All Episodes
March 9, 2019 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
50:45
20190309_Hour_2
|

Time Text
You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
Thank you, buddy.
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.
Welcome back, everybody.
It is Saturday, March the 9th.
We're live here on the AM Radio Airwaves in TPC.
I'm your host, James Edwards.
And as I mentioned at the top of the show, tonight is Ladies' Night on TPC in response to International Women's Day.
Now, apparently, this has been going on at least for a year or two.
I only heard about it just this week.
And then I looked it up and I saw exactly what kind of so-called women they were promoting.
And I thought we ought to give you an answer to that here tonight on the program.
So that's what we're doing.
And we have gathered a collection of beautiful, intelligent, and accomplished young women who are going to be joining me for the course of the next two hours to discuss everything from femininity to trad living and even contemporary political issues.
So with that being said, to lead off that parade is none other than Lacey Lynn, who is a wife, full-time homemaker, and homeschooling mother of two.
This equal form member and Christian conservative activist runs a YouTube channel that addresses such topics as nationalism and the benefits of that aforementioned traditional life.
Lacey made her debut appearance on this show on January the 12th.
We've been in touch ever since.
Lacey, how are you tonight?
Hello, thank you.
I'm good.
How are you?
I'm doing great.
Great to have you back.
Well, good to be here.
So I know on your Twitter, I'm sorry, a little bit of a hiccup there.
I know on your Twitter, you had tweeted out something about this International Women's Day, which again just became known to me.
I went to their website, and if you go to the website, you can see, well, I mean, just as a matter of fact, and I'm just speaking factually here, you're not going to see any white women showcased.
You do see some in the background surrounded by various minorities.
I scrolled down to the bottom, though, to really get to the point of what was going on there.
And they had quoted Gloria Steinem, who they list as a world-renowned feminist, who explained that the story of a woman's struggle for equality belongs to no single feminist nor to any one organization, but the collective efforts of all who care about human rights.
So that's what this International Women's Day all about.
I didn't think they were talking about women like you or women like my wife.
No.
Before we get to the point of why we called you back tonight, your reaction as a mother, as a woman, as a wife, to the celebration of Women's Day and month.
Apparently, March is women's month even.
Really?
So I hope.
Are you asking for my reaction?
Yeah, your reaction to that.
I mean, does it speak to you?
And I'll start there.
No, it doesn't speak to me.
I actually, I think what the tweet you're referring to is I just shared a video that I made last year about this time.
And it was more of a sarcastic tongue-in-cheek.
I took my boys to the park.
They threw around the ball.
You can see me in that YouTube video.
I think it's titled How We Celebrated.
And it's we, my family, my two kids and I, celebrated International Women's Day.
My husband isn't on the video, obviously, for safety reasons.
But you can see me in the park reading Phyllis Schlossy and Suzanne Banker's book, the flip side of feminism.
And then you can see me baking bread in my kitchen.
So it doesn't speak to me.
I was just being sarcastic.
Oh, no, I knew it didn't speak to you in the way that they were hoping that it would speak to women, but no, no, no, no.
I know that you're coming at this from a true woman, what I consider to be a true woman's perspective, the perspective of true femininity and everything that makes women the assets that they are to our civilization, to our families, and to our homes.
It was just interesting because I knew once this was getting promoted hither, tither, and yon, that it couldn't be anything that was wholesome.
And sure enough, just a very quick bit of digging revealed that to be true.
But it does beg the question, Lacey.
What do you think?
And I think we probably covered this.
You were on with us for an hour when we first introduced you to this audience back in January.
But what do you think a woman's role should be in the family and in politics in general?
Well, I actually just got done tweeting, not tweeting, I guess they call it sub-tweeting.
I guess what the kids call it these days.
I don't know when you reply to somebody's tweet.
Somebody with a couple of friends are talking about women in politics.
And I think that women are good community builders and they're good at gaining support and they're good faces, you know, to put out there.
And a little bit more of a softer edge, right?
So if you want support for a movement, women are good community builders.
So activism is really great.
And community building.
Running for office is not really something that I think most women are built for.
But in the family, obviously, wife and mother, I think most women would be happy at home.
Does that mean that I want to advocate for passing a law that all women have to be chained to the kitchen?
Of course not.
I think that some women do very well and some fields.
Obviously, since the 60s, it's been a push for all women to work and especially in certain fields where they don't belong.
But traditionally, female fields and work, and I think most women would be happy at home.
And I think society would be better for it.
We'd definitely have a stronger community, stronger churches, and stronger families if most women stayed at home.
And there's a myriad of reasons why that is exactly the case, why that is so true.
And then, of course, you get into just birth rates alone.
