March 6, 2021 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
50:33
20210306_Hour_3
|
Time
Text
You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
The Political Cesspool, known across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program.
And here to guide you through the murky waters of the political cesspool is your host, James Edwards.
She made me nervous.
She took me in and we gave me a question.
She said, You come from an undone alone.
A woman boomer.
Got your head, got your head up thunder.
You've got a run, you've got a ten of them.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, our march around the world continues tonight.
We spent a little time earlier in the program in the UK with British barrister Adrian Davis.
Now we go to the land down under with Andrew Fraser, who was an associate professor in the Department of Public Law at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia.
Professor Fraser holds degrees from Queen's University, Harvard University, and the University of North Carolina.
But he's got two books, ladies and gentlemen.
If that's not impressive enough, two books that have been among my most delightful reads ever.
Dissident Dispatches, an alt-right guide to Christian theology and the wasp question.
Dialing in all the way from Australia, where he's a day ahead of us as we broadcast here on Saturday night.
It's Sunday afternoon where Drew is.
Drew, it's great to have you back and thank you for participating in our march around the world and representing Australia.
Well, thank you.
Good day.
It's good to hear you again, Jane.
Always good to hear from you as well, my friend.
Yes, we spent time together, of course, not just on the air, but in the flesh as well at a different speaking engagement when you launched that particular book.
You know, that was so interesting about dissident dispatches.
You went, I guess, just sort of out of amusement.
You were already, of course, retired from your claim to fame, and you went to seminary and described it as MSNBC at prayer going through a Christian seminary in the modern day and wrote a book about it.
And it was just absolutely fascinating.
Yeah, well, it was an interesting experience, let me tell you.
And what we've covered in this short, like the Chinese say, may you live in interesting times.
You were living in interesting times at that point in your life, weren't you?
Yeah, well, it seems to be getting more interesting every year, doesn't it?
Well, that's what we're going to find out tonight.
What's happening at that far-flung outpost of the Anglosphere called Australia in New Zealand now?
And tell us if there's any calls for.
Well, I guess.
Well, do you want the good news first or the bad news?
That'll probably be shorter.
Give us the good, the bad, and the ugly, Drew, in any order you'd like.
The good news is that immigration actually went into reverse this year in Australia.
Net overseas immigration was negative something like 70,000.
They convinced all these third worlders that white people are really as bad as they say, apparently, right?
Yes, contagious.
Well, actually, but there's a bad side to that, too, because there are 40,000 Aussies still overseas who aren't being allowed back into their own country.
So, you know, meanwhile, the government is trying to shoehorn foreign students back into the universities here.
Not with much success, thank God, but that's the situation.
It's totally.
Well, you know, in America, the reason we have all these foreign students is that the Chinese government, for example, that's the primary source of them, pays full tuition.
And, you know, these colleges and universities are just hungering for that money.
I don't know if you have the same situation in Australia or not.
Yeah, very much so.
That's exactly right.
I mean, this Macquarie University, where I taught for almost 30 years, you go down there on campus and you'd think you were in Hong Kong or something.
I said this about the University of Tennessee medical unit.
University of Tennessee's medical school is in Memphis, and I told people it looks like the United Nations on lunch break.
All right, Drew, but let me ask you this, my friend.
So, where do our people stand?
I mean, this is the purpose of this particular series, our march around the world, is to bring thought leaders and elected officials from the various outposts of Western civilization to the program to fill us in on how our people are faring in your respective port of call.
So, you're down there, you're manning Australia for us.
Take it away.
Are our people awakening?
Are there any good politicians?
Are there any good activist organizations we should be keeping an eye on?
Inform us because we don't know all the way over here in the U.S.
Well, it's actually that's the bad news.
I mean, despite the fact that this COVID hoax, I want to say, especially down here, was really nothing more than a bad flu season, except possibly down in Victoria.
People have just, in effect, signed up, you know, hook sign line and sinker for slave trading.
It's been, and I guess it's the same over there.
People are walking around in masks and so on, by and you know, it's easing up considerably now, but it's been a very depressing year.
It's just this zombie world for months on end, and that's in New South Wales, which really got off very lightly compared to Victoria.
