race and sex discrimination at the hands of government officials.
Happens all the time, and it is wonderful for a federal judge to say so.
As it turns out, the entire $28.6 billion in the Restaurant Revitalization Fund, which was supposed to be set aside for restaurants that lost money during COVID, I can't imagine any that did not, The point is, white men with the back of the line, and they had to wait until everybody else was handled, and it might turn out that they would suffer, as the judge concluded, irreparable harm because the entire fund, all $28.6 billion, could be exhausted by the time the prioritized group's claims are processed.
And Mr. Greer's lawsuit, that was the plaintiff, It was backed by none other than the America First Legal Foundation.
I'm sure that Mr. Kersey knows who started that.
And for those of you who are a listening audience who are unaware, it's a conservative litigation firm led by the former Trump aide Stephen Miller.
Stephen Miller, as I've often said, was probably the most effective white man in the country for certainly during the Trump administration.
I think he's been a great guy and he has continued to do great business.
He wants to be an ACLU for our side.
Wow, what you go back and think about all the great things that There are scores of individuals who could have been selected to staff the Trump administration.
I don't know if you saw what Ann Coulter just came out and said.
Probably not.
I don't know if you want to hear it, but I will.
She said, it's too late.
America's slide into South Africa is permanent.
Trump was the last chance to do something about it.
And of course, you know her stance on Trump.
Hopefully one day we get the true story of what happened in the Oval Office when she yelled at him, but the one thing she can't yell about is Stephen Miller, because he was highly effective in the White House, and since leaving the White House, as you can see, as you can hear, I should say, he's been unbelievably effective.
And that's not the only case that he's involved in.
There's another case pending, and that is one having to do with Texas Agricultural Commissioner Sid Miller.
He is suing to ask a federal judge to stop the U.S.
farm program that had set aside, I believe that was $4 billion, $1 billion for racial and ethnic minorities to forgive farm-related loans.
This outright discriminates permanently against white people.
White ranchers and farmers, nope, we're not even going to listen to you.
It's not even a question to go to the back of the bus.
It's off the bus for good.
And the lawsuit filed in Fort Worth Federal Court was, again, by the America First Legal Foundation, the one started by Stephen Miller.
Good name.
Yes, very good.
Now, Sid Miller, the Agriculture Commissioner, and not, I believe, a relative, filed in Fort Worth Civil Court as a private citizen, not as a state official on behalf of the state, but he is, in fact, a rancher himself.
And so he says, look, they're out there, this is a violation of the 14th Amendment, and the federal government is treating me according to a standard that would be obviously discriminatory were anyone else a victim.
Now, guess what judge is listening to this?
Hmm, might it be the same judge who ruled on the restaurant case?
You go to the head of class.
You get to sit in the front of the bus.
Yes, sir.
It is Judge Reed O'Connor.
So, I cannot imagine that he will rule differently in this case.
You know, Mr. Taylor, one thing I want to point out to all of our listeners out there, especially those around the world, it doesn't take presentations on race and IQ to change people's opinions.
Look what's happened with the critical race theory stuff.
Obviously, we're still not at a point where people can just say it's anti-white.
They're still in that mindset.
They can't take their own side yet.
But these type of cases, These type of cases are the ones that are going to be clickbait on all these right-of-center sites.
These are the stories, and I'd like to congratulate Clay Travis, who's taken over Russell Limbaugh's spot.
I've mentioned him a lot.
He does outkick the coverage.
This is the type of story that his website, which is supposed to be only about sports, Mr. Taylor, they love talking about.
These obvious, glaring, shocking double standards.
Yes, yes.
The government itself, out and out, openly, in black and white, saying, no white people need apply.
It's extraordinary.
And it's about time these things went to the court.
But, and it seems obvious to me that a court would decide as it did, but the really shocking thing is the government should, without batting an eye, issue a ruling of that kind.
Set up a program that does that.
That is the fundamentally shocking thing.
Now, something else.
More good news, ladies and gentlemen.
This is a week full of good news.
The Supreme Court, once again, this is an obvious decision, in a unanimous decision just yesterday.
The Supreme Court ruled that a law barring illegal immigrants from seeking green cards is constitutional.
Now, doesn't that seem obvious to me?
A lot of things seem obvious.
They seem obvious.
In this day and age, the miraculous is so common day that the obvious is never obvious.
In other words, if you're an illegal immigrant, you don't have the right to apply for permanent residency.
You're still illegal.
Now, this had to do with illegal immigrants who had earned, as expression goes, temporary protected status.
Earned it?
They'd earned it?
Of course they hadn't earned it.
This is for people whose homelands have been ravaged by war or earthquake or natural disaster have become apparently utterly unlivable.
So these people earn TPS status if something horrible happens with their homeland.
They happen to be here illegally and they get to stay.
Well, Justice Elena Kagan, the wise Latina grandmama, widely recognized as the court's most liberal justice, wrote the unanimous opinion.
So, I'm impressed, Elena.
Good girl.
As she points out, unlawful entrants, who later got temporary protected status, can't apply to remain legally because temporary protected status is people who have non-immigrant status.
They are here by the grace of God, so to speak, by the grace of the President, and they're supposed to be here temporarily, but sometimes they're here for decades.
Yes, if not, you know, For the duration of their life.
The point is they are legal.
They are here legally, but they cannot get a green card and be permanent, permanent legal residents.
It protects them from deportation and allows them to work legally.
There are an estimated 400,000 such people from 12 different countries, but no.
And the court was called upon to decide whether a couple from El Salvador, who have been in the U.S.
since the early 1990s, Temporary.
Temporary can go a long way.
They got protected status in 2001, 20 years ago.
And they said, hey, you know, temporary sounds good.
Temporary has gone on for 20 years.
I think we ought to just make it de facto and let it stay forever.
Nope.
