Queen Elizabeth II has died at the age of 96, and the media are divided on her legacy. Is it a good thing or a bad thing? And what does it mean for the future of the monarchy? Plus, a mass shooting in which a 19-year-old black man went on a rampage and killed 4 and injured 5 people, apparently only targeting white people. And why is there still no official memorial for the Queen? And why isn't there any mention of it in the mainstream media? And is this really as bad as it seems? Today's America First is hosted by Nicholas J. Fuentes and features the host of America First: The No Fly List. America First! is a show where we discuss current events and pop culture, politics, entertainment, and current events in general. Today's episode features the story of Queen Elizabeth II's death and the reaction to it from the American right and the American left, and what it means for the monarchy and the country at large. Subscribe to America First to stay up to date with the latest news and discuss the latest in pop culture! Music: "No Fly List" by The Moneyfly Crew by Zapsplat and "Moneyfly" by Fountains of Wayne Parris Join us on social media: Subscribe, Like, Share, and Retweet! Subscribe and Share this episode of America's First Podcast! and be sure to leave us a review on Apple Podcasts! or wherever else you re listening to podcasts are listening to this week's new episodes are available. Thank you for listening to the latest episode of "America's First"? Subscribe? and we'll be giving you a chance to win tickets to our new show! to our next episode! on iTunes and more! in next week's episode on the next episode coming soon! Subscribe to our newest episode on Podchaser, "No Money List" on Tuesday, November 5th, November 21st, 2019! by clicking here! Learn more about our new ad-free version of "The Moneyfly Documentary "No Effing List" or "No Deal or No Deal? , "The No Deal Documentary" is available on VaynerSpeaker, No Deal is a new podcast? Subscribe & Subscribe to No Deal Is That's That's Not a Deal? by Meek Mill's "The Real Deal?"
Transcript
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00:01:46.000It's interesting because it seems like people in the American right are kind of split on this.
00:01:52.000I know that there are some people that are saying that it's a very sad day and this is something that we as Americans should mourn because it represents the loss of a connection between Europeans of the past and Europeans of the present.
00:02:11.000Queen Elizabeth was coronated in the 1950s, when there still was a British Empire, and when times were very different.
00:02:20.000And they say that she is one of the last things, if not the last thing, that connected the British to their historic past.
00:02:29.000Other people, on the right as well as everywhere else, for various reasons, say that Queen Elizabeth either has nothing to do with America, or it's a good thing she died.
00:02:41.000A lot of blacks and non-white people in the United Kingdom as well as around the world are actually celebrating the death because they say that the British Empire is the pinnacle of colonialism.
00:03:13.000And there are right-wing people that say that Queen Elizabeth presided over the very transition which the former category of right-wing people decry.
00:03:24.000Some people on the right say that she's the last thing connecting us to our historic past, or Europeans, British in particular.
00:03:32.000And the critics on the right will say that, well, she presided over the transition from that historic past to the nightmarish present.
00:03:40.000And so, what is really the value of that legacy?
00:04:05.000We'll also be talking tonight about the mass shooting in Tennessee yesterday, which
00:04:12.000I didn't cover last night because we didn't really have that much information In case you didn't see in I believe it was Memphis, Tennessee yesterday a 19 year old black guy Went on a shooting rampage, which he live-streamed on Facebook live and he just went around shooting random people killed four I think shot five others
00:04:34.000And this is a guy who actually had a prior conviction for attempted first-degree murder.
00:05:00.000Obviously very tragic and also not surprising that it's not getting hardly any media coverage.
00:05:07.000And as I said yesterday, yesterday was a particularly dry day, particularly slow news day, and yet coverage of this shooting, or the gravity of what it represents,
00:05:19.000...was not present anywhere across any major news agency.
00:05:24.000A 19-year-old black man on a massacre, a shooting spree, only targeting white people apparently.
00:05:32.000So there's an apparent racial motivation, but of course nobody in the media is bothered to discuss that.
00:06:24.000And, if you haven't already seen it, the America First documentary about me and my being on the no-fly list and the FBI investigation into me and the freezing of my money
00:06:38.000That is available now on MyMoviesPlus.com for $6 for a subscription.
00:06:43.000So if you haven't seen it, check it out.
00:06:57.000The day today started off in the morning in America.
00:07:03.000With this announcement that the Queen was under medical supervision.
00:07:09.000But it's a very bizarre announcement, and I think everybody realized what was going on from the very moment the press release came out saying that she was under medical supervision, but they say she was comfortable.
00:07:21.000And when you hear that, you don't like to hear that when somebody's in their 90s.
00:07:27.000Anybody who's lost a loved one in that advanced age knows what that means.
00:07:35.000And so everybody was talking about it this morning.
00:07:38.000I remember I woke up and I checked the news and I saw that and it was everywhere and people were preparing for the worst.
00:07:46.000And this is something that I don't think a lot of people think about all the time, the Queen, but it is a remarkable feat of longevity that she lasted 70 years.
00:07:56.000You know, when you consider that she's been the reigning monarch since before probably most Americans were born,
00:08:06.000Any reference to the Queen of England in nearly any movie and almost all of television and almost all of popular music, when you think about it, or anytime anybody referenced it in the school system in the last half century or three-quarter century, was talking about her, which is pretty monumental.
