Jared Taylor and Paul Kersey dissect the Tucker Carlson email that the NYT claims got him fired. They also discuss Jordan Neely, the Southern non-border, more Biden idiocy, and sexual starvation in France and the United States.
I'm your host, Jared Taylor, and with me is my indispensable co-host, none other than Paul Kersey.
How are you today, Mr. Kersey?
It is May 5th, and in America, we just call it May 5th, so I'm doing great!
Yes, it's a brilliant, brilliant morning where I am, and I hope it's the same for you.
I hope it's the same for all our listeners all around the world, whether it's morning or midnight.
As usual, let us start with comments from listeners.
A listener sends us a letter from the president of Portland State University addressed to all students, and let me quote from it.
Recent headlines pointed out that anti-trans bills in legislatures across the country have doubled since last year.
At Portland State, we are committed to being a safe space for all members of the LGBTQIA plus community to learn and thrive.
Our colleagues at the Queer Resource Center, in parentheses, it says QRC, offer many resources and opportunities to connect and support.
Next week, the QRC will host Trans and Gender Expansive Celebration and Community Hour.
Gender-expansive.
Are you gender-expansive, Mr. Kersey?
I'm expansive in many ways, but not in gender.
No, I am gender-restricted.
Yes.
And proud of it.
I'm not gender-expansive.
And then, this is the punchline, this letter goes on to say, cotton candy, temporary tattoos, and coloring will be available.
Please bring your Portland State University I.D.
So they wouldn't let you in, Mr. Kersey, because you don't have a P.S.U.
I.D.
So you won't get any temporary tattoos, cotton candy, and you're not going to be allowed to color.
Shouldn't that I.D.
be expansive as well and not restrictive?
That's a good point.
Wait a second.
Well, but see, this is gender expansive, not student expansive.
And our listener writes to say, If these people were any more immature, they'd be wearing diapers.
I'm sure some of them are, actually.
They probably are, yes.
It should say, cotton candy, temporary tattoos, coloring, and diapers.
Wow.
Boy oh boy, it's a brave new world.
And another comment.
Thank you for your fantastic podcasts.
Well, you're welcome.
Listener, we do our best.
Jackson, Mississippi is beyond ruined, he writes.
Now, you and I have mentioned this from time to time.
Jackson, Mississippi, which used to be a great city, named, of course, for President Andrew Jackson.
Our listener goes on to say, I did a YouTube search for a current look at the mess.
One of the videos by someone calling himself Hood Time.
It's dated February 11th, 2023, and it paints a picture of Jackson.
It's worse than Zimbabwe.
The title of the YouTube video is Jackson, Mississippi versus Memphis, Tennessee hoods.
And by hoods, they're not talking about, well, they're talking about neighborhoods.
He goes on to say, only God knows how we can stop this plague from spreading more destruction to this country.
I looked it up.
And yes, Jackson, Mississippi versus Memphis, Tennessee hoods.
It's this typical drive-by.
You see these videos of Baltimore, Philadelphia, Detroit, and this one is comparing Jackson and Memphis, and I'm not sure which is worse.
But this is also part of our Brave New World.
And another part of that Brave New World is this excitement that took place on the New York City subway.
Now, you know more about it than I do, so do tell our listeners—of course, it's going all around the world here, this little episode between a white ex-Marine and a black man.
So, take it away, Mr. Kersey.
Yeah, we'll just keep this one short and sweet and to the point, we can talk about it.
Basically, you have this individual who's 30 years old, Jordan Neely.
He was a black homeless man, who apparently was also a Michael Jackson impersonator.
And when I was preparing all this, I didn't know this, but about 10 years ago, Mr. Taylor,
there was a Reddit thread which warned people to stay away from the Michael Jackson impersonator
because he was becoming increasingly erratic and dangerous.
Jordan Neely.
This very guy?
This very guy, yeah.
This very guy.
So he was 20 then at the time.
Now he was 30 years old.
You can watch the video.
I'm reading this from heavy.com right now, but he basically started threatening people.
Mind you, he's been arrested 40 times.
The latest incident, I believe, was for punching a 67-year-old in the face.
40 times.
Arrested 40 times.
A lot of people like that.
A lot of people like that walking around this country, especially in New York.
They specialize in that.
Especially in Soros-funded DA areas, like with Alvin Bragg.
So basically, you have to wonder, how many times has this guy done stuff he got away with if he's been arrested 40 times?
Just real quick, I'm Reid from Heavy.
Major crimes in the subway system have dropped 16% from October 22nd through January 2023.
The city's treatment of mentally ill and homeless people has also raised concern.
So according to CBS News, The white man who put Neely in a chokehold is a 24-year-old Marine veteran.
CBS reported that the man restrained Neely because he had been acting radically on a train in a station in the SoHo area of Manhattan.
He was taken into custody but released without criminal charges, according to the New York Post.
Now, his name has not been released, but he's a blonde-haired guy and he put on this chokehold.
Here's what Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said in regard to the chokehold that ended up killing Neely.
Well, he was just restraining the guy.
He was restraining him, but he does put on some sort of jujitsu or hold to restrict him.
Here's what Alvin Bragg says, quote, This is a solemn and serious matter that ended the tragic loss of Jordan Neely's life.
life as part of our rigorous ongoing investigation.
We will review the medical examiner's report, assess all available video and footage,
identify and interview as many witnesses as possible and obtain additional medical records.
The investigation is being handled by senior experienced prosecutors and we will provide
an update when there is additional public information So, a freelance journalist recorded the viral video.
And this has gone viral.
The video was recorded by a freelance journalist named Juan Alberto Vasquez.
Happy Cinco de Mayo, Mr. Vasquez, who posted on his Facebook page Lucas de Nueva York.
He also posted a detailed account of what he saw writing.
Excuse me.
that Neely yelled, quote, I don't have food, I don't have to drink, I'm fed up, I don't mind
going to jail and getting life in prison. I'm ready to die, end quote. Well, you know, that's a scary thing.
