April 3, 2021 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
The Political Cesspool, going 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.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to April.
Welcome to Easter weekend and welcome to Confederate History Month here on the Political Cesspool Radio Program.
It's all coming your way this evening.
It's going to be one of our busiest shows of the year tonight, this Saturday, April the 3rd.
And it's great to be with you.
After wrapping up our very special March Around the World series, we move into our other special series, an annual tradition here, Confederate History Month.
And the action is going to begin in just a few minutes when Henrik Palmgren of Red Eyes TV joins us to offer commentary on the ongoing trial of Officer Derek Chauvin.
Then in the second hour, we will kick off that aforementioned fan favorite event, Confederate History Month, when Rebecca dissident mama Dillingham returns to the show.
And then later, it is a convergence of three special events, I guess you could say, Confederate History Month, Easter.
We're wrapping up March Around the World from last month.
Brett McAtee, Pastor Brett, is going to be back, and he's going to close the show in the third hour with a very special Easter message.
All of that, Keith, and more is coming your way tonight.
We're ready.
And that's no April's Fool joke either.
We're getting this done now.
I tell you, we're going to make it happen here in April.
We're going to cover all the bases, and we're not going to slight Confederate History Month, folks.
Just, you know, rest assured, we'll find a way to cram that in there, a little bit of it, at least in every show.
And I think the next couple of shows after that, basically, that's going to be the main topic of everything.
Well, that's right.
For the remainder of April, of course, the Saturday before Christmas and the Saturday before Easter, we always focus on a Christian message.
And for good reason.
I mean, that's a big part of who we are and what this show stands for.
But and tonight, with it being the eve of Easter, we'll be doing that, Confederate History Month.
Then we're going to focus a little more heavily on our Southern History series the next few weeks.
And then when we finally get into May, we'll be back to a regular schedule for lack of a better term.
But man, listen, I couldn't have had more fun last month during the March Around the World.
But before we reflect on that and sort of set the table a little bit better for tonight, just want to read a couple of quick folks.
We can't read them all tonight.
We'll try to read some more correspondence, your dear handwritten notes that have come in throughout the month of March.
We'll try to read those intermittently throughout this month.
But dear James, this comes from Matt in Tennessee.
Thank you for all you do.
I'm sorry that I haven't donated in a while.
I'll try to support you more frequently going forward.
It's heartening to see the rapid growth in our cause over the past five to six years.
But TPC must be supported for its primary and pioneering efforts and continued outstanding programming content.
May God be with you and protect you and the TPC crew.
Well, thank you so much, Matt.
It's like I said last week, I had made an appearance on a live stream and the host, who was so well versed in the knowledge and the history of this program, said before there was this entity, before there was this organization, before there was this outlet, before there was this personality, there was TPC.
And certainly for 16 years, that's a long time, folks.
William in Colorado writes, James and Keith, thanks for all you do.
Keep up the good and much needed work.
Philip in Illinois.
Philip writes, here's a small donation to the best radio show out there.
Well, thank you, Philip, and thank you all who contributed last month in our time of need.
After facing deplatforming from credit card processing, we responded, our audience responded in a resounding way, and we answered.
And now, of course, we'll move forward.
And there is still a bit of foreboding and apprehension about going forward into an indefinite future without credit card processing.
But all we can do is respond immediately, and that has been done.
And now we'll have to continue to rely on checks for hopefully many, many, many years to come.
So just think about it, ladies and gentlemen.
This is what we'll do.
If you're listening to the show and you say, man, my goodness, Keith Alexander just made an incredible point.
If you hear something you like, write a check.
If you hear me say something and you'll think to yourself, well, James sure sounds handsome tonight.
Write a check.
Put something in the tip jar.
No, I'm kidding.
But listen, that's how we're going to have to do it going forward.
If we say something that moves you, put it in the tip jar because we are going to be deplatformed going forward.
But what a great response from the audience last month.
And we're sending out those incentive gifts.
A lot of them have already been shipped.
A lot of you have already received them.
We've still got some more to send out.
Everybody will get theirs very, very soon if you haven't received it already.
But one more thing I want to say, Keith, if I can, about the March Around the World series, especially last week's show, I think, when we had Philip the Winter, who is a sitting member of the Belgian parliament on, and of course, Nick Griffin, who is a former member of the European Parliament.
I think just shows how much more serious Europe is than America when it comes to talking about allegedly controversial issues, but having a grown-up discussion about it.
So over there, you have elected officials and former elected officials that will come on a show like this and speak frankly and candidly and honestly.
You would never get that out of a member of Congress here.
And it just goes again to show the seriousness of Europe.
And perhaps that even goes back to America's founding.
