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June 30, 2018 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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Time Text
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 Edwards.
The hits just keep on coming tonight from Alabama, ladies and gentlemen.
James Edwards in the Political Cesspool Hour 3.
I love these remote broadcasts from fantastic events.
And I hope Dr. Hill hasn't been assassinated because he was supposed to have shown up at some point.
I guess he's still got an hour, but he's a busy guy.
Oh, he gave us his regards.
Okay, well, that's fine.
Okay, no, that's fine.
He said he's really hired.
Yeah, I know he's exhausted.
He is exhausted.
Yeah, David was falling asleep in the first segment, but we got him perked up.
Are you on the air?
Yeah.
I'm telling people I was falling forward.
Well, that's okay.
I mean, you're just taking a little rap.
You're just taking a little respite.
And we all need that for time.
Wait, see, that's called a power nap.
He took five minutes, and now he's good for another day.
Our leaders aren't supposed to be born.
He's going to be saying I'm old.
No.
One day you will be old, but that's decades from now.
But anyway, we're having a good time, as you can tell.
I mean, I hope this is coming across over the air that we're having a good time, and we're having a good time with good people.
And we've been doing that all weekend here at the League of the South conference.
And I've got Rick Tyler with me now.
Rick, of course, organized a fantastic event a couple of weeks ago that we did a very similar show at.
And we highlighted that event and talked to different people in the crowd and different speakers and, of course, the organizers.
And now Rick too is here with us again in Alabama tonight.
So Rick, what were your takes on this conference, one you didn't have to organize?
Well, James, this was the first time that I had an opportunity to attend a League of the South conference and had wanted to come last year and just wasn't able to.
And I can understand now why I believe probably those who are in the business of trying to monitor our movement and assess who is a real threat and who isn't, I can guarantee you that there are some eyebrows really raised about the League of the South in the halls of power because the League of the South is organized and structured, and they are moving forward in a way that in my decades of involvement in the truth movement, I've never seen anything quite like it.
And I'm extremely impressed, and I think it bodes well for the future.
I bragged so much on the league in the first segment of the first hour when we first opened tonight.
The security details and they knew what was going on.
They said we have an observer across the tree line.
And sure enough, the SPLC, our friends in Montgomery, about 30 minutes from here, already have their report up, and it said, we observed from across the street this.
And so our people knew that they were there.
And undoubtedly they were there.
I say they said they observed across the street.
They were talking about how they observed people under the awning at the League's Cultural Center during the rainstorm.
So we assume that that must have been them across the street if they were witnessing our people under the porch during the storm, which there was a rainstorm today, as is known to happen from time to time.
But no, the league has been very impressive.
I've spoken at League of the South state conferences in Arkansas and Missouri and in other states over the years.
This is my first national conference to come to.
Michael Hill's been on our show many, many times.
We've been to other events together, but this is my first league conference too on a national level.
I am highly impressed.
Very much so.
And as Michael Tubbs in his talk brought out, that the symbolism that the league is putting forth front and center is very powerful.
It's not beyond the pale.
It doesn't transgress certain lines.
And as he brought out, when he goes into venues or just into a restaurant or something with a number of his guys with him, they immediately attract attention and questions.
And people are looking at them.
They're impressed.
And they are drawn to this obvious, this organization, this structure, a very kind of spit and polish type image that they're putting forth.
Now, also, I believe that the Christian emphasis that was very, very much prevalent during this weekend was a key to the rising success of the League of the South.
And I commend them heartily for that.
I think they're on the right track.
Absolutely.
And it was a diverse crowd today.
I saw someone in there from Wyoming.
And that's plenty of diversity for me.
Y'all got that.
No, y'all got that.
Okay.
Anyway.
But no, they did just a good job, a good event all the way around.
We've talked about some of the other speakers talked about.
Rick, could I ask you?
Because you're so loquacious.
That's a word, right?
Y'all know that word?
And Rick is a fantastic orator, and he has an ability to verbalize his thoughts that supersedes mine.
So rather than telling the audience what I talked about, would you please tell them what I talked about?
Well, you read my mind because I was going to bring up the fact, you made a, I believe you made this profound point.
And of course, your talk two weeks ago was very compelling, and people very favorably commented on it.
But you made a point about that, you said to the folks assembled today, you will never be in this room again with these same people.
In other words, this is a historically unique event.
And the synergy that comes into play when you have, unless you were there, you can't really imagine what it was like.
But there was a synergy this weekend.
The crowd assembled.