If some crazy man on the subway says, I'm ready to die, you don't know whether he's going to whip out a gun or a knife or a bomb.
If he's ready to die, that's almost a warning.
You better be ready to die, too.
I'm sure it was a very intimidating and unpleasant experience for everybody on that subway.
I also read that he had been throwing garbage at fellow passengers, but maybe that's true.
Maybe that's not.
But this, you know, when I see these videos of people smashing and grabbing jewelry in broad daylight, accosting people, knocking them down, all of this polar bear hunting, the knockout game, it makes me angry as heck.
I want to get my hands on those people and wring their necks.
And the more this happens, and the less the police intervene, and of course the police are being hobbled and hamstrung, defunded, The more people are going to say, I've had enough.
I'm going to step in.
And who knows?
This guy could have been like one of those bums who pushes people off a subway into an oncoming train.
You never know.
And I think it's great that a lot of people see this guy as a hero.
I don't think anybody thinks that he was determined to kill him.
This was a mistake.
He's trying to restrain him, trying to hold him down.
They'll tell him what this nut is going to do.
And unfortunately, he dies.
And even the New York Times, In their account of it, I was surprised at the number of commenters who say, I've been on the subway so many times, been scared, and I'm delighted that somebody stepped in and did something too bad for this guy, but he is no loss to New York.
So we'll see what happens.
What's your bet as to whether he'll be charged?
Well, that's an important point.
Uh, it turns out that, uh, you know, if you watch the video, what's fascinating about the video is that there's a black guy who's also helping subdue the, uh, the Michael Jackson impersonator.
And, uh, everyone's fed up every, you know, people are cheering on, uh, you know, this is a moment where it's kind of, it's, it's fascinating because the medical examiner ruled that he died from compression of the neck.
And I believe, The death was ruled a homicide by the medical examiner's
office.
So that's not fun when you think about what Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg could
potentially do here.
If you go back and think about what the Manhattan DA did to that, I don't know, Indian or whatever
that bodega owner who shot and killed someone.
I think it was a spank.
Yeah, you're right.
It was Hispanic.
So happy Cinco de Mayo to him too.
But he was charged initially and that created outrage.
Well, you're thinking of two different cases.
One was a bodega owner.
He stabbed a guy.
That's right.
Then another guy, he was in a parking garage and somebody pulls a gun on him.
He wrestles the gun away from him and the gun goes off and the attacker gets shot in the stomach.
The guy was initially charged and taken to Rikers Island.
The guy who was wrestling with him.
But he ended up not being charged.
Just crazy, crazy stuff.
We'll see.
But I'm very glad to see that this Marine has fans.
He's got a lot of fans, and I think he's got a lot of fans within the New York City Police Department, which of course is one of those police departments that is experiencing record shortages.
And as recruitment is down, this is one of those moments.
It's anarcho-tyranny again.
And again, what you were talking about, I don't know, this might be an interesting segue, your thoughts on this enrages you.
And I think a lot of people see this.
There's another story that I think illustrates how weird the left and right is on Twitter.
that Home Depot, the white guy who was shot by the people who were trying to just rob
Yeah.
a Home Depot.
Like he lost his life because again, in California you have this situation where you can basically
steal up to what, $950 and not have a charge against you?
Basically.
Yeah.
You just get a ticket.
Yeah.
Show up at court if you feel like it.
Yeah.
And so we're at a point now where some people, an increasingly large number of people want
civilization versus this lawlessness.
And I think this is one of those moments where, you know.
I really don't know what I would do if I saw people just running wild.
It makes me furious.
It is just such an in-your-face violation of all the normal rules.
I might do something very foolish.
I hope not, but it just enrages me and I think it probably enrages all normal healthy people.
And the more lawlessness there is out there and the more it is unchecked, people are going to take things into their own hands.
I'm sorry, this guy died.
Well, I'm not very sorry, frankly, but people are going to die and that's too bad, but people have had enough.
Well, it's an indictment of our criminal justice system.
This guy should have been in jail.
He should never have gone out.
42 arrests.
And I'm going to pose a query to you.
He was arrested most recently in November of 2021 on felony assault charges after being accused of slugging a 67-year-old female stranger in the face.
There was a warrant issued.
What do you think the odds are that woman was a white woman?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I mean, these guys, these cuckoo guys, they can be violent with anybody, but could very well have been a white woman.
And just a stranger, walk up to a stranger and slug her.
I mean, people like that in primitive societies, say Eskimos, if people who behave like that, they just get pushed off an ice floe, or they take them quietly out and take care of them.
You just can't have people like that walking around.
But we have plenty of them.
Well, shall we move on to Tucker Carlson?
Uh, you know what, I was actually going to try and ask you to do that because I think that the way that you spoke about your, uh, the way that these stories enrage you and the feeling you get, I think that's actually, I get it, but that's also one of the reasons why Mr. Taylor of the New York Times stated Tucker Carlson might have been axed Well, you know, there seem to be so many theories about why he was fired, and everybody seems to know.
I don't think anybody except him and somebody at Fox actually knows, but everybody's speculating.
I don't care to speculate.
The latest story from the New York Times is that the following email message that he sent was a crucial component in the decision to fire him.
I'll read the whole thing, because I think it's worth talking about.
This was something that came out in litigation with Dominion, and I would like to note this email message was under protective order.
Somebody leaked that.
That is a crime.
Nobody seems to be talking about this.
This is a private communication that is supposed to be under wraps.
Nobody's talking about the fact that somebody violated a judge's legal order.
Lawyers who do this get disbarred.
Nobody seems to be worried.
But apparently he wrote on January 7, 2021, A couple of weeks ago I was watching a video of people fighting on the street in Washington.
A group of Trump guys surrounded an Antifa kid and started pounding the living shit out of him.
It was three against one, at least.
Jumping a guy like that is dishonorable, obviously.
It's not how white men fight.
That seems to be one of the key phrases.
Yet suddenly I found myself rooting for the mob against the man, hoping they'd hit him harder, kill him.
I really wanted them to hurt the kid.
I could taste it.
Then somewhere deep in my brain an alarm went off.
