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Nov. 23, 2022 - Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor
59:49
Calling All Khanith/Xanith and Skoliosexuals

Jared Taylor and his co-host note the targets of San Francisco’s latest free-money program. The hosts also discuss a verdict in Hawaii, the first lady senator, DEI in medicine, “tired of white cis men,” and they make an informal bet. Thumbnail credit: Ted Eytan, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Radio Renaissance.
I'm Jerry Taylor with American Renaissance.
And with me is the indispensable Paul Kersey.
Ooh, just indispensable today.
That's good enough.
That's good enough.
You can be indispensable in many other things.
I know you love being incandescent.
Well, before we begin, I do want to wish all of our listeners around the world, especially here in the United States of America, a very happy and safe Thanksgiving.
Yes, by all means.
I plan to have a happy and safe Thanksgiving.
I hope you do too, Mr. Kersey.
And I have much to be thankful for, even in these distressing times.
But I would like to start with a brief report of the American Renaissance Conference, which
was a roaring, crashing success at our usual beautiful venue of Montgomery Bell State Park
in Tennessee.
We had a packed house, really pushing at the limits of what the fire department permits.
In the ballroom.
And many, many excellent speakers.
We had a very small and meager unwelcoming party in the form of Antifa.
Those people get tighter and more bedraggled all the time.
They've moved on to bigger targets, I mean.
There's no such thing as a bigger target, Mr. Kersey.
They just realized that their fire is bouncing off our impregnable walls.
Ooh, I like the sound of that.
Yes, yes.
But you know, the Antifa types, they had a little welcoming party of their own.
Did you hear about this?
I did not, but I... Well, actually, take that back.
I believe I know what you're talking about, but I'll let you... Yes, while the bedraggled 20 or so, after having hooted at us from a great distance, practically inaudibly and invisibly, after they were setting out to go home after their, I suppose it would have been about 45 minutes of futile hooting, they apparently encountered the Proud Boys, or people who are dressed in Proud Boys regalia.
There was a shouting match which degenerated into a pushing match and in fact Antifa, or at least Darrell Lamont Jenkins, perhaps he wouldn't call himself Antifa, but he runs the Antifa crowd, he posted a video of it.
So they had a very jolly time.
Needless to say, needless to say, Mr. Kersey, we strongly deplore any kind of violence or any kind of expression of hate. 100%.
So, there they were having the time of their life out there.
They met the enemy and had a roaring good time.
So, yes, all of you who missed it, there will be videos posted of the speakers, and I think you will find that they were uniformly first-rate.
But, of course, the great thing about American Renaissance Conference is meeting people face-to-face, and making friends, making networks, and realizing that you are not the only one in your neighborhood who thinks the things that you think.
Yeah, I thought that, just real quick, I read Hunter Wallace's excellent Oh, I didn't see that.
I didn't see that.
I did see that.
He came to the conference with his wife and I believe his son came with and he wrote a
glow-in review of all the speeches and in particular he was excited to think that there
was a former congressman.
That was pretty exciting.
And Steve King who gave, I believe you said the keynote after dinner address.
Yes he did.
Yes.
who gave, I believe you said the keynote after dinner dress.
Yes, he did.
You know, Stephen King is quite a... he's got the gift of gab.
He was really quite funny.
He's got the timing of a comedian, made a lot of jokes, doesn't look at the notes.
He was very good.
I can tell some great stories about Stephen King.
Perhaps I will one day.
He's a true gentleman.
He was railroaded, and I'm sure you're aware, he just sat down and did an hour-long interview with Tucker Carlson about what truly inspired him.
It is a brilliant look eye-opening, jarring experience to realize just how crazy
the inner workings of Congress are and what happened.
Terrible.
He was just crucified, tarred and feathered.
No, it was disgusting.
All the Republicans turned on him, as you can expect, spineless, absolutely just invertebrate people.
But, no, he was great.
And the other potential Congresswoman, we had hoped that Laura Loomer would be Congresswoman-elect when she showed up.
Wouldn't that have been remarkable?
A woman on her way to Congress for her first term speaking at American Renaissance Conference.
She came very close.
And there is some chance that there'll have to be a special election.
The guy who's there now, a fellow by the name of Webster, I believe, he's a little rickety.
So he may step down and she could have another chance very soon.
We'll keep our fingers crossed.
Now, our first story has to do with a certain David C. Banks.
He is now the chancellor of New York City's school system, the largest in the country.
When he was growing up in a working-class black family, he being black also, in Queens, his father pulled strings to get him into a better junior high school across town.
The school that they chose, Hillcrest High in Jamaica, Queens, had reportedly been the site of integration protests from white parents when it opened in 1971.
Although when Mr. Banks arrived in 1977, six years later, there was little racial strife.
He was elected vice president of his senior class at a lovely, wonderful time.
He is not, now that he's Chancellor of Schools, he's not campaigning for integrated schools.
He does not think the sort of hunt his parents undertook is the best answer for today's black families.
Interesting.
Yes.
For the first time ever, as it happens, New York has both a black mayor and a black school chief.
But racial integration is not on their to-do list, Mr. Kersey.
Okay.
Hey, that's, you know, it's integration.
It's a white thing.
You wouldn't understand.
Black people, black people just don't go for that.
They're very healthy.
Now, and not only is it not on their to-do list, they have rolled back many of Bill de Blasio's policies that were meant to achieve it.
The chancellor does not think most black families care that much about integration or gaining access to schools viewed as elite, which might require traveling across town.
They want to stay home.
They just want better schools in their own neighborhoods, even if their schools stay segregated.
Black is beautiful.
That's, you know, Wakanda.
Yeah, yeah.
Wakanda on a small-scale Wakanda.
He says, when I talk to families across the city, black families, nobody ever talks about integration.
Not even once, he says, his voice rising.
