Best of The Program | Guests: Jason Whitlock & Jaco Booyens | 4/28/21

41m
Journalist Jason Whitlock joins to preview his upcoming speech on the African American journey and give his predictions for President Biden’s first address to Congress and thoughts on LeBron James. South African native Jaco Booyens warns that America is heading down the same path toward extreme racial equity, affirmative action, and vengeance.
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Transcript

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Welcome to the podcast.

Big night tonight, because Joe Biden's going to be out there doing a speech, and that's always fun because at some point he's going to say squirrels in the middle of it, and we're not going to know why he said it, and it's just going to be funny.

He's also going to spend about $4 trillion of your dollars.

We go through all the details of what we have spent and what we are apparently going to spend now.

It's shocking, to say the least.

We have Jason Whitlock on.

He's always fantastic when he comes on, Yako Bouillon's as well, to explain to us what the heck is going on in South Africa and what lessons are we learning from South Africa that might be coming here very soon.

You don't want to miss that.

Blazetv.com/slash Glenn is the place to go for tonight's coverage.

If you use the promo code Glenn, they got you 20 bucks off your subscription.

Now, this incredible program has not only Glenn back, but also Mark Levin is going to be joining us, among others, including myself.

I'll be there as well to react to the speech.

And that will be right after a brand new Stu Does America,

which starts at 8 p.m.

So 8 p.m.

for Stu Does America, 9 p.m.

Glenn's live coverage of the speech with Joe Biden.

And then

don't forget, it's always free on podcast.

You can check it out right here.

Subscribe to this podcast and subscribe to Stu Does America as well.

Appreciate you taking the time.

Here's the podcast.

You're listening to

the best of the Blenbeck program.

Mr.

Jason Whitlock.

Welcome to the program, sir.

How are you?

Awesome.

Awesome.

Headed to Oklahoma.

Yeah.

And

you're giving a speech.

Give us a little highlight of the speech.

Well,

I think we've discussed some of it here.

It certainly has been inspired by some of my conversations with you.

But if you really understand America's journey, and how central the African-American journey was to making America live up to its promise of freedom.

And so the African American journey expanded freedom and made America hyper-focused on freedom.

And it helped us become the greatest nation in the world.

The African American journey and having to live up to the things we promised in the Declaration of Independence and in our Constitution.

And if you really understand what's going on in America right now, African Americans have been targeted by our adversaries, China, Russia,

the Mideast,

the far left, the satanic left.

And they understand

that without African Americans on their team, they can't bring down America.

And so they have targeted us and have moved us away from our faith-based worldview and have removed us from being America's moral conscience.

And that's why so much degeneracy is promoted by liberals in control of the zeitgeist and Hollywood culture.

Degeneracy is promoted within black culture.

And now you have guys like LeBron James and all the Hollywood influencers and athletic influencers expressing all of this anti-American sentiment.

And that's why we have so much chaos here in America.

Have you met LeBron?

I mean, you're a sports writer.

Have you met him?

What do you think of him?

I've met him, but not in a real way.

I've been, you know, practices, games, press conferences, have, you know, asking questions at press conferences, things.

At one point, I was tight with the people close to LeBron, Maverick Carter, his business partner, and Rich Paul, and have sat down with a lot of those guys.

What I mostly think is that,

and look, I just got to be real.

I'm a former athlete.

When you focus that much time

on

your

body and athleticism and developing your athletic ability, there's not a lot of time left over to develop your intellectual capacity.

So most of the guys that I have known who are blessed with the most physical ability aren't the brightest lights in the world.

LeBron's not one of the brightest lights in the world.

There are some athletes from Grand Hill,

others who are, pretty smart, come from really solid family foundations, and are more well-rounded than LeBron.

LeBron's one of the greatest basketball players of all time.

He's not one of the greatest thinkers.

And it's not surprising if I was blessed with that kind of athletic talent, I wouldn't be one of the brightest thinkers, not that I am now, but I just think that athleticism, that level of it, gets in the way of...

developing your intellectual capacity.

And so LeBron's not very bright,

but he's got a lot of money, and that trumps all in America.

When you worship money the way we do here in this country, we tend to think, oh, that guy's got a lot of money.

He's got to be really smart.

And I say a lot of times the people with the most money are the people either physically blessed or the people willing to cut the most corners to get the money.