00:08:24.000And so you don't think about it too much, but it is one of those things which has just been a constant for nearly a century.
00:08:31.000So I saw the news come in and as the day went on it became clear that there was a transfer of power being set in motion.
00:08:41.000The BBC cleared its broadcasting schedule.
00:08:44.000They were preparing to make an announcement at 6 o'clock at their local time.
00:08:49.000All the presenters were wearing black ties.
00:08:52.000They put up pictures of her at the British Embassy in France.
00:08:57.000And then all the family members coming by, and so people kind of know, and it's always sort of sad to see that.
00:09:03.000And that's how it played out today, and this is the announcement about it in the Daily Mail.
00:09:10.000It says, quote, Queen Elizabeth II has died today, age 96.
00:09:14.000Her son Charles, the former Prince of Wales, is now King Charles III, as the world grieves his mother, Britain's longest reigning monarch.
00:09:24.000For those that don't know about succession, the Queen dies, and immediately upon her death, the heir apparent, which is her son, Charles, accedes to the throne and immediately becomes the king.
00:09:39.000So, the United Kingdom had a new king as of this afternoon.
00:10:47.000A Buckingham Palace spokesman said, quote, The Queen's death will see Britain and her Commonwealth realms enter into a 10-day period of mourning, which is an official, that's a formal schedule.
00:10:55.000There's 10 days of mourning and then a funeral.
00:11:10.000Her coffin will be moved to London on the Royal Train via Edinburgh before she lies in state in Westminster Hall in the House of Parliament for four days.
00:11:18.000Hundreds of thousands of people will be able to pay their respects.
00:11:21.000The state funeral is expected to take place at Westminster Abbey in central London on Monday, September 19th.
00:11:29.000Which will be attended by her bereft family as well as 2,000 heads of state, prime ministers, and presidents, European royals, and key figures from public life around the globe.
00:11:39.000As her son accedes to the throne, there will also be a celebration of her historic 70-year reign that saw her reach her platinum jubilee this year, a landmark unlikely to be reached again by a British monarch.
00:11:53.000Charles will reign as King Charles III said today, quote,
00:12:03.000Today, and this is maybe a little bit of irony here, it says, today all her children and Prince William flew into Scotland from all over the United Kingdom to get to Her Majesty's bedside before she died.
00:12:17.000Prince Harry did not travel to Scotland from Windsor with his family, and Meghan Markle stayed at Frogmore Cottage.
00:12:25.000But, Harry did not make it in time and landed in Aberdeen around 15 minutes after the death of his grandmother was announced.
00:12:33.000He arrived at the castle just before 8 p.m.
00:12:36.000around an hour and a half after the public announcement to join his father, brother, and other mourners.
00:12:43.000Which is appropriate and fitting, I think.
00:13:06.000The funeral happens on the 19th, 11 days from now.
00:13:11.000Tomorrow, the new king, King Charles, goes to London and there's, I forget what it's called, but there's a committee that's formed about his accession to the throne and they're gonna televise this and this is sort of like
00:13:28.000He's going to get briefed on what the king is supposed to do and all of that.
00:13:50.000It could be months, it could be a little over a year.
00:13:53.000But so that's what happens now, and it will be interesting to see politically what happens now to the monarchy.
00:14:00.000There's been historically in modern times calls for the British monarchy to be abolished, although that was never a very popular position because people saw the Queen as likable and benign.
00:14:14.000So people that opposed the monarchy, it was really a fringe position because nobody really saw a reason to do it because she was
00:14:22.000Dignified, ceremonial, figurehead, inoffensive, likable, not really casting a long shadow over domestic politics or anything.
00:14:33.000So now we wonder what is going to happen next.
00:14:36.000Will the same be true of Prince Charles now that there's a transition?
00:14:39.000Will there be a renewed conversation about getting rid of the monarchy and have the United Kingdom become a republic or become a democracy or something like that?
00:14:50.000This Prince Charles is less popular, significantly less popular.
00:14:54.000Also people are wondering, you know, what is Prince Charles like?
00:15:37.000I think that the only Americans that really care about the royal family are old white people.
00:15:45.000women you know affluent white female liberals I think they're the ones that are so caught up in the monarchy in the royal family it's kind of like I don't know tabloid and at the on some level and foreign at the minimum it's certainly foreign so I don't really know that very much about the Royals I don't know about the internal politics of all of that
00:16:10.000And I really don't care very much, I'm gonna be honest with you.
00:16:14.000It's sad, it's an important day historically, and it's interesting to sort of observe the historical legacy here and how that represents truly the passing of an old age, sort of the last relic of the ages of empire and kings and queens and monarchical sovereignty and those kinds of things.
00:16:37.000But outside of that, I don't really feel a particular affinity for the United Kingdom or for London or for the British monarchy, if you want to know the truth.
00:16:46.000So that's sort of my immediate reaction.
00:17:00.000But by the same token, I don't have any kind of particular personal or cultural affinity for the Queen of England any more than I would for other countries or other heads of state.
00:17:13.000But I want to get into... Well, I will say one thing about it.
00:17:17.000A lot of people ask questions about the monarchy in the United Kingdom, and it does raise sort of some interesting topics, which may be beyond the scope of the show, but I know that a lot of people look at the Queen and they wonder, you know, what does the Queen even do?
