March 10, 2018 - 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, known 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 Edward.
Now, wait.
Welcome back to the third and final hour of tonight's live broadcast of the Political Cesspool.
Can we top Evan McLaren and Paul Fromm?
Well, maybe we can because we've got Jack Ryan in the third and final hour, and that is Jack, TPC's cultural correspondent, Ryan.
And he's going to talk to us tonight about dating tips for our young men.
And maybe that has something to do with tonight's intro to Jack's segment.
American Woman, Jack, how are you?
I'm doing very good.
Greetings to you, sir.
Very good.
In and outside of Chicago, beautiful place.
Great place, but with some rather rough stuff women.
So that's it.
Lead-in one was the American Woman.
So I've got some tips for our young men.
How are you doing?
We've got it out there.
Things are not going so well in the life.
I did get some tips last few weeks ago to say, take a partner dance.
Begin a good salsa dancer.
Or my dance is Siroc.
It's a form of swing dance and stuff.
So my dance coming in there is to warn our young men to be on guard from these bad American women.
And I'm not talking about the southern women that we met, Courtney from Alabama, your wife or things, but we've got some bad women that are out there.
They're doing bad stuff.
They're marching on the Washington Mall, dressed up as vaginas and things like that.
I'm living in the city of Chicago where Billy Rodham Clinton is from.
So that's about as bad as it could get.
So I'm from our young men.
You never know where Hillary's from.
Is she from Chicago?
Is she from Arkansas?
Is she from New York?
I mean, where is she?
She's from Chicago, and then she went to Yale Law School.
My version is like, why do they want to send a woman to law school to teach them how to argue?
Most women want to argue flying on their own.
Like, why do you have to send them to law school to teach them to argue more?
They should get some more.
It's like a Middle Eastern person sent them to terrorist school.
So anyway, I have been in the roughest places with the roughest criminals and gangsters and stuff, but I've been with the roughest women.
So I'm here tonight to try to give some tips to our young man to try to do a little bit better.
And so that's my theme tonight.
Well, listen to that, ladies and gentlemen.
He's been with the roughest, and he's going to tell you how to be the toughest, Jack Ryan, our cultural correspondent.
And Jack is a big hit on this show in the current year.
I'm telling you, people, eat Jack up.
And we need to have Jack on more.
Maybe we could do that next week and have him on for more than 15 minutes.
What do you say?
But yeah, okay, so Jack, American Woman is the cover.
Now, very quickly, very quickly, before we get back to the theme of tonight, which is dating tips for our young men, let's go into the book and the movie recommendations.
Let's get that through and then let's get back to the topic at hand.
Okay, so my book of recommendation is Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenna.
He has one piece.
And I'm 25% Russian.
I've got a Russian background.
So Anna Karenna is one of the greatest novels ever done.
So I want to recommend that book.
And my family's land is on Vronsky's estate.
They played tennis.
So that's there.
So that's the book.
That's my book recommendation.
And the movie recommendation is Peter Pan.
It's 1993 Jeremy Brett.
And it's very faithful to the original Jam Berry's Peter Pan.
It's a beautiful romantic.
I would recommend this to you and your children that it's romantic.
It's Wendy's version of her life and Peter Pan.
It's Victorian England's best, tremendous movie.
And that's what I recommend.
Well, so there's the book, Karinina by Leo Count, Leo Toy Story, if I may.
And Peter Pan, of course, we like Walt Disney.
Walt Disney was hashtag RGuy.
Walt Disney's Peter Pan is pretty good, too.
Hey, what about the movie, Corinna, starring, what's her name?
Oh, please help me.
She was in Pirates of the Caribbean.
Kiara Knightley, did we like that one, Jack?
I confess I'm not familiar with the movie.
I haven't seen it either.
There you go.
So we'll both be the one.
They would revisionists to try to make it pro-Muslim or some that they were homosexuals, some stuff.
But the Tolstoy's Anna Karen is a fantastic one.
There's so many reasons that I like it.
And one of the other things that I like, okay, I like partner games.
That's something they think that they can do.
Another thing, and it wasn't Anna Karena, is that they would go ice skating.
And they dress up in formal clothes and go ice skating with men and women there.
So that's another thing that men and women can do together.
