$500 Fine for First-Degree Arson
Jared Taylor and Paul Kersey share the widespread outrage. They also discuss James Yoo, Jussie Smollett, 10,000 in one day, and the College Admissions Accountability Act.
Jared Taylor and Paul Kersey share the widespread outrage. They also discuss James Yoo, Jussie Smollett, 10,000 in one day, and the College Admissions Accountability Act.
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Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, welcome to Radio Renaissance. | |
I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance, and today is December 7th, Anno Domini, 2023. | |
That means it is Pearl Harbor Day. | |
So happy Pearl Harbor Day to all our listeners, especially our Japanese listeners. | |
You know, Mr. Kersey, I was out earlier today and there was a nip in the air, for sure. | |
And I forgot to add, ladies and gentlemen, that with me is my indefatigable co-host, Paul Kersey. | |
Well, let us begin with listener comments. | |
In particular, we had one that reacted to a story we mentioned yesterday about the city of Denver, which has decided to empower all students, all students in the schools who are users of languages other than English. | |
Just what that will involve, whether they take the SAT tests in Twi or Tigrinya, we don't know. | |
But Denver is all set to empower them. | |
And so our listener writes. | |
Thank you for the news items you feature on your show. | |
And the one on languages reminds me of something not mentioned often. | |
Spain and Portugal are part of Europe. | |
Their colonization of the New World has been decried by many people today, and even Columbus Day has been pushed off the school holiday calendar. | |
But why do we celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month? | |
It comes around Columbus Day, when what we are celebrating is destruction of native peoples, the domination of Europe over the New World. | |
You know, that's such a good point that I'm a little embarrassed never to have thought of it, Mr. Kersey. | |
Why are we celebrating these genocidal maniacs, these enslavers, these horrible colonizers and sappers? | |
Anyway, our listener goes on to offer a side point. | |
Why don't people know that Brazil imported 4 million blacks, sold by other blacks in Africa, of course, while the United States imported only 400,000? | |
Yes, I've made that point many times. | |
Absolutely certain. | |
Our listener says, couldn't you say that Brazilian soils are filled with the bones of four million slaves, so we should not import Brazilian coffee without a label stating this? | |
Another good point. | |
Besides which, many Guatemalans live in Florida working in law and maintenance, agriculture, especially in Palm Beach County. | |
They don't speak Spanish. | |
And I would guess some live in other parts of the United States. | |
That's true. | |
And our listener adds, there are 53 indigenous languages in Mexico. | |
If all of those people come to the United States, things in that Denver School District will get very complicated, and there will be no more money left for sending rovers to Mars, Venus, Uranus, etc. | |
I thought that was a pretty good comment, Mr. Kersey. | |
I agree with you completely, and we love every one of our commenters who send in letters, emails, suggestions, stories, and anything else that they deem worthy of sending. | |
We sure do, and I think we should tell our listeners how to do that. | |
One way that you can get something straight to me is to go to amren.com, A-M-R-E-N dot com, hit the Contact Us tab, and your message will come straight to me. | |
And the other way, Mr. Kersey, is? | |
So simple. | |
Shoot me an email. | |
Because we live here at ProtonMail, I'm sorry, BecauseWeLiveHereAtProton.me, once again that email address is BecauseWeLiveHereAtProton.me. | |
Our first news story today is one that I think is quite significant. | |
The College Admissions Accountability Act has just been introduced in Congress by Senator J.D. | |
Vance and Representative Jim Banks. | |
It would establish a Special Inspector General within the Education Department, separate from the Office of Civil Rights. | |
To probe potential violations of the colorblind standards set forth in Students for Fair Admissions vs. Harvard, which ruled that race-conscious admissions programs violate the 14th Amendment. | |
The bill would also bar schools that flout the decision from receiving any form of federal aid. | |
The proposed law comes as universities around the country are combing for loopholes in the affirmative action ban. | |
The Office of the Special Inspector General for Unlawful Discrimination in Higher Education, boy that's a mouthful, would take direct aim at these evasions. | |
The bill would create a new mechanism for applicants and university employees to file discrimination claims. | |
Those claims would be investigated by the Special Investigator General, now this part worries me a little bit, nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. | |
Who could then recommend enforcement actions, including revocation of federal funds. | |
Imagine what sort of clown Joe Biden would nominate. | |
So there's a problem here, but I guess that's probably the only way legally you can arrange to do something like this. | |
I wish I could appoint him, but I'll get JD Vance to write that into the law. | |
The bill also covers financial aid determinations and academic programs, empowering the Inspector General to go after scholarships, fellowships, research programs, etc. | |
that exclude white people. | |
The Education Department's Office for Civil Rights, which is supposed to oversee campus complaints and deal with nondiscrimination law, has proven unable or unwilling to enforce the rules on the books. | |
I thought this was interesting here. | |
The bill includes a sunset clause that would terminate the office after 12 years. | |
Republicans, optimists, all seem to be betting that recalcitrant universities will, after a decade of robust enforcement, throw in the towel and get used to colorblind norms. | |
That reminds me of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's decision on one of these affirmative action decisions by the Supreme Court in which she said, I expect these all to just go away after 25 years. | |
But anyway, this is this is really quite good. | |
Somebody has realized that you need somebody actually to enforce the law. | |
The law says don't discriminate. | |
Of course, I suppose you could get Congress to repass the anti-discrimination laws and say, this time we mean it. | |
Just add that as a tag into the Civil Rights Act of 1964 if that's what you wanted to do. | |
But it is very encouraging to see that some people realize not only are people not Now, here is another interesting little bit. | |
universities in a racially fair-minded way, but they are actively figuring out how to | |
violate the law, and these people would breathe down their necks, we hope. | |
Now here is another interesting little bit. | |
