The Michael Knowles Show - Ep. 1715 - Libs Defend Ancient "Non-Violent" Child Sacrifice
Episode Date: April 15, 2025An ancient altar used for child sacrifice is discovered in Guatemala, Hungary bans Pride, and a mainstream liberal journalist calls Luigi a "morally good man." Click here to join the member-exclusi...ve portion of my show: https://bit.ly/4biDlri Ep.1715 - - - DailyWire+: We’re leading the charge again and launching a full-scale push for justice. Go to https://PardonDerek.com right now and sign the petition. Now is the time to join the fight. Watch the hit movies, documentaries, and series reshaping our culture. Go to https://dailywire.com/subscribe today. Live Free & Smell Fancy with The Candle Club: https://thecandleclub.com/michael - - - Today's Sponsors: ARMRA - Go to https://tryarmra.com/KNOWLES or enter code KNOWLES at checkout to receive 15% off your first order. Good Ranchers - Visit https://goodranchers.com and subscribe to any box using code KNOWLES to claim $40 off + free meat for life! PureTalk - Switch to PureTalk and start saving today! Visit https://PureTalk.com/KNOWLES - - - Socials: Follow on Twitter: https://bit.ly/3RwKpq6 Follow on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3BqZLXA Follow on Facebook: https://bit.ly/3eEmwyg Subscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/3L273Ek Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Breaking news this morning, a new leftist euphemism has dropped.
We can credit this one to an ancient altar recently discovered in Guatemala.
The altar is pre-Azthac.
It dates to between 100 BC and AD 750.
We all know the Aztec sacrificed humans to the tune of 80,000 a clip.
Well, this pre-Aztec altar seems to have been used for human sacrifice as well,
and, in the words of the archaeologist who discovered it,
It was used in the sacrifice, quote, especially of children.
But the archaeologist and the liberal media outlets reporting on the archaeological find want you to know that, I'm quoting directly here, it's not that they were violent.
It was just their way of connecting with the celestial bodies.
Fiery but mostly peaceful protests are out.
Nonviolent child sacrifice is in.
I'm Michael Knowles.
This is the Michael Knowles show.
Welcome back to the show. Are we going to war with Iran? Are we going to war with Iran? We're we seem to be inching ever closer.
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that this one might take the cake. Non-violent child sacrifice. That is, you know, the libs always
have these euphemisms that don't make any sense. Like undocumented American. It's an American without
documents because they're foreigners because they're not Americans. You know, it's a contradiction in
terms. Justice-involved person is a criminal, you know, so he's not involved in justice. He's
involved in injustice. And they always do this. We've talked about it for years. Fiery, but mostly
peaceful. Those things don't go together. And then nonviolent child sacrifice. Just a reminder,
despite what you learned in public school, the conquistadors are among the greatest men who ever
lived, even pre-conquistador, starting with Christopher Columbus, really one of the greatest men
who's ever lived, followed by men like Hernan Cortez, who ended these barbaric societies
that would just slaughter tens of thousands of people at a time,
and in this case, especially little children.
There were multiple bodies found around this altar under four years old.
Okay, these people just had a totally demonic society.
Of course, we sacrifice over a million babies a year in our country,
so a little bit of an indictment of us, too.
But good grief.
Our civilization, when we actually behave in a civilized way,
has absolutely nothing to apologize for whatsoever.
conquistadors vindicated yet again.
Okay, speaking of babies, this one was a little bit surprising.
SNL just took on the relatively recent phenomenon of homosexuals going to the baby store
to purchase the eggs of a woman and rent the womb of another woman to acquire babies,
which is obviously gravely disordered because two fellas can't make a baby together.
So it involves all this extra stuff and commoditizing human life and picking baby
out of a catalog and killing a bunch of the extra embryos that were created to find the exact
perfect baby. But S&L is super duper lib. So you would expect if S&L takes on this issue, it would be
very sympathetic to the homosexual baby purchasers and the non-homosexual baby purchasers, for
that matter. You would think it would be very harsh on the critics or the people who have questions
about this. And yet, the S&L sketch was exactly the opposite.
Gosh, whose baby is that?
Excuse me? It's ours.
Wait, but how?
Okay, I'm sorry, but gay people can't have a baby?
