A ‘Wypipologist’ Speaks
Jared Taylor and Paul Kersey laugh at a self-styled “specialist” on “Caucasians.” They also discuss Ben & Jerry, murder clearance, the Black Caucus, Giorgia Meloni, and the mayor of South Fulton.
Jared Taylor and Paul Kersey laugh at a self-styled “specialist” on “Caucasians.” They also discuss Ben & Jerry, murder clearance, the Black Caucus, Giorgia Meloni, and the mayor of South Fulton.
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Radio Renaissance. | |
I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance, and with me is my indispensable co-host. | |
Today is one day shy of July 14th, the French national holiday, Bastille Day, which commemorates, in my mind, One of the bloodiest, most horrible undertakings in European history. | |
And it shocks me to this day that the French don't simply repudiate all that bloodshed. | |
But be that as it may, it is July 13th and I am back behind the microphone for the first time in a couple of weeks. | |
And I must thank my co-host Paul Kersey. | |
Mr. Kersey, thank you very much. | |
You're welcome. | |
And for Gregory Hood, who took my place during my absence. | |
I'm very much obliged. | |
Glad to be back. | |
We're all excited to have you back. | |
Again, thanks to Gregory Hood for filling in for a couple weeks. | |
I have to ask, you spent a lot of time in Paris. | |
I believe you went to grad school there. | |
Tell me, is this the 4th or 5th Republic they're on right now? | |
This is the 5th Republic. | |
Well, perhaps the Sixth Republic will repudiate that holiday, if we get to that. | |
So, that would be a wonderful thing, the French Revolution. | |
You know, I hope all of our listeners have read about that just absolutely horrendous moment in human history that, in a lot of ways, we're still living under the horror of, you know, egalitarianism. | |
It wasn't until I was an adult that I read a book about the French Revolution. | |
And I kept thinking, alright, when is the good stuff going to happen? | |
It's just one horror after another. | |
Terrible. | |
Terrible. | |
Bloodthirsty. | |
Cruel. | |
Gee. | |
And yes, I just don't understand that the Marseillaise, that is the national anthem of France, celebrates this gruesome thing. | |
When I was living in Paris, of course, it was an excuse for people just to party. | |
There are block parties all over the city. | |
And you have a good time. | |
You go out and you eat and you drink. | |
Oh, dance the night away. | |
It's a great old time, but wow. | |
You know, I must tell you another thing. | |
I knew a conservative Englishwoman who used to refer to the metric system as regicide measure because it was brought in by the revolution. | |
They are the ones who came up with the meter. | |
Really? | |
And she didn't call it the metric system. | |
The regicide. | |
The regicide measure. | |
Chilean of the regions. | |
Yes, there you go. | |
Anyway, let us get to work because we have so much to talk about. | |
Here's a comment. | |
G'day, Uncle Jared. | |
Big fan of the pod from down under. | |
Question for you. | |
But looking from some travel recommendations, I've enjoyed the occasional travel anecdote that you've shared over the years. | |
Thought you might have some good ideas. | |
I'll be flying to Japan later this month. | |
Well, I won't go into great detail. | |
The one thing I will say is, spend as little time in Tokyo as possible. | |
That is my number one suggestion. | |
It's a great, huge city. | |
A few interesting spots, but it's a mess to get around in. | |
I mean, the transit system works okay, but it is just one enormous metropolis. | |
Spend time in Kyoto and then in as many outlying places you can find. | |
I think Shikoku Island, where I grew up, is a wonderful place, and I will mention one place in particular. | |
It is the Kompira Shrine. | |
K-O-M-P-I-R-A Shrine. | |
A great place to go. | |
And again, if this were not a podcast about other subjects, I'd have many things to say, but I will move to the next comment. | |
And this was about the Supreme Court decision limiting race preferences in college admissions. | |
Our listener says, I have suggestions. | |
Make one of the Ivy League universities all black. | |
That would be one-eighth, approximately, matches their population percentage, and make it an HBCU. | |
Okay. | |
And that university should be the least scientific of the eight. | |
All you'd have to do is change its name from Brown To black. | |
And call that the first institution in the Jivey League. | |
The Jivey League. | |
Oh dear. | |
If you haven't been, speaking of travel, Providence is a beautiful town to visit. | |
Very quaint, lovely city, great history. | |
I know you're not a fan, but the late Sam Francis loved H.P. | |
Lovecraft, so I would not say Brown. | |
We could give him Harvard. | |
Give him Harvard. | |
Give him Harvard. | |
It's not the endowment. | |
This is a comment about videos I make, but it could also apply to the podcast. | |
And because it's highly relevant, I will cite this comment. | |
I watch Mr. Taylor's videos and I saw a comment by a black person who always criticizes them. | |
And he said this, this black person, I don't understand J.R. | |
Taylor's obsession with black people. | |
Okay, if Taylor wants to be only around whites, God bless him. | |
Let him find a place where there are virtually no ethnic minorities. | |
Europe is full of them, and I suspect America too. | |
However, I would say that over 80% of Taylor's videos are concerned with denigrating all blacks. | |
Taylor loves to look at examples of individual blacks that don't meet his warped criteria. | |
Well, my criteria aren't warped. | |
And then apply it to all blacks. | |
It's as if Taylor is much more concerned with a campaign against black people than anything pro-white. | |
I will continue to criticize Jared Taylor's crazy YouTube rantings and ratings. | |
The commenter asks, well, how do you answer that? | |
Well, I have an answer for that, of course. | |
Indeed, it is unpleasant and perhaps uncharitable to be talking about black misbehavior, low black IQ, and that kind of thing. | |
What whites must talk about, though, is something that's required for self-defense. | |
This is the only way to get it through to people that the problem that black people face is not necessarily white wickedness. | |
Because unless we talk about the way blacks behave and what may be inherent causes for that behavior, there is no way to get around the idea that we are responsible for it. | |
We are responsible. | |
And so, yes, we often talk about unflattering things that blacks have done, continue to do, and certainly will do. | |
But it is only as a matter of self-defense. | |
I don't think Mr. Kersey or I take any pleasure in describing these things at all. | |
I wish we didn't have to. | |
No, exactly. | |
I wish we didn't have to. | |
I wish we could talk about your travels and traversing Japan. | |
That would be a far more interesting topic. | |
But I would like to point out, they're not YouTube ramblings. | |
You were removed from YouTube when you had over 100,000 followers and likes on your channel. | |
Yes. | |
So you're on Rumble. | |
Where can people find your videos? | |
Bitshoot, Rumble? | |
Bitshoot, Rumble, and Odyssey are the three big places. | |
But I can understand a law-abiding black guy who all the time hears us talking about crimes that he doesn't commit, probably his family and friends don't commit, or maybe they do. | |
But to say that we have warped criteria for law-abiding is absolutely not. | |
Just get a job, don't break the law. | |
That's all we ask. | |
In any case, an item here, we're talking about black people once again! | |
And it's the Black— Spoiler alert! | |
It's the Black Congressional Caucus! | |
The Congressional Black Caucus will oppose two of President Joe Biden's judicial nominations if the Senate Judiciary Committee does not alter its process for nominations. | |