Billionaire and Harvard graduate Bill Ackman called out his alma mater for discriminatory | |
practices against white men, Asians, and conservatives. | |
Fancy that. | |
Ackman is the CEO of Pershing Square Capital Management. | |
He earlier wrote a letter to Harvard President Claudine Gay demanding that she crack down on anti-Semitism on the campus. | |
Mr. Taylor, I believe that Claudine Gay is definitely melanin enhanced, correct? | |
Oh yes, oh yes. | |
She is absolutely black, black, black. | |
She's not just a suggestion of black. | |
She is just supercharged with melanin. | |
Yes, indeed. | |
That she should crack down on anti-Semitism that arose in the wake of the Hamas attack on Israel. | |
He says, students are taught that slavery and colonialism are the animating forces of history, and this ideology dominates the classroom conversation and coursework. | |
Jews are presented as white people, he seems to have noticed. | |
It's therefore okay to hate Israel and Jews because they are oppressors. | |
Harvard's Office of Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging. | |
Oh, this is belonging. | |
Oh gosh, doesn't that make you feel warm and fuzzy? | |
You can go to the Office of Belonging and say, what can you do to help me feel like I belong? | |
He says this office is about whiteness versus people of color. | |
I'd say it's more like people of color versus whiteness, but still. | |
Yes, the officer the office's standards are also enforced in hiring and in faculty selection excluding more qualified candidates if they are white or Asian straight men. | |
Atman, and I thought this was interesting, he says this in a post on X, he says he was saddened to hear how his beloved university had lost its way and embarrassed by his lack of awareness about these problems on campus. | |
Mr. Kersey, he clearly does not listen to our podcast. | |
So, Bill Ackman, you want to know what's really going on? | |
Tune in to Radio Renaissance. | |
He goes on to say, Antisemitism is the canary in the coal mine for other discriminatory practices at Harvard. | |
Well, I'm not sure about that. | |
There has been explicit anti-white discrimination for a long time before all of this hubbub about antisemitism showed up. | |
Correct, correct. | |
Yes, but better that Bill Ackman tumbled to it one way or another. | |
We like to think that we manage a big tent around here. | |
There are many entrances, many ways to get inside the big tent of racial awareness, and if it takes what's been going on, Well, Bill Ackman, welcome to the Big Tent. | |
Now, Mr. Kersey, you have a story that I just saw the headline on the story. | |
I never really got to the bottom of it, but I looked through what you've got here, and this is really outrageous. | |
These convictions that have been thrown out? | |
Do tell. | |
It is. | |
I'd like to actually real quick read from Steve Saylor, October 13th, 2023. | |
He wrote this in regards to the world historical question at the moment is whether American Jews, who are arguably the single most influential politically mobilized group in the modern globe, will figure out that woke anti-white hatred is inherently anti-Semitic. | |
Or will they assume the solution must be tripling down yet again on promoting racist anti-white hatred as the only way to unify the coalition of the fringes? | |
End quote. | |
I think that's one of the most profound things that has been written in 2023. | |
And I think that what Bill Ackman has just done, in fact, and what JD Vance has done, we live at a point now where mainstream A senator and one of the wealthiest people in America are calling out anti-white acts. | |
Yes! | |
That is unbelievable. | |
Well, I'm prepared to believe it. | |
I'm happy to believe it. | |
I just hope they stick to their guns. | |
So this is at least a second billionaire who talks about anti-white activism. | |
And again, if it took beating up on Jews for them to figure that out, well, however they figure it out is okay with me. | |
I agree, I agree. | |
Yes, yes, however they figure it out. | |
So, please do, tell us about these convictions that have been thrown out, en masse, about 100 convictions or so? | |
Yeah, so I saw this on a very fantastic website, the Conundrum Cluster, and I just want to give a shout out to him, or her, I don't know who wrote it, I don't know much about them, but someone emailed this to me, U.S. | |
Army Rewrites History throws out convictions of black soldiers who shot unarmed white civilians at random. | |
And Conundrum Cluster writes this, the military has finally found a war it can win. | |
And on November 14th, 2023, Secretary of the Army Christine Wormuth announced that she planned to set aside the convictions of 110 black soldiers who participated in the Camp Logan mutiny. | |
Now, on on August 23rd, 1917, Houston police beat up and arrested a black soldier who attempted to intervene in the arrest of a black woman. | |
When another soldier attempted to intervene in this arrest, he was beaten up too. | |
At nearby Camp Logan, soldiers of the all-black 3rd Battalion, U.S. | |
24th Infantry Regiment, worked themselves into a frenzy over false rumors that the soldiers in Houston had been killed by the police. | |
Later, that sounds a lot like the George Floyd stuff, doesn't it? | |
Later, equally false rumors of a white mob marching on the base to attack it were allegedly spread around by the soldiers as well. | |
In response to this totally imagined threat, the soldiers stormed the base armory, seized the weapons there, and marched on the city of Houston to get their revenge. | |
On their march, the black soldiers shot white people they encountered without provocation. | |
They also fired into homes they passed. | |
It was an overtly racial riot. | |
They were not only targeting white people, they stopped passing cars, pulled out white occupants, and killed them. | |
An amazing person, the American conservative magazine editor Helen Andrews, has assembled a set of quotes from the book A Night of Violence, which, I'm sad to say, was published by the LSU Press, and it goes for about $500 a copy. | |
I was gonna buy a copy, but Mr. Taylor, it's, uh, It is very, very difficult to attain. | |
She wrote this. | |
It uses the trial transcript to detail the murders. | |
The murder that most stuck out to me was that of Freddie Winkler, a local teenager who was unlucky enough to turn on a light in his home to see what was going on. | |
The black soldiers shot into the home and killed him and seriously wounded one of his friends. | |
They blew that kid's arm off. | |
These were random attacks on civilians committed by armed black American soldiers. | |
The murders were entirely one-sided. | |
The only casualties the mutineers suffered were from friendly fire, as the black soldiers shot wildly at their victims, accidentally hitting other black soldiers. | |
In total, 11 civilians and five police officers were killed by the rampaging soldiers. | |
Four of the mutineers were killed by friendly fire. | |
The ringleader of the mutiny committed suicide by shooting himself. | |
