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Aug. 15, 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.
For someone I've adore you now, turn the key to the heart.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to a very special installment of the political cesspool radio program.
I'm your host, James Edwards, along with Keith Alexander, once again this Saturday evening, August the 15th.
So the last time we did a show like this was our Valentine's Day program back in February, and the bottom just completely fell out of the world right after that.
That's when we got into the whole corona hysteria and so much more, the rioting, the destruction of cities.
So we're hoping if we do another ladies' night show, it will reverse the effect.
So that's why we're doing it tonight.
Maybe you're trying to bring it on again.
No, I'll tell you actually why we're doing it is because these shows are a great deal of fun.
And it's a wonderful opportunity for you to better get to know some of the female members of our listening audience.
And we have got five of the very best coming to you this evening.
And we're going to be talking about a whole lot of topics with them, vast and varied, from political, current events to how we can better prepare our families for the uncertain days ahead.
And you know what I most like about the females in our listening audience, Keith?
You have met or at least spoken with each of the five ladies we'll be featuring tonight.
You don't have to pick between intelligence and attractiveness when it comes to the TPC women.
They are fantastic by every standard of measurement.
And much more than that, they are good people.
And they're going to be bringing you a very important message tonight, collectively.
And furthermore, they're not just eye candy.
They bring it.
I mean, they've got the opinions, the right opinions, and they are stalwart advocates for the white race.
Now, let me tell you, I guess, what would be the polar opposite of the ladies we'll be featuring tonight?
And it's someone who has been in the news quite a bit herself this week, Kamala Harris.
So let's just start with that.
Keith and I only have 30 minutes with you one-on-one, and then we'll start sharing the stage with these fantastic women.
But first, let's talk about one not-so-fantastic woman, Keith, Kamala Harris, who will be the president probably in about, what, 10 to 12 months if Biden wins.
Six months.
Well, right, but they'll at least have to give him at least a few weeks to step down to make it not look so obvious.
But anyway, what do we think?
Probably suffocate Biden in bed like they did Antonin Scalia.
Well, look, well, first of all, I'll tell you this.
Every utterance she makes will be declared nothing less than solid gold by the media henceforth and forevermore.
She met the only two qualifications that apparently the media and Biden required, and that be that she was a woman who wasn't white.
Now, I have heard she is everything but a white woman.
In fact, I've heard she's black.
I've heard she's an Indian.
I've heard she, dot, not feather.
I have heard she is a Pacific Islander.
She's really everything.
She has a Jewish husband.
So the whole package.
Interesting, though.
Yeah, if she could go transgender, that's the only word.
Thank you, Sam.
Don't give them ideas.
She could up her ante.
But, you know, we can criticize Trump as much as you would like.
I think we have been very nuanced in our coverage of Trump in the last four years.
We are going to do a two-hour very special broadcast with Sam Bushman very, very soon, in fact, where we give you the case for Trump.
And I think now, listen, you know, say what you will, but if this ticket gets in there, you better gird your loins.
Well, here is my take on Biden-Harris ticket, okay?
Why was Biden chosen?
Biden was chosen because he goes back far enough.
First of all, he's a white male of typical American stock and a Catholic.
They're thinking that he is going to possibly appeal and bring back into the fold, at least for this 2020 election, the group whose departure and defection to Trump sealed the fate of the Democrats in the 2016 election, and that is white union workers, predominantly Catholics, from the Rust Belt and from the Northeast Corridor, the Acela Corridor.
That's why Biden was chosen to front the ticket.
Why then was Kamala Harris chosen?
One, she would pacify the restless natives in the collection of others that represent the coalition of the others, as they call them, which is another big base of the Democratic Party.
She is a woman, and she is a minority.
So that she checked both of those boxes.
But the most important thing is that she is off-the-chart radical.
She is so radical that there is no way she could win a presidential election, even in today's America, if she were fronting the ticket.
