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Sept. 25, 2021 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
The Political Cesspool, going across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program.
And here to guide you through the murky waters of the political cesspool is your host, James Edwards.
Baby, baby, can't you hear my heart beat when you go up closer to me?
I get the feeling that's who we are.
Now that's a song that'll set the attitude tonight that we're going to have, a very optimistic and forward-looking attitude.
Welcome to tonight's live broadcast of TPC.
Last week of September, October, here we come.
My favorite time of year, my favorite month of year, October coming up next week.
But first, we've got a great show for you tonight.
I want to begin it by reading this email we received from a longtime listener in South Dakota.
Yes, I said South Dakota.
We've got them everywhere, including South Dakota.
And he writes this.
James.
I, like you, am optimistic that the truth will eventually prevail and know that our people have overcome worse trials in the past.
I'm also a realist and believe that things will get worse before they get better.
But you and TPC are a true comfort to many that we aren't alone.
I deeply appreciate the sacrifice you and Keith make.
And whenever I hear your show, it's like walking into a room of old friends who have arrived after a long journey.
Well, my friend in South Dakota, we feel the same way every time we get to come literally into your living room via this broadcast.
Thank you for tuning in.
Thank you so much.
And yes, you just heard his voice after a month long of travels.
We are back together tonight, Keith Alexander, and yours truly.
We're going to be joined tonight by former SiriusXM and Fox sports host Patrick Dino Ryan for what promises.
Hey, folks, I'm telling you right now, this is going to be a high-octane and powerful, optimistic discussion of current events.
But first, he's back.
He's back.
First time in three weeks.
Keith, I've never missed you so much.
I don't think I've ever gone so long without seeing you.
Three weeks since we were together.
How are you, brother?
Well, the feelings mutual.
I'm doing fine.
I feel just like our listener in South Dakota, our fan there.
It's just like a homecoming.
You know, when you're back, you've been on Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show.
You've been in Watumpkin, Alabama, and then to Spanish Fort, Utah.
You've been all over the map.
And I mean, you've run into, you've had flat tires.
You've had ticket problems.
You've had everything possibly that you've had to soldier through, but you've done what you need to do, basically, to show people that the political cesspool is there for them.
And the show must go on.
Well, not just that.
It's just that, you know, we don't just say that we support people.
We actually come out there and do it, either you or I do.
And you do it a lot more than I do.
I'll have to give you credit on that.
Although you've been making the circuit at SCV cams, we'll have something to say about the SCV in a moment.
You've been giving some speeches.
That's right.
Yeah, I kind of take the, I'm in the AAA league and you're in the majors, but I don't know about that.
But nonetheless, it's great to have you back.
Well, it's great to have you back, and it's great to be back together and with our extended family out there in TPC Nation.
Well, okay.
Yeah, so last week's show was a little more dour than your normal episode of TPC.
And I think obviously it was because of the circumstances.
So there it was me.
I mean, we were covering Sam Bushman's 25th anniversary in the first hour, which was, of course, very, very positive.
But then we had to go back to Tennessee.
We had Gene Andrews, Rich Hamblin, and Dissident Mama, which normally that triumvirate would make for a fantastic broadcast.
But under the circumstances, we were talking about the reinterment of General Forrest and Mrs. Forrest.
And, of course, the situation that was thrust upon us there for them to have to be reburied again.
Again, the difference between rural and urban is stout.
And I think it was because of that whole situation that people were a little more pessimistic on the show than we normally are.
It was interesting, though.
One of the things that we said has been proven to be true.
The Sons of Confederate veterans themselves depressed the attendance of that funeral.
The whole South could have and probably would have turned out for that had they been allowed.
Now, my wife actually found this.
You know, we've worked with Beauvoir in the past, the Jefferson Davis home at Presidential Library in Biloxi, Mississippi, and Beauvoir.
In fact, we even gave out parts of the roof that had been destroyed in the hurricane as, you know, the tokens for support one month, I remember.
That's right.
I've still got my piece.
Well, I have.
And we were able to obtain those pieces because we'd helped them raise money for the restoration after the destruction of Hurricane Katrina.
But the point is that Beauvoir had put out on their social media that General Forrest had been reinterred, and there was just countless comments saying, oh, I had no idea.
If I had known, we would have been there.