And, you know, there's a reason why God says, you know, a rich man is like getting a...

a camel through a needle for him to see the kingdom of heaven.

I guess that's why I blow so much money, Glenn.

I want to die poor.

So much to my kids' chagrin, I want to die poor as well.

So what's his motivation, do you think?

Oh, I think he and Nike, he's being a great Nike employee, and Nike is beholden to China, and their interest in growing their market share in China supersedes growing their market share in America.

China has 1.4 billion citizens.

We have 333 million or something along those lines.

And so Nike is most interested in China.

And so LeBron James, being a good Nike employee,

you know, sings the praises of China or ignores the problems in China and focuses on being a good propaganda tool for China and Nike that, you know, America is the evil place.

He's just being a good Nike employee and serving his bottom line.

I know I saw some tweets saying that you were a rich elite,

calling out him as a rich elite.

You're a rich elite.

No,

first of all, you're not even in the same, none of us are in the same category as LeBron James.

But you earned your money just like he did.

And you came from nothing.

Isn't that

instead of arguing who's got more money or what you're doing because you have money the idea is that yeah i have money but i didn't come from money i earned it and i i did it the right way and in america anyone can make it i i think that they would argue lebron earned his money he came from nothing he did it the right way all those things are true i think what separates me and lebron though is

I'm aware that I live a pampered, privileged life.

However, I want to create the opportunities for kids who were in the same situation as you to elevate.

And so I can't be pro-elites.

I was an elite.

I was not an elite.

I was,

you know, a kid growing up with a dad that didn't graduate high school and a mom that was a factory worker.

and came from nothing.

And so

a lot of the things I'm arguing aren't in my particular best best interest.

I'm arguing for people who were like me 30 years ago.

How do they climb the ladder?

Because again, America has the most economic mobility

than any country on the planet.

My story is not unique.

There are other black, white, Asian,

Hispanic people that have came from nothing and

climbed the social and economic ladder here in America.

It's easier to do it here because of our freedoms and the principles that were founded long before any of us were alive.

Some of the principles weren't the greatest, but we corrected and improved those and kept the ones that were great.

And they allowed people like me to elevate from a

poor station in life to a life of privilege.

I just want other kids, and I'm arguing for things that will allow other Jason Whitlocks when they're 10, 12, 11, 15 years old, that they can climb that ladder the same way I did.

If we go the way of the elites and what's good for Nike and the globalists,

again, there will be less people like Jason Whitlock.

I'll reference my lawyer and friend in Kansas City, Kirk May, a white guy that came from nothing in Springfield, Missouri.

It'll be a lot harder for him to climb that ladder if we go the way that the elites like LeBron James and Nike here are pushing us.

There will be less stories of people

overcoming their circumstances and elevating.

It is the story.

It's why people are coming from South America here.

In South America and the rest of the world, China, you have to be connected and you have to be in the right party and the right class and know the right people to be able to make it.

Here, the rule of law was supposed to be: justice is blind, so it doesn't matter.

You don't have to belong to a union or a guild or be from the right family.

All you have to do is invent a better mousetrap.

But now we're making that damn near impossible.

And you can't because of all the regulations.

You have to have money and you have to have connections.

And if that stands and continues to grow,

people down at the bottom of the ladder, they don't don't have a chance.

They'd never, ever make it.

I know I wouldn't have.

I wouldn't have made it.

They are

going to make those people dependent on UBI.

And I'm just, I don't want to be dependent on UBI.

And they're already doing that.

Yeah.

And yes, they've done.

Someone the other day sent me

the letter or the newspaper column that Paul Harvey turned into a broad a radio broadcast speech and It was about if if I were the devil and was

written in 1965

and And it's so profound and so ahead of its time and and one of the great lines in there is about I would take from those who have and give to those who want it thus like destroying the incentive of the ambitious.

And that's what we're doing.

Look what's happening.

Look what's happening with just the bailouts.

We have people now making more money than they can make at work.

And so they're not going to work.

And what people don't understand is, you know, everybody says, oh, inflation's not coming.

All inflation is, is too much money chasing too few goods.

So all you have to do is not be able to make the goods.

Well, if no one's taking their job, the factories can't keep up with the demand.

So that demand will promise you higher prices.

And everybody's going to bitch and moan about higher prices.

