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March 17, 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, 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.
I thought that I thought a song like that, something upbeat and cheerful.
I thought the order of the day called for that.
That was you, baby.
Raise your hand if you remember the turtles from the 1960s.
That's just some feel-good stuff.
And though there may be turbulence all around us, you will always find a safe harbor right here at TPC, Time and Battle Tested TPC.
Great first hour with Ramsey Paul.
Staying up till now.
It's 2 a.m., past 2 a.m. in Budapest, Hungary, where he was this evening when he joined us live tonight.
It's after 7 p.m. Central Time here in Memphis as we're passing live from our flagship station.
But I thought that that really exceeded exercise when he's on.
Tonight may have been the best of all.
And let me know if you're on.
Email James at thepolitical.org.
Let me know what you think.
Now, this hour, the second hour tonight is sandwiched in between two great guests.
Ramsey Paul in the first hour, who you just heard still forthcoming tonight.
David Duke.
David Duke takes the lead.
This will be his third appearance in 2018.
Tonight is done.
We'll have the most appearances, at least as of today, of any guest in 2018.
He was with us at the Very Show of the Year.
We came at least eight different movement leaders, David Duke, on that show.
I believe he was the final guest of that night.
He was the closer.
And Eddie had him on a couple of weeks ago on a week that I was out.
And then he's back on a third appearance tonight, March 17th.
We'll get to David, former member of the House of Representatives in the state of Louisiana, in just a few minutes.
Speaking about Louisiana, I was not too far from there.
I woke up this morning in Biloxi, Mississippi, and I didn't want to leave.
Let me tell you what I've been doing.
I'm going to take you behind the scenes.
Let me tell you what we're going to be doing this hour.
I want to take you behind the scenes on what a week in the life of TPC is like, or what a week in the life of yours truly is like with regards to his work on TPC.
And this week was a little exceptional because we had a tour of Mississippi that we did for a couple of different reasons, show-related reasons.
And I'm going to take you there, and we're going to talk about that because the trip was so, I will tell you, I love Mississippi.
I love Mississippi.
I think it is the greatest state in the union.
They still fly the proud and defiant flag of my ancestors and their state flag logo, the Confederate battle flag.
God bless you, Mississippi.
My ancestors are from Mississippi.
I tell you all the time, my parents, both my mother and my father were born in Memphis, and they were both first-generation Tennesseans.
Before that, as far back as we can trace our line, it's all from Mississippi.
I think they came from South Carolina before that, but as far back as we have traced, several generations back, going back to my Confederate forebears and beyond, all from Mississippi.
I love being in Mississippi.
Love being in Mississippi.
I love everything about Mississippi.
When I go to Mississippi, I feel like I'm home, even though I was, of course, born in Memphis myself.
So we're going to talk about that this hour.
I was so inspired by my trip.
I thought that it warranted an hour here on TPC.
So I'm going to tell you all about what I learned, what I did, who I met, where I went, and there's going to be something in it for you too, ladies and gentlemen.
So stay tuned for that.
But first, let me just tell you a little bit about what goes on in a week in the life of TPC.
A lot goes on, and it's, of course, now almost routine how we chart the course for a week in between our regular Saturday night broadcasts.
So we're on the air now on Saturday night.
What will happen tomorrow?
Tomorrow, we will make sure all the archives are posted and everything's ready to go for the people who can't tune in live, that they'll be able to check the archives for the remainder of the week.
We want each show to be an event.
That's one of the reasons we switched from being a nightly show, five nights a week, to being a weekly show, because we wanted each show to be an event.
We wanted every member of our listening audience to have a full week to absorb and digest each program.
So we make sure all the archives are up and in working order.
They're really up by just a few minutes after we're done on Saturday nights.
But that's pretty much what we do on Sunday.
We go to church and we lay low.
On Monday, I start to put up content for the blog for the remainder of the week.
We schedule posts for the blog, whether it's other articles that we like that have caught our attention or announcements related to the show.
We put up content for the blog, thepoliticalsuccesspool.org, every Monday.
On Tuesday of any typical week, I begin to zero in if they haven't been booked in advance on which guests we might like to have on the following Saturday night show.
On Wednesday, I work on correspondence.
Correspondence, I am woefully behind on email.
