Nov. 26, 2011 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
41:06
20111126_Hour_1
|
Time
Text
Welcome to the Political Cesspool, known across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populous conservative radio program.
And here to guide you through the murky waters of the Political Cesspool is your host for tonight, James Edwards.
Welcome, everybody, to the Political Cesspool Radio Program.
Holiday weekend it is Saturday evening, November 26th.
We're coming to you live tonight.
There's no vacationing for us, not here in the Cesspool.
AM 1380, WLRM Radio, Memphis, Tennessee.
Going after the AM FM affiliate stations of our good friends at the Liberty News Radio Network and simulcasting online to a worldwide audience of TPC fans at our official internet headquarters, thepoliticalcesspool.org.
Spoke with the gentleman on the phone, had some business to tend to with him about half an hour before the show started tonight.
I was sitting here in the studio and made a quick call.
And he informed me that he already had the internet plugged in.
He was already tuned in via the internet, I should say, listening to us there.
And listen, I mean, that's the kind of fans we have, Keith.
30 minutes prior to showtime, they're already in their seats and ready for us to take the stage.
You like that kind of dedication and loyalty.
And God bless them.
And good to have everyone here this evening.
Yep, our fan base, we're late.
Have a great show again tonight, right?
All right.
I hear I'm having some static in my line here.
We're going to get that worked out every time we move it.
It's always something here.
I tell you that the gremlins have crept in over the weekend.
But it's kind of cluttered in the studio tonight.
We are two days removed from Thanksgiving.
It was a great Thanksgiving for the Edwards family.
And Keith, I trust it was for you as well.
Absolutely.
No doubt about it.
And we had a little bit too much turkey, way too much cheesecake, pumpkin pie.
My wife really did a good job.
I got to brag on her really quick.
She cooked the turkey from scratch.
I mean, you know, we don't go to pig and whistle and get our turkeys.
You know, we did the thing this year and she put it together.
In the past, it's kind of fallen on my mother or, you know, grandparent to do it.
But this time she did it.
We had apple bourbon turkey.
And this was a two-day event.
A two-day event to get it right, Keith.
We started cooking this thing on, you know, on Monday.
You know how that is.
But it was great.
And then we had an equally great dinner at her family's house.
Big Thursday for the Edwards family.
We went out to the old country home place.
All the family was there, all the way to third cousins.
We had a great time.
And just like you, the baton has been passed to the younger generation now.
It's no longer grandmas and grandpas doing it.
It's the young adults doing the food preparation.
So everyone else just sits back and enjoys.
And now it's time to enjoy the Christmas season.
And we're going to be talking a lot about Christmas over the course of the next month and probably into the first week of the new year.
And hopefully most of our coverage of Christmas 2012 won't revolve on the cultural war against Christmas that will certainly be waged anew this year.
We will as predictable as the sunset, as Keith said, but certainly we'll keep tabs on that.
But most importantly, we're going to be talking to you about the reason for the season and why it's so special and why we go to such lengths to celebrate it.
And I enjoy the secular stuff as well, although that's certainly not the reason for Christmas.
But to speak about the secular things, now two days past Thanksgiving, we have a couple of boxes.
As I said a moment ago, it's a little cluttered in our studio tonight, but we've got a couple of boxes, big boxes behind me filled to the brim with Christmas decorations.
So, Keith, you know, we're going to have to deck out the digs here and maybe get a picture or a short video clip for the fans of what our studio looks like all decorated for Christmas.
We don't have it quite decorated yet, but we do have the decorations in here.
So it's just a matter of getting them affixed to the walls, and we're going to do that over the course of the next week.
Are we not, Keith?
Yeah, James is Bartlett's answer to Graceland, so consequently, and Elvis.
So he's going to do his house up just like Elvis did his up and still does his up, or at least the people that are in charge of Graceland do.
So, you know, we'll have to get a picture up on the internet about that.
We're also going to have up on the internet something that I could not believe that James wasn't familiar with up until now, and that's the old song from 1970 by Guy Drake, Welfare Cadillac.
I was playing that for him.
It was Richard Nixon's favorite song.
In fact, he asked Johnny Cash to perform it at the White House.
And Johnny Cash, who at the time was trying to curry favor with Bob Dylan and people like that, refused to do it and made a big public stink about it because it made fun of poor people.
And, of course, if I were Richard Nixon, I would have told him not to let the door hit him in the posterior when he left.
