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Dec. 4, 2021 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
50:21
20211204_Hour_3
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You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
The Political Cesspool, known across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program.
And here to guide you through the murky waters of the Political Cesspool is your host, James Edwards.
Bye now in New York City.
There's snow on the ground.
And out in California, the sunshine's falling down.
Maybe down in Memphis.
Graceland's all in light.
And in Atlanta, Georgia, there's peace on earth tonight.
Christmas in Dixie with snow and in the pine.
Merry Christmas from Dixie to everyone tonight.
Well, that's a message we can certainly all get behind tonight, ladies and gentlemen, as TPC rolls on and this is our third hour for the live broadcast of December the 4th, Year of Art Lord 2021.
And boy, I wish you could see what I see right now.
Well, it's that beautiful flag we've got on the wall.
It's you eating your chili, Keith.
And we're actually having a veritable party here.
Really a pre-Christmas party here in the studio this evening.
And we've had some great guests on the air tonight.
But now we have some actually in the room with us, which very rarely happens.
This is radio, not television.
So you can get the call-ins and you don't have to have the people actually in the studio with you.
But a dear family to us was traveling back through Dixie tonight and from a family function in North Carolina.
And they just happened to be coming through Memphis during the time of our live broadcast hours.
So they stopped by and we have one with us now who's a regular actually for our Valentine's Day programs and maybe even a time or two in between.
And she's here tonight with her husband and they're very, very well-behaved and properly mannered homeschooled children.
And so we'll let her say hello.
How are you doing tonight?
Well, James, I got to say really why we drove all this way because I had to tell you, I had to ask you, why do you do all I want for Christmas bump music by Mariah Carey?
Let's just get that out right now.
Well, have you ever heard it?
About a million times in every single store.
Every time I go out, James.
And I came here to confront you on Christmas about this.
Now, Christmas and Dixie, we can all get behind, but what happened, James?
Let's go back to your childhood.
Well, you know, I tell you, we got some feedback about the Phil Spectra praise that we lavish every Christmas season in the Ronettes.
I mean, obviously, everybody in the audience is on my team on that, and they realize we need the symphony for the kiddies, as Phil put it.
But, you know, I don't know where the right went wrong.
It's Pat Buchanan running one of these books.
But, you know, it's interesting you bring up that particular song.
We have not actually played that yet this.
Thank you.
So you're preempted me.
Now I'm going to have to play it when we come back.
You're just going to do that to torture me.
But, you know, I love Christmas music, and I love that y'all do the bump music, all December being Christmas music.
And, you know, every kind of genre, I think I just run it through every year with my kids.
And you can just never get your fill of it.
Well, I got to say something about this family.
So I met, well, I met the parents of this family for the first time.
They're my contemporaries, my peers.
They're the age of my wife and I.
I met them in 2004.
Okay, so I met them before they ever had kids, before they were ever even married, in fact.
And so we have really grown up together, at least in terms of our adult lives.
So this isn't just some people who wandered in off the street and into the studio tonight.
These are people who are very, very close to us.
And so we can joke about liking good music with one another.
I'm sure that she really does love that song.
But no, in all seriousness, I should say this, talking about Christmas music.
They came through Memphis on Thursday as well on the way to North Carolina and now stopping in on the way back.
And we had the opportunity to go to this little quaint town square and talk about Christmas music.
I wasn't going to bring this up tonight until you mentioned the listening of Christmas music and how fun and how comforting and warming that is.
Could you take the people?
We do have some business attended this hour.
We'll get to that business, but the fostering and the development of communities and fellowship and the sense of kinsmanship with one another is so important, especially at this time of year.
Could you take the people behind the scenes on just my family and yours going out to that breakfast diner on Thursday and what we witnessed there and that the real South and the Christ-loving South still does exist?
Yeah, absolutely.
Well, it was a special morning.
We had breakfast at this small little diner, and I told James that I would just love just to sit there and drink coffee and read the newspaper like old people and just hang out.
And on the walls, it was really special.
The high school, they had all of the high school pictures from the community from about 1935 up into the 1950s.
And I went over there and I just took a moment to just look at all of those faces.
And so many of those that I was looking at, you know, we talked later that some of those guys graduated and went off to the war and some of them probably never came home.
