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May 8, 2021 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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20210508_Hour_2
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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.
I found in my mother's eyes.
Once again, everybody, to all the ladies out there, to my mother and to the mother of my children, and to all mothers tuned in tonight.
Happy Mother's Day.
Tomorrow is Mother's Day.
And Keith Alexander, your mother is still with us at the very young age of 94.
94.
God bless her.
How about that, ladies and gentlemen?
Give a big round of applause to Mrs. Alexander.
Right, an English war bride, actually.
You know, we were talking with Mark from England.
I didn't mention that to him, but you know, it's funny.
I had, at least on one side of my family, ancestors that were servants at Waddeston Manor, which is the ancestral home of the English Rothschilds.
Talk about being in the belly of the beast.
But, you know, motherhood is what we need to have more of.
We need ladies to choose to be mothers.
There we go.
That's what we need.
And we need more men to make mothers out of women.
Now, this was the conversation we had last week with Roger Devlin.
We don't want them making mothers out of women against their will.
We need men having the mothers.
I don't think anybody is suggesting that.
But no, I wanted to revisit that very briefly in the first hour.
And we went into a little overkill on it and stuck with it a little bit too long because we had trouble connecting with Mark Collett.
But it is an important conversation.
And as I made mention of, though, in the first hour, my wife and I celebrated our 15th anniversary just this past week.
And I bring that back up again this hour because we took a little trip, a midweek trip, and we toured the rural South.
And I made some observations on that trip that I thought might be worthy of sharing with you here on this broadcast.
So I want to thank first again Mark Collett.
Again, a micro interview, but an important interview because he is an important leader and we'll be working with him much more steadily and frequently going forward.
But Mark Collett, our featured guest for tonight, if you missed him, if you're just tuning in, check out the first hour a little bit later.
But yes, my wife and I and our children, we went out of town and you got to get out of the cities, Keith.
You and I were talking about this at supper a couple of nights ago.
You got to get out of the cities.
You got to go to the rural counties.
And that's where the real people are of the South.
And you got to visit their museums.
Okay.
And I went to a museum, a small little city museum.
I'm not going to tell you what, I'm not even going to tell you what state it was in, but they had a War Between the States exhibit.
And this is what The exhibit on Nathan Bedford Forrest read, and I know we it seems as though once again we're doing a little bit of march around the world, a little bit of Confederate History Month, but it just turned out that way.
But Nathan Bedford Forrest in this exhibit at this museum, he was the most respected and feared cavalry commander of the war.
The wizard of the saddle was wounded four times and famous for having 30 horses shot out from under him.
He was a master of the lightning raid and an expert at winning against long odds.
The exhibit went on to read that he was born, and you know this if you've listened to this show, but born in Bedford County, Tennessee, the son of an illiterate blacksmith, Forrest had become a wealthy planner by the time the war began.
With a little formal education and no military training, he relied on frontier experience and natural instincts.
In 1861, he enlisted as a private, then raised and equipped an entire cavalry battalion out of his own pocket.
Explaining how he won his victories, Forrest said he did so by getting there first with the most men and planning and making my own fight and never having the other fellow make the fight for me.
One of his greatest innovations was the use of cavalry as a mounted infantry.
As his reputation grew, he was frequently able to bluff the enemy into surrendering after minimal resistance and minimal use of force on his part.
Forrest rose from private.
Listen to this, ladies and gentlemen.
Listen to what I'm about to say.
Forrest rose from private to lieutenant general, a feat accomplished by no other American soldier in any war.
After the war, Robert E. Lee stated that Forrest accomplished more with fewer troops than any other officer on either side.
Only American in history to rise from private to lieutenant general.
General Sherman recognized Forrest, the exhibit at this museum continues, as a major threat.
Forrest must be hunted down and killed if it cost 10,000 lives and bankrupts the federal treasury.
Sherman repeatedly committed key federal troops from West Tennessee into northern Mississippi to pursue Forrest.
But outmaneuvering and outwitting his adversary at every turn, Forrest thwarted all of Sherman's attempts.
After the war, Sherman would describe his former foe as, quote, the most remarkable man our war produced on either side, end quote.
And at the end of the exhibit, it had a huge piece of signage that read, an endangered heritage, and it had a Confederate flag underneath it.
That is a city museum in the rural South.
Get out of the cities, go to the rural counties.
That's where the real Southerners still reside.
And to this day, very little has changed.
