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May 14, 2011 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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20110514_Hour_2
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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, my friends, my friends, second hour.
Welcome, welcome.
The Political Cesspool Radio Program.
I'm your host, James Edwards.
We're broadcasting to you tonight, as we have done every night since 2004 from the studios of AM 1380, WLRM, right here in downtown Memphis, Tennessee.
We're also broadcasting tonight, as we always do, to the AM FM affiliate stations of the Liberty News Radio Network and simulcasting online at thepolitical cesspool.org and libertynewsradio.com.
I want to thank my friend and colleague Keith Alexander for his services during the first hour.
Isn't it always great to kick off the show each week with some robust commentary, opinion, and analysis from Political Cesspool co-host Keith Alexander?
He's such a great feature of this show and we really like getting it started with him every week.
We're going to end, we're going to wrap the show up tonight with an equally big of a bang when we welcome Jared Taylor, another good friend of mine back to the program.
Jared Taylor, of course, is the editor of American Renaissance magazine and he is going to be joining us at the top of the third hour about an hour from now to promote his newest book.
It's entitled White Identity, Racial Consciousness in the 21st Century.
It's getting a lot of good reviews and making a lot of waves.
And I am very much looking forward to talking to Jared about that release tonight and getting all the facts and details about the book and presenting them to you here on this award-winning nationally syndicated radio program.
So something to look forward to.
Jared Taylor still coming up tonight.
Oh, pretty big news here in Memphis.
Of course, we are based in Memphis.
Our flagship station is here in Memphis.
And Barack Obama, the president himself, is coming to Memphis.
He's going to be here on Monday to deliver the commencement address at Booker T. Washington High School.
It's an all-black school located on the mean streets of South Memphis.
Here's the story from the local NBC affiliate, and it reads, an academic turnaround at an urban high school with a rich tradition of educating African Americans has earned graduating seniors a commencement address from President Barack Obama.
Booker T. Washington High School found out it was the winner of a national competition and a phone call last week from Vice President Joe Biden.
I'm very excited, said Kenneth Robison, a member of the class of 2012.
In fact, when I first heard it, I almost cried, but I held it together.
Principal Alicia Keener said she jumped up and down so much that she came out of her shoes when she heard the news.
Creener said the school earned the victory through hard work, passion, and determination.
By the way, I'm going to pause right there.
You got to go to the website.
You got to go to thepolitical cesspool.org, find the article entitled Barack Obama is Coming to Memphis, and watch the video of this principal giving an interview to the local TV affiliate, or try to give an interview.
You know, this is the principal we're talking about.
Go check it out.
Anyway, it says the article goes on to read that the school is in a gritty South Memphis neighborhood.
You know what that means.
It means it's all black.
It's crime-ridden.
But, you know, allow the media to portray it as gritty.
It's a gritty South Memphis neighborhood where the median income, annual income, is less than $11,000 a year, and the crime rate is 14th highest in the nation.
Well, one thing for sure, they don't have to worry about paying health insurance.
We talked about that in the first hour.
They don't have to worry about buying their own food or anything else.
That's all covered by the taxpayers, I'm sure.
Talks about the neighborhood annual income less than $11,000.
The crime rate is 14th highest in the nation.
Last year, 20% of the students lost their homes when the public housing project was closed and demolished.
But the reason the president is coming to Memphis is because these students did so good.
You're never going to believe it.
They had a 55% graduation rate in 2007.
55%.
You know, I went to a private Christian academy before I homeschooled the last couple of years of high school, and it was unheard of for anyone not to graduate.
It was 100%.
If it wasn't, something was very wrong.
There was something wrong with those students.
But here's a school that 55% graduate.
And they moved that percentage up just a little bit.
And so the president's coming to honor these aspiring scholars.
And he's going to be here on Monday.
Again, Booker T. Washington, an all-black school.
It's known for being an all-black school.
That's not a slap or a snide.
It opened in 1873 as the first public high school exclusively for blacks in Memphis.
Its alumni include NAACP members, can you imagine that?
And Memphis Mayor Willie Harrington, the city's first black mayor.
Okay, so anyway, Barack Obama's coming to Memphis.
