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Aug. 17, 2019 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
50:20
20190817_Hour_3
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You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
Georgia, Georgia, the whole state, just an old sweet song, keeps Georgia on my mind.
Georgia.
Well, I think the last time he was on, we introduced him with that song.
And since he is Georgia's favorite son, I thought it was only appropriate to do it again.
Sam Dixon, the venerable attorney and respected orator, is back with us this evening to reflect on the two-year anniversary of Charlottesville and the legacy that that day has left on our movement and our people.
Sam, great to have you back with us this evening.
Thank you, Jamie.
Well, we have talked a lot about Charlottesville in recent weeks, again, with the two-year anniversary looming, and now it has, of course, come and pass.
That was August the 12th, 2017.
So we're just a couple of days beyond it now.
But I was really excited to have you back on the show tonight to offer your personal reflections.
And I say personal because, of course, you were there.
So let's first go back, before we talk about legacy and impact, let's go back to that week, a couple of days prior, if we can, your decision to go, because I know it was a last-minute decision.
Take us there.
Well, I did not intend to go.
I had been busy.
And as you know, one of my little pet quirks is that I dislike calling ourselves white warriors or the white conservatives and that kind of thing, because I think we're working for the triumph and liberation of our people.
And that means that we're not bound to ideologies of left or right, which are comparatively recent in our history.
It rose out of the French Revolution in the 1780s and 90s when the monarchists sat to the right of the speaker and the Jacobins and revolutionaries sat to the left.
But anyway, I didn't intend to go.
I had not been invited to go or speak or anything, but I had people ask me at the last minute in the wake of the court decision, which affirmed the First Amendment rights of people who wanted to have their rally at the Lee Statue against the efforts of the city of Charlottesville to curtail their rights and violate the law, to violate the very First Amendment that we have in our Constitution.
People said, several people said, we really ought to be there.
We need a lawyer.
We might need a lawyer.
And I reminded them I can't practice in Virginia.
And they said, that's true, but we can give you at least give us a lawyer's perspective if we have problems.
So I got on the train in Amtrak about 7.30 that night and got off the train in Charlottesville at 8.30 in the morning.
And friends met me and picked me up at their car.
And the first thing that I noticed, which is of interest, because it shows how false the system's untruthful narrative about Charlottesville is, was that we drove to a park.
I think it's called McKinley Park, which is about three miles away from the main rally.
And the people, the various people who played roles in setting the thing up, I understand kind of a confused setup.
They had arranged to have people park their cars at McKinley Park, away from the city, outside the center of the city, and to take shuttle buses that would take the attendees to the park because they wanted to avoid violence.
They wanted to avoid confrontation. with these demonstrators and leftists, let us call them what they are, the Antifa, which the system manages to purge out of its reports.
They wanted to avoid clashes with the Anti-Faw because, as everyone knows, the Anti-Faw is a terrorist, violent organization that is dedicated to violating the rights of freedom of speech and assembly of the American people in order to carry out their own extreme Marxist agenda.
So anyway, I got in one of the shuttle buses.
At this point, the landing was the last bus leaving.
It was about, I think, close to 11 o'clock.
And we got to, but the police stopped us.
We were not allowed to go to the park venue.
The police stopped us.
We had to get out of the shuttle blocks away from the rally.
And we had to walk through gangs of these protesters that were the anti-Fa.
I hate being tricked into using the language and semantics of our enemies.
And these people were just, they looked like they were inmates of an insane asylum.
There were many of them.
I think there were probably several thousand of them.
And I gather that there was a hardcore of the anti-Fa communist types who were directing it and inspired it and organized it.
But there were lots of people who did not appear to be with the Anti-Faw.
They didn't look as nutty as Anti-Fa people look.
But they were all just, just like they were crazy, screaming, yelling, faces contorted with hate and rage, cursing, spraying people with pepper spray, shoving people.
There was one guy walking around with a homemade flamethrower, as you know, firing this flamethrower almost to the faces of people trying to go to the rally.
If he had tripped or if they had panicked, if someone had shoved them, they could have had their eyes put out.
And there were police standing around like wooden Indians watching all of this and making no efforts to restrain these people who were attacking us as we tried to make our way to the entrance of the park.
