Not Being Fat Is White Supremacy
Jared Taylor and his co-host laugh at yet another dreadful sin of the white man. They also discuss Stanford Law, Don Lemon, the Kenyan way to salvation, and Lesbian Visibility Week.
Jared Taylor and his co-host laugh at yet another dreadful sin of the white man. They also discuss Stanford Law, Don Lemon, the Kenyan way to salvation, and Lesbian Visibility Week.
Time | Text |
---|---|
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Radio Renaissance. | |
I'm your host, Jared Taylor. | |
And with me is my indispensable co-host, none other than Paul Kersey. | |
Today is April 27th, Year of Our Lord 2023. | |
And Mr. Kersey, did you realize we are right in the middle of Lesbian Visibility Week? | |
Of course I knew that. | |
You knew that? | |
Well, you know everything. | |
It's going to last all the way till Sunday. | |
Visibility Week! | |
You know, it makes you wonder, are they going to be taking their clothes off and making themselves really visible? | |
Let's hope that it becomes increasingly Invisibility Week for the lesbians. | |
Well, anything's possible these days, but you know, I welcome all the lesbian listeners that we can have all around the world, and it's not as though I have anything against them. | |
I just don't think lesbians need to be any more visible than anybody else. | |
So there you go. | |
We are. | |
We are very inclusive here. | |
You know, the I word is one of our favorite words. | |
So inclusivity. | |
Yes, I agree with everything you just said. | |
So there you go. | |
Well, let's see. | |
Let us begin with a listener comment on your most recent podcast. | |
You said Virginia's Albemarle County Commonwealth Attorney James Hingley. | |
...has filed charges against three Unite the Right protesters carrying lit tiki torches during a rally in Charlottesville. | |
I guess his name is Hingeley. | |
How would you pronounce H-I-N-G-E-L-E-Y? | |
Hingeley, I guess. | |
Hingeley? | |
Hingeley? | |
Yeah. | |
Hingeley seeks to prosecute the men under a rarely enforced criminal statute which makes it a crime to burn objects with intent to intimidate. | |
You also have to give them a legitimate fear of bodily harm or death. | |
Our listener goes on to say, it should be remembered that in August 2018, a black counter protester was convicted of disorderly conduct for pointing a jury-rigged flamethrower at Unite the Right protesters. | |
What he had was something that produced a flame, then he had an aerosol, an aerosol can. | |
Did you ever do that when you were a kid? | |
You take a light and you give an aerosol can and you get this six-foot flame blazing out? | |
It's really quite exciting. | |
I did that last week, actually. | |
I'm lucky mine didn't explode and kill me, but it's great fun when you're small. | |
I guess it was great fun when you're big, when you're certain people. | |
And let's see, he eventually was found guilty of a single count of disorderly conduct, and he was sentenced to 360 days in jail, but 340 days were suspended. | |
And he ultimately served only 10 days of his 20-day sentence. | |
The judge, Robert Downer, refused to invoke the same statute that Hingeley is now seeking to apply. | |
Although you would certainly suspect that if walking around with a tiki torch is intimidating people, blowing six-foot flames at them would be even more so. | |
Now, our listener says it's possible the Long case has either set a precedent or if the protesters are found guilty by Albemarle County, that Judge Long, that this fellow, I'm sorry, this Corey Long guy, Corey Long, could be indicted under the same law. | |
No evidence has been presented that three protesters now being charged in anything with their torches, but carry them around. | |
Long's intent, as has been clearly demonstrated by video footage, was undoubtedly to intimidate and perhaps even harm people exercising their right to protest. | |
The flamethrower incident was only one of several in which Corey Long was recorded threatening and intimidating people in public that day. | |
Well, my question of course is, what are the chances of a proper rule of law outcome in this collection of cases? | |
And it's in that connection that I wish to bring up a black prosecutor by the name of Kim Gardner. | |
She is the elected prosecutor for St. | |
Louis, Missouri. | |
And there are now efforts by the state attorney general, Andrew Bailey, to remove Kim Gardner from office. | |
In fact, a hearing on that very subject is scheduled for September. | |
Now, the Missouri attorney general, Representing the state says that in too many cases, Kim Gardner, who is one of our African American S fellow citizens, including homicides, these cases have gone unpunished because Gardner does not prosecute. | |
Victims and their families are left uninformed of what's going on, and the prosecutor's office is too slow to take on cases brought by the police. | |
Imagine how demoralizing for the police that is. | |
You collar a guy, he's done an armed robbery or a rape or something, and the prosecutor's office says, oh, we've got other things to do. | |
And, of course, Kim Gardner says that the Republican attorney general's effort to remove her is politically and racially motivated. | |
She's a Democrat and is St. | |
Louis's first black district attorney. | |
So there you go. | |
It's the classic. | |
The classic battle lines are drawn. | |
A wicked white man against a virtuous, upstanding, brave black woman. | |
You know, if I could, Mr. Taylor, a lot of people say, oh, you know, Florida under Desantis is such a great state. | |
All this base stuff is going on. | |
I hate that word, by the way, based such a dumb don't use it. | |
I'm not going to use it. | |
I'm not going to use it, but I'll tell you this. | |
The good people in Missouri have turned that state so solidly red. | |
And again, you and I both live in a, in a, in a state that should be solidly red, but unfortunately the demographic transformation of Northern Virginia has changed that, but I really encourage all of our listeners, move to a state that is as red as possible, that has a really good legislature that is dominated by Republicans. | |
You can say as much as you want to about the National Party, but I think in the coming years, local, state, Legislatures are going to be so important, and what's happening in Missouri is very exciting. | |
What's happening in Missouri is very exciting. | |
It's a great state. | |
Going back to the whole Kansas-Missouri conflict of the 1860s, 1850s. | |
Yeah, I think that there's a lot to be said about Missouri. | |
Well, there's a lot to be said about Kim Gardner, too, to whom we will return. | |
Recently, her office let fall through the cracks. | |
The first-degree murder trial of 18-year-old Jonathan Jones. | |
It was scheduled to be on April 17th. | |
And everybody's getting ready to go. | |
They're all there. | |
No prosecution. | |
It was a complete no-show. | |
And, of course, the public defender says, ah, well, justice has been denied. | |
Turn my boy loose. | |
But the judge said, no, no, we're going to reschedule. | |
But they just didn't show up. | |
Didn't show up. | |
Just slipped through the cracks. | |
And criticism of Kim Gardner Escalated earlier this year after 17-year-old Janae Edmondson, a volleyball star who was visiting from Tennessee for a tournament, was struck by a speeding car in downtown St. | |
