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Record rents trap tenants in a vicious circle

Rents in England and Wales – averaging £705 a month – make saving a deposit for a new home almost impossible Rents in England and Wales rose for the sixth month in a row in July to a record high of £705 a month, plunging struggling first-time buyers into a “vicious circle” with spiralling rents making it impossible for them to save the deposit to buy a home. Despite annual rent inflation reaching 4.2%, the latest LSL Property Services buy-to-let index shows the rate of increase is slowing, with July’s figure just 0.6% higher than June’s average rent of £701 and only £29 a month more than the July 2010 average. In the year to July rental prices rose the fastest in London, increasing by 7.1% to a record high of £1,009 a month, followed by the north-east (an annual increase of 5.5%), and the east and West Midlands (both rising by 4.8%). The only region not to experience a rise in the past year was Wales, where monthly prices were static at £547. Month-on-month, the sharpest rental increases were found in the south-east (1.7% in July), Wales (1.4%), the east Midlands (1.4%), and the south-west (1.2%). Prices fell in the West Midlands (-0.6% to £551), Yorkshire & the Humber (-0.2% to £525), and the north-west (-0.1% to £569). But landlords are seeing a squeeze on profits as returns from property investing fell in July. The total annual return on a rental property fell to 1.2% during the month, as annual declines in rental property prices took their toll. LSL said if property values continue on their current trend, a property investor could expect to make a total annual return of 2.5% over the next 12 months. LSL, which surveys 18,000 properties in England and Wales for its index, said demand from thousands of frustrated buyers was underpinning buoyant competition for rental homes, enabling landlords to increase prices. Spokesman David Newnes said it was “unlikely tenants will gain any respite soon”. “This is the peak summer season, and with more renters on the move the market will continue to heat up. Such strong demand and high rental incomes has forced lenders to take notice, and more are returning to the sector,” he said. “As a result of the competition in the buy-to-let market, the range of affordable products is expanding – and lending to investors rose by 21% in the last quarter. Nevertheless, even with the squeeze on landlord finance abating, the new supply will not be enough to meet demand from tenants.” But Newnes said the increasing cost of rental accommodation – alongside the soaring cost of living – was eroding first-time buyers’ ability to save deposits. He added: “First-time renters are also keenly feeling the pinch. As rents climb, so does the size of the average deposit a new renter must find. Thousands of new buyers each year rely on the bank of mum and dad to help fund a deposit. “However, now it is becoming increasingly commonplace for renters to get parental help to fund their first deposit on a rental home, with the typical one-month deposit on a property in London more than £1,000.” Renters turn to flatshare Jonathan Moore, director of Easyroommate.co.uk , said the present situation is difficult for those looking to get on the property ladder: “First-time buyers can’t get mortgages, so demand for rented homes soars. Rents shoot up, tenants find it even harder to save a deposit to buy, and rental demand strengthens further. It’s a vicious circle. “But many renters are cutting costs by turning to flatshare, and this sector of the market is growing. Demand is now so strong that four tenants compete for each room available, and room rents have risen by 1.4% in the last month alone – more than twice the rate of the wider rental market.” LSL’s monthly figure is broadly in line with the Office for National Statistics’s latest consumer prices index , which shows rents in July increasing by 0.7%. However the ONS, which includes rent from social housing in its inflation report, said rents increased by only 3% over the year to July – lower than LSL’s annual estimate. Meanwhile, Halifax has teamed up with credit reference agency Experian to make sure applicants who do not get approved for a mortgage because of their credit score will have access to a CreditExpert membership, offering unlimited access to credit experts. The Halifax CreditExpert service, part of the bank’s first-time buyer pledge, offers customers support and advice on what is affecting their credit score, as well as personalised advice on steps to improve their credit profile. However, they will only get the service free for 30 days – after which they will pay a discounted rate of £9.99 a month compared to Experian’s usual charge of £14.99. Renting property Buying to let First-time buyers Property Housing market Mark King guardian.co.uk

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Australian news team feared dead in ABC helicopter crash