But, you know, this is an obvious ruling, but it changes nothing on the ground for people like them until TPS is lifted and President Trump tried very hard to lift TPS.
Remember for these Haitians who are here on account of the earthquake that happened, what, 10 years ago?
2010, that's right.
Yes, yes.
And for these people who have been here for that, you know, they got TPS 20 years ago because apparently, after all, El Salvador is a mess.
It's still a mess.
When is it going to stop being a mess?
But he said, look, Go home.
But President Biden, of course, has reversed all this and the TPS people are continuing to get their protective status.
But that's how it goes.
Now, on an entirely different note, Mr. Kersey has a story about facial recognition software and King County, whose name we discuss every time.
Let's just not discuss it this time.
We'll just talk about King County.
We're talking about Seattle.
Basically, King County is the first county in the country to ban government use of facial recognition software.
Now, I am a major proponent of facial recognition software being implemented everywhere, but the reason why is this.
This sets a big win for civil rights and privacy because they're worried about facial recognition
software.
They say that blacks, Asians, and Latinos are often misidentified by the software.
Council Member Jean Cole-Wells said her proposed legislation, which the Council unanimously approved, will protect civil rights.
Now, let's go a little bit into the article.
King County Council Member David Upthegrove, I hope that's how you pronounce it, that's how it looks phonetically, in a release statement said this, The use of technology is invasive, intrusive, racially biased, and full of risks to fundamental civil liberties.
I am proud to sponsor this ban, which is supported by local community groups, public defenders, immigrants' rights advocates, racial justice organization, workers' rights groups, public defenders, and privacy advocates and technologists.
Now, wait a second.
Let's go back and look at some of those groups there, Mr. Taylor.
Why do you think they might be opposed to this?
Well, the people who are immigrant rights people are afraid that illegal immigrants will be identified by this stuff.
That's my guess.
That's correct.
And people who are worried about the community, and we know that other than white people, there are communists.
Everybody's got a community except white people.
Correct.
You can't have a guy who's active in the white community.
Sometimes I describe myself that way to people.
A white communitarian?
I'm active in the white community.
Ha ha ha.
People just double-take when you say that.
But people in the community, because they're more likely to be the kind of people who will be doing those things, whose face will be recognized in places where they shouldn't be, like when they're about to break into a liquor store.
That's my guess.
Well, Maru Mora Villalpando, who's with the Latino Advocacy.
Now, that's a good name for a group.
I guess you couldn't be with the Caucasian Advocacy.
You know, she joined the coalition because basically she said, as immigrants we've been targeted by immigration enforcement as people of color.
We're already afraid of the power that ICE and police have and giving them this kind of technology makes us more afraid.
So we think the county did the right thing.
They listened to us, to the community.
Now the community in that case is the Latino advocacy.
Now of course, as all Americans should be, we should want illegal immigrants to be afraid.
Yes, but no, we can't have them living in the shadows because they need to be out here brave and bold, just acting like they own the place.
And yeah, that's exactly as I suspected.
These illegal immigrants don't want facial recognition software because they might be recognized.
Can't have that.
Now, this whole idea that the facial recognition software is somehow biased against blacks or Hispanics, well, apparently some of the early versions had a hard time telling black faces apart.
But this stuff has gotten better and better.
And it's only going to get better and better as more technology, as more That is a pure baloney argument.
But, be that as it may, it might make life a little bit more uncomfortable for illegal immigrants so we can't have it.
Now, here's a perverse sort of good news.
And it has to do with a New York-based psychiatrist by the name of, and she's now increasingly famous, Aruna Kilanani.
I don't know where she's from, but she revels in the fact that she is not white.
Can I tell you where she's from?
Dude.
She's a first-generation Pakistani-American who grew up in Troy, Michigan.
Is that right?
And its population was, when she was there growing up in the late 90s, mid-2000s, about 85% white, about 2% black.
So she grew up privileged.
Her parents were both physicians.
I bet she just had a miserable, miserable childhood.
But in any case, back in April she gave a talk At the Yale School of Medicine.
And her talk was entitled, The Psychopathic Problem of the White Mind.
The Psychopathic Problem.
And when she proposed that title, apparently one of the wimpy men at Yale says, well, you know, this just doesn't seem quite... If we were talking about the psychopathic problem of the Asian mind, people might get upset.
It's just, no, no, this is my subject.
And he said, okay, okay.
So she gave her talk and she talked about the intense rage and futility that people of color feel when talking to white people about racism.
It is so bad that she has fantasies of, quote, unloading a revolver into the head of any white person that got in my way and then she would walk off with a bounce in my step like I did the world a fucking favor.
That's what she says.
And when it comes to any conversation about racism, We are asking a demented, violent predator who thinks that they are a saint or a superhero to accept responsibility.
Ain't gonna happen.
Now, Mr. Kersey, are you a violent, demented predator?
And do you think you are a saint or a superhero?
That's a trick question.
Which are you?
Are you a saint or a superhero?
Now, we know you're a demented, violent predator.
That goes without saying, because you're a white man.
That's axiomatic, yes.
But are you a saint or a superhero?
Saint or superhero?
Wow.
Those are the only choices you get.
I'm just going to keep going about what I'm doing and let the person decide who asks such a question.
Oh, you ought to see this man in the waiting room.
I'd call him a superhero.
In any case, she then claimed that Yale promised her footage of the talk would be released to the public next Monday, or the following Monday.
Instead, after a series of delays, it was released internally, available only to people with a Yale School ID.
So, it sounds as though this sort of thing, that even Yale itself, after they'd advertised this, they decided, Maybe this is just a little going too far.
And so, now that this has come up, Ms.
Kilanini has taken to TikTok to push for the video of her talk to be made public.
And I love the way she's taking this.
She's really adopted the local vernacular.
She says, yo, white amnesia is an amazing thing.
The white people promised they'd release it, and they haven't.
