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Nov. 24, 2018 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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20181124_Hour_3
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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 Edward.
If you know the song, sing along.
Have really changed.
Since I kissed you.
I knew the very first part.
I should know it.
I was there.
I think it was 1957.
Hey, let me ask you this.
I played this game with Keith from time to time.
Eddie, the Bible and David Miller now in the studio.
Ladies and gentlemen, James Edwards, the political cesspool, Saturday evening, November 24th.
And I've just now got Eddie's mic potted all the way up.
Eddie, I do this with Keith from time to time.
Was the world better off in the late 50s or better off now?
It was infinitely better in those days.
And those guys, the Everly Brothers, came from your neck of the woods up there in Kentucky.
Yes, they did.
They're Kentucky boys.
Yes, they did.
The Kentucky boys.
As a matter of fact, I've been right by where they were born.
I took my grandson there back in he was a junior in high school.
We went to see my kinfolks up in Bloody Breath County, Kentucky.
And I don't know if you know this.
I've shared this story before on the show, but I don't know if it was Phil or Don Everly, but one of them bought a home in Nashville specifically because Nathan Bedford Forrest rehabilitated there after one of his injuries during the war.
I remember you talking about that.
And he said that it was a beautiful story there, that it was very special to him that Forrest recuperated in the home that he now owns.
They were right-thinking Kentucky boys.
Right-thinking.
Beautiful music, a beautiful time.
It's the America we'd like to restore by and large.
1950s America, you know, even though we had lost the war, even though we had made the follies of participating in World War I and World War IB, America in the early 1950s was still a beautiful place, and that was beautiful music.
And of course, that seems like it never happened compared to where we are now.
But that happened within your lifetime.
Yes, it did.
Matter of fact, I know this may be a rabbit trail, but it's a nice rabbit trail.
It's a pappy rabbit trail.
You don't ever go down a rabbit trail, do you, Peppy?
Lord, no.
I was running through the University of Memphis campus today.
It's a big campus.
It's not a little Memphis State College like it used to be.
And they have this monument.
These monuments are popping up everywhere.
It just so happens, it's in 1959.
Guess what happened in 1959 at the University of Memphis?
Of course, in those days, it was Memphis State.
The first black suitors came in out there.
They said they had to bring them in under guard.
And they had to leave.
In the 50s, that seems a little early.
Yeah, they had to leave under guard and all this crap.
And they greatly exaggerated it.
There's a plaque like that on Ola Bruce School.
You remember that guy in Old Miss who desecrated one of those plaques?
And I think he's doing like life in prison because of it.
Life in, you know, 99 years in electric share if they could do it.
But, you know, this plaque up there is just, and it's just bogus.
And I wanted to say, why don't we put a plaque over South Memphis where my little friend Larry McVeigh got his ribs beaten so bad.
What about the speech you gave at our most recent conference?
You slept with a shotgun under your pillow because you had to walk home in integrated neighborhoods.
Was diversity your greatest strength in those days?
I'll tell you what, that street was that was mighty, that was mighty tough there.
My pappy, as you well know, I've told James this a hundred times.
You're the pappy.
Well, that's right.
Yeah, I'm pappy too.
You're pappy now.
It descends.
You know what?
Before I die, I got to get you up.
I'm going to take you up to Pine Ridge, Kentucky.
That's where I was born.
I was born up in Pine Ridge, Kentucky.
Forget this.
You can even get me out to go fishing.
I got kids now.
You know how that is.
Yeah, we'll have to get one of these knockout drops.
Some of the listeners will send me some knockout drops.
We'll get James Edwards, my peppy someboy.
We're going to go up to Pine Ridge, Kentucky.
Guess what they got?
The old.
Well, you took Sam.
Yeah, I knew it.
I knew it.
Sam just came in our heads and said he wanted to go that direction.
Remember when Sam and Kurt wanted you to take them to the Primeval Forest in Arkansas?
Eddie took Sam to a primeval forest in Arkansas.
Sure did.
Sure as hell did.
We took him to Indian Mounds, too.
And I had my mason fruit jar that day that Sam was so intrigued with.
What about the Indian Mounds?
The Indian Mountains.
We were there at the Indian Mountains.
Yes, sir.
Matter of fact, the first time that I ran away, the first time I ever hopped a freight train run away, we camped out there at the Indian Mounds.
That was DeSoto Park.
Just a mile or so from the Harryham Bridge.
We hopped a freight train and went over, got caught, went all the way up to Missouri, got caught.
Matter of fact, we were out of money, starving to death.
We were on the way back.
