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Nov. 6, 2021 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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20211106_Hour_2
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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.
In a little Kathy, you'll see all the signs of the morning.
She was sitting there giving me looks with me among the mourners.
Who has started walking her way?
She belonged to Batman Jose.
And I knew the yes, I knew, I believe.
Then I heard her say, Come a little bit closer.
You're my guideline, so big and so strong.
Come a little bit closer.
I'm all alone.
Every night of summer.
Somebody thinks to lament in this day and age, and so we'll add another shrimp on the Barbie and lament the passing of Jay Black or David Blatt, if you prefer.
Obviously, a Jewish singer, and he got the name Jay Black.
Well, we explained that.
From Loss, excuse me, Long Island, Long Island, New York.
I had a problem with addiction, gambling addiction, and some other addictions.
But boy, they don't make songs like that anymore.
And well, you know, this brings me to my weekly question, Keith.
Were we better in 1964?
Are we better now?
Now, by 64, it was already all over.
I think we know that.
But if you had to pick.
Well, I don't think it was all over.
I think that the foundation had been laid for our demise, but we definitely weren't all over them.
For example, in the South, the 60s really didn't start until the 70s.
What happened in Berkeley in 1964?
Four didn't happen until the 70s in places like Memphis and throughout the South.
Basically, if you want to confirm or deny that, the proof would be look at annuals from colleges and high schools in, let's say, 1965 and compare them with similar annuals from 1975, and you'll see a totally different look in the student body.
Well, I'll tell you, and Keith is very keen on showcasing these annuals.
He actually brought one to our pre-show dinner meeting, or should I say, supper on Thursday.
Anyway, hey, what we're going to doing this hour, we continued our coverage of the Charlottesville trial in the first hour.
Nice surprise appearance from Jason Kessler.
Be sure to help him out.
We gave you the information on how to do that a few minutes ago.
This hour, we're going to be talking about the election results of Virginia.
Really, the world is revolving around Virginia this week in some ways with the trial in Charlottesville.
The election results in Virginia are very interesting.
I don't know if they're good or bad, but they're interesting and they're remarkable.
And we'll be talking about that a little later on.
Also, this week, the trials, not just for Charlottesville, but in the shooting of Ahmaud Arbery and, of course, the Kyle Rittenhouse trial in Wisconsin.
They're all ongoing.
They're all taking place simultaneously.
We're going to touch on all of that.
But I don't want to shift gears and then go back to something.
Keith, you heard the first hour's presentation.
Obviously, you helped me set the stage for the Charlottesville trial last week.
The two hours we spent last week covering the trial and its lead up and all the different factors and players and really breaking down the who, what, where, when, and why.
Tonight was more of a continuation on what's happened during the second week of the trial.
What did you hear?
Talk about slap.
Anything you want to add from listening to Jason Kessler?
Yeah, there's quite a bit.
And by the way, our audience and I owe you a great debt of gratitude for actually listening to all this trial so that we don't have to.
Talk about behind enemy lines.
And I mean, you know, you talk about mind-numbing boringness.
It hasn't been boring, but it has been long.
Well, it has been, and it's minutiae and it's tedious and whatnot.
But it's not at all like the old Perry Mason show where people, you know, confess to murder from the witness stand and then go jump out the window to their death or something like this.
You know, it's not that type of drama.
You're going to got two different sides that are at polar opposite ends of their opinions on interpreting the same facts.
So you need to keep that in mind.
And there's no easy out for the jury.
The jury has to digest all of this and decide how to apply the law to it.
So being a juror is not an easy task.
It's a very easy task on the old Perry Mason shows or law and order and everything because basically everything is set and we know what result, you know, who the good guys are and who the bad guys are.
The jury, if they come in as they're supposed to be, just listening to the facts, they supposedly don't come in with a preconceived notion about who the good guys and bad guys are.
Of course, I think that's almost impossible in today's world.
But that at least is the fiction that we all have to travel under when you are in the courtroom.
Now, let me just say in the larger context, you need to remember that the proper sequence for doing anything is ready, aim, fire, not ready, fire, aim.
And unfortunately, I don't think that was followed by our side at Charlottesville.
What we need to do is study the civil rights movement and see what of their techniques we should follow and which ones we'd have to jettison in good conscience if you want to have a successful public protest.
For example, the left basically choreographed everything like it was a theatrical production.
