Ever Heard of Pierre Omidyar?
Jared Taylor and Paul Kersey introduce you to the new billionaire champion of everything you despise. They also discuss Bionca Ellis, Cornel West, and the Regents Exam.
Jared Taylor and Paul Kersey introduce you to the new billionaire champion of everything you despise. They also discuss Bionca Ellis, Cornel West, and the Regents Exam.
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Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, welcome to Radio Renaissance. | |
I'm your host, Jared Taylor with American Renaissance. | |
And with me is the one and only Paul Kersey, my co-host. | |
And today is June 12th, Autodominy 2024. | |
And as usual, we're going to start with comments. | |
A listener writes in to say, you too, that means you and me, Mr. Kersey, were wondering about the statistics showing so many people getting their news from YouTube. | |
It's simpler than you think. | |
Every major news outlet posts versions of their content on YouTube within hours of TV broadcasts. | |
For example, when a recent tornado was in the news, I went to YouTube and easily found plenty of network coverage Some smaller edited segments, some long form 10 to 12 minute unedited broadcast clips. | |
This is something I tend to do when a news story breaks. | |
So I guess I am part of that percentage that gets their news from YouTube. | |
Well, Mr. Kersey, when we read that story, I thought, golly, who gets his news from YouTube? | |
But I guess there's some people who get really all of their news from YouTube. | |
But there you go. | |
The thing about it is, what this guy did, you'd have to have heard about it somewhere else before you went to YouTube, don't you think? | |
Oh, you know, I'm still trying to wrap my head around that. | |
It's not giving too much thought to. | |
And at the same time, again, when you've cut the cord, I know you haven't had cable probably ever in your life. | |
So, you know, again, I get almost all my news from from online sources. | |
So. | |
It's not that weird to me, but again, it befuddled you last week on our podcast. | |
Well, it did, it did. | |
YouTube, YouTube as a source. | |
I mean, if that's the only place you got your news, I mean, you'd know all kinds of weird things, but I don't think you'd know much news, but I'm old fashioned. | |
And remember, if you will, Instagram was already a big thing as well. | |
That's right. | |
Instagram gives you news. | |
Well, okay. | |
I guess everywhere, everyone, everybody wants to give you news. | |
Okay, another comment. | |
And you will recall, ladies and gentlemen, that we had a story about Bianca Ellis, who stabbed and killed three-year-old Julian Wood in North Olmsted, Ohio. | |
Police say she just attacked a child and his mother in a giant eagle parking lot. | |
Well, a commenter says, I'm glad to see you're talking about the North Olmsted killing. | |
Terrible stuff. | |
North Olmsted is a very safe white area. | |
that has recently been experiencing a certain amount of black American enrichment. I have | |
friends who live there who have lamented the slow diversification of the area. It's still | |
a very nice but for how long who knows. I've often been to that very plaza where the poor | |
child was killed. More proof, yes, for your last videos that we just need to leave and be on our | |
I'm not sure how much longer we can take this. | |
I'm not sure how much longer we can either. | |
And let us move as our first news story, in fact, to this killer of Julian Wood, the said Bianca, who spells her name B-I-O-N-C-A, in case you're interested in learning more. | |
Well, She had a probation violation from Rocky River Municipal Court stemming from a May 223 misdemeanor theft charge that was also in Ohio. | |
And also warrants were issued there. | |
She was accused of also three counts of battery on a person. | |
I guess if you battery on an object, is that a crime? | |
Battery on a person. | |
Also she had warrants in California. | |
But somehow she got back to Ohio and ended up in a women's shelter. | |
And in February, an official at the shelter called the Cleveland police saying Ellis wanted to confess to murdering someone in California. | |
Bianca then explained that sometime in the last few months, she had killed a white lady, dumped her body in unknown parts, possibly near a river. | |
Well, the Cleveland officer reached out to the detectives in Bakersfield, and they said they had several unsolved homicide cases, but they weren't going to come all the way to Cleveland to arrest her. | |
And apparently Bianca told officers that if she was not taken to jail, she's going to murder someone at the shelter. | |
She said she wanted to kill someone and eat his flesh. | |
Charming lady. | |
And as I say, the Bakersfield police said, OK, sounds crazy to us, but we ain't coming all the way out there to collect her. | |
The North Olmstead police, they had this probation violation, but the North Olmstead police said they wouldn't take her into custody just on that. | |
Cleveland police took Bianca to a hospital for a mental health evaluation. | |
While she was there, she started fighting with the nurses and had to be sedated for her safety. | |
Her safety? | |
How about the safety of everybody else? | |
A few weeks later, she was arrested in Orlando, Florida. | |
This girl gets around. | |
Where'd she get the dough for all this? | |
Well, I'd like to know. | |
And reports from the Osceola County Sheriff's Office said she was arrested for trespassing after she took a hotel room and refused to pay for it. | |
But she was eventually released from jail. | |
She spent a little time at the bakehouse and came back to Ohio. | |
Maybe she hitchhikes. | |
Maybe she teleports. | |
I don't know how she gets there. | |
Then she was arrested in Ohio just days before she killed poor little three-year-old Julian. | |
The magistrate recommended a mental health check. | |
So, that happened. | |
But, you know, we get these crazy homicidal people just walking around. | |
Well, she finally appeared in Cuyahoga County Court facing charges on this murder, an attempted murder of the mama. | |
She smiled and she made faces. | |
She is just a prime nutcase. | |
The judge in the case set bond at $5 million. | |
Now, she probably cannot scrape together $5 million, but Mr. Kersey, this reminds me of something. | |
At least 20 people who were involved in the Capitol riot have not had bond at all. | |
Not bond at all. | |
They get treated worse than this cuckoo bird who actually killed somebody and tried to kill somebody else. | |
That's justice in America for you, I guess. | |
Yeah. | |
You know, you know, Mr. Taylor, I, having, um, Never really experienced any of that. | |
I do know I did look this up before we did this, but traditionally a bond service will post bond and take 10%. | |
That's true. | |
That's true. | |
But you never know. | |
You know, maybe, I don't know, this sounds like a perfect case for George Soros to step in and front her the $500,000. | |
I don't know. | |
And she's probably not got that laying around in the mattress. | |
But you never know, you know, maybe, I don't know, this sounds like a perfect case for | |