We got caught in Cabool, Missouri.
I was 11.
My buddy, my accomplice, was 10.
I got to interrupt you right there because no, no, no, I can't.
I can't.
Because when Rich Hamblin texts us, you stop talking.
Rich.
He complained about the music.
No.
Now, hang on a minute.
Rich tells us that, and Rich is one of our greatest friends.
Now, is that true or not?
He's a hell of a guy.
And he's about to go to South Africa, and we're going to talk about that this hour.
He's about to go to South Africa to visit our good friend Simon Roche.
But Rich says that the Everly brother lived in Columbia, Tennessee, not Nashville.
I am mistaken.
That's near enough.
I mean, as far as Memphis is concerned, relatively speaking.
And Rich writes that his cousin was actually an accountant for one of the Everly brothers.
But anyway, so that happened in Columbia.
I stand corrected.
But nevertheless, I appreciate the respect that one of the Everly brothers showed to a true American hero in all-America, Nathan Bedford Forest.
Yep, I tell you what, you know, well, there's a lot of good people in Tennessee and Kentucky.
So many of us have been brainwashed nowadays, but sometimes I get kind of down thinking our younger people aren't worth a crap.
But I've been told that.
But you've been working on Blood River Radio, everybody.
BloodriverRadio.com.
Eddie now has a show now, I think in its seventh week, seventh day of the week.
Oldest one there by far.
Yeah, but I mean, Blood River Radio immediately precedes TPC on Liberty News Radio Network, and Eddie's working with a cadre of young folks, including Matt Goodwin and, of course, Jacob Tyler, son of Rick Tyler, who's both good friends of ours.
And you've got a good show there growing.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Just in its second month, so still in its infancy, but you've surrounded yourself with a good team.
Unique from TPC, but also, of course, very similar and something that our people need to check out.
Blood River Radio, Blood RiverRadio.com immediately before TPC every Saturday night here on the network.
You know what, folks, we're all of this battle together.
We'll either, what that Benjamin Franklin said, we'll either hang together or hang separately.
So you did two hours of radio on your own show tonight and then coming in now for the third hour tonight, pulling double duty, double shift.
You know what?
See, James is doing a heavy lifting right now.
All I got to do is sit back here, enjoy this ambiance, if I'm saying that right.
I hadn't seen James in like three weeks.
That's actually what we're going to get into in the next segment.
Let me tell you what's coming up on the rest of the hour.
We're going to revisit the Cindy Hyde-Smith story from Mississippi.
So we didn't cover all of that in the first hour because I brought my wife on and we were talking.
But when we come back, before we go back to Mississippi, and there was a huge, huge piece by CNN this week on Simon and the Sightlanders.
So that we're going to talk about as well.
Rich is going over to South Africa in a few days.
We're going to talk about that.
But before we get to any of that, when we come back immediately after this, we spent the last segment porch talk, as sometimes happens when yours truly and Andy DeBomedeer Miller join forces here on the radio.
Little porch talk, little reminiscing about the good old days.
When we come back, Eddie just got back.
Well, we haven't seen each other in three weeks.
I was on vacation last week.
The week before that, Eddie was in New York running and completing the New York Marathon.
We're going to hear that story when we come.
It was glorious.
Recent studies show that parents who smoke in the home are more likely to have children who smoke.
Yes, in fact, my brother, he's 22 now.
He told me and my father that's why he started smoking.
One of the reasons why he started smoking is because my dad was around, you know, and my dad, they saw my dad smoking.
My dad said, okay, I don't want you to smoke.
I don't want you to watch what I'm doing.
Recent studies also show that in homes where parents don't smoke, their children usually don't smoke either.
I am the way I am because my grandparents taught me what not to do.
They gave me morals.
They gave me belief.
They gave me something to believe in.
They just taught me, well, I love them.
I do.
Smoking.
If you think you're old enough to start, you're smart enough to stop.
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We are protecting the sanctity of life and the family as the foundation of our society.
And most importantly of all, it is the gift of life itself.
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And now back to tonight's show.
All right, we're back.
We spent that first segment doing a little porch talk, reminiscing on the Evelyn Brothers and Nathan Bedford Forrest.
One of the greatest Americans, maybe the second greatest American behind Robert E. Lee, as far as I see it.
Now, that's a matter of a man's opinion, but I don't know.
There's so many good ones.
Patrick Clayburn, Jefferson Davis.
They all fall for the Confederacy among the greatest Americans.
But nevertheless, a little porch talk in the first segment, but we got to get, I guess we've got to give you a little bit of news this hour.