Our founding fathers were great men, but let's not pretend that they weren't a little bit punch-drunk on the Enlightenment Kool-Aid.
The whole thing with Thomas Jefferson, of course, the silliness of all men are created equal.
Well, he didn't mean that in a literal sense.
In the context of that, it was, of course, every man's a king.
It had to do with the quarrel that they had with Ken Roosevelt.
Was that every man has equal standing before the sovereign, before his, in the courts, for example, things like this?
There weren't going to be distinctions made between classes and society.
And that has been tortured and twisted now so that everybody has to have the same amount of stuff.
And if they don't have it, yeah, equal outcome.
Well, see, that's what all of this is about, James.
If you want to just get right down to the nitty-gritty, what is animating the cancel culture?
It's the profound embarrassment of the left regarding the failure of the civil rights movement.
They thought giving people equal rights would translate into equal outcomes, but it hasn't.
In fact, if anything, the black population in America is in worse shape now than they were in 1955.
Well, they're in worse shape in Haiti, too.
But I'll tell you what, they didn't play around with their constitution.
After the blacks in Haiti killed all of the whites, they made a constitution.
They were gilatoes.
They even killed the half-breed.
They made a constitution that put it in stone that a white man couldn't own a square inch of land in Haiti.
And then in Iran, no Christian can have a superior standing to a Muslim in a place of employment.
So this is, again, we hear our media in our countries, we've allowed our media or their media in our countries to say, to talk on and on and on about Islamophobia.
What about Christophobia in these Islamic nations where a Christian cannot have equal standing to a Muslim or in a place like Haiti where a white man can't even own land?
Whites must have our own advocates and we Christians too.
The advocates certainly aren't going to be the Republican Party.
See, the Republican Party has let us down time and again.
And Christians need to have their own advocates as well.
And sadly, the modern church is not it.
But we are going to have a representative.
Every institution has been taken over by cultural Marxism.
And every one of them is now aligned in a concerted effort against white people.
Period.
There's nothing you can try to hate it.
You can try to put caste in other terms, but there's no doubt about it now.
Just pay attention to the news.
The whole animus of the Democratic platform is anti-white.
All right, folks, that's our opening salvo this evening.
When we come back, what a busy show.
Henrik Palmcrant on deck.
Here he comes.
Next hour, swinging the weighted bag.
Confederate History Month.
Desident Mama, third hour, Pastor Brett McAnteable talking about Easter of the Red Break Churches this place.
Stay tuned, everybody.
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Well, my mom smokes and my dad smokes, and I saw them smoking, so I tried it.
They're telling me not to smoke, but they smoke themselves.
When it comes to smoking, are you sending mixed signals?
When you teach someone a certain way to do things and you go back on that certain way, it sends mixed signals to the person that they're trying to teach.
The parents need to be a good example.
Smoking, if you think you're old enough to start, you're smart enough to stop.
A public service message from this station and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Ladies and
gentlemen, kicking off our busiest show of the year is our very good friend, the founder and editor-in-chief of RED ICE TV, Henrik Palmgren, who was born, of course, in the land of the Goths.
Henrik, how are you?
Very good.
Good to be back with you, James.
How are you?
And happy Easter, by the way, I should say, too.
Oh, yes, indeed.
Well, thank you.
Thank you.
Happy Easter to you as well.
And always great to have you.
Of course, we just wrapped up, Henrik, our March Around the World series and what we were doing during that series.
Well, we were checking in on our kinsmen throughout various ports of call, and we've tried to feature some of the music from those representative nations or the nations that were represented, rather.
And of course, you've got a foot on two continents, born in Sweden, but now, of course, here in the U.S.
But surely you and I are about the same age.
I can remember in about 1994, that particular song being ubiquitous.
When you think of the pride of Sweden, you got to think Henrik Palmgren, Vikings, and Ace of Bass.
Do you remember them, Henrik?
Oh, yeah, of course.
Yeah, absolutely.
Brought back some memories.
Yeah, they were huge.
I mean, Abba Swedish or Norwegian or Danish or what?
Hey, Keith.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, definitely.
I mean, ABBA was definitely Swedish.
And I think Ace of Bass, I mean, even if you think of the name, they're like kind of try to mimic that style a little bit.
They're trying to mimic their, you know, the two guys, two girls, you know, and all that kind of stuff.
And I forget if someone was related.
I think one, and I could be wrong on this, but I think someone from Ace of Bass was actually related to the ABBA crew there as well.
And I think there might have been a brother and sister tandem in Ace of Bass as well.
But that was of the coming of age years.
And anyway, that was a Swedish export.
Now, interestingly, one of the members of Ace of Bass, who had that hit song that took the world by storm in the early 90s, was alleged of being a so-called neo-Nazi.