George Soros to step in and front her the 500,000. | |
I don't know. | |
The point is, theoretically, she could get out on bond, but not people who were involved | |
in the riot on January 6. | |
What does that tell us? | |
Now, on the subject of crime in general and crime statistics, we've had some suspicious numbers from Attorney General Merrick Garland. | |
He calls them historic. | |
He says the first three months of 2024 saw a continued drop in violent crime and murder all across the country. | |
The FBI is saying this. | |
And Merrick Garland is just leaping with joy. | |
He said reported incidents of violent crime dropped 15% during January and March this year compared to the period last year, and murder is down by a whopping 26%. | |
Now, that would be nice if true. | |
Now, I believe you're going to give us a story that suspects that this is in fact not true, but wouldn't this be just the sort of thing the Democrats could cook up as a handy little campaign stunt? | |
What do you think? | |
So, you have an alternative view on these statistics. | |
I do have an alternative view on these statistics. | |
Give me one second as I scroll down to give the details of this story. | |
And we would be talking about a story that I found at Zero Hedge. | |
Again, one of my favorite sites. | |
If you remember, Mr. Taylor, back in 2019, it was one of the first sites actually removed from Twitter and Facebook because it was doing too much good reporting. | |
And this is yet another example of that good reporting. | |
Admission of failure. | |
Democratic cities stop reporting crime stats to FBI. | |
The Biden admin's petitions at the Bureau of Labor Statistics have painted a rosy economic picture of the job market, yet voters know Darn well, the economy is in a persistent inflation storm sparked by Bidenomics. | |
That's why Biden's reelection odds are sinking by the month. | |
The most recent BLS job reports show, um, the absurd reports get, get worse month by month. | |
There's no shame. | |
Well, recently we've been seeing yet another type of propaganda and that's coming out claiming that, uh, the Biden admin is claiming that nationwide crime has plunged to half century lows. | |
Huh? | |
That's good news, right? | |
Well, it's fake news. | |
The problem with this neighborhood is that it's at odds with the imploding progressive cities that do not uphold law and order and fail to arrest and prosecute criminals. | |
Plus, on top of all this, Democrats have flooded the nation with, you know, 10 to 15 million illegals. | |
So let's begin with MSNBC's Kyle Griffin, who posted on Twitter the latest FBI crime stats that show that murder, rape, robbery, theft, and property crime has plummeted across the board nationally. | |
Well, here's what's happening. | |
Turns out that these cities have Just stopped reporting crime. | |
Most of some of the biggest cities where we have the largest amount of crime, these large departments are no longer cooperating with the FBI. | |
And the article goes on to point out that 37 percent of police departments stopped reporting crime data in 2021 to the FBI, including Chicago, Los Angeles and New York City. | |
And for other jurisdictions like Baltimore and Nashville, crimes are being underreported or undercounted. | |
This leaves a large gap. | |
By 2021, the real crime data collected by the FBI represented only 63%, Mr. Taylor, of police departments overseeing just 65% of the population. | |
When compared to pre-2021 data, the result is a questionable decline in crime. | |
And again, we've got Twitter users who are pointing out the best way to show that crime is down. | |
Don't arrest criminals. | |
Don't prosecute criminals. | |
Don't report crime statistics. | |
We've seen that happening all across the board post George Floyd. | |
Again, I'm sorry that I wasn't able to join for the fourth anniversary of when you and I were actually, we were doing a podcast live when in late May of 2020, the, uh, the riots started during the day in St. | |
Paul. | |
And I said, Hey, Mr. Taylor, this is going to be pretty bad if we've got riots breaking out during the day. | |
And of course that's the night they burned down the third precinct. | |
And since then, our, uh, Our government has basically tried to say, oh, things are great, but it's really a Potemkin village. | |
Potemkin. | |
that is not used. | |
I mean, the whole facade, it's so easy to see through. | |
You know, one of my favorite terms is a dollhouse, And that's in St. | |
Louis, where you see a house that looks pretty nice. | |
But if you go behind the house, Mr. Taylor, it's completely been ripped apart and everything stolen by criminals. | |
No one lives there. | |
But again, you think just driving on the street, oh, that's a great house. | |
And that's kind of what America is right now. | |
That's right. | |
All fake. | |
They're all fake. | |
And if you just look at it, it's Swiss cheese. | |
And you can see right through this. | |
It's just this grotesque facade and it's even more grotesque when you see what actually is there. | |
So that's the story. | |
Well, you know, not to cast doubt on the veracity of zero hedge, but they say that the crime statistics in 2021 were no good because it was widely reported that in 2020, and those are the numbers you had to get in 2021, that murder was up 30%, a record jump. | |
So I don't know quite how that fits, but in general, I would not doubt it for a moment that we are getting a skewed picture of what's going on. | |
And when we really get to the point where you can't trust anything the government says, I mean, a lot of people don't trust anything the media says, but these Bureau of Labor statistics, they're supposed to be apolitical. | |
FBI supposed to be apolitical. | |
Ho, ho, ho. | |
But I can well believe that the books are being very diligently cooked. | |
Cooked at high boil, for that matter. | |
But be that as it may. | |
Well, one of my favorite African Americans, Cornel West, he's broke. | |
Despite being paid, oh, pots and pots of money, prestigious positions, there's quite a long article about him. | |
This is just skimming the surface here. | |
But he has been, of course, a fixture in American society for more than three decades. | |
He publishes books. | |
He teaches at top Ivy League schools. | |
He comments on cable TV. | |
He even collaborated on music with Prince. | |
What a life! | |
What a career! | |
In the end, he earned an estimated $15 million or so over the last 30 years. | |
That's half a mil a year. | |
I know some people do better than that, but that's not bad for an academic. | |
And his net worth is, believe it or not, pretty close to zero. | |
Pretty close to the average black. | |
Well, he's now 70 years old. | |
He burst onto the scene in 1990 with his book Race Matters, which sold more than half a million copies. | |
He traveled the country to deliver speeches, And he hauled in his half a mil a year, but much of the money went to him with no taxes deducted. | |
Ooh, 1099. | |
Ah, yes. | |
Isn't that a temptation? | |
This money comes in, money goes out. | |
