Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance.
The internet is trying to make this video really, really hard to find.
So if you like it, I hope to send the link to a lot of your friends.
Brittany Cooper of Rutgers University is back in the news.
In September, she was interviewed as part of an online conference put on by The Root, a website whose motto is, The blacker the content, the sweeter the truth.
It takes that motto seriously.
The content is black, black, black, and more black.
The most widely quoted of Professor Cooper's remarks was, speaking of whites, and I'm quoting her precisely here, we gotta take those motherfuckers out.
But let's be fair to the professor and put this in context.
If I understand her correctly, she believes black and brown people were in America having a fine time before white people showed up.
The world didn't start when white people arrived in America and tried to tell all the rest of us how things were going to go.
There were people out here making worlds.
Africans and indigenous people being brilliant and libraries and inventions and vibrant notions of humanity and cross-cultural exchange long before white people showed up being raggedy and violent and terrible and trying to take everything from everybody.
I'm not sure how black people had libraries without a written language, but she's a professor and I'm not.
Alas, white people barged in determined to make a mess of things.
I think that white people are committed to being villains in the aggregate, right?
Fortunately, white people have low birth rates and are dying out, so we are just a temporary curse upon the planet.
But in the end, right, it is what I like to say is, you know, black folks were out here for centuries and centuries and millennia doing all kinds of wonderful things and probably some...
But whiteness is largely an inconvenient interruption.
And so we then get to ask ourselves, so why am I here in this moment of it?
Like, damn, you know, why did I show up in this particular iteration?
And it's like, well, I think we showed up in this iteration precisely so that we could help to figure out an end and a way to the other side of this, you know.
Gargantuan historical tragedy.
Today's black people had the great misfortune to be born in this tragic period of whiteness.
But their descendants will live to see the affliction lifted.
And so now we can fully understand Britney's thinking.
The thing I want to say to you is we got to take these motherfuckers out.
But I know, but like, we can't say that, right?
We can't say, like, I don't believe in a project of violence.
I truly don't.
Because I think in the end that our souls suffer from that.
You see?
She's not as bad as you thought.
We deserve to be exterminated, but she's not urging that because it would hurt the gentle souls of black folks.
Brittany Cooper makes a good living complaining about white people.
In 2014, she wrote an article for Salon called Michael Dunn and Open Season on Black Teenagers, the Onslaught of White Murder.
She wrote, Black boys officially exist in a state of social death.
Because the law continues to tell us that their lives, when taken by white men, are legally indefensible.
They have been rendered by the law dead men walking.
The result, as you might expect, is that white people are mowing down black folks at every turn.
Back to the conference, though, where there was another Brittany, Brittany Cunningham,
unbosomed the view that if the stated goal of the criminal legal system in America is to increase profits for certain communities of people, to decrease autonomy for other communities of people, and keep folks that look like you
and I under control, then frankly the criminal legal system is doing quite well.
And so it went at the Root Institute conference, where the content was very black and the truth very sweet.
Now, Brittany Cooper's words did not go unremarked.
The Daily Mail was incensed that Rutgers University fails to condemn tenured professor.
There were tweets like this one.
I am disgusted and embarrassed to be a Rutgers alumna if this is the type of person you have as faculty now.
But weeks later, not a peep out of Rutgers.
I can't help thinking about a little incident in March of this year at a different university.
Adjunct professors Sandra Sellers and David Batson of Georgetown Law School were having a Zoom talk that they didn't know was being recorded.
You know what?
I hate to say this.
I end up having this, you know, angst every semester that a lot of my lower ones are blacks.
Happens almost every semester.
And it's like, oh, come on.
It's some really good ones, but they're also usually some that are just played at the bottom.
It drives me crazy.
Later in the conversation, David Batson wondered whether the problem might be their own unconscious biases playing out.
A black student appears to have found and publicized the clip.
The Black Law Students Association then issued a fierce letter demanding that the woman be fired and that the man be forced to apologize.
Along with the usual demands, more black professors, implicit bias training, etc., etc., the blacks needn't have bothered.
William Treanor, dean of the law school, said the conversation between the two whites was abhorrent and reprehensible.
So, they crawled on their bellies and smote the ground nine times with their foreheads, but they too needn't have bothered.
The dean fired the woman and forced the man to resign.
Doesn't the dean look like a happy fellow?
No one, of course, looked into whether what Sandra Sellers said was true.
You'd think legal scholars might want to know the facts in the case, but you'd be wrong.
Professor Sellers was guilty of the exclusively white crime of noticing.
There was an almost identical flap in 2018 at Penn Law School.
After disparaging comments on black students, Amy Wax barred from teaching first-year course.
What was Professor Wax's crime?
She had said, I don't think I've ever seen a black student graduate in the top quarter of the Penn Law School class, and rarely, rarely in the top half.
Blacks roared.
But Professor Wax has tenure, so she wasn't fired.
But first-year students are now shielded from her malign influences.
But back to Brittany Cooper of Rutgers, who thinks us white motherfuckers ought to be taken out.
The silence from Rutgers continues.
Why? Well, maybe the administration agrees with her.
Here are the top six core faculty of Brittany's Department of Africana Studies.
That's Brittany at the lower left in what I guess is an old photograph.
Do you think any of these people are going to yell at her for saying that we ought to be taken out?
And here's the chair of the Department of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies where Brittany also teaches.
One of Ethel Brooks' specialties is post-colonialism and critical race theory.
Oh dear.
Well, how about the Dean of Humanities, Rebecca Walkowicz?
Does she look like a tough customer?
Let's imagine that Dean Walkowicz didn't like what Brittany said.
But don't forget whom she's dealing with.
Here is Brittany's Instagram account, where she calls herself Professor Crunk.
In one of her many blasts, she writes, Nor will I ever apologize for being fat, loud, and confident.
I bet she rarely apologizes for anything.
I suspect that when this well-nourished lady walks into Dean Walkowicz's office, Dean Walkowicz does what she's told.
What about other officials?
Here are the first six of Rutgers' assistant deans.
I imagine that when loud, fat Britney rolls down the hall, these girls scatter like tenpins.
And the president of Rutgers?
At least, he's a man.
But Jonathan Holloway is also proud to be Rutgers' first ever black president.
Is he going to slap down Britney?
White people love to call each other racist.
Nothing makes them feel more virtuous.
But black people attacking other black people for racism?
Has it ever happened?
But just to wrap up, I want to get back to the Root Institute conference, where Brittany was part of what appears to have been an all-black cast, with one exception.
There was one white man who spoke.
Just listen to this goof.
I want to congratulate everyone at The Root for convening this second annual Root Institute event.
Conversations like these are essential as we work to bring our nation closer to the promise of equal rights, equal opportunities, and equal dignity for all.
The work that happens at The Root is so important because it reminds us that Black culture is American culture.
Black history is American history.
And the Black stories are the core of the ongoing story of America.
Thank you for all you do to help build a more just and equitable nation.
And thank you.
Thank you for standing up and speaking out for black excellence and black dignity.
Thank you all.
bless you.
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