But by being the number two person, they can pacify the wolves howling at our doors, and they can then get a president that is such a leftist, off-the-chart leftist, that she would embarrass Trotsky or Lennon or somebody like that or mouse a tongue.
She is going to be your new president before the next presidential election after this 2020 election.
And it just seems like it's hard to believe it's a presidential year at all because what with they haven't campaigned at all.
There's not going to be a convention for either side.
I mean, I guess they're going to do it on Zoom or whatever.
But I'm telling you, Keith, this thing is coming up in just a few weeks from now.
And God only knows who's going to win.
We were talking before the show started.
Looks like the United States Postal Service is going to be collecting mail receptacles.
And we're supposed to be doing a mail-in vote this year, maybe, and they're taking the sorters offline.
And you said that was just a grab to try to get a little more money.
But I mean, God only knows how this thing's going to turn out.
I mean, I could see, and if you look through it at a slightly different lens or a slightly different angle, I could see either side winning this one.
It's just such an unprecedented election.
But I'll tell you one thing I know for sure.
For all of the people who have criticized Trump, and we've been among them off and on, and deservedly so when we do it, and we'll also give him credit when credit is due.
Just as easily, you don't want him to lose his election.
Well, the Democrats have wargamed this whole thing out where they're not going to lose.
They either win in the vote count or they win by creating total chaos and possible armed insurrection.
Like we've seen with you had the Russia hoax, the impeachment hoax.
Now you've got COVID.
I mean, it's just been one really unprecedented domino after another.
It's fallen going back the last few years now.
Well, they have tried to cover every eventuality.
And as a friend of mine who is not like-minded told me, he said, it's going to be a very interesting Thanksgiving this year.
By the time, I guarantee nothing will be resolved by Thanksgiving Day.
And there is going to be utter chaos.
There's going to be riots in the streets.
There's going to be mayhem, everything that you can imagine happening unless the left gets its way.
And when the left gets its way, then the other boot is going to drop on people that are opposed to their agenda, including anybody that contributes to Trump.
Kamala Harris has said that.
She said as much as that.
All right.
We're going to hold off right there because it is a busy night with the spotlight being on the ladies.
So that's all we're going to say about Kamala Harris tonight.
The other.
My God, what a tragic story.
I guess the biggest news story of the week.
We'll get to it when we come 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 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.
Let's help cover his massive legal costs.
To chip in five bucks or more, text the word fight to 444-999.
That's fight, F-I-G-H-T to 444-999.
Or go to defendapatriot.com.
That's defendapatriot.com.
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.
It's time to jump back into the political cesspool.
Well, thank you, Joe Cocker.
And again, ladies and gentlemen, the main event tonight is it is our second of two ladies' nights installments here on TPC.
And we wanted to have the ladies on tonight to instill a little hope and encouragement to our audience by reminding you and by once again demonstrating for you that those of us who are on the right thinking side of the issues are also attractive, intelligent, and wholesome.
Everything, frankly, that the left isn't.
And we are going to begin that parade in the very next segment.
The first of five ladies coming on tonight.
We're really excited about tonight's show.
But first, Keith, I'm going to read two headlines for you, and you tell me if you can spot the difference.
Here's one from earlier this year.
Both from CNN, by the way.
A white woman has apologized for calling police on a black man in Central Park.
That's the first headline.
Now, tell me if you can tell the difference between the two when I read you this headline, which was from just this week.
Police have charged a 25-year-old man with first-degree murder after they say he shot and killed a five-year-old boy last week in North Carolina.
What's the difference between the two stories?
They identified the races of the so-called victim and perpetrator in the first, but not the second.
This is really one of the most tragic stories I think we've ever covered on this program.
You know, we talk about the Channon Christian, Christopher Newsome, Knoxville horror murders.
I had the opportunity to appear live on CNN's primetime show at the time to debate the spokesman for the NAACP about that issue.
But that really is nothing compared to this.
You're talking about a five-year-old little boy who could be a doppelganger for my son.
And he was riding his bike in front of his home, and this black neighbor, this 25-year-old black neighbor, walks right over to the boy on his bike, shoots him in the head, point blank, the boy dies.