And this just really represented that community and the South, those people, they were beautiful and wholesome.
And it just kind of gave me an ache in my heart to, I just long for that for our community and for our people.
I'm glad you brought that up.
I wasn't even going to think to mention that, but I'm glad you did because they did have in this little diner, which is in a county adjacent to Memphis, this little room where you could go in and see these yearbook photos.
I don't know if it was the class photos, really.
It was the whole class that was framed and hanging on the wall, a very big picture.
And this was in 1940.
This was a 1940 senior class photo of the rural South, a rural South community, a rural South high school.
And your husband and I, I mean, we all commented.
Me and you and my wife and your husband, we were all commenting about how these people looked as if they were grown.
It's just totally different look and a totally different people than what we have become, what we have devolved into.
And yes, if you graduated in 1940, there's a very real chance and a very strong likelihood, in fact, that you were shipped off to fight in that unnecessary war, as Pat Buchanan called it.
But to see those people, that was within the lifetime of probably many people.
I don't know how many, but certainly some in our audience tonight.
That was not that long ago.
And what's been taken from us can be taken back.
It could be taken back in short order, if we will it.
But to see those people and to know that that was not that long ago that these communities and these families and these types of men and women existed, we can have that again.
Yeah, and I think it's important to look at those pictures and just take a moment to honor our ancestors and just honor the people of that community and just think about that their children and grandchildren, a lot of them are still living in this community.
And, you know, whatever was in their grandparents and their hearts and in their souls can be brought back within their own grandchildren, great-grandchildren living in that little community.
So, yeah, we had a wonderful visit.
Just had a nice time drinking coffee and hot chocolate with the children.
And it was just a really beautiful morning.
We're going to take a quick break.
And we've got Kim here.
Cam is a Missourian.
And she'll be back with us in the next segment.
And we'll do one more segment with her as her husband and my good friend Keith Alexander and their oldest son looks on.
And it's great to be amongst friends and family, especially at Christmas time.
I'm so glad y'all are here.
We're going to do one more segment with Sim and then we'll get back to a little bit of business to close the show.
But I'll go anywhere.
People in government hate to be compared to Nazi Germany.
But what is going on with the COVID vaccine is very similar to the beginning of something that happened not long ago.
From 1933 to 1945, Nazi Germany carried out a campaign to cleanse German society of individuals viewed as biological threats to the nation's health.
Enlisting doctors, the Nazis developed a health policy that began with mass sterilization of what they called genetically diseased persons, Jews, blacks, and gypsies.
With legitimacy provided by science experts, the Nazi regime carried out a program of forced sterilization, then isolation from the rest of the German population, and finally, euthanasia that found its most radical manifestation in the death of millions of people that were considered a national health risk.
Sound familiar?
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It's windy in Chicago.
The kids are out of school.
There's magic in Moldown.
The city's on the moon in Jackson, Mississippi, to Charlotte, Carolina, and all across the nation.
It's peaceful Christmas time.
Christmas in Dixie.
It's snowing in the vine.
Merry Christmas from Dixie to everyone tonight.
Really a treat to have such a dear good friend on with us tonight and to have her family here with us as we broadcast this show live tonight.
Kim, of course, you've been to several of our events and conferences over the years.
So you have set in for live broadcasts or at least live remote broadcast of the show before, but I don't think you've ever been actually, you've never penetrated the inner sanctum actually to set in for a live broadcast from the actual studio.
I'm finally in the circle of trust.
I mean, it only took 20 years.
I'm here.
I'm here.
I'm thinking of all the guests we've ever had on.
I'm thinking Bob Whitaker came actually to the studio to do a show before.
We were talking about Bob in the second hour tonight.
Joe McCutcheon, Sonny Landam, Paul Fromm, only literally, I could count them on my fingers.
Now I don't even have to go as deep as my toes.
I don't have to take my shoes off.
Yeah, so now Kim has joined that incredible, incredible grouping of people.
But it's great to have you.
I mean, this is a rarity.
Well, it's an honor to be here.
Thank you so much for giving a segment for me to sit in.
I mean, I'm honored.
And yeah, just among those names, just to even hear those, you know, over the years.
So many.
