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June 12, 2021 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
50:11
20210612_Hour_3
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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.
Well, that's a song, ladies and gentlemen, that Eddie the Bombardier Miller may be familiar with.
That's some of that Vietnam-era rock and roll.
Of course, Eddie the Bombardier Miller, a former combat medic, honorably discharged from the United States military after serving in Vietnam.
Man, I wasn't there yet.
I was born in 1980.
I'm sure Eddie could tell us all about it.
But he's back with us tonight after being with us last week in Pensacola, Florida.
And I just want to thank Eddie again for putting all of that together.
That was Eddie's idea.
Eddie was the one who gave me a call and said, hey, I'm footing the bill.
I'm traveling down to Pensacola.
I'm going to be at this meeting of USS Liberty survivors, and we're going to be broadcasting it.
And, you know, do you want to do it on the political cesspool?
And I said, that would be quite an honor.
And surely enough, it was.
What a great hour.
Two hours it was last week.
An unforgettable show.
Eddie and I were having supper with Keith Alexander earlier this week, and we were talking about the historical broadcast that we've had on this show with not only the USS Liberty survivors, but also Officer Drew Lackey of the Montgomery Police Department.
They're in the so-called civil rights era.
Also, former Luftwaffe pilot Godfrey Dulias.
That is something we have done and the service we have provided.
But last week, it was all credit to Eddie who made the long trip down to Pensacola.
And one of the things we wanted to do last week was talk to Eddie about some of the behind the scenes.
But once we got rolling last week, it seems as though it was just sailor after sailor after sailor, which of course we wanted to shine the spotlight most prominently on them.
But now, a week later, Eddie's back at home.
He's with us tonight, and we can get some of that behind-the-scenes stuff that we intended to cover last week but couldn't.
And now we'll make amends for that.
Eddie, thanks for being with us.
Thanks for, well, listen, the 20 years we've been together, going back to my campaign for State House in 2002, all the way through the political cesspool.
You're on the show now with Blood River.
I mean, we've been together a long time, but last week was one I'll remember.
God bless you.
Let's go ahead and call you son or sunboy.
There's a couple of people I call my spirit son, as you well know.
You're one of them.
I'm Sunboy, and he's Dr. Pappy.
That's how we refer to each other off the air.
You know, what do we call Keith?
I guess we just call him the, I just call him the counselor.
But you know what?
We've been through hell together.
Speaking of going back to that election you had, do you remember when Austin Farley was running for, what was he running for, District 7th Congressman, or was that you?
No, no, no.
So Austin ran for the same seat that I ran for two years later, and that was District 97 State House.
But Austin, if anybody remembers the early days of TPC, he was another player in that cadre.
But I remember getting a letter from Eddie on the door.
I had been apparently campaigning in Eddie's neighborhood, and I had missed him.
So I left one of my brochures, one of my campaign pieces of literature on Eddie's door.
Eddie came to my campaign headquarters.
We actually had a campaign headquarters in a strip mall around the corner from where Eddie lived.
And he came and said, I'll work for you.
I'll fight for you.
Give me a call.
I'm with you.
And through that campaign, we met.
Little did either of us know in 2002 that it would lead to a radio program that we would once again become joined forces on.
And then, man, I mean, 20 years, it's been the blink of an eye, but a lot of memories in between.
And anyway, Eddie, last week, listen, again, I want to give the credit to you.
It was your idea.
You footed the bill.
Your supporters paid for that.
Blood River Radio down in Pensacola, and you gave us the opportunity to sort of latch on and make that incorporate that into our programming last week, which we were all too happy to do.
Well, you know what?
We started off a brotherhood.
We're still a brotherhood.
And as long as one of us are alive, we'll always be a brotherhood.
Lord, you know what?
And the good thing about it, it's always been smooth sailing, no arguments, nothing between you and me and Keith.
We always, you know, never a crossword, nothing.
Even when we were tasting some of Kentucky's finest, we just kept it all.
Yeah, but we tried to pour stuff down, Keith.
But, you know, I cannot believe it's been incredible.
What an incredible ride.
Like you say, who, who would have ever thought that we would go down this road together?
But you know what?
It's a brotherhood.
You know, James, and you and I. You know, it all started.
I mean, it all started if, I mean, it's God's hand and it's God's will.
I left that piece of campaign literature on your door in 2002.
And 20 years later, you know, the rest is history.
But it all came down to that night.
God has a plan even when we don't.
Yes, he does.