And it got wilder and more frenzied as these lunatics were screaming and cursing and yelling and making threats and throwing things and spraying people to where, you know, I'm pretty low-key and unradical, as you know.
And there were people there, I discovered, as we got close to the park, who had come with these shields and stuff, which I would have discouraged their doing because it gives the media a chance to say that we are violent.
But I have to say, I was relieved as I saw that approaching the entrance of the park because the frenzy was mounting and the crowds of these fanatics were strengthening.
And it was with relief that I walked up the stairs and entered the venue where the people had put up, cops had put up these dividers where Irene crowded would be in two separate sort of corrals in front of where anyone would speak.
So that's how it started.
That was my introduction to what was going to happen that day on Detroit.
So we've covered what led you to make the decision to go and some of what you saw and experienced on the ground once you arrived.
We've covered the fact that contrary to the media narrative and the story of the Antiphon have put out, which has been embraced by churches, the New York Times, Mitt Romney, the Democrats in Congress, and many Republicans like Bromley.
Contrary to that narrative, people want going there.
They're like a ton of wild left people.
We're going to take care of the town.
I'm contrary.
Definitely.
But I'm a boy.
I'm a boy.
Hold on right there, Sam.
We're coming up on our first break.
It's a great time to take a break because I have another in-depth question for you when we come back.
But he has certainly set the stage for what will be his personal reflections on the two-year anniversary of Charlottesville and what the impact of that event has had on our people and our movement.
Stay tuned.
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And now back to tonight's show.
You know, it's amazing when you're 20 years old, as I was when I first met Sam Dixon.
You think you know it all.
Now, knocking on the door of 40, I realized that maybe the people who were older than me knew a little bit more than me at the time.
And one of those things is something that I say quite often now, and perhaps I picked it up from Sam, is that we shouldn't determine our positions on any given issue with regard to whether or not the media or society deems that issue to be right or left.
It should be, is it best for our people?
And if it's best for our people, then that's the position we take.
And Sam alluded to that just a moment ago.
So we've talked with Sam about how he got to the United Right rally in Charlottesville, what he witnessed, some of what he witnessed that day.
What I want to ask you now, though, Sam, is before it all fell apart, and certainly no one could have predicted, I don't think anybody really, obviously, if they could have predicted it, they wouldn't have been there, the collusion of the authorities and the media and just everything that went wrong.
Nobody could have foreseen that.
And of course, hindsight is 2020.
How did you think it would go in those minutes and hours just before the event and the rally was to take place?
How did you think it was going to play out?
It would play out the way it's played out throughout my life.
There would be a meeting and there would be a rally and there would be speakers who would speak to the crowd and then the rally would conclude and people would go home, which is what was planned.
I anticipated there might be some heckling and that kind of thing.
But, you know, we've had problems.
We had meetings years ago in Atlanta.
We had what called itself the Anti-Klan Network, which was an equivalent to the Anti-FAL.
I'm sure they were actually plugged in with Anti-FAL.
They were plugged in with them in Europe.
And they were a group founded by Brayden, who was the Southeastern organizer of the American Communist Party.
But they came and made trouble.
When they did our meeting and tried to take over the podium and that kind of thing.
You know, there were maybe 15 of them and there were 200 of us.
And we sat and put up them and asked the police to remove them and the police finally removed them.
That's been my one experience with this kind of thing.
And, you know, I had no idea that there would be literally thousands of these people there and that they would be worked into the frenzy, the snarling, foaming at the mouth, you know, analystic faces these people had.
And of course, the greatest thing that neither I nor anyone could have anticipated was that the police would not enforce the law and would stand aside while crimes were committed.
And that was the thing that was really even more striking than these fanatics screaming and yelling and spraying people with pepper spray and so forth, was that you saw all of these police just absolutely immobile.
I mean, there were many, many, there were hundreds of police and state troopers all over the area.
And none of them did anything to stop.
And to be clear, this isn't something you heard.
This isn't something you were told.
This is something you witnessed because you were there.
And when that cease and desist, that stand down order came down, you played a hand in trying to keep the crowd orderly.
You were telling me the story just a few days ago.
Well, our crowd was orderly.