Well, this is, I'm glad you're here because we're talking about something now that's quintessentially TPC, and that's our people.
And to be able to have any reason, not an excuse, but a reason or a cause to talk about our southern heritage and patrimony is all I need to take it like a bulldog with a bloody bone, as Keith Alexander would put it.
And Keith's not miped up or anything right now because he's passed on the mic.
But anyway, so we were talking about these yearbook photos and we were talking about the fact that this community, this level of civilization existed within the lifetime of people tuned in this evening, not that long ago.
We were talking about how these people at 18 years old looked as mature and as weathered as a modern day 30 or 40 year old.
You know, to be honest with you, I think people live their whole lives now and don't graduate beyond an elementary style mentality.
Right.
But we saw that, and we were talking about this.
I say that to say this.
We were talking about this at breakfast a couple of days ago with your family, that in 1940, they were not that far removed from Reconstruction.
They're about as far removed from Reconstruction as we are removed from them.
So they would have been certainly people that were born after Reconstruction, to be sure, but still people suffering from it.
As sharecroppers, as very, very, very poor people.
And I think that suffering is something that made the South very special.
Yes.
Yeah.
You and I were talking about just our own grandparents.
And even though we're, you know, my family was in Texas and yours was in Mississippi and Tennessee.
We both had sharecropping, cotton farming families and just sitting with each other, getting to share stories about the hardships that our family members went through.
I remember my grandfather telling a story in 1935, sitting under a shade tree in Texas and watching his parents chop cotton.
And they would chop all day long.
And when they got to the end of the row, there was someone to give them a new sharpened hoe and they would turn around and start again.
And those stories are so touching.
And we're so removed from them.
We live so comfortably.
And most of us have never done a day's work like that in our entire life.
And Keith's not mic'd up, but he's asking what chopping cotton is.
It's hoeing cotton.
And a lot of times you would have hoeing around them, hoeing the weeds and getting them ready to get bailed up.
But yeah, so we're really not too far removed from that, from our grandparents' time.
And I think it's important if your grandparents are still alive to sit with them and to and to get those stories.
And I know my grandfather had so many stories that are just unbelievable about living through the Depression in Texas.
And I think of those so that I don't take for granted the goodness and the comfort of living that I have.
We were talking about Reconstruction.
They were about in 1940 as far removed from Reconstruction as we are now removed from them.
But yes, not to mention the depression that all of these people would have had to gone through on top of that.
Anyway, it's just very special.
We fight for our past, our present, and our future here on this program.
And it's great to be able to do it with high-caliber, high-class people like the lady that we have sitting in between Keith and I right now.
And Kim, I would ask you this, just with only a couple of minutes remaining.
And I know your whole family is out waiting in the wings, but you got to listen to a little bit of the show as you were driving in tonight.
Your thoughts on that?
Wow, I'm on the spot here, James.
Obviously, we only want compliments.
If not, we can go ahead and put it back to Keith.
Well, I have to say, it was quite interesting hearing the short clip of DeSantis and describing the wonderful.
You've not heard that before.
Well, you had sent it over, and so...
Oh, so you did?
I forgot about that.
Yes, you're right.
But hearing it, yeah, hearing y'all speak on that.
And like you said, you know, is DeSantis perfect?
No.
But I think it's important.
It's not about the man.
It's about the message.
And if the message is one of truth, what he said about the Waukesha massacre was the truth, and people need to hear that.
Yeah, is DeSantis imperfect?
I mean, absolutely.
But what he said resonates with people.
Absolutely.
Now, as far as the guy running for the.
Give us a thought on that.
I mean, listen, we're not making an endorsement.
We're reporting facts tonight.
Tell us your thoughts on that and how you respond to a guy, a Jewish guy, saying the things he's saying.
Where do you land?
You know, once again, I mean, do I think he will get in?
You know, probably not.
But if you're opening people's eyes and pointing them to the direction of truth, I'm for it.
Well, that's where I asked Keith during one of the breaks.
Keith is Mr. Jewish Power and Influence.
And Keith, I play a game with Keith.
I say, Keith on the show tonight, you can't say anything that rhymes with news or blues, and he never really wins that game.
But even he said, even he said he would vote for him because, why did you say you would vote for him?