You know, and a lot of our troubles today is because we attracted, or I say we, you, because you were the one.
In those days, you know, you were the golden boy.
I mean, people all around the country were taking up, setting up take up notices of you.
Hell, you're only, what, 20 when you were up there rubbing shoulders with Pat Buchanan?
You were an alternate when you were represented to go to California in his campaign.
And see, you were making enemies then because we didn't realize it.
Some big name enemies were paying attention to you and your campaign.
They were thinking, holy hell, we can't let this guy get in there.
That's for sure.
But man, we have fought many battles.
We'll continue to fight battles.
But the whole object of the thing was to, now, I'll have to say, it was such a surreal thing down there in Pensacola.
I don't know if I ever really comprehended what I did, what was said.
The emotion was just uncontrollable.
But the whole idea was to get the sailors, get their story out as much as possible.
You know, Larry, Larry Bowens, the president of the association, came on Sam's show for a half hour.
Sam let him come on for a half hour.
And, you know, Sam has a huge audience.
So he got his story out.
I didn't know what they said.
I just gave Larry my phone.
Here's my phone.
Go talk to Sam.
I'm going to eat with some of the other sailors.
When he got through, he brought me his phone.
But, you know, we put out.
That's true.
And I did that down there because I know you won't believe this.
We shouldn't say this because I think Sam and Jay's probably are Mormons.
But there was some hoots down there now.
But you know what?
I only drank it when I felt it necessary as medicinal purposes.
But anyway, we had a howl time.
Well, as long as it was necessary.
It was necessary.
Absolutely necessary.
I promise you.
I'll swear that on the Baptist Pope Bible.
But, you know, we're going to talk about the Baptists in the next segment.
Right.
I can't wait.
In the next segment, the Baptist.
We're going to let you tear into them because they're having their meeting, their annual convention in Nashville just this very week.
It starts tomorrow.
It runs through next Wednesday.
But, Eddie, give me 30 seconds.
We talked about this last week, I know, but being there with those sailors, the people who actually sacrificed something, who risked something for someone.
You know, I'll tell you what.
One of the guys who impressed me as much as anybody probably was the fellow we had on the night.
He was a sailor from USS America.
Also, the Marine, the only surviving Marine.
There were three Marines on the ship.
Two of them got killed.
Bryce Lockwood survived.
Lockwood survived.
I was able to speak to him, but you could tell he was kind of squirrely and rightfully so.
But he couldn't make it.
He left.
I don't know where he went.
I was talking to the sailors tonight.
Did you see him?
Did he come back?
No one knew where he went.
I guess he just couldn't handle it because a lot of the sailors could not come because they were still suffering all these years later.
We had one sailor.
He was on your show, on your show.
He was 78 years old, James.
And we got him on your show.
And that was the first time he's spoken the name U.S. Liberty in 54 years.
His wife told me the whole story.
And he came on.
He was so emotional.
I mean, I could talk a million years and not tell you.
I broke down and cried and cried Friday.
They let me give a little talk down there.
It's God's will.
I mean, all the glory to God.
And I got to say something the next day.
And just, I couldn't help it.
I hope I didn't cross the lines, but I just got hotter than Fukushima.
And the guys said they appreciated it.
They said they'd hardly have anybody will stand up for them to speak up for them.
And I got the, when we come back, we'll also tell about some operations me and James talked about the other day.
We're going to try to plan if there's enough time.
And of course, James is going to be a part of it.
We're going to broadcast all the way to the moon if we can about what we're going to try to do for the U.S. Liberty sailors.
I guess I'm surprised we ain't got through a break already.
But anyway, I hear music.
Hang on, step tight, Patty.
We'll be right back.
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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 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.
Mom, you don't know anything about me anymore.
Honey, I know you're good at math.
You don't like English.
I know Ryan smiled at you yesterday at school.
I know your favorite color is purple.
And I know you don't like mushrooms.
And who can blame you?
I mean, mushrooms are a fungus, and people generally try to avoid funguses.
Or is it fungi?
I'm never quite sure.
But, you know, either way, I mean, penicillin is good.
Penicillin is a mold.
Huh.
Well, I guess you're right.
So you like penicillin, but not mushrooms.
No matter what you talk about, love is what they'll hear.
Mom, if we talk, will you be quiet?
Love to.
A thought from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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Alright everybody Well, listen, we got one more segment with Eddie the Bombardier Miller.
But before we go back to Pappy, we've got Scoop Stanton.
