Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor - Talarico Spreads the Virus of Racism Aired: 2026-03-12 Duration: 01:01:20 === White People Stick Together (15:03) === [00:00:00] Ladies and gentlemen, dear listeners, welcome to Radio Renaissance. [00:00:03] I'm your host, Jared Taylor. [00:00:05] And with me is my esteemed co-host, none other than Paul Kersey. [00:00:12] And today is March the 12th, year of our Lord 2026. [00:00:17] And as usual, we will begin with comments. [00:00:20] This first comment is one that struck home with me in a particular way, as I will describe after I have gone through it. [00:00:29] Our listener writes in to say, first, I must make a correction to the message I sent you last week in which I told you that Persian uses just one word for he, she, and it. [00:00:40] Although Persian is grammatically without gender, and so my point about its being vastly different from German still stands, it does, in fact, differentiate between people and objects. [00:00:53] So I guess it's he, he, and it, or hashi, hashi, it. [00:00:58] So it doesn't distinguish the sexes. [00:01:02] And that is really rather surprising. [00:01:04] You expect all these Middle Easterner, Middle Eastern, and certainly Islamic country languages, you'd think that they would be very, very careful about distinguishing the sexes, but apparently Persian certainly does not. [00:01:16] Now, this same commenter goes on to say this. [00:01:19] How often does it happen that you encounter people who see the validity of some of your arguments, but who are mostly aligned with the left, or even are vociferous enemies of the right? [00:01:30] I am anti-Trump, pro-marijuana, disdainful of cops, a Bernie voter, for lack of better options, anti-Ten Commandments in schoolhouse, anti-religion in general, anti-tax cuts for the rich, pro-free college for all, LGBTQ, Luigi Meoni, a Luigi Mangioni supporter. [00:01:51] I check all those boxes and a whole lot more that would seemingly put me in the enemy camp of what I presume to be most of your listeners, and for that matter, most of the people who would join you if you ever broke off to form an all-white society. [00:02:05] However, I've always been committed to considering any point of view, and this has resulted in my breaking from the left on certain issues. [00:02:13] I am, for instance, pro-gun and vehemently anti-hate speech laws, as much as you or Jordan Peterson. [00:02:21] I don't care if people insult me for being queer, and I don't think there should be laws against it. [00:02:26] When you're at an LGBTQ meeting, try saying that. [00:02:31] More relevantly, I am a race realist and an immigration skeptic. [00:02:36] I was introduced to the topic of racial differences in IQ some 20 years ago when I happened to see race, evolution, and behavior by Russian in the library. [00:02:44] I snatched it up just because it looked spicy. [00:02:47] I instantly became obsessed with the topic, not because it was about race per se, but because it was taboo. [00:02:55] I went on to read the bell curve and some other things I can't remember. [00:02:59] And then later I went on to listen to a lot of David Duke and you guys. [00:03:04] At this point, I'm more or less convinced that race is in fact much more than skin deep, and that the people who say otherwise are either deceived or deceivers or some combination of the two. [00:03:16] On a Darwinian view, which ironically is a view that us lefties hold more often than right-wingers do, there's no reason we should expect racial equality in the first place. [00:03:27] That's just how this cookie has crumbled, like it or not. [00:03:32] Even Sam Harris, who would never willingly grant anything to your side, implicitly concedes the argument when he says individuals are never equal and groups aren't likely to be either. [00:03:45] Incidentally, I know it'll never happen, but a Sam Harris-Jared Taylor debate would be my dream matchup. [00:03:52] Well, that would be interesting. [00:03:54] But we can always keep dreaming, can't we? [00:03:57] And regarding immigration, it doesn't do to go around saying to your fellow lefties, well, you know, a society with robust social programs, universal basic income, drug legalization, full acceptance of queers, et cetera, might be more likely to function if we build a wall and definitely don't allow in Muslims who might throw gays off of tall buildings. [00:04:21] But that's what I think. [00:04:22] And I think most of my liberal compatriots are blind fools on this subject. [00:04:27] I think it's also obvious that welfare programs in general would function better if we just didn't have blacks in the country. [00:04:33] I love my black friends, but when I look at the big picture and consider what I know, it's hard to see how blacks in general are not simply a problem and a drain on the system. [00:04:44] It's lonely out here for a secret race realist on the left, and it's nice finally to make contact with you after having listened to you for so many hours. [00:04:55] Well, I especially appreciate this message. [00:04:58] I've always been dismayed at what I take to be a real artificial cleavage between what's generally considered conservatism and generally considered liberalism on the whole subject of race. [00:05:11] There was a time, oh, 50 years ago, 60 years ago, when left, right, everyone agreed. [00:05:18] Everyone agreed when it came to race. [00:05:20] I mean, Jack London, for example, he was a big fired up socialist, but he thought socialism was for white people. [00:05:28] And everybody else could do whatever they liked, but lefties like him were going to be socialist, and they were going to be white. [00:05:34] Labor leaders, for example, Samuel Gompers, he was very much a lefty, but he thought that we did not need anybody but white people in the country. [00:05:45] This was just standard. [00:05:47] And I think it's tragic that people who are fellow whites are so divided on these other subjects. [00:05:54] But it's certainly true these days, if you're going to talk about race realists, you're generally going to find that they are pro-Gun. [00:06:01] They are anti-big government. [00:06:04] They are certainly going to be opposed to immigration. [00:06:05] They're going to be opposed to welfare. [00:06:07] You can probably chart most of their political positions, whereas there's no logical reason that should be the case. [00:06:15] And Mr. Cozy, you and I have talked about Sarah WagenConnect. [00:06:19] She's this hard, lefty, traditional, lefty German politician. [00:06:24] She started her own political party. [00:06:28] I think it was something like the Sarah WagenConnect coalition. [00:06:32] It didn't do very well, but she broke away from the lefties because she was basically one of us. [00:06:40] She thought Germany should be for Germans. [00:06:42] You can't have a social welfare program and let in all these Turks and Moroccans and Algerians and wherever they are. [00:06:48] No. [00:06:48] Unfortunately, she failed. [00:06:50] But I think for us to succeed, we're going to have to have alliances with people like that. [00:06:56] In any case, as I say, I have a soft spot in my heart for fellow white people, fellow white-awake white people, no matter what their thinking is, whether it's abortion, whether it's religion, whether it's big government, small government, we are white people and we need to stick together. [00:07:13] You were about to say something. [00:07:14] No, no, I was just thinking of a state like Vermont and a state like New Hampshire, which are diametrically opposite when it comes to politics, but both of them work out quite nicely. [00:07:23] In