You had a good line.
It's a one line.
The line is we need to reward people for saying the right things.
We don't need to apply these purity.
Purity tests and whatnot on everybody.
We need to make sure that people know that they're saying the right thing.
And when they say the right thing, we need to reward them for saying the right thing.
All right.
So if we reward somebody for saying the right thing, maybe one day a white Christian will actually have the guts to actually do something that would take a modicum of courage.
So that's what we want.
And we should prefer white Christians as our leaders.
There's no doubt about that.
We're not equivocating at all on that.
But I'll take a guy telling the truth to get that truth out there.
And then perhaps we can take the baton and go.
But I think we all know that this guy isn't going to be elected the president of France, but it's noteworthy and remarkable nonetheless.
Kim, a final word to you with only seconds remaining, and thank you for setting in impromptu.
She said, you could have given me a chance to prepare.
But I said, Kim, you were so good.
You stole the show, her first appearance.
Now she's a semi-regular.
She doesn't need to prepare.
She's great, and you are great, and you're fantastic, and I appreciate you.
So final word to you.
Well, thank you again, James, for just hosting me.
And I just wanted to say that it's an honor to be here in December.
And your wife is lovely, James.
And I just wanted to also say that she's always so gracious.
And yeah, just a plug for your wife, James.
She's a great person.
Well, that's right.
We can't plug her enough.
I'll tell you what, I wouldn't be here without her.
That's for sure.
And that's a story I love to tell.
Let me tell you, I met her when she was 15 years old at church.
Wait, I haven't heard this one before, James.
You had to listen to more than that.
Never gets old.
We love it.
Thank you, Kim.
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The latest from a community north of Detroit, Michigan.
It's believed to be the first time the parents of a school shooter in America have been brought up on criminal charges themselves.
But James and Jennifer Crumbly are now in custody after they were found in what the Oakland County Sheriff describes as an art facility.
But he says they were clearly trying to hide out.
But teamwork ended up finding them.
We were confident we'd be able to find them in short order, and because of that teamwork, we did.
The couple accused of buying the gun that their 15-year-old son, Ethan Crumbly, allegedly used to kill four classmates and wound seven other people in a shooting a few days ago.
With continued concerns of Russia's building up forces along the Ukraine border, President Biden and the Russian President Vladimir Putin are now set to speak on a video call on Tuesday.
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Some large explosions witnessed over the town of Natans in Iran, and the Iranian government says over state TV that it was a case of air defense units that were firing a missile merely to test its rapid reaction force as part of a drill.
Earlier, several news agencies had reported a large blast over that town, which is home to several nuclear development sites.
An Iranian military spokesman calling it an unannounced exercise, and that there's no reason for concern.
Parts of Hawaii are under get this, a blizzard warning this weekend.
The National Weather Service says a snowstorm could dump up to a foot of snow across higher elevations on the big island by Sunday morning.
The summit of Muana Loa volcano topping 14,000 feet.
A flood watch is in effect for the lower elevations.
You can find us online with news anytime at usaradio.com.
I don't want a lot for Christmas.
There is just one thing I need.
And I don't care about the best of the Christmas tree.
All right, everybody.
Hey, I got to tell you.
How about Kim number one, Keith Alexander?
It takes somebody to wrestle the mic out of your mouth.
Look, Kim is a breath of fresh air.
She's a soothing syrup, as grandma used to say.
I love to hear her voice.
Everything she says is absolutely, you know, solid gold.
And she's people like her and her family are winning.
You get a chance to win.
Of course, you've known them for years as well.
You had the chance to visit with them in between the second and third hour when they got here to the studio.
And it's a fantastic family out there in the hall.
They're everything that everything you think they are.
And then some.
They're what a customary white family used to be like back when I was growing up in the 50s and whatnot.
And it's so refreshing to see that that still exists in today's America.
Before this hour concludes, allow me again, ladies and gentlemen, to ask our Christian followers: did Jesus abrogate the kosher laws?
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This is an important issue.
There's one man, one organization that is talking about it.
It's a revenue skimming business that makes the story behind John chapter 2, verse 14 seem terribly mild in comparison, but it certainly has taught us a lesson.
