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Nov. 2, 2019 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
The Political Cesspool, 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.
Next week's going to feel a little unusual going back to business as usual, covering the topics, just easing back into another year of broadcasting.
But last week and tonight are different stories.
Last week, we were, of course, all together at such a celebratory occasion and gathering.
And then tonight we're reflecting on it a little bit further.
It was just quite frankly, I've never had one.
This one was the top of all of them.
All of them were great, but I mean, this particular convention was, I mean, just a bell ringer as far as I'm concerned.
It's hard for me to judge him.
But I tell you, someone who can is, we'll go ahead and knight him, for all intents and purposes, Sir Wilburn Sprayberry, who's with us.
I mentioned that there was one great mistake, and that was the singing that Jack and I put on and not holding the mic up to pick up the audience.
Rather, you just heard us, mainly Jack.
So there was that.
But the one disappointment I would say that I had over the weekend was the fact that for months, Sir Wilburn had told me that he'd be bringing his lady friend, the lady Ann, with him from Texas.
And then I see him there with no companion.
And yeah, I have to give a shout out to Ann because I was really looking forward to meeting her.
And we will just say we hope that next time we'll be able to do that.
But we're still glad that Wilburn made the trip and hopefully Ann next time.
But that was one that I was looking forward to meeting and just didn't get the chance.
So Hope Springs Eternal.
But Wilburn, how are you tonight?
It's great to have you.
I'm good, James.
I'm glad to be here with you and Keith and the political festival audience around the world and all the ships to see and the Skylab, Overdue View.
Well, that's fantastic.
And it's great to have you with us.
As I said a moment ago, it's hard for me to judge these things, but you are a man who has perspective.
Not only have you attended each and every one of the events that we've done, you've attended a great number of events across the spectrum, whether it be Amrin or NPI.
Great Globetrotter, man of the world.
And he's a guy that supports these different causes.
And without him, of course, none of us go anywhere.
But much more than that, he's a close personal friend.
And for that reason, above all else, I value his opinions and comments and critiques, etc.
He's attended house parties, lots of different events.
So, Wilbur, what is it?
You were one that I singled out last week.
What is it about the way business is conducted on this end that draws you in?
Well, it's your abilities, southern charm, James, and the folksy, devilish, and dangerously intelligent lawyer who is sitting beside you, Keith.
Y'all are the guys, and you've got the moxie to draw me in.
I remember you made a comment, I think, on the last morning where we got into talking about a guy, you're talking about clothing and whatnot.
And I told you about my sister's boyfriend who basically gave me the benefit of all of his castaway clothes that sent me on the path to being a fashion plate.
And remember his name?
Pretty boy.
Pretty boy Evans.
Yeah, that was it.
Can you imagine that?
And you said, only in the South would you hear a name like that, right?
Exactly.
And it'd be basketball.
Only in the South.
Well, let's talk.
Let's step back for a moment if we can, because I know you follow events and patterns and trends within our circles and rings as closely as just about anybody I know.
How would you assess our standing?
Not the standing of the political set school and what we did last week, but the greater cause.
How would you assess our standing here in the first week of November of the current year?
What's working?
What's happening?
A lot of things have changed since 2016, and there's always ups and downs.
And people come in, people go out, a lot of turnover.
A few of us have been able to stand the test of time, but you have a really, really firm grasp on the reality of it all.
What's your take?
Well, I think it's a long duration of war that we're engaged in.
It's not a battle.
It's a long campaign that's going to last for decades and maybe a century.
And it comes down to the last men standing, I believe.
And I know that we've had some outstanding leaders who have fallen, and we've had some that have failed us, and we've had some that have just disappeared.
But then we have people like the men of the political set school, James Edwards, Keith Alexander, and Eddie Obama Deere Miller, who are always there, who are never defeated, who are always standing, and who I believe will lead us into the future and lead us to victory in the end.
And I would add names to add to that trio.
That would be people like Jason Cunya and Jared Taylor and Sam Dixon, Kirk Lyons, and Gene Andrews, and a lot of other people.
Don't leave out Michael Hill.
I tell you what, Michael Hill is the type of history professor we wish we had all had.
That's what he was, by the way, in civilian life.