No ill will between the families.
In fact, I believe the night before this murder, the father of the slain son was having beers with this guy.
So again, the question becomes, how is this a racial issue?
Well, how was George Floyd a racial issue when that incident happened, that accident?
Well, it really wasn't an accident.
George Floyd killed himself.
We'll talk more about that in just a second.
But they wanted you to know it was a white police officer and a black victim.
And the whole world took upon this faux narrative from the media.
Race didn't play a factor in the George Floyd incident at all.
Him being on drugs, enough drugs to kill an elephant, him being a petty criminal, all of that factored in much more predominantly than race.
But why race in this one?
Well, because empathy seems to be less prevalent in some groups of people than others.
lack of empathy, low impulse control, propensity for violence, and a low IQ, all products of an identifiably smaller prefrontal cortex seen predominantly in specific groups of people.
That is why this is clear-cut a racial issue.
And George Floyd and all these other hoaxes, perhaps not.
Well, you know that it's different because they don't identify the race of the perpetrator in the second story, the five-year-old boy being shot, or the race of the victim, a five-year-old white boy who was riding his bike on the sidewalk in front of his house when apparently trying to turn around, he cut a little bit into the guy's yard.
The guy comes out with a pistol, puts it right to the kid's head, and blows him away.
Now, if that had been a black child and a white perpetrator.
Oh, my God.
I mean, you'd have seen the mushroom cloud over all of the United States.
Well, look, this is an eyewitness accounting.
Our neighbor saw it.
She said she saw the young man.
See, even the people there who have been victimized from this, you know, won't dare mention the factors here.
Saw the young man walk up to the boy who was sitting on his bike, which he does every day.
I just don't understand why he did it.
How can you walk up to the little boy point blank and put a gun to his head and just shoot him?
Well, it's a good question.
Because you're an immoral reprobate.
Well, look, here's the thing.
It took an act of God to get the media to cover it at all.
This thing simmered for days until the media mentioned it.
CNN didn't mention it finally, but they completely left out the racial animus, which, of course, they're so quick to do anytime it fits the narrative.
Well, let me tell you another story that didn't have a problem making the news this week.
Big national news story, AP News Story.
Let me read you the headline.
I'm going to read you the headline verbatim.
A beloved lesbian baker in Detroit got a homophobic cake order.
That was national news.
That was national news.
That this black lesbian got a social media.
It's not news.
It used to be all the news that's fit to print.
Now it's all the news that is not at all.
That is such a totally irrelevant event in the life of our nation.
And, you know, it's not just these cases that are bringing this up.
Think about this.
Tune on your local news, and you'll hear the biggest fluff pieces in the world taking up all the time about some kid with a lemonade.
This little boy gave his money to Black Lives Matter or something like that.
And we're all supposed to be charmed by that.
This little innocent child.
Look at him.
I mean, look at him.
He's an angelic-looking child, and he is, I never see a picture of him.
I never smile on this.
It's beyond heartbreaking.
A poor white family trying to get by.
Their son shot in the head, riding his bike.
Not one church would mourn the loss of this boy.
Not one politician, not one reporter.
I am so sorry that this happened to this family.
When is enough enough?
Say his name.
Cannon Heinett is his name.
Say his name.
Let's say this, too.
Why didn't you say that?
Why didn't you have things like this happening back in the 50s and 60s?
Would it have something to do with racial segregation, which is supposedly so bad, if they had had a racially segregated?
This is good.
Did this one time happen in the South?
During all that upheaval?
Were there ever, you know, no.
I know now, you know, you have this fictitious history where they're saying, you know, whites would go out and take little black babies and use them for alligator bait.
I read an actual mainstream story about that earlier this year.
It never happened.
Never did.
They were lynching black people on the hour all over the South.
You know, when there's actually, I think between 1865 and 1965, about 4,000 rapes.
4,000 is a slow year for black-on-black crime in America.
