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July 10, 2021 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
50:25
20210710_Hour_3
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Time Text
You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
The Political Cesspool, known across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program.
And here to guide you through the murky waters of the Political Cesspool is your host, James Edwards.
Well, welcome back to the third and final hour.
Now, again, ladies and gentlemen, I've been doing this for 17 years of my entire adult life.
I have been involved in this cause and for the last 17 years as a public commentator.
And I've seen a lot.
I have had my work covered by hundreds, literally hundreds of newspapers and magazines around the world.
I have been all the way to primetime CNN many times.
And Entertainment Tonight, you name it, Jimmy Kimmel.
They've all talked about the political cesspool.
This is the night I'll remember to be here with Jack Ryan, my brother, and my regular soldier on this program.
But Jason Kuna, I got to say this, and I was talking to Jason just a moment ago.
Of course, you know, I miss Keith.
I miss having my normal right-hand man here tonight, but I think for this particular broadcast, for this particular show, I don't think there is a single voice in the entire cause that would have been better suited for the job tonight of explaining where we're at and what we're experiencing than what Jason's been able to do.
Am I wrong?
Thank you so much for that, James.
I've been a fan of yours for 15 years listening to you.
So tonight is a moment that is ineffable for me.
To ask me to co-host with you, I really just, it is beyond words.
Well, that's another thing.
I mean, you obviously have your own outlets, and you work with Mark Collett.
You have your own broadcast with Jared George.
I mean, you're all over the place as a commentator and as a leader.
And you're a marathon guy.
I mean, you do, we do three hours once a week.
You do hours upon hours in one setting.
But I would ask you this.
Have you ever had two hours go by this quickly?
No, absolutely not had two hours go by this quickly.
So this has been an amazing, we've had an array of, and folks, you just, you can't see this.
I wish we could.
I mean, James was trying to say, if you could see through our eyes and this not be just radio, if you could see through our eyes, the faces, the glow.
That's something that's hard to put to words when you're trying to convey exactly when people are in harmony, when they're feeling who and what they really are and they see it in their environment around them.
It feeds back to them.
Well, that's the thing, Jason.
I mean, these are people from the local community.
These are just all locals.
They didn't travel across the country to be here tonight as they do for regular conferences of any organization.
These are just people that live around the location where we're at tonight.
And they're not names on a list.
They're not members of anything.
They're just Southerners.
But they are real Southerners.
And it's just been an incredible thing.
I got to say one more thing about Rick.
My career ended last segment.
I don't think we could improve however many years into the future this program continues to run.
And it's been 17 years and counting so far.
I've met my match.
Love you, brother.
Rick, thank you for everything for the years of support, the years of listenership.
No, no.
And for being here tonight and for what he did the last two segments.
I mean, it couldn't be improved upon.
No, it could not be improved upon.
And he should be a regular now to call in as often as he would like to.
I know the audience is going to say they want to hear more.
I've already seen the emails on my phone, the emails and the text messages.
Who is this guy?
But listen, we'll do the best we can.
We should have brought him in as the showstopper.
Hunter has met his match.
Yeah, Hunter has met his match.
That's right.
Well, we should have brought him in the last 30 minutes of the show because I don't know where we go from here, but we're going to do our best with the time remaining.
And let me tell you, no, in all honesty, we've got people that are no slouches.
We have another young man here who we had the opportunity to share in fellowship a couple of times last night, and he's here with us now.
There have been so many women here who have been so distracting.
And they're so beautiful.
I have to ask him to leave my line of sight because it's just, you know, that's not, it's not right.
And I have a beautiful wife, so I know what it's like to be married and be with a beautiful woman.
Now, and all kidding aside, it is wonderful to see how strapping and how dashing the men are and how beautiful and feminine the women are.
And we have a gentleman joining us right now who's going to introduce himself and tell us why he's here and what he's doing.
He has a beautiful wife.
I'm looking at her right now.
Thank you for being here, young lady.
And of course, you, my friend.
Thank you for being here and for what you've done to help put this event on.
Not a problem, James.
Thank you for having me on again.
My name is Matthew.
I was on last time you were here.
I was on last time you were here in November.
And what a great time it was then, but what an excellent time we have had today.
Yeah.
I've seen it, like you were saying in the glow of the faces.
Now, it might have been a little sunburned, but it was warm today.
It was hot today, Jason.
It was sultry.
It was definitely a southern day.
It was definitely a southern day.
