Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor - (Afrikaner) Refugees Welcome Aired: 2026-04-10 Duration: 01:07:28 === Verification and Cancellation Incidents (09:49) === [00:00:11] We're recording now. [00:00:14] Ladies and gentlemen, it is April 10th, 2026. [00:00:19] It must be time again for Radio Renaissance. [00:00:23] This is Paul Kersey, and this week, Mr. Jared Taylor is on vacation. [00:00:30] So we have a guest joining us at the esteemed microphone of the Renaissance of America, Radio Renaissance. [00:00:40] That would be Tom the Architect Tennessee, as I've come to call him. [00:00:43] If you're on Twitter, Tom Hennessy is one of the great accounts to follow, documenting what's happening in his home state of Florida with the Great Replacement. [00:00:54] But he's also one of the individuals who has been responsible for doing so much work in terms of utilizing a company called Give Send Go. [00:01:05] Most importantly, last year, he brought attention and raised, I believe, close to a million dollars for Shiloh Hendrix in an incident that Mr. Taylor and I spoke about in Rochester, Minnesota. [00:01:18] Mr. Hennessy, good morning. [00:01:20] Hey, good morning. [00:01:21] Yeah, thanks for having me. [00:01:23] Yeah, I'm a huge Jared Taylor fan. [00:01:26] I grew up and kind of got into politics listening to Jared Taylor and also Stefan Molyneux. [00:01:32] So, Stefan Molyneux was one of the pathways for me in my political journey. [00:01:37] But yeah, I've done a lot of work with Gifts Go. [00:01:40] So, Gifts Go is a website similar to GoFundMe. [00:01:45] And Gifts Go is proven to not be as cancelable as. [00:01:51] Gifts and Go. [00:01:52] So they don't cave into leftist pressure to shut down fundraisers. [00:01:59] So that I've been very successful with Gifts and Go. [00:02:03] And we did a fundraiser for Shiloh Hendrix that was coming off the heels of the Carmelo Anthony stabbing of Austin Metcalf that happened. [00:02:13] I think it was in Frisco, Texas, or somewhere near there. [00:02:17] It was. [00:02:18] It was actually a year ago. [00:02:19] And they still, by the way, have not released any of the videos of the incident that the, that the, That the city has a hold of. [00:02:28] Maybe those will come out in the trial of what actually happened. [00:02:31] But as of yet, we've not seen, as you were one of the people who actually, real quick, who did a FOIA to try and get the Irina Zaruska video out in Mecklenburg County in Charlotte. [00:02:43] Right. [00:02:43] Yeah. [00:02:43] So I did put it in. [00:02:44] And this is stuff anyone could do. [00:02:46] You know, you can, anyone can submit a FOIA request. [00:02:49] There's a different process. [00:02:50] So it is kind of tedious. [00:02:52] You have to, you know, it's easier with AI. [00:02:54] So if you use Grok, if you're on X, use Grok. [00:02:58] It helps you figure out things faster. [00:03:01] But I did put a FOIA request in and got the CDE. [00:03:04] But a lot of the news media had published that information before I did. [00:03:09] But yeah, I have the full video. [00:03:11] It has all the angles from the subway or the bus car of her being murdered, unfortunately. [00:03:17] But that similar incident happened in Chicago where a woman was set on fire. [00:03:23] And obtaining a FOIA request from those places is impossible because they know they have the city council and all the local. [00:03:32] Elected officials will not allow those kind of videos to ever be released for obvious reasons. [00:03:37] But in Charlotte, at least we're able to get that kind of stuff out so the public can see it. [00:03:43] So, going back to Rochester and what happened last year, I want to say it was in May, maybe late April, when Shiloh Hendrix was with her young child at a playground. [00:03:55] And of course, we've all documented on Radio Renaissance what happened next. [00:04:00] But it's really what you did that catapulted this story into the consciousness of millions of people. [00:04:10] Yeah, it was the first time that we kind of, I just thought this would be a good opportunity to kind of. [00:04:16] To kind of reverse the cancellation. [00:04:18] So the cancellation was already taking place. [00:04:21] They had Doc, Shiloh, a bunch of the left wing people that are prominent on social media, on TikTok especially, had already identified her and they were in the process of canceling her. [00:04:32] So at that point, you know, I saw the video and I was just, I just thought it was ridiculous. [00:04:37] You know, obviously she, some boy had stolen something from her and it was a total reaction. [00:04:42] So in my opinion, you know, you lose the right to be, to not hear any. [00:04:48] Bad, mean words if you steal from somebody. [00:04:50] I don't care how old the person is. [00:04:52] The kid was eight years old, by the way. [00:04:54] So, yeah, I got, I was, the hard part was just getting a hold of Shiloh. [00:05:00] And yeah, luckily there was somebody on X who, it wasn't actually my account, but another account who. [00:05:08] Shiloh reached out to, and that account then reached out to me. [00:05:12] There's like, I think, I think the actual Shiloh is in my DMs. [00:05:16] I'm like, Oh, really? [00:05:17] It's like, we'll get verification. [00:05:19] And she got verification. [00:05:21] And then I, um, we had a group call, and there's a, there's four people involved, and, and we, um, we talked to her on the phone, and we had her, we walked her through setting up the fundraiser, which site to use, which was critical. [00:05:34] Cause if we had used, uh, GoFundMe, that would have been a disaster. [00:05:38] And the fundraiser just took off. [00:05:39] We set it at like, I think the original goal was, 15,000 and it quickly surpassed that, I think, in like an hour. [00:05:47] And another thing with these fundraisers, it's critical that you get it off very early on in the incident when it's hitting the news. [00:05:55] So it's extremely important that you get it set up that same day or the day after. [00:06:00] So the money just went through the roof. [00:06:05] And Gifts and Go holds all that money. [00:06:07] So the money does not come to me or anybody else. [00:06:10] It goes into a holding pattern with Gifts and Go and then Gifts and Go releases it to the To the person and they do the verification on their end. [00:06:20] So there's a lot of people, you know, have, well, I don't know who this Tom Hennessy is. [00:06:25] I was like, well, the money doesn't, I never have access to the money. [00:06:29] I'm just the person that sets up the Gibson Go. [00:06:32] I don't get any commission. [00:06:34] There's nothing in it for me unless someone just wants to tip after the fact. [00:06:38] But otherwise, it's, you know, I'm just doing this because I wanted to reverse the cancellation. [00:06:43] And effectively, we did. [00:06:45] And there's been a couple other incidents that the same thing has happened. [00:06:49] So I think we've done this. [00:06:51] I've done this a couple, I think a total of six times now. [00:06:55] And they've been very successful. [00:06:56] Total, I was just looking through the money raised here, and I think the total amount raised is almost $1,400,000 total. [00:07:06] And that was between six different fundraisers Shiloh Hendrix, a kid called Patrick McClintock, Diane, the bus driver, Cinnabon Crystal. [00:07:18] Yeah, we talked about Cinnabon Crystal here on Radio Renaissance. [00:07:22] Yeah, Cinnabon Crystal, a person named Austin Herber out of North Carolina who was. [00:07:30] Who's in a legal situation? [00:07:31] And then finally, stand with our brave ICE hero, which is the ICE agent in Minneapolis who was involved in the self defense situation and involving, I think her name was Renee Good. [00:07:47] Renee Good, that's right. [00:07:48] Yep. [00:07:49] So, six fundraisers total about $1.4 million for those people. [00:07:54] It's fantastic. [00:07:55] Obviously, the bulk of that money was raised for Shiloh Hendrix. [00:07:59] And of course, she's still facing legal situations. [00:08:01] I believe she's got. [00:08:03] Another opportunity for her attorney to try and get the few remaining charges dismissed coming up here in a week or so, right? [00:08:10] Yeah, that's correct. [00:08:11] And he's submitting a First Amendment article argument in, I believe it's next week, sometime mid next week, to get the charges dismissed on First Amendment