00:18:40.000The premise that all men are created equal implies, then, that the people in the government are equal to the people that are not in the government.
00:18:52.000That what we really have is a lot of people not distinguished by nobility or class or heredity.
00:19:00.000What we have are people that were all created equal and therefore because all people are equal then they all have sovereignty.
00:19:09.000Then all individuals possess these rights.
00:19:13.000Life, liberty, pursuit of happiness and the right to self-government.
00:19:16.000The people can come together and create
00:19:20.000A government of peers, a government of, by, and for themselves to rule themselves.
00:19:25.000The sovereignty, the right to rule comes from them.
00:19:30.000And so we talked about that last week and didn't really explore too much because he said that.
00:19:35.000Biden made the claim, and it is true, that the premise of the country is that all men are created equal.
00:19:40.000Some people will say that that's liberal, egalitarian, progressive dogma.
00:19:47.000But no, although it is liberal, it is liberal, maybe not progressive, and certainly to some extent it's egalitarian, that is the foundation of the country because it is from that premise that we derive the idea of self-government, a social contract, a representative democracy, and this constitutional form of government.
00:20:09.000And so what that means, saying that a republic, republic
00:20:14.000Again, meaning that the sovereignty resides in the people, and the people having the right to rule means that our government, which is this institution which governs the country, receives its authority from the people.
00:20:29.000The people come together and elect representatives.
00:20:32.000The representatives are their... well, they represent the people.
00:20:49.000The representatives come together 230 some years ago and they create the Constitution.
00:20:54.000And the Constitution establishes the federal government and enumerates what the federal government does.
00:21:00.000And the Constitution transmits, and we talked about this earlier this week and last week, transmits the authority of the people to the government.
00:21:09.000The people, with authority, elect representatives and delegate the authority to the representatives.
00:21:15.000The representatives draft and sign the Constitution on behalf of the people.
00:21:19.000The Constitution establishes a government.
00:21:21.000The government derives its legitimate authority and process and structure from the Constitution.
00:21:28.000And then as the government rules, its legitimacy and its authority comes from the people.
00:21:34.000From the people, through this process established by the Constitution, through to the government.
00:21:41.000In the United Kingdom, of course, it's reversed.
00:21:46.000When I say that the monarch has passed, I say the sovereign has passed today, Queen Elizabeth.
00:21:52.000In a monarchy like the United Kingdom, the queen is called the sovereign.
00:21:59.000The queen or the king, the monarch is the sovereign, rather than the people.
00:22:04.000And again, sovereignty means the right to rule.
00:22:06.000And that means that the king or the queen, the monarchy, has the right to rule.
00:22:12.000The king or the queen has the right to determine what happens within the jurisdiction of their territory.
00:22:18.000And that includes collecting taxes, passing laws, going to war.
00:22:24.000All the things that we think of when we think about authority and what a legitimate government can do
00:22:30.000That power resides within the royal prerogative of the monarch, the sovereign.
00:22:35.000Now, of course, in the United Kingdom, we know that the king and the queen aren't going out and writing decrees all the time.
00:22:43.000People say in contemporary times that the Queen is a completely ceremonial role, she is a figurehead, and it means that she's not effectively ruling.
00:22:53.000It's actually the parliamentary government, it's the Prime Minister, and it's the House of Commons and House of Lords.
00:23:04.000It's got a representative system, although it is a parliamentary system.
00:23:08.000But the United Kingdom has political parties, it has a legislature, it has an executive branch, and people think of the Parliament like the Congress, and they think of the Prime Minister like the President.
00:23:21.000But it is very different, because unlike in America, where the authority is transmitted from the people through the Constitution to the government, in the United Kingdom, the authority proceeds from the monarch through to the Parliament and the Prime Minister.
00:23:39.000The Parliament serves at the pleasure of the monarch, and the Parliament is exercising the monarch's delegated right to create the laws.
00:23:48.000The prime minister running the executive branch and performing the ministerial duties is performing the executive authority delegated to them by the monarch.
00:24:01.000So we could say that the prime minister, when they act as effectively the head of state in foreign affairs,
00:24:24.000There is long-standing precedent and convention where that does not happen.
00:24:29.000It still is technically true that as the sovereign, the authority comes from the king or the queen, and that represents a very old idea.
00:24:37.000And so when people talk about abolishing the monarchy, what they're really talking about is completely revising the old world, where the right to rule comes from the church, where it comes from God, where it comes from
00:24:51.000The idea that there are classes of people and special families and these kinds of things, and it gives way to a completely egalitarian, liberal worldview that says that we're all individuals, we're all equal, we can all come together and pick who's going to run the government.
00:25:11.000And so while the king and the queen are effectively, and for the past 70, 80, 100 years, maybe even a little bit longer,
00:25:20.000While the King and the Queen are effectively a figurehead, tactically the legitimacy of the government's rule still comes from the King and the Queen.
00:25:32.000So just in case, I just want to talk a little bit about that because I know some people are confused on that.
00:25:39.000And it is true that the United Kingdom has a constitution.
00:25:42.000People say the United Kingdom is a constitutional monarchy.
