March 26, 2011 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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Welcome to the Political Cesspool, known across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populous conservative radio program.
Here to guide you through the murky waters of the Political Cesspool is your host for tonight, James Edwards.
Welcome, everybody, to another riveting installment of the Political Cesspool Radio Program.
I'm your host, James Edwards.
It is Saturday evening, March 26th, and this is normally the part of the program right here after the opening intro that I would tell you that I'm broadcasting from AM 1380 WLRM Radio this evening.
Only I'm not there tonight.
I am on the road on a family vacation, sitting in a hotel room in Dallas, Texas.
It makes you glad you lived this long that you can just kind of suckle off the marvels of modern technology.
I'm calling in as if I were a call-in guest and the great engineers and board operators at Liberty News Radio's HQ out in Utah have me on.
So I'm hosting the show via the phone from the road.
But Keith Alexander, my co-host, is sitting in our familiar digs in downtown Memphis at 1380.
Keith, how's everything at the home front, my friend?
Well, we're walking in the light and doing right down here in Memphis, James.
We've got a remote broadcast tonight, and hopefully everything is going to go smooth as silk.
So I got my fingers crossed.
Well, we're going to do the best we can, that's for sure.
Keith Alexander there in studio tonight.
And James.
Yes, I am deep in the heart of Texas.
We're going to talk about that briefly here at the top of the show.
Of course, we are also broadcasting the AM FM affiliate stations of the Liberty News Radio Network and simulcasting online atpolitical cesspool.org and libertynewsradio.com.
That much doesn't change no matter where I'm at.
I don't have a laptop computer with me, so I'm just going to have to go out on a leap of faith and assume that everything is going as it should in the Council of Conservative Citizens chat room.
Hello to everybody there in the chat.
If you've not yet joined the Political Cesspool Virtual Fan Party, join it in my stead this evening at CFCC.org.
And Keith, I got to tell you, it's been a very eventful week for me.
My mother's birthday is today.
So first of all, happy birthday, mom.
I love you.
My daughter's birthday, she turned one year old two days ago.
So in light of all the birthdays of my family this week, we decided to take a little trip, see some relatives in Texas.
And I've spent the last several days in Houston before making the drive up to Dallas today.
And let me tell you something.
I've been into Texas several times.
Normally I fly in and don't really see a lot of it, but when you're on the road, you get to see a little bit more.
I mean, this was a driving trip.
We drove from Memphis.
Houston and Dallas make Memphis look like a cow town by comparison.
They've got back to the future type highway systems and interstate systems.
It makes you think you're in Los Angeles or something.
And the skyline's here.
Anyone who's been to downtown Memphis, Tennessee, right there on the Mississippi River, you'll know that Memphis has a pretty limited skyline.
I mean, it's obviously a major metropolitan city.
But compared to Houston and Dallas, it really pales in comparison to the panorama of Houston for people who've been here.
Just, it's 360 degrees.
It's just, you know, the skyscrapers just encompass the whole city.
And it's very beautiful in parts.
And so is Dallas, where I'm at now.
And the thing is, though, you've got these great first world buildings and structures, and the architecture is so beautiful.
But of course, in pulling over and gassing up, as we've done from time to time, it literally, the last stop we made right in the heart of Dallas, right next to the American Airlines Center, which is where the Dallas Mavericks play, it's a world-class facility, an NBA arena.
And we stopped by there to fill up, and at the gas station, it was packed, and it was all Mexican.
And so it just begs the question, how long will these cities remain first world in nature?
Obviously, we've seen the answer in Detroit and in parts of Memphis with the population there.
I guess one way or the other, Keith, we're going to be proving right or wrong in a matter of years as these demographics continue to change.
I think we know what's going to happen.
The reason that they have that large, impressive infrastructure in Houston and Dallas is because really, up until the last 20, 30 years, they had a first world population and they had comparative wealth compared to a place like Memphis that's had its third world population in place for well over 100 years.
