Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor - Let's Spend $14 Trillion Into Existence Aired: 2024-01-26 Duration: 11:16 === United States' Moral Debt (03:36) === [00:00:03] Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance. [00:00:07] The censors hate my videos, so if you like this one, I hope you'll send the link to a lot of people. [00:00:12] Last May, a group of colorful congresspersons introduced House Resolution 414, recognizing that the United States has a moral and legal obligation to provide reparations for the enslavement of Africans. [00:00:27] It pulls no punches. [00:00:30] First, You, the taxpayer, are responsible for slavery from before there was even a United States of America. [00:00:37] That is from 1619 when the first slaves came to Virginia until 1789 when the U.S. Congress first met. [00:00:45] 170 years. [00:00:47] We have to compensate blacks for that because the United States was founded based on black plunder. [00:00:54] The bill says that at least 12,500,000 Africans were kidnapped from their homelands by European traders and forcibly brought across the Atlantic Ocean. [00:01:05] Except that Europeans didn't kidnap people. [00:01:08] Africans gladly sold them slaves that they had caught. [00:01:12] And of that 12.5 million, only about 2.5% came to what became the United States, but we're apparently to blame for all of them. [00:01:21] Ever since the first black man set foot in the colonies. [00:01:25] The economy of the United States in both the North and South flourished as a result of black trafficking, torture, and exploitation. [00:01:34] Torture was apparently good for the economy. [00:01:37] North and South, all are equally guilty. [00:01:41] New York began to abolish slavery in 1799, but it then produced the agricultural tools that were used in southern plantations. [00:01:50] Did you know that bodies of enslaved people were gorged and congealed in the name of white supremacist hate? [00:01:58] Well, they were. [00:02:00] And did you know that scholars have estimated that the United States benefited from 222,505,049 hours of forced labor? [00:02:12] They've got it down to the hour, but no link or footnote. [00:02:17] Respected economists have estimated totals at minimum $14 trillion to eliminate the racial wealth gap. [00:02:25] That's about $350,000 for every black man, woman, and child, for a cool $1.4 million for a family of four. [00:02:34] Here are median household wealth figures by race for 2022. [00:02:39] The white-black gap is only $223,000, but the Asian-black gap is twice that. [00:02:47] $474,000. [00:02:49] So it looks like reparations means not just keeping up with the Joneses, but pulling way ahead of the Watanabe's, too. [00:02:57] That $14 trillion, by the way, is more than twice the annual budget of the United States. [00:03:04] H.R. 414 is silent on where the money will come from. [00:03:09] But once the checks are cashed, The National Parks Services must seek to erect markers on every site where a black person was lynched. [00:03:18] There's a lot more stuff in this bill, such as targeted mental health treatment to help blacks overcome racial trauma that won't go away. === Congresswoman for Justice (07:34) === [00:03:27] Maybe not having reminders of lynching everywhere would help. [00:03:32] In short, this is cuckoo stuff, and H.R. 414 will never get out of committee, at least not during this Congress. [00:03:41] Let's look at the initial sponsors, but only at their own words from their congressional websites. [00:03:48] This video would be three hours long if I went into even just half of their slimy business deals, trick marriages, moronic statements, and outright lies. [00:03:58] Let's just let them speak for themselves. [00:04:01] Lead sponsor Cori Bush, in her second term from St. Louis, Missouri, calls herself a community activist, organizer, single mother, and ordained pastor. [00:04:11] She's the first black woman to represent Missouri. [00:04:14] She says, growing up, Cori's father imparted on her the lessons of legendary black leaders whose photos hung on the walls of their house. [00:04:24] After Michael Brown was shot, Cori spent more than 400 days Protesting for justice, leading on the Ferguson front line. [00:04:34] Whenever she rises to speak on the floor, she doesn't say, I rise. [00:04:38] She says, St. Louis and I rise. [00:04:43] Al Green of Texas says he has devoted his life to the elimination of all forms of invidious discrimination and the rectification of America's seminal sin, racism. [00:04:54] He is a big booster of Slavery Remembrance Day and is very proud that he was behind a statement by President Joe Biden marking Slavery Remembrance Day. [00:05:06] This was part of his effort to start healing the chasm of racial animus that exists within our nation today. [00:05:13] Brand new Congressman Jonathan Jackson of Illinois has a bio that starts with all you need to know. [00:05:20] Born to civil rights leaders Reverend Jesse Jackson and Jacqueline Jackson, the fight for underrepresented people runs in Congressman Jackson's blood. [00:05:30] Looks like the old man, too, doesn't he? [00:05:32] He slid into the seat in Congress that Bobby Rush, former