So, take that Joe Biden. | |
The powerful voting bloc, that is the Black Caucus, said it would resist the nominees to the eastern and western districts of Louisiana until the committee acts boldly and follows through on its demands. | |
That's right. | |
Do what we say or we won't support you. | |
What they're talking about is the blue slip process. | |
I never heard it referred to as that, but that is the process whereby home state senators must approve of a judicial nominee in order for the committee to take up its hearings. | |
It's a long-standing tradition. | |
It's over 100 years old, as a matter of fact. | |
And what it means is that, in effect, the home senator can veto a judicial appointment. | |
It's been a courtesy, as I say, for more than a hundred years. | |
The Black Caucus is insisting the chairman of the committee, Dick Durbin, a fellow Democrat, one they ordinarily adore, alter the rules so that only one senator need approve. | |
And if just one wants to veto it, too bad. | |
And the senator who does not send in approval would also have to submit an explanation. | |
Well, Dick Durbin doesn't say what he's going to do about that, | |
but he did say one of the nominees on today's panel will be the first person of color ever to serve on the | |
federal bench in the Western District of Louisiana. | |
It's important to recognize this important historic milestone. | |
So it's quite fascinating to me that the Black Congressional Caucus is threatening to vote against a judicial nominee now, and they want to overturn 100 years worth of rulemaking. | |
Probably my suspicion is, and I should have looked into this more carefully, is that this black guy is probably disapproved of by at least one of the home state senators. | |
And so they say, okay, if it are oxes being gored, we're going to end the rule. | |
But just imagine, just imagine what they would say if somebody wanted to end the rule, if a conservative were nominating justices. | |
And some, A liberal or goofball senator wanted to veto them. | |
Of course, they'd sing a completely different tune. | |
This is something that both the left and the right are guilty of. | |
But the left, I think, in particular, they will go against some sort of rule as if it's a principle when it suits them. | |
Correct. | |
And then they do a 180-degree backflip. | |
I guess a backflip is 360 degrees. | |
In any case, when the damages go the other way. | |
But, Mr. Kersey, I think I would like to ask you to talk about, I think, one of the most important stories for this podcast, and that is murder clearance rates. | |
You had a really interesting article on that. | |
Yeah, we've got a lot of stories. | |
Again, we missed your presence, and the Hood-Kersey Show is a little different, but this one, we're going to start with Excuse me real quick because I'm navigating a new computer here trying to find the first story here and that is Crime Without Punishment. | |
This is a story that came to us from late May out of Baltimore, Maryland, not far from the not far from the home quarters of the New Century Foundation. | |
World headquarters! | |
Worldwide headquarters of the New Century Foundation. | |
Crime Without Punishment. | |
Homicide clearance rates are declining across the U.S. | |
Baltimore is down to 42%. | |
Is that down 42%? | |
It's down to 42%. | |
Let me clarify that I say that. | |
So 58% of homicides go unsolved. | |
But let's talk about it. | |
Baltimore's seen so much pain with more than 1,500 people killed in the past five years. | |
That's 300 a year. | |
Yeah, more than half of those killings remain unsolved. | |
WJZ, in collaboration with CBS News, is examining a crime often going without punishment in our country. | |
The national homicide clearance rate is at an all-time low according to FBI data. | |
We've talked about this before on previous podcasts at the macro level, but here's the micro. | |
In the mid-60s, more than 90% of murders were solved at a time when America, Mr. Taylor, was about 90% white. | |
Pure coincidence, Mr. Kern. | |
Exactly. | |
Generally resulting in arrests. | |
By 1990, the percentage fell into the 60s, as the white population declined to the mid-70s. | |
Mere coincidence. | |
Yeah. | |
By 2020, as the number of homicides surged, the national clearance rate dropped to about 50% for the first time ever. | |
The national homicide rate for white victims, though, keeps improving. | |
The rate of solving murders for black and Hispanic victims is much lower. | |
On March 17, 2019, Dorothy Cunningham of Baltimore lost her grandson, Markle Hendricks. | |
He was just 16 years old. | |
Quote, I'll never forget that day. | |
The guy they were shooting at got shot in his hip. | |
He got shot in his head. | |
Markle will never be forgotten. | |
Never. | |
He was just a sweet kid. | |
And he just lost his life trying to come home from school. | |
A memorial plaque sits in her front yard and Cunningham wonders if the killer will ever be brought to justice. | |
Real quick, what a somber thought to think that there's a memorial plaque in someone's yard for the death of their... I mean, we talked about that question at the beginning of the program. | |
I wonder if that guy who leaves comments on your videos, does he live in Baltimore? | |
Does he live in one of these war-torn cities where... He probably lives surrounded by white people. | |
I'd imagine so. | |
He probably lives in an area whiter than you live. | |
Could well. | |
Although that's hard to do. | |
White, rich, and good looking I think is what you told Phil Donahue about your neighbors 20 years ago. | |
It's changed a little. | |
And of course the question is, what? | |
They let you in? | |
Anyway. | |
Cunningham said she's frustrated when she cannot get a detective to pick up the phone or call her back. | |
Quote, that's your job. | |
What's so much more frustrating, it seems that nobody cares. | |
Cunningham is not alone in waiting for answers. | |
A CBS News analysis of FBI homicide data shows Baltimore City's average clearance rate from 2015 to 2019 was just 38.7% hitting a low Mr. Taylor and dear listener | |
of 29.7% in | |
2015 the tumultuous year when Freddie Gray was killed in police custody and arrests plummeted | |
Well, no, that's again. Once again a coincidence A pure coincidence, Mr. Kersey. | |
Now, move along, move along. | |
Let me see here. | |
Now, this is really astonishing. | |
Seven out of ten killers got away with it? | |
Yes! | |
Yes, precisely. | |
Seven out of ten? | |
Boy! | |
And you have to wonder how many of those people who got away with it went on to perpetrate more murders throughout the city. | |
And probably got away with those. | |
Exactly. | |
But, no, this is so obvious. | |
You insult the police, you intimidate the police, you arrest the police. | |
Guess what? | |
Criminals are gonna have a heyday. | |
When the cat's away, or the cat's in jail, or the cat is terrified of doing his job, the rats sure will play. | |
I think this goes into the category of lowered expectations. | |
That's an old SNL skit that was always kind of funny. | |
They try and brag that, hey, you know what? | |
The clearance rate in 2020 improved to 47%. | |
Okay, that's good, but still, you're under 50. | |
I mean, under 50? | |
As you say, back in the 60s it was 90! | |
Exactly. | |
And Baltimore in the 1960s, I believe, was probably about 78% white, maybe even bigger, more than that. | |
Anyways, so far, so far this year, it's around 42% and remains below national averages. | |
So this is Baltimore? | |
This is just Baltimore we're talking about. | |
Cunningham said that it's a sad reality for many loved ones like her. | |
Shooters face, quote, no consequences for the action. | |
They act like police. | |
They're the joke. | |
Finishing up real quick, in 2016, only 11% of homicides involving black victims were solved compared to 35.7% for white victims. | |