And of course, that's a drag on the economy, James.
Well, it is, and anyone who's been to Memphis will know that we've definitely been proven right there.
It goes without saying we've been proven right in Detroit.
You look around, and we've, of course, made the compares, the comparisons and contrasts between Haiti and France and so on and so forth.
I just got to tell you, Texas is such a great state with such a great history, a proud Confederate state, the lone star state, Sam Houston, Davey Crockett, the native Tennessean who gave his life in defense of the Alamo at San Antonio.
There's such a rich cultural history here in Texas.
As I said, it is a very proud state.
It's a state, it's a manly state.
And I want Texas to keep all of that rich heritage, and we'll see where it goes.
It'll go certainly the way the population goes.
And of course, that is going to depend upon the politics of this nation, which, you know, of course, we want to chart over the next couple of decades.
But if prevailing trends continue, it's not going to go well.
It'll go the way of Detroit.
It'll go the way of Memphis.
And I don't want to see that happen.
That's a big statue of Sam Houston on the way from Houston to Dallas today.
It had to be 100 feet tall if it was an inch.
And that's the kind of stuff we like.
Tugged at the heartstrings.
This is something we're better than what we're becoming, to say the least.
Well, James, I think that we just need to have some spine conservatives with a spine to take all these troops that we have located over in Afghanistan and Iraq and now Libya and send them to the southern border to secure our border.
I think the last president that was willing to take a strong stand to secure the border was Dwight Eisenhower with Operation Wetback back in the 50s, where he rounded up and sent home all the Mexicans.
Well, that's right.
We need something like that again.
And this isn't to disparage anyone, but, you know, how many times do we have to say, and this isn't even a controversial statement in the least, assumed that it would be.
We don't want our country to become a flophouse.
America means more to us than that.
We can't support, we can't, Can't give jobs to the rest of the universe.
We need to secure our borders.
You want to come in line and wait in line and become Americans to the extent that you can if you get in.
But this is America, and America is an extension of Europe.
And furthermore, we're not intended to be, as Teddy Roosevelt warned us against, being the polyglot boarding house of the world.
We need to have people that are economic and national patriots rather than traitors, people that would allow third worlders who have no intention of assimilating into America or becoming like Americans to flood in here and then talk openly about annexing parts of America either to Mexico or as a separate nation.
People that allow that, there's a word for them.
It's called traitors, James.
Well, Keith, you're exactly right.
And like I said, I wish the very best to the Mexicans.
I hope that they can turn Mexico into a great first world nation.
Unfortunately, to date, they haven't.
They've been there for an awfully long time.
And if they intend to come to America and bring the worst of their culture and their traditions with them, then I am going to stand defiantly opposed to that.
But, you know, I've seen some disturbing trends since I've been down here, but I've seen some very beautiful European American cities as well.
And that's what I want to preserve and protect.
It's been a great celebratory week with a couple of birthdays.
You'll have to visit Alamo while you're down there, James.
Well, hang on, Keith.
We'll be back with more right after this.
Okay.
Don't let me be misunderstood.
Don't let me be misunderstood.
Please understand me, baby.
Don't let me be misunderstood.
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Jump in, the political says.
Pull 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.
All right, everybody.
I'm all again from Dallas, Texas.
I am broadcasting from a hotel tonight.
And I guess I just made mention of that during the first segment, but I wanted to remind y'all that if I'm not sounding as crisp and clear as I usually do, it's just because I'm not in the studio tonight, not on my super duper microphone and headsets.
So broadcasting over the phone, the audio quality is going to be a little bit less than what it would normally be, but it's only because I'm on the road and we'll be back at full strength next week when I'm in the studio.
Keith Alexander is in our studio right now, and we're going to have a fun show tonight.
Keith Alexander and Winston Smith will be coming on later to help me co-host, have got some good stuff prepared.