Yeah, but like, where did it come from?
Excuse me?
Wow, you are not allowed to talk like that.
That is so invasive.
Okay, but like we were with you last night and you did not have a baby.
Yeah, and you guys said that after dinner you were going to go to a
rave called Bulge Dungeon, and now today you have a baby.
What we're asking is, how did this happen?
Okay, I'm sorry, why is it when it's us an interrogation?
I don't ask you while you're poor.
It's not okay.
You can't ask this question.
It goes on, it's really funny.
The gay guys are the clowns in this sketch.
The straight people are the straight men in this sketch, which is fitting, I suppose.
The joke is that two fells.
can't make a baby, and it's super weird that multiple, many pairs of two fellas have babies.
And it's morally dubious, and everyone's suspicious of it. And they should be because it involves
bioethically suspect practices. Let's just call it what it is, downright immoral practices to
commoditize a human being, go to a baby store, purchase an egg, rent a womb, and pick a baby
out like you'd pick out a designer handbag. It's wrong. It shouldn't happen. Also, one of the jokes
is that babies need their mothers. So the straight group asks, well, where's the mother? And then,
and the guys in the clown position in the sketch say, oh, well, you know, I'm a little more emotional
and I'm not as good a driver or something. So I guess I'm sort of the mother. That's the punchline.
This is the most pronounced vibe shift example I've seen. I think, period, full stop.
I think more than the election, more than the public polling after the inauguration, more than the shift in how the liberal media and liberal institutions are treating Trump and Republicans.
This is Saturday Night Live. This is the liberal comedy show par excellence.
And they are mocking the idea of gay rights, of gay marriage, of surrogacy, of IVF, of the whole baby industry.
huge, huge vibe shift. And all of those examples that I just mentioned are obviously related.
The fact that CNN and MSNBC and all the liberal networks are now starting to have to cater to
conservatives is a direct reaction to the 2024 election. The fact that even S&L, even the entertainment,
comedy, popular media are having to shift their political tone is a reaction to the election
because Trump not only won the election, he won the popular vote. And he not only won the
only won the white guys. He won plenty of white guys, but he also won half of Hispanics almost,
one in five black guys, 40% of women under 30. He just, he just won a lot. And he ran on
nasty portations, and he ran on cutting out the excesses of the sexual revolution, and he ran on
normal. Really good stuff. A reminder, too, during the real high point of social, especially sexual
liberalism of the last, I don't know, maybe about 10 years ago, redefining marriage,
open out baby stores, pushing transgenderism, all of that kind of stuff. Those of us who resisted
and said no, not just to know transing the kids, but no to the redefining marriage. It's not possible.
No to the baby industry. No to all of these social experiments. We were called idiots and
rubs and passe and on the wrong side of history and all the rest. And look who's laughing now.
the reason that I can feel confident, and you should be able to feel confident,
that innovations such as baby stores and gay marriage and all the rest of it,
are not going to last forever, is that they are so out of accord with reality,
they are so ultimately indefensible, that it's like a castle built on sand.
Okay, it can't last because logic is eternal, human nature is eternal.
We can have all sorts of experiments.
Societies can go downhill.
We can sacrifice babies on altars for hundreds of years, but eventually reality is going to kick back in.
Okay?
Really, really good stuff.
On this very same point, there is something that I called for in a viral clip about a month, two months ago, that is now people laughed at me.
They mocked me when I said it.
And it is now national policy in a major Western country.
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Hungary's parliament has just moved on from the rainbow mafia.
from the LGBT Pride Day that became Pride Week,
that became Pride Month, that became Pride 2 months,
it became Pride Year.
Hungary's Parliament just passed an amendment to the Constitution
that allows the government to ban pride
and really all public LGBT displays.
This is so beautiful.
We'll get to exactly what it means how it passed.
But I was on the Jubilee Show, surrounded a couple of months ago.
And we filmed it even earlier than that.
And I was surrounded by 20 or 25 LGBT L MNOP activists.
And one of the prompts that we were debating was that we should ban pride.
Of course, we talked about, you know, get rid of transgenderism.
Of course, we talked, we talked about all of the issues that you usually hear about.
But one that even some people on the center right told me it was too far, too crazy,
was the notion that we should ban pride parades.