We're going to revisit the story of Cindy Hyde Smith.
Now, she's in a runoff election in Mississippi this week against a black Democrat.
We're going to talk about that a little bit more this hour.
Eddie, now we covered that a little bit in the first hour with Keith Alexander.
Eddie is going to have his unique perspective on what's going on and what's being said about Cindy Hyde Smith for her visit to Beauvoir, Jefferson Davis' home, in 2014.
And the fact that now just this weekend, she's being a pretend bombshell that she attended a segregation academy, as they call it.
That's also known as a private school for the rest of us in the world.
We'll talk about that with Eddie.
We're going to get his take.
We got Keith's take on it in the first hour, Eddie's take on it in the third hour.
But first, what we want to know, Eddie came into the studio tonight wearing a gold medallion.
And I mean, that is authentic, solid gold.
You got that right, brother.
But what it is, is the medal that he got for not only running, but completing and crossing the finish line of the New York Marathon.
So last week, I was on vacation with my family.
The week before that, Eddie was in New York.
So it's actually been three weeks' time since Eddie's been here in the studio with me on TPC.
But two weeks ago tonight, Eddie, you were in New York.
You ran, as a man of a certain age, the New York Marathon for the how many time?
And you finished it and tell us that whole experience.
It was my fourth time.
I ran.
You get this.
Give him a round of applause.
How old are you, Eddie?
I was 71 years old.
71 years old.
And when was your first New York Marathon?
My first New York Marathon was 2014.
So 60.
67.
67, his first marathon, 71.
He's run four marathons in the New York Marathon.
Thank you.
From 67 to 71.
Ladies and gentlemen, join me now in a round of applause.
And I made an awesome.
Thank you very much.
Thank you very much.
And I came back, you know, and this year, they kind of talked me out of it.
214, 15, 16, you know, I double back from New York and ran the Memphis Marathon.
Memphis-St. Jude Marathon will be December 1st.
We raised Buku and Swansea money.
Let me tell you, I've got to get this out.
So I'm so proud.
The little group that I went to New York with, and thanks to all you people in political says pool who contributed to St. Jude.
God bless you.
If you're ever coming to Memphis, you have to go to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
I'll take you out there.
We raised over $750,000.
Just a little group I went to New York with, St. Jude Heroes.
We raised over $3 million for our St. Jude Heroes here in Memphis for the Memphis Marathon.
But I'll tell you what, there's nothing on this earth like running the New York Marathon.
I don't care if you're a Yankee or Rebel, whatever you are.
There's so many good people up there.
They spoiled me rotten.
My oldest daughter spoiled me on Rotten.
She took me some restaurants.
I mean, my hair just fell off dearly.
It was so expensive.
She told me to shut the hell up about the money.
It was payback time.
And I kept saying the money, the money, the money.
She finally told me she's sick and tired of hearing about the stinking money is her money.
She's going to spend it.
She said, It's payback times that me and her mother work like dogs, send them to private schools.
Oh, excuse me, segregation academies.
And, you know, we sent them to these segregation academies where they didn't learn anything, but it's putting how to hate blacks.
But it's just so wonderful.
Just me and her.
Hey, wait till we get him in the next segment, folks.
We'll really let loose on this.
Hey, my wife, hey, it's going to be the, I don't know.
It's been a good show tonight, but it may be the highlight of the show.
We let Eddie lose.
We haven't seen Sunboy so long.
It's just like coming home tonight.
It's only been three weeks, but I was out there.
It's like three years.
You were out of town two weeks ago.
Oh, sweet Danny.
She's so precious, man.
She spoils me, right?
Yeah, Danny's in the studio tonight because we got a babysitter tonight.
We're going to go on a date.
I still date my wife after 12 years.
You still date your wife after a bunch.
I think it's going to.
God, I can't.
Do you know what's going to be 50?
Is it 50 or 51 years, Jula?
No, January.
It's a long time.
It's a long time, son.
I mean, what's it like to cross the marathon finish line as a 71-year-old running his fourth New York marathon?
That doesn't count all of the Nashville marathons and the Memphis marathons.
He's run a lot of marathons.
This man is a superhuman.
I mean it.
Superhuman.
What we'll do in Mr. Marine Jeans like this.
I want to run the Marine Corps.
I can't run to the mailbox.
What it takes training.
Patty could train you.
I think the Marine Corps is two weeks before, one or two weeks prior to New York.
I want to run the Marine Corps.
Not that, you know, not to love Marines so much, but they're good guys.
I'm going to have to admit that.