West blew it, especially on women. | |
And he left a little behind for Uncle Sam. | |
Time comes for tax season, and the back taxes piled up. | |
In 1998, he owed $144,000. | |
In 2000, another $105,000. | |
2001, $205,000, and so on and on and on. | |
144,000 in 2000, another 105,000 2001, 205,000 and so on and on and on. | |
Well, one of his four ex-wives, he's got four ex-wives and one current wife, at least one | |
that we know of and maybe who knows how many more. | |
One of his four ex-wives accused him of maintaining an apartment in Boston at $5,000 a month to | |
use as a love nest. | |
She also says, despite not having any health conditions, he took a medical leave from his job at Harvard. | |
He was teaching at Harvard to live a secret life with another woman in New Mexico. | |
I imagine that was just great for his health. | |
What a lothario he is, gosh. | |
You wouldn't have thought that, would you? | |
But this guy just can't keep it in his pants. | |
He has spent and lived wildly, impregnating and abandoning several women, leaving him with big divorce and child support payments, many of which, of course, he failed to pay. | |
He's now running for president, Mr. Curse. | |
And of course, if government is about managing money, ha ha ha, it's hard to imagine. | |
Well, I guess he'd really fit right in. | |
You know, he'd fit right in. | |
Washington, that's just the way they think. | |
Well, just for example, in 1998, he was on a speaking trip in Ohio and he met a student who was a married mother of two. | |
He convinced her to leave her husband and move to Boston for Wester's teaching at good old Harvard. | |
I guess this guy's charming. | |
Behind that scruffy beard and sort of weird crazed look, I guess this guy just is catnip to women, he put her up in an apartment separate from the Four Seasons condo he owned with his then wife. | |
He was a big star on the road, but he was a deadbeat at home. | |
The city of Boston filed property tax liens on his condo. | |
A Four Seasons condo, mind you. | |
But his reputation grew and grew and grew. | |
He was elected the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, an honorary society founded by John Adams and John Hancock. | |
They founded it in 1780. | |
Who can they imagine? | |
Could they ever imagine a guy like him being in their society? | |
And here's the bio on his website. | |
I bet his bio makes enthralling reading. | |
He says he has a passion For telling the truth and bearing witness to love and justice. | |
Must be love. | |
Must be love! | |
When he met this dude and whisked her off to Boston. | |
Must be love. | |
Well, he was making about a million dollars a year then, but his wife returned from a trip to Ethiopia to visit family. | |
At least that wife was Ethiopian. | |
She said he had failed to pay their bills. | |
Her phone and cable got disconnected. | |
What's a girl to do without cable? | |
Her car insurance was canceled. | |
And much of her debt was sent for collection. | |
Boy, isn't that a happy marriage? | |
There's another woman who had earlier filed a complaint to establish paternity against West, took him to court for welching on $49,500 in child support. | |
Now he's on his fifth wife. | |
As I say, this guy, this guy is an absolute lady killer. | |
He's only pulling down about $115,000 a year at Union Theological Seminary. | |
This guy teaches religion. | |
What kind of religion is he teaching? | |
It doesn't sound exactly like one who's a stickler for Judeo-Christianism. | |
It's the religion of self-indulgence. | |
But he gets only $115,000 a year, but the seminary pays for his housing. | |
Now, delivering speeches and teaching masterclasses—masterclasses in what? | |
I don't know—hocusing the American public helped boost his income, nevertheless, to about half a million. | |
This guy can't subsist on less than half a million. | |
However, he's on sabbatical for Union Theological Seminary, so he can become president of these United States. | |
But on sabbatical, he keeps collecting a paycheck, And but the paycheck is going to run out because the sabbatical is going to run out before the election. | |
And according to this article, which interviewed him, he doesn't worry about finances. | |
Recently, he said with a laugh, it's just it's just me and Jesus and prayers. | |
It's been like that for decades. | |
Just me and just me and Jesus. | |
That and every woman he walks past. | |
Good grief. | |
And this is the great icon of black intellectualism, theological thinking, and what does it say? | |
What does it say? | |
He was crazy on truth-telling and bearing witness to love and justice. | |
Wow. | |
Anyway, that's the latest on the great and good and lovely Cornel West. | |
Did you ever read Brace Banners? | |
No, I sure never did. | |
Did you ever read it? | |
I did, years ago. | |
Yeah, it's one of those, because he was, I want to say, didn't he vacillate between Harvard and Yale? | |
I think he bounced around. | |
Princeton. | |
Harvard and Princeton. | |
I mean, he didn't think Harvard was treating him the way the great white black savior deserved to be treated, and he buggered off to Princeton. | |
I don't think he's ever been at Yale, but Princeton, Harvard, you know, could have been Yale, I'm sure. | |
Yale just probably didn't offer him enough money. | |
I guess the women at Yale weren't good enough for him, eh? | |
Maybe that's it. | |
What's a quick low and dirty on Race Matters? | |
Avoid At All Costs. | |
That was one of the first foundational books. | |
That and David Roediger. | |
Didn't he write the book White Like Me? | |
I can't remember. | |
I forgot some of these titles. | |
There's so many goofy ones. | |
OK, well, no, he's just a great credit to his race. | |
Credit to America. | |
Boy, oh boy. | |
But the poor boy's broke. | |
Well, he better get that job in the White House pretty quick. | |
Doesn't that pay about $300,000 a year? | |
That'll bail him out. | |
Anyway, the Regents exam. | |
The New York State's Education Department has shared its official plan to abolish the Regents exam. | |
Students would no longer have to pass the three hour exam in order to get a diploma. | |
The exams were first given in high schools in 1878. | |
And now New York is in the minority of states that require an exit exam to get a diploma. | |
I wonder how many actually do that. | |
You know, that's a good thing. | |
Seems to me a diploma ought to count for something. | |
Students have to pass at least seven state exams for the advanced diploma. | |
That's seen as giving them a boost on their college applications. | |
Did you know that? | |
You could pass seven exams and get an advanced diploma in New York State. | |
Well, efforts to nix the current state level examination requirements were led by now New York State Education Department Commissioner Betty Rosa, or perhaps Betty Rosa, as they might say on national public radio. | |
Attention, all you people with certain tunes, a certain set, certain things. | |
We'll get to Betty Rosa later on. | |
Well, she has argued that graduation rates remain stubbornly tied to race. | |
And poverty, uh oh, uh oh. | |