And politically, well, it's been a state of suspended animation.
I think you'd have to say it's just been COVID, you know, 24-7 day in and day out in the mainstream media.
And most people have just been totally terrorized.
I think it wouldn't be putting it too strongly.
Yeah, so from that point of view, it's been very depressing.
Andrew, this is Keith Alexander.
Good to hear you again, by the way.
Let me tell you this, at least in America, we have a sectional rebellion going on.
The South, Texas, Mississippi, and other groups have decided that enough is enough.
We're not going to allow our economy to be put in a cryogenic state or something, you know, where we've been frozen and will be unfrozen years from now.
We're taking the bull by the horn.
We're going to reopen everything, damn the torpedoes full speed ahead.
And of course, our betters up in the north are tut-tutting about how disobedient children we are.
Anything like what happening here in Australia.
Ponder that, ponder that, Drew.
We'll be back with you in the next segment.
We're all the way down under tonight in Australia.
Always, always, always great to have Drew Fraser on the show.
He's back with us again to represent Australia here in our world tour.
Be sure to get his book if you do anything.
The WASP question you've got to read it.
We'll be right back.
I reinstated a policy first put in place by President Ronald Reagan, the Mexico City Policy.
I strongly supported the House of Representatives' pain-capable bill, which would end painful late-term abortions nationwide.
And I call upon the Senate to pass this important law and send it to my desk for signing.
We are protecting the sanctity of life and the family as the foundation of our society.
And most importantly of all, it is the gift of life itself.
That is why we march.
That is why we pray.
And that is why we declare that America's future will be filled with goodness, peace, joy, dignity, and life for every child of God.
As a parent, is receiving a faith-based, character-focused education for your children difficult to find?
Do you believe that godly principles should be a central component in your child's education?
Imagine a school where faith and integrity are at its center, where heritage and responsibility instill character.
For over 40 years, American Heritage School has been educating both hearts and minds, bringing out academic excellence.
This is the school where character and embracing the providence of a living God are fundamental, where students' national test scores average near the 90th percentile.
With American Heritage School's advanced distance education program, distance is no longer an issue.
With an accredited LDS-oriented curriculum from kindergarten through 12th grade, your children can attend from anywhere in the world.
American Heritage School will prepare your child for more than a job.
It will prepare them for life.
To learn more, visit American-Heritage.org.
That's American-Heritage.org.
As the United States boldly stepped forward in the glorious light provided by its new Constitution in 1787, the nations of the earth were in awe of the newfound strength and hope of this free land.
Today, the nation stands at a crossroads.
A divergence from the original attempt put forth in the United States Constitution has brought grave threats to our beloved nation.
A miracle is needed if the United States is to survive.
That miracle is again the pure application of the United States Constitution.
I'm Scott Bradley.
In my To Preserve the Nation book and lecture series, I bring forth truths that will help raise up a new generation of statesmen like those noble Americans who founded this land.
Vigorous application of these principles will invigorate and restore the nation, and we may become again the freest, most prosperous, most respected, and happiest nation on earth.
Visit topreservethenation.com to begin that restoration.
What a
great song.
I love that song.
Always great to have Drew Fraser on with us.
He's got as many degrees as I have children.
I mean, and I'm talking Queens University, Harvard, University of North Carolina.
He's like Paul From, though, in a way.
I mean, it's just one of the guys you just feel so relaxed with when he's on, and you know, it's going to be a great show, great content.
And Drew, you were last on with us.
If you, if you remember, I was just thinking back on it during the break.
It was a year ago this week.
It was when we were doing our March Around the World tour.
Well, obviously, last March, and you appeared on the first week of that particular series, and the whole COVID situation had just begun manifesting itself.
And I remember you reporting to us even before it started happening here that there was no toilet paper to be found in Australia.
And now here we are a year later.
It seems to be dissipating in the American South.
And as Rich Hamplin, our good friend in Nashville, said, it's a big difference.
It's not necessarily so much the South.
It's rural versus urban.
But the rural sections of the South down here are sort of turning the rudder.
And of course, the rural sections of the states dominate the state legislature.
