Radio Derb June 06 2025

This Week’s Show

Contents

  • 03m16s Lunacy, Muslim-style
  • 10m07s Imaginative warfare
  • 15m12s Rumors of war
  • 22m29s Trump and Musk
  • 27m25s Valediction

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Transcript

01 — Intro.     And Radio Derb is on the air! Welcome, listeners and readers. This is your conclusively genial host John Derbyshire with the D-Day edition of Radio Derb. I know of course that most of you listen to the show on Saturday, which will be the 7th; but Friday is when I sit down to record it, so “D-Day edition” is valid.

Calendrical matters are at the front of my mind this week as Tuesday, June 3rd, was my birthday, my 80th birthday. I didn’t broadcast that fact in advance, so I was pleasantly astonished at the number of emails I got wishing me a happy birthday. How did people know? A moment’s reflection reminded me that my birth date is there for all to see on my personal website. It’s also on Twitter, if you go looking; and it’s on my Wikipedia page in between the descriptions of me as a hate-filled far-right homophobic racist misogynist full of hate.

Even after remembering all that, I was still surprised by the number of emails that came in: surprised, and stirred. I offer my sincere, heartfelt thanks to all who emailed, most especially to those of you who told me you’ve been following me ever since such-and-such, with some of the such-and-suches going all the way back into the 20th century. Thank you, thank you!

And yes, I had a very happy birthday. It was a lovely June day. I did some garden work and some undemanding household chores. For dinner my wife and kids took me to an excellent Italian restaurant in the village here and let me make a complete pig of myself. Life is good; all the better with a loving family and friends far and near. Thank you, again thank you!

I shall have more calendrical observations later. First, a glance at the week’s news. It’ll only be a brief one; I’m still in a holiday mood.

02 — Lunacy, Muslim-style.     Sunday last came another attack on Jews by an anti-Zionist lunatic. This was just eleven days after the murders of Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim by Elias Rodriguez in Washington, D.C.

Sunday’s attack happened in Boulder, Colorado. The attacker was a lone male, 45-year-old Mohamed Soliman, an Egyptian national. His target was a group of mainly-elderly local Jews conducting a weekly walk to remind us of the Israeli hostages taken by Hamas in the October 7th raid.

Mohamed Soliman is — please try to control your astonishment — an illegal alien. He came here on a tourist visa three years ago. After six months that visa expired; he applied for asylum. While waiting for a hearing, which could be years away, he applied for and got a work permit. That expired back in April, though, so he’s been here illegally since April. Nobody seems to know what kind of work he’s been doing, if any.

Soliman had been planning the attack for months. His initial idea was to just shoot the Jews, but he couldn’t get a gun permit because of his expired visa. He therefore went with Molotov cocktails after learning from YouTube how to make them. Fifteen of the Jews and one dog suffered burns. Twelve of the people were hospitalized, two in serious condition. I don’t know how the dog is doing.

Thursday afternoon Soliman was charged with 118 state criminal charges, including 28 counts of attempted murder. There will be federal hate-crime charges, too. His wife and five children, all here illegally, were arrested to be held for deportation, but a lefty district judge — a Biden appointee, of course — is blocking the deportation. There’ll be a hearing on the judge’s block June 13th.

From his nationality and name it’s fair to assume that Soliman’s particular style of lunacy is Moslem style. That at least makes his anti-Zionism a tad more comprehensible than Elias Rodriguez’s. Rodriguez was afflicted with woke lunacy, not Moslem lunacy, although the two seem to be inseparable nowadays.

Nasty as it undoubtedly was, this little incident did generate one memorable tweet.

News reports made much of the fact that the oldest of the Jews injured by Soliman, 88-year-old Barbara Steinmetz, is a Holocaust survivor. Strictly speaking, that’s not true. She was born in Hungary, which wasn’t systematically rounding up Jews for the camps until the Germans occupied the country in 1944. Her family had left well before that. They were on the run, though, and having a rough time until they got asylum in the Dominican Republic in 1941. However, I’ll give Ms Steinmetz a pass on “Holocaust survivor” on account of her age and those traumas of her infant years.

