Dec. 11, 2010 - 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.
All right, everybody, welcome back to the political cesspool radio program.
Top of the third and final hour tonight.
I'm James Edwards, Winston Smith, co-hosting with me tonight.
And there, of course, you just heard the theme from Rocky.
And I think that we can relate to that in some ways as underdogs, as the sons and daughters of Europe, as conservatives, as southerners, as heterosexuals, as Christians.
Well, there's seemingly a lot of dark forces against us right now, the same forces that are manifesting this Wargans Christmas that we spent so much time talking about during the second hour.
But I believe that we do have hope.
And if we have hope, you know, you got to have hope at this time of year.
Christmas, the Christmas season, such a special spiritual time.
And just like the Italian stallion, I think we're going to have a big come from behind an upset victory.
I really and truly do believe that.
Welcome back again, ladies and gentlemen, to the third and final hour.
We're here at AM 1380, WLRM Radio, in Memphis, Tennessee, our flagship station, but by no means our only affiliate station.
We also broadcast to the AM FM affiliate stations of the Liberty News Radio Network and, of course, simulcasting online around the world at thepoliticalcesspool.org and libertynewsradio.com.
Going to have some fun, I think, this third hour, Winston, because all we're doing, all we're doing this third hour is taking questions from those in the political cesspool online chat room.
We're having for now the second week in a row, a virtual fan party.
It's being hosted by our good friends at the Council of Conservative Citizens.
And if you want to participate, we're going to have an open mic time.
It's completely open form here.
Go to cfcc.org, C-O-F-C-CC.org.
Listen, folks, if you don't submit your questions, we're going to have a lot of dead air this hour.
So get into the chat room, those of you who are there already.
Start firing away those questions now.
Winston, how are you enjoying the chat, though, before we start taking those questions?
I am enjoying it immensely.
We have the best audience on earth.
These people are sharp.
They are involved.
You know, James, the best thing about being a political cesspool host is the people we get to associate with.
Of course, the worst thing about being a political cesspool host is the people we have to put up with.
But they are more than offset by the great people who support us financially and who send us emails of encouragement.
And now on this chat room, this is just marvelous.
By the way, James, I did want to remind people that we do have a guest coming up in the final half hour of the show.
Oh, that's right.
That's right.
Well, see, I'm so immersed in the chat.
Now, I'll tell you this chat.
It can get you off kilter.
That's right.
We have a guest this third hour, and it's another author.
So he's coming up a couple of segments from now.
So without further ado, let's take advantage of all that we can.
Let's take some questions here.
I know a person in the chat room asked earlier what we think of Richard Spencer's work over at Alternative Right.
And, of course, I couldn't give it a more hearty endorsement.
Richard Spencer, a good friend of mine.
In fact, you know, we were talking about political successful videos, and he is one of the people that I interviewed and featured in one of our video submissions.
He's doing great work.
I don't really think there's much more we can say about that.
A seat for yourself at alternative right.com.
Winston, any questions coming in on your side?
Oh, there have been a lot of them, James.
This scroll bar is going down so quickly.
I know it's hard to catch them.
And I know that a lot of questions have been asked that we hadn't had time to get to.
So we're going to ask folks to rephrase the questions.
In fact, I'm doing that right now at cfcc.org.
Yes, folks.
Go ahead and send us your questions again.
I'll copy them down and put them in a Word doc so that we can get to them.
Folks, our guest coming up is an author we've had on the show several times, a budding author named Craig Langley.
He's written a heroic epic called The Legend of the Great Trek.
And it's a story in the bardic traditions of the old English literature like Beowulf and Dream of the Roode and the Battle of Malden.
I've received an advanced copy of it, and it is astounding.
This is the kind of thing that we need to be reading and the kind of thing that we need to be supporting.
So I encourage you to stay tuned for Craig Langley.
I guess I'll be talking to him because when it comes to literature, well, let's face it, James is a cultural desert.
So that's it to me.
Hey, but I got one more book under my belt than you have, my friend.
So although Winston is a fine commentator in his own right, and he contributes to the Political Successful blog and is beginning to do it with more regularity.
