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July 18, 2025 - Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor
59:53
Centenarian Blacks

Jared Taylor and Paul Kersey learn that black American newborns are more likely than white newborns to live to 100. The hosts also discuss baby trafficking, Claudia Sheinbaum, and the law of gravity. Thumbnail credit: Josh Hunter via Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/deed.en

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Ladies and gentlemen, dear listeners, welcome to Radio Renaissance.
I'm your host, Jeremy Taylor, and with me is none other than my indispensable co-host, Paul Kersey himself.
Today is July 17th, 2025.
And we'll start with a comment.
Here's an interesting one.
In your last podcast, you were aghast that over half of Australia's population are first or second generation immigrants.
Alas, this is the sort of grim fact we legacy white Australians have had to put up with in the multicultural success story that is modern Australia.
That's the phrase we are bombarded with almost daily.
The multicultural success story that is modern Australia.
My mind.
Australia's historical seed stock was immigrants from the UK, Ireland, and Europe.
In 1901, the Immigration Restriction Act, which was popular across the political spectrum, was the basis of the official White Australia policy, which required prospective immigrants to pass a dictation test in English or a European language.
Now, as I recall, on some occasions and in some countries, I don't know if this was the case in Australia, if someone were a South Asian Indian who clearly understood English, you could give him a dictation test in Polish and see if he passed that.
Now, I don't know if Australia tried that.
In any case, our listener goes on to say this splendid policy kept Australia largely white until the policy was entered in 1966.
In 1980, just a decade and a half later, white immigration was down from 100% in the colonial days to just 42%.
That was by 1980.
And today, it is barely 5%.
Immigration now comes from Asia, with China and India in the lead, Middle East, and Africa.
I've always heard that legal immigration in the United States is something along the lines of 10% white.
Mr. Kersey, do you have a figure on that?
I don't have a figure on that, but I just wanted you to clarify that number you just said.
Put that in perspective.
In 1980, it was 1% and 1% is it now?
In 1980, up to 1966, the immigration stream was almost 100% white.
In 1980, just a decade and a half later, whites were down to 42%.
And now, in 2024, 2025, barely 5%.
Yes.
It drums.
Unreal numbers.
Unreal numbers to me.
Yes.
You need to do a graph of the Great Replacement in Australia, I think.
While you were talking about that, sir, I just wanted to see if there's ever been a book that details the history of the whites-only immigration policy in Australia.
And alas, there isn't.
So maybe some listener out there, maybe we can spark that germ of an idea in your mind.
Actually, there is a book.
It's a sort of homemade book, but it covers the whole issue reasonably well.
I got it several years ago.
I believe I might have even reviewed it for American Renaissance.
It's a very sad story, but there is a book.
It wasn't put out by mainstream publisher.
Let's see.
Here's a comment.
Do you remember and revere the great men and women of the past because they are white or because they are great?
Why should the race of the people matter when it comes to their achievements?
If it had been a black man who invented the telephone or the light bulb instead of a white man, would you not equally remember and appreciate his accomplishments?
Answer, short answer?
No.
I think it would be fine if he had, and I would admire him for that.
But I root for my team.
I root for my team, whether it's among white people.
I rooted for the British at the Battle of Trafalgar, and I rooted for my Confederate ancestors in all battles of the Confederacy.
Was it Richard Sheridan?
I might have been a great cavalry commander, but my boy is somebody else, the Memphis man.
And so, yes, I root for family, and so I'm perfectly willing to recognize the accomplishments of non-whites, but I appreciate the accomplishments of people who are members of my family, Nathan Bett Forrest over Sheridan in my book.
Let's see.
On your most recent podcast, you commented briefly on saving grammar.
But about halfway through the podcast, you said a man with an assault rifle, I'm sorry, I'll start again, a man with an assault rifle, he fired.
Using the word he in this way is redundant and ungrammatical.
I've heard you make this mistake several times the past few years.
On the other podcast, you said he or she right after the individual's name.
Well, Mr. Kersey, if this is the way I talk, this commentator, well, he be right.
In fact, if that's how I speak, I was just joking now, of course.
I'm entirely unaware of it.
And Mr. Kersey, you let me know if I say such things.
I shall know.
All right.
You know, it's interesting.
I'm one to call you out.
And I just, I do want to ask, because we do have such a great listening audience, does the book by chance, does the title from White Australia to Woomera sound familiar?
The story of Australian immigration?
You know, I don't think that's it.
I don't think that's it.
I don't remember the title, and I'm not close to my bookshelf right now, but I could find it and perhaps talk about the title next podcast.
All right.
Now, here is a small correction.
The country of, which you pronounced Les Sotho, because that's the way it's spelled, it's pronounced Lesotho.
But believe it or not, Mr. Kerzy.
Lesotho.
I knew that.
I don't know why I knew that, but rather than give it the correct pronunciation, I pronounced it Les Sotho because I thought that was the only way people would recognize it.
I'm not sure I have ever heard it pronounced correctly in conversation.
Very few people talk about that country at all.
Lesotho.
But it is spelt L-E-S-O-T-H-O.
And our listener writes in to say, my father used to know the present king, His Majesty King Letzi III, when they were both students at Wolson College in Cambridge in the late 1980s.
So we have distinguished listeners, boys and girls.
Lesotho.
I will.
I will forget that for as long as I live.
Not Lesotho, Lesotho.
No, not Lesotho, which is the way it's spelled.
It is Lesotho.
And people will probably think that I'm not telling the truth when I said I actually knew that.
And it crossed my mind to give it the correct pronunciation, but I thought that would baffle you because you were staring at it on a screen spelled S-A-L-E-S-O-T-H-O.
