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June 29, 2021 - Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor
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Poor Whites Don’t Benefit From a ‘Support Industry’
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Ladies and gentlemen, it is our pleasure and honor to be with you on this most recent edition of Radio Renaissance.
I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance, and June is winding down.
It's June 29th.
And with me, of course, is my indispensable and irreplaceable co-host, and let us start with a listener comment.
He sends us an article entitled Oregon Bill would require colleges to hire staff to help students find food and housing aid.
Now, this isn't campus food and housing aid.
This is government food and housing aid.
Yes, the idea is that colleges have to have people who shepherd their students through the maze of the handout bureaucracy.
And our listener goes on to write, the government supplies benefits.
Navigators, as they would be called, would be hired to assure access to them.
Navigators.
And the target population in need of navigation is college students, although it's limited to community college students.
Those old enough to vote will now have concierge service to collect government handouts, says our listener.
Students going to college, once we're considered above average in intelligence, apparently no longer.
They need a navigator.
A navigator to help them figure out how to get government largesse.
As our listener goes on to point out, young people are universally adept at using the internet to find games, music, movies, concerts, and porn.
Why is finding public assistance on the net so impossibly daunting?
And who will pay for these navigators?
Tuition is paid for by government student loans, which will soon be forgiven?
Well, I think I probably understand the problem.
The goal, I am sure, is to reduce systemic racism because it was found that people of color need food aid.
They just weren't getting those Fritos at 2 a.m., and they need navigators to figure out how to get the government to feed them.
I think that's probably the problem.
But thank you, listener, for bringing this to our attention.
Yes.
It's funny, we're going to talk about food insecurities, and I couldn't help but laugh.
You know, that's a new word, a buzzword, that's replacing food desert.
So, that's a great tease for a later story there, your little anecdote.
Food insecurity.
You know, people used to talk about hungry people or starving people.
Now, it's food insecurity.
You've got to come up with a new name for everything all the time.
Now, the National Archives got on the bandwagon, like every other part of the government, and created an anti-racism task force.
I always think of, you know, Admiral Nimitz in the Pacific with his task forces.
Well, these are anti-racist task forces, and it cut loose with a 100-page report.
In which it blasted its own headquarters rotunda for structural racism.
Have you ever been to the archives, by the way?
They're beautiful.
It's a beautiful building.
There's this almost, well, sort of a small cathedral or temple to the American Constitution and the Declaration.
They're all there.
They're all there in the original copies.
Basically, anything in DC, architecturally-wise, that was built, what, prior to 1940, is amazing.
Beautiful.
It's astonishing, actually.
Yes.
Well, now it's considered fascistic architecture.
We can't have that.
Did you know that?
It's called fascistic.
Anything to do with the 1920s.
Well, you know, Biden undid that federal order that Trump did when it came to mandating federal buildings, being built in Roman and Greek style.
Classical, classical, yes.
The old, pretty one.
Now they all got to look like the old FBI building.
You know, that horrible, brutalist, concrete monstrosity.
You know the one I'm thinking of?
Oh, that or the Kennedy Center or that African-American museum there on the wall.
Oh, that's a real peach, yes.
In any case, the Rotunda is a shining example of structural racism.
The reason?
There are paintings that depict the United States' white founding fathers in two positive alight.
Scenes such as the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution are insufficiently tempered with depictions of Native Americans being driven off their land.
Now I add parenthetically, yes, there is not a single signer who has shown scalping or torturing an Indian.
Not one!
And so, a possible solution apparently is either to paint new murals or, now this is really quite hilarious to me, to stage dance or performance art in the space that invites dialogue about the ways that the United States has mythologized the founding era.
We're going to stage dance or performance art right there all around the Constitution and the Declaration.
Good Lord!
We're supposed to have a kickapoo rain dance right there in the Rotunda?
To fight the mythologizing?
Boy, oh boy, these people have a real imagination.
You've got to hand it to them.
Now, the report of this task force says structural racism permeates all aspects of work and workplace culture.
All aspects!
And the National Archivist, David Ferriero, he is, alas, a white man.
He was appointed by former President Barack Obama.
And I didn't know this.
Once you're appointed, you can serve indefinitely as archivist.
It's like an appointment to the Supreme Court, I guess.
Now, there may be some way to dislodge this guy, but he is serving until further notice.
The report, now this is also amazing, the report highlights the use of offensive anti-Asian slurs in the archives.
Okay.
You know, I bet they've got copies of newspapers that came out on December 7, 1941 that said, Japs bomb Pearl Harbor.
I bet they've got them.
Well, what are we to do about this?
The report recommends adding a trigger warning about text containing words to, and we quote the report, forewarn audiences of content that may cause intense physiological and psychological symptoms.
Intense physiological and psychological symptoms.
That's right.
If they see these horrifying words, are they going to pass out?
Are they going to, I don't know, start screaming?
The more you read from this report, the more and more I like that old America.
You realize we're really great country wardens.
But these people are psychotic.
Yes, they are.
You read a bad word and you're going to have intense physiological and psychological symptoms.
Bleeding from the nose.
I mean, what the heck?
Then he goes on to say, our ultimate goal is reparative description.
Now, these are the archives of the United States.
I mean, this is stuff that they've accumulated over the years, and they're going to go through every single document and turn it into reparative description?
That's a huge new word to add to the lexicon, ladies and gentlemen across the world, wherever you're listening.
That is going to be something we're going to see put up on monuments that don't get axed.
There's going to be a reparative description at the Washington Monument, at the Lincoln Memorial, at Teddy Roosevelt Island, which if you come to D.C., or if you're ever in D.C., make a plan to go see Teddy Roosevelt Island, and of course the Jefferson Memorial.
Reparative, well, you know, they could take down, they're going to take down Jefferson himself and put up Sally Hemings instead.