Now, I always like to sit at the back of the room.
And I guess, you know, I don't know what the psychological reasons for that are.
You can observe, you're the overseer.
Well, and sitting at the back of the room, you really do kind of get an overview or you get that bird's eye view.
And the synergy of the speakers and the crowd and seeing the spontaneous reactions.
I don't know how many standing ovations Dr. Duke got.
I mean, there were too many to count.
And it wasn't patronizing.
It was sincere.
It was from the heart because he was touching that nerve that needs to be touched.
And James, your speech also was so powerful.
And again, starting with that, pointing out to people that this is a historically unique situation you're in right now.
You'll never be in this room with these people again.
Not the exact.
There will be people in that, maybe even a majority who will be back next year.
But the exact people, that exact configuration of individuals will never be at the same place at the same time again.
That was a good comment.
Can you sum up mine for me?
Yeah, I know.
I mean, we got to hire him to be our PR guy.
All right, so David's asking Rick to do the same thing for him.
Of course, we know what David talked about.
That's interesting.
Yeah, how much of it is that?
You know, it's interesting.
Let's put it in Tyler, Tyler-esque.
Leading up to the convention two weeks ago, David had asked me a few times if we would be able to do the health talk there.
I told him I'd do my best, but we really were just so jam-packed with speakers that it just wasn't possible.
I was so glad at this event this weekend at the League of the South that David was able to give this talk that he did today on health because, you know, of course, anytime that Dr. Duke addresses any subject, it's always going to be very cerebral.
He knows his subject matter better than anybody.
And that's why, in addition to his giftedness of communication, he never loses the debate.
He always comes out on top because he knows his subject matter from A to Z.
But on the health issue, he's the same way.
But he doesn't get bogged down in a lot of the type of perspective on it that turns people off.
You know, a lot of times when you start talking to people about health, you know, they recoil and they withdraw.
He makes it so down to earth while at the same time so thorough and informed.
And so I think that, you know, it's not the kind of thing you're expecting to hear at a League of the South conference, and yet it is a very important thing.
But we need to emphasize it more.
Our health is important to our activism, am I right?
And we need to emphasize more about men being men and having families.
And we talked a little bit about that with the couple that was here earlier tonight.
We need to emphasize some of the things that are much more practical in application than a lot of issues are important.
Our issues are vitally important.
We need to be talking about that.
But we also need to be talking about things that people can make a difference in their day-to-day life.
And being healthy and having a family is something people can do if they know how.
And so we talked about that.
The music is playing.
We're going to be back.
Come on with it with Rick Tyler.
The one and only Sonny Thomas just walked in, and he's looking good.
Look at that shirt.
The sword is my lord.
It's bound for glory.
We'll be right back.
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And now back to tonight's show.
Ladies and gentlemen, if you subscribe to the pay-per-view version of TPC, you could have gotten our conversation during the break, which centered around Indiana Jones.
Good movies or bad.
Yeah, we're covering it all tonight.
Hush puppies, corn nuggets, and Indiana Jones.
Anyway, that's the conversation we were having during the break.
Do you like the Indiana Jones movies or not?
And there are some strong opinions there.
Rick Tyler, a few more minutes, a couple more minutes with you.
We want to get sunny on because we've got to get to one more segment with Dr. Duke before Jack Ryan calls in.
Well, getting back to the League of the South and the progress that they're making, it's very exciting to me because the Southern nationalism is so critical.
It's so central to our overall cause.
And Dr. Hill really is to be commended.
He put together a conference this weekend.
And, of course, you can see he's got such depth of leadership.
Guys that spoke yesterday, I wasn't even really familiar with, but just profound, very, very fascinating insight and perspective.
And I think they've got that right balance.
They've got that right equilibrium.
I just heard a slip there.
Was that a Freudian slip?
That wasn't intentional, but I hate to even say Freudian because we don't particularly like him.
But, you know, we were talking earlier.
Y'all were talking earlier about the flag, the American flag.
I can't tell you how many times I've seen, all the way up in Michigan when I was up there for a month last fall, people flying the stars and bars and the Maine and Oregon.
So many of our people.
And of course, that's a revealing of their superficiality, that they're not that very deep in their understanding.
But I think what Dr. Duke said is so important that white people are very connected to the American flag.
And so we don't want to, in any way, alienate or turn them off by being anti-flag.
But I have the same feelings you do, James, as well.
So you're anti-flag.
Well, it's the flag under which Sherman brought a swath to the ocean and he massacred and committed so many war crimes.