He's going to this school in the slums because they moved their graduation rate up from 50%.
And first of all, let me say this, you know, obviously, and it goes without saying, and this falls back into what we were talking about at the top of the show during the first hour.
You know, we talk about all the bills we have to pay and, you know, the insurance premiums and all this that you have to do just to make it.
Now, I live a nice middle-class existence.
I live comfortably.
I don't live lavishly by any stretch of the imaginations, and I don't have a lot of a cushion in savings, but I work hard and, you know, I pay my bills.
Well, and this article is, you know, bemoaning the fact that the residents in this black neighborhood only make $11,000 a year.
Well, they'd make more than $11,000 a year if they, you know, got a job.
And it couldn't be that hard with affirmative action and quotas and set-asides being theirs for the taking.
The crime rate might go down if they went to work and kept occupied.
Of course, that's all wishful thinking.
But nevertheless, I just hope for Barack's safety that there's a few extra Secret Service agents scheduled for detail that day before he gets out of his limousine in that part of town.
Because I can tell you, as a Memphis resident, setting foot in South Memphis is like wandering through the streets of Saigon during the middle of the Tet Offensive.
But all that being said, you know, while he's here in our fair city, the president might as well take advantage of his close proximity to our radio studio and swing by here for a quick interview on the political cesspool radio program.
I mean, we can tape it and then air the segment next Saturday night when we're on live.
I think that would be actually a pretty efficient allocation of his time.
And I'd like to take this opportunity here on the radio tonight to formally and politely, as I wrote on the blog, extend this invitation.
I mean, we're certainly high profile enough, the political cesspool, an award-winning show.
We received certificates of recognition from the Memphis City Council for outstanding contributions to the community.
I have been named an honorary city councilman as a result of my work on this show, if you can believe it.
I got the certificate and the plaque hanging right here in the studio.
So we're an award-winning show.
We're nationally syndicated.
You know, we've been covered by 100 of the world's most prominent newspapers, magazines, and television networks.
So I want Barack Obama, while he's here in Memphis with us, to join us for a quick segment.
It'll be our first time talking with the president and his first time to answer unscripted questions.
I'll take him to Nathan Bedford Forest Park.
We'll get some barbecue.
What's not to love?
I guess we'll find out on Monday if he accepts the accepts the offer.
I'm not keeping my fingers crossed, though.
We'll be back right after this.
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.
Was talking to you just a moment ago about the fact that Barack Obama will be here in Memphis, and he's going to be speaking at a school that is only a couple of miles away, but a world apart from where our radio station sits here in downtown Memphis.
And so, like I said, with him being that close, why don't he just swing by and meet with the host and the staff of the most talked about and most publicized, most famous radio show in Memphis.
It makes sense.
It's a political talk show.
We are, you know, he should come on in.
One thing's for sure, he's not going to be going to the casinos while in Memphis.
People have been emailing me, and I'm very, very thankful that so many thoughtful people are out there in our audience.
Been no secret that the city of Memphis has endured some record flooding over the course of the last couple of weeks with the Mississippi River cresting and overflowing its banks and some people having to be evacuated, some businesses underwater and homes and things like that.
And it's not just in Memphis.
It's all up and down the Mississippi Delta.
And it's even worse in locations even further to the south of here, down in Vicksburg, Mississippi, and into Louisiana.
They're going to get even worse than Memphis.
And Memphis got it pretty bad.
But one thing Barack Obama isn't going to be doing next week when he's here is going to the casinos.
You got to check out this video.
I can't even, there's not even words that I can use to articulate the severity of what's going on down there in Tunica, Mississippi, which is about a 20-minute drive, 30-minute drive from downtown Memphis.
And Tunica, Missippi, it's the biggest cluster of casinos in the country outside of Las Vegas and Atlantic City.
So the third biggest cluster of casinos, the third biggest casino resort in America is in the little town of Tunica Casino.
And they built it in Tunica because it was the nearest place they could build to Memphis.
Tennessee doesn't have casinos.
So they went to Tunica.
I think the casinos came down there in the mid-90s.
Well, Mississippi has a law that says gambling houses have to can only be riverboat casinos.