Now, of course, we know to take allegations such as that with a grain of truth, with a grain of salt, rather, because anybody to the right of Comrade Stalin is now a neo-Nazi, of course.
But anyway, interesting music, interesting backstory there with one of the band members.
I think James, sorry, interrupt, but I think it's more Ace of Bass, we need to call them, right?
That's right.
Well, you know, about Sweden, though, Henrik, let's do this before we get to Chauvin, if we can very quickly.
Sweden, you had a conflict last week, and we weren't able to get you on during the March Around the World series, but let's just do a quick, maybe five-minute touch on Sweden before we get to the Chauvin trial.
So the situation in Sweden is interesting to me because they were one of the nations that didn't have a lockdown with regard to COVID, at least a lockdown as we know it, which was interesting.
And of course, they fared quite well and made it through with no problems.
But you take that and then you counter it with the fact that they are one of the silliest with regards to racial realities, yet at the same time, it's a nation that spawned heavyweight activists like you and Dan Erickson of Europa Terranostrin.
He also has a Swedish nationalist group and so many others that we could mention.
So it's an interesting contrast with Sweden, I guess.
There's some good, some bad.
What is the state of affairs in Sweden right now?
Yeah, no, absolutely.
I think you're right.
I think the nationalist scene overall is very good in Sweden.
It's well developed.
I mean, it started really back in the 90s, some of this type of activism, and it's been going strong since a lot of different groups and things like that.
But you don't have as much, I guess you don't have, at least I don't see it.
And there are always some bickering here and there, but you don't see the big scale kind of infighting and things like that, which is a very good thing.
Smaller country, of course, it's easier.
If you compare to America, it's just so much bigger, so you would get some of that.
But no, in regards to the lockdown, though, I got to say, this is interesting because I think I said last year from the get-go that they made all the right decisions, but for the wrong reasons.
Largely and sadly at this point, the leadership, the political leadership of Sweden is incompetent.
And I think that their first reaction when everyone around the world, or at least in other parts of Europe and the West, decided to go on these lockdowns, Sweden is run by incompetent people.
And so basically, they didn't know how to do it.
So I think it was largely amazing.
It's kind of like Minneapolis, Minnesota on a grand shale, isn't it?
There you go.
Yeah, exactly.
There you go.
So I don't think they knew how to pull it off.
Well, there's some ethnic dissimilarities, of course, in both, right?
On both fronts.
But no, so they don't know how to pull it off.
And so basically, they came with this excuse that, well, we are an open and open society.
We can't just lock down and do these kinds of things.
But then you realize if they would have known how to pull this off, they would have done it.
Because now going into 2021, they have now kind of, I guess, corrected some of those mistakes.
Initially, we could use Sweden as an example to look at and say, look, Sweden didn't lock down.
They didn't suffer more.
There was no more deaths in Sweden, et cetera.
And now going into 2021, they actually have more problems.
They actually are trying to push the vaccine pretty hard.
There are some areas that are proposing stricter and stricter measures.
I'm talking to my family over there, my mom and my brother and my dad specifically.
And they're saying, like, even grocery stores now, you can't walk in more than two people.
If you're from the same household, you just can't be more than two or more in some other stores, just one person and things like this too.
And so the mask mandates are there.
So basically, Sweden is retarded.
And that's why they're one year late to the COVID lockdown party.
And moving forward, we'll see how they deal with the vaccination issue.
I'm not big on the vaccine, of course, but a lot of the conservative forces in Sweden, the more, I guess, comparable to the GOP types in America, they've been very critical of the Swedish government because they've also kind of failed on getting a lot of the vaccines into Sweden, again, because of poor leadership.
Now, again, I think that's a net plus.
That's a win for us at the end because I don't believe in this so-called vaccine.
I don't want to get too technical, but it's essentially an mRNA software update.
That's how the founder of the vaccine, of this update, sees it.
Moderna is one of the big first companies that came out with this particular method they're using now.
And Tal Zax, he's a guy born in Israel who came up with this specific method of doing it.
And he admitted recently in a video talk that, yeah, it's a software update.
It's a way to kind of hack the biology of the human and insert pieces of code into our genetic code in order to get us to fight this spiked protein called COVID-19.
But anyway, so Sweden has failed on a lot of different levels.
But if you give them enough time, they will ape after all the other countries.
So we'll see where they end up.
You know, if we're hopefully we're out of this by next year, but if not, the Sweden are still going to be there and they're going to have full lockdown at that point, I think.
That's interesting about why you said Sweden didn't rush to it.
I thought that maybe they were making a right decision.
But it's interesting to hear your take on that.
That's something, an angle I hadn't considered.