Helicopter carrying pilot, reporter and cameraman crashes near Lake Eyre in the outback, with no survivors Three members of an Australian television news team are feared dead after a helicopter crash in southern Australia. The Australian Broadcasting Corporation said three staff – veteran journalist Paul Lockyer, cameraman John Bean and pilot Gary Ticehurst – were in the aircraft, which crashed on Thursday in a remote part of South Australia state. Lockyer, Bean and Ticehurst were working on a story about Lake Eyre, a massive lake in the outback, the ABC said. South Australia police said three people were killed in the accident and said they were investigating the cause. A tour guide who spoke to the men before they took off saw a large fireball in the distance soon after the helicopter departed, said police assistant commissioner Neil Smith. The crash site was surrounded by water and boggy land, hampering access, Smith said. Its remoteness was also making it difficult to get in touch with investigators on the scene. “We are not expecting to have any positive news, any positive identification or the full extent of the detail for some time,” Smith said. Lockyer was an award-winning journalist whose career spanned more than 40 years and included assignments in Washington and Asia. Ticehurst, a well-known media pilot, had worked for the ABC for more than 25 years. Bean, a Brisbane-based cameraman, had worked throughout Australia, the Pacific and in Washington in a 20-year career at the broadcaster. The ABC’s managing director, Mark Scott said: “This has been the longest of nights and we fear it will be the saddest of days.” Australia Journalist safety TV news Television industry guardian.co.uk

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Red Hot Chili Peppers: The band that couldn’t be stopped

What keeps the Red Hot Chili Peppers from retiring to the beach to sit and eat burritos? Rob Fitzpatrick asks the LA rock aristocrats how they keep things chaotic after all this time Half of the Red Hot Chili Peppers are sitting opposite me on a pair of sumptuously plump sofas in a corner suite at the top of a beachfront hotel in Santa Monica, California. Outside the window to my left is the Pacific, while outside the one to my right are the fleshpots and fairgrounds of Venice Beach. It’s 2pm and the sun thumps down in thick, exhausting waves. Even the guy lying flat on his back by the pool, the one with his legs artfully spread so his inner thighs don’t miss out, yanks his towel up in submission and retreats to the tented shade by the bar. On the beach, huge bulldozers roll back and forth endlessly shifting sand, their reverse gear beeps punctuating our every sentence. Bass player Michael “Flea” Balzary – incredibly, this advert for perpetual adolescence is now 48 – is explaining something about how his love of surfing informs his love of songwriting, and I’m trying to keep up, but his outfit and demeanour aren’t helping me concentrate.

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Red Hot Chili Peppers: The band that couldn’t be stopped

What keeps the Red Hot Chili Peppers from retiring to the beach to sit and eat burritos? Rob Fitzpatrick asks the LA rock aristocrats how they keep things chaotic after all this time Half of the Red Hot Chili Peppers are sitting opposite me on a pair of sumptuously plump sofas in a corner suite at the top of a beachfront hotel in Santa Monica, California. Outside the window to my left is the Pacific, while outside the one to my right are the fleshpots and fairgrounds of Venice Beach. It’s 2pm and the sun thumps down in thick, exhausting waves. Even the guy lying flat on his back by the pool, the one with his legs artfully spread so his inner thighs don’t miss out, yanks his towel up in submission and retreats to the tented shade by the bar. On the beach, huge bulldozers roll back and forth endlessly shifting sand, their reverse gear beeps punctuating our every sentence. Bass player Michael “Flea” Balzary – incredibly, this advert for perpetual adolescence is now 48 – is explaining something about how his love of surfing informs his love of songwriting, and I’m trying to keep up, but his outfit and demeanour aren’t helping me concentrate.

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Revealed: the full picture of sentences handed down to rioters