This is an interview in the Washington Post.
It's not what they talk about.
You know, I bet you any amount of money, it's not what white parents talk about either.
No, it's not.
Though there are some who will be platitudes and there'll be their usual pronouncements.
Yes, they don't want, no.
For years, de Blasio faced pressure from integration advocates.
Obviously not black people.
And for elementary school, de Blasio directed that gifted and talented programs be phased out.
Because that just might, you know, these gifted and talented programs were phasing out black people.
In middle school, where students apply for admission, de Blasio, that's the former mayor, in case anyone isn't forgetting who Bill de Blasio was, he disallowed the use of academic screening.
That was used at the time by 41% of campuses to decide which students were offered spots.
What's the famous school there?
Stuyvesant?
Stuyvesant and Brock Science.
Those are the two super-duper places, now heavily aging, of course.
And let's see.
And as for high school, de Blasio ended the practice in which sought-after schools each set their own admissions criteria.
Instead, And this is just such a miserable cop-out.
Everyone who met a certain, much lower threshold was put into the top priority group and a lottery chose among them.
That's what they did at Thomas Jefferson.
Here in Northern Virginia.
One of the top schools in the country.
It is sometimes described as perhaps the best high school in America.
Well, so, Chancellor Banks has rolled back every one of these policies.
For high school, he raised the bar for grades needed to get top priority in the city's most selective schools.
Yes, attaboy!
And he left Dormant, a program that encouraged local districts to create their own diversity plans.
In other words, they can do their own things if they want, but none of this stuff, who cares?
And parents supporting the merit-based system are thrilled with the new chancellor.
Now, this is one of the great ironies of America.
It takes a black guy to do what probably everyone, deep down, really wants to do.
Bring back merit.
Well, not only bring back merit, but integration in itself isn't any good for anybody.
Black people want good schools, but they want their own good schools.
And that's why we give school choice, because the whole purpose of living in a nice neighborhood
is to escape the diversity we're told is so great.
So wait a second, your school, the quality of your school is directly correlated with
Exactly.
That's right.
the people living in the school district.
That's right.
This isn't that hard of a concept to grasp and understand.
And the point though, the point though that these black people realize is if their schools
can be improved, no.
Of course, as you point out, the main ingredient for good schools is the students who go.
Yes.
But they probably aren't too worried about that.
What they want is a flashy new gymnasium and maybe even a swimming pool?
I don't know.
Is that a top priority?
You mean a natatorium?
A natatorium, yes.
One of the truly hilarious things, Mr. Taylor, in downtown Atlanta is you can go to the Martin Luther King, Jr.
Natatorium.
It's not the swimming pool.
It is legitimately... I know, that's what they call it.
I've been there.
I did not natate in it, but natation was apparently going on.
So, there you go.
Black run America, as we used to say, or you used to say, and I used to laugh at you at the idea of black run America, but it is creeping and crawling into the mainstream because when Congressional Representative Karen Bass is sworn in as Los Angeles Mayor next month, black people, African Americans, will be leading the four largest cities in America.
This will be a first.
That is, of course, New York City is number one, Los Angeles, then Chicago and Houston.
Every single one will be led by a person of color.
Not just a person of color, but the person of preferred, the top priority person of color.
Color.
Pox.
Yes.
Bipox.
Bipoculus.
And with an emphasis on the B part of it.
Phyllis Dickerson, CEO of the African American Mayors Association.
Did you know there was such a thing?
I didn't, but I'm not surprised.
There's an African American just about anything association.
Said that black mayors bring a different perspective to public office and can identify not only problems they've experienced, like the need for public housing and food insecurities.
I bet not one of these black mayors has ever had food insecurities.
I bet not one of them.
I bet every one of them lived in some pretty high tone area.
Probably.
Yes.
But not only do they understand the need for public housing and the problem of food insecurity, they can bring solutions to these issues.
So, black runner America is a better run America.
It's funny, I'm very excited because a lot of the books that are under the Paul Kersey name, Mr. Taylor, are about to be republished by a very reputable I was very excited about that, and I was thinking back about some of the cities I wanted to do books on.
James Kirkpatrick actually helped edit a book on Chicago, which I think is quite good.
They were very excited about re-releasing that one, but it's fascinating to really think about the collapse of some of these cities.
If the left continues to win and they continue to push progressive policing, we've talked about this ad nauseum about what's happened in Minneapolis and New York City.
Nothing we ever do is ad nauseum.
No, we have spoken repeatedly and justifiably so.
Yes, sir.
The point is, knowing the exodus of really good police officers from these major cities,
and knowing how difficult of a task it is to find new recruits for Minneapolis, New York City,
Philadelphia, Chicago, you have to wonder, what major city is the next Detroit?
What major city isn't the next Detroit?
Well, I think the only major city that isn't the next Detroit is Boise, maybe?
Boise, Idaho?
Maybe Austin, Texas?
So, I mean, San Francisco would be a paradise if you didn't have the white progressive left.
That's just absolutely insane.
That's right.
And the thing is, nothing's over, guys.
One of the great things about Thanksgiving is give thanks and think about the fact that we still live in a country, as you said, Mr. Taylor, you know, There's darkness, there's sadness, there's tough stuff going on for everyone, but you know what?
We still live in a country where there are people who listen to this show, who have that awakening, and who understand something deeply disturbing is happening that impacts our past, our present, and our future for our posterity.
Well, I don't think our podcast impacts the past, but it's a slight correction.
No, no, no.
What I'm saying in the podcast, the thing that you bring up, Tonight I'll be driving back, I'll be going to Richmond and it's fascinating to think that in, what, two years we've seen the dismantling of probably the most beautiful street in the country.
You know, they don't even have the pedestals anymore.
They're just black holes now.
I can't even go down Monument Avenue.