So that's why these states and their leadership are taking the lead in basically telling the emperor that he has no clothes regarding the seriousness of this so-called COVID threat.
And that was the question Keith had for you, Drew, before the last break.
Are there sections of Australia that are sort of lax with regard to this or are bucking up a little bit to the I would say New South Wales, where I am, got off quite lightly.
The government, despite having a female premier, didn't get as hysterical as many of the other state governments.
And that's really, for me, been the most distressing part of this whole experience.
I mean, just the tyrannical response of some state governments down in Victoria, they were under lockdown where you couldn't go outside your house except to go to work if you were lucky.
You had to wear masks.
You couldn't invite people over to your house.
It was appalling.
And even as a I used to teach constitutional law for many, many years, and there's a provision in the Australian Constitution, Section 92, that guarantees the absolute freedom of trade, commerce, and intercourse among the states.
But several states, Victoria, Western Australia, and South Australia, completely locked down their states, sometimes overnight.
And this has happened repeatedly.
Then they lift the lockdown and re-impose it.
And what it meant were that, let's say, thousands upon thousands, tens of thousands of people from Victoria who had traveled to New South Wales, let's say, for whatever reason.
Once the lockdown was imposed, without warning, they were stuck here in New South Wales, you know?
No, I mean, and had to look after themselves, find accommodation, pay for their, you know, food.
I mean, like it was.
I know, it's a tremendous burden.
We've had that over here.
But see, we have this great tradition in America of the North feeling that they should tell the South and the rural areas, assume the urban areas telling the rural areas how they ought to think and what they ought to do.
And, for example, like in the Civil War, I tell people that the South was like Greta Garbo.
They just wanted to be left alone, and that continues on.
And this is just the latest manifestation of it.
We're naughty children that need to be put in timeout, basically, according to John.
It looks like, though, I tell you, Drew, it's enough state.
And this is all what we're talking about now has happened since our last broadcast.
And what I mean by that is it's happened within the last week with Mississippi, Texas, and from Mississippi and Texas, has come Arizona, West Virginia, and other states now who are completely disbanding their COVID restrictions and mask mandates.
It looks as though the dominoes are starting to fall.
And hopefully that'll be the case across the Western world and we can get back to where we were before the Great Pretend started.
But yes, it was just interesting, though, that I remembered this during the break.
It was with you on your appearance almost a year ago to the day that this really began to take hold across the world.
And now a year later, perhaps, perhaps we're beginning to come out of it.
Well, we totally held back and tried to take it seriously.
But I think it's now beyond a doubt that the whole thing is a hoax.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, I think that's true.
But still, the precedent has been set for state governments, even I guess in the South, to impose these tyrannical measures that are, you know, in a sense, unlawful.
They don't ever have to prove that there is a public health emergency in a court of law.
So, I mean, I wouldn't get too hopeful because the precedent having been said, it can happen again.
Well, on the other hand, I'm hopeful, Drew, that the precedent will be this, that like the WHO said, we won't be fooled again.
The next time they try to do this, we'll say, yeah, this is just, this crisis is just like the last crisis.
It's non-crisis.
Well, then again, though, Keith, I mean, it's like we've seen for with every radical egalitarian movement, the people never vote on it, but it still gets forced upon them.
So anyway, but we're talking with Drew Fraser about the situation in Australia.
Shift gears just the moment, Drew.
I tried to find this guy again.
It happened a couple of years ago, or rather, the situation that I'm about to bring to your attention took place a couple of years ago, and I couldn't track down the name of the person, the name of the man.
Hopefully you can.
I don't mean to put you on the spot, but there was an elected official.
I believe he was from Australia, perhaps New Zealand, but it was certainly from one of the two, who had spoken out against multiculturalism.
I believe he was some member of parliament, and he had been egged by the left.
Do you remember who that was?
Oh, yeah.
Fraser Annick.
All right.
I thought, okay.
All right.
That's why I was getting confused because you're Drew Fraser.
Fraser Anning.
Yes, okay.
That's the guy.
Well, tell us his story and tell us what happened to him.
Well, what happened to him is that, in effect, he, well, he got into the Senate because another senator who had run for the One Nation Party, which he then belonged to, resigned.