We had a listener from of all places, Dallas, Texas, email me a couple of weeks ago and suggest that Keith Alexander compile a couple of segments for a show documenting his favorite movies and his least favorite movies as they apply to being pro-white or anti-white in nature.
So that was the assignment that Keith was given this week.
We're going to work it into the show right now.
Keith, let's start with the good.
Your top 10 favorite movies, movies that reflect our people in a positive light.
Okay, we'll set the table here.
I've got 10 of the best, 10 of the worst.
Let's start with 10 and work our way down to number one, your best movie.
Okay, on the best group, I've got a tie, well, actually, a triple tie for 10th place, So Dear to My Heart, which is a Disney movie from 1948, starring Bobby Driscoll, Lana Patton, Burrough Ives, Eula Bondi, some people like that.
The window, again, Bobby Driscoll in a RKO picture, and Body Snatcher, 1945 movie, not based on not the invasion of the Body Snatchers, but Body Snatcher based on the Robert Louis Stevenson short story about the Westport murders, starring Bella Lugosi and Boris Carlo.
That's tied for 10.
Number nine, the Andy Hardy series of movie.
If you want a wholesome America back before the civil rights movement and before the onslaught of liberalism, tune into the Andy Hardy series and see what we've lost, people.
Then number eight, DOA, Dead on Arrival.
That's the 1950 version.
In 1950, even certified public accountants who were white were kick-ass stand-up guys that basically, if somebody, he gets poisoned and he goes out to search for the murderer and to bring him to rough-hewn justice.
And believe me, it is a great movie.
Edmund O'Brien is the star of that one.
Number seven Out Of the Past, starring Robert Mitchum, good southern boy, playing a private investigator in California, with Kirk Douglas, the good son of Israel, playing the evil gangster who is his nemesis.
Okay, then number six, First Blood, Sylvester Sloan.
The first Rambo movie, by far the best Rambo movie in my opinion.
That really shows the capabilities of white men in terms of warfare and things like this and their not only outward physical strength but their inner strength as well.
Then number five, Song Of The South, that Band IN Boston, BAND Everywhere, movie that now that Disney is run by sons of Israel you can't see anymore.
We get a bootleg copy of this again.
Bobby Driscoll and Atlanta Patton, great, great movie about the old south.
Number four, The Patriot.
Number three, Braveheart, starring Mel Gibson.
Thank heaven for Mel Gibson, or else we'd be living in a total uh desert for movies almost right now.
Number two is Snow White and The Seven Dwarves.
It basically models appropriate white female behavior.
What she does is she cleans, she keeps the house and she provides a loving, caring environment, and that's what makes her a true princess.
Okay, and number one, my favorite of all time, Shane starring Alan Ladd, uh Van Heflin, uh Gene Arthur.
Great, great movie, uh and Brandon Dewilda as the little boy shows the whole panoply of white people getting together out on the frontier, Scandinavians Germans, Southern Scots Irish, all together standing up to injustice and, uh oppression.
And the rancher who was oppressing them in this turns out in real life to be a good son of Israel.
So uh, this is Riker in the movie, the guy that plays Riker, he was a uh uh, a long time uh character Character actor did a great job in this movie, by the way, Excellent.
Now, Shane is basically a Christ figure.
He's a salvific figure.
He shows, for example, in the one of the right before the climactic scene where he has to beat up Joe Starrett, the Van Heflin character, to keep him from going in and getting killed by taking on Riker and his men.
And Shane, who is five foot four inches tall, but just projects power and goodness and manly strength throughout, is stopped by Starrett's wife.
And there's an obvious attraction between the two, and she says, Shane, are you doing this for me?
And Shane says, for you, Marion, and for Joe and Little Joe.
In other words, not Arrows, but agape.
It's the perfect presentation of white altruism and white courage.
And just, you know, he's the type.
In the novel, he was a former Confederate cavalryman.