But along with removing the Regents exam, the Education Department has proposed to adopt a portrait of a graduate, a portrait of a graduate, meaning students must demonstrate that they are, listen to this, this is straight from the portrait, critical thinkers, culturally competent, and global citizens. | |
Boy, these days, being a critical thinker, that means swallowing hook, line, and sinker everything your cuckoo bird woke sociology teacher and history teacher tells you. | |
They're going to be critical thinkers and culturally competent and global citizens in order to graduate. | |
Boy. | |
Now, the department also recommended redefining its credit system to align with this portrait. | |
And moving to a system with only one diploma available, another special high-powered diploma for the brainiacs, you know, everybody's got to be equal. | |
Everybody has got to be equally equally ignorant. | |
But back to Betty Rosa. | |
She is, as I say, the well, she is not only the commissioner of education, she's president of the University of the State of New York. | |
The whole system and she is the first Latina to serve in this position. | |
And so she's going to abolish something that white people have been doing since 1878. | |
Because she knows better. | |
She knows better, Mr. Kersey. | |
Can't have this stuff, those dead old white males who started the Regents exam. | |
Pooey. | |
And boy, I saw a photograph of her, and she looks Hispanic. | |
She looks like she, well, crawled down from the hills, practically. | |
A lot of these, a lot of these Latinas, you know, they look like, I don't know, Castizo, practically. | |
White, but not Rosa. | |
Well, Mr. Kersey, I think you have a story about a different lady. | |
Caitlin Clarke, she's back in the news, or at least back in your mind. | |
No, she's not going to leave the news for a long time, Mr. Taylor, and it's a good thing, because again, most white people want to avoid having uncomfortable conversations about race. | |
That's one of the reasons that so many people just enjoy zoning out and watching sports and thinking that, hey, these guys I'm watching, I could have a conversation with these African-American | |
athletes. | |
Well, but hold on, hold on. | |
Watching Caitlin Clark, surely that reminds you of race every time she plays, doesn't it? | |
The way she gets brutalized on the court? | |
In a positive way. | |
Oh, no. | |
I think this is one of the biggest white pills. | |
The great and good Gregory Hood and I just actually did a shockingly phenomenal podcast. | |
If you say so yourself. | |
Okay. | |
I thought, no, that was great. | |
Cause cause he and I both enjoy basketball. | |
We both enjoy sports. | |
And I, I, I, I'm going to tell you this story is only going to get more and more important, especially as you look at the ratings and you see that games with Caitlin Clark are getting so much more viewership. | |
Then games without Caitlin Clark. | |
And she's basically the only thing that's making this league palatable toward those who realize it's women's basketball. | |
No thanks. | |
Monica McNutt goes on anti-Caitlin Clark rant on the Daily Show. | |
Jon Stewart's Daily Show showcased this black speaker who had more negative things to say about Caitlin Clark. | |
She declared that she would not be silenced in her stance on Clark. | |
She said, fellow sports analysts have pushed back against WNBA player Caitlin Clarks, who's of course white, booming popularity, suggesting the white phenom's favor overshadows the work of past black and queer women in the WNBA. | |
Mr. Taylor would be remiss if I didn't point out that the league is 80% BIPOC, 71% black and 33% LGBTQ queer. | |
71% black and 33% LGBTQ queer. | |
So by being a skilled white woman, Clark is being accused of overshadowing the influence | |
of black women before her, which McNutt has confidently expressed | |
before on television doing so again with Jon Stewart. | |
To McNutt, viewers can't simply tune in to view Clarke. | |
It has to be about the minority groups alongside Clarke and those that came before, the Indiana Fever star. | |
She said this, quote, the tenor and the prevailing narrative that has been created around this season's WMV play is that it's the League versus Caitlin Clarke. | |
That's just absolutely false. | |
It's unfair to the women that have been there building up this league to this moment so that Clark's popularity could take it to the next level. | |
Well, Mr. Taylor, if I could say, I don't think anyone cares about anyone who built the so-called league to the point it is now in their 27th season. | |
When you have one white girl come along and people who've never watched the league before never cared about it, now they are invested in something because of Caitlyn Clark. | |
I can sort of understand these people who've been at it for 27 seasons and nobody gives a hoot, nobody watches, and all of a sudden this white lady comes along and everybody wants to watch. | |
I can see their being jealous. | |
I can kind of understand that. | |
It's really fundamentally at the end of the day racial resentment because Caitlin Clarke's Legion of fans is probably whiter than the snow that falls in your backyard. | |
It's not exactly hip-hop enthusiasts who are cheering her on or definitely not the LGBT community. | |
And you're telling me all these new fans, they can't be bothered with any game if she's not in it. | |
So they're watching these games only if she's playing and because she's playing. | |
I'll tell you. | |
Last night, for example, Yes. | |
She had, she had four fouls. | |
So she had to sit on the bench and the entire crowd erupted. | |
We want Clark. | |
We want Clark. | |
They're going to the games to watch this white. | |
Yes. | |
Like, I mean, I'm telling you as silly as it sounds, I would not be extending one ounce of breath talking about Caitlin Clark. | |
I've got a daughter, you've got two daughters. | |
Uh, you know, it's, it's, I've, I've, I've said, Hey, listen, you know, go play tennis, play, Do dance, do golf, do not play basketball. | |
This is, it's not a sport that I'm really that excited about you playing though. | |
You're going to be probably close to six feet tall. | |
Um, you know, it's not, I really don't want you hanging around, uh, you know, like we talked about last week, a bunch of nappy headed hoes who are envious of you for your looks. | |
And especially if you're not, uh, if you're not, if you're not down with the LGBTQ LGBTQ stuff. | |
And I think that's one of the reasons why Caitlin Clark played at Iowa. | |
You know, her team at Iowa is, is, was overwhelmingly white. | |
And I think that's one of the reasons why in the South, you don't see a lot of white girls try and play college basketball because again, the major programs, they're all, they're all just aggressively black and, and who they, who they recruit. | |
But that's why Caitlin Clark is just becoming this cultural. | |
It's a cultural moment. | |
So, and that, and it's so important, Mr. Taylor to document what and how black journalists and how black individuals who have positions of authority, um, As commentators to see how they're reacting, because I think that's that's very edifying. | |