They had a place that I've mentioned many times on the show before, the Highlander Folk School, right across the line from Alabama and Mississippi in Montegle, Tennessee, which was like the Paris Island for civil rights workers.
That's where they basically weeded out the loose cannons, the people like I think there's somebody that was named, was it Alvado or something like this by Jason Kessler?
Well, again, you know, even he's better than the best of the prosecutor, you know, the plaintiffs.
Right, but what I'm saying is you don't need people that are not going to follow the script.
They had a script.
If you got 5,000 people, you're not going to get 5,000 people to follow the script.
The civil rights protesters, sure as hell, didn't follow the script.
They were throwing feces and urine and all of that.
They were doing the exact same thing, actually.
And then the cameras would start rolling when the Alabama State Troopers were in the middle of the day.
Well, that was the response.
That was the script, okay?
Don't think that was not the script.
They wanted to provoke the police, but they knew because the media was on their side that none of that would be covered or reported on.
And that's why emulating their tactics might not work for us.
They had the right to-they had the president.
They had the media.
They had all of that.
We don't have anything to do with the money.
Well, like I said, there are certain things that we can't control that they could, but there are other things we could.
For example, we don't want people making these kind of loose comments, loose cannon comments on the media that can be used to defame the entire protest and all the protesters.
They made sure they didn't have that in the civil rights movement.
But you know what else that they do is they will send in agent provocateurs.
They will send in people who have this newly minted Nazi flag that has just been taken out of the packaging with all the creases in it and Yeah, this is one of their guys, you know, and this is what they do.
So you're never going to be able to always be able to have somebody appearing to be one of our guys that does something silly.
And then they'll paint the whole lot with that.
Look, it's not impossible to plan ahead.
There's a great article in Western Voices World News called Don't Forget About Step Zero or something to that effect.
Step Zero is the planning that goes into something like this.
It's not really productive to have a whole lot of people that are not coordinated coming together and doing this because we know that the other side controls the media.
They have agent provoxers.
They have plenty of money to do these.
You know, again, you're right, Keith.
You're right about a lot of this.
Monday morning quarterbacking is always, you know, the hindsight's always 20-20.
I don't think, and again, we've talked about this for years now, literally years, because this whole thing happened in 2017.
Nobody, though, could have foreseen the law enforcement of Charlottesville, the government of Charlottesville, the government of the world.
There are some things that we could do, and we're going to go.
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Well, my mom smokes and my dad smokes and I saw them smoking, so I tried it.
They're telling me not to smoke, but they smoke themselves.
When it comes to smoking, are you sending mixed signals?
But when you teach someone a certain way to do things and you go back on that certain way, it sends mixed signals to the person that they're trying to teach.
The parents need to be the example.
Smoking, if you think you're old enough to start, you're smart enough to stop.
A public service message from this station and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
We started to dance in my arms.
She felt so enlightened.
So excited.
You know, when we had our aforementioned pre-show supper on Thursday, I said, Keith, what we're going to do this week, we're going to do a three-hour tribute to Jay and the Americans.
And he said, well, you know, are you sure you want to do that?
You know, maybe we should continue to talk about Charlottesville and the election results of Virginia.
Okay, you win.
But, no, seriously, that didn't happen.
Anyway, great music.
We like the stuff.
We like the time.
We like the time.
We do what interests us, quite frankly, unapologetically.
We've always beat to our own drummer here on TPC, that's for sure.
We are wholly original.
Well, let me just say this in response to what you were saying.
And what I was saying was, if anybody should be on trial, it's the city of Charlottesville, the state of Virginia, the law enforcement there who put these two competing contingents in the same space at the same time, allowed them to brawl and did nothing to stop it.
Now, you've had literal Klan rallies that this never happened at because the police always did their job.
Now, I know everybody who's right of Comrade Stalin is known as a Klansman or a Nazi or whatever, but you have had literal Klan rallies where none of this ever happened because the police did their job.
They were instructed not to do their jobs here, and I don't think anybody could have foreseen that.
Well, let me just say this.
In the civil rights movement, it was scripted.
It was street theater.
In the end of the civil rights era, like in Memphis after in the run-up to Martin Luther King's assassination, if you'll recall, they had some people that were not part of the script.
They were called the Invaders, a group of young radical blacks in Memphis that allowed the Memphis supposedly peaceful protest to devolve into a looting destructive rampage.
And it was shortly after that that peaceful protest was more or less abandoned by the left.
If you can't control it, it's really not going to be productive for you.