But apparently, some lives, some black lives matter and some black lives matter.
Gotta gofund me.
We have tweeted a lot about this family, this little boy.
Look at the family up there.
Is that a family?
It's just a poor white family.
I mean, it's just trying to get by.
I mean, that's all it is.
And thank you.
Three children, father and mother, who are the biological parents of the three children.
Well, look, no money, no money could ever compensate for this, but I think they have raised about $600,000 on their GoFundMe page.
So I'm thankful for that.
I mean, whatever good that does for them, whatever good it does for them.
The silence is deafening from the news media.
The news media, therefore, must be said they are not doing their job when they won't report something this grave and this important and they want to report about some angelic black kid having a lemonade stand and selling lemonade so that he can fund Black Lives Matter.
We live in a crazy, we're on a crazy train in America now.
Our news media is the engineer on that crazy train.
Nothing you can say more than that.
I mean, there's no sense in belaboring it.
This is probably the most horrific story we've ever covered in 16 years on the radio.
I just, you know, for me as a father, I know Keith, you've had three sons.
I actually have a son that is his age that looks, I'm looking at this picture of this boy on his bike barefooted, just a rough and tumble little boy, exactly like my son, in a Barack Obama.
Well, my son, if I had a son, he could have been Trayvon Martin.
My boy is this boy.
And see, this is why they talk about helicopter parents and parents that have their children all signed up for baseball or basketball or for piano lessons or whatever.
That's what parents have to do.
This is what happens when you let your children go out on the street like they did when I was a child.
All right.
Well, now that we've got that, I don't want to say out of the way.
We needed to cover it.
But, you know, listen, it's a dark world right now.
What can we do to better provide and protect our families?
That's one of the things we're going to be talking about with these five incredible women who are going to be coming your way right after this next break.
Tune in for better news.
Pursuing Liberty, using the Constitution as our guide.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio, USA Radio News with Wendy King.
Congressional lawmakers have left Capitol Hill for the remainder of the August recess without a deal for the next COVID-19 relief package, which is expected to send another stimulus payment to most Americans.
The House and Senate are now both on recess.
House Democratic leaders and negotiators from the White House have worked this month to find a deal on another relief bill.
Both chambers have crafted relief aid, but the two sides remain far apart on certain provisions.
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The House is scheduled to return September 14th, and the Senate the second week of the month.
Adding to the uncertainty are both parties' national nominating conventions, which will be held over the next two weeks.
The Democrats will stage theirs next week and the Republicans a week later.
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The U.S. Postal Service sent dozens of states letters saying that some mail-in ballots may not be counted in time for the November election.
That's a warning that further complicates the role of the USPS in the voting process.
The Washington Post was the first to report that Thomas Marshall, General Counsel and Executive Vice President for the U.S. Postal Service, sent letters to 46 states and Washington, D.C.
He told the states some ballots may not arrive in time to be counted.
Los Angeles area officials lifted some evacuation orders as firefighters battled a 17,000-acre blaze amid what could be a record-breaking heat wave in Southern California.
The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said the blaze, which started Wednesday, was only 12% contained.
The fire was situated near Lake Hughes, an unincorporated community in Los Angeles County.
So far, the wildfire has destroyed at least 21 structures.
You're listening to USA Radio News.
Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dine at 1-866-986-6397.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, the last, what, three months before the election, last the next three months are going to be an action-packed and historic roller coaster ride.
We want it to be a matter of time.
It's going to be a mudslide is what it's going to be.
It's going to be like the whole of a mountain is rolling down into the valley.
It's going to be crazy.
Whatever comes, we'll be ready for it.
But we wanted to have one last moment of peace and happiness and tranquility before we go into all of that that's waiting for us ahead in this near future.
And the best way we thought we could do that was by having another lighthearted but still informative and important ladies' night installment.
The last time we did this was back on our show Nearest Valentine's Day.
And our first guest this evening, Kim, is a homeschooling, home churching mother of five.
She really stole that show, and it's great to have her back to lead the pack this evening.