So I do have that feeling, but I believe that we have to put it on.
In all seriousness, what David said makes a lot of sense.
I'm not saying I'm necessarily going to go out and buy a federal flag and hug it.
But what he says makes a lot of sense.
What you say makes sense, too.
Yes.
So final word before we go to Sonny.
Well, I'm just thrilled to be here.
We're making history in this room tonight, too, because this is a really great place.
We will never be.
Even, let's see, even this small contingent of people will probably never be in the same room at the same time again in life.
But maybe with the group this small, maybe we can arrange that.
Well, we are the guardians of this truth, and it's a sacred trust.
And I'm just so proud to be a part of a grouping, an assemblage of people who are coalescing around this mission.
Well, and you're much more than just someone who's supporting others.
You're doing the work yourself, organizing conferences.
What you did a couple of weeks ago was just top-notch.
And then, of course, you're running for office.
Let's not forget that, and let's be sure to plug that very quickly.
Well, I think that we can possibly take a page out of the playbook of Dr. Duke in the early 90s in Louisiana, and we might be able to shake Tennessee to its foundations during this campaign.
I'm on the ballot for governor, statewide race.
In fact, we were just kind of— You just got one vote.
I didn't even know that.
How did I not know that?
As long as as much as we talk, well, you got one vote right.
If you can get a vote a second, henceforth, you'll do good.
But you just got one vote.
Well, I'm planning a university tour during the campaign, going around to the universities in the state of Tennessee.
And, of course, that could obviously generate a tremendous amount of publicity.
And who knows where it might end?
Obviously, if we can capture the public's imagination and if we can package our message in a way that is less offensive and by being able to articulate points in a proper way, sometimes we can diffuse a lot of people.
We've got to have you back on to talk more about your campaigns.
David just said he's going to move up to Tennessee so he can register for you.
Well, we're thinking about holding a press conference.
Let's let that develop.
Rick Tyler, everybody, let's give him a big round of applause, indeed.
And as I shake his hand, and Rick, we'll have you back on.
I would like to honestly have you back on just to talk about your candidacies.
But let's get Sonny on right now.
Sonny Thomas.
Sonny came up to me today.
Now, you'll remember Sonny Thomas, folks.
He's been on the show before.
He was at our most recent conference last fall.
And a longtime friend of mine from the Council of Conservative Citizens, and he runs his own radio network.
He is the radio host on his own, right?
And he runs a radio network.
And he came up to me today, and you said, Sonny, that simultaneously as you and I were talking this afternoon, your network was playing something of ours.
Yeah, actually, because we have political cesspool on my network, which is resolutionrdo.com every Wednesday night.
So you play TPC every Wednesday.
Every Wednesday.
You syndicate us on that.
Yeah, you take you or an additional syndicate.
And Dan, on top of it off, I also put a lot of programs on cable access, which covers the entire Southwest Ohio area on a lot of the white rights and white struggles.
And so we feature a lot of different artists on there that have commentaries and things of that nature, mini documentaries, whatever.
And we've been doing a lot of stuff is we took like the American Renaissance conferences, and we've been re-airing those.
And my most recent edition is yours from 2016, where it says the best decision I ever made.
Oh, my American speaker.
That's our current one.
As well as Fernando Cortez's one recently.
I asked him if he was related to the Cortez.
He said he didn't know.
Maybe.
He was a very good speaker.
I mean, he's a Mexican nationalist and stuff.
And he had really good stuff showing how NAFTA, for example, is totally exploited the people of Mexico.
And that was a really good speech.
And so we have also featured some of David Duke's stuff on there as well.
Most recently, Multicultural.
This is television we're talking about right now.
On cable, yeah.
Yeah, cable television.
So we've been public stuff on there and even documentaries such as the wonderful documentary, The Greatest Story Never Told, in its entirety twice, all six and a half hours of it.
So at least now Dennis Wise can say as seen on TV on the DVDs.
So look at what Sonny's doing.
This is what one man can do, another can do.
This is one man with he does his own radio network.
He syndicates TPC or is an additional syndicate that we have here in addition to our home network, of course.
And he does his own radio programs, but he also takes our show and re-airs it on Wednesday nights.
And then he's got the public access channel, and he's playing our talks on there.
And I think while we were talking, that may have been playing.
Is that what you said?
So what we were talking today is currently in rotation right now.
So you should get a six-week spread, which is cool because we're actually getting ready to air the NASA's front meet from April.