Well, a tweeter with the tag “Oilfield Rando” posted a tweet showing a news picture of Ms Steinmetz with a picture of Soliman alongside it. That latter picure was taken outside the courthouse where Soliman launched his attack. Above the door of the courthouse there is hanging a big rainbow-and-pastel Pride flag.

Ms Steinmetz, in her picture alongside, is wearing a jacket decorated with a big lapel button reading MY PEOPLE WERE REFUGEES TOO. That suggests open-borders sympathies. Nothing surprising there: Jewish Americans of her generation are almost invariably hostile to almost any kind of immigration restriction, for reasons suggested by that lapel button. When I’ve written about immigration myself — which I have, a lot — some of the angriest responses have come from Jews.

Well, “Oilfield Rando” picked up those details in the two pictures and ran with them, or rather tweeted with them. Tweet:

I had my doubts. I really did.

Then a turd world immigrant hate-crimed an open borders activist in a gun free zone in front of a courthouse flying a DEI-Pride flag, and at that moment I was 100 percent positive we’re in a simulation.

End tweet.

03 — Imaginative warfare.     There was another attack last Sunday: a military one, in the war between the world’s two most corrupt white nations. Ukraine pulled off a very imaginative operation, using drones to damage or destroy Russian aircraft parked at their bases.

Very imaginative. Apparently, unsuspecting Russian truckers were hired by undercover Ukrainians in Russia to deliver modular houses. Then, when the truckers got near to airbases, the lids of their cargo loads opened automatically, drones flew out and attacked parked planes.

This method of attack allowed the drones to penetrate deep into Russia. One of the bases attacked, the Ukrainka airbase, is way out east in Upper Manchuria on the Chinese border, four thousand miles from Ukraine.

A lot of planes were destroyed in the operation, including at least five TU-95 strategic bombers, the U.S.S.R’s answer to our own B-52. We don’t know the full tally yet, but it’s plain from satellite imagery that Russia lost a lot of planes.

Of course you don’t stomp on the bear’s tail and get away unhurt. Sure enough, the Russians have been pounding Ukraine. In the five hours from midnight Thursday to 5 a.m. Friday they launched 407 drones and decoys, nearly 40 cruise missiles and six ballistic missiles from land, air and sea at towns and cities across the breadth of the nation, the Ukrainian Air Force reports.

Kiev, Ukraine’s capital, was a main target. The New York Times report tells us of attack drones swooping in, quote: “their ominous buzz trailing over neighborhoods,” end quote.

I don’t want to sound heartless — Heaven forbid! — but this isn’t exactly the London Blitz. As the Times went to press Friday morning only four people were known to have been killed in Kiev and 22 injured. That’s like a bad night in the South Bronx. Although to be perfectly fair, Ukraine only publishes civilian casualties, we don’t know the tally for military targets.

Our President seems not to want to get involved, for which I give thanks. He’s compared the combatants to two boys in a schoolyard fight, who need to work out their differences before the fighting could end.

I just wish he’d say out loud what I myself believe: that the territorial squabbles of the Eastern Slavs are no business of America’s. Let ’em go at it. It’s Europe’s business, and the Euros need to get their act together. It’s nothing to do with us, though — or wouldn’t be, if we’d had the good sense to pull out of NATO thirty years ago.

I’m sure you’ve heard this quip, or some variation on it, quip: “Why are 500 million Europeans calling on 300 million Americans to protect them against 140 million Russians?” End quip.

It’s a good question. If, after defeating Ukraine — which they will surely do — the Russians roll West and occupy all of Europe, what would have been lost? Europe under Russian imperial rule would be better off than Europe taken over by Islam, which is the most probable alternative.

04 — Rumors of war.     Here again is that little passage from the New York Times report about attack drones swooping in, quote: “their ominous buzz trailing over neighborhoods,” end quote.