It was so heartwarming to see a museum with those types of exhibits.
I went up to the curator and the proprietor after my tour, and I didn't introduce myself.
I didn't say who I was or what I do.
I wanted to be completely anonymous.
And I just thanked them for having the truth, for telling the truth about our Southern heroes.
And they thanked me for thanking them and said that we got to stand up and we got to stand for what's right against these liberals, quote unquote.
So there you have it, Keith, and we talked about that.
Rural versus urban cities versus these outlier counties.
There's still real history there.
There's still real people there.
There's still the real South there.
You got to travel a little bit to find it.
You got to get out of the cities.
But it was a wonderfully refreshing trip.
And I can't think of a better way to spend our 15th anniversary.
We did that with the kids just a couple of days ago.
I think it's going to be increasingly important not just to visit areas like this, but to move to them.
I think that cities like Thomas Jefferson, like Charles Dickens, and like all sorts of luminaries of white literature and history have said through the past, are the center of everything that is bad.
And that's certainly true now.
It's very dangerous to live in a city for a white person who has conservative instincts.
You will be before a, for example, majority black jury or a majority left-wing jury like Derek Chauvin was recently.
You can't depend on justice in areas like that.
So I'm seeing, I think, I think that the best advice we can give people is to head to the hills.
Hill Country in particular is where you will find majority white populations that think traditionally about values and about culture and about our heritage.
That's the type of area in which you need to set down roots and raise a family.
All right, stay tuned, everybody, when we come back.
More observations from this trip that I think you may enjoy.
And we're going to get into the biggest news stories of the week and break those down for you as well.
It's all coming this hour, so stay tuned.
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.
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Car with me, come time, the calendar flips to May.
You're listening to music like that.
That's the Beach Boys.
Summer is in the air.
Get out and go somewhere.
That's Little Honda.
And summer doesn't officially begin until Memorial Day.
I don't guess it naturally begins until the summer solstice in June.
But this is about, it feels summery out there.
So we're going to go ahead and crank up those Beach Boys and get out and go.
We did this week, Keith, heading out to the rural South with my wife and kids.
I actually lived when Honda 50s, nifty, thrifty Honda 50, broke on the scene.
I was in about the seventh grade.
And suddenly you got all these neat-looking guys.
Before, motorcycles were for guys with leather jackets and greased back hair and whatnot.
And they had oil coming out from the Cushman or from the heart that you had.
Suddenly, instead, you get these nice, neat guys wearing, you know, HIS trousers or whatnot, perma press trousers with button-down collar shirts with a nice girl with Page Boy collar blouse on driving, riding on the back of her boyfriend's Honda 50.
And that was, I mean, look, you talk about the American dream for a teenager when I was coming up.
Having a Honda 50, that was it.
I mean, that was it.
Driving around there, it gave you freedom to go anywhere you wanted to go.
And it also had a wholesome aura about it, unlike the old motorcycles.
So this was really a revolution when it came out.
And that's the song that commemorates that revolution.
All right.
Well, there's the history behind the song that I didn't know.
Anyway, back to this tour of the South that we were on a few days ago.
So if you don't know, you can go to most, certainly the majority of courthouses in the rural South, and you'll still find Confederate monuments there on the courthouse grounds.
And sure enough, when we were visiting, had one as well.
And it was an obelisk raised in memorial to the Confederate soldiers.
And this is what it read.
This monument erected in honor of the gallant Confederate soldiers of such and such county who fought and died and suffered during the war between the states, 1861 to 1865.
Sacred is the memory of the men and women for the sacrifices they made in defending their homeland.
Your glory shall not be forgotten.
On the back of it, it reads, poor is a nation that has no heroes.
Shameful is a nation that has heroes and forgets them.
No nation can long survive without pride in its traditions.
We're not living in the past, ladies and gentlemen, but the past does live in us.
Our ancestors do live in us.
And I am not choosing necessarily Southerners over our racial collective.
But I will always defend the South.
I will always defend my most immediate flesh and blood.
Now, granted, just because we defend the South, first of all, and there's no shame in that, the South was right.
The South was right about everything.
They're proven more right every day.
But we're not abandoning the rest of our kinsmen across the world.
In fact, you know, we were talking about all of the incredible men we featured during our march around the world.
People like Paul Fromm, people like obviously Nick Griffin.
You just heard from Mark Collett, Philip DeWinter, everybody that was featured in the march.