grounds. [00:08:24] She was charged with three counts of disorderly. [00:08:26] Each count carries a 30 day max prison sentence and a fine. [00:08:33] It was reduced to two counts, one count for each quote unquote victim. [00:08:38] So the two victims, I believe, are the eight year old Somali who stole from Shiloh and then the Somali who was recording her aggressively. [00:08:50] And he is currently in Somalia. [00:08:52] So I, or he's in Africa. [00:08:53] I'm not sure if he's in Somalia. [00:08:55] But so, yeah, she's facing two counts. [00:08:57] We'll know more sometime next week. [00:09:00] And then if she actually has to go to trial, that will be in June. [00:09:05] I think, I believe June 15th is the trial date. [00:09:08] I will be at the trial if it gets that far. [00:09:14] Well, and all the money that was raised for her is obviously going to both support her family. [00:09:19] She has two children. [00:09:19] She's married. [00:09:21] She's in her mid 30s, I believe, but she also is now having to face what is anywhere in the country just an anti white judiciary that is not something that you want to get entangled with. [00:09:34] And so just tremendous work in terms of being that individual, that engineer behind the scenes to help erect a monetary system. [00:09:49] Mattress for them to fall upon as they tumble through dealing with the world that we all have to navigate through on a daily basis. [00:09:58] And that's what we do here at Radio Renaissance. === Anti-White Judiciary and Borders (13:32) === [00:10:00] We bring all of our listeners who we love, each and every one of you, the opportunity to take a quick dive into what's happening from a very racial perspective in terms of a pro white lens. [00:10:15] As I think we've come closer and closer to that moment where. [00:10:20] Tom, Jared's been doing this for 36 years, New Century Foundation, and you're starting to realize and you're seeing how the benefits of a federal government that actually puts the interests of the American citizens first, what that means. [00:10:35] And we're not going to talk about these stories too long, but I just want to bring up a couple stories. [00:10:40] There was one that pointed out that amnesty requests have now bottomed out versus what was going on during the Biden and Obama administration. [00:10:49] I'm sure you saw that. [00:10:51] That tweet where it was just astonishing to see what happens when you don't have a federal government that is basically stamping any amnesty request for individuals trying to come here and claim asylum. [00:11:06] Right. [00:11:06] I think the approvals have been basically cut down, right? [00:11:09] So I'm sure the requests are still there, but they're there. [00:11:11] They're coming, but the approvals are just almost non existent. [00:11:15] Yeah, which is fantastic. [00:11:18] At the same time, it was the 11th month in a row where there were no encounters of illegal aliens and. [00:11:24] What's called a catch and release, which again shows you what we've talked about when this first started to break last year, early in the infancy of Trump 2.0, his administration. [00:11:35] When that happened, you realize it was just a matter of will and instituting the federal government's charge in protecting the integrity and sovereignty of our borders. [00:11:44] And so, unfortunately, you have again 20 million illegal aliens. [00:11:49] You always hear that number that came during the Biden admin 2021 to 2025, and 40 to 50 million before then. [00:11:56] So On a low end estimate, I would say you probably have 70 million illegal aliens still here. [00:12:02] And we know that horrifying number of, I think it was 54, 55 million visa overstays that was kind of slipped out last year by one of the members of the Trump administration. [00:12:14] So you know that you could control the borders. [00:12:17] And increasingly, as Canada becomes a third world country with just unprecedented levels of migration coming from hostile nations, I think we're going to start to have to focus. [00:12:29] A lot more energy on the northern border, unfortunately. [00:12:33] Yeah, absolutely. [00:12:34] I think it's been a kind of. [00:12:36] I've even seen Democrats have to admit. [00:12:38] I've seen some interviews on YouTube channels where Democrats have basically had to admit that, yeah, I guess there was something going on with the Biden administration because of how drastic the cutoff was after Trump came in office and just magically, you know, the border is secure. [00:12:53] And how is that possible? [00:12:54] It's not like they, you know, they didn't build a new wall all in that time. [00:12:58] They just simply enforced the law. [00:13:00] They didn't let people walk across. [00:13:02] They weren't lifting, I'm sure most. [00:13:04] Most of these people have seen the video of the front end loader that was down there at the Rio Grande, where they were lifting up the barbed wire for the migrants to just walk underneath and just walk in. [00:13:20] So it was literally an open border. [00:13:22] They were letting people just walk in under Biden. [00:13:25] And yeah, there's at least 10 million came in. [00:13:28] I'll never forget when they forced Arizona to remove the cargo boxes that you would see on ships that Arizona had put down as a makeshift border. [00:13:37] Arizona sued because at that point they still had a Republican governor and the federal, uh, Biden's, uh, Biden was victorious in court. [00:13:44] So those had to be removed as well. [00:13:46] And just come on in, guys. [00:13:48] And guess what? [00:13:49] Here's, uh, here's an app. [00:13:50] Here's a phone. [00:13:51] We're going to fly you somewhere. [00:13:52] And it was, it was truly treasonous of what took place between 2021 and 2025. [00:13:59] And I don't believe there's any reason why Biden, regardless of his mental state and, uh, Mayorkas, the DHS head during that time, are not, uh, incarcerated, awaiting trial. [00:14:14] Yeah, Mayorkis for sure. [00:14:17] I know he was brought up in front of Congress and he, you know, immediately when he was under some pressure, he said that he was, you know, they should not question him so hard because he is a victim, you know, he comes from a family of Holocaust survivors. [00:14:34] So that was his excuse. [00:14:35] But yeah, he needs to be prosecuted. [00:14:39] And one of the other examples I was thinking that was so discouraging under Biden was when they stopped. [00:14:46] Remember all the thousands of migrants that were underneath that overpass and they were letting them in. [00:14:51] I forget the location, but people were flying drones. [00:14:55] News agencies were flying drones to document this. [00:14:58] And then they shut down the airspace because they didn't want to have this documented. [00:15:02] And all those people came into the country and they were being flown around the country on the airlines, commercial airlines, with simply just pieces of paper to board planes. [00:15:15] So now we're dealing with that now. [00:15:17] And it's, you know, obviously, it's difficult. [00:15:20] Trying to just clean up the mess just in the short amount of time that Trump is going to be in there just to break even with the damage that was done. [00:15:27] Yeah, especially when the courts make it almost impossible to get through deporting just one individual. [00:15:34] Think about the guy in Maryland. [00:15:35] Do they continue to call him Maryland manned? [00:15:37] I believe he's not sure if he's El Salvadoran or Nicaraguan. [00:15:42] It doesn't matter. [00:15:43] Just send him home. [00:15:44] But there's still a court battle. [00:15:46] And you've had multiple Democrat senators and congressmen, Congress individuals who have. [00:15:54] Advocated on his behalf. [00:15:55] And it's just, you're just watching all this and you're just thinking, you know, this, all these people are our future voters once amnesty is secured. [00:16:04] And you see from the 2024 election what the American people wanted this unbelievable coalition that brought President Trump to a second term, winning the national popular vote and the electoral college convincingly. [00:16:20] And one of the great things that we've seen from all of the immigrant crackdown, of course, all across the country, rents are dropping. [00:16:29] For individuals trying to find a home because you have less competition. [00:16:36] And, you know, it's simple supply