It debuts on July the 7th.
And because of some of the language that's in, obviously, it has to air after 10 o'clock at night.
But it gets about a six-week spread.
They're really good at giving me some really good fair time and coverage.
And then I'll break down the speeches individually, which I have five of them already made up.
And so they'll run for about six weeks each.
So you're looking at 36 weeks of commentaries from different speakers, plus in unison with the other speeches like from American Renaissance and other groups and David Duke's stuff.
So we're getting a pretty good spread of the white rights, white genocide, and other issues that are going on.
So those are some things that really matter is because it's an accessible way to get the message out there, especially what's going on in South Africa.
So most people don't know it because ever since Nelson Mandela died, nobody even knows where South Africa is in a map.
That's a good touche.
Well, hey, Sonny, listen, we should have had more time and I want more time, but time is fleeting.
Can you believe it?
The show's almost over.
Give us all your contact information.
So you do the radio network and then, of course, you're airing these things on public access television up in Ohio.
Yes, you can go to sunnythomas.com and a lot of my information is there.
ResolutionRDO.com is the web address for our network.
And of course, we're featured on GAB and some other places as well.
So if you go to sunnythomas.com, you should be able to find plenty of that information.
That's Sonny Thomas, S-O-N-N-Y-T-H-O-M-A-S.
SonnyThas.com.
And from there, that's the hub, and they can link to all of your other enterprises.
Definitely.
Okay, fantastic.
Sonny has been a longtime friend.
I thank Sonny for helping get our show out to an even wider audience.
And I'm sure, David, you would appreciate him putting your stuff on public access TV.
Have you seen my South African matters?
No, I haven't.
We're having a conversation here only once.
We do that from time to time.
That's okay.
We've got the music just started playing.
When we come back, we're going to talk to David Duke again.
He's back.
So stay tuned, everybody.
Round of applause for Sonny.
Can we give it to him?
He deserves it.
Thank you, Sonny.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
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.
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Go online at www.thepoliticalcesspool.org and make a safe and secure donation.
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Go out and find a girl.
Come on, come on, and that's all night.
Despite the heat, it'll be all right and leave.
Don't you know it's a pity the day.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, that song ain't no lie.
It is summer in the city and it is hot.
And that's the loving spoonful.
I actually finally found a proud Southerner who shares my disdain of this merciless summer climate.
Michael Hill last night at dinner is the first one that's ever opened up about how much he hates the heat.
And we came from Northern Europe.
We came from Scotland and Ireland.
We weren't made for this subtropical climate.
I love the South.
I live for the South.
I fight for the South.
I want to die in the South.
I want to be buried in the South.
But I don't like Southern summers.
And we're at the height of it right now with 100 degrees Fahrenheit and 100% humidity.
But oh, yeah, it's you.
I was going to say, who do we need to talk to this segment?
It's you.
Well, I want to, very quickly, let me get this.
It's talking to me, folks.
It's me.
Nobody knows my name.
You just you.
No, well, of course, I don't even have to say your name because I'm saying, but you know.
Today, so many people came up and said, I've been listening to the political cesspool since high school.
I've been listening for all these years.
I've been listening forever.
I've been listening.
This young lady right here came up and said, I've never listened to your show before, but I'd like to come in tonight while you broadcast it to see what it's all about.
So we have a first-time listener tonight.
Not only that, the first show she's ever listened to is this live broadcast sitting in here with us as we do it remotely.
So my cord won't read.
What's your impression now?
We're about done with it.
I have had so much fun and such a good time.
So I'm very grateful that I was able to come and listen to my first broadcast of TPC tonight.
A brand new listener, first show ever.
You may tune in again.
Yes.
Okay.
I don't know if it'll be this fun next week because we won't all be there, but it won't be, folks.
Thank you so much.
And I told her today, it's always great doing.
If we're not reaching new people, we're not doing our job.
Yes, we love the people who have been supporting us for years, but we've got to reach new people too.
And we've got a new one.
What a first show experience.
I've never heard of anything like that.
My whole life has been about reaching new people.
I've always felt that's the main thing.
That's why I often say the fundamentals because I want to make sure every time somebody tunes in, if it's a lark or they just make a mistake, they get the basic message, a little bit of it, so that makes it very clear that it says, hey, and the little bell goes off.
Look, we can't just preach to the choir every week.
We've got to reach new people.
And I'm glad you're here tonight.
David, very quickly, just a quick 30-second answer because I got to ask you.
From me?