But the pride these people have shown today in their people, it was amazing.
And it may have been exhausting for some of us working the event, but well worth it.
And we've done it a thousand times over again.
And we'll continue to do it because it's all for the greater cause.
And we're going to be here till the end.
Amen to that.
What did you see today?
Many things went through your field of vision today.
You heard many things over the course of the day.
Something that stands out to you that speaks exactly to what you're saying right now.
The biggest thing I think that stands out to me is the fellowship and the kindred people that were here.
I can't tell you, I've seen thousands of faces today.
Everyone's been smiling.
Yes.
Everyone's been smiling.
We all know we're family here.
We all know we're family.
And as much as it's been thousands of locals through here, but I've talked to so many people.
We had people from Ohio, Virginia, all over the place.
A lot of them just passing through.
A lot of them just passing through.
They didn't know what was going on.
I have seen that a lot today as well.
I mean, some people who got the word of mouth clue as to what was going on today, so they came.
But so many people just were driving by and they saw the festivities and they stopped in.
I met earlier today a young lady from Pennsylvania and her husband.
And he was dressed in only overalls.
There's no undershirt.
It was incredible.
But she was the one who stopped the car.
She said, hey, I want to check this out.
And I said, you're a native Pennsylvanian.
You saw all the Confederate flags.
You wanted to stop.
Why?
She said, this is great.
She said, I don't remember her exact words, but she said it drew me in.
And they had some of the giveaways here, and they were taking them home.
Now, he was a native-born Georgian who had moved to Pennsylvania, which is where he met his wife.
It was very attractive.
This was a young couple.
But she said, I was just driving by and I saw it.
I said, let's stop.
Let's go back.
Let's see what's going on here.
So I said, but you're from Pennsylvania.
You weren't put off by our flag?
No, not at all.
And that's the thing, Jason, that we keep going back to.
There is a real mirage that the establishment media, the controlled lying press, is trying to paint.
Not only do the southerners not care, but are in favor.
Many more people from outside the south.
We heard from Rick earlier from New York.
Many people outside the South know the truth as well.
In spite of all the propaganda and the incessant drumbeat of hatred against Christ and against the South, they still come.
From Pennsylvania, a young man today, a Hispanic man, well, I say man, he was 16, but he knew who I was.
And he said, listen, I listened to your show.
He's 16 years old.
He had a mustache that had never been shaved.
You know what a mustache looks like before you shave it?
It's like the hair on your head, but it is not bristled yet.
And very well versed.
Well, we got to take a, I don't want to take a break.
I don't want to take a break, but we have to.
We'll continue to share these reflections and observations today.
The people we've met, the surprising people we've met in some cases.
But thank you again, my friend, for being with us tonight.
A final word?
Thank you, James.
Thank you for everything you and Jason both do.
And thank you very much for having me on again.
Continue to set a standard.
You and your wife are setting a standard.
You set the bar high.
This is the standard we should all strive to emulate.
We'll be right back, ladies and gentlemen here.
Okay, girls, about finished with your lesson on money.
Daddy, what is a buy-sell spread for gold coins?
Well, when you sell a gold coin to a coin shop that's worth, say, $1,200, you don't actually get $1,200.
But don't worry, we're members of UPMA now, so we don't have to worry about that.
Daddy, why somebody seals that gold?
We don't have any gold at the house.
It's stored safely in the UPMA vault, securely and insured.
But the SP 500 outperformed gold.
Daddy, gold is a bad investment.
Some people do think of it that way, but actually, gold is money.
And as members of the United Precious Metals Association, we can use our gold at any store, just like a credit card.
Or I can ask them to drop it right into Mommy and Daddy's bank account because we're a UPMA member family.
Find out more at upma.org.
That's upma.org.
Why don't we say to the government writ large that they have to spend a little bit less?
Anybody ever had less money this year than you had last?
Anybody better have a 1% pay cut?
You deal with it.
That's what government needs, a 1% pay cut.
If you take a 1% pay cut across the board, you have more than enough money to actually pay for the disaster relief.
But nobody's going to do that because they're fiscally irresponsible.
Who are they?
Republicans.
Who are they?
Democrats.
Who are they?
Virtually the whole body is careless and reckless with your money.
So the money will not be offset by cuts anywhere.
The money will be added to the debt, and there will be a day of reckoning.
What's the day of reckoning?
The day of reckoning may well be the collapse of the stock market.
The day of reckoning may be the collapse of the dollar.