Louis. | |
She lost both her legs and had to spend 40 days in the hospital. | |
What a gruesome thing! | |
The driver, 21-year-old Daniel Riley, was out on bond on a robbery charge despite Listen to this. | |
Nearly 100 bond violations. | |
100 violations, including letting his GPS monitor die, breaking the terms of his house arrest, and more and more and more. | |
And everybody wanted to know, why was this guy out? | |
Free despite so many bond violations. | |
This is the stuff you get when you get these black prosecutors who are determined to get rid of any kind of disparate effect of the criminal law against their co-racialists. | |
Now, I don't know if she was Soros backed, but it wouldn't surprise me the least little bit. | |
That is such a sinister connotation, what you just said there. | |
Co-racialist. | |
I like it. | |
That needs to always be used to denote insidious, nefarious characters of ill will. | |
So, I like it. | |
Well, I'm glad you do. | |
Now, do you ever listen to NPR's interview program Fresh Air? | |
I used to when I would be at your house. | |
I do not. | |
I avoid NPR. | |
Well, I listen to NPR pretty regularly. | |
It's good to know what all the fashionable people are thinking. | |
It's good to know what you are going to do very well not to agree with. | |
But the interviewer on Fresh Air is a lady named Terry Gross. | |
And most of the time she talks to rock stars and lefty authors. | |
But I must say, she's a very good interviewer. | |
She asks precisely the kind of follow-up questions that would occur to me. | |
You know, you hear somebody say A, and you say, well, gosh, if he says that about A, what's he liable to say about B? | |
And what does Terry Gross do? | |
She reads my mind, and she asks about B. So Terry Gross and I must be on the same wavelength, at least when it comes to rhetoric. | |
In any case, I was not listening to this show. | |
I haven't listened for a while, I must say. | |
But I do like to listen to the morning news show. | |
As I say, learn what all the elites and all the right-thinking people are waking up to in the morning. | |
But a guest on Fresh Air recently promoted the idea that the desire to be thin stems from white supremacy. | |
Well, I guess everything stems from white supremacy, after all. | |
A woman by the name of Virginia Soul Smith was on the show to talk about her new book. | |
It's called Fat Talk, Parenting in the Age of Diet Culture. | |
Now I would be embarrassed to have a book called Fat Talk on my bookshelf, but these | |
days I guess you can talk about anything. | |
Her argument is that when slavery was abolished and blacks began gaining rights, white supremacists | |
sought to maintain old inequalities by demonizing black bodies and glamorizing thinness. | |
Now, when you think about that, it seems to be very odd. | |
I mean, does that mean that all the ex-slaves were fat? | |
I mean, aren't they supposed to have been mistreated and whipped and nearly starved and thin as a rail? | |
Shouldn't it have been all the white slave masters who were fat? | |
I just don't get it. | |
But this implies that all the ex-slaves are fat as barrels, and so white people had to glamorize thinness to make a distinction and otherize—they love that word—otherize black people. | |
She says, the chronic experience of weight stigma is similar to the research we see on chronic experiences of racism and other forms of bias. | |
Weight stigma. | |
Now, Sol Smith, Also cited the work of somebody by the name of Sabrina Strings. | |
These SS's are a little bit too much for me. | |
Sol Smith and Sabrina Strings and a recent book called Fearing the Black Body. | |
Sabrina Strings argues that the modern aversion to being fat has nothing to do with health, but instead is a way of using weight to perpetuate racism and classism. | |
So I guess fat is beautiful, Mr. Kersey. | |
Black is beautiful. | |
Fat is healthy. | |
Fat is poetic. | |
Boy, oh boy. | |
And so Sabrina Strings goes on to say, celebrating a thin white body as the ideal body is a way to other and demonize black and brown bodies, bigger bodies, anyone who doesn't fit into that norm. | |
You know, they have such active, incredible imaginations, these people. | |
Then back to Sol Smith, she proposes that toxic American attitudes around weight can be combated by encouraging parents to normalize fatness. | |
So that's what the title of her book is all about. | |
Fat talk. | |
Parenting in the age of diet culture. | |
I guess what she wants is all parents say to their children, you want to get fat? | |
That's great. | |
Fat is beautiful. | |
That's wonderful. | |
Actually, actually, no, no, no. | |
BIPOC fat is beautiful. | |
I bet white fat's beautiful too. | |
And Mr. Kersey, I've seen a photograph of this genius. | |
I give you one guess. | |
Is she slim? | |
Oh no. | |
She's corpulent, I'm sure. | |
She is certainly no Twiggy. | |
Not at all. | |
So, I have a message to all you aspiring white supremacists. | |
Work out hard. | |
Don't get fat. | |
Be on time. | |
Keep your promises. | |
Stand up straight. | |
Be proud of your heritage. | |
Hold your head high. | |
And be the best white supremacist you possibly can be. | |
And just don't get fat. | |
Yes, yes sir. | |
Oh, I thought that physical fitness and actually working out, I'm sure that there's a list | |
somewhere. | |
I'm sure someone has created the master list. | |
I shouldn't use that term actually. | |
I'm sure someone has created the ultimate list denoting what is white supremacy and | |
I believe I've read that. | |
actually working out and lifting weights is white supremacy or watching your diet is white supremacy. Being on time, | |
Yes. | |
we know that because Professor Kronk has said that, you know, being on time is white supremacy. There's colored | |
people time and but yeah, you're right, you know, lifting weights, taking | |
care of yourself, proper hygiene, Speaking, speaking grammatically, yes. | |
Believing in logical cause and effect, all that is white supremacy of the worst kind. | |
Godliness, yeah, you're right. | |
But now, I understand music instruction is white supremacy too, at least in some parts of the country. | |
Well, it's going to be that way everywhere, sure, but who's leading the charge on this? | |
Definitely not. | |
Mr. Holland, if you ever saw that movie, Mr. Holland's Opus, we have to get rid of that now because we can't celebrate that kind of stuff. | |
Because according to the New York Post, Washington's Olympia School District to axe music classes. | |
Axe? | |
Are they going to axe questions about music? | |
No, no, no, no, no, no. | |
I said axe, not axe. | |
To axe music classes for pushing white supremacy. | |
Now, before we jump into the story, remember that all across the country, businesses play classical music. | |
For one reason and one reason only, because it drives away those who loiter, it drives away the shiftless, the aimless, and those who would shoplift when you play classical music. | |
So here we go. | |
A Washington school district is planning to cut music classes it believes promote white supremacy culture and significant institutional violence. | |
The school district, which is facing a budget shortfall of $11.5 million, voted last week to eliminate band and strings for fourth graders in an effort to both save money And fight racism. | |