That really snagged my attention. It’s creepy. Drones are creepy altogether. They are a key component of modern warfare, though.

It is of course a cliché that generals always want to re-fight the previous war. With the advances in tech this past couple of decades, the difference between this war and any previous one is big indeed. Do the world’s generals understand that?

We don’t even really know how big that difference is. For example: What part will AI play in the next and future wars? I have no idea, but I am certain there are teams of very smart people in Russia, China, India, and I hope the U.S.A. cooking up plans.

And then, robots. Some of us have been consoling ourselves that no big old-style wars will be fought because, with the worldwide demographic implosion, there aren’t enough young men to fight them. The fact that both Russia and Ukraine have had declining fertility for decades casts doubt on that theory; but anyway robots might take up the slack.

Sorry, but that’s got me recalling once again that Philip K.Dick Cold War short story The Defenders. The Cold War goes hot; the entire populations of the U.S.A. and U.S.S.R. retreat to huge bunkers deep underground. They leave the fighting to robots up on the surface, monitoring the war via video that the robots send down to them. Then one day the humans send a team up to the surface to check. The Earth is a lovely, peaceful park; the robots quit fighting long ago. They’ve been having fun staging war scenes to film and send to the humans down below.

Hey, it’s possible. However it plays out, I feel sure that day when the human race ain’t going to study war no more is a long way off.

The more attention I pay to the news, the more I think that even a superpower war is very possible. I hate the thought — not on my own account: now in my eighties, what do I care? — but for my kids and my grandson. Uncle Sam spent four years and a lot of dollars training my son to be a warrior. Presumably my boy is on some kind of reserve list, liable for call-up. If that happens, I shall zip-tie him and smuggle him down to Uruguay in a boat.

People who make a living trying to figure out what the rulers of China have in mind seem to be in consensus that 2027 is the year Taiwan will be returned back to the warm bosom of the Motherland. That’ll be Year Three of the current Trump Presidency. Will Trump show the same restraint he is showing towards Russia today? Oh Lord, I hope so.

And then, nukes. They’re all over. Even some crazy nations are nuked up, nations you wouldn’t want to trust with your lawn mower: North Korea, Pakistan.

Iran? Last week I mentioned Iran’s nuclear weapons. Quote from me:

They don’t actually have any. At least, that’s what we’re told, and we can only hope the intelligence is good. Iran’s been working on nuke development for at least twenty years, and it’s not that difficult.

End quote.

Here’s something fortifying my skepticism: a report that came out last week from the International Atomic Energy Agency, the IAEA. Sample quote from today’s New York Postquote:

The IAEA last week released a long-awaited comprehensive report on Iran’s violations of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

The report details Tehran’s failure to comply with a nearly eight-year IAEA investigation into the regime’s illicit nuclear-weapons work. It also shows an elaborate Iranian coverup that continues today.

End quote.

So yes: I’m betting, now with more confidence than before, that the Mullahs are nuked up, or could be at a day or two’s notice. They jeer at Israel, calling it “a one-bomb country.” The Israelis are ready for them with the Samson Option: “If we are nuked,” they say, “we’ll nuke back without mercy.”

I was born midway between V-E Day and V-J Day. I’ve lived a long life without ever experiencing war. As human history goes, that’s pretty unusual. I pray the peace will continue.

05 — Trump and Musk.     Sorry, that was pretty depressing. Realistic, I like to think, but definitely depressing. Don’t you hate reality?

For light relief, in today’s news we have Elon Musk breaking up noisily with Donald Trump. Is anyone really surprised? I sure ain’t. Quote from myself, Radio Derb last November 22nd, quote:

Some commentators have expressed doubts that the Musk-Trump bromance can endure for four years. I share those doubts. History doesn’t offer many examples of two strong-willed, energetic men sharing power amicably at a high level. “There can only be one Sun in the sky …” But we shall see.

End quote; and … we’ve seen.

If you have read Walter Isaacson’s biography of Musk you’ll know that Musk is a very volatile person. He’s a great man who’s accomplished amazing things, I won’t dispute that. He is also, though, an Aspergery nerd, deeply unskilled at relationships with his fellow human beings.

