Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor - Ireland: Emerald Isle, Tragic Isle Aired: 2023-03-17 Duration: 12:42 === Ireland's Tragic History (12:03) === [00:00:03] Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance. [00:00:07] The censors hate my videos, so if you like this one, I hope you'll send the link to a lot of people. [00:00:12] The history of Ireland is both tragic and heroic. [00:00:16] For centuries, the English dominated and exploited the island. [00:00:20] Anyone who rebelled was killed or transported to the Caribbean to work as a slave alongside blacks. [00:00:27] In more modern times, the potato famine of 1845 to 1852 killed roughly one million people. [00:00:35] Barefoot mothers with clothes dropping from their bodies held dead infants in their arms as they begged for food. [00:00:43] Dogs ate corpses. [00:00:45] More than two million Irish fled, many to the United States, and the population dropped by nearly a third, one of the greatest depopulations of an island in history. [00:00:57] Americans shared the English contempt for the Irish. [00:01:01] This help-wanted ad for a cook and washerwoman from the New York Evening Post, September 8, 1828, says, To save trouble, no Irish need apply. [00:01:13] A researcher found 15 no-Irish-need-apply ads in the 1842 editions of Just the New York Sun. [00:01:22] When Frederick Law Olmsted toured the South before the Civil War, he asked a slaveholder why, for some jobs, he hired Irishmen. [00:01:30] It's dangerous work, he explained, and a Negro's life is too valuable to be risked at it. [00:01:36] If a Negro dies, it's a considerable loss, you know. [00:01:40] Back home, it was only in 1949 that the Irish established a republic, completely independent of Great Britain. [00:01:48] A proud, long-suffering people finally had a nation of its own. [00:01:53] And Ireland prospered. [00:01:55] But as it prospered, it lost its way. [00:01:58] Now, immigrants come to Ireland. [00:02:01] In 1987, there was a trickle of 17,000. [00:02:05] Last year, there was a flood of more than 120,000. [00:02:09] And this year, even more are likely to come. [00:02:12] These are big numbers for a country of just 5 million. [00:02:17] Many third-worlders claim asylum. [00:02:19] Numbers seeking international protection in Ireland in 2022 set to be highest in over 20 years. [00:02:26] The largest group was Ukrainians, but as this article notes, 10,000 others showed up just in the first nine months of last year. [00:02:35] That included 1,500 Somalis and more than 1,000 from Algeria, followed by Zimbabwe, Nigeria, and Afghanistan. [00:02:44] More than 5,000 came without passports, and not because they didn't have any. [00:02:49] They used them to board a ship or plane, but lost them during the trip. [00:02:54] This makes it harder to judge asylum claims. [00:02:58] 70% of those frauds were men. [00:03:02] One of them explained that Ireland is an easy touch. [00:03:05] When corona gone, the people start hearing about Ireland, that in Ireland they give people the asylum. [00:03:17] Ireland doesn't have the will to deport criminals and asylum fakers. [00:03:22] An Irish site called the Berkian learned through a Freedom of Information request that not even 20% of the people ordered to leave actually go. [00:03:33] On the left are citizens of the top 10 countries for which Ireland issued deportation orders. [00:03:40] On the right are the top ten destinations to which illegals were sent back. [00:03:45] As you can see, even deportation is usually an empty threat. [00:03:51] Non-whites who live in Ireland are the new Irish, and as in all white countries, they make quite a fuss about themselves. [00:03:59] Here's a photo collage on the new Irish, young Irish and Muslim. [00:04:05] The photographer is also young Irish and Muslim. [00:04:10] Shakira says, at times I do feel I'm Irish, and at times I don't, even though I don't know anywhere else because I was born in Ireland. [00:04:20] Amina says, and I quote, I'm not like everyone else was like the Irish people were. [00:04:26] I think that gives me the courage to embrace my religion. [00:04:30] If she were where she belongs, she wouldn't have to worry, would she? [00:04:35] Here is Amanullah DeSondi, senior lecturer in contemporary Islam and chair of race equality at University College in Cork. [00:04:45] I bet you didn't know they have chairs of race equality at Irish universities, but they do. [00:04:52] He says, the fact is, there is more and more of me, and that is Ireland's future, and Ireland's future has to be represented through the media. [00:05:01] More and more of me. [00:05:03] We're taking over. [00:05:04] Thanks for clarifying that, Amanula. [00:05:08] And here's a young lad who gets the message. [00:05:11] Like, even one of my plans for Ireland, because I can literally tell you the future of this place. [00:05:18] People of my colour or other colours, wherever, are going to be the majority in this country. [00:05:24] Some Irish have had enough. [00:05:27] Just this year... [00:05:29] There has been enough grassroots opposition to immigration that Wikipedia has a page devoted to the demonstrations. [00:05:35] Locals are outraged when busloads of foreigners suddenly arrive. [00:05:40] This is from a demonstration in Dublin. [00:05:44] Here is another demonstration. [00:05:56] in the Dublin area of East Wall. [00:06:06] Thank you. [00:06:08] Thank you. [00:06:08] you Thank you. [00:06:10] This is a demonstration in front of the police station in Finglas, a suburb of Dublin. [00:06:16] Concerned parents of Finglass put up this leaflet that says, We will not tolerate any more people brought into