And my wife actually saw that and pointed it out to me.
And I think that's the point.
I mean, the number of tickets that they allowed to be available, they sold out of, they were given away.
It wasn't for sale, but they were all spoken for and accounted for weeks in advance of this event.
And the Beauvoir response was pretty telling.
Hey, you know, yeah, if we'd have known about it, we'd have been there.
But the SCV was so scared of negative press, they were too scared to have the funeral, as we said last week.
What they were afraid of, I think, now, because I've actually been in their council, so I can tell you, they were afraid that Antifa and people like that, Black Lives Matter, would somehow find a way to infiltrate, and they didn't want that problem.
On the other hand, I don't think that was going to be affected by whatever ticket.
They're not waiting politely for tickets and people at BLM and at Antifa to come in here and make a situation.
But nobody knew about it.
But what they were trying to do, basically, was just limit it to SCV members.
And I'm like you, I would really have preferred to have something that more people could have come to.
But they were really, really scared of the Antifa.
And that's one of the reasons they did what they did.
And it betrays the legacy of Forrest, I think, to have those misgivings overshadow what the right thing is to do there.
Now, that being said, I agree, by the way.
When the river flows, we talk about this.
When the river flows naturally, it comes back to us.
And we've seen this at the events we've done in South Carolina where you have a thousand people show up for a pro-Confederate, pro-Southern event.
Poll after poll suggests we are stronger than people would imagine.
So we were talking about polls of Trump voters.
Brad Griffin has done a lot of data digging on this.
Poll after poll that says 90% of Trump voters say whites are under attack.
30 to 40% of Trump voters say that they have a very favorable, if somewhat favorable view of, quote unquote, white nationalism.
So those are numbers you can win with.
The problem is, of course, people are content and they're unorganized, but they are simmering.
Are simmering and they are there and they are waiting for an opportunity to be led.
This would have been a great opportunity.
I agree.
And it would have been ideal.
Unfortunately, there's a lot of leadership in the SCV that is still caught back in the past with giving you lines like Democrats are the real racists and Martin Luther King was a Republican and all of this type of stuff.
And they were basically trying to say when they were questioned by the national news media that the reason they were supporting Trump, I mean, see me supporting Forrest was that later in life he'd become a big advocate for black people.
You know, so, you know, some of them.
That even isn't.
Well, we'll tell you the truth about that when we come back.
Hey, hey, we're going to give you some more white pills.
We're going to feed you white pills tonight.
We got, I haven't even told you what's coming up at the third hour.
Big surprise there, too, by the way.
We'll tell you all about it in time.
Stay tuned.
We're just getting started.
We're back.
Keith Alexander and James Edwards, full strength.
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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.
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Don't I thought that she would love me so.
Don't put a time I realize she had a pair of rubbing eyes.
I remember the nights we did.
I got her always acting so fiercely treated.
All right, so a little quick story here, ladies and gentlemen.
I was working in my home office a couple of days ago earlier this week, and through my son's bedroom door, I heard my 11-year-old daughter and my six-year-old son singing that song together.
Now, how did they know that song?
Well, the answer, of course, is they hear it when they're in the car with me because this is the music I play, and it's the music I play exclusively.
They're probably the only children in their age group that know that song and one appreciate it and two sing it.
I mean, because they are James and Sure.
At least James is getting his musical taste passed down to the younger generation.
Hey, well, now much more than that.
I mean, we told the story about taking them up to the forest boyhood home.
And no, no, no, they're getting a lot more than the musical taste.
They're getting the whole.
Well, I'm glad to hear that.
But I tell you, I couldn't help but grin as I heard that through the door because it was, you know, it wasn't like we had just gotten out of the car and heard that song.
It was sort of like just out of nowhere.
But yeah, that's good stuff.
Well, hey, while I breathe, I hope.
That's another old, I guess that's a Latin maxim, but it's on the South Carolina license plate.
We spent some time in South Carolina the last couple of years.
I was at the barbershop.
I took my son to get you at the barber shop.
I was at the barbershop.
It wasn't for me.
It was for my son.
Yeah, what did you do?
Tell him, don't drink too much off the top.
I'm trying to get you right here, Keith.
No, I was there, and it was to get my son a haircut.
Okay.
And so we got there right when it opened.