It never comes out where he's from in the movie, but it's a great movie.
If you haven't seen it, gorgeous Technicolor shot in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
The perfect script and the perfect casting.
You could not have, and it was George Stevens was the director and producer.
It was just, you know, you couldn't ask for a movie where everything clicks on all cylinders the way that it does in Shane Jeans.
Excellent review, Keith, if I do say so myself.
And of course, we're doing the segment now at the request of political cessable fan Gerald in right here in Dallas, of all places.
You ought to invite him out to the motel or whatever.
Yeah, I should have thought about that.
I got so flustered on my way up.
I got lost about five or six times.
See, I'm a man's man.
I don't do the GPS.
I figure I'm either going to find it by the map.
I'm not going to find it at all.
And unfortunately, I didn't find it at all for a while today.
But we finally got here.
We checked in about an hour before the show.
So my mind's a little frazzled here.
But it was a great suggestion.
And we always like to work in the suggestions of our fans if we can to the show.
It took us a couple of weeks to find the time to do it, but we got it done now.
Keith Alexander just went through his top 10.
And there are a lot that I had to leave off.
I didn't put in one of the Clint Eastwood Spaghetti Westerns.
My favorite one is for a few dollars more, but they're great movies too.
And again, Clint Eastwood.
John Wayne was such a great.
Oh, yeah.
She wore yellow ribbon, you know, and True Grit.
There are all sorts of great John Wayne movies.
And I've had the searchers talk very seriously about putting a John Wayne movie in there too.
But for example, very few people have heard of So Dear to My Heart, but it's about a little white orphan boy that goes to live with his grandmother.
And they're plugging along, hardworking, industrious, organized, making a living honestly and industriously in Indiana around the turn of the century.
And he has a black sheep that he enters into the county fair seeking to win a prize.
And, you know, that may sound like pretty pedestrian fair, but it is just a celebration of the old America.
And it's a hard movie to get a hold of, but I would suggest that you try to get a hold of it and see it.
You talk about resonating with the values that made America great.
That movie does it.
Well, folks, you'll have to find it on the internet.
In Memphis, all of the Blockbuster video stores have gone out of business.
Everything's going online now with Netflix.
Well, you know, Netflix is a good place to get all this stuff now.
You can get more at Netflix than you ever could have.
You wouldn't find movies like this at Blockbuster to begin with, but you can find them on the internet.
The nature of commercial radio forces us to condense a lot of information from time to time.
But if you didn't have pen and paper in hand and Keith was rattling off these great films too quickly for you, all you got to do is go back to our website after the program tonight and revisit it in the broadcast archives and share with your family.
Keith, you mentioned Braveheart and the Patriots.
These are two of the only movies in recent years, perhaps not the course in the last couple of decades, that could be included in such a list.
I'm going to come back and offer my thoughts on the best movies before we move into the worst movie.
We've been waging hobby to get on the show and express your opinion in the political cesspool.
Call us toll-free at 1-866-986-6397.
Normally when I'm at home and doing the show from our studio at 1380 AM radio in Memphis, I've got my headset on.
I can hear the cues from our producer in Utah, and I know how long I've got to each commercial break.
Well, being on the cell phone here in Dallas, I'm not getting those cues.
I was informed during the commercial break that I ran over my music, and my last couple of sentences might have been cut off.
I was just going to say, I wanted to add on a couple of it's more like some of our favorite movies of all time rather than the top 10 list because we've certainly exceeded the 10 quota.
But Keith mentioned Patriot and Braveheart, great Mel Gibson movies.
The Patriot is such a good movie documenting the Revolutionary War.
Obviously, Braveheart, everyone's seen it, everyone's heard of it.
So it goes without saying why that movie is such a genius.
I got another one that Keith left off.
He also mentioned Song of the South.
And to Disney's credit, they do have Splash Mountain, The Ride, at Magic Kingdom, which is based upon the film, even though they probably won't show the film anymore.