I mean, obviously, with all of these women now living their lives in cubicles as office drones, that's not the way God intended a woman to live her life.
Now, of course, we're not advocating for women to get on the front lines of a battle and to be policemen and all of these things that they can now do, unfortunately.
But there is a role.
This is the thing, Lacey.
I mean, there's a role women play that men cannot play.
But when put together as complementary pieces, you can fulfill God's plan for what a family should be.
And there's a role a man should have and a role a woman should have.
Now, how far, though, would you take it?
Now, you're obviously very upfront.
You are an unusual woman in that you use your name, you use your face, you're out there on video.
Would you encourage that for the majority of women?
No, I probably wouldn't.
I think that every woman has a part to play in speaking about traditionalism or nationalism or supporting those causes.
Not everybody is going to have a YouTube channel, and probably not everybody should.
My husband and I are pretty much a team.
So when somebody sees my video, they're seeing what my husband also supports.
They're seeing the pillow talks.
They're seeing the background.
You know, when he comes home from work and he says, well, I listened to the talk radio today, and this is what I heard.
and I'm in the kitchen making dinner and we're talking about it as he's coming home and the late night conversations.
That's what they're seeing.
It's definitely a team effort and we feel it as a team.
So the criticism we feel as a team, the safety concerns we feel as a team, and you have to factor in your children as well.
And because we are obligated to, you know, protect our children as we should when we love them.
So would every woman be an activist?
Publicly, probably not, but she could be and should be living traditionally and speaking about this in our community.
We're going to take a pause right there.
I have a follow-up to what Lacey just said when we come back from the break, and then we're going to get to the actual reason that I originally talked to her earlier this week about coming on the show.
I'm going to tell you what that is in about three minutes' time.
Stay tuned, everybody.
Lacey Lynn, check her out on Twitter.
Kosher, certified.
Put the two words together to get coach certified, which is spelled with an SCH instead of just SH.
It's the right way to spell this, the German way.
And they made it easier to trademark.
Now, did I tell you that the letters SCH still make the shh sound?
As in all those American food producers saying, shh, let's keep it really quiet that our product is kosher certified.
Think about it.
Nearly one century of kosher certification, and hardly anyone outside Exclusive Observers knows that most packaged food and kitchen products are literally certified by religious intermediaries.
Well, because you, consumer, are indirectly paying for this, the Coach Certified app is here to make kosher certification awareness an inclusive matter for people of all faiths and identities.
And it even boasts a unique database of products not kosher certified.
We call that NKC.
Start meming it.
It's fun.
NKC, not kosher certified.
Now, to confuse our audience even more, we've put a question mark at the end of our name, and that really cinched our trademark approval.
It relates to the website where you can begin your new shopping behavior, thekosherquestion.com.
Attention Liberty News Radio listeners.
Hard-hitting talk radio has never been and never will be supported by the mainstream in America.
Hard-hitting talk radio is taking on the mainstream press like never before.
News that networks refuse to use is one of the best ways to educate people.
We invite all liberty-loving Americans to join with us to restore the principles of our founding fathers and promote God, family, and country in the media and our lives.
Please help spread the Liberty message with your generous donation.
You can go online at libertynewsradio.com right now and make a donation online or call 801-756-9133 and make a donation over the phone.
That's libertynewsradio.com and 801-756-9133.
Make a donation today.
As the United States boldly stepped forward in the glorious light provided by its new constitution in 1787, the nations of the earth were in awe of the newfound strength and hope of this free land.
Today, the nation stands at a crossroads.
A divergence from the original intent put forth in the United States Constitution has brought grave threats to our beloved nation.
A miracle is needed if the United States is to survive.
That miracle is again the pure application of the United States Constitution.
I'm Scott Bradley.
In my To Preserve the Nation book and lecture series, I bring forth truths that will help raise up a new generation of statesmen like those noble Americans who founded this land.
Vigorous application of these principles will invigorate and restore the nation, and we may become again the freest, most prosperous, most respected, and happiest nation on earth.
Visit 2PreserveTheNation.com to begin that restoration.
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.
It's Ladies' Night on TPC.
We've got four different women that are going to be appearing tonight.
Lacey is the first of those four.
And we were talking with Lacey a little bit about her activism as a YouTuber.
That's how she first came to my attention.
And one thing that she didn't mention is that this was her ability to do that was something that she saw to her husband's blessing for.
And that's something that should be made clear.
This was a joint decision that their family made.
And I agree that this isn't something that every woman could or even should do.
But it is important, I think, that people, that somebody out there, like Lacey, and there's others, obviously, we're going to be featuring a few of them tonight, but there's more than that, to be sure.