00:25:45.000But the Constitution, in the case of the UK, performs a similar function as the US Constitution.
00:25:52.000The British Constitution technically has no authority, but it says how the monarchical authority is transmitted and how the Parliament will operate.
00:26:02.000But it just operates with a different flow.
00:26:05.000In a republic, the authority and the sovereignty resides in the people and flows from the people through the Constitution to the government.
00:26:14.000In the United Kingdom, it comes from the sovereign, the monarch.
00:26:17.000The sovereignty and the authority resides in the monarch, and it flows down to the Constitution, through the Constitution, to the ministerial executive ranch in the Parliament.
00:27:06.000And the argument goes that Queen Elizabeth, because she represents all of what I just said, because she represents the dying of an old age of empire and dominion and conquest and kings and queens and colonies and truly the old world, while all the indigenous, non-white, communist, Jewish elements despise her as a representative of that.
00:27:34.000And so you've got black university professors, and you've got immigrants and foreigners in the United Kingdom, and Middle Easterners, and a lot of Africans around the world, and liberal white women in America.
00:27:46.000They're all saying that actually it's a good thing that the Queen passed because she's an evil person.
00:27:53.000She's an evil person that presided over an empire, and an empire that used genocide and slavery and all those terrible things.
00:28:05.000And in particular, there was something telling about this.
00:28:08.000There was a group of mourners outside the Buckingham Palace today, and they're all out there and they're singing God Save the Queen, and they're paying their respects.
00:28:19.000And there's all this backlash on social media.
00:28:21.000There's a video of this posted on Twitter, and there's all this backlash in the replies.
00:28:26.000People saying that the crowd of mourners is so white.
00:28:33.000They say that the proportion of people in the crowd is far whiter than London, than the City of London, which is now a global, diverse, multiracial, cosmopolitan hub.
00:28:43.000So all these non-white people in the reply say, well there's too many white people in this crowd, and F your white queen, and F this and that.
00:28:52.000And it goes to show the differences in national feeling.
00:28:58.000Take away the GDP, take away all this talk of shared values and we're all human beings, we're all pink on the inside and assimilation and all of this.
00:29:14.000English people who are white, you know, the color of English people is very very white in case you've ever seen them, and they're out there mourning their sovereign, not even necessarily because they are conservative or anything like that, but because to them the monarchy is a part of their character.
00:29:33.000It's part of their national character, and their national heritage, and their culture, and it's part of their identity.
00:29:40.000It's part of their identity in meaningful ways.
00:30:46.000It's a source of racial and ethnic division and, for some of them, revanchism and hatred and grievance.
00:30:54.000And if that does not tell you why multiracialism is not tenable, I don't know necessarily what does.
00:31:02.000They do not share the same affinity for the national character, they don't share the same affection for it, and that's because they're not of it, they're not in it, it's not theirs.
00:31:13.000In the same way that black people in America will go and tear down statues of Christopher Columbus,
00:31:20.000Or tear down statues of Thomas Jefferson or of Robert E. Lee for the exact same reason.
00:31:26.000Blacks have been on this continent with the white people as slaves initially and then as freedmen and then under segregation and now as delinquents.
00:31:37.000They have been on this continent for 400 years.
00:31:44.000More than my ancestors have been on this continent.
00:31:47.000And yet, that 400 years together in this place, on this land,
00:31:54.000For almost a quarter of a century under this flag and under this government has not engendered in them any positive sentiment, any positive feeling towards the nation and the heritage and the identity and the culture of the nation.
00:32:11.000Represented by its statues, by its national symbols, its holidays, its heroes.
00:32:18.000And this is a commonality throughout the Western world.
00:32:22.000The same is true of the indigenous Indians and the recent Asian immigrants into Canada.
00:32:28.000The same is true of all these Muslims and Sub-Saharan Africans pouring into continental Europe.
00:32:35.000In Italy, in Denmark, in France, in Germany.
00:32:39.000It's a day like today that reminds you what makes us different.
00:32:43.000It's a day like today that reminds you that we are a people.
00:32:47.000We are a distinct people with a distinct civilization and culture and nationality and identity which no amount of time, no amount of friendliness or neighborliness will allow other people from other places to enjoy.
00:33:06.000And their culture, they've got their motherlands, and they've got their ancestral customs, and we've got ours.
00:33:14.000And I'm not English, but I can certainly understand by analogy what is happening.
00:33:19.000I can certainly have sympathy for the British people in a way that, as a white person, that the black and the Indian people and the Asian people in the United Kingdom simply do not have.
00:33:34.000No congeniality, no familiarity, or anything.
00:33:37.000And it's not all of them, but it's significant enough across the Atlantic Ocean that it tells you that
00:33:44.000No amount of this liberal window dressing is going to paint over these very real cleavages and differentiation and distinction between peoples.
00:33:53.000So that's one strain that I saw across the board, is non-white people, particularly these Liberation Jude-up minorities in America and elsewhere, talking about what a great day it is because she represented white supremacy.
00:35:00.000What else could you call it when an island the size of the state of Alabama conquers one quarter of planet Earth and rules the world through its navy and creates and builds civilization where there wasn't any across every continent of the world and teaches them literacy and language and builds schools and infrastructure?