The order itself was a violation of freedom speech.
I had gone, I was gotten gathered with the people I knew from Atlanta, and we were trying to make our, we made our way from one of these corrals to the one to the right as you go to the park, and I had gotten there.
And the pretext of their, what appeared to be the pretext of their proclamation was that one of these anti-fa threw a smoke bomb into the middle of the crowd, and it exploded and smoke was flying up in the air.
Some intrepid lad went and actually grabbed the thing and threw it back over the fence to get it away from the people.
And my interpretation at the time was that the police had interpreted this, our refusal to sit and be the victim, then there and be the victims of this bomb that was stinging everybody.
This was interpreted as their excuse to ban our rally.
But of course, we know that wasn't true.
They started, I was up near the front of the thing where the speakers would stand, and there were two police officers who were walking up and down along the barricade.
They were talking, and you really could hardly hear what they could say over the frenzied screams and shouts of these antifa animals and the people who were gathering there who had managed to come through these assaults.
But I listened and I realized they were reading out what's commonly called in Anglo-Saxon countries, the Riot Act, where the group is declared to be rioters and their toes that they had to disperse.
And the police seemed to be making no effort to really let people in the crowd know what was happening, to make sure they heard.
So if they passed me and I spoke to them, I said, officers, I'm a lawyer and I know all these people.
I will help you get them out of here if you will let me have a microphone to speak to them.
And they basically said, go to hell.
What we want to see is your back side leaving this place.
So they rejected my help.
Now, by the way, that's written up in the Heathy report, which we'll come to later.
I'm the only person on our side mentioned, and I mentioned favorably that I tried to maintain order and get people to cooperate with the police, which is what I did.
I told the people from Atlanta around me that we had to get people to obey the police.
There was a lot of people who were outraged at the violation of our First Amendment rights, that we were dealing with fanatics and apparently the police acting in concert with fanatics who were there to prevent us from having a meeting.
And I knew there would be a lot of people that would say, oh, well, we're in the right.
We're not going to go.
But I also knew what would happen then is they would be arrested.
They'd have mugshots taken.
Their addresses and their workplaces and telephone numbers and email addresses would all be taken down.
And all of this would then be accessed by the antifa, which would then use this to destroy them professionally and expose them to threats and danger where they live.
So regardless of whether we were innocent, it was important that people not be identified and doxed.
Also, I knew that they would have to hire lawyers.
And I anticipated lawyers being the cowards that 99.9% of all lawyers now are.
They would have a hard time getting lawyers to represent them.
They'd have to come back to Charlottesville, have to go to court appearances, and they would end up paying thousands of dollars to lawyers.
And the best they could hope for, you'd be found innocent, which is no victory after you've lost your job, been identified.
and paid three or four thousand dollars to a lawyer and had to travel back and forth to your hometown in Charlottesville two or three times.
That's not a desirable outcome.
So we found out and we were able to tell people what was happening and asked them to just please leave as a body to get out of there.
And I think about, it appeared to be about 80 to 85 people then left.
People led them out.
We went back through the gate.
The antiphile were triumphant that the system had assisted them in violating our rights.
They were just joyous and still screaming and yelling and attacking people.
And we walked three miles back, two and a half miles back to Kinley Park with these people trailing along behind at the side of us triumphant and committing more assaults on people and the police standing there in Unicamp watching these Marxists,
this Marxist gang that had assembled for the express purpose of preventing us from having a meeting as they tried to create trucks all the way back to Kimley Park.
Hold on right there, my friend, Sam Dixon, the one and only, the incomparable one.
He'll be back with us when we return.
In fact, he's with us for the remainder of the hour.
So we're only halfway through this very important personal reflection from Charlottesville, given by Sam Dixon.
But also we're going to get into the legacy, the importance, and the future of this narrative as our people charge forward into an uncertain future.
We'll be right back.
Pursuing Liberty, using the Constitution as our guide.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
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Portland, Oregon Mayor Ted Wheeler left a voicemail message for people who planned to go downtown.
In past demonstrations, the various groups have taken to the streets in the core of downtown.
We recommend for your safety to move away from these groups inside a location if possible as a precaution if you find yourself near demonstrators.