I can't remember why he left parliament and Fraser Anning stepped into his shoes.
But he proved a bit too radical for Pauline Hansen's One Nation Party.
And he was pretty much turfed out of that party.
And he tried to start a one-man party of his own, but never really got much traction.
So at the last federal election, he lost, basically, and just left the federal parliament.
And actually, I believe he's actually in the state right now, visiting with his daughter.
I'm not sure.
One of his children, at least, lives in the States, and I believe he's over there with her now.
Well, is he always answer to Enoch Powell or something?
Or what's his significance to you?
Yeah, well, no, I'm not really.
I mean, Enoch Powell was a major league politician.
This guy was pretty much a fluke senator who only was in the federal party.
He made quite a stir, however, in the short time he was there.
But he's no longer.
So that's the update we needed.
I mean, he was the guy who said some of my things.
He was a guy who said some of the right things, and now he's gone.
But nevertheless, it was an interesting story.
I remember that.
I'm sure we covered it at the time.
But anyway, thanks for the update on that.
We've got you for one more segment in Australia, Drew Fraser.
And we're thankful for it.
And we'll be back with him right after this.
Stay tuned, everybody.
Exposing corruption.
Informing citizens.
Pursuing liberty.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
USA Radio News with Dan Naraki.
The Senate has passed President Biden's $1.9 trillion COVID relief plan.
The bill passed Saturday morning along party lines by a 50 to 49 vote.
Following the measure's passage, President Biden thanked those senators who voted for it, saying it was something the country urgently needed.
I want to thank all of the senators who worked so hard to reach a compromise to do the right thing for the American people during this crisis and voted to pass the American Rescue Plan.
It obviously wasn't easy.
It wasn't always pretty, but it was so desperately needed, urgently needed.
The package now goes back to the House for reconciliation and is expected to be on the president's desk this coming week.
Biden and Congressional Democrats had wanted to get the measure into law before federal unemployment insurance expired later this month.
This is USA Radio News.
Awesome and amazing day.
Hey there, friends.
It's John and Chelsea Jubilee.
And today we have a message for you women out there.
Are you pre-menopausal, post-menopausal, or maybe you're in the middle of menopause right now?
Ouch.
Listen, we have thousands of clients that have reported reversing all of their symptoms of menopause.
Or maybe you have thyroid imbalances.
Same thing for those women.
Listen, this is your time.
Absolutely.
You can reverse all of those symptoms and you can be your real joyful, exuberant, and lean self again.
Ladies, I don't care if six doctors told you you can't lose that fat after menopause or in menopause, you can.
We have done it hundreds and hundreds of times, even in a medical setting documented.
So make your action call today.
Log on to energizehealth.com, energizehealth.com, or call 888-444-8895.
That's 888-444-8895.
Some churches in Florida, already struggling financially in the pandemic, are now facing more difficulties.
Mike Ford here reports from the USA Radio News Florida Bureau.
Some thieves appear to be targeting several churches in central Florida.
Surveillance videos show people stealing cash donations from church mailboxes.
One pastor says thieves took hundreds of dollars.
Another church in a pop get victimized three times.
Their pastor tells Orlando's Fox 35, he understands people are facing tough times, but so are churches.
But a lot of churches are struggling because tithe and offering and that sort of thing is way down because people are not in church.
Another pastor says he believes in forgiveness, but he also wants justice.
And Mark Pavlich, who played center for the 1980 Miracle on Ice Olympic hockey team, has passed away.
Pavlich died Friday in a mental health treatment center in Minnesota.
A cause of death is still pending.
Pavlich assisted on Mike Russione's game-winning goal to beat the USSR at the Lake Placid Games, later spending five seasons in the NHL.
Pavlich was 63.
This is USA Radio News.
Well, for anyone who may not be familiar, that is the Crocodile Dundee theme song.
And those were good movies for my coming of age years in the late 80s and early 90s.
Crocodile Dundee, a national hero, Paul Hogan of Australia.
And those movies were actually pretty based.
I actually went back and watched them again with my kids, I guess, last year.
And it's surprising what you could get away with in a movie like that, even in the 80s and 90s.
But I always liked those movies growing up.