That's very, very edifying. | |
They can't be generous, not the slightest little shred of generosity for apparently this very talented girl. | |
Now, I just worry. | |
I just worry that she may crack under the strain. | |
I mean, with all of this attention and all of this hatred directed for her, And as I believe I said last week, if you get fouled deliberately and painfully over and over and over again, you might think twice of driving for the basket. | |
Did you know I knew a term like that? | |
Drive for the basket? | |
I bet you had a nice little, um, had a nice little, uh, move or you'd probably fake a left and then, and then cross over to your right. | |
And, uh, you know, you get that lanky height. | |
No, I bet you, I bet you had a nice little, uh, jumpstop move. | |
So. | |
Actually, I was a pretty good ball player, but all my opponents were Japanese teams, so I was a relatively big guy. | |
But anyway, I just hope that she can tough it out. | |
I really worry about her. | |
Imagine, imagine, she is psychologically in a vice. | |
This is a real Pressurized system for her. | |
But anyway, so we finished with her or you got more to say? | |
No, we're totally finished. | |
Actually, I don't think we're going to be finished with her. | |
I think she's going to be someone for today to push things. | |
But for today, we are finished. | |
And I'm with you. | |
I'm not going to watch a WNBA game, but I'm going to watch the reaction to her games. | |
And especially as the ratings continue to go up for just her games. | |
And then there's no other interest. | |
And I think that's going to be important because we're going to continue to see the racial resentment toward white players. | |
Remember the comments we had last week where the other white girl from Stanford said, Hey, most of my teammates are all masculine. | |
They're they, them. | |
And it's like, could you imagine just a league where it was just a bunch of, you know, cute, petite white girls who, um, you know, weren't out there, weren't out there fouling, fouling their competitors just because of the color of their skin wasn't, uh, Was it Melanin Enhanced, as you've said? | |
Right. | |
Beach Volleyball on the basketball court. | |
Yeah, I think the ratings would go up. | |
Yeah, she says they're envious of us because we look like women. | |
Good for her. | |
Now, is she still playing? | |
Has she been cancelled? | |
How's she doing? | |
She's still playing. | |
Very good. | |
All right. | |
Well. | |
I've got a story about somebody I've never heard of, but I've never heard of so many famous people these days. | |
A fellow by the name of John Leguizamo. | |
John Leguizamo, yeah. | |
Okay, he's apparently some sort of actor. | |
Well, he ran a full page in the Sunday New York Times, and he is telling Emmy voters to vote for BIPOCs. | |
Of course, he is a BIPOC. | |
He says, I know everyone is exhausted with inclusion, but not us who are not included. | |
Oh, vote for me, me, me. | |
The liberal actor said white people are overrepresented in top positions across the board in tech, banking, medicine, streaming, and Hollywood. | |
He says America is better when it's inclusive. | |
America's better because I'm here. | |
What an arrogant little swine. | |
He says it's more profitable. | |
It's more creative. | |
Let's not give up. | |
I'm still woke. | |
Are you? | |
He says. | |
Leguizamo, is that how you pronounce his name? | |
Leguizamo? | |
His letter noted that hundreds, hundreds of talented non-white artists deserve to be considered for awards, not because of their ethnicity, but because they have achieved greatness with a foot on their neck for too long. | |
How long is too long? | |
You know, how long would be enough? | |
Let this be the start of a new era, says he. | |
And he also expressed deep frustration over the fact That former President Donald Trump is getting more and more support among Latinos. | |
He raged against Univision for hosting an interview with Donald Trump back in November. | |
Huh, better not even interview him, I guess. | |
Wow. | |
Well, I looked into this Leguizamo fellow. | |
He's been in over 100 movies. | |
He has produced himself. | |
More than 20 films and documentaries. | |
He's made over 30 TV appearances and has produced various television projects. | |
And he is from Bogota, Colombia. | |
Bogota, Colombia! | |
I just love it when these guys sashay into the country and they tell us how to run the place, you know? | |
Nominate more people like me, me, me, me, me! | |
Boy, he's as bad as the blacks, whom so many people despise. | |
It's just really incredible to me. | |
But anyway, that's John Leguizamo for us. | |
I'll keep an eye out for this guy. | |
Yeah, John Leguizamo. | |
He actually has played a white guy in a lot of movies. | |
He actually played in the live action Super Mario back in the early 90s. | |
He played Luigi because he has this kind of swarthy, you know, Southern Italian look. | |
So he plays white guys? | |
Yeah, exactly. | |
So no, he's someone that I assiduously avoid in any cinema. | |
So, yeah, that story, that story is, it's silly, but again, it's yet, when you see that story written, it's just another story that helps reinforce, these people really don't like us. | |
Boy, they don't like us. | |
As I say, he's from Bogota, and he comes here and he says, hey, it's on account of me, on account of people like me, this is such a great country. | |
We make your country better. | |
Vote for me. | |
Give me an Emmy. | |
Boy, oh boy. | |
I just get so fed up with these arrogant people. | |
Anyway, we've got another billionaire, another billionaire who is badly on the wrong side. | |
Now, I suppose since you've heard of everyone, you've heard of Omidyar, Pierre Omidyar. | |
Yep. | |
I know that name. | |
Okay. | |
Well, I did not, but I do now. | |
And ladies and gentlemen, you should be on the lookout for Pierre Omidyar. | |
He is the former eBay chief executive, a many times billionaire, and he's issued a call to reimagine capitalism in America. | |
He bemoans structural racism, colonialism, paternalism, and he's going to build an explicitly anti-racist and inclusive economy. | |
We spent millions of dollars, mainly funneled through dark money groups, to put Joe Biden in the White House. | |
And after his victory, One of the Omidyar groups, called Reset, explained how it would use the Biden presidency to implant its people to pursue its goals, specifically targeting agencies that it believes has power. | |
And three years later, says the Daily Wire, wrote this article, the French-born Omidyar has succeeded to a remarkable degree. | |
Lena Kahn, the FTC chair, was previously the legal director of the Open Markets Institute, which is part of the Omidyar Network. | |
Sarah Miller, the government agency's chief of staff, left her role at one of his little pet outfits, and she took a job in the government. | |
FTC's chief technology officer, Stephanie Guyen, was part of the club. | |
