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June 20, 2021 - Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor
10:00
Meet the Not Fu**ing Around Coalition
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Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance.
There are powerful people who would prefer that no one saw my videos, so if you like what you see, please send a link to your friends.
On January 20th this year, more than 20,000 people rallied in Richmond, Virginia for gun rights.
A few dozen white people showed up with rifles, and the Virginia government was terrified.
As CNN noted, The Commonwealth braced for the potential of extremist and white nationalist groups to disrupt the peaceful demonstrations.
The governor declared a state of emergency.
Of course, nothing happened.
But lefties still got very excited.
Can you imagine a group of black men walking around with masks and guns?
Gun rallies sparks questions of racism and privilege.
In May, several hundred people protested the lockdown in Michigan.
Some walked into the statehouse armed, as was their right, and there was yelping about terrorism and white supremacy and double standards.
Aggressive armed protesters stormed a state building last night, and the police did nothing.
Imagine if black people had done the same.
No one stormed anything, and the police did nothing because no one broke the law.
We can imagine black people marching with rifles.
There's a blacks-only group called Not Fucking Around Coalition that marches by the hundred.
NFAC, as I will call it, is led by a man named John Johnson, who was in the Army and National Guard for 17 years and achieved a final rank of private, not a distinguished career.
He is an open separatist.
What is the solution to all of this?
And that's the last question.
The solution is very simple.
We file a declaration of liberation, declaring every African-American descendant of slavery a political prisoner here in the United States that was affected by the Portuguese slave trade.
And then, after that, the United States has a choice.
Either A, carve us a piece of land out here, we'll take Texas, and let us do our own thing, or don't stop us when we exit this body here and go somewhere where they will give us our own land to build our own nation.
On Independence Day this year, N-Fact was at Stone Mountain, Georgia, demanding that the sculpture be destroyed.
According to CNN, there were 1,000 marchers, and Mr. Johnson issued a challenge to all white militias.
I don't see no white militia, so to the boogie boys, the three percenters, and all the rest of you scared-ass rednecks, we here!
Where the f*** you at?
We in your house!
Let's go!
NFAC, mother!
Mr. Johnson also explained some of his theories.
It is only appropriate that after 400 years, as prophesied the tribes of Israel, all 12 of them, you enslaved us,
you degraded us, raped our women and our men, stole our history, stole our religion.
And now you're trying to steal our lives.
But you want us to believe they matter.
You can kiss my ass right in the crack.
Mine too!
Mr. Johnson likes to be called Grand Master Jay and says he speaks for all black people.
Y'all ain't had nobody speak for us in over 60 years.
So I'm everybody.
I'm Malcolm.
I'm Martin.
I'm Huey.
I'm Stokely.
I'm Angela.
I'm Khalid.
I'm even Harry.
I'm Shaka Zulu.
I'm Hannibal.
I'm Emotep.
I'm Henry Farrell of the 35 Dynasties.
And I am walking black consciousness.
That was from a speech he gave on July 25th in Louisville, Kentucky.
Which had seen near-constant unrest and rioting ever since a black woman, Breonna Taylor, was killed in police gunfire.
Here is how Louisville's local TV station introduced NFAC.
They are here and calling for justice, traveling from Georgia all the way to Louisville.
A militia group called NFAC, not related to Black Lives Matter, adding their names to the growing voices demanding justice for Breonna Taylor.
Yes, they came and they marched all right.
About 350 of them.
There's a Kentucky state law that says no private militia shall associate together as an armed company or drill or parade with arms without permission from the governor.
In his speech from the steps of Louisville City Hall, Grand Master Jay explained that he got around that little problem by having a chat with the Kentucky authorities who listened to him because he threatened violence.
one minute long talk to your attorney general talk to you man's office talk to you police department i talked to all the activists out
here talking usual suspects like the NAACP and all the other groups that keep collecting money but shit don't change i talked to everybody trying to get to the truth
Don't live here.
This your house.
So I brought my family with me.
'Cause y'all are our family.
'Cause y'all are like, y'all need a little help.
Not the kind of help that you can sing about.
But the kind of help that put people in the hospital.
Put people in the ground.
Like they've been doing us.
Because that seems to be the only language they understand.
So because of that...
They were willing to talk to us, to me, behind closed doors, just like I was one of them.
Y'all got me fucked up.
I'm not one of them.
I'm one of you.
Only difference is, I got thousands and thousands of guns and people willing to use them.
A spokesman for the Kentucky Attorney General agreed that the talks had been Productive.
The local paper, the Louisville Courier-Journal, called the Grand Master's talk a fiery speech calling for local and state officials to speed up and be more transparent about the investigation into Taylor's shooting.
That's one way to put it.
This is what Grand Master Jay actually said would happen if he isn't happy with the investigation.
If we don't get the truth, the all truth, and the motherfucking truth, we are going to burn this motherfucker
down.
I suppose you could call that a demand for transparency.
Commander Jay finished the day by having the lads put their fists in the air and take an oath of lifetime membership.
I am the NFC for life, motherfuckers.
Most of all the rest!
Off they went in ambulances.
But Enfact put on quite a show in Louisville and is winning hearts and minds.
is an expert on violent extremism at DePaul University.
As he explained, there's no moral equivalency when comparing NFAC to white armed groups.
That's because whites are racist and violent.
He thinks NFAC does not have an overtly racist ideology.
Judson Jeffries, who teaches black studies at Ohio State University, says NFAC might go the way of Malcolm X Or be like Martin Luther King and show a great deal of patience and love for those who were oppressing him?
I guess we'll see about that, won't we?
Either way, as Professor Carolyn Gallagher at American University notes, the authorities have taken a very cautious, almost kid-glove approach to NFAC.
On October 3rd, it was on the march in Lafayette, Louisiana, with a troop of 400.
Devin Norman, who is a committee chair for the local NAACP, says it's an opportunity to show people what black unity is and what black power is.
CNN reports that hairdresser K.C. Coleman took her nine-year-old daughter to watch.
Ms. Coleman explained that it was beautiful to have a group showing America and white groups that we are not backing down.
She explained that her daughter knew those guns were there to protect her.
Not to hurt her.
And that the two went home feeling even more proud to be black.
Heartwarming, isn't it?
I'll leave it to you to imagine how the media and the police would treat a whites-only group that talked and behaved the way N-Fact does.
Or what CNN would say about a nine-year-old white girl who went home feeling prouder than ever to be white.
Or what our friend Professor Makaitis at DePaul would say about moral equivalency or overt racism.
But these are interesting times, not fair, moral, or sensible times.
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