And in honor of Drew Fraser, we play that and we salute you, Drew, author of The Wasp Question.
Ladies and gentlemen, let me tell you, check it out.
The WASP Question deals with the question of Anglo-Saxon life in the United States and Australia and really everywhere across the world where we have settled, our people have settled, having for the most part lost a sense of our own ethnic identity in a time of increasing globalism and international multiculturalism, which values nearly every culture except their own.
The WASPs, white Anglo-Saxon Protestants, are alternatively mocked, attacked, and ignored in their own lands.
And in this book, The Wasp Question, Drew Fraser addresses the many questions involved in the matter with impeccable erudition and proposes possible solutions for the future.
Constitutional and legal history, evolutionary biology, and Christian theology, they all come into play as Drew tackles one of the most burning questions of our time.
It's an analysis of our problems, a possible way forward faced by European ethnic group, faced by European ethnic group.
The book is going to be of interest to anyone concerned about our fate going forward.
The WASP Question, check it out.
And Keith, turn on your mic and tell us what you think about this book, this man, our guest tonight, Drew Fraser.
Well, I can say this about the WASP question.
What we have, you know, it's a great testament to our people that you could take basically the supposedly the scum of the earth in England, set them in a reasonably fertile land like Australia or the United States.
free them from the pernicious class system, and they turn every place that they went to into a garden spot.
In fact, that's the destinations for immigrants.
They want to go somewhere in the Anglosphere.
And, you know, nothing taught, you know, well, they say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.
Do you agree with me, Drew?
Yes.
And, you know, like I was just reading something about New Zealand recently that underlines everything you said about creating a garden out of the wilderness, but being reviled for it.
I mean, the condition of white Anglo-Saxon Protestants, people of British descent, is really getting quite dire in New Zealand as we speak.
Because the history curriculum, for example, is being totally inverted to place the Maoris on a pedestal representing a kind of the myth of the noble savage while the colonists,
the British settlers there, are being reviled as drunken, degenerate people who did nothing but victimize and oppress the Maori people there.
And the Maoris, as you may know, are a much more warlike people than the Aborigines in Australia.
And they've managed to build up a kind of a political machine that has a good deal of influence with the New Zealand Labor Party led by Yacinda Ardern.
All right, all right.
Yeah.
Well, no, I was just going to ask you to compare and contrast.
No, no, no, Drew, sorry for the interruption, but I was just going to ask you to compare and contrast Australia versus New Zealand.
So obviously, these are, well, we all had the opinion that New Zealand was even more liberal than Australia.
Well, we'll call them.
Well, we'll call them, you know, they're both similar nations in terms of that they are white expression nations in the far-flung reaches.
But yeah, compare Australia to New Zealand in terms of nationalistic tendencies and where we have a better foothold in one over the other.
Yucinda Adern, listen, as far as the head of state goes, you know, I certainly take her appearance-wise.
I put her up on a class with maybe Christy Noham out of South Dakota.
Is there a far-right movement in New Zealand, Andrew?
Tell us that.
We can't find it.
Hey, listen, Keith, me and Andrew are about to do some locker room talk.
You want to get back in here with the work tonight.
All right, so seriously, Drew.
I do want to give a plug because a little version of the New Zealand situation I was just giving you comes from a dissident writer in New Zealand called Kerry Bolton.
may have heard of him, but he runs a website called the European New Zealander, which I would strongly recommend that anybody of British descent or WASP ethnicity ought to have a look at.
Because if you're looking for a guide to New Zealand, he's your man.
All right.
So here we go.
Drew, two minutes left.
Two minutes left.
The final word and the entire floor is yours.
With two minutes left, give us a parting shot, a final word.
And thank you again, my friend, for appearing with us tonight as we kick off our march around the world.
New Zealand, Australia, take it, which gives us better prospects for the future, which of the two nations?
And it's all yours.
Well, Australia, of course, is much bigger geographically and population-wise than New Zealand.
So the white population here is not under immediate threat unless and until they turn the immigration tap on.
But like, as I say, New Zealand is a very isolated country, which has its advantages, but they can also be very easily muscled and bullied by the Chinese who have a big foothold there now, too, as they do in Australia.