I actually responded to a guy who emailed me a year and a half ago.
I wrote him back last week, and he was so excited to get the email.
He wrote me right back saying, thank you for taking the time to reply.
I was a year and a half late.
So sometimes we get behind on correspondence, but I do try to work on correspondence every Wednesday on Thursday.
I try to meet with the crew to chart out topics for the show on Saturday.
We like to take late week meetings, either on Thursdays or Fridays, to let the news develop.
We figure out what we're going to talk about on the Saturday night and pair that with the guests we're going to have.
On Friday, I send in any songs or clips or any other audio that Sam Bushman needs.
I get that to him.
And then, of course, on Saturday, we put out the promotional email and the blog, the promotional blog post on Saturday, and then we get ready to do the show.
So that's a typical week.
That's typically how we spend our week.
Every day, work is being done on this show.
We're only on the air three hours a week, one day a week, but every day we are working for the show.
And of course, we have to monitor the attacks that are being levied against us so that happens.
But that's a typical week in the life.
Now, this week was a little bit different because we were on the road, we were meeting with supporters, we went down to Piloxi, and I'll tell you what we were doing down there in just a minute.
But my wife is in the studio tonight.
She's looking at me.
Do you want to talk?
Do you have something you want to say?
Listening to what your layout for the week is.
And you forget, which I'm happy to sacrifice for you guys, that you invest all day, every day into this show for right now, for it to be the best three hours for y'all.
And he puts a lot of love and a lot of sweat into this.
And I'm sweating right now with her being on the air.
So what happened was, my family wanted to stay on vacation today.
When we woke up, we were in Biloxi, Mississippi.
I'm going to tell you what we were doing in Biloxi.
My family wanted to stay in Biloxi.
I said, I got to get back.
I got to do the show.
I wanted to stay so bad.
And so we got into Memphis 10 minutes before the show.
They had to come straight with me into the studio.
So that's why you're hearing my wife all the ladies and gentlemen.
What is the KQ?
You know, the kosher question.
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In an effort to promote awareness to this kosher question, developers have recently published an app for your smartphone that will not only educate users on this little-known phenomenon, but also features a database of food products that have not been kosher certified.
The CoCertified app has prominent advertisement on TPC's homepage, or you can check out its website at co-certified.com.
Wouldn't it be proof to start eating in favor of your own interests?
The CoCertified app will be your start.
Download it now at co-certified.com.
That's K-O-S-C-H-E-R-T-I-F-I-E-D dot com.
Attention Liberty News Radio listeners.
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Scott Bradley here.
Most Americans are painfully aware that the nation is on the wrong track and in dire straits.
Unfortunately, most political pundits only nibble around the edges when they claim to address the issues.
Even worse, many of the so-called solutions are simply rewarmed servings of what got us into the mess we currently face.
And the politicians think we're so gullible and naive that we'll buy their lies that they have reformed and now understand where they led us astray.
Unfortunately, the truth of the matter is that they simply wish to continue to hold power.
The solution to America's challenges is found in returning to the timeless principles found in the United States Constitution.
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Visit topreservethenation.com and order my book and lectures to begin the restoration of this great nation.
To get on the show and speak with James and the gang, call us toll free at 1-866-986-6397.
And now back to tonight's show.
Well, I was telling you last segment about typically how a little bit of time each day is spent on the cultivation of this radio program and how we normally do things.
This week was off kilter because we took a little road trip down to Mississippi.
And we spent time in Jackson, Hattiesburg, and in Biloxi.
We spent most of the time in Biloxi.
And if anyone's been following our quarterly fundraising drive that's going on, we're now halfway through it here in March, ladies and gentlemen.
If you want to take advantage of the incredible offer that ends on the last day of March, you need to go to thepolitical cesspool.org, read about it, make a contribution, and you can get a piece of that, an authentic piece of Confederate history.
It is an amazing offer.
Amazing offer.
You can't get it anywhere else.
And of course, that was part of the reason we were down in Biloxi.
But anyway, down to Jackson, had dinner with supporters.
Great time meeting with old friends of the radio program in Jackson.
And we did that.
I took my family with me, my wife, my two children, and my mother.
Yes, my grandma went.
And then we went on down to Hattiesburg, did a function down there on the early afternoon of Thursday, and then we were on down to Biloxi.