fact, Vermont has one of the top 10 cities in America that has the happiest population. [00:07:28] And I looked up the demographics and it was 0.2% black. [00:07:33] And I was just thinking, yeah, it's amazing what you can tolerate when you don't have one political party that uses a minority population, a black population, sir, as a bludgeon. [00:07:44] Yeah. [00:07:45] Yeah. [00:07:47] I'd like to say one thing. [00:07:48] I do believe, though, Sam Harris, that would not be that interesting of a debate. [00:07:52] I think the person, the two people you need to speak to. [00:07:56] And I sincerely hope that someone who could make this happen is listening. [00:08:01] You and Tucker Carl, or Tucker Carlson and yourself, and Joe Rogan and yourself. [00:08:05] I think a Joe Rogan, Jared Taylor collab, as the kids say, collaboration would be spicy, to use that same name. [00:08:14] Spicy. [00:08:15] Well, you know, the older I get, the more spicy I like my food. [00:08:18] Maybe it's because one's taste bugs dull with age. [00:08:21] I don't know. [00:08:22] You would unfortunately mog Sam Harris too easily, and I think you need to bring some fight out of it. [00:08:30] Yeah, some Renaissance maxing to Joe Rogan's program. [00:08:33] And Tucker Carlson, I think that's the conversation that really needs to take place. [00:08:38] I would look forward to having a lengthy on-air conversation with Dr. Carlson, even off-the-air conversation with Tucker Carlson. [00:08:45] And I think Joe Rogan would be a lot of fun too. [00:08:47] But I am available, but the decision is up to them. [00:08:52] How would they get in touch with you, by the way? [00:08:53] I know we have some other things. [00:08:55] It seems like a good time to go ahead and do the shameless blog. [00:08:58] I suppose that's true. [00:08:59] And as we always say, we love listening. [00:09:02] We love hearing from our listeners. [00:09:05] This last note, again, particularly touched me because, as I say, these political divisions, we can work them out. [00:09:13] We can work them out. [00:09:15] What matters is so long as we are white men and white women in this together. [00:09:20] The rest we can work out. [00:09:22] And so I love to hear from you, especially if you are a liberal on certain subjects. [00:09:27] But of course, we have a tender spot in our hearts for all good conservatives. [00:09:31] You can get your comments on our podcast and anything you'd like to call to our attention by going to amran.com, A-M-R-E-N.com, and hitting the contact us page, and your note will come to me. [00:09:43] There's another way to get to us because we live here at protonmail.com. [00:09:49] Once again, that email address is because we live here at protonmail.com. [00:09:54] And let me know when you send an email, correspondence, if you would like to be added to the award-winning newsletter that comes out once a week that's signed by Mr. Taylor himself. [00:10:06] Yes, please do let us know. [00:10:08] We don't like to add unsolicited email addresses to our public distribution. [00:10:16] That can get you in trouble with the spamming and the anti-spammers. [00:10:19] But no, we love to hear from you, and we'd love to have you hear back from us if you are interested in hearing back. [00:10:26] Moving on to our next comment: about a week ago, I printed up some of the posters from Amran, and I put them up at the library. [00:10:37] I waited until nighttime, and I stapled the white advocacy posters across my college campus. [00:10:43] Yes, we have a part of the website called Activism, and we have some posters that you could download and print up. [00:10:51] And this is exactly what this person did. [00:10:54] He says, My campus is University of California, Santa Barbara. [00:10:58] Of course, whenever I go down this route, I am bombarded with the usual racist, white supremacist, xenophobic name-calling, but never a plausible argument. [00:11:09] Never. [00:11:10] I've read White Identity, and I'm now reading Pave with Good Intentions, so I have got a lot of talking points if someone asks me what I'm doing. [00:11:18] And sure enough, at the bus station, a stout, that is a euphemistic way of talking about some of our fellow citizens, a stout, half-white, half-Columbian girl stopped her bike to see what I was putting up. [00:11:32] She started by reiterating the myth that whiteness doesn't exist. [00:11:36] Race is a social construct made up by white people, justify colonialism, blah, blah, blah. [00:11:42] Doubling down on her lunacy, she said, there should be no borders. [00:11:46] Only love at the end of the day exists. [00:11:49] Course, I responded coherently, but to no avail. [00:11:52] The fact that she can vote or have children, say she will be a college graduate, delegitimizes all the things that I think I can do if there is radical egalitarianism in society. [00:12:05] There is a popular college app called Yik Yak. [00:12:08] I've heard about this. [00:12:10] It seems to me that the only people who use it are college students. [00:12:13] Maybe I'm incorrect about that. [00:12:14] Maybe one of our listeners can fill us in on what Yik Yak is all about. [00:12:18] But it had a post about the Amerin posters that I put up. [00:12:22] Some comments read, Tear that shit down. [00:12:25] I just saw that on the way to the bus stop, and it was like WTF. [00:12:29] Ew. [00:12:31] However, there were some receptive comments. [00:12:33] How is that any different from ethnic frats that let only their race in? [00:12:38] Kind of want to join out of pure curiosity. [00:12:41] And not letting people come together based on their heritage seems oppressive to me. [00:12:47] The listener goes on to say: The second and third generation of immigrants are being brainwashed to hate us. [00:12:53] They are the most spoiled, rotten, ungrateful kids on the planet. [00:12:57] And whites, we are the most decadent, apathetic morons if we think feeling bad for them makes us somehow better people. [00:13:05] We let their takeover happen. [00:13:08] I think that if it were not for censorship, there would be many willing whites to join our movement. [00:13:14] All we need is momentum. [00:13:15] I will continue to spread the message. [00:13:17] I'm just one of many. [00:13:19] A paroxysm of change awaits us. [00:13:22] One day, when the boomers slowly shrivel away, there will be a countercultural movement, just like in the 1960s. [00:13:30] Only this time it will be our people. [00:13:33] Well, thank you. [00:13:34] Thank you out there at UC Santa Barbara. [00:13:36] I'm delighted to hear you're putting up our posters and you are fighting the good fight. [00:13:41] Another comment: There were many people who cheered the Browning of America, but who provided the executive organization? [00:13:50] Time after time, there would be reports of scores of refugees being sneaked into a town the dead of night, instantly planted among the established citizens. [00:13:59] It just happened as if it were a weather event over which there was no human control. [00:14:04] NGOs, church-affiliated groups, they would provide organization, but who directed them? [00:14:10] Has the story ever been told? [00:14:12] As a matter of fact, and Mr. Kersey, you may be familiar with this book. [00:14:16] There is the story, and it's called Refugee Settlement and the Hegira to America. [00:14:23] And it's by Ann Corcoran. [00:14:25] Ann Corcoran was a really wonderful woman who worked very, very hard trying to fight this industry of refugee resettlement. [00:14:34] The book came out in 2015, so some of the facts are perhaps a little out of date. [00:14:38] And of course, Donald Trump has made