Initially.
Can I ask real quick, what is Lesotho known for?
I don't know.
It's not known.
It's not known for much by me.
I think it's small, landlocked, and it might have even been one of the homelands for one of the Bantu Sastans, so to speak, in South Africa.
It's down there in South Africa or around on the border, somewhere down there.
I'm sorry, I don't know much.
Okay, now here is an interesting comment.
In your last podcast, I believe Mr. Taylor misspoke.
Again, I misspoke, Mr. Kirsten, when he said that someone opened fire on a border patrol facility more than 400 miles south of McAllen, Texas.
Well, if you go 400 miles south of McAllen, you'll be deep in the heart of Mexico.
Well, yes, about two-thirds of the way to Mexico City, as a matter of fact.
Now, I don't remember exactly what I said, but we'd been talking about Alvaredo, Texas.
And in that context, I meant to say 400 miles south of that in Macallan.
But the listener is certainly correct.
If I suggested that something happened in the United States, 400 miles south of McAllen, that would have been an error.
Now, the listener writes to say, I started my Border Patrol career.
My first duty station was in McAllen.
It was just south of McAllen.
It's the tiny town of Hidalgo, Texas, and the Hidalgo point of entry going into Reynosa, Mexico.
Back then, what was called the Rio Grande Valley sector, or what is now known as the Rio Grande Valley sector, was known as the McAllen sector.
Where the shooting took place is right next to the McAllen airport.
If you get a rental car, walk to the parking lot to pick up your car.
If you were to keep walking 30 more yards, if that even, you'd be knocking on the door of the old McAllen sector headquarters.
Apparently, some of our Bortac agents were there.
Bortak stands for Border Tactical Unit.
It was probably mustering up to help with the Guadalupe River flood.
Remember, these are the same guys who shot the Uvalde school shooter when the local cops refused to act.
They are the wrong guys to get into a gunfight with.
And based on what I've read, it sounds like one of the civilian employees, the count office, maybe a radio operator, was showing up for his shift at 6 a.m. when he noticed a man standing between two vehicles in the parking lot.
The man shot at the civilian employee, and it being Texas, the civilian returned fire with his own handgun.
Hooray!
Then he called 911.
In the meantime, the active shooter, we now know him to be Ryan Luis Mosqueda, just as you reported, he tried to get into locked doors but couldn't.
When a McCallan police officer responded, he shot him.
Now, I suspect, says the writer, he was probably assigned to airport duty that day.
What a way to kick off your shift, hoping to have an easy day at the airport, and it starts off with a nutcase firing an AR-15.
Reports say the civilian was injured, as well as the responding McCallum police officer and a Border Patrol officer.
Breitbart reports that Bortak members are present, and it says one or more of the Bortak agents fired at the man.
It appears one shot struck the assailant in the head, instantly terminating the attack.
Our listener says, Bortec guys would have been happy to deport Mosqueto all the way to the underworld.
So, a little additional information from some guy who knows what he's talking about.
Now, here's another involved and interesting comment.
Last week's podcast, the subject of Japanese longevity came up along with Rushton's RK theory to explain why Africans don't live as long as whites.
Here are the current longevity figures for the United States.
White women, longevity of 80.2 years.
Black women, 77 years.
That's three years shorter.
White men, 74.8 years.
So, white men, if you round up to 75, they die two years sooner on average than black women.
Black men, 67 years.
That is a good eight years less lifespan than black men.
However, our commenter goes on to point out something fascinating.
The current verified oldest living American is Naomi Whitehead, an African Americaness, who, on the day I was writing, was 114 years and 287 days old.
Her predecessor, oldest living American, was another African-Americaness, Elizabeth Francis, who died in 2024, age 115 years and 89 days.
Among the top 10 verified oldest Americans ever, there are no fewer than five black women.
They're just 7% of the population, but half of the champions of extreme longevity.
So on the one hand, there is a growing movement to declare racism a public health crisis because expected lifestyle, the average lifespan of blacks is shorter than that of whites.
Racism supposedly creates inequities that produce and perpetuate disparities in health.
On the other hand, a study of African-American centenarians makes the claim that experiencing racism, particularly in the earlier days when it was said to be much worse, that explains how long-lived blacks,
quote, built and sustained positive relationships within their neighborhoods and religious communities, which, quoting again, appeared to enhance their ability to cope and remain resilient against the experience of segregation, discrimination, and inequality.
So, which is it?
It's racism a public health crisis that shortens black lives?
Or does it produce community that makes them Live longer?
Or does it do both?
Mr. Kersey.
Our listener writes in, my own personal opinion.
I believe that Rushton's RK life history theory goes a long way to explain racial differences around the world.
However, selection pressures may have in some way caused a small share of blacks to live into extreme old age.
But this is a very interesting thing.
I have been paying attention to race low these many years, and I did not know that black women are more likely to become centenarians than white American women.
Now, I looked into it even further, Mr. Kirsten, and my eyes were opened further.
Did you know 5.6% of Hispanic girls at birth in the United States are expected to live to 100?
5.6?
That's more than 1 in 20, compared to 3.2% of black girls and 2.5% of white girls.
So black girls are about, well, let's see, nearly 50% more likely to live to be 100 than white girls.
Racism be damned.
Now, for men, the figures are lower, but follow a similar pattern.
1.6% of Hispanic boys are going to live to be 100, 1.1% for black boys, and 0.9% for white boys.
So, black men are, let's see, about 20% more likely than white boys to go on to live to be 100, despite the fact that so many of them are shooting each other, despite all this horrible racism that's supposed to be grinding them down and shortening their lives.
All of this I find very, very interesting.