Putting their face out there, showing that not only do these natural women still exist, and not only did they exude femininity and happiness at living this traditional life, that they are thriving, in fact, living such a life.
And I do think that there has to be a minority of women out there who do put their face forward, as you do, Lacey, and do the good work and go forward.
And I know that you've suffered for it.
You've talked about that in some of your videos.
You've paid a price.
There's been some upheaval in your family.
And that's always obviously unfortunate.
But I know that you're reaching a lot of people.
And I appreciate you reaching even more tonight through our work here on the AM Airwaves.
Well, thank you so much.
Now, very quickly, before I ask you this question, and this is, again, we've come about it a long, it's been a long time coming that I asked you the question I originally intended to ask you tonight.
But just so we don't run out of time, because we're doing quick hits with everybody tonight as opposed to long, you know, one hour long features, give us all that contact information so we're sure to get it out there before we run out of time.
Right.
Lacey Lynn, L-A-C-E-Y, Space, L-Y-N-N, on YouTube.
And then you can find me there on Twitter and Lacey Laurenland on Instagram and at Trad Lacey.
That's T-R-A-D-L-A-C-E-Y on Facebook.
I have a public Facebook page, and that's where you can find me.
Folks, look her up, support her, follow her, do what you need to do.
If you go to our Twitter handle for the show at James Edwards TPC, they're prominently featured at the top of the roll tonight.
We have a picture of Lacey and her Twitter handle, and you can go over there and link over to all of her different outlets.
Now, I noticed, Lacey, that you were at the most recent conference of the Eagle Forum.
I just want to say Phyllis Schlathley was a fantastic woman, and the Eagle Form has done great work.
I think if we lived in a racially homogenous society, a high trust society where everybody believes in a sense of fair play, that the Eagle Form would be the absolute way to go.
Now, unfortunately, we don't live in that society.
We live in a society where a sense of fair play will ensure that you lose every time.
And not so much even a sense of fair play.
Perhaps that's not how I should have worded it.
If you don't have a sense of racial solidarity, if you don't have an identity, you're going to lose every time.
So what conservative groups do, as great as the Eagle Form is, and I'm not necessarily lumping them into this, but I don't have any reason to suspect that they behave otherwise.
Most conservative groups will say it's all about the ideas.
Every other group will say, any non-white group will say it's all about our identity.
It's all about our race.
It's all about our people.
And if you go into that fight with your hands tied behind your back, well, the results are predictable.
And we've seen the conservative movement lose everything that they've claimed to have been fighting for for the past 60 plus years, if not longer than that.
So my question to you, Lacey, was: can organizations like the Eagle Forum and other race-neutral conservative entities play a positive role for our people in the current climate?
Definitely.
I think that young activists or activists of any age group who are racially conscious, who are pro-white, need to get involved in these groups, these activist groups and communities anyway.
What attracted me to the Eagle Forum from the beginning was their feminist stance and Phyllis Shosley and her crew, you know, taking down a big chunk of second-wave feminism.
That's what got me through the door.
Now, while that was happening, I was being red-pilled on race, realism, and nationalism.
And then I went to the president of the Eagle Forum and said, okay, I want to talk about the 1965 Immigration Act on my channel.
Then I went to the chapter president of where I am in Texas, and I said, I want to talk about white identity and how multiculturalism, progressivism, liberalism has hurt white people specifically.
Now, I expected to have to pick, you know, between following the facts and the Eagle Forum.
Like you said, I expected that mainstream conservative, just the ideas, just the values, no race at all.
They actually were very accommodating and they let me talk.
And Phyllis is actually famous for saying that each housewife, each traditional woman, needs to pick a subject that she's interested in and knows a lot about and go advocate for it.
So there's a lot of room in the Eagle Forum.
Now, when we talk about the pro-white movement, there's not a whole lot of that we can do politically.
We don't have our own political party, but we have people who are racially conscious who can go into activism and advocate for whites, who can advocate for these more red-pilling, more tough subjects.
So you can talk about it.
You can spread the word.
And this is definitely, I think, especially as a woman, it lies more in community building.
It's no different from going to a church where you have a lot of, I'm going to say, you know, this phrase boomer to your conservatives, you know, watching Fox News.
And you can go in and you can talk to those people as well.
I think that we're at a point right now where we need to expand our thinking and our views when talking to other people.
Just because they might not know specifically what you're talking about does not mean that they cannot be reached.
So I think the best way to go about that is if you're a libertarian, go find a libertarian group, but don't be a libertarian.
If you're a traditionalist conservative, find a traditionalist conservative group and get in there and help people understand why this is so important, why the values are inherently white, why the values are inherently Western.
And if we have mass immigration of non-whites, why those values will go away?
Because a lot of people don't understand.