everything that was written before his second term out of date. [00:14:44] But it is a very, very convincing, eye-opening account of all of these NGOs, how they work at the U.S. government, how it all works, and all the various religious organizations, the various do-gooders and uplift artists of all kinds come together to plant these people in every single neighborhood in America. === Fighting Refugee Resettlement (11:52) === [00:15:03] Refugee Resettlement and the Hegira to America by Anne Corcoran. [00:15:09] Did you ever meet Ann Corcoran, Mr. Kersey? [00:15:12] I can tell you that I did meet Ann Corcoran. [00:15:16] I believe she's still with us. [00:15:18] I just don't believe she posted anything on her website. [00:15:20] She made a committed and fierce warrior. [00:15:24] And that's about the best way I can describe someone. [00:15:28] Committed and feared for a great cause. [00:15:30] And she fought a tireless fight. [00:15:32] And I think she regrettably served through the towel in about 2020 when it became obvious that the Trump 1.0 administration wasn't going to do anything. [00:15:43] And I don't know if she's written anything since because I'd love to get her thoughts on what's happening with what we talked about last week, the fact that the only refugees being brought in are white South Africans. [00:15:53] Yes, yes. [00:15:54] Well, if she is not with us, I'm sure she is smiling in her grave. [00:15:59] But somehow I got the idea that she had moved on to her reward. [00:16:02] But I'll have to think about her. [00:16:06] It didn't occur to, well, I had not thought about her for some time until this guy asked the question. [00:16:11] Immediately, her book popped into my mind. [00:16:13] But, all right, another comment. [00:16:16] Thank you for reading my message on your last program. [00:16:20] You said you were unaware of what appears to be the new trend of demonizing everyone the left doesn't like and calling them pedophiles. [00:16:28] Well, here is the viral video clip in which a woman says she will kill her children to save them from ICE pedophiles. [00:16:37] Matt Walsh and Michael Knowles and others help it go viral. [00:16:42] And he sends a link, which I will certainly not bother to read out over the air because it's got so many letters and weird characters in it. [00:16:50] But it's on YouTube, all right. [00:16:53] And the listener goes on to say, this all appears to be a race to the bottom. [00:16:58] Since racist and supremacist don't have much sting anymore, I guess pedophile human trafficking is the new insult. [00:17:06] Here's some examples of what I'm referring to, which seem to be getting more common. [00:17:11] So, well, Mr. Kersey, I thought that not to play devil's advocate here, but I thought people on our side were supposed to think that the Dems were shape shifting pedophiles and lizard creatures and the light. [00:17:25] I just, I guess I can't keep up. [00:17:27] Now, I don't know, maybe this has something to do with the Epstein files, but it's all too deep for me. [00:17:32] But as this same commenter said last week, maybe the next level of insult is going to be to start calling us a neck, saying that we are busily into necrophilia and bestiality. [00:17:47] In any case, I don't think that's going to stick with most people. [00:17:50] You can yell bestiality, bestiality, all you like, but unless there's some sort of good evidence for it, I think people are just going to recognize that that's pure hot air. [00:17:59] Necrophilia, actually, also. [00:18:01] I don't think many people have a chance to indulge their taste for anyway. [00:18:07] Hopefully, no one has a taste for cadaver. [00:18:09] Well, yes. [00:18:11] I think that's, I mean, once you start calling somebody a necrophiliac, unless you've got some very weird and convincing evidence for it, nobody's going to believe it anyway. [00:18:23] So it's really kind of a waste of time. [00:18:25] But pedophilia, who knows? [00:18:28] Last comment. [00:18:29] I'm so glad you mentioned Cleveland the other day. [00:18:32] Yes, we did. [00:18:33] We talked about Terminal Tower and we talked about that beautiful Yankee monument right in the middle of the town. [00:18:39] I must say, I am capable of admiring the aesthetic qualities of those monuments built to people whose job it was to try to kill my ancestors. [00:18:51] Yes, they were loyal men doing what they considered their duty, even if they were deluded and wrong. [00:18:56] And some of those monuments are beautiful, I will concede. [00:18:59] But this man goes on to say, I'm so glad you mentioned Cleveland. [00:19:03] There used to be an old Slovak neighborhood in the Buckeye area. [00:19:08] It's almost exclusively black now. [00:19:10] There's one single Hungarian church still in the area that offers the traditional Latin Mass. [00:19:16] This is probably now the most violent area in the city with homicides up and down Buckeye. [00:19:22] It's so sad to drive in that area. [00:19:25] You can see some of the old Slovak names on buildings along with the years they were built. [00:19:32] Now they just sit and rot away or get broken into by vagrants. [00:19:38] I can so easily imagine what this person is saying. [00:19:42] All of these signs of people had pride in their neighborhoods. [00:19:46] They loved where they lived. [00:19:47] They poured their lives, their aspirations, their souls, their fortunes into building what was going to be a wonderful community. [00:19:55] And then our Dusky brethren moved in and they had to move out. [00:19:59] It's just so heartbreaking and sad. [00:20:02] However, our listener concludes on a high note. [00:20:07] Cleveland, according to some reports, is getting more and more whites as white couples move in for what is, for the time being, cheap housing. [00:20:16] So things are looking up. [00:20:18] Well, let's do hope that Cleveland is looking up. [00:20:22] And so because we have already told our listeners how to reach us, we won't repeat that again. [00:20:28] But, Mr. Kersey, finally, let us get to this story that we have delayed for so long, the story of Hannah Dustin. [00:20:36] Well, we like to go back and see if the maniacal misgivings of Republicans or Democrats in office come to fruition. [00:20:48] And we had brought to you a story three or four months ago, sir, about one of the first statues to a female erected in the United States. [00:20:57] That was to Hannah Dustin back in the 1870s in Boscoin, New Hampshire. [00:21:04] Well, Mr. Kersey, is it not, in fact, known to be the first statue erected to well, I don't want to say that because there were two Hannah Dustin statues, and I don't recall if this is the first one or if there's another one that was in a different city. [00:21:20] Well, I see. [00:21:20] But she was, without a doubt, the first female for whom a statue was erected. [00:21:26] And the only question is which was first. [00:21:28] That's precisely correct. [00:21:30] There are two gorgeous, glorious statues of her. [00:21:33] One of them had a, she had a knife, you know, a cleaver in one hand that was removed for sensitivity reasons. [00:21:41] But our astute listeners will recall that there was a Republican rep in New Hampshire who was against this statue and wanted it removed because he drove by it and was like, what is that statue of? [00:21:53] Then he researched and he decided to call for his removal. [00:21:57] Well, good news. [00:21:58] Supporters of a bill to tear down the controversial Hannah Dustin memorial statue in Boscoin are changing course. [00:22:06] And Mr. Taylor, dear listener, they're no longer calling for the removal of the monument. [00:22:13] Do you