Ladies and gentlemen, esteemed listeners, welcome to Radio Renaissance.
I'm your host, Jared Taylor.
With me is my indispensable co-host, the one and only Paul Kersey.
Today is August 7th, Year of Our Lord, 2025.
And as usual, we begin with comments from listeners.
One writes into saying, this was a post on X that deserves widespread dissemination, especially for the youngsters over at American Renaissance.
Please consider this.
Think about it.
It deserves to be read in its entirety.
So I will read it in its entirety.
And it goes like this.
I'm so over the relentless scorn directed at boomers.
Born into a world of post-war grit, they mastered mental math before calculators, cursive before laptops, and adapted to the internet's rise while many of us struggled to update our IOS.
Their parents were in the actual depression.
They faced the Cold War's shadow, Vietnam's turmoil, civil rights battles, economic swings, waiting on the daily paper to find out what had happened the day before.
They built the infrastructure industries and institutions we lean on without the luxury of instant Google answers and step-by-step instructions.
To dismiss them as out of touch ignores their resilience and ingenuity.
Are they set in their ways?
They know all the ways.
Respect isn't just due, it's earned.
Let's retire the complaining, the victimhood, the finger-pointing, and the lazy stereotypes and honor their lives and work with the dignity it deserves.
When you say something ugly about boomers, I instantly recognize you sound like an entitled brat.
Thus saith our listener.
Well, as a boomer, I am a fully qualified boomer born in 1951.
That's when the population was really boom, boom, booming.
It's all very well for people to say nice things about us, but we did come into a world in which the United States was absolutely top dog.
I think that it was really one of the best periods of time for the United States to be in America.
I don't think we faced any particular difficulties.
Yes, there was the Cold War, there was a civil rights movement, all of those things.
No matter what we may have accomplished, however, our great and unforgivable failure was what happened in terms of race relations and immigration.
And in that respect, we failed miserably, absolutely, unforgivably, miserably.
In that respect, in terms of the kind of self-flagellation that white people are now, a victim of, in terms of the way we are pushed around by non-whites, in terms of the number of immigrants from all around the world who cannot be us, who don't want to be us, have been pushing their way into our country, threatening to outnumber us, outnumber us.
We have committed what really amounts to a crime against humanity.
So whatever you say about boomers, which is nice, we must never, ever forget that we boomers made a terrible mess of things, and we have handed that mess on to younger generations.
Now, I'm counting on the younger generations with the help of a few of us turncoat boomers who realize that the rest of my generation was making a terrible, terrible mistake, one mistake after another.
I think we can dig out of this hole.
But this is going to be, in my mind, the great legacy of my generation is the horrible anti-white sentiments that we instilled in the minds of our fellow citizens and the fact that we opened up the floodgates to people who will destroy the old-time United States and leave something unrecognizable, a terrible mismatch in its place.
If I could real quick, I'm a millennial born in the mid-80s.
Real quick, I don't like the idea of attacking boomers over the top because as you said, you were born in 51, which is four years after Shelley Kramer.
It's three years after the military was integrated by Truman in 48.
Brown versus Board was what, 55, 50?
54.
54.
As a three-year-old, I was deeply responsible for it.
Yeah, exactly.
The 1964 Civil Rights Act, you were 13.
I don't think you had anything to do with that.
The 65 Immigration Act.
I think the idea of boomer hate in a lot of ways is just this, just the world When you hear people say, Mr. Taylor, oh my gosh, you know, you had an interest rate of 17% on your first house in the 1980s that you got for $80,000 to $90,000.
I know my dad's first house was in a very nice area, and he had a crazy interest rate, but it was crazy in meaning what?
It was close to 18% in the early 80s compared to where it was five years ago.
You're talking about potentially negotiating for a 2.2 interest rate on your home, which, you know, people had the opportunity to do.
So I'm not apologizing and trying to say, hey, we shouldn't just generate all our hate at boomers.
That whole episode was something that was forced.
It took decades to create the movement by the NAECP, the ADL, the SLU, to bring down to the point where these acts were passed by Congress or by the Supreme Court.
That's all true.
That's all true.
But as we grew up, we simply made things worse.
We benefited from a kind of material wealth that no American generation had ever enjoyed.
And I think that's probably something that beguiled many of my generation and made us incapable of seeing what the long-term consequences of these so-called civil rights activities, all of this, what ended up being.
You might say.
Yes, yes.
We were horribly complacent.
And I think it was this fatness of the land that made us susceptible to the kind of anti-white manipulation, which then we absorbed, and then we worked upon succeeding generations.
But this is a subject of some depth.
And I'm glad that the whole question of the boomer legacy is being raised here.
I know that a lot of people think that the boomers, well, the whole sexual revolution, the whole idea of gay rights, feminism, all of that was carried forward with great diligence and excitement by my generation also.
I think it's not just in terms of race.
If you start cataloging the terrible changes in our society, this all been for the worse.
If we didn't originate them, and you're right, 64 Civil Rights Act happened when many of us were still in diapers or still running around.
And things like Shelley versus Kramer, the integration of schools, all that happened before we had our hands on the tiller.
But once we got our hands on the tiller, we made a hard left.
Anyway, I'm glad that someone has raised this question, and I'm glad to be able to answer it.
It's nice to be petted on the head and told you boomers were not so bad.
But again, we had a pretty good country just dropped into our lap.
And what we are dropping into succeeding generations' lap is nothing like what we have.
Well, let's see.
Let's move on to another comment.
Someone writes in, I was recently made aware of an all-black community started four years ago called Freedom Georgia.