We've got the Winter Olympic, you go ice skating, dressed up, and that's something that we can do.
I can count the things that I like to do with women on my left hand and still have my middle finger available to flip off these anti-white like ones.
But there's another thing you can do.
You can go ice skating.
You can go partner dancing.
That's something that you can go.
You can do there.
So that's something I recommend.
Well, you can go ice skating in Chicago.
We can't do that.
We can't really do that in Memphis.
We certainly can't do that down in the deep south.
You can't do that where Courtney's from in Mobile, Alabama.
You can't go ice skating in Mobile, but we can still take advantage of Jack's book and movie recommendations.
And he recommends the book, Anna Karenina, but not the movie, but with Karen Knightley.
Well, if I see it, maybe if I see it, I might recommend it.
Well, maybe we'll see it before next week.
We can watch it together before next week.
We can watch it before next week.
And Peter Pan starring Jeremy Sumter.
Jason Isaacs, Jason Isaacs, I think, is a member of the tribe, but he did well as we're going to have to carry you over to the next segment, I guess, Jack.
He's an actor.
It's a beautiful movie.
It's good, and it's romantic.
It's faithful.
It's not hateful.
So my recommendation is to get Netflix and start a film club and try to get people together to watch good movies.
Don't just subscribe to what's coming down.
I've got this device.
It's called TV Be Gone and you can zap it, that you can kill the TV that's coming on and you've got it.
And otherwise, like, you know, just come out.
And so we shouldn't lose it that Hollywood is not pro-American.
It's not, you know, it's not pro-Southern.
It's not Christian.
The Hollywood and stuff is in the hands of the enemies.
They insult us and stuff like that.
But we can't lose it.
So we have to try to promote good movies, good books, and good music and good dancing.
So that's what I'm trying to do.
Well, that's exactly right.
I mean, we have to retake our institutions, is what Jack's thinking is.
We have to retake the media.
Jason Isaacs, though, for what it's worth, very good in The Patriot.
He is the villain in Mel Gibson's movie, The Patriot, which is a great movie, came out in 2000 when I was cutting my teeth with Pat Buchanan.
Hey, folks, we're only supposed to have Jack on for one segment.
If Jack will indulge us, we'll actually get to the theme of the night, which is dating tips for our young men.
Jack, if you can stay through the break, we'll get to that and get back with the rest of the show rax.
Stay tuned, everybody.
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And now back to tonight's show.
Well, because we couldn't get down to business quickly enough with Jack Ryan, our cultural correspondent, we're going to carry him over to another segment.
Jack, let's now get down to business as quickly as we can.
Dating tips for our young men.
My tip is to find them in church when they're 15 and raise them right.
That was my method.
What's yours, Jack?
Okay, my tip is to try to live your life like an Australian rugby player and then Sherlock Holmes drofts and colon dollars.
You want to live your life with your men.
And your money is you want to be loyal to your friends, your mates, and stuff.
And there are women coming in.
They come to the rugby party and stuff like that.
But you want to say like you're loyal to your friends, your mates and stuff.
So you can say Jerard Tolkien, the fellowship of the ring.
There's not a lot of women, girls, and stuff like that.
They're not coming in there.
There's some eldest princesses that you go.
So you're loyal to your, like, like, if there's some women that come in that will marry you and stuff, then okay, then that's good.
But these women will break up the fraternity, the rugby team.
They'll break up the Beatles they will do and their whims.
So basically, you don't want to have too much interaction with women.
You don't want to like there.
Like I was on Vanderbilt University there.
95% of my interaction with women was like worthless.
It didn't help my education.
It didn't do those things.
So I would recommend for, you know, it would be great if you were around these great women like Courtney from Alabama, you're one, but most of the time, you want to stay away from these women.
They're causing trouble and stuff.
I think you're better off dating healthy Indo-European women that don't speak a lot of English.
They could say, the only rules they know is, darling, I love you, and can I get you a beer?
You know, that would be good for you.
That would be a better thing to do than these women that are marching on the Washington mall dressed up like vaginas or something.
You don't want to associate with these type of women.
They're causing trouble.
So my one is be a good, solid guy, be a good one, and be loyal to your friends and the like.
And then try to have better relations with women, but don't let these women mess up your life and destroy your thing.
So that's my recommendation tonight.