and demand economics. [00:16:40] If there's greater supply of housing and the demand isn't there, guess what's going to happen? [00:16:44] The price is going to come down. [00:16:46] If you have infinity immigration, whether it's legal, illegal, or refugee resettlement, I mean, my goodness, the price of housing is going to go up because it's a finite resource. [00:16:57] So I was reading Brian Gerdusky, who's a really good person to follow on. [00:17:01] Twitter. [00:17:01] It's just at Ryan Gurdusky. [00:17:03] And he broke down the CDC data, Tom, on births for February. [00:17:08] And he noted if you look at the map, it's the first time in, I hate to say this, but decades that the white birth rate for a majority of states is actually above 50% for those states. [00:17:25] And I'm not sure if you've had a chance to look at that map. [00:17:28] Obviously, places like California and Texas, you're talking about 20 to 29% of the Of the births are for white children, but places all across the country, you're talking into the 70 to 79, 80 to 89 percentile of births. [00:17:47] And that is a complete departure from what we've seen for regrettably decades. [00:17:52] I mean, when you come across a number, Tom, where the number of children, I think under 18 in Texas is something like 22%, those are pretty harrowing numbers. [00:18:05] In regards to what's coming for the electorate. [00:18:08] Yeah, yeah, no, that's a very white pill. [00:18:10] It's nice to see that. [00:18:12] I think that has to do with the racial awakening. [00:18:15] I hope that has to do with the racial awakening because I don't think people really feel that much more comfortable because of all the issues that we're dealing with today. [00:18:25] I mean, this is not the golden age as far as I can tell. [00:18:30] So I think this is more of a people waking up to the fact that they need to have children. [00:18:36] Or things are going to get a lot worse. [00:18:38] And I hope it has to do with the racial awakening of white people finally. [00:18:42] Well, Fugitive Caesar, another great person to follow on Twitter, it's at TomBrady5. [00:18:48] Tom is spelled T H O M, Brady, the numeral five. [00:18:52] He responded to Gerdusky's tweet by writing this 50 million mass deportations, and there will be a huge increase in productivity, white births, GDP, technological innovation, military power, and widespread optimism like you have never seen before in human history. [00:19:08] Take the boot. [00:19:09] Off our neck. [00:19:10] I mean, Tom, you and I were born well after the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Hart Seller Act of 1965. [00:19:17] As Sam Dixon and I noted on a recent podcast, The White Man's Library, check it out. [00:19:24] It's the newest addition to the American Renaissance family of podcasts. [00:19:29] That in The Dispossessed Majority, which was written in 1972, America, the census in 1970 showed the country at 88% white. [00:19:38] So, a country of 203 million, 88% of the people were white. [00:19:42] And you think about all that was happening in terms of the optimism for the future. [00:19:49] And, you know, there was nihilism for what had happened in the 60s, Vietnam. [00:19:55] But it was really as you started to see immigration, as you started to see racial aliens being brought to the country and emboldened with ethnic grievances and ethnic structures in place that could promote their interests, because you basically had. [00:20:15] The black population that was a bludgeon to destroy the social capital that it took whites generations to build in cities all across the country. [00:20:27] And that's, of course, I believe, and I know Mr. Taylor does, Tom, that's one of the most important things we need to be talking about the just sheer atrocity of the white wealth that was decimated as the implementation of the Civil Rights Act. [00:20:47] Along with the one two punch of the way that our immigration was completely changed. [00:20:53] And then, as illegal immigration became a huge problem, just the white wealth that was lost as whites could no longer maintain the integrity of their communities, their neighborhoods, their small businesses, and they were forced to flee the cities that their parents, their grandparents had lived in, and they had potentially had that house passed on to them. [00:21:12] And now it made no sense to stay in a place like New York or Boston or Philadelphia, Memphis, Atlanta, et cetera. [00:21:20] Yeah, I mean, it was bad enough having to deal with. [00:21:23] Let's just be honest. [00:21:24] It was bad enough just dealing with the blacks. [00:21:26] So, you know, white people had managed to deal with the blacks through different ways, you know, segregation, those types of things. [00:21:35] And then once that was removed, that wasn't enough. [00:21:40] Then they had to change the Immigration Act and then bring in more cultures that are alien cultures, African cultures, Indian cultures, and make it a multicultural America, not just with. [00:21:53] Sub Saharan Africans, but also Hindus. [00:21:57] And that's what we're seeing today. [00:21:59] And it's just completely unsustainable. [00:22:01] And it's just bludgeoning white people more and more, wearing white people down. [00:22:06] And it takes its toll. [00:22:08] People have to constantly move. [00:22:10] They have to practice white flight, as they call it. [00:22:13] And the big cities are systematically destroyed. [00:22:19] And I'm in the process of practicing white flight myself. [00:22:22] So I'm going to be leaving Florida soon. [00:22:26] I don't, you know, the demographics in Florida are pretty bleak, even though we have a good Republican governor. [00:22:32] But yeah, that's what white people have to deal with today. [00:22:36] Yeah. [00:22:36] And that's one of the factors that goes into family, affordable family formation that Steve Saylor's always talked about how whoever can unlock that has the key to generational power in terms of people just being able to live, to raise a family. [00:22:51] You see posts all the time of people on Twitter talking about how in the 80s, there was one that stuck out in my mind of how a job at Macy's. [00:22:59] Could be a job that you could have working within that department store and raise a family and retire, you know, have dignity and be able to do that. [00:23:07] And that's just impossible when every action that you take, you know, implicitly you have to factor in how demographics are going to impact your children's education, the equity in your home, whether it's going to appreciate or depreciate. [00:23:28] It's all factored into race, which of course we're not supposed to take into consideration. === America First Legal Filings (04:37) === [00:23:33] And yet, this past week on Twitter, again, we focus on X guys because that's where the most important conversations are happening, where you're seeing the way that people interact with the ideas of raising white racial consciousness. [00:23:48] And inadvertently, Tom, the Boston Red Sox Fenway Park Twitter account, I think, ignited a firestorm for people who saw a video for our listeners who have not seen this video. [00:24:03] Opening day for baseball just took place, Major League Baseball, and the Boston Red Sox posted a video of Fenway Park and the fans who attended the games. [00:24:13] It was probably the late 1950s. [00:24:15] It doesn't say a date, but all you see is a sea of well dressed, well mannered, happy, optimistic looking white people because Boston at that point was 95% white. [00:24:28] And it didn't get the reaction that I think the Fenway Park. [00:24:34] Social media manager was hoping in terms of getting anticipation for that season's first pitch. [00:24:41] But it was, why can't we go back to the game that you're showing in that country, that Boston? [00:24:47] And we get to see that first pitch when Boston looked like one of the greatest, most magnetic cities in the world. [00:24:55] Yeah, it was safe to go to the games. [00:24:56] It was safe to park. [00:24:58] It was safe to walk. [00:24:59] Everyone was stressed differently. [00:25:01] I saw the video and you're right. [00:25:03] They disabled the comments on that video. [00:25:07] So you can't even comment because the comments were too based to that post. [00:25:12] That was funny. [00:25:13] So you know we're getting the right response when they have to turn off the comments. [00:25:18] Well, speaking