Those relationships aren’t just clumsy, they’re repetitively clumsy. Musk’s armory of insults is way too small. Example: the charge he made on Thursday that Trump is named in the so-far-unreleased papers on pedophile financier the late Jeffrey Epstein.

Readers of the aforementioned biography will recall the fuss back in 2018 when Musk referred to Vernon Unsworth, in a tweet he later deleted, as, quote, “pedo guy,” end quote.

If you don’t know the story, this all started when twelve schoolboys in Thailand, ages 11 to 16, got themselves trapped in a cave system in the mountains of that country. Heavy rainfall flooded the cave complex so the boys couldn’t get out.

The story went worldwide. Elon Musk heard it and had his engineers build a mini-submarine that he said was small enough to pass through the flooded cave system and get the boys out. He shipped the sub to Thailand and followed himself.

The Thai authorities decided not to use it, though. A British expert on cave exploring, name of Vernon Unsworth, lived in Thailand and knew this particular cave complex. He helped organize parties of divers from the American, British, and Thai navies to rescue the boys, which they at last did.

Unsworth scoffed at Musk’s mini-sub. He called it a, quote, “PR stunt,” end quote, which, quote, “had absolutely no chance of working,” end quote. Musk, Unsworth further said, could, quote, “stick his submarine where it hurts,” end quote. That was in a CNN interview.

Musk was not pleased. He tweeted out insults, calling Unsworth “pedo guy.” Unsworth sued him for that, but the federal jury in Los Angeles said he hadn’t proved his case so Musk walked free.

Perhaps President Trump and Vernon Unsworth should compare notes …

06 — Valediction.     That’s all the news I’m going to cover this week, ladies and gents. I shall now proceed straight to signoff, and this week’s signoff is somewhat out of the ordinary.

I have already mentioned — and please forgive me mentioning it again — that Tuesday this week, June 3rd, was my 80th birthday. As it happens, that wasn’t the only memorable milestone for me this week. Today’s Radio Derb — the one you are listening to or reading — is Number One Thousand. It’s my one thousandth podcast since the show began in May 2004. I think Radio Derb may be the oldest continuous dissident-right podcast on the internet.

I can hear arithmetically-inclined listeners muttering: “Wait a minute, Derb. May 2004? That was 21 years ago, plus a few days. There go 52 weeks to the year; this is a weekly podcast; and 21 times 52 is 1,092. How can this be only issue number one thousand? Where did the other 92 go?”

Answer: We took a while to settle down into a regular weekly podcast; and even when we had, I sometimes missed a week. In all those years there were only two years with 52 podcasts, four years with 51, and six with 50. All the rest had fewer than 50.

The total, first to last, is one thousand — trust me. Or if you don’t trust me, go to my personal website johnderbyshire.com, select “Opinions” from the navigation box, then “Radio Derb.” They’re all listed there, with transcripts. You can count ’em for yourself.

The audio is there, too, so you can listen to them all if you want to. It’s only fair to warn you, though, that while I don’t yet know precise minutes and seconds on today’s podcast, the previous 999 add up to 38,541 minutes and 41 seconds; or, if you prefer, 642 hours, 21 minutes, and 41 seconds. If you were to listen for 8 hours per day, that would keep you busy for 80 days, 2 hours, 21 minutes, and 41 seconds.

So: 80th birthday, podcast number one thousand. You’d think that two milestones in one week would be enough of a coincidence, but there’s a wee bit even more.

If you were following me back in 2007 you’ll recall from my monthly Diary in April that year that I have a harmless eccentricity: I count my days, from the day of my birth as day number one. Well, Tuesday this week — my 80th birthday — was day number 29,221; and that, ladies and gentlemen, is [drum roll] a prime number !

