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Sept. 5, 2009 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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Welcome to the Political Cesspool, known worldwide as the South's foremost populous radio program.
And here to guide you through the murky waters of the political cesspool is your host, James Edwards.
Welcome back to the show, everyone.
We're live on AM 1380 WLRM Radio in Memphis, going out to our affiliate stations on the Liberty News Radio Network and internet and satellite venues as well.
I'm your host, James Edwards.
Eddie the Bombardier Miller will be co-hosting with me for the bulk of this third hour tonight on our Labor Day holiday weekend special.
However, picking up right where we left off, going from the end of the second hour into the top of the third hour, we are talking with Paul Fromm, whose cell phone is on live support right now.
It doesn't help that I was 15 minutes late getting a hold of Paul.
That was my fault, but we're going to try to quickly summarize that which he was sharing with us a few minutes ago.
Big victory.
Perhaps one of the biggest victory, and I don't think I'm saying this to, I don't think I'm exaggerating this too much.
Obviously, Nick Griffin's win was a big victory over there, but I think this is right up there with that.
A huge victory for freedom of speech in Canada.
And Paul had his fingerprints all over this victory for our people, and he's sharing just very briefly some details about it.
Paul, essentially, you went to battle against the system.
You beat the system.
Free speech prevailed.
You were able to overcome a very draconian, very Orwellian thought crime or thought-suppressive type of legislation up there, correct?
Well, yes, what we did was essentially get the internet censorship provisions of the Canadian Human Rights Act thrown out as unconstitutional.
And this is a huge victory because the heavy hand of fines, prosecution where truth was no defense, intent was no defense, has hung heavily over patriots in Canada now ever since 2002.
And what was decided, just to kind of recap from before the break there, was that the law had changed from what it was originally.
And originally, the argument was that it was really remedial, not punitive.
But in 1998, they added fines.
You could be fined up for $10,000 for your posting.
If you mentioned the person who prosecuted you, the complainant, and mentioned him negatively, well, that was retaliation.
That could be good for $10,000 more.
And if you made a disparaging remark mentioning one of the privileged groups, you know, like race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, about the person who complained about you, he could collect up to $20,000 more from you.
So the argument we made, along with a whole lot of other ones, but the one that was bought by the member or judge in this case, a guy named Athanasius Hadgis, was that the law had changed and it now was punitive.
Because if a person can be fined, it's no longer remedial.
And then in Mark's case, Mark had said, well, look, the major area that Richard Warman had complained about, Richard Warman is an Ottawa lawyer, professional complainant who's made a bucketload of money from awards given to him.
Mark had said, well, look, before you even made the complaint, I removed the message board on which a number of the comments were located that he didn't, the Warman didn't like.
And he said, there are only four more comments up.
I'll take them down.
So he took them down.
And then Mark said, well, let's have mediation.
Let's, you know, the law says this About remedial measures.
It's not punitive.
Well, you know, can't we settle this thing?
And Warman absolutely refused mediation.
In addition, at that point, I moved as one of the intervening parties that the charges be dropped.
As it looked at the laws remedial, there's nothing to talk about anymore.
I mean, the posts are down.
This is all moved.
I don't know.
The hearings forged ahead and wasted tens of thousands of dollars of money.
four more years of people's lives.
So what the judge decided was, in fact, the law has changed.
It's now punitive.
That's not what the Supreme Court upheld.
And so he struck down the law and he ruled it unconstitutional in this case.
So this is a huge victory.
And we are now going to start.
I have a process of composing letters to him to reverse the penalties that he imposed on four of my previous clients.
And this is a huge victory.
It's getting immense publicity in Canada.
And the enemy is going nuts.
The Canadian Jewish Congress is demanding that the Canadian Human Rights Commission and Richard Warman appeal it or actually seek judicial review, but essentially that's the same thing.
They go to a real court and say that they had just got it all wrong and that this should remain as the law.
But this has been a huge victory, and it's a battle.
Now, the war isn't over until either the government withdraws the legislation or the Supreme Court of Canada finally rules it unconstitutional.