Now, I did know that Hispanics have better health outcomes than whites, and in many cases, better health outcomes than Asians.
But I sure didn't know that they were that much more likely to live to be 100.
In other words, again, I think this is worth repeating.
5.6% of Hispanic girls at birth can expect to live to 100.
In the case of whites, it's 2.5%, more than twice as likely to make it to 100.
Now, whether that is considered a curse or a blessing, opinions may differ, but they live longer than we do.
So put that in your pipe and smoke it.
I'll pass.
You're not going to smoke that.
It might make you high.
Okay, now, ladies and gentlemen, we do love hearing from you.
I suspect I would never have known what I just told you about longevity of the people of different races had it not been for this fascinating comment from the listener.
So please do write to us with corrections when I misspeak, as I occasionally do.
You can send a message straight to me if you go to our website, amlen.com, amre n.com, and hit the contact us tab, and you can get a message straight to me.
And there is another option.
There is.
You can send me an email because we live here at protonmail.com.
Once again, that email is becausewevehere at protonmail.com.
And we'd be remiss if we don't encourage all of our listeners to follow both myself and Mr. Taylor at X at Twitter.
Follow me at BWLH underscore and follow Mr. Taylor.
You can follow me at RealJar Taylor.
So, yes, be there or be square.
Now, Mr. Kersey, you have a very interesting story about Claudia Scheinbaum, who is the president of Mexico planning to sue the United States government.
Please do tell, do tell a lot about this.
Let's tell you why.
Before we do, I'd like to point out that each year, Mexicans in the United States of America send back $64 billion in remittances from the United States back to Mexico, which is about, I think, 5% of the GDP of Mexico.
So quite a sizable number.
Just think about that as the story goes on, sir, and listener.
Mexico's president, Claudia Scheinbaum, said her administration is considering the possibility of filing a legal complaint over the death of a migrant, an illegal alien, who fell to his death during an immigration raid, a cannabis raid in Camarillo.
A cannabis raid.
This was a pot farm, right?
This was a pot farm.
I believe that cannabis is legal in the state of California.
In fact, it turns out that the guys who own this cannabis farm are donors, to white guys, to Governor Gavin Newsom.
So the growing was a completely legal operation, all above board, but with illegal workers.
Over 300 people were detained at this raid.
Yes, sir.
Jamie Alanis Garcia, he was hospitalized and later died after falling off a roof during the ICE raid in Kimarillo.
Quote, Jamie was not just a farm worker.
He was a provider and a human being who deserved dignity.
His death is not an isolated tragedy.
It's the result of a targeted raid at Glasshouse Farms.
Workers were met not with protection, but with chaos and fear.
Some were detained.
Others were traumatized.
Jamie lost his plot.
Is that Scheinbaum talking?
No, that's what the family posted on social media.
The family?
I mean, from what I've gathered from news reports, this illegal immigrant scaled up a scaffolding and tried to evade an encounter with ICE for which he would have been detained and obviously deported.
And he tripped and fell 30 feet to his ultimate doom.
So words of the wild.
That's one form of self-deportation, I guess.
Affimolation, in a way.
No, I guess the advice we would give all the illegal aliens is, from what I understand, the DHS is offering $1,000 to illegal aliens to self-deport.
You'll get a flight home.
So you either get a flight home, or I guess you can end up like Mr. Garcia and get a flight home in a casket.
So federal agents clashed with protesters during this ICE raid at the farm in Ventura County, one of at least two large-scale raids in SoCow on July 10th.
Garcia's family said he fell, like I said, 30 feet off a building while he was possibly trying to run from federal agents During that fall, during that evasive maneuvers he undertook, sir.
He suffered a broken neck and skull.
Quote: We are supporting the family.
We're in contact with them, and we're also exploring the possibility of filing a complaint in the U.S. because this is unacceptable, Scheinbaum said on July 15th.
You know, I don't understand.
It's not as though they pitched him off the roof.
No, they did not.
He might as well sue the law of gravity.
I just don't understand.
The Newtonian laws.
Yeah, you're right.
The quote, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is currently reviewing the matter.
It's very unfortunate that this happened.
All our solidarity and support go to the family, and there must not be another case like this one.
That's why the complaint must be filed in the courts over there.
End quote.
The DHS said he, I'm sorry, the Department of Homeland Security said he was not being pursued by law enforcement when he fell.
Quote, this man was not in and has not been in CBP or ICE custody, although he was not being pursued by law enforcement.
This individual climbed up the roof of a greenhouse and fell 30 feet, said DHS Public Affairs Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin.
CBP immediately called a medevac to the scene to get him care as quickly as possible.
Since June 6th, 435 people have been repatriated from the U.S. to Mexico.
Between January 20th and July 14th, 1,427 people have been deported to Mexico, specifically due to raids, Scheinbaum said, including all repatriations to Mexico.
During that period, the total is 75,341 people, 68,790 Mexican nationals, and 6,551 foreigners.
During what period now?
January 20th and July 14th.
So right when the Trump administration 2.0 took over.
Mr. Taylor, I guess we'd be remiss also if we didn't point out that $64 billion in remittances go from the U.S. to Mexico untaxed yearly, but also that when the kerfuffle between President Trump, ICE, DHS, and Los Angeles took place, Scheinbaum gave a press conference where she encouraged Mexicans in the United States not to be quiet and to make noise as to what was happening.
And of course, as you pointed out in a prior podcast, there were a lot of Mexican flags shown flying in Los Angeles during the initial riots that broke out.
Yes, rather ironic that they enthusiastically wave the nation's flag, the nation to which they don't want to return.
But be that as it may.
Well, okay, so she's going to sue.