He used to do it all the time.
And I tell you what, you'll certainly appreciate the pros of a Winston Smith blog entry.
So check it out.
He put one up this week at thepoliticalsuccessful.org.
Okay, here's a question.
James, I do want to correct you.
You have one book over me that the people know about.
Folks, I'm a professional writer by profession, by trade, and I publish books all the time, James, just the public doesn't see them.
That's true.
That's true.
Well taken, and he speaks the truth.
All that aside, Winston, let's answer a quick question before we go to break.
What are mainstream political issues that wake up our people?
Is it illegal immigration, Obama, Black Panthers, welfare, affirmative action, tariffs, economic conditions?
What do you think, Winston?
Biggest political issues that we can use to wake up and motivate our people to take action.
All of those are good.
I think the illegal immigration issue is the most urgent one.
That's the one that is most rapidly displacing us from our homeland.
I think that's the one that we need to continue on.
Of course, there's also the gay question, the sodomite question.
That's one because nothing will rip a society apart as fast or as heinously as what sodomites are doing to this country.
I mean, they're attacking the military.
They are attacking the courts.
They are attacking everywhere.
And of course, we know who's behind that attack.
It's Jewish organizations like the SPLC and the ADL.
They are the ones who are pushing the homosexual agenda via hate crimes laws.
So those are the two that I would say are the most important ones right now.
The ones that would certainly get our people moving.
How much time do we have, Denny?
Well, four seconds to break, ladies and gentlemen.
A lot of questions coming in at the Political Cesspool online, virtual fan party at cfcc.org.
We're going to take as many of them as we can right after this next commercial break.
So keep them coming, ladies and gentlemen, and we'll be back with more right after this.
after these messages jump in the political cesspool with james and the game
Call us tonight at 1-866-986-6397.
And here's the host of the Political Cesspool, James Edwards.
All right, everybody.
Welcome back to the show.
Hard to believe that two and a half hours nearly have almost passed, but we've still got 30 solid minutes of radio to bring to you tonight, the Political Cesspool radio program.
We are taking questions from the fans in the Political Cesspool virtual chat, this online chat at cfcc.org, and we're going to continue to take as many questions as we can for the remainder of the show.
One question was, when are we going to have our next big guest, quote-unquote, big guest on the political cesspool?
And I will tell you this.
This year has been a banner year for many reasons.
There's never been a year in the history of our program that we've received more media attention.
And there's never been a year that we've had bigger guests.
Of course, you know, if you go back through the archives this year, that'll be readily apparent.
We have not had a lot of guests on the last couple of weeks because we've been having so much fun talking to the fans.
I would much rather talk to the listeners of the Political Cesspool than any so-called celebrity.
But anyway, for the remainder of December, we'll probably continue to keep a low profile, bring you our commentary on a lot of important stories and share this time with you, our family of listeners.
And then hard and heavy, kicking off the new year in January of 2011, you can expect an all-star lineup of guests.
I will tell you that.
And that answers one question coming from the chat room right now at cfcc.org.
Winston, I'll let you field this one.
It comes from a listener, and he writes, how do we keep the poisons of entertainment from our homes?
And as a family man yourself, Winston, I'm sure you've had to deal with this very question.
Oh, I have dealt with it and dealt with it decisively.
We don't have a television.
There you go.
We don't have a television.
It saves us money on a cable bill.
And I'll tell you, you come to the Smith House on any night.
You're going to see people reading books, playing a card game, playing chess.
We spend time with each other.
We don't have to go to the Ju-Tube for our entertainment.
We make our own entertainment.
On any given night, you might find me out in my wood shop.
You'll find one of my daughters sewing.
You just get rid of them.
You don't parlay with the reasons.
You don't try to find substitutes.
You don't make schedules.
You don't say, well, we only watch the history channel, all that crap.
You don't do any of that.
You just get rid of the thing.
Okay, well, that's a simple enough and straightforward enough answer.
How about this one, Winston, also coming to you as a family man?
It comes from Mr. Deckert in the chat room.