He was a history professor.
And I remember, you know, Kevin McDonald commenting, too, about him.
He's just, you know, he's a man's man and as intelligent as they come.
And his scathing commentary is something that is sorely missed in the mainstream.
And I'm glad we've got it.
Also had, of course, Simon and Lacey there last week to round out the entire assortment of speeches.
Lacey gave a great speech.
So did Simon.
I mean, Lacey provided the lady's touch in the speaker's dice and gave us insights that were invaluable.
Thank you so much, Lacey, for what you did.
But yeah, I mean, can you imagine having Michael Hill as your history professor?
I mean, that actually happened at one point in this.
And Gene Andrews was a history teacher as well.
On the college and high school levels, respectively.
That's true.
You've got two great in the room last weekend.
Yeah, I mean, they were there.
And it just goes to show.
I was just thinking about how much things have changed.
You know, we talk about previous generations and looking back on how things have changed since they were a kid versus our childhood.
I mean, we all do that, but I was just thinking about how much things have changed even in my own life, not just in my own life, but just within the last 15 years since the time of the show.
You know, it was after I started this show that I was in Charleston, South Carolina for the burial of the crew of the CSS Huntley.
And the entire city of Charleston turned out and people from all over the country and all over the world, I think it was tens of thousands of people there.
That is no exaggeration.
Over 10,000 people with Ted Turner leading the procession.
Could you imagine such a glorious and dignified burial for that crew today?
That happened in 2005?
I mean, it's changing rapidly, but there are constants, and we're going to be talking about them for one more second with Wilbert Scrayberry, my good friend who was with us last week, and we'll be coming right back.
Why don't we say to the government writ large that they have to spend a little bit less?
Anybody ever had less money this year than you had last?
Anybody better have it a 1% pay cut?
You deal with it.
That's what government needs, a 1% pay cut.
If you take a 1% pay cut across the board, you have more than enough money to actually pay for the disaster relief.
But nobody's going to do that because they're fiscally irresponsible.
Who are they?
Republicans.
Who are they?
Democrats.
Who are they?
Virtually the whole body is careless and reckless with your money.
So the money will not be offset by cuts anywhere.
The money will be added to the debt, and there will be a day of reckoning.
What's the day of reckoning?
The day of reckoning may well be the collapse of the stock market.
The day of reckoning may be the collapse of the dollar.
When it comes, I can't tell you exactly, but I can tell you it has happened repeatedly in history when countries ruin their currency.
Hey, listen up.
This is a deep state alert.
Former Texas Congressman Steve Stockman, who moved to arrest Lois Lerner for contempt of Congress, has been imprisoned by the very office that Lerner led.
You heard right.
Stockman hit the Obama administration hard and they hit back with the full force of the federal government.
The guy who said he wanted Mark Levin as Speaker of the House was the first to threaten Obama's impeachment, exposed Hillary's selling steel to the Iranians, and blocked both Obama's immigration and gun bills from even reaching the House.
But Obama holdovers came after him in federal court with trumped-up charges and have locked our guy up.
Like many others, he was on Obama's hit list.
Steve fought for us in Congress.
Now we need to fight for him.
Don't abandon this wounded hero on the battlefield.
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To chip in five bucks or more, text the word fight to 444-999.
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You know where the solution can be found, Mr. President?
In churches, in wedding chapels, in maternity wards across the country and around the world.
More babies will mean forward-looking adults, the sort we need to tackle long-term, large-scale problems.
American babies in particular are likely going to be wealthier, better educated, and more conservation-minded than children raised in still industrializing countries.
As economist Tyler Cowan recently wrote, quote, by having more children, you're making your nation more populous, thus boosting its capacity to solve climate change.
The planet does not need for us to think globally and act locally so much as it needs us to think family and act personally.
The solution to so many of our problems at all times and in all places is to fall in love, get married, and have some kids.
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.
We're back with our longtime friend and supporter, Wilburn Sprayberry, and I want to get your response to this.
Well, first of all, I want to thank you.
I'm hungering for another Wilburn Sprayberry article.
That's.
You know, he does normally write reviews about these events, that's for sure.
Just saying.
We need a cricket.
Thank you, guys.
Yeah, there he is.