And a fantastic one that is, Jack.
And I, you know, of course, as you may remember, and as our audience may remember, Sam Bushman and I were both at the inauguration of Donald Trump last year.
Yeah.
And the day after that was that horrific march on Washington where they were all dressed as vaginas with Madonna and Ashley Judd.
Dreadful.
I think they had another one this year.
Vaginas.
Horrible.
Just dreadful.
Well, it is.
And as Francis Parker Yockey wrote in commemoration of the International Women Day, as we had, I think it was two or three days ago.
Frances Parker Yockey wrote, feminism liberated women from the natural dignity of their sex and turned them into inferior men.
Would you agree with that, Jack?
Inferior men, but also just they're dressed up and they're marching around like vaginas, but they're not using their vagina.
Okay?
They're not, there's nothing good going in, and there's nothing great coming out, healthy babies and stuff.
So we want to encourage our women stuff to, you know, you want to say this, to use their vaginas in a positive way, to be a great man and to date a great men and stuff.
But we don't want these women just like showing off and stuff.
So we want healthy, good things, and we want good Americans.
But it's a lot of fish in the world.
I see so many good relations between middle-aged, 40-year-old guys and Hispanic women or Eastern European women.
So there's good women in the world.
So don't deal with these feminists, these law school, Harvard and Yale law school.
I've dealt with these women all my life.
You don't deal with them.
Yeah, whatever.
I'd rather be held hostage by Islamic jihad or ISIS than have my toes than I have to deal with these god-awful feminists, Hillary Clinton, Elena Kagan, Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
So just don't deal with them.
So we have to be positive.
We have to be good.
But there's a lot of good women in the world.
So my advice is be positive, but don't waste your life on just the worst, these women that are dressing up with that.
So that's my position.
Hey, there it is, ladies and gentlemen.
Jack Ryan doing a little overtime tonight.
Jack, we love you.
The fans love you.
And believe me when I say you, when I tell you, ladies and gentlemen, that the correspondence coming in from Jack is highly positive.
And, well, you don't need to know why, because you just heard it.
You know why.
Jack, we'll talk to you next week.
Thank you, brother.
Okay.
I'll be in so.
Oh, thank you.
Yeah, we'll talk to you then.
Indeed.
All right.
Jack Ryan, there he goes.
Jack Ryan, the one and only.
He's back in Chicago now after a month.
I was going to say a week.
Normal people take a week longer vacation if they're lucky, but Jack was in South Carolina for a month at least.
And he's now finally back in Chicago, and he's still doing the good work.
So, okay, now listen, now you know we are running a very special first quarter fundraising promotion this month that's going to give you the rare opportunity to obtain an authentic piece of Confederate history.
Contribute $100 or more before the end of the month, before March 31st, and you will receive a piece of the original slate roof of President Jefferson Davis's home in Biloxi, Mississippi.
Beauvoir.
Beauvoir.
I was there as a teenager.
Let me tell you something, ladies and gentlemen.
When we sent out this incentive, I said we did this incentive before.
We did it before, right?
And yes, we did.
I thought it was like, what, two or three years ago?
No, like seven years ago, we did this incentive where we sent out everybody a one-inch by one-inch piece of tile.
What happened was the political cesspool aided in the restoration of Beauvoir, which was badly damaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
And we aided in the restoration of that by fundraising for it.
And they gave us some very big pieces of tile, which we cut down with the skill saw to one inch by one inch pieces.
And we did this fundraiser several years ago in which we offered this to everyone, and it was a big hit.
With now the condemnation of Confederate monuments and the desecration of Confederate monuments as it is, I thought, let's do it again.
This is the first fundraiser that we've ever done twice.
And it is going off the shelf like hotcakes, ladies and gentlemen.
We have never gotten out to a start more quickly than this in a fundraising drive.
What we have now is it's interesting.
It's a little bit different than what we did before, where everything before was a uniformity one-inch by one-inch piece.
We have pieces of the slate that were damaged by Hurricane Katrina as they were.
And what I mean is every piece is a little bit different.
No two pieces are the same.
They're not cut identically as we did before.
These are the actual pieces as they fell from the roof as it was damaged by Hurricane Katrina.
Now, this is the roof.
The roof that sheltered President Jefferson Davis, my president, the only president that I recognize.