The battle might go on, but it's going to make it very difficult for the Human Rights Commission to prosecute anybody else under this.
So, you know, it's a major victory, but you would not believe the amount of abuse we have taken.
I have either lost a major libel case to Warmer, who is punishing me for calling him an enemy free speech and calling him a censor.
Mark Clamier is, we've raised tens of thousands of dollars in this battle.
It's cost an awful lot of people a lot of time and money and worry.
You know, we've been in a major battle up here.
Well, Paul, listen, you can't understate the magnitude of the victory that has been sustained up there in Canada.
Thank you for not only sharing with our audience tonight the magnitude of that success, but for also playing a very instrumental role in that victory.
And this is something, listen, folks, free speech in Canada just got liberated, or it went a long way to becoming liberated.
And we're going to put more information up on our website about this.
But when I read about this last week, I said, if we have one guest on the show this week, it's got to be Paul Fromm.
This is something, ladies and gentlemen, that you've been asking for, something that you can invest your hope in, something that you can take pride in.
And you can thank Paul Fromm for it.
Paul, I know, in addition to being on vacation, your cell phone is low.
I apologize again for being late getting in touch with you.
But thank you so much for spending a little extra time with us this segment and in this hour and giving us this great news.
I tell you, you've really made my week.
Well, thanks, James.
Thanks for having me on.
Thanks for being such a great patron.
I have a feeling I might be seeing you sometime in the next six weeks.
I have a feeling that we never go too long without seeing one another, but that's the way it should be.
People working for a common cause should run in together from time to time.
And certainly we do.
And Paul, I'm looking forward to it.
Thank you, my friend.
Thanks a lot, James.
Bye-bye.
Paul Fromm, everyone, vacationing, but taking the time out.
Taking a much needed vacation from his great victory up there, but taking the time out to make news of his victory known to our audience tonight.
And now, like I said, we're running about 15 minutes late, and I take all the responsibility for that.
But our good friend and everyone's favorite Cesspool host, Eddie the Bombardier Miller, is on with us now, and he's going to be sitting in with me for the next 45 minutes.
Eddie's got a lot of stuff to talk about tonight, don't you, Big E?
I sure do.
Hey, James, it is your fault, man.
You always screw things up.
Well, I know, you know, I do the best I can with what I got.
Hey, we got a hey, we have another little treat lined up tonight at the second, at the last of the, you know, the last half of the third hour.
One of our biggest supporters is going to call in a little bit.
He has four children, and him and his wife are concerned about the vaccinations.
We're going to talk about vaccinations a little bit at the last 20 or 30 minutes or so.
And that's just one of the things we got online today.
You know, James and I, we talked about activism some during the week, and I think we're going to talk about that a little bit, aren't we, James?
We're going to talk about everything as much as we can in 45 minutes.
Now, I'll tell you what, Big E, we got to get you home for the whole show next week.
It's just, you know, what are we going to do?
It's been too long.
And as I said, you're such a fan favorite.
But we are going to talk a lot.
Eddie has done a lot of research on this segment he's going to be bringing to our attention during the last half hour of the program tonight with regards to vaccination.
And of course, this all coincides with healthcare.
And that's been a big conversation to say the least in the country.
But yeah, we're going to talk a little bit about activism for the next 15 minutes after we come up on this break.
And then we're going to be talking about vaccinations.
And Eddie's going to clue us in on some of the research he's done.
But Eddie, big news from Canada, I tell you, anytime we win a victory, it's such a rare occurrence, I guess.
I wish I could have heard it, James.
Now, if I'd have been on the radio, I could have probably heard him.
I could barely hear him over the phone, but I guess because his phone was cell phone was low.
You know, you've been listening to the show tonight, though.
Have you been tuned in on the radio?
You better know it.
And you're number one.
I'm not their number one fan.
Your number one fan is my wife, Brenda.
She's listening to every word.
In fact, when I try to say something like, hey, what do you do with ice cream?
She doesn't mean, shut up, man.
She listened to the cesspool.
So we're coming through live and clear on 1380 tonight, I guess.