Thankfully, you know, Hollywood Cemetery is there and I do want to encourage If any of our listeners live in the area and you've never been, go to Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond and just feast your eyes on the pyramid that was built in 1869 to the Confederate dead.
There are many, many beautiful memorials to the Confederate dead.
Absolutely true.
They have not torn them down yet.
Not a lick of graffiti on any of it either when I was there.
Even, even the barbarians seem to have certain limits on their barbarous behavior.
But as I say, we're talking about black-run America, but even in white-run America, even in Oregon, there's strange doings, even in Oregon.
Well, you know, why this story really stuck out to me and, you know, talking about people who were really a thorn in the side of the establishment, Babylon Bee does a great job, lives of TikTok.
This is a great website.
They do a phenomenal job of exposing Some of the terror the left is is doing to our country.
Yeah, they're increasingly talking about anti white Attacks.
Yeah anti white inculcation and people fighting back exactly And that's why when I said earlier about the conference bigger targets the fact is what scares the left more than anything is the open denunciation of So do tell.
Predators.
and that is basically the foundation of what holds aloft this,
this, this, whatever you want to call cabal of, of, of individuals who really hate us.
So, and lives at TikTok, she shows us. So, so do tell.
Yeah. White kids described as predators and school shooters in Oregon high school classroom.
Predator, school shooter, not intelligent, privileged, racist, dumb.
What do these words all have in common?
These words were all listed as adjectives used to describe white students in a freshman English class at Scaposi high
school in Oregon.
And I apologize if I mispronounced that high school.
About 25 students walked into Miss.
Autumn Gonzalez's classroom to a whiteboard with two columns, one labeled white girls and the other labeled white boys.
In total, there were 21 words used to describe white girls and boys and not one, not one, was positive.
According to one student who spoke with libs of TikTok, quote, the students were in there for a few minutes and all were looking at the board not only in disbelief, In other words, the students are just to sit there and absorb that.
Exactly.
the students started asking a lot of questions amongst themselves.
When Ms. Gonzalez entered the classroom, one student raised her hand and asked,
quote, what is the context of the writing of the board?
Ms. Gonzalez allegedly told her, quote, mind her own business.
In other words, the students are just to sit there and absorb that.
Exactly. They're supposed to take this just highly antagonistic, you know,
what would you call it?
It's an outright insult.
A blatant insult.
What was the word the communists would use when they would have the struggle sessions?
Struggle sessions.
Yeah.
It's an anti-white struggle session, basically.
Apparently, she claimed the lists were there from a previous class discussion.
Destruction.
That's actually probably a better word, but she's trying to do to these poor kids.
About, quote, suggestions for a possible play at the school.
After hearing the contents of the board, one of the parents immediately the image and ask for a ca
of the high school parent quote, I received a callb
approximately two hours l He admitted he had no les
and or messages left abou That is what we want to hear.
Exactly.
I asked him why this would be discussed, let alone written up on the whiteboard, for all to see in the English class.
He had no reason to say he would look into it immediately.
Three days later, after several emails requesting for students to be transferred out of Ms.
Gonzalez's class in demands for a resignation, the school board sent out an email to parents excusing the situation as a teaching exercise, in quote, stereotypes and implicit bias, in quote.
But students and parents aren't buying it, claiming she's an activist who pushes her beliefs on other students.
Her Facebook profile suggests they are correct with a slew of politically charged posts about privilege and being terrified after about the 2020 election results.
I'm not sure why she'd be terrified, considering... Yeah, I don't know why either.
The bad guy lost and the good guy won.
From her point of view, yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
But again, this is a situation where it ends this piece.
Could you imagine the outrage that would be coming from the entire nation if the words
Gonzales's white border used describe any other group? Why are we tolerating anti-white racism?
So again, this is libs of TikTok.
This is one of the Twitter accounts that was nuked many times, and attacked, and censored.
Massive amount of followers.
The author of this piece, she was doxxed, I believe, by the New York Times.
Yes, the New York Times doxxed her.
Nice folks.
Yeah, and the point is, we are now, we're on the cusp of 2023, Mr. Taylor, and the word anti-white racism is now becoming embedded within.
I don't like using the word conservative, because I don't think we are conservatives, The right, within the mindset of the right.
Yes.
I think that's a beautiful thing, because more and more independents, as we saw with Tulsi Gabbard, you and I have mentioned this many times, she was one of the first people who came out and used the term anti-white, before President Trump even used it.
He's never even used the term anti-white.
Yeah, I don't think he has either.
But the fact that that is now in the nomenclature, that that's part of the vernacular, Mr. Taylor, again, American Resilience is about to start its, what, 34th?
34th, 33rd year.
Oh, 33rd year.
33rd year.
That's right.
That is the biggest step that has to be taken when you start to realize that there are,
if someone's anti-white, that means that white people have, and you're saying that,
I think that's beginning to percolate in the minds of some of these individuals.
Yes, it is, yes.
There might be collective interests if they're being anti-white for white people to start to have and assert.
Yes, that's right.
33rd year, if the third is the charm, 33rd, that is charm times 10.
We have another small triumph to report.
Oh, apparently this Gonzales may be on the way out.
They're really working to get her kicked out.
Let's hope that they're successful.
And Gonzales, you know, isn't that a nice, nice Irish name, isn't that?
It's a conquistador, yeah, a conquistador, Mary.
Point is this, you know, lives of TikTok, encourage this stuff, guys.
Share this stuff on your social media, because again, in the headline, anti-white, I mean, this is no longer, you know, AmeriCorps is on this article where you're like, oh, can I share this?
Can I share this?
No.
This is part of the growing, you talked about that impregnable fortress.
This is part of this coalition that's growing.
Well, another triumph, but it's unfortunate that these triumphs come as A reaction to outrage, but it's a first step.