You can have riverboat casinos, but you can't have casinos on land.
the people in Tunica or the casinos that were building there to be in close proximity to Memphis got around that by building floating casinos that are on the Mississippi River.
And if you go down there, the parking lot is on land and then you walk across little bridges to go into the casinos which are actually floating, although you can't, of course, feel that.
You don't feel it.
Modern of one of the marvels of modern day engineering.
It's pretty great stuff actually.
The way they build these lavish things on boats that you can't fill and you don't know that you're on the water.
Well, with them being on the water, though, and with the flooding being as it is, these casinos are literally, literally underwater.
I've got a video for you there.
If you go to thepolitical accessible.org, you can actually see this.
And I used to go down to these casinos quite a bit with my grandmother.
And she and I, when I first got involved in politics working for Pat Buchanan back in 1999 and 2000, his third and final presidential campaign, my grandmother and her sister would travel with me to the campaign functions.
And I was always very close to all my grandparents, to all of them, but particularly to my maternal grandmother because she lived the longest.
And she actually lived with us back when I was still living at home after my grandfather died.
And I was just always tremendously close to her.
I loved her with all my heart.
She passed away in 2004, about two weeks after this show originally went on air.
And nevertheless, we took a lot of trips together.
And some of my fond memories with her include trips down to the casinos.
And my family aren't gamblers, and we didn't go down there to gamble.
I mean, we lost a little bit, a few dollars here and there on the slot machines, I guess.
But we went down there just because we enjoyed taking trips together.
And we took in a few concerts.
But nevertheless, you got to see the video all the way up to the door.
There's water.
Water all the way up to the door of these casinos.
You couldn't get in.
I mean, you'd have to have a boat to get through the parking lot.
Pretty severe stuff.
So we're pretty sure Obama isn't going to be going to the casinos when he's here in Memphis.
But will he come on the political cesspool?
That remains to be seen.
Another quick story here before we transition into more serious fair, well, I don't guess you can get more serious than flooding, but you know what I mean, political issues and all.
Howard Veal is a busy guy.
This story, a few months old, but I found it and had to post it.
This is what we're talking about here.
You know, we're talking about health insurance in the first hour.
We're talking about paying bills.
Well, you know, that's something normal people worry about.
But then you've got people like Howard Veal, who at some point during this incredible run had to be a guest on the Maury Povitch show.
Had to be.
The story comes out of Grand Rapids, Michigan, the Associated Press.
A Western Michigan man accused of fathering 23 children from 14 different women, and Keith mentioned this in the first hour, has been sent to prison for at least two years for failing to pay tens of thousands of dollars worth of child support.
Animals procreate.
Human beings are supposed to nurture their children.
So said Kent County Circuit Judge Dennis Lieber.
Says that this guy, he's 44 years old, 23 kids with 14 different women, owes over half a million dollars in child support.
Good luck collecting that, ladies, according to the state's attorney's general office.
Goes on from there.
I mean, you really got to see this.
You really got to read this story.
It says he's only paid $87 worth of child support in seven years to one of these women and the two kids that he fathered with her.
Pretty incredible stuff.
I mean, this is the welfare state.
This is what we're up against, folks.
You know, while me and you are out here working hard trying to provide for our families, I mean, there's some people that just don't have to worry about that kind of stuff.
And I don't say they actually live well, but you know, they're living.
And if they were forced to feed themselves and provide for their families, they wouldn't be.
So who's picking up this tab?
That's a question.
And, you know, you know who the answer is: it's us.
Big news politically: Ron Paul has announced his, I think, his third presidential campaign has officially begun.
And I like a lot of things Ron Paul says.
Every now and then he'll say something a little kooky, but I don't like to endorse candidates on this show because I'm 30 years old.
I've been voting every election cycle since I was 18.
I have never voted for anyone who's won, never voted for a winner.
And that includes myself when I ran for state representative in 2002.
I didn't win.
I've never voted for anyone who's won.
So I don't like to give anyone the kiss of death.
But Ron Paul, along with really a dark course, and I don't even think he's going to get in the race, Haley Barbara out of Mississippi.
These would be the only two candidates right now that I could see people in my audience even remotely considering pulling the lever for.
But obviously much more will continue to develop as we head into 2012.