Now, in an earlier conversation, you said to me, if they could sue for something as innocuous as that, surely we could sue the Mexican government for all the people that are killed by drunken Mexican drivers in the United States.
There are loads and loads of them.
Once you start suing, watch out, Claudia baby.
It might be coming your way.
I feel sure, though, that this case will be absolutely thrown out.
If it were the case that, I don't know, they were chasing this guy and off he went and then they just sat around and laughed at him while he died rather than call in any first aid.
Maybe, maybe, maybe, maybe.
But this sounds as though they have no case at all.
Let's see.
Now, the whole question of third country deportations is a fascinating one for me, and I'm hoping to get a story on that.
We're trying to find somebody to write it up and get some details on how it actually works.
What that means is if you have an illegal immigrant from country X and country X won't take him back, then you pitch him out to country Y with which he may have no contact whatsoever.
But illegal immigrants could be given as little as six hours' notice before they are deported to a country other than their homeland, according to a new government memo.
Todd Lyons, the acting director of ICE, said immigrants could be deported to a third country with as little as six hours in exigent circumstances.
That's, I guess, if we're in a real hurry to get them out.
So long as the person has had an opportunity to speak to a lawyer first.
Generally, an immigrant gets 24 hours before he is pitched to some country other than his own place.
Illegals could be sent to nations that have pledged not to persecute or torture them.
Well, I suppose that's fair enough.
The United States has sent hundreds of illegals to Costa Rica, El Salvador, and Panama, while South Sudan recently accepted eight third country deportees.
They were from Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Myanmar, Sudan, and Vietnam.
Now, Mexico accepts illegals.
I wonder why this Mexican could not be shipped directly to Mexico.
It seems a whole lot cheaper than sending them all the way around the world to South Sudan.
But imagine you're from Myanmar.
That is the fancy new name for Burma, of course.
And then you end up in South Sudan, which is one of the most primitive, war-torn places in the world.
It must be a bit of a shock, as I keep saying on this podcast.
I hope those guys all write back home and explain what happened to them.
Don't come to the United States because you might end up in South Sudan.
Mr. Taylor, one quick thought.
We see how President Scheinbaum cares so much about the life of Jamie Alanis Garcia, this guy who fell 30 feet to his ultimate doom, but they care so little about these other people who were being deported to other third-party nations.
You'd think that they would want this elite human capital back in Mexico.
That's the one thing that's always blown my mind is the Mexican president sees illegal immigrants as what they are.
They are a key exporter of capital from the United States back to Mexico, and they're serving a purpose.
One of the things that Claudia herself said during those riots in Los Angeles when we were rounding up these illegals is that, well, of course they went.
In fact, she's admitting that her country is so disagreeable, you can't make a living.
Of course they went.
And of course they had a right to go.
And so they should make as big a stink as possible.
Good grief.
I mean, she really acts as though this is part of her territory.
Yeah, and that's an important point.
Anyway, But let's see, the administration is now considering five other African nations, including Liberia.
Liberia is no garden spot.
I was there in 1970, actually.
One of my stories I tell about my racial awakening is set in Liberia.
Also, Senegal, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea-Bissau.
I've never been there, but boy, is that a primitive place.
Mauritania, I have been in, and that's just all sand.
I think it'd be no fun to be deported there.
And Gabon, not to mention Eswatini.
Es Swatini.
Excellent.
Yes, Eswatini is a hot middle country.
It is fully landlocked by South Africa.
Why do you think Lesotho won that list?
That's a good question.
That's a good question.
Maybe they don't want these people.
But Lesotho sounds like an excellent candidate.
You're not going to swim home from Es Swatini.
Now, this was news to me.
I've not heard that Joe Biden struck up similar deals with Mexico to take in thousands of illegals from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela since those countries refused to take their criminals back.
Did you know Joe Biden had done the same thing?
The Mexicans agreed to take them?
Now, what I want to know about how all this works is how much do we pay?
How much do we pay?
And when somebody shows up in South Sudan, for example, do we give him, you know, a $5 bill walking around money?
Can he empty his bank account before he goes?
I guess if he's got only six hours, that's probably the first thing I'd want to do is get as much cash in my pockets as possible.
But that can't be much fun.
How does that work?
Do they have their passport with them?
What does the local country do with these guys?
I would think they'd end up on the breadline.
They show up no job, no money, just with clothes on their back, or they get to pack a suitcase.
It's all quite intriguing to me, but I don't know the answer to that, but I'm hoping that I soon will learn the answer to those questions.
Let's see.
Oh, another exciting story.
In California, a couple has been accused of running a baby surrogate-fueled human trafficking ring that involved at least 21 children.
The two are Guojuan Zhuang, 65, that's the male of the group, and Sylvia Zhang, 38, the female.
These two are clearly Asian, and their names sound awfully Chinese to me.
After police descended on their $4.1 million home in Arcadia, California, police found a huge brood of children, which included 17 toddlers aged three or under.
Detectives said six other children had already been moved to other homes.
All 21 children were taken to family services.
Now, at least some of these, and maybe all of them, had been born by surrogacy.
So apparently, what Guo Jong Zhuang and Sylvia Zhang said to these surrogate girls is that they had only one child and they wanted a brother or sister for a little Gun Guan or whatever the name they said was, and they were having fertility problems, and so would they produce a child?
So that's how they got all these people to produce children.
Now, having dozens of children through surrogacy is not illegal, Mr. Kersey.
You could have 50 if you wanted to.
But investigators are investigating because Zhuan and Zhang are alleged to have been abusing these children, despite the fact that presumably biologically they were theirs or at least half theirs.
This is a very murky story.