Why do racially conscious white people have so few children?
And what can we do to promote the big families, the big white families that our heroic ancestors had?
We have so few children because we're responsible, James.
We see that when times are hard, we think that the best thing to do is to quit bringing more children into the world to use up resources and all that.
It's suicide.
Our responsibility is one of our greatest weaknesses.
Other races, they don't see that.
They don't see it that way.
They're not responsible.
But of course, we need to adopt their irresponsibility in this way.
We need to have babies.
You young married couples out there, get busy.
It's a lot of fun in the process, by the way.
And I urge you to stay away from the modern thinking about children.
It's not modern thinking.
It's satanic thinking.
Thinking that children are a burden, thinking that children are a drain on your resources.
They are none of that.
Children are your security.
Children are what you are here for.
We are way, way behind.
So, folks, have children.
I'll take this question from Chloe.
And we're trying to do this as rapidly as possible so we can take as many questions as possible.
And unfortunately, I don't think we're going to be able to get to them all because there are a lot there in the chat room.
I just see our buddy, by the way, I'm going to give a personal shout-out to John Tate, another friend of ours, and a gentleman who has been a guest on our program in the past.
He wrote the book Plain Truth.
I see John Tate has just signed into the chat room at cfcc.org.
So, John, we salute you and thank you for your support and friendship, as well as the friendship of everyone in the chat room.
Question from Chloe: How can we stop the ad agencies from promoting miscegenation?
And I would like to take that one.
You see examples of this, a dime a dozen all the time, everywhere.
And I still believe in the value of good old-fashioned complaining.
One case in point would be a particularly heinous Sears ad, a Sears Christmas ad that promoted the act in question here.
And we put it up on our website.
So many people, and this was something, a national ad campaign, Sears had put it up to YouTube.
So many people were complaining on the YouTube comment feature there underneath this ad, which again was put up by Sears, the company itself, that they pulled the ad from YouTube.
And I haven't seen it on television anymore, even though it was a seasonal Christmas ad.
So I do believe, and this goes back to a point I had earlier, that so many people are with us.
You know, you read the comments underneath an online article from any major newspaper on YouTube.
The vast majority of Americans are still with us.
I do believe that.
And so I still think that there is some value in complaining and letting your voices be heard, whether you email people, whether you're posting comments.
Now, again, you don't want to limit your activism just to internet stuff, but I think there is a time and a place for that, and it can come in handy, making phone calls, sending in letters, emails, comments.
These can have an effect on the decision-making of a corporation.
But if you don't speak out, then they're just going to toe the politically correct line because that's the safest thing in their minds for them to do.
So we've got to stand up and let our voices be heard as well.
And I would encourage everyone to do that.
Let's find another question here.
Winston, do you have one?
I'm scrolling through.
I'm way back in the chat.
I've got to pause because there's so many people.
Well, someone's asking me what I think about David Duke.
Well, I like David.
He's a friend of mine.
Know that there are some people, just like with any person, not everyone likes everyone.
But Duke, I've worked with him for a number of years now.
He's been on this show many, many times.
He has been very honest and fair with me in any and every dealing that we've had.
I've had him in my home, broken bread with the man on countless occasions.
He comes to Memphis once a year.
He's always calling in to check on us.
I think he's a good guy.
Winston, I know you've spoken with him and talked with him as well.
I know you would share that assessment.
I would.
He is a fine man, a fine gentleman, and I am proud and blessed to be associated with him.
I wish all of you could know him like we do.
Now, let's find another question here.
Winston, I know you're all over this chat.
Have you targeted one?
No, I haven't.
I'm getting emails from people, too.
I think I wondered, did some of you people out there read Saul Lincy's book and see rule number four about delusion organizations with mail and correspondence and things like that?
Because this is a glorious burden, I shall say.
These folks, you are just the best in the world.
Well, the thing about this chat room now is there's so many people in it, it's lagging.
I can't even get it to scroll anymore.
Maybe it's just my computer.
But I'm kind of stuck here in limbo trying to find another question that we can answer.