This isn't good for me.
I'm becoming something I don't want to be.
The Antifa creep is a human being.
Much as I despise what he says and does, much as I'm sure I'd hate him personally if I knew him, I shouldn't gloat over his suffering.
I should be bothered by it.
I should remember that somewhere, somebody probably loves this kid and would be crushed if he were killed.
If I don't care about these things, if I reduce people to their politics, how am I better than he is?
That is the complete quote.
Now, I don't think that this got him fired.
This is a rather introspective and in some respects humbling observation by a guy who is considered by many people to be this heartless brute who hates everybody who's unlike himself, To me, if there's anything that the other side might get excited about, it's because, he says, it's not how white men fight.
If there's a real crime here, that's probably it.
The fact that you want your political enemy to be beaten up, and then you realize that is an ignoble feeling.
I think that is probably more common than people like to admit.
In fact, a lot of people, when they talk about white people, they say, kill them all.
That's not an uncommon expression on Twitter and in the media in general.
Just get rid of us all.
Now, this idea, of course, about it's not how white men fight.
Mr. Kurz, you and I have seen countless videos.
I mean video that the cell phones with cameras in them mean that there are videos all over the place of things that never were circulated before.
And there is no end to videos of mobs of black people attacking one guy.
Just recently, there was one shot in a gas station, and it's three or four guys, and they're attacking another black man.
He's down on the ground, utterly unconscious, and they are stomping on his head, kicking him as hard as they can, stomping on his neck.
And the lady who's taking the video is a black woman.
They're going to kill him!
He's going to be dead!
He's going to be dead!
And it really looks that way.
Just a merciless, ruthless kind of thing.
You don't often see white people doing that.
That is the fact of the matter.
And my guess is that's what Tucker Carlson was thinking.
Uh, what do you think about this quotation?
Is it something that you think should get a guy fired?
No, I think... Well, actually... Or that would have gotten a guy fired.
I want to juxtapose it with kind of what you thought when you thought about this Jordan Neely guy and what you felt.
I think a lot of people feel justified.
They feel justified in their, in their acrimony to a situation that is so egregious to their, to their sensibilities.
And that's what Tucker's talking about.
And he's having an inner monologue here where it's like, wait a second, I'm, am I, am I going to debase myself and lose my humanity in this inhumane situation or do we just leave?
And I think that's the fundamental question here of, of the whole left, right, great divorce debate.
Like this can't go on much longer.
We're going to see this summer, there's going to be, right now they're talking about doing some protests here, I'm not in New York, but they're talking about doing a protest in New York City for this Jordan Neely guy.
It's like, why does the left continue to choose these martyrs that, if you just take a moment, you can look through them like Swiss cheese?
At some point, they're going to name a train station for Jordan Neely.
No, they're not.
It's not going to go that far.
We'll find out.
The point is, I don't think Tucker got fired for that.
I actually don't think what he said is that bad.
I think there's nothing wrong with it at all.
It's an honest and revealing and, in some respects, saddening sentiment.
I don't have the killer instinct.
I wrote an essay about it once.
It's in my book called If We Do Nothing.
And it was a very sobering thing.
I remember once watching a guy mug a guy and just run off.
And he ran right by me and I did nothing.
And I fretted over that for years.
Well then I saw the same thing happen.
This is in New York City.
New York City in fact.
And I saw something and because I had fretted about this and beaten myself up but I've not done anything.
I was with my mom.
She had two big shopping bags and had just come out of Saks Fifth Avenue.
I took off after that guy, and I was furious, and he ran down into a subway, and he ran onto a platform, and he ran up another set of stairs, and I heard myself bellowing at him.
I'm gonna get you!
And he came up, and I tackled him on the sidewalk.
Took him down.
And I flipped him over on his back and said, what'd you take?
And he just put his head back and he opened his hands and he had a necklace.
If he had resisted me, I would have beaten, as Tucker Carlos says, the living shit out of him.
But he went completely limp and all my fury drained out of me like I'd been a popped balloon.
And I just, I took the necklace out of his hands and I said, never do that again.
I led him up and I kicked him hard in the rump, and off he went.
But to me, as soon as he was non-resistant, all of my anger and fury and desire to murder
this guy disappeared.
And so that's why to me it's so shocking when you've got somebody knocked out and people
are stomping on his throat, kicking him in the head.
This is just alien to me.
I don't like it one bit.
Well, I didn't mean to talk about that, actually.
But all of this is part of a kind of viciousness that seems to pervade society.
And for Tucker Carlson, for political reasons, to want this guy beaten up and maybe killed That's farther than I go.
I suppose it's because I get a sense that so many people want me killed because of my politics.
That is just a bad way to be, and I'm glad he's got enough of a conscience to say, I don't want to be that way.
Well, you have to also think about two things.
One, Tucker was working one night, it might have been 2017, 2018, I don't remember the date, but a massive group of largely white, probably mentally ill Antifa went to his home, and they tried to kick his door down.
Yeah, yeah, he had to leave Georgetown yet. You know, he no longer I think he is in Florida and Maine now
You know in any ways the point is so he experienced it firsthand and then going back to your visceral reaction to
to criminality and to just the
The underdregs of society, you know I grew up in the suburbs of Atlanta went to Atlanta all the
time and rode Marta and I you know it was it was amazing to have that experience when you go
from pristine streets and an amazing golf cart path community to seeing just this is
what we fled.
I get it.
And at a young age, at a young age, I knew that.
And and instead of ever thinking, you know, unfortunately, people who live in in downtown Lennon, these cities, they're willing to put themselves in these situations.
Metro, you know, train, you know, transportation should be a very good form of easy transportation to get around.
But when you experience that unpleasant person who starts yelling at you, like I remember going to the airport one time and this person just got up and started Bemoaning all the white people on the cart and he actually urinated everywhere and was just yelling at everyone and at the next stop I want to say I can't remember which one it was but I just said you know what I'm not gonna subject myself to this I got out and got into the car and Probably a lot of people do.
It's very unnerving.