But instead, he, you know, being a gentleman, allowed him to, you know, make hay at his expense about that.
But we're going to let you hear the song that was the cause of all the flat back in 1970, Welfare Cadillac.
You've got that to look forward to as a Christmas gift from us, an early Christmas gift by the Political Assessable staff in the upcoming week.
And not just Welfare Cadillac, which, of course, I think everyone will readily identify as a Christmas song.
Maybe not.
But we are going to have some good Christmas music, including my favorite Christmas song of all time, Do You Hear What I Hear?
I got a good version by Johnny Mathis.
You know, we like to do that on the weekends.
Weekends, especially on Sunday, we don't post a lot of news stories at our website.
I've grown accustomed now to posting some of my favorite songs from the 60s, from the 50s and 60s, which is my favorite genre of music.
And coming up here in the next few weeks, we're going to be posting some of our favorite Christmas songs.
That's just another perk you'll have to look forward to as you visit thepolitical cesspool.org.
But anyway, we certainly hope that everyone had a blessed and enjoyable time of Thanksgiving with their friends and family this week.
We did.
We're certainly thankful for you and our listening audience.
And coming up later in the program tonight, during the third hour, I'm going to read to you George Washington's original Thanksgiving proclamation.
We had that posted as the featured news story at our website on all day Thursday.
That was the only story we posted.
And it's something that I hope all of you had a chance to read and share with your family on that special day.
And if you just so happen to miss it, we're going to share it for you tonight and you'll be better for it.
So that's coming up in the third hour, the second hour.
We're going to catch up with our old friend, Reverend Ted Pike, the National Director of the National Prayer Network.
And he has been tracking a lot of good stories there.
We're going to run through the laundry list with Reverend Pike during the second hour and much, much more news forthcoming before the show ends as well.
So anyway, now that the opening remarks and friendly banner is behind us, we're going to get down to business.
Keith, I know we only have a moment to give him a teaser about our first story of the night.
But as you know, college football season is reaching its zenith for this year.
The Bowls are coming up, and that in and of itself wouldn't be news enough to make the Political Cesspool radio program.
But there is one particular university that seems to be waging a never-ending battle against Christian culture and particularly southern Christian culture.
That is the University of Mississippi, Ole Miss.
And just a year after they sent Colonel Rebel, their mascot, to the firing squad, they have endured, suffered through the worst season in school history.
Serves them right, right, Keith?
Absolutely.
That's what you get for pandering to the political left.
There's no way to win that war.
There's no way that you can ever gain absolution from this particular Pope because the Pope of political correctness will never let you off the hook.
All right, the stage is set, everybody.
The table's set.
To use a Thanksgiving analogy, we're going to come back with the Ole Miss Rebel Black Bears.
That's our topic, but much, much more to come this show.
Stay tuned.
It's all coming your way right after these words.
Jump in, the political says pool with James and the gang.
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, the Political Cesspool Radio Program.
Keith Alexander and myself, James Edwards, in studio with you this first hour.
And we're going to start off the show now in earnest talking about the collapse of the Ole Miss Rebel Black Bears, whatever they're called, the football team there at the University of Mississippi catastrophic season.
And I found an article written by a gentleman by the name of William Houston, who writes for Youth for Western Civilization.
And I basically just posted it verbatim at the Political Cesspool website this week because this has been a story that we've been following for a couple of years now, the attack on Southern culture being waged by a university that was founded by Confederate generals, no less.
But the author writes, like many SEC fans, I find myself struggling to watch the LSU Ole Miss game recently.
Louisiana State crushed the Rebel Black Bears 52-3 in Oxford at Vaughn Hemingway Stadium.
It was Houston Nuts' last home game as head coach of the University of Mississippi.
The LSU victory was so overwhelming that the Tigers effectively invoked the mercy rule.
The Tigers showed the Rebels, who were 2-9 overall and 0-7 in conference play, plenty of mercy in the first quarter, fourth quarter, clearing the bench and having third-string quarterback Zach Mittenberger take a knee on four consecutive plays with five minutes to play after reaching the Ole Miss one-yard line with five minutes and 20 seconds left.
The crushing loss to LSU is the 15th consecutive conference loss for Ole Miss.
The Rebel Black Bears, as we mentioned, are 2-9 this season.
If they fall to Mississippi State tonight, which is the likely scenario, 2011 will be the first 10-loss season in the history of Ole Miss football.