But one movie Keith left off that has got to be on any top 10 list if you're looking to go find a movie that really encompasses all that was great about Western culture.
You've got to rent Gods in General.
It is the sequel to Gettysburg, and it chronicles the Confederate victories at Fredericksburg and Charlottesville.
And don't forget, ladies and gentlemen, Confederate History Month is April.
So all next month, starting next week, next Saturday, we'll be celebrating Confederate History Month.
But Gods in General, a very pro-South movie, and it didn't even come out until I think 2001, 2002.
You would be shocked to find that such a mainstream feature film coming out in 2001, 2002 would be so pro-South.
But indeed, it is.
Robert Duvall plays Robert E. Lee, and Robert Duvall is actually a direct descendant from Robert E. Lee.
So that was a great portrayal.
Stephen Lang does a great job playing Stonewall Jackson.
Gods in General is a movie everybody's got to see.
True Grit, the remake of True Grit, was actually pretty good as well with Jeff Bridges and Matt Damon playing Confederate soldiers, believe it or not.
They do a good job, even though Matt Damon is a liberal puke.
And one more Mel Gibson movie, Keith, that you forgot to mention.
It's a movie that the entire political successful staff saw together.
His most recent one, Edge of Darkness, another good movie.
Everything is there's so many good movies, and you know, The Patriot and Gods and Generals were both loudly criticized by Spike Lee, and that's as good a recommendation as I know for finding a good movie.
Let me mention a couple other movies that I think are great movies for people that are making lists to show your children and your grandchildren.
Things like Dumbo, The Old Disney, Treasure Island, the 1950 version by Disney, starring Bobby Driscoll and Robert Preston as Long John Silver.
Robert Newton, excuse me.
Then, let me see, what's another good?
Oh, Pinobo.
Any Disney movie when Disney was still alive.
He's got to be on the list, I guess.
Yeah, well, you know, you're right.
They were great.
Old Yeller is a great movie for the family to watch.
Of course, it's a tearjerker.
And there are so many of these good movies out there that we ought to make.
We ought to publish a list sometime for people because you've got to very carefully monitor what your children see or else they're going to think that they're a member of the worst people in the world, white people.
That's the way the movies portray us now.
Well, you're exactly right.
And these are just some of our movies that we recommend before we move in and transition into the worst movies on Keith's list.
And he's got some, he's got the best of the worst, if you know what I'm saying.
I want to take a quick call from Dave.
He wants to add a movie.
Dave, we've got to move quickly, but I wanted to get to you, buddy.
What do you got?
Hey, listen, thank you.
Yeah, I have to agree with Keith Alexandra on how outstanding Shane is.
And I wanted to add that the Alamo that John Wayne produced out of his own pocket, I think it was Chill Wills in that.
There was such a dramatic scene to where before the final battle, they were talking about the eventuality, and Chill Wills said, yeah, either system is a faith system.
Whether you believe or don't believe, either one is a system of which you believe in and choose.
And he said, I choose to believe.
I thought that was a very touching moment, but Shane is at the top of my list as well.
I can't watch Shane without crying, to tell you the truth.
I'll have to confess that.
It's hard for me to fight back a tear when I watch Shane.
Well, I thank you, John.
There's no shame in that, guys, because I get choked up.
I'm mentioning Gods and Generals.
I absolutely get choked up.
When you see those Confederates charging against all odds, you don't have a southern bone in your body if you can watch that without feeling a groundswell of emotion.
And Dave, thank you so much for your call.
I'm glad somebody referenced a Texas-themed movie while I'm down here.
Anything documenting the Alamo.
Look, think about this too, guys.
We've got the Davey Crockett Disney movies, King of the Wild Frontier and Davey Crockett and the River Pirates.
They're great movies for a family to watch.
Well, we could probably spend the rest of the hour.
I guess there are more movies worth watching than we realize.