A first step is reacting furiously to the stuff that these people have been getting away with so far.
This was in Gettysburg College, a sort of a similar event in which people, it was an event for people who are, quote, tired of white cis men.
Yes.
I suppose if they're homos, that's fine.
But this was to be hosted by the Gender and Sexuality Resource Center.
What the heck is that?
A Gender and Sexuality Resource Center?
Maybe they share space at the natatorium there in Atlanta.
Maybe they do.
Maybe they swivel out together.
Yeah.
And it's part of a Peace and Justice Project at Gettysburg College.
Attendees were encouraged to come paint and write about their frustrations with white, comfortable-in-their-skin men.
If you're uncomfortable in your skin, I guess you're okay.
How comfortable are you in your skin?
Well, it's the only place I've ever lived.
It's been home for a long time.
The student organizer, once again a conquistador, I suppose, Melissa Trujillo.
She offered a sample of the kind of art that you can do.
This was a white man with devil's horns.
And the caption said, stupid dum-dum.
Now that's cutting-edge academic discourse for you.
Stupid dum-dum.
Well, it's been canceled.
This event for people tired of white cis men?
Yes, the poor dears are just going to have to do something else.
A spokesman for Gettysburg College said the project was not endorsed by the school.
I quote from the statement, the faculty leaders of Peace and Justice Studies.
Were there Peace and Justice Studies when you were in college?
Peace and Justice Studies?
Yes.
There certainly weren't when I was.
I wish there had been because I do remember attending, well never mind.
Yes.
The faculty leaders of Peace and Justice Studies have asked the student to reflect on her objectives and restructure her project.
Yes.
Great.
I mean, that's the best they can say.
In any community our size, there will be a wide range of views.
That creates a productive educational environment.
Got that?
A wide range of views, except for certain views.
On the other hand, a Gettysburg alumnus said the college thought they were going to get away with this until the event was shared on an Instagram with two million people.
He says there was outrage about it.
He says the event was only postponed due to fear of financial consequences from alumni donors.
So we'll see.
In any case, there is outrage about these things, and rightly so, and there'll be more and more.
Now, there's been a verdict in Hawaii about the case that we talked about,
I guess it was two weeks ago.
We talked about it two weeks ago, and we got a very lovely email.
Yes, we did.
By one of our listeners.
We read it on the air.
We read it on the air.
This guy Christopher Kunzelman moved to Maui because his wife loved the island.
They had lived in Scottsdale, Arizona.
She was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.
This was to be her paradise home.
He said, now this sounds a little odd to me, but Mr. Kunzelman must be one of these unusual people.
He said a Hawaiian woman appeared to him in a dream and told him to buy a dilapidated oceanfront house.
And he and his wife bought it unseen for $175,000 after finding an online listing.
And it was in a remote area of Maui, almost exclusively populated by natives.
But the pair never got to live there.
Some locals came along while he was fixing it up and beat the heck out of him.
They did not want the neighborhood turning white.
Apparently, he was told, you seem like a nice guy, but you're the wrong color for this place.
Nothing personal, but you just have the wrong fucking color skin, they said, as they kicked, punched, and used a shovel to beat poor Mr. Kunzelman.
Leaving him with a concussion, two broken ribs, and abdominal trauma.
They told him, you have the wrong color skin, no white man is ever going to live here.
At the time of the incident, the state did not make hate crime charges.
Instead, charging the both of them with assault.
One of them pleaded no contest to felony assault and was sentenced to probation.
That's... Felony assault and you get probation?
Golly, I'm gonna move to Hawaii.
Except I'm the wrong color guy.
No, you're the guy who made me say that.
Exactly.
Then another guy did get 200 days in jail.
So maybe the guy who swung the hammer... I'm sorry, swung the shovel got 200 days in jail.
A federal trial was held separately to determine if they were guilty of a hate crime.
According to news reports, it's unclear why it took so long for U.S.
prosecutors to pursue the charges.
Well, it's not unclear to me.
It's not unclear to our listeners either.
Local attorneys told the AP that they had never heard the federal government prosecuting Native Hawaiians for hate crimes.
They've never committed one.
This is unprecedented.
Last Thursday, a multiracial jury unanimously agreed that both men attacked Kunzleman because of the color of his skin.
They had argued that they were not racially motivated.
They just took offense at his entitlement and disrespect.
They were checking his privilege.
They sure were.
Checking it with a shovel.
No sentence reported so far.
Now, another report from San Francisco, and this is the spirit that explains why the place is increasingly uninhabitable.
Yes.
There is something called the GIFT program, G-I-F-T, which stands for Guaranteed Income for Transgender People.
It'll provide 55 economically marginalized transgender people who have a monthly income of less than $600 with $1,200 a month for a year and a half.
I'll call that a gift.
Now, on the application, you can choose between 130 different gender, sexuality, and pronoun options.
Somebody counted them up!
How many was that?
130.
And you can check all that apply.
Oh my gosh!
Now, pronoun options include z, zim, zis, I don't, well, then there's Fae-Fair-Fares, F-A-E-F-A-E-R-F-A-E-R-S, and then Tay-Tare-Ters.
So, yeah, this is all babble-boppycop to me.
Under the gender identity category, applicants can choose from options such as aggressive A.G.
You know what that is?
That's an identity label claimed by some African American and Latina masculine of center lesbians.
I've never heard of that.
I've never heard of it either.
Then there is genderfuck.
You can tick that as one of your options.
Do you know what a genderfuck is?
Again, I'm sorry.
That's one of those situations where I'm making sure I've heard correctly.
You did.
Could you repeat the third syllable?
I will not.
I will not.
I will not repeat the third syllable.
This is a gamely friendly show, ladies and gentlemen.
We do apologize for the people of San Francisco.
But we are quoting what is literally on the application.