But take heart, Ole Miss fans.
Colonel Rebel has been banished from the sidelines.
The new politically correct Rebel Black Bear mascot has a box over his head as Ole Miss went down in flames against Louisiana Tech, not to be confused with Louisiana State.
The Ole Miss school flag has been changed and Dixie and the Confederate flag have been banished from the field.
Ole Miss students were so disgusted with the Rebel Black Bears that the entire student section was almost cleared out by halftime.
There were more LSU fans than Ole Miss fans at the Ole Miss home game watching Rebel Black Bear on the sidelines.
And Keith, you know, again, we don't care too much about college football here at the political cesspool.
Is, after all, a political radio program and not a college sports show, but nevertheless there are some political ramifications about what's going on here and again, not the least of which them being is the attack on southern culture and southern tradition by a formerly very southern university.
And i'd like to say this, we had on the a student from OLE MISS last year.
Her name escapes me now, but we had her on.
She was making big, big news, getting interviewed by national television networks and the major newspapers here in the south.
She was leading a sort of defense coalition trying to save uh Colonel Rebel as the mascot down there.
And I think an official poll was conducted by the school and over 90 percent of the student body which includes countless black students, mind you wanted Colonel Rebel to remain the mascot at OLE MISS.
90 plus percent of the student body voted to keep colonel Rebel.
But just like the American government Keith, 90 of the people can vote for something on a referendum, but it ain't going to stop the, the signature of a pen overruling the dictates of the, of the citizenry or of the populists.
And, just like with these tyrannical judges, uh the OLE MISS administration completely uh null and voided it and ramroded it through one way or the other.
Yeah, our bettors know what we are supposed to do, James.
Um, nobody defies a revolution and gets away with it.
That's a lesson uh, that we've drawn, for example, from the fact that all these old Civil Rights era crimes.
They keep hauling wheezing oxygenarians into court with walkers and oxygen tanks until they can finally get them prosecuted successfully for some type of crime so they can say that the, you know, the revolution has succeeded.
It doesn't matter what the people think.
Like you said, the Brown Versus Board OF Education decision was a watershed moment in American history, because it is the point at which the 3 percent learned how to rule tyrannically the remaining 97 percent, the silent majority of Americans, and that was through the power of judicial review.
Well, now they don't even bother with the power of judicial review.
They have gathered, they have claimed every institution that sets moral or ethical standards in America, including higher education.
Everybody that is a uh allowed anywhere near the levers of power in higher education in America is a bona fide liberal, which is basically the same as saying, a bona fide cultural marxist.
The leadership at OLD MISS certainly qualifies for that appellation.
And this is what is happening to uh OLE MISS.
It takes people with a very long historical memory now to remember that one OLE MISS was the toast of southern football from the late 40s until the integration of the league in 1972.
The Sec used to be an all-white league and during that time OLD MISS was the best team.
It was Alabama before Alabama was Alabama.
Johnny Vaught eclipsed Bear Bryant.
Bear Bryant came along, I think in 1958, to Alabama, which had a losing record for the 10-year period, or really 15-year period prior to that, and John Vaught was the dean of SEC coaches and we had people like Archie Manning, Jake Gibbs, we had All-americans, we had Miss Americas.
At OLE MISS everything was going great until the Integrations league also, if you'll recall, OLD MISS really got down and refused to knuckle under to the triumph of liberalism in the South.
They fought, actually had a riot in which one person was killed when they tried to integrate Ole Miss with James Meredith in 1962.
But now the leadership in Ole Miss, rather than being made of the stern stuff of their forefathers, they cannot, you know, they can't bend over enough.
And furthermore, what it shows, what the experience of the rebel black bears has shown, is that no amount of pandering, one, will satisfy your critics on the left.
And two, nothing's ever going to get better.
Everything's going to get worse, just like Ole Miss football.
Ole Miss has now taken over the position of doormat of the Southeastern Conference from Vanderbilt.
Vanderbilt is no longer the doormat of the conference.
Ole Miss is, and Ole Miss will be the doormat of the conference for the foreseeable future.
The people that follow Ole Miss football basically just go to Oxford so they can groove in the grove and tailgate and have a good time kibitzing with their friends.
They leave the football stadium.
You know, if they stay till halftime, that's an extraordinarily good game for them.
They've just given up on the team because the team has given up on them and the administration has given up on them.