Again, don't want to start a list because we'll leave someone off.
They all are there.
I would choose any of them, all of them, are more of a brother to me than a guy like Russell Moore, who is a Southern, a man who was born in the South, born in Mississippi.
He's no ally or friend of mine and would have no home in an ethno-state.
I certainly value my kinship with these people more than Southerners like that, traitors to his heritage, traitors to his ancestors.
But I think it is interesting, and I think we can certainly say, Keith, that had the South won the war, the South would have stayed the same.
I think to this day, the South would have looked very similar to the South of the antebellum era.
Now, obviously, I'm not talking about slavery.
That was going to go anyway with mechanization and the Industrial Revolution.
But we would still live in a nation that honors our ancestors.
And by the way, a listener in South Carolina may mention of the fact that May 10th is Confederate Memorial Day, which is still a state holiday in South Carolina, and some state offices will be closed in honor of Confederate Memorial Day next week in South Carolina.
But you certainly wouldn't have homosexual marriage if the South was its own independent nation.
You wouldn't have transgenderism.
You wouldn't have abortion, the murder of children.
You would have a much more healthy, wholesome, godly society.
And still to this day, of course, the South is the moral runner of America.
But unfortunately, it gets overturned by courts.
And one problem that Southerners have, of course, well, there's a few problems Southerners have.
They still race to join Uncle Sam's army and fight against their own interests in all of these unconstitutional demonic wars.
I can criticize Southerners.
It's like we say, I can criticize my mom, but you better not.
I can criticize my nation, but you better not.
So we have some problems, but I think ultimately, had the South won, not much would have changed because not much has changed in these rural counties.
Well, let me tell you that they are trying to take care of that as we speak.
The long march through the institutions is going through public and private schools, even here in the South.
And because of that, we need people standing up for us in our state governments.
And thankfully, in Tennessee, we have just that.
The Tennessee legislature recently, within the past couple of weeks, has passed two very, very important and hopeful legislative initiatives.
The first is permitless concealed carry of firearms.
We do not have to have a permit now or concealed carry class to attend in order to carry a gun.
That is what our ancestors intended us to have, James, which was to have, you know, the right to bear arms in the Second Amendment.
Try this one, Keith.
Your mic is coming in quite tinny, and it has been for a while.
I don't know if it's both mics.
Let's try this one.
Okay, well, what's happening is that in Tennessee, you now can carry your promia.
You're about to have a promotion.
And that's wonderful.
That's wonderful that we're able to do that because.
James, turn that off.
I can't.
Keep talking.
We got to test this.
Look, the Tennessee legislature has done two things.
First of all, it has caused us to have permitless right to carry arms.
That's great.
Second thing is they have now prohibited the teaching of critical race theory in the public schools of Tennessee.
And if a particular school district balks, like the Memphis, Tennessee, or the Shelby County, Tennessee schools here in Memphis, then they will have their money cut off by the state of Tennessee, which would be a disaster in Memphis.
So consequently, we are taking the lead in fighting the culture war.
And other southern legislatures, state legislatures, are doing the same thing.
And that's a wonderful, wonderful sign that the South is rising again.
The South is still the same place that it was during our fathers and our grandfathers and our great-grandfathers' lives.
And we still have the same values.
It's wonderful to have a state legislature that is as brave as Tennessee.
and I challenge every other state to follow suit.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
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It's time to jump back into the political cesspool.
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Call us at 1-866-986-6397.
Well, it only took us half the show, but we did get the gremlins exercised from the wiring and from the system.
From our new system.
Let's be candid.
We were trying out a new system today and we're working out the king.
And the new, well, we've been trying over the last couple of weeks, and the new system is superior to the old system.
It's just that the problem was on my end with regards to the connection and the way it was executed.
And so, again, when you're using a new system and you're breaking it in, it's still a little bit of a learning curve, and it had gone very well the last two weeks.
And so, anyway, apologies for the tinny sound of the first half of the show, but I guess it's better that the last half will be crystal clear as opposed to none of it being crystal clear.
And we learned a valuable lesson, and we'll know how to rectify that going forward.
And so you live and you learn, and it is live radio.
And after 17 years, the old dogs can still be taught new tricks.
Well, we'll just wonder what the next snafu will be.
Just stay tuned, folks.
Well, it's live radio.
We prove it, that's for sure.