There he is.
All right.
So I want to thank you for introducing us to John and his beautiful wife, Leah, who had the opportunity to meet for the first time.
Just fantastic people and friends, bringing friends in.
I mean, that's what it's all about.
One reaches one and two reaches four and et cetera, et cetera.
But I want to get your response to this.
So your take on this.
My philosophy, the way I can continue to be a happy warrior in spite of everything that's going on in the degenerate world around us, is that it's too much to ask for any of us to single-handedly turn the rudder of this country.
For us to say, because of us, things turned around and you see all the trends that were going in one direction.
We stopped that.
We reversed it.
Now we're going back in the right direction.
Now, surely, I hope that in some way our work individually and collectively can serve as a catalyst for some great awakening and through God's grace, something miraculous can happen.
But for me, for me, it's enough to tend to our flock, to provide a positive impact into the hearts and minds and souls of those who come to us for educational nourishment or spiritual nourishment or whatever.
Because if you look at it and you say, well, in the age of James Edwards, in the age of Jared Taylor, in the age of all of these people, America continued to decline.
Their lives were spent in vain.
Nothing changed.
It only got worse.
Well, I don't see it that way, and I don't see it that way for a couple of reasons.
Number one, we're told to do our duty and let the results be in the hands of a higher power.
So we do our duty with a happy heart.
And if we can positively impact the lives of those closest to us, then our life has been well spent.
And you never know.
My greatest hope is not that James Edwards or Keith Alexander changed the world, but that through our work, somebody far greater and more capable than us will rise up and in some small way be, yes, gains inspiration and goes on to do things that we are incapable of doing.
Is that a naive way or is that a simplistic way or just a way to sugarcoat the fact that things are continuing to decline even against our best efforts?
Or is that a healthy way to look at the struggle?
I'm not sure what you just said, James, because I was too busy finishing my bottle of bourbon.
I did want to say to you that you have...
Did we get cut off?
You have created a bit.
Well, we don't know what happened to Wilburn, but we waited on him to come back in because I wanted to hear what he had to say in conclusion.
But you heard, obviously, what I just said.
I mean, is that a healthy way to look at it?
Or is it just a way to say, well, we're just going to keep on doing it, but we're not really going to.
We're like the monks at Lindis Farn during the Dark Ages, copying the manuscripts, trying to preserve the old ways and the old thoughts.
And because we, like hermits in these monasteries on the cliffs of Scotland and Ireland, our civilization will be preserved and will once again bloom and blossom and spread and bring light and happiness and prosperity to the rest of the world.
But we're right now in a dark time, but we keep scribbling away just like the monks.
What good comes of that in the end?
Well, you saw what happened.
You see now that in like 700 AD or 800 AD in the age of the Vikings, who 800 to 1000 AD, everybody thought that Western civilization was going down for the count.
But then it blossoms.
And for the last 700 years, all innovation, all creativity, and everything came out of Western civilization.
That's why we have a modern age rather than a continuing dark age.
And we have that modern age because of the toiling in the vineyards of those monks at Lindis Farm.
Well, and here we've got, this is what I'm talking about.
Here's Bob from Franklin, Tennessee.
Dear James, I was glad to get the interview you did with Pat Buchanan.
And personally, I like these interviews better than books.
I can listen to them on the road when I'm driving.
I know that I can depend on you and Keith to deliver the truth.
And I'm enclosing a $25 donation.
Very best regards, Bob.
Let me mention one thing, too, before I forget it.
I got an unexpected phone call from an old supporter and a great friend, Tom, in Little Rock, who has apparently been fighting a really bad cancer, took some really strong chemo, almost did him in, but his strength persevered, and he's on the way back.
And we want to wish him Godspeed and all of God's blessings.
And hopefully he will recover fully and rejoin the fight with us.
See, that's what we have to do.
We have to give support to all those who have supported us in the past.
You are so right about that.
And that's another thing that I brought up.
I bring it up often.
I brought it up last week.
I'll bring it up again now.
We have so many people in our listening audience who share with us the trials and tribulations of their daily lives, the passing of loved ones, as we just had a listener, Roseanne, email us today about the passing of her husband.
