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Dec. 26, 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, everybody.
Saturday, December 26th.
It's the day after Christmas.
It's the last show of the year.
2009 will soon be the year that was for all of us, including those of us here in the Political Cesspool.
Welcome back to our program.
I'm James Edwards, and we're coming to you live from AM 1380, WLRM Radio Studios in Memphis, Tennessee, our flagship station, and going out to our AM FM affiliate stations across the country on the Liberty News Radio Network, LibertyNewsRadio.com and our official internet headquarters, thepolitical cesspool.org.
We'll hope that you'll check those websites daily, bookmark them as favorite places.
And joining me now for the remainder of the broadcast tonight, Winston Smith.
Winston, how are you, buddy?
I am so well, James.
I'm happy to be here with my family.
I'm happy to be on the political cesspool with the greatest listeners, the greatest audience in the world.
And Merry Christmas to you, my friend.
Merry Christmas to all of our listeners, too.
Absolutely.
Merry Christmas.
And it's not that belated.
It was just yesterday, and a great Christmas it was.
Of course, Keith and I touched upon that for a moment.
And as we said last week, this time of year, this very special and spiritual time of year, gives us an opportunity to pause and reflect upon the things that mean most to us in life.
Obviously, family, friends.
And I am thankful, Winston, obviously for those things, but almost of equal importance, I'm thankful for my family here in the political cesspool.
Of course, you and Keith, Eddie, Bill, and then the rest of the staff and crew behind the scenes, including our friends at Liberty News Radio, and obviously everyone that tunes into this program, our fans.
Life would not be life if I didn't have this show to come to, as it gives us an opportunity to work on behalf of our people, a cause so much greater than ourselves.
And that is why we love doing this show.
It gives us a higher purpose and a higher calling.
And obviously at Christmas, and always, we're thankful for these things, but I think you're thankful a little more so during Christmas.
And it's good to be here with you tonight.
How was your Christmas, by the way?
Oh, it was excellent.
Just getting up early with the family and reading the Christmas story.
And, you know, we have our little traditions.
And, of course, we open presents.
I never really liked the idea of Christmas presents.
But, you know, that kind of flies in the face of what I said last week about my most memorable Christmas being the one after my stepdad and mom got married.
My brother and I finally had a big Christmas.
But the point is, you know, now that I have my own family, we have our own traditions.
And I think our Christmases have become more and more family times and times to really reflect upon the profound message of Christmas.
And I talked about that last week, about how God was angry with us.
God was angry with me, righteously furious, and because of this great condescension.
You know, now no longer is God angry with me.
God has taken the courtroom of justice and put me in his living room.
Son.
And that's what I, as the head of my house, have guided Christmas in my home to be.
Well, it was an absolutely, I think, moving segment last week, the last hour of the show in which we reflected upon Christmas and the meaning of Christmas.
Now, tonight, a little bit different, although still on the topic of tradition, obviously one thing we do every year in this program on the last broadcast of the year is reflect upon the top 10 moments of the show during that particular calendar year.
This obviously 2009, during tonight's third hour, we're going to be talking about the top 10 moments, most memorable moments, most memorable interviews of the year.
Always a highlight of my duties as host of this program to bring that list to you.
I have worked on the compilation of that list.
Winston, on the other hand, and a little bit different, another take on the top 10 list.
Top 10 most hateful comments of the year.
Now, obviously, these weren't comments made on our program, contrary to the opinion of the real haters at organizations, anti-American, anti-Christian organizations like the ADL and the SPLC.
We don't promote hate on this program.
In fact, quite the opposite, love of our people, love of our faith, love in general.
But Winston has gone into the belly of the beast and garnered for us a very original segment tonight.
A lot of times during the show, when we're not interviewing guests, we're providing you commentary, our commentary, our take on stories that are in the news.
But tonight, Winston has come up with an hour of programming that is going to be all original content.
Winston, you've gotten us the top 10 most hateful comments of the year.
This is something that you compiled yourself.
You just went out there and there was a lot of hate going around in the country this year, and you narrowed it down to the top ten.
So what I want to do, what I want to do.
You know, there is an abundance of hate out there.
And I'll tell you, James, it's not coming from the likes of us.
It's not coming from the constitutional conservatives.
