Dec. 17, 2016 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
The Political Cesspool, going across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program.
And here to guide you through the murky waters of the political cesspool is your host, James Edwards.
The hall, the tree, the stocking, maybe rushing things, but deck the halls again.
All right, everybody.
Welcome back to the second hour of tonight's live broadcast.
You know it's got to be close to Christmas with this kind of music, and it is December the 17th.
We're live unrehearsed and uncensored here on the Liberty News Radio Network.
Days away, right?
Hey, Keith, I got a trivia question.
Who's singing right there?
Turn it back up a little bit.
Let him hear this.
Oh, Ethel Mermon.
Nope.
Who?
I can't believe.
I've never heard an answer to anything that you didn't know.
I've never heard a question you didn't know the answer to.
Well, you found it now.
I cannot believe that.
That's Angela Lansbury.
Oh, okay.
Angela Lansbury.
Yeah, she didn't sing a lot, but that's probably why you were stumped.
Well, Ethel Mermon sounded like that and sang a lot more.
Anyone who did there's no business like show business.
Well, Angela Lansbury did voice Mrs. Potts in Beauty and the Beast.
And so once you have a daughter, you know that.
But Murder She Wrote, that's right, Eddie over there, not mic'd up.
I love her more as a serious actress rather than a singer, but I guess they all do a little bit of everything.
Well, I'll tell you, I watched more ways than one.
I watched Murder She Wrote with my grandmother all the time.
So I became a big, look, I'll say it.
I liked Angela Lansbury.
I like Murder She Wrote for what it was.
But she didn't think she was hot.
I didn't think that, but I tell you, I have precious memories of watching that with my grandmother.
And, you know, she's dame Angela Lansbury now, like Sir Elton John.
They just give away night ships to anyone, I guess.
But I did like Angela Lansbury.
She's still alive.
She's in her 90s.
Anyway, very quickly, before we talk about this New York Times article, so you know, folks, I think a week or two ago, we made an announcement that I had been interviewed by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Serge Kovaleski.
Pulitzer Surprises don't impress me, as I said.
It's just an award that folks give to each other that are in the press.
But if you're going to do an interview, you might as well do it for a Pulitzer Prize winner of the biggest newspaper in the world.
And I did, and the article was published last Sunday, page A1.
I can't think of any more high-priced real estate in print than page A1 of the Sunday New York Times.
We're going to talk about it, but first, Keith wanted to wrap up some things we were talking about in the last segment.
Yeah, I was talking before we had the break about what the real reality of racial differences in intelligence is.
We have this thing called the Knowledge Bowl every Saturday morning in Memphis, and it has two different high schools.
You know, sometimes a public versus a private school, sometimes two private schools, sometimes two public schools.
Well, the one I saw had First Assembly Christian School versus Overton High School, which is part of the Memphis City School.
Break down those two schools.
FACS was a segregation academy founded back in the early 70s when the busing order was handed down by judge Robert Mcrae of the federal bench in Memphis.
Overton HIGH School used to be where Johnny Newman, the uh ace, uh leading scorer for the NCAA in 1971, played at.
OLD MISS went to high school.
They used to have a really good basketball program.
Then it became the Performing ARTS HIGH School OF Memphis and it um, you know, basically has kids that have aspirations of uh having some type of career in show business one way or another.
Well, they were on and fac, with these little, you know, non-privileged white kids coming from working class and lower middle class backgrounds, beat Overton.
Uh, no see, it wasn't Overton, it was Catholic HIGH School, Catholic HIGH School, which is a Catholic high school that is now part of the Jubilee Schools initiative for black and Hispanic students.
Uh and FACS won 385 to 20.
But it came out when they were asking these kids about what they were doing and what their aspirations and dreams were.
All of these kids that were attending Memphis Catholic have internships and special jobs to get them special inside tracks for jobs at these big corporations headquartered in Memphis, like International Paper or Federal Express or Autozone nothing like that for the little poor um, working class and lower middle class white kids at FAC.
But then when it came to actually answering things in this kind of uh intellectual contest, those kids win 385 to 20.
all right let me break this down so basically what you're telling me is we talked about this movie at the last segment of the last hour you're telling me meanwhile in the real world based upon something you saw in a knowledge poll featuring two high schools competing in an intellectual competition against one another that the predominantly white private christian school beat the predominantly black school 300 to 20.