You know, the Ole Miss Black Bears, you know, it used to be the Ole Miss Rebels and was for an awful long time.
But of course, that has connotations of the old South and plantation culture, just like the name Ole Miss.
So we are predicting that both of those names, just like the playing of Dixie and the waving of the Confederate flag at Ole Miss football games, will go down the Orwellian memory hole, James.
It's just, you know, it's, you know, the thing at, well, they say the mills of the gods grind slow, but they grind exceeding fine.
And there's not going to be any vestige of the old, old mists that is left once the left gets through with it.
And as a result, all of this conformity and conforming with the desires of people that hate your guts hasn't gained Ole Miss anything except, you know, the most embarrassing decline of any school in the Southeastern Conference in terms of its athletic program.
Well, that's exactly right, Keith.
And as we said, the Ole Miss Rebels are slowly morphing into the University of Mississippi Black Bears.
And in the meantime, as if the gods were striking back in our favor, they are suffering the worst season in the history of the program.
And it comes again a year after they delivered a seeming death knell to, you know, what they're really doing there, it's really vicious attacks of cultural genocide, as I wrote last year on the blog, that's being levied against Southern Heritage from the campus of Ole Miss.
Of course, playing a very key role in this unforgivable assault on our people is none other than the infamous Toohey family, Sean and Leanne Toohey, made popular in Hollywood by the film The Blind Side.
We've got to take a break, folks.
We're going to pick up on this, wrap up this right after these words, and then we'll move on to other subject matters.
Stay tuned.
post-Thanksgiving edition of TPC.
To get on the show and express your opinion in the political cesspool, call us toll-free at 1-866-986-6397.
We've got to get out of the space.
All right, everybody.
Welcome back to the show.
We've spent the entire previous segment talking about, again, the relentless attacks of cultural genocide being levied against Southern Heritage by the administration of Ole Miss, despite the fact that 90% of the student body in a poll conducted last year before this decision was made to dismiss Colonel Rebel in favor of the nondescript black bear mascot.
But they still did it.
And one of the power families in the Ole Miss camp was the Toohey family, made popular again by the Hollywood movie The Blind Side.
We've spent plenty of time and provided ample commentary about the disturbing tenets of that film.
And I'm going to turn it back over to Keith to wrap up this segment.
But first of all, I want to state the obvious very quickly.
We should never forget, you know, why are we bringing this up?
Why do we care about what's happening at Ole Miss?
Well, we should never forget, and all too often it's never mentioned clearly enough that the South was right in that war.
There's no shame to bear.
In fact, coming a great deal of pride, as Keith says, and from my own personal testimony, is that I consider myself having won the genetic lottery for God to have allowed me to come into this world as a Southerner and to have been born and raised in the former Confederate state of Tennessee.
This is a birthright to me, and it's something that I wouldn't trade for any amount of money.
It's an affirmation of pride that we should all share.
I've shared this with you before, and I'm going to share it with you again very quickly before we give the mic back to Keith.
My great-grandfather's grandfather fought and died in service to the Confederate cavalry at the Battle of Shiloh.
As a child, my parents would frequently take me to visit my great-grandparents in Corinth, Mississippi, and I was lucky enough to have seen the blood-stained saddle that belonged to my heroic ancestor so many years prior.
And, you know, the question must be asked, what is love?
And we ask this quite often, if not loving your own family and standing at the ready to defend their honor when need be.
You know, that said, getting back to the TUIs, I sit with fists clinched as I think about the TUI family, who are nothing more, as Sam Dixon once called the Bushes, than jumped up white trash, spending their time and money to lead the charge to remove Colonel Rebel from the groves of Ole Miss because they think that by having him there, they may miss out on an invitation to the next cocktail party.
We must not surrender any more ground to those who wish to systematically remove every last symbol of that which makes the South so precious.
As General Stonewall Jackson was said to have remarked, we must raise at once the black flag, no quarter to the violators of our homes and firesides.
I continue to implore with every fiber of my being for the students of Ole Miss, as well as Southerners everywhere, to stand in ardent defense of all that makes the South so righteous.
Don't ever let those who hate us make you apologize, for we have nothing to apologize for.
We were right, and we were all too right.
And we must find that fierce determination that propelled our ancestors who were outmanned and outsupplied, but never outfought, Keith.
What we need to remember first of all about the Civil War, and I appreciate you bringing this up, is that the Southerners were the first people, one to rebel against an overwhelming, overweening, totalitarian federal government, the type of federal government that was envisioned by Abraham Lincoln and resisted by the Confederate States of America.
