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Nov. 23, 2019 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
50:13
20191123_Hour_3
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You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
Look what you've done to me.
Look, it really is Davey Jones.
Me and my whole world.
You've brought the sun to me with your smile.
You did it, girl.
I'm telling you, Dave, something unknown to me wants you to laugh.
Hi, Charlie.
Hey, Marsha.
It's rude of me to break out date.
How can I make it up to you?
Hey, Marsha.
How about a dance?
Why I'd love to Charlie Anderson.
Thank you, girl.
But making the lifetime nicer girls.
But making a better world to me.
Oh, those were the good old days, Keith.
Coming home to what is ours, as the Amrit article put it.
Well, I guess we try to do as much as we can in this degenerate day and age, but having a lot of fun.
If you want to get back to what's good, go back to the 50s or an earlier time than what we're in now.
I think modern culture has plumbed the depths.
And I really think William Lynd is on to something with this retro culture.
It's a way to keep your sanity and to make sure your children get wholesome entertainment.
And see, I even live in an old house.
That's another thing he said.
You furnish your house with antiques.
Well, everything that you, and if you have a modern house, have traditional embellishments.
Tell me if I'm wrong about this then.
The New York Times continues to pull up old stories.
Let's see if they're doing it in the way that we would like it to be done.
No.
In fact, I read a brand new headline, Breaking News, in fact.
It was a very, very high-profile article that came out in the New York Times just a few days ago.
And it was talking about how the signs at the place where Emmett Till may have been killed.
I don't even know if that was the place, but it might have happened there.
It was at least in the same state.
It had to happen somewhere, right?
It had to happen somewhere.
It was at least in the same state.
And they said all those signs need to be in a museum.
In fact, a museum needs to be built around the signs that have been vandalized down there.
So the New York Times, Keith, continues to be right on top of all of the late breaking Emmett Till news.
When you need, up to the minute, Emmett Till News, the New York Times is your go-to source.
Yeah, we need the Emmett Till News Network now.
Whoever doesn't believe in life after death, the ghost of Emmett Till haunts the New York Times.
So is the New York Times doing what we would advise people to do here in our commentary tonight about reliving the past?
No, I tell you what.
Everything that they want to, if you want to know what is wrong with America today, consult the New York Times position on it.
Hey, let's go to the fan mail bag real quick.
I don't want to say fans.
Listener mail.
Mr. Edwards TPC, keep up the good work.
Encloses a $20 bill.
Sending cash is the only way that I feel comfortable donating in this current PC nightmare culture.
I hope to be able to support your work in a much more substantial and regular way in the not-too-distant future.
Again, keep up your courageous efforts to tell the truth and to fight the good fight.
Sincerely, a supporter of your work.
Well, we thank you, supporter, for that and for your gracious note, handwritten, no less.
We appreciate it.
A listener in Franklin, Tennessee writes, dear James, I was glad to get the interview with Pat Buchanan.
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 as a result, I'm enclosing a $25 donation.
That comes from Bob in Franklin, Tennessee.
Well, I had another one that I was going to read from Stephanie in North Carolina.
I'll have to read that in the next segment because I had to reset the computer during the break because it was running slow.
But anyway, they're out there, Keith.
These are the people we work for.
And I'll tell you what, I'd rather have that $20 and $25 donation from these listeners than, well, you know, you couldn't pay us to lie to them.
We're the keepers of the flame.
You know, it's a lonely job, but somebody has to do it.
We've got to get it done.
We've got to keep the flame of truth alive in this current cez pool that we all live in.
And this is important work.
And I want to make it easy for everybody to do the same thing at their home.
So I would recommend that you at least consult Ida Davis's review on William Lynn's new book, Retro Culture, Taking America Back.
That's something that you can, this is practical advice.
It's like homeschooling.
It's something that you can do to make sure that your children don't go astray and say and just as importantly that you keep your sanity in these insane times.
Keith, one thing we haven't talked about very much at all is the impeachment hearings.
If you put a gun to my head, I do this professionally, I guess you could say.
Well, maybe not that far, but we do this in a very high-profile way here on TPC.
If somebody walked into this radio station tonight and put a gun to my head and said, I want you to tell the people why the president is being impeached, I couldn't do it.
I don't even know.
I mean, what's going on?
Well, it's obvious that they're just trying to railroad him.
They want him out.
What is the official reason?