I guess if you just say you're fighting racism, no one's going to question your budgetary decisions, right? | |
That's right. | |
Who's going to object to fighting racism? | |
Well, I mean, gosh, classical music. | |
He hit me over the head with a Tchaikovsky. | |
Oh, my God. | |
So we got to get rid of classical music. | |
Violence, violence. | |
It's too much. | |
The school board director, Scott Cliff Thorn admitted during the meeting that research proves music classes are healthy for young minds, but that they are disproportionately rolled out across the district's 12 elementary schools. | |
Students at some campuses are required to miss core instruction in order to attend music classes, he said, while some campuses offer longer instrumental class time than others. | |
Quote, we also know that there are other folks in the community that experience things like a tradition of excellence as exclusionary, Cliff Thorn said. | |
We're a school district that lives in and is entrenched in and is surrounded by white supremacy culture. | |
And that's a real thing. | |
That just sounds awful. | |
That's a mouthful, by the way, to get that out. | |
Try it again, try it again. | |
Lived in, surrounded by, entrenched in, steeped in, marinated in, covered by, smothered with, what was that again? | |
Contaminated in, laminated in, subjugated by, no, he said this. | |
We're a school district that lives in, and is entrenched in, and is surrounded by white supremacy culture. | |
And that's a real thing. | |
I think I'll move there. | |
Olympia School District in Washington. | |
I agree, it sounds like a lovely place. | |
It sounds like there's probably a lot of ethnic restaurants with white people who've learned how to perform the culinary arts of other ethnicities. | |
Anyway, sorry. | |
The board director also told concerned parents that there was nothing intrinsically white supremacist about string or instrumental music, but warned that there are ways in which it could contribute to the racist culture. | |
Quote, the ways in which it is and the ways in which all of our institutions, not just schools, but local government, state government, our churches, our neighborhoods inculcate and allow white supremacy culture to continue to be propagated and cause significant institutional violence. | |
Hey, there are things that we have to think about carefully as a community. | |
Uh, he said. | |
What? | |
Institutional violence. | |
Wow. | |
Wow. | |
As I say, boy. | |
Gosh, I was just strangled to death by classical music. | |
I guess excellence means hitting the right notes, and that's white supremacy too. | |
Mr. Taylor, you're downplaying what you just said. | |
Significant institutional violence. | |
A spokesperson for the district told the New York Post that the cuts only applied to music elective students. | |
were able to opt in for the addition to their general classes, the district wouldn't be | |
cutting any secondary music offerings, general and linear music, or fifth grade band and | |
strings, the latter of which was also in the chopping block. | |
I guess somehow those classes escape the significant institutional violence of intrinsically white | |
supremacist culture. | |
Well, maybe the inherent significant violence of white supremacist strings and wind instruments | |
affects only people who are in fourth grade or younger. | |
I don't know. | |
This is all very deep and mysterious to me. | |
Yeah, Alicia Perkins, a mom of three in the district, told Fox News that there was no evidence whatsoever that the fourth grade music class has contributed to white supremacy. | |
Quote, we have reached a level of absurdity in our school district among our school board and our leadership that is just hard to ignore at this point. | |
Ms. Perkins said. | |
Agreed. | |
I think, I think across the country we've reached a level of absurdity that is not only | |
impossible to ignore, but it must be dealt with and confronted head on. | |
And if it's not, then we, we, we truly deserve what's coming. | |
But I don't think that's going to be the case. | |
That's just my opinion. | |
Nope. | |
Nope. | |
I think Americans are waking up. | |
Think again, white man. | |
Mr. Taylor, we're not going to talk about it at length, but I think this is a very interesting segue. | |
Talk about Fox News and... Let me talk about Don Lemon. | |
Go ahead. | |
Because he was out the same day as Hucker Carlson, wasn't he? | |
Just within a day or two. | |
Same day? | |
Same day. | |
It was the very same day. | |
Boy, that was a good day for ousting people from high-profile media jobs. | |
There's a lot of speculation as to why Tucker Carlson is out, and I'm not sure it's useful for us to speculate on that. | |
We hear various things. | |
So let us let the speculators speculate while we careful investors go after the sure bets. | |
And in the case of Don Lemon, there appears to be a sure bet. | |
His departure came just weeks after it was reported that female CNN employees were increasingly concerned that he had become untouchable. | |
And that CNN network bosses were protecting him despite a litany of accusations of cruel misogyny and mistreatment of co-workers going back decades. | |
Without a doubt, a white straight male would have been fired by now, one employee said of Lemon, who came out as gay in 2011. | |
So he's been out of the closet for 12 years. | |
He's a minority in his race and sexuality. | |
Don seems to be in a protected class and he continues to get away with behavior that others couldn't. | |
Now tell me, Mr. Kersey, how could someone at CNN say such a thing? | |
I mean, doesn't that, doesn't that, wouldn't those words be very hard coming out of their mouths? | |
Isn't that something that their brains can't wrap themselves around? | |
But I guess when it happens to them, they can see it, but not anywhere else. | |
Well, he was reportedly making $4 million a year. | |
However, as well-placed CNN insiders exclusively reveal, and this is the Daily Mail talking, Levin may not have gotten the axe over what everyone is assumed was his final affront. | |
That apparently was a particularly combative interview last week with the Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy. | |
Apparently, what Lemon said in a very nasty tone, I haven't seen the clip myself, was, when you're black, no sorry, when you're in a black skin and you live in this country, then you can disagree with me. | |
What an incredibly arrogant thing to say. | |
If you're not black, you can't disagree. | |
If you're not black, you're going to say, yes sir, no sir, yes Massa, Massa Lemon. | |
He snapped at him, and of course, Ram Suwari is an Indian-American, and he accused him repeatedly of lying. | |
And many observers have since claimed that the unprofessional on-air outburst finally convinced CNN he had to go. | |
But according to CNN insiders, it's different. | |
You can yell at and insult Indian Americans all you like, but what you can't do is, if you watch the interview closely, you will hear Lemon appear to cut off his colleague very rudely as she tries to move things along from the confrontation and wrap up the interview. | |
That's what he was accused of doing over and over and over again, says a CNN source. | |
That was the pattern. | |
Dismissing, cutting off, Bigfooting. | |