But it's a pretty big announcement.
Ron Paul running for president again.
Going to take a quick call from Oregon.
Quick call from Oregon.
You're on the line.
Are you with me?
Yes.
Hey, I like the title of your program, Cesspool Politics.
Have you heard of Go?
Of who?
Go.
G-O-O-O-H.
I don't think I have.
Well, you got to google it and try to get a hold of Tim Cox and interview him on your radio.
He has an idea of how we can flip the House of Representatives in Washington in one election.
Clean up the whole place.
My old Pappy used to say, if it sounds too good to be true, it just might be.
But I'll tell you what, I'm interested in looking into it.
We got about 20 seconds to break.
If you could, thanks for calling in, by the way.
Hated to see what happened to our Trailblazers there against the Mavericks.
I know you're calling from Oregon, but give me an email and remind me of that information, and I'll be sure to look it up before next week.
And thanks for the call.
Thank you.
All right, no problem.
We're going to take a break, ladies and gentlemen, when we come back.
Much more forthcoming on the Political Cesspool this evening.
Got a couple more issues to bring to your attention this hour before we go into the third and final and feature Jared Taylor.
Stay tuned.
Don't go away.
The Political Cesspool, guys.
We'll be back right after these messages.
On the show and express your opinion in the Political Says Poll,
call us toll-free at 1-866-986-6397.
Still got a lot of news to bring to you before Jared Taylor joins us here at the top of the third hour.
Before we get back to the news, let's first get back to the phones.
And we've got Brian in Arkansas.
Brian, how are you tonight?
Hey, James?
Hey, good to talk to you, buddy.
What's going on?
Oh, not much.
Look, you were talking about insurance a while ago.
Oh, yeah.
Well, you know, a lot of times when people, you know, get with me and say, well, you shouldn't be, you know, you shouldn't judge minority groups and things like that as a group.
You ought to always try to look at the individual.
I always remind them that that's exactly what insurance companies do with our teenage drivers, tobacco users, and everybody else.
You know, that's a good point.
You know, that's a very valid point.
Yeah.
How are you doing with your insurance company, may I ask?
It's been a recurring subject tonight on the show.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, but that's just one of the points.
That was one point I just wanted to make, though, that, you know, a lot of people criticize me for, you know, you shouldn't be, you shouldn't judge groups.
And, you know, you should always try to stick with it, just looking at the individual.
But I always tell them, look, you know, the police do that, the military does that, but the insurance companies do it more than any of them.
Yeah, well, it's just a foolish practice.
I mean, you know, granted, there is always the exception to prove the rule.
But at the same time, I mean, you know, it's just a matter of fact that, you know, certain groups, certain ethnic groups, certain races have, you know, trends that seem to follow them by and large.
And you'd be very stupid to put the blinders on and to ignore these facts that have been proven time and time again.
So that's true.
Anyway, Brian, listen, always good to talk to you, and thanks for calling in tonight.
It's good to hear from you, too.
Also, I just wanted to say I'm looking forward to that interview with Barack Obama.
I'm holding my breath on that one, buddy.
Don't hold it too long, buddy.
Don't hold it too long.
I don't know.
We haven't heard back yet.
I don't know.
They might be scared.
All right, Brian in Arkansas.
Thanks for the call.
Winston Smith wrote a great article earlier this week entitled Black Student at University of Virginia Law School lies about the police.
And then the UVA blamed the police.
This is a story that broke on April 22nd, so a couple of weeks ago now, but the Virginia Law Weekly published a letter to the editor written by Jonathan Perkins, who was a student at the University of Virginia, a law student at the University of Virginia.
And in his letter, this black fellow wrote that, well, he described an encounter that he had in which he claims that he was sorely harassed by two white university police officers.
And if you read this, and I encourage you to do so by going to our website because we got it prominently posted there, Perkins' description reads like a script of a made-for-TV movie.
And he goes on by, listen to this.
I mean, it's really written like a script.
Very tense and scary, timely and offensive.
It's a great drama.
He writes this, I noticed a police car approaching me.
As it neared, the squad car slowed down, blue lights flashing.
One of the officers inside pointed the car spotlight on me.