And we spent the night in Biloxi on Thursday night.
We woke up Friday morning and we went to Beauvoir.
I haven't been to Beauvoir since I was a teenager, even though we did aid the restoration effort of Beauvoir in 2005, and that's how we came into ownership of pieces of the original roof of Jefferson Davis's home.
I had not physically been to Beauvoir.
We raised some money for them in 05.
They sent us pieces of the original roof, which of course is what we're offering to you during the fundraising drive.
But I had not been there in about 20 years.
And we went back down there this, we went back down there on Friday.
We were there today.
We were actually, I woke up this morning and outside my hotel, we could see the Mississippi Gulf Coast.
We could see the Gulf of Mexico from our window.
And we went to Beauvoir for two hours this morning and they gave us a golf cart.
And we had this golf cart.
And 52 acres, 52 acres on that property.
It was just the most amazing time with my family.
And I loved it.
It meant so much to me to be able to take my wife and my children there who had never been before.
And it was just a fantastic day.
And we stayed so long.
If we had stayed literally 15, 20 minutes longer, I would have never made it back to Memphis in time for the show.
I bled every minute out of that as I could.
Beautiful grounds there, 52 acres.
And let me tell you a little bit about what I've learned here.
I had to put my show notes on a piece of an envelope in my chicken scratch handwriting that I can't read.
I can't read my handwriting, but I'll do the best I can here.
We toured Beauvoir, and there was a few things that I learned there today that I had not heard before.
Or rather, over the weekend, yesterday and today, talking with the people at Beauvoir.
Of course, you know, that was Jefferson Davis's home.
Now, every week of March, we've talked a little bit about the history of Beauvoir.
I think on the first week of March, we talked about the history of the home, how Jefferson Davis became the owner of Beauvoir.
And then last week, we talked a little bit more about it.
But tonight, though, having just been there, if we're going to do this fundraiser, I wanted to go down there and I learned a little bit more.
So, Jefferson Davis, of course, was ruined by the war.
The war ruined Jefferson Davis financially and in many other ways.
He spent time in prison, but he did write a book, The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government.
He wrote that book there at Beauvoir, underneath the roof that you have an opportunity to own a piece of.
And he did not die poor.
He was able to make a living, as many authors do.
He made some money off of his book.
And also, everybody wanted to interview him.
Abraham Lincoln had died, of course, and Jefferson Davis was still alive.
So he was of the two presidents that presided during the war.
Jefferson Davis was the only one that lived after the war.
And so many reporters and journalists wanted to interview Davis, and he made money off of that.
And listen to this, ladies and gentlemen.
Please listen.
If you listen to one thing I say tonight, listen to the two things I'm about to tell you this segment.
Please listen to what I'm about to tell you.
I'd never heard the story before.
One journalist came to visit Davis, and Jefferson Davis had six children, four boys and two girls.
The two girls outlived Davis, meaning that as most parents do, he died before they did.
All four of his sons died before he did.
And a journalist asked him, Davis was a devout Christian, as most of the Confederates were.
A journalist asked him, did it ever shake your faith that your four boys died before you have?
Did you ever question your faith?
And listen to what Jefferson Davis said.
I choked up.
I choked up when they told me this.
He said, no, sir, to the journalist.
He said, I've never questioned my faith because God is much more wise and much more merciful than I am.
God must have known that had my boys lived, there was something in their future that was worse than death.
So he called them home.
I thank him for that, and I can't wait to see them again.
That is the kind of man that we should strive to be.
And that is the kind of man that the charlatans in the Southern Baptist Church are trying to tell you that you shouldn't be like.
You shouldn't fly his flag.
He was a racist.
No, he was better by every standard of measurement.
He was a better man and a better Christian by every standard of measurement than anybody in the Southern Baptist Convention is today.
Anybody.
Your four sons die, and you thank God for that?
That was the faith of Jefferson Davis.
And I got to stand just this morning, just a few hours ago, I was standing underneath an oak tree, the very oak tree that he would go under every day and read his Bible.
I got a picture there with my wife and children.
I posted it to Twitter.
By the way, I posted a lot of these pictures to Twitter.
Go to my Twitter handle at JamesEdwards TPC.
Go there and check out some of the pictures that I took today on the estate of Jefferson Davis.