Apparently, it's a kind of counterpoint to the relatively new attempt to start an all-white community in Arkansas.
Yes, that community is called Return to the Land.
And I think it is a wonderful thing.
And one of the most wonderful things about it is a legal structure which recently, after having been queried by the Arkansas State Attorney General, was found to be entirely legal.
So they are going to continue to be an all-white community, at least for now.
Our listener writes in, I got curious as to the success of Freedom Georgia.
I did a little poking around, and the only updates I could find were four years old.
Are you aware of the progress of this so-called self-sustainable, racism-free, vibrant all-black community?
Well, as far as I can tell, it is self-sustainable in the sense that it is still bare land.
It is racism-free because no one lives there.
And it's vibrant in the sense that I suppose the birds are still singing there.
And is it all black?
Well, it's neither is it all black nor is it all white.
No one lives there.
The last I can tell is that it has not been developed at all.
I saw a notice about it that was about two years old and that showed no sign of any kind of development.
Furthermore, I found the Facebook page of the woman who was primarily involved in building Freedom Georgia.
She's a realtor, and she is still promoting her career as a realtor, but she's talking this up and talking that down, but she had no word about Freedom Georgia.
So my assumption is these people who were seeking freedom in this all-black community have found freedom elsewhere, or at least they are no longer so driven to seek freedom that they want to camp out on land that has no development, no electricity, no water, no sewers, or anything, or inhabitable buildings or any buildings of any kind.
It's still bare land.
So there you go.
Wakanda has not yet been created.
As it risen, it is interesting to juxtapose the reaction by the corporate media nationwide to Freedom Georgia's announcement back when that was done a few years ago.
It was 2020.
Exactly.
To what's happening now in Arkansas.
That's right.
The media in general, including Fox News.
I made a video about Return the Land, and I found some of the reactions to Freedom Georgia and even Fox News.
They had this black TV lady on rhapsodizing about it and saying, okay, they've got more land.
They're just doing great things.
But if it's white people doing it, oh, it's white supremacy.
It's about to be illegal.
We've got to bring this down.
The usual double standard, the usual double standard.
Final comment.
I'm a young man.
I work in a bar and in construction to make money for my master's degree.
Tonight I spoke to one of my customers.
He has met Mr. Kersey and Mr. Taylor.
He was formerly in politics in Washington, D.C. It's the first time I've met an older, that is to say, non-Gen Z person who shared many of my views.
We found much common ground when it came to politics.
I just wanted you both to know you are reaching more folks than you may know.
He was amazed to find someone such as I, at my age, held views that were unacceptable less than 10 years ago.
Your efforts are more effective than you know.
Well, it's glad to know, Mr. Kersey, you and I apparently have influenced not only a non-Gen Z older gentleman, but also a Gen Z person who, like so many Gen Z, by the way, is wide awake to the questions of race.
I remain, as ever, optimistic.
Never have there been more young people in the United States who are waking up to the crisis we face.
So thank you very much for those letters and comments.
We do very much enjoy hearing from our listeners.
And there are two ways to reach us.
You can write to me at amran.com, A-M-R-E-N.com at the Contact Us page.
Send us your corrections when you make mistakes.
Send us your comments.
Send us your suggestions.
And that is the way to do it.
The comment, the comment, the contact us page will send a comment straight to me.
And then there is another way, one way that you can reach Mr. Kersey.
Yeah, shoot me an email at because we live here at protonmail.com.
That email address, once again, becausewehere at protonmail.com.
Very good.
Now, Mr. Kersey, you have a couple of interesting stories about the consequences of the federal government's attempt actually to enforce the law.
We are basking in this practically unprecedented experience of seeing immigration law taken seriously, and other people are shocked.
And as you know, Mr. Taylor, we'd be remiss if we didn't point out that the federal government is once again celebrating yet another month of virtually zero gotaways or catch and release.
I believe that is the third month in a row, July, June, and May of 2025, have effectively seen zero illegal immigrants get into the country.
Whereas in some cases during the Biden administration, I think they were negotiating to say if there were 5,000 per day, they would then cause alarm up in Washington and maybe see some form of enforcement.
That just shows you the scope of the totality of what they were allowing to happen at the border.
Exactly.
They were really proud of this idea that if there were an average of 5,000 gotaways in a week or 10,000, 10,000 in a day.
There we go.
Then they would go to work and do something about it.
But anything less than that, you know, that's okay.
As I used to say, that's like saying, well, we disapprove of murder, but we're not going to really start trying to find murderers and stop murder until we've got about 50 murders a month in our town.
It's a wonderful thing, too, to see the federal government celebrate this fact because that's one of the, at its most basic level, something that the federal government should be doing.
And as we see in Los Angeles, they're doing it very effectively because Karen Bass, the mayor, on August 6th, she blasted the Trump admins immigration crackdown, saying the raids had put a huge dent in the city's economy.
Mr. Kersey, before someone writes in and corrects us, I don't think those numbers were for gotaways.
I think those numbers were for people who were apprehended.
Those were encounters at the border.
Encounters.
And it didn't even count the gotaways who could have even added to that number.
Those were the encounters at the border.
That's correct.
Thank you for the clarification.
I didn't want to go to Twitter and have my computer mess up again.
So I'm glad for the clarification from you.
So going back to where we are with Karen Bass, who is all over the news recently, and she's one of the main antagonists against this enforcement.
She said that businesses have seen a drastic reduction in immigrant customers.
And Mr. Taylor, I'd be remiss if I didn't ask you, how would business owners be able to see who's an immigrant?