Exclusive: Guardian data confirms courts opt for tougher punishments, and shows the demographic of those charged Data: the full list of cases and convictions so far The courts are handing down prison sentences to convicted rioters that are on average 25% longer than normal, according to an exclusive Guardian analysis of 1,000 riot-related cases dealt with so far by magistrates. The data proves for the first time that the handful of high-profile individual cases – including a four-year sentence for inciting disorder on Facebook – are indicative of a more punitive general trend. This unprecedented access to national court results reveals that 70% of defendants have been remanded in custody to await crown court trial, fuelling a surge in the prison population, which reached a record high of 86,608 in England and Wales. The Guardian’s data also shows that 56 defendants of the 80 who have already been sentenced by magistrates were given immediate prison terms. This 70% rate of imprisonment compares with a “normal” rate of just 2% in magistrates courts. More than half those imprisoned were charged with theft or handling stolen goods, receiving an average of 5.1 months. This is 25% longer than the average custodial sentence for these crimes of 4.1 months seen in courts during 2010, according to Ministry of Justice statistics. Public order offences are leading to sentences 33% longer than normal and those convicted of assaulting police officers have been jailed for 40% longer than usual. The results reflect the limited sentencing powers of the magistrates courts, which cannot pass a sentence of more than six months for an individual offence. The Guardian analysis shows that the average prison sentence handed out by the magistrates to rioters so far is five months. This is double the usual prison sentence in the magistrates courts of 2.5 months, but that average includes many other more minor offences, including motoring offences. Prison governors said that the huge 677-strong rise in jail numbers over the last week sparked by this more punitive approach had pitched the prison system into “an unprecedented situation”. Emergency measures had been agreed with Prison Service chiefs in case the rapid rise in inmate numbers continued unabated over the next fortnight. The Prison Governors Association said medium- to long-term measures included opening enough new and refurbished jail accommodation to avoid the normal emergency measure of using police cells. The governors said they were confident the situation could be managed safely. The record prison numbers are putting jails and young offender institutions under increasing pressure: there are only 1,485 spare places in the system before prison governors have to put out the “jail full” signs. Prison Service chiefs are expected to outline the contingency measures , including increased overcrowding by doubling and even trebling inmates in cells designed for single occupation. Prison governors had already warned that the riots had put further strains on a stretched prison system, with inmates moved out of London and Manchester to create space for rioters jailed or remanded in custody awaiting trial. The Ministry of Justice said that its latest figures, up to noon on Wednesday, showed 1,297 people had appeared before magistrates charged with riot-related offences. A total of 772 had been remanded in custody, compared with the “normal” remand rate for serious offences of 10%. “This is causing massive problems for prisons,” said Harry Fletcher, of Napo, the probation officers’ union. “There are so many of them coming through the system, it is causing considerable problems. When people are being held so far from home it causes real difficulties for their families.” He said Nottingham jail alone had been sent a group of 30 prisoners from London this week. The total prison population on Friday last week stood at 85,931, which included 607 immigration detainees. As space runs out so the potential for work, education or rehabilitation will be “zero”, claims Fletcher. The justice secretary, Kenneth Clarke, will be hoping that the developing pressures on the prison system are purely temporary, otherwise they have the capacity to derail his plans to stabilise the jail population and bring in his “rehabilitation revolution”. The normal pressure valve for the prison system when it comes close to capacity is Operation Safeguard, which involves emergency use of police cells to house prisoners. But that option is now closed off as forces stay prepared for any further disturbances. In the medium term the Prison Service may be able to add portable accommodation within existing jails, and no doubt in the longer term the prospect of a new prison ship could be raised. The service has already announced plans to close two small jails, Latchmere House in London and Brockhill prison, at Redditch, Worcestershire, next month. One option could be to postpone these closures. A Ministry of Justice spokeswoman said that there were enough places for those being sent to prison, including in young offender institutions, following the riots: “There is substantial capacity in the prison system. We will provide prison places for those committed to custody by the courts. We are developing contingencies should exceptional pressure be placed on the prison estate.” UK criminal justice UK riots Crime David Cameron Sentencing Social exclusion Prisons and probation Youth justice Alan Travis Simon Rogers guardian.co.uk

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Revealed: the full picture of sentences handed down to rioters