The Army's response to Mr. Taylor was swift. | |
The mutineers were placed on trial for charges that range from murder to assault. | |
The trial lasted for nearly a month, and 169 witnesses testified. | |
The final transcript ran well over 2,000 pages. | |
It was overseen by high-ranking officers, three brigadier generals, seven full colonels, and three lieutenant colonels. | |
So not a lynching, despite the extraordinary situation. | |
By the end of the trial, 110 soldiers, 110 black soldiers, were convicted for their roles in the mutiny. | |
19 of the men, who were accused of particularly brutal behavior, We're sentenced to death and executed several days later, despite these convictions. | |
Go ahead, Mr. Taylor. | |
No, no. | |
I was just going to say justice used to be swift. | |
Swift justice is important. | |
You know, these days, by the time somebody actually gets a death sentence, it's maybe 15 years later, forgotten all about what he did. | |
No, I think swift justice. | |
I think it's written in the Constitution, a speedy trial at any rate. | |
I think people deserve a speedy execution, too. | |
But anyway, please continue. | |
I don't disagree. | |
Despite these convictions, all of the participants in this mutiny have now been granted honorable discharges nearly 106 years after the fact. | |
In fact, Mr. Taylor, Army PR representative Bryce Doobie stated in a post that's now unavailable because he locked his account after receiving pushback that the trial shouldn't have even occurred to begin with. | |
The Black Soldier's actions were apparently A-OK. | |
The Army seems to be adopting the policy that mutiny and murder are honorable and lawful, as long as you say you're doing it to fight perhaps entirely imagined, in the words of the author, systemic racism. | |
So I guess it's not too long until Harper's Ferry and John Brown are retconned to be the true heroes of 1859. | |
They already are in a lot of people's books. | |
Unfortunately, you're right. | |
Yeah. | |
Even at the time, a lot of abolitionists thought they were wonderful. | |
Some of the New England transcendentalists, they said that when he mounted the scaffold, they were reminded of Jesus Christ being nailed to the cross. | |
So you don't even have to retcon it. | |
Just go back to what those fools were saying. | |
You know, it's fascinating. | |
At some point, there might be a made-for-Amazon or HBO movie glorifying the actions of this Houston mutiny. | |
I could see that being made very easily. | |
Of course, you remember back, oh, probably almost ten years ago, maybe nine years ago, there was a movie made about Nat Turner and his rebellion. | |
I think it was called Birth of a Nation, if memory serves correct. | |
Really? | |
Yes, yes. | |
No, no. | |
I guess I better watch that. | |
So he's a big hero? | |
Who plays him? | |
You've already watched Medea. | |
You don't need to watch Nat Turner's Birth of a Nation. | |
I don't know. | |
I don't know. | |
It sounds like a little bit different. | |
Just a little bit different. | |
Do you remember what star? | |
Denzel Washington? | |
Is he the homicidal maniac? | |
Who plays Nat? | |
Give me a second. | |
We can move on and I will find the answer for you. | |
Well, when I'm doing my next story, maybe you can dig it up. | |
But I probably won't recognize the name anyway. | |
But this, this story, this story sounds, well, don't they have some sort of set of justifications for these honorable discharges for these executed men? | |
I'm sorry, would you repeat that? | |
I was looking at that story that you asked. | |
Yeah, yeah, you know, I'll look it up. | |
But don't, doesn't the army have some sort of justification for giving these people honorable discharges? | |
Yes, they do. | |
According to Substack, the Army can't say out loud yet. | |
Someone said they're citing dubious procedural errors, non-falsifiable claims that an atmosphere of racism permeated the trial. | |
Every announcement, at least that I've seen, mentioned that the big issue with the trial that led to the Army setting aside their convictions was that the military lawyer representing the mutineers was not an actual attorney. | |
As far as I can tell, having a military lawyer who was not at Wow. | |
Remarkable. | |
formally licensed civilian attorney was perfectly legal and acceptable during that period. | |
Might have been normal. | |
It doesn't mean that the mutineers legal representation wasn't qualified. | |
The military justice system has always been different than the civilian justice system. | |
And that is, of course, as I said, the sub stack for the pseudonymous author, Conundrum | |
Cluster, who did a great job. | |
So I recommend people checking that out. | |
Wow. | |
Remarkable. | |
Well, here is more news from the exciting world of rap music. | |
As I say, it's a dangerous profession. | |
All of our listeners who are aspiring rap artists, you all take care. | |
But the headline on this story says it all. | |
Video shows moment rapper Kayvani guns down her manager in the middle of a Miami street before she is run over by a car fleeing the scene. | |
You couldn't make up this stuff. | |
If this were in some sort of movie, you'd think, ha ha ha, no, this is impossible. | |
Well, this is what apparently happened. | |
A rapper, Kevani, this is an African-Americanist, has been charged with murder as the shocking moment she fatally shot her manager after dispute and seconds before she was hit by a car was captured on video. | |
Video gets just the doggone things these days. | |
Her name is actually Kevani Camila Hicks, age 20C, 27. | |
Faces murder charges, but her attorneys claim it was all in self-defense. | |
The footage shows Hicks and another man arguing outside a white car. | |
As they start hitting each other, and I've seen this video, they just start wailing away on each other. | |
Another man, who was her manager, gets out of the car and starts hitting her too! | |
Not exactly chivalrous, if you ask me. | |
Hicks is seen being slammed to the ground before all three of them get up, and she walks off in the opposite direction. | |
Then, she pulls the gun out of her bag, turns around, and blazes away, plugs her manager. | |
The other man gets into the white car and runs over Hicks as he buggers off. | |
Video shows her getting up after being hit and staggering away. | |
Well, Miami police arrived at the scene. | |
They found the man who'd been shot multiple times. | |
He was stone cold dead and Hicks had blunt force injuries. | |
She didn't get very far, apparently. | |
Both were taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital, where the man, whose identity has not been released, was declared dead. | |
Well, I think that's very cozy. | |
There they were in the same hospital for his final moments, manager and rap star. | |
Now, the defendant says she was in fear of her life because of the victim's size. | |
And upon hearing him say, I'll kill you with one hit. | |
Well, by that time he had already hit her. | |
I don't know. | |