The University of Virginia police officers, both white, stopped their car, got out and confronted me.
They demanded that I provide identification and I complied.
When I asked the officers if there was a problem, one responded, you fit the description of someone we're looking for.
I asked what the description was and what had happened, and one of the officers responded, you don't need to worry about that.
It was clear, this hoaxer writes, at that point, that the officers were toying with me for their own entertainment.
I informed them that I was a law student.
They looked at me sarcastically and said, oh, he's a law student.
Having just taken criminal procedure, I knew to ask the officer whether I was free to leave.
When he responded, we just need to make sure you're not carrying any weapons.
It'll only take a second.
I was doubly surprised.
The officers had all but expressed that I was not the person they were looking for, if such a person even existed.
Yet the two were about to subject me to a search.
I knew that all the cases, regulations, and remedies that I learned about in class would be of no avail.
These two officers alone controlled my fate.
At that point, one of the officers spun me around, pushed me toward their car, and placed my hands on the rear of the vehicle.
One of the officers searched me, removing all my belongings from my pockets.
The other officer proceeded to rifle through my wallet.
Whenever I attempted to turn to answer their questions, they forcibly turned me back around to face the car.
When their questioning ended, I asked the officers for their names and badge numbers.
One of them responded, You don't need to worry about that either.
I knew that there would be no remedy for the indignity that I suffered at the hands of two of Virginia's finest.
This was not the first time that I've been harassed by police officers, and it won't be the last.
As I stood there, humiliated with my hands on the police car, my only thought was, there is nothing I can do to right this wrong.
I have absolutely no recourse.
That was a letter, a letter to the editor written to the school newspaper at the University of Virginia by a black law student.
And as you saw, he writes the tale of a lone African-American man innocently walking back to his apartment, pondering the lofty concepts he had just learned in a late-night law class, accosted and humiliated by a pair of dirty white cops too craven and cowardly to identify themselves.
This became a very big deal at the University of Virginia.
Two white cops harassing a black student, the young scholar.
Someone responded to his letter, which was published in the school newspaper, saying that he was touched by the incident because he knew that something like this would never happen to him as a white student.
So there you go, white guilt coming into play.
It's always a winning ingredient.
Anyhow, the article quotes a couple of professors, even.
A follow-up article in the University of Virginia Law Weekly quotes a couple of professors who said that Perkins's experience is the norm.
And one of the professors goes on to say that we engage in a contract with our police officers.
The problem is that the cost of that agreement is not spread evenly across the different strands of our society.
Most often, the cost falls most heavily on young black males.
Oh my God, you see what's going on here.
The whites are falling into their guilt-ridden hysteria.
The lone black hero here is playing his role perfectly.
And even the dean of the university gets in on the action.
The chief of police of the university police, Michael Gibson, asks the black male, the offended black male, if he can use his letter to the editor as a formal written complaint against these two officers.
And of course, Perkins agreed to that.
So you've got the school newspaper, the student body, the professors at the school, the chief of police for the university police, the dean, all just fawning over this horrible incident of a couple of cops, you know, accosting this kid as he walked back to his apartment.
But there was one problem.
After he allowed the chief of police to investigate the matter, it wasn't long at all before everything began to unravel.
The cops that he described weren't even in the vicinity of this alleged incident at the time.
University police cameras, or excuse me, university cameras, you know, documented that Perkins wasn't even where he said he was at the time in question.
And shortly after the story crumbled, he, in fact, admitted, the complainant himself admitted that the whole story was a hoax, a lie.
But he justified his lie by saying that he was just writing the article to bring attention to the topic of police misconduct.
So here you have what could have been in today's racially charged climate, in today's politically correct climate, a story that could have gotten out of hand very, very quickly.
He admits that it was a lie after an investigation and countless hours were invested in unraveling this lie, but he says he had to lie because he wanted to bring attention to the topic of police misconduct.
So how did the university respond?
Do you remember Alexandra Wallace, the young white girl who put up a harmless video post mocking Asian behavior?
Well, she was ran through the ringer in the American media.
She was drummed out of school, subjected to death threats and everything else.
And that was over.
You know, no crime was committed there.
She didn't file a false police report.