And that's why people like Brad Griffin have said that in this day and time, with the left in control of the media, basically when we have a successful protest like Shelbyville, Tennessee, nobody's ever heard of it.
If you have an unsuccessful one or one that has some problems or has something in it that the left can use, you hear about it endlessly.
And that's why Brad says maybe the best activism in the present time is no activism like that.
What we really want is a honest debate about the merits of the left's position and the right's position on these things.
But really, a lawsuit is not the ideal forum for that.
But in other words, that's forced on it, so we need to use it as best we can.
Now, we need to remember one thing about this suit.
It's a new type of suit.
It's what they call a slap suit.
SLAP is an acronym, S-L-A-P-P.
What does it stand for?
Strategic litigation against public participation.
This is not the typical goal-oriented litigation where you're trying to get a judgment or you're trying to get exoneration.
The left is doing this for the process as much as the end result.
They want to harass and antagonize the people on the right so that they decide that it's not a good thing to do these type of public participation projects like Charlottesville.
They're trying to do it by making it so expensive, so burdensome to, for example, hire lawyers to do all the things that Jason was talking about.
Lawfa.
It's called lawfare.
Yeah, all of that type of, you know, getting, you know, having to catalog everything that's said, having to get up transcripts of testimony each day.
That's an expensive undertaking.
That's an undertaking that the left is much better prepared to do than we are.
And that's what they did in the civil rights movement, for example.
They had battalions of lawyers at the radio.
They had stacks of money for bail, things like that, which we don't have.
Well, they're doing it and like you, it's not a matter that we would win if we get a hung jury.
The left would love us to have a hung jury because that means it's a mistrial and they can retry the whole thing again using their bottomless pit of resources to incur expenses on these defendants.
See, that's what this is.
And it's basically a slap lawsuit is a slap in the face of traditional due process.
It is basically an abuse of process by the left using litigation.
It's what they used to call vexatious litigation.
It would be barretry.
It would be abusive process, things like this.
And basically, the Bar Association of Virginia should basically entertain a complaint about it.
Likewise, the judge should try to take things by and control and make sure that this type of abuse isn't allowed to happen because they're using the law for extra legal purposes.
They're trying to basically break the defendants financially and otherwise.
Of course.
Now, we've spent so much time on that.
And rightfully so, we are going to focus more heavily on Charlottesville than anything else until its conclusion.
But we have now two minutes left.
We're so far behind schedule.
Two minutes left to cover the Rittenhouse and Arbery trials.
Well, the Arbery trial began.
Of course, he was presented to Maud Arbery as this innocent black jogger.
He was just jogging, don't you know?
And he was just gunned down by these hateful white supremacists.
And, well, of course, there's a lot more to it than that.
And a jogger was the least of what he actually was.
Of course, it was alleged that he went for the gun and he shot what happens.
But I think the mustache takeaway this trial this week as well.
And the message takeaway to me is he is apple the fact that the poor juror in this case we're told incessantly and every day, in fact, everywhere we look, race is a construct.
Why is it noteworthy that there's 11 white jurors on here?
Race doesn't exist.
Well, there is a case called the black case, a U.S. Supreme Court case, where you have to try to have a racially balanced jury if you have a black defendant charged with murder or some type of serious crime.
But this was basically a case where you had a kind of unofficial neighborhood watch trying to prevent crimes of opportunity that were happening in the neighborhood.
You apparently had some construction going on.
You had people like Mr. Arbery coming by, stealing building materials, things like this.
And some people that lived in the neighborhood decided they weren't going to stand for that.
So they couldn't get the police there.
They didn't have the means to have a private security service, so they became their own security service.
And they caught R. Berry in a very suspicious situation, and they tried to make a kind of citizen's arrest and call the police while they had him there.
He grabs their gun.
It goes off, and he is killed.
So this is what they're trying to punish, basically the right of white homeowners to protect their neighborhoods.
That's from criminal depredations.
Now, these people weren't out here shooting somebody for stealing their bike or something.
They were trying to hold him for the police, and this guy wasn't going to stand for it.
And rather than just running away, if he had just run away and they'd shot him, it'd be a totally different matter.
But instead, they tried to take his gun from him, and it went off.
So this is in a nutshell, the Ahmed Arberry case, one that you've seen on all those sites.
And then the Rittenhouse case is the other one where a young man from out of the area, not from Kenosha, I think it was from Cincinnati, Ohio, or someplace like that, somewhere in Ohio.