It's not coming from white nationalists.
It's coming from the people who hate us simply for drawing breath.
And, you know, I just kind of let my subconscious take over here, and I just thought, well, when was I really most offended or most struck over the past year?
And that's how I came down to these 10 quotes.
There were a lot more.
And some of them I had to think about.
You know, there's Sonia Sotomayor's hateful, wise Latina comment, but that was, she uttered that, I think, back in 2000, well, 2001 or 2004.
It was a long time ago, but it only came to light this year.
Well, anyhow, I'm just going to go ahead and then start in on the top 10 most hateful quotes of 2009.
These are from the files of Winston Smith.
And, James, of course, I invite your salient comment thereon.
Well, I'm going to do my best to be as salient as possible.
If possible, here's how I'd like to do it, Winston.
We've got just a few minutes left in this segment.
Then we'll have three more segments before we go into the third hour, which we'll shift gears and go into the top 10 moments of the show.
Let's start with number 10 and then try to do three in each segment if we can marshal it as such.
But number 10, Winston, the 10th most hateful comment you came across in the year 2009.
What was it and who said it?
This one comes from former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich on January 7, 2009.
And he was before Congress.
He was talking about how the stimulus money should be spent.
And here's what he said from Robert Reich.
I am concerned, as I'm sure many of you are, that these jobs not simply go to high-skilled people who are already professionals or to white male construction workers.
All right.
Pretty mild.
Nothing too flaming there.
I don't know how mild it is.
I mean, could you imagine if a white person, if one existed in a position of power anymore in this country, had said that about anyone other than white workers, what the fallout would have been?
I mean, not only would he have lost his job, he might have been executed.
Knows.
Look at what he's saying here.
He's concerned.
He doesn't want these jobs to go to skilled people.
And he was talking about infrastructure like highways.
He didn't want highway-building jobs to go to people who were already skilled at it.
And he didn't want the jobs to go to white male construction workers.
So he wants them to go to incompetent boobs who don't know the first thing about building a bridge.
Well, I think there's a lot of hate in that comment.
You know, obviously it's discriminatory against white people for no other reason than they are white workers.
He doesn't want white construction workers to get jobs or be put in positions of employ.
And again, you turn the tide on that and you reverse the ethnicity of the person that's being discriminated against.
And it would have been very hateful according to the media had it been anybody put into that sort of discrimination other than the white construction worker, which is obviously fair game.
But a lot of these things, and I know it's going to get a little more intense and vitriolic as we work our way down to number one.
A lot of these quotes come from stories that we have covered throughout the year.
And I do particularly remember that story or that quote being attributed to Robert Reich.
That was very early in the year, wasn't it not?
Winston, how long ago was that?
January 7th.
I knew it had to come right out of the game.
So the first week of 2009, we were attacked.
They didn't waste any time.
All right, number nine.
Ninth most hateful quote of 2009.
This one comes from none other than Barack Hussein Obama on July 16th, 2009, commenting on the arrest of Harvard University racist Negro professor Henry Lewis Gates.
Barack Obama said this: I don't know, not having been there and not seeing all the facts, what role race played in that.
But I think it's fair to say, number one, any of us would be pretty angry.
Number two, that the Cambridge police acted stupidly in arresting somebody when there was already proof that they were in their own home.
This was the same before the beer summit.
Go ahead, James.
No, I just don't mean to interrupt, but we're coming up on a break.
We're going to pick it up right there when we return.
We're working our way down the list, and we are going to resume with number nine, Winston's commentary on that obviously hateful comment from the President of the United States, Barack Obama.
And you can guess who the intended target or the recipient of that hatred is.
It's not going to be hard for you to figure out.
We're going to continue with number nine: 10 most hateful comments of 2009 when the political cesspool returns on the Liberty News Radio Network right after these words from our sponsors.
Don't go away, the political cesspool, guys.
We'll be back right after these messages.
Jump in, the political says, fool with James and the gang.
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And here's the host of the political cesspool, James Edwards.
We're having a lot of fun here this day after Christmas here in the Political Cesspool.
James Edwards and Winston Smith now with you for tonight's broadcast.
We are counting down a couple of the top 10 lists a little later on during tonight's third and final hour.
We're going to be recapping the top 10 moments of the political cesspool radio program this year.