I could not tell you.
I swear to you.
It changes from day to day.
But the only constant is they want him out and they want him out sooner rather than later.
They cannot abide by the choice of the American people in a lawfully held election.
They want to question the election.
They want to question his behavior since his election.
They want him out under any and all circumstances.
They are telling us they are the real rulers of America.
I can't stand to watch those impeachment hearings for more than five minutes at a time.
I feel like my head's going to explode because it's so obvious that it's based on fabrications and lies.
You know, it's like they're running a country club out there and they think that they want to blackball him.
But, you know, he's not trying to join their country club in the deep state.
He was elected president of the United States.
Well, you know, listen.
They will not accept losing.
I really wish I wasn't joking when I said to David Jones, do you think we've milked the Davy Jones, David Jones name coincidence enough this?
No, we got a couple more passes out.
You think we can put a couple more songs in tonight?
Yeah, we've got to have this monkey business needs to be handled.
Well, I wish I had asked David to elaborate a little more on exactly.
When we have him back, we will.
I would really love to know.
You don't sign up to give the prayer before Congress.
I mean, that's something you have to be sponsored by a member of Congress.
And in his case, it was Marsha Blackburn here in Tennessee.
But I would love to know a little bit more about that experience.
I mean, how out of place would a white Christian heterosexual Southern male feel in the halls of Congress?
And he made mention of it.
He only had 12 supporters out of 435.
12 got there a little bit ahead of schedule.
12 for the opening prayer.
And they even told him, Don't mention the name of Jesus Christ.
Well, then, who in the world are you praying to?
Who are you praying?
I would have loved to have listened to him talk.
Yes.
I mean, who would?
You're right.
Sam said he wouldn't have prayed.
In fact, David didn't.
He went ahead and dissipated.
I'm sure he can use Allah or whatever, or the great Vishnu or something.
Or Martin Luther King, who is the regent of our state religion now.
But anyway, too much fun for commercial radio.
We got to take a break.
we'll be right back yeah this is David and engineering This is your wife in Suburbia.
Oh, hi, Hen, what's up?
How's the robot coming?
Well, he doesn't exactly respond to requests yet, but I know how frustrating that can be.
You do.
I'm still waiting for my romantic lunch day.
Oh, yeah.
David.
I must not have enough memory allocated.
Uh-huh.
Sorry.
You know, your son said mama today.
Really?
Uh-huh.
Well, we'll have to have that sound changed to a daddy.
Well, you could reprogram it yourself, you know.
I know.
Hey, why don't we do it over lunch today?
Oh, you really are providing things.
You want me to bring the robot?
David.
He can order pasta in 11 languages.
Only if he pays for his own lunch.
Okay.
Oh, don't forget to bring Chip.
I still wish we had named him that.
Why?
It beats general defaults.
Oh.
Family, isn't it about time?
Do you know that a baby processes information three times faster than an adult?
An adult what, engineer.
Funny, funny.
I'll see you in there.
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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.
Keith, that's rock and roll.
That's it.
That's the last big monkeys hit of their career.
I remember it when it came out.
What were you doing?
I had my eyes on a girl named Valerie.
Oh, you go ahead.
Come on now.
That's the truth.
Well, thanks to Davey Jones.
And thanks to our guest tonight, David Jones, for putting Davey back in our line.
You called him Davey Jones, and that's what got us on this monkey kick.
All of a sudden, he's now David Jones.
Well, you talk all week long, you said he was Davey Jones.
Well, but Davey Jones of the Monkeys' real name is actual David Jones.
And I mean, you know, you can see how there would be some favorite Alistair McIntosh or something.
Who knows what his real name is.
But again, now I will tell you.
So when we were at that concert front row for Davey Jones, it was fantastic.
Met him backstage.
Great guy.
Great guy.
Very humble.
Very nice guy.
You know, it's a shame that he has passed on, but, you know.
Heart attack.
Boom.
You know, he was still on tour.
He was just, you know, that's what happens.
But he's left this wonderful legacy of music.
Well, we've had fun tonight with it anyway.
And we're not through yet.
We've got one more to do.
Well, actually, why stop now?
I like how this one starts back.
I like how the second chorus invalid, and then we'll get back.
It can't be monkey shines all night long, but hang on a minute since we're at it.
She's the same little girl who used to hang around my door.
But she sure's a different time the way she looked before tonight.