Kim, how are you?
Hey, James, I've really been preparing a lot for this interview.
I've got my full headgear mask on so that I don't possibly infect you guys through the phone.
I've got gloves.
It could happen.
I've got sanit, you know, I've got this chemical.
After I get off the phone, I can spray me completely with it.
You know, I'm just, I'm just trying to keep you guys safe.
Well, thank you.
And since you are so well prepared and have put so much thought, I'm unplugging Keith right now.
So we want to.
No, I'm just kidding.
Well, Kim, listen, this is a topic that you are particularly suited, I think, to offer an opinion on.
We talk about the uncertainty ahead with the election, with this, as you mentioned, this coronavirus hysteria, with, I mean, now the situation with the boy in North Carolina.
I mean, you don't know what's going to happen on any given day.
So what can our families be doing to better prepare for the uncertainty that is ahead?
Well, you know, I came up with this acronym, James.
Okay, go with me on this, okay?
I think we should practice COVID daily.
And that's care of vital individuals daily.
And who are those vital individuals?
They're our families, our children.
So I was thinking about this, you know, all week of, okay, what really can I do to change outside of my house?
And really the answer is not a whole lot, but what can I do daily in my house?
A ton, a ton.
Just one thing I was thinking about is, and I have to work on this, and I don't know if you're like this in your house, but trying not to blackpill my children because I'm very opinionated, I'm very vocal, and I am into reading about what's going on in the world.
And it's easy to just not sit there.
I mean, it's easy to sit there at the dinner table and just rant and rave about what's going on.
And I think when we overdo that, we can scare our children into them thinking there is no hope and there's always hope.
You know, just thinking about what Sam Dixon said one time, I remember I think you were there.
I know you were there, actually.
And he said, this is a long, this is a long struggle.
You know, I think we all want to think in our minds that our lives are like a movie.
And at the end of our lives, everything's going to get wrapped up and there's going to be this happy ending and it's all going to be fixed.
And the reality is this is a long struggle.
We might be in the prequel.
You know, we don't know what's going to happen in 100 years.
We just have our role to play now.
And so I think always giving our children hope, always filling them with positives and encouragement in what's going on around us, that would be, first of all, my best piece of advice.
Well, hold on right there, Kim, because I want Keith to have a chance to chime in.
But I have said this time and time again.
I'm sure you've heard me say it.
I do think things will turn around.
I don't know when.
I don't know what the catalyst will be for that reckoning and that reawakening.
And it's just a shame that we were born in this time where American culture is at its nadir.
But it will turn.
Will it be a situation where we have to be like the Spanish under Muslim occupation for hundreds of years before our people decide to get their act together?
We don't know, but what we can do is our duty.
And we can insulate and protect and help prepare those within our homes.
If we can do nothing else, we can do that.
But I thought what you said was very powerful and very touching, Keith.
I've got two thoughts, Kim.
One, what should we do for a worst-case scenario, which we may be hurtling towards in November?
As a friend of mine said, it's going to be a very interesting Thanksgiving this year.
And the second thing is, what can we do in terms of our families to make us, to put us in a situation where we can survive whatever may be coming?
And I understand from James that you basically have all that knocked in the head.
So share your knowledge of this, please.
Well, actually, I was hoping to come to your house for Thanksgiving this year, Keith.
Well, give me somebody that will cook the dinner.
I'll tell you what, you bring the food.
It's going to be done by me.
You bring the food.
He'll provide the VHS.
No, I'll provide the food.
You just had to prepare the preparation.
Who's going to provide Tammy and the Bachelor?
Oh, I got that.
Yeah, I just want to avoid some of my awkward liberal family members.
No, I'm kidding.
No, that's a good.
That is a good question.
You know, I think whether it's the election or coronavirus or whatever, I think there's some things, people that have already done these things or that we can do.
And one is, you know, what is your long-term game plan?
If you feel like there's going to be a Biden presidency and you're smack dab living in the middle of fill-in-the-blank large city, Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, and you have a family, you need to be thinking about these things now.