Someone keeps asking, have any of us read Jefferson Davis American by William Cooper?
And I'm sad to say that I haven't.
I have not either.
We got 58 seconds.
I've got to talk about Jay William Jones's biography of Jefferson Davis, and it's the best I've read so far.
Winston, we got 30 seconds left, and this is an important question.
Another one that I think you're perfectly suited to answer as a former military man.
Should we encourage our innocent youth to boycott the military service until we are reinstated in society with our own schools and communities?
I'm a veteran.
I served 13 years in the United States Navy.
I would never allow my son to serve in the military as it is today.
Look, that's as straightforward as you can possibly get.
And that's not to say that we're not patriotic.
In fact, nothing could be further from the truth.
We love America.
We completely support our armed forces, but we want our armed forces to be used.
We want our treasures of blood to be properly allocated.
And certainly, to say the least, that's not being done right now.
All right, folks, we're going to take a break and we're going to come back with more on the Political Assess Poll Radio Program, James Eddards and Winston Smith.
What a fun time we're having tonight in this chat room.
We'll be back right after these messages.
To get on the show and express your opinion in the political cesspool, call us toll-free at 1-866-986-6397.
All right, everybody, welcome back to the Political Successful Radio Program.
I'd never want this show to end tonight, I tell you.
I've got to thank Kyle Rogers again.
He is the webmaster for the Council of Conservative Citizens.
I wish I could take credit for such a great idea, having these online fan parties going on simultaneously during the radio program itself and interacting.
It took a man smarter with more vision than myself to make that happen.
That was Kyle Rogers, webmaster of the Council of Conservative Citizens.
And we are having a party right now at cfcc.org.
And the party continues.
Know we have our next guest or our first get our only guest for the night on the air or on the line with us right now.
I'm going to let Winston introduce him right after this.
I know we don't have time for a lot more, many more questions tonight, but somebody asked a question that I've got to answer.
And my computer's like exploding over here in the studio because of all the comments there in the chat room.
But I think to paraphrase the question, it was: when I was on CNN, why didn't I go over and punch Roland Martin?
Was that the question, Winston?
It was something like that.
I don't know what they meant literally, but I answered that Roland Martin is a troll.
And in fact, I'm debating on whether or not to put him on my top 10 most hateful quotes list because he's a treasure trove of hatred.
Well, if anyone doesn't know what the, I think that was a question that came in from Sally in the chat room, or at least that's the name that Sally was given.
If anyone doesn't know what the question pertains to, go to thepoliticalsuccesspool.org, go to the video link there at the website, and you can see some of my sparring matches with Roland Martin.
And I had a pretty good television career going.
I was coming on as a pretty regular guest on the Palazzo show on CNN until Palazzo got fired, and then my television career slowed down all radio again.
But nevertheless, those were some great experiences for me.
And I encourage you to go watch them.
If you haven't done so already at thepoliticalspool.org, why didn't I go punch Roland Martin?
Well, I was afraid if I got that close, he might try to eat me.
And so didn't want to risk it.
He looked as though he hadn't eaten that night, or at least within the last hour.
Anyway, Winston, who we got on the line.
Well, I'll come back with that, James.
All right.
Well, on the line, we have Craig Langley.
He is a friend of mine.
I've been in touch with him frequently.
And I've watched him grow and mature as a writer.
And folks, when I say he's a writer, that really doesn't say enough about him.
I will simply say that he has written a book that I want you to think very carefully about buying in the very near future.
It's called The Legend of the Great Trek.
And he has sent out advanced copies.
I have mine here.
And it is a wonderful read.
This is the kind of thing that I hope Merlin Miller at Americana Pictures gets a hold of and turns this into a movie.
And Mr. Langley's book has even received advanced praise from no less than Craig Bodeker.
And here's what Craig Bodeker says: The Legend of the Great Trek by Craig Langley is a unique and fascinating work that takes the form of an epic poem yet moves like an action film.
I imagine a group of people, young and old, gathered together around a campfire on a cold night with each taking their turn at reading a stanza or two aloud.
And that is superb.