I know it's tough.
But I want to ask you about another current event that I'd like to get your take on.
Sure.
Southern weather, though, your thoughts.
I said it last night at the dinner with Dr. Hill.
It's the one thing I really don't like about this.
Okay, so you're on board, too.
I'm one of these guys.
In fact, of course, I grew up in the city.
I complain about the weather.
New Orleans makes Memphis or places up here look like the Arctic.
And I soaked up in the swamps, you know, to the wetlands, the mosquitoes, and the heat.
I mean, the humidity is unbelievable, it just boils off the swamp water, you know, and then it floats over the city.
And then when I went to military school, well, I actually went to Europe when I was very young, so I went in the Alps with my folks.
And then later I lived in Europe about half the time, about half the time here in Austria and the Alps, way up in the mountains and beautiful little town.
And I never needed an air conditioner one day in the summer.
Man, it's just, I just, I tell you what, our ancestors were tougher than I am because they could make it without AC.
And, you know, because of me, because I grew up in this flat land where you can't even see much more than a few hundred yards, when I got to the mountains, you know, a person that comes in the flatland loves the mountains.
Like you're in the Mississippi, you know, by the river there and flat in Memphis.
When you go to the mountains, it's so inspiring.
I mean, it's.
So we don't have mountains in Memphis.
Well, that's right.
You don't have mountains in Memphis.
So when you go there from the flatlands are like me, and you could see for, I could go up in the mountains and see 100 miles or climb a 3,000, 4,000-foot peak.
You know, it's just, it's the greatest exhilaration in the world.
Well, and that's where we came from, too.
I mean, that's our ancestral homeland.
You go to Europe and you are at home.
We talked about that with Michael Hill last week.
Michael Hill was actually on the show last week to promote the conference and to promote his book on Celtic warfare.
And he talked about being over in Ireland, being over in Scotland.
It immediately called his ancestral memory.
I hadn't ever heard it actually put that way, his ancestral memory.
He instantly felt as though he was at home, having never been there before, never born there, never visited.
Anyway, I want to ask you about this.
Last week during the show, somebody came and whispered in my ear about a topic that was breaking while we were on the air, but I saw the headline, but I really didn't know the story.
And it's the story about Sarah Huckleby Sanders in the Red Hen restaurant in Lexington, Virginia, which is where, of course, Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson are buried.
It's a beautiful town.
It's a small town, a college town, 7,000 people.
I am no hypocrite when it comes to this topic.
I believe that any private business has the right to reject service to anyone for any reason.
I have no problem with them asking her to leave.
Obviously, there's a double standard here.
Now, one double standard in this particular case is that a lot of the staff, apparently, according to the owner, were homosexuals.
And so the homosexuals called her up and they said, we want you to ask her to leave and her party to leave.
Now, homosexuals, that's interesting because aren't they the ones that could only take a cake from this one Christian bakery probably in the whole country that didn't want to make it for them?
And they went all the way to the Supreme Court.
But yet when they come in, when somebody that they don't like comes into one of their establishments that they work at, they want to ask them to leave.
So it's for that reason that I hope that this particular owner loses the business and somebody who's proud of their southern patrimony buys it and renames it the Stonewall Tavern.
But what's your take on this?
I mean, it's a trivial topic, I guess.
My take is, is there any type or weird kind of humanity that is more pushy than a homosexual?
I didn't even know there was a homosexual component to this story.
I'm getting owner-offered.
I'm getting to the point where I don't think, I think we almost need laws, especially about employment, university laws against political discrimination.
Now, when I was in the legislature, I also worked for and supported an amendment which we passed in Louisiana against political discrimination.
And there should be.
Yeah, when we were on top, it's a different thing, obviously.
Maybe you wouldn't want it, but the truth is we're in the bottom now.
We're the ones facing massive discrimination as white people.
And the idea that somebody works their lifetime 40 years for a company or 30 years for a company, like Apple or one of these companies, and if they showed up with their bumper sticker, the person they want for president, they lose their job.
You know, they lose maybe their pension.
Maybe they're five years away from pension.
They are destroyed.
They lose their house that they've been paying on on all the money they put into it because it's dispossessed from them.
I mean, it's possessed from them.
I mean, this is crazy.
I think we need political protection laws in this house.
I think that's a great point.
I mean, you can't deny, again, I'm not going to be a hypocrite like our enemies are.
Private business is different than a governmental entity.
They can deny service to whomever.
This gets back to Starbucks and all that other stuff.