And the last couple of days, I've checked every day to see if there were more developments on it, and there are very few.
They had a nanny who was looking after these children, and she is under charges of child abuse.
Apparently, there is a Virginia woman now who is currently pregnant as a surrogate for the same couple.
And she is due to give birth on October 1st.
How exciting that will be for her.
I wonder what will happen to that child.
I guess that child will get popped into child services, and the state of California will have to look after that child for who knows how many more years.
But what a strange business this is.
Now, I have reasons to suspect that maybe they weren't trafficking these children because I looked into this whole business of trafficking babies, newborn.
And I found out that generally the way that happens is you acquire a newborn and then you pop it into somebody else's arms very quickly because people want to adopt.
And here's a story from about a year ago.
And it said Indonesian police cracked a baby trafficking ring in Deepak, West Java.
They made eight arrests in a case that saw newborns being bought from parents via Facebook before being resold in Bali for higher prices.
The syndicate sought out parents who wanted to sell their newborns.
They were advertised on Facebook.
I have to ask, you just answered the question.
Yes.
Meta is now engaged in the procurement and yeah, people are peddling their babies on Facebook.
I was kicked off Facebook years ago.
I sneaked back on in this very low-profile account.
So I'll just have to see what's available out there.
Might I get some cute little chickadee for me?
Marketplace, I guess, huh?
Okay.
I guess.
Yeah, Facebook Marketplace.
Now, apparently, they were the prices.
Now, I don't know if this is wholesale or retail, but apparently going from US $645 to US $960.
So it seems like not much.
I would guess that paying a surrogate is a whole lot pricier than that.
Apparently, what they did in this Indonesian group is they made arrangements with expectant parents before their babies were born.
And the parents realized they didn't want to rear them.
And so this meant immediate transport to Bali Right after birth, where the syndicate said it targeted foreign nationals as potential buyers.
Now, that means they were non-Indonesians.
I don't know where they might have been from.
I suppose it's possible that you've got Europeans who want these Indonesian newborns.
Apparently, similar things happen in the Philippines.
Women get pregnant.
They've maybe already been pregnant five times.
They don't want another child.
And they peddle their babies.
I don't know whether on Facebook or not, for $200 or $300.
Newborn baby.
And now just this week, coincidentally, six infants with five allegedly intended to be sold to buyers in Singapore have been rescued by local authorities once again in Indonesia.
Of the 24 infants already sold, 15 went to Singapore.
The six rescued babies were aged between two and three months.
The babies were bought from the biological mothers from $680 to $980, transported to Singapore, and were sold for up to $1,200.
That doesn't sound like that great a markup to me.
You could buy one for $680 to $980 and peddle it for $1,200 to buyers in Singapore.
But this all sounds very murky and strange to me.
I would have thought that people who want to give their children up for adoption, maybe in Southeast Asia, they just don't have a well-established adoption system.
So people say, oh, we're just going to go straight to the source, buy one directly out of the womb.
Just pay this middleman here and off you go.
But strange doings.
And I'm really plan on this thing about Kelly.
In California, it's piqued my curiosity.
These people have got surrogate babies, 21, maybe as many as 21 surrogate babies that are genetically theirs, but they're rearing them.
Apparently, they're going to keep them around.
Maybe they just love having children.
Who knows?
And that's not illegal.
It's not illegal.
So if you ever settle down, Mr. Kersey, and you think the world needs more Kerseys, nothing's stopping you.
Let's see.
But Mr. Kersey, you have a story about the Black Death in London.
You know, I think a couple of years ago, Hood and I did an analysis of knife crime in London.
I think that was actually 2019, because I remember you and I were talking.
That was about the same time that the Notre Dame caught fire in April of 2019.
And this story has been making the rounds on social media.
This comes to us from Breitbart.
Shameful that more black teens die in London crime than whites, says the Met police chief.
Sir Mark Rowley, the head of London's Metropolitan Police, he looks about like what you'd expect the head of the London Metro Police to look like.
Uh-oh, do tell, do tell.
Just this ineffective, bald, very meek-looking white guy.
Just the kind of guy you want in running the police force.
Bald, ineffective, meek.
You want a guy like Tom Homan, who you never passes on dessert, but he also has time to hit the gym occasionally, whose suit is ill-fitting because he's vacillating between gaining some weight, but he's also, he's got that sense of just of a mission to accomplish.
You can tell, you can tell, look at his face.
This guy has got testosterone.
This guy, he has got motivation.
This guy wants to get the job done.
Yes.
And I think he's the guy who should be on the videos scaring the illegals out of their wits and not DHS security.
I think I told you the story.
I fly a lot and at one of the airports I fly to occasionally, they have the DHS plane constantly when you're going through TSA, sir.
And it's just Christine Ohm.
And she looks cute, but it's sort of this aweshucky Midwest goofiness.
It's like, I want to see a white guy up there that just says, go home.
Go home.
She doesn't look scary to me.
No, I want to see someone menacing.
I want to see somebody who has behind them a bunch of white guys who are in their third or fourth cycle, who look like they mean business, the kind of guys who chased Garcia up that scaffold.
In their shades and their tactical outfits.
Exactly.
And their handguns strapped down low on their thigh.
There you go.
All that cool guy stuff.
Their flack jackets on.
I want a couple hummers behind them with turrets.
No.
Christy Noam and her dangly earrings and her satin shirt.
No, no.
Well, I'll tell you what, Mark Rowley looks more effeminate than Christy Noam does when you take a look at him in the videos and when he's doing this press conference.
Who is that?
Mark Rowley is Sir Mark Rowley, the head of the London Metropolitan Police.
Oh dear, he looks about as feminine as Christy Noam.