And he came up here because he had heard that there were people that were being beaten and harmed and in harm's way up there.
And he came up there armed to be a security guard, a protector against people from that.
And what happened was they started chasing him.
They tried to take his gun away from him and he shot several of them.
All right.
Is that proper self-defense?
That's the issue in the Rittenhouse case.
All right, hold on right there.
And we'll make another point about this before we go to the Virginia elections.
That's what we're going to do this hour.
And hopefully we can get to it all.
We're doing the best we can.
It's live radio.
Sometimes we work ahead of schedule.
It's like Southwest Airlines.
Sometimes you're ahead of schedule.
Sometimes you're behind schedule.
But we'll get you there either way.
Student.
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You're listening to Liberty News Radio, USA Radio News with Lance Pryde.
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Although a recount has been requested, it looks as if the governor's mansion in New Jersey will not have a new occupant.
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I'm all alone.
I gotta tell you, if I'm ever in the car and that song comes on, that volume goes up so loud, it's amazing.
I can still hear today.
It's a cute song, I tell you, it's funny.
And it's instructive because there's a lot of truth in that song if you actually listen to the lyrics.
Yeah, you do not want to mess with a strange woman who may be some other man's woman that you don't know about.
Well, I think the lesson is the woman goes the strongest man.
Well, that's part of it.
The other part is for self-preservation purposes, you know, you got to look before you leap.
Especially if it's Badman Jose.
Anyway, okay, so yeah, the situation in.
Check for a wedding ring.
The situation in Wisconsin.
You know, the people that were shot by Kyle Rittenhouse were by no means good people.
They were alleged of being serial rapists, child rapists, even.
I mean, this is stuff that I've been talking about.
Burglars, wife beaters, members of the Communist Party, Church of Satan.
I don't know.
I mean, there's all kinds of things going on out there.
But the important thing, James, was that they attacked him physically.
They were trying to dissolve him.
They were different than either the cases we mentioned previously, Arbery and even certainly Charlottesville, especially Charlottesville.
I will say, and just being honest, which is the only thing I can be and the only thing that I am, Kyle Rittenhouse had no business going there and inserting himself in a Black Lives Matter and anti-fud terroristic assault on a city.
He just didn't.
He had no business being there.
If he hadn't been there, he wouldn't be in this hot water.
But here's, It doesn't give anti-fund Black Lives Matter terrorists the right to do what they did for so long in this country.
What they were doing is what they are accusing him of doing.
He did not attack them.
They attacked him, and he was trying to defend himself.
Again, when he came there with the gun, I agree that quite in today's world, you'd be better off to leave your guns rather than taking them not to town.
This wasn't even property.
You keep them at home.
If they break into your home, you can defend yourself.
Otherwise, don't bring a gun here.
He inserted himself into a situation where this was likely to occur.
Now, that doesn't mean that he's not innocent in the charges against him.
I'm just saying it's totally different than Charlottesville.
Now, this is just a quick paragraph from an article this week.
Prosecutors in Kenosha, Wisconsin haven't rested yet, but they've yet to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Kyle Rittenhouse was in fear for his life when he shot and killed two men and injured a third during a chaotic night of protest, riots, and looting last August.
In fact, at several points in the trials first week, the district attorney's team elicited testimony from their own witnesses that bolstered Rittenhouse's argument that he was acting in self-defense.
I don't doubt that.
I don't doubt that at all.
But we'll see how it plays out.
Now, here's the thing that I think has to be mentioned, and we're so far behind on getting to the Virginia election results.
It's sad.
The fact that the Charlottesville trial, the Ahmad Arbery trial, and the Kyle Rittenhouse trial are happening all at the same time.
Now, these events were separated by a couple of years, but they all managed to begin in court nearly the same day.
And so they're all happening concurrently right now.
If justice is served in all of these trials, and in my opinion, justice would be served if the defendants in the Arbery, the defendants in the Rittenhouse, the defendants in the Charlottesville trials are exonerated.
And if that happens, we talk about a national divorce.
Can you imagine what could happen if justice is served here?
I'll tell you exactly what will happen.
You'll hear crickets.
The mainstream media will basically try not to cover it.
Or will BLM and anti-fat terrorists go back to burning down the country?
I mean, that's the thing that let me just say this for Kyle Rittenhouse.
There is a Second Amendment right to bear arms and to go out.