So she's entirely proud of what she said.
She's standing behind... You gotta hand it to these people.
The idea that she wants to... She's thinking about unloading a revolver into white people and walking away with a smile and bouncing herself, thinking that she's done the world a fucking favor.
She's got nothing to apologize for.
Don't you have a Yale ID?
Couldn't you get access to this video?
Well, I was thinking about that.
I was thinking about that.
You know, I just didn't know about it.
But, you know, she has a degree of medicine from the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Where she was a member of, now as you would say, get this, the Gold Humanism Honor Society.
Gold Humanism.
Good girl.
And she also has an MA in Humanities in the University of Chicago.
Wow.
Some of this humanities stuff seems to have gotten lost in the shuffle.
And a BA from the University of Michigan.
Obviously, she has been just trodden upon.
Her life has been a mess.
And I went to her website, and she's in private practice.
And she says, I have a high level of expertise in seeing both the conscious and unconscious structures of racism, sexism, homophobia, classism.
That's pretty good.
She's got x-ray vision.
She sees both the conscious and the unconscious structures of these things.
Then she goes on to say, I hope to undo the long and painful legacy of psychoanalysis has in causing harm.
Well, I don't know about Freud.
She didn't claim to be Freudian.
I don't remember seeing the word Freud on her website.
But if you've got any kind of problems with anxiety or if you think, you know, the Great Replacement is coming after you, you go to her and she'll set you straight.
You know, the fact of the matter is, when I went to her site, I saw all these Yelp things about people commenting on her.
And she had maybe a hundred recommendations with an average of one star.
And they had all showed up since this business about her became public.
And one of the people said, you know, I went into her, I went into her with a mental problem, and she whipped out a revolver on me!
So I decided to call that session off.
So all of her reviews are that kind of thing now.
But why is this relatively good news in a perverse way?
It is because this has gotten so much publicity.
It has.
Many people have written about this.
And Yale is running off with its tail between its legs.
It looks quite idiotic.
And the more this kind of thing gets attention, the better.
I say keep talking this way and more white people will understand.
This is the kind of thing that turns normies into white advocates.
So keep it up.
Now here's another one.
This is an article called On Having Whiteness.
Published just last month in the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association.
And let me read to you from the, what do you call it, the synopsis, the prece at the beginning.
It says, whiteness is a condition one first acquires and then one has.
A malignant, parasitic-like condition to which white people have a particular susceptibility.
In other words, you could be black and I guess, under weird circumstances, you could get this malignant, parasitic-like condition known as whiteness.
Obviously.
One first acquires and then one has.
I mean, I don't know how else, but in any case, parasitic whiteness renders its host's appetites voracious, insatiable, and perverse.
Your appetites, Mr. Kersey, are voracious, insatiable, and perverse.
In some things, not in whiteness.
What do you think those appetites are for?
These deformed appetites particularly target non-white peoples.
Does this mean that you've secretly all your life wanted to eat a black baby?
Is that your voracious and perverse appetite that's directed towards non-white people?
That's insatiable, obviously.
I don't know.
There are plenty of black babies out there.
I just don't.
This is such astonishing nonsense.
It goes on to say, once established, these appetites are nearly impossible to eliminate.
Once you start hungering for black babies, you just can't stop.
Effective treatment consists of a combination of psychic and socially historical interventions.
Such interventions can reasonably aim only to reshape whiteness's infiltrated appetites, to reduce their intensity, redistribute their aims, and occasionally turn their aims towards the work of reparations.
Now, Therefore, memorization alone, in other words, realizing it's going on, is no guarantee against regression.
In other words, you can, under this guy's helpful care, you can realize that you have these insatiable, perverse, and voracious appetites.
But knowing that doesn't mean that you can control them.
And it says, there is therefore no guarantee against regression.
There is not yet a permanent cure.
Oh, there is a permanent cure.
And it's, uh, it's, uh, It comes at the barrel of a gun, as our medical friend whose parents came from Pakistan.
I'm sure she's a by-product of the 1965 Immigration Act, who otherwise would never have set foot, her parents would never have set foot in America.
Or lobotomy!
I mean, again, that key word I pulled out of there, as you were telling me that story, quotations only.
That was, I think, in the third to last paragraph, where you said it's not sufficient.
They can only become advocates for... No, they can reasonably aim only to reshape whiteness's infiltrated appetites, whatever they are.
These perverse, voracious, and incurable, whatever they are, these appetites, you can't rid yourself of them.
But, you know, what are these appetites supposed to be, I wonder?
Really, realistically.
But they're directed at non-whites.
So, you know, you can probably live up in the mountains of Appalachia.
You'd still be white.
You'd be pretty damn white.
And I don't know what sort of appetites you'd have towards non-whites at all.
But this guy's got it figured out.
He's a shrink.
He has a private practice in New York City.
But, Mr. Curley, he's got you figured out.
He's got you pegged.
And, as he points out, there is not yet A permanent cure.
There's not a permanent cure to our voracious, insatiable, perverse, perverse, perverse appetites.
Isn't that a lovely trio of adjectives?
Well, you know, there are so few.
Preface is the right way to say this.
There are a lot of people who've looked at where this is all headed.
When you look at this intense, Language we're seeing from the Indian doctor to this piece from, forgive me, the AMA was it?
Oh yeah, the AMA.
But, you know, the whole whiteness stuff that we hear over and over and over and over again, this is a top-down elite-driven, and I'm going to say it, I mean, again, this critical race, when you look at critical race theory, it truly is just this anti-white, it's reshaping and reformulating and re-engineering.
You know, Lockheed Martin was forced to address the whiteness I'm surprised they didn't all have to.
to. And the CEO today, Mr. Taylor, admitted that over 1,050 white employees have taken
this re-education class. I'm surprised they didn't all have to. But
are they going to stop this now after the outcry? He did not say if they're going to
stop or not, but I mean, again, the point is you have all these... This is what... This
was the great thing that looking back at the Trump administration, he did set forth the
motion by singling this out and getting people talking about it. He wanted to actually try
and stop it with executive orders.
