 Anti-racism, if you remember during COVID we talked a lot, during COVID we talked a lot about this, BLM, I did a number of shows on anti-racism. I think kind of anti-racism is kind of disappeared, nobody really talks about it, qua anti-racism. Since Biden got elected and BLM is gone and and so on. Scott says you did say you'd spend your influence to stop Trump. Yes, my influence, my tiny little influence. Yes, to the extent that I can, I will spend every bit of my influence to stop Trump because it is Trump that has lost the Republican party, Pennsylvania, and it's Trump that has lost the Republican party, Georgia, and it is Trump that lost the Republican party, the Senate and almost, you know, and lost it for a while, the House and is going on. Yeah, Trump is the problem. So to the extent that we can defeat Trump over and over and over again and maybe defeat him more thoroughly next time, to that extent there's some minor little hope for the Republican party, to the extent that Trump succeeds, the extent that you continue to support him, to the extent that he is the nominee of the Republican party, the Republican party is finished. It is Trump's destruction of the Republican party that is to blame nobody else, nobody else. And if you, but anyway, we'll let you guys keep on that. Anyway, the anti-racism. So this was kind of a cool story that comes out of New York. It turns out that NYU, New York University, one of the top universities in the country, hosted a quote, white's only anti-racism workshop for public school parents. In the name of being anti-racism, only whites could attend the workshop. Now, of course, the workshop was focused on how whites are inherently guilty and they have to understand, you know, the attitude of minorities towards them and how ultimately it's their fault and they must do what they can in order to eliminate systemic racism everywhere where they find it and systemic because ultimately it's because they themselves are white and that they should feel super guilty and everything. And of course, you know, this is why it's whites only because why would you want to inflict all this, you know, white guilt and white self-obsession on minorities who might also participate in the seminar. So we want to, you know, spare them all this, all this trouble. You know, as part of the, you know, the supposed to be the first session, the workshop won't include about a dozen parents. These parents are public school kids. And, you know, the first session started out with, you know, in the background, the music of Woody Guthrie, All You Fascists Bound to Lose. That's a good way to start a seminar. I like Woody Guthrie, but he was quite a leftist. And, you know, pronoun sharing and then urge the participants not to intellectualize. I have a different way of phrasing that instead of saying, please don't intellectualize. The real way to express that is don't think. We don't want you to think. We're not, this is a quote, we're not going to get through this without welcoming the feelings, the feelings. Yes, this is all about emotionalism. And a lot of it is about the emotion of guilt that you should have because you're actually white. You know, there was a lot of emphasis on don't try too hard because, you know, that's just virtue signaling to be the good white person. Just feel guilty because there's nothing you can do about the fact that you're white. And so this was, there was at least one person from a local, actually from the Community Education Council for New York, for one of the districts. So somebody from in a position of power. And yeah, I mean, this is the continuation of this. It's done quietly in stealth. And this is all about white supremacy and how inherently whites are white supremacists and that we live in a white supremacist culture. And again, all of this is this completely insane, ultimately racist ideology of anti-racism that's both deterministic and racist and just overall horrific that we, you know, I was first exposed to during the BLM or the post BLM when all of this came to the forefront. So just know it's still out there. Seminars are just being done. One of the sponsors of the seminar was a group called AWARE LA. This is the Alliance of White Anti-Racists Everywhere Los Angeles. Let me just tell you the name again. Just see you, Alliance of White Anti-Racists Everywhere. I guess if you're brown, gray, blue, yellow, you need to form a different chapter. I mean, how do these people keep a straight face? Don't they see the overt racism in just the name and identifying people based on skin color? The problem is that racism is being redefined. The reality is that racism is treating people based on the color of their skin or some other immutable characteristic rather than the content of the character. This is how I understand racism. This I think is how Martin Luther King understood racism. But today, racism is not that. Racism is about power. Racism is about power over the people and being white immediately makes you a racist because you have power over others because I guess, you know, and if you're of an oppressed minority, you cannot be a racist. You cannot be a racist if you have dark skin because you're part of an oppressed minority and therefore, by definition, you can't be a racist. The whole way in which they use language is bizarre, offensive, and racist, racist. But it's all about, yeah, it's all about oppression, the oppression of the Olympics, who's more oppressed and therefore who has power. And but it's not about freedom. It's not about colorblindness. It's not about real anti-racism. Anti-racism is colorblindness. In all these other things, they are opposed to colorblindness, unprincipled, unprincipled. That's why they call themselves white, this, this, this, because the color matters.