It seemed to me like seven or eight times without killing her. | |
Hicks said, The victim appeared to be positioning himself to lunge at her when she opened fire. | |
She's pleaded not guilty. | |
Her public defender says it was a clear case of self-defense. | |
As I say, it's a pretty vivid video. | |
You can see everything that happens. | |
It does not seem like self-defense to me. | |
She turns around. | |
She's at least 20 feet away from this guy, maybe 30 feet. | |
But it does get a girl's dander up when her manager joins in a fight against her. | |
I guess this is yet another didn't do nothing case, but again, this is a dangerous profession, boys and girls, I suggest you avoid it. | |
Now this is a, I don't know, Mr. Kersey, you're going to call me a softie, but I have a strangely soft-headed reaction to this story. | |
You're a softie, I'm just going to say it. | |
Okay, you'll say it right at the beginning. | |
This is about three teenage girls involved in the dragging death of a woman during a carjacking in New Orleans last year. | |
Yeah. | |
There is clear video of these girls jumping into the car and driving off. | |
Well, Linda Fricke, age 73. | |
She, of course, is white. | |
The ladies involved, the young girls involved, are African-American. | |
Well, Lady Freaky had her—Linda Freaky had her arm torn off, and she was killed. | |
She got caught in the front seat belt. | |
Really, just—I mean, you don't see that happening in the video. | |
You just see them driving off, but that is how she died, with her arm torn off. | |
Well, a couple of Mondays ago, all three pleaded sentences to a reduced charge—pleaded guilty, sorry, to reduced charges, and were sentenced to 20 years in prison. | |
New Orleans news outlets reported that they were convicted of attempted manslaughter. | |
A fourth suspect, a male African-American, now 18, he still faces second-degree murder charges, which carry a life sentence. | |
All four had been slated for trial together, but jury selection for the lone remaining suspect, whose prosecutor said he was actually doing the driving, he will get underway after these three girls' guilty pleas have been entered. | |
The four range in ages from 15 to 17. | |
Yep, they start their lives of crime pretty young. | |
They were charged as adults in the 2022 killing. | |
Now, one of the defendants wrung her hands as she stood before Fricke's family. | |
That's not what we set out to do, she said tearfully of the killing. | |
And I hope you can all forgive me. | |
Now, am I being too much of a softy to feel sorry for her? | |
I mean, she was just riding in the car, and I'm sure she had absolutely no plan to kill this lady. | |
She did not drive the car. | |
It's the guy in the front seat. | |
I believe she was sitting in the back seat. | |
And she gets 20 years in the big house for just going along for the ride. | |
I know this is not uncommon. | |
You go out and you're going to rob a bank with a couple other guys. | |
You have no intention of shooting anybody, but one of the guys in your crew whips out a gun and shoots people, and then you're in the pokey for murder. | |
I suppose it's supposed to be a deterrent to people doing this kind of thing, but Mr. Kersey, I can't help it. | |
This girl who is facing 20 years in jail for just being along for the ride. | |
Now, it's no doubt about it. | |
She says, of course she knew that they were taking somebody else's car. | |
But what do you think about this? | |
I feel sorry for the white grandmother and the family that she left behind. | |
I have not one ounce of tears shed for the black juveniles who Participated in the gruesome murder. | |
I mean, it's like something out of Jaws to have your arm. | |
It is. | |
Oh, I agree. | |
I agree. | |
It's absolutely awful. | |
It's absolutely awful. | |
And you're certainly right that she sure wasn't a victim, but I don't know as I say, I'm probably going to get a lot of comments from our listeners saying Taylor Taylor, what's wrong with you? | |
In any case, Mr. Kersey, I think you have a story about an entirely opposite result in terms of sentencing. | |
A $500 fine for what you and I would get 10 years in the pokey for. | |
Oh, far more than that, Mr. Taylor. | |
Yes, you're right. | |
There'd be hate crime charges put on top, federal charges. | |
So this is from, I believe, the Post Millennial, fantastic website. | |
$500 fine for burning down a Wendy's sparks outrage. | |
I don't like Wendy's very much, but... I know it's Hanukkah, but I will say that I love the Junior Bacon Cheeseburger. | |
It's quite delicious. | |
Conservatives are outraged after two people charged with burning down a Wendy's restaurant in Atlanta in the summer of 2020 were fined just $500 each. | |
Prosecutors said Chisholm Kingsington, Natalie Hannah White and John Wesley Wade set a fire that destroyed the Wendy's in June 2020 amid protests sparked by the fatal shooting of Rayshard Brooks, a 27-year-old black man. | |
He was shot by a police officer during an encounter outside Dave Thomas's Wendy's. | |
Kensington and White accepted plea deals on Thursday, just days before they were set to go to trial. | |
WSB-TV, that's the ABC affiliate in Atlanta, reported. | |
Both pleaded guilty to charges including arson in the first degree. | |
They will each have to pay a $500 fine, complete 150 hours of community service, serve five years probation, according to local station. | |
Wade, however, remains in federal custody. | |
One of my favorite representatives, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, took to social media to rail against their sentences, compared it to the punishments Met it out to those charged with offenses related to the January 6, 2021 incident at the Capitol by supporters of former President Donald Trump. | |
J6ers are being locked up for years for walking in the Capitol, and some never walked inside at all. | |
But the guys who pled guilty to arson and burn down the Wendy's in Atlanta in the 2020 Black Lives Matter riots I'm sure a lot of J6 trespassers would love to pay a $500 fine and go home. | |
Probably eat some Wendy's, too. | |
Times three green wrote on Twitter, the scales of justice have tipped so hard one way they | |
have fallen off. | |
Rep Mike Collins, a very good guy, a Republican of Georgia's 10th congressional district wrote, | |
quote, I'm sure a lot of J six trespassers would love to pay a $500 fine and go home. | |
Probably some Wendy's too. | |
If only they had burned down a building, maybe the conservative libs of tick tock account | |
claim there was a two tier justice system for those arrested during the unrest that | |
erupted in the summer of 2020 following the death of George Floyd and other black people | |
and those who charged and those who were charged in relation to the so-called attack on the | |
Capitol. | |
I mean, again, we know that many people have gone to jail for nearly two decades, 17 years in prison for knocking over the fence on J6. | |