So, and I, and I really think that WASPs, I mean, just briefly, I mean, wasps are, in effect, just about everywhere in the world, a stateless people.
I mean, V-Dare, for example, in the United States calls the historic American nation now a stateless people.
Wasps here in Australia don't have a state that represents us anymore.
Certainly they don't in Canada.
So I think, you know, people of white British descent need to recover a sense of who they are, where they came from, and where they can go together as a people.
Let me ask you this, Drew, if I could.
What's the percentage of whites or wasps, as you say, in Australia to non-WASPs, New Zealand?
Same question.
We only have seconds remaining, so that's going to be a quick answer.
Okay, 80%, roughly.
Give us five to ten.
I mean, you know, you would think with odds like that, you could win.
But if matter of the light bulb coming on over enough people's heads, it would stop.
Well, you would think that would be true in the UK, too.
but look at what's happening there.
You know, you need a government.
We talked with Adrian Davis earlier, yes.
Well, there's a reason why we seceded.
Well, I mean, look at that.
Yeah, look at America.
I mean, we've got the numbers in all of our ancestral homelands, but we don't quite have a handle on the situation anymore.
It's an interesting point.
That's right.
Well, Drew, listen.
Yeah, go.
Go, go, go.
Thank you.
No, it's okay.
I was just going to say, when I went to the University of North Carolina, if I'm not mistaken, the United States was like 90% white, you know, in my lifetime.
What year was that?
1960s when it was.
I can tell you exactly what it was.
I was born in the old days.
69, 70.
I was there for the twilight of the gods.
Hey, well, I'll tell you what.
Hey, when we get together here and have fellowship and we break spiritual bread here on this program every night with people like Drew Fraser, the gods are still in season.
And this has been a wonderful show, a wonderful night as we kicked off or marched around the world again our tour, our special series, this, and it's going to continue throughout the remainder of the month.
But to have Andrew Fraser from Australia and of course Adrian Davis from the UK, what a great way to kick it off.
Drew, as I told Adrian, you've set a high bar for the rest of the guests to match and I thank you for it and have a great rest of your day as we go into the night here in the U.S.
And we'll talk to you following behind you.
Okay, girls, about finished with your lesson on money.
Daddy, what is a buy-sell spread for gold coins?
Well, when you sell a gold coin to a coin shop that's worth, say, $1,200, you don't actually get $1,200.
But don't worry, we're members of UPMA now, so we don't have to worry about that.
Daddy, why has somebody seal that gold?
We don't have any gold at the house.
It's stored safely in the UPMA vault, securely and insured.
But the SP 500 outperformed gold.
Daddy, gold is a bad investment.
Some people do think of it that way, but actually, gold is money.
And as members of the United Precious Metals Association, we can use our gold at any store, just like a credit card.
Or I can ask them to drop it right into Mommy and Daddy's bank account because we're a UPMA member family.
Find out more at UPMA.org.
That's upma.org.
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.
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.
So two by two and three by three.
They walked in his footsteps on that dusty highway.
Two by two and three by three.
They walked in his footsteps on that dusty road.
And they died in shipwrecks and in lion's pens.
And they died on crosses and the spears of men.
But when one fell back, two more would start again to walk upon that gospel road.
Two weary travelers from Jerusalem walking to Emmaus on that gospel highway.
Two weary pilgrims from Jerusalem walking to Emmaus on that gospel.
On the highway to Galilee, as he lay us down, it was here eyewitnesses saw him walking down.
When the three broke the bread, then the word spread around that Christ was on that gospel road.
Well, you know, Keith, when the man in black talks about two weary pilgrims, you wonder if he was singing about us.
And listen, folks, listen.
Talking about Jesus Christ, and he makes mention of Christ's name in that, and good for him.
We've got that planned, too, coming up for Easter.
We're going to have a great Easter program for you.
Confederate History Month coming up in April, and I do believe we may make it.
Look, Christ and Christianity is woven into everything we do, James.
We can't.
That's why we're attacked.
I think it's why we're attacked.
But listen.
One of the many reasons.
Touche.
But Keith, very quickly before we go back to Jack Ryan, has the night off tonight.