So we need to be there in those groups, in those organizations, in those communities, in those churches, talking about it and congregating with people who may think it's just the values, but they can be reached.
Lacey, my goodness, you hit a stride right there.
You ask Lacey a question She's ready for, and she goes off like a fire alarm.
That was a fantastic answer.
I appreciate you articulating that so well for our audience.
I agree with you.
Listen, our people need to be involved to the extent that they can.
It's just like anyone else.
I mean, my opportunity was in radio, but however, you can apply yourself, you certainly should do that.
And you need to, of course, weigh each opportunity against the risk and rewards for the cause in general, our beliefs, and our faith and our family.
And everybody's situation is different.
But Lacey is showing you one way how it can be done.
Her work on YouTube, her work as a member of the Eagle Forum, a fantastic organization, to be sure.
And of course, folks, we want you to like and subscribe to Lacey, follow her, however you do it in social media.
I was late to the party on that, being an AM radio dinosaur.
But in any event, go to our Twitter at James Edwards TPC, and you can link over to her and do all of that.
Lacey, thank you so much for coming back on the show tonight and for sharing with us your mind.
We'll look forward to it again very soon.
Well, thank you so much.
I appreciate it.
All right.
Have a great night, sweetheart.
Best to your family.
And we will get to our next guest of the evening, Courtney from Alabama.
Dear old Courtney, mainstay here on TPC, our mascot, really our unofficial mascot.
And she's waiting in the wings, and we'll get to her next.
Don't forget, ladies and gentlemen, that you can follow all the news that is news for TPC at our official website, thepolitical cesspool.org.
ladies night continues next all right Exposing corruption.
Informing citizens.
Pursuing liberty.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
USA Radio News with Wendy King.
Tornado watches are posted for parts of the South a week after Twisters in Alabama left 23 people dead.
National Weather Service meteorologist Alex Lamers.
Right now, we actually do have some severe thunderstorms pushing across portions of the Mid-South.
Right now, they're heading into parts of western Tennessee and northern Mississippi.
The main threats with those will be some damaging winds and perhaps some tornadoes.
And we'll also see a small chance of some flash flooding associated with those as well.
Plus, a significant winter storm will bring heavy snowfall to the upper Midwest and Great Lakes, where up to eight inches could fall with some locally higher amounts and possible blizzard conditions.
It's going to be a short day for most Americans.
Time to spring forward, turning your clocks ahead one hour at one o'clock.
Daylight saving time is upon us.
This is USA Radio News.
If your credit card bills have gotten out of hand, call Consolidated Credit Now.
If you're making the minimum payments, but your balance is just not going down, call Consolidated Credit Now.
If the interest rates on your credit cards are so high, it will take years to get out of debt.
Call Consolidated Credit Now.
They've helped over 5 million people with credit card debt.
They can consolidate your debts into one lower payment, reduce your interest rates, and get you out of debt fast.
If you're struggling with credit card debt, the first step is yours.
Call Consolidated Credit Now.
Call 800-406-0046.
800-406-0046.
That's 800-406-0046.
Consolidated Credit Counseling Services Incorporated 5701 West Sunrise Boulevard, Port Lauderdale, Florida, 33313.
Not a loan company.
Licensed by the New York Department of Financial Services by the Vermont Department of Financial Regulation.
Maryland DM19, Oregon DMA-0031 is licensed by the Virginia State Corporation Commission, license number DC32.
Singer R. Kelly is out of jail after making child support payments.
He was also charged with 10 counts of aggravated sexual abuse pertaining to four women.
More from USA's Rick Vincent.
His lawyer Stephen Greenberg on the explosive CBS interview this past week.
We're not going out there and doing interviews to taint a jury pool, to not taint a jury pool, to help a case, to not help a case.
People can think whatever they want based on that.
I can tell you that nobody who drew a judgment based on that interview is going to be on our jury and is going to be making the decision.
For USA Radio News, I'm Rick Vincent.
Despite President Trump's tweet that North Korea is no longer a nuclear threat, there is now a report that North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's regime may be getting ready for another missile launch.
The president says he'd be disappointed if the North Koreans resumed weapons testing.
Experts say the North Koreans may have resumed operations at a long-range launch site.
You're listening to USA Radio News.
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.
All right, Ladies' Night continues on TPC this evening.
I got a text from our dear friend Courtney, who goes back to the very early days of this show.
And she's been a supporter, a friend, a listener for well over a decade, well over a decade.
And we were talking earlier this week, and she said, you know, it's been a few months since I've been on the show.
It's about time to have me back on.
I said, you know what?
Not only are you right, your timing is uncanny.
It's ladies' night this Saturday.
So that went like a hand in glove.