But anyway, thanks to our producer for walking us through some troubleshooting during the last break.
And that's another good reason we have breaks.
We can try to work things out.
It's sort of like when you're crashing.
You're a pilot and you've got a checklist you got to go through to keep everything in the air or on the air.
The ground keeps getting closer and closer.
Well, anyway, here we are.
I guess you could still hear every word, right?
As they say, could you hear every word?
I mean, it might have sounded like hell, but anyway.
Okay, so I had been sharing some observations from a recent trip, a really exciting trip in some ways.
And we saw rural Main Street USA, and we drove through several different counties.
And don't you find it refreshing, though, James, that the Tennessee legislature is stepping up to the plate and trying to make some changes that will help preserve our heritage.
You mentioned a moment ago about the everybody in Tennessee is a gunslinger now.
You don't have to go through.
You don't have to get a permit.
And that's what the founding father has permit.
No, that's a great thing.
Also, the Tennessee legislature, and see, this is what I'm talking about.
The South would have been relatively unchanged had it not been for Artifici in Lincoln's War.
Tennessee just this week, the Tennessee state legislature.
Now, look, I'm not saying they're rock-ribbed, but they're good for a state legislature.
I mean, they're not going to speak truth to power with regards to racial realities.
They're going to run and hide from that.
They're not everything that they need to be as men, but they're certainly a sight better than most of the state legislatures throughout the country.
But the key is, though, James, the key is this.
If you want to know how to separate the sheep from the goats among conservatives, do they worship at the shrine of the civil rights movement or do they not?
Do they say that Martin Luther King was the best thing since floating soap or do they not?
Do they say that Democrats are the real racists or do they say that the whole concept of racism is bogus and that really what you ought to fear more than being called a racist is being called a race traitor?
That's where we are now in America.
Well, they're not going to take a stand like you would hear here on TPC, which is what they should and what we would hope for, but many fall short of the standard.
But the Tennessee state legislature did put in a ban just the last few days on the teaching of quote-unquote systemic racism or critical race theory in Tennessee schools.
And up until just last year, they still proclaimed Nathan Bedford Forest Day every year.
So this thing with regards to the teaching of systemic racism and critical race theory, it'll be interesting to see if there's any teeth to the legislation.
Well, what will happen is that a liberal stronghold like Memphis and its black leadership is going to push back.
And then what will the state legislature do?
What's the nuclear option for the state legislature?
The nuclear option would be to say we are now revoking the city of Memphis' charter.
They have proven themselves totally incapable of adequately governing their city.
So we will now revoke that charter.
All of their elected officials are now unemployed.
We're going to restaff their schools.
We're going to restaff their government offices with people that we have confidence will know what they're doing.
And that would really be a bucket of cold water in their face.
And we wonder what the reaction would be, whether the federales would try to come in and take over or what would happen.
This is really, you know, the only group that seems to have any backbone that will stand up to the onslaught of liberalism in America today are state legislatures and then county sheriffs.
We are waiting for the county sheriffs to come up with real initiatives the way that the Tennessee state legislature is doing.
And I hope we see more of this, not just in Tennessee, but throughout the country.
And there's still weakness.
There's weakness out of the relatively cucked governor, Bill Lee, in Tennessee.
The state of Tennessee did just remove the Nathan Bedford Forest bus from the state capitol.
I mean, they fall far short of the standard, but as far as state legislatures go, you will get some of these things that are quite favorable and quite good.
I mean, the permit thing is good.
They need to be better.
They need to do better.
We want them to do better.
We'll continue to stay on it.
But I'm just saying, would you rather have the Tennessee state legislature or the California state legislature?
What you're talking about, once again, and this goes back to the whole theme of this hour, my observations on this recent trip, you get, and again, a big difference even in Tennessee with rural Tennessee, rural counties in Tennessee, and Nashville and Memphis.
Okay, but you're talking about two different nations.
You're talking about two different nations, Tennessee, California, two different nations.
They should have been split.
They deserve to be split.
Frankly, the United States is bringing the South down.
The South needs to go its own way.
And that would be good for all of our people.
Yes, I am all about the group collective.
I care more about people like Mark Collett than I do cucked out people like Russell Moore.
But the South needs to be independent.
Well, just think about this, though, James.
What was it that brought about this zeal for domination by forces outside of the South?
It's exactly what it was in the Civil War.
Apparently, there's so much to be gained in terms of satisfaction and pleasure in tormenting the South that the North just could not let the South go its own way.
