In addition to being virulently antisemitic and deeply misogynistic, theocratic fascist Christian nationalist pastor Joel Webbon is also manifestly racist, as he amply demonstrated during last night's episode of his "Christian Nationalism Weekly" program.
The focus of Webbon's program was the trial of Karmelo Anthony, a black high-school student charged with stabbing and killing a white student named Austin Metcalf during an altercation at a track meet in Texas in 2025. Webbon declared that Anthony is evidence that "America currently has a black problem."
After insisting that calls to simply expel all black people from the United States are "not feasible" and "not practical," Webbon declared that white Americans must recognize that the continuing presence of black people is "baked into the pie at this point" and must be dealt with accordingly.
"There are heritage blacks here in the United States and they are disproportionately committing violent crime, not only against each other, but black on white crime," Webbon asserted. "Interracial crime statistics are skewed heavily towards black people afflicting other races in a way that other races do not do the same. We know this, but we're going to have to deal with it."
"If you look through history, there are many who would say violence is never the answer," Webbon continued. "History tells us that violence is almost always the answer. So the question is not whether, but which. What kind of violence is necessary and is permissible? The scripture actually allows for violence. In fact, not only does the scripture allow for violence, but when it comes to actually punishing those who commit violence, violence is mandated by scripture as the recourse, as a good and just and necessary consequence. So violence has to be enacted, but it must be violence from the state who has actually been instituted by God to bear the sword. It must be a violence that is just, that is fair, that is proportional, that is swift."
Webbon then declared that black people were better off during the Jim Crow Era, when widespread racism and segregation forced them to have "humility" and demonstrate that "they could to rise to the level of excellence and morality that white people at that time were portraying."
"The high-water mark in these United States for the black community was probably in the early 1900s," Webbon proclaimed. "A few decades before the civil rights movement, before Hart-Celler, where most—not all; it was never all—but most of the black families were intact. There were strong families. There was still a disparity of sorts between the white community and the black community, but the gap was actually narrowing. Black people were catching up. They realized that if they wanted a piece of the American pie, it wasn't going to be handed to them for free. They weren't entitled to it. They were going to have to work hard."
"There was a certain humility that the average black person in America at that time possessed," Webbon claimed. "They weren't saying, 'Oh, whitey stole everything from me' or 'I was wronged.' No, they actually recognized that in large part, white people ruled the country and built the country and if they were going to have their place in the country, they were going to have to do everything they could to rise to the level of excellence and morality that white people at that time were portraying."
"So things improved, and then it was all ruined," Webbon said. "It was ruined by Marxist Jews and psy-ops like Martin Luther King—Michael Luther King—and Rosa Parks and all the rest to convince black people that we was kangz once upon a time and that really we built not only this country, but every country that's ever existed, but the white man took it from us, that we were somehow oppressed, somehow wronged. Black people in general—not each and every individual, but in general—became entitled, became arrogant, haughty, and they became those who now, today, act like fools. Not always, but certainly more often than we see other races behaving in such foolish manners."
Later in the program, Webbon reacted to reports that some of black supporters of Karmelo Anthony have been hurling racial insults at white Metcalf supporters outside the courtroom by declaring that "it's time for another Franco," referencing the fascist dictator who ruled Spain from 1939 to 1975.
"We need an omelet and we're going to have to start cracking some eggs," Webbon said. "By God's grace, we'll try to do it justly and not [with] vigilantes, but it is egg-cracking time."