You know, that's, we need a wonderful statue to a black lady.
That's going to be, that's going to, or maybe, I don't know, maybe Harriet Tubman.
Katherine Johnson.
Oh, Katherine, she'd be a great choice.
Great choice.
In any case, let me finish up with the foolishness, the National Archives.
They go on to say, The long-term solutions would be fostering a more inclusive environment for black, indigenous, people of color, on staff, and as guests.
It recommends that the archives create safe spaces that would allow employees to feel heard and empowered.
I mean, they don't necessarily have to be heard or empowered, as long as they feel heard or empowered.
What is all this feeling stuff?
And where is a safe space going to be?
Are there going to be areas where whites are not allowed?
There's a lot of areas in Washington, D.C.
where whites aren't allowed.
There are going to be certain floors of the archives, I guess.
Yes, BIPOC safe space.
Honky out.
Good Lord.
You know the main safe space for a white person in D.C.
is?
I bet whenever they're having a classical music concert at the Kennedy Center.
The Air and Space Museum.
Oh, really?
Well, I can see that.
Yes, pretty safe.
Pretty safe.
Almost as safe as Wagner at the Kennedy Center.
But now, another crisis has been sniffed out.
Another crisis.
USA Today publicized it.
Extreme heat has been shown to disproportionately affect people of color.
Did you know that?
I did not.
That's in the United States.
We're not even talking about Africa and Malaysia, the people of color, right, who live around the equator.
But anyway, who populate, the people of color who populate especially hot concrete laden urban areas, which go on to become heat islands.
There's another term, another term, heat islands.
Yes, these were outlined by a new study published in May in Nature Communications.
I've never heard of that magazine, but researchers examined the distribution of heat islands.
These are parts of cities with higher average temperatures than the surrounding areas, and they found that during the summer of 2017, they had to go all the way back to 2017 to find good data, I guess, in nearly all large urban areas, The average non-white person lived in a census tract with a higher heat island intensity.
I would love to know when that concept, that word, those two words were combined to form yet another attack on on whiting.
Food desert, heat island, food insecurity, you name it.
Restorative description.
Yeah.
Restorative description.
I'm sorry.
Restorative.
Yeah, golly.
Now, the fact is, you know, these places, it's just called low-income housing.
You know these high-rises made of concrete?
Well, I'm sure we deliberately built them so they would bake black people in the summer.
This is more structural racism.
Oh boy, just like the rotunda in the archives, it's structural racism.
You know, the thing about it is, what if you controlled for income?
Or what if, even more important, what if you controlled for IQ?
I bet you'd find that the stupidest people live in the least desirable neighborhoods.
You think there's any chance of that?
Well, unfortunately, the stupidest people also live in some of the most desirable areas.
We know that with Chicago, with D.C.
From the point of view of access to downtown, yes, but where there are likely to be no parks.
See, that's what they're talking about.
The problem is, you know, I bet if you did a study, I bet you would find that Blacks and Hispanics and Din people are probably less likely to have ocean views or lakefront property.
Or pool tables in their basements.
Because all those things are probably racist.
No, the whole nutty idea here is that you find something in which black people or Hispanics aren't doing as well as white people.
You come up with some brand new name to blame whitey.
Some brand new way to do it.
Remember toxic racism?
The fact that blacks and Hispanics are more likely to live next to the dump.
Because I guess, you know, we force them at gunpoint to live next to the dump.
Anyway, now, we got some heat islands in Chicago last weekend.
Remember, we were talking about the fact that heat seems to affect BIPOCs, especially the B in BIPOC, in a special way.
And hot weather came to Chicago last weekend.
There were at least 63 people shot.
63 people!
That's a lot of bang, bang, bang, in three of them fatally, from June 25th to June 27th.
And the violence this week broke the 2021 record so far.
That was set in last May when 55 people were shot, 11 fatally, rather than 63 shot and 3 fatally.
So, more people being shot, more wild shooting.
Now, is there any other city on earth with numbers like that?
I mean, maybe the Gaza Strip under Israeli air attack?
I don't know, Glasgow?
Perhaps, maybe, you know, from a per capita standpoint, maybe St.
Louis, if you actually broke it up by population considering how big Chicago is.
Right.
We talked about, a couple weeks ago, that map of, that list of the most dangerous cities, and maybe some of these Mexican cities where they're drug, they're the drug cartels.
But do you get 63 people shot over a weekend?
I mean, I don't know.
I think their aim is better.
They might kill 50 people and wound one.
I don't know.
I'm still upset that under Rahm Emanuel, Chicago disbanded their amazing police review.
Every year they put out an even more concise database of non-fatal and fatal homicide victims, and the firearm that was used, and it was extraordinary.
It was very well done.
Very useful stuff.
Rahm Emanuel, I'm sure with no fanfare, decided this information was better deep-sixed.
But it was last year On Father's Day weekend, when Chicago recorded 106 people shot on a weekend.
That's a lot.
Including 13 fatalities.
That was the most deadly weekend in eight years.
Of course, what they say is the definition of Father's Day in the black community.
Mass confusion.
Oh, come on now.
Oh, I'm sorry.
That was bad.
But I guess they reacted to the confusion by opening fire.
They were so confused.
But 106 people shot.
That's a bit many.
A bit many.
I like that.
We'll add that to restorative justice.
Now, Mr. Kersey, I think you had an advanced billing of this food insecurity problem in St.
Louis.
You know, we've talked about Missouri a lot.
If you go back and look at the Amarin.com website, there's actually a really, really good article from a few years ago that talked about, because Kansas City and both St.
Louis, their police departments break out homicides, and you can actually see just how onerous It is in these cities on the black population for being responsible individually, collectively for the gun problem.
Well, I've read an article in St.
Louis.