care to remind our listeners whose memories might not be quite as sharp as yours just what Hannah Dustin did? [00:22:22] Well, she was Hannah Dustin and her child, they were kidnapped by merciless Indian savages, I believe in 1698, if memory serves correct. [00:22:34] Yes, 1697, by the Abenaki people. [00:22:37] And as the story goes, her child was viciously bashed in the head against a tree and was killed. [00:22:47] Dustin took revenge by killing and scalping 10 of the Abenaki where the statue actually now sits, where it's. [00:22:55] That's where the surgery took place. [00:22:58] That is apparently where this monument stands, is where this all transpired. [00:23:05] And where the Abenaki, where the Abenaki got their haircuts. [00:23:10] They, you know, definitely a little closer to the scalp than a zero. [00:23:15] So, you know, it was definitely not a, definitely worse than a fade. [00:23:19] But no, the goal is now to revive plans for a new interpretive site. [00:23:25] We learned that the bill, which was filed in the state house to take down the statue, like I said, a colonial Massachusetts Puritan woman who killed 10 merciless Indian savages, and she became a heroine to the colonialists and listeners as, well, the burgeoning American nation had to fight these various Indian tribes all throughout the 13 original colonies. [00:23:55] And then as we began the westward expansion, the story of her courage and bravery inspired the manifest destiny. [00:24:03] And that's why her statue was, of course, erected in the 1870s. [00:24:08] It created a lot of attention, said David Nagel, a Republican from Gilmanton. [00:24:15] I got a lot of letters. [00:24:16] He was the gentleman who put forth this bill. [00:24:19] He sponsored the bill to remove the statue. [00:24:21] He decided to change his position. [00:24:23] He's now advocating for his legislation to be amended to revive a working group active in the past decade that attempted to build consensus for a new interpretive site that would leave the statue intact. [00:24:36] Quote, we would rather see, instead of demolishing the statue, the interpretation of a broader nature be enacted. [00:24:41] The very recommendations that were made years ago by the original advisory committee from the 2013 legislation, said Lori Carey, a member of the Boscoin Select Board. [00:24:52] Again, it tries to claim that this has been a monument attracting lightning, political lightning for a long time, a conductor for lightning. [00:25:01] But in reality, it's just the changing nature of America. [00:25:04] As you recall, I'm going to do a shameless plug from one of Mr. Taylor's best videos when he described the two monuments that used to welcome people visiting the U.S. Capitol, the Discoverer and the Rescue, which were those two beautiful monuments that were removed, what, in the 1950s of Daniel Boone protecting his wife from a merciless Indian savage. [00:25:28] Yes. [00:25:29] And then the other one was of Christopher Columbus. [00:25:31] I mean, America was just an amazing place when we celebrated these monuments. [00:25:35] And I think you and I, go ahead. [00:25:38] Well, yes, we were very proud of what we'd done. [00:25:40] You know, you got to watch out for interpretive sites. [00:25:45] Did you know that there is an Emmett Till Interpretive Center? [00:25:51] It's not. [00:25:52] Isn't it the whole United States? [00:25:54] I beg your pardon. [00:25:55] Isn't it the whole United States? [00:25:58] Apparently, this is some private outfit that bought the barn in which Emmett Till came to his unfortunate end. [00:26:07] And you can go there and you can have the whole thing interpreted to you. [00:26:11] Interpreted. [00:26:12] And I imagine it's interpreted in languages that you and I would have difficulty understanding. [00:26:18] But it is an interpretive site. [00:26:20] It's interpreted, I suspect, in a very skewed and anti-white way. [00:26:24] So I'm not keen on interpretive sites. [00:26:26] I think that the statue should just stand and let the people who are there interpret it in their own way. [00:26:32] But this is certainly better than tearing it down. [00:26:35] And having that magnificent Robert E. Lee statue, especially the one right there on Monument Avenue, I would put up with just about any interpretive site so long as that could have been permitted to speak. [00:26:49] You and I both saw that monument desecrated into phase graffiti back in June of 2020. === Letting Statues Stand Alone (04:59) === [00:26:56] That was coming up on six years. [00:26:58] And it is shocking, in my opinion, that they didn't leave it in the state that it was found shortly after the uprising, the racial reckoning of May and June of 2020. [00:27:11] Well, that certainly would have conveyed a message. [00:27:14] And yet, all of that graffiti, all of that paint, all of those foul words that were sprayed onto it, not a drop reached the statue itself. [00:27:26] I have several photographs. [00:27:27] And all of this horror and defacement goes way up, but General Lee himself remains untouched. [00:27:35] And Traveler was untouched as well until they took it down in 2022. [00:27:38] That's right. [00:27:39] So that would have been a satisfactory solution for me. [00:27:42] There he is, the general and his faithful horse, untouched, untouched by the savages who were trying to take him down. [00:27:51] But no, not even that was considered acceptable. [00:27:55] Well, let's move on to something else. [00:27:57] Let's move up to Canada. [00:28:00] And an Indian who blew through a stop sign and killed 16 members of a junior ice hockey team in 2018 is now fighting deportation. [00:28:12] This guy's Josh Kirat Singe Sidu, age 37. [00:28:17] He barreled through a stop sign at 60 miles an hour before he hit a bus carrying the players from the humble Broncos in rural Saskatchewan in 2018. [00:28:28] I've seen a photograph of the team. [00:28:30] All of these bright, nice-looking young white guys. [00:28:34] He killed eight. [00:28:35] Can you imagine that? [00:28:36] Well, he was running a tractor trailer and he hits this bus and he kills 18. [00:28:41] Well, he pleaded guilty to dangerous driving, causing death, and he was sentenced to eight years, but they let him out after just four years. [00:28:50] Now, I don't know what an appropriate sentence is for killing 18 people with bad driving. [00:28:55] In any case, he goes back to a suburban life with his Canadian wife, and the couple had a baby soon after he was released. [00:29:02] But the child, poor dear, has heart and lung complications. [00:29:06] Meanwhile, the Immigration Refugee Board decided that they don't want him around anymore, and they want him to bugger off. [00:29:14] But he's trying to do his best to stay. [00:29:17] And he has got an attorney, Michael Green is his name. [00:29:21] He's filed an application to remain in Canada on humanitarian grounds. [00:29:25] Well, the lawyer says that he's got his two young children who wouldn't like it if he were booted. [00:29:31] And at the same time, if the children went with him, he's got a three-year-old. [00:29:36] And the three-year-old, get this, Mr. Kersey, might suffer because the quality of the air in India is not as good as it is in Canada. [00:29:45] Wait, Why is quality of air in India not as good as the quality of air? [00:29:50] I just cannot imagine. [00:29:52] I cannot imagine. [00:29:53] But that's what they say. [00:29:55] And that's not the fault. [00:29:57] The poor three-year-old who was born here in Canada is used to breathing clean Canadian air. [00:30:02] They daren't send this guy who murdered 16 members of the junior hockey player