If it's a city of immigrants, are they the ones engaging in racial profiling now?
Is it just a bunch of white people shopping now in Los Angeles?
Because last time I would be remarkable.
Last time I checked, LA is 22% non-Hispanic white.
I'm sorry, 28% non-Hispanic white now.
And in certain places, you might as well be in Tijuana.
You could be in Iran.
You could be in any of these countries that have set up shop in these little colonies.
That's right.
Mayor Bass is concerned, some immigrant families whose breadwinners have been rounded up by ICE may be on the brink of being left destitute.
Quote, when one breadwinner, one wage earner, is gone and disappears to survive in our city economically, you need two, three, and four wage earners to keep housing, to keep food on the table, to keep clothes on your kids, Bass said.
When that is taken away from you, that just doesn't destabilize a family.
That destabilizes a neighborhood.
It destabilizes businesses.
It destabilizes a community.
Oh, boy.
And the question of that would be: well, what exactly does illegal immigration do if not destabilizing the community that existed prior to the arrival of said illegals?
There's so many.
And presumably, you could say it destabilizes the communities that they left behind.
Come on.
Yeah.
Last week, a federal appeals court ruled to uphold a lower court's temporary order blocking Trump admin from conducting indiscriminate immigration stops and arrests in Southern California.
However, U.S. Attorney Bill Esseli says immigration enforcement will continue in the region.
Adding the enforcement of federal law is not negotiable.
Now, the LA region has been a battleground with the Trump admin over its aggressive immigration strategy, spurring protests and deployment of National Guard and Marines for several weeks.
In fact, yesterday, Mr. Taylor, we saw Home Depot raids courtesy of, I forgot which company, Pinsky Trucks.
I'm sure you saw the video of Pinsky Trucks show up, and Pinsky put out a statement saying that they don't want to be part of these raids.
It's against policy for those who take out a rental truck.
So maybe we'll have to.
Oh, it probably is against policy to load 20 people into the back of a Pinsky truck.
I think that's probably it.
Yes, what I saw was.
We're a pledge in fraternity then.
They've never known, anyways.
Okay.
Anyways, federal agents have rounded up immigrants without legal status to be in the U.S. from home depots, car washes, bust up and farms.
Many who have lived in the country for decades.
A story we won't be able to talk about, but I'll touch on briefly.
There have been a number of stories coming out showcasing the car accidents have dropped precipitously in places like LA from 10 to 20 percent From the year prior.
And a lot of people, zero hedge, is leading the way, asking the question, is this because of what we're seeing with ICE with less people on the road, with less illegal aliens?
Well, illegal aliens and Mexicans, Latin Americans particularly appear to love to drink and drive.
You hear about all of these DUIs, all of these drunk Guatemalans who go screaming through red light and kill three white people.
So that stuff is not happening as often.
That's wonderful.
It is.
It's exceptionally wonderful.
And I think we'd also be remiss if we didn't point out that ICE is actively out there and engaging in an incredible recruitment effort right now, currently, Mr. Taylor.
They actually just dropped the age requirements too.
So for any of our listeners out there who are looking for a change of career or a change of pace, ICE is giving a pretty significant signing on bonus for some of our younger listeners.
What is the age requirement now?
There's not one.
Wait, wait, wait.
You can't be a 12-year-old.
No, no, I'm saying they had it so I believe you couldn't be over the age of 40.
In regard to age, if you had aged out of.
Oh, I see.
I see.
You can be.
Huh?
Well, okay.
Maybe you can be a boomer ICE agent.
Well, boomers get a chance.
Boomers get a chance to rewrite the legacy that they had left, I guess.
So for all those boomers who have remorse and who realize what has happened under their watch and the bountiful existence that they had that they saw given away, you get a chance to redeem yourself by joining ICE and going out there and apprehending the tens of millions of illegal aliens.
It's been fun to watch.
We talked last week, sir, about the fantastic memes.
A lot of people, actually, sir, I got to say before we move on to the next story, they were upset that you were not a fan of the Kincaid paintings.
Oh, really?
You heard beefing about that?
It was all over X. Yeah.
And if you look at the comments, if you look at the comments at amrin.com, shameless plug, ladies and gentlemen, if you look at the comments underneath the block, underneath the post of the podcast, people are very upset.
They said that they proudly display these paintings in their home.
And they said this snob has the audacity to cast asunder these beautiful paintings.
Well, there's no disputing about taste.
I can say that in several different languages.
It's such a common observance.
De Gustabus Nanes Disputandum.
I could even say it in Latin.
I could say it in French.
And even in Japanese.
So, yes, there's no disputing about taste.
And I probably should have kept my mouth shut about my opinions of Thomas Kincaid.
Well, I'll tell you what, I hope someone will clip that piece because that was awesome.
And that should be a meme from now on of Mr. Taylor saying in four different languages.
Anyways, here's a very important story, though, because this is where I'm hoping that things are leading to in regard to the protagonists who are aligning themselves with illegal aliens and being their protectors.
This is from Fox News.
ICE raid tip-offs from Dim Lawmaker could mean charges, said DHS rep. Looks like obstruction.
Yeah.
So we've got a situation where an Arizona Democrat state lawmaker is tipping off ICE operations in her community.
And there's a very good chance, a spokesperson from DHS said, that we could see justice charges.
Senator Annalise Ortiz admitted on social media to alerting her community about ICE movements.
DHS Assistant Secretary Trisha McLaughlin claimed in a statement to Fox News Digital that the lawmaker is choosing illegal criminals, criminals, over American citizens.
Now, sir, this is the step that I've been waiting for.