I'd like to read some bits and pieces of it for you.
Here's the headline, ladies and gentlemen.
Food insecurity linked to gun violence.
In St.
Louis, black farmers work on a solution.
You mind reading that?
Food?
Read that again.
That is very evocative.
I'm going to read it again.
Food insecurity linked to gun violence.
In St.
Louis, black farmers work on a solution.
So food insecurity is, I guess, morphine from food desert?
Or it's a derivative?
I'm not sure.
Straw hat in hand, Tyrene Heru Lewis, He jumps out of his pickup truck alongside busy Shackleford Road in North St.
Louis County and walks into the tree line where he has something special to show.
On the other side, uniform rows of vegetables, lettuce, radishes, bok choy, sprout on half an acre.
Now the land is not in a remote country farm, but just 17 miles from the Delmar Loop in the heart of the city of St.
Louis.
Now he's the founder of Hebrew Urban Farming.
I wonder what that would be.
Well, I have a tomato plant growing in my backyard.
above the sound of traffic.
As he talks, he described the needs he has seen in his hometown, neighborhoods where many children
don't have enough healthy food to eat, and where the nearest fresh vegetable can be miles away.
I wonder what that would be.
Now, Mr. Taylor, how close to your home are fresh vegetables?
Well, I have a tomato plant growing in my backyard.
But if I really want a proper selection of fresh vegetables, I've got to go about four miles.
So I'm living in a food desert.
I asked this question.
Oh, your food insecurity.
I asked this question because here's the next paragraph.
He has also seen how gun violence has become a fact of everyday life in these same neighborhoods.
As a health teacher, he saw one of his students go to prison for a shooting.
As a resident, he hears gunshots daily around his home and three or four people just get killed in his neighborhood every year.
I mean, that's normal to some people.
And unfortunately to me, he said, well, if that's normal to you, it might be time to find a new neighborhood.
Neighborhood.
Researchers say a host of factors contribute to a city's gun violence problem.
What they define as deficits in social determinants of health, such as income, housing, healthy living environments, and quality education, and food insecurity.
That makes them shoot each other?
There's a certain word that starts with a D that's absent from that paragraph.
I think it might be delusion.
I was going to say a deficit of white people.
Yeah, demographics.
Okay.
Lacking a complex nutritional diet can harm brain development and childhood, according to public health experts.
That can cause later problems dealing with peers, handling authority, and responding to situations of extreme stress.
The problems facing areas that experience gun violence are many, Lewis acknowledges, but he has seen the impact that food can have.
We learned that 70% of the 271 homicides in St.
Louis last year occurred in low-income census tracts without access to a grocery store or supermarket for at least half a mile.
Half a mile?
According to this Kansas City Star analysis.
Half a mile?
You said you were four miles, right?
My nearest one's four miles away.
Boy, we ought to be just shooting each other lickety-split, bam-bam.
But somehow we're not.
Three or four shootings a night, he said.
You should have at least triple that, considering the mileage, I imagine.
I would think so.
It has to go like that.
52 of the killings occurred in just eight census tracts on the north side of the city, with no grocery store for a mile.
For a mile!
Boy, that'll make a guy shoot a fella.
So, what we learned is, obviously, this is all the fault of people needing mortgage assistance, rental assistance, food, no access to fresh vegetables.
So, Lewis said this, a light bulb went off, there's a need, a demand, so why can't I be the one that supplies it?
Urban farming has now come to St.
Louis.
A grassroots ecosystem of Black urban growers, farmers' markets, entrepreneurs, and community leaders has sprung up to increase production access to affordable fresh produce in their communities.
The mission?
To create a self-sustaining and economically beneficial food infrastructure for residents.
Here's the kicker.
They're tilling and planting vacant lots, backyards, and school gardens.
The fresh produce is going to community-owned businesses and families in need.
They're finding a way to fund and train the next generation of farmers and entrepreneurs from within their neighborhoods.
Because it turns out, just like I talked about how those eight wards in the northern half of the city were responsible for 52 of the killings in 2020, 96% of vacant lots for rent or sell in St.
Louis are found in those eight wards.
What happened to the houses?
What happened to whatever ecosystem existed there to one time produce the fresh food?
So, there wasn't food insecurity.
Secure food was found in abundance.
Well, wait a minute.
If they were all full of houses, where was the food coming from?
You had grocery stores.
I guess you did.
You had some grocery stores.
I say, what is this guy's name?
Hee-Hoo?
What is it?
Hee-Boo?
Hebrew? What is his name? It's Tyrene Heeroo Lewis. Heeroo.
Tyrene Heeroo Lewis.
Heru Heru Enterprises.
You know, God bless him.
I wish him complete success.
I don't think that eating a tomato or a zucchini every other day is going to stop people shooting each other.
But if people are growing things rather than shooting crap or playing dice or whatever it is they're involved in.
Otherwise, that's all the better.
And let them eat courgettes.
As Marie Antoinette would have said.
Something like that.
Yeah.
I like the fact that he's actually got some bok choy going on.
That's very multi-cultured, yeah.
Or is that cultural appropriation?
That's definitely cultural appropriation, but in this case, let's let it slide.
We will.
Indian food insecurity.
And look, we've joked about this.
This is actually a great idea, and highly encourage this.
You know, people should want to With all of these vacant lots, the same thing happens in Detroit.
I used to have Devil's Night.
Every Halloween you go down and burn as many buildings as possible, and some of them just tumble down anyway.
And if they're vacant, people ought to plant stuff in them.
I think it's great.
I think it's just wonderful.
So, Heru, go Heru.
I'm all for it.
I'm with you.
100%.
Okay, well, good.
So, but food insecurity linked to gun violence.
Well, that's a bit of a stretch, but... Well, another crisis has been discovered.
You'll be shocked to know.