Yep, she's been back there in the back listening while I was reading and I was doing a little bit of research, a little bit of last-minute research on vaccinations while I was listening to the cesspool.
Well, you're doing it all, Big E.
And we'll be back, James Edwards, and Eddie the Bombardier Miller, right after this break.
We're going to kick it into high gear.
it tight everybody don't go away There's more Political Cesspool coming your way right after these messages.
Welcome back to Get On The Political Cesspool.
Call us on James's Dime, toll-free, at 1-866-986-6397.
And here's the host of the Political Cesspool, James Edwards.
Welcome back to the show.
It's been a show that's been tempered with some news that you ought to know that perhaps isn't so uplifting, but certainly some very encouraging news being presented to you as well tonight, specifically during the first hour.
I think some very good results that Keith Alexander shared with you.
And obviously, Paul Fromm, it goes without saying, that's perhaps one of the biggest victories of the decade for liberty and for freedom, freedom of speech.
Even though it's up there in Canada, you know, listen, as Paul said, they don't have a First Amendment.
They're not guaranteed.
And even though we are guaranteed it, we still barely have it here in America.
They're not guaranteed the freedom of speech in Canada, yet they were able to score a very big victory in court thanks to the legal expertise of Paul Fromm.
And we're going to have more information about that on our website.
But I want to talk with Eddie here a little bit about activism.
I'm joined now by my co-host, Eddie the Bombardier Miller, one of the four regular Cesspool co-hosts.
And during the last half hour, Eddie's going to be talking about a subject he's been researching regarding vaccinations.
But I saw a story.
This is again something we blogged about on thepolitical cesspool.org.
Ben and Jerry's has invented so-called the world's first homosexual ice cream.
And here's the story.
It says, Ben and Jerry's thankfully retained its activist edge after being bought by food giant Unilever in 2000.
Now to mark the legalization of same-sex marriages in Vermont, the ice cream company has changed the name of its popular chubby hubby ice cream to hubby hubby for the month of September.
Okay, this in and of itself is just a gross and obnoxious story of a liberal ice cream company forcing down the throat of its consumers that which is alien to its base.
90 plus percent of the country still believes, as backwards as we are, that sodomy, homosexuality is a perversion.
It's disgusting.
It's immoral.
Yet, here's Ben and Jerry's pandering to what?
The less than 10% of the country who is outspokenly radicalized homosexuals by making this hubby-hubby ice cream, so-called.
Now, that in and of itself, Ed, isn't that big of a deal?
What is the big deal is that, let's face it, the squeaky will gets the oil.
Isn't that what they say?
You've got this.
Now, obviously, the media magnifies their voice exponentially so and gives them a much bigger voice than they have by themselves.
But these radical homosexuals are in your face.
They actually do things that we would never do in terms of violence and advocating violence and doing things extra-legally.
But they are outspoken.
You can't deny that.
And because they're outspoken, and that and many other reasons, they're getting away with this kind of stuff and they're getting this kind of pandering treatment.
Now, the point is this: Ben and Jerry's makes this ice cream to pander to the 2% or 3% of the country that is radicalized homosexual.
Why?
Where's the churches, Eddie?
Where are the people?
Where are the normal Christian conservative people who think like us?
Why isn't there some sort of organized resistance?
It's because our people don't know how to organize and become active, do they, Ed?
They think that the recipe for success is licking a stamp and begging these liberals to see it our way.
That's not the way to get the job done.
That's for sure.
You know, as our great beloved brother Keith has said often, talking about Keith Alexander, and I heard him say it tonight, the one thing liberals fear is an empty purse.
And, you know, people that don't want to really get involved actively, James, I mean, you don't have to get involved violently, but if people are so afraid to even write letters or too lazy to write letters, they could just boycott Ben and Jerry's.
And I noticed you and Keith were talking about the sports situation tonight, you know, that eliminates whites out of sports.
Again, people, and Keith mentioned this, don't go to the football games, but I could go one better now.
We can have people to go and peacefully protest the affirmative action football games, the reverse discrimination.