And so they called Henry up, and he was getting his haircut.
And by the time the barber started, another four or five guys had come in, my age or older.
And when the barber asked who was next, each of the men tried to say the other guy was next because they all wanted to be deferential.
And he said, y'all are all good Southern men.
This is good Southern manners.
And I said, you know what?
That's right.
That is something that still exists here that doesn't exist anywhere else.
And I said, you're not going to believe where I was last week.
Me and my boy here, we went up to the Forest Reinterment.
You know, Nathan Bedford Forrest got reburied and told him the story about that.
And boy, I tell you, in two minutes, they were all eating out of my hand.
They're like, yeah, we're proud of our Southern heritage.
We're proud of this.
And it's a shame what's going on here and what they're doing to our monuments and this, that, and the other.
But I say this.
If I had come back and said, you know what, Southern manners are good, but you know what?
We really got to be ashamed of our ancestors.
I am willing to bet they would have gone along with that too.
I don't want to come down on them.
I think their natural inclination was to be who they were and to be what they were when they were backing me up on that.
But I think the point is here, though, I've seen it so often, not just with women, but with men as well.
People will follow the strongest voice in the room.
And what we have to have is the confidence to be that strongest voice wherever we are in our communities and in our spheres of influence.
And the point is, this, Keith, we were talking earlier about these polls, these polls that indicate that, hey, there is a lot of support out there for our ideas.
I mean, you're talking about millions of people who are already there.
They're there.
They're just not organized.
They haven't had their leader come out yet and feed them the red meat that they crave.
But we do need to be.
And Amrin, by the way, just did a poll that backs these up.
This is an Amrin poll, not just of Amrin listeners, but of the general white population.
And they just published the findings and it backs up these other polls that we've been citing all year.
The support is out there, but there is reason to hope.
And I have that hope.
And we're going to continue on.
Well, I believe you're right.
And I believe that it's basically being fueled by Antifa and BLM.
They're basically telling people like those SCV members that were trying to tell you that General Forrest was really liberal on race issues.
They're telling them, look, shut up.
There's no room for you in the tent.
You're a white person.
White people are bad.
They're irretrievably and irredeemably bad.
And the more that they hear that, the more they need to hear it so they know, one, exactly what the end game is going to be, and two, that it will tip people who are on the edge over on our side.
That's, you know, if I was in that barbershop, I believe that basically what would have happened if, you know, you or me or anyone else had tried to say something bad about our ancestors, at the very least, you would have been met with stony silence by most old southerners.
That's right, that's right.
But on the other, and see, people don't want to ruffle feathers down.
They know that the culture in the media and the prevailing zeitgeist of the age is against us.
But like you said, white people are finally beginning to get past this idea that somehow they alone are not entitled to have a sense of racial solidarity.
That is what is beginning to flower because of the manure that's been spread by BLM and Antifa.
You got to be strong.
You got to be confident and you got to tell the truth and love.
And that's what we've always done.
What can be so bad about saying, I love my own tribe.
I love my own group.
Every other group loves their tribe.
Well, that's the thing.
It's not racist to love your own people.
But here's the thing.
To get back to the point we've been touching on, if people don't know the context of it, and it's this.
So the SCV did everything they could to keep it secret.
They didn't want the people to be able to honor Forrest.
Well, quite frankly, I'll tell you exactly what it is.
They didn't want people like Michael Hill's League of the South, people that basically are really good people, but have a little bit stronger opinion in defense of their race and defense of their heritage than they do.
They think that somehow they can walk a line and prevail.
They can't.
You're either on one side or the other.
You can't sit on the floor.
That's right.
And the SCP has gone out of the way to purge people like League of the South members who are, of course, their muscular allies.
But here's the thing.
There was one article that came out on the Forrest funeral, at least one that I saw, that had a reporter on the scene.
And they said, why are you honoring Nathan Bedford Forrest?
You know, why would you do this?
And they said, well, it was because of his work to reconcile the races late in life.
Now, what they're referring, which, by the way, is, hey, he gave a speech once at the Independent Order of Pole Bearers in 1875.
That was sort of a precursor to the NAACP.
It was about one paragraph long.
And basically, the gist of it was: we're going to have to live together, so let's cooperate and be as cooperative and harmonious with one another as we can be, which is a message that, of course, we all share.