When it comes, I can't tell you exactly, but I can tell you it has happened repeatedly in history when countries ruin their currency.
You know where the solution can be found, Mr. President?
In churches, in wedding chapels, in maternity wards across the country and around the world.
More babies will mean forward-looking adults, the sort we need to tackle long-term, large-scale problems.
American babies in particular are likely going to be wealthier, better educated, and more conservation-minded than children raised in still industrializing countries.
As economist Tyler Cowan recently wrote, quote, by having more children, you're making your nation more populous, thus boosting its capacity to solve climate change.
The planet does not need for us to think globally and act locally so much as it needs us to think family and act personally.
The solution to so many of our problems at all times and in all places is to fall in love, get married, and have some kids.
To get on the show and speak with James and the gang, call us toll free at 1-866-986-6397.
And now back to tonight's show.
Jason, I mean, this is the night that will go down in TPC history and lore.
Having you here doing this again, the encore appearance here in this particular location in South Carolina, wow.
You know, I look back and I was remembering the show we did here in November, and I was like, you know, geez, it's going to be hard to top it.
It's going to be hard to match it, much less top it.
But I don't know.
I think we found a way tonight with you, with Rick, with all the other people who have been on the program tonight.
I think we found a way to do it.
And I don't know where we go from here.
But there was something I was going to talk about in the last segment, and it's completely escaped me now because we're engaged in such conversation near the commercial breaks.
This is the thing you don't know.
When we go to the commercial breaks, the show doesn't end.
We're talking with the people here in the yeah, women.
Yeah, you're right.
Women.
We were going to talk about women.
Well, there's so many beautiful women.
They're distracting.
I had to ask them to leave.
But I'm a married man.
No, I think I know what I was going to say is there were so many people who are familiar with my work and your work, Jason, that has come up to us.
We've been here for, well, 10 hours?
What?
10 hours?
And people asking for books.
People wearing political accessible t-shirts.
Yes.
And posing for pictures and autographing books.
And they're familiar with your work as well.
To meet the people, to meet the audience, what's that been like for you?
Because I know you've experienced that as well today.
My gosh, you're talking about with a question there, you're going right to something that I really feel in my heart.
And that is that every single one of these people is infinitely valuable to us.
I know you feel the exact same way, James.
There isn't a leader in my mind, a leader, and then the battalions that march behind the leader like there has been so many times before.
There are brothers and sisters in the cause, and they stand shoulder to shoulder.
So as you're here, right now, you might be able to hear the fireworks are going off.
Yeah, a little bit of our studio in-house audience has dwindled because the fireworks are beginning out here in South Carolina.
That's the grand finale of the night with all of the different festivities that have been going on.
There's a fireworks show still to be had, and it's just now kicking off.
But we still have a nice, great crowd here around us as we do this live broadcast.
But fireworks to cap off an incredible night, an incredible day of festivities.
Oh, it's been, yeah, it's been.
It's been vast and varied.
I mean, the first thing I saw when I showed up, and there was cannon fire today.
There was cannon fire.
There was a raising of the flag with a color guard and some riflemen and musket fire and a cannon fire.
But this is the cannon going on right now.
It's fireworks.
No, precisely.
This is the musical score behind the recapture of our destiny, which we do here in Brotherhood and Sisterhood and coming together as a single family, recognizing that our true bond is in the essence of who we are, so that we bridge that.
And we heard from Rick, and you saw the evidence of it, this skeleton key, that even though you have so many from the local community, as the fireworks go off in the background, perhaps you can hear them.
Even though you have so many people from the local community and have so many things in common that they can talk about, news events, you can take Westman from anywhere in the world and drop them right in.
And if they open themselves up to the spirit that is projected by a people being proud, a people being heroic, a people in love, they are able to blend right in.
Well, you know, and the thing about it, Jason, is this isn't an organizational endeavor.
This is just a private citizen that is doing all this.
I mean, imagine the 4th of July was just a couple of weeks ago, and I did some fireworks with my kids, and it was like, you know, just the most minuscule thing you can imagine was a couple of hundred bucks.
This guy's doing it.
He's putting his money where his faith and his trust and his soul is.
And, you know, folks, I don't think you can top Jason.
I don't think you can top Rick when it comes to trying to verbally articulate what we've experienced today.
We've done the best job we can without being able to show you.
I'm sounding repetitive now, but it has been one memorable day, and the day still continues.
And the day, yeah, absolutely.
The day continues.