You know, anybody who's a friend of Gene Andrews, a friend of mine, and Gene was a Marine.
You know, your Army, Gene's a Marine, Art is Navy.
And what's the joke?
Winston's David.
Oh, well, like I told him, you know, I love my Marine guys, but I joined the Marines, passed all the tests.
Knocked the IQ test out of the park.
I mean, that was the bringing IQ.
It was a joke.
You know, and I was just getting ready to sign the papers, man.
And the Marine recruiting officer came out and said, don't let him.
We love him to death.
He's knocked the IQ test out.
A whole nine-yard.
We can't let him in because his parents were married.
And I laugh every time.
All right.
But now, hey, very quickly, because we got to get back to news.
We're going to talk about the Southern Baptist versus Cindy Hyde Smith.
Her visit to.
Hang on.
Let me get the correct pronunciation here from Rich.
Rich will correct us on the show.
He has no.
Rich is one of these Wennerville brands.
No, he is.
Rich is a brain.
Rich.
I hate talking to him because I only got 50 words about vocabulary.
He graduated from Vagin Friender Belt, man.
Friggin' Veteran friggin' belt.
With a degree.
You pronounce Jefferson Davis's home as the correct pronunciation is Bouvoir.
I can't.
It's French.
So, I mean, how are we expected to get it right?
Well, listen, from a guy like Rich, he majored in Rich owns a piece of that.
You actually said you wanted to be buried with the piece of Jefferson Davis' roof.
Amen.
That brother.
I got so many emails from people all over the world with how they have framed their piece of that roof that was given to them by us through extension from the Jefferson Davis home, which we did some fundraising for many years ago after Katrina.
But nevertheless, a very special price.
So we're going to go back to that story with Cindy Hyde Smith running in a runoff election against a black Democrat.
Well, Rich, I said I can't run all the way to my mailbox.
Rich wants me to tell everyone how far it is to my mailbox.
Well, obviously, it's 40 miles to my mom.
26.2 feet.
No, no, no.
26.3 miles to my mailbox.
26.2 miles in a marathon.
How far is it to your mailbox now?
26.4.
But you know what?
Patty can have him run the marathon.
You can give me 22 weeks with some boy.
I have the dude run the marathon.
I've been to every friggin.
Well, see, that's not on the Duke fitness plan.
See, Duke doesn't focus a lot on running.
He focused a lot on weightlifting.
I'm going to convert him over a little bit.
You've got to have a mixture of that, you know.
But yeah, convert him.
I'm on the Duke plan.
So I have built some muscle mass, but I don't know if I could run 26 point.
I run 26.3 to my mailbox, but 26.
Sam.
All right, anyway.
So we're going to talk about that.
Eddie, bottom line, what's it like being a Confederate in New York?
I'll tell you what, I'll have to say this, folks.
And are you a Confederate?
Oh, to the bone.
But you go to New York to run the marathon.
I'll tell you what.
I ran through my, I've never done a shakeout run.
I've never believed in it.
But this year I did what they called a shakeout run.
And I did it in Central Park.
And I will have to say this.
I was very pleasantly surprised.
I have never had a menace problem in New York.
I've never had menace problems in Manhattan.
And I'll have to say this.
I almost hate to admit, well, I don't almost.
I do hate to admit this.
You see a lot more race mixing in Memphis, Tennessee, especially down in Guruville, where I go.
I ride my bicycles.
You know, James, three days a week through the hood, down to the river to do the stairs and crossbrain and stuff.
Run across the business, Arkansas Bridge, what they call pedestrian bridge.
But I would say for every 20 couples you see downtown, especially on the weekends, every 20 couples, I'm going to say at least five of them are mixed.
In New York, I think I saw two the whole time I was there.
I talked about this with Bill Johnson.
They're friendly too.
They're really friendly.
I talked about this with Bill Johnson.
Well, that's in Midtown.
That's not indicative across the South.
Obviously, it's very rare.
Still, even to this day.
Bill Johnson said in L.A., four out of five.
Four out of five.
Are you kidding me?
A lot of Hispanics, but you got all those cucked out men out there that don't know how to get a woman.
We'll be back.
We're going to talk about Cindy Heides Smith, the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis.
Eddie's take on what Keith covered the first hour.
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Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
All right, so this is our third hour.
We've had a little bit of porch talk.
We talked about Eddie running and completing and triumphing at the New York Marathon, even as a 71-year-old young pup.
Eddie's got decades left in him.
But better shape now than you were 10 years ago, right?
I'll tell you.
No doubt about it.
Oh, yes.
There was one time I had to take breaks.