Now, I thought you could not accuse a black man of bigfooting. | |
That sounds kind of bigoted to me, don't you think? | |
It's like saying he was a gorilla-like. | |
He was bigfooting. | |
I've never heard that expression before. | |
I've never heard that expression before in my life. | |
Oh, he was bigfooting me. | |
He was bigfooting me. | |
In any case, they go on to say, and while executives might not have liked the emotional messiness of the Vivek interview, What they really don't like is this continued allegations of sexism and misogyny. | |
Ultimately, that was more damaging. | |
Now, one source said, everyone is celebrating his firing. | |
That's the mood inside the network. | |
For a month, people were wondering what it was going to take. | |
People are relieved. | |
Now we can all get back to work, says another. | |
Boy, this guy must have cut a wide swath if the whole network feels that way about it. | |
But earlier this month, a searing takedown emerged in Variety magazine, headlined simply, Don Lemon's Misogyny at CNN Exposed. | |
Of course, these days, what people mean by misogyny, I don't much know. | |
Apparently, when heterosexual men find women attractive and say so, that's misogyny. | |
Now, when homosexual men, just how they express their misogyny, I guess they do that by big-footing women, especially on air. | |
But this Variety magazine article depicted Lemon as power-hungry, jealous, viciously competitive, all the way back to his early days at CNN in Atlanta. | |
And things got so bad that some women reported refusing to appear on TV alongside him. | |
He was so unpleasant. | |
Maybe he had B.O., too, for all I know. | |
Easy now. | |
Easy now, Tiger. | |
Uh-oh. | |
Sorry. | |
I take that all back. | |
I'm sure he smelled just like a rose. | |
No fetid smells coming from his way. | |
No. | |
So there you go. | |
So that's apparently the deal with Don Lemon. | |
But as I say, I wonder if we'll ever get the straight story on why Tucker Carlson is no longer at Fox. | |
I mean, it does seem like a very strange thing. | |
The guy who was the most successful cable news guy, the guy that was really hauling up Fox ratings practically single-handedly, why they gave him the heave-ho, but maybe the truth will come out at some point. | |
We're not here to speculate, but what I would like to say is that his message he put out last night Yeah. | |
Twitter was extraordinary. | |
The amount of impressions and views it has is eye opening. | |
And I think that what he said is so important that, he spoke to heritage. | |
I have a very deep connection to heritage. | |
I don't actually say that I'm proud of that, but I can say that he gave a tremendous address | |
to heritage this past weekend where he said, we're kind of past the point of debate, | |
where one side wants to say it's okay to mutilate children. | |
Like what? | |
This is kind of sick. | |
And then on the presentation that he did on Twitter, Mr. Taylor, he said something along the lines of, | |
we basically have a society where so many of the most important discussions are no longer permissible | |
by the two parties. | |
And he alluded to demographic change as being one of the very paramount issues. | |
And having had the opportunity to be and interact with him before, candidly, I can tell you that this is a very big moment. | |
Just knowing that This dam has to break. | |
The idea of conservatism has to come to an end, because it is controlled opposition. | |
Well, see, I don't know if it's controlled. | |
Controlled opposition to me means that you pretend to be the opposition, but you are knowingly being manipulated by the other side. | |
Be that as it may, they are certainly a lapdog opposition. | |
They have no fangs, no teeth. | |
But he did say that as far as these really important questions are concerned, we now practically live in a one party state. | |
Yep. | |
And I think he's absolutely right about that. | |
And he did say that all of these absurd little debates that pretend to be serious about the future, they're all just pure fluff on the top of the cake. | |
And the real stuff that matters, nobody talks about. | |
Those are things you and I talk about, Mr. Kersey. | |
But there you go. | |
We'll see. | |
I just hope that he ends up with a huge platform, a super duper megaphone that makes him more influential than ever. | |
But we shall see. | |
Well, he was one of the few journalists, Mr. Taylor, who would interview people like Darren Beatty or Heather MacDonald and have tremendous conversations or Pedro Gonzalez. | |
And they would talk. | |
He interviewed Amy Wax. | |
Amy Wax. | |
You're right. | |
Despite the fact that Amy Wax has been friendly to me, that's one of her major sins. | |
That's one of the reasons I got to pitch her out, because I was actually invited to speak to one of her classes. | |
And it was after this horrible scandal that she spent, I think it was about an hour, hour and a half, one-on-one with Tucker Carlson. | |
But, well, we'll see if he interviews me or you, Mr. Kersey. | |
I think an interview with you about white identity, your book, would be tremendous. | |
I think it would be more than tremendous, but I'm not going to hold my breath until it happens. | |
We will see. | |
You know, there was a video in which he was just lambasting the very idea of white racial consciousness. | |
I suppose you saw that, and apparently it's relatively recent. | |
It was just a week or two before he got fired. | |
He said, the idea of people speaking as white people and suggesting that they represent me, that they're white and I'm white, and therefore we have something in common, this is just awful. | |
He was quite vulgar about it. | |
So I don't know if he's trying to avoid being fired by saying something like that. | |
I just don't know. | |
I'm sure you saw that video. | |
Yeah, well, if he was, it didn't work, did it? | |
It sure didn't. | |
It never does. | |
You know, it's funny. | |
Just one last anecdote. | |
It was 20 years ago this past February that I actually flew up to D.C. | |
to go to CPAC. | |
I was in college and you and I had been emailing and I actually met with you. | |
I think I took the orange line up to Vienna. | |
We went to IHOP and we hung out. | |
I went to see a speaker at CPAC that unfortunately has since passed away. | |
But I remember just thinking even then, it's like, it really is just going to take one voice to really get that audience to really change things. | |
And, you know, we were talking about Bill O'Reilly and his platform, and of course cable news has changed so much as people have cut the cord, but when you go back and you just think about how big that announcement was, and if Elon Musk is going to really allow this type of conversation to take place, Twitter may be the most important platform now. | |
Well, you know, there was just a swath of casualties at Twitter just this last week. | |
James Edwards, who is the host of The Political Cesspool, he, as a tweeter, had survived the pre-Musk era. | |
And it is after Musk came on that he got the axe. | |
Same for Kevin Macdonald. | |
I agree. | |
for Tomislav Sunic, they all were out the door on the same day. | |
Now, there's some speculation that might've been some rogue operator who's still there, | |
but if that's what we're gonna get from Elon Musk, eliminating people who had not been eliminated before, | |