The festivities are continuing.
It just segued beautifully from early this morning, sweltering hot.
A little storm rolled through and cooled things off a little bit.
Nobody went anywhere.
We continue to celebrate.
The band still plays.
The band still plays.
They play through the rain.
They play through the rain.
Electrocution, not an issue for these band members.
They're fine with that.
But that's the kind of dedication you need.
A small amount of electrocution, and you can keep plugging along.
I want to introduce to you now, ladies and gentlemen, in the listening audience, one of the most important people through this whole production today, the man who fed me.
This is a vendor who was here today who had a Cajun food truck, and I ordered a catfish po-boy, if you know what that is.
And it was the most delicious catfish I've ever had.
I'm not saying it because he's here right now on my flank.
It literally was the best catfish I've ever had.
He's from Louisiana.
He wanted me to let you know that the state bird of Louisiana is the mosquito, and he's going to tell you a few things about it right now.
Hey, great food, great fellowship.
Tell us why you're here, what the South means to you, and all that good stuff.
Thank you, man.
My name's Scott.
I'm from Louisiana.
I've been here nine years, and I'll tell you what, I will never move back to Louisiana.
Like you said, the state bird is technically the brown pelican, but we've got so many mosquitoes in Louisiana that they have actually said that is the state bird of Louisiana.
They will.
They will.
If you hear all of a sudden, you start lifting off the ground.
That's the mosquitoes in Louisiana.
I ain't going to lie.
Now, here in South Carolina, I have met way more flies than I have mosquitoes.
But I will have to say that I love South Carolina.
It is a very beautiful state.
I do not plan on moving back to Louisiana, but I do want to bring my food and my taste of Louisiana to South Carolina.
Scott, let me ask you a question.
The Confederacy, what does that word mean to you?
To me, the Confederacy is basically, and a lot of people get this so wrong, and it really makes me mad when people want to look at the Confederate and look at the rebel flag itself as just a mark for.
All right, let's go ahead and put it out, racism.
And it's not that at all.
It is, to me, the rebel flag and Confederacy is nothing more than having pride in the South.
We was named rebels for a reason.
The name rebels for a reason is because we wanted to fight what the North was trying to push onto everybody.
And what does that mean today?
Because now we don't have a North that is oppressing us.
Now we have an A.
Yes, it has nothing to do with the North and South no more.
And I tell you the truth, I am waiting for the next Civil War, which, like I said, it will not be the North and South.
It's going to be the red and blue.
And there are a few reds that need to go on and get the heck out of here because it's just become very just to me.
It's just stupid.
That's the word I'm going to use.
It is indeed.
It is indeed.
Jason, paint a verbal picture of this man's goatee.
It's a work of art.
I don't know how many.
Was it half a foot long?
And it's red, white, and blue, ladies and gentlemen.
Red, white, and blue.
I am all about the country.
And I will tell you right now, I fly a American flag.
But I will tell you.
No, I will tell you this.
My American flag hangs upside down because this is a country in distress.
I don't have a normal flagpole with a rope.
It is an extension flagpole.
So my flagpole can't stay half-mass.
I bring it down halfway.
But I do not, I am truly believing that this country is in a great, great distress and it needs a lot of help.
So, like I said, I'm just waiting on the next Civil War to kick off, but it's not going to be North and South.
It's going to rewrite in blue.
And they're going to be a lot of red that's going to get kicked out too.
Well, and that they are not here.
Scott, thank you so much for coming on.
And what you were speaking to, precisely, this ideas that are in competition.
Ones that make us strong and healthy and ones that destroy us all the way down in the Bayou and all the way up here, South Carolina, and moving forward around this world.
That is why.
We got to take a break.
We got to take a break.
Thank you so much, Scott.
Hey, I am so happy to be here.
Cajun Culture is represented tonight.
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Welcome back.
To get on the show, call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
Boy, I hate to sound repetitive, and I hate to revisit something that has been talked about before because it seems to be overzealous or put upon.
But Jason Kuna, after 17 years on the radio and after all your years as a commentator, tonight.
Electric, powerful, emotional.
Are we overembellishing?
No, not underembellishing.
I don't think that the people who aren't here can fully appreciate what we're experiencing.
I think we're doing the best we can with the ability that we have.
But I just don't know if the listening audience could know what it would have been like to have been here with us.
No, we can paint a picture, but you have the sights, the smells, the sensations.
The sensation of feeling harmony with your brothers and sisters in Western Kind.