No, he looks more effeminate, actually.
Oh, dear.
There's far more estrogen in his body.
And that's the sad thing about Europe.
It's as if all these positions of prominence and importance are just staffed by the meekest, weakest, just supine individuals.
Whereas what is needed in Europe is the exact opposite.
And anyways, but so in an interview with Sky News, Sky News is Trevor Phillips, who previously served as former Prime Minister Tony Blair's Commission for Racial Equity, Met Police Chief Sir Rowley said this, quote, it's not right that black boys growing up in London are more likely to be dead by the time they're 18.
Far more likely than white boys.
That's, I think, shameful for the city.
That's right.
We mean, we need more dead white boys.
Why aren't white kids stabbing each other on that Netflix TV show?
This is just perplexing.
This is shameful.
White boys are just not keeping up.
They're not stabbing each other the way black boys are.
This is just awful.
We've got to change that.
That's basically what he's insinuating.
Exactly.
According to statistics published by the London Assembly back in 2022, black Londoners, that's a phrase we should never have to hear again, are heavily overrepresented in knife crime, despite only making up around 13% of the city's population.
Gosh, strange, strange coincidence in the numbers there.
Black Londoners account for 45% of knife crime murder victims.
However, they are vastly overrepresented in those who commit such crimes, with Black Londoners accounting for 61% of knife murderers and being responsible for 53% of knife crimes in general.
Mr. Taylor, what I have not seen from this study is if that's just of known suspects, I'd love to know what the clearance rate represents for knife crime in the city of London.
That is 13% black Londoners.
Well, I'd like to know what the other racial stats on this are.
I bet the overwhelming majority of the other stabbers are Indians, Packies.
I bet there are not that many white guys running around with nothing.
There aren't any white guys left in London.
Well, there are a few.
There are a few.
And it's just shameful that they're not holding up their end of the stabbing game, I guess.
In the eyes of the Met Chief.
Sir Raleigh.
How do you spell his name?
Give me a second.
R-O-W-L-E-Y.
Sir Rowley, probably.
Sir Rowley.
Well, he should rolly pulley himself into the Thames.
In addition to discussing the increased likelihood of black teens falling victim to knife crime, Sir Mark, God, just ostentatiousness, also lamented the history between policing and black communities where policing has got a lot wrong.
Rowley continued, and we get a lot more right today, but we do still make mistakes.
That's not in doubt.
I'm being as relentless in that as it can be.
But that legacy combined with the tragedy that some of this crime falls most heavily in black communities, that creates a real problem because the legacy creates concern.
Again, it most heavily falls in black communities because blacks are the most heavily represented in both the suspects and victims, a fact that Sir Mark seems to roly-poly away from.
He came out of retirement back in 2022 to take the job as Britain's most senior police officer, and he's previously faced criticism for dodging questions on whether there's a two-tier policing system in Britain.
August of last year, he infamously grabbed the microphone of a journalist and threw it to the ground as he stormed off after being asked, are we going to end two-tier policing, sir?
The incident came amid widespread anti-mass migration riots in the wake of the Southport mass stabbing, in which a black teen of Rwandan heritage, Axel Rudakubana, stabbed three young girls to death and injured 10 others at a Taylor Swift dance party.
I'm sure, Mr. Taylor, you remember that story of the Taylor Swift dance party, three white girls being stabbed to death by the Rwandan.
I sure do.
I sure do.
And that seemed to be the straw that broke even the long-suffering British camel's back.
And people took the streets and said, no more of this.
And they said, he's an immigrant out.
Turned out he wasn't an immigrant as if that made the least bit of difference.
No, exactly.
He was this missing link-looking primitive from, where was he from?
Rwanda.
I can't, where was he from?
In any case, yes, he was very African, and they wanted him out, and they made their views known, but that just infuriated the crackdown on those people just for posting social media about how we need to get these guys out.
Yes, it was obvious two-tier policing, but he just was not going to sit still and answer questions about it through the mic on the ground.
You know, it's funny.
There was a number of years ago, there was the mass casualty event by Islamic terrorists at the Ariana Grande concert.
Do you remember that?
I do.
And one of the things we've never talked about on this program is that in August of 2024, there was a planned Islamic State attack on a Taylor Swift concert in Vienna, Austria.
And it was only about two weeks ago that one of the Syrians in that plot was arrested for the planned attack at the Vienna Taylor Swift concert.
That's right.
I remember hearing about that.
Yeah, they had a bomb.
They had a car filled with bombs, knives, machetes inside the stadium.
I mean, this is one of those moments where, again, it's people trying to have a good time and live their lives carefree.
And you can't when you have this racial diversity forced on you at gunpoint.
And then you have your leaders of your country, the top police officer, basically saying, I wish more white kids died by knives than these blacks.
Well, having black people die, that's shameful.
Having white people die, I mean, that might be regrettable, but having black people die, oh, that's just inexcusable and embarrassing.
Yes, the Ariana Grande concert.
It was on May 22, 2017.
22 people died.
Yes, the bomber hated non-Mussies.
Anyway, yep, yep, yep.
Many of the victims were children and teenagers.
Over 1,000 were injured.
Yep, that was a big deal at the time.
Still is a big deal.
So let's see.
Oh, yes.
Here is a nice little story.
A Portland State University professor, Bruce Gilley, he was responding to a University of Oregon DEI racism interruption post on Twitter.
Back in those days, the University of Oregon had an account called At UOEquity.
Maybe it still exists.
In any case, it was being run by a woman by the name of Tova Staben.
And she was handing out the usual mush.
And this Professor Bruce Gilly of Portland State, he replied by posting on Twitter, all men are created equal.
