Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor - How to Solve All Our Problems Aired: 2023-05-05 Duration: 14:03 === When Choice Means Homogeneity (13:58) === [00:00:04] Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance. [00:00:07] The censors hate my videos. [00:00:09] So, if you like this one, I hope you'll send the link to a lot of people. [00:00:13] We live in disturbing times. [00:00:16] America has a new sweetheart. [00:00:18] Her name is Dylan Mulvaney. [00:00:19] It's day 43 of being a girl and I'm in my canopy bed. [00:00:23] And I woke up this morning and I was like, Dylan, what are you going to do today to be a girl? [00:00:27] You know what I'm going to do? [00:00:28] I'm going to stay right here. [00:00:30] Girls deserve to stay in bed sometimes. [00:00:47] *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* Thank [00:01:03] you. [00:01:03] Meanwhile in El Paso, Texas, the city is getting ready for the end of Title 42 next week. [00:01:08] The mayor declared a state of emergency starting tomorrow. [00:01:12] The U.S. Navy invited an active-duty drag queen to be a digital ambassador as part of a recent drive to attract the most talented and diverse workforce and combat-plunging recruitment. [00:01:24] Yeoman Second Class Joshua Kelly, who identifies as non-binary, was appointed as the first of five Navy digital ambassadors in a pilot program that ran from October to March. [00:01:35] *music* [00:02:00] Let me add a different dimension. [00:02:02] As the Wall Street Journal put it, America pulls back from values that once defined it. [00:02:08] The paper reported how attitudes have changed in just 25 years. [00:02:13] As you can see, in 1998, patriotism was very important to 70% of Americans. [00:02:19] By 2019, the figure was just over 60%, and then it crashed to 38% this year. [00:02:28] In 1998, nearly 60% of Americans said having children was very important. [00:02:34] Now it's not even half that number. [00:02:37] The importance of religion is also declining. [00:02:40] The only thing in this survey that Americans valued more than they used to is money. [00:02:46] This is historical data from Pew Research on the percentage of Americans who trust the government to do what is right just about always or most of the time. [00:02:56] In the early 1960s, that figure was 75%. [00:03:00] There was a rise in the 1980s under Ronald Reagan and a spasm across the 50% mark after the 9-11 attacks, and then it's been down. [00:03:11] Not even 25% of Americans trust the feds. [00:03:16] Maybe it has something to do with the way our rulers spend money they don't have. [00:03:21] Here is total federal debt as a percentage of gross domestic product. [00:03:26] It's now 120% of the entire annual production of the country. [00:03:32] And here's a graph of how much the federal government pays in interest each quarter. [00:03:38] Last quarter, $213 billion. [00:03:42] That's $213 billion out of your pocket that bought nothing. [00:03:49] Thomas Jefferson thought it was immoral to saddle future generations with today's debt, and that's exactly what we are doing. [00:03:57] Maybe that helps explain why Americans are so pessimistic about the future. [00:04:02] Look at the bottom bar. [00:04:04] 78% of Americans think their children's generation will be worse off than their own. [00:04:10] Just 20 years ago, only 42% thought that. [00:04:15] One last point. [00:04:16] When New York City built a subway starting in the early 1900s, it put restrooms in the stations. [00:04:23] Now they are locked up tight. [00:04:25] If they weren't, people would be living in them, raping and murdering in them. [00:04:31] Something must have changed. [00:04:34] How would our rulers explain all of this, or any of it? [00:04:38] I can hear them now. [00:04:39] These are complex, multifaceted phenomena. [00:04:43] But drawing on the immense strength of our wonderful diversity, we are building a new, compassionate America in which all are valued. [00:04:52] They would never say, this country is dying. [00:04:55] But that's what's happening. [00:04:57] All these things have something in common. [00:05:00] Pathological individualism. [00:05:02] An inability or a refusal to think beyond narrow personal interests. [00:05:09] Obviously, smash-and-grab attacks or jumping on people's cars is viciously antisocial, even psychopathic, but blacks have been headed that way for decades. [00:05:20] It means something else when the nation as a whole stops wanting to have children and becomes much less patriotic in just one generation. [00:05:30] A society needs children just to keep going. [00:05:34] And a nation won't survive without some level of loyalty from citizens. [00:05:39] The obligation goes both ways. [00:05:42] Government has to at least seem to care about people. [00:05:47] It's hard to respect a government that saddles every baby with more than $93,000 of public debt the moment he's born. [00:05:56] When government is full of greedy, narcissistic people, why should citizens be any different? [00:06:03] In 1961, President John Kennedy said in his inaugural address, Fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you. [00:06:14] Ask what you can do for your country. [00:06:17] Can you imagine Joe Biden saying that? [00:06:20] People would burst out laughing. [00:06:22] That was a different America. [00:06:25] Has even one social trend improved since then? [00:06:30] Can you think of even one? [00:06:32] I can, actually. [00:06:34] Per capita cigarette consumption is about one quarter what it was in 1960. [00:06:39] Anything else? [00:06:40] So, how do you fix an entire country? [00:06:44] How do you give people loyalties beyond themselves? [00:06:48] How do you cure pathological individualism? [00:06:51] First, recognize that racial diversity is a plague. [00:06:56] People don't trust people who are unlike themselves. [00:07:00] Robert Putnam of Harvard is famous for quantifying just how much diversity kills trust. [00:07:08] Diversity can reach a point