When the flag was raised and the rifle salute, the cannons going off, you had the moon bounce.
You didn't even mention the moon bounce we had that was here today for the little ones.
I don't know if I mentioned the archery.
Archery as well.
And there was a petting zoo.
A petting zoo.
We didn't mention that.
We didn't mention that either.
So you had the smells, this absolutely succulent, aromatic wafts across, wafting across the landscape here of the magnificent food that we had cooking.
And we just had Scott talking about.
Every now and again, that would reach your nose.
The band live music playing in the background.
They were as good as anything.
Call me a liar.
Were they as good as anything you'd hear on Country Music Radio?
They were absolutely as good as anything you would find anyplace.
The difference is, I guess, is that these people aren't compromisable so that they can be compromising the playing anti-plags with Confederate flags, front, right, left, and center.
Precisely.
Everywhere.
But the band still came out.
And they sing this beautiful music, and they sing with harmonica, this traditional Dixieland music, but also, you know, some contemporary country and Western as well.
Yes.
But it never occurred to them that that should be something they shouldn't associate with.
Well, precisely, because it's completely in keeping with their nature, their instinct, who and what they are.
The laughter of the children, I think, is so much laughter today is one of the things that I'm definitely going to take away.
Their laughter, their smiling faces as they were running around, these families, these young families, the property filling up with automobiles, the motorcycles.
Harley, this beautiful motor.
We didn't mention that.
The mechanized cavalry.
The mechanized cavalry.
I mean, the motorcycles, absolutely.
How many motorcycles have we seen?
They're beautiful machinery.
Beautiful machinery.
A couple of dozen, minimum?
Oh, easily, yeah, a couple of dozen.
Some of them a little rough, some of them polished, some of them built out and glorious.
I mean, the entirety, everywhere we look.
Amazing.
So of all your years in broadcasting and commentary, what about tonight stands out to you above and beyond all of the rank and file?
Not to say that every, look, every show I've ever done is my baby.
I love all my babies the same.
How would you articulate that?
Well, to be able to do a show in the midst of something so fantastic, it's so varied.
And as you said, so many locals, but we also have so many folks coming from distant places.
California, from Bulgaria, from Romania.
We met people from those distant ports of call.
Oh, precisely.
But we got a guy here right now.
Listen, let me count.
One, two, three, four, five, six.
At least a half a dozen Confederate flags here.
He's got the first national.
He's got the stainless banner, the third national battle flag, and he's got a tattoo.
Oh, and then there's the battle flag.
And on a hat.
And then a fish hook, because we like to fish.
We like to fish down here.
My grandfather took me fishing.
Tell us who you are, why you're here, what you think about what you've seen.
And as close to the windscreen as you can.
Okay.
Yes, my name is Michael Adams Jr.
I came here today to honor the Confederate history.
I personally have family members on monuments and things.
I have family members that served with the 62nd North Carolina.
And in 1863, they was captured in Cumbering Gap, Tennessee.
And then it was taken to Camp Douglas, Chicago.
And I have them family members on that monument.
I hope to see one day.
And they're trying to protest that monument too in Chicago.
And it really fires me up when they want these monuments to separation.
Well, let me ask you, Michael, because that's really personal for you.
Yes, sir.
You have family members who are actually on monuments.
Now, you appear to be, and I want you to speak to this, living what they would have lived.
Living as the kind of man who would end up on a monument.
Yes, sir.
Speak to that.
The difference between just between just looking at the past as ashes and living the past as a flame.
Yes, we must keep their memory alive and not forget about it now.
Seriously.
We must keep our memories alive.
Those relatives, those ancestors inspire you today.
Your knowledge of them, the stories of them, their gallantry, their sacrifices inspire you to make similar sacrifices today.
Yes, sir.
Definitely.
Like all your, I have great headstones, the graveyards and stuff I go take care of.
Not even my family members, it just inspires me to do all that, seriously.
It fires me up.
All these monuments come down because this is part of history, and it's freaking ridiculous when all this happens.
It is.
And also this day in 2015, it's when our flag came down.
Turncoats and all them people.
Yeah.
They were white erasing us, white erasing your heritage, but also by white erasing your heritage, white erasing you from your own state, from your own Confederacy, from your own hue of Western civilization.
And what does that feel like when these anti-whites, when they're white erasing everything that you care about and scraping you from the pages of history?
It's bull crap.
It really is.
And then you got, I'm sorry.