There's been people, Mr. Taylor, who've sadly committed suicide because of Impending litigation they faced and time that they were gonna have to be in jail And I remember watching this live when this happened. | |
This is in a very very black part of South Fulton County South Fulton Atlanta not a place you want to be if you're if you're white probably not a place you want to be if you're a ghost even But it's also a place you don't want to be if you're a Wendy's restaurant because it's gone got burned down but again $500, Mr. Taylor. | |
This is incredible. | |
Yes, incredible. | |
It goes back to everything we've talked about this year. | |
2023 has shown us that municipalities where police officers tried to maintain law and order, there have been class action lawsuits on behalf of Antifa, Black Lives Matter in Philadelphia, Chicago, and New York City, where they've been given massive cash settlements for the violence that they experienced when police just tried to restore order. | |
Yeah, yeah, no, it's quite incredible. | |
I remember there was a video of this encounter at the Wendy's too. | |
And I'm sure you'll recall this, but they are very acting very polite to this black guy who's I think he's asleep in the Wendy's parking lot. | |
And they say, you know, you're going to have to move along. | |
So he hops out and starts fighting them and does as blacks always seem to do. | |
And then he grabs the taser from one of the officers and he starts running away and he aims the taser at the officer. | |
And that's when he gets shot. | |
Do you know what eventually happened? | |
I know the officers were immediately fired, but do you know if they were ever put on trial? | |
My recollection is that they perhaps were not indicted. | |
They were not indicted. | |
That's correct. | |
Yes, yes. | |
So that was a happy ending, but they're probably careers are over. | |
Who knows? | |
Well, yes. | |
No, uh, you burned down first degree arson. | |
I mean, you deliberately burning down a place and you get off with a $500 fine. | |
And what was it? | |
Community service? | |
No, this, this is, this is just incredible. | |
Astonishing. | |
Five years probation too, so. | |
Five years. | |
Well, what are their chances that people like that are going to violate probation? | |
But then they go for some other crime. | |
Let's see. | |
But we live in astonishing times. | |
And here is a story just from December 4th, a couple of days ago. | |
And we learn that over 10,000 illegal aliens from all around the world flooded across the southern border in the previous 24 hours. | |
This was a record, Mr. Kersey. | |
It topped the previous record of over 9,400 encounters with illegal aliens on the southern border in a 24-hour period from just late November. | |
So we're just ratcheting up where it seems by the week. | |
U.S. | |
Border Patrol apprehended 3.2 million illegals in fiscal year 2023 that ended in September 30th. | |
Since Joe Biden hit the White House, The number is estimated at 10 million illegal border crossings. | |
That number, 10 million, that is as much or more than the populations of 41 different United States of America. | |
So here they come, boys and girls, here they come. | |
They could be showing up on your block anytime. | |
Meanwhile, the floating border buoys installed by the state of Texas in the Rio Grande at Eagle Pass Must be removed according to a ruling by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. | |
The decision of the appeals court upholds a lower court injunction that tells the state get rid of those buoys. | |
Apparently they're part of a thousand foot long floating barrier. | |
Apparently the key testimony in the case came from the chief of the U.S. | |
Border Patrol, Jason Owens. | |
He was cited by the court as saying Talking about the buoy's negative impact on rescue operations by his agency. | |
If the poor deers need to be pulled from the murky waters of the Rio Grande, the buoys might get in the way, Mr. Kersey. | |
Owens sought to persuade the court that the freedom of movement of small watercraft used to respond quickly to migrants in distress would be impaired by the barrier. | |
It's not necessarily happened yet, but it might. | |
It might. | |
And one of those poor darlings who's trying to break the law and come into our country might get in trouble, or it might take a little bit longer to fish him out because of these wicked buoys. | |
Well, likewise, on Wednesday, a federal judge in the Western District of Texas reversed her temporary restraining order that stopped the Department of Homeland Security from cutting or manipulating concertina wire installed along the banks of the Rio Grande and Eagle Pass. | |
So the idea is the state of Texas puts up this concertina wire on the U.S. | |
side And a judge had said, no, no, there is no reason why Homeland Security can go cut this stuff. | |
Well, now she has reversed her position. | |
She says, yes, yes, yes. | |
Attaboy, men in green, you can go cut that stuff. | |
Let all those illegals in whenever you like. | |
Apparently, the case will now proceed to trial on the merits, although no trial date has been set. | |
I'm assuming that in the meantime, whenever the men in green feel like they want to cut the concertina wire and make it easier for the border hoppers to hop, they can do so. | |
Now, there was an interesting little development just down the street from where I live. | |
Oh, really? | |
Yes, yes, in Arlington, Virginia. | |
You probably read about this. | |
James Yu, age 56, lived in a duplex house in Arlington. | |
And Alex Wilson, a neighbor, described him in an interview as a recluse who covered his windows with aluminum foil. | |
That's kind of interesting. | |
That's reclusive, all right. | |
Yeah, a little weird. | |
Police said they first responded to the house around 4.45 p.m. | |
after someone inside fired 30 or 40 rounds from a flare gun into the surrounding neighborhood. | |
Probably not a good idea to do. | |
That's going to be in violation of an HOA, so I wouldn't recommend that, ladies and gentlemen. | |
No, no, that's a pretty eccentric thing to do. | |
Can anybody just get hold of flares? | |
I guess so. | |
There's safety equipment on yachts and things. | |
It'd be kind of interesting to see what they look like in the middle of the night. | |
Of course, this was in the middle of the afternoon, firing flares over the neighborhood. | |
As officers were attempting to execute a search warrant, the suspect discharged several rounds from what is believed to be a firearm. | |
I suspect chances are very high that it was a firearm. | |
With the goal of getting him to leave the house, police officers deployed non-flammable chemical munitions into the suspect's house, into the areas where they believe he was hiding. | |
Shocking video then shows a law enforcement vehicle approaching the house before a fireball engulfs the scene. | |
I've seen this on video. | |
It's a massive explosion that what looks like a piece of a roof flies 50, 60 feet in the air, comes crashing down. | |
The building was just completely demolished. | |