But let's get to some of the worst, Keith.
Okay, let me start here with number 10.
Worst from a pro-white perspective, okay?
Exactly.
We'll probably do the bottom five and then the number one through five.
Let's do 10 through five now and we'll do the bottom five after the commercial break.
But what's number ten on the most anti-white movies or anti-Western movies on your list, people?
Well, I've got number ten is The Blind Side, which is supposed to be this uplifting movie, but basically it's a manual for white racial suicide, okay?
Number nine, Remember the Titans about blacks taking over the high school football team and the whites docile accepting their relegation to second dairy status.
In 2008, A Time to Kill, based on John Grisham's first novel, the most fantastic inversion of facts ever with a bunch of white rednecks going out and raping a 12-year-old virginal black girl and her daddy being moved to revenge and then being tried for murder.
I just got to interject this.
If A Time to Kill, and whoever haven't seen that movie stars Matthew McConaughey, Ashley Judd, Kevin Spacey, Samuel L. Jackson, if that's number eight on your list, Keith, I don't see how that could be number one.
These top seven have got to be pretty awful.
Oh, they are.
Well, they get worse and worse.
Now, number seven may surprise you a little bit.
It's a Robert Duvall film, The Great Santini from 1979.
And what's so bad about that movie is they have a white southern redneck character named Red Pettus, who is, you know, who winds up tormenting and shooting the Christ-like black, you know, kind-hearted soul, Toomer, who lives in an abandoned school bus with all of his dogs.
He's kind of a black dog order.
And the dogs get loose at the end and run down Red Pettus and tear him to pieces.
And all the white numbskulls in the movie are cheering it on.
You know, they don't understand that they're cheering on their own demise, James.
Now, that's number seven.
Number six, Night of the Hunter, which is a very well-made movie from 1955 directed by the English homosexual Charles Lawton.
The only movie he ever did direction on.
And it stars Robert Mitchum, who is absolutely spellbinding in the title role.
Good daughter of Israel Shelley Winters plays the female lead.
And it's set in West Virginia, Parkersburg, places like that, back in like the 1920s.
But it's anti-Christian, anti-Southern white, anti-fundamentalist.
And the last part of the movie is basically Lillian Gish, who plays this wise old woman that protects the children from the murderous Robert Mitchum.
And she basically denies the divinity of Christ.
And she does it in such a way that people that aren't on guard find themselves nodding their head in agreement with her.
So it's really a pernicious Jewish-made film from 1955.
I've always said that the watershed moment in American history was May 17, 1954, which is when Brown versus Board of Education decision was handed down.
And this is just right before it was Shane, and right afterwards was Night of the Hunter.
And it shows the difference of day and night.
That's interesting.
Then, number five, Glory Road.
And I'll let James tell you about Glory Row.
That's about the 1966, I think it was, NCAA Finals with Ruffs Runs, who were the shortest in that their center was 6'5.
All-white Southeastern Conference team playing Texas Western, which is now UK.
Right now, we're going to continue on with number five.
It's the worst movie.
Don't go away.
The political cesspool continues here on Liberty News Radio.
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, everyone.
We are having some fun this hour, doing something a little bit deviation from our standard fare.
We want to thank our loyal listener here in Texas for giving us the suggestion for planting the seed in our mind.
I guess we can Gerald because he uses that name on his postings.
It's Jerry.
We're not going to give away his last name, of course.
But yeah, Gerald here in Dallas for giving us the idea to do this.
Of course, when you're talking about something so broad in scope, when you're talking about the best movies of all time, some of the most anti-white movies of all time, really, well, especially with the latter, basically every movie that comes out now could be a candidate for the list.
So you're never going to be able to pare it down perfectly.
And of course, we haven't seen every movie ever made.
So we're just trying to do the best we can with the time we've got.
And we're going to do one more segment about movies, and we're going to move on.
But I'd ask people to pay particularly close attention to the second and third segments of this first hour.