I don't consider myself an American.
I consider myself a Southerner.
And this is my president.
This is my nation.
This is his house.
This is his retirement home where he worked, where he lived, where he slept in his retirement years, where he wrote the rise and fall of the Confederate government.
This was the roof that he gazed upon as he trod the grounds around that estate in Biloxi, Mississippi, his retirement estate in the post-war years.
You will have a piece of that roof as it fell to the ground after the carnage of Hurricane Katrina, completely untouched.
Exactly how it fell.
The exact piece that he gazed upon during those post-war years, $100 or more.
You go to thepolitical Cesscipal.org, you donate tonight.
Donate tonight, because let me tell you, we have never gotten off to a start to any fundraising drive in the last 14 years as quickly as tonight, and everybody knows why.
This is a piece of history.
This home is, of course, on the National Historic Registry, but it's much more than that.
It is the home of the President of the Confederate States of America.
You will own a piece of his home, a piece of his roof, the original roof that he lived under, that he slept under, that he worked under.
For $100 or more, you donate to the Political Assessable by mail, by snail mail, by online contributions at thepoliticalaccessible.org.
But get them while we can.
Each will come with a certificate of authenticity.
You can frame it.
You can give it to your children.
You can give it to a loved one, to a friend.
Folks, it's a conversation starter.
Donate tonight.
We don't have many pieces left.
Limit three per contributor.
Three per contributor.
We'll be back with more right after this.
Liberty Across the Land.
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Scott Bradley here.
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Okay, girls, about finished with your lesson on money.
Daddy, what is a buy-sell spread for gold coins?
Well, when you sell a gold coin to a coin shop that's worth, say, $1,200, you don't actually get $1,200.
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We don't have any gold at the house.
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But the SP 500 outperformed gold.
Daddy, gold is a bad investment.
Some people do think of it that way, but actually, gold is money.
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Or I can ask them to drop it right into Mommy and Daddy's bank account because we're a UPMA member family.
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I and my compatriots are Southern nationalists.
We seek the survival, well-being, and independence of the Southern people, our people.
The League wants a South that enjoys the sweet fruits of Christian liberty and prosperity, but our current situation won't allow it.
We must have our independence from Washington, D.C. and the globalists.
The present system cannot be reformed.
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Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
Okay, folks, let me tell you something.
Once again, I'm so excited about this fundraiser.
I'm not trying to raise money.
I mean, yes, obviously we need money to stay on the air, and so that's part of it.
But what I'm giving you is the opportunity to own a piece of the home of President Jefferson Davis.
It's a first quarter fundraising opportunity, a promotion.
It's a rare opportunity to own an authentic piece of Confederate history, $100 or more, by snail mail online at thepoliticalsucible.org.
You're going to receive a piece of the original slate roof of President Jefferson Davis' home, his retirement home in Biloxi, Mississippi.
Your piece will come with the, it'll be suitable for framing.
It comes with a certificate of authenticity.
And once it's gone, it's gone.
So please don't wait to place your order because we've never gotten off to this fast of a start of a fundraising drive in the 14 years we've been on the air.
And they're beautiful pieces.
I've looked over these pieces.
These are the pieces as they fell to the ground after Hurricane Katrina.
This is the piece you will get in the mail after a contribution to TPC is exactly how it fell after the hurricane left it there.
And it's just an incredible, incredible opportunity.
Let's give you a little more history about Beauvoir, about Jefferson Davis, and about this piece that you will receive for a contribution of $100 or more.
Let's cue up that clip now.
Jefferson Davis once said, quote, I worked night and day for 12 years to prevent the Civil War, but I could not.
Some things men cannot prevent.
Now, the reminders of the deadliest war on American soil are found in battlefield monuments, tourist attractions, and history books.
President Davis's personal home, Beauvoir, in Biloxi, Mississippi, was to encounter another deadly event that also could not have been prevented.
Hurricane Katrina.
This is the story of Beauvoir and Katrina.
Long before the Civil War, the life of Jeff Davis, one of America's most historical figures, was filled with stories that read like a novel.
Named after President Thomas Jefferson, Mr. Davis was a West Point graduate who became a decorated hero in the Mexican-American War, earning the rank of colonel.