This is an option in the gender identity character Gosh, the gender identity category, which is the idea of playing with gender cues to purposely confuse stereotypical gender expressions, usually through clothing.
So, I guess the idea is, if you are one thing, then you're just like the other thing, and then you are gender effing all those who don't get the joke.
Then, another option is two-spirit.
This is an identity label used within many American Indian and Canadian First Nations Indigenous groups for people with both masculine and feminine spirits.
Two spirits.
They are two-spirited.
Couldn't you have 132 spirits within you?
I don't see why.
Why just leave it to two?
I don't see why.
Many spirits.
I'm spiritual.
Yes.
Many spirits.
Then there is feminine of center.
Feminine of center.
Wouldn't that make you a woman?
If the center is between men, if you're feminine.
But I don't know.
No, no, no.
You're reading too much.
You're trying to add logic to an illogical situation.
Then there is demi-girl.
That's an option.
Demi-girl.
And then boy, spelled B-O-I.
Boy.
Then Tomboy.
Now, some of these options look to me as though you'd have to engage in space travel to encounter one of these.
There is a Cahanith Xanith.
That's K-A-H-N-I-T-H or a Z-A-N-I-T-H.
That really sounds like an extraterrestrial to me.
And then one option is a Nina Uposkita Tsepikspi.
Yes.
I could spell this out, but it's spelled just the way it sounds.
Then you can be pansexual or scoliosexual.
Now scoliosis is when you have curvature of the spine.
That's right.
So I guess scoliosexual means you're twisted.
Twisted sexually?
Yes, scoliosexual, yes.
But the program will, of the 55 people that are going to be the contest winners, they will prioritize Transgender, non-binary, gender non-conforming, and intersex people who are.
Also, black, indigenous, or people of color, experiencing homelessness, living with disabilities and chronic illnesses, youth and elders.
I wonder how many elders are qualified.
Also, monolingual Spanish speakers.
That's gonna put you ahead of the line for this free money.
And those who are legally vulnerable, such as TGI people.
Do you know what a TGI person is?
That was news to me.
TGI.
Yep.
TGI people.
There are such people apparently.
Those who are undocumented... Like a fan of the TGI Friday's restaurant?
Beats me.
Then there are people who are engaging in survival sex trades or who are formerly incarcerated.
So, wow, if you are a, gosh, if you're feminine of center and you're engaged in survival sex trades, formerly incarcerated TGI person, you suffer from chronic illness, you're living with a disability and experiencing homelessness, you are BIPOC and speak only Spanish, boy, you go to the head of the line.
Be careful how you discuss the TGI network because TGI is an umbrella term intended to
cover a range of identities including the broad identity terms of transgender, transsexual,
gender diverse, and intersex.
Okay.
So transgender, gender diverse, and intersex.
And transsexual.
And transsexual.
Okie doke.
Well, this is mighty deep for me.
But in the meantime, let's switch to the field of medicine.
Let's get deeper here.
A report reveals just how much the DEI complex has infiltrated medical education.
This story comes to us courtesy of, let's do a quick hat tip, I believe the Washington Free Beacon.
So again, it's always nice to see these big sites that have a massive audience, a very influential audience, just point out what we're living under, this tyranny of diversity, equity, and inclusion and tolerance.
You know, there's so many great, great acronyms you can make with that.
Steve Saylor calls it DAI.
You could call it, you know, 44% of medical schools have tenure and promotion policies that reward scholarship on diversity, inclusion, and equity.
The title of this piece, again, report reveals just how much the DEI complex has infiltrated medical education.
70% make students take a course on diversity, inclusion, or cultural competence, and 79% required that all hiring committees receive unconscious
bias training or include equity advisors, people whose job it is to ensure diversity among
the faculty.
I wonder how long it's going to be until they're forced to take a class in understanding TGI.
Oh, probably.
Probably already, actually.
These are just some of the findings from a new report by the Association of American Medical Colleges, which, together with the American Medical Association, accredits every medical school in the United States.
the report.
The power of collective action, assessing and advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts at AAMC medical
schools is based on a survey of 101 medical school deans
representing nearly 2 thirds of American medical schools who
were given a list of diversity policies and asked to indicate which ones they had implemented.
Results paint a striking portrait of ideological capture.
At many medical schools, concerns about social justice have saturated every layer of institutional decision-making,
particularly the hiring and admissions process, a trend some doctors say will undermine meritocracy
and endanger patients.
Who cares?
We live in the aftermath of George Floyd.
So who cares if the patients die, I guess?
George Floyd died and so they can die too.
Exactly.
The report indicates that more than a third of medical schools offer extra funding to departments that hit diversity targets, half require job applicants to submit diversity statements, and over two-thirds require departments use to assemble a diverse pool of candidates for faculty positions.
Then, you know, there are plenty of medical schools now who demand that applicants to be students tell how they're going to boost diversity and what they're going to do for all of this crazy consciousness.
If you're a white student at one of these medical schools, you should just go ahead and just give up your seat.
Isn't that the ultimate embodiment of the principles and tenets of dying?
This is basically a religion we're seeing grow Die whitey die.
I'll just read a couple more things because this is a story that I do encourage our listeners to check out.
The report, in addition, every school reported using a holistic admissions process.
A euphemism for affirmative action that assess applicants' grades, test scores, and line of the race.
Lowering the academic bar for groups underrepresented in medicine, i.e.
blacks.
Well, Hispanics, American Indians, Haitians, who knows, Guatemalans, but anyway.
Yeah, it's just this really incredible story.
All told, 85% of schools said they'd use demographic data to promote change within the institution.
Again, i.e. the only way that diversity, equity, inclusion is going to increase in the medical
schools is to decrease the allotment of positions available to white male and white female students
who want to become doctors. Well, they use this term unrepresented minorities.