We could have signs, anybody that wants to, it doesn't have to be organized.
We could go and say, you know, we're not going to go to these games because they discriminate against better white athletes.
White athletes are just as qualified to play.
There's a hundred ways to do things like that, to be an activist.
Well, that's exactly what the other side would do.
I can see it right now, forming a ring around the arena and say, you know, NFL needs to stop discrimination against European Americans.
Why aren't our people doing that?
Why is a people who has accomplished so much throughout the history of civilization too scared to stand up for their own right of self-determination now?
I don't know where we went wrong over the course of the last.
I mean, the same people who are fighting for the Confederate States of America won't get up now and make sure that their kid can get into a good school, that they don't want to even fight affirmative action.
You know, also, just a few minutes ago, James, you said something that we have hammered in on this show ever since I've been a member, and that is, where are the churches?
Why are they so afraid?
The churches should be.
And that's why I brought it up, Ed, with regards to this.
This ice cream thing.
Homosexuality is one of the few things the churches still talk about.
And you know what?
And as you know, I belong to a Baptist church, but I'm really starting to get, you know, kind of feeling bad about that because they'll talk about it some inside the churches, but they won't do anything about it.
You can't get them organized.
I mean, you can't even have a meeting in church because they're so afraid if it's political, they're going to lose their beloved tax-free status.
Well, that's just it.
I mean, and this show is a Christian program, and all of the hosting staff are self-avowed Christians.
But, you know, the church can be perverted where the faith is not.
The faith can be pure, and the people who are in these modern-day churches can be dropping the ball.
And that's certainly what's happening.
Well spoken.
That's very well spoken.
You know, not to my own horn, but just today, I made up a big sign, and we live here in Memphis.
I know a lot of people, our listeners, don't know where Memphis is, probably couldn't find it.
You know, just kind of a backwater town, you might say.
But I went to probably the busiest section in this city, in Shelby County, and held up a sign by myself in the Federal Reserve.
And I only got one negative response.
The rest of the responses I've got didn't get many responses, really, but they were all positive except one.
And this was from an employee from the Navy base out here in Millington.
Because you could expect a professional government employee to react like that.
And then they told me, well, just the same thing that John Burchers would tell you, James, I shouldn't be out there in the street doing that, potentially inhibiting traffic.
I should write my congressmen and my senators.
And I said, I mean, that's like being in a jail in Stalin's jail and writing to Stalin and protesting.
Write to the warden of the gulag.
Yeah, I mean, that's like protesting to the mafia about having to pay your insurance where you keep your store open.
But James, I would very much like to, if I could get some way to people to get in touch with me, I would like to, and not necessarily form a tight-knit group because anytime you have a centrally, like a central command situation that's tight-knit, you're always going to get infiltrated there.
As a matter of fact, you and me and Keith and Henry were talking about that just Thursday.
You know, you'll always get infiltrated.
Well, it's going to become corrupted one way or the other.
I mean, as long as you're not doing anything illegal.
That's right.
All we need to do is to get together.
If we have some feds that come in the NFL Trade, hey, I'll give them a sign if they want to hold signs up.
That's fine because we're not going to do anything illegal or violent.
But we do need to take, we need to take to the streets.
And instead of having these little tea bag parties, for instance, I think we should go downtown and march around the federal building, just like I think Joshua did when he went and marched around the bank.
Absolutely.
And we got less than 10 seconds before the break, but mimic the tactics of the left.
Mimic the tactics that were effective.
What did they do during the radical civil rights era?
They didn't drop tea bags into a bathtub like we're doing right now.
But we're going to take a break.
We'll be back right after this.
Don't go away.
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Welcome back to the show.
It's an honor and a privilege to serve as your voice, ladies and gentlemen.
And we talk about some taboo issues on this program, but we truly believe, wholeheartedly believe, that we are right on these issues and that we are taking a righteous stand on these issues.
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That's why we host the Political Cesspool.
That's why we've done it for five years.
And if you want to be involved with this show, Eddie was talking in the last segment, and I think rightfully so, about the need for our people to do more with regards to activism.