of the right response, before we move forward, we love each and every one of you, the listeners we have. [00:25:25] Here at Radio Renaissance, I was thinking back how about six years ago, back in 2020, YouTube, we actually had a YouTube channel, Tom, and it had about 38,000 subscribers. [00:25:36] We never promoted it. [00:25:37] And I always will lament to Mr. Taylor about how that channel would probably be around 300 to 400,000, maybe even 500,000 subscribers now. [00:25:46] Who knows where it could be if you didn't have censorship? [00:25:49] And we appreciate each and every one of you. [00:25:52] We got a couple comments we'll read real quick before we move on to our podcast. [00:25:59] Uh, comment one comes from a listener who said, Hey, I'm sure you'll get a plethora of corrections on this one. [00:26:05] Stephen Miller's legal group is America First Legal. [00:26:08] I'm a constant donor as they are always suing some miscreant and winning. [00:26:12] Yes, Mr. Taylor and I were talking about Stephen Miller's legal group, America First Legal. [00:26:19] And I believe we called it America First, but we couldn't remember that last portion. [00:26:23] And it is America First Legal. [00:26:24] They are doing incredible work. [00:26:26] And we do appreciate what they are doing to fight against discrimination, what used to be called reverse discrimination. [00:26:33] Tom, but it's really just straight up anti white discrimination. [00:26:36] And they have done a great job in just simply addressing that fact and not sugarcoating the language, just saying quite clearly and concisely in their filings, this is anti white. [00:26:48] And that's that step that was always holding people back. [00:26:52] And it used to always be, oh, this is reverse discrimination. [00:26:55] Or imagine if the roles were reversed. [00:26:57] It's like, well, they're not reversed. [00:26:59] This is the exercising of state power to diminish the ability of whites to even think about engaging. [00:27:08] In their collective interest, which is what America once was. [00:27:11] Right. [00:27:12] Those laws are. [00:27:14] They use selective enforcement to punish white people because they don't apply the laws standardly across all races. [00:27:23] I know America First Legal was. [00:27:26] I'm not exactly sure what successes they have because I don't follow all their legal victories, but I know they've been doing good work, like the reader says. [00:27:37] They've been prosecuting anti white discrimination, most importantly. [00:27:42] We have one more comment. [00:27:43] I'll be brief on this one because it was long, but we do want to mention it. [00:27:46] A couple podcasts back, both of you, two good gentlemen, confessed to an ignorance on the novelist Lionel Shriver in relation to her. [00:27:53] Yes, she is a she. [00:27:55] Latest novel, A Better Life. [00:27:57] She shot to global prominence in a Hollywood film in 2003 with her novel, We Need to Talk About Kevin, about a fictional school massacre. [00:28:04] And it is written from the first person perspective of a mother of her emotionally detached teenage killer son. === Lionel Shriver's A Better Life (06:21) === [00:28:10] Hey, not my literary cup of tea. [00:28:12] So I passed on her whole. [00:28:17] I can never pronounce this word. [00:28:20] I don't know how to say that. [00:28:22] Over? [00:28:24] Gosh, Mr. Taylor's going to kill me because this is a French term and it basically is her. [00:28:29] I have, so I have passed on her whole resume, on her whole litany of books she's written. [00:28:36] And I'm just going to use that as a synonym until I discovered that she was a regular columnist for the UK Spectator magazine, who writes a Seabrick broadsides against various woke lunacies against immigration. [00:28:46] A Better Life is apparently, again, I haven't read it, about illegal immigrants in New York during the Biden immigration disaster, in which a white pro immigrant individual who proposes to open her home to shelter one of the cultural enrichers meets resistance from her Fox News consuming son, who believes the Great Replacement isn't a conspiracy theory but a real thing. [00:29:06] According to one reviewer, a glorious, funny satire on illegal immigration, in which right wingers are shown as attractive and likable and the liberals as odd and foolish. [00:29:16] I am almost sold in the book were it not for Shriver's chronic, albeit submerged, Trump derangement syndrome, her reticence on legal immigration, and her total silence on anything to do with race. [00:29:30] I may yet read it because the novel has triggered all the right people, because judging by reviews such as The Atlantic, Shriver tackles immigration and goes off the rails. [00:29:39] The Spectator, Trumpians will love it, others will loathe it. [00:29:42] The New York Times, sour and hectoring. [00:29:44] The Kirkus Review, Shriver, who's flirted with hard right all at Ideology cozies up to the great replacement conspiracy theory. [00:29:51] This rehash of the camp of the saints is just hackneyed, paranoid xenophobia. [00:29:56] Is there any other kind that you would want to celebrate, Mr. Hennessy? [00:30:02] Well, her worst book by award margin. [00:30:05] It may be worth borrowing a copy from the library on this basis alone. [00:30:09] If it is any good, I'd be happy to let you know. [00:30:11] Well, Mr. Listener, please let us know. [00:30:14] It sounds like this is a book that, again, it's fiction. [00:30:18] But it's something that I would recommend that you go ahead and read based on the criticism that received from those literary titans who are always ready to praise Ibram Kindi's latest nonfiction book. [00:30:33] It's stuff like this that will hopefully cause some of her readers to pause as they're perusing the prose and think, huh, that actually might be correct. [00:30:45] Maybe this world that we're living in isn't that great. [00:30:47] And then perhaps they'll see that Boston Red Sox video from the 50s and have that catharsis. [00:30:52] So, Real quick, I'll make this fast. [00:30:55] For those of you who would like to get in touch with us, corrections, criticism, or story ideas, shoot an email over to me because we live here at protonmail.com. [00:31:06] Once again, that's because we live here at protonmail.com. [00:31:09] And more importantly, make sure you follow myself at Twitter at X. [00:31:15] That handle is at BWLH underscore because we live here. [00:31:24] Underscore. [00:31:25] So at BWLH underscore and follow Tom Hennessy at Twitter. [00:31:32] What is that Twitter handle? [00:31:33] Yeah, Tom Hennessy. [00:31:36] And that's S E Y at the end, 69. [00:31:40] If you just type in Tom Hennessy, it should come up. [00:31:44] One interesting thing about that fictional story was that the grape replacement theory came from her son consuming Fox News, which is, I'm not sure if that's accurate, but that's interesting. [00:31:56] I sure wish the grape replacement theory came from Fox News. [00:32:01] That would be pretty based. [00:32:02] Well, hopefully they'll start talking about it more and more because that apparently is the only news source that the president consumes on a daily basis. [00:32:12] I've long heard that it's whoever engages with President Trump last that can convince him of what needs to be pursued in terms of policy. [00:32:24] So hopefully he'll watch a. [00:32:26] He'll watch a. [00:32:28] He'll want rhetoric. [00:32:29] That's the news. [00:32:30] They just talked about the great replacement, and he'll be like, I. [00:32:33] I didn't know that New York City was 95% white in 1950. [00:32:37] What has happened? [00:32:37] It's only 33% white now. [00:32:40] That's the reason why Mondani is the mayor. [00:32:42] Holy cow, we've got to do something. [00:32:45] So, anyway, send a DM to Laura Loomer. [00:32:49] You know, Laura Loomer was a prior speaker years ago that was a far different. [00:32:54] She spoke actually. [00:32:54] I don't know if you know this, Tom. [00:32:56] She spoke at an AR conference after she lost for the second time in her race for the House of Representatives. [00:33:05] There in Florida. [00:33:06] And that's something no one ever talks about as criticism of Loomer, which I find fascinating. [00:33:12] And the same thing with a guy who I am a huge fan of, Anthony Cumio, who used to be on that great show, Opium Anthony, one of the top radio personalities. [00:33:24] Now