And the Confederate States of America and its leaders were totally consistent with the blueprint of the founding fathers in opposing this Leviathan federal government, which is what the Civil War was about.
It was not about slavery.
If it had been about slavery, as we pointed out during Confederate History Month every April, then the Corwin Amendment that was proposed by Abraham Lincoln would have settled the matter.
The Corwin Amendment was proposed in the Buchanan administration, and Abraham Lincoln gave a handwritten letter to every governor of every state in the Union asking that this amendment to the U.S. Constitution be endorsed.
And it was ratified by two states, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
And if it had been ratified, it would have been the 13th Amendment to the Constitution rather than the current 13th Amendment.
And what it was about was the Corwin Amendment said that slavery would be forever legal in the localities where it was then legal in America.
In other words, if the Civil War had been about slavery as all of our children are taught today, that would have settled it.
There would have been no reason for the South to have seceded because slavery was going to be protected by a constitutional amendment.
But that wasn't what the secession movement was about.
That wasn't what the Confederacy was about.
And that's why the Confederacy continues to secede or persisted in seceding from the federal government because they did not want to be governed by another region of the nation that did not have their best interests at heart.
In other words, they wanted popular sovereignty just like the original colonists wanted popular sovereignty and they wanted freedom from oppressive political domination from England.
Now, Steve, I know you want to get a word in on the TUIs, please.
Yeah, let me tell you about the TUIs.
Now, the TUIs are typical modern grifters.
Sean Tue was a former basketball player at Ole Miss.
His wife, Lee Ann, was a former cheerleader at Ole Miss back in the late 70s, early 80s.
And what they represent is this.
They are the typical people that you see if you have children going to a private school.
Sean Tue is a dad that's always hanging out watching all the practices, leaning on the fence, trying to influence people on the coaching staff.
Although Sean Tue was able to get inside the fence based on his credentials as a former Division I college athlete at Old Miss who supposedly was going to use the expertise he had developed in that role to get black athletes to Briar Crest Christian School, which is a private school in Memphis where James Edwards attended, for example.
Now, the thing that is remarkable about all of this is that there was a rule promulgated by the TSSA, the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association, the governing board for high school athletics in Tennessee, which said that if a kid gets a scholarship to a private school and it's paid for by anyone,
if his tuition is paid by anyone other than his parents or some close relative, like a grandfather or grandparent, an aunt, an uncle, somebody like that, then he could not play football or basketball.
Now, this was not something that was foisted on the TSA by a bunch of evil white racists to prevent black kids from playing.
No, the impetus behind this was public school football and basketball coaches, primarily black public school football and basketball coaches that were tired of seeing their best players raided off and hustled into private schools by people like Sean Toohey.
And Sean Tuey did this.
He got Greg Hardy and he ought Michael Orr to Briarcrest in an effort to make them a football powerhouse and a basketball powerhouse as well.
Well, then he confronts, he's also a multi-millionaire.
He used his connections at Ole Miss to become a Taco Bell franchisee, which is like the next best thing to printing money.
Well, by doing that, by getting these kids in there, he suddenly found himself in violation of the rules.
So Tewy being an alpha male and a big shot, not the type of secondary character that he's portrayed as in the movie by Tim McGraw, the movie being the blind side, he decided he wasn't going to take no for an answer.
So he decided he was going to adopt Michael Orr.
That way he could do everything that a booster wanted to do for a star athlete.
He could buy him clothes.
He could get him a car.
He could give him an allowance.
He could get him tutoring.
He could do all sorts of things that he would like to do.
And he could do it cloaking himself in the mantle of righteousness.
Well, he did all of these things and got him into his alma mater, Ole Miss.
Well, the NCAA, National Collegiate Athletic Association, got suspicious and sent a black female investigator to the TUI's home to find out what the scoop was.
At this point, the TUIs cloaked themselves in the mantle of righteousness and said, we're just basically latter-day civil rights heroes trying to help this poor, neglected, and oppressed child.
And they apparently sold this not only to the NCAA investigator, but to the entire world.
And there comes the movie The Blindside, in which it's basically starring the TUIs as this ideal white couple.
And Hollywood picked up on this because they would like more and more white couples to adopt black children and, of course, bring them into their homes like a cowbird into the nest and displace their own children as the primary beneficiaries of their parents' love and financial support, James.