You know why they use that?
Why is that?
Because Asians are over-represented.
That's correct.
And Asians get the shaft in this stuff too.
It's a very interesting and intriguing development.
Fortunately, just like this black school superintendent who says, nobody's interested in immigration, maybe some of these Asians will say, no, no, no, no, no.
Merit counts.
Well, did you realize, Mr. Kersey, that yesterday, to the day, a hundred years ago, was the first time a woman was sworn in as a United States Senator?
I did not!
Well, I knew that, but I didn't want to... Okay, well, you knew that, but you didn't want to brag.
It is an interesting story.
Yes, it happened on November 21st.
And suffragists flocked to the Senate chamber to watch 87-year-old Rebecca Latimer Felton become the country's first lady senator.
The grand old woman from Georgia, as newspapers dubbed her, had spent half her life fighting for women's rights in her home state.
Now grayed and bent, she raised her right hand and swore to uphold and defend the Constitution, promoting a roar of applause from the ladies in the gallery.
The day marked a historic first.
Now this is, by the way, the Smithsonian Magazine talking.
The day marked a historic first for American women.
But, uh-oh.
Watch out.
Attention.
Danger ahead.
Trigger warning.
It's complicated by Felton's record as an outspoken white supremacist and the last member of Congress to have enslaved people, as the Smithsonian puts it.
Yeah, she went over to Africa and she tackled some big hulking black man and brought him back.
She enslaved him.
You know, if you owned a slave, you enslaved people.
Not only did she believe black people were inferior, but she also advocated lynching black men accused of raping white women.
Well, as it turns out, she never cast a vote because she was appointed to one of those terms, one of those almost-finished terms.
The term was almost over.
Ceremonial, basically.
It was essentially ceremonial, but it was considered a huge accomplishment for women in general.
Well, the story of this Rebecca Felton is really quite interesting.
She grew up on a very large plantation.
Of course, the Civil War destroyed everything, and by the war's end, she and her husband had endured a raid by Union troops, lost their two sons to disease, and spent six months in a refugee camp.
And when they got back to the plantation, it was all desolation and destruction, bitter, grinding poverty.
But her husband then got herself elected to the Senate.
And she worked with him as a secretary.
In those days, he didn't have a staff, basically.
So she was very helpful to him.
But this is a very interesting aspect about this lady.
She blamed elite white men for the fact that the Civil War took place and the violence and the economic hardship that followed.
She said that by refusing to compromise on slavery and by engineering secession, elite white Southern men had triggered what she called a series of events that would forever undermine their ability to offer protection to their dependents.
There's a lot to unpack there.
It's why I never really cared for the Jefferson Davis statue there in Richmond.
Well, it's an interesting angle on that.
She said white men got us into this mess and she really wanted political power for women.
Well, as I say, she followed her husband to Washington and she described herself as a sharpshooter in woman's form.
Who wielded a pen as her weapon, and from the 1870s on, her letters and editorials appeared in many Georgian newspapers.
She was also incensed by the inhumane conditions of Georgia's convict leasing system.
The way that worked was, a state's penitentiary, Georgia did not actually have state prisons.
What they did, if you were a convict, they would lease you out to somebody who needed labor.
Very economical, it seems to me.
You make money on prisoners, you don't have to pay for them.
How much did these prisoners, were they paid slave wages?
They probably didn't get much, but this mainly affected blacks, but she was outraged by the way they were treated, and she engaged in a more than 20-year battle that culminated in the system's abolition in 1908.
This sounds like a woman who was worth Yes, yes.
And also, well, her primary interest was getting Southern white men to live up to their duties to Southern white women, whom she called the coming mothers of the Anglo-Saxon race.
But this is all very interesting.
She was directed against white men because she didn't think they were doing the job they should.
She wouldn't have had to become an activist if white men had been living up to the standards, the high standards that she set for them.
Now, this is where she got this reputation as being in favor of lynching.
On August 11, 1897, while discussing white men's failures to protect white women, In a major speech, she mentioned the previous week's lynching of three black men accused of rape.
She said, if white men could not protect women's dearest possession from the ravening human beasts,
then I say lynch a thousand times a week if necessary. That's pretty strong talk.
But one of her biographers argues that Felton was not actually promoting lynching, but rather highlighting the depths to which white Southern society had fallen because of the spinelessness of white men.
I'd hate to show her the rape statistics in 2022, America.
Well, the Northern press, of course, didn't take it that way.
They were all horrified by what they thought of as recalls to mob violence.
But in 1920, Felton Got tired of being accused of this lynch promoter, and she expressed outrage at the lynchings of black men and that the facts the rapes of black women often went unpunished.
She says, More than 20 years have come and gone since my famous speech, because it's always been thrown in her face.
She says it is an outrage that our courts do not deal out justice and that our judges pussyfoot around these lynching atrocities.
Her feeling seems to have been that because white people hold themselves to superior standards, they do not engage in mob violence.
They believe in civilized rule of law.
Quite an interesting lady.
Very interesting, unusual biography.
As it turns out, it took another 16 years before one by the name of Gladys Pyle was actually elected to the Senate on her own as a candidate.
Was that the 18th or 20th Amendment?
Oh gosh.
I think it was earlier than that.
Women got the vote in 1919.
Wasn't that the 19th or 20th?
That was the 19th.
We are going to start making ourselves look bad.
We're going to flounder around.
We should not go down this.
Edit that part out.
Edit that part out.
Now, a little story from Great Britain.
The top baby names in Britain for boys, and this has been the case for a long time, the top baby name for boys is Mohammed.
Mohammed?
Mohammed, yes.
It looks to me that's the only Muslim name on there.
I don't see any Abdullah or what else might they be.
Number two is Noah, then Theo, Leo, Oliver, Jack, George, Luca, Ethan, and Freddie.