When he would do that live in concert, it would be she sure looks different than the way she did before.
And he'd do the little hourglass gesture with his hands.
Anyway, all right, Keith.
Well, we got a segment before we close out tonight with Jack Ron.
Great show coming up next week with Reverend Brett McAtee.
That is going to be can't miss, folks.
Right before we get into December, Brett McAtee next week is going to be something you will want to mark on your calendars.
We're starting the holiday season now, and the reason we were a little bit lighthearted, but serious at the same time.
I had to put all these monkey songs in tonight because we've got to play Christmas music the rest of the year.
But you see here, William Lynn's new book, I think, really hits the nail on the head.
You've got to go back to this is a time of year when our traditions as European-derived people are really at the forefront.
And this needs to be your focus along with Christ and the birth of Christ.
You need to celebrate it in the way that our ancestors used to.
Watch a good version of the Christmas carol, either the Alistair Sim version or the George C. Scott version.
Listen and sing those old-fashioned Christmas carols.
Get in touch with your roots.
Don't let the Kardashians Christiamus or something get you diverted into the cesspool, which is modern American culture.
We need to go back to our roots, and this is what we are recommending to all of our listeners.
Let's have a traditional Christmas.
Get in touch with our ancestors and what makes us special as a people and what is the true foundation of American civilization and culture.
Well, we might recommend them listening to the monkeys anthology, but we've actually covered that tonight here on TPC, except for another Pleasant Valley Sunday.
Oh, yeah, that's right.
Charcoal burning every day.
Now, who wrote that song?
Do you remember?
Was that another Neil Diamond?
No, Carol King.
Oh, who was Neil Sadaka's girlfriend when he wrote O Carol?
That's it.
Yep.
That's it.
How many A.M. radio talk, political talk, radio hosts would know that one?
Well, I don't know.
Just us.
Just us.
That's it.
I guess we're the only ones that will talk about it.
Okay, so, Keith, what else is on your burner?
You got to have something in the tank that has not yet been exhausted.
Well, I think that it's, you know, this William Lynd article, this new book, I think is a real breakthrough because it made me realize this is what we're all instinctively doing.
I live in an old house.
I have antique furniture.
James and I both like old music as compared to the modern.
You know, if you asked me right now who are the big current rock and roll stars besides Taylor Swift or Kanye West or something, I would really be at a loss to tell you who they are because none of them are as memorable as the people that we play as bumper music on this show all the time.
So, and I love old cars.
I love the old America.
That's right.
Everything, oldies but goodies.
That's what we need to, we need to realize that this is more than just an affinity.
This is a way to stay in touch with our past and to chart our future and to make sure that our children are raised properly.
This is serious stuff, although it sounds as if it's fluff and flapdoodle, but it's not.
We're going to find out from Jack what's up in Chicago.
And, you know, Jack, we like Jack, but Memphis and Chicago, we have some similarities.
Now, he likes Memphis better than Chicago, but, you know, we could try to.
But on the other hand, he's not moving here.
He loves, he has a love-hate relationship with Chicago.
Well, I saw on the news just last night, I don't typically watch the local news.
It's amateurish, and it's always, you know, the latest in They're marching home from network headquarters.
Diverse violence, but there was a man who killed somebody at a church's chicken in California, and he was found at a church's chicken in Memphis.
I mean, so that's what we're, you know, that's what we're up against here.
This felon, this fugitive on the lamb.
If you want to find him, just stake out church's fried chicken, right?
Oh, man.
You know, where are we supposed to go now, Chick-fil-A?
I went to Popeyes literally Thursday night, and my man, there is a difference in culture in the Popeyes experience, in the Chick-fil-A experience.
It's a shame Chick-fil-A had to.
I have a confession to make.
I drove by a Popeyes on Union Avenue in Memphis, and it was almost empty.
So I used that opportunity, that fleeting window of opportunity.
To get the chicken sandwich to jump in there and get that chicken sandwich.
And I tell you what, it's a darn good chicken sandwich.
Well, Brad Griffin, our guest last week, said he has defected the Popeyes now.
I mean, you may have to take a knife through the ribs for it, but hell.
On the other hand, they're not, whatever their values are, they don't renounce them or change them.
I'm sure it's right.
You know, Chick-fil-A is catching up to Popeyes in that regard.
I'm sure.
I doubt Popeyes is the last bastion of.