If you go back and you look at a lot of the language that Karen Bass said during the June kerfuffle that erupted over the federal government going in with the ICE raids in Los Angeles, Gavin Newsom, you look at what Governor Pritzker has been saying in Illinois, the governor of Massachusetts, all these things Are leading to, all right, let's arrest somebody who's siding and who's aiding and abetting illegal aliens.
McLaughlin said, quote, Arizona State Senator Ortiz is siding with vicious cartels, human traffickers, and violent criminals over American citizens, end quote.
And one other point, Mr. Taylor, we're starting to see ICE, we're starting to see DHS, we're starting to see the Trump admin continue to say all illegal aliens are by definition criminal.
We don't need to just justify it as going after cartels, human traffickers.
We need to justify it by making America, by making American laws matter and implement them.
And that also means arresting employers of illegal aliens.
So I just want to get that on record that we are advocates of that as well.
Quote, notifying the public about ICE law enforcement operations endangers law enforcement and weakens American national security, McLaughlin would continue.
In response to questions about whether Ortiz could face charges, she answered, this certainly looks like obstruction of justice.
She pointed to DHS statistics that ICE officers are currently facing an 830% increase in assaults.
Quote, the men and women of ICE put their lives on the line every day to arrest violent criminal illegal aliens to protect and defend the lives of American citizens.
Make no mistake, sectorary politicians like Arizona Senator Ortiz are contributing to the surge and assaults of our ICE officers through their repeated vilification and demonization of ICE.
Now, all this was because of the social media ex page Libs of TikTok, who blasted Ortiz for posting alerts on her account, giving updates on ICE operations in the area, posting a screenshot indicating it belonged to Ortiz that warned in English and Spanish, ICE is present.
The post also gave the location of the federal officials' whereabouts.
Now, Mr. Taylor, I'd be remiss if I didn't point out that wasn't there a guy who was doing this.
Yes, there have been several apps that have been developed precisely for this purpose, to warn criminals that law enforcement is in the neighborhood.
I got into a bit of a kerfluffle on X on this very subject.
I said, this is obstruction of justice.
If you know that the police are on their way to someone you know is a criminal and you say, here they come, now's your chance to bugger off, that's a crime.
That's interfering with law enforcement.
And this should be exactly the same.
So I'm very, very pleased that the administration is taking this position.
It seems like an obvious one to take.
When you think about it in any other context, if you know that somebody has just murdered his wife and the police are on the way, you say, uh-oh, off you go.
Would anyone say that was a good thing?
Would anyone defend that kind of behavior?
It's these people who don't think that these laws should be enforced who are engaging in obstruction of justice.
Too bad.
They're still obstructing justice.
Now, Mr. Kersey, I would be remiss if I were not to point out that you have used that expression probably at least half a dozen times already.
Well, I will stop using that.
Sorry, I happen, this has been a very eventful day, and perhaps we can talk about a little bit, maybe the foreshadowing.
So I shall refrain from doing that.
I will say there was a guy, there was a white guy, I don't remember his name, who was arrested.
And I believe he faces five years in prison because he was, he didn't have an app.
It wasn't like Ice Block.
Remember, he was the guy who was using his ex account to give away the hotels of where ICE.
Oh, right.
Right, right.
And he's facing some significant charges.
And he, you know, he willing, he willingly turned himself in.
And yet, justice is coming.
Well, I hope he willingly goes to jail.
Yeah.
And if you recall, we talked about Ice Block and the fact that a minority shareholder in ICEBlock worked for the DOJ and she was let go.
I mean, it's a brave new government.
And I think people need to realize that.
And that goes back to the whole thing of what we're seeing with what DHS is doing, promoting some pictures that Mr. Taylor might not enjoy that much, but also that they're going over the top with the ICE recruitment and just really great, really great Ads.
And this is something that I, I mean, again, Mr. Taylor, you've been doing this for a while with American Renaissance.
Was this ever something that you foresaw as coming about?
I really mean that in the most earnest and honest way.
I mean, because there's so much happening.
35 years ago, when I first got into this business, I thought we'd be here in five, seven, ten years.
That's how naive I was.
But then, say, five years ago, 10 years ago, no, I would not have expected this kind of absolutely dramatic transformation.
All of these things that we could not imagine under any previous administration are happening.
It's almost miraculous.
It is such an improvement.
I wake up with a smile every morning thinking about all those illegals, quaking and cowering, and some of them are self-deporting.
All those DEI swamis who actually have to pound the pavement and get a real job.
Oh, that makes me happy, happy, happy.
So, are we ready to move on to the next story, sir?
Well, one thing in response, Ortiz admitted to alerting her community about ICE activity saying, Yep, when ICE is around, I will alert my community to stay out of the area.
My community, my community, illegals.
That's her community.
This is what's so important about what's happening because you're beginning to, and again, we don't advocate for any political party.
What we simply advocate for are sane policies.
And this is a sane policy of making citizenry in the United States of America matter again and showcasing those who are agitating for imaginary rights of non-citizens, illegal aliens.
True.
An amazing change.
It truly is an amazing change.
Well, let's see.
Moving across the Atlantic Ocean to Great Britain, Mohammed tops the list of boys' names for the second year running, with Noah and Oliver making second and third place, as they did in 2023.
Mohammed retained his place, the most popular boy's name, with 5,721 babies being given the name.
Other spellings of the name also made the list.
The one that's really, that one that is really top right is Muhammad, M-U-H-A-M-M-A-D.
But also, Mohammed, M-O, came in at 21st place with 1,760.