Do I want to be living smack dab in the middle of town if I'm going to have BLM marching through my neighborhood like with the McCloskeys?
You know, just what do you plan, particularly if you have kids?
If your wife is working now and your kids are little, you have some time to think out, okay, do I want them going to the local school wearing masks for 10 hours a day?
Do I want them indoctrinated with critical theory?
If you don't, start making a plan now.
And it's never too late.
And if you think, well, there's no way I could support a family on one income, you might have to move.
You might have to move away from the big city because it is tough.
And I've heard Keith talk about this a lot.
It is tough for a man to provide for his family today.
It's not like 1950.
But what can you do now to hopefully get your family in the right location and situation to be able to have a safe and secure home?
Yeah.
Well, Kim, let me say this.
I've come to some conclusions of my own.
I think we've discussed them before.
I think you need to get to a mountainous area.
The demographics tend to be better.
You need to find out if you don't live in that area now, how you can get one, how you can get to it such a place if the balloon goes up, if everything hits a fan in November or whenever.
Now, the problem in Memphis is that you've got to go over a bridge to get to Arkansas.
Arkansas is like the promised land.
It's still basically a wilderness like it was in 1836.
There's a primeval forest right on the other side of the Mississippi River from downtown Memphis.
Yeah, it is, basically.
Well, the thing is, you have the Delta, which is not the good place, and you're going to have to travel through that.
But you get to the Ozarks, which is a good place.
You can be there.
You can go east to the Cumberland Plateau.
Kim might know something about the Ozarks.
Yeah, but just tell me, you know, that's the type of thing that I was thinking of.
We've got to figure out what we should do.
And, you know, I don't want to press the panic button on this, but, you know, it could be crazy.
And I think it will more likely not be crazy if when this election happens.
But better to have a plan and not need it than need a plan and not have it.
And so, again, this is something that our first guest this evening has life experience with.
They are self-sufficient.
Well, that's what I want to get to.
Well, you know, certainly much more than most.
And we're coming up on a break, so I don't want Kim to go into that right as the music starts.
So just sit tight there.
And let me tell you also, folks, what's coming tonight as we continue with the first of five ladies in our audience this evening.
We are going right now, of course, we're talking with Kim about what our families can be doing to better prepare for uncertainty and uncertain days ahead.
We're also going to be talking about what we can do with some of the other guests to come this evening, what activities we can adopt that will help us bond closer together with our loved ones during this time of unrest.
We're going to be talking about dating, traditional roles for women at home and in politics, building strong marriages, raising healthy families.
Courtney, our friend, will be with us later in the program.
Actually, she's our closer this evening.
She's going to be talking about movies.
And we've got a little bit for everyone, I think, tonight with Ladies Night, Keith.
Well, like I said, I mean, Kim really stole the show In February, when we did this for Valentine's Day, but she is not only tall and tall, but wallet and the wall.
Well, and she's going to continue to share that story when we come back.
Stay tuned, ladies and gentlemen.
Ladies' night, just kicking off this evening.
So much more to come.
He'll be back with Kim, a homeschooling, home-churching mother of five, when we return.
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Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
Ladies and gentlemen, at the top of the next hour, you'll be hearing from Rebecca, better known as dissident mama, as this wonderful installment of Lady Tonight continues.
But first, let's get back to Kim.
Kim, we're talking about, again, things our families can be doing to better prepare for uncertain days ahead.
Now, you and your husband, let me just quickly share, and I think I've probably said this before, but I have had the opportunity and the privilege of knowing you and your husband for a time that even predates the founding of this show, barely, but it still does.
It's age, as we say down here.
Well, a long time.
And I've gotten to know your family, your children.
You've gotten to know my wife and children.
Of course, you have a sister who is equally impressive and is also a friend.
Anyway, so we have grown together over these years, and you were able to take a plunge, along with your husband, to move from a more urban setting to a more rural setting to where you are now almost homesteaders, I guess you could say, in a way.