Well, see, yes, that was very important.
But you see, in a way, stuff by this guy's name is Donald Moss, this fellow.
And in a way, I want to see more of this.
Because when this was first sent to me, it was sent to me by a guy who thought this was an article from The Onion.
Or this is some kind of satire.
Yeah.
That this could not be true.
Agreed.
And I think many white people are going to read something like this,
parasitic whiteness renders its host's appetite voracious, insatiable, and
perverse. And they're going to think this is lunacy.
So just like, just like this Ms.
Kalanani, Ms.
Dr. Kalanani, who will shrink your head for a fee, this stuff is gonna drive more people our way.
Well, she won't only shrink your head for a fee, she fantasizes about turning your head into a canoe.
Put a hole in it for a fee.
Not for a fee, for free!
Yes, shrink it for a fee, put a hole in it for free.
I like that!
That's her mantra.
That's a great moniker, that's a great mantra.
Okay, now Mr. Kersey, for a complete shift of gears, let us move to Asheville, Nashville, North Carolina, from the heart of Manhattan.
Yeah, I just want to talk about this real quick.
Asheville, North Carolina, is one of the more pleasant places in the country.
I'm not sure if you've been there before.
I've been there many times.
It is beautiful.
It's one of these great places that has kind of been overwhelmed with kind of your Goofy whites from the West Coast?
Well, I don't know if they're from the West Coast.
East Coast whites get goofy, too.
They get goofy.
You know, they do.
They do.
But it has a kind of cutesy feel about it.
Oh, out of holistic dentistry and refried hippies and various... A lot of good restaurants, a lot of good booze, a lot of breweries.
Unfortunately, a lot of cannabis.
But the best thing about... Pleasant enough.
It's overwhelmingly white.
Oh, I think it's about 87% white and in 2020, actually.
I think 90% of the homicide suspects were black and the city is maybe 7% black.
Well, obviously, as all cities are across the country, there's a police shortage.
Well, we now find out that in Asheville, the police force will no longer respond to theft calls.
Because 84 officers have left the department.
The Daily Mail reports that Chief David Zak has cited the protests against law enforcement as one of the main factors that have caused so many officers to step away from the job.
Now we've talked about this before.
Who in their right mind would want to be a police officer?
You know, I remember last year, it's been almost a year, you went to Richmond and I think you walked up to a police officer and, you know, thanked him for what was happening.
That officer told you, you could burn the city down.
We wouldn't stop you.
We've been told to stand down.
Monuments have been destroyed.
They've been ravaged.
And he said, I believe in the video you did, or maybe the article you wrote about how he lamented that they couldn't get good people.
No.
To become an officer.
How could they possibly get people?
As you say, it's astonishing that anyone, certainly any white person, wants to be a police officer in the United States.
So, they are bleeding police officers and now they won't respond to a theft call.
So, yeah, there are no... Okay.
Two key points and we'll move on.
The APD officer attrition rate, formerly one per month, jumped to 7.5 per month in the four months after local
protests set off by Minneapolis police murdering, uh, murdering, I shouldn't have read that. Uh,
that's what the Asheville Citizen Times noted. So there were protests even in Asheville where the
only crime is basically committed by blacks as, as we mentioned after the George Floyd protest.
Correct. So the response to 911 calls have lengthened during this period.
7.7 response time for serious crimes.
It's now up to 10.6 minutes.
So again, if something really bad is happening, you've got now almost a 50% increase.
Well, you know why they had so many disturbances in Asheville?
It's because that's the place where George Floyd took five pieces of Kentucky Fried Chicken and turned them into 500 to feed the hungry black people.
You weren't aware of that miracle.
I wasn't aware of that miracle, but I will point this last thing out.
The chief of the city told the city council that the decision not to respond to calls about low-level crimes said this, quote, this is what it looks like when you're down this much, when you lose 50% of your detectives, end quote.
Now look, ladies and gentlemen, this is Asheville, North Carolina.
This is happening in every major city in the country.
Asheville is one of the top spots For people to go on vacation and have a good time.
To go to the amazing brewery, Sierra Nevada.
There's a lot of great things to do there.
It even has a pinball museum.
Pinball machine museum.
Did you know that?
I do know that.
I've actually been to that museum.
Look, it's a cool city.
But this is happening in Atlanta.
This is happening in Philadelphia.
It's happening all across the country.
And it's going to get worse, Mr. Taylor, for one reason.
Good people don't want to be police officers.
Because they could be Darren Wilson.
Or they could be Derek Chauvin.
Derek Chauvin, exactly.
Again, it's astonishing to me that anybody is in the business.
Now, a fellow was in the business in River County, Florida, where an unusual event occurred.
It was entirely conventional up until just the last moment, but John Henry James III, age 32.
That's quite a moniker for a guy who turns out to be quite the lowlife that he was.
He was the third.
He was driving erratically.
Police tried to pull him over, but he kept on going.
He wouldn't come over, and he led the police on a merry chase for 40 minutes.
High-speed chase for 40 minutes at times, striking a detective's vehicles, squeezing between cars.
He just barreled over tire deflation devices.
He forced other people's cars to swerve out of the way.
This was quite an exciting 40 minutes, but when they finally got him to stop, he got out of the car with his two-month-old baby.
He then threw the infant, I mean not just an underhand pitch, he threw him overhand like a basketball at one of the officers who caught the infant.
The child was unharmed and then other officers chased John Henry James III through the trees, through the sides of buildings, eventually forcing him to the ground where he kicked and bit officers as they tried to cuff him and escort him into the patrol car.
When he was finally taken into custody, as the video footage shows, guess what he started complaining about?