If you revisit the program of the broadcast archive, where we're talking about some of our favorite films and some of the films we would recommend you watch with your family, Good Family Nights, you know, Order of Pizza, watch one of these movies that we've suggested.
Check out the second or third segment.
We've got a comment, you know, a blog entry about this show.
Make entries.
Give us your top 10 of both, the best and the worst.
We'd love to hear that.
That's right, Keith.
I want to thank you.
I want to thank you for reminding me of that.
That's right.
We posted to the Political Successful website, bepoliticalsuccessful.org.
If you click on the article that's featured at the top of the blog roll right now, the one promoting tonight's show, it asks you to leave a comment in the comment box making your recommendations for best and worst films.
We want to hear it.
So go to bepoliticalsuccessful.org.
It's a good assignment.
Yeah, we learned from our blog entry.
We learn from our audience all the time.
And for example, we were going over the 10 through 5 of the worst.
Two of these are Glory Road and Remember the Titans, which supposedly celebrate black athletic superiority over whites.
Now, if you ever check the website, Cass Football, you know that that's all a figment of the imagination of our leadership, our ruling elite, our Masters of the Universe class who decided they've got to let blacks be best at something.
And the most probable thing to allow them to be best at is sports because they're not even close.
It would be laughable to say they were the best neurosurgeons, for example, or nuclear physicists or whatever.
But Glory Road, for example, people don't realize this now, but in 66, when this particular NCAA final happened, the real odds-on favorite to win was, of course, UCLA, which had won many times before and went on to win many times after.
They had the longest streak ever.
And Ruff Runch, Kentucky had been good back in the 50s, and this was kind of a fluke that they got there.
But if you look at this movie, you think that they're just, you know, the world beaters, the, you know, invincible giants, Goliath going against Lil David, Texas Western, which is now University of Texas El Paso, that had about seven blacks and five whites on the team.
And it's just a triumph of good over evil.
And of course, whites are casting the role of evil in that.
So it's another really bad movie.
It's badly acted, badly produced, badly directed, just bad.
But even worse than that is a movie that I have ranked number four called Hurry Sundown.
Another civil rights era thing about pernicious honkies persecuting humble but lovable black people in the South.
Okay.
And it is absolutely ridiculous.
It has that siren Jane Fonda, that liberal nincum poop, before she went to North Vietnam to give aid and comfort to the enemy.
She's up here just, you know, this is right before her great lesbian liberal tour de force called Barbarella.
But it is absolutely, it's rated one of the 50 worst movies of all time.
So, you know, it's really bad.
It's bad by anybody's standards, whether you're liberal or conservative.
It's just bad, okay?
And likewise, In the Heat of the Night, you know, they made the Carol O'Connor, another off-the-chart liberal, tried to make a TV series out of this.
And of course, it stands, has the wooden acting of Sidney Poitier saying, they call me Mr. Tibbs, you know, and all this stuff.
And he's just standing up to these pernicious honkies in the South.
Then, of course, that great tribute to miscegenation called Guess Who's Coming to Dinner.
They even made a pornographic sequel to it called Guess Who's Coming to Dinner and Staying for Breakfast.
I remember back in the day.
Well, you know, in Keith.
Starring Catherine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, two of the card-carrying communists of Hollywood back in the Hollywood blacklist days.
They inversed the role of that movie and remade it in a contemporary fashion in a movie just called Guess Who.
And in this movie, the remake, Bernie Mac is the black businessman living in a nice, clean-cut neighborhood.
And Ashton Kutcher is the white gentleman caller for his black daughter.
The low-class white that he is loath to let date his daughter, right?
Well, that's right.
And Bernie Mac, you know, he didn't want his daughter dating this white guy by the way.
Anyway, it was just a flip of the old movie.
Yeah, it's just crazy.
Number one has to be Machete, this recent bloodbath, you know, trying to incite Hispanics to murder whites.