But now Winston is in the midst of counting down the top 10 most hateful comments of 2009.
We started off with a comment of hatred directed against white construction workers by Robert Rush.
And now we are on to one of many hateful comments uttered by the president this year.
And Winston, you read it just before the last break, a comment he made at the infamous Beer Summit, which he had orchestrated to defend the noted racist, the so-called Professor Gates.
Continue on, Winston.
Well, James, as I scan down the list, I noticed that there are quite a few of these hateful quotes that have a either direct connection to Barack Hussein Obama or a pretty good connection to him.
But relating to number nine, the one in which Barack Hussein Obama excoriated the Cambridge Massachusetts police for arresting an unruly citizen who was threatening them and trying to attack them.
You know, there is a hero in that incident, and it's Sergeant James Crowley.
He's the white police officer who made the arrest, did the right thing.
And even afterwards, even at that ridiculous beer summit, Sergeant Crowley, he didn't cower.
He didn't beg for forgiveness.
He still has not apologized.
And because of this courageous European-American man, and he was taking a stand, a righteous stand, Barack Hussein Obama was more than happy to get that incident out of the spotlight.
So I give a hearty shout out to Sergeant James Crowley of the Cambridge, Massachusetts Police Department for his cast iron spine there in the face of extreme political pressure.
Number eight.
Number eight.
This was a tie, and it's anything that was said or written by the SPLC or the ADL.
Anything that comes from those two organizations is hateful in the extreme.
And, you know, James, the more I muse over the SPLC and the ADL, the more I wonder just how hateful they are.
Because let's face it, they are first and foremost businesses.
They are money-making operations.
And if the money dries up from peddling venom and vitriol and piss and vinegar, you know, they'll find some other way to make their money.
But still, they are both deplorable organizations, satanic organizations, if you will.
And for the most part, anything that comes from the mouth of anyone associated with the SPLC or the ADL or anything that comes from their computer screens or their computers is hateful.
Well, no, you know, seven.
Before you go to number seven, my little tidbit on that, it goes to show how much this radio program has not necessarily grown up, but withstood the test of time.
I can remember, heck, when we used to make a big deal out of being attacked, particularly, I believe it was back in 2006 when the SPLC originally put us on their hate watch list, ironically enough.
And all of the major network or affiliates in Memphis were trying to get an interview with us.
And I granted a couple of those interviews back then and basically just let them know that I was ecstatic, that you hadn't really arrived in the conservative movement until you had been put on the list or been attacked by those two organizations.
And even in the years after 2006 or since 2006, I can remember we would always at least mention it in passing here on the program when the ADL or the SPLC attacked the political test because we thought it was noteworthy.
Now, since we've come into our own to such a great extent and to such a large degree where we command our own media, we make our own media.
I mean, we're bigger than these guys now on certain levels.
And, you know, I can't even tell you how many times just in the last few months we've been referenced on their blog.
And it just, you know, it just, it isn't noteworthy enough to even mention on the program anymore.
But the ADM and SBLC have certainly played a role in giving the political cesspool the sort of acclaim that we now enjoy.
And withstanding the attack that they have levied us for so many years, many people have come to stand with us.
So as hateful as they are, they've served a role in making us who we are, and we're better men for it.
But down to number seven, I just had to insert in that little caveat, Winston.
Number seven is related to number eight.
And number seven on the list of top 10 most hateful quotes of 2009 is the MIAC report.
You might remember that's the Missouri Information Analysis Center report that was titled The Modern Militia Movement.
That comes to us from February 20th, 2009.
And this is related to number eight because the MIAC report was pretty much written by the SPLC and the ADL.
They're the ones who provided the ridiculous data for it.
And we all remember the MIAC report.
It basically said that if you're a white Christian, then you're a terrorist.
You're a domestic terrorist.
If you support Ron Paul or Bob Barr or if you question the government, if you fly the Gadsden flag, the one with the snake, the rattlesnake says, don't tread on me.
You fly that, you're a domestic terrorist.
We all remember that.
And the SPLC provided a whole bunch of the data for that.
It's only like an eight-page report or something like that, but the SPLC pretty much wrote it.
And the SPLC is proud of quoting the MIAC report, saying, see, the Missouri Information Analysis Center said this, but it was the SPLC who provided them with the copy to that.