I don't think Popeyes even pretends to have any values.
So that's probably a more honest approach to helping.
Popeyes has now rivaled Chuck E. Cheese as the one eatery that you could most expect to get accosted at.
It's a showcase of dysfunction, but it's a gift that keeps on giving to people like us.
Well, that Chick-fil-A, or rather, that chicken sandwich Popeyes puts in between the buns is a generous portion.
It was, and it's tasty.
I'll be back with Jack right after this.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
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Vice President Mike Pence made a surprise trip to Iraq where he helped serve Thanksgiving dinner to U.S. troops.
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Three people were killed when an Amtrak passenger train collided with a vehicle in Jupiter, Florida.
The Palm Beach Post reported three passengers were traveling in a vehicle that was struck by a southbound train, all of whom were apparently killed when the car was hit.
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Welcome back.
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You can feel the punishment, but you can't go and listen.
And you want to hear she wants you.
We want everyone to water to want to blame.
We'll leave it to Jack Ryan to break up continuity of monkey songs tonight.
But that is Howard Jones.
No one is to blame.
Jack Ryan from Chicago.
Chicago's proud and joy, the pride of Chicagoland.
Jack Ryan, last sign made in Chicago.
Jack, how are you?
Just outside of Chicago, just outside of Chicago.
But I keep contacting my former neighborhoods that may be the man that I am.
But I wanted to recommend that song.
I think it's a very beautiful song.
It's very, very melancholy, but it sort of summarizes, I think, a lot of my positions and a lot of our listeners.
We had so much hope when Trump got elected, and then he was presenting our issues of stopping the great replacement, the mass illegal immigration invasion, getting out of these neoconservative wars.
And we had these hopes, and it just didn't really pan out.
And so it says like, what did I say, Jack?
When all is said and done, more will be said than done, right?
More is said and done.
We didn't, it just didn't.
And so it's just, what do people do?
And I think that song sort of is a lot.
It's just that you're disappointed.
You're not giving up.
But you looked at these things.
You looked at the menu and you couldn't eat.
You dipped your foot in the pool, but you couldn't swim.
And so we looked at things that we wanted and great things, and it didn't happen.
So that's sort of a song that I like.
And it's a melancholy song.
It's not a song of defeat.
You're not giving up or anything, but you're just sort of soldiering on, realizing that these great hopes and expectations that you had just didn't come to fruition.
So that's why.
But it's just a good song.
I like a lot of the British 80s pop music.
And that's what our show is about.
Good music, good books, good movies, and good people.
And we try to separate ourselves from the bad things and just kind of soldier on.
Well, the sad thing about Trump is that we all realize he's the best we can hope for.
And what the best we can hope for for his second term, if he is re-elected, is that he has an epiphany of some sort and really becomes a spokesman for our viewpoint.
Well, I think his instincts are very, very good.
And he's a tough New Yorker.
I lived in New York for five years after I graduated college at Vanderbilt in the mid-80s.
And he lived in the places that I lived.
His instincts are good.
And he reacts the same way ours deal with some terrible atrocity, whether it's these, say, to Mexican drug cartels slaughtering some Latter-day Saint Mormon family.
They're dual citizens there.
His reactions are that these are bad people and you need to fight them and go get them.
Or when I lived in New York City, when they had so many atrocities of crime, a Central Park jogger was brutally attacked and gang raped, and he took out full-page advertisements in the New York Post demanding the death penalty.
I had letters published in the New York Post doing the same thing.
So it's instinctive.
Have you noticed they've now made those rapists into big heroes, cultural heroes?
They were improperly or they're trying to say that they were not guilty or something.
At least I saw something on the Today show a couple of weeks ago about that.
Well, if you follow it, I think one of the best writers on these issues, even though she's really not a big fan of me personally, is Ann Coulter.
And Ann Coulter has written very honestly about the Central Park wilding attack.
What happened was that this was a phenomenon, similar to the English soccer fans in the 80s, that they would go places and attack people.
And there are these huge mobs of teenagers that would go called wilding, and they would rob and beat people.
The Central Park jogger was not the only victim that was attacked, beaten, and robbed that night.
There were many other people who were done that.
And this mob attacked her and beat her and gang raped her and left her for dead.
And so what happened was that they just caught them.
They were busted.
They confessed they had DNA evidence on it.
But they realized that some of the rapists got away.
