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March 7, 2020 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
Ladies and gentlemen, TPC's World Tour is now officially underway during the month of March for the remaining four weeks of this month.
We're going to be showcasing leaders and elected officials from different European nations as we seek to learn how our kinsmen are faring throughout the West.
Representing Australia during our world tour is our good friend Professor Andrew Frazier.
He is a former professor of law at Macquarie University in Sydney and the author of Dissident Dispatches, an alt-right guide to Christian Theology and the WASP Question.
Drew, great to have you back.
How are you?
Yes, good to hear your voice again, James.
Such as it is, I'm a little bit beleaguered this evening.
Got a little bit of a bug, but we are going to make it through this together.
How is it over there Sunday afternoon in Australia?
Oh, cold and wet up here in the Blue Mountains and so on, but no bugs around up here.
Hey, I envy you that.
That's right.
You're about to head into winter.
I envy you that as well.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're heading into fall.
Heading into fall.
There you go.
Yeah, that's right.
I mean, yeah, that's right.
Spring and fall would be the yin and the yang, December and winter.
That's right.
That's right.
Well, because I have a little bit of a case of the flu, Keith is not in the studio with me tonight.
He is calling into the studio from home.
So I'd like to give him the opportunity to welcome you back.
Keith, I know you're a big fan of Drew's work.
Yes, I sure do.
Drew, it's good to hear your voice again.
Glad you could make it on here.
We're doing a round-the-world trip of white advocates in the Hanglosphere, which, of course, Australia is a prominent part of, and through Europe as well.
So you're the first, you're batting leadoff for us to use a baseball.
Yeah, you're actually, we couldn't go further away into the Western world than Australia, but you are, in fact, ironically, our first stop.
So let's get started.
And tell us the news, good and bad.
How are our people faring in Australia down under?
Well, it's been quite a summer down here, I'd have to say.
We started out in early summer in December in the middle of a drought, amazing heat, and then the bushfires started.
And then the media chimed in, climate emergency, climate emergency, never letting a good crisis go to waste and so on.
Then what happened?
Then the rains came, torrential rains.
So that put an end to the bushfires.
Then we had another heat wave, and now it's cold again.
And basically, politically, the coronavirus is, I don't know.
I mean, is it good news or is it bad news?
I mean, I think it is kind of good news in a funny sort of way because it's really making people question our dependence, utter, abject dependence on China these days.
So people can't get toilet paper anymore because the media have been ramping up that crisis as well.
So it's been an interesting summer here.
Well, Joel, we were talking to this as Jeff Alexander.
Let me ask you this about that situation.
Sure, yeah.
Yeah, here's the situation.
What is the globalist versus nationalist take in Australia on this coronavirus?
Well, I mean, the globalist, you know, the political media class essentially wants to frame any kind of concern about travel into Australia from China as racism.
And the reason for that is, like, for example, Chinese students represent an absolute money tap for the higher education sector.
A cash cow, as we say over here.
Yeah, exactly.
I was searching for that phrase.
Yeah.
Yeah, so there are like something like hundreds of thousands of Chinese students here.
It's really ridiculous.
So you can't in any way associate corona chan with China or East Asia the way, for example, on V-Dare, Lance Welton has been valiantly trying to do.
So it's just something that's going to kill us all.
Well, we all need the Chinese now.
If we didn't have the Chinese, Drew, who would steal our military secrets and technology?
Exactly.
That's right.
Yeah.
And on the left, I mean, people are trying to foster, I suppose, another kind of narrative about, look, we told you so if this globalism is just setting us up for these sorts of crises many times in the future, no doubt.
Folks, hang on there, Keith.
Hold on there, Keith.
I know there's a little bit of crosstalk sometimes with you being on the other side of town, me in the studio, and Drew literally, literally as far away on the other side of the world.
A 17-hour time difference as we conduct this show live tonight.
But I am glad, Drew, that you brought up the coronavirus.
I don't want to spend a lot of time talking about it because we did spend an hour and a half on it, but I want to spend the next segment talking about it.
And then for the last half hour of your appearance, we got you for the full hour.
We'll talk about other things going on in Australia.
But I wonder, Ramsey Paul put this up on Twitter if this is going to go down and be remembered as a textbook case of mass hysteria.