Now, if you hear the splashing of water in the background, Courtney alerted me that as she was doing this interview live this evening on the radio, she's also giving her daughter a bath.
Is that what you're doing, Courtney?
Yes, I am.
And I got another baby here that I just finished feeding.
And during commercial breaks, I'll probably be getting both of them to bed.
Whoa, now that, ladies and gentlemen, that is a multitasking mommy right there doing a live radio interview while feeding and bathing two children respectively.
That a round of applause if you can, my friends.
How about that?
That's more than I can handle at one time, that's for sure.
But in any event, it's great to have you back on tonight, Courtney.
How are you?
I'm good.
How are you doing?
I really appreciate you having me back on.
I always enjoy being on, of course.
And yeah, we have a few interesting things to talk about.
We do.
We've got a lot.
Let's see if you can keep your mind attentive with all the other things that's going on right now in real time.
Don't drop that phone in the water.
That'll be a quick end to the interview.
That's for sure.
But anyway, it is great to have you back on tonight.
Longtime listeners will know Courtney.
She's been doing these bits for us for quite a while.
But no, in fact, it's your dime, your dance floor.
So basically, I told you, I'm just going to turn it over to you.
We want you to have fun and be comfortable.
So tell us what you want to talk about.
Okay.
The kids want to be on the street.
Yeah, that's right.
She just threw, she just threw a couple things out of the bathtub that she wants me to put back in for her.
Well, let me tell you, I don't mind.
We can talk about that the whole time, and that would make for great radio as far as I'm concerned.
So don't get rattled by that.
If they make noise, it's just all the more endearing.
Oh, thank you.
Yeah.
Okay.
Maybe that'll make her happy.
I think I, oh, now she's throwing stuff intentionally out of the bathtub for me to keep giving back to her.
I think it's because she knows I'm not giving her my full attention.
Oh, goodness.
Anyway.
Yeah, I wanted to open.
I wanted to open with a brief comment.
I know, you know, last time I was on, all I talked about was James Fields.
you know, the audience is probably thinking, oh, don't talk about that again.
I mean, I know, I know people respect the topic.
It's important.
It's a very sad, unfortunate story.
But I just wanted to make a final comment on that.
I mean, it will come up again later because it's such a horrific thing that happened to him.
But for now, I just want to say, I'm still concerned about him.
And it's hard to find on the internet where people are still talking about what's going on with him, if he's going to have an appeal case.
I mean, I would love to keep, if there's anybody on the internet with a show or a podcast or a blog where they're kind of keeping us informed on that, I would love to know about it.
And if you ever have anybody on in the future, I'd love to either be on for that or listen.
Sure, sure.
Well, no, no, I mean, it is, I mean, it's sad.
I mean, obviously, you know, apparently the facts of what we have been able to see flies in the face of the so-called evidence that convicted him.
He's going to go to jail apparently for the rest of his life.
And what a wasted life.
And so, yeah, I mean, you would think that you would hear more about this, that it would be a bigger topic.
It would be something that remains kindled, but apparently not as much.
Right.
You know, and we have to, you know, remember the other men who were, you know, political prisoners of Charlottesville also.
We just have to keep praying for them and just hoping that something comes through for them and not give up on it because it's just a horrible thing to happen to somebody.
Well, you know, honestly, good on you, Courtney, for making mention of the political prisoners from Charlottesville.
Had you not brought it up tonight, they wouldn't have even been talked about or even mentioned in passing this evening on TPC.
So you alone have stoked the embers there just a little bit.
Oh, wonderful.
Oh, no problem.
Okay, so I think the next thing, you know, as you know, I like to have a, well, you like it.
You like outlines too.
When I come on the show, you like me to send you outlines, which is good because I am OCD.
I'm a perfectionist.
Thank you.
Well, I like I like to write up outlines.
And usually I write my own script.
I'm kind of, she's okay.
I don't want anybody to panic when they hear her coughing.
But anyway, I'm OCD too.
I usually have a script written for myself.
I write it ahead of time.
But tonight I'm just ad living it again.
But yeah, the other thing we, another thing we were going to talk about was International Women's Day.
Right.
I don't know.
It's just, it's one of those things, just kind of embarrassing to me as a woman.
I don't even think anything of it when it occurs.
What upsets me so much about it is it's a day that tries to combine the sisterhood of women of every race and around the world, women that I don't really feel a sisterhood with in any way.
Well, and it's not only that.
I mean, it's really, we were talking about this in the previous segment with Lacey Lynn.
I mean, it's all about a celebration of radical feminism and left-wing, you know, left-wing females, basically.
I don't think you are the type of woman they had in mind to join them in the celebration of International Women's Day.