Taking to the streets, waving signs, not being a public nuisance, but certainly letting people know that there is another train of thought out there on some very important issues that are facing them.
Obviously, the tactic of begging for breadcrumbs off of our congressman's table is not getting the job done in terms of turning the rudder and reclaiming America's destiny.
We've got to do more.
And here in the Political Cesspool, we aim to do more.
And if you want to do more, if you want to work with us, you can support us financially or you can be involved in some of the outreach efforts that we have in communities.
The Political Cess Pool played an instrumental role.
In fact, we were the driving force in saving three Confederate parks here in Memphis, Tennessee.
If it weren't for us, these parks would be gone.
Even the left-wing media gives us credit for that.
We've done some good.
We want to continue to do good, but we need you to stand with us together.
We will make a difference.
And if you want to be a part of our activism and efforts, go to our website, thepolitical cesspool.org, and you can email us there.
Go to the contact page.
You can email Eddie Miller.
There's a link to his email address.
Of course, I'm James Edwards at thepolitical Successpool.org.
Drop us a line.
We will put you to work on the front lines for God and country.
But, Ed, I know you have gone to great lengths to prepare a segment now, which we're going to be focusing on for the last half hour of tonight's live program, this Labor Day weekend.
Flu season is coming up.
That means vaccines for a lot of our elderly.
And of course, we're always talking about the needs to get vaccines, vaccines for our kids, vaccines for our babies, expectant mothers, the elderly, you name it.
The government wants to have us vaccinated.
What's up with that, Ed?
Yes, sir.
James, I tell you what, you're absolutely right.
And hey, before I get involved too far, we're going to bring Henry in tonight, one of our fellow Cesspoolians.
He has four children.
I can think of no one that's more interested in vaccines and children's health than Henry.
But, yeah, you know, first of all, James, I've researched this a great deal, like I've told you, from people like Dr. Russell Blaylock.
He is a world-renowned brain surgeon.
He's written textbooks.
He's developed delicate brain operations that he was the very first ones to do in the whole world.
People like Dr. Joyce Tinpenny, and they will tell you right now that there has never been a case in the world where any type of vaccine has been proven to stop a disease.
I mean, it seems a revolutionary idea, but it's true.
And not only that, it doesn't stop a disease, it won't prevent the disease, but it is very damaging.
It's very harmful.
For instance, with the swine flu outbreak in 1976, they had to pull the vaccines off the market because the vaccines were killing more people than the flu, than the actual flu disease was.
And the vaccines they have nowadays, James, they're putting in things like what they call adjudins.
And an adjudant, I think I was telling you some of this the other day.
An adjuvant is a chemical or a substance that puts the animal, human animal, any animal you want, we just talked about humans tonight, that gets our immune system in hyper overdrive.
And some of these adjudents are viruses that have been had human DNA and genes attached to them, linked to them.
And when they are injected into the human body, it creates an antigen antibody reaction.
In other words, I get to get more simple, it can cause an autoimmune reaction where the body actually attacks itself.
And some of the diseases that they know that these vaccines have caused, have come on the scene, has accelerated the cause of these diseases to come on, or Lou Gehrig's disease, ALS, amyloolateral sclerosis, which is an incurable disease that cripples people.
They know for sure that it causes juvenile arthritis.
Kids nowadays, James, are getting arthritis at 6, 8, 10 years old.
And I was talking to my little Seth Pouli and brother tonight about these vaccines.
And you might not notice anything happening with the first series of shots.
But many times they do.
Many times people can have shots when the kids are 6, 8, 10 months old, and they can go right into autism.
For instance, let me give you a statistic.
My best friend in the world is a doctor in Alabama.
His name is Charles McGehee.
And he did research all the way back in the 70s.
And he noticed then that the incidence of autism, Alzheimer's, and cancer, you never saw that.
You never saw it.
In the population between 1900, 1920, you never saw it.
People just didn't get it.
They died of gunshot wounds, logs falling on them.
Now, they did get typhoid fever, yellow fever, things like that.
But you never see yellow fever anymore.