back to his homeland because his poor three-year-old might not be able to breathe clean Canadian air. [00:30:16] And the lawyer says this is a litless test for Canadians. [00:30:21] To what extent are we a generous and forgiving country? [00:30:23] And to what extent are we punitive? He asks. [00:30:27] Well, at the time, Sidu was not impaired by drugs or alcohol, and nor was he on his phone. [00:30:36] He just ignored a stop sign, blazed through at 60 miles an hour. [00:30:41] But as it turned out, he had committed 70 violations of various federal and provincial trucking regulations in the 11 days leading up to the crash. [00:30:50] He's not the kind of guy we want in the country. [00:30:54] Well, his wife, now her name is Tanvir Mann, and I could not figure out just what race she was, but Tanvir, what kind of name is that? [00:31:03] I do not know. [00:31:04] I'm, well, who knows? [00:31:06] I won't speculate any further. [00:31:07] He's married to a Canadian, and she says that he suffered from PTSD. [00:31:14] He grieves about having killed these people all the time, and she's afraid that if he goes back to India, his PTSD won't get the kind of, won't get the kind of expert treatment that it deserves, and he doesn't have many close relatives to hug him and hold him when he's feeling down. [00:31:34] And let's see. [00:31:36] This is in some respects the worst part, Mr. Kersey. [00:31:38] Some of the victims' families have also expressed their support for Mr. Sidu, and they want him to stay. [00:31:46] Christine Hoggin, one of her sons was smashed up, but she says, I forgive him, and I hope he can stay. === Amazon EBT Card Fees (08:19) === [00:31:56] So there you are. [00:31:57] You're only four years for having killed 16 members of the junior hockey team. [00:32:01] And now you claim that your three-year-old might not like the air in India. [00:32:05] You might not get the coddling and the hand-holding that you're getting in Canada. [00:32:10] So you deserve to stay. [00:32:11] Well, that's America. [00:32:13] I'm sorry, that's Canada for you. [00:32:15] And I have a wonderful story about Haiti. [00:32:18] This will warm your heart. [00:32:20] A Haitian migrant has pleaded guilty to a $6.7 million fraud scheme. [00:32:29] Now, before we go any further, on that $6.7 million was turnover. [00:32:33] We don't know how much of this was income, but we'll talk about that later. [00:32:37] And he was running this through his small Boston retail store. [00:32:40] His name is Antonio Bonner, age 74. [00:32:45] And he operated this little bitty place, just 150 square feet in the Matapan area of Boston, just a little mom-and-pop place. [00:32:53] I haven't heard about a mom, but I guess it was just a pop place. [00:32:56] There's a papa dock place, right? [00:32:58] Yes, a papa dock place. [00:33:00] Very good. [00:33:01] Who knows? [00:33:01] Maybe he had herbal remedies and voodoo dolls. [00:33:04] Who knows? [00:33:05] But the scheme involved Bonner accepting EBT cards from food stamp recipients who wanted to convert their benefits into cash. [00:33:14] He would process the full value of the benefits through his point-of-sale terminal, but he'd hand over less than the total amount to customers keeping a portion for himself. [00:33:25] In other words, this is good old entrepreneurialism. [00:33:29] He offered a service and he took a fee. [00:33:32] You want cash? [00:33:33] Okay, well, you're going to have to pay a percentage. [00:33:36] Well, thousands of such transactions took place over a four-year period. [00:33:40] Throughout 2025, Mr. Kersey, the monthly totals consistently exceeded $200,000, and they reached in October the staggering figure of $358,472. [00:33:57] That's that much money in EBT that went through his machine in his 150-foot square foot store in the month of October 2025. [00:34:08] Now, let's imagine that he's just doing $200,000 a month. [00:34:12] That was his absolute minimum for the whole year. [00:34:15] That's $2,400,000. [00:34:17] In any case, he faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in the big house for wire fraud. [00:34:24] And he can expect a free trip home after he gets out of the pokey. [00:34:30] Now, I think there's an irony here. [00:34:32] His last name, Bonner, means happiness. [00:34:36] As the French say, quelle bonne. [00:34:39] What happiness? [00:34:40] Everyone is happy. [00:34:42] And, you know, I looked into the way snap payments work. [00:34:46] And the maximum for one person in the lower 48 is $300 a month. [00:34:51] And the maximum for a family of five is $1,180 a month. [00:34:55] In Alaska, it's higher. [00:34:57] I guess food is more expensive. [00:34:59] The max for a single person is $600 a month, twice as much. [00:35:04] And the way it works, you get your EBT card, which has got a magnetic chip on it, and SNAP benefits, those are your food stamps and benefits, are loaded monthly. [00:35:13] And they're issued, as I say, once a month for the upcoming month. [00:35:18] And the exact day varies and is often staggered. [00:35:22] They don't want all these people bursting into the mom and pop shops all on the same day. [00:35:28] So it's based off on the last digit of your social security number, the case number, your last name, or something like that, so that you don't have this total wave of EBTers crashing into the store on the same day of the month. [00:35:40] Now, my question is: this, Mr. Kersey: what do you figure his cut was? [00:35:47] Because you know, you can't buy hoots or hookers with EBT cards. [00:35:52] And so, if you want things that you can't do, how do you know that? [00:35:58] You can't. [00:35:59] All you can get is food. [00:36:00] No hoots, no hookers, nope, no cigarettes, nope, no rent of cars, nope. [00:36:07] And so, say baby mama just got her $500 card, and you are perishing from crack cocaine, and your dealer sure doesn't run an EBT card through his machine. [00:36:19] So, you take the card down to Mr. Antonio Boner's, and he will run Baby Mama's card through the machine and give you greenbacks. [00:36:28] What's it going to worth? [00:36:29] What's it going to be worth to you? [00:36:31] How much of a commission are you willing to pay Mr. Antonio Boner to take Baby Mama's $500 card and give you green? [00:36:40] What would you say? [00:36:41] 10%. [00:36:42] I don't know much about the underground SNAP EBT card black markets. [00:36:48] I don't know. [00:36:49] Well, I know. [00:36:51] I'm not sure what kind of points you're getting on that transaction. [00:36:54] Well, you're probably getting no points at all, but you're getting dough. [00:36:57] You're getting green back. [00:36:58] You're getting stuff. [00:36:59] You know, you can go to topless bars. [00:37:02] You can spend this money any way you like. [00:37:03] That's going to be worth something. [00:37:04] And you get it all at the same time. [00:37:06] My guess is, I bet, you know, I wonder if he had a sort of a standard commission, you know, 15% for everybody. [00:37:12] Or if he kind of figured out, well, you know, this guy looks desperate. [00:37:15] Look, I'll give you $250 for the card. [00:37:19] I bet if he was a real conniving guy, that's he would do. [00:37:22] If this guy comes in, he is really, really obviously desperate for cash. [00:37:27] In any case, $6.7 million. [00:37:30] Let's say it was 20%. [00:37:33] What's one that is, that is over a million dollars. [00:37:36] $1.2 million. [00:37:37] Yeah. [00:37:41] No, anyway. [00:37:42] It's extraordinary to just think about this as one little anecdote in hundreds of thousands all across the country. [00:37:49] Exactly. [00:37:50] No, this must happen all the