So, you know, the mothership here, TPC, has spawned two incredible spin-offs.
That is 7.5 Radio that immediately follows us and Blood River Radio that immediately precedes us.
And those programs, of course, are anchored by Eddie the Bombardier Miller and Peter Scoop Stanton.
Scoop, what do you got?
Good evening, James.
Good evening, Eddie, and good evening, Political Cestable family.
Last week, the three shows that you mentioned, Radio, The Political Cestable, and Blood River Radio, were the only shows on FCC licensed airways that mention the tragedy that took place 8 June 1967.
And it's just an absolute travesty.
You didn't hear it on Fox.
You didn't hear it on Newsmax.
You didn't hear it on OAN.
You didn't hear it on any of these so-called big-time conservative talk radio shows.
And you certainly did not hear it from Ben Shapiro, who at a conference he was giving or speeches giving says, who cares what happened something 50 years ago?
Well, Ben, who cares what happened seven decades ago, okay?
But anyways, it's shows like this that, you know, it's Libby News Radio Network.
We've been with them for a decade now.
And it's shows like ours that actually speak the truth.
And it's said that shows with no money, no backing, no staff, are able to outrun, outpace, outgun the big networks on television and on radio.
But anyways, James, I'm going to let you continue because we have our sites on another outfit that wants to piss off the family.
So if you follow me at Larry Lefty on Twitter, I have a couple things about the next group of people.
But people, do not piss off the family.
When I say we're family, we are family.
And trust me, we even fight like brothers because we are brothers.
Damn right.
And we are brothers.
We are Scoop.
We'll never forget the first time we met you either and going out and singing run around Sue by Dion.
The first night I met Scoop, we were on a karaoke stage singing Dion together.
That's how you really become blood brothers.
Stay tuned every week after TPC.
Scoop Stanton takes it over here on the Liberty News Radio Network with 75 Radio, him and Walter Yerku.
Thank you, Scoop.
Thank you so much.
Eddie, the Bombardier Miller, long time, long time brother here on TPC, now doing Blood River Radio immediately preceding TPC.
So we've got about half the night covered here.
But Eddie, listen, Scoop is right.
I mean, we're all brothers.
We're all fighting together.
And what you did last week with the Liberty was incredible.
But we're about to let you know, ladies and gentlemen, how a former combat medic got the nickname the bombardier.
How are you a combat medic, but you earned the nickname the bombardier?
This is going to be a question that sets up that answer.
Eddie, the Southern Baptist Convention is having its annual conference this week in Nashville.
What do you think about it?
Well, here's why I would like to, I would love to address that.
I'd like to give them a verbal letter.
We were covering, as you know, the USS Liberty, what happened to the sailors and the Marines there.
34 killed, slaughtered.
And I'll make this quick.
Not only that, but the sailors owned the Liberty, and you know this all too well, James.
We've covered it several times, in audience.
But they didn't send special medical personnel on board the ship.
They didn't send special people on there that do autopsy things, you know, pathologists.
They made those poor sailors who were just devastated go down in the hold of that ship and bring up body parts.
This was a sailor we had on the night talked about how many bags full of parts that they had.
And listen, here's this.
I'm going to a point.
And some of them were burned beyond recognition.
And I've talked to several, I lost my last Southern Baptist friend this week.
Let me come back to the Liberty.
I've been force feeding her the material about the Liberty for a long time.
And also, I sent her subscriptions.
You know, Peppy, we got three minutes left.
I want you to get to that point.
You know, Eddie became a Christian late in life, and I actually attended his baptism, his baptism.
And the Southern Baptist congregation to which he belonged actually gave away their entire building, their entire property to what they called gracious Spaniards.
We would call that.
Normal people would call that Mexicans.
They gave away a million dollars worth of property and building to the gracious Spaniards.
Well, anyway, that was a church talking about the people.
I was about to be baptized.
I was there.
And listen, I mean, you know, it's an incredible thing, the cuckoldry that's happened at the Southern Baptist Church.
But by all means, you know, Eddie belonged to this church for a number of years.
He had a number of friends there down to his last one.
What happened just this week, Eddie?
Well, I told her all this stuff.
She's the last one that I told this to.
I said, what do you think about that?
What do you think about Israel?
She said, well, you know, that's terrible.
But, you know, I can't turn my back on Israel.
I have to stand with Israel.
I said, you mean you put the outlaw country of Israel, a country, most of them are atheists.
They're antichrist.
They don't believe in Jesus Christ.