That's all they wanted.
We were like Greta Garbo.
We didn't want to dominate them.
We didn't want to tell them what to do, but they certainly wanted to do that with us.
We were like Greta Garbo.
We just wanted to be left alone.
Now, let's talk about rural red state conservatives.
Now, I'm not even talking about the Tennessee state legislature here.
I'm talking about the people that I met on my tour of the rural South versus Northern conservatism.
And Northern conservatism, I think, could quite rightly be pinpointed in where we stand currently by this interview that Sean Hannity gave to Bruce Jenner.
Bruce Jenner in character as Caitlin Jenner in this particular interview.
Of course, Bruce is running for the governor of California as a woman.
And here's Sean Hannity, who is supposedly one of the top two.
Who's gushing about him?
Top two talking heads on cable news for so-called conservatism.
And Bruce Jenner, as Caitlin, is supposed to be the outsider running for the California.
And she is the new white hope for California.
Well, see, even you call him she.
Well, see, what I'm telling you, though, is this.
Look, take him or her at the same time.
Look, it's not a her.
It's a man.
Bruce Jenner is a man.
He was born Bruce Jenner.
He has male chromosomes.
He can mutilate himself and dress and drag.
He's not a woman.
And for Sean Hannity to get on there and refer to him as a her, and Bruce is Caitlin.
Yes, you can change your name if you want to, I guess.
But you're not changing your DNA.
You're not changing your partner.
What's important is that if that is the Republicans' idea of the new white hope for America and for California, we definitely need a new party because that party is not anywhere near where the people of the American South are.
And then you've got George W. Bush, who, again, another one of these Yankee scallywags who set up shop in the South, George George H.W. Bush.
Yeah, H.W. Bush.
H.W. Bush.
This is the son.
This is his progeny.
And he's saying now the GOP, and of course, the corporate media is trying to rehabilitate his image now as an acceptable.
He was a racist.
He was Curious George.
They had monkey memes about him.
He was stupid.
And he probably was.
But I'm just saying now they're all for him.
And he said just this week, the GOP isn't going to win anything.
This is a direct quote.
GOP isn't going to win anything if it stands for white Anglo-Saxon Protestants.
Well, I would love to put that theory to the test because that is exactly the way the GOP is trending.
Sean Hannity, Bruce Jenner, and George W. Bush be damned.
Well, George W. Bush is down east Yankee stock from sissy bunkport, Maine, as I call it.
That's where they were.
They came down to the oil patch to try to make a hat full of money because there wasn't a lot of money to be made in the pine forests of Maine.
But again, skull and bones men from Prescott Bush to George H.W. Bush down to George W. Bush.
And let me tell you a little secret about George W. Bush.
He really is stupid.
I remember reading U.S. News and World Report in the run-up to the 2000 presidential election, and they had in-depth analysis of both Al Gore and George W. Bush.
Both of them made within five points of each other on the SAT.
And one of them got into Harvard, the other into Yale.
I made over 200 points higher than either one of them and never considered myself to vaguely be Harvard or Yale material.
Why are we picking dumb bunnies like Al Gore and George W. Bush to be president tank presidential candidates in the United States?
I guess because they can be controlled by the powers that be.
We'll be right back.
I have these messages here on the Liberty News Radio Network.
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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?
But 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 the 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.
So, you two are real actors, huh?
Well, I was an extra on a soap opera for three years.
And I'm best known for starring in cat food commercials.
Wow.
And you're going to play our parents for how long?
Oh, just during dinner for the next few years, probably until you're both off to college.
Your real parents will be back every night at 8 o'clock.
8 o'clock?
Hey, your dad's busy.
He's got work, softball, client functions.
Yeah, and your mom, she's got the literary club and play rehearsals.
Don't you worry, they'll be back on time.
Otherwise, we get time and a half.
Ka-ching!
Okay, according to the script, we're supposed to ask you how your day was.
Yes.
Um, okay, I guess.
Oh, is that the best you can do?
I think I want my real parents.
I don't see that in the script.
No ad-libbing, please.
There's no substitute for a loving parent.
And when you're really there, they'll know how much you care.
From the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
For more tips on strengthening your family, visit family.mormon.org.
I'm gonna turn you faster and slow down.
Here the round faster.
I'll tell you, folks, I'll tell you the truth.
You know, I would never lie to you.