00:35:27.000What else could you call that other than white excellence and white greatness?
00:35:31.000And she and they in the United Kingdom and we are hated for it and resented for it and this is why they kill and this is why they tear down the statues and this is what they seek to destroy.
00:35:46.000This is what they seek to pillage with this global migration and these new global attitudes.
00:35:55.000So, that's one strain, is all the non-white people hate the monarch because she represents white supremacy, and you know what?
00:36:03.000But we, as white people, we as Western civilization, we have got to protect our distinct and our excellent and our great heritage and history.
00:36:14.000It is for them to hate, it is for them to resent, it is for them to seethe over.
00:36:19.000Some of them, if they're smart, can appreciate it and can enjoy it.
00:36:24.000And can understand that there is something about the universality of the human experience, and to the sense that they can feel that, then they can appreciate objectively what whites have achieved.
00:36:35.000But for the rest of them, that is for them to scorn and repudiate and seethe and cope and bitch about, and that's for us to celebrate and revere and hold up and worship to some extent, not like a god, but to glorify.
00:36:52.000And to set our gaze towards as we live our lives and raise our children.
00:37:22.000Now, that's all of those people, but my response to this is not dictated by the non-white people and what they feel about it.
00:37:30.000I've seen two responses to this from Americans on the right wing, and some say that this is a very sad day and there's great affection for the Queen, and some say that it's, we don't care, it's not our business, or maybe it is a good thing that she passed.
00:37:46.000So first I'll talk about sort of the positive feelings towards the Queen.
00:37:51.000I've seen a lot of people online today are saying that the Queen has passed and she represented this connection between the past and the present.
00:38:00.000And whatever you want to say about all the details, her reign, her rule, her life, what's transpired in the past 70 years when she was the Queen, they say nevertheless she represented a cultural figure
00:38:39.000The Queen, like I said, you can say that she represents a connection between the past and the present, but she was the bridge between the past and the present.
00:38:50.000That's like saying if you're, I don't know, that's like saying if you had a great childhood, but then, I don't know, someone came in and like murdered your family, and then the murderer died, and you're like, well,
00:39:05.000You know, with the passing of my family's murderer, there goes the last thing that connected me to the old world.
00:39:11.000It's like, well, but you know, they kind of caused that.
00:39:15.000And it's not to ascribe total responsibility of the decline and fall of the British Empire to the Queen, but it is to say that there has been a remarkable social, cultural, civilizational transformation of the British nation, of the British Empire,
00:39:33.000Under the Queen's rule, and she presided over it as the sovereign.
00:39:43.000To some extent, these were historical forces beyond really anybody's control, and I'm talking about the decolonization of all the European holdings after World War II, and the liberation movements, and the social unrest of the
00:40:01.000So how much of that was under her control?
00:40:16.000She was literally the Queen of England and the Sovereign.
00:40:19.000And so as people bemoan the passing of the Queen and us kind of being left with what we have now, not just in the United Kingdom, but around the world as the
00:40:32.000Well, that transition occurred while she was running the show.
00:40:41.000It's universally, objectively, a horrible transition.
00:40:46.000Demographically, economically, in terms of diplomacy, in terms of culture.
00:41:01.000Can anybody really point to one particular thing, anything for that matter, that's worthy of us to say that this constitutes a real loss for us as Americans or as American nationalists?
00:41:20.000Mourning her passing without content is one thing.
00:41:24.000To say that she's the Queen, and it doesn't matter really what she's about and what she is, it's sad because she's the head of state and because she's been the head of state for so long and mattered to a lot of people, well that is one thing, and that is the kind of mourning which is devoid of content and somewhat universal in general, and that I respect and that's fine.
00:41:45.000To me, it really doesn't make much sense.
00:41:47.000Now, if Vladimir Putin died, I would be upset not just because he's the president and the king of Russia, but also because he was a great leader who stood up to the West and took courageous stands and, you know, brought back his country to its former glory.
00:42:05.000And similarly, if Bashar al-Assad died, I would feel sad.
00:42:09.000Not just because he's the king of Syria and the lion of Damascus, but also because he fought off Israel and he fought off Saudi Arabia, this gangster state, and fought off the United States and all these other foreign powers intervening.
00:42:27.000Not just because of him generally as a head of state or as a human being,
00:42:32.000But because of the ideals that he lived and his actions.
00:42:36.000I don't know that the same could be said of Queen Elizabeth II.
00:42:40.000I mean, we know that probably the Queen, to varying degrees, was complicit in the creation of a British banking empire, a shadow banking empire, which is basically controlled by Jewish people.
00:42:56.000If you look at the creation of the modern British Empire, which is still alive and well in the Commonwealth, it's just exercised in different ways.
00:43:05.000It's just controlled and governed in a different way, befitting of our postmodern, bureaucratic, managerial world.
00:43:40.000And she presided over the complete globalization of the world and of her country, the population, the economy, the affairs of the country, the creation of the European Union over the course of 60 years.
00:44:20.000I'm sorry for your loss, but I don't really have too much affinity for the monarchy, for this particular monarchy outside of that.
00:44:28.000You want to know about the United Kingdom?
00:44:30.000Look into the City of London and look into where all of the banking power in the United Kingdom comes from in London.