And in his speech, and I'm looking at it right now, he said, Go to work.
He's talking to black people here.
Go to work, be industrious, live honestly, and act truly.
You know, it's a fine message.
There's nothing wrong with that.
It's a good message against anyone.
Well, but they're saying, you know, it wasn't what he did in the war that we honor him.
It was because, hey, he gave a speech to this group.
And then they went on to say that Forrest thought that black Confederates were the finest Confederates.
Now, I guarantee you that was never said.
That's just completely ridiculous.
But this is the best they can muster.
Please don't call us a racist.
No, he was actually, you know, they cannot stand up for the trip.
He was the real tribe.
It's just this.
They cannot stand up for their own tribe.
And those are the type of people that we need to purge.
They're the type of people that we need to purge.
And this is I'm looking at the SCV website right now, Keith, the SCV website right now, and I'm reading it from their own website right now.
So not only did I read it in the article, I'm reading it on their own website right now.
Finest Confederate, finer Confederates never fought.
That's what supposedly said about non-existent black Confederate soldiers.
See, they're always trying to invent people like this, but they always wonder, they're always stupefied at why this doesn't change any opinions on the left.
It will never change opinions on the left.
If you're trying to pacify those people, the only thing that will pacify them is your premature demise.
That's what they're really hoping and praying for, folks.
So if you don't want to check out early in life, then you need to realize who the enemy is and you need to stand up for your tribe.
When we come back, we're going to talk about this January 6th rally that happened a few days ago.
We're going to talk about the Haitian.
What in the world are Haitian people doing at the Mexican border?
How'd they get there?
Are the cowboys, the Border Patrol agents on horseback, the new slave traders?
Something out of the Quentin Tarantino movie, apparently.
We'll be right back to talk about it all.
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You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
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I'm Brad Bernards.
Republican U.S. Representative Tony Gonzalez of Texas and 38 of his House Republican colleagues introduced a resolution on Friday urging the Biden administration to fulfill its obligation to fully enforce federal immigration laws in response to the migrant surge in Del Rio.
Gonzalez says most of the Haitians were not sent back to Haiti.
Out of these 15,000 migrants that were under there, about 2,000 got sent back to Haiti.
That means 13,000 were processed and released into the United States.
Norway will end all COVID-19 related restrictions starting Saturday, the government announced, joining a growing list of countries and states that have removed pandemic curbs.
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Health Speaker Nancy Pelosi slammed the cowards of the Supreme Court for the Dark of Night Texas abortion law decision as the House passed the Women's Health Protection Act.
What the Supreme Court did was cowardly, a cowardly dark of nice decision, and to allow that bill to go into effect.
How could it be?
The U.S. House of Representatives approved legislation on Friday to protect abortion services against growing Republican-backed state restrictions, including a Texas law that imposes a near-total ban on abortion.
But the bill is unlikely to pass the Senate.
The U.S. Department of State said China is attempting to divert attention from its own bad conduct in Hong Kong by accusing the United States of interfering in city affairs.
The statement comes after China published a list of people responsible for the alleged interference.
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Don't let my glad expression give you the wrong impression.
Really, I'm sad.
Oh, sad of the sad.
You're gone and I'm hurting so bad.
Like a client to be glad There's some sad things The tears of a clown when there's no one around.
I'm going to go ahead and say it right now.
I'll say it.
Best song Motown ever put out right there.
Now, I love The Four Tops, The Temptations.
The Supremes had so many good songs.
And you put a gun to my head.
You said, James, what's the best song Motown ever had?
Tears of a Clown.
And I'll tell you, I got to tell you the background about that.
You know, this is something we like to do.
We'll give you a quick, quick, quick, quick hit on this.
Stevie Wonder had this song in mind.
He brought it to Smokey.
And he said, hey, Smoke, you know, I got this song, this idea about this guy who's sad, but he puts on this front.
He goes, can you do anything with it?
And Smokey said he drew the inspiration from the Italian, the classic Italian opera Pagliace.
And he put it with a clown.
And the dun dun That makes you think of like a carnival or a circus.
So here was a guy, black guy, well, mostly black anyway, and drawing inspiration from a classical opera.
And this is the point me and you talk about all the time.