It's very unnerving.
It's unnerving Yeah, it's unnerving.
They just had the music playing really loud and there's signs everywhere that say hey you have to have ear earplugs and it's it's just it's it's a different world and this is you know, it's I think this is one of those moments where if they arrest this guy, if they arrest this Marine, I think that's going to be, that's going to really get a lot of people talking.
Oh, yes.
They're already talking.
Well, there are a lot of stories to cover and we didn't mean to spend so much time on this.
So let us move to the Southern border, Mr. Kersey.
Over 73,000 illegals crossed the border in the last 10 days, according to the U.S.
Border Patrol.
They admitted that a further 17,000 illegal gotaways slipped in, according to their estimations.
And all of this is reaching fever pitch ahead of the end of Title 42, which is scheduled for May 11th, just a week from today.
Now, what Title 42 ending, of course, means is we no longer have these medical reasons for kicking them out.
I don't think we need any medical reasons.
We should just kick them out.
But Title 42 ending is going to make a difference.
In the last 72 hours on Monday, said Border Patrol Chief Raul Ortiz, 22,220 people were arrested on the southern border.
That's a huge number of people.
He also said 51,560 were caught at the border in the previous week.
Thousands are handing them in every day to agents in attempt to claim asylum.
Officials have said this is a preview of what is to come when Title 42 ends.
Now, Texas Governor Greg Abbott, he said Monday that the federal government is expecting up to 13,000 illegal immigrants to cross the U.S.-Mexico border each day after 42 expires.
Now, maybe you can figure out how many that'll be in a year.
13,000 while I talk.
Responding to Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who pleaded with him to stop busing migrants to her city, Abbott said, this is not a Texas problem.
This is a problem for the entire United States.
To provide much needed relief to our overrun border communities, Texas began busing migrants to sanctuary cities.
And until Biden secures a border, Texas will continue this necessary program.
So, stick it in your ear, Lori, is basically what he's saying.
And if I could interrupt you real quick, just, uh, you asked me with 13,000 per day, correct?
Yes.
That would be 4,745,000 per, 4,745,000 per year.
Nearly 5 million a year.
Nearly 5 million a year.
So you're talking about, uh, population of what?
That's the population of Alabama and Mississippi.
So.
Yeah.
Here they come.
Here they come.
Your new neighbors.
Here they come.
Yes, in Brownsville, 6,371 were taken into custody last week.
And officials expect anywhere between 12,000 to 40,000 migrants may be poised on the Mexican side, just across from Brownsville, ready to hop as soon as Title 42 ends.
City blocks in El Paso were lined with them, sleeping in the streets.
They've already gotten over.
And agents said in the last 10 days, they were able to stop 19 known sex offenders, six known gang members, and one known convicted murderer.
Now, what are they going to do with them?
Probably just send them back where they came from.
They can try to cross again, along with the thousands and thousands and thousands who are coming our way.
And at the same time, in just the last 10 days, the feds seized over 2,624 pounds of drugs.
2,000 pounds.
That's a ton.
2,624 pounds of drugs.
Probably enough to get practically everyone in America high.
The Biden administration will send—now this is the most pathetic thing you can imagine—1,500 active duty troops to the U.S.-Mexico border.
They're not going to be involved in law enforcement or catching illegals.
They're going to do data entry.
They're going to support warehouses.
And these would join 2,700 National Guard members already there.
All they do is help process the people who come in.
What this means is illegals get a military escort into the United States.
What a joke, what a pathetic joke of a country we have.
In any case, this is what Joe Biden, Joe Biden rang the intercom even before he was elected.
He says, oh, we can be nice to all these illegal immigrants who want to come be good Americans.
But back to Lori Lightfoot.
This was an article in The Wall Street Journal.
They took they took a reasonably acceptable stance.
They said posturing as a sanctuary city used to be fun when it meant resisting Donald Trump.
But now the migrant crisis is everywhere.
We simply have no more shelters, spaces, or resources, Mayor Lightfoot says.
And since last summer, when Mr. Abbott began sending busloads of migrants to Chicago, she says, we have shouldered the responsibility of caring for more than 8,000 men, women, and children with no resources of their own.
Oh, the poor dear.
Well, that's nothing compared to El Paso, a much smaller place, which declared a state of emergency as it braces for the end of Title 42.
Ms.
Lightfoot says the national immigration problem will not be solved by passing on the responsibility to other cities.
The Washington Journal says the burden of this humanitarian crisis shouldn't fall only on border states and the virtue of Mr. Abbott's approach is in making progressives confronted.
The website for Ms.
Lightfoot's failed re-election campaign brags that she ended police collaboration with ICE.
And terminated ICE access to city databases.
She's proud of that now.
And signed an executive order so city benefits don't depend on citizenship.
Oh boy.
You reap what you sow, Lori, baby.
And the Wall Street Journal goes on to say, America's immigration problems won't be fixed until Ms.
Lightfoot's Democrat Party wakes up from this progressive daydream.
Well, that's putting it mildly.
And just one thing on the immigration business.
There was a little septu between Karine Jean-Pierre, our black lesbian press secretary for the President of the United States.
She became visibly agitated on Tuesday when pressed on her claim from day earlier that illegal immigration was down 90 percent under the Biden administration.
What utter folly and foolishness.
How could those words even escape her mouth?
But during the daily press briefing, Fox News White House correspondent Peter Doocy asked Jean-Pierre where she got that 90% number.
And he went on to point out that there were 136,000 more encounters this fiscal year than the previous one.
That's not down.
That's up.
Jean-Pierre appeared annoyed, interrupted Ducey, and seemingly tried to stop him from asking his full question while accusing him of, believe it or not, being dramatic.
That's our press secretary.
Now, Mr. Kersey, you have a very surprising story, as I recall, about hate crime charges being brought against a black murderer.
Yeah, this is in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
So we have a situation where the headline again, it's news on six out of Tulsa.
Prosecutors say murder suspect targeted victims because they were white.
Again, I'm going to read that again.
Prosecutors say murder suspect targeted victims because they were white.