That's who we should be like.
His wife.
His wife was 20 years younger than him when they married.
You know, we talked about that earlier or late last year with Roy Moore.
When Jefferson Davis married his wife, he was 38, she was 18.
And when Jefferson Davis died, she lived 20 years longer than he did.
And she said when he died that she had lost the love of her life and that she would mourn every day until she saw him again.
And for every day for those final 20 years, I learned she wore mourning clothes, meaning she wore a morning veil in public.
She wore black every day for 20 years until she was reunited with her husband.
There are no finer examples of the Christian faith than the people who fought and died for the Confederate States of America.
There are no finer Christians than Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis and Stonewall Jackson.
And by the way, I got to see a set of dishes that Stonewall Jackson gifted to Jefferson Davis.
I saw those just yesterday because we went there twice.
We went there yesterday and we went there today.
Amazing, amazing man.
I bet you didn't know he was one of the original founding regents of the Smithsonian.
Did you know that?
I learned a lot about the statues.
The statues in New Orleans, by the way, I learned this while I was in Mississippi this weekend.
The statues in New Orleans, they were said to have been put in storage.
Well, I'll tell you what really happened and what will be happening to those statues when we come back.
So much more to come.
I'm telling you about my visit to Mississippi, specifically to my visit to Biloxi and to Jefferson Davis's estate, the house where he lived, the property, the estate, the home where he lived his final 13 years of life.
I learned so much.
I'm going to share it with you when we come back.
Proclaiming liberty across the land.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
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.
But don't worry, we're members of UPMA now, so we don't have to worry about that.
Daddy, why has some of my silver gold?
We don't have any gold at the house.
It's stored safely in the UPMA vault, securely and insured.
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.
And as members of the United Precious Metals Association, we can use our gold at any store, just like a credit card.
Or I can ask them to drop it right into Mommy and Daddy's bank account because we're a UPMA member family.
Find out more at UPMA.org.
That's upma.org.
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.
However, to continue doing this, we need your support.
Go online at www.theepoliticalcesspool.org and make a safe and secure donation.
If you prefer not to make an online donation, you can send us a check or money order to the address on the website.
No matter which way you choose, the political cesspool needs your support.
go online to www.thepoliticalcesspool.org and make a donation today.
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Oh, yeah-oh, wanna be by my side.
Oh, yeah-ho, now it's finally time.
It's time to jump back into the Political Cesspool.
To be part of the show and have your voice heard around the world, call us at 1-866-986-6397.
Okay, everybody, I got to make haste because we got Jack Ryan coming up next.
But I shared with you in the last segment the story of what Jefferson Davis answered to the reporter who asked him if he was still a Christian, even though his four sons had died.
And I gave you what his answer was.
And because of that and so much more, it was such an honor, such an honor to take my family to his property over the course of the last two days to teach my children about our heroes, Jefferson Davis, people like Jefferson Davis and Nathan Bedford Forrest.
Proverbs 22, 6 says, train up a child in the way he should go, and when he gets old, he will not depart from it.
Proverbs 22, 6.
So that's why I want my kids, my daughter and my son, to learn about Jefferson Davis and Nathan Bedford Forrest and Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson.
I got pictures of them at the estate at my Twitter account at James Edwards TPC.
What's going on with the statues in New Orleans?
Well, they said that they were put into storage, but private investigators were hired and the investigators learned that the statues were put in the scrap metal bin.
They were put in the dump.
And that was found out.
They have been damaged, these statues from New Orleans.
I found that out on my trip to Mississippi this week.
And Beauvoir has put in a request to obtain ownership of them.
That request, I believe, has been granted in within two months.
Within a couple of months, they are expecting those statues, the ones that were removed in New Orleans, to be transferred to the Jefferson Davis estate, the beautiful 52 acres there in Biloxi, where they will remain forever.
And one of the things you need to know about Beauvoir is that it is privately funded.
It is a National Historic Landmark, so it could receive federal funds.
But they receive no state or federal funds.
Their entire operation is subsidized by contributions, by museum admissions, by ticket sales, gift shop receipts, etc.
And I went down there and, of course, made a, what is for me and for this program, a very generous contribution to them because we appreciate their work.
We appreciate the fact that they gave us pieces of these roofs many years ago that we can now make available to you.