Let me ask you this with only a minute remaining, because then we've got to spend the last two segments this hour talking about Chauvin with, with a minute to go, henrik or less.
Let's talk about Scandinavia at large, Sweden Finland Norway Denmark, which is the most healthy nation right now with regards to nationalistic concerns and why you got about 30 seconds.
And who's the worst I?
I i'd say Denmark is better and I?
I'd leave that up to the fact that they at least are having discussions about this.
They are looking towards Sweden as an insane country.
They are talking about this on their television.
They're kind of making tv shows mocking Sweden.
They're looking to their, their neighbors, to the um uh, to the north um, you know, to the, to the northeast, I guess technically and uh, and just saying what are these people doing?
They're crazy, let's not do what they're doing.
Uh, in terms of nationalist movements though I think, ironically again, Sweden is better on that, but if you look at the national stage of what the country in itself is doing, Denmark is much better and i'd say Sweden's the worst.
Uh, because of you know all the, all the reasons.
We're seeing it.
They're manifesting themselves now with everything, all the insanity, the crime, the rape, the uh run and mark ethnic replacement and things like that.
So Sweden I put at the bottom of the list and Denmark at the top, and then you know Norway isn't that right.
My impression is that Denmark is basically giving these people a heave hoe, all these refugees and whatnot, and uh, Sweden seems to be taking them in.
Well, hang on right there, Henrik Palm gren, RED ICE TV.
We're going to give you all the contact information in just a moment.
If uh people are doing better work out there than Henrik and Lana, i'd sure like to know them.
It's always great to have them on uh.
They are great representatives of our people and true champions of our cause.
We'll be back with Henrik in just a moment.
Stay tuned.
Everyone pursuing liberty, using the constitution as our guide.
You're listening to Liberty NEWS Radio, USA Radio NEWS with Wendy King.
Another holiday weekend has arrived with yet another warning from public health experts, if you haven't been vaccinated, dr Ashish Jad from Brown University told ABC you shouldn't gather or travel for easter if you need to travel and you've been vaccinated.
I think that's pretty reasonable uh, but I would cut out unnecessary travel and I would hold off if you've not been vaccinated.
He also said this is probably the last holiday weekend where it's not going to be safe for unvaccinated people to mingle together.
The CDC said that vaccinated Americans can resume traveling domestically and internationally with a low risk of exposure to covet 19, as long as they wear masks in Public.
Federal officials are still discouraging people from traveling even after vaccination.
The updated guidance doesn't apply to unvaccinated people.
This is USA Radio News.
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In Washington, D.C., investigators were able to quickly identify the suspect who crashed into police officers and was killed at the Capitol on Friday.
One Capitol police officer is dead.
They're searching his social media pages, trying to find out why he did it.
In one post, Noah Green said the pandemic and losing his job was difficult.
There's also indication he had ties to Islam.
He posted that his faith is centered on the beliefs of the honorable Minister Louis Varrakhan as Jesus the Messiah, the final divine reminder in our midst.
Green said he never met Varrakhan, but he said he believes that he's the one who can carry him through his darkest hours.
In one post, he says, the minister is here to save me and the rest of humanity, even if it means facing death.
The Capitol Police tweeted they wanted to express gratitude from the support they're receiving.
The fallen officer is 18-year veteran William Evans.
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.
I like how we worked in just a little taste, a little residual taste of our March Around the World Series.
That last segment, we checked in with Henrik Palmgren, redice.tv.
That's where you need to go, folks.
Checked in on Scandinavia with him.
Of course, he is a native Swede.
And there is a common denominator between the mindset or the thought process of what's going on now in modern-day Sweden, certainly not the Viking forebears, and what's going on in Minnesota.
I'm going to make a statement.
I'm going to toss it over to Keith to make a statement, and then we're going to toss it back to our featured guest of the hour, Hendrik Palmgren.
The Derek Chauvin trial began this week, and it has been unbearable to watch.
If anybody's been watching it, it's just been so far to me a parade of witnesses, quote unquote, offering anecdotal or emotional testimony that has nothing to do with the charges against Officer Chauvin.
Now, we know George Floyd was a petty criminal who had enough drugs in his system to kill an elephant.
A rhyme olicer's mate.
But let's just pretend he was a decent person.
Let's pretend he was the nicest guy in the world.
It doesn't change the fact that he wasn't murdered.
That's what they're on trial for.
And I found the testimony of George Floyd's girlfriend to be particularly interesting, or ex-girlfriend.
She claimed that he was nice to her when they were both drug addicts.
And she cried and she hooped and she hollered.
Therefore, I guess that's supposed to prove, Keith, that he wasn't murdered because she said he was nice.
Really, all the testimony has been almost irrelevant so far, at least a lot of it.