You're going to put those above your own American personnel, 17, 18, 19 years old.
And they said, yeah.
They said pretty much, well, they wouldn't answer it directly.
They said, well, I just can't stand.
I have to stand with Israel.
I said, well, I'll tell you what.
I'm probably crossing the line if I tell you this, but I hope, God forbid, God only forbid we have another Liberty incident.
It's inevitable.
We'll have other American sailors, soldiers, Marines, airmen will be mangled, mutilated, burned.
And I hope, it's my hope, God forbid me, forgive me, that the next time that happens, that these body parts that come home in a bag, they dump in front of a Southern Baptist church and they have all the congressional people in the congregation there.
They call them there, say, here's 15 bags of body parts.
You need to sort these body parts out and see if you can figure out which body parts go to your son and daughter.
How would you feel?
It's okay, James, as long as it's somebody else's daughters, sons, 18-year-old sons, they don't give a damn because they're sacrificed to the greater Israel.
But I'd like to know, I asked them, how would you feel like it if your precious little 17-year-old boy was burned with napalm, screaming, screaming, jumping to the ocean, trying to burn my put napalm out?
How would you feel if you couldn't even recognize they had like this hand connected to this body?
You had this eyeball connected to that eyeball, just a mass of organic flesh and dump it in your front yard and say, here's your son.
Now, do you, and the Israelis did this?
They did it.
Premeditated, raw, premeditated, cold-blooded murder.
Would you still stand with Israel?
Well, there was no answer, and they won't speak to me anymore, but the hell with them.
You know, that's the way I think.
I cannot believe an American citizen will stand up against, and like Gene Andrews said, any government, stand against any government against your own government.
Sacrifice your own servicemen for some country over in the Middle East that hates Christians, that hates the United States.
So that's a hard time.
Church stand with a non-Christian nation.
I mean, how can you believe that people who don't believe in Christ, who hate Christ, who work against Christ and all manners of being in any way possible are your greatest allies?
I mean, it's a cognitive dissonance.
It's a disconnect.
You wonder.
And they're meeting this week, though, the largest Protestant denomination in the world.
Exposing corruption.
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USA Radio News with Dan Naraki.
Air travel continues its pandemic rebound as Americans are traveling in ever-increasing numbers.
The Transportation Security Administration says it screened more than 2 million passengers on Friday, the first time in more than 15 months that passenger traffic has exceeded the 2 million mark.
Even with the travel boost coming from mostly domestic leisure travel, Friday's numbers are still only three-quarters of the crowds that flew in 2019.
Meanwhile, California is set to drop most of their coronavirus restrictions.
Governor Gavin Newsome signed an executive order on Friday that rolls back the state's stay-at-home order and updates mask mandates for vaccinated people.
By Tuesday, the state will hit its goal of having 70% of adults receiving at least one dose of vaccine.
And on the fifth anniversary of the worst terror attack on American soil since 9-11, President Biden says he will sign a bill to name the site of the Pulse Nightclub a national memorial.
The shooting at the club on June 12, 2016 killed 49 people and wounded 53 more.
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The Labor Department's reports of a higher-than-expected inflation rate is causing concerns over the direction of the economy.
John Clemens explains.
The consumer price index rose 5% in the year leading into May, marking the largest increase since August 2008.
Chuck Bentley of Crown Financial tells us this means Americans are buying less with more dollars.
Well, economists look for a rise in the consumer price index, which means the things that are required for us to live are on the rise.
The prices are going up.
And in a very simple sense, it means the purchasing power of the dollar is going down.
Economists point to the 7% increase between April to May for the prices for used cars and trucks that made up one-third for the increase in the Consumer Price Index.
From the USA Radio News Texas Bureau, I'm John Clemens.
And following a face-to-face meeting next week with Russian President Vladimir Putin, President Biden will hold a solo press conference, the White House calling it the appropriate manner to communicate the issues that were raised at the meeting.
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The sun came out today.
We're born again.
There's new grass on the deal.
Around the third and heading for home.
It's a brown-eyed, handsome man.
Anyone can understand the way I feel.
Oh, put me in, Coke.
I'm ready to play today.
Put me in, Coke.
I'm ready to play today.
Look at me.
I can be Santa Real.
I want to thank again, Eddie, the Bombardier Miller, for coming back with us to offer a little bit of post-mortems from the Liberty meeting, the reunion, the gathering of the USS Liberty Survivors last week in Pizzacola, Florida, and for sharing the thoughts on the Southern Baptist Convention.