Black Panther, held for 30 years. [00:05:39] The daughter of working-class Guatemalan immigrants is the first thing co-sponsor Delia Ramirez says about herself. [00:05:47] Not just Guatemalan immigrants, working-class immigrants. [00:05:51] She has a bold and people-centered agenda and is a staunch advocate of housing as a human right, health care for all, climate justice, and the fight to preserve and protect our democracy. [00:06:06] Also, as the only member of Congress in a mixed-status family, she's leading the fight for comprehensive immigration reform. [00:06:14] Mixed-status family means her husband isn't illegal, and comprehensive immigration reform means amnesty. [00:06:22] Another co-sponsor is Ilan Omar, who needs no introduction. [00:06:26] She is the first African refugee to become a member of Congress, the first woman of color to represent Minnesota, and one of the first two Muslim American women elected to Congress. [00:06:38] What would James Madison have thought of that? [00:06:42] She is creating a just immigration system. [00:06:44] I can see it now. [00:06:46] And she is determined to build a more inclusive and compassionate culture. [00:06:51] I'm not quite sure what that is. [00:06:53] She is a member of 33 caucuses, listed here, which include the Armenian caucus, hockey caucus, bike caucus, and the friends of a free, stable, and democratic Syria caucus. [00:07:06] Who knew? [00:07:08] Congresswoman Summer Lee of Pennsylvania is another co-sponsor. [00:07:12] Her first sentence about herself says she is a dedicated organizer, attorney, and progressive state legislator. [00:07:19] She got it right later on when she bragged about being the first black woman ever elected to Congress from western Pennsylvania. [00:07:27] She says she is leading efforts to build a more reflective democracy. [00:07:32] I'd like a more reflective democracy, too. [00:07:37] Of whom, a bit more later, is ambitious. [00:07:40] In his first term alone, he introduced nine bills to invest in our schools, tell the truth, make the rich pay their fair share, and end corporate greed. [00:07:50] And of course, there's Rashida Tlaib, who introduces herself as a well-known progressive warrior. [00:07:57] Also, she is the oldest of 14 children, born and raised in Detroit, the proud daughter of Palestinian immigrant parents. [00:08:05] She is a co-founder of the Congressional Mamas Caucus. [00:08:10] No grab for your money would be complete without Ayanna Pressley. [00:08:13] Note her slogan, bringing the people closest to the pain, closest to the power. [00:08:19] She calls herself an activist, a legislator, a survivor, and the first woman of color to be elected to Congress from Massachusetts. [00:08:28] She is a champion for justice and healing. [00:08:31] Reproductive justice, justice for immigrants, consumer justice, and a whole lot more. [00:08:38] And then there's Barbara Lee, who has represented California since 1998. [00:08:43] Her website says her mother broke many glass ceilings and racial barriers, and that she worked with the local NAACP to integrate her high school cheerleading squad. [00:08:54] She's the first black to do something, but I forget what. [00:08:58] Some other members have signed on. [00:09:01] Sydney Kamlager-Dove says she was born into a family of politically active creatives and will always be a strong voice for justice. [00:09:12] Yvette Clark tells us she is the daughter of Jamaican immigrants and formed the Multicultural Media Caucus to address diversity and inclusion issues in the media, telecom, and tech industries. [00:09:24] Surprisingly, there's not one goofy white person in the bunch. [00:09:29] So far, it's an all-BIPOC effort. [00:09:32] I mentioned that the bill is silent on funding, but squad lawmaker explains creative way to pay $14 trillion. [00:09:41] That's squad member Jamal Bowman. [00:09:43] He says it would be like COVID relief money. [00:09:46] Where did the money come from? [00:09:48] Bowman said. [00:09:49] We spent it into existence. [00:09:52] These are the people who want to splash out twice the annual federal budget to make black people richer than Asians. [00:10:00] These are the people to whom we are handing over the country. [00:10:03] It's not just bad luck when you have people in Congress who are African refugees or who think we can just spend $14 trillion into existence. [00:10:13] People just like them voted them into office. [00:10:17] And they're not shy about what they want. [00:10:20] Massive wealth transfers and immigration reform. [00:10:24] And they take for granted that white oppression is the only reason for black failure. [00:10:30] It's not. [00:10:31] Haiti is a wreck because Haitians live there, not because white people wrecked it. [00:10:37] Black neighborhoods were wrecked by black people. [00:10:40] They were thriving when they were white. [00:10:43] These are basic facts, ladies and gentlemen, like that pesky 15-point black-white IQ difference. === Many Think Will Interest You (00:31) === [00:10:51] Well, Horace explained it all 2,000 years ago. [00:10:55] You can drive nature out with a pitchfork, but she will always return. 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