Spelled F-R-E-D-D-I-E.
That seems just a little bit light-hearted.
That's number 10.
Freddie.
F-R-E-D-D-I-E.
Freddie.
Not Frederick, but Freddie.
And for women, number one is Sophia.
Sophia.
At least it means wisdom.
It's a beautiful name.
It's a nice name, but then the rest are a little bit, they strike me as rather modern.
None of the traditional women's names.
Lily or Lylee.
L-Y-L-L-I-L-Y.
Have you ever heard that?
That's number two.
Say it one more time.
L-I-L-Y.
I don't know how you pronounce it.
Well, isn't that Lily Potter?
Come on, you're a fan of the Harry Potter books, isn't that?
Lily?
No.
Lily is Harry's mom's name.
L-I-L-Y?
I'm pretty sure.
L-I-L-Y?
L-I-L-Y.
And how do you pronounce that?
It looks like Lylee, but I wouldn't guess.
Yeah, it's a Lily Potter.
Really?
Mm-hmm.
Heavens.
Then there's Olivia.
That muggle?
No, she's muggle-born, I should say.
I'm a muggle.
Then there's Isla.
I-S-L-A.
That's a Scottish name, apparently.
Then Ava, Amelia, Freya.
I mean, that's a good heathen name.
Aria.
I guess they want your child to grow up as a singer.
Aria.
Maya and Ivy.
But at least I see no Fatima or Miriam.
Lily is a beautiful name.
I like that.
L-I-L-I-L-Y.
How do you pronounce it?
Lily?
Lily.
Do you?
Have you not seen the Harry Potter movies?
Ah, I guess.
And they called her... I would have expected the L-I-L-L-Y, but who knows?
I'm just not with it.
I'm not modern.
I'm not sufficiently British.
Well, Mr. Kersey, speak to me of Leiden University.
Leiden University has removed work of famed Dutch artists due to the depiction of only white males.
I got this one.
I think Jonathan Turley's Substack.
So, shout-out to Jonathan Turley and Substack.
A painting from the renowned contemporary Dutch painter Rijnvoel has been removed from a wall at Leiden University in the Netherlands after the objection that it depicts only white men.
Political science PhD candidate Alina Zonina said that the painting of white men smoking cigars made her feel uncomfortable.
I think it was the cigars that were the problem.
Maybe.
According to Dutch news, Zonina insisted that the school needed to add an ironic or critical note with such a painting.
Zonina?
What kind of name is that?
In the meantime, it has now turned toward the wall to avoid harming or offending anyone else at the school.
We've seen similar actions in the United States where one or a small number of objectors resulted in the removing of paintings.
Again, I love that there's an emphasis.
Where one or a small number of objectors results in the removal of paintings,
material, or postings at universities.
Few faculty are willing to risk the ire of protesters by opposing such actions, I believe.
Didn't Harvard remove all pictures of the white male doctors or deans
in the medical school after George Floyd?
Was that at Harvard?
Uhhhhhhhhhhhhh.
There was some major university that had all the previous presidents or something.
Pretty sure it was Harvard.
It was Harvard Medical School, yeah.
And they were all white men, and that was just intolerable.
Not smoking cigars, though.
Not in those photos.
Probably not.
According to other reports, the famed nine-year-old painter, Lorraine Dool, is irate over the move, which he called incredibly narrow-minded.
His painting depicted the board of Light University in the 1970s with six serious looking men
cigars in their mouth.
I should point out, six serious looking white men.
Yeah, it's interesting that this is a living painter.
And they're turning his painting to the wall?
Remarkable.
They're not burning him yet, you know.
I want to ask you a serious question.
What do you think when you see these climate change activists throw painting or glue themselves to these works of art?
You know, they glue themselves with, I suppose it's some kind of super glue.
What I would do, I would leave them glued to the wall.
Just leave them.
At least overnight.
I mean, they glue themselves.
They want to tear themselves loose?
Go ahead.
They want to sit there?
Go ahead.
At least overnight, maybe a week.
Let them unglue themselves.
That's what I would do.
I guess you can't sit down if your hand's at the wall and you're glued.
I don't know.
You can't stand.
I don't know.
Well, the ones I saw, they'd sat down.
And then they put their hands behind their backs.
Yes.
No, leave them be.
They got into that problem.
They can get themselves out.
I don't know what they do.
They use some sort of solvent.
I guess if you actually just wrenched it loose, they'd leave their hands stuck to the wall.
That's right.
It's now part of Ed Taste.
That's right.
It's impressive.
I like that.
Leave them be.
They need a bathroom break?
Too bad.
More art.
Okay, yes.
Well, you know, there was an Italian artist and he put his excrement in a can and he sold it as Mierda dell'artista.
I can't remember his name.
Did it actually sell?
Oh, those things are very valuable now.
Oh gosh.
Let's see.
Now this is freelancing in Houston.
Aisha Mercer.
She was arrested last week in what investigators are calling a bribery scheme.
Officials said she was taking money from drivers to remove boots from ticketed cars.
A victim said, I paid for parking and put a ticket in my window.
I legally parked and we came back a couple of hours later, there was a boot on one of his wheels.
And parked behind me was a City of Houston vehicle with a City of Houston employee who had just put the boot on my car.
She said he had a bunch of back tickets.
She said, if you slip me $200 in cash, I will unboot you.
Well, turns out that this was an entrepreneurial African-Americanist who was just cruising around town in her city vehicle, in her city uniform, booting cars, and then telling people, OK, slip me a couple of hundred, and I'll let you loose.
Well, she is now out on $10,000 bond.
I must say, by choosing Houston, she chose the wrong city.
If this had been New York or San Francisco, she'd be out with no bond at all.
This is a nonviolent offense.
Come on, you're going to charge crime?
Yes.