385 to 20, 385 to 20 in terms of points, but it was the students from the black school that had all of the nice internships lined up.
Yeah right, they're up here being pressed by affirmative action.
I I, I wish I could have been one of those white kids.
I asked him about things like that.
Jobs just said, no, we're not the beneficiaries of affirmative action like our peers over here at Memphis Catholic.
Well, you're victims of it.
At least those kids from the white school got the win of the Knowledge Bowl, because i'm telling you, if they had gone up against this woman in the movie about they would, they would have been the ones getting beat 400 to nothing.
I can tell you that.
Remember, they had the one about the black debate team.
I remember.
I forget what that was.
Oh no, this is the truth.
Well, what Keith said is the truth too.
But yes, do you remember that we covered this on the show?
If you had told me you were going to bring that up, I would have looked into it so I could tell you exactly who it was.
But There was, oh my gosh, there was some black college, I think it might have been Towson.
It was a, whatever it was.
Towson State.
Towson State, maybe.
And it was a predominantly black college.
And they won, I think they beat like Harvard or something.
Some Ivy League school.
They beat them.
They threw all debating decorum out the window.
They beat them in a debate.
How they scored this thing, I'd sure like to know, but it was basically them just yelling cuss words, and they won the debate, and then they had them on the news, and they couldn't even string a single sentence together.
They're portrayed in the movie like they're the biggest eggheads in the world.
You know, like I said, they're like – They started rapping and screaming cuss words, and they won the debate against the Harvard debate.
Yeah, they're all Steve Urkel on Prozac in the movie, but, you know, in the reality, it was something totally different.
And then they had another one with some little country school called Munford High School going against Memphis.
You're back to the knowledge bowl.
Yeah, back to the knowledge bowl.
Tell them real quick.
And again, very quickly.
These little unprivileged, poor, working class and lower middle class white kids from Munford High School were mopping the floor.
And Mumford, for those of you not in the Memphis area, is a rural, rural country school.
Yeah, and not a Tony White suburb with damn communities or anything.
No, it's poor as a church mouse.
And so, okay.
Well, all right.
Well, there you go.
Reality.
That's why this has to be fake news because we saw the real news and it wasn't anything like hidden figures.
Well, the new movie.
Catch it if you want to.
Go to a theater if you want to find out about the black women scientists who put men on the moon.
We could have done it without them.
All right, we'll be back.
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Hello, everyone.
James Edwards here.
Are you sick and tired of liberals and race hustlers and the media calling you a racist just because you oppose Obama's policies?
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And now back to tonight's show.
Welcome back, everybody, to the Political Sessple.
James Edwards, Keith Alexander.
By the way, just got a message in from Paul Kersey.
We all know Paul Kersey.
He runs the website Stuff Black People Don't Like, but he also does some freelance work for VDARE and for American Renaissance.
Paul Kersey has written an article, The Truth About Hidden Figures, for VDAIRE.com.
It breaks down the whole thing about the real history behind this untold true story, they say, that will be coming.
Never happen here near you.
True story that never happened.
Go to my Twitter, folks.
I just retweeted the link at JamesEdwards TPC.
Obviously, we don't have it up on our official website yet, thepoliticalspool.org, but it is there.
And also during that last commercial break, we looked up that debate story we were telling you about.
It was the Towson debate team that won the national championship by doing a lot of screaming and rapping, but it wasn't against Harvard.
It was another university.
But nevertheless.
And the name of that movie came out in 2007 was The Great Debaters.
Which had nothing to do with this debate, but it's the same type of situation.
All right.
So one thing that's happened since our last broadcast a week ago, Saturday, was that I have been featured in an article in the Sunday edition of the New York Times.
Regular listeners of this show know that I have very little patience for the media.
I typically reject any and all interview requests unless it's live TV or radio.
I have not done a print interview in 18 months, going back to the summer of 2015, turning down some of the biggest outlets in the world, including the New York Times on previous occasions, even this year.
But I did end that zero-tolerant streak last week, did an interview with Serge Kovaleski.
Part of that interview, I was not the subject of this piece on the alt-right, but I was included in it.
Overall pieces about the alt-right, but it appeared in page A1 of last Sunday's New York Times.
And I'll just read a couple.
Keith has read the whole thing.
We have a link to the entire article at our website if you want to read it for yourself.
I'm just going to read a couple of excerpts from it.
The deceptively benign phrase alt-right now peppers the national conversation, often in ways that play down its fundamental beliefs, which have long been considered intolerant and hateful.