They're going to say it's the capitalist system.

No, it's not.

It's this government hybrid here of socialism and corrupt capitalism that is going to cause massive, massive pain for everybody involved.

You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.

So part of our infrastructure bill is to make sure that we have broadband available for everywhere in the country, that we are going to be blanketing this thing coast to coast and the government is going to be involved in it.

I don't want the government involved in any of this stuff.

I don't think the government has a place in it, a role in it.

And, you know, when things go wrong, you become China very quickly if it's all government lines, if it's everything was built by the government.

You know, the government's going to build in things for the future, you know, some things that maybe we'd like to do.

I would rather have people like

Elon Musk building them.

Elon Musk has just done SpaceX's Starlink internet service, and they're rolling it out around the world.

And it is a service so you can have high-speed internet anywhere.

And the latency is about 40 milliseconds to 20 milliseconds.

Well, so you know, we are now have a latency issue of about a hundred milliseconds.

When you get it below five, you can do surgery remotely.

But 20 milliseconds and 100 for sure is too long.

You'll kill a patient on the table if something goes wrong.

But five milliseconds and below,

that's like having the surgeon's hands right there in real time.

Well, this gets from space, this gets you a latency of 20 milliseconds to 40 milliseconds.

That's good.

That's really good for something in space, low orbit, and he's paying for it.

Now, why am I talking about this?

Because I think it's an amazing

project that an entrepreneur has taken on and said, I'll get internet to Appalachia.

I'll get internet anywhere.

We're just going to ring the earth with satellites.

And he's done it.

Now he is going and opening it up.

Already it's available in the U.S., in Canada, Australia.

And this is just the beta system.

It's going to get faster once they have more satellites up.

But they are now asking other countries, do you want to buy into this?

Do you want part of this?

Well,

the problem is in South Africa, they desperately need this.

But in South Africa,

they have something called the

black buy-in or something.

You have to have black

either ownership or black CEOs as the head of the company for you to be able to do anything in South Africa now.

Well,

wait a minute.

So

what does that mean?

Does that mean you're not going to give high-speed internet because Elon Musk is the CEO and he's white?

The answer is, yes, that's exactly what it means.

So we're no longer on meritocracy.

We are only judging things on race, which,

I mean, you could find ways around it, I would imagine.

But

is that a job you would want?

That you would be the guy who's not really the CEO, but you're black, and so you're going to be the CEO?

That'd be horrible.

Think of what kind of a country you would have if you start creating those kinds of things.

This happens often in foreign countries and sometimes in the U.S.

as well.

A friend of mine

won a purchasing business in Hawaii and the rules were basically that there had to be a certain percentage ownership of a native Hawaiian.

So it was the business was purchased and then basically the native Hawaiian was sort of like the billboard on the front of the company, you know, like not necessarily doing a lot, but had to be on the ownership papers and got paid to be on the ownership papers.

While the regular American, which I guess Hawaiians aren't, I don't know exactly how that works, but the regular American actually owned and operated the business.

It's bizarre, and it happens all over the world.

Foreign countries, it happens all the time with Americans.

In foreign countries, in foreign countries, it happens, and in foreign countries, even Mexico, you can't buy oceanfront property in Mexico unless you're Mexican.

And I understand that.

You don't want

foreign nationals to own all of the property that's good.

So people, what they do is they buy something and you can own it through the bank if you're a foreign national, but only for 100 years.

And then it goes back to the bank.

But if it's waterfront property, it has to be purchased through a Mexican.

So you, what people do, and I think, is they buy these properties and they buy them through people who are saying, you live there, but really they're just the caretakers.

So, I mean,

it's just a sham.

It's a way for people to make money, and it's a sham.

I wanted to talk about South Africa because it's a really unique situation.

But we have somebody who we know through the Blaze.

He's a really great guy, president and founder of Share Together,

and is from South Africa, actually

saved his sister from sex trafficking.

It's an amazing story.

Yako Buwens is with us now.

Yako, how are you?

We can get Yako in.

He was actually scheduled for about 10 minutes from now.

I did see him walk in, though.

So grab him if you would.

Oh, I thought he was on the phone.

I'm sorry.

Yeah, yeah, bring him in.

Bring him in.

He has a really interesting take

on

what all of this kind of stuff means

because he sees it in South Africa.

And South Africa is a disaster.