Time Magazine has tracked it down and reported on it.
And Time Magazine has found that more than 200 metropolitan regions
analyzed by researchers at Berkeley have found that more than 80% of them
have become more segregated in recent decades. More segregated rather than less.
What's more, it turns out that people of all races fared worse in segregated black and brown
neighborhoods in terms of income, poverty levels, home values, life expectancy, and rent.
I don't believe that.
Well, I do.
I do.
I'm sure that any white or Asian who has the misfortune to live in a segregated black or brown neighborhood is not doing very well.
Anybody stuck in one of those places?
Well, I guess what, you know, the question is cause and effect.
I guess these researchers are saying that if a white guy kind of wanders into one of these places, well then BAM!
His income and life expectancy all just suddenly plummet.
It's cause and effect.
One of the authors says this.
Segregation is not about separating people on the basis of their skin color.
That's a relief.
I thought for sure it was going to be about racism.
Well, no.
What it's about, he says, is separating people from resources based on their skin color.
So, it's racist after all.
It's about, and I'll continue to quote, it's about putting people of color in neighborhoods that have less resources.
He should have said fewer resources.
Grammar is bad.
Fewer public goods and predatory finance, harmful environmental exposure, and so on.
Putting people in these areas.
You know, I imagine what he can see is, you know, they come in in trains, stuffed into boxcars.
They don't have a helicopter just flown in.
Oh, no, no, no.
Trains in boxcars.
Helicopters would be too complicated.
But here comes the stupidest stuff of all.
And I quote, integration is good for everyone.
Now I ask parenthetically, if that's so, why doesn't everyone rush to embrace it?
Very odd that integration has been going the other way all these places and all these years.
And this is the most astonishing stuff of all.
He says, white people who grow up in highly segregated communities of color have lower incomes than white people who grow up in highly segregated white communities.
Now, just how this is an argument for integration, I don't know.
It's an argument for growing up with white people.
Correct.
That's the way it seems to me.
And then, here's another one that explains integration is good for everyone.
Black children raised in highly segregated communities of color grow up to make $4,000 less per year than black children raised in white neighborhoods.
Once again, that is not an argument for integration.
That's an argument for living with white people.
So the solution is pretty simple.
Everybody has to live in a majority white neighborhood.
How are we going to do that?
Access to white people, guys, is not a human right.
I know that this study basically shows that the less desirable places seem to have a deficiency of whiteness.
The best areas of abundance It does seem like an odd pattern, but now whose fault is this after?
Who is stuffing these trains of boxcars full of people of color and unloading them at gunpoint and telling them, look, you must live to this toxic waste site?
Who is doing this?
Who is separating them from resources?
Well, they go on to list the 10 most segregated cities with populations over 200,000 and Number one is Detroit, Michigan.
Detroit, Michigan.
I don't think white people have really been in charge in Detroit, Michigan since about the 1960s.
They had a white mayor recently.
Yes, I think they finally got desperate and said, you know, black people made a mess of this.
Who was that guy who ended up in prison who was a young man?
Kwame Kilpatrick, who Donald Trump actually pardoned.
Yes, Kwame Kilpatrick.
Yes, black people, but in any case, black people have not really been running the show, but it's one of the worst segregated cities.
There may not be white people loading them up in the boxcars.
Now, number two is Hialeah, Florida.
And Hialeah, I just looked up just how much wicked white people have been running the show there and it turns out that Hialeah, the last white mayor, was voted out of office 40 years ago.
40 years ago, and it's been an uninterrupted streak of Hispanic supremacy ever since.
Hispanics run the place first and last.
And I looked up the current city government of Hialeah, and remember, this is the number two worst segregated place in the country.
So it's hard to blame this on white people, it seems to me, but somehow they'll find a way.
Maybe these are just agents of white supremacy.
The mayor is Carlos Hernandez.
The council president is Jesus Tundidor.
And the council members are Paul Hernandez, Catherine Cuefuente, Monica Perez, Oscar De La Rosa, Carl Zogby.
Now, what are he's doing there?
He seems kind of out of place.
And Jacqueline Garcia-Roves.
Then the city manager is Mayocorles Hernandez.
And the city clerk is Marbles Fato.
So there you go.
It has got full-tilt, full-tilt Hispanic dominance and they are the people who it seems to me should be blamed for all of this, all of this segregation if that is the issue.
Now the number three is New York, New Jersey.
Now you probably know when the last white mayor was voted out.
I probably imagine it's around the same time as Coleman Young being elected in Detroit.
So, 72, 73, 74?
Very close.
1970.
Okay.
1970.
So, it has had 51 uninterrupted years of BIPOC government and somehow it's gotten more segregated.
Which is why there's a George Floyd statue in front of City Hall.
I guess that's why.
Now, Chicago, Illinois.
Well, that's the number four wicked segregating place.
Now, it got its first black mayor in 1983, but since it's gone back and forth.
Black mayor here, white mayor there, and of course we've got one now in the form of Lori Lightfoot.
So, I guess you could say blacks and whites share the responsibility.
Now we move on to Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Now, this is very bad.
You can blame all of the terrible segregation we find here probably on the white city fathers because there have been nothing but white mayors except for a few months there was an interim black mayor named Marvin Pratt.
Otherwise, just a full string of just hideous whiteness.
Now, Cleveland, Ohio is next on this list of infamous segregated places.
It got its first black mayor, Carl Stokes, in 1968.
Then it lapsed into hideous whiteness until righteousness prevailed in the form of Michael White, who was mayor.
He was a black man for 22 years.
And then, terrific backsliding.
Not another black man since.
So, there's been a split 50-50 there.
Then Miami, Florida.
Oh boy, that's terribly segregated.