Also, FTC technology advisor Eric Martin, ditto for FTC spokesman Douglas Farrar, And in May of 2022, Alvaro Bodilla, a former board member of the Omidyar group Free Press, ha ha ha, Free Press, was appointed as the FTC's fifth commissioner, giving it a Democrat majority. | |
I mean, this sounds like a remarkable success story for this guy. | |
Money sure talks, doesn't it? | |
And let's see, others are FTC Associate Director Shaul Sussman, Attorney advisor Alex Petros and attorney Kurt Walters, all coming from activist groups that this guy founded. | |
And by January 2024, all four officials listed on the website of the AI Now Institute. | |
That's one of his little clubby groups. | |
It was set up to regulate how big tech firms use artificial intelligence, have been hired as FTC consultants while they still work at his little nonprofit. | |
Now, the Omidyar network doubts the legitimacy of hate crimes, the idea, or at least the way they are reported and enforced, because it turns out that minorities, such as blacks and Muslims, are disproportionately likely to commit them. | |
So they just don't believe the statistics. | |
Well, there's statistics you can't believe. | |
I think those statistics are probably realistic. | |
They say the only effective way to deal with online harm is laws that change the business models or incentives that allow harmful content to proliferate. | |
Now, what does that mean, Mr. Kersey? | |
You're going to fine them if they let online harm proliferate? | |
This guy's got key roles in the Department of Justice. | |
DOJ Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust. | |
Jonathan Cantor is one of his fair-haired lads, although Jonathan Cantor does not have fair hair. | |
Senior Counsel Sally Hubbard, Deputy Chief of Staff Robin Shapiro. | |
At least 12 people linked to Omidyar nonprofits have worked in the Biden White House itself. | |
It's almost hard to believe that this guy's been this successful. | |
He himself made his billions through eBay, which of course has a stranglehold on its corner of the market. | |
But he wants to break up tech giants because he thinks they haven't been helpful enough to Democrats in the elections. | |
Omidjar can be seen as, in fact, the new version of mega-donor George Soros. | |
His massive partisan activities have flown under the radar because he influences politics through ostensible charity groups, non-profits, rather than direct campaign contributions. | |
Direct campaign contributions have to be reported and they're public record. | |
But if you're just funding wonderful little charities that are helping America, then nobody pays attention. | |
The Omidyar Network says it has paid out more than 1.86 billion dollars. | |
And that's going to reimagine critical systems and the ideas that govern them. | |
I'll start over. | |
That's 1.86 billion dollars to reimagine critical systems and the ideas that govern them to build more inclusive and equitable society. | |
He's a big, he's a big backer of vote by mail. | |
Easiest way, easiest way to do vote fraud. | |
He also says Trump is a dangerous authoritarian demagogue and endorsing Donald Trump immediately disqualifies you from any position of public trust. | |
Well, there you go. | |
Another billionaire who is on the wrong side of probably absolutely everything. | |
Very reassuring, isn't it? | |
So we just need, we just need some, uh, millionaires, multimillionaires, and, uh, maybe one or two billionaires who are on the right side of everything. | |
I'll say, I'll say 1.86 billion. | |
Good grief. | |
Seems like, uh, we could do a lot with 1.86 billion. | |
You know, I'll take the one and you take the 0.86, you know, take it from there. | |
Well, Mr. Kersey, I believe you have a story about a white man who got the short end of the stick. | |
Yeah, I'm going to try and keep this one tight. | |
This is one that I've seen a lot of places on Twitter. | |
It's from Daily Mail. | |
I risked my life serving my country in Iraq, but now I've lost my job at a bank because I'm a white man. | |
He's an Iraq War veteran. | |
He's suing a top U.S. | |
bank, saying he was pushed aside in favor of less qualified candidates and an aggressive diversity hiring push. | |
Chris Smith says Ally Financial ignored his 20 years experience in security and intelligence work and gave the job he wanted to an ex-Walmart employee because she was a woman. | |
He got a junior role in the New York, North Carolina office, but was then sidelined by a boss who railed against white supremacy, was treated unfairly and ended up quitting within weeks, he says. | |
It's just the latest lawsuit from America First Legal, a campaign group led by former Trump administration officials, including Stephen Miller, that fights diversity, equity and inclusion policies in the US. | |
Well, actually, it just fights to ensure that everyone's treated equally and fairly and no race is actually Uh, allowed an upper hand when it comes to the law. | |
Advocates of DEI says it helps get more women and minorities into colleges and workplace, but critics say it ends up hurting straight white men. | |
Ally Financial is an $8 billion a year bank holding firm, uh, headquartered in Detroit, Michigan. | |
It didn't answer Daily Mail's request for comment. | |
Federal law is clear. | |
No discrimination means no discrimination, says AFL lawyer, Gene Hamilton. | |
Now we've seen a lot of these cases, Mr. Taylor, where they're doing this, um, where they're fighting for individuals. | |
They're suing companies that only have scholarships or job opportunities available to BIPOCs, non-whites. | |
And in this case, now we're seeing it at a micro level as opposed to the macro level, where now they're helping individuals who are facing discrimination, especially someone who served our country in really unnecessary wars. | |
But you know what? | |
He still thought there was a country to defend. | |
He came back and found that he was a superfluous man because he's a white guy. | |
You know, I really have a lot of respect for Stephen Miller. | |
I think he was definitely the best man in the Trump White House. | |
And I applaud all of these things he's been doing since he's gotten out. | |
I think he's really great for the country. | |
So let's hear it for Stephen Miller. | |
Well, let's see. | |
This is an interesting story. | |
Here's somebody else I've never heard of. | |
Margaret Brennan. | |
She does CVS face the nation. | |
Well, I never face face the nation. | |
So I just I guess I've never had an eyeful of Margaret Brennan, who, according to photographs, is a nice looking young white lady. | |
But she apparently was shocked when she was made aware of recent figures on Sunday, just this last Sunday, showing that 62 percent of all Americans would back a new government program to deport All undocumented immigrants living in the United States. | |
You're shocked. | |
62% want to give him the boot. | |
And of course, Donald Trump has vowed to deliver the largest mass deportation effort in American history. | |
Well, from his lips to God's ears. | |
Young Brennan said Sunday that, quote, some of what Trump talks about could be illegal. | |
Right. | |
Enforcing the law. | |
Taking people who have broken the law to come here and sending them out. | |