Exclusive: Guardian data confirms courts opt for tougher punishments, and shows the demographic of those charged Data: the full list of cases and convictions so far The courts are handing down prison sentences to convicted rioters that are on average 25% longer than normal, according to an exclusive Guardian analysis of 1,000 riot-related cases dealt with so far by magistrates. The data proves for the first time that the handful of high-profile individual cases – including a four-year sentence for inciting disorder on Facebook – are indicative of a more punitive general trend. This unprecedented access to national court results reveals that 70% of defendants have been remanded in custody to await crown court trial, fuelling a surge in the prison population, which reached a record high of 86,608 in England and Wales. The Guardian’s data also shows that 56 defendants of the 80 who have already been sentenced by magistrates were given immediate prison terms. This 70% rate of imprisonment compares with a “normal” rate of just 2% in magistrates courts. More than half those imprisoned were charged with theft or handling stolen goods, receiving an average of 5.1 months. This is 25% longer than the average custodial sentence for these crimes of 4.1 months seen in courts during 2010, according to Ministry of Justice statistics. Public order offences are leading to sentences 33% longer than normal and those convicted of assaulting police officers have been jailed for 40% longer than usual. The results reflect the limited sentencing powers of the magistrates courts, which cannot pass a sentence of more than six months for an individual offence. The Guardian analysis shows that the average prison sentence handed out by the magistrates to rioters so far is five months. This is double the usual prison sentence in the magistrates courts of 2.5 months, but that average includes many other more minor offences, including motoring offences. Prison governors said that the huge 677-strong rise in jail numbers over the last week sparked by this more punitive approach had pitched the prison system into “an unprecedented situation”. Emergency measures had been agreed with Prison Service chiefs in case the rapid rise in inmate numbers continued unabated over the next fortnight. The Prison Governors Association said medium- to long-term measures included opening enough new and refurbished jail accommodation to avoid the normal emergency measure of using police cells. The governors said they were confident the situation could be managed safely. The record prison numbers are putting jails and young offender institutions under increasing pressure: there are only 1,485 spare places in the system before prison governors have to put out the “jail full” signs. Prison Service chiefs are expected to outline the contingency measures , including increased overcrowding by doubling and even trebling inmates in cells designed for single occupation. Prison governors had already warned that the riots had put further strains on a stretched prison system, with inmates moved out of London and Manchester to create space for rioters jailed or remanded in custody awaiting trial. The Ministry of Justice said that its latest figures, up to noon on Wednesday, showed 1,297 people had appeared before magistrates charged with riot-related offences. A total of 772 had been remanded in custody, compared with the “normal” remand rate for serious offences of 10%. “This is causing massive problems for prisons,” said Harry Fletcher, of Napo, the probation officers’ union. “There are so many of them coming through the system, it is causing considerable problems. When people are being held so far from home it causes real difficulties for their families.” He said Nottingham jail alone had been sent a group of 30 prisoners from London this week. The total prison population on Friday last week stood at 85,931, which included 607 immigration detainees. As space runs out so the potential for work, education or rehabilitation will be “zero”, claims Fletcher. The justice secretary, Kenneth Clarke, will be hoping that the developing pressures on the prison system are purely temporary, otherwise they have the capacity to derail his plans to stabilise the jail population and bring in his “rehabilitation revolution”. The normal pressure valve for the prison system when it comes close to capacity is Operation Safeguard, which involves emergency use of police cells to house prisoners. But that option is now closed off as forces stay prepared for any further disturbances. In the medium term the Prison Service may be able to add portable accommodation within existing jails, and no doubt in the longer term the prospect of a new prison ship could be raised. The service has already announced plans to close two small jails, Latchmere House in London and Brockhill prison, at Redditch, Worcestershire, next month. One option could be to postpone these closures. A Ministry of Justice spokeswoman said that there were enough places for those being sent to prison, including in young offender institutions, following the riots: “There is substantial capacity in the prison system. We will provide prison places for those committed to custody by the courts. We are developing contingencies should exceptional pressure be placed on the prison estate.” UK criminal justice UK riots Crime David Cameron Sentencing Social exclusion Prisons and probation Youth justice Alan Travis Simon Rogers guardian.co.uk

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The New GOP: The Party of Ted Nugent