Police say 13 people were arrested and some weapons were confiscated as the Proud Boys and other right groups were met by counter demonstrations on the left.
Many of the anti-fascist demonstrators wore masks.
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When the Proud Boys see us, they don't dox us or like release our information and identify us because they don't want people coming to our houses and interfering with our personal lives.
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Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
Well, of course, by now, as you know, Sam Dixon once again is our featured guest this hour.
And as it is the week of the two-year anniversary of Charlottesville, we are having him back to give his eyewitness testimony of what he experienced that day, but not just for the sake of lamentations, but I think as the Barnes Review once put it, to put history into accord with the fact, the Heathe report has certainly, well, I don't know if you want to use the word exonerated, but it has certainly put forth the facts, and the facts are on the side of our people in this case.
I want to transition just a little bit to the legacy, the importance, and how Charlottesville will be used in the future, perhaps as a bludgeon against our people.
I think you see it a little bit, Sam, with the reporting coming out of Portland today, where you have these so-called civic nationalist groups like the Proud Boys and the Three Percenters and even the Oath Keepers.
I was talking in the second hour with our previous guest about how the Oath Keepers showed up at a defend the Robert E. Lee Monument in New Orleans, which was just prior to Charlottesville in 2017.
And they showed up ostensibly to defend the Lee Monument.
But once members of the League of the South also showed up and it was made known to the oath keepers that the Southern Poverty Law Center had spoken ill of the League of the South, they actually joined forces with Antifa in opposition of the League of the South.
And I bring that up for this reason, is that these groups, these, again, so-called civic nationalist groups that were in Portland today are now in turn being called Nazis by the press.
They are being called far-right groups, Nazi groups who clashed with the very benign term counter-demonstrators.
So apply what we saw in Portland today to the legacy of Charlottesville.
Well, what the system wants is to use these thugs and to shut down people who really dissent from what the system wants.
They want to shut down dissent.
They want to preserve the pretense that America is a free country by not having the police themselves go and do these things.
All of the police often act to curtail our freedom and have throughout my entire life, especially the FBI.
But they want to stand aside and let these thugs take care of us.
They want to let them, as they did in Charlottesville, and we know they did it in Charlottesville.
We have the data on it now, thanks to the Heafey Report.
It was a conscious decision by at least the police chief in Charlottesville, who was the first American, black, first African-American police chief,
that he ordered the police not to enforce the law, which you knew someone had to do, because you wouldn't have hundreds of cops and state troopers over a three-square-mile area all making individual decisions not to do their jobs.
But anyway, we know that the black police chief did this, and he told the police why he was telling them not to enforce the law, to stand aside and let crimes take place, to create a pretext to prevent us, the white people, from having our rally.
That they weren't able to get away with it because the federal court ruled that it was a violation of the law.
And so the city of Charlottesville, through its police chief, decided that it was going to stand aside and use the anti-faw demonstration as a means to achieve what the courts had prevented them from achieving several days earlier.
And that's what they're doing all over the country.
As you know, here in Atlanta, the Antifa had a death threat up on me for some time on their website.
Nothing was done about it by the police authorities.
Imagine if some group like the League of the South, you mentioned, have a death threat up on some black person, some black advocate in Atlanta.
Oh, they did in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, of course, they arrested.
But they can make death threats.
And believe me, I'm not a coward, but knowing having to move around a city and go into the grocery store and get your laundry and do this sort of thing, knowing that there's a group of several hundred Marxist fanatics who have said Sam Dixon needs to die, and I am dedicated to bringing this about.
Yeah, I mean, it does take a toll on you to have to live in a society that is tolerating this kind of lawlessness and allows your life to be threatened.
Also in Atlanta, as you're aware from previous conversations, the Antifa threw a Molotov cocktail into a police car.
Fortunately, there was no police officer there, but it blew up and it exploded the police car.
Flames went 100 feet in the air.
Three of them were arrested in the act.
Not one has been prosecuted.
And the Atlanta Journal Constitution and National Public Radio's outlet and all the other news outlets in Atlanta, they won't talk about it.
They won't tell the people of Atlanta that we have a district attorney who will not act against terrorists.
If throwing a bomb in a police car is not an act of terrorism, what in the hell is?