Get this honest guy.
He had to take breaks during the radio.
He had to go outside and smoke cigarette.
Bleed.
Remember the time I broke up while I started having a break?
I think you had a heart attack during the show.
I had a bad bleed one night out at Millington.
We were at 1380 station.
You looked like a stuck pig.
I think that snake came through and bit you.
But I had to leave the station and go to the VA emergency room, man.
But the show went on.
I didn't stop talking to help you.
We didn't broadcast in the hospital.
Yeah, we sure did.
That goes around, you and Sonny.
And anyway, anyway, a little bit of porch talk, a little bit of talk about Eddie's marathon.
And I think going forward, this has always been sort of our de facto template.
Keith and I cover some contemporary issues in the first hour.
We have a featured guest the second hour.
Now, that's definitely how it went tonight.
And then Eddie and I come on.
It's sort of like a grab bag.
It could be anything.
And I think that's a good way to do the show.
I think that'll be our de facto template.
It has been, and I think it'll be more so in the coming year as we head into our 15th year on the air.
But now, as advertised, we don't want to let you down, ladies and gentlemen.
Keith and I covered this briefly at the end of the first hour.
I want to get Eddie's take on it, too.
I think it is a race of particular significance to whites, and so we want to cover it a little bit more.
So, Cindy Hyde-Smith, Eddie, is the Republican Senate candidate in Mississippi.
And yes, I pronounce it as Mississippi.
That's how Southerners pronounce it.
We can't go through the whole thing.
I was talking to a girl one time in California, and she said it's Mississippi.
Have you ever pronounced it as such?
Not in my days.
Not ever.
Hey, let me chop in one thing right here.
I was talking to a brother.
I mean, he's hardcore brother.
And he told me he's from Detroit, Michigan.
I'll tell you who he is after we go to the break.
But he said, rightfully, he's from Detroit.
He said, when we talk about Southern and Southern way of life, he said it's a white way of life.
He said that they lived in the outskirts of, he was 74 years old.
He lived in the suburbs of Detroit.
All white people in the school, he said it was no difference there in Detroit and the way it lived in Pontoc, Mississippi.
He said it's a white thing.
It's not really a Southern thing.
I can identify with some of that with what he's saying.
We got brothers all over.
Well, that's true.
We have listeners all over the country and all over the world.
And I'll tell you what, I wouldn't trade my Southern patrimony for anything.
Why, hell no.
You know, you've heard me say many a day that Southern is a state of mine.
Well, it is a state of bone and DNA, too.
And I am glad to be born a Southerner.
And I am glad that my ancestors fought for what was right during Lincoln's war and that we stood up against tyranny and we stood up to defend our race and our people.
I am glad of that.
Now, there's no doubt that some of our biggest supporters live outside of the South and they are with us in mind, body, and soul.
But at the same time, I wouldn't trade plays with anybody.
It is the winning of the genetic lottery to be born a southerner.
If you're an American, to be born a southerner.
I'm glad you said it.
I got to chop in one more time.
Very quickly.
We've got to get to this race in Mississippi.
We got to get a take on it.
I wouldn't trade being me for anything in the world.
I mean, I'm poor as a church mouse.
I mean, I don't have any.
But you are a Southerner.
I'm a Southerner.
Listen, you came from Jefferson Davis' home state.
I got that right.
You know, and James can tell you when I couldn't even walk to the ER to be able without taking breaks.
I've come from a physical wreck where I can run marathons.
I got all these people that love me in St. Jude.
All these people will love me in the radio.
I wouldn't trade nothing.
I got James.
I mean, what the hell are you doing?
You got a medal on your neck right now.
A metal man.
Out of solid gold, no less.
I mean, I tell you what, I wouldn't trade it for nothing, man.
Okay, listen.
What's going on in Mississippi?
Cindy Hyde Smith.
Now, she was appointed to fill a vacant slot, and this is her first campaign for re-election.
She's running against a black Democrat in this Senate race.
Now, there wasn't enough of a vote to declare her the winner outright in November, so they're running in a runoff on November 27th.
So there's been a couple of things that have happened this week with regard to that Senate race.
Number one was the fact that it has been rediscovered, conveniently so, that in 2014, Cindy Hyde Smith went to Beauvoir, Jefferson Davis' home, and posed wearing a Confederate soldier's hat and carrying a musket of a Confederate soldier, that this represented this being Jefferson Davis, Jefferson Davis' home.
The Confederate soldier represented Mississippi history at its finest.
Now, and it did, and it did.
No doubt about it.
No doubt about it.
It did.