And some other comments that I thought were interesting was that this could prove to be a textbook case of exactly why, to Keith's question, globalism is a fragile facade that can fall quickly and people devolve into belligerent automatons.
And of course, it is easy to spook the herd, but there's just a lot of things going on that just don't make a lot of sense.
Starbucks won't touch your used cup to refill it now.
They pour in a fresh cup and then pour that cup into yours, but they'll still touch your money.
At basketball games, they've encouraged the players not to shake hands, but they can still sweat and breathe all over each other throughout the basketball game.
So I don't know, Drew.
I mean, and you look at the number of people who died by the flu last year.
We talked about this for an hour and a half with Tom Kaczynski last week, who's become a well-read individual on the matter.
The flu has killed 10 times as many people in the United States alone that have died globally because of the coronavirus.
But still, the effects of it are real.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it is about mass hysteria.
And in a way, I mean, I think that's got to be a good thing because people here are really upset, but a lot of people here are really upset about it.
Hold on right there, my friend, Drew Fraser from Australia.
He'll be with us for the full hour.
Keith Alexander on the other side of town.
I'm in the studio.
And we're going to continue our talk right after this.
Why don't we say to the government writ large that they have to spend a little bit less?
Anyone ever had less money this year than you had last?
Anybody better have 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.
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And now back to tonight's show.
Always great to talk to Drew Fraser all the way on the other side of the world as we kick off TPC's World Tour.
Drew, thanks again for being with us this evening.
We've got you for the remainder of the hour.
And I want to do one, I want to read something here.
Keith, I found this from William Lind.
Now, we're talking about the coronavirus, and this will be the last segment we talk about it, but this is something that I think would be right up your alley, Drew.
I'd like to get you to respond to what I'm about to read, and then we'll toss it to Keith.
It's about five paragraphs, so just set tight, gentlemen.
I know there's a little crosstalk when we're all in three different locations, but let's see what we can do here.
This is what William S. Lynn says with regards to the coronavirus.
I have warned for decades that the future weapon of mass destruction is not the nuclear weapon, but the genetically engineered plague.
The world now stands on the brink of its first experience with that new weapon.
Whether the coronavirus now racing from China across the globe was created by intention or accident is not yet known.
The Chinese government claims the latter, but that government is well known for concealing facts it finds inconvenient.
My information, which may not be accurate, is that it escaped from a Chinese biofair bio warfare lab in Wuhan that was attempting to cross it with HIV to create an AIDS that would spread like the flu.
But either way, the coronavirus pandemic points to what is certain to come.
In genetic engineering, we have created a monster that very well may devour the whole human race.
When man seeks to play God, the results tend to be unhappy.
New plagues will be generated both intentionally and unintentionally.
Unlike nuclear weapons, genetically engineered diseases do not require vast facilities that cost billions.
They are knowledge-based, and the knowledge is already widespread.
That makes them ideal weapons of mass destructions for non-state, fourth-generation forces.
WMDs in the hands of states are generally stabilizing.
In the hands of non-state entities, the opposite is true.
We would do so well to remember that the medieval world, which contrary to what kids are taught in school, was highly successful, but it was brought down by the Black Death.
When you lose a third, half, or even two-thirds of your population in six weeks, everything falls apart.
So, what do we do about it?
We have to face the fact that in the face of new plagues, globalism is suicide.
The only thing that works is quarantine.
In the Middle Ages, some Italian towns saved themselves from the plague by a policy of bricking up homes with the people inside if there is any sign of infection.
The equivalent for us now is to shut down all international travel.
No one may enter the United States without going through a period of quarantine.
The current wisdom is that it's a two-week quarantine would be sufficient.
That may change.
With future genetically engineered plagues, the quarantine may have to be longer.
In Thomas Hobbes' novel, Victoria, entry into Europe requires a three-month quarantine.
Of course, anyone illegally attempting to enter the country, avoiding quarantine, must be shot.
In future cases, it may also be necessary to prohibit all imported goods.
It should not be too difficult to create plagues that are transmitted by things, by food, or imports, or cars, or parts.
Anything that an American might end up handling.
The toxins would be designed, at least initially, to come through the skin.
With genetic engineering, there's almost no limit on hideous characteristics a disease can be given.
Modernity, beat your Frankenstein.