Colonel Davis was elected twice to represent Mississippi in the United States Senate.
He was befriended by five U.S. presidents, and President Zachary Taylor was his father-in-law.
Jeff Davis even served as Secretary of War in the cabinet of President Franklin Pierce.
In 1861, With the drums of the Civil War beating, Davis resigned from the U.S. Senate and was elected the President of the Confederate States.
He was a towering figure in the epic history of the American Civil War.
At war's end, Davis was captured, taken as a war prisoner, and confined for two years.
After his release, all the treason charges were dropped.
Jeff Davis's beloved Beauvoir President Davis's colorful and adventurous life had earned him his retirement and rest.
He found solitude and peace at the beautiful white antebellum mansion facing the Gulf of Mexico in Biloxi.
Beauvoir means beautiful view in French.
Here, President Davis rested, farmed, raised his family, enjoyed the view of the Gulf, and wrote his final memoirs.
Here at Beauvoir, he documented the Confederate States' participation in the Civil War.
He lived at Beauvoir until his death in New Orleans while traveling in 1889.
Beauvoir was a sanctuary away from conflict, quiet, private, restful.
All of the things that he needed from a life filled with anything but tranquility and silence.
Beauvoir was sold to the Mississippi Division of the Sons of the Confederate Veterans to provide a home for Confederate veterans.
There were two provisions.
At Mrs. Davis's insistence, no Confederate veteran or their widows would ever be charged for living at the home, and that Beauvoir was to perpetually be a memorial to President Davis and all Confederate soldiers.
In 1957, the last three widows were transferred to a private facility and Beauvoir was open to the public.
Beauvoir Meets Katrina This United States historic landmark was built in 1852.
It has become the largest antebellum tourist attraction in the state of Mississippi.
The home of Jefferson Davis stood tall and proud for over 150 years and endured 21 hurricanes.
But on August 29, 2005, the beautiful view met the ugliness and power of a disaster named Katrina.
While Mississippians scrambled to protect their property, families, and lives from the invading Katrina, Beauvoir stood and waited her fate with another historical event, the deadliest natural disaster in the history of the United States.
Again, history repeated itself with Jefferson Davis and Beauvoir in the storyline.
Beauvoir was ravaged.
Many of the artifacts And personal property of President Davis and his family were damaged or destroyed.
Volunteers came from far and wide scavenging the debris field to find what they could salvage of Beauvoir.
Putting the home back together was the task at hand.
And like the conviction of President Davis, the keepers of his home and those who love history were resolved to rise to the task.
We're replacing the brick foundations, we're replacing the foundation below the building, the wood beams, the structure, the roof, the windows, all of the exterior finishes, paint, stucco, all of the plaster work, all the plaster work on the interior,
all of the flooring on the interior, all of the interior walls, all of the moldings will be restored, all of the artistry and paint and decorative finishes, everything all at once and at a fairly compressed schedule of only one year.
That just isn't done very often.
So we decided it was important enough to film it, to tape it, to record the progress and the work as it was all being done, both because it, I think, is interesting.
It also provides, I think, a good library of experience for other people who may be involved in a project like this at some point in the future.
How we brought all the team together, how we coordinated the work, how we planned it, and were able to accomplish it in what I think is a very compressed schedule.
Landmarks of America are given this designation of historic national landmark.
And while we maintain them and we take care of them, there's never been one catastrophically affected like what happened to Beauvoir.
So it's an important national landmark, but it's also a unique event where it has been so badly damaged by, and not just a hurricane.
Most of the time when we say Katrina, we don't even call it Hurricane Katrina.
People just know it's the largest natural disaster to ever hit the U.S.
And so that Beauvoir provided this opportunity to be a complete restoration.
I thought it was important enough to document what we're doing.
That not only do we want to do it well, we want to do it right, we want to do it in the truest character of the construction techniques and for the architecture and to strengthen the building, but it's important what we're doing and we needed to record it.
We needed to film and tape and preserve what has happened because it is an important event and it's so unique.
The storm scattered the broken parts of Beauvoir all over the property.
It broke apart and floated off in the flood tide and a lot of it came to rest on the property.
Volunteers by the hundreds in the weeks and months after the storm sifted through the debris field and found as many parts that they thought would belong on the home as possible and cataloged them and tagged them and salvaged them.