And Mohammad, M-M-A-D, came in at 53rd place with 986.
So really, the figure for Muhammad, and I bet there are other spellings too, should be 8,467.
There were that many Mohammeds that first saw the light of day in the United Kingdom in 2024.
So the second place name, which is Noah, which is a little over 4,000.
So Muhammad in its various forms is twice as popular as the number two name.
Wow.
Next came Oliver, Arthur, and Leo.
As for girls' names, Olivia and Amelia held the top two spots for girls' names for a third year in a row.
Olivia and Amelia.
And Isla, I think that's how it's spelled, I-S-L-A.
I believe the S is silent.
Isla, dropped from third place after being replaced by L-I-L-Y.
Now, I guess that'd be pronounced Lily.
I don't know.
Lily?
Lily?
Lily.
Probably Lily.
I think Lily?
In honor of because of Lily Potter knowing how popular Harry Potter stuff is over across the state.
Is there a Lily Potter?
That's Harry's mom.
Oh, but she's nasty.
Nobody would want to name, nobody would name a child for that nasty broad.
Harry Potter's mom is nasty?
What?
Wait, well, oh, okay.
Oh, I'm thinking of the adopted parents.
You're thinking of Lily's sister.
Okay, okay.
I beg your pardon.
Well, you're probably right.
And it's pronounced Lily, is it?
Yes.
Well, shut my mouth.
You know more better than I. Oh, you've read the books.
Oh, I read them to my children long ago.
But let's see.
While we're at it, there were 583 baby boys in Britain who were given the name of Yaya.
That's Spelled Y-A-H-Y-A.
That was a big jump from the year before.
Yaya is now the 93rd most popular boy's name, and I bet you don't know the Yaya who gave rise to this wave of Yayas last year.
I actually do, but that's just because I'm not going to pay attention to the news, and I don't just read Harry Potter.
Yes, that was Yahya Sinoir who planned the Hamas attack on Israel of October 7th and 2023.
So he has a big surge in popularity.
Meanwhile, British lawyers in training say the exam to become a solicitor, that's what they call lawyers over at Britain, is too hard.
Because although 70% of whites pass, only 49% of Asians and 37% are blacks.
Once again, 70% of whites, 49% of Asians, and 37% of blacks pass.
And this will lead to a lack of diversity in the profession.
And we can't have that.
Here's the typical sort of moaning, moaning.
No diversity in the profession.
Also, here's another typical kind of moaning, that the test is a severe toll on my mental, financial, and physical well-being.
Well, it sounds like you don't belong, you don't deserve to be a lawyer.
If taking a test leaves you in that state, what's it going to be like going to court, huh?
Now, the solicitor's regulation authority, which runs the exam, is investigating the reasons behind the lower pass rates.
I think they should ask me.
I'd be happy to explain them.
But this is the usual sort of guff that we always get when non-whites fail to meet the standards set by white.
Oh, gosh, the standards must be no good.
We're going to lower the standards, get rid of the standards.
All of these attempts to build a multi-racial society without understanding racial differences, futile.
And now, here's another interesting story about British youth who are waking up.
The Roger Scruton Foundation organized a conference that was attended by a variety of figures from conservative circles.
But what marked out the foundation's get-together was the significant overlap between the younger, edgier online right and the older and more establishment Tory-leaning right.
The audience was invited to ask questions, and the questions were pointedly focused on identity and demographics.
Carl Benjamin, otherwise known as Sargon of Akkad, I had a debate with him some years ago, bright boy, and I think he's definitely coming our way.
He pointed out that if anyone can claim to be English, then the authentic English can't claim to be threatened with becoming a minority.
What's wrong with that?
They're all English anyway, so why should we even come?
We have no right to complain.
Another question from a young man in the audience highlighted the futility of talking about local politics in an age of ethnic block voting in areas such as Rotherham.
And when panelist Robert Toomes, I don't really know who that is, but he's one of these Tory-type conservatives, replied by arguing that it's education, not ethnicity, that matters, the contempt and the weariness of the audience with such a tepid response is audible on the video.
In fact, you can hear people saying, rubbish, rubbish, which is good.
Yes, yes, very gratifying.
The dividing line is stark.
The younger generation of the British right wants answers.
These are existential problems, in large part created by the mainstream British right, and the younger generation is not getting answers.
And the very fact that they're there, suited up, openly demanding such answers, rattles and scares the mainstream.
The radical element is not wearing a bomber jacket, but right there in the conference room in a well-fitting suit and with a clot with a clipped posh accent.
Now, this author is, he's actually a substat guy.
I've forgotten his name.
I should give credit where credit is due.
But this is exactly what I'm seeing all around the world.
The young activists, they're not dressed in eccentric clothing.
They're well-dressed.
They're sharp.
They're smart.
They speak well.
And they are not taking this rubbish for an answer.
And the guy goes on to conclude for the mainstream right, the people we think of as English are simply expected to fritter themselves away in the bottomless oceans of the third world.
And this is what's known as integration.
Yes, yes, yes.
Young people are not going to put up with this.
Now, I wish we had a youth reaction of similar intensity enthusiasm about Confederate monuments.
You're going to give us a downer story here, Mr. Kersey.
Well, yeah.
And you know what?
I think this is all going to come at the same time, though, for all monuments that have been torn down, memorials, not just for the Confederacy, but for all dead white males.
And I happen to see with my own eyes today this monument, one of the monuments in question we'll be talking about that's laying in a prostrated state.
It was quite gruesome, a word you like to use.
Several Confederate artifacts remade into tools of education are heading across the country as part of a new exhibit.