That's the headline.
So Tulsa prosecutors have charged the man accused of murdering two innocent victims with a hate crime.
Carlton Guilford shot and killed London Hathcock at the D.A.
Steve Kunzweiler said, based on the evidence, they believe Guilford shot both men because they were white.
Oklahoma's hate crime is called malicious intimidation or harassment, and it's a misdemeanor.
Quote, the information suggests that race played a role in it, and I feel that it is something we can prove and it is something that a judge or jury obviously needs to listen to.
So we will present that information along with everything else, the D.A.
said.
He's charged with two counts of first-degree murder, Mr. Taylor, for killing Hathcock and McDaniel, and two counts of shooting with intent to kill for shooting at two QT employees who were not hurt.
Investigators say Guilford shot both men in the head from behind.
Good grief.
Wow.
They say Guilford continued to shoot McDaniel after he was already on the ground and even reloading his gun and shot McDaniel again in the head.
And McDaniel was the gentleman who worked for Quick Trip.
It's been outlawed and prosecutors say that's needed in order to keep people safe.
Quote, whenever you were talking about the dynamic where the safety of the public is at risk, in my mind, somebody who's killing somebody or doing harm towards someone who they don't know, that really amps things up.
They won't release any details about why they believe it was a hate crime.
That information will come out later during the court process.
But again, this is one of those stories.
Wow.
And this is one of those stories practically nobody's heard about, whereas in New York City, where a guy tries to restrain, a white guy tries to restrain a black man, no obvious racial motivation, and the guy happens to die.
That's cross-country news.
That's big, big news.
I hadn't even heard about this case.
Yeah, well, it's funny you say that because, you know, I hate the whole, oh my God, the double standard thing, you know, because that's, that's, that should be on the grave.
That should be the epitaph of conservatism.
Imagine if rules were reversed.
Well, no, come on, you idiot.
It's, it's, we're, we're, we're in a hostile country right now.
Come on, we're, we're occupied citizens.
Don't imagine like this is what they want.
Do you recall about a month ago, there was a story at a St.
Louis, a white guy was just sitting there, a homeless guy on the street.
And then all of a sudden this black guy walks up and shoots him in the head.
Yeah, that was charming.
And again, so here's a homeless situation in St. Louis, where you've got a well, you
did have a Soros appointed DA, Kim, she's now gone.
She actually resigned, which is amazing news.
I don't think we're gonna talk about that this week.
We'll talk about it next week, but just juxtapose those two.
Is there any indication in that story as to what this guy's motive even appeared to be, other than just pure racial animus?
He just walks up to two guys and shoots them in the back of the head right from behind.
Just pure execution style.
Ambush.
Precisely.
Yep.
We'll find out.
I mean, this is one of those stories to keep your eyes on because, let's be honest, no one else is going to.
No, no.
I mean, this will just be local news.
This is in Tulsa.
And I suppose, you know, I bet you any amount of money.
If the big media talk about this at all, which they probably will not, they'll spend half the article talking about the Tulsa massacre of 100 years ago.
As justification for the destruction of Black Wall Street.
That's right.
They're going to say, and resentment still lies deep in Black Tulsa.
That's all they're going to talk about.
Well, now here's something I consider to be good news.
The Southern Poverty Law Center's famous list of hate groups is under fire in a courtroom in Alabama, where a judge has opened the door for a group that opposes illegal immigration to challenge the SPLC for slapping it with the Scarlet H. I like that, the Scarlet H. I've had the Scarlet H for 30 years.
It has done me no harm at all, as far as I can tell.
The Georgia-based Dustin Inman Society.
Now, I don't know who Dustin Inman was.
He was killed, Mr. Taylor, by an illegal alien.
I've actually met the guy who runs that a number of times.
Oh, is that so?
I see.
His name is D.A.
King.
Was this guy once a congressman, D.A.
King?
I believe he's running for office, but he's a good guy.
He's a good guy.
They say they work against illegal immigration, but have no problem with legal immigrants.
Indeed, some legal immigrants are on the organization's board, and Mr. King's adopted sister is an immigrant.
He says it is defamation for the SPLC to call his group an anti-immigrant hate group.
And this is the very first defamation lawsuit specifically challenging the SPLC's hate group accusation to make it to discovery.
In other words, they're going to sit these people down, put them under oath and say, how do you go about this?
How do you decide who's a hater?
Can you read people's mind?
Do you understand?
Really?
Do you know they're hating?
And the SPLC, this is what's something I think is quite amusing, has acknowledged that its labels are not science.
And they're a political argument.
SBOC's anti-immigrant hate group designation is not capable of being proved false, a lawyer says, but is an opinion expressed as part of a political debate.
You can't prove it false.
Impossible to prove it false.
So all they need to do is say, he's a hater and it sticks.
You cannot prove it false because I suppose that means you can't prove it true either.
The SPLC questioned whether there can be a fixed definition of hate.
Well, good question.
What's the definition of hate?
Or being anti-immigrant.
If there is no definition, then there is no standard to judge the SPLC's argument as false.
This is astonishing.
They say, you can't prove it true.
You can't prove it false.
In other words, it's all baloney.
It's nice to see him admitting that.
I just wish that all the people that quote them would also quote this lawyer for them, saying it's all baloney.
So we'll see where this goes.
You know, it's fascinating.
We've reached such a dichotomy in the country where the left, there are still some people
on the right who seek, uh, who seek adulation and acceptance from the mainstream media,
the elite media.
But you know, I was telling Peter Brimlow, uh, earlier this year, there was a massive,
uh, piece in the wall street and the Washington post about their purchase.
Mr. Taylor of the Berkeley Springs castle.
And it appeared on the cover of the Washington post above, you know, it wasn't above the
full, but it was on the cover and then they had a front page, front page of the actual
paper, the actual paper.
Uh, it was extraordinary that they would devote a couple of journalists to go down and interview
people in Berkeley Springs and spend so much time.
And, and I was like, Hey, you know, Peter, who reads the Washington post?
And I was like, hey, you know, Peter, who reads the Washington Post?