Oh, no, not at all.
Not at all.
It's just, it's just, you know, I'd rather, you know, I just feel, you know, instead of, you know, this sisterhood of women around the world, you know, and the things that they celebrate are, you know, just goofy things.
Like if you go to Google, if you go to Google on the day of, and, you know, they all, Google's so liberal and they always have, you know, every day on Google, they're always celebrating, you know, non-whites or women who have done things great in the past.
You know, they hardly ever recognize a white male on there.
And, you know, for International Women's Day, it's just always something really embarrassing and goofy that they're recognizing.
You know, it's just like you click on the Google emblem and it takes you through this short video of this cartoon of, you know, women from different cultures who have written poems or, you know, came up with, it's just, it's just nothing that's really impressive.
You know, I'd much rather, I feel much more connected with, you know, white men who have done things like Neil Armstrong and Christopher Columbus, you know, all these evil white men who have done great things, William Shakespeare.
There's so many I could go through.
You know, I feel, I feel, I get it, I get butterflies in my stomach when I see them get recognized or white women who are doing feminine things like being mothers.
You know, that's something to celebrate.
But yeah, it's just, it's just this goofy sisterhood thing that I don't feel connected to, especially since they're trying to, you know, it's all about connecting women of all races who I just have nothing to do with and, you know, separating us from white men.
And it just doesn't interest me.
It's embarrassing and it doesn't interest me at all.
Well, I'm so obviously, you know, we know each other quite well.
And I'm not surprised to hear you say that.
But I do want to say the reason I developed tonight's show as I did in response to this International Women's Day and the proclamation that March is International Women's Month.
Now, there's only one month long celebration that we recognize here on TPC.
That's April's Confederate History Month.
But the reason I wanted to showcase you tonight, Courtney and Lacey and Kayla and Janice Hamblin in the third hour, we got four women tonight that are women who should be emulated.
These women that we are featuring tonight on TPC are living life in a way that honors God.
It honors family.
We are showing you that this isn't just hyperbole.
This isn't just an idea.
There are women out here who live this way.
And obviously there are millions of them, but we're giving you four tonight here on the show in real life examples.
And nine times out of ten, the guests on this show are men.
I mean, it's a political show.
It's a dirty, you know, it's a hard life out there on the front line.
So we feature a lot of men on this show.
But tonight it's ladies' night.
And I think there's good reason to do this.
It's our response to this really disgusting celebration of what they're calling International Women's Day.
Now, we're all for protecting our women, providing for our caring for and loving our women.
That's what we do as strong white men.
But that is not what this celebration is all about.
So we've got four women tonight, real women, the ones who are setting an example.
And Courtney, you know you do that.
Thank you.
I don't think I do as much as these other ones that, you know, that are homestone school moms and they probably make everything from scratch.
That's what I, you know, I try to strive for that.
I try to do the best I can.
And then we have to recognize, we always have to recognize not your average housewife who's hosting your comments, who has five kids at the home school.
Well, hold on right there.
Courtney's favorite singer of all time, Mr. Frankie Valley, gonna take us into the break right here.
I'm glad Courtney's not a Beatles fan.
You know, there's some people that actually think the Beatles are better than the Four Seasons, but that's not Courtney.
We'll be right back.
We'll come back to the political cesspool right after these messages here on the Liberty News Radio Network.
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.
That's upma.org.
So, you love Talk Radio?
Then you'll love TalkstreamLive.com.
Talkstream Live is always on 24-7 with the best streaming talk shows.
Find your favorite talkers and discover some new ones.
It's free, readily available online or on mobile with any smartphone or tablet.
Finding your favorite talk shows all in one place has gotten a whole lot easier.
Just go to TalkStreamLive.com.
Be sure to download the free apps from Google Play or the iTunes App Store.
TalkRight, the conservative app offered by Talkstream Live that caters exclusively to the conservative talk radio community.
Here you'll see only talk shows and podcasts from the conservative right, all the big broadcast names and online digital shows in one place.
TalkRight makes it easy to find all your favorite conservative talkers with all the upscale features you come to expect from Talkstream Live.
Keep up with the fast-paced political world.
Download Talk Right today from Google Play or the App Store.
Do we reflect about our future and where we as a culture are moving?
Do we keep our trust in our jobs, homes, money, life necessities, investments, stock markets?
Do we believe that our 401ks or other retirements will always be there and that the current economic order will recover?
Is the economy going to recover and life return to normal?
It ain't gonna happen by a friend of Medigoria.
Whether you are poor, middle class, or rich, it ain't gonna happen.
A book of astounding revelations about the present economic order and where we are heading.
It ain't gonna happen by a friend of Medigoria.