You have white-hating partisans out to lynch Chauvin and people so scared to go against the media hype and societal narrative that they're going to say anything to save themselves.
All that should matter is the cold, hard medical evidence.
And really, if you factor that in, charges shouldn't have been filed to begin with.
Now, Keith, what's the parallel between there and Minnesota and Sweden?
And then we'll toss it back to Henry.
Well, Minnesota is probably the most Swedish state in the United States of America.
I know because even though this is Confederate History Month, I'll have to confess I was born in Minnesota.
My father had some Swedish-American buddies when he was in Patton's army in France.
And after the war, he had an English bride.
It was tough to find a job in America.
Well, he called up his buddies and they got him into an electrician's apprenticeship program up in Minnesota.
So we lived up there for several years.
I was born there.
Now, my father said they were the nicest guys in the world, he said.
But on the other hand, he said in the county I was born in, Meeker County, Minnesota, there was one in the 1950 census, not two, but one black person in the entire county.
But that didn't stop every native Minnesotan from being an instinctive expert on race relations that used to lecture him about how badly Southerners treated blacks.
And he told me that he said he would just roll his eyes.
It's like people that lived in the desert presuming to tell people that lived in the jungle about jungle survival techniques.
Well, that's the background of Minnesota.
Minnesota nice, they call it.
They are, and, you know, the butter wouldn't melt in their mouth, and they are really bum-fuzzled.
And what I think Derek Chauvin and all of this cancel culture is about is the profound embarrassment of the left regarding the failure of the civil rights movement to improve the lot of blacks in America.
Blacks in America are probably in worse shape now than they were in 1955.
And it all gets down.
And basically, everything, every failure is met with the same charge.
We haven't done enough, and racism, white racism is too strong.
That is the background in Minnesota that we're planning, you know, from which we get this Derek Chauvin trial, this lynch mob basically in Minneapolis.
All right.
I've said my piece.
Keith, you've said yours.
Let's turn it over to our friend Henrik Palmgren, who has been covering it at Red Eyes.
Henrik, take it away.
Take the whole remaining time of this segment and give us your thoughts on what you've seen so far.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
What a farce.
But just to pick up on what Keith talked about there, too, I mean, he's absolutely right, right?
It's kind of in the Swedish genes or something.
I'm not sure what, but people are, the Swedes are generally, they're nice and they're gullible and they're easily bamboozled and hoodwinked by these kinds of things.
And if it's someone who comes with enough of an emotional solvent story, they tend to tend to fold to that.
Now, there's another segment of that population that's being wise to see through it, but it's really split, maybe not down 50-50, but it's definitely a split within society right now.
And you can see that not only in Sweden, but I'd say places like Minnesota too.
But, yeah, I mean, the trial has been a farce.
I've been following it.
As you said, James, the coverage of the girlfriend is talking about.
Well, she revealed actually some interesting things in her testimony, too, regarding how they're, you know, they have, you have to unpreviously have to overdose and things like this.
Now, I learned just today, actually, about a 2019 video.
It's up on YouTube, and maybe you guys have seen it, but it's up on YouTube showing another arrest of George Floyd, where he ended up swallowing a bunch of the pills that he was carrying, right?
Remember the 2020 arrest that led to his, well, the arrest, but the incidents that caused him to pass, you know, during while he was arrested by the cops and stuff.
It's very likely, of course, that he actually took the drugs that he was holding.
You remember he was with his drug dealer at the time, right?
So the 2019 arrest, if that's a pattern that we can kind of look at to George Floyd to see a pattern of behavior, then he tried to swallow the drugs to get away from being arrested by the cops.
But they discovered this, and apparently they helped him in the clip to make sure that he, or in the video, you can see this, to make sure that he didn't OD, basically.
But what seems to happen then in 2020, he probably did the same thing, but didn't manage to get any health, basically.
And so he died of an overdose right there and then.
And of course, as you said, the toxicology report, that's what that says.
And I even saw an article from, I think it was Scientific American today, where they're trying to argue that if you look at the toxicology report and if you try to look at this from the perspective that he died of an overdose, well, then you're gaslighting all of America into believing that structural racism is not a thing and things like that.
So even scientific magazines, and even when you actually have the numbers and look at the actual science of itself, it's still not going to be good enough.
It's still not going to be an argument that they think that we should be able to use.
I'm fascinated.
We're talking about Minnesota.
Structural racism in Minnesota.
Those people would twist themselves into a pretzel to avoid any hint of racism whatsoever.
Yeah.
No, exactly.
Of course.
And so where is the racism?
They're doing everything they can to appease the new and incoming population.
And yeah, I mean, and you can see parallels, of course, in Sweden, too.