45.7% for white victims in 2020. | |
43.4% Mr. Taylor of homicides involving black victims were cleared compared to 68.2% for white victims. | |
So that really terrible year, very few murders of whites were collared either. | |
Yeah. | |
That just seems astonishing to me. | |
It does. | |
I mean, that's the Freddie Gray year. | |
Yeah. | |
That's the Freddie Gray. | |
Well, no, that's the year after Freddie Gray. | |
That's a year after, but you know, the black police commissioner noted, and we'll put a bow on this story here in Baltimore with over 90% of our victims being African-Americans. | |
We have an incredibly large caseload. | |
As you know, we're not working any harder or less hard on any specific case. | |
We give 100% on all of them. | |
But some of them have nuances to them that bring us directly to the perpetrator right away." | |
Of course, you know, just so you know, Baltimore was one of those cities that years ago, I believe that's where the No Snitch rap video was shot in the aughts. | |
And of course, Baltimore is a city that's been You've probably never watched David Simon's The Wire on HBO, where they try and glorify the violence, and it's just, it's a city that is a microcosm for a lot of the problems, and until we can address them... Well, people often complain about the difference in clearance rates between whites and blacks, and they say, oh, police racism, police racism. | |
Of course, probably Baltimore has a black police chief, probably a large number of black detectives. | |
The point is, Black murders are harder to solve for several reasons. | |
One is, they have this no-stitching rule, as you say. | |
Very hard to get them to come forward. | |
Also, blacks kill each other for no apparent reason by ordinary standards. | |
When whites kill each other, you can usually sort of look through the contacts the victim had, what makes sense. | |
There's a motive. | |
There's a motive. | |
There's a clear motive. | |
And there's a reason to think, okay, this guy might have done the job. | |
And at the same time, apparently, for whatever reason, gun murders are more difficult to solve than other kinds of murders. | |
Perhaps because you can do it from a distance, and blacks almost exclusively shoot each other. | |
There are probably other reasons too, but those are some of the obvious ones that explain this difference in clearance rates. | |
Everybody shouts about racism. | |
What's weird is that there's a little throwaway line in the story and perhaps I'll research it for next week. | |
The Black Commissioner said a new initiative to add civilians to the department will help relieve the pressure on detectives and bring justice to more families of homicide victims. | |
Do you want to be a volunteer homicide detective? | |
I doubt that that's going to do anything considering there is such immense pressure of the no snitching culture to And then, of course, hung juries during nullification in Baltimore. | |
Some of it may be just pure manpower problems. | |
However, if you're going to hire civilians to be homicide detectives, well, good luck. | |
I mean, you might find a few good ones, but I imagine in Baltimore there will be local community activists who probably can't remember a phone number. | |
Let's see. | |
Moving to Washington, D.C. | |
Not too far from world headquarters of American Renaissance. | |
It's a little closer to Baltimore. | |
It's a little closer. | |
Getting closer all the time. | |
The Giant Food Supermarket Chain. | |
And this is a supermarket chain dear to me because I am a very frequent customer of Giant. | |
It is expecting to close a number of locations amidst a surge in theft and violence over the last five years. | |
Company President Ira Kress says they steal everything from roasts to shrimp to deodorant to razor blades, you name it. | |
He also highlighted that organized crime groups are hiring thieves to do the stealing for them. | |
It's so lucrative. | |
In Washington, D.C., Giant has taken security measures to combat the rise in shoplifting and violence, including limiting store entrances I'm not quite sure why that helps. | |
I guess that means you can run out of only one store. | |
If you limit store entrances, you can then have more security guards there, more cameras, and you're basically funneling people. | |
There's only one pinch point. | |
Exactly. | |
Hiring more security guards, restricting the number of items at self-checkouts, and limiting the number of items you may carry in your basket. | |
Isn't that interesting? | |
I guess if you really load it up, is the idea that you're just going to Dash out the door with... I mean, again, for those of us who don't live in food deserts, this is such an anomaly to have to think about this. | |
This exists because in my neighborhood, the greatest problem is that one jerk who doesn't return their cart. | |
And you have to go do it for them and give them a stern look to say, hey, in this neighborhood, mind you, we return our shopping carts. | |
And my problem is being sent to the grocery store by my wife to get X. And you go to the shelf and there are 25 different varieties of X. | |
The public white people face. | |
Grocery carts. | |
We are free, white, and 21. | |
Not necessarily all rich, white, and good looking, but close enough to at least know how to return our grocery carts. | |
Can I ask you a quick question as we're talking about this? | |
Have you ever been to a grocery store where items that are so seemingly innocuous are actually behind some sort of glass, not glass partition, well it could be glass partition, but it's locked up. | |
Like I went to a grocery store Recently, a food lion, and I was shocked that there was a $5 bottle of shampoo that was locked, and that you'd have to take this up to the cash register, and they would unlock it. | |
And that's because these grocery stores, they have the data to show the highest stolen items, and they're able to be like, hey, for some reason at this location, at X, these are the items that are being thieves. | |
Yes, and most of them, if there is any sense at all, often it's the ones that are particularly desirable to blacks. | |
The various skin and hair products for blacks, of course people march in and they scream about it, but it's just a practical realization of the truth. | |
In any case, this guy who runs the giant food chain, he blames the weakness of the justice system in refusing to punish offenders. | |
Of course, he says nothing whatsoever about demographics. | |
I guess it's all those Capitol Hill interns and low-paid foundation employees who are walking off with the merchandise. | |
Wouldn't you reckon? | |
A bunch of people from the Heritage Foundation. | |
Yeah, I mean, they just pay their interns just rock bottom. | |
You know, we need to pay those people a living wage. | |
I think the problem would disappear just overnight. | |
Giant wouldn't have to worry at all. | |
It's those poor, underpaid white interns. | |
But let's see. | |
In the context of Washington, D.C., the D.C. | |
Council appears to be taking some radical and common-sense, almost obvious measures. | |
It would be obvious if this wasn't the same council that a few years ago Mr. Taylor got rid of fair evasion because the people who were perpetrating fair evasion were almost 95% black and that was a bad thing. | |
And Hispanic. | |
Yes, probably Hispanic. | |
Don't leave our brown brothers. | |
Hey, the Black and Brown Alliance to ensure that we can all ride for free. | |
I have not been to D.C. | |
in a while, but I've heard horror stories post-COVID, post-George Floyd, since they put the Black Lives Matter sign on the street that the city's police are just overwhelmed. | |
Crime is just outrageous. | |
There's actually a Lyft video, Mr. Taylor, of a bunch of black kids who just shot and killed An Afghanistan interpreter who came over here. | |