You see what I'm saying, James?
No, I'm following absolutely.
And I can remember vividly covering that.
I believe it was back in the early summer when that was originally unleashed.
And it got such a vehement backlash from God-fearing, law-abiding citizens that it was thoroughly discredited and eventually summarily dismissed and thrown out.
But when you have on official state documentation, an official state-issued report that we're told not to racially profile, even though we know certain races in this country commit a wildly disproportionate amount of crimes.
But you actually had official law enforcement documents saying that police should suspect people for being domestic terrorists if they, as you mentioned, Winston, display a Ron Paul bumper sticker, for God's sake.
I mean, this is the kind of stuff that we've got to deal with.
Well, that was a thoroughly reprehensible report.
And it was the result of the secret police force being established between the federal government and the states.
This is from what they called a fusion center.
It was a fusion of law enforcement agencies from the states and from the federal government.
And this is just what happens when the federal government encroaches on state law enforcement.
It has no benefit being there.
That was also gave birth to one of the more encouraging moments of the year for our people, at least, in so much as they did stand up and cry foul over that.
Our people, one of our detriments is that we don't stand up and defend ourselves more often when we're being attacked like this.
But that was one instance in which we were attacked, ridiculously so, I might add, and it was a little bit too much.
And our people rose up and body slammed it.
We're about to take a break, just to recap where we are in Winston Smith's epic top 10 most hateful comments list.
We've talked about Robert Reich and his condemnation of white workers.
We've talked about Obama and his comments attacking the Cambridge Police Department for arresting so-called Professor Gates.
Anything the ADL and SPLC has written, and of course, the MIAC report, MIAC report out of Missouri.
We're going to pick up right after this with number six as we get closer to the most hateful comment of 2009 when the political cesspool continues right after this.
Obviously, I missed time that break just a moment.
That's until break.
Don't go away.
The Political Cesspool, guys, will be back right after these messages.
On the show and express your opinion in the Political Cesspool, call us toll-free at 1-866-986-6397.
A lot of fun being had in the political cesspool this evening.
It's a festive atmosphere as we are still in the midst of what the secular would call the holiday season.
I guess to an extent it is because now we're officially past Christmas and we're in between Christmas and New Year.
But it's December 26th.
James Edwards Winston Smith on deck with you tonight as we count down the 10 most hateful comments made in the year 2009.
We are down to number six.
And Winston, I just got to ask, with all the hate out there in the world this year, how did you winnow it down to only 10?
And when did you have the time to do it?
I mean, did they all just come to the top of your head?
Did you have to do a lot of research?
What was the practice behind the compilation of this list?
At first, it was just an off-the-top of my head sort of thing.
You know, you rest on your subconscious quite a bit and you just say, well, what this year, what was this year that really ticked me off, that really offended me?
And so I made a basic list from that.
And then I started going back through some archives of political cesspool blog entries and Western Voices World News entries and some of the entries from my favorite blog, Spirit, Water, Blood, and just finding things that were especially heinous.
And there is a lot out there.
Some of it is just incredibly stupid.
And I tended to discount the things that were really stupid because I wanted to focus on people who at least had the appearance of rationality and who really knew what they were saying and knew what they intended to say.
But it was fun winnowing it down and just saying the diversity of hatred out there and the thinking, the thought processes of these people who said and wrote these things.
It was kind of breathtaking.
Well, hopefully we are taking the breath of our listening audience tonight as we work our way down even further.
We're at number six now, Winston.
Number six.
Number six.
This one comes to us from the Army Chief of Staff, General George Casey, who on the November 28, 2009 offering of this week with George Stephanopoulos, speaking about the Fort Hood massacre, General Casey said this.
What happened at Fort Hood was a tragedy, but I believe it would be an even greater tragedy if our diversity becomes a casualty here.
And if there was any way to insult the memory of those who lost their lives in that incident, if there was any way to insult the family members of those who died there and the survivors of that incident, then to say this, I don't know what it would be.
Except for him to step up and say, so what's the big deal?
That was a significantly hateful comment for any number of reasons, not the least of which you're talking about so many people lost their lives because of diversity, because of diversity, and exclusively because of diversity were their lives lost.