I wish I had thought of that.
Praise indeed from Craig Bodeker.
So without further ado, I want to welcome my friend Craig Langley to the political cesspool.
Craig, how are you this evening?
I'm very good, Winston.
How are you?
I'm ragged.
I've been run ragged by the chat room and by hosting duties here at the mic.
But I look forward to doing this a lot.
It's been tough, but this is why we're here.
And I think our listeners have enjoyed it as much as I have.
Yeah, like I always say, Winston, when you compare the sacrifices the Confederates made, you know, it just pales in comparison to what we're having to go through in this chat room.
Indeed, I would take it 10 times worse if it would make me worthy of Our forebears.
All right, The Legend of the Great Trek, Craig Langley.
I opened up my advanced copy and I read, On the edge of the sea in darkest night slept a town abandoned in fright of the hordes coming to feast on riches not found in the East.
The streets no longer flourished with children about, followed by mothers stocky and stout, nor soldiers parading imperial might that created in young a heroic sight.
I read that and you had me.
Those are the opening lines of the Legend of the Great Trek, Book 1, an Easter Vision.
Tell us what you had in mind when you started composing this heroic epic poem.
Well, when I started composing it, I had just finished writing two smaller pieces I wrote.
My first attempt at poetic storytelling, one which I was on the show about before, the Files of the Last Night, which you've interviewed me before about.
And I really set myself up for a challenge, and I wanted to write something to hark back to the classics of our poetic tradition, our Western white civilization, which was the Homeric epics, the Aeneid with Virgil.
And that was a creative challenge.
But also, there was a political challenge, you could say, in the sense that when you look around and we seem to be exiles in our own country, you could say, the founding stock of America.
And many are talking about where's our home today?
And that kind of inspired us too.
And I just, using contemporary events and some personal incidents in my own life that inspired my art, and I just want to tell a great, inspiring story that would lift the hearts of our people.
All right.
This story, as we said several times already, this story is in the traditions of the great bardic epics of Old English literature.
We're talking Beowulf here, and I know most of you were forced to read Beowulf, and you probably didn't like it.
Maybe you should read it again now that you've got a few miles on you and that you now understand more about our people.
But this is in the tradition of Beowulf, of Sir Galway and the Great Knight, the Battle of Malden, Dream of the Rude, The Wanderer.
I would have thought this was a lost art, and yet you seem to have immersed yourself in it with apparent ease.
How did you do that?
It took a lot of years.
I fell in love with writing and storytelling very young when I read The Line, The Witch and the Wardrobe.
I've wanted to be a storyteller since then.
And it wasn't until 11th grade high school when I took a creative writing class that I really got into poetry.
And I love folks like John Keats and Percy Shelley, but I guess it didn't really affect me, the really wimpy, Mamby-Cammy poetry that everybody considers today.
I love the old-fashioned, heroic, manly poetry like Beowulf, like the battle scenes of Paradise Lost in Heaven, Sir Galway and the Green Knight, The Odyssey, the Aeneid.
These are what really I fell in love with, and I just immersed myself in it because they're just such great stories.
They're visually vivid.
You read them, your mind's eye goes crazy with the images they create.
And I just immersed myself in it, and I set my goal as like, I really want to do this.
It just creatively inspired me.
This is, like you said, a lost art, and I kind of want to resurrect it, even if it's just a personal challenge.
You met the challenge, brother.
Let me tell you.
You mentioned manly poetry.
I've been corresponding with a gentleman who he is a poet, and he wants to make sure that he writes manly poetry.
And so he asked me what I thought manly poetry was.
And I think I would say that manly poetry is the type that does not focus on oneself.
It focuses on something else.
The manly poet is more of a journalist.
He's more of a chronicler.
And he's not involved with his own feelings, his own observations, save for how they relate to his subject.
What do you think of that?
I think it's absolutely true.
And you just take epic poetry or heroic poetry.
This was the poetry of men and the world at one time.
I mean, the Greeks, the Homeric epics, the Odyssey and the Iliad were part of Greece.