Drew, your response to that.
Yeah, I mean, it's definitely a perspective that must be taken seriously.
And in a way, as I was saying, I mean, this could be a kind of a blessing in disguise, the coronavirus, because it will force us to take seriously the downside of globalism.
You know, and Australia is a country that's extremely exposed to that downside, especially in the biological, you know, the plague sort of conception, especially if, as Lance Welton claims, East Asians are susceptible to this.
We're not sort of immune to the downside of it because there are almost a million Chinese here.
And if that disease spreads even among them, it will overwhelm the public health system here in Australia.
So having a homogeneous society that's sealed off to a large extent from the world as Australia was under the white Australia policy is, as far as I'm concerned, a good thing.
Keith.
Okay, yeah.
Well, gentlemen, I want to take a more cynical, real politic approach to this.
We need to duplicate the tactics of the left and never let a good crisis go to waste.
This is a crisis because the leftist majority in the news media says it is.
Let's take them at their word.
This is the proof, just like Drew was saying, of the downside of interconnectedness and globalism.
And basically, the only way that we can effectively protect ourselves against these types of dangers is to be local and to be national.
And by doing that, we will be accomplishing a lot of the things that we think as members of the distant right need to be accomplished, such as restoring our manufacturing bases in white nations like Australia and the United States and in Europe.
We don't need to be relying on far-flung countries with different cultures, different mores, different folkways to provide us with the necessities of modern life, like medicine, like toilet paper, like, you know, the beat goes on, as Sonny and Sheriff said.
So, so, you know, let's do this.
This is what we need to do.
We need to jump on this with both feet.
Well, let's go back to Australia, Keith.
I mean, somebody said last week that Donald Trump has the chance of a white man's lifetime.
He could say, well, because of this, we're shutting down all borders.
We're shutting down everything, carte blanche.
I mean, it is a zero entry policy.
What is the government, because this is what we're having this tour for, so to say, off of all these old shuttered manufacturing plants and let's get cracking again.
Okay?
Well, yeah, so let's see.
How is the government in Australia responding to this?
Is it just a continued march towards perdition, or is there some nationalist sympathies rising as a result of this that we can tap into?
Or what's going on over there, Drew?
Well, certainly not in the political class.
The political class is totally opposed to nationalism.
And in a way, I mean, Australia is in kind of a cleft stick here.
I mean, because I was saying, you know, isolationism is a good thing.
But actually, Australia is kind of exposed to very large, you know, sometimes very aggressive countries like Indonesia and China.
And we can't really go it alone.
I mean, what I would like to see come out of this is a kind of a greater unity among the Anglosphere nations.
I mean, Australia really cannot do without the U.S. Navy for starters.
And it's like Brexit.
Brexit is, as far as I'm concerned, is an opportunity for Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the UK, and hopefully the U.S. to sort of forge greater ties with one another.
Yeah, I'm glad you said that, Drew.
I think that's really right on point.
We have, you know, Breaking in particular, they got to turn somewhere.
And I was hearing on the news about the negotiations that are about to take place between the United States and Britain.
I think that Australia needs to get in there with it, and so does New Zealand.
All right, hold on right there, gentlemen.
We've got to take a break.
Keith Alexander, my co-host, along with our featured guest for this hour, Professor Drew Fraser, representing Australia on TPC's World Tour.
We'll be back with them right after this.
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All right.
Well, hey, bonus boys to anyone who can figure out what movie this is the theme of.
Well, this shouldn't be hard if we've got the Australian guest on.
That's the Crocodile Dundee theme.
You know, those were good movies back in the 80s.
I remember watching those as a kid.
Hey, we are all one people here throughout the Western world.
Our brothers and cousins and kinsmen throughout the West, that's who we're checking in on throughout the month of March.
And we've got Drew here in Australia.
So, you know, it looks as though Drew, all the time you look to Eastern Europe, and there's reasons for hope.
Orban's doing this or saying that, or Putin is always seemingly doing something good or something that we can agree with and other places like that.
Is there any reason for optimism in Australia right now?
Any movements afoot or anything we can latch onto and say, you know what, this is happening and it's a good thing.
Yeah, there are a few glimmers of hope.
I mean, last year, the whole Fraser Anning phenomenon, that was extremely interesting.