that folks don't even trust people of their own race. [00:07:13] It was a terrible mistake to abandon the original idea of the United States as a land for white people. [00:07:20] In 1960, whites were nearly 90% of the population. [00:07:24] It was a high-trust society. [00:07:28] No one would have imagined the scenes you saw at the beginning of this video. [00:07:33] Now whites are down to 60%. [00:07:36] 130 million non-whites live here. [00:07:40] It would be impossible to persuade them to leave. [00:07:43] Therefore, the only cure for diversity is disengagement. [00:07:48] If Americans had permanent communities of people like themselves, they would have at least local loyalties and attachments. [00:07:56] They would know that their children would grow up and live among people like them, whom they could trust. [00:08:03] Large-scale separation won't be easy, but it's the only cure for diversity. [00:08:09] Of course, people separate all the time. [00:08:12] It's instinctive. [00:08:14] Look at neighborhoods, clubs, backyard barbecues. [00:08:17] When they have a choice, people want homogeneity. [00:08:21] Our country must recognize that this is normal, natural, and healthy. [00:08:26] Instead, the government is constantly pushing people together. [00:08:30] That won't change until white people, who are still the majority, make it change. [00:08:35] White people have to understand that race is central to the identities of non-whites. [00:08:41] It must be central to our identity, too. [00:08:45] Racial loyalty cures pathological individualism. [00:08:50] Racially conscious whites That requires new generations of white families and white children. [00:09:06] It means teaching children to respect the past and build the future. [00:09:11] It means living for something greater than yourself. [00:09:15] That changes everything. [00:09:18] Healthy societies are built around families. [00:09:21] They understand that men and women are different. [00:09:24] They recognize that children need a father and a mother who stay together. [00:09:29] The entire structure of society, courtship patterns, sexual morality, the nature of work, marriage laws, the tax system, everything is set up to support families. [00:09:41] No society that values families glorifies homosexuals. [00:09:46] People whose reproductive energy is directed towards their own sex are biological dead ends. [00:09:52] They are not role models. [00:09:55] Most probably didn't choose to be that way any more than deaf people choose to be deaf. [00:10:00] We don't persecute deaf people, but we don't line the streets to cheer on a deaf pride parade either. [00:10:08] No healthy society promotes sex changes. [00:10:12] That's another dead end. [00:10:14] White men and women, Today, the United States promotes all the wrong things. [00:10:29] That's because it is officially committed to equality. [00:10:33] Equality is impossible, and trying to make people equal invariably means dragging down the best and encouraging the worst. [00:10:43] The American compulsion for equality started with race, the idea that blacks and whites are equal and interchangeable. [00:10:50] This is obviously not true, and every effort to make them equal failed. [00:10:56] Despite that failure, the compulsion for equality spread. [00:11:00] All cultures are equal. [00:11:02] No religion is better than another. [00:11:04] Even the sexes are equal and interchangeable. [00:11:08] Now we're supposed to believe that it is healthy and beautiful. [00:11:12] To be fat and that it's wrong to admire beauty and to be repelled by ugliness. [00:11:18] All differences are so unimportant and superficial that I can announce that today I'm a woman and insist on being treated as one. [00:11:27] A society obsessed with equality is obsessed with failure. [00:11:31] Not to punish or improve people who are failures, but to punish society for supposedly making them fail. [00:11:39] No person, unless he is a white man, is ever responsible for failure. [00:11:45] Every loser, deviant, and criminal is a victim of the white man. [00:11:50] And the more ways you can claim to be a victim—nonwhite, queer, transsexual—the [00:11:54] Therefore, the greatest virtue today is compassion for all these so-called victims. [00:12:07] Of course, this is a phony virtue. [00:12:10] Because it comes with no personal cost. [00:12:13] All you need to do is make a fuss over failures and promote ways to take money away from successful people and give it to failures. [00:12:21] Imagine a society that honors courage, integrity, honesty, faithfulness in marriage, loyalty to principles, duty to family and nation. [00:12:33] When do you ever hear anyone praising these things? [00:12:37] A nation of racially conscious whites who cared about the future of their people would value real virtue. [00:12:44] It would be a happy society of proud people who looked forward to the future. [00:12:50] It would celebrate achievement, not failure. [00:12:53] It would seek reasons for admiration, not for compassion. [00:12:58] It would realize that in society's number one mission of encouraging families, some families deserve more encouragement than others. [00:13:07] Heredity is important, and a healthy nation wants future generations always to be better, not just morally, psychologically, and spiritually, but biologically. [00:13:19] All this could be true of a healthy society of any race, but it's not possible in a multiracial society. [00:13:27] It's possible only in a society of common purpose. [00:13:32] Diversity will always be the enemy of unity and common purpose. [00:13:37] What I'm calling for, of course, is a revolution in the way we think about society and our place in it. [00:13:44] But it would be a peaceful revolution. [00:13:47] It requires only that enough people understand that we are heading for disaster and be willing to do something about it. [00:13:57] Wouldn't you rather live in a better country? [00:13:59] Don't you want to leave a better country to your children?