The term's recent prevalence corresponds with the rise of President-elect Donald J. Trump.
Alt-right leaders say his inflammatory statements and Twitter habits in the campaign energized, even validated their movement.
But the alt-right movement is hardly monolithic, despite a well-publicized gathering last month in Washington, one that might have been mistaken for just another corporate conference were it not for the white nationalist sentiments and the Nazi salutes.
The factions within the ranks can differ on any number of subjects, white supremacy versus white nationalism, for example.
James Edwards, a far-right talk radio host who describes himself as a European-American advocate and who interviewed the president-elect's son Donald Trump Jr. last year, or this year, wrote in an email that the alt-right movement was, quote, a group of marauding conservatives who reject both the failures of the establishment and the false gods of political correctness.
Race is the united factor, Mr. Edwards wrote.
One fundamental element of the alt-right that brings the disparate factions together is the awareness of the reality of race and the need for European Americans to have organizations and spokespeople that explicitly advocate for our unique group interests.
Again, you can read the whole thing at our website, thepoliticalaccessible.org.
I would say this before turning it to Keith, the entire article is total garbage, total fish rap, as bad as anything you would naturally expect the New York Times to produce.
However, the two paragraphs that dealt with me were actually fair and objective.
The writer, I will give him credit at least for that.
He was very fair and a straight shooter with his dealings with me myself as I as I describe myself.
And so I guess I ended my vow of silence with the media by figuring that nothing I could say would damage Trump now that he's the president-elect, and so let's just let it ride.
The press may have thought I was open for business after this piece appeared because we received quite a few interview requests this week that were all turned down, although the Huffington Post did quote me using my quote from this article in a featured piece that they wrote.
I guess you can do that, or even if you can't, they did.
Nevertheless, break it down, Keith.
You read the whole thing.
Take it away.
Well, there's a reason that there are only two paragraphs devoted to James Edwards, and that's because James Edwards did not make a fool of himself, which is what they are always breathlessly hoping for, the mainstream or establishment media, when they take or interview somebody from our side of the tracks on these types of issues.
Now, the person they decided to focus on, I'm not going to name any names, but he lives in a trailer and a pretty dilapidated trailer at that, wearing a t-shirt with his chubby wife and running around in a front yard, basically fitting all the stereotypes.
That's the one they want to focus on.
They don't want to come to James Edwards' nice middle-class home or mine or anyone else's.
Well, I wouldn't let him.
And listen, I mean, living, look, all that stuff that you're saying.
But see, then it is endearing.
It's endearing to me living in the South.
I don't have a problem with that whatsoever.
But I know you don't have that.
But it's not endearing to the average American elsewhere, let's say, particularly on the coast, not the normal subscriber to the New York Times.
They're playing to a stereotype, and it's not intended to be endearing.
It's not intended to be positive in any way, but that's what they did in this article.
That's why they do that, and that's why that particular guy got several, you know, a lot more than two paragraphs of coverage and why James only got.
Well, and of course, it's not a competition.
We can get as much as we want it if we'd allow ourselves to do that.
But the thing is, though, James, and don't miss this point, because this is really important.
They do this because they want to defame people that think like us.
Okay, that's the entire purpose of it.
And when they stumble across somebody like you who is articulate and not extreme and says, you know, things in a rational and intelligent way, they move quickly on to the next subject.
At least that's my observation.
Well, right.
And of course, I didn't even grant a full-fledged interview.
I agreed to be interviewed only via email where I would have a transcript of the back and forth.
And again, to his credit, at least in those two paragraphs out of the article, I was treated fairly.
I was treated fine.
But the whole article itself is, of course, the all right's nothing but Nazis, Nazis, Nazis, swastika, Nazi salute.
People living in trailers, people living down in the hollow, you know, looking like down in the boondocks at Billy Joe song.
You know, that's what they want.
This is what you're missing people on the left coast and on the east coast by not traveling through flyovers.
And again, to me, that's what people in flyover country are like.
I'd probably, you live in a trailer, I'll probably get along with you.
I can probably relate to you.
But I see what you're saying.
They put that as the illustration of the entire piece because that doesn't play.
They think that's a joke.
They think that's something that's going to make it.
And they want to make our movement a joke.
See, that's the whole thing.
If the people are a joke, then their thoughts are a joke too.
And that's, you know, again, more fake news.