Oh, yeah. | |
And he was just shot senselessly in broad daylight. | |
And the kids are laughing about it. | |
Like, hey, why'd you do that? | |
I think that he was with the Special Forces. | |
Exactly. | |
And so he probably had to dodge a few bullets in Afghanistan, but he couldn't dodge this one in Washington, D.C. | |
No, so on Tuesday, July 11th, the D.C. | |
Council voted 12 to 1 to pass an emergency act revised by D.C. | |
Mayor Muriel Bowser following a recent rise in crime in the city. | |
Part of the emergency act has generated controversy involving making it easier for the court system to keep suspects accused of violent crimes in jail prior to their trials. | |
The act makes it easier to keep a defendant in custody before trial if the court finds Probable cause, the defendant committed a violent crime. | |
It also makes it easier to keep juveniles detained before their cases are solved if the court finds, quote, a substantial probability that the youth committed a crime of violence such as carjacking or a dangerous crime, whether or not it was committed while armed, end quote. | |
Ward 4 Council Member Janice Lewis-George was the only member of the DC Council to vote no. | |
on the emergency. And I can't guess why? I'm gonna tell you. | |
Okay. I bet you can't guess. | |
I bet you have an idea. I just can't. I have no idea. I bet you have an idea that the Japanese | |
would be completely perplexed by if we had to bring this up. | |
Before the vote, she raised concerns that the vast majority of adults who will be held in | |
custody pre-trial will be black. | |
Well, hey, Ms. | |
Janice Lewis-George, maybe you should go tell your constituents, quit breaking the law. | |
Yes. | |
It's not hard. | |
However, the act points out the majority of violent crime victims in D.C. | |
are also black. | |
One part said 106 of 120 homicide victims as of July 5th were black men. | |
And how many were black women? | |
I mean, again, I would imagine that 17 to 18 of the remaining 21 were black. | |
I can imagine that you could probably count the number of white victims in 2023 on one hand, Mr. Taylor. | |
Lewis George told the council she was also concerned the act violated due process rights for defendants accused of a crime. | |
Quote, in this country, we have a standard, innocent until proven guilty, unless you're white and you're guilty of white privilege, of course. | |
Lewis George said in an interview, she also said, quote, and in order to take away your liberty, you have to meet a high threshold. | |
And so when we sort out, when we sort of are reimagining that threshold, I think we have to be thoughtful about reimagining what that threshold is, end quote. | |
Yeah, meanwhile, you're going to get food desert after food desert. | |
You're going to see giant, uh, you know, increasingly instead of having one entrance, there are going to be no entrances and there's going to be a big sign that says giant closed for good. | |
That's exactly right. | |
Yeah. | |
That's why a food desert exists. | |
I could go on and on and talk about what else is in the story, but again, the most important thing is simply doing the bare minimum. | |
I mean, Mr. Taylor, Washington DC is one of those cities. | |
That I believe has a gang database that was attacked by NGOs and individuals because the primary individuals who were collectively exposed in this gang database were black or brown people. | |
Can't have that. | |
No, because again, it's just like we see in El Salvador. | |
It's not hard. | |
Arrest those people, en masse, who are committing crime. | |
And you know what? | |
If you have members of the community screeching, oh my gosh, this is bad. | |
But guess what happens after a month if crime goes down? | |
Shootings go down, if homicides go down, and they're still screeching, then you should lock up anybody that's screeching. | |
Okay. | |
Let's be honest, if you're making... The fact is, practically no one will screech. | |
Well, I mean, again, Giant might actually be able to stay open and open up two doors instead of just one door. | |
Yeah. | |
And maybe some of the ethnic hair products will no longer be behind plexiglass. | |
In the meantime... | |
Chicago's Public Library is pleased to welcome Jetta Grace Martin as part of its new Voices for Justice speaker series. | |
We can imagine what that'll be about. | |
She was to be reading selections and answering questions about her debut book, Freedom! | |
The Story of the Black Panther Party. | |
She says knowledge applied at the right time and place is more than power, it's magic. | |
That's what the Black Panther Party did. | |
They called up this magic and launched a revolution. | |
She says her book and her talk are about black nationalism, black radicalism, and about black people. | |
Wow. | |
Now, you'll be glad to know that this program is made possible thanks to generous support from the Chicago Public Library Foundation. | |
That's probably taxpayer money. | |
Now, anybody who knows anything at all about the Black Panthers knows that they killed policemen, they killed certain members of each other, a certain amount of torture was involved. | |
Didn't they kill a judge? | |
What was the shooting at Oakland? | |
I don't know if they actually shot the judge. | |
It was a black female that everybody canonizes and she had a school named after her in Paris or France. | |
It just burned down. | |
Oh gosh. | |
I'll find it. | |
Why can't we think of her name? | |
Well, no, the whole thing. | |
I think one of them hijacked a plane and went to Cuba and is still in Cuba. | |
They were a mess. | |
But according to what people are going to learn at the Chicago Public Library, they called up magic and launched a revolution. | |
Good for them. | |
Now, a story about his honor, the mayor of South Fulton, Georgia. | |
Probably not a well-known person. | |
Angela Davis. | |
Oh yes, Angela Davis. | |
Sorry. | |
Yes, that's him. | |
I think Erica Huggins was another Black Panther ass. | |
No, they had quite a lot... Was the Zebra Killings, that book, was that about Black Panthers or another grotesque...? | |
They were not Black Panthers. | |
But yeah, they were even worse than the Black Panthers. | |
In any case, South Fulton. | |
South Fulton. | |
This is Georgia. | |
That's part of Atlanta. | |
I know that area very well. | |
Well, his honor the mayor was busted after a homeowner called cops at 6.52 in the morning about a trespasser in his home. | |
This is the mayor. | |
The victim said that while he was on the phone with the police, Mayor Khalid Kamau yelled at him several times. | |
Yelling, don't you know who the F I am? | |
I'm the mayor, and I'll wait for my police to get here, and then you'll see what happens. | |
My police to get here? | |
Yes, my police. | |
Well, as it happens, the mayor ended up being charged with criminal trespass, first degree burglary, and was booked into the Fulton County Jail on $11,000 bond before being released. | |
Now, since his arrest, Mr. Comeau has not repeated his earlier comments. | |
Instead, he chose to praise the South Fulton Police Department. | |
I want to thank the police for their courteous and professional service, he said, after he got out of jail. | |
Now, the mayor, this is just such a funny story, the mayor told officers that he was on his way to a dog park when he stopped by this house, claiming it was his dream home and that he had hopes of buying it one day. | |
He admitted that he knew he was trespassing, and he was on the homeowner's property, despite believing that the home was abandoned and unoccupied. | |
His dream home, abandoned and unoccupied. | |
Well, the owner of the house turned out to be there, and he approached Mayor Kamau and held him at gunpoint until the police arrived, warning the mayor to stay put. | |
According to Kamau, The answer when he said, I'm the mayor, let me go. | |
He says, no MFR, you stay right there. | |