that is deeply disturbing to me. | |
I agree. | |
And there were a number of other individuals as well who had, let's be blunt, much bigger audiences. | |
But James Edwards being kicked off, that doesn't make any sense. | |
There's a guy who is a testament and just a gentleman when it comes to interaction with people. | |
Or, I'll tell you for that matter, a good friend of mine, Kevin MacDonald, his Twitter is not confrontational at all. | |
No, absolutely gentlemanly. | |
Nope, they bit the dust. | |
As usual, no explanation, no appeal. | |
You're gone. | |
Bye bye. | |
Now, I'd been hoping all along that my attempts to be reinstated had just simply been delayed by the backlog, but I'm beginning to think they have decided that when they say you're permanently banned, they mean it. | |
So if that's what we're going to get from Elon Musk, I am deeply disappointed. | |
But let us move along to a Stanford story. | |
Stanford Law School. | |
I believe we talked about this, that in March, Fifth Circuit Appellate Judge Kyle Duncan was supposed to speak to students at Stanford Law School. | |
This is a federal judge, an appellate court judge. | |
Of course, the students disrupted Judge Duncan's remarks, and the school's diversity dean, Tyrion Steinbeck, had egged them on. | |
Well, the law school's dean, Jenny Martinez, had the decency to apologize to the judge. | |
Now, Stanford University's Black Law Student Association has said it will no longer help the university recruit black students. | |
Oh, that's the kiss of death! | |
Boy, if I were them, I'd say, oh, don't throw me in the briar patch! | |
Oh my gosh, can't recruit black students! | |
But anyway, it wrote. | |
The apology to the judge was intimately aligned with white supremacist practices. | |
Of course. | |
I guess that's right. | |
It's a very white thing to apologize when basic free speech norms are violated. | |
I guess it's one of those white things that you wouldn't understand. | |
What the heck? | |
The apology is aligned with white supremacist practices? | |
What does this even mean? | |
This is English. | |
Try to speak English. | |
They're going to say, Stanford's administration has actively marginalized the black community. | |
Boy, they get up in the morning, they roll up their sleeves and say, how can we marginalize these black people? | |
Actively marginalized? | |
Gosh, they're coddled and petted and slobbered over. | |
No, they're actively marginalized. | |
Most recently by scapegoating Dean Tyrion Steinbeck. | |
That actively marginalized the black community. | |
Of course. | |
Of course. | |
The Black Students Association wrote this and then they said they would boycott official admit events for the class of 2026 and encourage prospective students to go elsewhere. | |
Ah, throw me in the power patch. | |
The letter also aired a number of grievances that it said predated the Judge Duncan incident. | |
Stanford had hobbled the group's ability to create a safe space for its members. | |
Boy, I wonder if they wanted half the campus off of themselves. | |
And despite black students' free labor—this is back to slavery, Mr. Kersey—free labor of helping Stanford recruit blacks, the school's admission policies, quote, reproduce and reify white supremacy, classicism, and colorism. | |
Reify. | |
I've never really understood what reify means, but these lefties love to use that word. | |
It reproduces and reifies white supremacy. | |
Well, is it white supremacy? | |
Well, whether it is or not, it reproduces and reifies it. | |
Well, after Martinez apologized to Duncan, 100 students protested her first year of constitutional law course, plastering flyers around her classroom and surrounding her as she exited it. | |
That must have been very unnerving for her. | |
This is the dean, the dean of the law school, and they protest the fact that she apologized to a federal judge that got hooted at and shouted down and couldn't give a talk. | |
What the heck? | |
I mean, that's just a level of absurdity that five years ago, would I have imagined that? | |
Well, I can imagine anything, as I keep telling you, but boy, I would not have imagined it would have occurred to me. | |
But at least two judges now have said they will not hire Stanford Law graduates as clerks. | |
Which is going to be more important to the bureaucrats? | |
Having their people hired for prestigious clerk jobs or getting the black law school students to help hunt down and encourage other blacks to come? | |
Which is it going to be, Mr. Kersey? | |
Where's the smart gunny going to land? | |
I don't have the answer to that. | |
All I can tell you is that you were asking about You can imagine anything. | |
Like, was it five years ago that Charles Murray was with someone who hurt their neck or something when they were chased out of a class? | |
It was Middlebury. | |
Was it Middlebury? | |
It was one of those New England schools, one of those liberal, that's right. | |
Was it as long ago as that? | |
Five years ago now? | |
Yes. | |
They were, I mean, I think he was, he was chased off the stage. | |
They were escorting, she was escorting him away and somebody tugged on her hair. | |
And she got a kind of a whiplash on that. | |
I don't think Charles Murray's been back to a campus since then. | |
And of course, you know, he put out that book that was sort of a response to the Black Lives Matter stuff and even that. | |
Facing reality. | |
Facing reality, it was called. | |
It went nowhere. | |
You know, he finally said, he just threw up his hands. | |
He says, look, If people are not prepared to talk about racial differences in IQ and black crime rates, those are the two things he talked about in that book, Facing Reality. | |
If we're not prepared to face reality, then there's no saving America. | |
He says, I give up. | |
I give up. | |
The country's going to the dogs. | |
And again, but that has to be the core of everything. | |
You know, you and I have talked about it, Kevin. | |
Well, Gregory Hood and I have talked about it. | |
If you don't confront what happened in 1964 with the Civil Rights Act, with the revolutionary legislation, or not legislation, but what that entailed in terms of usurping the Constitution, and this idea that race doesn't matter, that race doesn't exist, that every explanation for disproportionate, whatever you want to use the word, language-wise, We're going to have to believe in anything and that goes to transgendered stuff. | |
That goes to all this nonsense. | |
And so that's why you talk about Tucker Carlson, Mr. Taylor. | |
It's like, Hey Tucker, this is it. | |
This is that cross the racial Rubicon moment. | |
And because if you don't, if you just cross the Rubicon, you're not crossing the true Tigris and Euphrates of where we're going to get our civilization back. | |
Well, I was talking to somebody about Heather MacDonald. | |
I think Heather MacDonald is an absolute national treasure. | |
She has been doing great work for decades, but she does not talk publicly about racial differences in IQ and temperament. | |
And if you are not willing to talk about racial differences, then when somebody comes up to you and says, hey, the races are equal, absolutely geometrical down to the tenth decimal point, equal. | |
And so if they don't perform at the same level, then it's your fault. | |
How are you going to deny that? | |