The left does, who cares?
The left does, who cares?
And we're at a point now where the only people who are quoting this organization,
And we were at a point now where the only people who are quoting this organization for
for the most part, are these elite media.
the most part are these elite media.
You know, it's funny, during some of the releases of Tucker Carlson, Fox News is releasing videos
of Tucker Carlson, that try to make him look bad, Mr. Taylor, to media.
To make what look bad?
To make him look bad, of him like saying things off when they're not shooting, but they're still filming.
And it makes him look even worse.
Wait, Fox, Fox is releasing these?
Somebody at Fox News is leaking footage to Media Matters to try and make Tucker Carlson look bad,
and they only make him look cooler.
He's like, uh, he's like, F you Media Matters, you know?
And he's, he's, he's like cracking jokes about, about, he's just, he's human.
He's treating his staff like human beings.
And, you know, Tucker has come out and, and a lot of people on the right are increasingly like, Hey, you know what?
Like, uh, like Jack Posobiec.
I mean, he was profiled significantly by the, by that organization.
He's like, Hey, You guys are clowns.
Who cares?
Go away.
It's increasingly becoming that way.
As you'll recall, I guess it was a couple of years ago, their boss had resigned.
The CEO had resigned because they were accused of running this racist organization, mistreating their black people, mistreating women.
There was this big scandal and they hired some black lady to run the show now.
And they were going to do some investigation.
They never released the investigation.
They hired some lawsuit to look at the place top to bottom and just see what was going wrong.
What a pathetic bunch of losers.
It's astonishing that anybody takes them seriously.
I mean, the idea of setting up a database and explaining that everybody who opposes you politically is a hater.
A hater.
They're irrational.
They're unhinged.
Are you irrationally unhinged?
No.
You're a perfectly sensible guy.
But as far as they're concerned, you are a hater.
So, it's absolutely true.
The only people who quote them and take them seriously already agree with anything the SPLC says already.
So, it really adds nothing.
But they still are a light reman in the box.
Don't they have nearly, is it half a billion or three quarters of a billion dollars in their trust fund now?
I don't know.
Southern poverty.
It's at least half a billion.
Let's hope they made some bad investments.
Let's hope they had a lot in Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic.
I'm afraid it's probably only the Cayman Islands.
Well, moving right along to the New York City gang database.
NYPD's criminal group database, better known as the gang database, remains, drumroll please, 99% black and brown.
Of the roughly 16,000 people registered, 11,221 are black and 4,729 are Hispanic.
Of the roughly 16,000 people registered, 11,221 are Black and 4,729 are Hispanic.
The remaining 1% identifies either White or Asian.
Bye.
Now, Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso is furious about this.
He appears to be a brown person.
The gang database is a backdoor way for the NYPD to criminalize black and brown communities with zero due process or transparency, says he.
Reynoso Federal President of Brooklyn introduced legislation banning the gang database in 2021, but it remains unbanned.
Now, presumed gang members.
Now, why do they have this?
For several reasons.
One is that gang members are prone to federal racketeering charges intended for organized crime, which a gang, in fact, is.
That's what these laws are for.
Racketeering.
You might not be able to get them for some charge, but they're part of an organized crime gang, and that is a way to bring charges against them.
Good to know if they're affiliated with other criminals.
Another purpose of the gang database is that they are segregated when they go to prison.
So you won't stick the Crips in with the Bloods or whoever their enemies are, and so they won't slaughter each other.
So it has obvious uses, but it has It has disproportionate impact.
Now, whites make up 0.6% of the gang database.
That is six out of a thousand, my friend.
Six out of a thousand are white, despite federal officials identifying white supremacists as the greatest domestic threat in the U.S.
in 2021.
Imagine that, Mr. Kersey.
The Feds say white supremacists are the worst possible domestic threat, but in the gang database, it's only 0.6%.
And of course, this is just New York City.
It's not for people who might have just listened.
That's just for the city of New York.
That's correct.
That's correct.
And I bet it's probably true.
How many gangbangers are there out there that are white?
I mean, motorcycle gangs are mostly white, but they are not the same kind of gang at all.
The only real criminal gangs that I know of are prison gangs.
And once people are out of... I can't remember what they're called.
Oh, gosh.
Gosh, there are a couple of relatively famous white prison gangs, but their names are escaping me now.
But once they're out, they don't take part in outside gang activity, and they are part of gangs because that's what they have to do to defend themselves against predation by black and Hispanic gangs.
But this Reynoso guy, Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, he says it's just night and day, the difference between what the laws were designed for And how they're used now against black and Hispanic men and women.
Well, I wonder how many women there are in this gang database.
What a joke.
Probably more than there are whites.
Yes, yes.
More black and Hispanic women than there are whites of either or any of the multiple sexes.
Correct.
So poor Reynoso.
Now, moving on to yet a different kind of interesting business here in Milwaukee.
Prosecutors say at least eight men were part of an organized crime ring, and they have been arrested for targeting mail carriers and stealing their mailbox keys.
I'd never heard of this kind of crime, but these are an inventive bunch.
The eight men are accused of pulling guns on mail carriers, stealing their keys, opening mailboxes, stealing checks, and cashing them.
Apparently, they got away with tens of thousands of dollars that way.
Now, it seems to me you've got to be somewhat sophisticated.
If I ended up with a check made out to Paul Kersey, I'm not quite sure how I'd go about cashing it.
I suppose I could sign your name on the back, pretend you endorsed it.
But most checks that come in the mail, I don't know.
But apparently, they managed to cash these checks.
Now, what's interesting to me is their names.
One guy was named Abdi Abdi.
Ah.
Abdi Abdi.
Yes.
Great guy.
Good Mississippi name.
Then Darian Allison, Huria Abu, and Terian Williams, Amaury Smith, Jesse Cook, Hussein Haji, Kaperian Gatson.
Now, I looked at their photos.
And it appears to be a remarkably diverse bunch, a delightful mix of black Africans and black Americans.
It's that old American melting pot bubbling away.