he's back on WABC, which is probably the biggest radio station in the world with a show. [00:33:30] And he's done great work with Compound Media. [00:33:32] Anthony Cumio is one of the great people to follow. [00:33:35] Back in 2024, he was the keynote speaker. [00:33:38] After the banquet at the New Century Foundation conference there in Tennessee, he did a great job, just absolutely hysterical, a fearless, audacious dude. [00:33:48] That's about the greatest compliment I can give someone a fearless, audacious dude who's vigilant, but he's funny at the same time and just a tremendous guy. [00:33:59] He's a comedian, right? [00:34:01] He's a comedian, he's just a radio personality. [00:34:04] I mean, he does both. [00:34:06] Comedy is obviously his forte, and he's quite good at it. [00:34:10] The stories he had to tell were quite funny. [00:34:13] I'm sure that video is available on the Amran Rumble channel. [00:34:17] Unfortunately, again, they're not on YouTube at all. [00:34:19] And even though I've pushed certain individuals to try and get back on YouTube, I'm sure that they'd get the ban hammer pretty quickly. [00:34:27] But speaking of hammers, I'm going to let you take this one. === Somali Bathhouse Propaganda Push (15:50) === [00:34:31] Tell us about what is going on in Minneapolis. [00:34:39] In regards to. [00:34:41] Just go ahead and read the headline of the story from what I sent you over the notes. [00:34:45] Oh, yeah. [00:34:45] Go ahead and read down because this is one of those moments when you look back at what happened in the 1980s. [00:34:52] And Tom, I'll preface this. [00:34:54] One of the more important books I ever read in my life was The Myth of Heterosexual AIDS. [00:34:59] It's a very controversial book, even when it was published. [00:35:03] And it's very much worth getting. [00:35:06] And again, this is something that. [00:35:10] The math, when I read a passage from that book and what it documented, I mean, there's a reason why bathhouses were closed nationwide. [00:35:22] And it was to basically keep alive these individuals who were dying at rates almost beyond belief. [00:35:31] And yet this story is almost beyond belief. [00:35:34] So tell us what's happening in Minneapolis. [00:35:36] Yeah, Minneapolis is pushing to legalize sex bathhouses for gay Somali immigrants. [00:35:45] Minneapolis city leaders are barreling ahead with plans to legalize adult bathhouses and sex venues, whatever that is, where consenting adults can engage in sexual activity, scrapping a 38 year ban enacted during the AIDS epidemic. [00:36:02] The push driven by activists comes as the gay Somali community in Minneapolis has been clamoring to legalize bathhouses. [00:36:11] Now, stop for just one second. [00:36:12] Stop for just one second. [00:36:15] 38 years ago, what's that, 1988? [00:36:22] There are no Somalis in Minnesota. [00:36:23] There are no Somalis in Minneapolis. [00:36:25] The people who survived the epidemic, you know, they realized that there was a reason these needed to be shut down. [00:36:33] And now here you have a population of I think you've documented it. [00:36:36] It's probably about 140,000 to 180,000, maybe even above 200,000 Somalis spread across the state of Minnesota, largely in the Minneapolis St. Paul area. [00:36:50] Right. [00:36:52] And none of them were there before 1992, 1993. [00:36:55] 1993. [00:36:57] I always joke with people because I'm of that age when Mighty Ducks was a big film. [00:37:01] And when that movie came out, there were no Somalis. [00:37:06] Minneapolis. [00:37:07] And yet now you have enough Somalis in Minneapolis, in the state of Minnesota, to have a smaller minority of that group now push for and advocate on behalf of the gay Somali community to reopen bathhouses. [00:37:27] I mean, talk about the unintended consequences of refugee resettlement. [00:37:31] And it makes me wonder does Mogadishu have an area of the city in Somalia where there is a twin? [00:37:40] Gay Somali community with bathhouses. [00:37:44] I mean, I just, I guess I've never really understood the purpose of the bathhouse. [00:37:49] No, I never even thought about it except for when I'd read of the myth of heterosexual AIDS. [00:37:55] And I'm like, these existed? [00:37:57] Like, what? [00:37:58] Right. [00:37:59] And what, I mean, what's wrong with someone's home? [00:38:02] You know, like I thought that that kind of stuff was done in your own house, not, you know, in a public venue. [00:38:08] And this is specifically advocating for, um, A place where adults can engage in sexual activity, you know, just not at home and in the public or, you know, in some sort of, you know, building or something that people just go into and engage. [00:38:23] This is what the purpose of this place is to engage in gay sex or something that's very degenerate. [00:38:30] Yeah. [00:38:31] And as you go through this article, which was on Zero Hedge, largely from the New York Post, go and tell us what the purpose of all this is. [00:38:41] The purpose, let's see. [00:38:43] The push driven by activists, city leaders are considering the proposal to allow patrons to engage in sexual intercourse in the venues, the New York Post reports. [00:38:51] The latest development underscores the deepening assimilation issues in the city, transformed by mass Somali immigration. [00:38:58] The Minneapolis City Council has referred a package of four proposed ordinances to staff for further development. [00:39:06] These include creating licensing, so, licensing for these sex venues, I guess, and business regulations for adult sex venues. [00:39:13] To facilitate sexual activity between consenting adults. [00:39:17] Updating zoning codes for sexually oriented businesses. [00:39:21] This sounds like Weimar Republic stuff. [00:39:25] With a Somali bent. [00:39:27] Yeah, I mean, this is even worse. [00:39:30] Try to see which other are the big points of this article without reading all of it. [00:39:36] Council City Jason Chavez supported referring the measures saying LGBTQIA gathering spaces, including bathhouses, have long been targeted by criminalization and policing, and our communities have paid a devastating price for that. [00:39:54] That's why we're referring this to staff to begin building policy alongside community members and stakeholders. [00:40:03] So the Somali community, I wasn't aware that the Somali community has so many. [00:40:08] Gay people wanting to partake in sex in bathhouses, but apparently so. [00:40:14] I mean, you're reading through and you learn from this article that Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis has indicated he supports continued exploration of the issue. [00:40:25] Perhaps he'll go partake, like he took, like he went to the restaurant and there's a famous video and pictures of him eating Somali cuisine and he doesn't look too happy doing it, but he has to do it. [00:40:37] He has to, you know, A perfunctory act, a performative act. [00:40:41] But the original 1988 ban drew backing even from within the LGBTQ community at the time. [00:40:48] I don't think it was called the LGBTQ community back in 1988, but whatever. [00:40:53] Including the city's first openly gay council member, Brian Coyle, who backed the measure before his death from age related publications in 1991. [00:41:03] You can't make this stuff up. [00:41:05] Activists now claim the rules disproportionately harmed same sex partnerships and people with HIV/AIDS while driving gatherings into unsafe. [00:41:13] Private spaces. [00:41:13] Well, I hate to say this, but it sounds like the bathhouses were unsafe public spaces. [00:41:18] Recent coverage confirms the council delayed full debate on the ordinances this week, but remains committed to directing staff research. [00:41:24] Now, critics view the effort, Tom, as emblematic of misplaced priorities while neighborhoods struggle with the social and economic fallout of rapid demographic change, including documented fraud schemes and parallel economies that the Somalis have created, whether it's feeding the future, [00:41:40] whether it's the autism scandal, Medicaid, Medicare scandals, totaling, and the Tens of billions, if not hundreds of billions of dollars, the focus shifts to licensing orgy venues and updating stigmatizing language in city codes. [00:41:56] Now, here's a tweet that I found, which I think it's important to read because a lot of people talk about this was in response