This is pretty spectacular. | |
Police said they were aware of Mr. Yu's concerning social media posts. | |
In which he refers to his ex-wife as a witch. | |
Well, that's probably not so unusual these days. | |
Well, I guess my question, was she a witch? | |
Well, that's a good question. | |
You know, isn't the truth always a defense if you're accused of calumny or libel? | |
Yes, maybe she was. | |
Maybe she was. | |
Maybe she was a practicing, broom-riding witch. | |
But there were also anti-US slogans, including F-America. | |
He says, Yeah, that's pretty standard, too. | |
You know, nothing too disturbing. | |
Come on, police, you know, get over it. | |
Then he says, I gave them and you all every opportunity to do the right thing. | |
And all I see is America's hypocrisy, corruption, fraud, conspiracy. | |
Gosh, that sounds like us talking. | |
But I thought this was quite interesting. | |
In one of his most recent posts from December 1st, he included a rant about his neighbor's activity and that He said, this is how white people operate and have the luxury of outnumbering all other races by almost 7 to 1. | |
Now, this guy was clearly a goofball, but it's so interesting to me that goofballs, when they go goofy, they often have this racial element to things. | |
This is how white people operate and have the luxury of outnumbering all other races. | |
Well, I guess he plans to put an end to that. | |
The Great Replacement will solve James U's problem, won't it? | |
Of course, he was blown up, it appears. | |
They found little pieces of him scattered around, which they figured had to be he. | |
But I have not yet heard the results of the DNA investigation. | |
But yes, that was just down the street. | |
It looked like the explosion would have been loud enough to be heard here at World Headquarters of American Republicans in Oakton, Virginia, but I could not hear it. | |
Now, one little item about one of our favorite African-American fellow citizens, Jesse Smollett. | |
Or is it Smollett? | |
How do you pronounce his name? | |
It is Smollett. | |
It is Smollett. | |
Accent on the let. | |
All right. | |
Well, you know, he's the one who staged this phony anti-homosexual racist hate crime against himself, filed a false police report in January 2019, and then it turned out that he had hired two brothers, Abimbola and Olabinjo Osundairo, to carry out this fake crime. | |
He did? | |
Yes, he was convicted on five counts of disorderly conduct. | |
Seems like that's a weird way to call it. | |
Sentenced to 150 days in jail and 30 months felony probation and $120,000 in restitution to the city of Chicago and a $25,000 fine. | |
Now, I believe he's been made to pay all those fines, but I'm not entirely sure. | |
You probably know better because you have this steel trap mind, as we were reminded by a listener just last week. | |
But he's only served six days in jail. | |
Now the appellate court of Cook County has denied the appeal, and Smollett may be required to serve out the remaining 144 days. | |
I will shed no tears if he has to do that. | |
During the original sentencing, Smollett shouted at the judge, said he was innocent. | |
He also warned that he was not suicidal, and if he were found dead in custody, it would be for sure someone else would have killed him. | |
Now, this was interesting. | |
The brothers, the Osundaro brothers who testified in court, told the jury Smollett hired them. | |
To fake the attack because he wanted to boost his celebrity profile. | |
Yes, we all knew about that. | |
If you're attacked for being black and being homosexual, wow, you just zoom to the top and the producers come begging you to star in their shows. | |
The actor told the jury that he thought the brothers staged an attack on him to try to scare him into thinking he needed bodyguards and so that he would hire them. | |
Had you heard that, Mr. Kersey? | |
Not until today. | |
I've never heard that before. | |
Because these brothers were, you know, the legitimate definition of brothers. | |
Hard-R. | |
They were both Syrian bodybuilders. | |
I believe they were also both homosexuals. | |
Well, and apparently Smollett frolicked. | |
Well, we won't go into that. | |
But that was his claim. | |
It was a family program, Mr. Taylor. | |
Yes, yes, yes, yes, indeed. | |
But Smollett claims that they attacked him just to show him in what terrible danger he was. | |
I guess he was not supposed to recognize them while they were pounding on him. | |
But in any case, that was his story, and he's sticking to it. | |
The two brothers ultimately testified against their one-time friend in court. | |
And they were able to walk away from the incident with just two years probation and a small fine after cooperating with the police in unmasking the rumors. | |
So I think they should probably have gotten a little bit more than a slap on the wrist, these guys. | |
But I mean, they were conspiring to commit fake hate crime. | |
That should be pretty serious business. | |
And the police were on to Smollett no time at all. | |
They didn't need these guys. | |
But be that as it may, it looks as though Juicy Smollett is going to go to the big house after all. | |
I'm sure he'll have a lovely time there. | |
But now, Mr. Kersey, I believe you have a story on yet another terrifying aspect of being non-white in America today. | |
This is from our good friends at CNN. | |
And, you know, again, we should go back and think back to January 20, 2019, when the white attackers that Jesse Smollett still believes attacked him said, this is MAGA country at, I believe it was 3 a.m. | |
And what was it, like 20 degree weather in Chicago? | |
Oh, it was the coldest, coldest possible time. | |
Yes. | |
It was one of the most absurd stories ever. | |
And if you recall how many how many white conservatives and people like Nimrod or Nikki Haley fell for it and they were it was one of the gratifying white pills at the end of 2023 is this nonsense is over in a lot of ways. | |
I think you're celebrating a little early. | |
But, I hope you're not. | |
I really think it is. | |
I think you're celebrating a little early, but I hope you're not. | |
We'll see. | |
I always make sure the football crosses the plane for their touchdown. | |
I don't drop it early. | |
I don't spike it. | |
I give it to the ref and I say, hey, we're going to celebrate and win the right way. | |
But no, I truly believe that at the end of 2023, when you have people like J.D. | |
Hayworth and Bill Ackman, who also just came out and said that this black Harvard president was appointed because of D.E.I. | |
I mean, the fact that he's just being like, hey, you're a black female who got appointed president of Harvard because you're a black female. | |
This is a joke. | |
That's pretty important. | |
Don't forget, it's D.E.I.B. | |
That's helping her to belong. | |
Oh, yes. | |
Diversity, equity, inclusion, belonging. | |
OK. | |
Belonging. | |
That's the way the Harvard plays the game. | |
Belonging is all. | |
Oh, I just I just feel so warm and fuzzy when I hear that word. | |