The Black History Museum and Cultural Center of Virginia announced the loan to the Museum of Contemporary Art, MOCA, in Los Angeles.
The upcoming exhibit called Monuments wants to re-examine the ever-changing legacy of American history by bringing together a collection of objects related to the lost cause of Confederate statues.
It's going to, this exhibition is going to feature 15 decommissioned monuments from all around the U.S., including Baltimore, Boston, Montgomery, Pittsburgh, and New Orleans.
Now, Mr. Taylor, I tried to find a list of all of the monuments and I wasn't able to find it.
But the ones from Richmond include the granite base and the sculpture for the Jefferson Davis Monument.
That's the actual Jefferson Davis monument that stood on Monument Avenue for about 90 years that was torn down in June of 2020 by a mob of BLM Antifa.
You and I, of course, went and saw Monument Avenue a week later, Sands, the Jefferson Davis statue.
The monument was still there.
The base was there, but the monument was gone.
The Matthew Fontaine Maury sculpture in Globe, which is quite a beautiful monument.
And the granite slabs from various Confederate monument bases.
Of course, if you ever go on Monument Avenue in Richmond, Mr. Taylor, now the bases, of course, have all been removed.
There's no record.
There's no memory that these, there's no evidence that these statues ever existed, sadly, on Monument Avenue.
Now, is there, it's just flat bare ground?
Is grass growing there?
They put in a seesaw?
What's there now?
Well, where the Fontaine statue used to be, the Matthew Maury-Fontaine statue.
I'm sorry, the Matthew Maury statue.
It was sort of this roundabout circle, and they've put a bunch of plants and flowers in the middle of it.
It's overgrown.
Oh, overgrown.
Yeah, the Robert E. the Stonewall Jackson statue, if you remember, was just kind of in the middle of Monument Avenue.
Yeah.
And so that's just all been removed.
So now it's now you don't have to go around the monument.
It's not a roundabout.
Oh, it's just completely paved over.
Yeah, the Davis statue was a very large memorial.
And all of the memory of that is gone.
There's no shadow of it anymore, even.
It's just paved over.
The Robert E. Lee statue was in a pretty big roundabout, as you probably recall.
It was in a park of its own, Lee Park.
It was a park of its own.
Yeah, it actually was larger than the statue of George Washington that sits by the Virginia State Capitol.
And it's just, if memory serves, I think it's just a field.
There's nothing there.
There's no basketball court.
There's nothing.
It's just empty.
It's haunting, if you know, if you remember what stood there.
then the Jeb Stewart statue.
Yeah, that was also kind of in the middle of...
And I don't believe there's anything there at all.
So at all.
It's just the bricks, the pave it over.
Exactly.
Mocha plans to pair the Confederate monuments with contemporary artists like Hank Willis Thomas, Bethany Collins, and Nona Faustine.
I'm not familiar with any of their work to provide insight into how legacy can change over time.
Shakia Warren, the executive director of the Black History Museum in Richmond, said, Our stewardship of these monuments is grounded in a commitment to ensure that objects once intended to glorify those who led the fight to enslave blacks are repurposed in ways that foster critical reflection, healing, and deeper public understanding of America's past, present, and future.
You know, you know, the mere fact that these monuments are in the possession of people who hate the Confederacy more intensely than anyone else, that is an outrage.
How did they get a hold of these things?
The whole thing is disgusting starting.
There was an article in the Richmond Times Dispatch a few, about a month ago, which noted that the majority of the monuments, memorials that were torn down in Richmond, as you can imagine, there were a lot to the Confederacy Males.
They're all sitting at the Waterworks Department.
Yes.
And they're just under tarps.
And the Richmond Times Dispatch had a drone go over and took pictures that are just all sitting there with graffiti.
It's, again, it is a somber sight when you see and realize that the well, see, I semi-understand that, but to give monuments, how come the president of the Confederacy ends up in the hands of these awful people?
Well, the Jefferson Davis statue, which strangely is now in the possession of the Valentine, which is a museum in downtown Richmond, they're the ones that have loaned the Jefferson Davis statue.
It's actually on display at the Valentine right now, and it is in the position.
The statue is in horrible shape.
The face has been caved in.
The right arm that was extended out virtually severed.
In fact, I sent you a picture.
I shot you a text of the picture.
And it's quite jarring when you know what it looked like displayed proudly on Monument Adam compared to its current condition.
Terrible.
And it is, you walk into this very just haughty museum.
There's just absolutely no art in there.
It's basically just a celebration of the desecration and the dehumanizing, really, of anybody who would ever dare celebrate these men and the so-called lost cause.
One second.
So this is actually, and I did not know this.
It had been on display since 2022 at the Valentine.
So it's been sitting there celebrated in its dilapidated state and its desecrated state for almost three years as it looked the night it felled, dented, covered in graffiti, bedewed in graffiti, and sporting a large gash in one arm.
Most, if not all, of the city's other Confederate monuments, as I stated, are stored at the Richmond Wastewater Treatment Plant in Manchester under TARPS.
Monuments is going to be curated by the lax art director Hamza Walker and MacArthur Foundation genius grant recipient Carol Walker and Mocha senior curator Bennett Simpson.
So if anybody out there in Los Angeles in that Southern California area wants to go check out this exhibit, I highly recommend you go check it out.
I recognize one of those names, Kara Walker.
She is black and she does these black, jet black, almost silhouettes.
Well, that's what they are.
They're silhouettes.
But they have to do with the degradation of white people.
It's just constant insults of white people.
You look her up, K-A-R-A Walker, W-A-L-K-E-R.