Now, not everybody can do that, but would you mind, Kim?
I hope I'm not going to let you know.
The walls have nothing to do on Kim and her family.
Well, I hope I'm not putting you on the spot, and I certainly want to safeguard the anonymity of our guests who don't have their own platforms.
But can you tell us some of the measures you have taken?
Now, not everybody will be able to take these measures, but they are impressive.
And it shows that it can be done.
Oh, absolutely.
Well, I guess the first thing I would say is that you're not going to do everything overnight.
And number one, and number two, when you have little children, you need to set realistic expectations.
When we had, when all of our children were little, it was a lot tougher.
I mean, because you're nursing a baby, you're changing diapers, you're trying to go out and plant this garden, and the kids are running all over the vegetables.
And so I think if you go into it, just set realistic expectations.
But yes, and we didn't set out going, okay, we're going to bug out and go hole up somewhere and get this land.
And it was more of we wanted, I think it's a natural thing within our people to like a little bit of privacy.
You know, animal husbandry is within our people.
My husband certainly did not grow up having a garden or having animals.
It was just, all I can describe it as, it was just within him.
He was born that way, and it ended up manifesting itself when he became a man.
I mean, just today, he's been put a corral system up for our cows, and I heard him chainsawing in the woods.
You know, I think if you decide to live this life, and, you know, James, I agree, it's not for everybody.
There are some people that are just counties.
You know, they're not, they would be out of their element trying to have a garden and a farm and everything.
But if that is your desire, and I've seen a lot of people online and on Twitter that, you know, they're young couples getting started and this is what they desire.
And I say go for it.
Have realistic expectations.
Work towards it slowly, but have a vision.
And if you have a good husband, a good leader that can work towards those goals, you will get there.
And that doesn't mean you have to have, you know, 50 head of cattle and, you know, a two-acre garden.
But even having some tomato plants and some chickens is something.
And we can all work towards that.
Well, you know, Kim, I got to say, again, we have had the opportunity, my wife and I and our children, to visit you and your husband and children at your home on at least two or three occasions by now.
And I remember the first time we came out there a few years ago, you had a garden.
And then now, you know, we've been out there a couple of times since, and you've got cows, you've got sheep, you've got all of these different animals, and you're really doing it.
And I've been able to actually see in some small way the logical progression with my own eyes.
And it's just incredible that I just cannot see James growing and eating vegetables.
I might grow them.
I wouldn't eat them, but I could definitely eat the sheep or the cow.
Well, I tell you what, he wouldn't need that you don't have, and that's a whiskey still if he was out here in the country.
Yeah, it's never too late.
If Keith, if he ends up bugging out to the Ozarks, you know, it's never too late for James.
But yeah, I was thinking about this today, James.
Having the importance of men being risk takers, because there's a few things that my husband has done around here, and just to be straight up, I thought this is a terrible idea because women by nature generally are not risk takers.
We like security.
We don't like to take risk.
We want everything safe in our case.
And there's been a few things he's done.
I thought, oh, I do not want to do this.
This is going to be awful.
And it turned out awesome.
And I was laughing to myself today.
I thought, you know, you have to realize to yourself, Kim, you're not always right.
And you need to trust, if you have a man that can take a little bit of a risk, you need to put your faith into him.
In fact, I had my husband one time when we were in a not an argument, but a strong discussion about taking on more animals.
He just finally looked at me and he said, Kim, all I need for you to do is have faith in me.
And when he said that, it took this huge weight off of me.
And I thought, you know what?
I don't have to run this show.
I can have faith in him and take that burden off me.
And he will take that burden upon himself.
And it's God's natural order.
You know, if we can just submit to that and trust that, you know, even if it fails, and sometimes things do fail, but if you can just put a little faith in your husband, if he is a man, he will do everything in his power.
So you don't have to say, I told you so.
Well, let me tell you something, ladies.
You're undermining the entire divorce industry.
I hope you know that.