To order, visit medg.com, spelled NEJ.com, or call Caritas in the U.S. 205-672-2000.
205-672-2000 We got a lot to do.
Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
All right, I just want to make sure Courtney hasn't passed out because that last comment before the break was a little bit ingested.
She and I have had this long-standing quarrel over what band was better.
Was it the Four Seasons or The Beatles?
Courtney, are you still sticking with the Beatles?
Against all logic.
I have to, James.
My dad, you know, he grew up the same time your parents did.
And, you know, they're both, they're both, my parents are baby boomers just like yours.
And I'm sure it sounds like you were raised on music from that era just like I was.
Probably.
And all I've ever listened to.
Well, you know, I am going to talk about Elvis later that's related to this, but, you know, there's him too that I really like.
Well, that wasn't proper, that was not proper grammar.
I just used it.
Anyways, my parents listened to the four seasons a lot, too.
And I've always really liked them, but I have to, and I hope this isn't too cliche because, you know, I guess, you know, even if it's for a superficial reason, for whatever reason, you know, they are considered the number one band according to certain, you know, so I hope I don't sound too cliche or unimaginative for liking them, but I guess for my generation, it is kind of unique.
And my dad, my dad, my dad just listened to them a lot and he wanted us to listen to them too.
Not that he was a hippie or a liberal by any means.
He just liked the music from that era.
Well, listen, all kidding aside, all kidding aside, they're early stuff.
The Beatles, early 60s pop.
I mean, it's fantastic music.
I mean, all of that's good music.
I mean, you really can't go wrong.
I will tell you, though, I may have told you this before.
When my daughter was first born, I had a CD player waiting in the hospital room when she came out of delivery.
The first song she heard as soon as she was wheeled in the room was Can't Take My Eyes Off You.
You got to raise kids right in this day and age.
And that's, I guess, going back to what you're raising yours right.
I hear them making a request of you right now, even here live on the radio.
But that's what tonight's show is all about.
It's about families.
It's about children, women tonight.
We're talking about featuring four of the best I know.
And anyway, Courtney, you and I were talking earlier this week, and you were hitting on so many things that Keith Alexander and I were talking about last week with Paul Kersey.
Disney movies, Toy Stories, Swiss Family Robinson, so on and so forth.
And I know you listened to that part of the show last week.
Anyway, how does it tie into what you were wanting to talk about?
Well, the reason I first started thinking about all this was because, well, your show, of course, but Netflix, I've noticed that, gosh, it's been like a year now.
It's been way too long, two years.
They only show the newer, they only show the newer, you know, Disney movies that were based on non-white stories.
A lot of them came out in the mid to late 90s.
And then in the millennial period, like, you know, there's Nulan, there's Pocahontas, there's the Emperor's New Groove, stuff like Lilo and Stitch.
I mean, they're good in their own way, but they, you know, they're not as good as the original classic stuff that was based on the European fairy tales.
I mean, they're never going to compare to those.
And so I've noticed how on Netflix, it's like that's all they have on there for like the past two years.
And it's like, I don't see them ever shuffle it out with some of the classics.
And obviously, obviously, obviously that's something I can control on my own.
I can pull out the old VHS.
But also, you know, to tie into what y'all talked about, the Swiss Family Robinson was mentioned, and that is probably one of my favorites when it comes to the non-animated classic Disney movies.
I wish Keith was on right now.
But, you know, the non-animated classic Disney movies, that was something I grew up on that I always just really love to watch.
I tell you what, Courtney, not to interrupt you, but we can always arrange Keith to be on.
And I'll tell you this, if we need to continue this discussion next week when he's back, let's absolutely do it because we can't have you on enough.
But keep going.
Oh, thank you so much.
I appreciate that.
Yeah, it's just, you know, it's just, I mean, I was raised on, just like, you know, I was raised on the older music.
I was also raised on classic, clean movies.
I'm sure you were too.
And that was something that we just watched over and over again in our house.
And it's just, you know, it has its own.
I mean, the movie's good in a lot of ways.
I mean, you know, in relation to what we're talking about tonight, it shows, you know, traditional gender roles.
And it shows a white family just, you know, alone taking on this huge army of, I guess, I don't know, they're Chinese or Malai pirates.
I don't, I have no idea.
Some sort of Asian pirates, but they take them on all by themselves at the very end with their own ingenuities and everything.
And, you know, it's a movie that they would never make now.
And another thing is it's just, you know, the characters in them, the intelligent dialogue and the humor.
It's like parts of that movie.
It's just clean, mature humor.
It's so different from the humor now that's so dirty and bathroom related.
It's like back then, it's like, I mean, I don't know if people notice it when they watch that movie, but there's some parts that are pretty funny.
