Anti-Racism is KILLING People
4/6/20261 hr 9 min
Michael Murphy reveals how anti-racism policies and woke ideology are directly causing deaths in Britain and America.
Anti-racism is killing people. In this explosive Heretics interview, Michael Murphy joins Andrew Gold to reveal how woke ideology and anti-racism policies have directly caused deaths in Britain and America through institutional fear, ignored warnings, and deadly social experiments.
SPONSORS:
Get an exclusive 15% discount on Saily data plans! Use code andrewgold at checkout. Download Saily app or go to https://saily.com/andrewgold Check Plaud U...
Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsSpeaker 00:00
It's Toyota Truck Month. Time for a truck that works as hard as you. Tacoma, Tundra. Built for the job and ready for the trail. Available with four-wheel drive and connected tech, all backed by legendary Toyota reliability. Visit your local Toyota dealer for great financing and lease options available to qualified customers. Or visit buyatoyota.com to find your Truck Month deal today. That's buyatoyota.com. Toyota. Let's go places.
Speaker 10:29
UnitedHealth Group is simplifying healthcare by investing in tools to help patients know more and pay less. These tools help patients find providers and compare costs and save hundreds of dollars annually. Learn more at unitedhealthgroup.com/commitment.
Andrew Gold· Host0:44
Anti-racism today, how it's actually killing people, which is mental. People wanting to look good, celebrating this George Floyd stuff. Meanwhile, 10,000 extra people are now dead. The homicide rate, the biggest spike in American history since the '60s. It was up by around 30%. In Britain, the main victims of this were Black people, who saw around a 40% spike in Black homicides. I mean, that's a massacre. That's like a war. And interestingly, a 39% spike in road fatalities because when the police are reluctant to pull over Black people. This is an institutional problem. You see these failings not just in the NHS, but also in schools, in the police, in the judiciary. The fear of an