Now, the Southern Baptist Convention, some of its leaders said no.
I'm reading directly from their statement.
No, Cindy Hyde Smith.
Jefferson Davis, the Confederacy, and what it represented was Mississippi history at its bloody, absolute evil worst.
You have to know this.
You have to understand what happened.
It was all about slavery, says the Southern Baptist Convention, who, of course, was originally founded by future Confederates who didn't think that you shouldn't be able to restrict missionarieship to slave owners.
And that was how the Southern Baptist Church was founded.
And the Southern Baptist Church was also key in the creation of all these segregation academies.
But he brings up the slave issue.
Slavery doesn't exist in the Americas.
It doesn't exist in Europe.
It does exist heavily so, even in the current day and age in Africa.
And I haven't heard one Southern Baptist preacher or fake apostate say anything about slavery that still exists today.
They don't mention it at all.
But they still complain and virtuous signal about the slavery that existed long before they were born.
But I will tell you this, Cindy Hyde-Smith is right.
The Jefferson Davis era, the Confederate era of Mississippi represented Mississippi and the Southern America at its absolute best.
And her stock skyrocketed with me.
Good for you, dear lady.
You aren't ashamed of your ancestors and you hold natural and healthy beliefs that the vast majority of your base shares 80%, 80%, highest in the nation, Eddie.
80% of whites in Mississippi vote GOP.
They haven't elected a black to be a United States Senator since Reconstruction.
She's going to win re-election next week because she didn't cuck.
I can't wait to get a hold of this.
You know what?
Let me address the Southern Baptist cowards.
You people of the Southern Baptist Convention, what have you ever defended?
Have you ever soldiered?
Have you ever picked up a rifle?
Have you ever gone through a rice patty?
Have you ever gone through the Central Highlands of a Vietnam for real?
Have you?
Amen.
Have you?
Tell us now.
Yes, yes.
And have you ever soldiered a rifle with no boots, no shoes, with two feet of snow, like our Confederate soldiers?
Our Confederate soldiers went in to battle at the end of the, getting close to the end of the war, they knew it was lost cause.
But you know what?
They didn't trade out.
They didn't go to the north.
They didn't give up.
They fought for their homeland.
As one Christian Confederate soldier said, we talked about this on the Cecipool some years ago during Confederate History Week.
They asked, he was captured, and the Union soldiers asked him, why are you fighting us so hard?
Why are you fighting against all odds?
He said, because you're here.
You're in our homes.
You're in our hearth.
You're raping our women.
You're eating out our substance.
You're trying to destroy our homeland, our country.
We're fighting for our very lives.
We're fighting for our homes.
These guys soldiered.
They picked up a rifle against all odds.
They had no shoes, no beans, no bullets, no band-aids.
The North had endless amounts of substances.
They fought with incredible bravery.
I got drafted.
I'll say that.
People tell me, thank you for your services.
Don't thank me.
Thank the draft board and thank Leavenworth Federal Freaking Penitentiary and thank Goldman Sachs.
Would you have fought voluntarily for the Confederate States of America?
I most certainly would.
I would today.
I'll tell you what, but I got drafted in that stinking Goldman Sachs war back in.
You know what, people?
These people had, they're so brave.
They fought for a true cause.
They fought for what they believed.
They fought for their Christianity, their faith.
I would like to tell you that Stonewall Jackson.
Is there a member of the Southern Baptist Church today that can hold a candle to Stonewall?
Not one.
In terms of his faith.
Stinking cowards.
You're a bunch of stinking cowards.
You're a bunch of marshmallow cowards.
Pale-faced marshmallow cowards.
You just cucked out.
I'm telling you what, I spit on you.
We did tonight.
You know what?
I might just go to church tomorrow and just spit on you.
And I dare you to do anything.
I might even ask your wife for a date right in front of you.
And I guarantee you wouldn't do anything.
If you put yourself in blackface, you're such a coward.
You're such cowards, man.
You know what?
You've cucked out.
You've taken the money.
You've taken out 30 pieces of silver.
You sold out your very ancestors.
You don't even deserve to deserve to be in the South.
I'll say, get the hell out of this country right here.
Go to some other place, man, because we don't need you.
We don't want you.
You wouldn't know honor for you won't know honor for anything.
I'll tell you what, these guys, this lady here, let me tell you about Secretary of the United States.
You're talking about a United States Senator who, as recently as just a couple of years ago, said Jefferson Davis and what he stood for represented Mississippi's history at its finest.
That is exactly somebody.
They're fighting against the invaders.
They're fighting against invaders.