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That's going to be the last frontier.
were talking all of this episode of TPC about the changing paradigm where anti-white is now allowed us to capture the moral high ground as opposed to the left claiming it for themselves.
Well, when we can talk as candidly as now even mainstream politicians are about the anti-white animus of the left, when we can talk about Jewish power and influence honestly, then we know we will have arrived.
Well, when that day comes, it won't be for lack of effort on your part, my friend.
Well, or on your part.
You know, let's give each other credit on this.
There are two taboos that we will tackle.
So when they talk about the third rail, we grab onto it and we don't let go.
That's right.
We do Jewish power and influence and race.
Those are the two third rails, the two taboos.
And you can't discuss our dilemma candidly, honestly, and with a mind towards improving the situation without discussing those things.
Well, that being said, and we're certainly known as raging anti-Semites.
That's one thing that has been written about us.
I actually saw the SPLC refer to me as a raging anti-Semite.
To be an anti-Semite, you know, maybe anybody can reach that level.
But to be a raging anti-Semite, that takes a little bit extra work.
They'd say your hair is on fire, but you have no hair.
I actually saw, though, that Mel Gibson was referred to in the Atlantic magazine just this week as a raging anti-Semite.
And they were abhorred that Hollywood was still hiring Mel Gibson.
Now, though we're known for our work on the air, I am proud that we have also worked well with others and that we have established strong connections with the many personalities that comprise our sphere.
We play well with others.
That used to be one of the categories on my first grade report card.
We definitely get a plus mark by Plays Well With Others.
If you got our Christmas letter in the mail this week, and I hope that if you are a regular contributor to TPC that you did by now, we sent them out on, well, we sent some out on Monday.
We sent the second lot out on Wednesday.
But hopefully, well, I can't take anything for granted with the USPS these days, but maybe, maybe they've arrived by now.
But we are currently collaborating with author and filmmaker David Cole on a documentary that's going to be of great interest to you.
In fact, David himself asked me if he could write the appeal for TPC's Christmas fundraising drive, which just kicked off last Wednesday.
So we're just now in our first week.
And here's the message he wanted to share with you.
Here we go.
This is David Cole writing.
In February of 2004, rather, I was invited into the home of Hutton Gibson, father of international superstar Mel Gibson.
Hutton, a renowned author and theologian, a decorated World War II veteran and a dedicated family man, was looking for someone to tell his story fairly because at the time, the media was attacking him as a hate-filled right-wing anti-Semite and using that to attack Mel, who was about to premiere his new film, The Passion of the Christ.
Most in the media and many in Hollywood despise the younger Gibson for spending his own time and money to craft a superior quality film aimed at people of Christian faith.
So both father and son were under attack in that month of 2004.
Hutton, knowing my, this is David Cole writing, reputation for handling even the most explosive issues in a fair and objective manner, opened his home to me for a weekend.
And I interviewed him at length about his personal passions, his faith, his family, his views on Christianity, politics, and Holocaust history.
Hutton asked that the film be released only after his death, and he just passed last year at the age of 102.
The final product of the work I did with Hutton Gibson is being edited into a full-length feature documentary film complete with supplemental footage and interviews with Gibson's friends and followers.
The distribution company with which my team and I are working has decided to release this film in conjunction with the opening of the Passion sequel.
Mel Gibson is making a movie on the resurrection of Jesus Christ due out next year.
Until then, it cannot be released elsewhere.
However, David Cole writes, because of my great respect for James Edwards and the important work he does, I'm making his support as a very special one-time offer.
The full raw footage of the Hutton Gibson interview, edited, unedited, rather, every word he spoke.
This item will be offered nowhere else and can never be offered again.
But my hope is that it will become a special and treasured remembrance to help further James's much-needed work in honor of Hutton Gibson, a brilliant, good-humored, and always fascinating scholar.
That was written by David Cole.
Our fourth quarter Christmas fundraising drive officially kicked off last Wednesday.
And I'm thrilled that such an incredible incentive offer is being made exclusively to TPC fans.
And as you may remember, folks, Hutton Gibson made a series of appearances, this is Mel's dad, on this very radio program, which received worldwide media coverage, including condemnation from Hollywood gossip brags and the late night comedy shows like Jimmy Kimmel Live.