That could be illegal, says this white twit. | |
And last week, the Biden administration announced it would bar asylum for illegals who cross into the country if crossings exceed 2,500 per day for seven consecutive days. | |
This so-called crackdown would still allow at least 1.8 million border hoppers into the country each year, even if it were fully enforced. | |
I mean, as I said even several times on this program, I think it's like a city saying, you know, stopping murder. | |
That's really, it's really tough. | |
You know, it's, it's so bad. | |
It's so hard. | |
And some of these murderers, you know, um, they can't all be wrong. | |
They can't all be bad people. | |
So we're just going to start chasing murderers only after the 50th murder, after the 50th murder, then it's going to be illegal. | |
You know, then we're going to go after the perps, but you know, the first 50, That's just fine. | |
And so Biden is saying the first 2,500 per day, that's just fine. | |
And then the Johnny-come-latelys get a little bit of the heavy hand. | |
And of course, despite this purported crackdown, videos show hundreds and hundreds of migrants from China and Turkey crossing the border unhindered into California. | |
Now, back to Margaret Brennan. | |
As I said, she is a white twit. | |
I suspect she gets picked up in a town car every morning for work, and she hangs out with liberals all day, maybe goes to a wine party in the Upper East Side, and she jabbers about the deplorables, and then gets taken home to her penthouse or her mansion in her town car. | |
It's these people that run the country, and the rest of us have to deal with it. | |
Turns out she was born in Stamford, Connecticut. | |
Ever been to Stamford? | |
It's one of those white suburbs. | |
The only BIPOCs you ever see are chauffeurs and nannies and gardeners. | |
I have been there. | |
I've been there a number of times, yeah. | |
It's not far from New York. | |
Oh, not far from New York. | |
And so she probably, well, who knows where she goes home to, and she is married to someone named Yaddo Yacoub. | |
Y-A-D-O-Y-A-K-U-B. | |
Now, tell me, you say you have a daughter. | |
Wouldn't you just love a son-in-law named Yaddo Yacoub, Mr. Kersey? | |
No, I would not. | |
Well, okay. | |
Now, you have another story that just baffles me. | |
I'm easily baffled, of course, being the old dinosaur geezer that I am, but what's this stuff about back this as up business? | |
Well, unfortunately, 25 years ago, that would be 1999, so I was Was I a sophomore? | |
Sophomore? | |
Freshman? | |
Sophomore. | |
Class of 2002. | |
So, Mayor Cantrell honors Juvenile, he's a rapper, with proclamation of Back That Azz Up Day. | |
Mayor LaToya Cantrell has proclaimed June 11, 2024 as Back That Azz Up Day to honor the 25th anniversary of the hit song and video. | |
And of course, New Orleans is 60% black. | |
LaToya Cantrell is a black female mayor. | |
And the city is completely dominated by a black bureaucracy. | |
We saw what happened when Hurricane Katrina hit and how quickly that infrastructure collapsed and that leadership collapsed and descended into African style chaos. | |
And this story just reinforces the reality of that African style insanity that New Orleans is regrettably blessed with, because otherwise it could be about as awesome as Key West. | |
Of course, Key West is about 80% white. | |
But anyways, back that as up, huh? | |
Well, you know, it's a rap song. | |
I'm not going to I'm not going to reply the lyrics. | |
I actually used to in college, if I ever heard that song, I would leave the bar or I'd leave the venue where I was. | |
I just I do not like being around rap music, despite how white girls might dance to it. | |
A friend of mine once said he said, I don't understand how you guys can even be around some of these girls when they're dancing like they are. | |
I'd have to excuse myself just because of What happens naturally, but I just excuse myself because it's just really regrettable music to have to listen to, and to use a word you used earlier, it's deplorable. | |
The fact that ASAP is a pretty famous rap song. | |
Here's what Mayor LaToya said, quote, this song has been a huge part of, I'm sorry, this is what Juvenile said, quote, this song has been a huge part of my musical journey, and it's amazing to see it still resonate with people today, and I can't wait for the moment each night of the tour when the song drops. | |
You know, I just discovered the lyrics here. | |
starred Lil Wayne and producer Manny Fresh. | |
Contrelles said the song has become a cultural phenomenon. | |
She said this, quote, "'The legendary song has remarkably become | |
"'the most played wedding song in America, "'united people across the nation in celebration | |
"'and exemplifying the unifying power of music,' "'the proclamation stated.'" | |
You know, I just discovered the lyrics here. | |
Oh, go ahead. | |
May I gather you can't sing us a few bars? | |
Well, I guess there's no- There's no cue. | |
I'll allow you to have that illustrious honor. | |
I am censoring some of the language here. | |
It starts with, girl, you working with some ass. | |
Yeah, you bad. | |
Yeah. | |
Make a Negro spend his cash. | |
But he didn't say Negro, of course. | |
Yeah, his last. | |
Yeah. | |
Hose. | |
Frown when you pass, yeah. | |
They mad, yeah. | |
You gonna ride in the Jag, yeah. | |
With that head, you could smoke or buy a bag, yeah, of grass. | |
Then he goes on to say, girl, you look good. | |
Won't you back that ass up? | |
You's a sci-fi mother, well, trucker. | |
Won't you back that ass up? | |
Call me Big Daddy when you back that ass up. | |
Oh, who is you playing with? | |
Back that ass up. | |
Girl, you look good. | |
Won't you back that ass up? | |
Then use a fine mother trucker. | |
Won't you back that ass up? | |
You've got a stupid ass. | |
Yeah, make me laugh. | |
Make a Negro want to grab that. | |
Autograph that. | |
I'm sweating in the drawers. | |
Yeah, hard and long. | |
And it goes on. | |
And it goes on. | |
So that, we're going to have a whole day to celebrate that cultural uplift. | |
You know, in Georgia, we have Ahmaud Arbery there. | |
And now we have Back That Ass Up Day in Louisiana and New Orleans. | |
Again, you laugh when I talk about the whole concept of Black Road America, but again, when you have black elected officials who believe that this song is legendary and it's worthy of commemorating. | |
Well, who is keeping track and who has determined that this is the most commonly played song at weddings in America? | |
I refuse to believe that. | |
Well, here, I actually just looked that up. | |
Here comes the bride. | |
It comes on it's from bridal guide.com. Yes. The number one played song is | |
Let's see, hold on surely it's here comes the bride No, well according to according to | |
It's not even the top 100 according to bridal guide.com The number one song is Uptown Funk, Shake It Off, Shut Up and Dance, Can't Stop the Feeling, I Wanna Dance with Somebody, September by Earth, Wind and Fire, Don't Stop Believing by Journey. | |
Well, maybe. | |
I don't see it, yeah. | |