The racism accusation, the white supremacy accusation, all this stuff, it's being used as a sledgehammer against the white culture.
Well, basically, if you have institutional racism, systemic racism, white privilege, basically means that all white people are guilty regardless of what they say or how they act.
Well, this is ground zero because this is the most anti-racist state, very possibly in America.
And now it is the hotbed of structural racism.
It's like the Birmingham church bombing all over again, the way the media is spinning this.
Henrik, would you say why are we emotionally, to the extent that we are emotionally invested in this?
I mean, I guess we are watching this with interest.
That's a more appropriate way to put it.
Would you say in some ways, Chauvin, who may have been a complete and total jerk?
He may have been a guy that we wouldn't have been friends with or had anything in common with.
But do you think he is in some way serving as a proxy for all whites under the regime's mismanagement of the system towards us?
Is that why we're taking a look at this a little harder than most trials?
Yeah, absolutely.
I think that's what happens in these kinds of cases.
As you said, now you can classify all whites in the same way, and he becomes white supremacy in this case personified.
And so there's a witch hunt out here how to get him.
And I also think what Keith said there, see, if they can get the least, and again, this is to use their vernacular or kind of their accusations.
I don't believe America is a racist country at all, considering everything that it does to appease, and it bows backwards to show itself not being racist.
And all these things, whites are basically walking off the stage of history just to prevent being called racist.
But regardless, if they can get the least racist state in America to be looked at as like the heart of where white supremacist is, or that that's a problem in that kind of state, that's kind of an immediate then indictment of all the other states in itself.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like setting the bar, if you will, really low, or if you look at it from their perspective, really high.
So if you can get Minneapolis to be this evil boogeyman state, what chances are the other states going to have in trying to redeem themselves in the public side, right?
A lot of this is symbolic, you know, I think, to be honest.
Well, you know, the problem, too, is that now we need to look at Derek Chauvin and any other hapless white person that gets caught up in this web of anti-racism.
Keith and Derek Chauvin, for example, here's what I see as a lawyer.
I'll just cut to the bottom line.
We need to relearn the lessons of jury nullification in places in these urban centers where you have a majority minority population or a very significant minority population.
And you know that these people are going to vote on the jury tribally.
They're going to look at the skin tone of the defendant and the victim.
And if the accused is white, heaven help him.
We're going to have to get white people on those juries that have the backbone to say, I'm not going with this.
I'm going to fight it.
And I'll take the heat.
Keith, there's two white men on the jury.
The rest are either women or blacks.
Two white men, and they're both millennials.
So is that a jury that's favorable for sure?
No, this guy's going down.
I hope not.
Well, look, I want justice to be served.
I mean, that's us.
I mean, we're the fair play, guys.
Well, hang on, everybody.
RedEyes.tv.
Hendrik Homgren, the one and only.
He's back with us for one more segment.
Yeah, this is David in engineering.
This is your wife in suburbia.
Oh, hi, Henry.
What's up?
How's the robot coming?
Well, it doesn't exactly respond to requests yet, but I'm still waiting for my romantic lunch date.
Oh, yeah.
David.
I must not have enough memory, allocated.
Uh-huh.
Sorry.
You know, your son said mama today.
Really?
Uh-huh.
Well, we'll have to have that sound changed to a dada.
Well, you could reprogram it yourself, you know.
I know.
Hey, why don't we do it over lunch today?
Oh, you really are proud of things.
Thanks.
You want me to bring the robot?
David.
He can order pasta in 11 languages.
Only if he pays for his own lunch.
Okay.
Oh, don't forget to bring Chip.
I still wish we hadn't named him that.
Why?
It beats general defaults.
Oh.
Family, isn't it about time?
Do you know that a baby processes information three times faster than an adult?
An adult what, bitch?
An engineer.
Funny, funny.
I'll see you in this.
I can't wait.
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Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
Always great to talk with Henrik Palmgren, of course.
He is a media guy and he is a pro.
And I want to ask you to support his work.
He and Lana are dear, good friends, and they are suffering the same attacks and hatred and censorship that all truth tellers face.
So go to redice.tv and support them in any way that you can.
I would consider that to be a personal favor.
Send them a check.
They're trying to choke point out all the money that goes to everybody.
And quite frankly, I think that Henrik and Lana have been walking point on that problem.
I think Lane.
Oh, yeah.
Now the poster children for that.
We share scars.
We compare the scars every time we talk, indeed.
Well, I'm going to read you something in just a moment, Henrik, from Paul Craig Roberts.
But first, I want to ask Keith this very quickly.
We were talking about the demographics of the jury and whether or not, in your legal opinion, Keith, Keith is, of course, an attorney by trade, if that was going to be favorable.