But to me, it seems so obvious.
I'm a citizen.
I have the right, at least some right, to set standards in the town square.
And the pride parades are not things that happen in people's backyards.
They happen in the town square.
They happen on Main Street.
And I should not be expected to walk my little kid or to walk my elderly grandmother
through the town square when they're weird fellows wearing leather costumes,
smacking each other around doing gross stuff.
They don't have the right to do that.
I have the right in part to my town square.
And even people on the center right, they mocked me for this.
How could you possibly ban pride?
Well, I'll tell you how hungry just did it.
The vote passed along party lines, 140 votes for it, 21 against it.
Pretty good victory.
The amendment declares that children's rights to moral, physical, and spiritual development
supersede any right other than the right to life,
including that to peaceably assemble.
Love this.
This is great.
You don't have a right to obscene weird stuff in the public square.
Now in Hungary, kids are not going to be exposed to and propagandized with LGBT nonsense in kindergarten, first grade, second grade, third grade.
This is common sense.
One reaction is going to be, well, Michael, that's Hungary.
and Hungary is a far-right authoritarian government.
We would never tolerate that here in America.
We have our constitutional rights.
Until very, very recently, we had, in practice, the exact same policies in America.
And in principle, we still do.
There is no free speech right to obscenity.
Pride parades are not as American as apple pie.
Benjamin Franklin didn't show up to the pride parade, okay?
Pride parades are a relatively recent phenomenon that come
about as a result of the weakening of American laws against obscenity that come about as a
weakening of the American political right to set community standards and a strengthening of the
individual license to autonomy and libertinism and all the rest of it. We made more sense before that.
We have political rights. We have the right to an exalted freedom beyond the degraded pseudo
freedom of the individual license to do gross stuff in public.
Really, really good stuff.
And it reminds me of that line from Cardinal Manning.
There is a day to come that will reverse the confident judgments of men.
People who say, oh, there's no way.
Look, it's the same people who said Roe v. Wade will never be overruled.
And I was one of the people who was skeptical of Roevi Wade getting overruled.
How quickly things can change.
Settled precedent, the most sacred Supreme Court decision ever for the
American left, overturned, by President Trump, a guy who for much of his like was a kind of Democrat,
socially liberal New Yorker. These things can flip. The pushback against transgenderism,
which even five years ago we were told as the way of the future. Now it's a punchline.
Gay marriage, we were told here forever. Now it's a punchline on Saturday Night Live.
Pride parades in public. I don't know that they're all that long for this world, even in America.
Now, speaking of family, new report at the Wall Street Journal that young people increasingly are turning away from cutting their own path, from going to work for some corporations, somewhere else in the country.
Young people increasingly are working for family businesses.
They write, the share of small businesses that employ a young adult child of an owner has doubled since 2018 and is up 13% year over year as of January to roughly 1,200, according to an analysis by,
payroll provider, Gusto. Mark Valentino, the head of business banking at citizens,
sees this moment as a reversal from recent decades in which the children of business owners
tended to stigmatize returning to the family firm in favor of striking out on their own.
For the first time in a generation, there's more excitement and interest in taking over a business
that already exists. So for pretty much all of my life, there has been this sense that there's
something wrong about taking over the family business. There's something kind of unmanned,
about it. You're not really free. You should cut out on your own, do whatever you want, go work for
some other corporation. That it would be better to go work for some guy you never heard of,
doing some business that you've really got new experience in than it is to work for the family
business. A similar kind of reasoning, I think, to the idea that women must go out and work
in some corporate environment. Not that they can go out and work, but they must, that it's
somehow wrong. They're not liberated if they stay at home and raise children and homeschool and
bake cookies and do all the things that women once did. It would be wrong to do that. And I think
that judgment, too, is being reversed here. There's a popular sense that it's wrong to go work for
your family business, but really it's just natural and reasonable. You know, I didn't grow up
with a family business or anything like that, so obviously I didn't work for one. But I was thinking
about my own employment history. I've had all sorts of crazy jobs going back to when I was 14 years old.
And it occurs to me, I don't think I've ever gotten a job by submitting a job application.
You know, going to some kind of random recruitment website and just submitting a blank application.