Without agent provocateurs picking off the scabs of racial strife and race relations in the South, I mean, blacks and whites have always lived together in the South.
And so, yes, Nathan Bedford Forrest could go to a group of blacks and give a nice speech and pay them kindness and courtesy.
Of course he would.
Of course, we do as well in our daily lives every day, in fact.
But, you know, to say that, hey, that's the reason we honor him, it's a joke.
You're embarrassing yourself.
You're embarrassing Forrest.
You're embarrassing me for even having to say it here on the air.
But we'll let that lie.
Now, Keith, let's go to this.
Let me make a little very, very quickly.
Okay, basically, you're absolutely right.
White people and black people in the South have always gotten along unless there are third-party agent provocateurs, usually from out of the area, like Yankee abolitionists in the first Reconstruction and Jewish freedom riders in the second Reconstruction, also known as the Civil Rights Movement.
Basically, people get along well down here.
And that's what we in the South understand is quite frankly, we have less conflict in our day-to-day lives with black people than a lot of people from the North that live in areas where they rarely encounter black people.
Black people are able to spot a phony, somebody that is not being honest and truthful with them.
We found a way to do it without being offensive.
And you have to do that.
It's something that, you know, I was with a guy that I know that has a business in the ghetto.
And he basically provides and he provides like a bank service in there.
And all the people like him.
They rely on him.
And see, that type of thing is, you know, stupefies a lot of people from the North when they come down because they don't know how to relate to black people the way that white southerners do.
And that's just all there is to it.
On the other hand, let me bring this out.
My favorite Motown song of all time is Jimmy Ruffin, What Became Broken Heart?
That's good.
He's from Mississippi, by the way, Jimmy Ruffin.
He's David Ruffin's brother.
All right.
Well, you know, we like to work that into every show.
A little bit of Pop 60s trivia.
Well, okay, Keith.
Now, that being said, well, and again, the point should be made.
I mean, living here where we do, we interact with the blacks every day, and we're as nice and as courteous to them as anybody that we come across.
Get along with them.
And what do they think about Forrest?
They think Forrest would get off his horse and beat one or run them down.
You know, of course not.
I mean, it's like black joke.
If you don't point this out, all this anti-Confederate stuff, most black people are oblivious to it in places like Memphis, Tennessee.
It's white people that are the ones that are pulling them down in those urban areas.
It's people, it's those fatal agent provocateurs, third parties that are responsible for all of that.
All right.
Now, getting back to something, though.
So we had this beleaguered January 6th rally where they were rallying for the people.
And that's a good cause.
But as Brad Griffin points out, it was poorly attended.
I think only a few feds attended it because the end that it was a setup.
Well, the so-called intelligence community has pretty much snuffed out freedom of speech for anybody right of center.
It was just a trap for people that were foolish enough to go there.
And we're like the song by the Who, We Won't Be Fooled Again.
Well, and they had these eye-in-the-sky cameras taking pictures, you know, high-definition, high-resolution pictures of anybody who did show up legitimately.
But here's a topic for broader discussion that I'd like for you to break down, Keith.
Let's take two recent events, January 6th in Charlottesville, versus the so-called civil rights marches and demonstrations where you really did have violence everywhere those people went.
You had them attacking police officers, throwing feces and urine, violence everywhere they went.
And by the way, we've had Drew Lackey on, the former chief of police in Birmingham, Alabama, during that tumultuous era.
And he even talked about in his interview with us how he went out of his way to help make sure Ralph Abernathy was safe.
And hey, we got this tip.
We're going to keep you safe.
Don't go here.
Now, yes, they were totally against this stuff, but at the same time, they still provided them responsibility was as a member of law.
But here's the question.
Those marches were allowed to happen.
You know, Charlottesville was not allowed to happen.
January 6th was, of course, wildly taken out of context.
They should have been, as we've mentioned, maybe given a misdemeanor citation, paid a fine, and that's it at most.
But Charlottesville was not allowed to happen.
All of those marches, and you had violence every single time.
All of those marches in the South were allowed to go on.
The police didn't shut them down.
You had the intelligence community, the government, and the media behind the so-called civil rights demonstrations.
Of course, in Charlottesville, all of those entities and institutions were against us.
Take a broad scope view, Keith, on this.
Charlottesville versus the civil rights vis-a-vis the establishment's treatment of both.