And I think we worked that in.
But we were talking about this at supper a couple of nights ago, Keith.
30 seconds, because I want to toss it back to Henrik.
He's the guest.
But should the judge be allowing these emotional theatrics in the courtroom?
I mean, you've got people in there sobbing and hollering as if George Floyd was their son.
It was somebody, I mean, they were witnesses on the day of it.
They didn't know him.
They're up there breaking down like somebody had just saw their wife in half or something.
Well, it's a cultural difference.
It's like the difference between a white funeral and a black funeral.
Basically, you prove how close you were to the deceased by how much emoting that you do.
Well, at least at a black funeral, they presumably knew the deceased.
In this case, you can't even say that.
I don't know.
But, you know, this has nothing to do legally.
A good juror is supposed to put emotionality aside and look at the facts.
But that's all the prosecution has to go with, of course, though.
I mean, the thing is, they're going to do it.
If they try not to let that in because it's irrelevant legally, they're going to be caught in the same web.
They're going to be accused of structural racism.
See, if you cannot accommodate your judicial procedure to black sensibilities, like he who cries loudest wins the case, well, you know, then that is more, that's another example of systemic racism.
And we haven't made enough allowances for black people in their ways.
All right, Henrik.
So, Paul Craig Roberts, who, of course, was the former Secretary of the Treasury under Ronald Reagan, he's been on my program.
I think y'all have interviewed him as well.
He says things now so stout that it would make us blush.
I mean, Paul Craig Roberts is a truth teller extraordinaire, and his articles are.
He backed off for a while.
He tried to get away from the racing, but I think it was a lot of people.
The last couple of years, listen, but he's basically said, look, it's so much in your face now.
I got to say that.
No, the last couple of years, this guy, he's telling the truth.
The truth is Garrett Snuff, as we say down here.
Here's what he wrote about this case.
And I want Henrik's response.
The truth in Officer Chauvin's is Officer Chauvin's true defense, but it's unlikely to play a role.
The prostitutes have presented the prosecutor with the case of his career.
He is not going to let the facts get in the way of Chauvin's conviction.
Neither does the judge want the vilification of a fair trial that a fair trial would bring.
The jurors all understand that if they let Officer Chauvin off, they will be outcasts and suffer violence to themselves and their property.
The entire community knows that unless Chauvin is convicted, their city will again be looted and burned.
Indeed, the many cities that experienced the George Ford protests feel the same way.
A person already convicted by the media cannot be let off, even if innocent.
It would take an heroic jury to find Chauvin innocent, Paul Craig Roberts writes.
His conviction will constitute another blow to law and order.
The emboldened criminal population that is being created will be hard to contain.
Now, it's anarcho-tyrannies.
Sam Francis' concept of anarcho-tyranny brought to its ultimate conclusion.
Anarchy.
The good people suffer from anarchy by not having the law enforced against people like Floyd and whatnot.
And they've already, on the other hand, it's tyranny where law-abiding citizens are now the targets of the prosecutorial machinery of the United States.
And they've got the autonomous zone already set up there, Henrik, and all the wheels are in motion.
So the media scrutiny, charges have never been brought, but now, my goodness, the pressure that everybody's under, the witnesses, the judge, the judge, and the jurors are on trial rather than George.
All right, go.
Henrik, take it away.
And what happens come what may with the decision on this?
Oh, no, I mean, I think they're going to fry this guy.
And it's mostly symbolic.
And again, keep in mind, there's no professionalism left in the legal system, but you talk about Keith.
Everybody reads the New York Times, the Washington Post, you know, whatever papers it is.
They go up in the morning.
They are programmed by the same things to assume that we still live in a society where people are judges for that matter, too.
Not just the jurors, but the judges are somehow separated themselves and can be impartial and objective.
That's long gone and dead.
I think that they're going to be like bamboozled and forced because of, you know, he's guilty in the eyes of the media already, in the eyes of the public.
And so it's like a Soviet system.
It's like a Stalinist show trial.
It's like a Stalinist show trial.
It's a show trial.
Yeah, they only know what they want to do.
We already see the writing on the wall.
We know where this is going.
And these cases is just, you know, one drift to get us there.
It's one little insh at a time.
It's the way they move forward.
That's what I'm seeing here.
I think it's absolutely crazy.
And we used that too earlier, James.
We played a clip yesterday in our show.
I forget what his relation was, but yeah, it was a black guy, older man, with like really white glasses, very, you know, pronounced.
And he was doing the sob story and crying.
And he was bringing in that his own mama had died or something like that, which was completely irrelevant to the issue.
And the judge, I think, issued like a 10-minute pause after this so everybody could recover.
And then they cut back to CNN with the anchor crying and things.