He started saying, I can't breathe.
Tennis elbow.
Nope, I can't breathe.
I can't breathe.
This fellow reads the news.
His son almost couldn't breathe because he tossed him out the window.
I don't know the sex of the child.
It might have been female.
So don't leap to conclusions.
He didn't toss him out the window.
He just heaved him at the officer.
That's going to distract most officers.
Well, the officer, of course, was white.
Here's this baby coming his way.
And you know, you ain't going to get off around while you've got a two-month-old infant headed your way, airborne.
In any case, I just love this.
After he'd done all this, ran and ran and ran, now he complains he can't breathe.
After biting and kicking police officers.
He had COVID and his lung capacity decreased a little bit.
Well, there are other reasons to get decreased lung capacity, as we know from St.
Floyd.
But additionally, he faces charge of aggravated battery on a pregnant woman.
But the sheriff's office has not released details about that charge.
That must've been something else he was doing.
And he's been previously arrested on charges of battery, home, burglary, and grand theft.
A thoroughly charming lad, this John Henry James III, age 32.
Now, let's imagine the child, let's imagine this white cop, you know, I assume he, you know, what if you're about to draw your revolver on a guy and he heaves a child at you?
You're in a tricky situation.
Now, I don't think he had his revolver in his hand.
He didn't have it.
Sorry, he had his pistol in his hand, but in any case, Let's imagine this guy had missed the child and the child had hit his head on a curb and died.
Who'd be to blame?
Or even worse, if he pulls the clock out, say, he has a round chambered, the baby's coming at him, he decides to then drop the gun and it discharges and it shoots the third, whatever the guy's name was, but he catches the baby and then he's got a situation where what are you doing at that point?
Yes, yes.
In any case, If anything bad had happened, we know who would be to blame.
There would be a huge outcry, yet more police brutality.
There's a little video of this guy who caught the... He's a very nice looking, absolutely on the ball looking white guy.
He says, yeah, he says, good thing I caught him, you know, and the kid was uninjured and off he went.
But so there was something of a happy ending.
But yeah, he complained that he couldn't... Wait a second, are you saying that this cop didn't want to devalue, didn't have an insatiable Apparently not.
Perverse desire to... He wanted to catch this child.
The police video shows him walking off trying to comfort the child, taking him into some sort of shelter.
There you go, you're right.
He didn't have this perverse desire to devour the child.
Voracious as well.
Yes, yes.
So, there you go.
Now, in Paterson, they've got yet another attempt at fighting gun violence the usual way that some of these black run cities do.
I just want to be brief with this one again.
I'm sure you've been to many community events.
I'm sure a lot of our listeners probably spent a Memorial Day going to barbecues, maybe doing a cul-de-sac party, or going to some park and being around a lot of people, and it was just simple.
There were no cops anywhere.
Everyone was having a good time.
There was Maybe a monochromatic mixture of Caucasian faces there.
William Patterson!
This past weekend they had a healing fest on Saturday in an effort to combat... What?
A healing fest?
They had a healing fest on Saturday.
Only sick people were invited.
Well, unfortunately it's not that type of healing.
It's an effort to combat the recent gun violence that's plagued the city of Patterson, New Jersey.
The event was a concert where there were five blocks in the city's most dangerous neighborhoods.
Organizers estimated that more than 70 people attended the event. 70?
700.
I'm sorry, 700.
Sorry, I did that.
It was a zero.
Yes.
It was sponsored by the Patterson Healing Collective Organization and the St.
Joseph's University Medical Center, where I'm sure many of the people who were victims have been patched up.
It was part of a Wear Orange anti-gun violence event, and they were so happy.
Patterson Healing Collective member Teddy Martinez said this.
He's a survivor of gun violence.
I believe this day was historical.
There were no shootings or even reports of gunfire I'm going to try and get through this without laughing.
There were no shootings or even reports of gunfire in Patterson for the entire afternoon and evening.
I think the efforts and collaboration of so many people and organizations really made a difference.
They got through a whole afternoon without anybody being shot.
Well, Andrea Robinson had this to say.
I can remember the day like it was yesterday.
I immediately broke out in tears but was relieved when I found out he was okay.
That's why I'm here today and that was because seven years ago her 20 year old son called from the hospital after he was shot in the leg when he was walking home.
And she said this, I grew up in Patterson.
I want to give back and help people, help provide a space where children can grow up in a safe environment.
Well, okay.
Well, so they had this, they had 700 people in the most dangerous blocks of Patterson and not one round was fired.
Not one round was fired.
And they had it in an area, Mr. Taylor, where children were able to participate in games, including beanbag toss at a block right across the corner from where four people were killed and three were injured in a shooting Just the prior month.
Well, then that is something to celebrate.
Yes!
Healing works!
Healing works.
Well, I'm very happy for the Patersonians.
Let's hope there are more cities that have healing fests.
Spontaneous healing fests.
Well, I think from Paterson, you're going to switch to Jackson, Mississippi, where there's more excitement.
Alright, well, ladies and gentlemen, real quick, Jackson, Mississippi is the capital city of the state of Mississippi.
Last year during the George Floyd riots, the George Floyd revolution, the city council, the city is about 80, it's probably close to 85, 86 percent black and about a population of just over 130,000.
You're talking about a city that is Probably the blackest big city in America.
It's completely dominated by black elected officials.
They have a black mayor who's part of this new Black Panther Party that wants to turn the South into a black ethnostate.
They closed out 2020 with the highest homicide rate in the city's history.
A higher rate of killing in New Orleans, Memphis, only St.
Louis had a higher rate.
Now, last year, like I said, they decided to vote to remove the Andrew Jackson statue from a place on the Capitol grounds because, well, he was a horrible white man.
I'm surprised they haven't tried to rename the city yet.
That will come!
That will come.
So bear with me.
We've got a couple stories to talk about.