They could have gone to Richard Spencer's mom's house.
Yeah, right.
They've done that.
They probably went to it, and that's why they decided to try to get drive-a-wedge between Richard and his mother because they didn't want to show somebody living in the tony environs of Whitefish, Montana, as having anything to do with this movement.
But if they can find somebody in a dilapidated mobile home, then that's who they want.
Well, nevertheless, the entire article itself was just a throwaway, disgusting piece collaborated on by no less than four of the New York Times' finest.
It was a collaborative piece that was months in the making.
I know one of the people that was interviewed was interviewed in November for that piece that came out just last week.
So it was several weeks in the making, and four people were working on it.
The finished product was bad, bad, bad, but two good paragraphs anyway, and I was happy to be included in it.
Hey, thanks for your services tonight.
Keith, we'll see you next week for the Christmas Eve Show.
Okay.
Keith is between the ditches.
Eddie will be.
Pursuing liberty, using the Constitution as our guide.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
With news this hour from LibertyNewsDaily.com, I'm William Grigg.
Since Democrats hold a supermajority in the California state legislature, they are in a position to enact legislation on an urgency basis, and many legislators are preparing to do so in anticipation of the Trump administration.
By passing urgency bills, Democrats in Sacramento predict they will be able to act fast, counterpunching in real time if Republican President-elect Donald Trump signs federal laws or adopts policies they perceive as hostile to California, reports the Desert Sun newspaper.
Legislative Democrats hope to demonstrate the old adage that there's strength in numbers when it comes to issues over which they are at odds with Trump, including the environment, health care, and particularly immigration.
On December 5th, they launched a preemptive strike, opening the new legislative session by proposing two bills to boost legal aid for undocumented immigrants in response to Trump's threats of deportation.
One would train public defenders in immigration law.
The other would fund lawyers to represent undocumented immigrants facing deportation.
Both are urgency bills that require support from two-thirds of the legislature to pass.
You are listening to LibertyNewsDaily.com.
Henry Kissinger has expressed approval of Donald Trump's selection of ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson to serve as Secretary of State.
I think it's a good appointment.
I pay no attention to this argument that he is too friendly with Russia, Kissinger stated at a Manhattan gathering of the Committee of 100, an organization promoting closer relations between the U.S. and China.
For commentary and insights on a troubled world, visit Joel Skousen's WorldAffairsBrief.com.
For LibertyNewsDaily.com, I'm William Grigg.
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Oh, yeah, wanna be by my side.
Oh yeah, oh, now it's finally time.
It's time to jump back into the political cesspool.
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Run, run, Rudolph.
Ron, don't leave you far behind.
Run, run, Rudolph.
Santa's gotta make it to town.
Santa making Harry, tell him he can take the freeway down.
Run, run, LaRudolph, cause I'm reeling like a merry-go-round.
A lot of racist music on the air tonight with the Ronettes and Chuck Berry.
Hey, Eddie Bombardy Miller in with us now.
Keith had the first half of the show.
Eddie has the last half.
And Eddie was over at my house a little earlier this afternoon.
We rode to the radio station together tonight, met Keith for dinner along the way, and we talked about that a little bit earlier this evening.
But as you know, Eddie, yesterday was my wife's birthday.
Now I know you are, Eddie says he didn't know that.
Well, you didn't go to the website yesterday because I put up a little announcement about it, put up a little tweet about it.
Well, every time that an anniversary or birthday comes up, I like to retell the story about how we met.
And Eddie, you probably spend as much time with my kids as anybody on the staff, I guess.
God knows, I love them.
I was telling them stories tonight.
You know what?
They were mesmerized with my story.
Eddie came over to the house at about 3.30.
We hung out at the house for a little while, got in the car, went and met Keith for dinner, and then we came on over to the radio station.
But yeah, so Eddie was singing them.
Eddie was singing songs to him.
My kids were dancing.
And it's just all about family here in the Cesspool.
And anyway, so my wife had a birthday yesterday.
And again, it's just amazing.
I met her when she was 15 years old.
I met her at church.
My pastor comes over.
I was too old to be in the youth group at that time.
I was too old to be in the youth group anymore, but I could drive.
So my pastor came over.
I've told this story 100 times on this show, so indulge me, folks.
Bear with me.
I like to hear it.
Pastor comes over.
I was living at home at the time.
And he says, we need you to help us haul some equipment up to the youth camp for church.