And it's not because we have vaccines for yellow fever.
It's because we have much better hygiene.
Dr. Walter Reed, the famous Army doctor, discovered the vaccines.
He discovered what caused the yellow fever in the Panama Canal Zone when the United States Army Corps of Engineers were building the Panama Canal.
He discovered that mosquito, I believe it was the Anopheles mosquito, they were the ones that carried the disease and they had to have standing water to lay their eggs.
About anybody in the South knows that.
Well, what he did was just a simple thing.
He had them to drain in these swamps nearby where the construction workers were working.
He covered all their water supplies.
The construction workers, they had mosquito netting put over their bunks.
And that's how they cured yellow fever.
The polio vaccine, when the polios came along in the 1950s and 60s, people were vaccinated in mass for polio.
In fact, I was myself.
Well, they gave, you know, they gave a, if you look at the vaccinations, you'll see, you know, when they started vaccinating people, you'll see, yeah, the rate of polio did go down after the vaccinations.
But what people don't look at is before, you know, 10, 15, 20 years before the vaccinations program started, the rate was dropping drastically then.
Once again, because we had much better hygiene.
People were getting away from the outhouses.
They were getting away from contaminated wells.
When they did have wells, they were covering them with green, they were keeping the insects out of them.
And we just had much better nutrition.
We had a lot better sanitation.
We had closed sewers.
We used to have an open sewer here in Memphis.
But these vaccines now are deadly.
Not only do they have the adjutants in them, they have chemicals called thimerosol, which is basically a mercury compound.
And there's no greater substance in the world than mercury to put into your body.
And this mercury, when this mercury compound gets in your body, it can unite, it can form a compound with fluoride, the sodium fluoride.
We get in our water, and it also can combine with aluminum, and you get aluminum deposits, and you can get these aluminum deposits in your brain, and they know for certain now that that causes Alzheimer's.
It's a great cause for Alzheimer's.
But I tell you what, I would recommend anybody right now, and I'm not a medical doctor, I'm not trying to give you any medical advice, but I myself am not going to take any type of vaccination at all because I know beyond a shadow of a doubt.
Anybody doesn't believe me, just assume that I am a liar.
Just assume I'm a rave lunatic.
I don't know what I'm talking about.
But I can give you some websites you can go in.
You can go in and you can look at the Blaylock report.
He's a Dr. Russell Blaylock.
He's the world-renowned brain surgeon and urologist I was telling you about.
But is Henry on the phone?
Is Henry on the line?
Henry is on the line.
We're going to get to him here.
I'm going to give Henry some time to ask me some questions, and I'd like to hear his little voice.
We're going to get that.
We're going to get to that in just one second.
We have less than a minute left.
And when we come back, we're going to have Henry.
My goodness, you can't say enough about Henry and the role he's played in the development of this program behind the scenes.
It's good to have him on the air tonight for the first time.
I'm going to be talking with Eddie about this issue when we come back from break.
But Eddie, you might not be a doctor, but you're certainly not a novice when it comes to the medical field either.
You have a history as a combatant medic in the United States Army.
You did that, and you've also spent a career as a registered nurse.
So you definitely have an abundance of experience in this realm, certainly much more so than myself and the other novices.
All we do is go to the doctors.
You've worked in hospitals for countless years, in addition to your time in the Army.
So you know a lot about this.
So don't be modest.
And this is all good advice and could save your life, ladies and gentlemen.
So more forthcoming with Eddie DeBobetier Miller's public service announcement on vaccines.
And the political cesspool continues right after these words.
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The political cesspool, guys.
We'll be back right after these messages.
Jump in the political says pool with James and the game.
Call us tonight at 1-866-986-6397.
And here's the host of the Political Cess Pool, James Edwards.
James Edwards here with you, everyone.
I'm joined this third hour by my co-host, Eddie the Bombardier Miller, and we're trying to do what we can with what we've got, trying to cover it all during the three hours we've got with you each and every week here on the Liberty News Radio Network.
And Eddie is doing a fantastic presentation right now on an issue that you need to know about.