How are you going to not deny that? | |
You have to be able to say, nope, sorry, a group with an average IQ of 85 and a shorter time preference is just not going to turn out the same way as a group that can defer gratification as a higher, has an average IQ of 100. | |
If you're not able to say that, then it's all just nibbling around the edge. | |
You say, oh, fatherlessness. | |
Well, hey, who caused the fatherlessness? | |
Hmm, white people, bad, bad, bad. | |
No, you've got to grasp the nettle, as the Brits would say, and lay it on the line. | |
And I hope that Tucker, let's assume that he will be in a position where he's really his own boss, and he can say things, and I don't know what he really thinks. | |
Does he understand race, really? | |
After that rant about the horrible consequences of white racial consciousness, I don't know. | |
But be that as it may, this really is a turning point. | |
And as you say, people need to cross the Rubicon. | |
No, no, no, no, the racial Rubicon. | |
The Racial Rubicon. | |
You gotta cross the Racial Rubicon, because again, the Rubicon, okay, that's not enough. | |
It has to be explicit. | |
Well, that's what I mean. | |
That's how you cross the Rubicon. | |
That's, you know, bringing your troops in and you're declaring civil war against the rest of Rome. | |
And that's what we have to do. | |
Somebody has to declare civil war. | |
Somebody with an army. | |
Somebody with an army, a loyal army, has got to cross the Potomac and declare intellectual civil war. | |
I was about to clarify your comments there. | |
Yeah, I want to mention who wrote this article about the whole Stanford fracas, and that is Aaron Sebarium. | |
And I urge people to keep an eye out for this guy's name. | |
Everything I've read by him is really spot on. | |
I've never met him, but I suspect deep down he's one of us. | |
He's got it figured out. | |
Aaron Sebarium. | |
Always well worth reading. | |
Now, as far as sending the country to the dogs, DEI has penetrated deeply into the training of veterinarians, the people who will take care of your pets. | |
The industry apparently was exclusively for white people, and as Cornell University says, building anti-racism in animal welfare is crucial. | |
Apparently, according to the American Veterinary Medical Association, it is pervasive that white pet owners don't want a black veterinarian treating their pet. | |
And apparently that's all the more reason to have as many black veterinarians as possible! | |
So legislation targeting pit bulls might reflect biases against persons of color. | |
Now why would that be? | |
Is that because so many people, so many black people have pit bulls? | |
I mean pit bulls it seems to me are fairly dangerous no matter who owns them. | |
And I believe by far they are the breed that is most often implicated in Biting people, even killing people sometimes. | |
Yeah, that's 100% true. | |
Yeah, if you are ginning up legislation about pit bulls, that's biased towards people of color. | |
Of course, everything's biased towards people of color. | |
Whenever you breathe, whenever you inhale, exhale, that's biased towards people of color. | |
In any case, biases come into play whenever that makes a judgment about treatment. | |
Whenever a judgment is made. | |
And in 2020, the American Veterinary Medical Association set up a commission And it's going to promote the value of diversity, equity, and inclusion. | |
And it's giving guidance to vet schools. | |
Ah, they're going to make DEI positions, incorporate DEI into the profession. | |
It's going to be just like medical school. | |
So, but a majority, and this to me is really the worst thing, a majority of the top 11 vet schools have bias reporting tools that allow for anonymous reporting of alleged DEI violations. | |
This is just the most vicious thing. | |
Anonymous denunciations. | |
This is like the days of the Stasi in East Europe, or East Germany, I mean to say. | |
And under Stalinism, you know, children were welcomed, encouraged to denounce their parents if they listened to Radio Free Europe. | |
And this is a great way, anonymous denunciation, a great way to eliminate rivals, take down your enemies. | |
But I guess just like the veterinary profession, the hideous whiteness of journalism is soon going to come to an end, right? | |
Well, this is an author that I don't suggest you follow. | |
Her name is Janice Gassam Asare. | |
She's a senior contributor at Forbes Magazine, and she says that I help create strategies for more diversity, equity, inclusion, and she is a melanin sister. | |
And this Forbes title kind of blew my mind. | |
It was a recent figure show. | |
The media is still overwhelmingly white. | |
Well, guess what? | |
Recent figures show the NBA and the NFL are still overwhelmingly black. | |
But they don't need diversification one little bit. | |
Nobody cares about that. | |
By the way, I do hate when people say that, like, oh, look at how many people are, look at how many blacks. | |
Okay, yeah, guess what? | |
That's what they want. | |
Diversity means just less white people. | |
That's what they want. | |
Come on. | |
That's right. | |
Come on. | |
A lack of white people is a good thing in a vocation or an avocation. | |
Many of the major media companies in the U.S. | |
remain mostly white, with recent reports indicating that racial diversity is declining. | |
Digiday, a media company that describes itself as a leading voice in the media and marketing industry, reported on the latest figures from top media companies like Condé Nast, Hearst, The New York Times, Vice Media Group, and Vox Media. | |
Now, of course, we should say RIP to BuzzFeed, by the way, Mr. Taylor, which has done so much horrible work in doxing so many wonderful right-wing people and doing everything they can to try and hurt individuals who are on the right. | |
I shed many bitter tears when it buzzed off. | |
No, I definitely didn't. | |
I thought it was a very interesting moment in terms of the market speaking because that was a publicly traded company. | |
But anyways, the report revealed that media companies are still hiring mostly white people for the majority of media companies, even though there is diverse I bet one of the best ways is to hire her! | |
It's the best strategy of all! | |
candidates hired from underrepresented racial groups has declined compared to previous years. | |
Gasp. There are several ways that media companies can address racial diversity. | |
And this article, again, authored by Janice Gassam-Assery, will explore these strategies in more detail. I bet one of | |
the best ways is to hire her. | |
Well, at least the best, the best strategy of all. Hire me. | |
I'll teach you how to be human. | |
So, I. | |
Get those consulting fees so she can get those billable hours and she can just continue to have some fun. | |
Again, the majority of billionaires that own the major American media companies are white when looking specifically at the racial diversity among journalists. | |
Although racial diversity has increased from recent years, journalism is still overwhelmingly white. | |
Again, in the context of this sentence, overwhelmingly white is a Bad thing. | |
It's a pejorative. | |
According to a 2022 Pew Research Center survey, 76% of journalists surveyed were white, 8% Hispanic, 6% black, and only 3% Asian. | |