The recent war over the federal budget and debt ceiling were simply the latest in a long line of skirmishes where Democrats – the self-described practitioners of “good faith” and seekers of compromise – found themselves in a pitched policy battle with recalcitrant Republicans. Right-wingers so high on radical, Randian, tea-party-brewed, Kool Aid, that anything short of dismantling the Federal Government and requiring universal tattooing of Milton Friedman where-the-sun-don’t-shine was treason. After its humble beginnings as an astroturf, Koch-Brothers-funded revival aimed at mobilizing ill-informed, reactionary, mostly older white Americans against health care reform and psychologically-constructed monsters under the bed, the tea party has become an malignant force that now holds the Republican Congressional Caucus – and with it the country – hostage. While the Stockholm Syndrome may not have quite set in yet among all Republicans, the tri-corner-hat crowd seems to behave much like the giant Brain Bug in the movie Starship Troopers, jamming a claw into the heads of their fellow GOPers and slowly sucking out cerebral tissue until only the brainless body remains. Most problematic, most of the tea partiers, private citizens and elected officials alike, seem to possess just slightly less understanding of the Federal budget or tax code of than say, Mater from Cars . Yet, these are the people in the driver’s seat as the country heads for what might be Act II of the Great Recession, unless progressives, centrists, and others edified with high school civics adopt a new strategy to counter them. And counter them we must, for they and their ilk are nothing new, but representative of a recurring and quite dangerous political strain that has always been with us. Their undermining of the traditions, culture, and give-and-take necessary for any democracy to function has had destructive results on free societies in the past, and taken down a Republic or three. This is what President Obama seems constitutionally unable to grasp. That even if they are a sometimes useful foil, and (sadly) sometimes equally useful in getting him the policy results he wishes, by definition the Tea Party brigade sees any compromise as evil, because everyone to the left of Pat Buchanan is viewed as a mortal threat to their imagined perfect society, which looks a lot like Utah. With fewer minorities. And a lot more Jesus. None other than former Secretary of State and one-time Republican wunderkind Henry Kissinger understood this to be true . In his first book on the Napoleonic wars, Kissinger offered an almost perfect description – on the international stage – of what can happen when an entity with no interest in compromise and no problem destroying the current order gains control of major political party or country: “It is a mistake to assume that diplomacy can always settle international disputes if there is ‘good faith’ and ‘willingness to come to an agreement’”; in a revolutionary situation “each power will seem to its opponent to lack precisely these qualities. In such circumstances many will see the early demands of a revolutionary power as ‘merely tactical’ and will delude themselves that the revolutionary power would actually accept the status quo with a few modifications.” Kissinger concluded that, “Coalitions against revolutions have usually come about only at the end of a long series of betrayals … for the powers which represent legitimacy … cannot ‘know’ that their antagonist is not amenable to ‘reason’ until he has demonstrated [that he is not].” Sound familiar? From its inception, the tea party is the very definition of the type of revolutionary movement. Until Democrats, and their leader in the White House, realize they need to stop calling people like Paul Ryan “courageous” and “serious,” and start fighting fire with fire, Michelle Bachmann and her creepy pinwheel eyes are going to continue to get their way at the expense of American values and the middle-class that once made this country great. The late, great historian Richard Hofstadter added further insight into just the type of “movement” we’re dealing with, in his 1964 award-winning tome, “The Paranoid Style of American Politics” . In it, he outlines the psychological origins of the type of crazed, tea-bagger style of all-or-nothing dedication to an absolute end, when he wrote of their forebears: “He does not see social conflict as something to be mediated and compromised, in the manner of the working politician. Since what is at stake is always a conflict between absolute good and absolute evil, what is necessary is not compromise but the will to fight things out to a finish. Since the enemy is thought of as being totally evil and totally unappeasable, he must be totally eliminated – if not from the world, at least from the theatre of operations to which the paranoid directs his attention.” In other words, any compromise, no matter how small, is seen as an act tantamount to treason, which is precisely why we need to stop engaging these tottering tea lovers, because they simply do not believe in the workings of democracy. The Republican Party is no longer the party of Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Eisenhower, or even Reagan – the GOP in its current form is nothing more than the party of Ted Nugent – hopefully with somewhat better hair. Speaking of Lincoln, he proffered to Congress in December of 1862 that, “The dogmas of the quiet past, are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise – with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew, and act anew. We must disenthral ourselves, and then we shall save our country.” What he said. Follow me on Twitter @cliffschecter This column was first published at Al Jazeera English

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Allen West Calls Himself ‘the Modern-Day Harriet Tubman’