I've submitted job applications, but it was to people I knew or to people who knew people that I knew.
And it's not like I came from money. It's not like I came from connections.
but even my first job.
I worked at a subway sandwich store,
but it was a store that we would go into a lot.
And, you know, I would talk to the owner.
My mother kind of knew the owner.
Said, hey, you know, maybe you could give my kid a job.
Other jobs I've had in politics,
it was kind of people that I knew or people that I knew that I knew
or someone heard about me from some campaign that I worked on
and we kind of were aware of each other.
Obviously, the Daily Wire.
We were all kind of friends.
We're all in the same social circle before this company even existed.
And I think that's the way it works.
When young people, I go to these universities and young people ask me for advice, how do I break into politics?
One joke I say is, well, the best way to break into political media is to be friends with Jeremy Boring.
That's the first thing I would recommend.
But there's a lot of truth to that.
You know, humans are social creatures.
And so we're not just clinical, you know, independent robots floating throughout our space with no.
connections to each other. It actually makes sense to work with your friends, or at least to work
with people who know your friends, or people that you can trust in a way that is sometimes
inarticulable and goes deeper than just the terms of a contract. Businesses actually work better
that way. There is a reason that there is such a thing as a family business. That isn't wrong.
It isn't wrong to follow your natural inclinations and the relationships that you've cultivated in all other areas of life, in your professional life as well.
Everyone knew this for all of it.
So much of our time is just rediscovering things that people have known intuitively for all of history.
Now, speaking of business and businessmen, you remember that lunatic, a young guy Luigi who murdered the health care CEO in New York some months ago.
in an act of cold-blooded murder.
Well, a prominent left-wing journalist has just gone on a prominent left-wing cable channel
to explain how that murderer is clearly, obviously, a morally good man.
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Taylor Lorenz, one of the more eccentric figures from the left-wing media space.
She is a totally mainstream left-wing journalist.
She's worked for the Washington Post, the New York Times, the Daily Beast, the Daily Mail, business insider.
She's worked for everyone.
Now she's going on CNN to explain why the young man who murdered a healthcare CEO in cold blood,
and deprive that man's wife and children of a husband and father,
why he is obviously a morally good man.
hilarious to see these millionaire media pundits on TV clutching their pearls
about someone standing a murderer when this is the United States of America,
as if we don't lionize criminals, as if we don't have, you know,
we don't stand murderers of all sorts, and we can give them Netflix shows.
There's a huge disconnect between the narratives and angles of the,
sort of mainstream media pushes and what the American public feels.
And you see that in moments like this.
And I can tell you, I saw the biggest audience growth that I've ever seen.
Because people were like, oh, somebody, some journalists, is actually speaking to the anger that we feel.
The women who got her outside court in New York.
So you're going to see women, especially, that feel like, oh, my God, right?
Like, here's this man who's revolutionary, who's famous, who's handsome, who's young, who's
smart. He's a person that seems like this morally good man, which is hard to find.
You can tell in the eyes. You can tell in the eyes and the mouth and
Taylor Lorenz is exactly the kind of woman who would have married Ted Bundy. You know,
she's got, and she's always had that in the eyes. So I'm not denying that she seems a little
little bit cookie. However, this is the view of the mainstream left. This is not just a fringe view.
She's not a fringe journalist. She's worked for all the major outlets. She's here on CNN and she's laughing with the interviewer.
He's a morally good man. It's kind of hard to find. He's so hot. Oh, yeah. And we lionize murderers all the time in America.
Correction. Hold on. Interjection here. No, you do. I don't lionize murderers.
You do. The American left does.
No, but we give them Netflix shows. Right. You run Netflix. I don't, conservatives don't run Netflix.
Yeah, but just, I mean, I don't know. He's just so hot, you know, and he's so obviously morally good. Why is he morally good?
Because he murdered a husband and father in cold blood, a husband and father who is probably richer than him, I guess.
Although, I don't know. Luigi was a rich kid too, apparently. Or is a rich kid. He's still alive for now.
Oh, he-h-he-he-he.
And so I'm sure many on the left would like to say, oh, no, this is not representative of us.
She says I had the largest audience growth during the period in which I talked about how hot and wonderful he is.
But second of all, we have that survey that came out a week ago.