Yeah, you got all these gay communities and all these other things.
Happy communities.
Yeah, okay.
They're coming to our upstate and stuff, and they get more, they get, they're able to do more stuff.
Like, say if we have a flagpole too big in downtown Greenville, they're all right, I was tickets.
But to the LGBT community, they can do what they want.
That's freaking ridiculous.
Listen, I will not tolerate that sort of bigotry on this program.
It's LGBTQ plus minus apostrophe.
Cubed.
No, so today, though, you've seen something very different.
You haven't seen white erasation.
You've seen a resilience.
Yeah, I actually stood up against, I had to go to court, too, after this.
I had a flag.
I had to stand up against BLM in downtown Greenville.
I had a shirt that said my fate, and then my flag and my folk.
And they didn't like that shirt.
I got it all on videotape, too.
I'm still waiting on court.
You had an altercation.
Now, that was some hostility you experienced from people that were anti-white who didn't like you.
But today you haven't experienced that.
Today you've seen a lot of love.
You've seen celebration.
Contrast that for us.
What is that like for you to see?
It's like a big old relief, you know?
Is it like a family reunion here today?
Exactly.
That's exactly what it is.
And we need more of these things going on.
And we also need people standing up that they ain't scared.
I've been standing up since 2015 when all this crap started, going to Columbia's and all this stuff, State House everywhere.
We need people that ain't scared to stand up.
I got to tell you, I appreciate what you're saying.
I like the fish sugar.
You could catch a catfish with that.
I got some big catfish pictures.
I ain't lying here, man.
You go noodling or do you just do it with the hook?
I do both.
Amen.
Hey, there ain't nothing more southern than a catfish.
Am I right, Jason?
Absolutely nothing more southern than the catfish.
Especially the noodling ones.
When they reach down there and they pull that out from the mud.
Definitely.
That's something else.
Oh, yeah, definitely.
It is a beautiful fish.
It's a beautiful cuisine.
Fried catfish.
I remember my grandparents when I was back in the 80s.
I had dinner with Sam Dixon in Atlanta on Thursday, and he wouldn't let me eat the cornbread at the restaurant with the sugar in it.
They say, your grandparents didn't make cornbread like this.
And I said, no, they put it in a skillet.
They did it like this and this and this.
I have so many memories of the 80s.
Fried catfish and cornbread.
And we would eat it.
And it was the most.
There's few things more southern than catfish.
What James is saying is that he hates vegetables.
All right, ladies and gentlemen.
That's really what it comes down to.
This man has a visceral hatred of all vegetables.
So he will eat anything as long as it's not a vegetable.
It was fried and not a vegetable.
Yeah.
You got it, Jason.
Jason knows me too well, ladies and gentlemen.
And yet he turned out as healthy as he did.
Michael, any final thoughts for us?
I say we need more people standing up again, you know.
Don't be scared.
Dio Vin D's.
Amen to that.
Dio Vin D's.
Get there first with the most men.
Yes, sir.
This is our, this is, and by the way, I should add, the reinterment of Nathan Bedford Forrest, the iconographic hero of the South, the man who I think probably, you know, Robert E. Lee was the greatest American.
He was the most Christ-like, flawless man who ever trod this soil.
There's something about Forrest that resonates with me.
And he will be reinterred in Tennessee on September the 18th.
We just found this out a couple of days ago.
On September the 18th in Columbia, Tennessee, Nathan Bedford Forrest, the hero of the South.
You know, his life was more like a mythological God.
What he actually accomplished, what he actually did, what he actually sacrificed.
It was more like a mythological God than any human being could actually be.
But he was that and more.
And he'll be reinterred.
You will be able to go to the Confederate funeral of Nathan Bedford Forrest on September the 18th.
If you want to know more information, email us at thepolitical cesspool.org.
We got one more segment tonight from South Carolina.
My God.
One more segment.
Stay tuned.
The Foundation for Moral Law is a non-profit legal foundation committed to protecting our unalienable right to publicly acknowledge God.
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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.
Yeah, this is David in engineering.
This is your wife in suburbia.
Oh, hi, honey.
What's up?
How's the robot coming?
Well, it doesn't exactly respond to requests yet, but um.
Well, I know how frustrating that can be.
You do.
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 brilliant in this.
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?
Engineer.
Funny, funny.
I'll see you in this.
I can't wait.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Welcome back to Get On The Show.
Call us on James's Dime at 1-866-986-6397.
Okay.