I mean, you know, the part when, you know, once the girl comes on the scene and at first they don't know she's a girl, you know, that whole dynamic is pretty funny.
The two sons don't know she's a girl and then they find out she's a girl and they start acting completely different.
And then, you know, when they're fighting each other over her, it's just a lot of dynamics between the characters in the movie that I think personally are really funny.
And it, you know, it's just good old-fashioned humor, intelligent dialogue, well-rounded characters, and it's just stuff you don't find now.
And you mentioned Keith a minute ago.
No, no, no, go ahead and finish.
No, go ahead and finish.
Go ahead and finish.
I was going to say, like another movie from another movie from that era, like a non-animated movie from that era.
I guess this was, I think the Swiss Family Robinson was 1959.
This other one was, I think, later into the 60s.
And it started showing some of the depravities of the time, but it was still a wholesome movie compared to what we have now.
The Parent Trap, that was another one that I grew up on with Haley Mills in it.
And that, you know, that shows some of the cultural depravities, like it's about divorce and stuff like that.
But it's just funny.
It's clean humor.
I mean, that's a good example of, that's a good, clean movie where I'm laughing the whole way through.
It's just funny.
And it's not based on anything inappropriate or anything, you know, anything sexual or dirty or any, you know, anything obnoxious.
It's just, it's just clean, funny, old-fashioned humor.
So it's like, that's just the stuff I grew up on.
And when y'all mentioned that, it just kind of, you know, got me thinking about a bunch of things I wanted to add also.
Well, I'll tell you, Keith, you're right.
Keith would certainly be like a pig and slop on this conversation.
Did you ever watch, Keith almost demands it of anyone who comes to Memphis as you have done in the past.
Did you ever watch Tammy and the Bachelor?
I have to ask that on Keith's behalf today in absentia.
He actually, he either sent me that movie or he told me to watch the whole thing on YouTube.
I don't remember.
And it was the only one that I saw it.
So you have seen it.
Okay, so there's that.
But now, listen, I know we're running out of time here, and 30 minutes is never enough.
But I want to say this before you go.
You know what the highlight for the show tonight for me has been?
has been hearing your babies in the background.
I know you've got two very young children.
And that, to me, has made the show, it really absolutely accentuates what this show is all about.
It's about faith and family and folk and any it's about all of that.
And this is who we are.
I mean, we are the real deal.
We are not only saying this is how you should live, we are actually living that way.
And I think that really adds to the credibility of the message of this program to have you, a young mother, calling in tonight, doing radio with your kids in the background.
It's just, I've used the word once already, but it's very, very endearing.
But there was something you wanted to say about Elvis Presley.
Now we only have a minute remaining.
How does Elvis tie into what you wanted to talk about tonight?
You know, I just have random things go through my head all day.
It's like, oh, I want to talk about this on the show.
And then by the time the show comes around, it's like, well, what do I say?
No.
And it's over before it starts.
Yeah, but he was another, you know, I mean, he, you know, like when it comes to 60s music, we can debate like, oh, this group's better than that group.
This group is kind of an appropriate like, you know, versus that, because, you know, it was a time period where things were changing.
But when you talk about Elvis, I mean, he's somebody that all generations in our movement, I think, appreciate, you know, and mostly the early stuff from him.
And if Keith was on the show, I was going to ask if he knew much about what his political beliefs were.
Well, hang on.
I'm going to call you this week.
We may get you back next week, even if for a brief time, to continue this with Keith, because I know Keith would want to be here with you for this conversation.
So let's table that because I know we only have seconds remaining.
One of our listeners, Rich in Nashville, you just mentioned this movie to me.
He wants to know your thoughts on Old Yeller.
And you had just talked about that with me.
So you got to go quick on that.
Old Yeller.
That's another good one.
It has that same actor, Tommy Kirk, that was in Swiss Family Robinson.
I had a crush on him when I was 11, 12 watching those movies.
And he was in a lot of Disney movies.
I like him.
So I loved that movie.
And he was always paired up with that younger actor, too.
They were always in all those movies together.
And the mother, the mother and that was in the Swiss Family Robinson, too.
But anyway, that's another question for Keith, why they paired them up like that.
It looks like we're just going to have to have you back on next week when Keith's back in the studio.
I just don't see any other way around it.
Did you cry when Old Yeller died?
I cried at a lot of things.
For some reason, that's something that didn't make me cry.
I mean, you're not a dog lover.
Okay, I got it.
There's other things.
All right.
Hey, Courtney, always good to talk to you.
Go tend to those kids.
God bless you.
And we'll talk again soon.
Okay, thank you.
But don't go away.
There's more to come right here on the Liberty News Radio Network.
Export Selection