That survey that showed that 55% of Americans who identify in the left say that it would be justified to murder Trump.
And we have all the statements from the mainstream liberals, Biden, Kamala, all the rest of
them, justifying the murder of Trump, calling him an existential threat to America. We have all the
statements of the mainstream leftists saying that you shouldn't be civil with Republicans, as Hillary
Clinton said, of Maxine Waters saying you've got to push back on Republicans in public where you
see them, of people justifying this stuff. So, you know, she seems totally nuts and what she's saying
is repulsive and deeply immoral. That is the mainstream left-wing position. She says it in a
particularly kooky kind of way with that wacky looking, that wacky look on her face, but that's it.
There is no equivalent on the right. There might be some fringe lunatics on the right who would
be condemned by every serious person on the right. For her, that's the mainstream view.
Now, speaking of men and women, my friend Sour Patch Lids, you know Sour Patch Lids from, she was on
Tim Poole's show and you might know her from various places on social media now. She made a really great
point the other day on men and women. Did not involve Luigi, the murderer. She said, what is an
example of a third space for men? A third space, not work, not home, somewhere men can go in their
free time that is majority slash completely occupied by men. Seems like a lot of male frustration
could be traced back to this third space disappearing. I think this is totally, totally right.
because this space did exist.
It is one of the reason that you're seeing explosive growth in cigar bars right now.
It's one of the reasons I like to go to cigar bars.
I know there are women who smoke cigars.
I'm very grateful to them.
I'm glad that they keep buying Mayflower cigars.
That's great.
But generally, cigar bars are men.
And I like that.
I like cigars just in themselves.
And I've been a cigar enthusiast since I was 15 years old.
But another reason that I like cigars is that when I go to a cigar bar,
I'm just hanging with guys.
And sometimes I just want to talk to guys.
I talk to women plenty of times in my life.
Sometimes I want to just talk to guys.
And furthermore, if I go out and I have a drink,
if I'm on the road, if I'm doing a public event,
I don't even want the risk of a scandal
for someone to take a picture of me
getting a late night drink with a young woman.
I don't even want to see that.
I like the fact that the cigar smoke is a kind of woman repellent.
Not because I don't love women.
I do love women, but because it is appropriate for men in certain occasions, certain times,
to just be around men.
There used to be such a thing as a gentleman's club.
Now we use that expression just to refer to strip clubs.
There used to be a thing as a gentleman's club.
Some people were responding to Sour Patch Lids over there, and they said, oh, these mail spaces,
they never really existed.
Nostalgia's history after a few drinks.
You're just imagining that.
No, no, no, they really did.
I was in New Orleans for the Premium Cigar Association trade show over the weekend.
where we had a great time seeing a lot of friends in the industry.
We won the best booth, our great ship booth of the Mayflower for our size of booth.
So anyway, thank you to PCA.
It was a great time.
On Saturday night, I went out to one of these old Southern gentlemen's clubs.
You know, you put on a tuxedo for dinner, and you go, you have a nice time with the fellas
and you throw some drinks back.
And it was such a throwback.
And it used to be.
A lot of private clubs were like that.
And women had their own spaces, too.
And that's appropriate sometimes, okay?
even going back to Aristotle, who comes up on the show, at least every other day,
Aristotle pointed out importance of friendship, friendship not just of the networking kind,
friendship of utility, friendship not just of convenience, you know, you guys both happen to be in the same place,
friendship not just of pleasure, you both like Pinochle, but friendship of virtue,
friendship of the good, where you can really sit down and have a proper conversation.
This is in large part why men and young men in particular really,
love cigars why there's cigar bars opening. It's because of this point. And I think
there's one group of men that doesn't have to deal with this, and it's the in-cells.
Weirdly enough, because the in-cells intentionally are never around women. They just exclude themselves
from female life. And that's bad for them in many ways, too, because it means that they probably
can't grow up and they can't get married and they can't have kids and they can't do the things that
men want to do. But they do at least have their male-only spaces, which is why they don't need to go to
cigar bars or whatever, you know, join some
gentleman's club. But for
those of us who really want a full
human life and
are fine growing up, getting married,
having kids, being in society,
being a
normal person,
Sour Patch Lids is right.