But if you're going to make it where you can't discriminate against certain people, you shouldn't be able to discriminate against anyone for any reason.
But you know what?
If they have so much control that, all right, let's say that they can discriminate against you.
All right.
And the majority discriminates against you because the pressure is going to be put on them that they're going to lose all their other customers or businessmen or banquets.
Well, we've seen it.
I mean, when you and I were in Memphis, you got kicked out of three hotel rooms that you were just using for your private accommodations.
That wasn't even a.
Yeah, but you've got to understand I'm a really bad guy.
I was there in the room and you go, well, we're getting kicked out of the hill.
I'm so terrible.
I actually defend the rights of white people.
But that wasn't even places we were trying to hold that conference, which we did pull off.
It was one of the most wonderful events of my life.
But you were talking about getting kicked out of three rooms that you were just trying to sleep at.
You weren't holding a meeting there.
You weren't holding press there.
You were just trying to sleep there.
That's why, you know, it's hard for me to go to Europe.
You know, I've spent so many, I don't have any problem finding a place to sleep in Europe.
They put me in jail so much.
It's not the most comfortable room you ever had, but at least it's a place.
You don't have any pillows or anything, but you can lay your head down and sleep.
But no, it's really bad because, and that's what's happening right now.
We're seeing a shutdown of the very fundamental rights of Western European people in our own countries.
We still have the majority of.
We're coming up on another hard break, and it's not a normal show tonight because we're working on so many people.
But you've heard what I've said in my last couple of talks when it comes time for me to make the point on how we don't betray a brother.
And I give the example that I give when people ask me about you.
I say, you got it wrong.
You don't know the half of it.
And I want people to know tonight, I love you.
You're a good friend of mine.
You're a brother, a comrade.
And thanks for hanging out with us and popping on and off throughout the course, intermittently as it were throughout the course of the show tonight.
DavidDuke.com, DavidDuke.com, DavidDuke.com.
Support him.
Well, I just kind of, it still curdles my back for somebody to say, I love you when they're a guy.
Yeah, but you tell it to me at the cracker barrel.
I'm giving away all the time.
In response to what you said.
I said, yeah, I love you too.
But, you know, I always saw funny, you know?
Well, no, you're giving me a hard time about my friend.
My daddy didn't even say that to me.
Because it was like a shake, a handshake.
We men handshakes.
Yeah, that's right.
I respected that as a kid, and I wanted to grow up the same way.
Yeah, that's right.
Well, see, but my dad did tell me.
But that's why maybe that's why we're so soft.
You know, we're too soft.
No, no, no.
We love our brothers.
I did a whole speech today about being hard as glass, hard as rock.
Well, they love each other too, though.
Well, they did, but they didn't say it to each other.
Okay, if it's something anyway, I do tell people I love them.
Well, okay.
I know.
I do too sometimes.
It's gotta be really a special occasion.
Like if you're gonna get your father on his birthday or over fried food, and you don't want people to get the wrong idea that you're gonna be.
Like your mother's dying.
Love your mom.
Okay.
Oh, man.
This is one of the most fun shows I've had.
I've got to tell you.
Most people never hear my sense of humor.
Well, the music.
No, well, you got a good sense of humor.
Oh, maybe.
We got to take a break to the music player.
We're back with Jack Ron.
David Duke, everybody.
Support him.
DavidDuke.com.
Now, Mr. and Mrs. Sir Gallagher, what seems to be the problem?
Well, it's just not working.
She's been very unrealistic, really.
Ever since he rescued me from the dragon, we've been drifting apart.
That's not true.
We were supposed to live happily ever after.
Now, this isn't a fairy tale.
At first, he was gallant and chivalrous, opening doors for me, holding my chair, taking my arm.
All right, I'm not as young as I used to be.
He simply isn't the man who swept me off my feet.
Well, you're not as young as you used to be.
Mr. Sir Gallagher, maybe if you started by just holding Mrs. Sir Gallagher's hand when you're together.
Really?
Yes, try it.
Okay.
All right, go on.
Take your hand.
Careful, Lilo.
Marriage.
You're never too far apart when you're still holding hands.
From your neighbors, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Now, look into each other's eyes.
That's right.
Raise your visor.
For more tips on strengthening your marriage, visit family.morman.org.
Can a nation conceived in liberty carry its head high if it denies protection to the youngest and most vulnerable of its citizens?
Can a country founded on God-given rights continue to thrive without understanding that life is a precious gift from our Creator?