Well, Tova Staben blocked him just for saying that.
Now, Tova Staben, by the way, she has her own, very own website.
And I want to see her description.
And it starts with these words.
Tova Staben is an Ashkenazi lesbian feminist from a working class family.
Well, working class lesbian makes good, and she was working at the University of Oregon's DEI office.
Well, with the help of the Institute for Free Speech, Gilly, who had been blocked, filed suit to challenge the University of Oregon's public form viewpoint discrimination.
The case wound its way through the courts for 18 months.
And in late March 2025, an agreement was reached requiring the University of Oregon to acknowledge that Gilly's speech is constitutionally protective, should not have been blocked, and the university is to implement comprehensive reforms, including explicit protection from viewpoint-based censorship, appeals for wrongful blocking, and an annual First Amendment training session for social media managers.
I wish I could be asked to do that training, but they probably will not call on me.
Well, then on June 17th this year, a judge just awarded $191,000 in attorneys' fees to Gilly's legal team.
This figure brought the university's total legal expenses to at least $724,000.
That includes the $533,000 it had already paid its own lawyers to defend this Tova Staben who had blocked this guy simply for quoting from the Declaration of Independence.
My least favorite line from the Declaration, by the way.
But that's all he did, and he was blocked, and he decided he would sue about it.
Now, the university's insurer will pay the fees, but shutting out hundreds of thousands of dollars could very well lead to an increase in the University of Oregon's insurance premiums, ultimately leaving Oregon taxpayers to pick up the tab.
But, you know, wonders just don't cease, do they?
I wonder if that would happen today if somebody blocked someone for saying all men are created equal, threatened a lawsuit.
I think with Trump in the White House, nobody would end up spending $724,000 defending the person who blocked somebody who posted all men are created equal.
Yeah, the person who blocked that individual had quite the CV, by the way.
I looked at her CV of what she's dabbled in.
She's done it all.
She's done it all.
Yep, yep.
Now let's see.
A little item about Chicago Public Schools.
It laid off more than 1,450 school-based staffers.
That is to say, these are not headquarters staffers.
The town that I live in, one of the biggest buildings in the whole town, is the school district's headquarters.
I walk by that place and I think, why are you people not teaching?
It's this enormous building full of paper pushers.
In any case, they didn't get fired in Chicago.
And the Chicago Public Schools CEO, it has a CEO named Macquillan King.
I suspect Macquillin is an African-Americaness.
But in any case, she emailed teachers and principals on Friday promising that they would get retroactive raises for the last school year.
So they're going to give 1,450 of them the heave-ho, but then the ones who stay behind get retroactive raises for the previous school year.
Now, wouldn't you like that, Mr. Kersey?
You've got a job and you say, well, you know, we weren't paying enough for the last year.
Here, here's a check, lump sum check for what we should have been paying.
Last year, Chicago Public Schools laid off 1,410 staffers, and the layoffs sparked frustration among the teachers' union.
And earlier this week, Chicago Teachers Union called on Illinois Governor J.B. Putzker.
He's one of my least favorite governors.
Maybe right up there with Gavin Newsom of California to launch a special legislative session to find more money for public schools.
And the Chicago Public Schools, which is a good-sized school district, this year has a $734 million budget deficit.
$734 million.
And so it's good to lay people off, but then why'd they get the retroactive race, the ones who were left?
And why is it up to the government to fill the hole?
Now, anyway, this is Chicago.
I imagine it is riddled with incompetent BIPOCs, top to bottom, left to right, north to south, and they are just burning through money at a great rate.
And how can this be saved?
Good question.
So let's see.
Mr. Kersey, we have a different riddled with BIPOCs country, and that's Liberia.
Speak to me of Liberia.
A country you visited many moons ago and learned so much about racial history.
It was eye-opening.
It was eye-opening.
Everyone should visit Liberia for about 24 hours.
That's all you need to spend there.
Liberia faces empty health clinics and unplanned pregnancies as U.S. aid abruptly ends support.
U.S. AID built schools and health clinics, but most of the U.S. funding went to Liberia's health system, making up 48% of its budget.
48%?
We paid half the medical system's budget in the entire country of Liberia.
We did.
And of course, Mr. Taylor, give us the 40,000-foot overview of Liberia's history.
Oh, my goodness.
Well, it was founded in the early 1800s by emancipated black slaves.
The American Colonization Society helped send them over.
And President Monroe was very active in setting up the country.
And the capital Monrovia is named in his honor.
Yes, it is.
Of course, the blacks that showed up, they re-established something analogous to the system that they had just escaped, a kind of slavery in which they lorded it over the people they called the Aborigines.
I think that's quite hilarious.
So the Americo-Liberians ran the place up until, as I recall, about the 1980s, that's when Samuel K. Doe, the first Shernoff Aborigine to run the place, he staged a coup d'état.
He marched all the AmeriCo-Liberians, as the founders called themselves, down to the beach, tied them up to posts, and had them all shot.
And after that, the place has been pretty much a consistent mess, although it was not a sterling place to begin with.
Even the AmeriCo-Librarians rang it.
But if anything, I think I would give the nod to the AmeriCo-Liberians for having done a slightly better job than the Aborigines once they were in the saddle.
So that is the from 30,000 feet potted history of Liberia.
It would be amazing if somebody listening to this made a fun video on YouTube of Jared Taylor describing the history of Liberia in a one-minute TikTok video.
That would be hilarious to go viral on a TikTok or Instagram of the history of Liberia.
And I'd also like to throw in that they have a facsimile of the United States Constitution governing the matters of— There is one significant change.
Go ahead.
In order to be a citizen of Liberia, you have to be African.