First Hispanic mayor 1973 and unbroken Hispanic supremacy since, except There were three years, I think in the 1990s, some white guy named Stephen Clark, who died in office of stomach cancer.
Serves a cracker, right?
They're trying to run a Hispanic city like that.
Then Birmingham, Alabama, New York City, St.
Louis.
In other words, it's pretty clear that the people who are running these places have become terribly, terribly segregated, don't tend to be white.
So, but that is just one more crisis that was discovered.
Now, there is a world crisis.
A world crisis.
The UN has discovered it.
The UN in the form of Michelle Bachelet.
She is the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.
She's got a lot of work to do.
She's got a lot of power as well.
A lot.
Yes.
She's former Chilean president.
Did you know that?
They had a lady president.
She was a socialist.
Well, she just unburdened herself of a report on, can you believe it, systemic racism.
She has identified a long overdue need to confront the legacies of enslavement and to seek reparatory justice.
There's another of our buzzwords.
Reparatory justice.
Reparatory justice.
Compensatory justice.
Reparatory justice.
I don't know.
You name it.
Now she goes on to say, now she's learned all the tricky words.
Systemic racism needs a systemic response.
Pretty good.
And this is the only way to dismantle centuries of entrenched discrimination and violence.
Centuries of entrenched violence.
It's ensconced in the American psyche.
In the world.
That's right.
In the world.
That's what we've been talking about.
She says the voices of black people and anti-racism activists must be heard and their concerns acted upon.
And this study came from interviews of more than 340 people.
Mostly of African descent and more than a hundred experts.
Okay.
Now, did they ask you, Mr. Curzon?
No, no.
I would have said that food insecurities are probably created by an absence of white people.
And they would have fired you instantly.
Yes, we would have not had the same view of humanity and The problems that certain demographics produce in city after city after city in any country.
But it's a world problem as we will discover.
Now, there must be state funding for groups like Black Lives Matter.
12 billion dollars in private contributions are not enough!
That's insufficient.
That's just not enough to tackle an issue that she says knows no bounds or borders.
Now listen to this.
She says, this is Michelle Bachelet.
Remember that name because she's got you in her crosshairs.
We could not find a single example of a nation that has fully reckoned with the past or comprehensively accounted for the impacts on the lives of people of African descent.
Not one country in the world has done its duty.
Goodness gracious.
So, I wonder what that duty actually ultimately means.
Well, see, one of the spokesmen for this is somebody by the name of Mona Rishmawi.
She leads a unit on non-discrimination.
She sounds Indian, but apparently she lived on the West Bank and was a member of something called Al-Haq.
So, she must be some sort of Palestinian.
But not one nation has done its duty to black people.
The whole world.
We have a lot of work to do.
A lot of work.
But see, I don't understand.
But I guess that's what you end up learning when you ask 340 Africans about what the problem is and what to be done about it.
But what did the Japanese ever do to black people?
You know?
Or the Indonesians maybe?
I don't know.
But the Tibetans, you know, they're on the hook too.
The whole world.
Not one country is done right by the Africans.
And I'm curious about the African countries that sold people into slavery and the ones who still practice it.
Are they?
Are they?
I don't know.
Do they have to do any of this too?
I don't know.
Well, so there you go.
Michelle Bachelet, she's got it figured out.
She's coming your way.
But in the meantime, then there are Africans coming our way.
There were Africans always coming our way.
Which story are we teasing here?
The knife attack!
The knife attack!
I'm not sure where we were going with that one.
This is a true African.
This is a true African.
It's not an African-American.
It's a true African-German story.
You know, these type of attacks, you know, we talk about Merkel's problem when she let in all the refugees.
You know, all the horrible terror attacks we saw in France in 2015 through 2019.
But this is one, again, it's become so... you almost become desensitized to this.
That's right.
And that's a horrible thing to think about.
That's the consequence of diversity and this perverse, never-ending, ceaseless flow of black-on-white or immigrant-on-white crimes, whether it be in Europe or in the United States.
So here's the headline.
Somali kills three in brutal Germany knife attack.
24-year-old suspect staged the attack at 5 p.m., striking out a household goods store.
Before he hit a bank, a witness has reportedly said the suspect shouted Allah Akbar.
Well?
He didn't shout systemic racism yet.
I'm sure we'll have... I'm sure there's going to be... I'm fighting systemic racism.
I'm sure at some point we will have a crime like that.
Or maybe he'll be shouting food insecurity as he goes after Whitey.
Yeah.
Restorative justice or restorative description?
Restorative slashing.
How many new buzzwords do we have?
Here it is.
Somali man killed three people, left five others seriously injured in what is described as an incredibly brutal knife rampage in the southern German city of Würzburg.
Würzburg, sorry if I mispronounced that city.
Twenty-four-year-old suspect from Somalia So investigators have found documentation showing the man was treated in a psychiatric institution.
six years, so he was 18 when he got here.
We let him in as an 18-year-old.
He lives there and grows up and he starts flashing white people.
So investigators have found documentation showing the man was treated in a psychiatric
institution.
The police investigation will determine if this was an Islamic act or if it was due to
the psychiatric institution.
There's video you can find of this.
the officials reported. Again, as stated, he was reported to have shouted
Oh no.
Allah Akbar as he was stabbing a number of the people. One of the people that he
stabbed was a beautiful German girl who was on her way to get a wedding dress
for her wedding. She died. Again, he's a Somali man. There's video you can find of this.
I don't want to. Yeah, I mean the city is about 130,000 people.
Again, the perpetrator's motive has not been established, but Germany has been on a high alert after several deadly Islamic extremist attacks.
The same city was hit five years ago by an axe-wielding man who seriously wounded four people on a train.
Suspect then was an Afghani, who the attack was blamed by the Islamic State Jihadist group.
Deadliest attack happened in 2016.