They were having it at Nathan Bedford Forest Park in Tennessee.
And I said, sure, Pastor, I can do that.
No problem.
And I'd get there at the church the next day.
And they load me up.
James, James, one more thing.
We had a couple of extra people sign up that are visiting.
And could you haul two passengers along with the luggage?
And one of them was my wife.
And that was it.
The rest is history.
We've been inseparable ever since.
She was 15 years old.
That was 2001.
And since then, of course, we got married in 2006.
That was two years after I started the radio show.
Of course, now we have a son and a daughter, or a daughter and a son, I guess you could say, because our daughter's the older of the two.
Lots of memories.
Lots of things have happened since that day.
And it's just so special.
So special.
And I tell these people all the time, there's so many single young men in the movement, for lack of a better term.
I don't like to call it the movement.
It makes it sound sort of ominous.
But there's so many young men that share our ideas, and I don't know if they don't understand or what, but they're looking for women that they can marry.
And I tell you, you've got to go to church.
They're at church.
One of my best friends said that he met more women in church than anywhere.
I have to tell a part of my little story.
The first time I saw little Danny was, you weren't married.
It's been years ago.
That's right, because we were together for five years before we even got married.
She was with me for my campaign.
Of course, you and I met Eddie in 2002 when I ran for state representative.
That was 2002 when I ran for state representative.
And of course, she was helping me with that campaign.
God, that was fun.
We had some battles.
We had some physical battles there.
Well, I mean, even my bottom line, he was 11 or 12 years old, my grandson then.
He was ready to duke it out.
But, you know, that was really fun.
It really was.
And it never actually came.
I'm sure our scribes at these human rights groups are listening.
We never actually, there was never any blows thrown out.
Yeah, these were the love kisses we threw.
But the first time, I'll never remember.
The first time I saw Danny, she wasn't too fond of Pappy.
Well, you were at the rectangular.
You were a little eccentric.
You're an acquired taste.
Yeah, the gun range.
You were at the gun range.
I came in and we used to have meetings at the gun range.
And she looked at me, and you could tell she came up.
She didn't want no part of Pappy.
I was pretty, I guess she sensed that I was kind of wild, really.
But you were there, and I think you had part ownership or working in a hamburger place inside the gun range.
Well, that's a whole convoluted story.
So there's a local gun range, Austin Farley, who was one of my original founding fathers at the radio show, I guess you could say.
He was buddies with the gun range owner, and so he acquired a stake of the restaurant for us.
So he kind of ran the local restaurant there for a little bit.
But anyway, that was short-lived.
But you know, Danny, Danny, I guess I was kind of putting out some bad vibes, man, because he didn't want no part of me.
But like I say, I grew up, you know, there's nobody on earth I love more than Danny right now.
And the kids, I love coming over here.
I love to come to James's house every Saturday just so I can be with the kids.
They're growing so fast.
And you would not believe how sweet they are.
They're so precious.
Well, here's another thing I'll say about this.
And so many people are scared to be who they are around women.
I can guarantee you, I will guarantee you that women, even beautiful women, you know, my wife was a promotional model for some of the biggest companies in the world when we first were dating.
And then later in our first few years of marriage, before, as I wrote on Twitter yesterday, gave her the promotion to become a full-time mom.
But she was working for a lot of these companies.
And listen, women will be much more attracted to you if you're confident, assertive, aggressive, dominant, be who you are.
I know a lot of guys who will pretend not to be a conservative around women because they think that's what they want to hear.
I don't know how far that really gets you, but it's certainly not the way I played it because, as you know, I started dating her in 2001, 2002.
She was out campaigning for me when I was running for state representative and was everywhere I went, knocking on doors, passing out brochures.
That was when she was 16 years old and out there working for me as I ran for office.
And of course, I started the show in 2004.
We got married in 06.
So she's been there with me for everything in my political evolution except for the Buchanan campaign, which was in 2000.
Other than that, she's been with me every step of the way.
And it's certainly never been anything that has concerned her.
In fact, she wants me to do what I love and wants me to do what I believe in and supports me 100%.
Don't ever forget that.
They are out there.
The point is, they are out there, guys.
They are out there.
And what one man can do, another can do.
If I can do it, you can do it.
One of my favorite parts of the world, I don't know.
I'm pretty special.
I love that Confederate battle flag that James had at the wedding.
I forgot about it.
I didn't forget about that.
I hadn't thought about that in a while.
We had a flag.