It's a disaster.

It was getting better under Nelson Mandela, and they made massive changes.

It's not America.

It's certainly not Israel.

And it has some real poverty problems.

I mean, the...

The difference between the black community in poverty and the white community in poverty is something Americans have never seen.

We've just never seen that kind of poverty.

And how do you get out of it?

We have Yako on with us.

Hi, Yako.

How are you?

Glene, good to be with you.

Good.

I'm sorry to pull you in.

I thought you were on this half hour.

No, it's true.

I wanted to talk to you about what Elon Musk is dealing with and what that means in South Africa when

you have to have a black South African at the head of a company, and it's a sham.

A hundred percent.

Glenn, it's the Black Economic Empowerment Act.

And this act, you know, Dr.

Helen Zillow is the leader of the Democratic Alliance, which is in the Cape Province.

It's the only province that's not governed by the ANC.

She wrote a book recently called State Woke Go Broke.

In the book, she says, We don't know if South Africa can survive the culture wars in the USA.

I disagree.

I don't think the USA can survive a type policy as what we've had for the last 27 years in the culture wars in South Africa.

So South Africa is really a test case.

It should be the test case for the world.

Everything we've seen through COVID in 2020, I've seen that movie before.

I lived it through apartheid.

I can script it for you what's coming next.

And what's coming next is affirmative action in the U.S.

It is a BEE, black economic empowerment-like kind of policy.

And this is what that does.

It mandates by the state that you have C-suite level executives with a 51% majority ownership of your company.

If you're the founder of the company, it doesn't matter.

You just hire a black face, you give equity, and that qualifies you for certain privileges by the state, lower taxes, etc.

And then, most importantly, you can qualify for government contracts.

And here comes the massive corruption.

This is why you see President Zuma indicted for fraud, the Guptas, why you see banks going down, why you see ESCOM, the power company, funneling money, billions of dollars out of South Africa, it's because of black economic empowerment.

But the policy does the following.

Black economic empowerment is preferential procurement, affirmative action, quotas, even in sport, to where a sports team says, hey,

seven players this color, three players white, two players that color, not on merit, even in sport.

It's crazy.

Even in sport on our national level, our national level.

Then it also, of course, economic equity and in

the representation that needs to be across the board.

So literally how it works is there's a scoring system, Glenn.

And if you say, look, I'm not going to subscribe to BEE at all.

I am a business owner in South Africa still.

And I had to decide, do I want to subscribe to BEE?

And if you don't, you get penalized.

Your capital gains, your taxes are through the roof.

Now you start playing the game because there's a scorecard.

Okay, I'll bring in one C-suite guy.

I earn a couple points.

Two C-suite guys, 20% ownership.

And this is this game.

And what happens, I'll give you an example.

The head of our education department in South Africa, the head, so our equivalent of the head of education in the U.S.

And we have ministers.

Our minister of education does not have an education degree.

Our minister of health.

is not a doctor.

Think about that first.

The person who's writing policies on health in South Africa is not a doctor.

It's a person who used to work in the economic department, who used to be in mining, and just gets placed at the top of the tier of a whole sector.

This is what Elon is stepping into.

Aaron Powell,

this is the great reset.

Absolutely.

This is what the World Economic Forum, I mean, the scorecard is already there.

It's the ESG system.

100%.

And I think that's what you're going to hear

a tip of the hat to tonight about finding new ways to equity and to make things more fair, et cetera, et cetera.

And what you're describing, I think, probably was the prototype.

And now they've just figured out how to do it and how to cast it out for the whole world through the World Economic Forum.

Because all of those things are being proposed right now in the United States.

All of those things.

It's sad to say, Glenn, but I called several economists because thank you for inviting me on your show.

I really always appreciate you.

I called them because I just want to be on the cusp factual on your show.

Even this morning spoke to one of the top economists in the country and he said, Yaku,

we are cringing over here because you're literally following our playbook from 1997, 2001, 2005.

It's like it's scripted.

The guys can predict what's next.

So tell me what it was like.

And

what they sold and what happened.

Yeah, yeah, I'm from South Africa, you know, born and raised 27 years, first 27 years of my life, Glenn.

And so through the apartheid era, I was raised.

And we were raised right by a mom who said, hey, all men are equal, created by God.

But what we saw is a massive pendulum swing in reverse racism.