So Abdi Abdi and Darian Allison just seem to be getting along fine.
Now, this is something that I was intending to talk about last week, but we ran out of time as we so frequently do.
It has to do with the Biden administration's new rule on mortgages.
And of course it has to do with people with high credit scores will have to pay higher fees on their mortgage payments to subsidize people who have bad credit.
Anyone with good credit that's defined as a score of 680 or above is going to have to pay roughly 40 bucks a month extra on mortgage payments than some with lower scores if the home loan is about $400,000.
40 a month extra!
If you have a FICO score, a credit score of 620, that's not such a good score, then you get a 1.75% discount on your mortgage fees.
If you have a 740 score, that means you've paid your bills on time, you've done the right thing, you're a good citizen, you are penalized.
So you don't get a discount for doing the right thing, for paying your bills, you are punished.
Now what's the backstory here, as people now say?
Guess which racial group is the only one in the country with an average credit score of under 680, which is the magic limit that gives you a discount.
I think you can guess.
White gang members in New York City.
You're wrong.
Oh, dang it.
Black Americans.
Black Americans.
Black people.
Yes, black people!
So it's another way, it's another way to punish people who have saved mostly white and Asian, probably a number of Hispanics, so that their money can be filched out of their pockets and given to black Americans who have not paid their bills and have bad credit scores because, of course, they're victims of systemic institutionalized racism and have been ever since the day they were born.
Now, David Stevens is a former commissioner of the Federal Housing Administration during the Obama administration.
He wrote the following.
This confusing approach won't work, and more importantly, could come at a worse time for an industry struggling to get back on its feet after these past 12 months.
To do this at the outset of the spring market is almost offensive to the market, consumers, and lenders.
Now, I'm glad he's opposed to this, but he says it's confusing.
It's not confusing to me.
Is it confusing to you?
Is it a good credit rating?
You're subsidizing people with bad credit rating.
How about calling it unfair, Mr. Former Commissioner?
But it's at least good that he is opposed to it.
Now, all he's worried about is that somehow this is going to upset lenders or the market a vicious assault on virtue and it rewards people
who can't get their act together and maintain a good credit rating.
So this is yet another Biden initiative to punish the virtuous, extract wealth
from people who are competent and give it to incompetent.
It's the white tax.
Excuse me, real quick as we're doing this, I just found out that the Marine has been
obviously doxxed now on Twitter, so by Tariq Naseed.
So again, I think this story is gonna be one just like three years ago.
I remember you and I were talking, we were actually doing the podcast when during the day
there started to be riots in St. Paul, Minneapolis, which culminated in the burning
of the third precinct that night.
Cause it was like, wow, this is, these riots are starting at like 2 p.m. on a Wednesday.
What's going on here?
So we'll see.
This could be one of those big moments here where I
I'm sorry, Tucker Carlson.
And Elon Musk has come under a lot of fire because he spent all day yesterday, May 4th,
liking people who were pointing out the criminality of this Michael Jackson impersonator.
And only 42 arrests.
Come on.
Nothing to get upset about.
Gee.
Well, yeah.
Well, and again, I mean, I am nonetheless, I mean, you say it is all very old hat to
be struck by double standards.
But I am nevertheless appalled by this utter silence on the case.
This guy walks up behind two different white men and shoots them in the head.
And I guess he walks off with a hey nani nani and a hot cha cha.
He doesn't care.
And he is buried on the back pages, if he's mentioned at all.
Now, I think, you know, you have a story.
Now, this is sort of a long and complicated story, which I hope we can get through reasonably concisely.
About this, what should we call her?
Rather... Rotund?
Corpula?
Rotund!
Yes, regular to her meals.
I'll tell you what, why don't we go ahead and save this one just because we spent so much time in the beginning and this one is an important story.
Why don't we just jump over real quick to Baltimore and we'll hold the Charlottesville one where we can actually spend... I can unpack because there's a lot that needs to be distilled and taken out.
You unpack it, you distill it, you analyze it, you slice and dice it, and we'll save it for next week.
But just a tease for our listeners.
It was at Reason Magazine, and it's a very good story about how a major university in Virginia just took his fact that someone said, oh, this white girl was going to kill us, and it ruined her career.
And it was all a lie.
All a lie.
So you wanted to talk about Baltimore instead?
Yeah, let's talk about Baltimore.
Yes, the triple shooting.
The triple shooting.
So Baltimore last year, this has always astonished me.
For the past three years, Baltimore has had more homicides Not just per capita, but more homicides than New York City, even though New York City has, what, 14 million people and Baltimore has 600,000.
So back in 2007, Mr. Taylor, Baltimore tried to ape what Chicago had, the Safe Streets Program.
It's Baltimore's flagship gun violence reduction program founded by epidemiologist Dr. Gary Sleckin, as a way to cure violence, because he says it's a public health approach that has trusted messengers in the community who try and interrupt the transmission of violence.
They spread anti-violence messages and encourage positive changes in individual behavior, as well as community norms around violence.
So this was all pioneered based on a program in Chicago.
As you and I both know from the crime stats, it's not working in either city.
So.
And what do they call it in Baltimore?
Safe streets.
Safe streets.
So this, this story.
Voiceful thinking.
They could be safe streets, but the population that occupies them right now make them unsafe.
WBFF out of Baltimore reports this.
Despite triple shooting in safe street zone, Mayor Scott committed to programs efforts.
Despite a triple shooting in a safe streets catchment zone, Brandon Scott said the additional $5 million investment remains a priority and said the efforts continue to yield results.
Yeah, they continue to show that people are getting shot, dude.
Come on.
The shooting in McKeldry Park Safe Streets Zone left a 14-year-old boy injured, along
with two others.
Few signs of the shooting remain in the area, a blood trail in the street and some fragments
of the crime scene tape.
Quote, the residents of Baltimore are a little smarter than that to think about in that sense,
Mayor Scott said when asked how the city can trust the $5 million investment would be a
fruitful use of money.
What?
I mean, again, there are more homicides in Baltimore, which has 600,000 people, than
in New York City, which has 13, 14 million people.