By the way, she has voted with Trump more than any other United States Senator.
Yes, we got to continue.
This one come back.
Well, we got Jack Ryan.
We got Jack Ryan.
Well, let's night palm the SBC some more with Jack Ryan.
Okay, stay in those marks cooks.
We'll be right back.
I think I'm going to go to church tomorrow.
What about be tomorrow?
I think I will.
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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.
But don't worry, we're members of UPMA now, so we don't have to worry about that.
Daddy, why somebody seals that 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.
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The dearest and the best.
The love that limps us.
The love that praise the road.
Well, there was.
I'll tell you what, yummy, yummy, yummy, which was my song for Thanksgiving, pills in comparison to that which Jack Ryan has brought to the show tonight.
A true Thanksgiving offering.
Jack, tell us what song that was and why you'd recommended it this evening.
Okay, well, that was the hymn I vows to be my country by the very talented and very beautiful English-Welsh singer Catherine Jenkins.
Very classy later, but a babe.
And so I thought it was a patriotic hymn.
But I think it made some change because we can't really vow to our countries because the English-speaking countries that were once ours are no longer ours.
So you can't be disloyal to this country and England or Australia or Canada or the United States.
So we wanted to change it to vow to be my people.
But the concept is good.
We want to be thankful and want to be loyal to our people.
And highly recommend the music of Catherine Jenkins.
A great song for Thanksgiving and absolutely beautiful, great recommendation from Jack Ryan tonight.
But that's not the only recommendation he has.
He has, as he so often does, this Thanksgiving weekend.
By the way, before we transition from Thanksgiving entirely, and we do, of course, hope everybody had a wonderful and joyous and great Thanksgiving with their friends and family and loved ones.
If you go back to thepolitical cesspool.org, we're not going to read it tonight as we have done in the past.
But if you go to the blog entry for Thursday, which was, of course, Thanksgiving, you can read George Washington's original Thanksgiving proclamation.
That is something that everyone should have read with their family on Thanksgiving.
And if you haven't done it yet, you could still do it now.
It's still Thanksgiving weekend at thepolitical cesspool.org.
Read George Washington's Thanksgiving proclamation.
But Jack, in addition to the song, you have book and movie recommendations, no doubt, tonight.
Okay, so my movie recommendation is the movie Planes, Trains, and Automobiles.
It's starring Steve Martin and John Candy, and it's directed by John Hughes.
I love that movie.
God Almighty, that's one of the best movies I've ever seen, Jack.
Excuse me for chiming in, but that's one of the finest movies I've ever seen.
God Almighty, I love that.
That's back when comedians were actually funny and Gentiles and indeed.
Yeah, they did.
I think it's John Candy's best work.
And the director is John Hughes.
So we lament about the fact that Hollywood is dominated by this Ashkenazi mafia.
But there are some Midwesterns that somehow managed to sneak through and come in.
John Hughes.
John Hughes.
John Hughes, of course, known for Home Alone, Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
He always had a movie with a touching, family-friendly message.
And it generally dealt with children and fathers or some variation thereof.
And he just doesn't have that Talmudic hatred of our people on our holidays and things.
It does have a Thanksgiving theme that there are two individuals that are trying to get home to Chicago for Thanksgiving.
There's not really very many movies that have a lot of people supposed.
Yeah, no, they're there, and the movie is just great.
So I think it's like a clearly don't want to overplay it, but I like to have like a Thanksgiving movie, a Christmas movie, It's a Wonderful Life, or a Miracle on 31st Street.
But I think that Planes Change and Automobiles is the best Thanksgiving themed movie.
So that's my recommendation for this week.
I talked to Jack a little bit before the show started tonight.
I called Jack off the air, and we had a great conversation just minutes before the show went live tonight.
And Jack and I had a great conversation.
And we remarked on the fact that this is, in fact, Jack's one-year anniversary with the show.
He has now been with us a full year.
He was, of course, with us at our anniversary conference last October, and then even in 2014 for our 10-year anniversary.
But Jack, as an official member of the staff, he has now celebrated his full one-year on the air, and that is being celebrated this weekend as well, along with Thanksgiving.
And we appreciate, Jack, all you've added to the show as our cultural correspondent over the course of the last year.
And we've got big plans in store for the days, weeks, months, and years to come if all goes according to the plan.
And we look forward to you being a continued part of our family here at TPC.
So always bringing us the book, movie, and music recommendations.
Jack, did we have a theme for tonight being?
Well, I want to give my book recommendation first, okay?
Yeah, go ahead.
Take it away.
This is a book that I actually haven't read in an entire year.