You might remember this, when the jihadists rammed a truck into a Berlin Christmas market, killing 12 people.
So, I mean, again, this all happened after the country was thrown open.
Donald Trump used to talk about, we won't do what Merkel did to Germany.
Of course, now we see with Biden doing that.
I don't think we're going to talk about the story, but just the idea of an Afghani in Germany.
Reminding me of this story that broke that the Biden administration is considering bringing up to 100,000 Afghans to this country.
Every time we save a country, it means we have to bring in at least 100,000 of those people when we pull out.
That's just one of the natural consequences of it.
We save Iraq, we'll get, you know, 100,000 Iraqis, Afghanistan.
Who's next?
We'll go save Somalia.
Why not?
Somalis are obviously great citizens.
As we see in Minneapolis, They are the model American.
More American, Mr. Taylor, than you or I. They learn quick, and some of them end up in Congress.
But, yes.
Now, back to Harvard.
Harvard is set to host an August music business course, and it will cover topics that include financial literacy, mental health, and personal branding in the music industry.
It's a comprehensive 10-day music business course, and it's free!
And it focuses on building a pipeline for, believe it or not, BIPOC talent to start their music careers, which will democratize and reframe what is attainable in the industry.
Music or artist experience is not required, tuition and all expenses will be covered for admitted students, and the course is open only.
To BIPOC individuals ages 18 to 25 living in the United States.
Now, I consider it discriminatory against foreigners and old people.
You got to be a BIPOC age 18 to 25 living in the United States.
So, there you go.
Discrimination is rampant.
Now, Cornell University, just this spring, it offered a physical education course and it advertised it as BIPOC rock climbing.
That's the name of the course!
Again, if you didn't know what these terms were, you'd think that that was some sort of activity that you do.
You'd have no idea it was something engineered and exclusively engineered for non-whites.
Climbing those BIPOC rocks, you know, BIPOC rock climbing.
In any case, it said this class is for people who identify as Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian, or other people of color.
I don't know how many other different colors there are, but anyway.
The description, however, has now been changed because somebody pointed out that this seemed just a little bit intolerant and non-inclusive.
It now says, the class is designed to enable black, indigenous, latinx, asian, other people of color, underrepresented in the sport of rock climbing, to learn the sport and feel included and supported.
Climb those mountains by box.
Climb those rocks.
But feel included.
You're going to teach them to feel included and supported.
It will provide a supportive space and a high degree of individual attention in which participants will discuss BIPOC individuals and groups in rock climbing.
So what in heaven's name?
The course is not just about teaching how to climb rocks.
It's about how to feel included.
How do you feel included?
Well, boy oh boy.
But, now the Course Execution has been changed, and it's open to all Cornell students interested in learning rock climbing with this special focus.
Now, Mr. Kersey, if you, as just an ordinary corn-fed, white bread, white boy, If you wanted to learn about rock climbing, do you think you'd feel welcome in one that was designed to welcome BIPOC people specifically?
Make them feel comfortable in a supportive space?
What kind of goofiness is this?
On that day, just to combat food insecurity, I would identify as a BIPOC, so I could climb
those rocks and deliver necessary food to people who couldn't otherwise get it.
I would wear that ribbon proudly.
I think you just put a bunch of Tootsie Rolls in your pockets and hand them out.
In any case, John Carberry, Cornell's Senior Director of Media Relations and News, he insisted the course's original description reflected an intentional focus on outreach and inclusion, but there was never Any intention to exclude people that didn't identify as BIPOC.
I wonder just how many ordinary non-BIPOCs, that's I guess what we have to call ourselves now, you and I are non-BIPOCs.
We used to be white.
But now we're just non-BIPOCs.
I wonder how many will show up.
BIPOCalysts.
Oh, that might be BIPOCalypse is what we're headed for.
Anyway, Mr. Kersey, I think you have a story about illegal immigrants who are going to get Medicaid.
I do.
As part of the BIPOCalypse.
I do.
This is out of Oregon.
Now, again, you think that, uh, what was it, up until, what, 1860, it was a, what, basically a whites-only state?
That's right, that's right, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Radical Oregon, this is from the Gateway Pundit, Radical Oregon Democrats passed a bill to give illegals Medicaid.
Now, this is not law yet, however, the Oregon State Senate passed a bill, HB 3352, which expanded eligibility for illegal aliens to receive Medicaid.
The governor of the state, Kate Brown, is expected to sign the bill into law later this week.
Wow.
I mean, that means anything.
If you are, uh, if you're, wherever in the world you're living, if you've got some sort of, if you need a heart transplant or dialysis, head to Oregon.
Well, you remember when the Democrats had the debate for the, for the primary, every Democrat was asked, would illegal immigrants get free healthcare if you were president?
Not one of them kept their hand down.
You're right.
Governor Brown said this, quote, everyone deserves access to healthcare.
It's the right thing to do.
The just thing to do.
Now, according to Pew Research Center, there are 110,000 illegal aliens living in the state of Oregon.
Usually the federal government pays most of the costs associated with Medicaid, but non-citizens are ineligible for federal funding.
This means that the taxpayers of Oregon are going to have that joyous responsibility and obligation to fit the bill.
The estimate to cover an additional 50,000 people on Medicaid, less than half the state's population for illegals, Over about 300 million dollars a year.
I wonder how the taxpayers feel about that.
Well, one report reports this, quote, typically Medicaid cost taxpayers about 60,000, I'm sorry, $6,000 per covered person per year.
So that's where that number comes from.
50,000 times 6,000 average.
But there are 100,000 of them apparently.
Maybe some of them will fail to register.
Maybe some of them well in fear of being deported, but this is also one of the reasons why, Mr. Taylor and our listeners out there who might not be familiar with this, that Greater Idaho Movement is coming along, where seven eastern Oregon counties have expressed an interest to secede from a state that, you know, I've been to Oregon a number of times.