We had a Confederate flag at our wedding.
Yes, we sure did.
That's where when I first met Bill Rowland in person, I had heard him on the radio.
And Winston, you know, Winston was my favorite radio personality for a while.
And I started, you know, I listened to the political society before I came on board.
But, you know, Nashley Winston was at the wedding.
Bill Rowland was there.
Austin Farley was there.
And all the staff art was there.
Yep.
Everybody that was a part of the show in 2006 was at my wedding.
And that was right before, right as Eddie was being eased into the lineup.
And I'll tell you, those were the good.
We had some wonderful time.
You know what?
I can tell one more story.
One of my favorite times, out of the hundreds of favorite times, I guess, we had a ball out in the Eld Beanfield radio station.
But one of my favorite times, people, you long-term listeners, you've probably heard this story before.
But Pappy used to be pretty much of a gambler back in my other life several years ago.
And I used to love, God, I used to love to gamble.
I used to walk in the casino like at 3 or 4 o'clock in the morning, and I'd hear the slots going, and I hear people screaming, heartache, heartache.
And I thought, this must be what heaven's like.
But I wouldn't, I'm telling you what, if you don't want to become addicted, never start shooting craps.
Now, I love to play poker, Lord knows, but there's no game like craps.
Well, I had roll up, it was a long, you know, a regular gambler down some of the casinos in Tuning of Mississippi.
Now, I built up about $1,800 worth of comps.
This is like 10 years ago.
Maybe more than that.
But me and James, and we tried to get the Chiefs to go down there, but he weaseled out and didn't go.
It was me and James and Winston went down and we took the wives.
Originally, it was supposed to be just a cesspool crew, but the wives would not hear anything about that, especially Winston.
He was determined to get his wife in on it.
So anyway, we all went down, me, my wife, my daughter and grandson, James, Danny, and Winston and his wife.
And man, we ran up, you know what?
We ran up a bill close to $2,000.
We had the concierge in there.
Is that what they call him?
The head honcho?
The Mater D, I think is what you call him.
And yeah, he was in there, as I always like to tell it, with an organ grinder and a monkey.
And he had, he brought in a portable fire pit and was doing tricks and swallowing fire.
And he was a fire breather.
I don't know.
What's all that stuff you poured out?
It was flame.
Yeah, I know what you're talking about.
We'll think about it during the break.
I know exactly what you're talking about.
I love this.
It's one of my favorite stories.
Anyway, no, we've had some good times.
We didn't pay a dollar for it because Eddie gambled so much.
We got him all the way.
Anyway, all right.
Well, folks, listen, I did an ode to my wife on her birthday, which was yesterday.
Check it out at thepolitical Suppestpool.org.
Got some pictures when we first got married and find out who we are.
More recent.
It's all about family.
We'll be back right after this.
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My sister began smoking because of friends.
I don't think any less spurred because she smokes, but it's been really hard because I know she could have done better if she hadn't chose to smoke.
She's trying to quit, actually, right now, but it's a really hard process, and she's down to a couple of cigarettes a day, so she's doing really good, but it's been a really hard thing in my family, actually.
It's caused a lot of problems.
My sister's smoking definitely hurt my parents.
I'd come home sometimes.
My mom would just be in tears.
Smoking hurts a lot of people, most of whom don't even smoke.
I definitely think my religion has played a role in me not smoking.
I'm a Christian, and I believe I'm better because I don't smoke.
Smoking hurts your friends, your family.
It's not worth it in the long run.
And you may not realize it now if you are smoking, but you will.
Smoking.
If you think you're old enough to start, you're smart enough to stop.
a public service message from this station and the church of jesus christ of latter-day saints welcome back
On the show, call us on James' Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
Here to stay is the newburg.
He sings a last song as we go along.
Walking into winter wonderland.
Eddie, what do you say?
Mean you just take out early at night, let Sam keep playing these songs.
I'm ready to roll, son.
I'm ready to roll some bones, baby.
How long would it take to get to Tunica from here?
Oh, will you drive it or me?
Someboy over here has a kind of a heavy foot.
Papy's seen enough wrecks where his foot ain't quite so heavy no more.
Well, but that would be great.
It would be nice if we could go there and make a little change for the suspense.
We got to do something to keep on the air.
Sure do.
I'm telling you.
Hey, one more quick thing about my wife.
I think anyone who's married to a beautiful woman likes to brag about how beautiful she is.