We try not only to cover the salient and contemporary political issues, but certainly those that have your health at stake as well.
And Eddie, with that being said, I'll turn it back over to you.
Well, you know, James, unfortunately, some of these vaccination programs have been politicized.
The government is really pushing it hard.
And a lot of people might think I'm a crackpot, but that's okay because, you know, I'm not calling myself a pioneer because I'm just getting this information from the pioneers.
And, you know, the first people, you know, the Patriot in the beginning is always called a crackpot or nut, and he's belittled.
But, you know, the CDC just leaked some of this information out not long ago.
They sent a memorandum out to some of the top virologists in the country telling them to be on the lookout for a lot of these degenerative brain disorders from some of these viruses that they've turned loose from these vaccines that they know they're contaminated.
Hey, but hey, is Henry on the line yet?
I didn't want to get too long-winded, you know.
And is Henry on the line now?
Absolutely, yeah.
Hey, Henry.
Oh, Henry is one of our beloved Cesspoolians.
And like I said, I told him about you earlier, Henry, tonight.
You have four children.
And, you know, you told me that you and your wife, not unlike a lot of other people, are kind of have had some concern about these vaccines.
And I had volunteered to the best of my ability.
Like I say, I'm no expert, but I've read a lot on this stuff.
And I think you might have some questions.
Well, you know, I'll just give you my two cents.
I've got a seven-year-old, two, five-year-olds, and a one-year-old.
And our research, we did a lot of research on it.
And we decided to go with the bare minimum or alternative vaccine.
Maybe our information, we exposed a little bit different information than you were.
But I knew full well that there was concerns.
I'm glad you mentioned the polio vaccine.
There was a 1 in 20,000 chance of catching polio if you get the vaccine.
But up until here, just a few years ago, it was a 0% chance.
I mean, why even get vaccinated for it?
But I mean, you know, some of these new diseases coming on now, is there really a social responsibility to vaccinate?
I'm sorry, Henry, I'm having kind of a hard time hearing you.
Can you?
Yeah, I was just asking, you know, with the advent, you know, some of these new, you know, some of these diseases creeping back into the United States, is there a social responsibility for parents to vaccinate?
I understand what you talked about.
For instance, a couple of the diseases that we mentioned earlier today, you and I, were the tuberculosis that's coming back in.
To the best of my knowledge, Henry, and I'm not sure about this.
Like I say, I'm not the all-world expert.
I don't believe there is a vaccination for tuberculosis.
And we're also, you know, I worked here at one of the major hospitals in Memphis, and we had the Methodist hospital system.
We, of the four hospitals in the area, we were the only hospitals that I'm familiar with that I know of that had the reverse isolation rooms for the tuberculosis patients.
Now, there are drugs to treat tuberculosis that once you get it.
But as far as I know, there's no vaccine to prevent that.
Now, of the diseases that are new diseases coming on, these are the two of the ones that I know of.
That and leprosy, you know, a lot of people may not know, but leprosy has coming on the scene here, rearing its head, especially in the southwest areas in Texas and Arizona and New Mexico.
And we even have leper colonies now.
And guys, that's one of the many blessings of multiculturalism.
You got that right, Eddie.
The quickest way to cure polio and tuberculosis is to close the border to third world immigration, but that's another issue.
You've got that right.
You know, I mean, and James, you probably never even heard, as young as you are, I can vaguely remember, I'm 62 years old.
I can vaguely remember, and I know Henry's younger than me too.
Henry's only 39 years old.
He's just a member of a child.
They closed the old sanitarium over here off of Lamar, probably, I guess, back, what, 1960, somewhere around there.
But we just totally wiped out the tuberculosis.
And it was from, you know, from quarantining people.
That's a big, big do-do right nowadays.
For instance, they can't quarantine people with HIV virus because it's considered, you know, like they say, HIV is the only disease that has its own, what's the word I'm looking for?
It's on the affirmative action bureau.
You can't treat anybody with HIV any differently than you could someone who's perfectly healthy.
God forbid, though, you know, we discriminate against homosexuals.