That’s not a sensational coincidence, but it’s against the odds. As numbers get bigger and bigger, the primes thin out. In the neighborhood of a decently big number N the frequency of primes is roughly one in log(N), where that’s the natural logarithm of course. The natural logarithm of one million is approximately 13.8, so in the neighborhood of one million, only slightly more than one number in fourteen is a prime number.

The natural logarithm of 29,221, my birthday day number last Tuesday, is 10.28264 and change; so in that neighborhood, slightly fewer than one number in ten is prime. Sure enough, 29,221 is preceded by eleven non-primes and followed by nine more.

The day number of my birthday being prime isn’t a miracle; but, as I said, it’s against the odds.

So: podcast number one thousand this week, birthday number eighty this week, day number of the latter a prime against the odds. Pondering these coincidences, I have concluded that the universe is trying to tell me something. What it’s trying to tell me is, it’s time to hang up my mike and my keyboard.

To be perfectly open about it, the numerical coincidences only served as prompts. I’ve been feeling for a while that I spend way too much time at my computer when there are other things I should be attending to. I have a hundred-year-old house I need to keep from falling down. I have a nearly forty-year-old marriage that needs time and attention, as all marriages do. I have a son and a daughter nearby to worry about, and a three-year-old grandson to fuss over, and a dog to walk.

There are friendships to keep up, church responsibilities to fulfil, books to read, jigsaw puzzles and crossword puzzles to do, shooting skills and my cribbage game to keep honed. I’m blessed with good health; but inevitably, entering my eighties, I tire more easily than I used to, and get less accomplished per hour of waking life.

So this edition of Radio Derb is the last.

I won’t be giving up opinionating altogether. I’m a chronic writer by nature, cacoëthes scribendi. I shall keep up my monthly column in Chronicles magazine for as long as they want me to, and I’ll do occasional book reviews for them and for any other of the dwindling number of outlets that still publish book reviews for the dwindling number of people who still read books. I may try to take full advantage of social media, which up to now I never have … although, as I said, I’m aiming to spend a lot less time at the computer.

This valediction, like the famous poetic one, forbids mourning. In these 21 years of podcasting I’ve engaged with a mighty host of listeners and readers. I’ve learned a lot from them that’s improved my understanding, and I flatter myself that they may have learned something from me. Like that poet and his sweetheart — I think it was actually his wife — whose love keeps them spiritually united even when physically far apart, those mutual improvements in understanding will keep me and my followers bonded together at some level above the everyday transactional.

My heartfelt thanks to all those who’ve engaged with me by following Radio Derb, the thanks doubled to those who’ve emailed in with wit and/or wisdom, tripled to followers who’ve blessed me with donations and gifts. And I must add my gratitude once again to the surprising number of listeners and readers who have emailed in since Tuesday to wish me a happy birthday. It was a happy birthday, made even happier by your kind thoughts. God bless you all!

There will be no more from Radio Derb next week, nor in any following week.

41 Comments
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Beobachter
Beobachter
8 days ago

End of an era, though there have been rumors of Derb’s imminent retirement for some time. I’m a long time listener. I can say i learned a lot about the dissident right ecosystem, and indeed I think I first heard about the Zman, on Radio Derb.

Thank you, Sir, for all you’ve done so far, and though we disagree on some (mostly zio) things, I will continue to look for your articles, wherever they might appear.

Best of luck to you and all your family!

Vizzini
Member
8 days ago

Thank you, Mr. Derbyshire, from the bottom of my heart, for all the wisdom you have shared with us over the years.

Bruno the Arrogant
Bruno the Arrogant
8 days ago

I’ve been enjoying Radio Derb for I don’t know how many years, but I’ve been listening since it was hosted at National Review. It’s hard to imagine a world without a weekly Radio Derb, but I suppose, like so many other good things these days, it had to end eventually.

Godspeed Derb, and thanks for the many hours of interesting and insightful commentary. May you enjoy your well deserved retirement.

JMDGT
JMDGT
8 days ago

I started listening from program number one to now. Goes back to the National Review years. At 1000 a fitting end. Over the years I somewhat found myself through your writing. Thank you.