This is the popular, most popular one at black weddings, I feel sure. | |
But it's remarkable to me that a lady mayor, of course, well, her Her tastes are no doubt melanin-enhanced, but she thinks this is worth a whole day to celebrate, back that ass up! | |
Okay, I'll stay away. | |
I'll stay away. | |
It's amazing. | |
I think it would be awesome if you sampled that song, and Jared Taylor sampling, back that ass up. | |
I will cover, I will do a cover of that. | |
I was at a party and I one time actually went and unplugged the The DJ's music, because I was so disgusted with the song. | |
So, true story. | |
Well, okay, we've got yet another true story, alas and lack, and one of these horrible things that apparently is true, and this one I happen to believe. | |
I think we have no choice but to believe it. | |
How are we doing on time? | |
Oh boy, the time, ooh, time be flying. | |
Okay, I think we can fit this one in. | |
But illegal immigrants who have come to the U.S. | |
as part of this record-breaking tsunami tidal wave, they get a whole host of services, assistance, and benefits completely funded by you, ladies and gentlemen, at least if you're in the United States. | |
There were 2.4 million illegal crossings just in fiscal year 2023, a new record. | |
And now the Immigration Court has a backlog of, drumroll please, 3.6 million cases! | |
It'd probably take a hundred years if we ever get around to these cases. | |
All the judges and all the illegals would be dead. | |
Another benefit is legal services. | |
Legal services for civil deportation hearings. | |
We get to pay for that, you know, legal service. | |
And we will see significant tax increases to pay for all these handouts for these border hoppers. | |
And at the border itself, migrants are taken into custody, they get housing, they get shelter, meals, medical care. | |
If specialist or emergency care is required, they are transported to independent private providers. | |
And they are being released, they'll be turned over to NGOs at the border who will care for them and help them make their way into their favored destination. | |
And besides caring for these border hoppers at the border patrol stations, the federal government is providing hundreds of million dollars to these non-governmental organizations and communities who are taking care of these little darlings. | |
According to the Department of Homeland Security, it splashed out $640 million in fiscal year 2024 via its Shelter and Services Program. | |
That's every one of those $640 million is taxed on, is tax money. | |
And they'll help them find hotel rooms, book their travel. | |
Then there's another Department of Homeland Security pilot program called Case Management. | |
It provides case management and other services to those in immigration removal proceedings. | |
Can you believe that? | |
They are being booted out of the country. | |
But this DHS program, it gives them mental health services to prepare for their new life, their exciting new life outside of the United States. | |
Enrolls their children in school. | |
These are people who are getting the boot, and this will enroll their children in school, give them legal aid, and cultural orientation programs. | |
So if they're a little rusty on their Somali or their Haitian Creole, this will just get them back up to snuff, connects them to social services. | |
Oh boy. | |
And then there are sanctuary cities. | |
They give shelter as part of their security nets, and they have migrant-specific programs. | |
In Denver, they can be enrolled in a program that offers housing assistance options for up to six months. | |
Six months. | |
Free room and board on the city, along with pre-work authorization, readiness training, you name it. | |
Then, if you go to New York City, you can get a prepaid debit card. | |
Wow. | |
$53 million has been ladled out to give families with two children $350 a week. | |
And every week your car gets topped up. | |
Not bad. | |
New York State has also extended state funded Medicare coverage to everyone 65 or older, even if they're illegal. | |
Yep. | |
Got to get these geezers. | |
They take a lot of medical care, but you know, they're here. | |
So we got to treat them. | |
New York City also pays one-way plane tickets to migrants. | |
It's called their re-ticketing program for migrants, and it will redouble its efforts to purchase tickets if they want to go someplace else. | |
Free ticket! | |
In California, this is the first year illegals are eligible for CalHealth. | |
Every last man-jack of them. | |
In Washington, D.C., illegals get health coverage via the long-standing Healthcare Alliance program. | |
Boy, you know, if you need dialysis, if you need surgery of some kind, just hovel across the border, come to D.C. | |
and boy, you are going to get first class treatment. | |
In Chicago, there is the Legal Protection Fund in partnership with NGOs to provide community based outreach, education, legal consultation and courtroom representation. | |
You can't have the little deers show up for their immigration hearing without a lawyer. | |
No, you can't. | |
Boy, and we got to pay for them. | |
They're also a host of emergency nutrition assistance programs. | |
These are Federal Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children, otherwise known as SNAP, Child and Adult Care Food Programs. | |
I mean, probably it would take an accounting genius to figure out all the different programs and all the dollars that are going on these people who just sashay across the border. | |
And of course, If they ever were granted a pathway to citizenship, which is another way of saying amnesty, then they could be on board for many, many other programs. | |
And of course, Biden, Biden, he has repeatedly touted his comprehensive immigration reform bill, and he says this will solve the system that they say is broken. | |
Now, this is just such, such outrageous, brazen, jiggery-pokery. | |
They say the system is broken. | |
Well, the system is broken because the law is not being enforced. | |
And they're going to fix this broken system by saying, okay, all you people who broke the law, you're just not illegal anymore. | |
Pathway to citizenship right away. | |
Now, my question to you, Mr. Kersey, is there any chance, is there a ghost of a chance that all of this tax-funded lolly, all of this stuff that is there for free, free for the taking, you think word of that has gone out all around the world? | |
Yes. | |
Go to the head of the class. | |
God, I'm sure it's on every Instagram channel, every Twitter channel. | |
Oh boy. | |
Oh boy. | |
Come and get it. | |
We're ringing the dinner gong here in the United States of America. | |
Well, Mr. Kersey, we are out of time. | |
It always happens so quickly. | |
So ladies and gentlemen, we really are honored and it is a great pleasure to spend this time with you and we look forward to hearing from you next week and be sure to write to us. | |
You can go to www.amred.com at the contact us page or Send me an email, ladies and gentlemen. | |
BecauseWeLiveHere at ProtonMail.com. | |
Once again, BecauseWeLiveHere at ProtonMail.com. |