Well, what happened in Charlottesville and January the 6th is that people, white people, and particularly white people from outside the South, but even ones within the South, basically bought into the fable of the civil rights movement, which black people still buy into as well.
What they buy into is this idea that black people just got together, locked arms, started rocking back and forth and singing spirituals, and the walls came tumbling down.
That's not the truth about nonviolent Gandhian-style protests.
In fact, the people that actually were the civil rights people, workers, they were all funneled, the people from the North, through the Highlander Folk School in Montegle, Tennessee, which is near where the University of the South is.
And they were basically put through a boot camp.
The Highlander Folk School was like the Paris island for black and white Northerners coming down to protest civil rights.
One thing that they don't point out to you about the history of the civil rights movement was that it was very difficult, and people like Medgar Evers and others admitted this to recruit indigenous local black people to participate in these protests because white and black people had a long tradition of staying in their own lane on things like this, and they were not into it.
They basically found a few people that they could buy off with money to get them to work in this, like Martin Luther King.
If he hadn't been well paid, he wouldn't have been doing it, folks.
And that's the same way with a lot of others.
And there were, of course, there were society's chronic malcontents.
But again, look, what happened is there's a great article in Western World Voices called Step One that I would recommend you look to.
It's one of our daily reads.
Basically, you have to be prepared if you're going to try to duplicate what happened in the civil rights movement.
During the civil rights movement, Jewish power and influence was the secret hand behind all of it.
You had the National Lawyers Guild, which had been created by people like Kathy Bowden, the famous SDS weather person father back in the 1920s.
They were providing battalions of lawyers.
So was the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, to step in and defend any protesters that got arrested.
The judges were not particularly harsh on these people at all.
In fact, they would do things like give them fines.
And these people wanted to go to jail because they wanted to be able to show to the rest of the world how cruel and mean and bad white Southerners were when, as Drew Lackey showed you, it was just the opposite.
We didn't realize how they were manipulating the media to portray people the way that they were.
The civil rights movement was the first time in American history in which lawbreakers were successfully portrayed as the good guys and law enforcement was successfully portrayed as the bad guys.
Now, what happened at Charlottesville was what could have happened to black protesters and white northern protesters at Selma and Birmingham.
What if they were tracked down?
What if they were prosecuted?
What if they were held without habeas corpus?
Without risking the city, this is like January the 6th.
Now you're cooking with Greece, Keith Alexander the Great.
This is the, to put a fine point on it, the so-called civil rights demonstrations were successful because the establishment was behind them.
The media of the club.
And the Southerners were polite, good people.
Abby Johnson was once director of a Planned Parenthood clinic in Bryan, Texas.
After a moral crisis, she quit, and now she campaigns against what she once endorsed.
They implement abortion quotas in all of their clinics.
What do you mean, quotas?
You have to perform a certain number of abortions every month.
One of the reasons that I left...
Are they explicit about that?
Yes, it's in your budget, right there on the line item.
One of the reasons I left Planned Parenthood was because in a budget meeting, I was told to double that abortion quota.
And for me, as someone who had spoken to the media and had said, you know, we're about reducing the number of abortions, we're about, you know, prevention, all of these other services, I was shocked.
So since you actually worked at a Planned Parenthood, give us some sense of the relative number of abortions.
Okay, Abortions Planned Parenthood provides over 330,000 abortions a year.
They are the largest single abortion provider in our country.
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My grandmother's middle name was Eileen.
Welcome back to the show, everybody.
James Edwards, Keith Alexander.
Keith, hey, you know, look, you can make something happen if you've got the entire array of the establishment's installations behind you.
It's a little bit tougher when you don't.
They had it.
We don't.
Well, in particular, Jewish power and influence control the media.
Like somebody was asking, I think Mark Weber a few weeks ago said that Franklin Roosevelt was just responding to what the media did.
And I said, well, who was in charge of the media in the Franklin Roosevelt administration?
The same family that was in charge of it in the Teddy Roosevelt administration, which is, of course, the Sulzberger family, which are Jewish.
We got to get to Haiti, though.
We got to get to Haiti.
Well, let me just bring this thing about the civil rights movement.
There was not cruelty, as the fable goes, visited upon civil rights protesters by white southern police.