But Hutton never backed out, and we stayed in touch until his passing.
And during the season of hope and goodwill, I would ask that you would make a special Christmas time contribution to help us stay on the air, to help us continue to serve as a light for our people during this dark winter that approaches.
And to do that, you're going to have to send in a check with a stamp and an envelope and all of that because we've been completely deplatformed from receiving online credit card contributions.
We're 100% listener supported.
Our quarterly fundraisers are the lifeblood that keeps us on the air and have kept us on the air for nearly two decades.
And so that's the incentive offer.
$100 or more, you're going to get this unedited before anybody else sees it, made possible by David Cole.
This piece of interview.
This piece of history.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
What an incredible incentive offer made exclusively to TPC fans.
$100 or more, you get it.
And this video footage, of course, serves as the foundation for, as you mentioned, a forthcoming documentary that's going to be released in the coming months on a major streaming platform.
So this is an offer being made exclusively to TPC fans and only during our Christmas fundraising drive, $100 or more, and it's yours.
Get it in before December the 31st.
Keith, Hutton Gibson, Mel Gibson, we are where the action is, as Freddy Boom Boom Cannon would want us to be.
And this is it.
And Mel Gibson being attacked for being a raging anti-Semite.
I was called the exact same thing about 20 years ago by the SPLC.
And here we are, and we're all one.
And Hutton Gibson, a good friend who called TPC his home away from home, the whole six degrees of separation, we're all related to Brad Pitt type of thing.
We got it going on here.
Look, this is part of what we do.
We have the interview of Drew Lackey from the Montgomery bus boycott that no one else has.
We have interviews with the surviving seamen and Marines from the USS Liberty that no one else seems to have.
And then we have Hutton Gibson's candid comments.
And, you know, I don't know where else you would get them except here through the contributing to the political cesspool.
But this is part of our legacy.
This is what we do.
We do the job that other American journalists aren't willing to do.
You know, like they say that the third world immigrants that come here are doing the work that Americans won't do.
Well, we're doing the work that American journalists won't do, that needs to be done.
And that's why we need your support so we can continue to do this work and continue to have the legacy of preserving history that otherwise would go down the memory hole.
You know, and we've interviewed people of historical significance, the likes of which nobody else would ever touch.
We've interviewed Godfrey Dulias, who was a Luftwaffe pilot.
And that was just an incredible interview.
And Bill Rowland, actually, Keith, you know, Bill Rowland set in our dearly beloved departed brother who set in for so many key interviews of TPC where he helmed the show.
Gottfried Dulias was one.
Shark Hunters.
Yeah, that was a different organization.
But Godfrey Dulias, Drew Lackey, and Hutton Gibson, Bill was the one who spearheaded.
We'll talk a little bit more about this when we come back.
States have one more segment to go.
Yeah, this is David in engineering.
This is your wife in suburbia.
Oh, hi, Ann.
What's up?
How's the robot coming?
Well, he doesn't exactly respond to requests yet, but 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 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.
Why?
It beats general default.
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.
Finally, funny.
I'll see you next.
I can't wait.
From the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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 wants endorsing.
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.
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 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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With American Heritage School's advanced distance education program, distance is no longer an issue.
With an accredited LDS-oriented curriculum from kindergarten through 12th grade, your children can attend from anywhere in the world.
American Heritage School will prepare your child for more than a job.
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To learn more, visit American-Heritage.org.
That's American-Heritage.org.
Santa Claus, Santa Claus, Santa Claus, Santa Claus, Santa Claus.
Well, Santa Claus, bring my baby back.
Santa Claus, bring my baby back to me.
Well, Christmas tree.
Our friend Kim nodding in agreement as we play that song.
That was sent to me.
I heard that for the first time just last year from our friend Rick from Brooklyn, who stole the show.
I mean, he stole the show.
Hey, hang on.
All right, Kim, very quickly.
We don't have time, but I got to make time for this.
Rick from South Brooklyn.
I hope he's still listening.
He was actually texting me earlier during the show tonight.
Rick from South Brooklyn, you heard him when we were on.
He actually came on again for our anniversary show.
He actually led the parade that night in October as we celebrated 17 years on the air.
But he made his debut appearance to the audience at least when we were in South Carolina.