Now, I guess if he's inside your house, you have the right to shoot him if he doesn't do what you tell him. | |
In Georgia, I believe they do have standard ground laws. | |
Yes. | |
Anyway, those were the antics from the mayor's office in South Fulton, Georgia. | |
Now, moving on to foreign countries. | |
This is a very disappointing piece of news. | |
I wish I didn't have to read it, but it's all too typical. | |
Italy. | |
so-called right-wing coalition plans to sharply increase the number of foreign workers from outside the EU. | |
Prime Minister Georgia Maloney, remember we've spoken about her many times. Of course before she got into office | |
she was accused of being a fascist, a proto-fascist, a neo-fascist, some sort of fascist. If only. An unregenerate fascist. | |
In any case, she said they would issue 425,000 work permits to non-EU people. | |
up until And that's part of its plan to promote legal immigration to fill gaps in the labor market. | |
I want to hear that again, Mr. Kersey. | |
The announcement followed repeated complaints from employers in various industries, construction, tourism, that they can't find workers. | |
The Bank of Italy also said a serious shortage of skilled workers threatens Italy's ability to carry out its ambitious 200 billion euro EU-funded post-pandemic recovery plan. | |
Now, I think this EU-funded is one of the key factors here. | |
In any case, it's going to expand categories for jobs which foreign workers from outside the EU will be eligible. | |
I don't think many will be coming from New Zealand or Australia or Canada. | |
Before COVID, Italy granted fewer than 31,000 work permits a year. | |
Now they're talking about 425,000 for three years. | |
So they are more than tripling the number that they're going to grant. | |
And listen to this. | |
Opposition politicians accuse the right-wing coalition of hypocrisy. | |
Hypocrisy? | |
Yes, given its leaders' historic hostility to foreign immigrant workers. | |
Both Miss Maloney, Georgia Maloney, and she's the leader of the Brothers of Italy. | |
I think it's great that there's a woman in charge of the Brothers of Italy. | |
She's one of the founders. | |
She doesn't think there's anything wrong with leading the Brothers of Italy. | |
I'd say hats off to her. | |
But, and another of her political allies, Matteo Salvini. | |
From the League, who at one time was one of my absolute favorite European politicians, they have long said that non-European migrants are an existential threat to the country, its people, and culture. | |
This is the opposition bringing this up now. | |
She says, this is Laura Boldrini, a member of the center-left Democratic Party. | |
She says, the government of the right has capitulated. | |
Now, does that mean she's opposed to these new visas? | |
I don't know. | |
Because then she says they had originally opposed all this ethnic replacement and invasion of migrants. | |
What are they up to now? | |
Well, very good question. | |
Even the opposition is wondering, what the heck, boys? | |
But the Italian government at the same time is pushing the EU to take stronger joint action to safeguard Europe's external borders. | |
Well, great! | |
So we'll just let them in legally instead. | |
But, and again, this reflects awfully badly on Giorgia Meloni, who was our great white hope for Italy. | |
We thought so. | |
Yeah, we thought so. | |
Since the start of the year, roughly 70,000 migrants and so-called asylum seekers have showed up by boat, compared to just under 31,000 the same period last year before she was in office. | |
Come on, Georgia! | |
Georgia! | |
We thought we knew you! | |
Have you seen the video? | |
Just a moment. | |
In its statement, Rome said some of the permits for workers in agriculture and tourism would be reserved for workers from countries that sign deals to take back irregular migrants. | |
Now, that is at least one thing. | |
One of the problems, of course, is you catch these people, and if they're from Tunisia or Algeria or South Sudan, they say, we ain't taking them back. | |
I mean, really, they ought to punish those people. | |
Issue them no travel or work visas. | |
But this say, OK, we're going to take you guys legally if you'll take back your illegal people. | |
Is that a proper quid pro quo? | |
Not in my book. | |
And listen to this. | |
Under the skilled workers, among the skilled workers Italy will accept are construction workers, bus drivers, hotel employees. | |
Oh boy, those are really important skilled occupations. | |
Apparently, they also need fishermen. | |
Not enough Italian-born fishermen. | |
At least, that's what the fisher folks say. | |
So there you go, what we thought. | |
I mean, this happens so often. | |
People get into office, promising one thing, and then turn right around and do exactly the other thing. | |
Of course, in Giorgio Meloni's case, the EU has got hundreds of, what is it, 200 billion euros, did I say? | |
Hundreds of billions of euros dangling on this hook, and they're probably gonna say, uh-oh, uh-oh, mm-mm, you're not letting in enough people. | |
No, not one euro for you. | |
That's what they've been threatening with Hungary. | |
Have you seen the video of the asylum or the, let's just call it what they are, invaders coming to shore Spain and these beautiful Spanish women in bikinis, a couple of them topless, pointing, shocked and going to confront them. | |
It's just, it's a surreal video because I couldn't imagine being on a beach with, you know, with my family or, you know, hanging out, all of a sudden you see a boat. | |
Like, what would you do? | |
Hey, on Long Island? | |
It's going to happen. | |
It's going to happen. | |
Just wait. | |
Just don't hang out on the beach in Long Island. | |
I mean, they'll be coming up from Haiti. | |
Oh my goodness. | |
Yep. | |
Now, you have a story on what the Home Office is up to. | |
Spending taxpayer dollars. | |
Oh, your favorite country. | |
The Home Office admits to spending £500,000 a day on empty hotel beds for migrants. | |
Repeat that figure. | |
£500,000 a day on empty hotel beds for migrants. | |
So these are ones that louts are not even sleeping in. | |
Yeah, this is from E.J. | |
Ward writing for Leading Britain's Conversation. | |
The Home Office is already spending six million pounds a day on housing 51,000 asylum seekers in nearly 400 hotels or other contingency accommodations such as hostels. | |
So those are beds that are actually filled. | |
Correct. | |
Six million a day and then a half a million pounds on empty beds. | |
A day. | |
A day. | |
So over a week, you're talking about 42 million pounds a week. | |
You break that out, that's what? | |
80? | |
50 by 40 is 2 billion. | |
It's unbelievable, the amount. | |
And that's just 51,000 asylum seekers. | |
2 billion. It's unbelievable. That's just 51,000 asylum seekers. Some 1,339 migrants have reached | |
the UK in small boats in the last three days, taking the total of Channel migrants for this | |
year to 12,772. Just 4% lower than this time last year. | |
The news comes as almost 10,000 small boat migrants who reached Britain in the past four months were handed an amnesty from the government's tough new immigration measures. | |
Home Secretary Suella Braverman had previously said any migrants who arrive since March by irregular routes Such as on dinghies across the channel would be barred from making asylum claims, but in a major concession to get the government's illegal migration bill through Parliament, it will now apply only to migrants who reach the UK after the legislation gains royal assent. | |
You know, Suela Braverman is of Indian extraction. | |
Correct. | |
But she's actually pretty good. | |
It seems to me she's trying every possible way to keep these people out and once they're there to send them back. | |
So, I think she's quite sincere about this. | |
Yeah. | |