I agree 100%.
So even though I would never advise my own children or any friends or anybody to do what he did, he had a right to do that.
And he was attacked and was in fear of his life and safety when he destroyed it.
I get it.
I get it.
Okay, that's my position.
But see, Arbery and Rittenhouse are both criminal prosecutions where the defendants, Rittenhouse and the two, the father and son that are being prosecuted in the Ahmed Arbery case, look at basically spending the rest of their lives in jail if they fail.
These are not slap lawsuits, civil lawsuits to be vexatious litigation like the Charlottesville case.
Now, there'll be a conclusion one way or another, probably in both of those criminal cases, Rittenhouse and Arbery.
In the Charlottesville case, if you have a hung jury, it'll be a mistrial and the left can refile the suit or retry the suit.
And they can do that ad infinitum.
So basically, their purposes are very well served if they get a mistrial based on a hung jury.
So the only good result for our people would be to have a lawsuit in which they are exonerated by 12 jurors.
And that's going to be a tall order.
You know, I hope that happens, but I wouldn't be betting on it in Vegas.
Let me say that.
Okay, well, we'll see.
And with regards to Charlottesville, Rittenhouse, Arbery, God's will be done.
God's will be done.
That's, I think, all we can ask for.
We do need to pray for all the defendants in each of these cases, people.
I really do think the power of prayer is something that we need to rely on as much as anything else.
All right, well, let's set the stage for this, the Virginia election results.
Is it good or bad?
I mean, certainly Terry McAuliffe deserved to lose for the role he played in Charlottesville if nothing else.
But Glenn Younkin is certainly not one of us.
He benefited from backlash politics.
The whole thing, I mean, McAuliffe was running away with it until he made the comments about how parents shouldn't have the right to tell schools what their kids are taught.
And that was within the context of, of course, very perverse and vulgar sexual things that elementary school kids even were learning.
And, of course, the critical race theory, which teaches that all white kids are born evil.
And that's after that, the suburban moms and the suburbanites and all the people who sort of abandoned Trump to an extent, those five percenters that we keep hearing about, they went back to the Republican camp.
And Virginia, which had been a blue state the last couple of presidential election cycles, is now back to a red state.
They not only took over the governorship, but they took over the state house as well, or I think they call it the House of Delegates in Virginia.
And that's key.
And it's good that whites had this implicit sense of white solidarity.
But believing now, as many of them will, that they have an advocate in the governorship, in the governor's mansion with Glenn Young, it's not true.
He's just another Chamber of Commerce establishment Republican.
He's not going to do anything to advance white interests, no more, no less than Terry McAuliffe would have done, but he won because of white racial interest, even if they had been misplaced.
Well, I look at this stepping back to see the forest rather than thinking it's obscured by the trees.
This is part of a larger political movement.
It's good that Trump lost the election because the left has now vastly overplayed its hand.
It's very good that there is no longer a safe haven for normie conservatives who can say the only people that the left is really against are these bad racist whites.
I'm one of the good whites.
What the whole critical race theory, which is what the Yunkin election was about, basically trying to the fact that they're actually teaching it to our children, trying to brainwash and indoctrinate them, is that there is no such thing as a good white.
Now, Youncin is being seized upon by the Sean Hannity wing of conservatism and Newt Gingrich and people like that is saying, well, this is a win for our side.
What they want to do is bring things back to the status quo pre-2016 election.
That's not in our interest.
We want the people to be radicalized to the point that they do not want to go back to that particular redoubt, ideologically, of the Sean Hannity people that say that they're good whites and then they're racist whites.
No, this is a war on whites, each and every one of us.
That's what we need to do.
For example, one result in that election was the election of a black woman from Jamaica as lieutenant governor on the Republican side, Winsom Sears.
And of course, Hannity and the Hannity Lot of the GOP are all saying, oh, well, this is so.
Look, I mean, she probably was better than McCollum.
I mean, I might have even voted for it, but I'm just saying they're just talking about how colorblind and how great and how diverse.
Something on that.
And they basically said that the two candidates, the Republican and the Democrat for lieutenant governor, were basically indistinguishable in their positions on the issues.
So consequently, why, see, black people insist on getting the spoils of war.
When they win an election, they expect black people to be elected and they expect black people to be appointed.
White people don't.
There's a scene in Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure where Billy the Kid's cheating in poker and he says, What I win, I keep.
What you win, I keep.
That's exactly what it is.