I thought there was justice to in some cases. | |
But anyways, this story is about justice from CNN. | |
People of color expect to experience discrimination during health care visits. | |
Survey finds. | |
A trip to the doctor's office can be stressful, but many people of color in the United States say they also expect to experience discrimination while seeking health care, according to a KFF survey on racism, discrimination, and health released just two days ago. | |
60% of black adults, about half of American Indians, Alaskan, Native, and Hispanic adults, and 42% of Asian adults surveyed said they prepare for medical visits by expecting insults from health care workers, or by being very careful about their appearance at least some of the time. | |
Wait, wait, wait, wait. | |
Hold on, hold on. | |
That's an either-or? | |
All these people expect insults or they dress nicely. | |
I wonder how many of which do what? | |
But anyway. | |
Great question. | |
The survey also found many people of color reported that providers blamed them for their medical issues, ignored their questions, and refused to prescribe a pain medication. | |
Quote, the survey really illustrates how persistent and prevalent racism and discrimination remain in the U.S., both in daily life But including in people's health care experiences. | |
Samantha Artiga, KFF Director of Racial Equity and Health Policy, told CNN. | |
Outside of unfair treatment in doctors' offices, the survey found at least half of American Indian and Alaska Native, Black and Hispanic adults say they've experienced at least one type of discrimination in daily life at least a few times in the past year. | |
About four in ten Asian adults reported the same. | |
You know, this surprises me. | |
All these Asians claiming that they're facing discrimination. | |
That makes me almost doubt this whole thing. | |
I mean, I would doubt it anyway. | |
But this must have something to do with the way these questions were posed. | |
I don't know. | |
But, sorry, proceed. | |
No, no, no, no. | |
Quote, this includes experience such as receiving poor services in restaurants and stores, people acting as if they are afraid of them or as if they aren't smart, being threatened or harassed, or being criticized for speaking a language other than English, Artigo said. | |
Gender also plays a role. | |
KFF's first report in the survey pointed out with black men being the most likely to say people act scared of them and Hispanic women most likely to say they're treated as if they're unintelligent. | |
Black men. | |
Black men. | |
Well, often you're right to be afraid of black men. | |
Yeah. | |
RT told CNN, there's a direct correlation between discrimination in health and well-being. | |
People who report having experience with discrimination in daily life are more likely than those who don't. | |
Who don't report feeling anxious, lonely, and depressed, Artiga said. | |
As a result of historic and ongoing policies, often rooted in discriminatory practices, there are stark differences in access to resources, opportunities, and power by race and ethnicity in the U.S., the KFF report noted, including access to safe housing in neighborhoods, economic and educational opportunities, and healthcare. | |
What? | |
KFF, which is, it's a health policy nonprofit, previously called the Kaiser Family Foundation, It says it's going to release more of the report on the date in the future, but I would just say that, you know, access to white people is not a universal right. | |
The type of community is that white people uniquely create in the absence of the aforementioned racial groups. | |
Again, it just happens to be a bright product of whiteness. | |
But, Mr. Kersey, these people are not seeking access to white people. | |
They're seeking access to doctors of their own race. | |
Now, it's interesting to me, I wonder if you'd ask white people. | |
I mean, it wouldn't occur to me really to think about this, but if you ask white people, well, do you dress up especially good so that you'll get certain respect when you go to the doctor's office? | |
Or, have you ever not had pain medication prescribed to you when you wanted it? | |
I wonder how the answers of whites would compare. | |
All of this stuff about alleged race Complete, total, utter baloney. | |
It's imagined, all the stuff about not getting served properly. | |
How many people out there are saying to themselves, if you're a waiter, or if you're a doctor, or a nurse, or a carpenter, whoever you are, you say, oh, that guy? | |
I'm going to treat him like dirt, because he's not white. | |
I think this is just such baloney, that we're all supposed to swallow this. | |
America is a baloney-fed population, swallowed all the time. | |
Yeah. | |
So, let's move on to Germany. | |
Here's another shocking story. | |
Eight of nine young men convicted of gang raping a heavily intoxicated 15-year-old girl in a Hamburg city park will not face prison time. | |
Hamburg Regional Court last week sentenced a 19-year-old to a youth prison sentence of two years and nine months without parole. | |
While youth sentences of... See, one guy got there. | |
One guy got prison. | |
Two and a half years. | |
Youth prison. | |
I bet it's really not such a bad place. | |
While youth sentences of one or two years probation or so-called pre-parole were imposed on eight men. | |
The girl had attended a party in the park which had become a popular meeting area during COVID. | |
According to prosecutors, four of the men led the girl who had a blood alcohol level of at least 0.16 percent. | |
How does that rate, Mr. Kersey? | |
Aren't you generally drunk if you're over 0.1? | |
I've never remembered these details too well. | |
Do you know what the percentages are? | |
I don't. | |
In any case, she was 0.16. | |
Apparently, that's probably pretty drunk. | |
led her into a bush and performed sexual acts on her against her will. | |
I guess they're being squeamish here. | |
We won't really know what happened there. | |
One of the men stole her mobile phone wallet. | |
Another two defendants then took advantage of the girl's confused state and raped her. | |
Then when she wandered across the grass again, she ran into another of the defendants who | |
also raped her. | |
Finally, three other defendants then took the girls into the bushes and they all raped | |
her. | |
So, DNA evidence connected nine of the defendants to the crime. | |
Now it goes through their various nationalities, Armenian, Afghan, Kuwaiti, etc. | |
I got the impression that this was an entire BIPOC rape gang. | |
Now, what is shocking here is a psychiatrist by the name of Nala Saimeh. | |
She appeared before the court as an expert witness. | |
I just love to hear when people by the name of Nala Saimeh show up as expert witnesses in German trials. | |
And she explained to Der Spiegel that a gang rape may have been a way to vent frustration due to migration experiences and sociocultural homelessness. | |
Now that's a new one on me, Mr. Kersey. | |