Do you remember that when you were nodding your head when I mentioned his name?
So you must.
Yeah, when I heard Rick, I just immediately thought, was this guy hired on to do this segment?
And I know he's done radio.
He was just incredibly well spoken and just a really sharp guy.
So that was really cool.
You've got a lot of just super cool people, James, that listen to the show and really top shelf people.
So yeah, just really, really enjoyed getting to hear Rick.
While you were talking, I was texting Rick.
Please, God, tell me you're still listening.
As God is my witness, you can verify that.
There it is.
He's had some pointed critiques for me tonight with regard to Zamour.
But anyway, Rick is the stand-up guy.
I tell you what, this is one of the most fascinating guys that I've ever met in my life.
And he is.
That same thumbs.
Yeah, because I know you, Keith.
But no, this is a guy that everybody would do better to know.
And I'll tell you a little story about Rick when we get off the air.
Your sister knows Rick.
We'll talk about that.
We'll talk about that.
All right, go kick.
I can say that I did hear that song before.
You know, I used to be a DJ back in the late 70s and early 80s before my wife put the kibosh on that.
And I remember playing music like that.
That was a great, great old bluest standard from, you know, I don't know if that's from the 50s or the 40s, but it was quite a long time ago.
But you were there.
First 80 years.
Well, like you said, 1940 was the watershed.
80 years after Reconstruction, 80 years before today.
I'm texting with Rick now, so why don't you keep talking?
Just talk for maybe like 30 more seconds.
Okay, what we would like to do with the political cesspool is give our people hope that we're going to get through this dark period in time in history.
This too shall pass.
White people will not be wiped out as the left wants.
We're not going to be blended out through miscegenation.
We're not going to be genocided.
We're going to continue to thrive because never forget this, we are the majority of people in the United States.
It's just a matter of having the light bulb go off above the heads of enough white people in America.
And that's what we have devoted this show to tonight.
This process is happening right now, right before our eyes.
Praise the Lord.
All right.
So we mentioned in the last segment that our incentive, our very special incentive, and I think it's one of the most unique incentives we've offered, even after all these years here on TPC for our Christmas fundraising drive, is the unedited raw footage of David Cole's interview with Hutton Gibson, Mel's father, who was just this week condemned by the Atlantic magazine as being a raging anti-Semite, which I was called in the exact same terminology, raging.
I got to say again, to be anti-regular anti-Semite, anybody can do, but to be a raging one, that takes extra work.
And I'm glad to know that I have joined the ranks of Mel Gibson by being a raging anti-Semite.
But his father was a good friend of ours.
His father passed away last year, nearly 102 years of age, right before his 102nd birthday.
And if you go to his YouTube channel, there are five videos, rather, excuse me, seven videos on his YouTube channel for Hutton Gibson.
One is when he appeared on a quiz show back in the 60s, and there was one other, and then five of his appearances on the political cessible.
This is Mel Gibson's father.
David Cole continues.
Mel Gibson's Passion of the Christ was opening worldwide, and the media, always hungry for a scandal, zeroed in on Mel's father, Hutton.
Hutton Gibson was vilified by the press as a racist, a bigot, an anti-Semite, and a Holocaust denier.
He was condemned by so-called journalists who had never met or interviewed him, and Mel himself was attacked for not denouncing his own father.
The media hysteria and vitriol led many people to ask the question, who is Hutton Gibson?
Who is this man who inspires hatred in some, but passionate loyalty and high esteem for others?
For many Americans, the only thing they knew about Hutton Gibson, apart from his attacks in the press, came from a few call-in shows Hutton had made.
But who was the man behind the voice?
To those who knew him, he was an author, a theologian, a World War II veteran, and a decorated family man who lived his faith on a daily basis and garnered thousands of loyal friends and followers worldwide.
As the media firestorm swirled around him, Hutton reached out to a documentary filmmaker.
That's David Cole, whose work he knew was fair and who had a history of tackling controversial topics.
David Cole was invited to bring a camera crew to Hutton's home and spend a weekend and document his life and views.
What resulted was a lengthy shoot that covered everything Hutton wanted to discuss.
His faith, his personal history, his family, his views on religion, marriage, children, politics, the Holocaust, and the most pressing issues of the day.