That's a great analogy.
Hang on.
more on this yeah this is david and engineering This is your wife in suburbia.
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What's up?
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Well, he 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 chip changed to 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.
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.
Well, why?
It beats general defaults.
Oh.
Family.
Isn't it about time?
Do you know that a baby processes information three times faster than an adult?
An adult what, bitch?
Engineer.
I'll see you next time.
Can't wait.
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Well, we have moved on now to the election results in Virginia, sort of breaking that down from our perspective and offering some commentary on that.
I was actually going to open the show with this tonight until Jason Kessler got in touch with me this week, and then we decided to lead with Charlottesville because he was going to be making an appearance, and rightfully so.
I mean, you know, obviously that's the biggest thing going for our side.
But this is also quite interesting as well, and I'm glad we have an opportunity to cover it now.
So what we were talking about is the Virginia governor's election.
Is it a good outcome or bad for our people?
I think you could argue it either way.
I think certainly, you know, I wanted to see particularly Terry McAuliffe lose because of his role in Charlottesville, but Glenn Young certainly didn't deserve to win.
But he got a tremendous backlash of support from whites over the critical race theory issue, which is an explicitly racial issue.
And so whites are coming back home on that issue, but it is what they did serving their best interest because now I think so many of them will go back to sleep and Glenn Young isn't going to do anything for us.
So this is something we mentioned, Brad Griffin.
I got to mention this, Keith.
Brad Griffin gets cited a lot on this program and rightfully so.
OccidentalDescent.com, there's a couple of articles there.
You really need to read his takes on the election in Virginia.
You need to read them in their entirety.
I think one of them we posted earlier this week at thepoliticalspool.org.
There's another one we will cross-post at thepoliticalasspool.org next week.
So just be sure to check them out.
But a quick excerpt, and this is, the truth is, northern conservatism, and even though Virginia is a Confederate state and Glenn Young's now the governor-elect of Virginia, this is northern conservatism, which exists as sort of like a shadow boxer of the left or the Washington generals or the Harlem Globetrotters.
Northern conservatism is simply performing its traditional role in American politics, which is absorbing and digesting the last left-wing social revolution while pretending to resist the most recent ones.
And I think that's what you've got here in Glenn Young.
Now, he can prove me wrong if he does one of a couple of things.
Let's see Youngkin get the monuments back.
Let's see him go to bat for Robert E. Lee.
Let's see him hold Charlottesville accountable for what happened on August 12th.
The city of Charlottesville and the law enforcement of Charlottesville.
Let's see him hold them accountable for what happened on the street.
He also hold the city of Richmond accountable for taking down those Confederate statues on Monument Row.
That's how you know he's fake, and that's how you know this is a ferric victory.
But it is still remarkable.
Okay?
We didn't win anything, but it's still remarkable.
McAuliffe underperformed his 2013 showing in rural white parts of southwestern Virginia.
The Western District of Virginia, which is where this federal court district is, where the Charlottesville trial is being held by as much as 20 percentage points in some places.
That is remarkable.
Let me repeat that.
McAuliffe underperformed his 2013 showing in rural and white parts of southwestern Virginia by as much as 20 points.
Remarkable.
Now, here's one thing, Keith, and I'd like to get your response to this.
This is Juan Williams.
You know, Juan Williams, who is the left-wing, somewhat black commentator for Fox News.
You see him there.
You see him everywhere.
Juan Williams says, parents' rights is code for white race politics.
That's the headline in this story, this mainstream story.
The tactics being used by the GOP in Virginia have an odious history.
But let me again read you the headline.
Juan Williams says, parents' rights is code for white race politics.
Let me first say this.
There is nothing, nothing, nothing wrong with so-called white race politics.
Every racial group does it.
We need to be as smart as they are.
What he's talking about here with regards to critical race theory and the parents who fought back against it is that the fact of the matter is parents of schoolchildren who don't want their kids told they were evil in class or to be taught how to engage in anal sex in elementary school are now called Nazis and white supremacists.
That's where we are now.
Well, Juiams is a predictable exponent of leftist values.
No matter how far to the left, how out of the mainstream the left goes, he's always going to be there with them.
He follows them like their shadow.
You've got to give parents the God-given right that they have to be primarily in charge of the education of their children.
When you have a teachers' union saying that they have that right and that parents have no rights, then it's perfectly legitimate for parents to rise up in anger and vote Terry McAuliffe against him and vote for his opponent.