And the insult's going to have a point too.
Men need their own spaces.
We need, that is appropriate.
And liberalism
in the form of feminism
is really leveling. And
and this is where the gender dysphoria really begins.
The claim that men and women are exactly the same for political purposes, for social purposes,
is the beginning of that gender dysphoria.
You've got to fix that.
Or just head to a cigar bar and have a Mayflower.
Now, I want to go back to co-ed spaces for a minute.
You know about the University of Austin?
It's that university that was founded in Texas to oppose wokeness.
It's a non-woke university.
They believe in free speech and merit and none of this coddling,
none of these safe spaces.
Well, the University of Austin has just announced its new admissions process, and it is revolutionary in higher education.
And a lot of conservatives are cheering this on. And I can't give it three cheers. I can give it one cheer, maybe two cheers. I can't give it three cheers.
Because I think conservatives are getting tripped up a little bit, and we're falling for liberalism again.
I'll get to that in one second. First, though, becoming a member of Daily Wire Plus is not.
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yesterday is from Will G.D., who says Michael's best defense of daylight saving time,
is that when you think about it, there is great significance to the passage of time.
Okay, I think there was a little more to my defense than that.
But look, maybe Kamala Harris has a point there.
She was right about the coconut tree.
She was right, we're not, we didn't just fall out of a coconut tree.
And there is, in fact, great significance to the passage of time.
Maybe this woman, she's really growing in my estimation.
The University of Austin is not one of these safe space, woke, affirmative action kind of universities.
No, no. University of Boston is getting back to meritocracy with this admissions process announcement.
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No extracurriculars, no personal essays, no personality scores, no nepotism, no GPA.
University of Austin just unveiled our new admissions policy.
It's all in this kind of 90s like VHS format to bring back merit.
to higher education.
SAT 1460 automatically let in.
ACT 33 plus automatically let in.
No correct opinions, only correct answers.
Automatic admission.
If you get a classical learning test,
105 plus you get in.
Students pay zero dollar tuition.
That's cool.
Merit over mediocrity,
intellect over identity,
excellence over equity,
education over indoctrination
University of Austin
come here and conquer the world
nothing is in your way
okay and it's all
for those of you who are only listening
it's very pointedly
done in this 90s kind of VHS format
because
the ideas
behind this kind of a university
come from
not a kind of deep conservatism
but a non-woke
liberal nostalgia for the 90s. The 90s are the new 50s. Back in the 70s, the good old days were
the 1950s. Now in the 2020s, the good old days are the 1990s. Remember how great that was when we
were kids and everything was cool? Truly, I think this is history after a few drinks. I really don't want
to counter signal the University of Austin here because the University of Austin is so
preferable compared to many of the institutions of higher learning today. But what
The University of Austin is describing in its admissions policies is not really conservative.
It's in many ways hyper-liberal.
It says all we look at is test scores.
If you get a relatively high test score, you get in.
Merit over mediocrity.
But what do we mean by merit?
It says no extracurriculars.
What if a kid doesn't do that well on a standardized test?
Or, you know, he doesn't get a 1460, it gets a 1450.
But he's started a business when he was 16.
And he's the class president.
And he's the captain of the football team.
And, you know, he's got a lot of leadership potential.
And he's got a lot of discipline and he's balanced.
And he's a well-rounded person.
Isn't that the kind of person you would want at your school?
Aren't those qualities good to have in your student body?
I'll go further.
This is no nepotism, meaning no legacy admissions.
Okay, I was not a legacy admission when I went to college and we didn't have money.
and I wasn't captain of the football team, I'll tell you that too.
But one of the reasons that one goes to an elite university
is because there are legacy admissions there.
Because there are people who come from means,
who come from established families,
who come from different walks of life than you.
And one can pick up some of the habits of the old blue bloods or something.
One can hobnob with people who, you know,
in a really kind of crass way,
might be able to help you out down the road.
If you go to school with, you know,
I don't know, the descendants of J.P. Morgan
and the Rockefellers and Carnegie and, I don't know, who else,
that actually can help you out a little bit down the road
if you're trying to get a job.
One wishes also to have friendships for the good, virtuous friendships.
But, you know, that can help.
You go to an elite university in part for that kind of networking.