I've read comments about it, but it's called The Benedict Option by Rod Dreyer, who's one of the main writers left at Pat Buchanan's magazine, The American Conservative.
And so the theme of the Benedict option is that traditional conservatives are not going to reclaim the culture of the country of the United States, and they need to retreat into a Benedictine mold.
The last Catholic Pope before this current communist liberation theology, pro-Muslim, terrible one, was a pretty good Pope.
I think it was quite good.
And the idea was to create institutions to protect your culture and sort of withdraw and survive this fallen dark age, like at the end of Rome.
And it's something to consider because we were so excited about the election of Donald Trump.
We were going to take back the country, control immigration, and stop these wars.
And we're now the deep state is just hit in and we're being persecuted and losing our rights to even First Amendment rights.
And so the option of this idea is to withdraw and set up our own private institutions and kind of survive this dark age.
And so that's the kind of idea behind it.
Jack, two questions.
Number one, how does Trump write on your report card?
Number two, second question is how can we take back?
How can traditional conservatives take back America?
And is it possible?
Two-part question.
You can't take back all of America.
You can't take back Baltimore or just Hollywood if some movie or something comes through.
It's impossible.
Our country has a population of 300 million people now.
We have a population that's more similar to Brazil or India than we did to the country of 100 years ago or the 1950s.
It's just impossible to take that back.
And we don't control a single Hollywood studio or a news organization.
The last non-Ashkenazi J person that had a news television was Ted Turner when he ran CNN.
And he wasn't a conservative.
He wasn't a Christian, but he was a southerner.
He didn't hate his people.
And then when he sold out and merged with Time Warner Communication, Gerald Levin, he basically took the 30 pieces of silver.
And so we've been dispossessed.
So we do not have a stake there.
And we've been dispossessed in our universities, our institutions that were once ours.
And that's the way it is.
And nothing nice.
There's no way we're going to be able to take back the whole country.
So, you know, we got to make separatists.
You got to figure out how to minority people, Christians in Lebanon, how do they operate?
How do you Amish operate or something like that?
But yeah, my view is there's no way we can take back the entire country university.
Well, what I want to know, what I want to know, Jack, is we won't call you a Yankee because I know you take offense to that.
And rightly so.
You are a Midwesterner.
You are a Midwest correspondent.
You are, yeah, you do have southern roots.
How did you celebrate Thanksgiving in Chicago?
What was that like on Thursday?
Southwest.
Similar places that John that Steve Martin was trying to get back to.
I have family in the Chicago suburbs, and I've got uncles and cousins and brothers and nieces and nephews.
There's a healthy, good-looking people.
We don't have any sexual degenerates or communists or anything that.
But it's a sort of good people, and there's kids coming in.
But boy, just incredible conservatives is basically what I've described.
I don't talk about politics with them because they're trying to be successful in this world.
And some of them are very successful, including the leader of my family.
He's very, very successful, extremely wealthy.
He's got a huge suburban house.
He's got a Florida retreat, a place in the country, in Wisconsin, and downtown.
But he has to tell the line.
He's got to go along with these other groups.
And he would rather be caught with child homosexual porn than go against something of the Israeli lobby or say something about immigration or things like that.
And so we got conservatives.
That's basically what it is.
So we don't talk about politics.
We do play touch football.
We do board games.
And we watch decent movies.
So it's not that bad, but I got to walk on eggshells, basically.
So that's what I've got to do.
I got to say, I got to say, report Carl Trump.
Report Carl Trump.
Give us a very quick grade.
A plus, F minus.
For Trump.
That's fine.
I'd say, I don't know, C plus, B minus.
It's tough to take on the entire world or change history.
And his instincts are good.
We are both veterans.
He and I, Donald Trump of New York City of the late 80s, early 90s.
Hey, we're out of time, Jack.
We're out of time.
I want to tell you there was a story we meant to get to tonight.
CNN is in a huge explanation with Simon Roche and the Sightlanders.
We're going to get to that next week.
We're meant to get to it tonight.
Too much monkey shines with Eddie.
That happens sometimes.
But we want to thank you, Jack, for your contribution this evening.
We will pick it up next week.
And by the way, Rich is going to South Africa to meet with Simon in a few days.
We'll talk about all of that.
Stay tuned in December.
It's going to be a great, great.
We love you, people.
Good night, Jack.
Good night, everybody.
Thank you.
I'm James.
He's Eddie.
ThepoliticalSuccessful.org.
Happy Thanksgiving weekend to you, Jack.
Talk to you next week.
Good night.
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