They didn't have it.
Everyone knew that.
And so what these terrible people did, the Sharpton mob, is that one of the rapists that got away was in jail for life for some other terrible crime he did.
And so he confessed to doing this.
And he said, well, I did it alone.
I did it completely alone.
And so he doesn't have anything to lose because he's already in jail for life.
And then I don't want to get this so much, but the district attorney in New York City is a very famous Ashkenazi family.
I think it's Morgantaw.
Is it one?
She's the Morgenthau plan, and they fix it up, and they let all the other people off and gave them tens of millions of dollars.
It's terrible.
I mean, there's atrocities.
And, you know, that's part of a new wave that we've got now of excusing black crime.
That seems to be one of the new themes that seems to be going through our communities and through our national culture now that the best way to deal with this crime is not to punish it.
Well, that's what, but I would say that it's not new.
I think it's been going on for over 40 years.
There's so many, and I give credit to a lot of New York City that they have good writers that write about these things.
Thomas Wolfe, who wrote Radical Sheikh Mao Maoing, the Flatcatcher, Bonfire, the Vanities.
And then they documented their there was this one criminal, Woolly Bossett, that he was from a Southern family, moved up there, and he did like hundreds of terrible atrocities of attacking people and murders, and they had to change the laws about it.
So, yeah, in these northern cities, New York, Philadelphia, Camden, New Jersey, they have these atrocities.
But again, I would say that they're not anything new.
They've had them since the mid-60s.
And fortunately, they cleaned up a lot of these cities in great ways, but now they're reverting back.
The mayor of New York City is a communist.
Santinista, Cuba, he's married to a black lesbian.
John Derbyshire is writing a lot about the corruption.
So this terrible woman.
So, yeah, again, you're dealing with hell.
You're dealing with those shades of hell.
Dante's Inferno.
And again, that's nothing new.
It's like I didn't live in the 1950s of Oscar and Harriet, Leave It's a Beaver, this good one.
I've always lived in these rough places, and you make the best of it.
That's even more reason why you need to hark back to those times, I think.
Imagine being married to a black lesbian.
Who would marry that person?
What heterosexual man want to marry a lesbian?
I'm, you know, I'm somehow baffled by that one.
It's supposed to be that you weren't supposed to change these women.
But again, it's very much the George Orwell in 1984 that everything's political and things that just don't make any sense that don't go together get forced together.
A square pig gets rammed into a round hole just by by violence.
And so why do you think that this black lesbian is on the side of radical Islam where they kill lesbians?
But they are on the same side because of political correctness and everyone's lined up against white heterosexual Christian southerners.
These things really come out in presidential election years, but our presidential election years are like two and a half years.
So it's almost like Leon Trotsky's permanent revolutions.
Like every year is a presidential election.
They're trying to dispute the last three elections on things like that.
So it's pretty bad and it's easy just to despair.
And so that's sort of my theme tonight to our listeners is to not despair.
We've been through these problems before and it's nothing new, but you got to just stay positive and live on daily life in positive ways.
Listen to good music, read good books, and try to find good movies and interact with your own people and not get fucked up.
Let me recommend something to you then.
There's a book that we've been covering.
It sounds to me like you need to have it.
It's called Retro Culture, Taking America Back by William S. Lind.
And it's covered by, it's reviewed by a lady named Ida Davis in American Renaissance.
I think that is probably your way out of the forest.
Well, we definitely want people to listen to good music, watch good movies, read good books, and thankfully, we've definitely got listening to good radio covered.
Right.
No, we've got that covered.
I saw the American Renaissance article on that subject.
And the enemies are going on.
So now they're going on a witch hunt to find anybody that ever admitted that they read an American Renaissance or a V-Dare article.
They're going off against that Jewish advisor to President Trump, Stephen Miller.
Yeah, Stephen Miller.
Yeah.
Yeah, that he just covered that last week with Mark Weber.
Mark Weber was on.
He wasn't part of the story in the way that Jerry Taylor and Peter Brimlow were, but we did talk about that extensively with Mark Weber last week's first hour.
Jerry Taylor will be back with us next week during the first hour to talk about it from a first-hand perspective, having been a featured part of that.
Brett McAfee as well next week.
But that's next week.
We still got one segment in tonight's show, and Jack's going to help us close it out.
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Kosher.
Certified.