Another great report.
Always good to revisit that.
And wouldn't you know it, ironically enough, Sean Tewy is now employed as a broadcaster for the Memphis Grizzlies, who apparently, Keith, will once again soon be playing basketball about 50 feet away from where we sat in the FedEx Forum Plaza.
So there on one end, you have us here in the Political Cesspool studios at 1380 WLRM Radio and right next door of the FedEx Forum is Sean Tewy, mono and mono, the two opposing ideologies right here on Bill Street.
Two Paul Robinson's.
Got to take a break.
We're going to wrap up this first hour right after this.
Stay tuned.
If it's the last thing we have in 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.
James Edwards indeed, along with my right-hand man, Keith Alexander, wrapping up the first hour of tonight's program.
Don't forget, ladies and gentlemen, coming up in tonight's second hour, you're going to hear from Reverend Ted Pike of the National Prayer Network.
He has an infinite supply of interesting stories at his website, truthtellers.org.
And we're going to cover as many of them as we can during the second hour.
And then in the third hour, we're going to be bouncing around vast and varied news stories that we're tracking.
We're going to bring to your attention during the third hour.
We are going to take the time to read George Washington's Thanksgiving proclamation as we wrap up the Thanksgiving weekend, but also many other things going on.
Ron Paul gaining ground in Iowa.
Chuck Baldwin, political accessible guest running for lieutenant governor in Montana.
Great news there.
We're very excited about that.
White House, this isn't hypocritical at all, I don't guess, Keith, at least by their double standards.
The White House, if you can believe it, just released, I think last week, an official report, a 44-page White House official report documenting in detail how Obama has exclusively helped African Americans.
Basically, it's a report to Obama's black base about what he's done that exclusively benefits them.
Now, I mean, could you imagine the fallout that would occur if you had asked Obama or asked any candidate or asked any elected official in the country or former president, anyone from dog catcher up to mayor to governor, senator, you asked them, okay, sir, ma'am, madam, what have you done to help white people lately?
I mean, you would be shouted down as a racist.
And then Obama, his White House, his administration releases an official White House document, 44 pages, on how he has helped the African American community.
I don't have a problem with that.
But what I have a problem with is the double standard.
We're going to be talking about that and much more during the third hour of the night.
Folks, you're not going to want to miss a single second of it.
All of that and more forthcoming before we run out of time this evening.
But Keith, back over to you real quick, talking about the hypocrisy and double standards that seems to drive and define the left, wrapping up our extensive coverage on the cultural genocide at Ole Miss and some of the power players there.
Sean Tuey and his wife Leanne are no different than any other country club liberal.
They're hypocrites.
And tell them why, Keith.
Well, you know, they are among the top athletic supporters.
And I use that term with intended double entendre at the University of Mississippi.
And, you know, I think it's pretty appropriate that they've renamed the team from Rebels to Black Bears because Black Bears seems to indicate the new recruiting priorities at Ole Miss.
The team has gotten increasingly black almost every year since the integration of the league in 1972, and it has also gotten progressively worse.
You know, the promised improvement in athletics at Ole Miss that was supposed to come from integration just hasn't materialized at all.
In fact, it's been the exact opposite.
Now, the hypocrisy of people that, you know, play the political correct game, like the Touheys, is, I think, in no instance better shown than in this particular observation.
Leanne Touhey, in the book, The Blind Side, denounces her father, who is a U.S. Marshal, as a racist and a bigot.
You know, you talk about kniving.
You know, what was it that Shakespeare said, how sharper than a serpent's tooth is an ungrateful child?
That's what came to my mind as soon as I heard that or read it.
Well, what did her father do to deserve this type of denouncing from his little daughter?
Did he ride with Byron Della Beckwith?
Was he involved in some type of Klan murders like the Mississippi Burning murders or something?
No.
What he did to deserve this type of denunciation from his daughter was when they instituted busing in the Memphis public schools, he took his daughter out of the public schools like 95% of all other white parents in Memphis at the time and put her in one of these terrible segregation academies.
But the segregation academy that he sent her to that she found to be so objectionable was none other than Briar Crest Baptist School, as it was called at the time.
Now it has morphed into Briarcrest Christian Academy, but basically it's the same old place, and it exists for the same purpose.
And she sends her children to that school, including her adopted child, Michael Orr.
But nonetheless, her father deserves denunciation for doing exactly what she's doing.