Oh, yes.
There are a couple of people.
I mean, Pauline Hanson, for all her flaws, is in Parliament.
She does have a couple of other people from one nation beside her, and she does ask embarrassing questions and embarrassing to the government and the opposition in Parliament.
And there is, I mean, this is still a very, I mean, I'm not exactly sure what the white population here in Australia is still around 85%.
And I would say that the British-descended population must be still in the neighborhood of 70%.
And there is that memory of Australia as an independent British dominion that is becoming more and more appealing as our major cities are taken over by a flood of third world immigration.
I think there's just a much deeper seated resentment towards the impact of globalization here in Australia.
This is Chief Alexander.
Let me say this.
That's a very astute observation because that's what's happening in America.
Yeah, that's right.
I mean, the conservative, they have a map of red America, red state America versus blue state America.
95% of the geographic land mass is red.
It's just in these urban centers that we have this vibrancy and diversity that we think is destroying our nations.
And it's apparently the same thing in Australia, right?
Yeah, that's right.
And it is a bit easier to get a bit of a dissident political movement sort of on the with with legs on the started here.
It hasn't really managed to crack the major party oligopoly yet, but there are dissident voices here that, for example, are pretty much absent in my original homeland in Canada.
I feel very, very lucky to have left Canada and come down here.
I feel as if there is some hope of an active resistance movement to globalization here, whereas Canada seems like it's dead in the water.
Well, you know, it's funny you mentioned that because we have Paul Fromm from Canada coming up as our next guest.
So we have Australia and Canada being represented tonight.
But 85%, though, Keith, I take that number.
You know, as an American, we don't have that.
We certainly don't have it here.
Is every other white nation?
You know, you have things like Hank Colbert pointed this out several months ago.
America's at 60%.
West Germany's at 85% white.
France is 80% white.
England about 80% white.
So we're twice as far down the road to destruction and despair as Australia and basically all the rest of the white nations of the world.
We're the people that are on in the clinical care ward.
That's interesting you say that, Keith.
I would have figured, I haven't looked into it, and we'll ask.
You know, we're going to have representatives from the UK during our radio tour of the world this month, but I would have figured that the white population of the UK was much less than that, you know, judging by London anyway.
But I guess you're going to be able to get a lot of people.
Well, that gives you the urban centers give you an unrealistic portrayal or view of what's going on.
That is where all of these foreigners congregate, and that's where they get tutorials and how to game the system for government benefits and things like this.
Meanwhile, white people are moving beyond the suburbs to what we call in America the exurbs.
And I think they're apparently doing the same thing in Australia.
I don't know if that's the case.
What's happening over there regarding that migration?
Well, you know, you're quite right.
I mean, the major impact is in Melbourne and Sydney To a somewhat lesser extent in Brisbane and Perth.
But it is interesting.
I find it quite interesting that in Melbourne, for example, where not only Chinese and Indian migration is a major problem, but African migration has become a major problem down there, even though the numbers are relatively small.
But, you know, gangs, home invasions, carjacking, it's like Baltimore down there.
And the upside is that there's a growing sort of resistance down there.
The sort of dissident right media, if you like, is pretty much headquartered in Melbourne now.
I mean, there are, you know, a lot of stuff is going on there.
So once again, there are silver linings in those clouds here, I think.
Well, you mentioned the Fraser Adding situation.
Of course, we covered that when he broke the news.
I mean, this is a guy who very masculinely and very, you know, with a great deal of authority with saying all the right things, all the stuff we would say on this program.
This was a member of parliament and did a great job.
So that was one good thing that has happened recently in Australia.
But of course, as we saw in the neighboring state of New Zealand, we had the unfortunate situation with the Christchurch shootings.
And it's like Keith said earlier, the left never misses the opportunity to cash in on a situation, manipulate what happened to advance their designs.
And of course, they did that and used that tragedy to further harm the populations of Australia and New Zealand.
Yeah, so are there still any residual effects of the shooting in Christchurch that you're suffering through, Drew?
Well, I mean, yeah, I mean, like one thing that I noticed immediately that the, what could you say, the dissident right alt-right scene on, or dissident right media in Sydney just disappeared overnight.
They just headed for cover, unlike the folks down in Melbourne.
But I mean, I think that's kind of faded largely from memory.