They transmitted their values and their ideals of manliness and heroes.
The same thing with Virgil's Aeneid.
It was about the founding of Rome.
It was their national myth, and so fine and so forth.
Beowulf, the confection of the Anglo-Saxon warrior, the northern Nordic warrior.
This was, it wasn't just about, oh, I'm feeling depressed.
You know, this girl broke my heart, so I'm going to cry in a few lines.
It was about their world and writing about what they loved in their world and conjuring up heroes to defend that world that they loved.
So you're absolutely right, and your friend is in that regard.
All right, gentlemen, hold on right there.
Craig Langley, our guest, Winston Smith co-hosting with me.
And of course, I'm James Edwards.
We're going to take our final break of the evening, and we'll be back to wrap the whole show up right after this.
Right after these messages.
We got to get out of this place.
If it's the last thing we ever do, we got to get out of this place.
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.
All right, everybody, the final segment of tonight's program here.
Now upon us, James Edwards, Winston Smith, co-hosting with me tonight as we sit here in our palatial studios at WLRM Radio in Memphis, Tennessee, A.M. 1380.
Want to thank once again all of the people who have been with us for the entire three hours of tonight's program there at the Council of Conservative Citizens website, cofcc.org.
Your friendship and support sustains us.
And I cannot thank you enough for all that you've done and for all the accomplishments that we've accumulated over the course of the last seven years, all the headlines we've been made.
Once again, ladies and gentlemen, that is all a result of everything you've done for us.
Winston, I know we've got a pretty interesting guest, a friend of ours, Craig Langley, author.
And you were right in the middle of a great interview before that last commercial break came upon us.
Oh, yeah.
I wanted to end that last segment by we were commenting on manly poetry.
And I want to tell folks that this book, The Story of The Legend of the Great Trek, comes from the traditions in which for a man to be considered worthy of any sort of respect in his tribe or in his clan, he had to be equally proficient with both sword and verse.
So this is the kind of thing that men can really appreciate.
It is poetry, but guys, this is for you.
You need to take a look at this.
And speaking of which, Craig, when is this book coming out, and how can people lay hold of a copy?
Well, I'm self-publishing the work, and it should be in the next couple weeks.
It'll be available on Amazon.
I'll have a link through my own website, Radical Rhymes, and also another one, Occidental Descent, which I also write for in a few weeks.
Should be out by Christmas.
I'm really working towards it.
Okay.
Speaking of Radical Rhymes, how's it going over there?
It's actually been, I have to shamelessly admit, it's been a little quiet since the Thanksgiving started because I've been overdrive working on the legend of the Great Trek.
But within, since I'm all going through that, within the next week, I am going to have a bunch of new articles up.
I talked to you about this before.
I'm going to have a review of the new Harry Potter movie up that I saw and its implications.
I'm going to have a post on the implicit whiteness of Taylor Swift and a bunch of other ones as well this next week.
So it's going to be more activity.
Craig, is there a baby over there?
Oh, James, that's your daughter.
Hey, she came to work.
I was hearing those cutest little baby noises.
That was actually me, Winston.
Oh, I thought so.
Man, you're a big cry, baby.
I was thinking cats over here.
I don't know what the baby is.
Our last segment, we were talking about Beowulf, and one of the people on the chat really exists.
My favorite part of Beowulf is the end of the show, Angelina Jolie emerged from a lake.
It's the end of the show, Winston.
You know what all falls apart in the last segment?
Oh, that's the best time.
You never know what's going to happen.
The other thing about Angelina Jolie, folks, there's a movie called Beowulf, and it's pretty good.
Angelina Jolie plays Grendel's mother.
Well, let's get back on the Legend of the Great Trek.
The main character, the heroic character in here is a gentleman named Andres.
Why don't you tell us about Andres?
Andres is a young prince at the very beginning of the trek.
His clan, their empire, basically all in the service, the empire is overrun.
And what it is, is he, Andreas, leads the survivors to the last island of the empire that hasn't been conquered on its most southern border.
And there on Easter, he experiences a vision from God of his people going afar and founding a new homeland.