And my wife is most certainly that.
But as you know, Eddie, and this gets back to the whole family thing, no one could have known.
No one can know what kind of mother someone will eventually turn out to be, I don't think.
I mean, I guess you could have an idea, but I could have never guessed in my wildest dream that anyone was capable of being the kind of mother that she is.
And so I'm just so lucky.
I remember it every day, but especially on birthdays and anniversaries.
I'm not an easy guy to live with.
I mean, I'm a difficult person.
You got that right.
But Patty loves you anyway, though.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you.
Hey, speaking of staying on the air, I got to ask you folks, do you want to treat yourself to an excellent Christmas present while also helping to keep the political Cesspool radio show on the air into 2017?
Send us some crap sheet money.
We'll double it.
Triple it.
Hey, no, no, no.
In all seriousness, in all seriousness, you want to get a great incentive gift?
You want to keep us on the air?
Then take advantage of our offer for anyone who contributes $100 or more before the end of the month.
This is a win-win thing here.
The incentive being offered during this special Christmas promotion is the book, Downtown White Police, Demonizing the Alpha Cop, Glorifying Thugs, and Militarizing Law Enforcement.
That was written by our very own criminal justice correspondent and former police officer Jim Lancia, so he knows what he's talking about.
Downtown White Police.
Now, we've talked about this before, but I want you to listen to what I'm about to say because as many times as Jim's been on the show, as much as we talk about this book, still pretty incredible to me.
Jim was 18 years old when he was hired by the Bridgeport, Connecticut Police Department.
And during his career, he patrolled one of the most dangerous neighborhoods, not in Connecticut, but in all of America, during the height of the crack epidemic.
During his epic career, he once carried out seven felony arrests in a single week, all with just a Billy club and a six shooter.
He's the real deal.
I've talked to him privately a few times.
He's the real deal.
And he documents this career in his book, Downtown White Police.
So again, folks, hey, we got to have your help to stay on the air.
We got to have your help to stay on the air.
And while you're helping us stay on the air, why not get this great book to boot?
And you can do that tonight.
If you've not yet contributed, and by the way, we had a pretty good week.
We're not where we need to be, but we had a better week last week than we did the first week.
But we need your help.
We're at the halfway point of this fundraising drive.
It ends on December 31st.
So if you've not yet given, and it all helps, $5, $10, $25, $50, but $100 or more, and you get Jim Lancia's book, Downtown White Police, donate now.
You can do it at thepolitical Cesspool.org.
And in addition to keeping us on the air, of course, Jim, we're going to pay Jim for the book, and we give a little tithe to the network.
So you're helping not just the political cesspool, but our friends and comrades as well.
So we need you to do it.
$100 or more tonight.
You get the book, and I guarantee you, you're going to enjoy it.
But I'll tell you, you know, Eddie was in Vietnam, did two, we talk about that a lot too, two tours of service in Vietnam.
It'd be nice if you didn't forget it some kind of way.
Did two tours of service.
He was a combat medic.
They fought that war the wrong way, Eddie.
If they had sent just you and Jim into Vietnam with billy clubs, I guarantee you that would have turned out way different.
Instead of a medical bag.
You send to Bombardier Eddie Miller and Lancia with a couple of six shooters and billy clubs, and Charlie is done.
I'm telling you.
Wait at night when you're sleeping, Charlie Kong comes just creeping around.
You remember that old song?
I didn't know that was about Charlie.
Charlie Kong.
I thought it was about Poison Ivy.
Well, it kind of got turned around a little bit, redone a little bit in the knob.
Charlie, he's a bad dude, son.
Yeah.
Do you think you could have taken him with a Billy Club?
If you can find him.
The trouble is, you never knew who Charlie was.
If you went into the towns with a little bit of furlough, the guy who's serving up your drinks in the bar could be the VC at night.
Slip out and you never know who the hell you're fighting.
They all look the same.
You know, luckily, y'all tell people I didn't inflict the wounds.
I heal the wounds.
And that's what you did in a career through nursing, a combat medic to nursing.
And you're a man of the people, Eddie.
You're a true humanitarian.
Listen, I'm not joking.
You want to think I'm joking.
Look, look at what Eddie is.
We were talking about Richard Spencer's mother in the first hour.
And the so-called human rights group who is, I don't want to say terrorizing her, but I mean, certainly applying a lot of pressure on her.