And the result, and

immediately, the proposed

economic plan was black economic empowerment.

And it took three years to employ, from 1994 when Nelson came out of prison to 1997.

Now, here are the...

So he was part of this.

Oh, 100%.

Because he didn't.

No, 100%.

He did not have...

He didn't...

He was a communist, but he didn't have ⁇ he didn't seem to have a bone in his body where it was vengeance.

No, but Nelson, it's like it always...

There was a version of this plan with President Mandela that then

followed.

Yeah, it was kinder, and it was truly about building a nation together and really bringing people together.

Because the man had a heart chains in prison.

He was a communist, but he had a heart chains.

But very quickly, those who took over power from him swung the pendulum all the way.

And that's what we're seeing in the U.S.

now.

I firmly believe the radical left feel like Barack Obama was not radical enough.

And

this is the time to come get the pound of flesh.

And this is what's going to happen.

It's scripted.

So when that pendulum swung, reverse racism came in.

But this is what happened.

$3 trillion,

U.S.

dollars, was spent by the apartheid government on the majority, which is always black in Africa.

The majority is black.

The minority is white.

There's only 3 million people that speak my language on the planet, Afrikaans.

It's a small group of people, right?

So when that pendulum swung and they brought in black economic empowerment, here's what happened.

We're now at 29%

nationally unemployment rate.

29%.

Oh my gosh.

Today.

That's a figure today.

That's black economic empowerment.

There is no middle class.

It enriches the political class.

They hand out contracts, government contracts, to government employees.

This is pay-for-play.

This is everything you cringe about as a free American, and it's coming.

And they call it

the Economic Forum in South Africa, the Equality Act.

They have done nothing.

This policy does nothing, Glenn.

to uplift.

It's

as bad for black South Africans as it is for white South Africans.

It's a facade.

They're riding on the backs of their own people.

It's a cannibalization of their own people.

It's a voting block so that we can stay in power, the ANC, through black economic.

And now a foreign company comes in.

Elon is a South African born.

I'm South African born.

We're both citizens of the U.S.

But Elon is about to step into a mess.

I mean, is he going to do it?

I don't think so.

Because what they're going to require of him, I can't see that man give it up.

He's going to have to give up.

He's going to have to position his company at 51% black ownership in South Africa.

51%.

That's controlling interest, Glenn.

You know that.

I mean, this is how

the corporation is steered.

And the reason they do that, whether it is our version of Walmart, which is MassMart, or our version of Nestle, Cadbury, they put these guys in senior C-suite positions so that they answer to the government.

Stu.

They answer to the government.

So the government says, turn left.

A corporation shifts.

Culture shifts.

They control the purse strings and they pay these guys.

We got people in education in South Africa that earn more than doctors.

And by the way, it trickles down.

Today, if you're a white kid, which is the minority in South Africa by number, okay?

The minority.

You cannot go to school to become a doctor.

They won't let you in.

Your skin color is not right.

You can't become a doctor.

So it trickles down to sport.

We're talking about quotas in

our version of Pee Wee football, Pewee rugby.

Hey, sorry, only four white kids allowed on the team.

Not merit.

Hey, but Johnny is really fast.

No, Johnny, you're the wrong skin color.

That's coming.

More in just a second.

I want to talk to Yako about something else that is going on.

When Nelson Mandela died, there was a turn towards vengeance,

enough of this reconciliation.

And they turned to vengeance, and it is the dark side of what's happening here in America as well.

And it hasn't led to anything good.

We're going to talk about that coming up.

The best of the Glenn Beck program.

It is so sad, Yako, because South Africa is beautiful.

And, you know, it is a

system that was built, I think, by

Nelson Mandela out of love.

He thought he was right about his economic policies.

He's a communist.

And he thought he was doing the right thing by the people.

And now, once he died, a new guy came in and said, to heck with all the nice stuff.

And you were telling us in the break that

you know the guy who was in jail with Nelson Mandela.

Yeah, I had the fortune of meeting a cellmate of Nelson, actually, who became a professor and had a heart change.

But there were policies drawn up, a battle strategy

planned while they were in prison for almost three decades, right, of how to take this country back.

And there was a direct connection with the outside world, the foreign world, and prison system with the ANC, which was the African National Communist Party.

Let's not forget that.