Well, I tell you, it's setting an example is what it's doing, and that's why we wanted to have these particular.
Look, we didn't just have, look, what are five ladies we can have on tonight?
No, we selected, very selectively, chose the ladies we wanted to have on tonight because of the message we knew that they would deliver.
And that's the thing.
I have met, and without exaggeration, thousands of people since I started this show.
But two of the most impressive I've ever met are Kim and her husband.
And well, you know, it's true.
And look, doing what they did, moving from a suburban area to a more rural area, and then slowly but surely over the years becoming a different self-sufficient.
Ever more self-deficient, sufficient, but also de facto homesteaders.
There is something that even the suburbanites can do, and it's the choices they make with regards to their education and their churching.
So we introduced you, Kim, as the homeschooling, home churching mother.
How important are those decisions?
Oh, huge.
If you, you know, ideally, the ideal thing is to have a local congregation.
I feel like we're meant to worship with other believers.
There's literally when you sing hymns with other people, it releases oxytocin.
It is a spiritual connection with other people singing the hymns of our ancestors and of our people to our God.
But if you don't have that, you know, there's still YouTube.
I mean, as commie as YouTube is getting an acting everybody, there are still some really good sermons and some good preachers on there.
But yes, ideally, if you can even get together with people, say, once a month, it is important, particularly for women.
Women need other women for camaraderie.
We need to see other people's families and go, okay, I'm not the only one that's stressing out about my kids or this garden.
It helps you to push forward and to know that there's other people walking this same path with you.
And I did want to say, James, I just really think a lot about your family.
I love when y'all come to visit.
I've loved to see your family.
You're like family.
I feel a connection, just a southern connection, a Christian connection with you guys.
And I had a question about that family pick in the creek, James.
Okay, hit me with it.
Yeah, by the way, folks, if you don't know what Kim's talking about, we did post it at thepolitical session.org just yesterday a little last little photography session with my wife and children before our next baby comes in October or late September.
My wife always goes a little bit.
Maybe Election Day.
Could be.
I hope not.
That'd be after the fact.
But anyway, we posted these pictures that she's referring to.
So yes, the creek, yes.
It wasn't the Mississippi River.
Somebody asked that.
Yeah, I was thinking when I saw that picture as a mom, I thought, now, did y'all have a game plan if the kids slipped in that water?
If you slipped, did everybody have a change of clothes?
Or like if your pregnant wife falls in that water, like you'd never be forgiving that.
Well, she actually picked the photographer and picked the venue there.
Now, that water was only ankle deep, but you know, my son, you know, my son, and he's a boy's boy.
Yeah.
And so he was trying to squat as quickly as he could to catch tadpoles and the little minnows that were in there.
It was everything we could do to get pictures taken before he was completely wet and just covered in mud.
So we were able to actually get it done.
That was the only really threat that we faced that day.
Well, you know, kind of dovetail back to your first question about giving people hope.
Honestly, James, you can put a lot of stuff on your Twitter feed.
You can have a lot of shows.
But that picture that you posted of your family, you know, the saying, you know, preach the gospel and if necessary, use words.
Posting that picture is like preaching the gospel.
You don't really need to say anything.
Healthy-minded people can look at that picture and say, I want that.
How can I get that?
Well, thank you so much for saying that, Kim.
I mean, that means the world.
Actually, Danny is here tonight, and she actually just heard you say that, and I'm sure she would like to respond.
Well, first, I'm really sad that I'm late to come in here.
But that is one of the sweetest things ever said, and it really truly is an honor for people to view us like that.
So thank you for saying that.
That's really sweet.
With tears in her eyes, she says that, Kim, and you know how much she thinks of you.
Yes, I think the world of you guys, and that was a beautiful picture.
I'm looking forward to that baby.
Oh, me too.
Coming soon, that's for sure.
Kim, thank you so much for leading tonight's presentation of Ladies' Night Part 2 of this year.
We love you.
And we'll continue, ladies and gentlemen, with Dissident Mama when we return.
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