And this man had the gall to say on national television that as sad as it is to have lost the lives of a great number of soldiers, relatively speaking, a greater casualty would be the diversity that we all love, so on and so forth.
Yeah, Winston, if that's number six, I can't imagine what number one is going to be.
And that was obviously something that's very near and fresh in our hearts and minds because this was an occurrence that just, of course, just happened last month.
And I can remember, once again, quite distinctly covering that very quote on the show just a few weeks ago.
So for obvious reasons, that has made the top 10 list absolutely heinous.
Well, I sort of disliked this quote, particularly because this was the Army Chief of Staff saying this.
And not only was it hateful, but it seemed cowardly to me.
This is obviously a butt-kissing of political correctness.
Yeah, why he was aware of that.
I wonder who told him to say that.
This doesn't sound like an Army Chief of Staff saying this.
This sounds like a political hack.
Well, as the great Navy Chief Art Frith would tell us, our dear producer, once you rise to that level of prominence in the military, you are a politician.
And he was probably, I don't know if he was forced to say it, but he was certainly asked to say it.
And maybe he believes it.
Who knows?
But nevertheless, certainly worthy of mention in our recap of the top 10 most hateful comments of the year.
Now, number five, as we get to the top five now, down to number five.
I want to say one final thing about number six.
I am loath to say that any military man is cowardly, but in this case, I think it was cowardly.
This would have been better left unsaid.
This took the focus off those who suffered and died and put it on something that was totally stupid, this idea of Of diversity.
Those men, those people died because of diversity.
All right, continuing on.
Number five in the list of top 10 most hateful comments or quotes of 2009.
This one comes to us from the racist Negro Reverend Joseph Lowry on January 20th, 2009, at the inauguration of Barack Hussein Obama.
Racist Negro Reverend Joseph Lowry said this.
Lord, this was his prayer, by the way.
Lord, in the memory of all the saints who from their labors rest and in the joy of a new beginning, we ask you to help us work for the day when black will not be asked to get back, when brown can stick around, when yellow will be mellow, when the red man can get ahead man, and when white will embrace what is right.
And you can see that these are these, and number five, these are taking a decidedly venomous turn.
And this, not only was this prayer a mockery of the occasion, not only was it a mockery of Christianity, this was hateful.
Look at that last line.
He's praying that white will embrace what is right.
And never mind the fact that at, Winston, you're making my blood boil, and this tends to happen on this program more weeks than not.
I remember that obviously it was in January of this year.
That was something that as much as I've seen in living a life on the front lines over the course of the last at least five years and doing this radio program, that staggered me.
To see a man get up there at a presidential inauguration and say something that, what's the word I'm looking for?
Without cursing.
He knew exactly what he intended to do, and he did it.
That insulting.
I mean, you know, that crowd there that he insulted was 90% white.
I mean, who are we kidding?
I mean, whites elected Obama.
Whites elected Obama.
He could have gotten every minority vote in the country, and he wouldn't have even made a blip on the radar.
Whites elected Obama.
But it wasn't enough that whites elected him.
This guy who gave the closing prayer, the invocation, had to insult them for electing him.
It wasn't enough that they elected him.
They still have more atoning to do before they can truly embrace what's right.
Perhaps he could have gotten up there and said, Lord, we pray for the day when violent Negroes will stop kidnapping young white people and raping them and torturing them and murdering them.
Lord, we pray for the day when black people will realize that we have laws in this country and that you have to behave a certain way.
Would that a reverend would pray that at an inaugural prayer?
Yeah, well, if that would have happened, you know, seventh level of hell would have been unleashed, but maybe not if a black person had done it.
But that wasn't the prayer.
It never was going to be the prayer.
The prayer was that the message was that we're an evil people and we still got a long way to go before our hearts will enable us to embrace what's right.
That's what he was saying.
And as we've always said, we've heard the grievances.
Where's the gratitude for all that's been done and given, given away at our expense, I might add, to try and bring everyone up to the same level, which is, of course, a fool's error and it cannot be done.
We're not here to commentate on social issues.
We're talking about the top 10 most hateful comments, the hateful quotes of the year.
And as you mentioned, Winston, quite accurately, these are taking a decidedly more venomous turn.
I hate to ask you what number four may be.