to the legalization of adult bathhouses and sex venues for Minneapolis, primarily for the Somali community. [00:42:13] And council member Jason Chavez said the 1988 ban wasn't a neutral policy. [00:42:19] It was written during a moral panic targeting gay men. [00:42:23] An individual on Twitter pointed this out. [00:42:25] It wasn't a moral panic. [00:42:26] AIDS literally killed every 10th gay man during the peak of the AIDS crisis. [00:42:32] In the US, by 1995, one gay man in nine had been diagnosed with AIDS, one in 15 had died, and 10% of the 1.6 million men aged 25 to 44 who identified as gay had died. [00:42:46] A literal decimation of this cohort born between 1951 and 1970. [00:42:52] In 1990, AIDS caused 61% of all deaths of men. [00:42:56] Age 25 to 44 in San Francisco, it was 35%. [00:43:01] I'm sorry, it was 61% in San Francisco, 35% in New York, 51% in Fort Lauderdale, 32% in Boston, 33% in Washington, D.C., 39% in Seattle, 34% in Dallas, 38% in Atlanta, 43% in Miami. [00:43:17] And now, because there's a Somali community that you can't say no to in a state like Minneapolis, you've basically rearranged every priority to placate this. [00:43:28] Population group that didn't even exist in Minneapolis until 1993. [00:43:34] There's now large enough of an advocacy organization of gay Somalis to say, hey, open up the bathhouses again. [00:43:47] And if you don't, you're a racist. [00:43:48] You're not inclusive. [00:43:49] And it's like, well, hey, wait, wait. [00:43:51] Don't you see the data? [00:43:52] They're like, no, we don't care. [00:43:54] I mean, the moral panic is why is there one Somali in America? [00:43:58] And this is all you have to go back to say because. [00:44:03] It's an insanity that borders on the darkest writings of H.P. Lovecraft. [00:44:09] It's like, wait a second, this just happened 38 years ago. [00:44:12] There's a reason these were shut down. [00:44:13] It's like, nope, we're Somalis. [00:44:15] We're gay Somalis. [00:44:16] We've got the Trump card, right? [00:44:18] So, yeah. [00:44:20] Well, I remember when I was a teenager, I think I looked this up, but I was curious. [00:44:24] You know, I don't exactly know when this was happening. [00:44:27] I want to say it was the early 90s, maybe mid 90s. [00:44:30] There was a huge propaganda push about HIV. [00:44:33] There was. [00:44:34] I remember this. [00:44:35] And I You know, I thought that it was like COVID. [00:44:38] Like, I thought, you know, if I just believed what they were telling me, I thought HIV was going around everywhere. [00:44:43] I was, you know, I was a little curious to see, like, geez, if I have sex with a woman, am I going to get AIDS? [00:44:51] Like, I have to, you know, wear protection. [00:44:53] I have to do all these things, or I'm going to, you know, that's how they made it sound. [00:44:56] And I started Googling, looking into the research. [00:44:59] And then I realized that the dirty secret was that it was almost entirely gay people and mostly blacks. [00:45:07] It was like black gays were your number one hotspot for AIDS and HIV, and then gay men. [00:45:13] And outside of that, if you're just a heterosexual couple or you're just a man and you want to have relations with a woman, the chance of getting HIV is actually relatively low. [00:45:30] It's very, very, very slim. [00:45:33] And it's not saying you shouldn't take precautions, obviously, but it wasn't to the level that the news media was. [00:45:41] purporting it to be. [00:45:43] There's a book that I read years ago called Best Nightmare on Earth A Life in Haiti. [00:45:50] And it is by a gentleman by the name of Herbert Gold. [00:45:54] And it discusses his journeys in Haiti, people he met. [00:45:58] It's a travelogue, but it talks about how Haiti used to be a place in the 1970s and 80s for sex tourism. [00:46:05] And Haiti was hit unbelievably hard by the epidemic of HIV. [00:46:12] And obviously, that ended overnight. [00:46:14] And it is a devastating book. [00:46:16] It's almost like the book that. [00:46:18] Sam Dixon and I just discussed. [00:46:20] It's an update in a lot of ways because it's written 100 years after the book by St. John that we discussed on the White Man's Library Haiti or the Black Republic, which is one of the quintessential books you need to read to understand that we knew the reality of race and the implications of ignoring the reality of race at the end of the 19th century. [00:46:43] And it's a book that I would recommend reading if you have a strong stomach. [00:46:47] The author actually. [00:46:49] Was a member, I think his wife was a member of High Society. [00:46:52] She ended up divorcing him because of all of the negative fallout that happened from his publication of Best Nightmare on Earth, A Life in Haiti. [00:47:01] And it's crazy to think that there are now, what, 400,000 Haitians who are still protected by TPS, which one judge has said, Judge Reyes has said, we're not going to let you get rid of all these Haitians. [00:47:13] Sorry, Trump administration. [00:47:14] They've got to stay in Springfield. [00:47:16] And the same thing with TPS for Somalis and Venezuela. [00:47:19] I mean, it's almost as if the country is just an incubator for every just antithetical idea known to develop society, all to handcuff us so that we are dragged back down to the Earth at the same time that the Artemis II just sent four astronauts farther into space for humans than has ever happened. [00:47:42] In fact, they splashed down later today. [00:47:44] But speaking of which, let's go to a white pill and we'll be quick on this story because time always flies and we try and stay on topic here. [00:47:51] This is a story, Tom, that I. I've been thinking a lot about because you haven't heard the just. [00:48:00] Vitriolic reaction like you did when the first troop of South Africans, white South Africans, arrived. [00:48:09] Do you remember when the first, I think it was maybe 50 to 60 white South Africans were brought to the United States in the middle part of last year? [00:48:19] And it was a bunch of families all happy. [00:48:22] They were all waving the American flag. [00:48:24] And the reaction from the left, from the corporate media, you would have thought that this outraged. [00:48:29] They were outraged. [00:48:31] It was, to me, it was the most. [00:48:34] Defining moment in clearly articulating what refugee resettlement had been prior to this reversal. [00:48:44] It was all about making life worse for white people in America. [00:48:47] Because here you have a country, South Africa, since 1994, it's been dominated by black elected officials who have done everything they can to dismantle civilization in South Africa, to uphold black economic empowerment, to maintain black hegemony. [00:49:05] And now, Now you have a story that the BBC reported. [00:49:11] US has let in 4,499 refugees since October of 2025. [00:49:18] All but three were South African. [00:49:21] So that means that 4,496 refugees out of 4,499 refugees were white Afrikaners, South Africans escaping and being resettled in the United States. [00:49:38] And you've seen the numbers that our friend Oilfield Rando has been putting up on his fantastic new website, MorseResearch.org. [00:49:47] I highly recommend everybody stop what you're doing and write this down. [00:49:51] Go to it in your browser, morceresource.org. [00:49:56] What he's done is nothing short of a miracle. [00:49:58] He's developed a program, a software where you can look up any county in the country, any zip code, and you can see how many refugees have been brought to that state, that county, that city. [00:50:11] And you can find out the country of origin. [00:50:13] You can find out the group that resettled them. [00:50:15] And you can find out the amount of money that was procured from the federal government for these resettlement agencies. === Multiculturalism and Refugee Data (15:19) === [00:50:22] To bring Congolese, Senegalese, Ivory Coastians, Chadians, Afghanis, Somalis. [00:50:31] You name the country from the third world, you will find out how many are in your little hamlet wherever you live, and you'll find out which agencies are making hundreds of millions of dollars to do it. [00:50:42] And if you were to look at the math, Tom, I think you'd be hard pressed to find a year where three white people were brought in, maybe since the Ukraine Russia conflict. [00:50:53] In 2022, there's a number of