And so someone said what we've done is we've repurposed the wood.
It used to be perhaps a rafter or a floor joist, but because it's broken it won't fit and span that space anymore.
But we've not discarded it.
We've simply taken it and milled it down to create a flooring board or maybe it's a part of a window sash or a molding or part of the architrave and trim around a door.
But as much as possible the wood that was damaged and lost in Beauvoir was recovered and where pieces were undamaged we've put them back.
We've fitted it like a jigsaw puzzle until we found where that joist went and put it back together so it's as close as possible to what it was and as much as possible it's the same wood and where we couldn't find that we've gone out and found Period correct materials that replaces it so it's as authentic as it can possibly be.
The original roof on Beauvoir was a Welsh slate and the roof we're now installing is also a Welsh slate quarried from the same ground in Wales that would have been used 160 years ago.
And so the slates you see going on Beauvoir today match precisely the slates that were originally installed in 1850, 1851.
Did you hear that, ladies and gentlemen?
The original slates quarried from a Welsh location in the United Kingdom, what is present day United Kingdom.
You go to Beauvoir today in Piloxi, Mississippi.
You go into that building.
It is not the original roof.
It couldn't be.
It was damaged by Katrina.
It was destroyed by Katrina.
We have pieces of that original roof, and they are yours for $100 or more, a contribution to TPC.
Online tonight at thepolitical Sesspool.org or via snail mail to our snail mail address.
Please get it, ladies and gentlemen.
I want to share it with you.
It's beautiful.
It's beautiful.
I want you to have it.
Help us, and we'll help you.
We'll be right back.
Each week, the Political Cesspool, known worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program, hits the airwaves to bring you the other side of the news and to report on events which are vital to your welfare but are hushed up or distorted by the mainstream media.
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We fought.
We learned.
We struggled.
We won.
Despite Obama's best efforts, the newspaper of the human resistance survives.
We have lived only to face a new nightmare, the war against the machines.
Read about our struggle in The Sovereign, newspaper of the resistance.
The Sovereign is a 24-page monthly tabloid newspaper about the war between man and machines.
We've tried reason.
We've tried legislation.
We've tried every peaceful means imaginable.
And all it's gotten us is shut out.
So now we fight the machines.
Order online today at thesovenews.com or find the sovereign at select newsstands.
Remember to read The Sovereign, newspaper of the resistance.
The human resistance's battle against the machines will be everlasting.
This is mercy.
It was never our destiny to stop the age of Obama.
It was merely to survive it.
Together.
Together.
When a beer commercial, everyone's happy and they're jumping around or whatever.
The thing is, is they not only have appealing activities, they have appealing people on there too.
You know, you see beer commercials and it's done with natural water and it's cold brewed or heat pasteurized and all that kind of stuff.
They make it sound more like a health food almost.
But they never show the hangovers or alcoholism or anything like that.
And then in reality, you're happy and then you're vomiting in the bathroom and then you're waking up sick the next morning with a really bad headache.
Any person that says that beer is married for recreational use is stupid because it's a form of alcohol.
They just want your money.
It's the people that sell the product that are getting the most out of it, not the people that use it.
That's exactly what they're doing.
They're all seller beer and it doesn't matter what it takes to sell it.
No, they're not honest messages.
They don't show the flip side of it.
The results of alcohol.
A public service message from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
Okay, we're about to go directly to Scoop Stanton, but just reminding you about this first quarter fundraising drive.
$100 or more gets you a piece of the original roof of Jefferson Davis' retirement home, President Davis in Biloxi, Mississippi.
Beauvoir was the last home of President Davis.
It was designed and built between 1848 and 1854 by James Brown, not the singer, who resided there until his death.
The beachfront property in Biloxi passed briefly through the hands of Frank Johnston before finally being sold to Samuel and Sarah Ann Ellis Dorsey.
The Dorsey's moved to the home, which Sarah named Beauvoir, meaning beautiful view, because of Samuel's failing health.
He died two years after their arrival in 1875.
Sarah Dorsey was not alone at Beauvoir for long.
In December of 1876, she encountered President Davis, who was looking for a place along the Gulf Coast to settle and write his memoirs.
She offered him the use of her library cottage, and he moved there the next month.