As a physician, I have looked into the eyes of one-pound babies.
I have cradled their small bodies in the palm of one hand.
I defy those who are careless, who would disregard life and look at these tiny little miracles and say, we're not going to protect that.
But I believe there will come a time when we are all judged on whether or not we took a stand in defense of all life from the moment of conception until our last natural breath.
One thing I promise you, I will always take a stand for life.
As a parent, is receiving a faith-based, character-focused education for your children difficult to find?
Do you believe that godly principles should be a central component in your child's education?
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That's American-Heritage.org.
The great Todd Rundgren, now.
I think that's the first on TPC, but I do like that song.
And this is Jack Ryan's segment.
We have spent the entire show tonight talking about the League of the South conference, talking with people who were at the League of the South conference, but we're making a departure to the final segment because we did not want to bump Jack.
Jack is an integral part of our show each week, and his segment is important.
And I was adamant about that Jack keep his segment tonight, even if it is tucked away here as the closer.
Jack, welcome.
How are you?
I'm doing okay, but it's really very, very hot in and outside of Chicago.
Hey, we were just complaining about the heat down here, and you've even got it up.
You're not a Yankee.
We've established that.
A Midwesterner from Chicago is complaining about the heat.
You know, it's pretty bad.
A Midwesterner.
Midwesterner, Jack Ryan.
I want to dedicate that song about I don't want to work to Reverend Jesse Jackson, Reverend Al Sharpton, Reverend Jeremiah Wright, and also the Bush family, the Kennedy family, all these people that just have managed to avoid doing honest work.
It's like in this rough thing, we got boom.
They're building high-rise.
We got a lot of people that are kicking ass and are working really hard in this one, and they're working hard.
So I wanted to do that show for all these other people that don't want to work.
To our listeners out there that are working hard and my employees and my workers for our people, because there's a lot of people that don't want to work.
They've got some scams and stuff.
So that's why I like that show, that song, Todd Rundgren, I don't want to work.
And there's a lot of people, they got some scams, and they don't want to work.
I don't really believe it.
Well, what you just said, though, this is going to be.
Well, you always crack me up, Jack.
You are our cultural correspondent, after all.
Books, film, music.
But Jack's also a funny guy.
And I think it's important to infuse humor into our work.
Yeah, Al Sharp and all these other guys, hey, it's a good gig if you can get it to become fabulously wealthy and powerful without ever having to work for anything.
But for the rest of us, it's another story.
That's right, Jack.
And so that's the song.
Let's talk about the book and the movie recommendations, and we'll get to your theme of the week, my friend.
Okay, so both my book and movie recommendations are, sorry, there's a lot of street people that are coming here.
It's Oscar Wilde Picture of Dorian Gray.
So Oscar Wilde is this writer in Victorian England.
He's a brilliant guy, but he is a homosexual.
Dave wants their bisexual.
So this is this story about this very selfish, beautiful guy who makes a deal with the devil that he has a portrait of him.
It's a painting and says that he would never aged.
And so this picture that they portrait on him would All the bad things that he did.
He gets eternal youth.
And this portrait, all the bad things that he did, these things, the portrait would be corrupted and he would stay eternally young.
And there was a great, there's a couple of movies that they did, pictures of Dorian Gray, but the 1940 40s one is the best one.
So that's my recommendation.
Picture of portrait of picture of Dorian Gray.
And Oscar Wilde is just a brilliant guy.
The British have lots of incredible artists, writers, gay people, but this was in Victorian times where they forced them to get married and stuff like that.
So I think that that's one of my highest recommendations: Oscar Wilde's picture of Dorian Gray.
Sweet.
Fantastic.
Thank you, Jack.
Then about your other recommendation.
What other recommendations on that, like book and movie?
Those are the ones.
I don't have any other ones.
The book is Oscar.
It's a double one.
I don't like it.
All right.
All right, no, you got it.
You got it.
Let's what I meant to ask was the theme.
We've got a little content here, and there's some crosstalk in the background.
Let's go to your theme of the week if we could.
Let's go to that.
My theme is maybe dealing with gay people.
That's sort of my theme.
Oscar Wilde.
Like the British have so many talented gay and people.
And so I'm in a big city.
And you're just like a healthy society has less open homosexuality.
And so you want to discourage it.
You want to have it.
But how do you deal with it?
So, like, sort of my theme is that would you rather have your neighbor be this talented gay artist than Cherry Desperator or some Algerian guy that's back, you know, just cutting up sheep in his in his one.