Now, you know, there's some mental gymnastics involved in that that I just can't do.
I don't know about you, James, but I just can't make myself think in that type of illogical way.
But that is typical of what I call the limousine liberal set.
You know, they always find a way to segregate themselves from the black underclass while professing to be champions of the black underclass.
And quite frankly, I think it's time to tell the emperor that he has no clothes.
Ladies and gentlemen, once again, I find myself sitting.
I'm not standing.
I can't lie to you.
I'm sitting in my chair here at the studio, but I'm sitting in awe of Keith Alexander.
There is no finer wordsmith on mainstream American radio.
The man can just tell it like it is, and he's able to paint that verbal picture and articulate it in such a way that it just he, what can you say?
I mean, he's so good, I don't even have the words to describe him.
But Keith, I appreciate you breaking down that argument so eloquently, but yet so simply, succinctly.
And I guess we'll wrap it up there.
But when we started the show tonight, as we always say, we're live, we're unrehearsed, we're uncensored.
I didn't originally plan on spending that much time talking about Omiss.
I basically just wanted to draw the point that they've spent so much time, effort, and resources attacking their traditions that I revel in the fact that they are suffering so badly in sports now.
And then, of course, we chased that rabbit down the trail a little bit, and it ran into the twoies, which we've talked about before.
But I'm glad we have the time, and I'm glad we took the time to spend a few minutes on that issue.
But Keith, I know we only have about five minutes left, a little less than five minutes left with you this hour.
And you want to make a couple of closing points on another story.
Well, I wanted to say a couple of closing comments on the article that you ran.
I think it was maybe two weeks ago now on the phenomenon of wealthy white guys like Rupert Murdoch and Nicholas Cage taking Asian brides.
Yeah, basically, I'll just recap it.
What it was was, it was a Marie Claire article, and I pretty much simply reposted it.
Marie Clare, the magazine.
It was entitled The New Trophy Wives, Asian Women.
And it talked about Nicholas Cage and some of these moguls, Hollywood actors and other assorted moguls taking big shots, young Asian wives as their brides after several failed marriages to white women.
We talked about it a little bit last week during the first hour.
It has really spawned a pretty vitriolic comment war on our, or an exchange, as Keith says, on our blog.
It's about 100 comments all across the spectrum.
And Keith, anyway, very little time left this hour, two minutes.
Make your remarks so we can wrap it up.
Well, feminism, which is another aspect of liberalism, has basically made male-female relationships within the white race much more problematical than they probably have ever been at any other time in history.
And none of this is an accident.
This is intended by the left, and it's not a coincidence, and it's having its intended effect, which is to the declining of white birth rates.
And we were talking about Christmas and Christmas movies and Christmas songs earlier today.
It reminds me of Macaulay Culkin in the Home Alone movie, the original one, in which he proclaims, I made my family disappear.
Well, basically, that's what feminism is doing to the white race.
It's making our family disappear.
It's making marriage a very risky proposition for white men.
And quite frankly, that's why white men might be looking for wives other than typical white women.
As we pointed out before, I defy you to think among your own acquaintances about couples, white couples that you know.
And I will just about assure you that in 90% of those couple instances, the wife is more liberal than the husband.
In fact, this is an important phenomenon.
People wonder why conservatism, in particularly paleoconservatism, is so feckless, so ineffective.
Well, I think the opposition that white males get from the women in their lives to standing up and being outspoken, particularly on racial issues, issues that affect the welfare of the white race, is one of the main, you know, that this opposition from white women is one of the primary reasons for that.
That is what has happened in America.
And it is a dynamic, again, that is not an accident or a coincidence.
It is intended.
I don't think it was any accident whatsoever that the left chose as their first agenda item women's suffrage.
They knew that women were naturally soft-hearted.
They could appeal to that soft-heartedness.
And soft-heartedness often leads to soft-headedness in the voting booth and also when it comes to addressing issues like race in culture and popular culture.
And again, Keith, you're exactly right.
Liberalism, feminism, especially radical feminism, has certainly afflicted white women more than black women and Asian women, etc.
And so that's problematic.
Of course, it still doesn't justify violating God's natural order with regards to choosing your mate.
But I'm glad we had a couple of minutes to wrap that up.
I've got to take a break, everybody.
Thanks to Keith Alexander for his services this first hour.
I'll be back with Reverend Ted Pike and much more as the program continues this evening.