We got so excited about that, we ran right into the commercial break and just basically just ran right into the wall.
And you probably didn't even hear the last of that segment because of it.
But now we're back to close the show tonight with Jack Ryan.
But before we do, let me remind you that there are still stout-hearted men of God out there like Pastor Brett McAtee of the Charlotte Reformed Church in Michigan.
Charlottered.org is the website.
Be sure to check it out if you are looking for a church home and you can't find it.
I mean, nothing substitutes for being in the presence of other believers, but charlottereformed.org.
At least there you can get a true message from a true man of God, Brett McAtee.
Always happy to feature him on this program.
Jack Ryan is detoxing in another way, removing himself a little bit from this rancor and vitriol by focusing on the college baseball playoffs, hence the intro music from John Foger, D. Centerfield.
What a great song.
What a great song for summer.
How are you doing tonight, Jack?
I'm doing just great.
It's a beautiful night in and outside of Chicago.
And yes, you're right.
I'm trying to get away from a little of politics, bad politics, media, Hollywood, and things like that.
I think it was Steve Bannon that said politics runs downriver from culture.
So we have to try to find culture that is good, that's positive, and that we're doing well in.
And one place that we're doing really well in is baseball.
It's the American pastime.
It's our sport.
And our boys are doing just great.
The college baseball is dominated by the southern boys, Midwestern boys.
My college, Vanderbilt University, which hadn't won an NCA championship since the 1950s in women's bowling, we're just doing great.
We've won two out of the last five NCA baseball championships, and we've got in second place, and we've made it again to Omaha, Nebraska for the fast, the final eight teams.
We're doing good.
My baseball team, Chicago White Sox, are doing the best team we've ever had in my life, won first place.
And it's just, it's a good sport.
It's our sport.
We invented it, and that's why our enemies are attacking it, like the British leftist CEO of Coca-Cola, James Quincy, who forced the Major League Baseball to remove the All-Star game from Atlanta, Georgia because they dared to pass laws for trying to have honest elections.
I mean, this guy thinks that vote fraud is a civil right or something like that.
So baseball is our sport, and I'm into this.
And not just the college baseball, but I think women's college softball, it's an acquired sport, but those gals are good.
And some of them are good looking.
And I'm getting into it.
The crowds are fantastic.
They look good.
They dress the sport.
So I think we need to get away from this football and basketball.
I understand people that remember the early 60s with University of Mississippi and the Confederate.
Who was the guy that Peyton Manning's father was the quarterback of the old Miss Rebels there?
But the SEC football is just not ours anymore.
We don't play it.
It's violent.
Football is used against us.
Basketball is terrible.
But baseball is great, and I'm into it.
I'm following it.
And it's fantastic.
It's a summer sport, and our people are doing great in it.
Crowds are fantastic, and so on.
I'm getting into it, and I'm writing about it.
And hopefully there'll be some superstars, former coaches of the baseball teams that will run for governor of southern states and things like that.
So now, Jack, this is something that otherwise wouldn't be mentioned on this program.
So we appreciate you bringing it to our attention and to the attention of the wider audience.
I don't know of anybody else in the pro-white sphere that's talking about this, but you're telling me that our people, people who look like us, predominate in college baseball, men's college baseball.
And I guess, you know, certainly when compared to the National Football League and the National Basketball Association, I guess you could say that they do that as well in the Major League Baseball.
But this is something, I mean, your alma mater Vanderbilt, you've traveled actually to these games.
Am I right?
A little bit, but the tickets have gotten pricey.
I mean, you used to get them away for free.
So I'm debating whether I'm going to go to Omaha, Nebraska.
We're certainly not going to pay for anything.
But this is a folk festival.
I think it's better.
I think it's even better than NASCAR that you're there.
And the crowds are just good looking, wholesome.
They dress the team colors.
In baseball, it takes some time to get to know the sport because it's not just non-stop sex and violence, like football.
Smash them, kill them, and then there's half-naked cheerleaders.
There's a baseball game where you have to play.
There's a left-handed, right-handed pitcher, and it takes a while.
But baseball is a great game, and it's our game, and we're doing good.
One of the best writers in the alternate world is Steve Saylor, who's on Taki Mag and like, and he's just noticed that there used to be white Americans who did pretty well in basketball, but now they don't.
They're discriminated against very much.
So if you've got a six-foot-eight white guy, they're positioning him in to play baseball instead of basketball, and their pitchers are quite good.