Yeah, so, but it, but it, but the effects of the Port Arthur shooting, when was it?
Like 20 years ago, when the Liberal National Party government just confiscated guns on a mass scale, you know, this country is still disarmed, which is causing, again, problems down in Melbourne where, you know, as they say, only the criminals have guns now.
Yeah, I'm really glad we're doing this.
It's really fascinating to me, Keith, to learn about what's going on.
I mean, we wouldn't know.
I mean, if you don't ask, you don't know.
You don't learn unless you seek to find the knowledge.
But I'm fascinated by listening to Drew.
And I think we're just going to have a lot of fun this month finding out what's going on.
Like I said, we're all kin, and we all need to be working together and pulling in the same direction.
We're like the fish in the nets.
We have a common enemy, too, which is the left.
And the left is definitely working on a global scale.
And it's ironic and kind of, but it shouldn't be surprising to us that in Australia, they're running into the same problems as us.
Now, I don't know what type of immigration problem they have in New Zealand.
The nearest group of foreigners would be penguins, I think, to New Zealand.
I have no idea what their problems are.
He's going to get in everywhere.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And don't forget there's a very large hour of talking.
Ah, interesting.
Interesting.
All right.
Well, hang on.
We got Drew Frazier live in Australia.
He's a day ahead of us, but we're on the same show.
Simple things fascinate me.
We'll be right back.
Don't go anywhere.
Let's hang on and come back to the political sesh pool right after these messages here on the Liberty News Radio Network.
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Welcome back.
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I think what we were saying before the last break is that we across Western civilization, whether it be in Europe, Eastern Europe, Western Europe, Northern Europe, Southern Europe, the United States, Canada, Australia, we're all one.
And for far too long, everyone else has a sense of racial solidarity.
They have an understanding of their unique group interests.
They have a racial identity.
And of course, whites are like the fish in the nets that are all pulling in different directions.
And if we could pull in one direction, we'd be able to break free and be free again.
But, well, that's what we're working towards here.
That's what this program, one of its missions, of course.
I keep saying we're not going to talk about the coronavirus, I guess.
That's going to be a battle that I might have to lose because this just came in from a listener in Arkansas.
He sent us in a story during the commercial break.
This is interesting, though.
An attendee at CPAC, last week, CPAC has been tested positive for coronavirus.
He was there mingling with all the Republican heavyweights.
And so the coronavirus would have been presumably spread through CPAC.
It's an inland indeed that done blow somebody some good, right?
I think the story was even better than that.
Wasn't it at APAC?
Yeah.
Well, now it may have happened at AIPAC.
Well, you know, I'm sure, you know, there's a reason why both of those conferences were held at the same place within a day of each other is because once they went to one, they went to the next.
But now this story was from CPAC, but now there may have been a similar story and a similar situation at APAC if there was.
I don't have that one in front of me, but I mean, no, I mean, I'm sure there was a lot of cross-pollination between those two events, God knows.
Anyway, Drew, back to you, back to Australia.
Give us something we haven't covered tonight, something perhaps you wanted to talk about that we haven't asked yet.
I always like to have the opportunity.
We have a little extra time to just lob that out there for a guest to run in any direction that he'd like.
Well, what would I like to talk about?
As a former academic, I mean, the thing I really find just maddening is the state of universities in Australia,
that they have become so dependent upon foreign students, so controlled by the left, and so tied into the global homo agenda generally that,
and again, I mean, I am just watching this coronavirus story unfold and I and I cannot help but feel a bit of Schadenfreude at the contortions the universities are going through.
Do you know that some of the big universities here fearsome, fearing that their Chinese students couldn't get back from the Chinese New Year holiday, have actually given them some of these students at least $7,500 grants to go spend two weeks in a third country quote self-isolating,
unquote before they come to Australia?
And some intrepid reporters have gone to some of these locations where the Chinese students are hanging out and basically it's party time for them.
So I you know what's going to happen when they finally arrive here.
You know, God only knows.
But that might be the salvation in America Drew, because all the Democrats, one of the primary issues on their plate of issues is free public college for, you know, all potential students from America.
So if that's the case, if that comes there, their sole source of funds is going to be students from overseas, so they'll be even more dependent on them.
Yeah, that's exactly.