It was at the time and remains to this day the only in-depth set-down on-camera interview that Hutton ever allowed.
He spoke as a scholar, a spiritual leader, and a family man.
The wide-ranging interview included moments of rigorous intellectual discourse and humorous personal anecdotes.
No topic was off limits.
Hutton Gibson passed away on May 11th, 2020, three months before his 102nd birthday.
The mainstream media and powers that be in Hollywood rejoiced like vultures.
Hallelujah, neo-Nazi-loving, bizarre Catholic Hutton Gibson is dead, crowed journalist Roger Friedman of Showbiz 411.
Friedman, who has covered Hollywood for Fox, New York Magazine, the New York Times, and Washington Post, could not contain his ghoulish joy of the passing of this father, grandfather, and great-grandfather.
Quote, Hutton Gibson was a bad guy, a bad, bad guy, who was a Holocaust denier, an all-around crazy person.
Hell is too good a fate, so roast in hell, Hutton, end quote.
Ladies and gentlemen, remember that Hutton Gibson called TPC his home away from home.
There is one documentary that has been made, and it has been made by David Cole.
And you, if you support the work of TPC during this, our Christmas fundraising drive will receive the full unedited raw interview footage that David Cole recorded with Hutton Gibson on that fateful weekend in 2004.
This will be released as a major film documentary in the coming months on a major streaming platform.
But as David Cole wrote, because of my great respect for James Edwards and the important work he does, I'm making his support as a very special one-time offer.
The full raw footage of the Hutton Gibson interview, unedited, every word he spoke.
This item will be offered nowhere else and will never be offered again.
But my hope is that it will become a special and treasured remembrance to help Further James' much-needed work in an honor of Hutton Gibson, a brilliant, good-humored, and always fascinating scholar.
I bring this up again because, of course, it is our Christmas fundraising drive, but because Mel Gibson was attacked just this week for the same anti-Semitism that was alleged to define his father and his father's life and his father's work and me and you and everybody else, Keith.
David Cole will be on the show next week to talk more about this.
But this, if you are a regular contributor to TPC, you will have already learned by receiving our snail mail solicitation or update this week.
It should be in your mailbox by now.
Keith.
Now, what's the definition of a raging anti-Semite?
It's somebody that recognizes a Jewish name or a Jewish person when they encounter them.
Like the person that made that scurrilous comment about Hutton Gibson of saying that death, that hell was too good for him and whatnot with the name Friedman.
If you recognize that Friedman is a Jewish surname, well, then you're a raging anti-Semite.
So this is, we need to put all of this in context for people.
You cannot understand what's happening to us if you don't understand, you know, the Jewish power and influence role in it.
Now, one thing I can say for Mel Gibson, which I think is a great feather in his cap, I've never heard him try to distance himself or back away from his father or his comments.
No, you know, and he was asked by Diane Sawyer about that.
Do you remember that when Kim's nodding?
David Cole mentions it in 2004.
David Cole, by the way, we talked about Nathan Bedford Forrest living the life of a mythological god.
David Cole's life story reads like a tall tale, and we'll remind you of it next week when he returns to the world.
He was at all these crucial junctures.
No, I mean, this guy, he made his debut appearance on TPC last fall, the September of 2020.
He's going to be back for an encore next week.
And this guy, folks, you got to tune in.
But Mel Gibson was asked by Diane Sawyer about his father to denounce his father.
In fact, was invited to denounce his father.
He said, that's my dad.
I can't go there.
I won't go there.
So, and of course, we'll talk more about Mel Gibson.
We don't have any more time.
We're out of time.
There's the music.
But we'll talk more about it next week.
But folks, we need your support to stay on the air.
We're 100% listener supported.
We can't get commercial advertisers, so we need your support.
17 years you've kept us going.
We wanted to make it to an 18th year, and we've got a great incentive for you.
We just explained it.
We just described it for the last hour.
We've been talking about it along with Kim.
Well, maybe for the last half hour.
Keith Alexander, for Jason Kuna, for Tim Murdoch, for Brad Griffin, for Kim, for our entire staff and crew in Florida and Utah and in Memphis.
It takes a village.
I'm James Edwards.
We'll talk to you next week.
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