Well, first of all, I just want to know, is commentate a word?
What do you want to know, Winston?
Is commentate a word?
Sure it is.
I don't think it's a word.
I bet you.
We'll talk about that later.
There's a commentator?
Commentary.
Well, we're going to look it up during the break.
We don't have time to get to number four yet because we got a break.
We're really going to have to move through these final four in the last segment we have before we head into the third hour, which is going to be another top 10 list, the top 10 moments in the political cesspool of 2009.
So let's get on the computer.
Let's go to the thesaurus or the dictionary.
Let's look.
It would be the dictionary.
Let's look for commentate.
And then we're going to go down the last four.
Yeah.
Last four or top four most hateful comments.
We've worked our way from 10 to 5.
Four is next when the political cesspool continues here tonight on AM1380 WLRM radio in Memphis, thepolitical cesspool.org.
We'll be back right after this.
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We're counting down the top 10 most hateful comments or quotes that were made in 2010.
We're down from 10 to number 4.
We've got to make haste with the top four because we only have one second left.
We've got to switch gears.
So, Winston, without further ado, number four, if you will, Maestro.
Number four, this one is well known.
I'm sure you will all remember it.
This comes to us from Attorney General, racist Eric Holder, February 18, 2009.
He said this: Though this nation has proudly thought of itself as an ethnic melting pot in things racial, we have always been, and I believe continues to be, in too many ways, essentially a nation of cowards.
Now, James, I don't know who he was talking about being afraid or being cowardly when it comes to talking about race, but he wasn't talking about, he wasn't talking about us.
I still say, you know, he has an open mic.
If he wants to come on the political cesspool and talk about race, we will do it until the cows come home, and we will do so without one iota of cowardice.
No retreat, no surrender, no apology.
In fact, our claim to fame, we've made our living in talking about issues with a racial animus.
But certainly, I think if anyone was spared in his naming of our nation, claiming our people to be cowards, certainly the hosted staff and crew of the political cesspool were spared that insult.
But for everyone else, I don't know.
And to be sure, there are a lot of cowards when it comes to this question, but they're just, they're not cowardly for the same reason that he believes they are cowards.
He believes people, and only white people, let's be honest.
Yeah, only white people are cowards, according to Eric Holder.
He believes they're cowards because they haven't done enough.
They haven't done enough.
They haven't purged themselves enough.
They haven't done enough to benefit the lot and life of minorities.
That's why he thinks they're cowards.
I would agree with him that.
Eric Holder needs to get out more often.
Yeah, to be sure.
He may be right that to an extent we have a lot of cowards in this nation, but it's not for the same reason that he mentioned and because he mentioned the cowardice that is out there in the wrong context that earned him a deserved spot in the top five.
All right, number three.
I'm going to depart from my format here, and I'm just going to read, I'm going to read the quote first and then explain who said it.
And here's what this person said.
Quote, it was a very unfortunate event, unquote.
And this comes to us from Columbia University racist Negro professor Lionel McIntyre on November 10th, 2009.
And he said that, commenting upon his punching the face of university employee Camille Davis, a white woman, during a discussion about white privilege.
So here he is, a racist Negro professor at Columbia University, Lionel McIntyre.
He's having this argument with a white woman at a bar.
This woman's name is Camille Davis, and he can't take it anymore, so he hauls off and cold cocks her, punches her face.
And the accounts say that the punch was so loud that the cooks in the back stopped what they were doing to see what made the noise.
Now, when you're talking about cowards and when you're talking about hate, a man punching a woman, number one, is almost always out of bounds.
Now, yeah, you know, this is another one, Winston, that happened very recently.
Certainly was talked about and covered on this program just about a month and some change ago.
I really don't know how we could elaborate on that any further than to just mention the players and the circumstances that led to the punch from this, if you want to call him a man, punching the woman because she didn't agree with him about the guilt complex that all whites are supposed to have, right?
Something like that?
James, if she had so much as laid a finger on him, it would have been an automatic hate crime.
She'd still be in jail why she couldn't get bailed.
That's an interesting thing.
This was an interesting take on it, Winston.
I appreciate you for bringing this up.
Absolutely.
Where's the hate crime in this?
Where's the hate crime?
And I mean, you know, again, you're talking about a man hitting a woman, which is and should be a little bit more punishable.