She put up a video on her own personal YouTube.
You remember Alexandra Wallace.
Well, what happened here?
This was a very serious charge.
He definitely, at the very least, broke the honor code of the University of Virginia.
So how did the university respond to a legitimate problem here?
This hoax or lying about the police playing a racial card.
Well, the University of Virginia Chief of Police responded by saying, quote, I recognize that police misconduct does occur.
Pressing charges against Jonathan Perkins in this case might inhibit another individual who experiences real police misconduct from coming forward with a complaint.
I want to send the message that just how seriously we take such charges and that we will always investigate them with care and diligence.
Ladies and gentlemen, we got to take a break with that.
Can you believe it?
back.
We'll be back right after these messages.
Jump in the political cesspool with James and the gang.
Call us tonight at 1-866-986-6397.
And here's the host of the political cesspool, James Edwards.
Okay, so I was dedicating a pretty large chunk of that last segment to a story that you probably never heard about that comes out of the University of Virginia Law School.
It deals with Jonathan Perkins, a black law student there who wrote this incredibly detailed letter to the editor about how he was accosted for no reason, abused by two campus police officers.
There's only one problem.
It never happened.
And after the dean got involved, after professors got involved, after students got involved and the chief of the campus police got involved, he finally admitted, sorry, guys, I was just joking.
That never happened, but I wrote it and I said it happened and I filed the false police report because I needed to bring attention to the topic of police misconduct.
And guess what the university said?
Hey, we agree.
No problem at all.
We're not going to press charges against you because, you know, if we do, it might, you know, inhibit another black from bringing forth equally frivolous charges.
That's basically what they said.
You've got to read this article at thepolitical cesspool.org.
And I'm telling you, you know, again, why The University of Virginia is so desperate to downplay this liar's rotten behavior is a mystery, but I strongly suspect that it has a lot to do with fear of being called racists.
I mean, look at what he did.
Look at what he did.
He filed a false police report.
He cast suspicion and resentment upon every white police officer.
He subjected every white university police officer to possible violence, and he wasted probably, you know, thousands and thousands of dollars in investigations and time and effort and hours work dealing with this issue, so on and so forth.
Now, these are serious issues, and Perkins' lie could have easily, as I mentioned before, gotten out of control.
And yet, neither the district attorney nor the university police sees any reason to file charges against Perkins.
The university sees no reason to expel him.
The University Honor Council sees no reason for disciplinary action against him.
Every entity that can and should do something is doing nothing and saying nothing.
And with that, the University of Virginia management wipes the cold sweat off its institutional brow, breathes a massive sigh of relief, and falls back into a leather office chair, so happy to have avoided its own crystal magnum-like nightmare.
So in a couple of weeks, the University of Virginia will graduate Jonathan Perkins, a liar and a hoaxer, bestowing upon him a degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence.
But maybe that's the point.
Get him off this campus as quietly as possible.
After that, he's someone else's problem.
Now, there hasn't been a lot of talk or ink about why Perkins carried out this hoax.
Some have wondered if he has mental issues, and some believe his own state of goal of wanting to bring attention to the topic of police misconduct is why he did it.
And perhaps both reasons are true.
Maybe he is so deluded that he actually thinks there's some merit in falsely accusing the UVA Police Department of race-based harassment two weeks before he graduates, like the way a terrorist hides a bomb and then walks away, leaving others to deal with the mess he caused.
But the more probable reason, which is being scrupulously avoided with a caution that borders on paranoia, is that Jonathan Perkins is a racist himself, that Jonathan Perkins hates white people.
In the end, his hoax is based upon accusing white people of institutional racism.
His story was a lie, and he passed it off as the truth.
The reason he gave for what he did makes no sense.
And besides that, he lied about being harassed.
So we can't believe what he says about why he lied.
But the effect of his lie was that it cast white people as racists.
In fact, Jonathan Perkins is not just a racist.
He is also by definition a hate criminal.
False accusations of racism, of course, go back to the earliest days of the civil rights era.
The FBI's civil rights division is still investigating allegedly racially motivated murders from that era.
And Jonathan Perkins is just the longest line in a long string of lies and hoaxes intended to bring about disdain and punishment on white people.