Ukrainians. [00:50:57] But before that, you could probably count on one hand the number of whites that were brought in in a fiscal year. [00:51:03] Yeah, absolutely. [00:51:04] And the website is M O R S E, M O R S E research altogether.org. [00:51:11] And basically, this just gives you a window of the 1980 Refugee Act. [00:51:17] Yeah. [00:51:18] So the Refugee Act of 1980, which had bipartisan support in Congress, that was passed and that enabled all of these refugees to be selected by the or these. [00:51:28] Allocations for refugees to be set aside, and then the president or somebody under the president determines where are we going to get these refugees from. [00:51:40] And throughout history, I think since its passing, it's been mostly sub Saharan Africans. [00:51:46] And so this website allows you to see exactly how many of these mostly Africans have been, and it shows you where in Africa they're from the Congo, the Congolese, or whoever. [00:52:01] Have been inserted into, you know, white areas, mostly white areas, but all over America, unfortunately. [00:52:08] And obviously, each, each, all of these refugees have access to family reunification, which usually times the number by three or four. [00:52:18] Once they bring in all their extended families, they end up getting voting rights and they have full access to welfare. [00:52:23] So they're completely subsidized by us, by the taxpayers. [00:52:29] Yeah, I believe there's been about 122,000 Congolese resettled all across the country, primarily in Kentucky and Idaho since 2012. [00:52:40] And that's all documented by MorseResearch.org, named after Samuel Morse. [00:52:47] It's a fantastic site. [00:52:48] But we learned that since 2025, again, all but three who were from Afghanistan were white South Africans in the last full fiscal year of the Biden administration, which started in October 2023. [00:53:01] 125,000 people were accepted from 85 countries. [00:53:05] And ladies and gentlemen, I can tell you that not one of those was a white South African. [00:53:08] And if you compound that with the prior three years of his administration, of the fiscal year, you're talking about 375,000 to 400,000 people from 85 countries, exclusively almost non white, except for, you know, there was a. [00:53:30] A smattering of Ukrainians, like, of course, Irina Zaruska. [00:53:34] Trump in 2025 halted all refugee admissions, including applicants from war zones, but allowed Afrikaners, a white minority group he said was persecuted, to seek resettlement. [00:53:45] Of course, the black government of South Africa objected to this characterization. [00:53:49] Trump said it would help strengthen national security and public safety. [00:53:53] Priority was given to Afrikaners, South Africans, and other victims of illegal or unjust discrimination in their respective homelands. [00:54:00] In fact, Tom and dear listener, The Trump administration is trying to bring in 50,000 to 60,000 white South Africans, Afrikaners, not British, not the British whites. [00:54:11] It's exclusively Afrikaners. [00:54:12] And they're going to try and get that done by, I want to say, October when the new fiscal year starts. [00:54:18] So they've got an aggressive plan to bring in at least potentially 56,000 more Afrikaners. [00:54:25] Diplomatic tensions between Pretoria and D.C. have risen since Trump returned to the White House. [00:54:30] We all know that a year ago, South Africa's ambassador in the U.S., Ibram Rasool, was expelled after accusing Trump of. [00:54:37] Mobilizing the supremacism and trying to project white victimhood as a dog whistle. [00:54:43] Then in the Oval Office? [00:54:45] Go ahead. [00:54:45] Well, I was just thinking, you know, the South African governments are extremely upset with this because this is their tax cattle. [00:54:54] So, you know, if you remove the productive, high IQ people that build everything, maintain the infrastructure, build the water pipes, and maintain the electricity and everything else, the blacks in South Africa know what's going on and they don't like the fact that the whites are leaving because they can't follow them. [00:55:14] That's why they're upset. [00:55:16] 100% right. [00:55:17] No, 100% right. [00:55:19] We all remember back in May when Trump confronted his South African counterpart, Saiwo Ramfosa, where he claimed that white farmers in South Africa were targets of persecution and genocide. [00:55:29] He tried to refute Trump's assertion and was backed by John Stonhewson, the white leader of the Democratic Alliance, which is part of a coalition government. [00:55:37] Certainly, the majority of South Africa's commercial and smallholder farmers really do want to stay in South Africa and make it work. [00:55:43] In October, the South African government criticized a U.S. decision to prioritize refugee applications. [00:55:48] From white South Africans saying claims of white genocide have been widely discredited and lacked reliable evidence. [00:55:55] Of course, that's just what the state would say. [00:55:58] We all know that it is the exact opposite. [00:56:01] Great thing is, 543 of these Afrikaners are now living in Texas. [00:56:07] That's the highest concentration. [00:56:09] And I'm sure they're all productive and wonderful citizens. [00:56:12] If we recall that photo that you saw of the initial group that were brought into the country, they were all waving the American flag, they were all happy, crying. [00:56:22] Because they knew that the horrors that they faced and the unbelievable security mechanisms that were necessary to construct to keep their families safe, whether it was almost military enhanced cars to drive around Johannesburg, Pretoria, Cape Town to get to their domiciles or to then secure their domiciles with multiple layers of security measures. [00:56:49] It's just, this is not a way to live. [00:56:50] And it is a reminder of what's coming to the United States. [00:56:53] Unless we continue to see drastic measures put in place, Tom. [00:56:57] We are shockingly running out of time. [00:56:59] And so we're going to try and get to one more story. [00:57:02] Tom, if you will indulge me, we've got about three minutes left here. [00:57:07] I'll go quick here, but I want to get your thoughts on this because it's really important. [00:57:10] Zero Hedge reports that Mayor Mondani has unveiled a racial equity plan which would direct city resources to black and brown New Yorkers. [00:57:21] Now, New York is about 33% white now, it's about 20% black. [00:57:25] Of course, New York in 1950 was 90% white. [00:57:29] About 90% white. [00:57:30] And the Mohammedan mayor of New York City, I believe he's an Indian Muslim, Zoran Mandani, he's introduced this racial equity plan directing city resources to black and brown New Yorkers in an attempt to confront institutional and systemic racism within our city. [00:57:48] Now, Tom, my question to you is hasn't this been replicated in every major city across the country once a black or brown individual takes power or a white liberal who wants to utilize state power? [00:58:03] To basically final resources exclusively to the patrons that put him in office. [00:58:10] Absolutely. [00:58:11] Yeah. [00:58:11] They're all egalitarians until they get in charge. [00:58:13] And then all of a sudden, it's, you know, these people are more important than the other people. [00:58:19] And identity politics obviously takes, they've always been practicing identity politics, but as soon as they get in power, they really turn it up. [00:58:28] So, yeah, racial equality. [00:58:30] I mean, we all know what that means. [00:58:32] What happened to the race is just a social construct? [00:58:35] That's what I, you know, what happened to that? [00:58:38] Well, I'll tell you what the racial equity plan and true cost of living. [00:58:42] Living measure prompted a warning from U.S. Assistant Attorney General Armeet Dillon, who I think she's done a fantastic job, who called the measure fishy and promised to take a closer look at its legality under current civil rights laws. [00:58:54] The Daily Caller reported that Mondani told reporters While today's true cost of living measure confirms that the affordability crisis touches every corner of our city, we know that these effects are not applied evenly. [00:59:05] So often it is black and brown New Yorkers who are hit the hardest. [00:59:08] This preliminary racial equity plan is the first step