Click here to view this media Tea party favorite Rep. Allen West (R-FL) explained Wednesday that he was helping black voters escape slavery of the “21st-century plantation” overseen by black liberals like Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA). “When you look at what is happening, the laughable hypocrisy is that [President Barack Obama's] big black bus is not going into the black community,” West told Fox News guest host Laura Ingraham. “You have this 21st-century plantation that has been out there, where the Democrat Party has forever taken the black vote for granted,” he continued. “And you have established certain black leaders, who are nothing more than the overseers of that plantation. And now the people on that plantation are upset, because they have been disregarded, disrespected, and their concerns are not cared about.” “So I’m here as the modern-day Harriet Tubman, to kind of lead people on the Underground Railroad, away from that plantation into a sense of sensibility.” “Now, you’re saying Maxine Waters is the plantation boss at this point?” Ingraham asked. “Well, absolutely,” West agreed. “Because what you end up having — and you know, I’m gonna be brutally honest — is that white liberals have turned over to certain leaders, quote-unquote ‘perceivably innocent’ in the black community like, a Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, or a Maxine Waters or Barbara Lee, and said you know, pacify and keep the black community firmly behind us, regardless of the failures of our social welfare policies.” “That’s the absence of this quote-unquote ‘leadership’ in the black community, which as I say are nothing more than overseers of this 21st-century plantation,” he added.

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Allen West Calls Himself ‘the Modern-Day Harriet Tubman’

Click here to view this media Tea party favorite Rep. Allen West (R-FL) explained Wednesday that he was helping black voters escape slavery of the “21st-century plantation” overseen by black liberals like Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA). “When you look at what is happening, the laughable hypocrisy is that [President Barack Obama's] big black bus is not going into the black community,” West told Fox News guest host Laura Ingraham. “You have this 21st-century plantation that has been out there, where the Democrat Party has forever taken the black vote for granted,” he continued. “And you have established certain black leaders, who are nothing more than the overseers of that plantation. And now the people on that plantation are upset, because they have been disregarded, disrespected, and their concerns are not cared about.” “So I’m here as the modern-day Harriet Tubman, to kind of lead people on the Underground Railroad, away from that plantation into a sense of sensibility.” “Now, you’re saying Maxine Waters is the plantation boss at this point?” Ingraham asked. “Well, absolutely,” West agreed. “Because what you end up having — and you know, I’m gonna be brutally honest — is that white liberals have turned over to certain leaders, quote-unquote ‘perceivably innocent’ in the black community like, a Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, or a Maxine Waters or Barbara Lee, and said you know, pacify and keep the black community firmly behind us, regardless of the failures of our social welfare policies.” “That’s the absence of this quote-unquote ‘leadership’ in the black community, which as I say are nothing more than overseers of this 21st-century plantation,” he added.

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Allen West Calls Himself ‘the Modern-Day Harriet Tubman’

Click here to view this media Tea party favorite Rep. Allen West (R-FL) explained Wednesday that he was helping black voters escape slavery of the “21st-century plantation” overseen by black liberals like Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA). “When you look at what is happening, the laughable hypocrisy is that [President Barack Obama's] big black bus is not going into the black community,” West told Fox News guest host Laura Ingraham. “You have this 21st-century plantation that has been out there, where the Democrat Party has forever taken the black vote for granted,” he continued. “And you have established certain black leaders, who are nothing more than the overseers of that plantation. And now the people on that plantation are upset, because they have been disregarded, disrespected, and their concerns are not cared about.” “So I’m here as the modern-day Harriet Tubman, to kind of lead people on the Underground Railroad, away from that plantation into a sense of sensibility.” “Now, you’re saying Maxine Waters is the plantation boss at this point?” Ingraham asked. “Well, absolutely,” West agreed. “Because what you end up having — and you know, I’m gonna be brutally honest — is that white liberals have turned over to certain leaders, quote-unquote ‘perceivably innocent’ in the black community like, a Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, or a Maxine Waters or Barbara Lee, and said you know, pacify and keep the black community firmly behind us, regardless of the failures of our social welfare policies.” “That’s the absence of this quote-unquote ‘leadership’ in the black community, which as I say are nothing more than overseers of this 21st-century plantation,” he added.

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