Happy Trails Derb.

ProZNoV
ProZNoV
8 days ago

Let’s talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs.

For God’s sake, let us sit upon the ground
And tell sad stories of the death of pundits;
How some have been deposed by NRO, some slain in Twitter wars,
Some haunted by their epic “The Talk”;
Some poison’d by their editors, some by NY DA lawfared,

Derb did lead me to Zman, but Derb was always more than that. A perfect gentleman, the driest of dry sense of humor, consistent across the decades, and a realist (We. Are. Doomed).

I’m going to miss his place on the public square.

Last edited 8 days ago by ProZNoV
Bruce Carter
Bruce Carter
8 days ago

My heart sank when I learned that this was the last installment of Radio Derb. Then I was happy for our metaphorically ink-stained wretch who will now be emancipated from his time in the salt mines. This was also the first podcast I listened to. I don’t believe they were called podcasts then. We’ve always had dogs. I have walked two generations of dogs on Saturday mornings while listening to our dear friend. We’ll be getting a new puppy in a few weeks. The third generation will not know their master’s Saturday morning pleasure. Our Venn diagrams overlap considerably. I… Read more »

usNthem
usNthem
8 days ago

Well, selfishly sorry to hear this but wish you all the best. This show was one of my waypoints along the road to crossing the great divide. Many thanks.

Carl
Carl
8 days ago

That’s all, folks. Thank you John.

James R Moldenhauer
James R Moldenhauer
8 days ago

The Darkness closes in. Rush is gone, Tucker is stifled as is Alex, Mark is very ill, now no more Derb.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  James R Moldenhauer
8 days ago

The passing of the Kings. We dwell in a hall of statues.

Profa
Profa
8 days ago

goodbye Mr. Derbyshire! You have been my weekly companion for ever so long! Happy birthday and thank you for the years of entertainment and good sense you have given us all! You are truly one of a kind and irreplaceable! May you and Mrs. Derb live a long retirement and neither predecease the other but turn into an oak an elm like baucis and Philemon! Best wishes to you and your family!

Last edited 8 days ago by Profa
Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
8 days ago

It is sad to read this will be your last podcast but be happy with the rest of your life. It was a pleasure to listen to you over the years, and your enjoyable podcast–the first I followed, was brought to a classy close. Thanks for the 1,000 programs you did give to us.

Last edited 8 days ago by Jack Dodson
Rented mule
Rented mule
8 days ago

I receantly “retired” myself, there are so many other more important things to do.

Thanks for all your shared wisdom.

Go enjoy the little fella. He wont ever forget grandpa. What a life it is!

Ben the Layabout
Ben the Layabout
8 days ago

Since Derb is a mathematician by training, I wonder if he’d be interested to weigh in on what should be a simple mathematical (actually, actuarial) question posed on yesterday’s Zman blog. The question surrounds how many Holocaust survivors are still alive today.   I used figures found from the Wikipedia article “Holocaust survivors.” Reader “Anna” gave numbers not far different. My interest (and, I admit, I did much of the replying thee) was simply this question:   Given a starting population of 3.5 million “Holocaust survivors” in 1945 (what seems an official claim), can we really expect to have about 245,000… Read more »

Last edited 8 days ago by Ben the Layabout
Mr. Invisible
Mr. Invisible
Reply to  Ben the Layabout
8 days ago

Most Jews consider themselves to be Holocaust survivors now. Older people may not know this, but if you talk to younger Jews — like the woman who flipped out at Max Blumenthal of The Greyzone at a foreign policy event this week — they will physically attack you for questioning their self-ascribed identity. It hasn’t helped to have Derb’s generation encasing this in stone for 50 years, giving “a pass” because, well, technically, if she had been near Hitler he would’ve killed her — maybe that’s the thinking behind such generosity. Either way, questioning them in person will lead to… Read more »

Ben the Layabout
Ben the Layabout
Reply to  Mr. Invisible
8 days ago

Yes, I’ve met a Jew[ess] or two in my life who let it be known [s]he was the child or perhaps it was grandchild of a Holocaust survivor, in much the same way that a Yale or Harvard almumni will let you know, within the first five minutes of meeting him/her. Generational victim credentials, doncha know?