The graduations, births, deaths, marriages, divorces, our audience is one with us, and we're one with them.
And to have a positive impact in their lives, to make their lives a little bit better, a little bit brighter.
I mean, that is enough.
And yes, I do think we'll win.
Whether or not our efforts alone will lead us to that victory, who's to say?
But to be able to positively minister to those in our audience, that is enough to keep me going every day with a happy heart.
We got Gerald back, Wilbur back, rather.
I think we got disconnected there.
But it's good to have you back.
Hey, let me just give you a parting thought.
Sure.
And it's this, that James Edwards and Keith Alexander and Eddie the Bombardier and Sam all have created what you started out thinking was just a listener anniversary appreciation party, but it has become one of the major activist events on the pro-white calendar.
And it is also unique.
A combination of Southern Folk Fest, sing-along, family reunion, and it's also a political event.
And how are you going to keep the magic going there, James?
Because I don't understand how you make it work in the first place.
I don't either.
Well, it's by submitting to God's will.
That's what it is.
We want God to guide everything that we do.
And we pray that I think on a daily basis.
I think that you can grow this thing as big as you want if you wanted to.
I know that you don't want to, but there's some people out there that think that you've created, you've got lightning in a bottle, and you need to figure out what to do with it.
And I think the whole PPC universe is lightning in a bottle.
And you've got to figure out how to employ it the best.
Well, thank you so much for saying that.
For the coming year.
Well, let's talk about it.
Let's talk about it off the air because you're right.
I mean, you're not talking about not growing the program.
We always want to grow that.
But with these gatherings, we keep it intimate.
We keep it invitation only.
No public promotions.
Just our closest friends and supporters get the invites.
And then we get such a nice large crowd.
But yes, I mean, if we unleashed it, if we did it publicly, we'd have to find a venue that would host us, not somebody's house or something like that.
But if, yeah, who's to say?
I mean, I have always wondered if we did this all in, you know, what kind of crowd would we draw?
Would it still keep that magic that the intimate gathering has?
Maybe it's worth finding out.
I don't know.
But as long as good people like you keep coming, we'll keep finding a way to do these.
And I love you, and I appreciate your attention.
In the meanwhile, Wilburn, don't hide your light under a bushel.
Spread the good word.
As he always does.
Hey, thanks so much to you and the lady Ann.
Talk to you later, buddy.
Thanks for calling in tonight.
We'll be back with Jack Ryan.
Protecting your liberties.
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Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dyne at 1-866-986-6397.
Okay, well, we're back and coming down the home stretch before we get back to the program at large next week.
Back to business as usual, as we've mentioned a couple times.
Keith, you mentioned Tom in Arkansas.
Well, Tom just sent me an email.
There's so many anniversaries and birthdays going on this week.
We had, of course, the Political Cesspool's 15th anniversary last week, my son's birthday.
And Tom said that today, November 2nd, is Pat Buchanan's 81st birthday.
Well, if that's not cause for celebration, I don't know what is.
Happy birthday, Pat, and many happy returns.
What I wish more than anything else is that Donald Trump sees the light and makes Pat Buchanan his primary advisor and consultant.
If he did that, he'd never go wrong.
He would be totally in sync with the wishes of his base.
Then one other thing I want to say before I pass the mic off.
We were commenting about how wonderful it would have been if our children or if we had had a history teacher like Jim, like Gene Andrews in high school or a professor, a history professor like Michael Hill in college.
I'd exhort both gentlemen to create a course on their insights on the Civil War and their other areas of expertise and make it available on the internet for homeschoolers because they have knowledge that's invaluable and not to be found elsewhere.
And I have learned more understanding about General Forrest and the Confederacy generally from these two gentlemen than any other source.
Pat Buchanan's 81st birthday today.
Thank you, Tom, who writes that he is a 15-year listener.
Well, almost.
And so many have been with us for so long.
Another letter I want to read here very quickly before we toss it to Jack, who has just now joined us.
James, I want to tell you how much Stephanie and I enjoyed the conference.
The speakers were impressive, and their message was awesome.
We had lunch with Kevin McDonald and Sam on Saturday, which for me was an unexpected pleasure.
Since we left early, there was not an opportunity for you to give me the Kevin McDonald book.