I think that's more or less exactly what's happening here, because higher education here is pretty much a public higher education system and tuition fees don't really come close to covering the cost of the system.
So yeah, that's why they've uh turned on the tap of foreign students and so on um, and and also I mean like, but another thing that uh relates to America, a?
U.s.
Australian relations.
That got up my nose, and also the nose of the government too, is that I don't know whether you've ever heard of Holden CARS from Australia.
There used to be a car manufacturer here that went out of the manufacturing business about just a few years ago.
I can't remember exactly when, but it was famous for the big six-cylinder muscle car type products that they produced.
And they were just about everybody when I first came down to Australia had a hold in the car because...
they were protected by tariffs, uh.
But then we went to free trade and it became impossible for this company, which was actually um, what would you say financed in the beginnings, in the immediate post-war period, by GM.
They pulled the plug on their manufacturing operations, but continued to sell cars produced by GM in the state under the Holden label.
But just in the last little while, GM pulled the plug on that without even telling the Australian government.
You know, and I just thought it was an interesting example of how callous and kind of indifferent the corporate elite in the Anglosphere are towards the interest of not only the American people, but their Australian cousins.
It's just, you know, so the corporate educational political elite are really becoming our enemy.
You're 100% right, Drew.
I mean, the major corporations, obviously, even the local, even the Chamber of Commerce is across the country, not our friends.
Business is not our friends, particularly big business.
But I want to come back to something because you were right.
And we were looking this up.
We talked at the very beginning of this segment.
Listener in Arkansas had sent us in a story.
Sam Bushman just sent it as well about there being a confirmed case of coronavirus at CPAC.
Fox 5DC, the local Fox affiliate in Washington, D.C., now has reported that two New Yorkers who attended AIPAC in D.C. tested positive for coronavirus.
So now this would mean that it's all over D.C. because APAC is huge.
These people would have gone to the bars, to the restaurants, to Capitol Hill, the White House.
And between AIPAC and CPAC, you're going to have 10,000 people, 20,000 people at these events, members of Congress and staffers from all 50 states who travel back home on the weekends.
So we're soon going to know how real the coronavirus is.
Could be quite ironic if Vice President Pence comes down with a bad case of the coronavirus.
Well, you know, he was at AIPAC.
God knows that for sure.
Maybe you get it from kissing the wumbling wall.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, anyway, Drew, I want to thank you for spending our Saturday night, your Sunday afternoon with us here on TPC and letting us know how things are going in Australia.
You've written some great books, among them, dissident dispatches and the WASP question.
How can people better their library and get a hold of these books?
Oh, they're quite easy to get, even on Amazon.
The first edition of Dissident Dispatches got canned by Amazon because it had Bishop Pepe on the cover.
I remember it well.
The cover.
Yeah, yeah.
It's got a new cover.
It's available on Amazon and all of those places.
Same with WASP question and so on.
Yeah, I should have remembered this before now.
I mean, I remember it fondly and vividly, but you and I were together at one of your appearances.
We made a joint appearance together and had a great time.
Sold some books.
You did some autographing and had a good night together there.
I remember that fondly.
And it was great to spend that time with you in person.
And it's always great to spend the time with you on the air.
Yeah, same here.
And I want you to be sure to say hello to Paul Frum for me.
I haven't met him for quite a time, and I'd love to sit down and talk to him again sometime.
Hey, we can certainly make these connections happen here at TPC.
That's for sure.
We'll get y'all on the line together one day.
But he'll be coming up next, and we'll see what's going on in Canada.
But Drew, God bless you, brother.
We love you.
Keith, a final word from you to Drew.
Drew, keep your finger on the pulse down there.
We need to find out.
Sometimes developments happen first in America, but I also have the feeling that sometimes developments against our people germinate first in Australia.
So we need to find out what's going on down there.
It looks like we're on a very similar trajectory, and that's ominous to me.
It shows the coordination that the left has.
Yeah.
Okay.
Professor Andrew Fraser, everyone.
A great man, a great guest, a good friend.
Keith, thank you.
Drew, thank you.
I'm going to see if I can last one more hour.
Bye, God, with Paul Fromm.
Stay tuned.
He's coming up next.
Another hour of the political session is in the can, but don't go away.
There's more to come right here on the Liberty News Radio Network.
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