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Mr. Invisible
8 days ago

Our fabulous Derb signing off with the observation that “Europeans might end up speaking Russian!” is surely the end of an era, and a harbringer of fraught hope to come.

Milord was every bit a man of the Golden Age.
May your God bless you and keep you and yours, dear Johnny.
Well done, lad, not bad at all. You kept the torch alight.

Last edited 8 days ago by Alzaebo
Ben the Layabout
Ben the Layabout
Reply to  Ben the Layabout
8 days ago

Retraction: I did some further googling and guess what? My earlier “analysis” (on Friday’s Z blog) was in error. I posted multiple retractions as needed. So Derb, or anybody else, please don’t bother checking my incorrect rantings. Turns out I was way off estimating the average age of survivors in 1945. I’d figured mid-30s, but I found estimates closer to 8 years old. I was amazed how young. I also found some German Life tables from 1940s that, if I read them correctly, seem to support Anna’s (or Wikipedia’s) claims that yes, there really are ~200,000 Holocaust survivors still alive.… Read more »

Vizzini
Member
Reply to  Ben the Layabout
8 days ago

I rejoice that I will likely live to see the day when there are no more “Holocaust Survivors” to lecture us.

Nachum
Nachum
Reply to  Ben the Layabout
7 days ago

Obviously it depends on how you define “survivor.” There were very few survivors of the camps themselves- I once saw the number 100,000- and the minimum age there was, maximum, 12 or so. (Passing for older in those cases. A former chief rabbi of Israel is a bizarre exception, having been hidden in a camp when he was 7.) So any camp survivor would be well into his or her 90’s by now. But then there are all sorts of others, like babies who had to run off like the woman Derb mentioned. So under that definition there may still… Read more »

Xman
Xman
7 days ago

Derb, I have been reading your stuff religiously for at least a quarter-century. When the issues of NR used to come in the mail the very first thing I would do is flip to the last page and read your column. You are a towering figure on the dissident right, intelligent, insightful, witty, wry, humble, literate, and with an incredible breadth of knowledge. Truly sui generis in the best of ways. We have learned so much from you. It was easy to take your prolific output for granted — Derb would always be right there with the most penetrating and… Read more »

Last edited 7 days ago by Xman
Steve W
Steve W
8 days ago

Mr. Derbyshire, you have been a regular in my podcast lineup since the NRO days. I imagine I have read a couple dozen books based on your reviews and recommendations. If not for you, I would never have encountered Simon Leys or Tete-Michel Kpomassie. In fact this week I’ve been reading Leys’ translation of The Analects.

As a retired math teacher, I have always enjoyed your math corner challenges.

Enjoy your retirement Sir! I’ll look forward to your miscellaneous future writings.

John Derbyshire
Reply to  Steve W
7 days ago

Thank you, Steve. My favorite line in Leys’ translation of the Analects is 2:xii where Confucius says: 君子不器。 Leys translates that as: “A gentleman is not a pot.” So true!

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
8 days ago

As a very long-time listener, I wish you a happy retirement and many thanks for years of wonderful articles and podcasts. They were a pleasure.

And make no mistake, you changed the thinking of more people than you can imagine. Indeed, I’d argue that you played an important role in the changing of national zeitgeist that has pushed back on the Woke totalitarianism that was rolling across our country.

Well done, sir. Well done.

Person in Pictland
Person in Pictland
8 days ago

Sorry to hear that you are giving up your excellent Radio Derb.

Best wishes: lang may yer lum reek.

JoeyD
JoeyD
7 days ago

I started reading Derb in NR which I discovered in high school in the late eighties
I followed him out after his defenestration & came here many years ago due to his endorsement
His intelligence, wit, polymathic curiosity and overall character made his podcast the only one of which I can honestly say I listened to every episode
He will be missed because he can’t be replaced but I wish him the most peaceful enjoyment of family and friends and the sincere gratitude of his faithful reader and listener

Sam
Sam
8 days ago

My Saturday mornings won’t be the same. Thank you, sir!