There was an op-ed published in the Mississippi Clarion Ledger by a lady who's a professor who had left Jackson 25 years ago.
She wrote this.
I'll leave the astute listener to try and get all the hilarity out of what I'm about to read.
Teen slain on Medgar Evers Boulevard.
Heartbreaking.
Crime drove us out 25 years ago.
Mind you, this is written by a black professor.
My family moved here more than 25 years ago, later due to increasing crime.
Our cars and house were constantly burglarized.
It was a different day than when white residents were in Jackson.
Crack cocaine heroin has been dumped for trade in many middle-class black neighborhoods, affecting the dynamics.
The name Delta Drive referred to traveling to the flatland of Mississippi, up Highway 49 to the northwest part of the state, where cotton, corn, and watermelon are common.
The land is fertile and perfect for agriculture.
When I travel to a new city, if I want to find chicken wings, I find Martin Luther King Street.
I also know that there is a good possibility there will be crime, such as increased homicide, robberies, and the illegal sale of illicit drugs.
Police do not protect like they do in non-Black areas.
Oh, that's the problem.
An 18-year-old Black female, a new graduate from Murray High School, was shot three times two hours after a cap-and-gown ceremony on Medgar Evers Boulevard Tuesday in Jackson.
The pretty young Black lady, who was wearing silver sparkling high heels like Cinderella, did not survive.
Meryl ought to demand her husband's name be taken down.
Meryl Evers, the widow of Medgar Evers.
Yep, here's what she says.
Meryl ought to demand her husband's name taken down.
There has been nothing but bloodshed since it was renamed in Jackson, Mississippi.
That's what her aging mother said about her previous neighbor's friend.
I can't believe they shot her.
The reality is Medgar Evers Boulevard is a dangerous area and does not represent Medgar Wiley Evers.
The late civil rights icon.
You know, I've got a great idea for it.
If all of this shooting is detrimental to the reputation of Edgar Evers, they should rename it Andrew Jackson Boulevard.
Then he would be associated with all this violence.
Well, there's a New York Times article that goes a little bit deeper into what happens when you have such dramatic racial changes.
And I'll go in and I'll just preface this.
This is buried in the story.
In 1960, the city of Jackson, Mississippi, 64% white.
This is buried 20 paragraphs down.
This is a front page New York Times story in March of 2021.
And 36% black.
So this is 1964.
Today, Jackson, Mississippi is about 16% white and 82% black.
So here's the story, Mr. Taylor.
You can't bathe.
You can't wash.
Water crisis hobbles Jackson, Mississippi for weeks.
This was a New York Times front page story.
Nearly one month after a winter storm froze pipes and water mains, more than 70% of the city's water customers remained under a notice to boil water.
This has been this way for a number of times.
The city's water system, parts of which are more than 100 years old, was no match for that storm.
You might remember this ice storm all across the southeast, all across Texas, that crushed Texas's power grid and water systems, which left Millions of Texans without heat or drinkable water.
Across Jackson, freezing temperatures bursted pipes and water mains and left a trail of misery.
That's continued for more than a month.
And how long?
This is just last winter, right?
This was this past winter.
This went on for about two months.
I found some more stories about this.
This was the New York Times, though, trying to cast that white privilege spotlight on a black city and blame all white people.
The crisis, which is nothing new in Jackson, while this time it's protracted, is not new.
A city of about 160,000 people where a majority of the residents, including the lady they're profiling, are black.
In Jackson, boil water notices are common and an enduring municipal drama that has played out for decades.
As white flight, an eroding tax base, and poor management have left the remaining residents
with old and broken pipes, but without the public funding to fix them.
The article goes on to talk about how they have a faulty billing system that fails to
charge customers sometimes or accidentally sends other people statements totaling thousands
of dollars.
This happens in a lot of black-run municipalities.
Famously, Atlanta had this same problem.
Mayor Chokwe Lumbambe, a Democrat and African-American, has estimated that modernizing the city's
water infrastructure could cost $2 billion.
Last week, back in March, he asked Governor Tate Reeves, a Republican, for $47 million
to help repair the city's damaged water system.
Well, white people are the only people who are going to stump up?
Is he going to ask Jordan?
Or is he going to ask Oprah Winfrey to stump up?
No!
He's going to ask a white Republican!
And as I noted, the city has a dwindling tax base for decades after integration of schools and other public spaces in Jackson triggered whites to flee from the point of being 64% of the city.
Also, at that point, it was over 240,000 people.
240,000 people. So it's dropped by 80,000 people since 1964, Mr. Taylor. And, you know,
it's now an 82% Black city. And let's be blunt. This is what happens.
The article even points out, Jackson's crisis shares some similarities with Detroit, where deindustrialization and white flight emptied out the city, leaving a smaller population to support vast infrastructure systems.
Well, but you know, we all know that black people built the wealth of America.
That's what I hear?
Yes.
I hear that all the time.
You'd think that all those black people left to their own devices would have built a paradise there.
They would have already sent their entrepreneurs.
You know, Jeff Bezos is about to go up into space in Blue Origin.
He's basically saying, hey, you know, Elon Musk, I'm actually going to go up on my rocket.
You?
You're staying back on Earth.
I want to read this last quote for you from Mr. Lumbombe, the black mayor of Jackson.
He says this quote, Jackson's infrastructure was built at a time when the population was much higher and white flight has led to divestment.
It has left fewer people to maintain what was built for more people.
Mr. Lumbombe, I'm going to say something that needs to be said to everyone out there.
The city of Jackson, the infrastructure that was built so many decades ago, was built for white people, by white people, for their posterity.
They had no idea this was going to happen.
They left and built new cities where they were able to thrive and have communities where they didn't have the necessity to have Emmett Till's cousin In an event in April of 2021, lead a march through the Mississippi State Capitol called Stop the Violence, where they were asking blacks to stop killing other black people.
