Topic: White Sacrifice

6 chapters across the catalog

97: Flowers for Fuller
2:43:17 - 2:46:06

97: Flowers for Fuller

White Sacrifice Confusion and January 6th

The final strategy of confusion is "White Sacrifice," where the system mistreats or arrests a small percentage of white people to prove that racism does not exist. The hosts point to the prosecution of January 6th protesters and "White Christian Nationalists" as modern examples of this numbers game. This tactic is described as a distraction to keep non-white populations from recognizing the true nature of the system.

91: Scott Free
2:54:42 - 3:00:42

91: Scott Free

White Sacrifice and Racial Showcasing

Neely Fuller Jr. introduces the concept of "white sacrifice"—allowing some white people to suffer or be imprisoned (like the January 6th defendants) to maintain the illusion that the system is not racially biased. Simultaneously, "racial showcasing" promotes incompetent or over-represented individuals to high positions to set them up for a public "fall." The hosts cite the recent FAA administrator nominee as an example of this dynamic.

62: Pink Elephant
1:13:22 - 1:17:58

62: Pink Elephant

Ritual Sacrifice of Black Men in White Identity

Drawing on the theories of Rene Girard, the discussion explores the "ritual sacrifice" of Black men as a tool to create social cohesion among white populations. This "symbolic murder" of identity is used to restore harmony to a community by projecting internal violence onto a marginal victim. The hosts argue that the Democratic Party dehumanized George Floyd by treating him as a necessary sacrificial lamb.

50: Class Action
1:57:45 - 2:01:15

50: Class Action

René Girard, Mimetic Desire and the Desirability of Whiteness

The discussion applies René Girard's theories of mimetic desire and ritual sacrifice to American race relations, identifying the "plantation elite" as the model for social desirability. Whiteness is described not just as a racial category but as a "desirable quality" representing purity and goodness that others are conditioned to strive for. This competition creates a binary system where elites generate allegiance by making whiteness an exclusive and sought-after status.

48: Shootist
3:16:13 - 3:22:04

48: Shootist

The "Concu-Surf" and Disposable Black Men

Dr. T. Hassan Johnson's concept of the "concu-surf" (a hybrid of concubine and serf) is introduced to describe the disposable role of black men in society. Mo Facts argues that black men are used as "sacrifices" for other demographics to "progress into whiteness." He claims that elite black women and other groups use black male death as a tool for their own social and political advancement.

48: Shootist
3:22:07 - 3:27:50

48: Shootist

Ritual Sacrifice and the Creation of "White" Identity

Reverend Ian White Marr, citing historian Rene Girard, explains how the "ritual sacrifice" of black men's humanity was used to create a unified "white" identity. Mo Facts applies this to modern "Soros Sisters" (DAs) and politicians like Kamala Harris, who he claims "make their bones" by sacrificing black men to the criminal justice system to prove they can play the "model" role of the elite.