The college baseball is integrated.
Our best pitcher on Vanderbilt is a black American, very strong, very large, but it's mixed.
There's not as many South Americans playing college basketball.
Baseball, there's some, but most of them sign up for pro.
Our Vanderbilt team is really, really good.
And then some of it is when you get good, you get certain perks.
Like we played all of our games so far on our home turf, on our home field, where the fans are on our side.
You know, maybe that's not the fairest thing to do, but we're into the final eight, and I'm really proud about it.
And then I've also been watching these college women softball players, and that's my rule of college with just women's sports.
If I put on a wig and I look as good as the players out there, I don't want to see the sport or if they're not better than me.
But these women college baseball players, they're good, and a lot of them are pretty good looking.
The crowds are good.
So I'm just loving baseball in the summer, and I'm happy about it.
I'm promoting it.
And I think if we get into these cultural good things, there will be good political and cultural things to follow because to be honest, we don't control a single Hollywood movie studio or any TV network.
The politics is against us.
But if we can do good well in sports or something like that, I think there'll be some good political things that will follow from it.
So as we sit right now, this Saturday evening at 8.41 p.m. Central Time, Vanderbilt, the Vanderbilt Commodores are still alive in the college baseball playoffs.
Is that right?
Well, it's more than still alive.
We're kicking ass.
We made it to, they have regionals.
So then they go to, I think there's eight teams that go to Omaha, Nebraska.
So we've made it in there.
So we have, in the last five years, we've won two championships, and then we were in second place.
So we're actually the best college teams.
But I can read off the winners the last like 10 years.
Well, I was just going to say, you know, Vanderbilt can't be all bad if it produced Jack Ryan as a scholar, but also featured as a professor, Virginia Abernathy, who's a good friend of ours.
So Virginia, hey, if the Harvard of the South is good enough for Virginia Abernathy and Jack Ryan, that's good enough for me to root for in a college baseball game, I can tell you that.
Isn't that a horrible term, the Harvard of the South?
Now, that's another thing I got into is our nickname is not that great.
So we were founded by this New York shipping magnate, Cornelis Vanderbilt, that married a nice southern gal, and then she convinced him to be able to.
And their union gave birth to Anderson Cooper.
So, you know, you know, it went awry.
Anderson Cooper is a member of the Vanderbilt family.
You're going to have to look up the other thing.
But anyway, the name of our team is the Vanderbilt Commodores.
So that's too long.
And so the Southern people just call them Doris.
How about them, Doris?
I kind of like that.
But now they got this really gay name, Vandy.
And so they put up.
It's the Vandy Boys.
And that doesn't sound like a Neil Sadaka song.
Oh, it's the Vandy Boys.
So I was trying to get them to change their name to the Vanderbilt Commies, that they would respect these Southern people.
Well, that would probably be a little more akin to their current politics there, to be sure.
Alumni Magazine is just unreadable.
It's horrible.
But our baseball team's kicking us, as the British would say, hey, let's get behind our doors.
Doing good.
And baseball is our sport.
Come on, we invented it.
That horrible CEO of Coca-Cola, James Quincy, what does he want us to do?
Play cricket or something like that?
He's attacking the American pastime of baseball.
So we're rallying around this sport.
It's a good summer, and we're doing good.
Well, I tell you what, yeah, they're kicking bum, as they would say it in the UK.
Just like a flashlight is a torch in the UK.
Hey, our good friend, I just learned that.
I did not know this.
I've known this man, I can't even remember how long, a decade plus.
Our good friend Richard, Rich up in Nashville, graduated from Vanderbilt.
Vanderbilt, there's something we're salvaging there.
Richard, Jack, Virginia Abernathy.
Stay tuned, everybody.
As you all know, Roe versus Wade has resulted in some of the most permissive abortion laws anywhere in the world.
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It is wrong.
It has to change.
Americans are more and more pro-life.
You see that all the time.
In fact, only 12% of Americans support abortion on demand at any time.
Under my administration, we will always defend the very first right in the Declaration of Independence, and that is the right to life.
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Scott Bradley here.
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Go back, Jack, and do it again.
I mean, maybe we need to go back to Vanderbilt from the bygone era because I'm hearing now, reading now, that Rich, our good friend, a big supporter up in Nashville, graduated Sama Cum Laude.
Highest honors from Vanderbilt.
Vanderbilt also produced Jack Ryan, another TPC mainstay.