That is the state of 82% black jacks in Mississippi, ladies and gentlemen, in 2021.
When you have Emmett Till's cousin, Asking black people to stop killing other black people in Jax, Mississippi, and you have a black professor whose family fled black violence in Jax, Mississippi, 25 years ago, demanding that Medgar Evers Boulevard be renamed.
As I say, they should rename it Andrew Jackson.
Blame it on him.
Then, every time somebody gets shot, they can say, it's a kind of that wicked honky who got the name up there.
Would I be remiss if I didn't say that Gregory Hood could write a hell of a piece on the Great Replacement in Jackson, Mississippi?
I'm sure he could.
I'm sure he could.
Well, fine things have been going on, but what is it, 80% to 1.5% black?
You know, that may be like South Africa.
What's the white percentage?
The white percentage there is, what, 12%?
Essentially, we've got the race that we find in South Africa.
And we find, oddly enough, many of the same things.
You've got to boil your water.
There are places in the townships where, you know, you get these power outages.
Oh, by the way, is the power still on?
Could they keep the lights on in Jackson?
Yeah, I'm sure Mississippi Power is working overtime to make sure that people who are delinquent on their power bill still have some access to the electrical grid.
Well, moving on to something of a hilarious story.
I think it has to do with Twitter, and it has to do with Nigeria, and it has to do with President Mohammed Buhari of that West African country.
He was blocked out of his Twitter account.
And Twitter said he broke the rules.
And then his government's information wing responded by banning Twitter from the country.
Now, I didn't realize the Nigerians had the technology to do that.
Well, how many times have you gotten an email from a Nigerian prince trying to let you know that you have a billion dollar... I guess they're cleverer than we realize.
But in any case, they turned off Twitter for the whole country.
Now, Twitter's reaction was what I found so humorous.
They said, We are deeply concerned by the blocking of Twitter in Nigeria.
Access to the free and open internet is an essential human right.
Oh, wait a second.
The man who just read that statement, I believe, sued Twitter three years ago, correct?
Yes, but now Twitter says it is an essential human right that but nevertheless it has denied that right to Donald Trump and Laura Loomer and Milo Yiannopoulos, Alex Jones and anybody who wanted to post what the New York Post had said about Hunter Biden's laptop and your humble servant.
Yes, all of us have been deprived of our essential human rights but Oh, Twitter is high and mighty.
You know, you just wonder, do these people even listen to themselves?
Well, no, they listen to that.
Have they no sense of irony?
Anyway, now, what was the tweet that got him blocked?
I don't know.
Well, probably very few people.
I had to hunt high and low to find the tweet.
You know, this is always the case.
You'll be banned for Twitter for some sort of racist thing and nobody tells you what it was.
So you have to dig and dig and dig and dig and sometimes you can't even find out.
You're just supposed to accept on faith that it was racist or homophobic or anti-trans or whatever the latest deadly sin is.
This was the tweet.
Many of those misbehaving today are too young to be aware of the destruction and loss of lives that occurred during the Nigerian Civil War.
Those of us who were in the fields for 30 months, who went through the war, will treat them in the language they understand.
Now, this was considered a threat of violence, and this was enough to get him blocked out of Twitter.
Now, you probably are among those too young to be aware of the destruction and loss of life that occurred during the Nigerian Civil War.
That was between 1967 and 1970, and that was also known as the Biafran War.
The point is, he is talking about violent secessionists in Biafra today, who are talking about breaking up the country.
And their electoral offices and police stations have been burned down in recent months.
Armed gangs have carried out a series of killings of police officers.
I think he's really rather mild.
He sounds like he's talking about George Floyd's America, actually, with all the things you just mentioned.
We will treat them in the language they understand.
And oh, no, no, no.
Twitter says, oh, you better not talk that way.
Anyway, so there you go.
Now, another thing this reminds me of, of course, is I think one of the most interesting things that has happened so far this century, in terms of information access, is this sudden shift that we are now permitted to talk about a potential lab leak.
From the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
Originally, of course, this was considered Trumpian nonsense, a conspiracy theory worthy only of dunces, and Twitter wouldn't let you talk about those.
And now, there's been a turnaround.
And I wonder, again, if these people who think they are masters of the universe and can decide what it is we're allowed to say, think, and believe, whether they're going to have any self-reflection about this.
But I suspect they will not.
They will have absolutely no idea that they were busily banning something that has now become entirely plausible.
Now, there are any number of subjects of which I fervently pray that that kind of switch will take place sometime during my lifetime anyway.
Well, it could.
I mean, again, this is, this, it just shows you, it shows you the, that, that, that elite Inability to allow any other subject.
You know, there are a lot of good people who've pushed back on this, you know.
Let's face it, Ron Unz has done tremendous stuff on this.
And a number of other people.
That fantastic essay by Nicholas Wade, I believe, was... I think that was really the key.
Yeah.
And then there was the article in Nature Magazine signed by all of these prominent people.
Let us hope that there are, as I say, other subjects on which there are going to be equivalent breakthroughs.
Let us also hope that all of our listeners out there have been safe during these very... and their families have been safe during this really weird... 15 months has it been since the lockdown started in March of 2020?
It is finally beginning to be lifted.
I went out to the grocery store just the other day, and I would say at least a quarter of the people were not wearing masks.
That's not enough.
It's not enough.
No, it's not enough.
In any case, let's move on to wide-awake Russians.
This was an article written by Serge Trifkovich.
He's a good man.
He's spoken at an American Renaissance conference.
He was writing in Chronicles magazine, which under new management, I think, is moving in an excellent direction itself.
But he writes this.
Russia's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, recently said, Let's see.
He said that Russia had long supported a worldwide trend against racism, but that it was important, quote, not to switch to the other extreme, which we saw during the BLM events and the aggression against white people, white U.S.
citizens.
This is Sergey Lavrov talking.