Before we go back to the mailbag, and I want to read a few more handwritten notes that have come in from the audience this week.
How about tonight's kickoff to our March Around the World Tour with Adrian Davis and Drew Fraser?
I mean, folks, listen, if you can do better, I'd like to see it.
Yeah, really.
And I want to play this thing back and get the name of that activist out of New Zealand because we need to get him on the show too.
Well, Fraser Anning, and I don't know if he's here.
No, it's not Fraser Anning.
It's Chris Summer.
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
You're talking about, yes, from New Zealand.
Yes, Carol.
Because we haven't had a New Zealander on, I don't think.
Yeah, we should do that.
Yeah, we'll do that.
We've got to find out about it.
We also need to get a Tasmanian devil, somebody from Tasmania to talk on the show, too.
Let me see if I can pull that up here in a moment.
When you're next talking, Keith, are they a part of Australia or are they a separate country?
Well, we'll find out.
But hang on.
This comes from a first-time contributor, Tony, in South Carolina.
Mr. Edwards, I've enclosed a check and would like to purchase an autographed copy of your book, Racism, Schmaisism.
I've heard a lot about this very good book.
And thank you for speaking up in defense of our good Christian, moral, patriotic ideas and values our country was founded on and for our race.
Well, that's what we're here for, Keith.
And this guy found a home.
Tony, thank you.
And that book was sent out to you this.
We're Southern and we're Christian, and we're unapologetically avatars and standard bearers for all three.
Listen, folks, I always cringe to go through the countdown and the checklist of people who have sent in support.
We always, we never can get to it all into all the names and to all the ports of call.
But we thank you all just as equally if your name is being read or not.
Hello, James.
This gentleman writes, thank you for all you do for our white Christian culture.
God bless.
And that's from Dennis.
And he cites the book of Amos, chapter 5, verse 15.
Thank you for that, Dennis.
And thank you for the verse.
And he's right.
Listen, we make no bones about it.
We don't have our candor under a bushel.
We're here to advocate and to advance and to fight for white Christian culture.
Period.
End of story.
White Christian culture.
Period.
End of story.
And southern culture, too.
Well, thank you for that, Keith.
Yes, you could always add to that.
Yes, indeed.
But that is true.
Well, and of course, for all of our people across the Western world, but I mean, here, that's what it feels like.
Like Rich said, you know, it's not just southern, it's rural, rural southern.
You know, the hot, as always has been the case, the hotbeds of sin and degradation are urban areas where you go for restoration and for a return to you know the faith of our fathers is the rural areas.
And God bless the rural people.
Well, listen, I'm not even going to shy away from this one.
I can't read it.
I appreciate the gentleman for sending the contribution.
I'll read it the best I can.
And he knows that I love him.
And it says, Dear James, congrats on your family and thank you.
Well, thank you.
We'll just leave it at that.
It's not much of an enclosed contribution, but it is a donation with a note of interest.
You might consider having Michael Hoffman, author of They Were White and They Were Slaves on.
Yes, indeed.
Thank you so much for the letter and for the suggestion.
Yes, Michael Hoffman's work is incredibly important.
It just goes to show, even after all these years, there are still great talents and great people who we have not had on.
Michael Hoffman at the top of that list.
Bob from Franklin, Tennessee, sends in a great note.
I'm astonished at how our political landscape has become so influenced by Marxists.
Their strategy is the divide and conquer strategy.
I've begun reading a book, Unmasked.
So far, it seems to be a good book.
We watched Tucker on Fox News, and he spoke highly of that book.
Antifa is clearly a frontline Marxist group and very evil.
Well, you know, you're not lying to us, Bob.
And Bob.
It's cultural Marxism, though, now.
That's the applied Marxism du jour.
It's not communism anymore.
That's passe and old hat.
We're certainly going to remember you, Bob.
Bob, you're a good friend, a loyal and faithful listener and supporter for so many years.
We met Bob Keith so many years ago during our work with the Council of Conservative Citizens.
He and his wife, his wife is in our prayers, and so is he.
This comes from John in Texas.
Hope this letter finds you well, James.
We survived the winter storm and style down here in Texas.
We never lost power.