So, like there, my one is like gay, there always been gay people.
There always been one and we got it.
We got to.
You know, deal with it um, but they I don't know.
I just think if you, if you just deal with it in a, in a in a right way uh they, they could be more of a positive a lot of things they do, like gentrification, going in cities or dealing with the arts uh, some of the the, a lot of the gay things we do we could do.
So that's sort of my theme tonight, Oscar Wild.
But we were strict in Victorian England, like there was homosexuality was, was not was illegal up until 1970s in in in Britain.
So that's my sort of my theme, dealing with gay people.
But there's a lot of talented gay people and and they do a lot of things.
So I think a lot of ones that we could do there.
So that's sort of my sort of my theme.
Well, you know, speaking on on this uh, I would say that of course, as we know, it was classified as a mental illness all the way up until the 1970s by the American Psychiatric Association right and then, in addition to that, even into the early 2000s.
In the early 2000s you could still get arrested in Texas, and people were arrested in Texas for public displays of homosexuality.
Now they They weren't busting down doors and arresting people in their homes or in their bedrooms.
But if you did a public display of homosexuality, even in Texas in the early 2000s, that was very recently that was the case.
But we were talking about this not long ago.
Yeah, in a private conversation.
I mean, a problem is, of course, all of the foods.
You're getting more estrogen.
You're getting less testosterone baths as you develop in the womb.
And so that factors into it as well.
I think the biggest problem is these bad women.
These feminist women are there.
And a lot of men, they see these women and they're not attracted to them.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg or Elinda Kagan, and they see this woman, they're not attracted to them, so they think they're gay.
So I think that the women of the South, when I was there, the good women, Courtney from Alabama, my girlfriend, Cindy Ray from Chattanooga, they're there.
And so these corruptions, the main one, we want to do positive male-female ones and there.
But this feminist plague is one of the worst curses they've ever affected our people.
It's just terrible.
And so I think that this gay thing, but Oscar Wilde or Buddy Mercury, the lead singer of Queen, they did have relations with women.
They had families.
Oscar Wilde was married.
He had children.
And so I don't think we should give up.
I think we should stay in there and we should encourage the mayor.
Well, I think all I would say is it's not anything that should be encouraged.
In fact, quite the opposite.
I don't have a problem with anti-sodomy laws.
But if you are going to have them in your society, it's better to be able to be better for them to be on our side, I guess.
Is that what we're trying to say?
I mean, I would agree with that.
If they are going to be here, it'd be better for them to be supportive rather than antagonistic.
And there's no reason why.
There's no reason, honestly, why white homosexuals can't be supportive of a pro-white cause.
That's not to say that we're endorsing that or that we think that that's a healthy lifestyle.
But if they do exist, they might as well be supportive because they've got a vested interest in that as well.
And sorry to overtalk you, Jack.
But the other thing is like a lot of things that the gay people do in the cities, there are things that we can do.
We can do good interior decoration.
We can do good dressers.
We can be into these arts.
You know, there are a lot of things that the gay people do.
Like, I'm a good cook.
Okay.
Those are things that are ours.
Yeah, that's a great.
That is a good point.
Yes.
The things that are now identified as hopefully homosexual, having an affinity for the arts or being able to prepare a nice meal, heterosexual men can do that too.
They could.
And obviously have throughout history.
But you have to train them.
We have to get in there.
And we have to do these things, these machos.
So we can't say that being a good dresser or being a good cook is something that's like gay.
These are things that we have to do for our young people.
And our guys have to do that.
And we can, if you're a good cook, and if you're a good dresser, and if you're a good partner dancer, which is something that I highly recommend, you know, you're going to get, you're going to, women are going to like that.
A lot of women like gay people, they are.
But so those are things that we've got to do.
And we've got to encourage our listeners to get in there and dress well and be good partner dancers and live a good life.
So that's sort of my theme for this week.
And that's the way.
That's a fantastic theme, Jack.
I appreciate this because this is provocative.
You're right.
Because the way the media fashions it, you can't be fashionable.
You can't have an appreciation for high culture unless you are either a woman or a homosexual.
And that is just not the case.
That's why you're our cultural correspondent, Jack.
Well, good.
We've got to bring in somebody that's a little cultured around here.
Another segment with Jack going by far too fast.
Jack, being remote, it's a little bit more difficult to hear you than normal.
So I apologize if I overtalked you at all.
But we are out of time.
And thank you, Jack, for your contributions.
Folks, I'll be back at home next week.
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