Now, the best thing about Yunkin's election is not the election of Yonkin, but that expression of the public will that his election represents.
Now we need to keep that alive.
We do not need to sit back and say, well, now we've got a good guy in there.
We don't really have a good guy in there.
We have a fleece-wearing financial consultant in there who is basically one of the people that plays the game of the establishment.
And that's why he's where he is now.
And like James said, is he going to make any significant progress in trying to roll back all the bad things that have happened under Ralph Northam and Terry McAuliffe's governorships?
No.
I'll bet you a dollar to a donut hole, none of that happens.
Just like R.L. Dabney said, and like James said, northern conservatism, and these people are exponents of that, at least Yunkin is, is just like the sparring partner for the left, just to keep him in fitness, but not to actually knock him out or win the fight.
We need people in there to win the fight.
And see, this is what, again, we see the Sean Hannity, Newt Gingrich wing trying to co-opt Yunkin's victory for themselves.
But I guarantee you, the people that voted for Yunkin and voted against McAuliffe want more stronger and stronger medicine than anything that Yunkin, Hannity, or Newt Gingrich are prepared to deliver for them.
That's why we need to keep that kind of spirit of 76 or the spirit of 2020 or 2021 alive right now, because this is where we are, folks.
We've got to use this moment where the left has overstepped its bounds and overplayed its hand to basically get a true conservatism empowered for white people.
Now, here's the thing, Keith, I think we could sum it up is this.
This is once again an example of the Republican Party running an implicitly white candidate who's not going to do anything ultimately to help white interests, but running this implicitly white candidate who taps into explicitly white sentiments.
And that's what we had here in Virginia.
And how do we know that?
There were three, count them three, local referenda in Virginia with regards to removing Confederate monuments, and all three of them failed.
in Matthews County, Virginia, in Middlesex County, Virginia, and in Nottaway County, Virginia.
You had three separate referenda, and the question was to take down the Confederate war memorials in those counties.
80% versus 19%, no.
In Matthews County, in Middlesex County, 75% to 25%, no.
In Nottaway County, 67% to 32%, no.
Vast majorities for our side on each of those counties referendums.
So, see, that tells you where the people are, and we have Republicans that will not represent the country.
But yet the Republicans, yes, yes, yes, yes.
But the Republicans are still too cowardly.
Newt Gingrich still wants to put Winsome Sears into the lieutenant governor's office.
He still wants to basically use the outrage of white people to get Republicans elected and then do nothing to serve their interests once they win the election.
TPC listener Jules in Georgia just wrote an email.
Hey, James and Keith, I would like to say that Alexander the Great should have been a lawyer in the ⁇ that's you, Keith.
Should have been a lawyer in the Charlottesville defense enjoying tonight's show.
Well, thank you, Jules.
And Jules just sent in a nice contribution to TPC.
So thank you for that as well.
Well, thank you very much.
The problem with the court is that the court is going to basically help the left.
On the other hand, it's really a long shot that we're going to get 12 jurors to vote to exonerate all of these defendants.
You only have to have one to vote for them.
That's the thing.
That's to get a mistrial, but a mistrial is a win for the plaintiffs because that means their program of harassment can continue against these people unabated.
But they can wheel and deal and offer some.
Some of these defendants are in hiding and they've already gotten judged.
They don't want to wheel it.
Think about the mediation we're talking about.
That's so ridiculous because the left never mediates.
They never compromise.
They never meet you halfway.
And the judge should have enough sense to know that.
They never have and they never will.
They believe they're like Khrushchev banging his shoe on the table at the UN and saying he will bury us.
That's what the left is right there.
They want total and complete victory, unconditional surrender, like Ulysses S. Grant and all subsequent American warfare leaders have requested or required in World Wars I, World War II, the Civil War, the Spanish-American War.
They don't negotiate with the other side.
You're in a death struggle with them.
They're either going to prevail or we're going to prevail.
And we need to know who we're dealing with and know that there's no substitution for winning.
A slap lawsuit is a slap in the face of justice.
And somebody ought to bring a bar complaint against the plaintiffs for doing that.
All right.
Well, you know, and by the way, this should be mentioned.
Jason Kessler does have a lawsuit pending against the city of Charlottesville that's completely unrelated to the Charlottesville trial that we're talking about now.
That's still forthcoming.
That hasn't progressed to the point as where this trial is that we've been covering, but that's still something in the hopper.
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