Rex Little
Rex Little
8 days ago

How ’bout that–Derb and I have something in common. I, too, count my age in days (27711 today). I do it so I have a suitable answer when the telemarketers for Medicare plans and life insurance ask me my age.

I’ll miss Radio Derb, but at least he hasn’t gone the way of Jerry Pournelle, another writer I sorely miss.

Steve W
Steve W
Reply to  Rex Little
8 days ago

Not a prime, though.

Rex Little
Rex Little
Reply to  Steve W
7 days ago

No, but not my 80th either. When that time comes (assuming I make it that far), my day number will be the same 29221 as Derb’s was.

Tank
Tank
8 days ago

Thanks for all the good years and God bless you and yours.

Delmar Jackson
Delmar Jackson
7 days ago

So long, Mr. Derbyshire. I can’t tell you how much I enjoyed reading your comments on Vdare over many years. I learned so much from you. Without a doubt, the most important thing I ever learned from you was one time, during the very dark days of open borders, when you admonished your readers that we should remember that the Bible teaches us that it is a sin to despair. That cheered me up, and I never forgot it. I also remember one time I was on a website and people in the comment section we’re talking bad about you… Read more »

Steve (retired/recovering lawyer)
Steve (retired/recovering lawyer)
7 days ago

Oh, my. Another unwanted milestone passed. I knew it would hapen eventually, either as a result of retirement or… you know. But knowledge of an impending event does not diminish its impact and sometimes, amplifies it. I have been a fan of The Derb for a long time, and always found his insights useful, often humorous and never banal. I must also confess a streak of envy at his mathematical skills, which I sorely lack. (That’s why I found myself in law school upon graduation from university. I had acquired no useful skills during my sonambulation through college, so law… Read more »

Tars Tarkas
Member
7 days ago

The Holocaust survivor was in the DR the year the holocaust started.
The official narrative is always a lie.

Many thanks to the Derb for his years work.

usNthem
usNthem
7 days ago

I’m always going to think of you as a “Derb”, not a “Darb”, but all the best, regardless.

Nachum
Nachum
7 days ago

You should hear John Podhoretz on his podcast these days. A fire-breathing “deport them all” type now. I guess we take what we can, but as someone who was subject to attacks from him as well, it’s a bit distasteful that he’s only waking up *now*. It wasn’t obvious before?

Vizzini
Member
Reply to  Nachum
7 days ago

Just like always, trying to climb on the latest thing, only so he can derail it later.

Nachum
Nachum
Reply to  Vizzini
6 days ago

Like a lot of “conservatives” (and I suppose others) who jump on popular causes, they support it only so long as they can do so without feeling unpopular at Beltway cocktail parties. Usually all it takes is a media push informing them that they’re Nazis or something.

Nachum
Nachum
7 days ago

“I’ve learned a lot from them that’s improved my understanding, and I flatter myself that they may have learned something from me.”

No need to flatter yourself- it is true.

“those mutual improvements in understanding will keep me and my followers bonded together at some level above the everyday transactional.”

Amen.

Wishes for many more years of enjoyment of the important things in life, as you described, with thanks and appreciation.

Auntie Analogue
Auntie Analogue
7 days ago

Mr. Derbyshire, I shall miss your <i>Radio Derb</i> whose conclusion forms a hole in however many forthcoming Saturdays which God may will for me to live. It has been a sterling pleasure to have made your cyberacquaintance, and I pray God bless you in enjoyment of your other pursuits and especially in enjoyment of your family.

Heresolong
2 days ago

Mr. Derbyshire, I will miss your weekly musings. One of two or three podcasts that I have faithfully listened to for years. Others came and went as their schtick got old and tired, I never tired of yours. Thanks for all the years of entertainment and may you enjoy the extra time with your family and your hobbies.