Surely it's a story that's worthy of reporting, but not in the Atlanta Journal Constitution.
The journalists there all know, oh, that's not good for our side.
So the Atlanta general constitution is going to work with the anti-FA and this police, this district attorney, to conceal the fact that terrorists can commit bombings against the police in Atlanta with impunity.
We're going to cut up.
Well, it's not just those of us who have very responsibly advocated for white well-being throughout our careers.
We're not the only ones anymore being called Nazis, being targeted.
It is the police.
It is even the president of the United States.
I mean, we have seen since El Paso, the Democratic candidates for president, as well as the establishment news organs referring to the president of the United States as a white nationalist or a white supremacist.
They use the terms interchangeably, of course, terrorist leader.
I mean, this is the treatment that Donald Trump gets who has done next to nothing to help his own base, which is, of course, white Republican voters.
But that would lead me to my next question.
In fact, we've seen now even with the people in Portland today who were siding with the communist and the anarchist against our people in 2017, and who actually even released a statement today, according to our previous guest in the second hour, saying they would rather stand with Antifa than quote-unquote white nationalists.
Why are we revising?
And they think, of course, that will curry them favor some shelter, but of course it doesn't.
Why are we revisiting this topic?
We only have a few seconds before the next break, but it's not for lamentation's sake.
Why are we revisiting the topic of Charlottesville on this two-year anniversary?
It's a correction of the system's narrative and for the purpose of instructing our own people so that they will understand just how bad the system is and how estranged we are from it.
How this system is bent upon the destruction of the white founding stock of this country.
They hate us.
And things like truthfulness, law and order, decency, they stand for nothing with the people who run the system.
It is the system that is our dangerous enemy, not some kind of pathetic, doped-up, middle-ill, antifa fanatic screaming and yelling and foaming at the mouth.
No, it's that system.
It's people like Nick Romney.
They are the ones on whom we must focus our anger and outrage.
The whole eat-me-last elitist class who believe that in somehow, some way they won't come for them in an inevitable future.
It's just not.
They have contempt, supreme contempt for us.
Even though they are biologically, they look like us.
This system is selective for sociopathic people to rise to positions of leadership.
They don't connect.
It's like these proud boys siding with the antifa.
The proud boys believe that loyalty to one's own people is a terrible thing.
They call that racism if it's white Christians being loyal to the civilization that brought us things like the Parthenon and modern surgery.
We could certainly...
No, I was just going to say, we could certainly take out...
We start out with the premise that we start out with the idea that loyalty is bad.
It's bad to feel loyal to your religion, which overlies your race.
Well, then, how can you talk about the family?
Isn't the family discriminatory?
A mother gives her milk to her own baby instead of a baby in Port-au-Prince?
That's a thing.
According to their philosophy, that mother is a racist.
Supremacist.
Even you can't see, you cannot.
You cannot say that loyalty to your children and your mother and father are morally good but loyalty to your extended family is morally bad, and our race is our extended family.
This is gets into what Kevin Mcdonald calls pathological altruism.
You know, we could take a parenthetical departure and ask, what is it about whites that we created and incubated this defective gene because no other race would, would accept what whites have accepted for themselves by and large.
We got to take a break.
We'll be back with Sam Dixon.
One last segment.
What an hour.
What a guest.
Stay tuned.
I'd advise mr Trump to stop whining and go try to make his case to get votes.
The press has created a rigged system.
They even want to try and rig the election.
Well, I tell you what it helps in Ohio that we got uh Democrats in charge of the machines and poisoned the mind of so many of our voters at the polling booth, where so many cities are corrupt and voter fraud is all too common.
And then they say oh, there's no voter fraud in our country.
I come from Chicago, so so I want to be honest.
It's not as if it's just Republicans who have monkeyed around with elections in the past.
Sometimes Democrats have to.
You know, whenever people are in power they're, you know, they have this tendency to try to, you know, tilt things in their direction.
There's no voter fraud.
You start whining before the game's even over.
Whenever things are going badly for you and you lose, you start blaming somebody else.
Then you don't have what it takes to be in this job.
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Well, just trying to be patient dad, it sounds like a cat calling for help or something worse, a basement full of cats.