percent black and only three percent Asian. Does that add up to 100? I don't think it does. | |
90, 93. | |
Or 90, 93. | |
No, it does not. | |
Where's the other 7%? | |
In any case, white people are still 60% of the population, and I bet for the age of journalists, they're probably closer to 65% of the population. | |
So, what is it, 71% it said were white? | |
How many percent? | |
76%. | |
76% as opposed to 65%. | |
That's overwhelming? | |
That's awful? | |
white? How many percent? 76 percent. 76 percent as opposed to 65 percent. That's overwhelming. | |
That's awful. I guess so. She then writes civil rights activist Malcolm X once said, | |
quote, the media's most powerful. | |
The media is the most powerful entity on earth. | |
They have the power to make the innocent guilty and to make the guilty innocent, end quote. | |
The fact that most media companies are white owned, coupled with the fact that the majority are, I'm sorry, one second. | |
Uh, where am I? | |
Sorry, I lost my sentence here. | |
The fact that most media companies are white-owned coupled with the fact that the majority of those writing stories are white means that the news we receive is at greater risk of being white-centered. | |
Oh gosh, another new concept for... | |
Our ever-ever-increasing vocabulary and vernacular here at Radio Gaze. | |
That's right. | |
Yet another sin of the white man. | |
Here's another one for you. | |
Writer Toni Morrison has spoken before about the white gaze and how it shows up in writing. | |
The white gaze can be thought of as the assumed white audience that stories are crafted for. | |
With media companies being overwhelmingly white, the white gaze may be more prevalent in the information that we consume. | |
You know, this is just so absurd. | |
The media bend over backwards. | |
They turn themselves into pretzels trying to hoop up every possible non-white, offbeat, crazy, heterodox kind of a thing. | |
And they also have their own, the root is black. | |
Doesn't AOL have black voices, Hispanic voices? | |
There's BET. | |
All this stuff, this stuff, it's absolutely the other way around. | |
But of course, this girl, this girl makes a living telling people how to be more diverse, so she's got to hoop this stuff up. | |
I used to follow a lot of those black news sites. | |
I've forgotten. | |
It's The Root and... The Griot. | |
The Griot. | |
Was it Black Planet? | |
They all had significant corporate financing. | |
Oh, gosh. | |
They have all this fancy advertising as if everybody who reads The Griot must drive a Mercedes or a Porsche and live in a hundred thousand, sorry, live in million dollar houses. | |
It's quite incredible. | |
All of this fancy advertising. | |
American Renaissance could never get advertising like that. | |
When was the last time you were in a commercial, and Scott, any advertising? | |
Oh, we get these sort of offbeat, weird things, you know. | |
The only advertising we can get for a while is, you know, the 20 best, prettiest legs in Hollywood kind of stuff. | |
We didn't really want to go for that. | |
But, oh, we occasionally get advertising. | |
It's very low grade. | |
I would love to know who has the best legs in Hollywood right now. | |
Anyways, the article goes on. | |
It's insane. | |
It's inane. | |
And it is a reminder again of, you know, I don't like that word grifter either, but this is a racial grifter. | |
This is somebody who is trying to ply her ways just to be like, oh, this is awful. | |
But it's like, wait a second, you've got, you have entire channels devoted, like you said, verticals devoted exclusively to black news. | |
And come on. | |
And you've got nothing devoted to white news, nothing, nothing. | |
And she would say, oh, well, MSNBC, NBC, CBS, they're all run by white people. | |
That's all white gays. | |
Boy, as I say, they are bending over backwards all the time to be as un-white as possible. | |
Meanwhile, back to another DEI story here. | |
You will have thought of this. | |
I would have thought of this, but probably a lot of people haven't. | |
But HCBUs, Historically Black Colleges and Universities, they rarely have any diversity, equity, and inclusion administrators or policies. | |
For the reasons you just cited, they're already diverse. | |
The fewer white people, the better. | |
Howard University, our vice president, Kamala Harris' alma mater, has no DEI office. | |
Neither does Jackson State or Grambling State, two famous HBCUs. | |
No DEI plans. | |
North Carolina's public HBCUs. | |
Very little DEI on campus. | |
Differences of race, gender, religion are supposed to enrich our work pace and make for a great national strength. | |
In fact, according to Joe Biden, they're our greatest national strength. | |
And at least 75% of the students at these schools are black. | |
Only 8% are white, 2% Latino, and 1% are Asian. | |
Nobody's asking them to be more diverse. | |
Hmm. | |
Why not? | |
More than two-thirds of all degrees at HBCUs are conferred on female students. | |
Now, no one is demanding that Texas Southern, one of the largest HBCUs, admit more whites, although its student body is more than 90% black. | |
I guess that's a safe space for black people. | |
White people would make it dangerous. | |
There'd be institutional violence, and the buildings would fall down on them if white people walked around campus. | |
Fewer than 30% of the engineering students nationwide are female, so programs exist to promote women, when, you know, only 30. | |
But, you know, if only 10% of the whites are people of white age, nobody's trying to get more of them. | |
Fewer than 25% of the education students are men. | |
But no programs exist to try to get men to become teachers. | |
And so, of course, the real definition of diversity means fewer whites, fewer men. | |
And HBCUs are not expected to have a DEI apparatus because they already embody the true spirit of fewer whites, fewer men. | |
So they are already diverse, even if they're entirely and 100 percent and completely and evermore will be black. | |
So, let's see. | |
There is, you know, let's move to Africa, where salvation comes in strange ways. | |
Let's not move to Africa. | |
This is rhetorically. | |
We will move the program to move to Africa. | |
In fact, to coastal Kenya, where Paul McKenzie runs this little, I don't know quite what to call it, but he calls it the Good News International Church. | |
I think by the time I've gotten through this, you might have another name for it. | |
But there was a tip-off from members of the public that led police to raid the pastor's property in the town of Malindi. | |
Again, this is the Good News International Church. | |
They found 15 emaciated people, including four who later died. | |
Now, these 15 said they were starving on the pastor's instructions in order to meet Jesus. | |
Well, I guess that's one way to do it. | |
Authorities recovered at least 58 bodies from mass graves. | |
They arrested McKenzie, who himself went on hunger strike. | |
I guess hold him long enough and he'd meet Jesus, too. | |
But they released him, and he's on bail for the equivalent of $700. | |
He's been arrested twice before in 2019 and in March of this year in relation to the deaths of children. | |
And each time he's released on bond. | |
And since justice grinds slow in Kenya, they're still working their way through the court. | |