Virginia Abernathy, who was a Harvard graduate, but was a lifelong professor, nearly lifelong anyway, at Vanderbilt, professor emeritus now at Vanderbilt, longtime friend of mine.
You know, I met Virginia Abernathy before I ever even started the political cesspool and we were friends.
And also, who else from Vanderbilt?
There was somebody else.
Hang on now.
I'm going to forget it.
What else happened at Vanderbilt?
Dinah Shore?
No, oh, no, no, no.
Well, maybe.
But Carol Swain.
Carol Swain.
Now, Carol Swain is this black woman who is entrenched up at Vanderbilt, who has hosted the likes of Jared Taylor.
I've talked with Carol Swain.
Carol Swain, like Jesse Lee Peterson, we come full circle for tonight's broadcast for the purposes of tonight's broadcast.
Jesse Lee Peterson.
I think she's good.
No, absolutely.
And she's a Vanderbilt mainstay.
So Carol Swain, Virginia Abernathy, Rich Hamblin, Jack Ryan.
Carol Swain brings us back to Jesse Lee Peterson.
I mean, we do have allies, few and far between as they may be, who are willing to speak more truthfully about matters of racial reality than the vast majority of white men.
But Carol Swain's another one and another Vandy product.
I don't like the term fandy.
It's just too Neil Sadaki.
Hey, hey, hey, no, no, no, no.
I did that to trigger you.
You're triggering me because you know I love Neil Sadaka.
You know, I love meets of Neil Sadaka.
But anyway, Vanderbilt Commodores.
Hey, that's probably four more solid people than most universities can claim.
Absolutely.
And I went there.
I just had to break out of this northern there.
And so I wanted to go to the South.
I wanted to go to a good school.
My brother went to Duke.
It was Southern, but then it got corrupted.
But Vanderbilt was still a southern school.
They still had the Southern agrarians that were around there.
And they had legitimate history, which I love.
I think it's gone.
The Alumni Magazine is horrible.
But there are people around it.
What are you going to do?
But it's my alma mater.
I'm loyal to it.
And I have lots of good friends there.
Regular good, too many rich pink and green fraternity and sorority people.
I didn't go along with it.
But going to Nashville, Tennessee was really the best thing that I ever did in my life.
And I have this connection with the South.
The North is the direction, but the South is the place, and the South is a great place.
And I hope to always be connected in a good world, good way with that good place, which is the South.
All you got to do is move back down here, man.
Why are you still up in Chicago?
I can't sell my place.
It's some curse excuse me.
Some dying Wehrmacht Confederate soldier says you're damned.
He'll just stay there.
The women will be mean, and you'll never get it.
We'll see.
I'll take the church.
They're not saying that.
They're not saying that.
They're saying, no, but they're saying the ghost of the Wehrmacht and the Confederate saying, Jack, come back to Tennessee.
And that's where you'll find your redemption.
I had my few girlfriends.
I've got real good taste in women.
That's why I'm usually alone.
But my best girlfriends have all been from the South.
And I have a shout out to Ms. Cindy from Chattanooga, Tennessee, and Beth from Texas.
And my advice to young man, if you haven't seen a nice son and gal and you like her and she likes her, just marry her.
Don't worry about economics or taxes or other things.
Just go ahead and marry her because the alternatives are pretty rough.
And I've got a book that I can write about these things.
And these northern college miseducated women, man, Hillary's, it's just horrible, just dreadful creatures.
I'm being honest, I'd rather hang out with black gang members than these college miseducated feminist women.
They're just no fun.
They don't do anything for you.
There's so many gay people here.
And there might be some genetic predisposition to this lifestyle.
But I think one of the biggest problems is that these women in these northern college places are just, they're not fun.
They're not sexy.
And some people, these guys think, well, there must be something wrong with me.
I must be gay.
But you won't have that when you're around these great southern women.
So that's my advice to our listeners is just to get a lot of people.
Well, speaking.
No, you got to get them.
You got to get them.
And you got to go to the churches to get them.
Now, our churches have a lot of problems.
The problems they don't have in the South is good-looking women.
I met my wife when she was 15.
You know when I met her?
20 years ago yesterday.
Wow.
June 20, 2001.
And I actually got a picture of us from not from that day, but from that time, very near that time on the Twitter at James Edwards TPC.
20 years ago yesterday, I met my wife at a Southern Baptist church.
The Southern Baptists are having their annual convention, of course, in Nashville just this week, speaking of stuff going on in the South.
But that's a place where you can find women who know that their role is to be submissive to the man who is submissive to God.