Yeah, you know honey, it is a little hard on the ears, not you too?
Well, maybe we can all play a game.
Andrew, do you want to play a board game?
How about we watch a video, hide and seek?
Oh, I don't know, I give up.
Maybe we could all just sneak out of the house.
Honey, he's nine years old, we can't leave him home alone.
And we can make him practice with a sock.
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Welcome back to Get On The Show.
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Been a fast show tonight.
We've had some great guests, some great commentary, great topics for discussion, but we certainly didn't want to let the two-year anniversary of Charlottesville pass without dedicating some time to that event and the legacy it has left and what it means for us going forward, how it will be used against us, and what we can do to reclaim the narrative, which is, of course, the truth.
Now, our guest this hour is, of course, Sam Dixon.
We also have now on the line who called in during the break.
He is in the car listening on the radio, so the connection may not be as stable as some, but we're going to do the best we can with what we've got.
We've got Rich on the line, Sam, from Nashville.
Rich was also in Charlottesville, and he's listening tonight.
And Rich, take it away.
Any questions for Sam or comments?
Anything you'd like to add to the conversation tonight?
Well, thanks for having me on.
I've heard most of what Sam said, and I really do agree with his last point that the system is stacked against us.
It's like I want to quote George Carlin with his routine where he said it's a big club, and we ain't in it.
I think that's exactly true.
Everything that's been associated with Charlottesville has been a travesty of justice.
I mean, it's pure kangaroo court, Soviet-style courts, and unfortunately, it's permeated throughout the entire legal system in the United States, as you well know in your experience in your lawsuit, and I know in my experience in the case that I had that I argue.
So it's the one word is we've got to get better organized because right now the opposition is in a lot better position to achieve their goals than we are to achieve ours.
Well, we've had Sam on Rich obviously for the better part of an hour to cultivate his experience there in Charlottesville.
We don't have that much time left for you to do that.
Of course, we've covered this event before in the past, but share with Sam very quickly your personal experience there that day, and then we'll toss it back to him and y'all can go back and forth.
Okay, yeah.
I was there.
I was the chairman of the Tennessee chapter of the League of the South, and I drove up there with the rest of the contingent, and I was part of that large column that was mentioned in the Heathy report, the oppressive column, as we marched into up Market Street and into the park or attempted to get in the park.
We had to actually fight our way into the park.
And this is in spite of an injunction by the federal court the day previous.
And my experience there was once we met contact, I mean, we were sabotaged from the very beginning, from monkeying with the sound system to preventing people coming in to allowing the intermingling of the anti-file with our people to the fact that we didn't have the entire range of the park, that the police couldn't even let us, they had barricades set where we couldn't even approach the statue, which we were all there to defend.
Both my father and grandfather were named for Robert E. Lee.
So that was the primary reason I was there to defend his good name and not to let his memory be besmirched.
But once we hit it there, I mean, it was, I can't describe it no other way as a conspiracy by all levels of government to deny us our right to peaceably assemble.
Well, Sam, your reaction.
Well, we know that.
We know what went on because the city itself, James referred to the Heathy report, which I find many people on our own side haven't heard of.
The city of Charlottesville hired a former federal prosecutor named Timothy Hefey to do an investigation as their lawyer on what happened.
Now, I think they expected him to do what his client wanted, as more than 99 out of 100 lawyers would.
They got an honest lawyer instead.
And he filed an official report, which is a very line.
He pinpointed what had happened.
But the black police chief ordered the police to stand aside and let crimes be committed so that he could violate our First Amendment rights.
Bill Connor never did that.
You can look through the history of the civil rights movement in the South.
No Southern sheriff ever did that.
And yet there's no comment on it.
Bitt Romney won't condemn him.
Bitt Romney says there were only good people on one side, the people with the flamethrowers and the pepper spray, the people who organized for the press purpose of preventing us from every one of them, according to the Republican senator from Utah, Bitt Romney, was a good guy, Mr. President, and only bad guy were on the other side.
And you talked about the laws being committed.
I was in the thick of that fight at the parking garage.
I mean, I was right in the middle of it.
And in fact, I got knocked down and ematilated after it.
There were no fewer than 15 cops standing there because he was right in front of the police station while all this and everything else was going on.