So as we say, the encyclopedia of false accusations of racism is huge and it grows every week with stories from every imaginable setting.
Stories that you're just not going to hear about unless you're tuned into this radio program.
But college campuses have recently become prominent venues for high-profile false accusations.
University of San Diego, this was a story we reported on a couple of years ago.
A noose was found hanging from a lamp fixture near the library, prompting cries of white supremacism and demands from the black student union.
A minority student later confessed to placing the noose.
At Westchester University in Pennsylvania, a flyer for a white student union, a flyer for a white student union prompted an investigation and calls for the racists to be brought to justice.
Well, it was found out that the flyer was produced and distributed by anti-white bigots on campus.
And who could forget Henry Louis Gates, the incident at Harvard in which the black professor falsely accused a white police officer of racism?
And who could ever forget the woman I just mentioned, if you can call her a woman at all, Crystal Mangum and the Duke La Crosse rape hoax?
False accusations of racism are occurring more frequently for one reason.
The perpetrators are never punished.
The minority student at the University of California at San Diego was suspended, big whoop-de-doo.
The white-hating bigots at Westchester University were unscathed for their hate crime.
Henry Louis Gates is a celebrity professor at Harvard and Crystal Mangum is about to stand trial for murder, but perhaps if she had been charged and prosecuted for her hoax against the Duke La Crosse team, the man she murdered would be alive today.
And since they get away with their lies and hoaxes, others are encouraged to copy them.
Now, who knows what will become of liar and hoaxer Jonathan Perkins?
Apparently, he has been hired in advance of his graduation by a Philadelphia law firm.
Well, if that's true, then I suggest that that firm opens a civil rights branch that's headquartered in Salem, Massachusetts.
So there you have it, folks.
The story of Jonathan Perkins, graduate of the University of Virginia Law School, class of 2011, liar hoaxer, Esquire.
That's it.
So again, what did he do?
To recap in summation, he filed a false police report, cast suspicion and resentment upon all the whites on campus, especially the white police officers, and wasted thousands and thousands of dollars, worry and trouble.
And he is not reprimanded, not even in the slightest.
In fact, he doesn't even get a verbal reprimand.
The university says, you know what, this was a great idea.
I'm glad we went through this because, you know, we need to show blacks that, you know, you can come forward with your complaints, whether they're real or imagined, and we're going to investigate them.
Now, what kind of precedent was that set, did that set, that this guy was not punished whatsoever?
And then again, just to compare and contrast, you have the young white model out at UCLA who gets drummed out of school.
Her name is raked through every media outlet imaginable because she says, what, Ching Chong on a YouTube video because she's upset that Asians can't keep quiet in a library?
You know, she paid a hell of a price for saying something on YouTube that had nothing to do with school.
This guy, you know, files a racially charged false police report and he's basically celebrated.
This is the sick world that we live in because European Americans won't stand up and demand better.
Well, we demand better here on the political cesspool.
And we don't cow to the false gods of cultural Marxism and the vandals and visigoths of multiculturalism.
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And one more quick, quick, quick story before we welcome Jared Taylor onto the show at the top of the third hour.
You know, I hate being right all the time.
We're not going to have time to really explore this in depth.
But I told you last week that Delta Airlines was really going to have to pay for booting two Muslims off a flight.
Now, these were Muslims that were decked out in their costumes and all this, that, and the other.
And now they're getting shaken down for money and apologies and who knows what else.
You got to read the story.
And it's interesting to know that just today, two other Muslim clerics were arrested for planning some sort of attack.
I think they were down in Florida.
You know, they should have just gotten on an airplane and said they were discriminated against.
And then the charges would be dropped.
They'd be made heroes.
And I'm sure they'd get some sort of a stipend from Delta.
Just like these other two are going to get.
You got to read that story.
Muslims seek to cash in on the actions of a Delta pilot.
It's featured right now at thepolitical Cesspool.org.
Got to take a break.
Third hour coming up.
Jared Taylor is our guest.
Stay tuned.
The best is yet to come.
Believe it or not, there's a third hour of tonight's installment of the Political Cesspool coming your way right after these messages.
My bad was the trailer.
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