And so that's what we did.
Now they have a presidential library there.
Since Hurricane Katrina destroyed so much of the property, the house, the original house is still intact.
The original roof is not.
We have pieces of the original roof that we were offering to people of the fans of the political cesspool for a contribution of $100 or more.
But they have since restored everything as it once looked.
And they have built the Jefferson Davis Museum and Presidential Library.
I had the opportunity to spend a whole day there yesterday.
So incredible.
So incredible.
Let me tell you what was written about Jefferson Davis upon his death.
When he died, this is what you would have read.
This is what you would have known.
In late November 1889, Jefferson Davis boarded a train from Beauvoir, his home in Biloxi, bound for New Orleans.
In New Orleans, he purchased a ticket on the steamer Natchez, intending to travel to his plantation, Briarfield, south of Vicksburg, and settled the accounts with his overseer.
The weather turned cold and rainy, and he became ill and feverish, and he developed bronchitis.
He was unable to leave Briarfield, return home for several days, but on that last day, kind hands helped him, and he made his way through the broad middle hall of Briarfield to the porch, then descended the steps to the carriage, which was waiting to take him to the landing.
As he looked out, he saw the remnants of white cotton, which was still in the fields he had cleared so long ago.
The overseer's 10-year-old daughter timidly approached him and asked him if he would please write in her memory book.
Unable to disappoint a child, Jefferson Davis wrote, quote, may all your paths be peaceful and pleasant, charged with the best fruit, the doing good to others.
It would be the last thing he would ever write.
In New Orleans, the boat was met by prominent doctors waiting to take him.
And after lingering for several days, he died on December 6, 1889.
Newspapers, even in the North, paid tribute to him as his body lay in state in New Orleans City Hall.
200,000 people came to pay their respects.
First of all, think about that, ladies and gentlemen.
He laid in New Orleans City Hall.
This was only, what, 120, 130 years ago, less than 130 years ago, he laid for five days in the state of the New Orleans City Hall, what's going on in New Orleans now?
Listen to what, listen to this.
Listen to what, this is a newspaper that is no longer in circulation, but the New York World, this was a newspaper at the time, the New York World.
In an editorial, the editor of the New York World wrote, quote, Jefferson Davis was a man of commanding ability, spotless integrity, and a controlling conscience.
He was proud, sensitive, and honorable in all of his dealings and in every relation of life.
A great soul has passed.
That was the New York World.
What about the New York Times?
Think about the New York Times today, ladies and gentlemen.
The New York Times was in existence in 1889 when Jefferson Davis died.
This is what the New York Times, the New York Times, wrote.
Listen to this if you ever hear anything I say.
The New York Times.
Quote, the South loves Jefferson Davis' memory as it should love it and as the people of every patriotic country should and ever will respect it.
Were the people of the South to forget him or failed to honor the man who endured for their sake, they in turn should deserve none of the respect or place in the minds of men.
That was the New York Times writing Jefferson Davis's eulogy.
It was the largest funeral the South had ever seen.
In New Orleans, Louisiana, December 11, 1889, the astonished North looked on in amazement as 200,000 men, women, children, former soldiers came for the curtain call of their president, the president of the Southern Confederacy.
The New York Times said it better than most Southerners would say it today.
It was so moving.
I got to go there today.
I stood at the tomb of the unknown Confederate soldier.
You know the tomb of the unknown soldiers in Arlington, Virginia, but the tomb of the unknown Confederate soldier is there on the 52 acres of Beauvoir.
Absolutely awe-inspiring.
You can see a picture of that at my Twitter account.
And it is the tomb of the unknown Confederate soldier.
We stood at the oak tree where he would go and read his Bible every day.
One thing I learned that I didn't know, Jefferson Davis kept camels.
And there are still camels on the property today, and ox and sheep and goats and all kinds of things that we saw.
Emus, sort of like an ostrich.
You know what an emu is.
And that was there.
It's just an amazing time.
I wish everybody could have been there.
I wish everybody could have been there.
And again, folks, ladies and gentlemen, you have a piece, a piece of Confederate history we're offering you $100 or more.
Please, if you ever donate again to this show ever, let it be now.
We only have a limited number of these pieces of the original roof of Jefferson Davis' home, the home that he lived the last 13 years of his life.