Ladies and gentlemen, I mean, I got to tell you, 17 years doing this.
I regret to tell you we only have one segment left tonight.
Jason Kuna, I mean, you've done this so many hours, so many live streams.
I've asked you this two or three times tonight already, but does it seem like three hours?
Does it seem like we've done what we've done?
Without question, it has seemed much more like 15 minutes rather than three hours.
It's such a parade of wonderful, beautiful, healthy people and laughter and joy, despite what's happening.
And that is, you know, you had the, what was it, the, was it the Estonians who sang against the communists?
I believe that was the case.
And that essentially is we are bringing together that sort of energy of joy and love and focus on our people and our purpose that will drive us and that will protect us from all victimizers, from all predators around the world.
A single people with many countries.
That's what we are, a single spirit.
And speaking to that spirit, we have a bit of news.
Please share.
So the.
All right, let me set the table here in this our final segment before we close the show with Jack Ryan, who's been with us throughout the night and a couple of segments prior.
But we want to give Jack the last word.
But the host of this event, so there's been a dunk tank.
There's been a bounce house.
And so you have to contract that out.
I mean, he doesn't own a dunk tank in a bounce house.
That would be a weird fetish.
He had people who service that industry come in.
And so he sold tickets.
He sold tickets to, if you want to do the bounce house, you want to do the dunk tank.
You buy a ticket for a dollar.
And well, Jason, take it from there.
He came back.
And let's get for our host.
Can we get a really loud rebel yell?
As loud as you can.
As loud as you can.
For our host.
Give us the rebel yell.
Ladies and gentlemen, one, two, three, go.
Yellow!
We can't thank him enough.
That was pretty good.
Yeah, that was pretty good.
I think it scared him back in time.
They even brought right back out of the battlefield.
Well, you know, at Chancellorsville, Stonewall Jackson said, and when you yell, yell like furies.
And that's where the rebel yell was born.
With Stonewall Jackson's admonition, when you charge, actually what he said in the exact words was, when you charge, yell like furies.
When they charge, after they fire that first volley, when they charge with bayonets, yell like furies.
And they ran them out of Virginia at Chancellorsville as they gave that rebel yell.
And that's where the rebel yell was born.
But we've heard that tonight.
Yeah, absolutely.
We've heard that tonight.
And kudos and deep love and thanks to this wonderful man who is our host.
And we need more, many more like him.
But the story, the story about the tickets.
Dollars for tickets.
Dollars for tickets.
He came back to tell us.
In the very last break, just a moment ago.
The very last break.
It just happened right before we went live.
And he had a handful.
When I say handful, I don't mean it was like an inch worth of cash, ladies and gentlemen.
It was like four inches of cash that he came back with that he said was turned in because it was found on the property.
Somebody, I don't know who it is.
He doesn't know.
He found at least a couple of hundred dollars worth of cash.
Easily, easily, hundreds, hundreds of dollars found and turned in.
Where does that kind of thing happen?
Right here in the South.
Amen to that.
That is a great demonstration of the brotherly love, that sentiment that we have, that we are family, that we're not going to stop.
We're honorable.
We're honorable people.
Honorable people.
No matter what the Southern Baptist Church says, no matter what the Antichrist media says.
Amen.
There's something here worth preserving.
There is a faith.
There is a culture.
There is a brotherhood.
And we're looking at him right now.
We're looking at the right now.
What would you say about this man?
He glows with the spirit of the West.
Somebody like this gentleman right here has the spirit of the West moving through every single pour.
And he's doing this for his people.
He's doing this with love.
It's a focus on who and what we are and a future that he wants to secure for our babies in many generations to come.
These are the kind of people that are remembered.
Without men like this, it doesn't happen.
It doesn't exist.
Precisely.
You have to have men of action.
You have to have men of honor.
Men with something to sacrifice, something to risk, but they do it anyway.
They do it anyway.
For a higher calling and for a cause greater than themselves.
And you were just talking about that with force.
And you honor those people by living their memory, not just remembering who and what they were in time.
And I tell you what, as we get ready to pass it over to Jack, that the listeners of this program, live and in replay, their pride swelled in them when they heard that little story, that little vignette of all of those hundreds of dollars being turned in rather than walked off of this property by a thief who would have then absconded with somebody else.
With his honor.
A southerner cannot abscond with his honor because he is a southerner.
Indeed.
Jack Ryan, such an integral part of this program.
He's been with us already a couple of segments tonight in the second hour.