If the British were actually sincere, she'd have no position of power. | |
And then they'd have a country. | |
But again, this is why watching movies like Dunkirk, it makes no sense. | |
Because you think about the Battle of Britain, you think about all that happened, and then, you know, what's his name? | |
Winston Churchill campaigns on a Keep Britain White campaign in 1947, and what he loses. | |
You know, Enoch Powell should have been. | |
I mean, it's just... Watching England, what's happening, you read the Rivers of Blood speech, and it just, it's like, again, we have gone mad. | |
And the question that you've spent a lifetime wondering, and I think a lot of very intelligent people, why? | |
What is it? | |
And that's the fundamental question, because if that can be figured out, Mr. Taylor, there is a chance to reverse things. | |
Yes. | |
But until then, we're going to see the English spend £500,000 a day on empty beds. | |
And yeah, like I said, $42,000,000 a week. | |
A pound. | |
A pound, yeah. | |
£42,000,000 a week on these housing 51,000 asylum seekers. | |
So, just extraordinary numbers. | |
Well, for that, I say only one thing. | |
A pound. | |
A pound, yeah, 42 billion dollars, pound, pound, 42 million pounds a week on these housing | |
51,000 asylum seekers. | |
So just extraordinary numbers. | |
To that, I say only one thing. | |
Rule Britannia. | |
When you think about the country it used to be and the just pathetic mess it's become. | |
Well, here's another British story. | |
The Church of England's school pupils are now being taught they benefit from white privilege. | |
Teachers at schools in the Diocese of St. | |
Edmundsbury and Ipswich. | |
Now, the instructors are told to teach pupils that they benefit from the systematic oppression of people of color. | |
The diocese, which oversees 87 schools, probably most of them are K-12, says pupils should learn that white privilege means they are the dominant representation on all media. | |
I don't watch British media, but I bet, I would bet any amount of money that's not true at all. | |
That they're probably just slathered with multiracial couples in both dramas and in the advertising. | |
Let's see, children should amplify the voices of people of color. | |
How do you do that? | |
You bring a microphone and a sound system around with you wherever you go? | |
Be more than just not racist, but actively anti-racist and confront racial injustices even when it feels uncomfortable. | |
We're talking about children. | |
Yeah. | |
Daddy, that's a racist joke! | |
People should learn about the white supremacy pyramid to show, and I'm quoting here, a bias stereotypes and prejudice can lead to racist words and actions leading to physical harm and death. | |
Got that? | |
Stereotypes and prejudice can lead to death. | |
That'll terrify the third graders. | |
The Right Reverend Martin Seeley, Bishop of St. | |
Edmundsbury and Ipswich. | |
Boy, what a title. | |
He criticized the government's Commission on Race and Ethnic Differences, which found that race is a minor factor in British society. | |
It said that family structure, class, socioeconomic background, geography, culture, and religion have, quote, more significant impact on life chances than the existence of racism. | |
Isn't that astonishing to have a government commission that actually says such a thing? | |
Well, the right reverend, the right reverend Martin Seeley, Bishop of St. | |
Edmundsbury in Ipswich, he knows better. | |
He just blew this aside. | |
He says there is no shortage of evidence of systemic racism. | |
Now, Nigel Genders, gosh, that's a modern word, Genders. | |
I wonder how many he has in mind. | |
Nigel Genders, wow, I bet he's so happy to have that name. | |
The Church of England's chief education officer said, racism exists, and children and staff experience racism in our schools every day. | |
Every day. | |
You know, when people make this claim, I'd like to kind of walk around after a black person, you know. | |
Okay. | |
Hmm. | |
When's it going to happen? | |
Come on, it's got to happen. | |
It happens every day. | |
When is today's act of racism going to happen? | |
We've only got two minutes left in the school day. | |
What's going on here? | |
When's it going to happen? | |
Yes. | |
Yes. | |
Gee. | |
Anyway. | |
And the Telegraph, which is usually a pretty good paper, revealed last week that white pupils have been excluded from extra weekend literacy classes at the schools in North London. | |
These are public schools. | |
In these extra classes, they study black authors and celebrate being black. | |
There are no equivalent offerings for white students. | |
Too bad. | |
I think they ought to get the same treatment. | |
I agree. | |
Yes, celebrate being white, read white authors. | |
Now, of course, you've followed this story about Ben & Jerry's. | |
I have. | |
And before July 4th, they said that U.S. | |
is founded on stolen indigenous land. | |
This year, let's commit to returning it and said we need to start with Mount Rushmore. | |
Well, of course, some people are calling for a Bud Light style boycott. | |
Of course, Ben & Jerry's has been just signaling its profound virtue for a long time. | |
In June 2020, at the height of the BLM mania, it called for police to be defunded. | |
Yeah, that always solves the problems. | |
And Matthew McCarthy, CEO, wrote in an op-ed piece in 2021, I understand that acknowledging the structural racism | |
that is deeply woven into the fabric of our society is difficult, and to move forward, | |
America must be honest about our racist past and fix it. | |
Now, Mr. Kersey, how do you fix the past? | |
That's a neat trick. | |
Time machine, get back in. | |
But you know, this is for the cuckoo notion of reparations. | |
We're going to fix the past. | |
Okay, okay. | |
I mean, life travels only at one particular speed. | |
You can't go any faster than that. | |
Correct. | |
But now, this is the best point. | |
A tribal chief with links to the Native American nation that originally inhabited the land in Vermont, where Ben and Jerry's headquarters are located, said he'd like to get the land back. | |
Don Stevens, chief of the Nulhigin Band of the Kusuk Abenaki. | |
He said in a recent interview, the nation has always wanted to reclaim stewardship of our lands. | |
Well, let's see if Ben and Jerry's are as good as their word. | |
I would love to be a tribal chief, by the way. | |
What a great title. | |
Oh, man. | |
Well, I don't care about the title. | |
Look at what you can do. | |
The spoils. | |
Rewards. | |
Yes, tribal chief. | |
I could be tribal public servant. | |
I don't care what they call me, but I'd like to run the casino. | |
Oh, my goodness. | |
Yes, sell booze. | |
Oh, man, oh, man. | |
Tribal chief. | |
Not bad. | |
Well now, you have, yet again, an important story, and I'm so glad we seem to have time for it, about ring cameras. | |
This is from the editors of Wired Magazine. | |
I used to read this every month. | |
I don't think I picked up a Wired Magazine, Mr. Taylor, in probably 13, 12 years. | |
Well, has it been... When's the last time it was printed? | |
I don't know. | |
That's a great question. | |
I don't know if it's printed anymore. | |
I mean, again, it's... I bet it's strictly on wire now. | |
Probably just online. | |
Quote, why we don't recommend Ring cameras. | |
They're affordable and ubiquitous, but homeowners shouldn't be able to act as vigilantes. | |
Most of the time, product testing is very simple. | |
If a router is better and more feature-full than another with a similar price, then you give it a better score and move on with your day. | |
However, we occasionally end up with products that can be dangerous to you or to society | |
in general, which we believe to be the case with Amazon-owned Ring and its relationship | |
with law enforcement. | |
When you set up a Ring camera, you are authentically enrolled in the Neighbors service. | |