It just went on and on.
It's like they have the fantage and they faint and they get out the smelling salts and everything else.
It's just the craziest.
It's almost like a caricature.
Yeah, it is.
It's a farce.
And at the same time, it's very serious because it's, as you guys have been talking about here, it's a white America there on the stand, basically, right?
On trial.
And they're going to lock him up and throw away the key.
The police.
Yeah.
Well, we keep saying they're going to lock him up.
I mean, I would have said that for George Zimmerman and the officer in the Michael Brown situation, too.
But do you think, Henrik, justice was served in both of those cases.
Both of them walked.
They were acquitted.
That's, of course, what should happen here.
Do you think that society has changed so much in just the last, what, how long has that been?
That's exactly what this trial.
That is the key of this trial right now.
Has left flipped the paradigm for us now.
Yeah, I mean, I'm more cynical.
I'm more conspiratorial than that.
And I think that the Zimmerman cases and some of these other ones that we've seen have kind of continued to play into all of this.
And one of the reasons why the anger is so pronounced around a case now like George Floyd and the riots are so intense is because that's now in the history, folks, right, of those conclusions of those trials.
And so all of this is building up and adding on slowly.
And so who knows?
You might be right, James, that maybe they will continue to acquit him, which means that the opposition here, the anger, the racial hostility would be, it's going to go be like nothing we've ever seen before.
It's just getting worse and worse all the time.
But if he is, of course, they'll never try to control this effectively.
They'll let them go hog wild and pay crazy.
Well, I actually, I just watched a new Godzilla movie today, and Godzilla, it was not the newest one, but every time you knock Godzilla down, he comes back stronger and stronger.
And at the end of the movie, he's thermonuclear.
So what happens actually if Chauvin is found not guilty, which I believe obviously he should be based upon the evidence, based upon the evidence.
If evidence matters at all, he should be found not guilty.
If he is found not guilty, Henrik, I mean, could you even fathom what's going to happen in Minnesota and across the country?
Yeah, and particularly in Minnesota, because they will not fight back.
The authorities will not do anything to control it.
What do you think, Henrik?
No, no, no, exactly.
I mean, it would be complete chaos.
But the meme I saw was like, you know, if he, if Chauvin, you know, get, you know, if he wins his case, it'll be a riots.
If he doesn't, it'll be riots too.
It'll be a riots, whatever we do.
And whatever happens, it will always be riots.
And there's no way out of this situation, right?
That's the thing.
And that's why people like Jared Taylor and you guys and many others have talked about this, that we've got to think up of a different plan here.
We can't just keep moving forward.
With business as usual, we can't live like this.
It's impossible.
And I don't know who would want to live under these conditions.
We've got to have something else to come out of this, an amicable divorce, as Jared Taylor usually say.
That's the only way forward, I think, to be honest.
It's either going to be riots out of, well, because that's what they do, or a celebratory riot.
Henrik, with just a minute remaining, let's get all your contact information, folks.
These are the best of the best.
Henrik Palmgren and Lonal October, what they're doing at Red Eyes.
We love them.
He's a brother, and we want to stand shoulder to shoulder all the way to the end, whether it's a victorious end or if we go down doing our duty, we're going to stand together.
How can we stand with you, Henrik?
Thank you so much, James.
Always appreciate it.
And you guys are always so kind and generous, and you've been so nice to us.
And so thank you so much to you guys for all your support over the years.
And it's an honor to be here with you guys and fighting and being on the show with you guys as well, getting all this crazy information out in terms of what's happening.
And so everyone out there as well, ladies and gentlemen, do support the political cesspool.
James and Keith are doing great work and they need it as much as we do, as many of us do in the movement now.
As Keith said, it's Operation Chokepoint.
And you guys know exactly what that feels like being shut down by processors and banks and all this crazy stuff.
It says the volume is being turned up.
But if you want to check out what we do, RedEyes.tv is, of course, the best way to go about it.
If you guys want a membership and check that out, so a little bit extra that we do for the subscribers to our show, you can check out RedEyesMembers.com where we do some exclusive shows and stuff like that.
We don't have a payment processor, but we still have some third-party kind of workarounds.
We'll see how long that holds out.
And as long as we have a pen and a paper, people can sit a check.
I mean, the USPS has to deliver, at least for now.
We still have that.
I never thought that the government would be our friend, but compared to the private sector now, I think the government is our friend.
Well, that's yes.
With Jared Taylor holding his conferences at a state park and us having to rely now on the Postal Service to receive any support, that's where we are.
Henrik, I love you, brother.
Happy Easter.
Godspeed.
We'll talk again soon, whether it's on Red Ice or here.
You and Lona are always welcome, and I know we'll talk again soon.