Her stuff is in top flight museums all around the world.
It's just revolting.
Well, what's fascinating is all of the artists who are participating in this exhibit, they're basically going to be doing contemporary answers to the questions that the former veneration of these dead white males represented and what that means.
I believe that the Stonewall Jackson monuments that survived from Charlottesville, we all know what happened to the Robert E. Lee statue.
It was melted down.
The remnants of that are actually going to be on display at this exhibit, the Robert E. Lee statue there.
Well, they were going to take the Lee statue and then recast it as some glorification of the black man is ours.
That is going to debut.
So I would just love to see it.
Yeah.
And again, it goes back to the fact that all of these statues, I mean, the Jefferson Davis monument, the Matthew Maury sculpture in Globe, they're all headed out there, heading out to L.A. to be on display.
And I believe they're going to be a Christopher Columbus statue as well.
Would love to know all of the statues that are going to be celebrated in their, like I said, in their toppled form, because that's the way that the Jeffrey Day, I'm sorry, that's the way the Jefferson Davis statue has been and it's in its held position.
You know, occasionally you'll go to a museum and they've got a piece of mineral or they maybe have a skin of an animal and they will give it a label that says, please touch.
I wonder if these are all going to be labeled, please spit upon.
Well, it does say at the Valentine, do not touch.
It does.
I'm surprised it doesn't say a restroom is that way.
If you feel compelled and no one's around, you're welcome to your, you know, it's a disgusting reminder of the fact for so long, people before the energy really got underway after what, the Charleston shooting back in 2015 when they pulled down the Confederate flag.
And then you started to see the monuments come down in New Orleans and Baltimore and other places, Confederate monuments.
There was always this idea: just put these in a museum.
Why are you celebrating this?
Just put these in a museum and you can tell the story there in a museum, but we're not going to do it publicly.
And now we know that when they're in a museum, they're going to be celebrated by our intellectual betters in a very demoralizing manner.
You know, you did say that one of the memorial that is going to be on display for desecration is from Boston.
I'd be curious to know what that was.
Does that ring any bells with you?
I know that during the BLM riots, and I cannot remember his name, the white guy who led the black troops, they have a statue of him that's celebrating the movie Glory.
I cannot give his name right now.
He actually has a monument that they put up in Boston.
It's hilarious.
It's a goofy-looking monument.
And I think some people actually spray painted that, not realizing what it was commemorating.
I know that one still stands.
I'll find out what it is, the Boston monument.
And as you go on to the next story.
But again, there are, you know, I'm sure the statues from Montgomery are probably of Confederates.
Oh, yeah.
It's going to, it's going to, it'll aggrieve me greatly if the New Orleans statue is the one that was a Robert E. Lee that was always facing north.
That was one of the first ones that was taken down, if you remember.
Robert Gould Shaw.
That's the name of the Yankee who led black troops.
Okay.
Okay, moving once again back across the Atlantic Ocean, this time to Germany.
Nearly half of Germany's 17.68 billion euros in housing support for 2024 was paid out to farmers.
17.68 billion.
Half of that is 8.15 billion.
Went to people without German citizenship, even though they make up just 15% of the population.
They're 15% of the population.
They consume half of the housing budget.
The figures were in the federal government's response to a parliamentary inquiry by, guess what, alternative for Deutschland, the only people who care.
Large family sizes among migrant households often lead to higher housing expenses.
Well, we have to meet that.
Yes, every time they get pregnant, we've got to buy them another bedroom.
518,050 Syrians in Germany were still living on welfare and public housing nearly a decade after The 2015 refugee influx.
And remember, Mother Merkel, she was saying, oh, these are the people who are going to carry our economy forward.
They're going to pay for our retirement.
No, no, they are still sucking off the public teeth living in public housing.
Half a million of them 10 years later.
Meanwhile, after underage girls were sexually assaulted in a public swimming pool in Gelnhausen, the Christian Democrat mayor pointed out that hot weather makes tempers prey.
That's the problem.
Well, he was piled on mightily, as he should be, and he has apologized for having blamed hot weather.
Well, aren't these people from the Middle East?
Aren't they used to hot weather?
Aren't they from hot weather countries?
Of course, Syrians groped and molested one group of girls, but when they complained to a lifeguard, he took no action.
Since he couldn't see exactly what had happened, we sent the girls back into the water, said the pool manager.
It was only after more girls complained.
The police were called, and four Syrians aged 18 through 28, they were groping them in the lazy river, feeling them all over.
A fifth suspect escaped, and people were still looking for him.
Now, no doubt, a lady judge, once they're caught, will say, oh, the poor dears, they're feeling rejected and unloved, and we can't be too hard on them.
You know, pretty soon they're going to just provide them with state-sponsored girlfriends so they won't feel rejected.
And let's see.
For years, there have been regular reports from pool visitors of abusive behavior, sexual violence, and assaults of migrants at Germany's once peaceful swimming pools.
An article in 2023 tried to claim that much of the violence and sexual assaults were due to the rising price of French fries.
Ah, boy, that would make anyone grope young girls.
French fries are too expensive.
I'll just go out and grab some girl.
Employees of the Columbiabad outdoor swimming pool complex in Berlin wrote to Der Teigespiegel newspaper complaining about Arab migrants and Chechens sexually assaulting women and of mass brawls while also leaving the complexes in disgusting conditions.
I'm sure that's all true.
They make an absolute wreck of the changing rooms.
As a result, the entire pool was shut down for an indefinite period of time because workers called in sick because it was so stressed out.
Can't take this.