Neighbors, which is also a standalone app, shows you an activity feed from all nearby | |
Ring camera owners with posts about found dogs, stolen hoses, and a safety report that | |
shows how many calls for service, violent and nonviolent, It also provides an outlet for public safety agencies like police and fire departments to broadcast information widely. | |
But it allows Ring owners to send videos they've captured with their Ring video doorbell cameras and outdoor security cameras to law enforcement. | |
This is a feature unique to Ring. | |
Even Nextdoor removed its forward to police feature in 2020, which allowed Nextdoor users to forward their own safety posts. | |
To local law enforcement agencies. | |
They did that right around the time that all the George Floyd insanity started. | |
They went woke. | |
If a crime has been committed, law enforcement should obtain a warrant to access civilian video footage. | |
But that's if the civilians don't want to turn it over, right? | |
Exactly. | |
Multiple members of Wired's gear team have spoken, reading over the years about this feature. | |
The company has been clear it's what customers want, even though there's no evidence that more video surveillance footage keeps communities safer. Oh I'm sure | |
there's none. Yeah exactly. Instead neighbors increases the possibility of | |
racial profiling. | |
It makes it easier for both private citizen and law enforcement agencies to target certain groups for suspicion of crime based on skin color, ethnicity, religion, or country of origin. | |
Mr. Taylor, if you get a package from Amazon and a black person walks up and steals your package, I think that's pretty much conclusive proof, if it's captured on your ring, that a black person stole your package that had been delivered by Amazon. | |
No, no. | |
That's stereotyping. | |
That's stereotyping. | |
He didn't really steal it. | |
He wasn't really black. | |
So I live in a White Topium. | |
I think I can count the number of blacks in this neighborhood on one finger. | |
Maybe two fingers. | |
Point is, I've got, or I had, I have a ring camera in both the front and on the side. | |
It's something I encourage everyone to do. | |
I think it's very important. | |
It's very inexpensive. | |
The service is fantastic and as I stated in this in this op-ed you are then able to tap into the network to find out other types of crimes other types of suspicious behavior that's transpiring within a Very short radius from your home, and I think it's important that you know this stuff Well, you know, speaking of short radiuses from your home, actually, I do have more black neighbors than you think. | |
Just a few doors down is a beautiful house occupied by two black doctors. | |
Really? | |
Yes, yes. | |
Very nice people. | |
I almost never see them, but in any case... | |
It is not. | |
I don't live in a pure Hoytopia. | |
Yeah, one of my neighbors, we have a lot of fun talking at the pool. | |
He was a former college football player, a former coach, and it's fascinating talking about what he's seen and why he doesn't want to be a coach anymore because of the negative trajectory of where kids are going in terms of discipline and how hard it is to actually be a coach. | |
Is he a black guy? | |
He's a black dude. | |
Yeah, he's a black dude. | |
Really good guy. | |
But it was just fascinating. | |
He lost all interest because you could no longer have discipline. | |
You couldn't discipline? | |
You couldn't discipline him. | |
There was no manner in which to do that. | |
But... Let's get back to Ring Camera. | |
Let's get back to Ring Camera. | |
This is fascinating. | |
We've been concerned about this issue. | |
Okay, again, I'm reading this from... This is the voice of the editorial, ladies and gentlemen. | |
Quote, we have been concerned about this issue since Ring started partnering with the police departments to hand out free video cameras via the Neighbors Police Safety Service. | |
Within the app, law enforcement can create requests for assistance and neighbors can contact camera owners directly for footage. | |
Hey, fantastic! | |
That's wonderful! | |
Right, if the police say somebody was hijacked and shot on thus and such an avenue, have you got any footage? | |
Yeah. | |
What's wrong with that? | |
Yeah, we believe this feature should not exist. | |
When we interviewed next-door CEO Sarah Fryer on steps the company was taking to reduce racial profiling, Fryer cited the work of Jennifer Eberhardt, a Stanford professor whose work on the psychological associations between race and crime won her a MacArthur Genius Grant, once again proving why the MacArthur Genius Grant should be disbanded. | |
That's the exact opposite. | |
The MacArthur Moron Grant. | |
Yes, exactly. | |
This morose mutant somehow wins a reward that she should not have done. | |
Much of Eberhardt's work revolves around decision points. | |
The more you make people stop and think before they act, the less likely they are to engage in unconscious racial bias. | |
Okay, that means you're gonna be shot when you're trying to stop a crime, I guess. | |
Putting a frictionless feature directly into neighbors makes it much easier for ring owners to bombard law enforcement. | |
with unsubstantiated and possibly biased alarms. | |
It's important to note here that law enforcement is legally not allowed to access your personal videos | |
or information without your permission. | |
Law enforcement agencies must cite an active investigation within a time and geographic range | |
and cannot solicit information on lawful activities like protesting. | |
The point is though, again, you have the ability through Ring to get this information to police to help them in a case. | |
It's strictly voluntary, and the police obviously have got no business snooping on your Ring videos, which is absolutely as it should be. | |
Unfortunately, Ring has taken steps to address the concerns about its relationship with law enforcement. | |
In 2021, the company released the results of a two-year long audit with the Policing Project at New York University School of Law. | |
Ring made changes to policies, including making requests for assistance public, making NPSS a local service, and introducing new community guidelines when it comes to posting. | |
For example, you're now only allowed to report facts, not feelings. | |
You're no longer allowed to post footage of people just because you feel Squirmy about them. | |
I've still seen people post stuff about suspicious activity. | |
Facts, not footage. | |
Or facts, not feelings. | |
Yeah, not feelings. | |
In other words, you say, yes, someone just outside my door brutally hammered somebody to death with a sledgehammer. | |
I have no feelings. | |
I'll tell you, my ring doorbell, Mr. Taylor, a little anecdote for you. | |
Two It was last summer, maybe two falls ago, there was a mass theft of people foolishly leaving their cars unlocked. | |
And this group of people would go in, they'd open up the car doors, and they would get whatever they could. | |
No, no, no, they'd take whatever they could. | |
And then I guess they'd go and they'd pawn it, sell it, and I had a friend whose son had his iPod, I'm sorry, his iPad for college stolen. | |
They found it down the street in a neighbor's yard because the people who stole it realized they couldn't find a way to pawn it because it was locked at the university. | |
It was locked and only accessible by his face. | |
It was like a facial recognition Apple computer. | |
Well, they tried to get into my vehicle because I had my ring side camera on and I was recording it. | |
I was able to forward that to the police. | |
They were able to deduce who the people were and they were a group of melanin enhanced individuals from the major metropolitan city that I live in a wonderful suburb from. | |
You mean reliable Biden supporters? | |