They had dogs on leashes.
They didn't turn them loose from the leashes.
And if you didn't want to be bitten by the dogs, you just backed up.
Then, on the other hand, they used fire hoses.
What do they use in Israel against the Palestinians?
Rubber bullets at the best and live ammunition at the worst.
But why do we hear no outcry about the cruelty of the Israeli police forces against Palestinians?
But we heard volumes about the cruelty of white southern police, Bull Conner, people like this, et cetera, et cetera, against civil rights protesters during the civil rights movement.
Ask yourself that question, and the answer is obvious.
Well, again, the point you were making before the last break, and that is, hey, look at the treatment that J6 and the Charlottesville truly peaceful protesters are getting compared to what the truly lawless anarchists were doing in the so-called civil rights era.
And it's the exact opposite.
Everything's a negative image of as it should be.
But we know that, and we accept that.
We don't accept it because it's the way it's supposed to be or the way it should be, but we understand it.
And we want to change it.
Now, let's go very quickly.
Well, let me just say.
Well, it needs to be pointed out to people because if you just listen to the news media, you just absorb like a sponge their viewpoint.
And you need to be able to hear an opposing viewpoint because there is a good opposing viewpoint.
All right.
I got to give you a quick preview of what's coming up because I don't want you to miss any of it.
Again, coming up in the next hour, we're going to continue to talk about current events.
We still got to talk about Haiti, the Border Patrol agents on horseback and what's going on with that.
Now, this just goes to show the power of the media to craft a narrative.
So, what you actually had here were Border Patrol agents patrolling the border.
They were actually doing their jobs, and they're not supposed to do that.
You don't see the pictures of it, but you hear a report that makes you think that it's like some scene out of Django and Chain.
Yeah, some Quentin Tarantino movie or bandingo.
Now, why were they on horseback?
Let's just ask ourselves that.
Well, let's just think about it.
Why were they on horseback?
Well, I'll tell you because there's places horses can get that a car can't.
And horses are faster than if you're running after one of these criminals on foot, and it gives you an elevated position.
That's why.
And this whole thing, even the photographer who took the picture said, hey, they weren't whipping them.
What are you talking about?
The narrative coming out.
Joe Biden even went up today, senile Joe, Slow Joe, said we're going to punish these Border Patrol agents for what?
Doing their damn jobs?
He said they ran over Haitians.
They were whipping Haitians.
I mean, complete, complete, and utter lies.
But now they're so emboldened that now, who are you going to believe?
Us or your lying eyes?
We've seen the pictures.
We've seen what they were doing.
These Border Patrol agents are heroes.
And by the way, Alice Sharpton went down there.
Alice Sharpton went.
You know, we squared off with Al Sharpton here in Memphis a few years ago.
We were cutting our teeth back in 2005, protecting the Confederate parks for a while.
And anyway, Sharpton was down there and he got booed by the citizens.
They said, you're the racist.
You're the one who doesn't belong here.
The Border Patrol agents are our heroes.
But down there, you've got this throng of Haitians.
How in the hell did they get there?
Do they walk?
Do you walk from Haiti?
I don't think they're on water.
And go to my Twitter, by the way.
If you haven't seen the scene at the border at James Edwards TPC, go take a look at what's going on down there, man.
That is scary as hell.
And by the way, Haiti is not governed by white people.
As tens of thousands of these people flood into the United States, the anthropological question must be asked: what is preventing them from establishing a viable civilization in their own country?
Does the Western world have the intellectual integrity to confront that truth and the reality?
They've been trying to do it ever since 1915.
American troops stayed in Haiti from 1915 to 1934 trying to establish a good Western white-style government down there.
It was impossible.
They've tried numerous times since then.
But then, on the other hand, the news media never wants to show you the real pictures like the real pictures of the people.
Look at these people in this tent and they're taking baths in the Rio Grande.
You don't see that on the news.
Another thing you don't see on the news is a local story.
They've had nothing but nonstop coverage in Memphis about a shooting in a Kroger by a gunman who mysteriously has no apparently racial or ethnic affiliation whatsoever.
But they, you know, kind of suggest because it happened in a white bedroom community, Collierville in Memphis, that it was white.
Well, he wasn't.
He wasn't.
He was a Burmese guy who worked as a sushi chef in their delicatessen.