But as this article notes, cults are common in Kenya. | |
Last year, the body of a British woman who died at the house of a different cult leader while on holiday has been exhumed. | |
And the family's lawyer said that—catch this name of the British woman who died—Lufthunissa Kwandwala. | |
That's the British moon. | |
That's a common name in Yorkshire, I understand. | |
Lufthunissa Kwandwala. | |
They say that she was visiting Mombasa when she died and was buried a day later, and they are claiming foul play. | |
In any case, that's the news from Kenya. | |
And I got a little news from Haiti for you, too. | |
Haiti may be a sign of things to come, and I'll explain why. | |
You may have followed this story, but a mob in the Haitian capital beat and burned 13 suspected gang members to death with gasoline-soaked tires after pulling the men from police custody at a traffic stop. | |
The vigilante violence underlined public anger over the increasingly lawless situation in Port-au-Prince, Where criminal gangs have taken over an estimated 60% of the city since July 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moise. | |
Moise, by the way, is how you say Moses in French. | |
So he was leading his people to the promised land, but he was assassinated. | |
Oh, dear. | |
There were six more burned bodies laid out in a nearby neighborhood later the same day. | |
Some witnesses said that the police killed them. | |
And then the residents got them and set them on fire just to make sure they didn't come back zombies I guess. | |
Yes! | |
Officers in the city's Canape Verde section stopped and searched a minibus for contraband and had confiscated weapons from the suspects before they were lynched. | |
This is back to the previous story. | |
The statement from the police did not elaborate on how members of the crowd were able to take control of the suspects. | |
Well, I guess they'd been disarmed, but the police, you know, you'd think maybe the police said, you know, quietly, yeah, yeah, these guys are bad. | |
They beat them, they stoned them, then they put tires around them, poured gasoline over them, and burned them. | |
Pretty gruesome stuff. | |
Of course, that's the way they did things in South Africa. | |
Back when under apartheid, this is an act of great blow for freedom, burn people to death. | |
An AP reporter at the scene saw 13 bodies burning in the street. | |
Can you imagine that? | |
No, I can't. | |
In the nearby area of Turgot, just a few minutes drive from Canapé Verde, witnesses said the police killed six gang members. | |
The local residents dragged the bodies from where they fell into a central location and made a bonfire out of them. | |
Well, you know, I hate to say this, but several times on this podcast, we've talked about police just not doing the job in Portland and New York City and Los Angeles. | |
Well, not just last week, we were courting some Los Angeles police officers. | |
He don't come, don't come to LA, he says. | |
We can't guarantee your safety. | |
Well, maybe that's where we're headed. | |
Because being burned to death would discourage criminals, I should think. | |
You would think so, but again, You know, not advocating anything. | |
We're just discussing what's happening in the Western Hemisphere's oldest black republic. | |
Yes, this is not an advocacy program. | |
We just lay out things as we see it. | |
Now, this is really something. | |
Youthful hijinks in Northwest D.C. | |
Early Sunday morning. | |
That's just this lab. | |
Two teenagers, 15-year-olds, were accused of robbing more than 10 people in just five hours. | |
Now, these are precocious kids, 15 years old. | |
It started on the 2600 block of Georgia Avenue, and the suspects took a gun and demanded the victim's car keys. | |
So, off they go in the car. | |
And then 30 minutes later, they get out of the car, take out a gun, rob another victim. | |
Get back in the car, drive away. | |
Then they pulled over again and approached at least two people. | |
One of them took out a gun, robbed the victim before beating them. | |
They get back in the car, drive away. | |
10 minutes later, they pull over. | |
One takes out a gun, robs the victim. | |
Then they drive away. | |
Ten minutes later, they pull over again, push a victim against the wall before robbing him. | |
Six minutes later, they get out of the car, approach people on Ontario Road, took out their guns, robbed them, get in the car, drive away. | |
This is all in one night, and we're not finished yet. | |
Just before 4 a.m., they pulled over in Northeast, they walked up to a person, took out a gun, demanded he hand over his keys. | |
So now they both have a car. | |
Wow! | |
So now they're driving around in tandem. | |
One in the first stolen car, the other in the second stolen car. | |
Then they next, one minute later, one minute later, they approach a person on 17th Street. | |
One of the teenagers takes a gun out, robs the victim before beating him. | |
They drive away. | |
Shortly before 5 30 a.m. | |
the suspect robbed another person at gunpoint. | |
On U Street, after assaulting him, they drove away. | |
Five minutes later, they rob another person on 1200 Block, 28th Street at gunpoint, hop back in their cars, and drive away. | |
Three minutes later, they approach yet another person on Wisconsin Avenue, rob the gunpoint, off they go. | |
Four minutes later, pull over on Connecticut Avenue, point a gun at a victim, another suspect takes his phone. | |
The final robbery was just before 5.45 a.m. | |
Out with the gun, rob the victim, and after that, they buggered off. | |
Well, they apparently caught these two guys, two 15-year-olds. | |
Two 15-year-olds! | |
Well, they have been arrested. | |
Two enterprising 15-year-olds, by the way. | |
Wow. | |
Precocious. | |
Yes. | |
Good time management. | |
I'll say. | |
Yeah. | |
Wow. | |
Now, this must be some kind of youth Olympic record, it seems to me. | |
But, now, you think they'll face any jail time, or will it be restorative justice, or counseling, you know? | |
But, you know, as I say, if this sort of thing keeps happening, and it's not all that difficult for me to imagine it keeping happening, there might be necklacings in D.C., too. | |
Got people running around doing stuff like that. | |
But, anyway, our time has come to an end, Mr. Kersey, and we should make an announcement as to how people can reach us, beginning with you. | |
Yeah, we'll start with me because this was a really fast hour. | |
But we love hearing from each and every one of you. | |
Thank you for listening. | |
All you have to do go to your email provider to in the to field, send an email to me at because we live here at protonmail.com. | |
Once again, it's because we live here at protonmail.com or you can Now, I'm not necessarily interested in hearing from each and every one of you. | |
If you've got something really interesting to say, especially if we've made a mistake, something you need to call our attention to, I'd love to hear from you under those circumstances. | |
But you can go to amren.com. | |
A-M-R-E-N.com. | |
Hit the Contact Us tab and send me a message. | |
We really do love hearing from you. | |
We really do. | |
Mr. Curtis is absolutely right about that. | |
And it is our honor and privilege to spend this time with you. | |
And we look forward to doing the same Next week. |