time. [00:37:53] It must happen all the time. [00:37:54] And I'm surprised we don't hear about it all. [00:37:56] There must be some kind of built-in mechanism that's supposed to foil this. [00:38:00] But be that as it may. [00:38:01] Yep. [00:38:03] And real quick, what's fascinating about the small business administration is I know this isn't the story we're talking about, but this is what I'm hoping would happen with SNAP: SBA has gone in and they've audited the entire system now. [00:38:15] And now you can no longer, which blows my mind that non-citizens were given small business administration loans. [00:38:21] That's gone now. [00:38:22] And you would think that you could do that if all of the states, sir, were going to hand over their EBT snap rolls, which a number of them refuse to do because you start to realize, my gosh, how many hands are in the very system that you just described of this kickbacks? [00:38:41] Yeah. [00:38:42] And it's why the whole system has to be audited. [00:38:45] Every individual Snap user, because as our writer at the beginning of this program said, we should care about our fellow Americans. [00:38:55] You and I have a very different definition of Americans than most people. [00:38:58] We kind of go back to the factory settings of this great nation, but you need to do a massive audit and there needs to be serious recrimination. [00:39:08] See, I am always skeptical of government-run charity. [00:39:13] Americans are generous people, and I think that this sort of thing could be much better run by private enterprise nonprofits. [00:39:24] And as soon as you get the government in it, you get empire builders. [00:39:28] The more money you get to spend, the more important you are. [00:39:30] So you have no incentive whatsoever to solve the problem. [00:39:35] So these things should be all done privately. [00:39:38] That's what I think. [00:39:39] I agree. [00:39:39] I agree. [00:39:40] Real quick. [00:39:41] I will challenge all of our listeners to do something. [00:39:43] The next time I know a lot of our listeners, I know you shop on Amazon, Amazon.com. [00:39:48] When you're on that website and you're looking at various products or, you know, just click on something you get at the grocery store. [00:39:57] You're going to be shocked when you see how many products on Amazon.com are Snap, qualify for Snap EBT. [00:40:05] I mean, again, the incentive for these companies to use Snap cards on their system, on their platform, it really is mind-blowing. === New York Subway Incident (05:34) === [00:40:16] You know, that didn't occur to me. [00:40:17] You can use your EBT card for an Amazon purchase? [00:40:21] You can. [00:40:21] And it will say if it is SNAP eligible. [00:40:25] I believe that's the exact term. [00:40:28] You can check for any product. [00:40:30] So anytime you go to a Kroger, a Publix, a Harris Teeter, a Wegmans, a Giant, a Safeway, think about a product. [00:40:37] Just go to Amazon.com. [00:40:38] Type in that same product you bought from a grocery store that you paid for with your own hard-earned money and see if it is SNAP eligible. [00:40:46] Because as we discussed on a prior program, I believe Amazon.com is one of the top five places to procure goods with a Snap EBT card. [00:40:59] That probably is Costco number two. [00:41:04] Wow. [00:41:05] Wow. [00:41:06] I never even thought about that. [00:41:07] Well, thank you for calling that to my attention. [00:41:09] I will snoop around on eBay and I'll just see what I can put on my screenshot and put it on your axe at RealJar Taylor and get something to go viral before tomorrow's payday. [00:41:21] My goodness. [00:41:22] Wow. [00:41:23] Well, you have a story. [00:41:25] This guy should have been snapped up long ago. [00:41:28] He was snap eligible by ICE, but instead, this Honduran illegal shoves people onto the subway tracks in New York City. [00:41:38] This is a really important story because it seems every day we're inundated with more and more stories of illegal aliens engaging in crime, like we talked about briefly last week with the NOVA Northern Virginia stabbing by the Sierra Leonean of Stephanie Minter, the 30-year-old mother. [00:41:59] They're at a bus stop. [00:42:00] This story comes from New York City on a New York subway. [00:42:04] Migrant who shoved two onto New York subway tracks was deported four times, had 15 arrests on his record. [00:42:12] Illegal Honduran migrant accused of shoving two Manhattan subway riders is a serial criminal who, again, deported four times. [00:42:19] Federal officials said just today. [00:42:23] Bayron Hernandez, his rap sheet includes at least 15 arrests for various charges, including aggravated assault, possession of a weapon, domestic violence, according to DHS. [00:42:34] He's faced previous charges of simple assault, drug possession, and obstruction of police. [00:42:41] He was arrested and charged on March 10th with attempted murder, attempted assault, and reckless endangerment two days after he allegedly punched 83-year-old Air Force veteran Richard Williams and Han Pina onto the roadbed at the Lexington 63rd Street station on the Upper East Side. [00:43:00] Richard Williams, the 83-year-old Air Force veteran, is a white male. [00:43:05] Hernandez, he entered the United States illegally for the first time in January of 2008. [00:43:12] He'd been deported a total of four times, but he keeps coming back in illegally. [00:43:18] His most recent deportation was in 2020 during Trump's first term. [00:43:25] The New York Post makes it clear that it's unclear when he re-entered the country after his fourth deportation. [00:43:35] Not much else to say. [00:43:38] No, well, I do want to know, though, these people got pushed onto the subway tracks. [00:43:42] They survived, I hope they weren't run over. [00:43:44] What happened to them? [00:43:46] Well, one of the individuals is the Air Force veteran, retired Air Force vet Williams. [00:43:54] His daughter said, now I'm pissed. [00:43:55] Now I'm upset. [00:43:57] How the F did he get back here? [00:44:00] Pena suffered non-life-threatening injuries, but Williams, he is actually, he's potentially going to pass away and succumb to his injuries. [00:44:11] Well, golly. [00:44:12] Well, at that age, just falling onto subway tracks, that's a mighty nasty fall. [00:44:18] You hit your head on the rails or back on the ties. [00:44:21] Good grief. [00:44:23] Just imagine what this guy has cost American taxpayers simply in deportation costs, police costs. [00:44:30] This guy is just a total black hole in terms of anything that could be good about a human being anywhere on Earth. [00:44:39] And again, just like the SNAP story, sorry to interrupt, but just like the SNAP fraud story, this is one little anecdote, hundreds of thousands or more like this all across the country. [00:44:49] Every day, an American citizen put into a situation with an illegal alien, serial criminal that shouldn't even be in the United States. [00:44:57] I mean, this would not be transpiring if we have control of our borders now. [00:45:03] We don't have control over the lawlessness that existed when we didn't have control of our borders. [00:45:08] And that's where we find ourselves in. [00:45:12] Yes. [00:45:13] Let us hope that the newer versions of this guy are not coming across the country, coming across the border. [00:45:20] And you know, the trouble is, he's going to go and he is going to whine and dine on the taxpayers' money for a long time. [00:45:27] And only then will we boot him back across the border. [00:45:31] But who knows who will be president then? [00:45:33] Maybe AOC, who will just wave him back, meet him