I'm going to ask that you mail it to me.
I'm anxious to read it.
And I will tell you, my friend, Joe, that that will be in the mail to you this week.
So don't worry about that.
He closes his letter by writing, once again, it was a very good event, and I'm happy that we had the opportunity to meet you.
Well, not half as happy as I was and honored as I was to be able to meet y'all.
And that's the truth.
Let me say one more thing, too, just while we're spreading the kudos out, spraying the berries of Wilburn Sprayberry out here.
But what I would like to say is that ladies who find themselves somewhat isolated or ostracized because of their devotion to traditional gender roles and traditional roles within the family, they can do no better than to tune into Lacey Lynn and Orlana Loctave.
Both of those ladies are walking the walk and talking to talk, particularly Lacey right now.
Lana has a broader thing, but Lacey, what Lacey does is provide a support group for people like the ones I just described, ladies that are trying to do the right thing and to do the traditional thing.
And her counsel and sage advice is a rare resource, and you need to look it up.
Put them down in the Google box.
All right, now back with us.
And by the way, Lacey just did a new video this week, and I couldn't help but notice a copy of Racism Schmazism above her head on her bookcase.
Don't think that I didn't notice that, Lacey.
Now we go to Jack Ryan.
Jack, I was telling the audience in the first hour that one of the true highlights of the whole weekend for me, maybe it was just because I had the relief of the whole thing being over by that point and a sigh of relief.
But no, I think under any circumstances, it was a great highlight to be able to spend the better part of a late morning and an early afternoon with you and Keith getting back up into Memphis after the event and walking the Mississippi River and having a nice lunch there on the river and just hanging out and talking and sharing a good time and a moment together.
How are you, Jack?
I'm doing okay, but I'm back just outside of Chicago, brutal big city.
They're come taking the train back, descending back.
And I feel like they're like a Vietnam veteran that somehow decided to sign up for his third tour of combat duty.
Like he just can't take the nice ones.
He goes back and when he comes back the first day, there's bombs going off and things like that.
And when he first gets his old shot.
So I've got there.
But yeah, I'm back.
And no, it was a very good time to come down tonight.
I got treated well in Mississippi.
My best times of my life were spending in the state of Tennessee.
So we were close to Tennessee.
And I met so many good, good people.
And just to see the young women that have got these beautiful children, it's just fantastic.
And I got to see your family.
And people don't know that James has got just a beautiful, beautiful wife.
And I don't know why you have these fears, but James is a handsome guy.
He's a really good-looking guy.
If I was a gay guy, I'd be giving him flowers.
But he's not.
He's phallically challenged.
For some reason, I thought that his children would look like him.
They would look like cancer people would be bald.
But no, his children have got beautiful hair.
His daughter is tall, good-looking, sons.
It's good.
So, yeah, it was good to see these children there.
And so that was the best things.
But, you know, it's also kind of sad.
We have some people, really good people, are being persecuted.
They're having their lives ruined.
Now, their possessions taken away.
I'm feeling very mortal.
I feel like I always, from seven years old, I could take on all the America's problems.
And if I just stuck to my guns and my principles, my truth, I could fight for victory.
I'm really not feeling that way.
And I feel this next year of presidential elections are going to be terrible.
And I'm trying to flee the country to get away for their.
They're not gone.
I'm going to go to Chile.
Well, just go to the other country within a country, go up to those arcs, like I suggested.
Ozarks.
All right.
Well, you think, oh, you've got these stable places.
Oh, you go to Missoula, Montana.
Next thing you know, all of a sudden, some refugee center has flooded Missoula, Montana for refugees with Ebola from the Congo.
So there's like, where do you flee to?
You know, where can you go?
And so any event, but I had a great time.
It's tremendous people.
Thank you so much.
And thank you.
I was honored to be accepted there.
And I've been trying to flee the North since I was seven.
And James said that the North is a direction.
The South is a place.
It's a special place.
And I was very honored to be, not accepted as one of our own or something, but just sort of accepted as a person that was a good person that liked the South.
And yeah, I had a great time.
It was a great time.
Well, you know, Gerard Epardieu and Stephen Seagal and some of these other actors have fled to Russia and have been, I think, naturalized, in fact.