Put the two words together to get co-certified, which is spelled with an SEH 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 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.
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Hard-hitting talk radio is taking on the mainstream press like never before.
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Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
Running to and fro, hard working at the meal, never failing the meal, yet come a rotten bill.
Too much money to be in.
Too much more to be.
Too much more to be in for me to be involved in.
That was Keith's contribution to the show tonight.
Well, among all of the others that he so regularly contributes.
But he said, after all these monkey songs, we need to play Too Much Monkey Business by Chuck Berry.
Now, I heard a rumor about Chuck Berry that if you booked Chuck Berry to do a gig for you, when he arrived at the airport, you had to have all of his money in cash in a suitcase or he'd get on an airplane and fly right back.
That's how you had to pay him if he was going to come sing, you know, do a concert for you.
I think Jerry Lee Lewis tried to do that too, and the IRS got him eventually.
Well, Jerry Lee Lewis was setting pianos on fire with liquor and everything else.
But we like Jerry Lee.
Yeah, Jerry Lee is another wild rocker from back in the 50s or retro culture.
All right.
Well, anyway, Jack, we've certainly gotten your music recommendation.
Do we have a book?
Do we have a movie?
Sure.
Well, it's my book recommendation.
I'm going into a different genre.
I've not recommended any children's books before, but I'm going to get in that.
So my book recommendation is Hans and the Winged Horse.
It's written by Jean Kellogg.
Very nice story about a German orphan.
He's very loyal to his grandparents.
And this white winging horse comes in and he befriends him, and the townspeople try to exploit him.
It's just a beautiful story, a traditional story.
So that's my recommendation.
So since it's Thanksgiving coming up, I'm going to recommend second year in a row.
It's a traditional Thanksgiving movie, Planes, Trains, and Automobiles.
Yeah, good pick, Jack.
Good pick.
and it's you know they don't make go ahead and finish And I want to add to that.
Go ahead.
Well, the actors are John Candy and Steve Martin.
And for some reason, you never know how it's going to happen.
But there is a white Midwestern director.
I think he also wrote it, John Hughes, that wrote this story.
It's about a New York executive trying to get back to suburban Chicago to his family.
And then there's this regular lower middle class shower curtain salesman.
So they hook up.
They have adventures.
And it's funny, but it's also a happy ending.
It's a good story.
I think it's very much like the best Christmas movies, Miracle on 34th Street.
And it's a positive movie.
You can't overplay it or things like that.
But I think it's, in my opinion, the best American Thanksgiving movie.
And John Hughes, the guy that did Home Alone and Home Alone 2.
That's exactly right.
You're on to something here, Jack, with John Hughes.
That is a fantastic recommendation.
Plane, Trains, and Automobiles.
I mean, they don't make comedies like that anymore.
Now it's all Jewish humor.
It's potty humor.
I mean, that's what's funny.
But back then, you had legitimate comedians like John Candy and Steve Martin and some of these other folks.
But John Hughes was a fantastic director.
And all of his movies had a moral heart.
And they had something to it that brought family together.
You're right, Keith.
He did Planes, Trains, and Automobiles, as Jack mentions, but he also did the Home Alone movies.
He did Uncle Buck.
He did Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
He did, well, a lot of movies like that, but all of his movies had something, The Great Outdoors.
It was all about bringing family together in some shape, form, or fashion.
Dutch with Ed O'Neill, Beethoven, classic comedies in the late 80s, early 90s.
But John Hughes always had a touch of home about his films that were very endearing.
The system is obviously very, very corrupt.
It's dominated by this ethnic, sexual mafia that hates us.
But somehow the system, some guy, they get through.
They come through until once in a while.
And it's not just any time then or now, but during that time, John Hughes was able to get through and his movies were commercially successful and they made money and they were good movies.
So the system is against us, but sometimes there's some guys that manage to get through the system like Tucker Carlson is now.
He's like the only honest heterosexual white guy on cable news.
And how long is he going to last?
Probably not very long, but we want to support him when we can.
And my advice is to try to separate yourselves from the corruption and try to find good movies.
And I think there's a term called the Benedict option, the last Catholic Pope before this worst ever liberation theology, pro-Muslim, pro-homosexual, pro-Talmanist Pope.
Pope Benedict, he had the option of saying, listen, we can't, we're not going to take over mainstream society culture or things like that.
So we need to sort of withdraw from society and hunker down and live a good life.