In 2022, Remix News, that's one of our favorite sources, Mr. Kersey, Remix News, good stuff coming out of Remix, covered how the president of the Federal Association of German Swimming Championships, Peter Harzheim, said he can no longer recommend that families visit public pools.
He said he would be acting irresponsibly if he went to an outdoor pool with his own three grandchildren.
That's right.
He's not going to expose his own grandchildren to the horrible behavior of these imported Muzzies.
In the German city of Chele, or C-E-L-L-E, 20 rampaging youth attacked swimmers and sexually assaulted them, including beating a woman who rejected their advances.
When lifeguards tried to stop them, they threatened them as well.
And as a result, the entire swimming pool had to be shut down.
How many news stories, how many news stories do Germans have to live through before they put two and two together?
This is just what's so surprising to me.
And still, all these years later, all these murders, sexual assaults, all this thuggery, all of this utter disrespect for Germany and Germans, and people are still making excuses for them.
White people are just absolutely incredible.
Now, here's a story about interracial dating.
Now, I don't know how the data were gathered, but I find this really quite interesting, quite interesting.
The data have to do with the IQs of people of various races who are hoping to date people of other races.
Now, if you are a white man and you are hoping to date a black female, your average IQ is 93.
If you're a white man hoping to date a white female, average IQ of 100.
So on average, whites who want to date, white men who want to date black women have Iqs of 93 as opposed to 100.
Isn't that interesting?
Now, if you are a white woman and you want to date a black man, your average IQ is going to be 96.
Whereas if you're a white woman and you want to date a white man, average IQ of 101.
In other words, white people who want to date other white people are smarter than white people who want to date black people.
Isn't that interesting?
Now, on the other hand, if you are black and you are aiming to date a white woman, average IQ, 95.
If you are a black man wanting to date a black woman, average IQ of 85.
And so the black men who are hoping to date white women have IQs 10 points higher than those who are looking to date black people.
Black women.
On this point, I make no comment.
Black women who are trying to date black men, average IQ, 83.4.
Black women who want to date a white man, average IQ, 89.
So it's an interesting form of symmetry here.
The white people who want to date black people have lower average IQs than white people want to date white people.
In the case of blacks, black people who want to date white people have higher average IQs than black people who want to date black people.
The combinations here for Hispanics and everything else, but I thought those were just particularly interesting.
Again, this is from something called, it was from the Mankind Quarterly of the 2023 Winter Edition.
And I'd love to know where this IQ information came from, but Mankind Quarterly is a respectable journal, and it looks into these questions with some diligence.
It's respectable to us and definitely hated by a lot of people.
Hated by a lot of people, but very few people would claim that they make up the data.
That's the point I'm making.
Yes.
This is seriously edited, yes.
And I don't want to make up any data because I want to answer your question about Boston, and I found out monuments it's going to be, and you're going to get a laugh out of this.
It has to be one of two.
And I believe it's the Emancipation Memorial, which previously depicted a freed slave kneeling at Abraham Lincoln's feet.
This was removed from Park Square.
The decision was made by the Boston Art Commission following concerns about the statue's depiction of a black man kneeling before Lincoln.
And it is, it's a funny statue.
I have a feeling this is, I have a feeling this statue will be there and it'll be of a white man kneeling before a black person.
Well, now, I think there's one very similar to that in Washington, D.C. There is.
There is.
Is it perhaps a copy of the same statue?
I don't know the answer to that, but I have family in Southern California, and I'm tempted to plan a trip in September, October, just to be able to go see this museum.
You are a glutton for punishment, aren't you?
No, no, no, no.
It's important to see, and it's important to catalog and to see the world through your enemy's eyes.
And if you recall, when you came to Richmond to join me in seeing the Monument Avenue in its desecrated state there in June of 2020, when four of the five monuments still stood, we saw the Rumors of War statue by Wiley, I think is his last name.
Kinda Wiley.
Kinda Wiley.
And that was the black answer to the Jeb Stewart Monument.
And that statue still stands before the beautiful Virginia History Museum.
It's Museum of Art.
Museum of Art, Virginia History.
It stands between the Virginia Museum of Art and the Confederate Museum that the Daughters of the Confederacy still have there.
And it stands in between almost untouched.
And it is a middle finger directed toward not just the Confederacy, not just the posterity of Confederate veterans, but to all of white America.
Indeed.
Now, Mr. Kersey, I was going to ask you to do a story about how colonizing the moon could be viciously racist, but we have practically no time.
So I think it is really amusing, nevertheless, to mention that some, was it black TV host says, oh, we can't build a nuclear reactor on the moon.
That would be colonization.
Look what colonization did here on Earth.
But then some, what this black guy, what's his, what's this, this, this famous astronomer guy, he said, well, it's not just a black guy, it's astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Toss.
Yes, yes, yes.
He pointed out, well, the fact is there are no moon people.
Well, good for Neil deGrasse.
In any case, this is a funny story that, you know, it just shows.
I mean, if the colonizers hadn't come, would the colonized people have ever had roads, medicine, or potable water?
Well, you know, this is so typical.
Colonization, uh-oh, it can be of an uninhabited rock.
And uh-oh, can't let white people out there.
No telling who they might rape or enslave.
Oh, my God.
Well, there are no people there.
Anyway, well, Mr. Kersey, we're out of time.
It always happens.
It always happens.
I just don't know what to do, but it always happens.
And so, ladies and gentlemen, we must sign off.
It is always a pleasure, a joy, and an honor to spend this time with you.
We look forward to doing the same next week.
So, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
And we look forward to hearing from you all of your comments.