It was there that he began dictating the rise and fall of the Confederate government to her in February of 1877.
When Verena Davis, his wife, returned to the States from London, she joined her husband there in July of 1878.
Davis made arrangements to purchase the home in February of 1879, but before the transaction was completed, Dorsey died, leaving Beauvoir to President Davis in her will.
Beauvoir faces the Gulf of Mexico, and Davis enjoyed spending time on the beach there in his later years, as did his grandchildren, who visited him there often.
After President Davis's death in 1889, his wife remained at Beauvoir and there wrote Jefferson Davis a memoir.
Davis actually left Beauvoir to his daughter, Winnie, but the ownership of the property reverted to his wife after Winnie's death in 1880.
Five years later, his wife sold the property to the Sons of Confederate Veterans for use as a Confederate soldier's home.
Twelve barracks, a hospital, and a chapel were constructed on the Beauvoir land, home to as many as 250 veterans and their family members at its peak operation.
The last veteran left Beauvoir in 1951.
Six years later, the final two widows were moved to a nursing home.
Since 1957, the home and the grounds were opened to the public.
Hurricane Katrina in 2005 caused extensive damage to the main house and completely destroyed several other structures.
Many artifacts and documents were also severely damaged, destroyed, or washed away.
The main house was restored and reopened for tours in 2008, and replicas of the destroyed buildings were completed in 2009.
Folks, you want an original piece of the roof, an original piece of the roof.
You donate it $100 or more, and we're going to give you that.
It's a piece of the original roof that once sheltered President Davis.
Contribute today.
Help us keep us on the air, and we'll give you a piece of Confederate history.
That being said, Scoop, take it away.
Great here, James.
Good evening, political successful family.
You might hear some background noise of some white dude playing some gangster rat music in his mom's conda.
Tonight we're doing a little things a little bit different.
Mrs. Stanton had a case of explosive diarrhea, so I had to take her to the doctors on Thursday.
So Sean Bergen, right after the political cesspool, is going to report live about the phenomenon known as QAnon and the alleged videotape of Hillary Clinton.
But it's one definitely you want to hear.
Hell, I'm not even calling it even though it's my show.
Anyways, let's remember the fallen who gave up their lives.
Police officer Gregory Cassilla, Pomona, California Police Department, end of watch March 9th, 2018, offender still at large.
Police officer Christopher Martin, Clinton, Missouri Police Department, end of watch March 6th, 2018.
Luckily, his offender is DOA.
And then Deputy Jacob Pickett of the Boone County, Indiana Sheriff's Office, end to watch March 2nd, 2018.
His offender is alive, breathing, but thankfully wounded.
Anyways, as we all know, it was Bill Rowland's anniversary of his passing five years ago.
But unfortunately, I haven't been able to give a tribute, so I wrote a little something on my blog on red42radio.tumbler.com.
And it's a little long, but I'll give you the excuse me.
Excuse me.
I got to quit smoking banana peels.
But I'll give you the nickel version.
All right.
It's been five years since the passing of our beloved brother, Bill Rowland.
It left a huge hole in our hearts and on the political cesspool.
But time marches on.
But here's just a taste of what happened since Bill was called home to the Lord.
This was done just at the top of my head.
And of course, I'm missing a whole bunch of other facts and whatever.
Anyways, the first thing we did, of course, is do a tribute show to Bill where it was hard to find a dry set of eyes.
Sam Bushman said it best when he said, Bill is alive with Christ.
It was one of our best, yet hardest shows to do.
But then we scooped a story from New Jersey where a cable news reporter had the ball to say that the reason that there is a lack of law enforcement in the inner city is because of lack of files and the media refused to talk about it.
That reporter was Sean Bergen, and he since made the Political Cessible and Libby News Radio home.
Pardon me.
We also had radio legend Anthony Cumia, who also had Bergen on his show for a couple appearances.
Also, I brought in Fox personality Pulitzer Prize winner Charlie LeDuff, who was on Red 42 last week.
Plus, we had Harlem Minister and YouTube sensation Reverend James Manning, whose view on black people make us look like liberals.
Then as usual, the Cessboat was ahead of the rest of the major news cycle.
We were one of the first news outlets to report on the murder of New York City cops Louis Ramos, who then we were the first to report there's a war on cops.
