Dec. 18, 2021 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
50:36
20211218_Hour_3
|
Time
Text
You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
The Political Cesspool, known across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program.
And here to guide you through the murky waters of the Political Cesspool is your host, James Edwards.
The fireblaze is burning bright, shining all on me.
I see the presence underneath the good old Christmas tree.
And I'll wait online till Santa comes to wake me from my dreams, oh, because that's Christmas to me.
I see the children play outside like angels in the snow.
Well, mom and daddy share a kiss under the mistletoe.
And we'll cherish all these simple things wherever we may be.
That's Christmas to me.
Welcome back, everybody, to the third and final hour of our next-to-last show of the year and the last show before Christmas.
James Edwards and Keith Alexander with you and with a very special guest tonight, we want to thank Alan Baylog for coming on with us on short notice.
He is firstly the father of Warren Bailaw, who was with us back in November, and we had a great time with Warren and of course had the opportunity to meet Warren at an event a couple of months ago and we just instantly hit it off.
But Alan is the senior of the Baylog family and a guy whose activism spans many decades now, not to date him, but he has been doing effective work for our people for a lot longer than I have.
And anybody who can say that gets my utmost respect.
Alan, thank you for coming on with us tonight.
It's indeed an honor.
One of those hated boomers, but he was right.
Well, that's right.
It's an honor to be on your show.
And thanks for the kind introduction.
And thanks for all you do.
I was looking at your Wikipedia entry, and you've had some illustrious, quite a few illustrious guests on your show.
And you have all the right enemies, by the way, according to that article.
Yeah, we're proud of it.
We're proud of our enemies.
I'll tell you what, we're proud of our friends, and we're proud of the people who support us.
But you've got to have enemies, too, or you're not doing the job right.
And we certainly count ourselves lucky to be on the same list as you, my friend, and indeed all the lists.
So I think sometimes that's the best way to judge your work and see what your enemies are saying about you.
And if they're not vilifying you every day, it means you probably were not doing your job yesterday.
You got to sharpen the edge a little bit.
Well, we follow in your footsteps, Alan, and stand on the shoulders of those who came before us, that's for sure.
And I'm big on giving respect to the people who did it before I had the opportunity to throw my weight into the ring.
But listen, obviously tonight's show is a little bit off-kilter, a little bit different.
And so we didn't even call you up until midway through it.
And I would love to sit down with you and perhaps Warren, perhaps we could do it in tandem in January and really just sit down for an hour and really just sink our teeth into a lot of the issues and continue this collaboration.
But with only two segments with you tonight, and that's not a lot of time with the commercial breaks and all of the trappings of commercial talk radio, you've been doing this for a long time.
I'm reading your son had sent me a text.
You go back to the George Wallace campaign.
You were with Duke in 88 and still active today.
We'll talk about the recent rally up in Wisconsin, but let's go back to the early days.
In what ways has advocacy and activism on behalf of our people and our cause gotten better?
And in what ways were there advantages that we had or that you may have had in the 60s that are long gone?
What would you say as you compare the two?
Well, in some ways, like the big picture has gotten much worse, you know, but I think the people who the patriotic resistance, if you want to call it that, has become a lot smarter and a lot more focused on the real issues.
I mean, what is the root of our problem instead of just attacking the causes or the symptoms, I should say.
You know, when you say like the civil rights era, it's a long time.
In some sense, it's still going on today.
You know, it's a total farce, but, you know, if you talk to the other side, they still think there's discrimination and so forth.
But it really kind of started, I think, after the Second World War when Americans were talked into going over and allying with Bolshevik Russia and international high-finance against anti-communist Christian Europe.
And the slogans, you know, we were going over there to fight for democracy and freedom and against racism and bigotry and all that stuff.
So when those guys came home from the war, it was easy for our enemies, who already had captured a lot of the nerve centers of our society, to just say, hey, well, we just got done fighting and dying for these ideals.
And what about here?
Look at the U.S. South.
Look at this.
Look at that.
We have the same problems right here.
So it was an easy step for them to then just start dismantling the structures in this country that allowed white communities to flourish.
And white people, I mean, all the races really, when left on their own, tend to be with their own kind, to work, live, and play with their own kind.
That was a big lie, wasn't it?
That somehow black people wanted integration.
We can see today they don't.
They want separate dorms, separate graduations, things like this.
That was a lie upon which the whole civil rights movement was based.
It was.
You know, I was reading an article about, like, I'm pretty much a Yankee.
You know, I do have one part of my family was in Maryland.
It goes back pretty far.
But the others were Germans who came here in the 18s, 70s and 80s.
And then my father's side were Hungarians.
And they came around 1907, 1910, and that, you know, Ellis Island types.
So, you know, the whole southern thing to me was always, you know, I'd read about it and all, but I didn't have a real personal connection to it.