in developing a whole of government approach to tackling that reality. [00:59:14] Translated, white people, They're coming for the equity in your home. [00:59:19] New York City Chief Equity Officer. [00:59:21] You know, if you're in a city that has a Chief Equity Officer, it's probably time that you consider leaving. [00:59:28] But especially when the Chief Equity Officer's name is Afui Ada Mensa. [00:59:35] That's the individual who's going to be overseeing this project, Tom and dear listener. [00:59:40] Afui Ada Mensa. [00:59:42] Probably not a good sign. [00:59:43] No, that person has been tasked with guiding the plan, focusing on narrowing the wealth gap. [00:59:49] And claims that white New Yorkers have a median net worth roughly 15 times higher than black New Yorkers. [00:59:55] The goal of the initiative includes expanding access to capital for businesses in underserved areas, using a racial equity framework to guide investment, and increasing access to primary health care and reducing pollution in communities of color. [01:00:11] Yeah, when I saw this story come out, I just think my reply was Has Madami ever been to like a Walmart? [01:00:17] Has he ever walked inside of a Walmart? [01:00:19] I mean, he can see the differences between the races very easily, and he can see why blacks are not so successful. [01:00:27] If you just go into a Walmart, you can see the answer. [01:00:31] It will answer a lot of his questions of so called racial inequality. [01:00:36] It's just funny how any kind of difference in outcome is immediately because of the evil white. [01:00:42] Person, or does this discrimination, or somehow we have some sort of magic that we're doing to make us more successful? [01:00:49] And then now we have to be oppressed because we're more successful. [01:00:52] It's extraordinary to read this because you see a glimpse of what's coming. [01:00:57] As whites were replaced in New York, I read a story that the way that the mayor's election happened in New York, it's a very different system. [01:01:08] It's not just individual voting, but nobody, even within Mondani's camp, thought that he was going to defeat Cumio. [01:01:15] I'm not Cumio, Cuomo. [01:01:17] I'm sorry. [01:01:18] I'm thinking about Anthony Cumia, all these Italians. [01:01:20] Oh, gosh. [01:01:23] Cumio, Cuomo, Deanna. [01:01:25] Goodness gracious. [01:01:26] Just no vowels to end a surname, guys. [01:01:29] No, I'm joking. [01:01:30] We all love Kevin. [01:01:32] But no one thought Mondani was going to win, even his own team. [01:01:36] They didn't even have a victory speech written when he was thrust and catapulted to the top of the primary because they have a very weird primary system in New York. [01:01:46] But as you've seen, Whites replaced, I think it was Christopher Caldwell who wrote an article saying it's impossible for a Giuliani type Republican to win. [01:01:57] And you think about all the amazing things Giuliani did. [01:02:00] I'll watch Seinfeld reruns occasionally, and it's always fascinating to think that that sitcom is transpiring during what became the golden age of New York. [01:02:09] Because if you know anything about New York in the 70s and 80s, as the first black mayor Dinkins was in charge in the 80s and the city was just falling into disrepair, it was collapsing. [01:02:21] In its own footprint. [01:02:23] And the 70s, of course, gave birth to Taxi Driver, Martin Scorsese's film, the Death Wish film in 1974 of just this racial apocalypse that was transpiring and whites trying to traverse throughout the declining city quality and standards. [01:02:40] And yet in the 90s, you had a moderate Republican who won, brought in reform, they brought in broken windows policing from. [01:02:50] Police Chief Bratton, which it works. [01:02:53] Guess what? [01:02:54] It works. [01:02:54] Stop and frisk works. [01:02:56] Cracking down on low level crimes works because if people are afraid of going to jail for a low level crime, guess what? [01:03:03] That's going to have an impact on everyone. [01:03:06] And of course, that's impossible now because the demographics have changed to such a degree that you now have, I truly believe, Tom and dear listener, a glimpse of what could be coming all across the country as the As the rising tide of color ushers in a new level of insanity, [01:03:30] which, in a lot of ways, was encapsulated by that story from Minneapolis of reopening gay bathhouses for Somalis, even though, guys, look what happened in the 1980s. [01:03:42] There's a reason why in 1988 we closed these, and there's a reason why one of the main promoters of that idea was a gay city councilman who then three years later died in 1991 of AIDS. [01:03:54] Yeah. [01:03:55] I mean, this is an inevitable consequence of multiculturalism and anti white immigration policies flooding the country with non whites and via all these different mechanisms, the Immigration Act, the refugees, and then subsidizing those nons. [01:04:12] You know, all mostly, almost all non whites are subsidized to some degree. [01:04:17] So we don't have a level playing field. [01:04:19] And so our cities, this is definitely what's coming to a lot of cities. [01:04:22] I think this is going to be happening. [01:04:24] You know, Charlotte, the crime is out of control where Irina was murdered. [01:04:29] Charlotte is extremely dangerous. [01:04:30] There's stories, it seems like there's stories out there every week of some person that's been, you know, arrested 20 times. [01:04:37] Who's, you know, just for the listeners, I don't know if you guys know the statistics, but 33% of black men are convicted felons. [01:04:47] You can Google it. [01:04:48] There's 33% of black men are convicted felons. [01:04:50] They're extremely dangerous. [01:04:52] So these cities, as soon as their city councils are infiltrated with non whites, then the, the, The local policies are extremely discriminatory towards white people. [01:05:03] So I think white people are going to have to start practicing identity politics and collectivizing in the places that can still be collectivized in. [01:05:13] I don't think there's any way to reverse like New York City or these cities that are infiltrated and are minority white at this point. [01:05:21] I think the best bet is to unfortunately practice white flight and take a last stand somewhere else where there's still a chance to win local elections and kind of mitigate the damage. [01:05:34] Well, we once called the implementation of policies that impacted whites the United States of America in a positive manner. === White Identity Politics and Collectivizing (01:46) === [01:05:42] And that was all erased with Shelley v. Kramer in 48. [01:05:45] And then, what, 17 years later, well, 16 years later, the Civil Rights Act in 1964 and that twin death blow, the Heart Cellar Immigration Act in 1965. [01:05:57] Mr. Hennessy, the architect, Tom Hennessy, thank you so much for joining us on Radio Renaissance. [01:06:03] These go by very fast. [01:06:04] They actually go by faster than the little X space that we do, Life in the Alien Nation. [01:06:09] We were honored to have you join, continue doing the fantastic work that you do on X on behalf of a people who do not yet know the sacrifice that you've made in terms of helping raise money for Shiloh Hendrix and the other individuals impacted by this just pernicious mindset that we've discussed, [01:06:33] which is alive and well in pursuit of the equity of white people's homes in New York and nationwide. [01:06:40] So tell us once again how people can follow you on Twitter. [01:06:44] Yeah. [01:06:45] So it's Tom Hennessy, T O M H E N N E S S E Y, Tom Hennessy, 69. [01:06:52] That's, you know, I post a lot of edgy content, but again, this is to, you know, move the Overton window in the right direction. [01:06:59] So, you know, you'll see some edgy stuff being posted, but that's how you can find me. [01:07:05] Excellent. [01:07:06] Well, give him a follow. [01:07:08] And most importantly, if you enjoyed this podcast, make sure that you share it with friends and tell us what we did right. [01:07:14] Tell us what we did wrong. [01:07:16] Any corrections? [01:07:17] Any ideas for stories for next week? [01:07:19] We had a number that were left on the cutting room floor. [01:07:21] We'll get to them next week. [01:07:23] So, for Tom Hennessy, this has been Paul Kersey. [01:07:25] Our time's up. [01:07:27] We thank you for yours.