at the border with open arms, clutch him to her bosom with shouts of joy, and say, Welcome home, Gonzalez, or whatever his name is. [00:45:46] In any case, Fernandez. [00:45:47] Hernandez, Gonzalez. [00:45:49] All right. === History of Income Tax (03:35) === [00:45:50] Well, here's just a little historical point that came across my screen the other day. [00:45:58] And something to think about as the year grinds relentlessly towards April 15th. [00:46:03] And that is that it was in 1909 that President Taft inaugurated the federal income tax. [00:46:10] At that time, there was no tax at all on incomes up to, in today's dollars, mind you, up to $48,000, no tax, up to today's dollars equivalent of $650,000. [00:46:24] The tax was, guess what? 1%. [00:46:28] And the highest tax rate, it was 7% applied only to incomes over the equivalent of $16 million. [00:46:37] And only 3% of income earners in the United States paid any tax at all. [00:46:43] Well, back in those days, of course, it was thought necessary to amend the U.S. Constitution in order for the feds to do things not included in the enumerated powers. [00:46:54] So Congress felt compelled to pass the 16th Amendment in 1909, enabling the federal government to exercise the powers of taxing our incomes. [00:47:07] And that amendment, the 16th, was ratified in 1913. [00:47:12] The feds wasted no time in codifying the Revenue Act of 1913, the very same year, and we've had an income tax ever since. [00:47:20] Well, speaking of wasting no time, we had had an income tax officially on the books according to the Revenue Act of 1913 for only five years before President Wilson raised the top rate to 77%. [00:47:35] And all other brackets had sharp increases. [00:47:37] They have gone up and down since then. [00:47:39] But this is just one of those things that you think about the country we used to have in which the federal government was this sort of distant minor irritant. [00:47:49] It wasn't in our faces all the time. [00:47:52] And at least it is something to the credit of former generations. [00:47:56] They passed an amendment to enable the U.S. government to do that. [00:47:59] Welfare, for example, welfare spending, where the government pulls a gun on you and says, you know, we're going to take money out of your pocket and we're going to give it to this layabout, Jared Taylor, whether you like it or not. [00:48:12] There's nothing in the Constitution that would prevent that. [00:48:15] Do you know, by the way, on what part of the Constitution they hang the idea that the government has the power to do that? [00:48:25] I'll give you a hint. [00:48:26] I'll give you a hint. [00:48:27] It's why they're called welfare programs. [00:48:29] I don't think it oh right in the preamble. [00:48:36] The general welfare. [00:48:38] Okay, so it's an interpretation from the that's right. [00:48:42] In order to promote the general welfare and anti-discrimination, it is not enumerated. [00:48:50] And the whole idea of saying that you cannot discriminate as to who you feed at your barbecue or your jute joint or whatever it is. [00:49:01] You know how they got that? [00:49:02] It was the case of Ali's Barbecue. [00:49:04] I think that was in the late 1960s. [00:49:08] Ali's barbecue was a southern joint. [00:49:10] It said, no, we serve white people only. [00:49:13] And they said, no, we found in the Constitution where it says you have to serve the people that we tell you to serve. [00:49:21] And that part of the Constitution where it says that, that's in the Interstate Commerce Clause. === Ali's Barbecue Segregation (02:52) === [00:49:26] Well, of course it is. [00:49:29] They hung the Interstate Commerce Clause around the necks of the proprietors of Ali's Barbecue because they served pickles that came from out of state. [00:49:39] And if they serve pickles, they got to serve black people too. [00:49:43] It's funny. [00:49:44] The late Joe Sobrin, Mr. Taylor, had a great phrase. [00:49:48] He said, anything called a program is probably unconstitutional. [00:49:52] Exactly right. [00:49:53] Exactly. [00:49:54] And just listening to all that, bring back freedom of association and unleash the American economy in ways you can't even imagine. [00:50:01] Another short little item here. [00:50:06] This is one of these memes that somebody sent me. [00:50:09] It's a graph. [00:50:10] And it's a graph of autism Medicaid payments in Minnesota. [00:50:16] In 2017, it was $1,285,000. [00:50:20] Just seven years later, it had become from $1,285,000, it became $228,082. [00:50:32] That was a 17,646% increase in just five, in just seven years. [00:50:38] Autism. [00:50:39] Well, the way it worked, and it's all pretty clear now, you set up a fake autism center and you get fake autism diagnoses for Somali children. [00:50:51] And you round up the Somali community and you tell them, hey, you know, fellas, you claim that your child is weird, and we don't believe you. [00:50:59] Antisocial. [00:51:01] We will pay you $300 to $1,500 per child per month to come register and say the boy or the girl is weird. [00:51:12] And then you get him officially diagnosed with some phony Somali doctor and you bill Medicaid for up to $3,500 a month for imaginary services while you pay the kid maybe $300, maybe $500, and you pocket the difference. [00:51:27] And then you sing, God bless America in Somali. [00:51:32] And the odd thing is, nobody seems to have noticed here from $1.2 million to $228 million in seven years until finally somebody figured out what was going on. [00:51:45] Well, Mr. Kersey, I know you had some stuff on James Tallarico, and I do want to hear what you had dug up on him, but I did want to talk about him a little bit before you did, if you don't mind. [00:51:57] This is the guy who defeated Jasmine Crockett in the Democratic primary for senator from Texas. [00:52:04] And people, now, this did not come up during the primary. [00:52:09] Jasmine Crockett is this African-Americaness who is one of these prime white haters. === Understanding the Left (09:01) === [00:52:18] I think she went to Yale. [00:52:20] She has just swanned from one affirmative action job to another. [00:52:24] You know, the higher they get, the more they resent us. [00:52:28] It's a funny thing, but Jasmine Crockett is a perfect example of this. [00:52:32] Well, we have now found out a little bit more about the guy who's going to be running for Senate back in May of 2020. [00:52:41] And we know what happened in May of 2020. [00:52:45] But he chose to write about Ahmed Arbery. [00:52:48] He says, the latest American killed by the virus of racism. [00:52:52] The virus kills our black neighbors if they're jogging, playing music, sitting in church, selling CDs, or carrying a bag of skittles. [00:53:03] Now, we know about the jogging, but I don't know about music, sitting in church, selling CDs. [00:53:07] I mean, selling Lucy's. [00:53:09] Well, then that might be one guy. [00:53:11] That was that fat guy that they took down in New York City. [00:53:14] In any case, what was his name? [00:53:17] I forgot his name, Eric Garner, Eric Gardner. [00:53:19] Yeah, good for you, Eric. [00:53:21] I was laughing because he was quite corpulent. [00:53:23] And I was remembering he wore one of these goofy, one of these goofy Kanglo-type hats that Samuel Jackson popularized, and he had glasses on as he was being. [00:53:35] The thing is, that guy could not walk from one end of the block to the other without being completely exhausted. [00:53:44] He was in no shape, and he died of all sorts of internal. [00:53:51] You knock him down even gently, and that guy's probably going to die. [00:53:54] But in any case, that