If you get a chance to go see the Beach Boys, take advantage of it.
I went and saw them a couple of years ago, and they can do more at 80.
Actually, I can't even keep up with them in the seats as a spectator with what they're doing, rocking and rolling in their 80s.
And it's a great concert.
It's a good time.
You got to turn your mic back on.
Keith's always in the green room during breaks, getting munchies and, you know, doing God knows what.
Well, tell the truth now.
You've just been extolling the virtues of the Beach Boys, but who would you go to see?
Frankie Valley in the four seasons or the Beach Boys?
Well, you know, it's always going to be Frankie is number one, but there's no shame in being a close second to the Ultimate Ultimate.
But, you know, I'm a doo-wop guy at heart.
But the Beach Boys had some great harmonic melodies and harmonic.
In fact, what they like.
Great harmonies.
Vocal harmonies.
Brian Wilson modeled their harmonies over a group called the Four Freshmen that were like the Four Aces and other groups back in the 50s.
Some of that pre-rock and roll pop, like Love is a many splendid thing, stuff like that.
That's who he modeled their harmonies against.
And apparently, people like the Beatles, for example, thought their harmonies were wonderful.
Well, it was some of the best harmonies ever.
And that was an East Coast, West Coast competition between the Four Seasons and the Beach Boys.
But two of the very best, great music, fun music, feel-good music, and it's summer music, and we're getting very close to summer.
Wouldn't it be nice if California were far away from this?
wouldn't it be nice now was that uh was that uh that was a great song by the beast boys but wouldn't it be nice if california we could sprinkle some fairy dust on them wave a magic wand and basically make california transform itself into what it was back in 1965 I can turn your mic up now that we figured this whole thing out.
So, yeah, again, folks, breaking in a new system.
I think this is our third week with a new system, new sound system in the studio.
And I mismanaged one of my settings on it.
That's why we sounded a little off, to say the very least, the first half of the show, the first hour and a half of the show, to be frank.
But we've got it fixed now.
And now we have to determine the punishment.
Yeah, well, I'll be here next week.
That's all I can say.
Or we can start the show over.
I'd be happy to do that.
I don't know if Mark Collett's still up over at 3 a.m. in the UK.
But anyway, get out and go.
Get out and go.
We were out on this trip sharing some observations, breaking down some news stories and some headlines.
The Sean Hannity Bruce Jenner interview.
So sick.
So ridiculous, really.
I mean, they are legitimizing that.
This is the so-called conservative Fox News legitimizing transgenderism.
Sean Hannity will go with any trend.
This guy.
Well, that's what Dabney talked about.
And Dabney specifically was talking about northern conservatism, which is establishment conservatism.
That's what Dabney was talking about.
And what Dabney said during the war was, of course, so true and more true today than ever before.
Well, remind people what Dabney said.
Well, he was just basically talking.
He was basically R.L. Dabney.
That is R.L. Dabney, of course, was chaplain to Stonewall Jackson.
But basically what he said in a nutshell, I mean, he has an incredible quote.
I can bring up the whole thing, and perhaps we should read it again.
You can never read it too much.
But basically, what he was talking about was establishment, respectable conservatism was merely a shadow that follows liberalism into perdition.
It never retards it.
It always basically exists to keep the liberals in fighting trim, but there's no danger of them winning the fight.
That's pretty much it.
I mean, it exists as its shadow, but it never truly opposes it.
If there's one person in contemporary America that represents the truth of Dabney's observation, it would be Sean Hannity.
Well, and it takes the left's victories and tries to pretend that it was conservatism's victory.
So now you have conservatives like Hannity, so-called conservatives or quote-unquote conservatives, saying, you know, praising the civil rights movement as if that was a conservative movement or if that was their heroes or their victory.
It was not their heroes.
It was not their victory.
They always quote Martin Luther King, I want my children to be judged by the content of their character rather than the color of their skin.
He was a total opportunist.
He would be totally in line with Black Lives Matter was he alive today.
Sure, he would.
And we know that because we have actually talked to the people that Sean Hannity would never talk to.
We've talked to people like Drew Lackey, who was photographed booking Rosa Parks.
And he gave us another view of the civil rights movement, one scene from the police perspective.
And man, you want to talk about a guy that had a bird's eye view of it or a front row seat to it.
And that was the former chief of the Montgomery Police Department.
That was Drew Lackey.
We talked to him when he was still alive.