He says he's talking about against white people.
Lavrov accused the United States of seeking to spread a cultural revolution across the globe.
Absolutely true.
A powerful arm of the project, Hollywood, changed its rules so that everything it produces reflects the diversity of modern society.
True.
He says, I've seen black people play in Shakespeare's comedies, yet I don't know when there will be a white Othello and this is absurd.
Well, good for Sergei.
Sergei can see things that our president certainly cannot.
Now, Russia's... No, this is better still.
Russia's former ambassador to NATO, Dmitry Rogozin, said, There is a new civilization emerging in the third world.
I'm not sure I would call it a civilization, but there is something emerging in the third world that thinks that the white northern hemisphere has always oppressed it and must therefore fall at its feet now.
If the Northern Civilization wants to protect itself, it must be united.
Mr. Kersey, hold on.
America, the European Union, and Russia.
If they are not together, they will be defeated one by one.
You know, one of my favorite books is Star Trek Troopers, and Robert Heinlein wrote that, I believe in the 50s, and he actually saw the breakup of democracy coming, and he actually said that the Anglo-American-Russian alliance had to happen to
stop Chinese aggression.
And he didn't obviously go into the Third World as Jean Raspel would in Camp of the Saints.
Now, I've begun to wonder as this CRT anti-white stuff is really ramping up and just getting...
It's aggressive.
You're seeing a major pushback.
The pushback that's happening is noticeably white.
It's all white.
It's exclusively white.
You're seeing articles now By these leftist websites that are actually beginning to go, like, what's happening?
Like, you see this, it's as if a domino has been pushed.
And is there time, Mr. Taylor, that I believe they're thinking, we can't let this domino hit a few of these other dominoes, because these are ones we've spent our entire careers propping up.
Even the New York Times has said, aren't they going just a little bit far?
You know, white people are going to wake up.
But with stuff like this, when will Americans start to say, Dasvidanya to this system and say, hey, Can we seek refugee status in Russia?
Let's continue with Trifkovich.
Trifkovich himself is speaking now.
He says Russia is freer than the West.
True.
No American or EU diplomat could dare make a statement like that of Rogozin, even if he shared the sentiment and hoped to stay in his post.
We must pave the way for a genuine northern alliance of Russia, Western Europe, North America, as all three face similar existential threats.
I call it the World Brotherhood of Europeans.
That's we're all part of it, wherever we are.
Whether we're Europeans in Europe or whether we are anywhere in the European diaspora, we all face the same problems and must work together.
And I'm glad to hear that Dmitry Rogozin feels the same way.
Good man, Dmitry!
I think there are a lot of people who feel the same way.
More and more all the time.
Now, this was a great article.
This was called... It's an NPR article called, Do Black People Have Full Second Amendment Rights?
Question mark.
No, I'm sorry.
That was the first sentence.
The title was, The Second Amendment is Racist.
Oh, that was the title?
Yeah, that was the title.
And the first sentence, Do Black People Have Second Amendment Rights?
And so it's all about somebody by the name of Carol Anderson, who is the chair of the African American Studies Department at Emory University.
Oh yes, talking about her new book, The Second, Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America.
She says, and I had to catch my breath, she says, the language of the Second Amendment was crafted to ensure that slave owners could quickly crush any rebellion or resistance from those whom they'd enslaved.
And she also goes on to say, the Second Amendment is not about guns.
It was designed and has consistently been constructed to keep African-Americans powerless and vulnerable.
That's its purpose.
That's its purpose, huh?
That's the Second Amendment's purpose.
Good Lord!
She may claim to say this and NPR reports this.
Don't they have some duty to pay some attention to this stuff?
I mean, just because he says it doesn't make it true.
I mean, if NPR were interviewing me, I mean, I'm sure anything that I said was ever so slightly off the reservation.
It would be fact-checked.
Yes, but anyway, yes, it's not about guns.
And so, here is her example to explain why the Second Amendment does not apply to blacks.
She talks about the Minnesota police killing of Philando Castile.
Okay.
Do you remember him?
He's a black man.
He was licensed to carry a gun and in a 2016 traffic stop.
Now, here's the way she describes what happened.
Here was a black man who was pulled over by the police and the police officer asked to see his identification.
Philando Castile, using the NRA guidelines, alerts the officer that he has a license to weapon on him.
And the police officer starts shooting.
That's how she describes it.
I don't think that's actually what happened.
Ah, no.
Well, as it turns out, the guy who, the police officer, Jeronimo Yanez, went on trial in 2017.
And a Minnesota jury found him not guilty.
I recall.
Of second-degree manslaughter.
And, interestingly enough, several members of the Castillo family screamed profanities after the verdict was announced.
Despite warnings from the judge that everyone in the courtroom should remain composed.
Now, I suspect that if Carol Anderson was there, she might have screened profanities, too, because she shares the same sentiment.
As it turns out, the jury was composed of eight men, four women, including one black man and one black woman.
It was a unanimous verdict, as these always are.
Now, Yanez... Most of the time.
Yes.
Unfortunately, Derek Chauvin is that... Well, no, it was unanimous.
It was a unanimous verdict.
Oh, that's true.
Good point, good point.
You cannot convict.
Yes, yes.
Now, Yanez, who was one of their fair-haired Hispanic lads who they'd hired for the police force in the names of diversity, he testified he feared for his life because Castillo put his hand on his firearm, not his wallet or his identification papers, and he thought he was pulling the gun from his pocket.
Castile had been smoking marijuana that day and might have affected his judgment.
So, of course, even if Yanez was Hispanic, if he shot a black man, it was only because he was an agent of white supremacy.
But there you go.
The Second Amendment was crafted strictly, and you didn't know this and I didn't either, but now we all know and now all our listeners know that it was to keep black people down, not to protect us against the government or against possible brigands and cut paths and people who might want Slit our throats!