was one of those. [00:53:56] But then this guy goes on to say, white skin gives me and every white American immunity from the virus. [00:54:03] But we spread it wherever we go through our words, our actions, and our systems. [00:54:07] We don't have to be showing symptoms like a white hood or a Confederate flag to be contagious. [00:54:14] This is a guy who's trying to be senator from Texas. [00:54:18] The only cure, says he, is diagnosing the virus within ourselves and taking dramatic actions to contain the spread. [00:54:26] I think the only way to contain the spread, if we're that infectious, is to just off ourselves, Mr. Kersey. [00:54:32] But he says the first small step is proclaiming loudly and unequivocally that black lives matter. [00:54:39] So that means you have to walk around bellowing all day long, proclaiming loudly black lives matter. [00:54:46] And then that'll scare away all the black people. [00:54:48] They won't get infected, I guess. [00:54:50] I don't understand why he ran in the primary against a black woman. [00:54:53] She's clearly his moral superior in every way. [00:54:56] By definition, not a racist, whereas he is. [00:54:59] Shouldn't she be in the Senate? [00:55:01] Well, in any case, yes, this Tallarico guy, he's a state, he is a state lawmaker. [00:55:08] He defeated her in this highly competitive primary. [00:55:12] Crockett and Tallarico were generally aligned on policy. [00:55:15] Surprise, surprise, surprise. [00:55:16] And both rose to prominence in large part through social media. [00:55:20] He is a former middle school teacher and seminarian. [00:55:24] That's what they learn in Divinity School. [00:55:27] And he says his progressive politics are rooted in his Christian faith. [00:55:32] Was it in the Gospel of Matthew? [00:55:34] Doesn't it say you have to proclaim loudly and unequivocally that black lives matter? [00:55:39] Or is that John? [00:55:40] I forget. [00:55:41] Much of his campaign centered on excoriating billionaires. [00:55:45] In any case, Crockett conceded and called for the party to unite behind Tyler Rico. [00:55:51] He mostly did not attack her directly, but he did tell Politico he was concerned about her assertion that she wouldn't need to win over Trump voters in a state that backed Trump by 13%. [00:56:03] But he's going to expand his message and he's going to tell them: no, you don't have to wear a white hood or fly the Confederate flag to be a racist, but you get to vote for me anyway, no matter what. [00:56:14] Well, the Republicans are going to have a choice between John Cornyn and Ken Paxton. [00:56:18] That's going to be a runoff for the primary to be held in May of 2026. [00:56:24] Do you have any particular preferences as between Cornyn and Paxton? [00:56:28] Well, I'd like to clarify that the New Century Foundation does not endorse political. [00:56:33] I'm asking you. [00:56:33] You're asking me. [00:56:34] Yes. [00:56:36] I believe that Ken Paxton is one of those people who needs to be passed the baton of MAGA. [00:56:42] I think he can take it into a much different, different direction. [00:56:45] He's fantastic. [00:56:47] Well, we'll see. [00:56:47] You know, he had some murky charges of not being quite on the up and up. [00:56:54] I didn't look into that in great detail, but it seemed to me that where there was that much smoke, there might have been an ember or two. [00:57:01] I just don't know. [00:57:01] But, Mr. Kersey, did you have anything to add about this James Tallarico fellow who might just be our new senator, spreading the virus of racism wherever he goes, whether he helps it or not? [00:57:15] Well, what's fascinating about Tallarico is he put that weird tweet out about the virus of whiteness before George Floyd. [00:57:23] This is when he volunteered that. [00:57:25] I want to say that was in either April or early May of 2020. [00:57:28] It was early May before George Floyd went to the United States. [00:57:31] Chronology of 2020 is very important because he's virtue signaling before it's a virtue to signal your toleration of any black dysfunction and blaming it on white white supremacy and white implicit bias. [00:57:49] He was volunteering this to show off his moral scruples, his just how devoted that you're correct. [00:58:01] His tweet was dated May 8th. [00:58:03] And we know that this turning point in world history took place May 25th. [00:58:09] Yeah, it's stunning how anti-white this guy is. [00:58:12] And I was going to read from this really good article from Chronicles, actually. [00:58:16] And there's not much else to add except for, I'll read this because I think this is pretty good from this one article. [00:58:22] James Tellarico and the anti-white cult of the left. [00:58:25] The author ends with this paragraph. [00:58:27] Tellerico is held up by the left as the answer to the specter of Christian nationalism, but it is his, but it's his disastrous philosophy that holds sway today. [00:58:37] Most Americans and many Christians tolerate abortion, homosexuality, and anti-white hatred without thinking twice about these vices. [00:58:44] His views are not as novel as many want to think, nor are they unfortunately far outside the mainstream of popular opinion. [00:58:50] They are filling a profound spiritual void deep inside many lost souls like Renee Goode, Alex Pretty, and their many devotees. [00:58:59] Again, it's just trying to understand what the left is at this point. [00:59:05] And real quick, you've seen no anti-war protests against our latest bombing of Iran. [00:59:12] And Kevin Deanna had a great tweet where he pointed out that go back and look at these crowds in January in the snow in Chicago and Minneapolis that gathered to protest ICE, because to the left, the war is here. [00:59:27] ICE is the embodiment of every evil that they hold dear in their hearts to defeat. [00:59:34] And it's just fascinating to think about what this movement is gearing up to in November. [00:59:40] And Tallerica was one of the main priests of this movement. [00:59:46] Yes, and you do wonder about that pretty guy. [00:59:50] And what's the name of the girl you just mentioned? [00:59:53] Renee Goode. [00:59:53] Renee Goode. [00:59:55] Yes. [00:59:56] What are they living for? [00:59:59] Surely they are probably not Christians. [01:00:02] They are anti-Christian, but they have no religious belief. [01:00:06] But what becomes religion for them is this utter woke virtue signaling, the sense of being on the righteous side of history. [01:00:15] It's a very, very sad thing. [01:00:17] But then you get a guy who is clearly a Christian who went to seminary, who believes that this is the will of God. [01:00:23] This is what Jesus would have done. [01:00:25] We really are in a strange time. [01:00:28] Well, as you and I are both adherents of the South, as W.E.B. Du Bois said, you know, what stands against us is that fiery sword of the South. [01:00:39] And I like to think that more and more people are beginning to realize it might be time to unsheath that. [01:00:46] The terrible swift sword that was on the wrong side. [01:00:49] And of course, the original fiery sword was, I believe, what kept Adam and Eve out of the Garden of Eden after they'd been expelled. [01:00:56] So you watch which way you wave that fiery sword, Mr. Kersey. [01:01:00] Anyway, our time is up. [01:01:02] Dog got it. [01:01:04] It just slips by. [01:01:06] Ladies and gentlemen, we really do enjoy the time we spend with you. [01:01:10] It is an honor and a joy and a pleasure. [01:01:12] And we look forward from hearing you. [01:01:14] And we will spend this time again with you once again next week. [01:01:19] Thank you so very much.