I think Gerard was fleeing French taxes.
I don't know what Stephen Seagal was up to, but I don't know.
Maybe they let you.
Seagal was in Germantown next to Memphis for a while.
Well, I think Stephen Seagal for a time had a child, if I understand correctly, who was getting treatment at St. Jude, which is exactly right.
He's been with us for some time.
St. Jude's children's cancer hospital, research hospital.
Tops in the world.
Of course.
Well, tell us about train travel, Jack.
People forget that America does have a very beleaguered rail system.
It's certainly not like the bullet trains you see in Asia or even the rail infrastructure that you see in Europe.
But there are trains that do haul people from at least Houston.
Not hobos and box cars, but actual, you know, passenger cars.
And one of them runs through Memphis and to Chicago.
So tell us all about your peregrinations.
They haven't.
And that was one of the causes that my mom had was that she loved trains in the golden age.
And we would go to Montana when I was about seven or eight.
And my train travel was excellent.
The thing they did, I got a sleeper car.
So my recommendation, Amtrak has gotten a lot better in the last 20 years.
They're on time.
It's clean.
I love going city to city.
The Chicago's Union Station is just beautiful.
That's why they filmed The Untouchables.
But if you go during the day, you can walk around, you can meet people, but you definitely don't want to sit up all night.
That's torture.
And then you have these women that are like working for the post office that are ordering you around and things like that.
You don't ever want to do that.
But I had a sleeper car coming down.
I didn't do it quite right.
And you get a sleeper car and they got a seat.
And then there's a bunk that comes down up top.
But if you climb up there, you're kind of cramped up there.
You want them to bring down your bed at the lower level.
And then it's good.
They had pretty good food.
It's plastic place.
I wish that it was like the murder on the Oriental Express where they had good place and things like that.
But everyone on the train was treating me fantastic.
And it's all regular Americans, regular white Americans, regular black Americans.
It's not third world or something like that.
And social justice warriors.
Yeah, no, the train was a civilized way to go.
And I don't like being on airplanes cramped in.
And I have bad, no one checks your bags for your, for your, there.
Did I ever tell you my terrible Newark airport experience?
I don't know if it was going to be there conference.
You got a couple of minutes I could tell you the story?
Yeah, Rocket Road.
Does it involve a cavity search?
I tell you what, we are about to come up on a break, but after the break, the whole next segment is yours.
You're taking us to the house tonight.
And then, of course, next week, it's back to talking about news and commentary and opinion on the issues.
But tonight is just for the family.
So when we come back, we're going to wrap it up with Jack, and he's going to regale us with a little storytelling.
So stay tuned, folks.
One more segment.
And then we got to somehow get back to the way we normally do things around here without a lot of audience and without folks.
That's what tonight is, a transition into that.
That's exactly right.
And what a transition it's been.
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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 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 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 have this tendency to try to 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.
And you don't have what it takes to be in this job.
Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
Okay.
Wow, more anniversaries.
I want to thank Tom again for reminding me that today is Pat Buchanan's birthday.
You know, and we made mention, we talked about Pat at the event last week about how Pat's fingerprints, you know, he gave me my start in this whole thing.
Without that.
You still can't find better insights or sage your counsel than to visit his website twice a week.
He comes out with two articles a week, and they're solid gold.
I just wish that Trump had the benefit of all of them.
Before we toss it back to Jack, Mr. Wonderful reminds us that today is the anniversary of the Balfour Declaration.
Keith, give him a 30-second synopsis of the Balfour Declaration.
Oh, my gosh, what is that?
Let me think about that.
Oh, I know what it is.
No, I know what it is.
The Balfour Declaration was to create Israel, the state of Israel.
Balfour was an English diplomat, politician of sorts, and that was his big, he basically authorized the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine.
And I guess he was the source then of all the mischiefs that found from them.
Of course, the British, in return for their good work for the Jewish people, had the King David Hotel where all the British visitors to Jerusalem would stay bombed by the Irgun that was under the guidance and the direction of Rahm Emanuel's father or grandfather.
I forget which one it was, but it killed 120 people, and they put explosives in kegs of nails so as to create the most possible damage from the going off.