our country. [00:06:25] An end to your lies. [00:06:27] There was an arson attack on this building in Dublin when it was rumored that foreigners would be housed here. [00:06:34] At Ballymun, another Dublin suburb, banners read, Ballymun says no. [00:06:40] Another said, Close borders. [00:06:43] Ireland is full. [00:06:44] Here is a protest in Mullingar in County Westmeath. [00:06:49] *Squeak* [00:07:06] In Coot Hill in the north of the Republic, demonstrators protested illegal immigrants on an industrial scale. [00:07:15] Memes like this are cropping up. [00:07:17] Rise up, Mother Island. [00:07:19] Ireland is full. [00:07:21] Big Brother doesn't like this. [00:07:23] The president of Ireland questions the future of national borders to block migration. [00:07:29] He says Ireland has to let everyone in as a commitment to a common humanity. [00:07:34] Black people in particular have to stay strong against racism, he says. [00:07:40] In response to protests, lefties in Dublin held an Ireland for All solidarity march. [00:07:47] Ireland for All? [00:07:48] As someone wanted to know, Africa is 430 times the size of Ireland, so why do Africans have to live in Ireland? [00:07:58] Asia is almost four times the size of Africa. [00:08:01] But here's an Asian at the rally explaining he has to be in Ireland to breathe in freedom. [00:08:09] The lefty Irish Times boasted about the rally. [00:08:12] Thousands protest against hatred and disinformation at anti-racism march. [00:08:18] The speeches were the usual guff. [00:08:21] Are you on the side of humanity, decency, equal rights, or are you on the road to fascism? [00:08:27] Or, we have come together to celebrate that fabulous, rich variety and diversity that is Ireland today. [00:08:34] Leon Diop. [00:08:36] Founder of Black and Irish said, Whether you were born in Ireland or Cameroon, we need to replace this culture of fear and hatred with love and empathy. [00:08:48] How nice for him! [00:08:50] The Irish Times failed to note. [00:08:53] That anti-immigration demonstrations are spontaneous. [00:08:56] The paper did not run this cute graphic of all the organizations that bragged how they worked together to give the country away. [00:09:04] I count at least 60 of these creepy groups, doubtless funded by George Soros, and probably by the U.S. State Department. [00:09:13] Ordinary people aren't fooled. [00:09:15] Before the rally, Independent IE had this headline, President Michael D. Higgins condemns those sowing hate and building fear around refugees. [00:09:28] As polls show, 56% believe Ireland took in too many. [00:09:33] Even in the teeth of pro-foreigner propaganda, 56% of the Irish said they were too many. [00:09:40] 14% weren't sure, and only 30% disagreed. [00:09:44] But Mr. Higgins, President of the Republic, says those 56% are sowing hate, building fear, and are unforgivable. [00:09:53] Michael Higgins, here on the right, at an event last year, is 81 years old. [00:09:58] His father was a lieutenant in the Irish Republican Army. [00:10:02] Two of his uncles also fought, just as these men did, in the Irish War of Independence. [00:10:07] Two and a half years of bloodshed and sacrifice to throw out the English so Ireland could be Irish. [00:10:14] Were his father and uncles sowing hate? [00:10:17] Were they unforgivable? [00:10:19] What possessed this man to turn his back on the sacrifices of his flesh and blood and babble about Ireland for all? [00:10:26] Here he is, five feet, three inches tall, with two of his ministers. [00:10:31] On the right is his prime minister. [00:10:33] Leo Varadkar looks mostly white, but he has an Indian father. [00:10:38] He is openly homosexual and has a partner. [00:10:41] You can guess where he stands on Ireland for all. [00:10:45] If there were ever a white country that owes nothing to non-whites or to outsiders, it's Ireland. [00:10:52] Ireland never had an empire. [00:10:54] It was brutally colonized. [00:10:56] It never practiced slavery. [00:10:58] Instead, many Irish were slaves. [00:11:00] The Irish are indigenous. [00:11:02] It is their ancestors who built these beehive huts in County Kerry, modest shelters from 1,000 years ago in which a man can barely stand up. [00:11:12] Their ancestors carved out this 45-foot dugout canoe 4,500 years ago. [00:11:19] The Irish are the people who scratched out a living on this beautiful rugged island. [00:11:24] It's their kings and prelates who built a dedicated rock of cashel. [00:11:29] And the Irish are placidly to give all this away to Muslims and Africans who claim to be their future? [00:11:37] The Irish Times think so. [00:11:40] Here is the front page in the run-up to Valentine's Day. [00:11:43] Please note the article, Reignite Your Love Life. [00:11:47] This sort of thing is common. [00:11:49] Television advertising is packed with new Irish, as if they'd been there since the days of Brian Baru. === Ireland's Tragic Transformation (00:50) === [00:11:57] Ireland is a sickening example. [00:11:59] Of a people that can go from healthy, even armed nationalism to capitulation in just one generation. [00:12:07] Such is the power of the poisons the United States spreads everywhere. [00:12:12] May the spirit of their ancestors guide those good people in Finglas, Ballymun, Mullinger, and wherever the Irish are fighting for their heritage and way of life. [00:12:23] Capitulation is death. [00:12:27] Please subscribe to this video channel. [00:12:30] Also, you might give this video a thumbs up. [00:12:32] I invite you to visit amren.com. [00:12:35] A-M-R-E-N dot com. [00:12:37] There you will find videos, podcasts, and a lot of discussions, I think, that will interest you.