00:44:40.000All of the British banking is headquartered in a neighborhood in London which used to be called Old Jewry.
00:44:47.000Okay, I mean it doesn't even get more obvious.
00:44:50.000It doesn't get more transparent than that.
00:44:53.000That would be like if the State Department and the Federal Reserve and the Pentagon were all in a neighborhood in Washington DC called Jewtown and people were like...
00:45:04.000Hey, well, this is about our nation and this is about our country.
00:45:08.000It's like, well, it's more like our country if there was like a headcrab attached to it or like the alien from Alien growing in its stomach.
00:45:18.000So, um, so, and it's, it's times like this when you don't really know when to accept for some value the face story.
00:45:29.000And say that the Queen ruled the country and because the Queen to everyone in the United Kingdom was the Queen.
00:45:36.000That's not, I mean, she's not really what she is to the common people.
00:45:41.000But you want to go out and say, well, we mourn her loss because of how people perceive her and what, you know, what she is to them rather than what we know to be on a more esoteric basis in reality.
00:46:10.000And the same is true of a day like today.
00:46:13.000You've got the Queen that people see with the hats and the ceremony and all of that, and to the extent that that is what millions of people believe, it is real on some level.
00:46:24.000But if we really want to understand how the modern world is so radically different from the old world and how it was severed and why she was the last remaining totem, well then you need to dig a little bit deeper and there's a little bit more than meets the eye.
00:46:40.000Things are not like in America as they seem over there either, especially when it comes to the highest levels of British government.
00:46:48.000So that's sort of broadly my feelings on
00:46:54.000And again, I feel bad for the British people because I'm sure for the British people it's a big loss regardless of your feelings on the politics of it, but I fail to see, or rather I don't understand how people fail to see the connection.
00:47:11.000Yeah, well, and she did not play an insignificant role in that.
00:47:15.000She and the British government and the royal family did not
00:47:18.000Play no role in why things were the way they were when she was coronated in the 50s and why they are now when a new king is coronated in the 2020s.
00:47:37.000Who is there to blame other than the Queen?
00:47:40.000When you look at how bad things have gotten, who else is there to blame other than literally the sovereign, literally the head of the government, or rather the head of the state?
00:49:51.000It says, quote, four people were killed, three wounded, and parts of Memphis were in lockdown for hours until a man suspected in a live stream shooting spree that stretched across the city was taken into custody.
00:50:06.000on Wednesday and continued until Ezekiel DeJuan Kelly's capture on Wednesday evening.
00:50:13.000The crime scenes included seven shooting locations as well as a carjacking in South Haven, Mississippi.
00:50:21.000The Memphis Police Department, after receiving a tip from a concerned citizen at 6.12 p.m.
00:50:26.000on Wednesday, launched a citywide search for Kelly.
00:50:30.000Residents were told to shelter in place, public bus service was suspended, and many restaurants and other public places were shut down during the desperate search.
00:50:38.000South Haven police tweeted that officers responded to a vehicle theft around 8.53 p.m.
00:51:00.000Because it was live streamed, so we know that.
00:51:02.000The mayor, Jim Strickland, said in a statement, quote, I'm angry for them, and I'm angry that our citizens had to shelter in place for their own safety.
00:51:10.000This is no way for us to live, and it is not acceptable.
00:51:14.000Which Andrew Anglin pointed out is a funny way to react to a mass shooting.
00:51:18.000A black guy goes out and shoots seven people, kills four, and the mayor says, you know, that's really unacceptable.
00:51:25.000Yeah, I think that definitely... I think it kind of goes without saying, actually, that it's not acceptable for teenagers to go around shooting random people in stores and gas stations and across the city.
00:51:48.000Kelly, the shooter, was charged with two counts of attempted first-degree murder, possession of a firearm, and reckless endangerment with a deadly weapon.
00:51:56.000A grand jury indicted him on those charges in June 2020.
00:52:00.000He pleaded guilty to aggravated assault in April 2021 and was sentenced to three years in prison.
00:52:05.000He only served 11 months and was released about six months ago.
00:52:16.000He was convicted of two counts of attempted first-degree murder, possession of firearm, when he was 17 years old.
00:52:26.000He comes back and pleads guilty to aggravated assault a year later in 2021 when he's 18.
00:52:32.000They let him out of jail after 11 months.
00:52:38.000And I guess my first take on this is we are constantly told about these poor black people that are mistreated by the police, locked up, mandatory minimums, ruining the lives of people.
00:52:53.000People like this should be locked away forever.
00:52:56.000If you got a black kid who's 17 and going out and trying to kill people and beat people up and illicit firearms,
00:54:29.000And now here we are 30 years later and we've got all this rhetoric about, you know, you've got to release these people and second chance and a first step towards a new life, first step back, platinum plan and all this.
00:54:41.000And this wouldn't have happened if this guy had just been thrown in jail.
00:54:47.000And this is maybe the first most obvious thing.
00:54:50.000This is happening, especially since the wake of George Floyd, but even before that.
00:54:55.000All across the country, in these big liberal cities, it is happening at every level.
00:55:00.000It's happening at the level of the police department.
00:55:03.000It's happening at the level of the state attorneys and who they choose to prosecute and who they choose to charge.
00:55:11.000It's happening at the level of legislation, at the level of state government where they're changing the laws.