I ended up getting tackled by an anti-fight that was on the pavement.
They finally came out there and chewed the cops away.
One of the people filming all this stuff said to the cop, why aren't you arresting anybody?
And the police replied, I don't do arrests.
So, I mean, this was, you know, this was a brawl in front of 15 court officers, which is what cops are.
And rich, and rich.
Remember, it went on for 26 hours.
They declared a state of emergency, but it was enforced only against our side.
The anti-file were not required to disperse.
The people who committed the crimes, they were allowed to go on, and they were allowed to roam the streets for over a day committing their crimes all the way up until 2 p.m. the next day when one of the organizers of the rally, Jason Kessler, tried to hold a press conference.
And 40 of the anti-files showed up and assaulted him and prevented the press conference going forward.
With the national media there, the media, which never protested, they pretty much hushed it up because they're journalism whores, they're press accused.
And once again, there were 20 to 40 cops standing around, motionless, while a mob prevented someone from holding a press conference 26 hours later.
And in the face of the decree that law and order was in danger and crowds went to gather and so on, which was never enforced against that sign.
And we know from the Heathy report that the police chief threatened cops and tried to prevent them from cooperating with Heathi's investigation.
He tried to prevent them from telling Heathi what he had done.
And there's no outcry from Mitt Romney about that.
There's no outcry from Liz Warren.
No, these people are using it.
They're using Charlottesville the way they used the bridge thing in Delma.
We're going to hear about it for decades.
We're going to hear a lying narrative for decades.
And it will be in the history book unless we come here, which we're going to do.
But this is now a weapon.
And they're making it very clear what they intend to do.
Liz Warren actually spoke to a crowd of her supporters some weeks back, and she assured them that when she's elected president, when she is elected president, she will take the oath of office to uphold the Constitution and the laws of the land.
And the first thing that Liz said the Fuca Hunter says she's going to do is call in the Justice Department and the FBI and tell them to shut up the white races.
So at least she's given notice.
Hitler didn't give notice.
Benin didn't bother to give notice.
She's given notice.
The first act she will do as president is to violate the law, the most important law in our country, the First Amendment.
She's given her solemn word to the American people that you elect me and I'm going to set the bill of life aside.
Yeah, and Kamala Harris, who said she will establish a cabinet-level office to combat white supremacy.
And again, there was Corey Booker this week as well who said he's going to open up the office.
And who qualifies as white supremacist?
Well, anyone who even speaks out with a modicum of resistance to the regime.
Sam, last word to you.
I've never met anyone who calls himself a white supremacist.
You know, I've met people who call themselves communists.
The media never uses that word.
I've been called a white supremacist by the Atlanta paper and a vowed white supremacist.
So they could pretend that I call myself that.
Instead of putting their own rotten, prey, security, credibility on the line, they can tell their readers, oh, Sam Dixon calls himself this because he's the most valuable.
That's the integrity of Atlanta journalists.
But yeah, this is what we're doing.
But never did the blacks get treated the way we were in Charlottesville in the history of the South.
Never did you have a Southern sheriff doing what the black police chief in Charlotte.
And the media likes it.
The New York Times editorial, they want more of it because they're lying about.
And Mitt Romney, we talked about the Democrats, and we touched on Mitt Romney.
Marco Rubio, the Republican Serve from Pharma, when all this took place, he stated the anti-fi are justified in attacking white racists on the streets.
He endorsed, he had publicly endorsed lynch law.
That was his reaction.
So, I mean, and you can tell it's the whole system is at fault.
It's not a question of getting a new broom and sweeping clean.
The whole system is broken.
And the time has come for us to move forward beyond traditional two-year elections, Democrat versus Republican.
We need a new fucking.
Well, Sam, you're right about that.
I could have gone a full three hours with you two, and it wouldn't have been enough time.
We'll continue to tell the truth until they put us in jail.
And if and when that day comes, I hope I'm cellmate with the likes of you and Rich, Sam.
I'm James Edwards.
Thanks for joining us tonight.
What a great conversation.
We'll have another one soon for Sam Dixon, Rich Hamblin, our guest, Augustus and Victus in the second hour.
We'll see you next week.
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