We're offering it to you.
That piece of slate to me signifies and represents the sacrifice of Jefferson Davis, the sacrifice, you know, he was a United States senator.
He had it all.
He gave it all up like so many of them did for a cause greater than himself.
He lost it all.
He risked it all.
He lost it all.
Those are the people we should honor.
Those Christian men are the ones we should honor.
And for a contribution of $100 or more to the political Cesspool, we're going to give you a piece of the original roof.
And that piece of roof to me signifies all of it.
It signifies the entire Confederacy.
It was a piece of roof of our president.
Very lucky to have, and I'd like to give a piece to each and every one of you, so please take advantage of that.
I would like to say one thing in closing this segment.
It is St. Patrick's Day.
And our favorite Irishman is none other than Major General Patrick Claiburne.
And my favorite quote of Patrick Claiborne is this.
If this cause that is so dear to my heart is doomed to fail, I pray heaven may let me fall with it while my face is toward the enemy and my arm is battling for that which I know to be right.
And General Patrick Claiburne died in battle.
He also wrote, surrender means the history of this heroic struggle will be written by the enemy, that our youth will be trained by northern school teachers.
We will learn northern school texts, their version of the war.
We will be impressed by the influence of history and education to regard our gallant dead soldiers as traitors and our main veterans as subjects fit for derision.
Patrick Claiburne also said, this is the great Irishman, the great Arkansan.
Patrick Claiburne said, if slavery is all we're fighting for, it is said that slavery is all we're fighting for.
Even if this was true, which we deny, slavery is not all of our enemies are fighting for.
It is merely the pretense to establish sectional superiority in a more centralized form of government and to deprive us of all of our rights and liberties.
And isn't it that true, ladies and gentlemen?
Don't even have the right or the liberty to honor our fallen dead, the great Christian soldiers of the Confederate States Of America.
Our churches won't even stand up for their own ancestors today.
They'll throw you out for standing up for the Christian men who fought and died for the South.
Patrick Clayburn wrote, I am with the South in life or death, in victory or defeat.
I believe the North is about to wage a brutal and unholy war on a people who have done them no wrong, in violation of the constitution and the fundamental principles of government.
They no longer acknowledge that all government derives its validity from the consent of its governed.
Ladies and gentlemen, we'll be back with Jack Ryan right after this.
We'll come back to the political sesh pool right after these messages here on the Liberty News Radio Network.
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We've tried reason.
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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.
Okay, let's try this.
Honey, I've got some surprising news.
No.
Okay, this will work.
Guess who's going to have a baby?
Oh, no.
That's not it.
I don't know.
Hi, honey.
Are you okay?
Jill's pregnant.
Our Jill?
She's just a kid.
I know.
But, you know, nothing really has to change when the baby comes.
I'll help her.
We'll just help her, right?
We never thought it would happen to our Jill or to us.
We didn't know how to best help her through the tough decisions she'd have to make.
Thankfully, we found that help.
And not just for her, but for us too.
We're here to listen.
We're here to help LDS Family Services.
Where there's help, there's hope.
Are you familiar with the term vigor?
Strength in body and mind?
He pursued his tennis game with vigor, for example.
Well, I hadn't, but I learned about it from Kurt Crosby.
All right, and he actually let me take a scientifically proven free vigor test.
And I got 13 out of 32, not very good.
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The number's 801-669-2211.
That's 801-669-2211.
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That's Kurt, C-U-R-T, at LibertyRoundtable.com for your free vigor test today.
Kurt, LibertyRoundtable.com or 801-669-2211.
Figure test, free, scientifically proven today.
We got a lot to watch.
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Get on the show.
Call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
On a warm summer's evening, on a train bound for no, I met up with a gambler.
We were both too tired to sleep.
So we took turns staring out the window at the darkness.
For boredom overtook us.
And he began to speak.
He said, Son, I've made my life.
I've been reading people's faces and knowing what the cards were by the way they held their eyes.
So if you don't mind saying, I can see you're out of aces for a taste of your whiskey.
I'll give you some advice.
So I handed him my bottle.
And he drank down my last swallow.
Then he bummed a cigarette and asked me for the light.
And the night got deathly quiet.
And his face lost all expression.
Said, if you're going to play the game, boy, you got to learn to play it right.