But, you know, I think we should commend her for this outside-the-box thinking or, I don't know, maybe inside-the-boot thinking.
Very entrepreneurial of her.
But, you know, this is really the third world direction we're headed in.
I mean, the idea of somebody who is a parking, she's in the sitting parking business and she'll stick a boot on you and ask for a bribe to take it, that's the direction we're heading, ladies and gentlemen.
Now, back in February, some of you may have been aware of a rash of threats, bomb threats, that have been phoned in historically by colleges and universities.
Now, if I am to read from a news article from February 2nd, we find out that these are just causing great turmoil and anguish and campus lockdowns.
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki, who was secretary at the time before the African-Americanists took her place, she said, Homeland Security officials are providing regular updates to Biden and senior staff.
The administration is working closely with law enforcement.
And Jen said, it is scary, it is horrifying, it is terrible to these students, these faculties, these institutions are feeling under threat.
And Mary Schmidt Campbell, president of Spelman College, said in a statement, reports of nationwide bomb threats against campuses this week are appalling, raise serious concerns about racially targeted hate-based violence in our communities.
and Representative Al Lawson of Florida. He said, it's this reprehensible and unbelievable
that at the beginning of Black History Month, an orchestrated effort should be undertaken
to harm students at our beloved educational institutions.
Well, now, the bulk of these threats are believed to have been linked to a single juvenile, one
young person, one young underage person who has been prosecuted as a minor by state
authorities, says the FBI.
What state?
We don't know.
Interesting.
The juvenile has not been identified.
But the longstanding inquiry into more than these 50 threats Uh, is believed to have been resolved and the suspect's identification in prosecution because, on the other hand, federal limitations on charging juveniles for federal crimes.
They worked with state prosecutors to ensure that the individual is charged in the various state offenses, which will ensure some level of restriction and monitoring and disruption of his criminal behavior.
That's, thus saith the FBI.
Now these threats, You'll not be surprised to know prompted a wide-ranging inquiry involving at least 30 of the FBI's 56 field offices.
God.
Yes.
And who knows how many people in each of those field offices.
So they stopped infiltrating the Proud Boys to do this?
Citing... I'm sure they didn't do that.
They wouldn't sacrifice that.
Citing the suspect's status as a juvenile, the authorities provided no descriptive information.
What's your bet that this is melanin-enhanced or melanin-deplied?
I'll tell you what.
I'll tell you what.
What do you reckon?
Do you remember, you know, before we started this podcast, everyone, we were talking about how long we've been doing this for, and there was a pretty famous episode where the New York Times just hired this Asian author who had made all these anti-white statements.
Erica Jong.
You said before, I said, I'll bet you any amount of money they're not going to fire her.
Yes, you did.
And you said, oh no, no, no.
She's gone.
She's toast.
And it was like, you know what?
We should have done this big bet.
So I will, I will... Well, we may never know.
That's the problem.
We'll find out.
We may never know.
Well, I would say 99.9% it's a black individual.
99.9% it is.
Well, you know, let's give you a counter argument.
Now, that all happened in January.
January 22nd.
Yes, they finally are tracking this guy down.
Okay, I get what you're saying.
Covered his tracks.
But maybe they were all too busy rounding up Jan Sixers.
I don't know.
But, you know, a guy who made all these phone threats and who did it so cleverly that it took 36 field offices and, what is it, nine months to catch him?
You think he's a black guy?
I mean, there are considerations on both sides of the question.
But in the meantime, the Biden administration announced that the U.S.
Department of Education would grant up to $150,000 to the targeted HBCUs for mental health support.
So, there you go.
There's always something in it for the brothers.
$150,000.
Yikes.
Well, let's see.
And I gather there is something in it for the brothers, too, in the lottery.
How much time do we have here?
Let's see.
Oh, not much.
Okay, I'll be quick.
You know, there was a big Powerball the other day.
The largest Powerball jackpot ticket was sold in Altadena, California, a resident winning
a historic $2.04 billion.
$24 billion. The odds of winning that were 1 in 292.2 million. Lottery has been accused
The odds of winning that were 1 in 292.2 million.
Lottery has been accused of systemic racism, though, after the massive Powerball payout.
of systemic racism though after the massive Powerball payout.
The CNN piece spoke with the critics, knocking the lottery system as a form of
systemic racism that targets poor black and brown communities across America. The researchers
told CNN that despite the extremely low chance of winning state lotteries, all still
aggressively market the lottery and sell tickets to low income communities at higher rates.
Hey, you know what? They should probably do an article about stupid white males who
invest in crypto and are now watching it go down so much.
We're being, we're being, you know, there's a, there's a disparate impact there.
So anyways, thus misleading Americans believe it'll help them quickly generate wealth.
Quote, these communities are disproportionately made up of black and brown people.
Critics say the consequences that marginalized people will be driven into deeper debt by a system that is transferring wealth out of their communities.
CNN's Nakheel Terry Ellis and Justin Gamble wrote.
So again, the lottery is racist.
I have never bought a lottery ticket.
They sell tickets to people who buy them for heaven's sake.
When was the last time you purchased a lottery ticket?
I have never bought a lottery ticket.
I am in awe of that. I buy some just as stocking stuffers for friends and family.
Somebody once called these lotteries the stupidity tax.
That was not I who brought that up.
In any case, the fact is you are just as likely to win if you're black as if you're white.
There's no white privilege there.
You're just as likely to lose if you're white, black, brown, Hispanic, Asian, part of the TGI community.
The TGI community.
I'm not part of it.
But we must depart.
Because our time is up.
And once again, we both wish all of our listeners around the world, both in the United States and anywhere else, a Happy Thanksgiving.
Because people are allowed to celebrate Thanksgiving wherever they are.
We all have much to be thankful for.
You and I, Mr. Kersey, more so than most.
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