And and Nelson Mandela was not put in jail because he was a black man.

They blew up a building.

Children got hurt.

It was acts of treason, right?

And so, but anyway, Nelson comes out.

He was a people person, though, Glenn.

He loved people.

The guy who followed him up, Tabu Mbeki, was a radical, absolute radical communist.

And Mbeki said, forget about this nice stuff.

Forget about this.

their version of a reset with Nelson loving people and wanting, you know, true, true, you know, relationship in the nation, the rainbow nation, as we were called, right?

And Mbeki just said, forget Nelson's out dropped the hammer, and it's been downhill from there.

And the policies are absolutely radical.

And we should, as Americans, make a study of South Africa since 1994 to today, really 1997, when this came in, when Nelson started losing his grip because he was still there in president, but he was losing his grip on his party.

His party ousted him way before he actually left as president.

They took it back.

It was really just three years of

them following him because it was an euphoric, kind of a, you know, emotionally driven thing.

And then when they realized, well, Nelson's not really going to just hate white people, right?

And so then they started taking power back.

And then, you know, the Jacob Zumas of the world, who is so radical, and now, you know, Cyril Ramapoza, who is an absolute fraud, a fake, and the infighting.

And

it's...

The corruption.

It's corrupt.

It's the corruption you're seeing now in Black Lives Matter,

the corruption you're seeing seeing now in the Biden family, where they just enrich themselves because they're part of the deal.

We hide it better, but you'll notice that here in America, people are starting just to just be out with it.

I mean, look at Black Lives Matter.

I'm just going out and buying houses.

How?

How are you buying?

Where is that money coming from?

How are you buying all those houses?

You know, it's so cliche, follow the money.

But there's President Zuma, Jacob Zuma.

Currently, it's Ramapoza.

Zuma goes and up to the equivalent of $100 million US plus, builds himself houses around the globe, builds these four.

You can always follow the money.

Black Lives Matter Inc.

is literally following the playbook of the South African state, the State Department at the moment.

And they're walking hand in hand to the point where we have George Floyd Square, where black businesses are now out of business.

They didn't do anything.

I mean, they're black businesses.

Is Black Lives Matter Inc.

funding those businesses?

No.

No.

No.

And they're calling for the police, begging the police, please come back.

Of course, come back.

And this is South Africa today.

We have no borders.

My family owns a farm on the border.

On the border, the most northern border of South Africa.

Our fence, the family's farm is a border fence.

I mean, you can't do anything.

Someone walks onto your land, shoots an elephant, shoots a rhino, comes to the horse.

You can't even, you know, in South Africa, you can't fire upon somebody if they're in your house unless they fire upon you first.

And so just look at where we're going.

I can take the gun issue in the U.S.

and say, been there, saw that happen.

Take your guns.

Literally came and confiscated guns in people's homes, right?

The playbook is there, and we should not, you know, we should, it's shame on us if we get fooled by this, Glenn, because there is a harmony.

How are you feeling about tonight and the speech tonight?

You know me.

I am an optimist.

We fight evil, but I have a really, really bad feeling about tonight.

I feel like, and I told you this in a break, and I'm not a doom and gloom guy, but I feel like we're going to remember tonight as a marker that we'll look back at and say, that moment things pivoted.

I think they're getting so bold that tonight they're going to lay out policy.

And unfortunately, I think America is just too numb some,

definitely the left who voted them into power to even see what they're doing.

They're disemboldened.

For those with sanity in our country, like the Glenn Becks and the Stews and this network, we're going to look at it and say, there it is.

There it is.

They're now so bold, they're going to lay out a plan.

And I just ask people, look at the plan that's laid out tonight and then look at what's currently in South Africa.

And you're going to see so many dots line up.

So, Yaku, you and I have spoken off-air many times because there's something going on in South Africa that

is

horrifying.

But because the alt-right got involved,

the reporters won't, no one will report on it.

And it is very similar to what is happening here in America, I think.

There is a part of it that is race.

There's also a part of it, I think, a big part,

that is just lawlessness.

Because you can do anything.

We're seeing this here in America.

The people who were

burning things down and rioting and taking things from Walmart, they don't believe in anything.

Not at all.

They're just

lawlessness because who's going to stop them?

There is a problem

with

farmers, generally white,

that are just being slaughtered in their homes by these gangs.