But, you know, after Charlottesville, by the way, I said we're all Confederates now.
But anyway, it's...
Amen.
Yeah, it's, but, you know, they were able to start attacking that.
And the people in the North who, like, I was raised 40 miles outside of Philadelphia, and I think I remember the first time I ever actually saw a black person.
Maybe it wasn't, but I can remember as a very small child my mother saying to me, that's not nice to stare.
That's a colored person.
Because I just never saw any 40 miles outside of Philadelphia.
The television was all white, and that's, you know, it was just the norm.
And it's hard for people, young people today, to even imagine a world like that.
It's just exactly the opposite now, isn't it, Alan?
It was, you know, Edmund Connolly's written a great article about this in the Occidental Observer, which I would recommend everybody go to about the visual displacement of white people.
A white child today would think, you know, he would be surprised to know that we're the majority population still in the United States.
Oh, for sure, for sure.
And, you know, it's an interesting point because I can remember as a grade school student, we took a trip where I was raising farms around me.
Like I said, it was only 40 miles outside of Philly, but at that time there were still farms around my home.
And we took a school trip to Philadelphia to the Philadelphia Zoo.
And that's the first time I saw like lots of blacks.
You know, we drove away.
Hold on, my parents.
We're going to pick it up right after this break.
Alan Baylog, Lifer.
He's got a lot to say.
A lot to tell us.
How do you know your child loves you?
When he calls and he says, Dad, why don't we go fishing?
Just very simple, but it really counts.
Make a song out and they come into our bedroom and say, we made a song and will you listen to me?
Our next year's daughter came to me with tears in her eyes.
She said, Daddy, I just thank you for coming home every night when we were growing up.
My son does the nicest things.
When he's playing outside, he'll come in and just give me a hug and run right back outside.
My daughter goes to the same high school that I'm the registrar at.
And I'll go into my office after the bell has rung and there's a note on my desk.
And it'll usually say, Mom, I love you.
I'm thinking about you.
And I think of my boy that we finally got him through graduation.
He came up to me and said, I made it.
Thanks.
Family, isn't it about time?
That's all I said.
And that meant everything to me.
From the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
As you all know, Roe versus Wade has resulted in some of the most permissive abortion laws anywhere in the world.
For example, in the United States, it's one of only seven countries to allow elective late-term abortions, along with China, North Korea, and others.
Right now, in a number of states, the laws allow a baby to be born from his or her mother's womb in the ninth month.
It is wrong.
It has to change.
Americans are more and more pro-life.
You see that all the time.
In fact, only 12% of Americans support abortion on demand at any time.
Under my administration, we will always defend the very first right in the Declaration of Independence, and that is the right to life.
As a parent, is receiving a faith-based, character-focused education for your children difficult to find?
Do you believe that godly principles should be a central component in your child's education?
Imagine a school where faith and integrity are at its center, where heritage and responsibility instill character.
For over 40 years, American Heritage School has been educating both hearts and minds, bringing out academic excellence.
This is the school where character and embracing the providence of a living God are fundamental, where students' national test scores average near the 90th percentile.
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.
It will prepare them for life.
To learn more, visit American-Heritage.org.
That's American-Heritage.org.
I've got this Christmas song in my heart.
I've got the candles glowing in the dark.
All the stockings by the Christmas tree.
Cause that's Christmas to me.
Cause that's Christmas to me.
I can already tell you just from listening to the first segment with Alan Balog that two segments is not going to be enough.
And I apologize that that's all the time we have tonight.
Can I get him back on?
We will absolutely, if you would be so willing, get him back on at our earliest occasion in January.
We didn't even know that he would be available until we were into our second hour tonight, kind of calling audibles on the fly, as it were.
But Alan, it's look, if you're talking about the destruction of America, there's a lot you can point to.
I guess like all of us, America began to die the moment after it was born.
And you can look to the war between the states, obviously the world wars, the social change that really began to be provided.
There was some type of acceleration that happened right after World War II that had been planned before World War II, I believe.
And we could get into hours-long discussion about that.
But I think if we could refocus on your personal activism, you were there with Wallace.
You're still there today.
And you had a hand in a very impactful and proactive event just a few days ago.
Could you tell us about that and give the information to the audience of how you are involving and applying yourself as we speak?
Well, like you say, my first political involvement was with Wallace, and I had the pleasure of seeing George Wallace at the Spectrum in Philadelphia with thousands of people cheering while they played Dixie in Philadelphia.
Wow.
You know, and I went through over the years a lot of stuff.
But right now, I'm with the National Justice Party.
And I have to say, they're the best bunch of guys, really bright people, really dedicated people.
You know, nobody has to worry about getting doxxed.
Everybody's been doxed or doxed themselves.
Nobody on the council is going to be intimidated by harassment from the FBI or anti-FA intimidation.
So, you know, it's a really solid, good group.