It has Robert De Niro of all people, that great second generation of immigration representative, who always plays a disreputable white in every movie from taxi driver on up in his career as some corrupt southern politician.
And seeing him try to get his mouth around a southern accent is probably worth the price of admission.
The guy is really pathetic.
And it is just, you know, it's a mixture between boss hog and the godfather.
And I like a lot of De Niro's movies, to be fair.
I mean, you know, not those, but Casino is a good movie.
I mean, he's obviously a bad guy to the New York Times.
You like Jake LaMotto?
He always portrays some demented or debased white like Jake LaMada or in Goodfellas, you know, and stuff like that.
You know, some of them are good movies, but Alan Ladd and Shane is not.
I can't see Robert De Niro starring in the remake of Shane, can you?
No, no, and that's where your point is well taken.
I mean, he's made some good movies.
Goodfellows is a good movie.
Casino, Heat, there's so many, Robert De Niro.
But he's always the bad guy.
And this is another thing, you know, don't get us wrong.
There's always exceptions to prove every rule.
But I think the reason why, in addition to this being a fun segment, we have to get messages like this out there to debunk the myth that a lot of these movies would create.
And that is, whites are always, without exception, and universally speaking, the bad guys.
And non-whites are always the altruistic dude.
You can get every movie made in the last 30 years.
Well, it's an exact inversion of reality.
You know, it's exactly the opposite of the way the world is.
But to the young, they create a world that's more real than the world that lies outside the front door.
And they put the poison in so skillfully that you hear white kids in school now saying that they're ashamed of being white and that their race has never done anything except enslave and oppress other people.
Quite frankly, we would still be back in about the fifth century if it were not for white Western civilization and culture.
Everyone else is the beneficiary of our race's inventiveness and virtue.
And that's right.
We've heard that, as Pat Buchanan has said on this show, we've heard the grievances, where's the gratitude when it comes to that which we've given the world?
And it goes without saying there are obviously, and I shouldn't even have to say this, before the detractors out there, we all know, we all realize, we all understand that there are many non-whites out there that live good, decent, healthy lives.
You know, so this isn't pointed at them, but by and large, these stereotypes do exist.
These rules do apply.
But getting back to the point here, you know, talking about, going back full circle to the very beginning of this segment, I talked about how beautiful the cityscape of Houston and Dallas is.
I was looking, I was watching TV in the hotel back in Houston a couple of nights ago with my wife, and we were watching, I don't know, some show where they buy houses, and this guy was buying a house.
He lives in Indiana, but he's doing charity work in Morocco.
And Morocco is obviously a pretty advanced nation by African standards.
And even Morocco, you know, he was buying a house in Morocco to do, you know, all this goodwill for the native population there.
And they showed a panorama of the capital city of Morocco.
And they're still living in dirt huts there.
And that's not an exaggeration.
Well, it reminds me, James, too.
Did you see the pictures from Haiti?
It's been almost a year since the earthquake.
And their version of the White House, the centerpiece of their governmental buildings, is still in a complete wreck and ruin.
In fact, it looks like nobody has lifted a finger to try to make repair one on the thing.
I was watching this show, donkeys walking down the main highways, defecating in the street.
You know, this is what they want.
Everyone has benefited by that which we've given the world.
We got to take a break, folks.
We'll be back.
Right after these messages.
Harve leaped to his feet and said, got a hold on me.
Wow!
The day the squirrel went berserk in the first South Baptist Church in that sleeping little town of Bascagoula.
It was a fight for survival.
And that's the guy and revival.
They were jumping fumes and shouting, Hallelujah!
Well, Harv hit the aisles dancing and screaming.
Some thought he had religion, others thought he had a demon, and Harv thought he had a weed eater loose in his fruitless looms.
He fell to his knees to plead and beg, and the squirrel ran out of his britches' leg, unobserved, to the other side of the room.