You got to know when to hold up.
Know when to fold up.
Know when to walk away.
Know when to run.
You never count your money.
When you're sitting at the table, there'll be time to count when the deal is done.
All right, everybody.
Hey, that's Jack Ryan's intro music tonight.
Kenny Rogers, the gambler.
And we're going to get to Jack immediately.
I just wanted to finish that last quote as it is St. Patrick's Day.
And our favorite Irishman and yours is Major General Patrick Claiborne.
I didn't finish his last quote.
He wrote that the United States government at the time of the war between the states no longer acknowledged that all government derived from the its validity from the consent of the governed.
He finished that quote by saying, They are about to invade our peaceful homes, destroy our property, and murder our men and dishonor our women.
We propose no invasion of the North, no attack on them, and only ask to be left alone.
Life has always been a small matter when duty points the way.
Those are the people we need to be honoring on St. Patrick's Day and every day.
Jack Ryan, to you, my brother, your song tonight, Kenny Rogers, the gambler.
Tell us what you got for us, Jack.
Okay.
Hi, James.
I just want to send you warm greetings from Chicago on St. Patrick's Day.
And I wanted to ask this question.
What do you call an Irish homosexual?
Okay.
It's an Irishman that prefers women to alcohol.
Okay.
And so there's lots of half Irishmen in Chicago that are enjoying alcohol tonight that they're there.
So that, you know, things are like rough, but things are straight and things like that on that in Chicago.
So I love the gambler song tonight.
And so that's my theme tonight.
Knowing when to hold them, walk away, you know, run or things like that.
So that's my theme tonight.
Are the rivers running green in Chicago today, Jack?
Yeah, they did this.
The river's green, but there's all this one, like the biggest incident in Chicago was when the downtown St. Patrick's Day Committee disrespected the Southwest Side Patrick's Day committee, and they split and they did a separate parade.
And so that's the biggest event.
And they've not, this was happened like 30 years ago where they, these sides, whose side were you on?
Were you on the downtown or the south?
So that's the biggest one in our city's history.
Like whose side were you on the downtown St. Patrick's Day or the Southwest Side, St. Patrick's Day.
So it's a pretty Irish city that they've got.
But I'm happy that there's lots of heterosexuals here that are preferring alcohol to women this night.
Okay, so The Gambler, knowing when to walk away, knowing when to run.
The Gambler, Kenny Rogers, that's your song for the week.
Let's go quick to the book and movie recommendations, and then we'll get to the theme.
Right.
Well, you got my book.
So, okay, the movie recommendation is the Fulmonty.
It's just a great, beautiful British movie about some unemployed steelworkers.
A guy is trying to compete for his custody of his child, and then they have this deal that they're going to do these cabaret strippers.
It's a very, it's a G-rated movie, but it's just, it's great, it's fun, it's romantic.
Robert Carlisle, I highly recommend the Fulmonty.
That's my movie.
All right.
And the book, a recommendation, Indian mythology.
What's that about?
Okay, it's a little bit maybe someone's, but yes, highly recommend Indian mythology, Jan Nappert.
So our people, most of our side at Oxford and stuff, we're Christians.
We're trying to make the best of it.
And we can.
We can do these things.
But our people, our civilization, we go back a long, long time, Greek and Roman, Persians, Indians.
And this gets into the Indian mythology that these Indo-Europeans, like way back, and they had a great deal on things like karma, Dharma, the things of the time cycle.
It's beautiful.
It's very, I highly recommend it, this book.
And, you know, you don't want to give up like the Christian, though, the Southern Baptist traders like that.
You could give up those people and stuff like that.
But if you want to get into Indian, these are our people, Indo-European, our people in India.
This is the best book.
It just describes everything you need to know about it.
And if you do this, you could impress some college gals with your knowledge of Dharma, karma, and things like that.
I want to hear from the first TPC listener who has listened to, read, and seen every book, movie, and song recommendation.
Well, we play a little bit of the song each week, so they can't escape that.
But I want to know who's the diehard out there that's done it all.
Now, he gives you a week in between each.
If you don't see all the movies, look at the trailers.
You can look at the trailers.
Yeah.
Jack accepts King.
Professor.
Right.
Yeah.
Just do that one.
That's going to be a course.