All right, let's compare what this so-called human rights group has done compared to what the political cesspool, one of the most, according to the same degenerate liars, one of the most notorious, racist, evil shows in the world.
Let's compare our very young Eddie Miller to these human rights thugs.
Now, Eddie, two tours of duty in Vietnam, served honorably, honorable discharge, career as a medic, and now in retirement, runs three marathons a year to benefit children afflicted with catastrophic diseases.
Now, that's just one of our staff members.
I would put Eddie's portfolio, Vietnam, career nurse, running marathons for kids now, even though he's 70.
I would put Eddie's credentials against any of these so-called do-gooders that are up there trying to crush Richard's mother for simply giving birth to a good man.
I tell you, too gracious to me.
I really appreciate that, James.
I really do.
You know, I'm not going off on a St. Jude rant here, but there are many, many needs in the world.
There's the Cancer Society, there's Arthur Society, there's LeBonner Children's Hospital here in Memphis.
It treats nothing but children.
He can't do it all.
I've seen up to St. Jude.
It's a supernatural place.
I've been there, and all I can tell you is God Almighty is there.
Why he allows the cancer to keep going.
I don't know.
We'll have to talk to him when we get to heaven.
But I do know that St. Jude Children's Research Hospital has done a lot.
And this isn't a commercial, but I'll wind this up quick.
When St. Jude opened its doors in 1962, Danny Thomas opened the doors here in Memphis, Tennessee.
The cure rate for cancer was like getting bit in the face with a cobra.
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia was like the biggest number one killer.
Like two children out of 100 survived.
Now we have like 90 out of 100 surviving for that one thing.
So that's why I'm so driven.
Well, you know what?
That's right, Sam.
We have blacks, yellows.
We have children that come from all over the world.
Not only just all over the United States, we have children that come from all you name the country.
We got them.
We have what they call the flag room at St. Jude.
It's gigantic.
We have flags from every nation in the world.
I tell people when I go into St. Jude, I hang my political hat at the door.
I hang my religious hat at the door.
It's about the kids, all about the kids, and nothing but the kids.
And, you know, like Sam said, we have children from all over the world.
I hear that FedEx, Federal Express will fly children in need from any point in the 48 states.
And we support them at three hots in the cop.
We have about five homes here in Memphis.
But I'll tell you what, the political cesspool and Liberty News Radio has been helpful.
Sam Bushman has contributed my St. Jude fund.
James Edward has contributed.
Many of you wonderful people on our listeners have contributed in my name.
I certainly appreciate that.
I really do.
It's just wonderful.
There's so many causes, but it's great.
God bless Political Cesspool.
God bless Liberty News.
And God bless St. Jude.
Well, and God bless you, Eddie.
And this is the kind of people we are, and this is the kind of audience that we have.
And of course, when you contribute to the political assessment, we haven't contributed radio program funds to Eddie's endeavors, although I wouldn't have to.
Yes, you have.
Well, we have had our people, our listeners, have done that on their own volition, and we are thankful for that.
And we have certainly promoted it on this radio, and we'll continue to do that.
But when you donate to the political cesspool, one thing we're proud about is that everything that you give goes to keeping this show on the air.
And again, the incentive this quarter is Jim Lance's book, Downtown White Police.
He writes, growing up on the streets that he patrolled as a poor white male with no privilege has the credibility that's worth listening to.
Along with his truthful social and political analysis, Jim Lancey incorporates his real-life police experiences to reveal to the public the true side of race and policing, which shows a much different picture than what the public is spoon-fed by an agenda-driven media today.
He also uses his exciting and emotional experiences to prove what police officers have to face today does not necessitate the need for fundamental changes in law enforcement, such as militarization.
Downtown White Police discloses not only the disturbing fact that our police are becoming militarized, but also explains why this troubling trend is occurring and how race, religion, immigration, Black Lives Matter, and anti-police rhetoric are being used as a catalyst to accelerate it.
What's more, Jim Lancey reveals how the media, the entertainment industry, politically correct politicians, and anti-white social justice warriors are shamelessly hyping the news while hiding the truth about crime statistics regarding race and creating a false paradigm that demonizes the white alpha cop and glorifies criminals.
Hey, folks, $100 or more of the book is yours.
Help us stay on the air and get a good book in return.
With all the stuff in the news in the last few months, over the course of the last couple of years with Black Lives Matter and cops, how about hearing it from one of the good guys, a pro-white cop now retired who's on our team?