It's a beautiful state.
Portland used to be a really nice city.
Seattle used to be a really nice city.
I mean, isn't it hard to believe this time last year, Was CHAZ in operation in Seattle this time last year?
About this time, I believe it was.
Portland was undergoing, what, 100 straight days of attacks on the federal buildings?
It's the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone.
Yes, that's right.
Yep, yep, oh, it was like the Paris Commune, you know, true liberation had come to Seattle.
What a weird year it has been.
Yes, well, I think it's fixing that to be a pretty weird decade, I'm afraid.
But I'd like to think we've hit bottom, but I keep thinking we've hit bottom and we find we can go deeper and deeper and deeper.
So is that it for, yes, what a wonderful state.
That's it for Oregon.
Now we're going to leap clear across the country to Daytona Beach, Florida.
Oh no.
Yes, this was quite an interesting thing.
This little shooting was caught on video.
And it showed a white officer, an officer Rainer, being shot about 9 p.m.
Wednesday during a confrontation.
He was patrolling an area because residents had complained about crime in the area.
So there he was, helping them.
But, at last report, 26-year-old officer Rainer remains fighting for his life in a hospital after suffering a gunshot wound to the head.
As it turns out, Daytona Beach suspect Othel Torriani Rasheen Wallace, age 29, known as Ozone.
I like that it's easier than Othel Torriani Rasheen Wallace.
Ozone was captured a few days later, 2.30 a.m., while hiding in a tree house in a wooded area in DeKalb County, Georgia, just east of Atlanta.
He had made quite an escape bid from Florida to Georgia.
He was found with many weapons as well as body armor, but apparently he didn't go out guns blazing.
And the property, now this is the interesting part, where Wallace is found was owned by a militant group called NFAC.
That stands for Not Fucking Around Coalition.
There were four other people on the property where Wallace, Mr. Ozone, was captured.
The property also contained two structures and a trailer in addition to the treehouse.
Now, this is pretty interesting.
Now, we won't go into any kind of stereotypical commentary about black people living in tree houses, but he said that the officer said that they didn't know whether the other four people on the property might face charges or whether they were members of the NFAC, but a large arsenal of weapons was found in the main residence.
The suspect, Ozone's Facebook says he was linked to groups such as the NFAC, Black Militia, the New Black Panther Party, and the Atlanta chapter of the Huey P. Newton Gun Club, named by the founder of the Black Panthers from the 1960s era.
All appearances are that this guy simply tried to assassinate a white police officer.
That is all I can gather from any of this.
In any case, Debbie James, Who is a spokesman for NFAC Global claimed that Wallace had been terminated from the group in January.
He's no longer a NFAC member in good standing.
However, another representative of the group claimed that NFAC has been disbanded.
They are not fucking around anymore.
The NFAC's Brandon Oliver said, it doesn't even really exist no more.
He went on to say that Wallace, Ozone, the shooter, had recently devoted his life to God.
Hey.
To God!
The Bipocalypse is tonight, it sounds like.
I guess.
Put on hold for the time being.
These are the guys, you can see footage of these guys marching on Stone Mountain.
Yes.
Last year.
I made a whole video about these guys.
Yeah.
They had several hundred people, all dressed in black, All with AR-type weapons, marching around with masks on.
They're a pretty spooky bunch.
They also showed up in Louisville, Kentucky, and they really made us stink.
They said, boy, if we don't get what we want, we're coming back.
But I guess it doesn't even really exist no more.
I believe they showed up in Tulsa.
No, they did.
They did not show up?
No, I was looking for that name.
They had all these other names, the Black Militia, New Black Panther Party, Huey P. Newton Gun Club, but they did not have NFAC.
Yeah, I certainly, and I was wondering to myself, gosh, whatever happened to those guys?
Because they made an impression on me.
As I said, they did a whole video about them because I thought they were significant.
And everybody at the time was talking about how, oh boy, white people can walk around with assault rifles and black people they'd be just shot down like dogs.
And here you have, as I say, 200 of them marching through the streets of Louisville.
Marching in uniform.
Marching in coordination.
Yep, yep, yep, boy.
In fact, in Louisville, one of them accidentally shot himself.
Well, I shot two of them.
Yes, they got wounded and then there's a quite interesting video of these white paramedics all rushing in and saving their lives, but there you go.
Ah, there you go.
It must have been a heat island, you know, caused the firearm to go off.
It just cooked off, you know, rounds cooked off.
So there you go.
He devoted his life to God.
Now, I believe you have some stories about CRT for us.
Two stories.
A couple stories about CRT.
Yeah, I'm trying to recover from that story about the NFC Breaking up.
Not anymore.
They're just not effing around anymore.
So, let's start with England.
Do you want to talk about the term white privilege?
Did we do that story?
No, that sounds fine.
Yes, we missed that story, and I think that's a very... The last time we were going to talk about that, we didn't have enough time.
Yeah, so the story headline that caught my fancy was, term white privilege might have contributed to a systemic neglect of poor white pupils.
Government report out of England.
Government committee has said that terms like white privilege may have contributed to More white people, including children, who do not benefit from an industry of support systems that are readily available to ethnic minorities, who would be considered systemically neglected.
Can you imagine such a report in the United States?
No.
White people don't benefit from an industry of support systems?
All white people in the United States are taught, regardless of where they live, regardless of if they're below the poverty line, they benefit from That's right.
benefit from whiteness. That's right. Report published on Tuesday, members of
Parliament on the Education Committee agreed with the Commission on Race and
Ethnic Disparities concluded that the UK is not a systemically racist country
raved against minorities and that terms like white privilege are divisive.
Can you believe that?
Boy, the UK does all kind of cuckoo stuff.