It's going to be one we're going to have a grading on it.
And people that don't just work, you know, they're going to get smacked with the rulers.
So we do.
Professor Jack does accept Cliff Stokes, though.
So he will take that.
Cliff is a well-written guy.
I like Cliff.
All right.
So let's talk about the theme of tonight then.
Tell us what the theme is, Jack.
Okay, the theme is we suffered some really brutal, just disappointing things.
With the election of Donald Trump, we had some breakthroughs.
Not just Donald Trump, but the universities we were contesting, going through, and things were looking good.
But this last year, we have suffered some extreme persecutions.
A lot of our people are being persecuted, and they're giving up.
And they're saying, okay, I got to step back and I got to go in with it.
Great attorneys or spokesmen.
And we had a bad sexual scandal this week from our one.
I'm not saying that I can't defend it.
There was adults that did an affair, but any of this, this scandal that we had for our people, Martin Luther King Jr. and John F. Kennedy all did the stuff.
It's not there.
So my suggestion sort of there is we've suffered some defeats, but we're not going to fold.
We're not going to run away.
But sometimes it's better just to sort of walk away and regroup and things like that.
So that's sort of my theme tonight: we need to walk away.
The alt-right was doing good, but we're being severely persecuted.
And you can't one person taking all the media mafia or all the conservatives and things like that.
So sometimes it's time to sort of walk away and regroup and do what we can.
So that's my recommendation and theme tonight.
You shouldn't be too depressed.
But yeah, we're being persecuted.
We're suffering rough things.
In England, just someone who goes in and says, okay, I object to these Muslim Pakistani gangs raping 11-year-old girls.
They're being persecuted and saying, okay, you can't say that.
And so it's rough, it's brutal, and we've got to reorganize and do what we can.
But yeah, we suffered some severe persecution this year and last two weeks.
So that's my theme.
And that's my view: we're not going to give up.
We're not going to run away, but maybe we need to walk away and reorganize.
Well, what about the advice going forward, Jack?
What would you offer in that regard?
Oh, my one is just to understand that we don't live in the roughest, worst times, but we are what they are.
And then you see places that went bad but came back.
So Eastern Europe, Eastern Europe is looking great.
Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Slovakia, Russia, these places that we thought were gone have come back and they've got, they're not as rich as we are, but they have got good culture.
They don't allow terrorists.
They don't allow Pakistani gangs to rape Russian or Ukrainian Polish girls.
They'll do what they can.
So those places went down.
They came back.
And so that's what we should do.
But we have to recognize that we're in a rough spot.
We don't control our media.
We are dispossessed.
The last southerner that controlled a major news network was Ted Turner.
He sold out.
He merged with A.O.L. Time Warner, Gerald Levin.
So we are dispossessed, and we have to understand the situation, do what best we can, and walk away and come back.
But I think things are going to get better.
Things are looking great in Eastern and Central and Russia.
It's never been better since the last 100 years.
So that's my recommendation.
Don't try to take on the whole world yourself.
Don't sell out.
Don't take the 30 pieces of silver.
But we've been through worse and we're going to get through it.
All right.
Very quickly, Jack, and we only have seconds remaining.
Why are those places, and I agree with you, those places we talked about it earlier tonight with Ramsey Paul, talked about it recently with Nick Griffin and others.
Why are those places seeing a renaissance?
30 seconds or less, your answer.
Why do they have a renaissance?
Well, they bottomed out.
They suffered the worst and then they came back.
And then our people, we're a little bit too rich.
We're a little too decadent, watch too much stupid TV.
And we need it, you know, tough enough.
And things get back.
We're going to come back.
So we've been through worse.
And we're going to come back.
Turn off your TV.
I've got this great device, TV Be Gone.
It zaps off the TV and you've got it.
And I think things are going to look better.
And yeah, stay strong and get Netflix.
Listen to James Edsworth.
And we're going to do good.
We're going to win.
Thank you, Jack.
We'll talk to you next week.
For everybody out there reveling tonight, if you got to take a shot, take a shot in honor of the greatest Irishman, Major General Patrick Clayburn of the Confederate States Army.
St. Patrick's Day.
We put a picture of him up on our Twitter account just a few seconds ago.
Thank you, Jack.
We'll talk to you next week.
David Duke up next.
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