Yes, they are a special voting bloc. | |
Yes, they're part of that group that doesn't snitch, which is one of the reasons why my city has one of the higher homicide rates in the country. | |
Real quick, if you've logged into Neighbors recently, you might have noticed these effects. | |
When I first tested a ring camera, Neighbors showed me a weekly crime report of two dozen police incidents that had occurred on my street, which spiked my heart rate and convinced me that we were live among criminals in a degenerate society. | |
A recent peak showed me that my neighbor's feed is now 50% missing cats and only 50% terrified people posting about gunshots or thieves. | |
It's an improvement. | |
You know what? | |
I think I'd rather live in a neighborhood where everybody is posting about missing cats. | |
What she's saying is she doesn't want to know. | |
Yeah. | |
She wants to be willfully ignorant. | |
She doesn't want to know. | |
I'll tell you, I have been on next door for some time and I had no idea how much crime there is in my general neighborhood. | |
I haven't been a victim of that kind of crime, but people talk about their cars parked in front being broken into, and old people trying to break into people's houses. | |
I think, and it's made me much more careful. | |
I'm glad to know this. | |
Well, it's important to that because you should, again, ladies and gentlemen, regardless of where you live, lock your door, don't have valuables in your car, and don't be foolish enough to leave your garage door open. | |
Don't be foolish enough to leave your doors open. | |
Unlocked. | |
But what is, of course, remarkable about this, about Ring, is we don't want to know. | |
We don't want to know the truth. | |
And the editorial, we don't want you to know either. | |
You don't have the right to know. | |
Yes. | |
And you certainly better not tell the police. | |
Now, they say they're worried this is going to increase racial profiling. | |
There's only one way to reduce racial profiling. | |
Just one way. | |
What's that? | |
Black people need to stop breaking the law. | |
Very simple. | |
Very simple. | |
And there's no racial profiling against Asians somehow. | |
Gee, I wonder why. | |
Those just idiot white people just don't know how to be white supremacists. | |
We call it, instead of Occam's razor, call that Taylor's pencil. | |
Erase racial profiling by just having the document correct. | |
Stop breaking the law. | |
Taylor's meat cleaver. | |
I don't want none of this pencil stuff. | |
Hey, listen. | |
Hey, John Wick can do some damn gamey things with a pencil. | |
Let's move on to the Griot. | |
The Griot. | |
We have a little bit of time. | |
I think we have enough time for this story. | |
This is a good one. | |
Yes. | |
Oh, now I'm quoting. | |
I'm quoting from the Griot, this black site that gets, oh boy, the kind of massive advertising they get. | |
Mercedeses and all the fancy stereo equipment. | |
And wow. | |
Oof. | |
I wish we'd get advertising like that, but no hope. | |
Over the last five years, the long game of white supremacy has stymied police reform, thwarted student debt relief. | |
That was white supremacy at work, by the way. | |
Really? | |
Yeah. | |
Criminalized black history. | |
Yeah, we criminalized black history. | |
Ousted black educators attempting to equalize education and made it harder for black people to vote. | |
Now, 80% of whites did not support reparations for the descendants of enslaved people. | |
Yet more evidence of white supremacy. | |
This is all part of white supremacy's long game. | |
You know, I'm sure the descendants of the Africans who sold the slaves in the first place don't want to pay reparations either. | |
I guess that's white supremacy too. | |
Of course, everything can be white supremacy. | |
This guy goes on to say, most whites, 62%, think our country has done enough or too much to give black people equal rights. | |
This is a white supremacist thought. | |
And then he goes on to say, white people come to take things. | |
One of the reasons black students have higher student debt is that banks charge black students higher interest rates than similarly situated white students. | |
I'd like to see the data on that. | |
We play defense because America takes our things. | |
Takes our things. | |
We should take things from white people. | |
This is right there by the Mercedes ads. | |
As for reparations that certainly wouldn't cost white people $800,000, I guess this means $800,000 a piece, the difference in the wealth of the average white household compared to a black household. | |
Obviously, that's because of slavery. | |
Obviously. | |
Obviously. | |
Redlining. | |
And then he goes on to say, we should take that too. | |
Just take that too. | |
Then, this is curious, we should ban white Santas and Christmas songs. | |
Ban white Christmas songs? | |
And pro-police rallies and violent national anthems. | |
How many of them do we have? | |
One. | |
One's all you need. | |
He says, It's currently popular to capitalize the be-in-black in acknowledgment of and reverence for the history, experience, and culture of black Americans. | |
But amid pervasive racial violence and destructive white grievance, I fear capitalization provides fodder for those who preach race as a biological reality. | |
See, if you capitalize black, I mean that is bowing down to black people, but it might suggest that it's actual race. | |
He says, while racism is deadly real, race itself is a fiction. | |
And you wonder just how so many people can detect this fiction at a glance. | |
In America, whiteness is more valuable than gold, but it is impossible to convince the average white person that he benefited from slavery. | |
Tell that to Rachel Dozell. | |
I know. | |
Tell that to, uh, to, uh, oh, golly, why is her name slipping my mind? | |
Pocahontas. | |
Elizabeth Warren. | |
Elizabeth Warren. | |
Yes. | |
She's a great senator from Massachusetts. | |
Another great senator. | |
Yes. | |
It's impossible to convince the average white person that he's benefited from slavery. | |
It's impossible. | |
Most believe they don't have a racist bone in their bodies. | |
All the facts, history, and data will never be able to change their minds. | |
Even trying is useless. | |
Because they're right. | |
Whiteness is a storm always brewing. | |
The tidal waves cannot be stopped. | |
We will never be able to take away their whiteness. | |
Well, this isn't going to take everything else. | |
I mean, who cares if we're white after they've stolen our Mercedeses, and our houses, and our bank accounts, and our $800,000 apiece? | |
Who cares if they're white? | |
But this is by a guy named Michael Herriot. | |
I looked up his website. | |
Do you know what he calls himself? | |
I know, yeah. | |
A white peopologist. | |
A white peopologist. | |
Because he's a professional who has specialized knowledge in the field of Caucasian culture, including the political, economic, and social habits of white people and their history. | |
Yeah? | |
Mr. Kersey, he knows you better than you know yourself. | |
Well, he's also a championship-level spades player, Mr. Taylor. | |
I'm not even sure what spades are. | |
That's a card game, right? | |
Yes. | |
He's also, he has a book coming out. | |
Black AF history. | |
The un-whitewashed story of America. | |
I can't wait to read that. | |
Well, he is a white peopologist. | |
White boat. | |
Woof, woof, woof. | |
Bye-bye to him. | |
Now, we have already exceeded our time, so we will sign off. | |
But, ladies and gentlemen, we'd love to hear from you. | |
Please send your comments, corrections, love notes to amren.com, A-M-R-E-N.com, and click on the contact us button, or Simply go to your email provider in the To field, send an email to me, Paul Kersey, at BecauseWeLiveHereAtProtonMail.com. | |
Once again, BecauseWeLiveHereAtProtonMail.com. | |
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. |