But of course, that's nothing, nothing at all compared to the bombing in Birmingham of the 4th Street Baptist Church, where four people were killed.
Well, that's a transition in the next week for sure.
And by the way, I know my dad's listening tonight.
My dad has had a rough year with brain surgery and all, you know, so much going on.
It was so good to have him and my mom there last week.
But dad had sent me an article today.
I promise, Jack, we're tossing it back to you to tell the V-Day story.
But Dad had said that now at USC, there is a plaque commemorating John Wayne at USC that the students are trying to peel off the walls.
Look, all YP, first it came from the confession, just like Sam Francis predicted.
First they come for the Confederates, then for any white leader historically.
Or even white people.
And then they're going to come for the living white people.
Stay tuned.
John Wayne.
So John Wayne, whatever marker he has there at USC is under assault tonight.
Very, quickly.
Jules in Georgia was one of the people who was signed up to attend the event and couldn't make it.
And we did have some last-minute cancellations.
And, of course, we had a waiting list.
But he was listening to the show last week.
And he said, James, listening to TPC right now, he wrote this during last week's show.
Stellar show, just disappointed I wasn't able to attend in person.
Speed on.
I've got the remainder of the show to listen to.
Thanks for 15 years and many, many more.
Supporter and listener, Jules.
Also, Bill was another one.
Bill took us out for a fantastic stake in Washington, D.C. when Sam Bushman and I were there for the inauguration.
And Bill had a last-minute cancellation.
We want to send our prayers to Bill and his grandmother, who was hospitalized just before our event, so he had to miss it.
Bill, you asked if we'd send you the Kevin McDonald book, and you got it.
We're going to be sending it to you, so don't worry about that, brother.
And don't forget to send your clocks back in the morning.
We fall back tomorrow.
We don't want you to miss church.
So set those.
Will the time move up or move back?
Well, it'll start getting dark at about three in the afternoon.
That's all I know.
So in other words, church will be an hour earlier tomorrow.
I thought you get an extra hour of sleep.
I guess it depends on the money.
Well, that's what I'm trying to figure out because they say spring forward, fall back.
Fall back, does that mean we get an extra hour of sleep?
All I know for sure.
Maybe Jack can tell us.
All I know for sure is that the time changes by an hour.
You got to send your watches back in the fall.
And a lot of these things, I wish I would like to have more sun in the afternoon, in the fall and the winter.
A lot of these things have to do with the right farmers that want to milk their cows and stuff in the morning.
We got the ultimate authority on it.
Sam's bright.
Yeah, I knew a Bushman would give us the answer.
Well, that does make sense.
If you move your clocks back an hour, it would cause it to get darker earlier.
And that adds up.
So thank you for that.
Anyway, Jack, take us to the wall.
What do you got to say?
You want to tell us a story?
You want to talk about daylight savings time?
But Keith has called me out that I told this one more story about being abused in the Newark airport and stuff like that.
So I'm going to share a story.
I mentioned to you that I'm a Midwesterner, but one of my grandfathers was part of the Russian nobility.
So 100 years ago, he was fighting the White Army against communists, against Leon Trotsky, the Red Army, and we lost.
Alexander Kerensky.
Yeah, yeah, they had.
And then 50 years ago, it was the Civil War collapse in our cities.
Black riots, revolutionaries, Bill Ayers, Abby Hoffman's.
And I was a young boy, but I was very aware of what was going on in Chicago.
And it was 68, 69, and it was just a civil war.
And I had to fight with all my days of rage.
Yeah, no, they had days of rage, and I added.
And plus, I was a White Sox fan, and my students, classmates, or Fairweathers, the Cubs were in first place, and I went to them bed.
I had to argue.
So I had to argue every day, and I added it.
And so I had to prepare myself.
And my parents were like liberal Democrats from the 50s, Adelaide Stevenson, Harry Truman.
Kennedy John Kenny wasn't that bad.
But we were against this drug culture, this riots of these things.
So I was fighting against these University of Chicago students.
And so I had to prepare every day how to argue.
I'm only seven, eight years ago with how to prepare for these people.
And so I'm going to the bus.
I'm going from my school bus, and I'm at the bus stop, and there's a newsstand.