What an interview that.
We've got a great interview.
And we also have plenty of other people that were real actors on the side of the forces of conservatism during the civil rights movement.
Well, now you got all the churches going into the tank for that, too.
But anyway, I mean, that again, difference between rural South and Urban South, the difference between the South at large and between the faux south and the real South.
Another thing we should mention, I don't know if we made mention of this last week, but we've been covering, of course, the Chauvin trial.
And if he had been found by some miracle not guilty, Merrick Garlands, as Hunter Wallace puts it at Occidental Descent, I love this.
The department, you know, Merrick Garland is the director of the Department of Justice, or as Hunter calls it.
Who would have been the Supreme Court justice not stopped that?
If Obama had gotten his way.
But Brad calls him, or Brad Griffin, Hunter Wallace, one of the same, calls it the Department of Social Justice.
Officers for the Department of Social Justice were standing at the ready, had Chauvin been found not guilty, to walk into the courtroom and arrest him on the spot for civil rights violations.
So there was no way, even if the jury had done its job and found an innocent man not guilty, they were immediately going to walk in that courtroom before he could even exail and arrest him on supposed civil rights violation.
And by the way, the other four officers who were milling around during that moment of infamy were arrested this week on so-called civil rights violations.
This is, of course, what the left, what the federal government, what the Yankees did during the civil rights movement.
We have this provision in the U.S. Constitution, a prohibition against double jeopardy.
That apparently was totally forgotten, totally bulldozed over by the left, by the Kennedy administration, by the Lyndon Johnson administration back then.
That's why you had people like Edgar A. Killen brought to trial eight different times.
He was let off by the jury, found not guilty seven times.
But in the eighth time, they finally got him on some arcane federal charge.
Again, if it's the same criminal episode, it should have been double jeopardy, and it should never have been allowed to go forward.
But they put him in jail, and this is what Jewish power and influence always does.
What they want to do is just like the Holocaust, tracking down these people that, you know, some obscure prison guard at Treblinka or something like Don De John DeJamuk, who led an exemplary life in America.
They haul him off to Israel, try him, and in his 90s with his, you know, oxygen tax in tow, put him in jail for the rest of his life.
Basically, they want to teach us all this lesson.
Nobody bucks the revolution and gets away with it.
This is pernicious.
This is non-right.
This is evil itself.
And this is what our federal government does.
It's standard operating procedure and has been since the civil rights movement.
Law is no longer law in America, but rather an opportunity for judges to virtue signal against white advocates.
We are not equal under their law anymore.
And just this week, actually just yesterday, the National Policy Institute, which was the organization led by Richard Spencer during the era of Charlottesville, has been ordered to pay, was ordered to pay just yesterday, $2.4 million to someone for emotional distress.
So basically what you had was a guy in Ohio went to Charlottesville, probably as part of, I don't know, I can't say probably as part of Antifa, but he certainly went down there to counter protest.
And because he had emotional distress and he filed a lawsuit, he was awarded over a million dollars in damages.
And so this is by some goofy federal judge in Ohio.
Now, just think about this, James.
Put the shoe on the other foot.
Martin Luther King.
What if Martin Luther King had been found guilty like Richard Spencer and subjected to a $2.4 million judgment because somebody got their panties in a wad or got upset because of a demonstration that he led?
That is, you know, do you think that the civil rights movement would have happened?
The only reason the civil rights movement succeeded was because Jewish power and influence and the media were totally behind it.
People need to understand that.
Well, and the South playing.
I love the South.
You know, I die for the South.
The South is in my blood.
It's in the very marrow of my bones.
But the South should have played harder ball in the 60s.
George Wallace really should have stood his ground in the courthouse instead of putting a stunt on for the media.
He really should have dug his heels in.
He's a thing for Ross Barnett at the University of Michigan.
Yeah, they shouldn't have capitulated.
They should have made Kennedy pull the trigger.
That's right.
Because this is what, you know, the results now are in, and we see the results of them standing down.
They should have never stood down.
They were in the right.
History has proven them right.
And even though things aren't going our way in the courts, things nationally are trending our way.
The Republican Party is trending our way.
It's not where it needs to be.
God knows not even close.
But it's going in the right direction.
It is going in the right direction.
People now in America know how corrupt the deep state is.
But don't go away.
Got to take a break.
We'll see what we get into in the third hour, ladies and gentlemen.
Stay tuned.
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