You go to an elite university, in part,
for the kind of finishing that that gives one for manners, political behavior, how to socialize,
how to move among elites in society, especially, actually especially if you come from circumstances
that are less privileged. That's one of the benefits of it. So for the school to say,
no, no, we don't want any of that. All we want, no, no, GPA even. What if a student,
what if a student is really, really good at history, has a deep interest in history, could be one
of the great historians of his generation. But he's not that good at math. I don't know, maybe his SAT is
1450. It's not 1460. But he really specializes. To me, that's the kind of person you should have
in your school. It's like, it's kind of like the IQ bell curve meme. You know, at the lower end,
the Philistines of the culture say that the way you get into college and the way you succeed at
college should be based on everything but standardized test scores. You know, it should be
be based on your identity and what you do and all these intangible things and, you know,
your true self, man, that can't be quantified. And then in the middle of the cultural bell curve
mean, I say it's all just about merit, standardized tests. But when you get back up to the top again,
I don't know. I actually do think that students benefit from a little variety on campus.
The problem is not the notion of taking into account extracurriculars and even identity. It's how
that is being done right now. Right now, you've got to be part of all the liberal clubs,
and you've got to come from some socially favored or politically favored racial group or sexual group,
and that's how you get in. And so if you're just a regular old white kid who's good at his
schoolwork, you're in a bad spot. If you're a regular Asian kid who's good at his schoolwork,
you're in a bad spot. But we shouldn't throw the baby out with the bathwater here. Right now,
you know, the system selects for leftism and favored race.
races. But this kind of thing is not ideal. So I say one or even two cheers for the University of
Boston. I like the idea. I get it. This is kind of the 90s nostalgia ideal of merit. But
even if this is a refreshing improvement over the status quo, there's more to it. There's actually
more to the idea of merit than just how you did on your SAT. And I did do, I wasn't captain of the
football team, but I did do well in my SAT. But there's more. There's more to life than how you do
on your SAT. Okay, back to racial politics. You know the guy, the young man who murdered Austin Metcalf
is black kid and he murdered this white kid who was a, who was a football star and a bright future
ahead of him, stabbed him in the heart as the white kid, allegedly, because the white kid
asked him to move out of his seat. So the alleged murderer was being held in jail, one million
bond. And that bond was just reduced to $250,000 and now the kid's walking free.
And he was able to pay the bond because there was a go-fund me set up immediately after this
black kid allegedly murdered the white kid. A go-fund me was set up and it's raised something like
$400,000. So not enough for the million dollar bond, but don't worry, the judge is going to lower
it to reach the still absurd huge amount of money that the black kid was able to raise.
because he allegedly murdered a white kid.
Regardless of this alleged murderer's guilt or innocence,
he raised that money as a reward for being a black teen who killed a white teen.
That's why he raised that money.
We all know if it were the other way around,
he would not have raised that kind of money.
No one would have donated.
Oh, GoFundMe, would have shut it down.
The bond would not have been lowered.
It would have been raised.
he might have been executed already in a fast-tracked kind of capital punishment.
We have a social and political incentive in this country, undeniable from this case,
to reward a black teen, not just for being arrested, not just for being misunderstood by society,
specifically for allegedly murdering a white teen.
And the reason for that is we have all been told through our schools, through our popular media, for decades, for many of us since we were kids, that white people are bad and black people are good. And it's as simple as that. And when black people are bad, it's actually because of white people and white people are so bad that whiteness itself needs to be abolished. There are university, speaking of the university, university classes on the need to abolish whiteness.
So when a young black kid
takes it into his own hands to abolish at least one instance of whiteness,
that is rewarded.
None of this should be unexpected.
This is all perfectly predictable
if you understand the incentives in our culture.
Speaking of death, a woman has just been accused of selling human bones on Facebook
for as little as $35.
And she was arrested for this.
And I just got to ask why it's wrong.
I think I might have to start a segment on this show.
Why is this wrong?
When you take an example of something that's obviously wrong,
but according to the popular understanding of morality and pop culture,
it would not be wrong.
Why is it wrong?
We'll get to that story tomorrow.
We've run out of time for today, and it's T-He-He-H-Tuesday.
The rest of the show continues.
Now, you do not want to miss it.
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