It's, it's, it's astonishing.
And, and to have that type of statement be made.
Uh, Mayor Scott again touted a John Hopkins report showing some decreases in homicide and nonfatal shootings in some of the 10 different safe street zones.
Though the report also found a reduction in homicides was not found in some of the newer locations.
We have to continue to focus on why in the hell people are doing these kinds of things to each other over small things.
Mayor Scott said.
The questions continue to go ignored about how safe street locations are spending petty cash and if the city or government-based organizations are responsible for keeping track of the receipts.
Mayor Scott told Fox 45 News he'd get back to us about the issue when asked.
Don't worry, the $5 million is being well spent, we promise.
I'm sure Marilyn Mosby would be happy to do an audit of that.
I bet she would.
Well, we have a story from France.
Back in February of 2021, a 35-year-old Algerian by the name of Ahmed Khalaf approached a 20-year-old woman who was waiting for a tram at a stop in Begles in France.
She found him suspicious, and so she moved in front of the tram's CCTV camera.
Smart move.
But that did not deter young Khalaf.
He pressed a knife into her back, dragged her into the park, and raped her.
A little earlier, he had already set his sight on two young 18-year-old passengers by groping them and insulting them in Arabic.
I mean, what a charming thing.
You're an 18-year-old French girl.
Some guy, obviously foreign, gropes you and yells at you in a language you don't understand.
Well, police moved in to arrest the guy.
He bit his tongue and started spitting blood at them, resisting arrest, and hit an officer in the nose.
Khalif explained that he is an only son among seven sisters, and he told the court he is a normal person to whom his parents gave a good education.
Yeah, I'm sure he's an entirely normal person by Algerian standards.
Is that what normal Algerians do?
Grope women and rape them.
Well, he's now been convicted of the rape, and he said he is shocked at the length of his prison sentence.
He says, I don't understand.
I'm shocked to find myself here and in prison for 26 months when I came to France to build a future.
Oh, the poor boy!
26 months is only two years and two months.
Armed rape?
I mean, that's pretty light sentence to me, but he's shocked I came here to build a future.
Well, France has been beset with high-profile rapes by immigrants in recent years, including the rape of a 12-year-old Paris girl by the name of Lola.
She was quite famous for a while by an Algerian with deportation orders last year.
Hadn't gotten around to kicking him out.
In the same year, a Tunisian raped an English tourist right on the street.
And in August 2022, a North African was arrested for raping an American tourist in a Paris public toilet while her partner waited outside.
Now, it seems to me that she should have made some noise to attract attention.
I don't know what, I don't know the details on that.
But in October 2022, a Congolese tried to rape a 24-year-old French woman because he didn't have enough money for a prostitute.
He said, yes, he said, I wanted to have a beautiful white woman.
And he couldn't buy one, so he just took one by force.
There you go.
That's a Congolese for you.
And last month, a certain Walid E. I don't know why we get only his We've seen cases like this all across Europe.
Giorgia Maloney, at the time of her campaign, posted a video of somebody, a migrant, raping a woman on the streets of Italy in the middle of the day.
Do you remember seeing that video?
I do.
Just incredible, brutal, disgusting.
And somehow, Europeans don't get the message.
We don't need these people.
We should keep them all out.
It seems pretty obvious to you and me.
Meanwhile, in the United States, here's yet another.
Ah, it's such a heartwarming story.
Sidney Royal Selby III is known by his rapper name of Designer, spelled with two I's, not just one.
He's a heck of a hip-hop artist, by the way.
Oh, is he?
I have no idea.
I have no idea either.
The 25-year-old is perhaps best known for his single, Panda, which gave him a 2017 Grammy nomination.
He got a nomination.
I don't know if he got the Grammys.
Probably not.
Well, he was on a Delta flight from Japan to Minneapolis-St.
Paul.
He was in the plane's first class area.
When?
About 60 or 90 minutes after takeoff.
And now here is a warning to our underage listeners.
You may turn off the podcast at this very moment.
Off you go.
Click, click.
Well, he exposed himself to flight attendants.
She told him no, and he covered back up.
About five minutes later, the woman and another flight attendant saw him masturbating.
They told him to stop, that he was going to be arrested.
Well, third time's a charm, I guess.
And he exposed himself and was moved to the back of the plane with his two security guards.
When he stood up, a jar of Vaseline fell into the aisle.
I guess he carries a jar wherever he goes.
Boy Scout motto, be prepared.
While he was detained and interviewed by an FBI agent when the plane landed at Minneapolis-St.
Paul, he said he became aroused by the flight attendants and that he exposed what he called his magic stick because I didn't have sex in, like, a week.
Well, gosh, designer, why didn't you explain?
Explain that to the flight attendant.
Now we understand the problem.
A whole week?
Oh, poor boy, just like those Algerians and Tunisians in France.
How can you possibly blame him?
And boy, he's something else, explaining to FBI agents about his magic stick.
Gee, these people are just beyond comprehension.
So, Selby was released without being jailed.
If convicted, he faces up to 90 days in jail and a $500 fine.
So, there you go.
Another high-flying rapper comes to earth with a bump.
Now, you and I have been talking about rappers and the whole profession as being one of the most dangerous.
Well, we haven't had a rapper fatality for some time, but apparently rapper Money Sign Swade died after he was stabbed in the shower in a California prison.
He was found in the shower area of the correctional training facility in Soledad.
He had been sent there after being sentenced to serve two years and eight months on two charges of being a convicted felon in possession of a gun.
And so I'm sorry to hear that he met a sticky end, but this does confirm what I've been saying all these years.
It's a dangerous job, a dangerous profession to get into.
It's amazing how you go so that thin line between aspiring rapper and expiring rapper.
Yes, that's an excellent way of putting it.
Well, Mr. Kersey, our time is up, as it always is.
Always all too soon.
And so, ladies and gentlemen, we really enjoy and appreciate being with you.
And next time we'll tell you how to get in touch with us because we have run out of time.
But we really always appreciate all of your messages.