00:55:17.000And it's not just happening in Tennessee where this guy gets picked up and let out, but it's happening in Chicago.
00:55:23.000Famously, there's a new law on the books now that says that they're not going to take cash bond.
00:55:29.000Somebody can show up on a property and trespass.
00:55:32.000You call the cops, the cops give them a ticket and leave.
00:56:23.000Criminality is almost exclusively, this degree, and this kind of predatory, random, violent criminality is almost exclusively a black phenomenon.
00:57:18.000When you look at crime, there are disparities.
00:57:21.000Asian people commit the least amount of crime.
00:57:24.000White people commit a little bit more crime than Asians.
00:57:26.000Hispanics commit a little bit more crime than white people.
00:57:29.000Black people commit more crime than anybody by far.
00:57:34.000They're really in a league of their own.
00:57:35.000There's disparities, but when it comes to those conversations, it's really blacks and everybody else.
00:57:41.000And in particular, it's not just that you have higher rates, but only among them do you see so much randomness, where it's punching elderly people in the face, walking down the street.
00:58:00.000It's cartel, it's gang-related, it's these kinds of things.
00:58:05.000When you see white crime, white crime is usually personal or very impersonal.
00:58:11.000When you see white crime, you know, when white people murder each other, it's family, they're serial killers, they're, you know, it's something like that.
00:58:22.000When they rape people, because whites notoriously have a higher rape rate, I believe, than everybody else, it's people they know.
00:58:30.000When black people commit crime, it's not just that they're committing violent crime, like they're gonna rob a store, they're gonna rape someone they know, or something like that.
00:58:38.000Only in the black community do you have this kind of rambunctious, go out and just beat people up, go out and just shoot people, go out and just burn cars, go out and just loot a store, go out and just go crazy.
00:58:50.000You know, there's words for that, there's colloquial expressions for this, which I think we all know, and they're the only ones that do that.
00:59:43.000We don't say that it's racist for the cops to get in a fight with black people, or chase black people by car or by foot when they commit a crime, or beat them up when they catch them, or shoot them when they draw a gun or a weapon.
01:00:03.000Don't you understand how understanding the disparities
01:00:07.000And the differences between the races is essential to solving this very imminent problem?
01:00:14.000You've got a crime surge across the country, and this kind of thing, which is affecting everybody, even if it doesn't touch people directly, it touches scores of people indirectly.
01:00:26.000Because every one of the people shot and killed has loved ones, and everybody was affected when the whole city gets put on lockdown.
01:00:33.000It's not just the people that are killed or the people that are shot, but it's the ripple effect that happens across the society.
01:00:40.000It's when black people in San Francisco loot a target, it's everything in the target being put behind a black locked case and having to go to a store clerk to unlock a USB stick for purchase, or a stick of gum for that matter.
01:00:56.000It's Walgreens picking up and leaving the area.
01:00:59.000It's having a bank teller shield at Popeyes or Kentucky Fried Chicken.
01:01:05.000You know, or any fast food restaurant for that matter.
01:01:08.000It's... That is how it affects everybody.
01:01:12.000And that is the direct result of this race-blind ideology.
01:01:20.000Because people start to get a problem with too many blacks in jail, or too many blacks shot by the cops, or too many cops in black neighborhoods, or something.
01:01:28.000But when you look at the numbers, and when you realize the difference, you realize that is entirely the appropriate and the necessary thing to do.
01:01:37.000If you have a mind towards forcing equality of people and reading into these disparities a racial, a systemic racist explanation, then this is what we have to live with.
01:02:34.000There isn't a media narrative that's being pushed by what they cover and what they do not cover and what remains in the news and what does not remain in the news and what becomes a national tragedy or an international historic tragedy and what does not become those things.
01:02:51.000It's important to push it every time because we're told with the same frequency that it doesn't exist.
01:02:59.000This guy went out of his way to only shoot white people.
01:03:02.000And despite that, despite the fact that this was a hate crime, this was a shooting spree massacre, mass shooting hate crime, motivated apparently by hatred of white people.
01:03:18.000And yet there was hardly any news coverage of it at all.
01:03:21.000And again, you've probably heard this before, and you'll hear it more in the future.
01:03:26.000If a white person had gone out and livestreamed a shooting, shooting only black people, do you think that that pattern would escape the attention of the media?
01:03:37.000Because some people might say, well, they didn't release an official motive.
01:04:08.000Do you think that even though there is not a confirmed narrative that that would prevent the media from speculating or projecting that narrative onto it, and before any of the details were confirmed, writing a press release condemning white supremacy and hatred?
01:04:23.000Of course, of course it wouldn't prevent them from doing that.
01:04:28.000And it would be a bigger headline than the Queen dying, frankly.
01:05:09.000Diversity is the increasing negrofication or non-whitification of America.
01:05:16.000Not necessarily negro because it's... Africans represent the third largest immigration... the third largest source of immigration behind Asia and Latin America.
01:06:38.000It becomes very difficult to push that narrative when these people that constitute the source of our strength are going out and killing us all the time.
01:06:50.000That's what it means when you say it goes against the narrative.