And the newsstand says, notice, we don't sell Playboy or Penthouse magazines to miners.
And I was a good Christian person.
I knew that these magazines, Playboy, and Penthouse, were not good Christian magazines.
I thought they were talking about coal miners, that they wouldn't sell these magazines to these dirty magazines, the coal miners.
And I thought about it for a long time, and they're like, that it would corrupt the coal miners.
But I thought there probably weren't that many coal miners in our neighborhood.
And I thought that was very unjust that they were singling out coal miners to do this.
And I doubled down and said that if any of my teachers or these college students disrespected the coal miners, I'd fight them.
And I would go there.
Okay, I didn't have all my issues right, but I think it's a principle stand that we at the political sets pool should defend our coal miners and stuff.
We don't want them to buy penthouse or Playboy magazines or things like that.
But we'll defend the coal miners.
And we're for the working people.
Well, we're definitely for that.
We have a definite working class band and origins.
We're not aristocrats around here.
I'm just glad Jack called in at all tonight.
You know, Jack was telling me earlier he had such a good time last week with us that he was so depressed to be back home.
He didn't feel like he had a segment anymore.
Let me get fucked up.
Let me ask you this, Jack.
Remember where I dropped you off?
Did you spend six hours in that place until you caught your train or not?
No, I spent there.
And then I thought, but you were saying that the train station was just a few blocks away.
It was much further.
But no, I had a good lift.
Right.
I take it.
Memphis is a rough city.
It's a small city.
But I got, well, I was just missing.
I'm sorry, I'm accusing my one, but coming back to it.
But it's people in the South.
I love the South.
I spend the best years of my life in Tennessee, and Southern people always treat me great.
I got some criticisms in that the people eat too much.
They eat three meals a day, and they don't have sidewalks.
They don't walk.
So the people are kind of heavy.
I mean, your wife is.
Well, that's why we put you on that walk down to the train station.
But no, I love the South.
I love the people.
People treated me great.
And black and white Southerners have always treated me great and always fair.
And I love the women.
If the rest of the country would just leave us alone, we'd all get along great.
I think there's some truth in that.
Yeah, but one of the reasons is I have all this free time because I'm not bothered by all these beautiful Southern women.
I have lots of free time to read books and watch movies.
That's why I'm so educated because I'm not distracted by these nice people.
I don't know how you even get up in the morning and go to work with such a beautiful wife.
I would just stay home there.
But I had a great time.
It is difficult.
Is that why you were in Hooters?
You're looking for a beautiful wife?
No, no.
The Hooters, yeah, the Hooters.
There, I had one gal, and she was, yeah, she was, she had a nice southern accent, and she played volleyball, and she had a good southern accent.
I'm looking for southern accents.
Charleston, South Carolina, when I went back last February, it's nice.
Oh, God.
Yeah, you're not kidding, man.
You want to find a debutante.
Memphis is all right, but Charleston is Charleston.
Charleston is just a bunch of New England people watching the Patriots.
I did not like that.
There was one church.
Well, I thought that was in Hilton Head.
Yeah, they're in Hilton Head.
That's a resort.
You can still find some beautiful young Southern girls in Charleston.
Yeah, you're right, right.
Any Southern city, anywhere in the South, especially the rural South.
Well, we'll see.
Well, let's just hope I might be cursed for being a bachelor for the rest of my life.
But no, I had a great time.
Really nice people.
And just to see the young couple, really nice children.
And then this guy that I did activism against the Tyson Fools five or six years ago, real handsome guy.
And I got a photo and a propaganda postcard about support Christian women.
I saw a beautiful wife and his daughter there.
And I was going to show it.
But I was thinking, like, oh, maybe it's not the same woman.
Maybe it's a different one, but it wasn't the same gal.
So it's worth it.
Great conversation.
Yeah, we raise them right down here.
We get them young and we just keep them.
That's the way we do it.
It's like Elvis does.
Jack, we love you.
Great seeing you last week.
Thanks for calling in.
We'll talk to you next week, folks.
Back to business as usual next week.
Next week, we got to get back at it.
For Keith Alexander, Jack Ron, everybody else who called in, Sam Bushman, of course.
I'm James Edwards.
Good night, Godspeed.
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