These people are suffering from sociocultural homelessness. | |
Now, how come they ended up with that? | |
They showed up voluntarily, didn't they? | |
Or at least their parents did. | |
She also said sex is a means of venting frustration and anger. | |
A means of warding off sadness and emptiness. | |
And in a group of men with the same fate, it creates identity and strengthens group feeling. | |
Now when you think that'll be trotted out as a defense for a bunch of immigrants who rape American girls. | |
As outrage at the verdict spread, court officials and lawyers have complained of a flood of hateful comments, personal attacks, insults, and threats on social media. | |
Presiding Judge Anne Meyer Gehring acknowledged that none of the defendants uttered a word of regret during the trial. | |
Now, I wonder if she is a descendant of a certain other Gehring we've heard of. | |
I looked her up. | |
I thought the presiding judge might have been another one of these people of color with whom Germany is filling up. | |
But no, she is as white as Angela Merkel. | |
In any case, the Germans, real Germans, are sick and tired of this kind of behavior, and I'm glad they were flooded with what they call hateful comments. | |
Meanwhile, still in Germany, 60% of those who can work but instead receive state welfare payments have migrant backgrounds, with that number rising to over 70% in certain federal states. | |
The exact figure Nationwide is 62.5% or an increase from 59.9% the previous year. | |
Now, the group, these are people who are people of migrant background, as I say, they comprise just 24.3% of the German population, it says. | |
Did you know that 24.3% of the German population have a migrant background? | |
That means at least one person was born overseas, born outside of Germany. | |
I didn't know that. | |
That's a huge number. | |
I mean, in the United States, that figure, the people born outside the United States, that has reached 15% now, but I suspect if you included people who are born of, say, at least one, if you included in that figure people who have at least one parent who's born outside the United States, we'd probably be over 24.3%. | |
over 24.3%. All of these, in any case, a quarter of Germany's population is immigrant. And | |
the foreign population make up, so, okay, just to review these figures, this group is | |
24.3% of the German population, but 62.5% of able-bodied people who are nevertheless | |
on the dole, living on handouts. | |
Likewise, Germany's foreign population, they made up 37.7% of suspects arrested for violent crimes, assault, manslaughter, murder, In other words, 24.3% is cut. | |
No, I'm sorry. | |
I beg your pardon. | |
Germany's foreign population, these are outright foreigners. | |
That's different from the population I was talking about earlier, who might have a parent, who might have a parent from a foreign country. | |
They're only 12% who are actual foreigners, and they commit 37.7% of the violent crimes. | |
12%? | |
Yes. | |
Commit 37.7%. | |
of the violent crimes. 12%? Yes. Commit 37.7%. Now the question of course arises, | |
when are white people going to learn? | |
What does it take? | |
What does it take for them to learn? | |
This is just so crazy. | |
Well, Mr. Kersey, we have about four minutes left. | |
Do you think you can fill us in on menthol cigarettes in four minutes? | |
Or should we save that for next time? | |
You know what? | |
Let's save it for next time. | |
I've got the flu and I don't want to think about menthol cigarettes because it's going to make me cough even more. | |
I don't know. | |
I think that might soothe the passages. | |
Well, okay, then let's instead talk about a new crime trend. | |
This is just another one of those horrifying developments in the multi-culti, multi-racial America that we're building and leaving for our children and grandchildren. | |
Burglars are using stolen vehicles to crash through storefronts. | |
And then the ATMs. | |
Yes, isn't that charming? | |
Yes. | |
Yeah, steal a vehicle, crash through the storefront, and then loot ATMs, guns, and other valuables. | |
The battering rams of choice are often, you will probably guess correctly, stolen Hyundais and Kias, because they're so easy to hotwire. | |
Which is why all these black municipalities are suing Kia and Hyundai. | |
That's right. | |
That's right. | |
The attacks have been most concentrated on the West Coast. | |
In an unusually brazen attack in Oakland, thieves Back in November, used a backhoe to crash into an AM-PM convenience store and yank out the ATM with chains. | |
Good grief! | |
Where were the police? | |
A backhoe? | |
At the Beauty Supply Warehouse across the street. | |
Supervisor Louie Montoya said the establishment has been hit with seven attempted drive-thru burglaries in the past two months. | |
Despite being encircled with steel posts and having four metal security doors, burglars haven't managed to break in yet, although Montoya says the store's doors have been badly damaged by efforts to yank them open with chains. | |
A beauty supply warehouse? | |
Wow, boy. | |
I mean, makeup must be in hot demand in certain communities. | |
Well, certain Indian wigs are in high demand. | |
Ah, Indian hair wigs. | |
Yeah, you're probably right. | |
You're probably right. | |
It's the wig crowd. | |
Montoya said they're figuring out if they break through the front doors, they can get away with whatever's of value before police can respond. | |
Now, in Wright City, Missouri, when thieves plowed a stolen Hyundai Elantra into Osage County guns shortly after 2 a.m., they spent two minutes clearing out 35 firearms. | |
That's pretty quick work. | |
Yeah, isn't that awful? | |
They had two bollards put up outside the front door, but they were just wide enough to allow a Hyundai Elantra to get through. | |
Isn't that a disappointment? | |
The cost in damages and lost business was $200,000 plus $30,000 for the stolen guns. | |
and to prevent a recurrence after being closed for five weeks, the store put up three 4,000-pound | |
blocks at the front entrance. I mean, this is really going to beautify the American cityscape, | |
isn't it? The same criminals were suspected in a total of five ram raids on gun stores in the | |
Louis area last fall using stolen cars. | |
There's a video of one of these and the perps, the perps are exactly who you would expect them to be. | |
Usually arrive in several vehicles. | |
I mean they steal a couple of them and they leave the damaged one behind as they bugger off in the other one. | |
And as it turns out between 2019-2022 Motor vehicle theft soared by 67.5% nationally. | |
Well, Mr. Kersey, we have to leave it at that, on that jolly note. | |
And ladies and gentlemen, we very much appreciate the time we spend with you. | |
It is a privilege and an honor, and it is something we look forward to every week, and we hope that by the time we speak to you next week, Mr. Kersey will be feeling better. | |
Thank you very much. | |
I promise. | |
Great. | |
Great. | |
Very good. |