But Henry, do you have any more diseases that you know that any more new diseases over the scene that I'm not aware of?
I mentioned, like I said, tuberculosis, and I mentioned the leprosy.
But I'm not really familiar of any more coming on the scenes.
I hadn't heard of any cases of the smallpox pocket back up on the scene.
I'm not really, you know, I hadn't heard of anything like that.
You don't never hear typhoid fever anymore, a hooping cough.
Are there any more diseases you had on mind specifically?
Well, you know, just kind of along those same lines, you know, hepatitis, you know, they'll vaccinate a very young child just a few months old, and there's really no risk of them getting hepatitis till they're teenagers, you know.
But that's over the truth.
Once again, Henry, I know the breadth of that.
You could really eliminate a lot of these, eliminate the vaccines.
I know a lot of parents that stay home and homeschool and breastfeed.
A lot of them just opt out.
And we're really having trouble with the doctors.
What about the code of ethics?
They're not going to see you if you're not vaccinated.
Most of them won't.
We don't hear them.
And I've not talked to the doctor because I know, you know what?
You couldn't pay me to be a doctor.
There's not enough money in the world to make me be a doctor.
If you want to see a slave nowadays, a modern slave, you go see a doctor, especially the young ones.
Not the doctor, not the dog them, but they don't have the education.
Just to quote Dr. Russell Blaylock, the world-renowned vaccine expert I was telling you about, and Dr. Tinpenny, the average doctor has just the very minor, bearish training in vaccines.
About the only information they get is reading the inserts from the vaccination packages or from a drug rip.
They don't read the major studies done by the universities and the independent research agencies.
They don't read those.
And that information is not put out in lockdowns for a reason, because these drug companies don't want us to know that.
But here's what Dr. Russell Blaylock says.
Quote, he says, vaccinations do not cure anything.
He says there's no, unquote, there's no reason, first of all, to take a vaccination because there's not one shred of evidence proving that vaccinations can cure a disease.
But there is mountains of evidence showing that they cause tremendous harm, irreparable harm.
They cause death in many cases.
They cause irreversible brain damage.
They cause Yamberet syndrome, which is a severe nerve disease that can be lethal.
It can be fatal.
It's what it does.
These viruses, for instance, that cause Yamberet, they attack this thing called the myelin sheath that lines the nerve tracts.
It leads from one branch of nerves to another branch of nerves.
But matter of fact, there was a movie made about that back in the early 1960s.
But my answer to you, Henry, would be, just to sum it up, I guess, would be, if you can't prove that a vaccination is effective, and you know that it has been proven that they can be very harmful, why would you ever want to risk that?
That's what you point out yourself, Henry.
And by the way, Henry, you really impressed me tonight about the research you have done.
Oh, thanks.
We've got an impressive...
They do not know of the long-term effects.
They're just pumping the kids full of vaccines at an early age, and they just don't know.
Talking with a friend of mine not too long ago, and she was talking about a child that died on the way home from taking her vaccine.
Of course, they can't link that to the vaccines.
Nobody really knows.
Just another.
So often, though, here.
Another coincidence, guys, I'm sure.
But listen, what a great segment this has been.
What a great show it's been.
And Henry, thanks for calling in.
And Eddie, thanks for being so well prepared for this presentation tonight during the third hour.
Folks, if you have any more questions about vaccines or anything that we've been covering here, go to www.thepoliticalcesspool.org and send an email to our resident registered nurse, Big E, Eddie the Bombardier Miller.
He'll get back with you.
And we're flat out of time.
Guys, we've got to go get a snow cone.
I know when we went out for barbecue with Keith this week, you wouldn't think it's to get a snow cone.
Hey, we're going to make it happen this week.
And for the rest of the barbecue place, I told him that's the first time I ever got a meal out of you, but I'm treating you next time, buddy.
You got it, Big Eddie.
We're out of time, guys, for Eddie the Bombardier Miller, Winston Smith, and Bill Rowland.
I'm James Edwards.
We'll see you next week right here in the Political Cesspool.
Thanks for joining us tonight in the Political Cesspool.
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