But no hate crime about race.
So the racial aspect was there.
In fact, I'm surprised she didn't somehow get indicted for something for provoking him as a white woman.
I don't know why he just didn't use that magic phrase.
She used a racial epithet.
She called me the N-word.
If he'd have done that, he would have probably been given a prize, had his record exposed if he is facing any charges.
And then she would have been thrown under the bus.
All right.
All right.
Let's go to number two.
Yeah.
Number two.
This one comes to us from Marxist activist and lousy actress Janine Garofilo, and she was on MSNBC's countdown with Keith Oberman on April 16th.
And that's an all-star lineup of hate right there, Oberman and Garofilo.
Yeah, there's a match made in Detroit or something.
There's a match made in Moscow.
How about that?
All right.
This was April 16, 2009, and she was referring to tea party attention.
She's in her comments about what this is.
This is not about fashion Democrats.
It's not about taxes.
They have no idea why the Tea Party at all.
It's all about hating a black man in the White House.
This is racism straight up.
Nothing but a bunch of teabagging rednecks.
There's no way around that.
So here is a woman who was spitting this venom on national television.
And let me tell you something about Janine Garofilo.
She hasn't got a clue.
She's like Barbara Streisand.
She just hasn't got a clue.
She is just one of the Hollywood Marxists who have nothing better to do.
She can't land a decent part in any respectable movie of any cultural value.
So she goes on this rant and refers to Tea Party attendees as racist and that their main concern is hating Barack Hussein Obama.
Because you know that radical left-wing activists like Olbermann and Garofilo really understand what the Boston Tea Party was all about.
Oh, yes.
Yeah, you know, again, Winston, you're bringing up something that I remember unfortunately, fondly.
And again, number one has to be pretty deadgumbad to top that.
Janine Garofo, anything she says is worthy of some sort of a mention on the top 10 most hateful comment list.
But let's recap very quickly as we get into number one.
We only have about a minute and a half left.
Robert Rush, Barack Obama, ADL SPLC, the MIAC Report, General George Casey.
We're working our way back down the top 10.
Joseph Lowry was responsible for the fifth most hateful comment of 09.
Number 4 came to us from Eric Holder, followed by number 3 from Lionel McIntyre.
And Winston just provided the quote from Janine Garofilo, which was number two.
Drumroll, Winston, if you will.
Number one, the most hateful comment of 2009.
Of 2009.
This comes to us from Newsweek magazine.
Writers Poe Bronson and Ashley Merriman on the September 14th, 2009 issue, they wrote this, quote, it's horrifying to imagine kids being proud to be white.
Read that one more time.
It's horrifying to imagine kids being proud to be white.
The most hateful comment of 2009, again, it's obvious, but Winston, tell them why.
Because this goes to the heart of the genocide that is going on against white people today.
Our children, these people are saying that our children, our white children, have no right to be proud of their heritage.
They have no right to respect their fathers, their mothers, their grandfathers, their grandmothers.
They have no right to be proud of the accomplishments of their people, the very people who brought this nation forward.
This is a genocidal statement.
These people may as well have said white kids need to just kill themselves.
No, Winston, absolutely.
It's an indication of the cultural genocide that we find in all forms of media, be it print, movies, radio, what have you, and in all of the major institutions of American society.
This is the kind of anti-white bigotry that we find ourselves up against.
And I want to thank you, Winston, for providing such great commentary on the top 10 most hateful comments of the year.
You have put forth an absolutely outstanding list.
Not only outstanding, but I don't think I would have changed the order in any shape, form, or fashion.
You did an excellent job and even placed them correctly as far as I'm concerned.
I thought people, hopefully people enjoyed that.
And we're going to talk more about it during the third hour when we shift gears.
Another top 10 list forthcoming, top 10 moments of the political cesspool in 2009.
But thank you again, Winston, for that.
And folks, if you want to stand up for a radio broadcast that is fighting for our people and for our culture, support this radio program.
You can support us online at thepolitical cesspool.org.
And don't forget to support Liberty News Radio as well.
We're going to take a break.
We'll be back with a third hour, a fun hour, right after this.
There's a third hour of tonight's installment of the political cesspool coming your way right after these messages.
And God, I know I'm one tailor.
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