We also broke the Zimrin verdict live on air.
Matthew Copperhead was in and out of Ferguson, Missouri before the media was able to check in their hotels.
But the political cesspool wouldn't be the political accessible without controversy.
When Dylan Roof went into a house of God as an agent of Satan, he cited the council conservative citizens as an awakening, which James and Keith were board members.
Cesspool is under attack again.
Sean Bergen, who just came aboard the cesspool, was told by me and James that, hey, it could get ugly.
You know, we want to soil your reputation to get a real job in a real news organization.
But Sean being Sean says, you know what?
If they want to fight, this Iron Minister says, bring it on.
Mofo.
Of course, the Confederate flag again became controversial in the past five years, a couple times, thanks to Dylan Roof and the media fan and the racial flames.
So what did the political cesspool tool do?
We went to a rally at Forest Park with Eddie the Bombardier Miller carrying stars and bars that could cover a Peterbilt.
But also, we love a good fight.
We fought the media on air and on the web.
James took on the Detroit News in court claiming that for claiming that he's not leader of the KKK, which he's not.
But unfortunately, he lost in Michigan courts twice.
But he still can still appeal all the way up to the Supreme Court.
Then the Cessbo's staff still grew.
Jim Lancey had a book he wanted to promote.
And then on air, while he's on there, Scoop and James decided to find a place for him, where he's now our criminal justice correspondent and co-host of Red 42.
And as usual, the political cesspool was denounced, but this time at a congressional hearing with an old enemy, Penal County Sheriff Paul Babu, testifying before Congress about immigration.
This is one of our best shows with me, James, Eddie, and of course, Sean Bergen.
But Carmen is SOB because Babiu, as he threw us under the bus, he ran for Congress and lost, and lost re-election for sheriff in Penal County, Arizona.
Also, during the Anthony Coomia controversy, which, of course, we're in the middle of, comedian Joe Robert Joe DeRosa trashed Cumia and trashed us, but then his career took a nosedive.
We went to Charlottesville for the United Right rally, where two of us, me and the Bombardier, went.
And it was a setup from the get-go.
It was one of our greatest shows.
Fortunately, we made it out alive.
And then not only did our staffing levels grow, but our programming grew.
On October 21st, 2017, Scoop Stanton and Jim Lanceler rolled out Red 42, a spin-off of the political cesspool immediately following the Cessbo on Saturdays.
But since Bill passed, he was not able to see us gain mainstream acceptance in our losing streak come to an end.
To our dismay of enemies on the left and the right, I was able to obtain a media credential at seatback, except for 2018, the year of the cuck.
Also, we got credentials to the Donald Trump rallies, the GOP convention, and even the press box for the inauguration of President Donald Trump.
Our losing streak of endorsing political candidates ended in 2016.
The political assessment got behind Trump as early as June 2015.
Anyways, he was a candidate for Border Security, American Manufacturing, Nationalism, Lower Taxes, and Not Afraid to celebrate Christmas.
But then also, we were able to interview Donald Trump Jr. and henceforth, controversy.
And then James was in the media again as an influential member for the Trump campaign.
On election night, we called it and we combined both shows, Liberty Round Television Table and Political Assess Pool, four hours of non-stop commercial-free news.
Yours surely went to GOP headquarters in downtown D.C. where, again, I was disrespected.
But anyways, our epitome was when on Inauguration Day 2017, James Edwards and Jared Taylor were sitting in the press box, a stone's throw away from the 45th president of the United States.
But anyways, not only is Bill smiling in heaven, but he's involved in divine intervention.
There's no doubt in my mind that he is pulling some strings with the good Lord.
Because how did three guys from the Northeast, well, four if you call it Gabberhead, get involved with a radio show in Memphis syndicated by a man in Utah?
How do we rub elbows with the movers shaping national politics and be our type of story after story?
Anyways, Bill's up in heaven, telling Jefferson Davis, Nathan Forrester, Stonewall Jackson.
Hey, look at them guys.
They're with me.
James.
Hey.
Scoop, you covered it.
I don't know how we covered that much ground.
I thought we're doing a tribute to Bill.
We covered it all.
We covered the whole history of the show in 10 minutes.
Only Scoop can do that.
We'll be back with you next week, ladies and gentlemen.