01:06:53.000To air news stories night after night about crime sprees, shoplifting, carjackings, murders, gang crimes, grazed bullets, killing children, mass shootings by blacks, blacks hating whites, blacks hating Jews, blacks hating Asians.
01:07:08.000It runs counter to the narrative when you report on that every day that having a country that's more like that is gonna be better than the country that didn't have all that.
01:07:19.000That's, simply put, why they don't cover it.
01:07:22.000And if you don't believe that, there was a picture that was published not too long ago from the Southern Poverty Law Center office.
01:07:35.000And the Southern Poverty Law Center had some journalist in their headquarters and he was working diligently at his desk and on his wall was a countdown timer.
01:07:46.000And it was a countdown to when whites became a minority in America.
01:07:53.000Why does the Southern Poverty Law Center have a countdown?
01:07:57.000Apparently, do you think they're remorseful about that or do you think they're looking forward to that?
01:08:01.000Why are they looking forward to and documenting and tracking with glee, visibly?
01:08:06.000This is what, you know, they wake up every day to look at the countdown of how many white people are remaining here.
01:08:12.000Other than because they hate white people, they hate white civilization, they hate all of this.
01:08:18.000And when the SPLC and groups like it, like the ADL, or like Right-Wing Watch, like all these other groups, and when the Washington Post and the New York Times echo that sentiment, when they write articles like, we will replace you, and, you know, it's about time the Democrats achieve ascendancy in Georgia because it's all good non-white people instead of all these racist white people from before.
01:08:42.000That's the reason they don't cover these kinds of stories.
01:08:45.000It's with a mind towards that, obviously.
01:08:48.000And I know that that probably makes a lot of sense hearing it, but people don't hear it spelled out to the letter explicitly enough.
01:08:58.000I know that all of it, when I lay it all out, that probably sounds like, oh yeah, of course, naturally.
01:09:03.000People don't hear it spelled out enough, because I see coverage a lot on Twitter, and I see coverage a lot on Fox, where conservative pundits will say, oh, you know, if the shoe were on the other foot, they wouldn't talk about it.
01:09:14.000That's because it doesn't fit the narrative.
01:09:23.000White people bad, non-white people good.
01:09:26.000And this thing, the most significant thing ongoing in our country right now, which is happening today, which is the displacement of the historic white population by non-white immigrants, which
01:09:51.000The narrative is that that thing, this thing which is happening, which they want to ignore or tell you is a conspiracy theory and people feel negative about it, but on other days will tell you it's a great thing, it's real, and it's happening, and they want to program people to believe that this is the basis of our morality is accepting this transition.
01:10:33.000If white people saw what was going on every day with the black people and at the border and with the gay people and frankly with women and their competence in the workforce, the white men wouldn't stand for one more day
01:10:49.000This feminist, non-white, anti-religious, gay, trans takeover of America.
01:11:14.000Some people say, we need a country that's run by a multi-racial coalition of non-white workers who may be gay, but it's their business, and may be a Jewish, but that's their business, and may be women.
01:11:26.000If they're the right woman for the job, it's like, HELL NO!
01:11:35.000If I hear colorblind meritocracy one more time, I'm gonna scream!
01:11:41.000We hear that the narrative is about identity politics, it's about this victim hierarchy, but the real truth is that we need a multiracial coalition of legacy Americans who were born here and have citizenship whether they be a man or woman or straight or gay and if they're gay it's their business and if they're Jewish we can't even talk about it.
01:13:13.000To have that menace, to have that threat, to have that criminality, it destroys the public.
01:13:20.000That's the reason public transportation is untenable.
01:13:24.000That's the reason why anything affordable is untenable.
01:13:28.000Anything, anything that is like, if you want to talk about like public works, public works
01:13:36.000Is crashing into black criminality like a train?
01:13:42.000Because you hear all these people say, you know, why can't we have these public projects that make things affordable for the poor and the working?
01:13:53.000Why can't we have trains that are cheap like Europe?
01:16:47.000So that we can deal with things like this and make the civilization better for everybody.
01:16:52.000Not just white people, but even for the non-white people that can't enjoy.
01:16:57.000The public and the civilization is for everybody that lives here.
01:17:01.000Whether they are a citizen or a foreigner or a visitor, whether they're a white or a minority, whether they're a racial or a religious minority, it affects everybody.
01:17:11.000The quality of life effect or decline affects everybody.
01:17:18.000And the only reason that's happening is because partisans have obfuscated the debate with this progressive egalitarian rhetoric.
01:18:02.000If somebody came to you and said, I'll transport you to a country where the city is clean, the transportation is cheap, it's advanced, they have beautiful architecture, you feel safe walking down the street, but you also have privacy,
01:18:16.000Everybody has prosperity and everybody is treated with respect.
01:18:20.000Nobody's wearing slides or sweatpants in public.
01:18:24.000People speak proper English and they don't talk ignorantly.
01:18:27.000You don't see anyone's underwear when they're walking around.
01:20:24.000I think it's more like racialism or race realism, because I think racism is prejudice, discrimination, cruelty, hatred, which I don't support.
01:20:34.000But if racism is disparities, difference, acknowledgement that races are real in significant ways, and that has effects on behavior, and behavior has an effect on society, and that has to be accounted for, you know, well then, then, you know, I would call that something else, but I do believe in that.