So Andres, or Andreas, how you want to pronounce it, has been forced as the leader of his people, the last remnants of his people, and he has to lead them further than they've ever been to a new homeland.
And he has this great responsibility and burden on him that he has to undertake this monumental task.
And it is a monumental task, folks.
This book has it all.
If you are into high adventure, you need to look out on Amazon.com for this book, The Legend of the Great Trek by Craig Langley.
By the way, folks, Craig's last name, Langley, is a very old English name.
And I had to tell Craig about this.
He didn't know it.
Shame on him.
But it comes from around the time of the Norman Conquest.
It's a Frenchified version of the word the English, and the Frenchified version is Langlois.
Langois, the English.
So, you know, your name, Craig, it goes all the way back to the Norman Conquest.
So you know genetically whereof you write.
Yes, it's well, it's in my blood.
What can I say?
Yes, that's the best kind.
Speaking of blood, you know, you and I were talking earlier, and I was thinking of Andreas.
He is basically the king of the people.
And folks, I want to remind you that our English word king comes from the old English word kin, which means a blood relation.
Now, our old English forebears, they not only knew this, after all, it was their language, but they took its implications with deadly seriousness.
The thought of a foreigner ruling over them was unthinkable.
And this is something that has been in our people since biblical times.
And it's why God warns our people that as part of his judgment, he would set strangers over us as our rulers.
That's right, my friends.
Think about it.
When there's a foreigner, an alien ruling over you, that means you are under God's judgment.
All right, I want you to think about that.
But, Craig, I want to read the last few lines of the great track just so people can have an idea of what's in store for them.
At the sunrise on the 13th morning, Andreas and his men came without warning upon a sight that left every heart still, a walled settlement upon a hill.
For 12 days they had followed the guiding star without any trace of their people near or far.
For 12 days they'd wandered through a land at which their minds pondered, a land filled with vast forests and streams, a land that stretches and teems with wildlife of every kind and the grassiest hills one could find.
After they had crossed the mountains separating this land from the fountains of blood they had endured before a victory God ensured a victory in a desolate place that nearly killed their race.
The appearance of this new land pushed forward their wandering band.
Yet it was 12 days of dread, for they did not know if their people were dead.
Now on this 13 day, no voice knew what to say as they looked at this town whose pounding hammers a child's laughter called down to them that would no longer roam because they had found their new home.
Winston, we have but one fleeting minute remaining during tonight's show.
As you can see, ladies and gentlemen, as you can probably hear, the family has shown up here at WLRM Studios.
Look, they're trying to contribute to the show.
What can I say?
Taking after our old man.
We've had a good time tonight.
Winston, a final word with Craig.
I appreciate you, by the way, carrying the show these last two segments.
As you were distracted in the chat room for a little while, I've been distracted here in the waning moments.
But Craig, I want to thank you again for being with us tonight as our guest.
Winston, a final word in summation before we head off into the darkness until next Saturday night.
Certainly, folks, look for it on Amazon.com, The Legend of the Great Trek by Craig Langley.
And also, order your copy of Racism and Smashism by James Edwards at www.depoliticalsychool.org, 1995, so shipping and handling makes a great Christmas gift.
Winston, listen, I never get tired of that.
I never get tired of it.
I appreciate you.
I appreciate Craig.
And, of course, everyone, our listening audience around the world.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, on behalf of our staff and crew here at WLRM Radio in Memphis, and of course, our production staff at Liberty News Radio in Utah.
I'm James Edwards, and on behalf of my family, we will see you next week.
Remember to live life the way we do without retreat, surrender, or apology.
And now to wrap up the show this evening, a little Christmas song.
It's the Christmas season.
We're celebrating it here on the mainstream AM Airway.
See you next Saturday night, everybody.
Merry Christmas, everybody.
Come and be honored, Lord and King of angels.
Oh, come, let us adore him.
Christ, God of God, light every light.
The Jesus blue, we are who not created.
Oh, does adore you?
Oh, come, let us adore you.
Oh, thanks for joining us tonight in the Political Cesspool.