There you go.
Now, you know what?
Maybe one of these days.
We should copy theirs.
We should copy theirs.
That's right.
They have a more sensible constitution than we do.
They have a far more sensible constitution, except one word needs to be changed.
And Africans needs to be go back to the Naturalization Act of 1790 and use that language in the Constitution.
But no, the American Colonization Society, which didn't disband until 1964, is an idea whose time still can come.
And Liberia is a place that, as you can see from the headline that we talked about, it's in desperate need of human elite capital.
And I think we've got plenty of that here.
I think it is in need of normal human capital.
I'm not so sure Baltimore or Philadelphia has the normal human capital you're talking about.
No, it needs ordinary human capital.
There you go.
Well, real quick, five months ago, Rosaline Fay, a 32-year-old farmer from the West African nation of Liberia, set off on a quest to find contraceptives.
Her partner, they have two daughters, barely make ends meet.
They don't have more children, so she went to health work in her village, but contraception pills, implants, and condoms had run out.
She trekked for hours on red clay roads to the nearest clinic, but they had no contraceptives either.
She didn't know, but her mission was doomed from the beginning.
Just weeks before, President Trump abruptly suspended most foreign aid through the U.S. Agency for International Development, U.S. AID, which paid for medications in Liberia's public clinics.
Tenacious and outspoken, she repeated the trip four times.
Then she got pregnant.
I'm suffering.
I'm sorry, go ahead.
No, I was just all this tramping, all this tramping might have kept her calm, but no, no, she got pregnant anyway.
Oh, dear.
That's right.
Yeah.
I'm suffering.
I'm suffering, she said, with daughter Pauline crying in her arms.
I have this little child on my back, and this other child in my stomach is suffering.
She must continue farming throughout her pregnancy, she said, or I will not eat.
After she got pregnant, she tried to wean Pauline off of breastfeeding, she said, and the girl became so badly malnourished that she almost died.
The U.S. cuts left no therapeutic food to give her, and she is still ill.
Among millions like her across Africa who've seen their lives upended after U.S. cut U.S. AID, in Liberia, the American support made up almost 2.6 of the gross national income, 2.6% of the gross national income, the highest percentage anywhere in the world, according to the Center for Global Development.
So 2.6% of the gross national income of Liberia, a number that can't be all that high to begin with, came from USAID, Mr. Taylor.
Well, I am perfectly happy to spend tax money on contraception for what's her name?
Elizabeth, what was her name?
In any case, Rosaline Faye.
Rosaline Fay.
Rosaline, I'd be happy to pay for your contraception.
I'd be happy for my tax dollars to do that.
But that is about the only kind of foreign aid we should give to Africa.
And sorry you didn't get it.
Sorry you got pregnant.
Sorry that you're going to have to work through your pregnancy.
But ultimately, that's not our fault.
It is just not our fault.
But again, that's the kind of foreign aid I would give to Africa and nothing else.
Yeah, we learned that, quote, the impact of U.S. AID in Liberia cannot be overstated, said Rich Lou Burfey, who worked for U.S. aid projects for over a decade and manages the National Lottery, a government body.
Everywhere you go, you see the USAID signs.
So that's so embarrassing.
And almost all the government institutions had some kind of USAID partnership.
I mean, what you're really realizing is we're just with our tax dollars proliferating dysgenics.
I mean, that's right.
It's that simple.
It's that simple.
Well, as Herbert Spencer put it, we are rearing up an army of enemies for our own children.
I think that is a great line.
Thank you, Herbert Spencer.
Yeah.
And as you said, Liberia was one of the first countries to receive U.S. aid support starting in 1961.
Its officials thought they would be spared from Trump's cut because of the country's close relationship.
Again, the sense of betrayal runs deep.
Country was established in the early 1800s with the aim of relocating freed slaves and freeborn black people from the United States.
The political system is modeled on that of the U.S., along with its flag.
Its flag is red, white, and blue.
I think there's only one star on it, though.
I guess that symbolizes the blacks.
They're united.
So Liberians often refer to the U.S. as their big brother.
Well, I don't refer to Liberia as our little brother, though.
So sorry.
It's a one-way brotherly love, I guess.
And just one last quote on this, because this is a fascinating asterisk to this story.
Following civil wars and an Ebola epidemic, Liberia's survival has depended largely on foreign aid, mainly from the U.S. and the World Bank.
Despite abundant natural resources, six out of 10 Liberians live in poverty, according to the World Bank.
And Liberia is among the world's 10 poorest nations.
So regrettably, ladies and gentlemen, Wakanda was not created in Liberia by freed slaves and by freed blacks without any impact and influence by evil white privilege and redlining.
So sorry.
Well, you know, speaking for conda, I just did a video about an attempt to build Wakanda in Senegal.
Yes.
Acon.
Acon, Acon City.
Acon City.
Now, I won't spoil, I won't add any spoilers about whether Wakanda was actually built.
So I will leave you in suspense.
All of you Wakanda lovers, you'll just have to watch my video.
It may already be up to find out what the status of Wakanda in Senegal is.
It's very exciting, Mr. Kersey.
As always seems to happen, we're out of time.
If I could ask our listening audience on something, it'll be very fast.
Back in 2020, 19 black families in Georgia purchased 96 acres of land near Tombsboro, and they called it Freedom Georgia.
They were trying to create their own community.
There's been very few stories about this since.
If any of our listeners can find what's happened to Freedom Georgia, we here at the New Century Foundation would be greatly appreciated.
There are no stories, I suspect, because there is nothing to say.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, thank you so much.
It is our joy, pleasure, and honor every week to spend this time with you.
And we look forward to doing the same next week.
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