And nobody is...

Nobody's willing to verify.

Nobody's willing to go on record.

And so many people in the mainstream media just deny that it's even happening.

Is it happening?

Glenn, I'm going to tell you, I'll go on record.

I have the interviews to prove it.

My family is there.

It's absolutely happening.

We have gone from 300,000 farmers in 1994 to 30,000 farmers in South Africa in 27 years.

300,000 farmers to 30,000 farmers.

Okay.

The farming community is a direct attacked community in South Africa.

They're profiled 100%.

Do you know that by the World Forum, the most dangerous job on the earth today is to be a South African farmer?

That is the most dangerous job.

The whole World Forum agrees to this, but in the U.S., mainstream media don't want to go there.

Why?

Because it's predominantly 95% white farmers, and we're not talking about killing a bullet.

A bullet would be merciful.

We're talking about killing, raping women, killing them by burning them with blowtorches.

We're talking about dragging them behind vehicles, delimbing people, decapitating people, raping children in front of the fathers, pouring hot water down their throats.

They just, you know, had a young kid, 22-year-old farmer, Brennan.

They skinned him like you skin a deer in the public square, hung him in a tree and skinned him, Glenn.

This is not, we got the photographs, this is verifiable, but the alt-right, unfortunately, tried to make it worse.

It's bad enough.

We don't need to make it worse.

Just let the truth stand for itself.

And the president of South Africa says nothing to see here.

And his defense is, well,

there's 50 murders a week in South Africa.

It's nothing to see here.

Disproportionately, when you look at, well, who is being murdered, you see, well, wait a second.

There's not another sector in society on earth that is more profiled than the South African farmer.

Yes, black farmers are being killed too because they're considered traitors because they work with the white farmer.

And so now you need to talk about the land grab that's going on.

The government just...

Who's grabbing the land?

The government, and there's no compensation.

So you've got a mortgage on the land, you've got mortgage on your tractors or your equipment.

They go, that's your problem with the bank.

We're just

taking the land.

And do you think they're selling the land?

Do you know that a black farmer in South Africa today, I want people to hear this, cannot buy his own farmland.

He leases it from the government.

So they take land from the white farmers and then they lease it to the black farmer.

He can't even buy it.

They won't allow him to be if he had the cash.

White farmers are going around putting mortgages down for black farmers, saying, we want, they won't, it can't.

It's state-owned.

Under the guise of democracy, these are facts, absolute facts.

I'll bring the proof.

I'll set up the interviews.

But the world doesn't want to touch it because it's reverse racism.

And they don't want to talk about that at all.

We have talked about this, and I've talked about this with my producers for almost two years.

And we are going to do a

special with you on it and we'll do it this quarter.

Thank you.

I promise you.

It is we just have to be very careful because the alt-right, as you said, makes it worse than it is.

You don't have to make it worse.

Not at all.

And whether it is because of black radicals or just chaos,

I think it's a combination of the two.

It's just, it's what's happening here in America.

And if you don't think that that will come here,

you're sadly mistaken.

Sadly mistaken.

Glenn, you're walking in the streets and someone commits a murder and

they want to prosecute the guy and they go, we can't do anything to this guy.

He's not here.

He's a ghost because he's an illegal immigrant.

He's from Kenya, Rwanda, you know, Ivory Coast.

Well, what's happening at the moment?

You know, Guatemala walking through other countries into our country.

Honduras, they're just walking in.

This is literally, I'm telling you, that little country of South Africa in the political cycle is ahead of the United States.

And it's a very young country, but it is ahead.

We have done this.

This exercise does not work.

It's going to break this culture if we do this.

And Glenn, I promise you, I'll bring you

from the horse's mouth, the verified truth.

We'll bring black, white economists, black, white farmers, and you yourself and your audience, because you always give your audience fact.

And I love this show and I love this network.

We'll bring it to you.

We have to shed light on these things because

it is a warning for, should be for all our politicians and for people in this nation to say, if you keep voting this way or supporting this radical stuff,

this is what happens.

It's human nature.

Anarchy.

Yako, thank you so much.

Thank you.

Yako Bouillons.

You can find him at Yako Bouin,

spelled right just the way it sounds.

J-A-C-O-B-O-O-Y-E-N-S.

You can find him at yakobouyansministries.org or share together now.org.