They do stuff that makes you be like, I can't believe that my ancestry is largely, uh, you know, English.
But this, this is surprisingly, it's just startlingly realistic.
Startlingly sane.
Yes.
The inquiry report entitled, quote, the forgotten how white working class pupils have been let down and how to change it, end quote.
Let that sink in.
I'm going to go back and read that.
We've had some crazy headlines here, but this is one of those where you're like, is this like an onion story?
Quote, the forgotten, how white working class pupils have been let down and how to change it.
MPs said they were concerned that the phrase white privilege may be alienating to disadvantaged white communities, and it may have contributed towards a systemic neglect of whites facing hardship who also needed specific support.
Quote, it was noted during our evidence hearings that a lot of children in these disadvantaged white communities aren't aware of their own disadvantage.
It's a problem.
As a committee, we believe that the use of terms such as white privilege doesn't help the matter.
Statistics shared in the report revealed the striking disparity between the academic progress of poor white British pupils on the Free School Meals program, who were found to be outperformed academically by Black and almost all other minority groups, also on FSO.
Yeah, you know, that's a sort of a shocking thing.
You find that the white working poor in Britain, they really are a sorry lot.
They're outperformed often by black poor.
I don't know what to make of it, but someone apparently had discovered this fact.
Yeah, in terms of the white British FSM-eligible pupils who had started university by the age of 19, it was 16%, the lowest of any other ethnic group apart from Gypsy, Roma, or traveler of Irish heritage children.
Well, that's right.
All these free school meals types are being courted if they're black or if they're subcontinental Indian or Paki or something.
It's fascinating.
69% of black African and 31% of black Caribbean FSM pupils are also enrolled at university by the age of 19 if they're part of that FSM.
I would argue that a lot of that might have to do with a need to fill some of these affirmative action spots in the schools.
So that might not actually be truly an accurate representation when, in a lot of ways, there is discrimination against whites.
Well, that's just it.
Didn't they talk about the industry?
What was it?
The support industry?
Exactly.
The committee also described what it called as an industry of support mechanisms that
exist to support ethnic minorities which simply do not exist for poor white people.
Continuing, quote, this is coupled with the fact that there is an industry which is emerged
to support these other groups in a form that is not available for disadvantaged white people.
So that, ladies and gentlemen, is a astonishingly eye-opening and refreshing breath of fresh
air from Mother England.
Yes.
Astonishing.
Meanwhile, back in the United States... Well, let's do this one.
Do you want to do the Amazon one?
Well, I was going to talk about... Gosh, we don't have much time left.
Well, yes.
Speak to me of Amazon.
We've only got like five minutes here, so I'll be quick.
This was at Front Page Magazine.
That's David Horowitz's outfit.
This was a great story.
I'm just going to read the headline and the first couple paragraphs.
I recommend people check this story out.
Did Amazon's critical race theory push lead to a racist assault on a customer?
The author wrote this, When a company pushes racism, is it responsible when its employees assault white people?
Ever since Amazon created its own delivery service, the blue vest of its drivers and the dark blue trucks with the monopolistic giant's arrow have become as ubiquitous as UPS brown or FedEx purple and orange on every street.
The first Friday of June, a delivery in California instead ended in a violent assault.
We find out this time there was an exception as Itzel Ramirez, an Amazon driver in her 20s, was caught on video violently assaulting a 67-year-old white woman who had asked her about a package.
While Ramirez claimed self-defense, the video shows her assaulting the elderly woman from behind.
Not really self-defense if you're attacking someone from behind.
Punching her in the back of the head and seemingly using a keyring in the assault.
The beating caused the victim to collide with the door and reportedly left her with a broken nose.
Not the first assault by an Amazon driver on an elderly person caught on video.
Previously, a 73-year-old in Miami Beach.
This time, the Amazon delivery person had used a politically correct slur, thereby turning it into a hate crime.
Ramirez accused her victim of white privilege.
The article would go on, and again, I recommend everybody check this out yourself, did Amazon's critical race theory push lead to a racist assault on a customer?
That is what we need to see that next step in this confrontation with this anti-white system.
What is going to be, Mr. Taylor, the logical conclusion of an increasingly non-white public school system student body taught that America is irredeemably racist, our entire history is fraught with white supremacy, and that white people living today have unearned privilege because of this?
I have said ever since I wrote Paved with Good Intentions, which was, gosh, about 1989, that if the United States had set out to teach black people to hate white people, they couldn't have found a better way to go.
Constantly tell them that it's whitey's fault.
Whitey who lived 400 years ago.
Whitey who lives right down the street.
Whitey who's in government.
Whitey who makes the movies.
Whitey who's the policeman.
It's all our fault.
How can it not end up with stuff like this?
And it just seems to get worse and worse and worse.
Well, I think we are approaching the end of our hour.
I guess we shouldn't call it the hour of power, but it is an hour that's coming to an end.
And as usual, we thank you, all of you.
It is a great privilege to have this opportunity to speak with you.
And I will let Mr. Kersey, once again, invite the kind of commentary and comments that we always appreciate.
Yeah, because we live here at ProtonMail.com, all one word, because we live here at ProtonMail.com, if someone wants to help us create that glossary, it would be great.
We have a massive archive of shows dating back to, I think, 2015, maybe 2014, don't remember the year, or you can go to Amarin.com, or you can go to the Contact Us page, or you can, I think, can you learn about the conference?
Very soon, very soon, but the point is, we'd love to hear from you, and especially if we've made any errors.
We love corrections because we hate to spread falsehoods.
We never consciously spread falsehoods.
And if you have concerns, ideas, stories we should cover, we love hearing from you.
We love to spread truth.
So with your email, you give us permission to have you then opt in to the email newsletter.
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So for Jared Taylor, this has been Paul Kersey.
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