I don't know how much more your opinion or your observations could have cultivated from the last time you were on the air.
But my friend, with five minutes remaining, the floor is yours.
Well, I just want to thank everyone, and I'm just happy and honored to be alive.
Isn't it great to be alive and be in South Carolina?
Woo!
Woo!
I have lived my whole life in rough and crappy places in Chicago, New York City and stuff.
But I've gone along to be for our southern brethren, and there's so many southern, good old boys and stuff here.
They're great.
But I want to say more to the southern women.
The southern women that gave birth to James Edwards, that married him, and things like that.
We need more southern, beautiful women.
And like these are the ones that we really have to do.
And I would do, I would take a trailways bus to go over this crappy place to get away from these northern feminist communist bitches like Hollywood.
You know, these ones like they're like, that's why I'm here, man.
That's why I'm here.
And I would be so honored to get, you know, just have a girlfriend or a wife that was even something close to the wife or the mother of James Edwards.
And that's what I'm trying to do.
And I'm wealthy.
I'm rich and things like that, but I'm lonely.
I'm trying to get you.
Jack, we got you covered.
There's no shortage of what would have been analogical basis if they weren't already spoken for that would have been married on this particular broadcast.
Hey, Jack is wealthy.
He's a political sensible alumni.
I mean, he's on the show.
Who wouldn't want to marry Jack, Jason?
Well, me.
But I mean, I mean, I'm sure there are plenty other wonderful women.
But, Jack, please, you have to watch out because the anti-white white females are down.
You can find them down south as well.
Maybe not as many.
But you've got to watch yourself because they may chase you out of Chicago.
She's going to have to sign a pre-nuptial.
That's for freaking damn sure.
Because if you've got, listen to Jack's heritage.
We're talking about our heritage as Southerners.
Your ancestors fought for the White Army of Russia.
Yes, absolutely.
My grandfather fought in the White Army.
Talk about that.
Yeah, no, we did.
And, you know, we fought for the right side.
The Confederates fought the right side.
There you go.
My grandfather fighting the White Army.
We lost, but the good side still knows one.
And then sometimes we lose.
And what happens to the history?
And we have to go along with that, but we're not giving up.
And we're in there.
And even though these are wrong sites, we're not giving up.
And the good side is fighting the southern side, the Christian side, the nationalist side.
And we're in here and we're not giving up and we're going to win.
There's no freaking way that's like there.
Jack's been with me for four or five years.
I've never heard of this animated time.
He is fighting.
That's what this event can do.
Jason Kuna, my co-host tonight.
Jack Ryan, my right-hand man, a regular every night on TPC.
Jack, I love you, brother.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you for being with us every week.
Jack Ryan.
Jason, but I want to turn the last 60 seconds to you.
Wrap it up.
Brother, first of all, I want to thank you.
I'm going to get a hold of you.
We're shaking hands as we speak.
You can't see it.
No, you can't see it.
We're shaking the hand of Jason Kuna as we speak.
This is the kind of bond and brotherhood that lasts lifetimes.
It's the kind of thing that the anti-white propaganda isn't going to be able to split apart.
It's the kind of thing that is going to enable us to move through these trials, to move through these tribulations, to move through the volcano and the hatred and the misrepresentation that the anti-whites are able to shower down upon us regularly.
We have suffered through this our whole lives.
And as a crucible, we have grown out of that.
The steel of our hearts has been hardened so that we can resist that tyranny that has sought to keep us down for so long.
It has been my deep and unabiding pleasure, my dear brother, to be able to co-host this TPC with you after 15 years of listening with you.
And you've been a regular guest.
I mean, you're a stranger to this program.
Indeed, indeed.
Not in this capacity.
Not in this capacity.
And in this sort of an event.
Not in this sort of event either.
So to be able to spend yesterday and today with you and Rick, and we had a magnificent time.
And I don't know where Rick is right now, but he's probably out chatting somebody else up.
But ladies and gentlemen, this has been something to remember this day that there was a Garden of Eden, and there were seeds planted there, and a future is beginning to grow.
Ladies and gentlemen, we'll be back with you next week for Jason Kuna, for Rick, for all the people who have joined us tonight.
Jack Ryan, Kirk Lyons.
I'm James Edwards.
Good night.
Godspeed from God's Country, Dixie.
We'll be back with you next week.
Ladies and gentlemen, a final word go.
There's Hunter.
Hunter.
Yeah.
Good night, everybody.
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