You don't want to eat sushi at Kroger.
Let's just start there.
But nonetheless, this is what, you know, the guy shot 14 people.
Two people were killed, and he was one of them.
That ought to be an indication right there it wasn't a white guy.
Okay, but that's that's that.
But see, that's the type of situation that the national news media and our local news media, they will continue to lie by omission.
On the other hand, if this, what they did do, they ran at the very beginning a picture of a white guy in camouflage with flak jacket and a gun.
And they kind of suggested that was the shooter when actually that was one of the policemen that came and, you know, look, if we're going to talk about shootings in Memphis, it's a bit like having Jack Ryan to talk about shootings in Chicago.
That ain't noteworthy.
It's just too kind.
It's like dog bites man versus man bites dog.
Jesse Lee Peterson saying, our good friend Jesse Lee saying, I don't want Haitian refugees in America because they'll turn America into Haiti.
This whole thing on the border, you know, the United States.
That's the purpose of them.
The United States Congress voted 420 to 9 this week for a $1 billion aid package for Israel so they could have this iron dome.
We can't even secure our own borders.
I don't know if we can't or we won't.
I don't know which one it is, but we're not.
I mean, that's the key thing.
But this is a fan of defense, much less an iron dome over America.
Oh, my God.
You do not want these people in here.
Okay.
You cannot bring the entirety of the world up to your standard of living.
If it comes out of Michael Turkey versus the world, I'm going to take my kids every time.
Tucker Carlson and Fox News have finally gotten white-pilled.
They are now talking every night about the great replacement.
And the rest of the media, the silence is deafening.
All right, I got to ask you one thing, Keith.
Very, very, very, very quickly.
We're running behind here.
But we got Patrick Ryan, former Sirius XM and former Fox sports radio host and TV host as well, locally.
He's going to be with us in the second hour.
We're going to continue to talk about current events.
I got an email from a guy, okay, a few days ago.
And he said, long time listener, the first show he ever listened to, and he's listened ever since.
He said, I knew y'all were the real deal.
It was a discussion we had with Pat Buchanan about World War II.
Now, you know, Pat's made a series of appearances on this program.
We have played in repeat before our conversation with Pat about Suicide of a Superpower.
But I said, wow, that's incredible.
I don't even have the archive to that anymore.
Our archives used to go back to 2004.
Now they go back to 2009.
He said, well, I taped it.
I taped it on, I went to your archive at the time and taped it.
And he sent me the tape.
What we're going to do in the third hour, I haven't listened to this in 13 years.
We're going to go back to a conversation.
We've got a new inducement for one of our fundraisers.
I'm going to go back with you in the third hour with all new commentary from Keith Alexander, and we're going to listen to it together.
This conversation that I had with Pat about World War II.
Nobody's heard this in 13 years.
You can't even find it in the archives anymore.
That's what's going to go on in the third hour.
Patrick Ryan in the second.
Keith, we're wrapping up our first quarter, or first quarter, no, third quarter fundraising drive, third quarter fundraising drive.
And, hey, get it postmarked.
Obviously, we can't take online donations.
Get it postmarked before October the 1st, and you'll qualify $100 or more.
You'll get that DVD, the Frankfurt School with Bill Rowland.
We were talking about it right before the show started.
You know, our next DVD needs to be this thing of Pat Buchanan because, I mean, it's on fire, folks.
Well, you were talking about how everybody's talking about this DVD, not this DVD, but everybody's talking about critical race theory now.
Bill Rowland was talking about it in the 90s.
When I say, yes, it's PBS quality, it's PBS quality for the 90s.
It does look like it was taped in the 90s, but it is.
The intellectual content has never been more current than it is now.
And even to the point that people like Mark Levin have tuned into it, of course, he's renamed it American Marxism rather than cultural Marxism because he knows if you go to Wikipedia or to the encyclopedia or the dictionary and look up cultural Marxism, you will be keyed in right away to the Jewish antecedents of that whole movement, which Mark Levin doesn't want you to know about.
If you have not sent it in yet, folks, your support this third quarter, thank you, first of all, by the way, to everyone who already has.
My God, we love you.
Still time to do it and qualify for this DVD.
We'll be back with Patrick Ryan next.
There's more to come right here on the Liberty News Radio Network.
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