And when we survive, the rest of the civilizations going down around us.
So that's sort of my version of the Benedict option is to just promote good movies of your own, have your own library or be part of a film club and trade good movies.
Don't consume what is just pushed on you every year.
And it looks new.
They market it.
They advertise it as something new and something.
At the end of the year, you went back and say, well, what good movies were there this year?
There weren't any.
And so you don't want to just consume what's forced down upon you.
Get rid of your cable TV.
I did.
I got rid of my cable TV and I don't miss it.
So that's what I'm doing tonight, kind of melancholy and preparing the year.
I would like to get out of the country for the presidential year.
I hate it.
But if we are here, we should just sort of separate and for a thing.
Well, your message is exactly the message of William Lynn's new book.
We have been revisiting the United States every time.
I mean, every time we keep coming around to it, it's like we're orbiting that thing.
But that's really about the best you can do in these times that we live in.
Yeah.
And you can also, I think it's sort of reversed.
When Eastern Europe and Central Europe got overrun by the communists in World War II, it became occupied country.
A lot of people there, they would listen to the voice of America for honest news.
So I think it's now reversed that to try to get honest news about the United States of America or you got to go to Russia today.
And I go to Russia today.
I think their coverage of American crime and politics is honest.
It's good.
Plus, they also do good sports and kind of a little bit sexy in a PG way.
So, yeah, I recommend our listening audience start tuning into Russia today, and you're going to get flagged.
Jackson covered one of our articles earlier tonight.
Yeah, Russia Insider is another good one.
And basically, what Eastern Europe shows is that there's a great advantage to being backward in the eyes of our cultural souls today.
Supposedly, Eastern Europe and Russia were backward, and Germany and France and America, Great Britain were advanced.
And believe me, where is the good stuff coming from now?
Where are the healthy societies that are in Eastern Europe and Russia?
Keith, do you think we can shoehorn one more monkey song in tonight?
Let's get it in there.
Let's do it.
Because, you know, it is Saturday night.
And what do we want everyone to have tomorrow?
We're going to have a Pleasant Valley Sunday.
Hang on.
Let me turn up the volume here.
Oh, that's right, Keith.
That's what we're going to do.
Rozo houses are all the same.
And no one seems to care.
Jack, are you going to have a Pleasant Valley Sunday in Chicago tomorrow?
No.
There's some heterosexual Christians.
If you look long enough, I'm going to give away some nice clothes to some decent African-American Christians.
There are decent people here.
People just think everything and stuff.
But yeah, but there's nice people here.
So I'm going to give away some clothes to some deserving people.
And if you look hard enough, there's still some decent Christian people.
Got to work hard for it.
But yeah, that's what I'm going to do on my Sunday.
I don't care about the NFL football thugs.
The Chicago team is very mediocre, so who cares about them?
So I don't worship NFL thugs on a Sunday.
No, I don't do that.
Well, there's one thing we have to ask, Jack, and that's if you're a believer.
Thought love was only true and fairytale For someone else but not for me Disappointment haunted all my dreams.
Then I saw her face.
Now I'm a believer.
Mickey Dolan.
It's going to be Jack tomorrow.
He's going to find her tomorrow.
I tell you, I think we actually worked in every monkey song they ever released tonight during the show.
Throughout the show tonight, every monkey song they ever had.
Every hit anyway, Keith, right?
That's right.
We didn't do Zora and Zam, but it's kind of like a Rorschach test.
But we have had fun.
And we do typically have a little more fun immediately before or after a holiday.
We seem to be a little more loose.
And so certainly that's been going on.
Did you like the monkeys, Jack?
Yeah, I did.
I mean, they're not a real fan.
I mean, it was a TV show.
Some of the writers, yeah, I thought the songs were good.
And yeah, no, I like those songs.
Did we miss any of them, Keith?
Well, I'm sure that we did, but on the other hand, I'm talking about a video of the big hit.
Yeah, the big hits we got, I think.
We had to do about three of that last segment there with Jack.
But anyway, well, we did Hey Hey with the Monkeys last week when we first started.
I don't even know how that happened.
Well, if we've forgotten any right tuition, we'll cover them next week.
Jack, we'll talk to you next week for Keith Alexander and our guest David Jones, not the Davy Jones, but the other one.
James Edwards, good night.
Happy Thanksgiving, folks.
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