Always make a point of keeping lots of firewood around.
Yeah, they're self-sufficient down there in Texas.
God bless them.
Donating this money in the name of a mutual supporter.
Never give up and never quit.
Well, John, you don't have to worry about that.
Are we ever going to give up?
Are we ever going to quit?
No, we're not.
I'll use the last dime you have in the bank to keep this show on.
Well, let me tell you what I did this week.
I mean, Memphis has fallen so far from my childhood.
In my childhood, we had another week of temperatures around zero.
But of course, we had a different government.
We had a Claude Armour in charge of public works.
He got all of the broken water mains repaired and fixed within one day.
I went without water the entire week.
In fact, I was...
So one begs to ask how you bathed.
Well, I didn't.
So that explains the story.
Well, I got the bath just in time before I went out last night.
Thank goodness I did.
I would have run people out of the restaurant probably.
But I mean, it was.
See, this is good, though, to get back to because I started getting water and I had cisterns and things like this to use.
And, you know, it takes you back.
This is what we're facing in the future if we don't do something about this immigration.
We'll have third world America, third world Australia, third world England.
And we're going to go back to doing things.
We're going to be hauling water from the community well the way that they do in Africa and other third world locales now.
John down in Texas concludes his letter and his contribution.
Thank you so much, John, with a quote from Thoreau.
There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to the one who's striking at the root.
Well, do we not strike at the root of it here, Keith Alexander?
I say we do.
Well, I think we do.
Good friend of ours in New Jersey, Brother James, heard your message loud and clear last week about the money changers not being willing to do business with you.
My check is already in the mail.
Thank you, brother, for that.
It's better off that you're not giving the money changers 4% anyway.
That's one of the reasons I've always paid you by a check.
You see, Jesus threw the money changers out of the temple, but somehow they got back in.
Also, the unavoidable fact is that the money changers are discriminating against you based upon your race in violation of the Civil Rights Act.
You know, I really think that, truth be known, that's probably the reason that Jesus was killed because that's when he stopped preaching and started meddling when he ran the money changers out of the temple.
Well, let me tell you, it's the same way now.
I mean, and that's what they use to control us.
They use money to control.
Want to read this very quickly.
I want to thank our listener from, and our very, he's not a listener, he's a brother, and he's a friend up in New Jersey.
Dear James and Keith, this comes from a listener in South Carolina, and we'll let this be the last.
My goodness, we could never get to all the letters that have come in since last week's show.
Have been contributing online with a small amount of a monthly donation.
I noticed that stopped.
Was hoping it was credit card processing and the issue would be resolved.
But on your recent show, it was mentioned that we could contribute a few months in advance since you would no longer be able to accept online contributions.
So that's what I'm doing.
I might not be able to send more money this year.
That could change, but please find my check enclosed.
I was fortunate to be able to sit in with a small audience that James made during his appearance at Dixie Republic and Travelers Rest, South Carolina, earlier this year.
My reluctance to speak was due to a lack of preparation.
I was surprised that you would let some of your attendees speak that night.
And what a great show that was, Steve.
My goodness, what a great show.
I had so much.
What an honor it was to spend that time with you.
He continues, though, during the breaks or afterwards, we talked about homeschooling.
To me, that is something that needs to be more and more popular to preserve history and values.
And he talks about the need of ours, Keith, to have a full show dedicated to homeschooling and how people can do it.
And he's quite right about that.
I'd love to do that.
I'd like to tie it in with our Brown versus Board of Education show because this is what it's all come to.
They've stolen the schools.
Well, we'll do that in May.
I'll tell you.
We got the March Around the World in March.
We got Confederate History Month in April.
In May, we'll do a full show on homeschooling.
Thanks to Steve in South Carolina.
And thank you for your support.
Speech, folks, keep it coming.
We've had a great first week since our payment processing went down.
We got to have it in perpetuity.
We've got to get into Road Jim Maeus when one falls two steps away.
We've got to have it in perpetuity for Keith Alexander and our guests as we start our series tonight, Adrian Davis and Drew Fraser.
I'm James Edwards.
Our march around the world continues next week.
We're going to be going all around Europe, and you're not going to want to miss it.