And that is the way that the family nucleus is built.
That's the building block of our civilization.
We have had our confrontations with the Southern Baptist Church.
But I cannot tell you that it would not be in your best interest to go to a Southern Baptist church or a church, any church in the South.
Healthy, wholesome females there that are waiting to be taken by men who want to lead a family.
We're talking about what's going on in the Southern Baptist Convention.
Russell Moore, one of our longtime nemesis, stepping down, reader writes, listener writes, cannot imagine anything more pleasant than realizing Dr. Moore has gotten the axe.
Millions of white Southerners have been hurt by Moore in a wide variety of ways.
Another listener writes, very inspirational story.
James has long been an icon and leader for us.
A trillion-dollar propaganda machine can't budge men like that who love God and their blood and soil.
Well, thank you so much for the kind words.
Another writes, Russell Moore has been vanquished, at least from the church.
Go, James, the good news comes trickling in slow but constant these days.
This is something, again, Jack, we were talking about with Jesse Lee Peterson earlier.
Men, men, period, have to uncuck themselves.
The men of the church really need to uncuck themselves because that's where you're at least going to be finding these women who are waiting for a dominant masculine presence to take them to rear a family.
You've had your ins and outs with the church as well, your good feelings and bad feelings and so on and so forth.
But anyway, it has, listen, no matter how you slice it, Christianity has played an integral role in the development of our people of the Western kind, as Jason Kuna likes to call it.
European mankind is inseparable from the church for these last 2,000 years and even beyond that.
But Jack, your thoughts on that, on weak men in the church and the need for strong men to be taking over not only the pulpits, but the families as well.
I mean, everything said it's true, but you just also have to recognize reality.
And I think we have so many faults of our own people.
I talked about the fact that our people are not, men are not good partner dancers.
That's why I stress with it.
But one of the big faults that we have is that we keep loyalties to institutions that were once ours that have gone over to the other side.
So, like the Democratic Party, Southerners, the Democratic Party was the party of Southerners, white Southerners from like 1840 to 1965.
But the situation changed, that the National Party got taken over by Jacob Javits and Jesse Jackson and Marion Berry and all these things.
And then you still have these Southern people saying, well, my daddy was a Democrat and my granddaddy was a Democrat.
So by God, I'm a Democrat.
But if your church has gotten taken over by black liberation theology, by homosexual extremists, and a lot of them have, our enemies understood that the reason why the communists just didn't win in places like Eastern Europe or South America or Spain is that those peasants and farmers were Christian and the communist Marxists were perceived as correctly as being atheists.
So they created this idea of trying to disguise their revolutionary communist program with some kind of Christian cover, which is liberation theology.
And then they added this racist, anti-white, black liberation theology, which my neighbor, my former Illinois state representative Barack Obama, got into.
So you got to be careful.
If your church has gone over the other side, if it's a homosexual, lesbian, black liberation theology church, you can't pretend that it's the church of Western civilization or things like that.
So it's a tough call, but you have to go in there.
And if it's gone over, you got to get out.
Don't give them money.
Don't keep paying for our dispossession.
So it's a fight in all kinds of ways.
Walt Disney Studios used to be Walt Disney, and then it got taken over by Michael Eisner.
CNN was run by Ted Turner.
He wasn't a Christian, but he was a Southerner.
And then it got merged with Time Warner Incorporated, Gerald Levin, and now it's run by Jeff Zucker.
So as far as churches go, you got to be aware of the situation, ready to move.
And there's the Orthodox Christian Church is in a better situation.
I tried to work for very many years with the Church of Latter-day Saints.
A lot of good people, but the top has gotten soft.
Their politics are terrible.
Mitt Romney, Jeff Flake.
So I don't know.
I mean, it's a Carl thing, but you just got to be aware of what the situation is on your local church.
And good for us for making a big victory to run off this terrible traitor, Russell Moore.
God bless you.
You did a great job, James.
Thank you for that, Jack.
And that's by their own admission.
And by their own admission, they take their position.
They took their position on the anti-alt-right resolution based upon the position we were taking.
So again, when the largest Protestant denomination in the world bases its position to counter yours, you're doing something right because they're wrong.
We're right, and we'll be right.
And hopefully they'll come back to the light.
Jack Ryan, thank you so much, brother, for Jesse Lee Peterson and Keith Alexander edited the Bombardier Miller.
I'm James Edwards.
We'll see you next week.
Good night.
Godspeed.
God bless.
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