And we did a thing in Waukesha, Wisconsin, where Daryl Brooks drove his car into that Christmas rate and killed six people, I think it was.
Yeah, five or six, yes.
Five or six, and wounded people with horrendous injuries and stuff.
And, you know, we saw that the media is just dropping us.
It doesn't fit their narrative.
I mean, this guy had social media, all kinds of stuff where he was obviously like a Black Lives Matter, anti-white individual, and they just don't want to talk about that.
And so they made up this story about he was fleeing some knife fight or something, which is totally false.
And then they just dropped it from the news.
And the double standard is so enormous that just more and more people, I think, are seeing that.
And we were out there for about two hours in front of the Waukesha courthouse there.
And like every five minutes, people were driving by, beeping the horn, giving us a thumbs up.
We had signs like stop, you know, uh BLM terrorism and about double standards and all kind of stuff like that.
And, you know, going right after the racial thing, because that's we're being attacked racially.
We're being attacked as white people.
We're not being attacked by, you know, because we're conservatives or even because we're against abortion or something.
That guy drove his car into those that crowd because they were white people.
And there's a Telegram channel called Every Day, and they just show like two examples every day over the years of horrendous crimes against white people by blacks.
The telegram is rapid that everybody can get on their cell phone and computer by this.
Yes, they know.
Yeah, and it just makes you realize that this, you know, when I was a kid, my father used to bring home the Philadelphia Daily News, and in those days they used to show the pictures of these criminals.
And I used to, you know, when I got a little older, I was like looking at them and still in school, but I'd see these pictures of these individuals and how they'd rob the store and the owner would give them the money.
And then as they're going out the door, they would just turn around and shoot the person for no reason at all.
And, you know, it was racially motivated.
There's no doubt in anybody's mind.
People who lived around there and knew the victims and stuff.
We knew people that live right in Philadelphia and that stuff all got out.
But they are just by suppressing one side all the time and then blowing other stuff way out of proportion, our people have like a warped sense of what's not all our people, probably not most of the people listening to this show, but voters in general and a lot of liberals are, I think they're basically good people.
They want to be nice people.
They're just, they don't have the information.
If they knew what was happening, they might think a little differently.
I think what's happening, Alan, is that people are now beginning to realize, even the normies, that they're hating you because you're white, not because you're conservative, not because you're pro-abortion, anti-abortion, not because of any of your beliefs.
They just hate you because of your skin.
And because of that, I think we're seeing a new sense of solidarity among white people arising.
And I think the Democrats are going to pay the price for having awakened that sleeping giant in the next election.
Yeah, they probably will.
The National Justice Party, we firmly believe that we need a third party that actually stands up for white people and says it.
Like, you know, I live in West Virginia now, and we have Joe Manchin here.
This state's 97% white or something.
He wouldn't get caught dead saying that he represents white people.
And that's all the people who vote for him.
But they're cowardly.
And conservatives, I've become long ago really disgusted with conservatives because system conservatives, think about it.
They haven't conserved one damn thing.
I mean, they haven't stopped abortion.
They haven't stopped.
They've conserved gains of the left.
Yeah, it's just the only thing they've conserved is tax breaks for the super rich and blank checks for Israel.
I mean, that's about the only thing they've been able to conserve.
But the Democrats are almost like open, like anti-white.
And so people feel like they have no place to go.
And so they just end up voting Republican, and they know all the good talking points.
They get elected.
They wave the flag.
They talk the right stuff.
All in coded language, because they'll never talk straight.
And so they get elected over and over again.
And they never do anything.
Even when they have somebody in the White House and they have the majority of Congress on their side, like they have in the past a number of times, they don't accomplish anything.
The message needs to get out to the Republican Party lead, follow, or get out of the way.
Well, we could be saying that forever.
This goes back to R.L. Dabney saying that these, he called them northern conservatives at the time.
They exist to essentially ratify the advancements and the victories of the left.
And that's still to this day.
What's going to happen to the Democrats in the midterms?
The Republicans are going to be the beneficiaries of that, undeservingly, the undeserving beneficiaries of the more things change, the more they say the same.
Well, but it's not going to last forever.
Alan, listen, this is such an unusual night, inso much as we got you, and then it was just, we didn't have time to even hammer out what we were going to be talking about.
We just had a couple of minutes.
Could you come on?
Yes, we'll do two segments and we'll just start talking and see where it goes.
But I am fascinated.
I'm always fascinated to hear about the activism of those who came before me.
So I would love to have you back on.
We'll do it in January.
Perhaps you and Warren together and we can talk about that activism, that history, and where we're going.
I really do want to learn more about the National Justice Party, why you think that could be effective.
And of course, you've got history in going back to third parties with Buchanan, with George Wallace.
We didn't even mention you were in Long Beach as well.
So was I.
I would love to do that if we could get you back in January.
I wish we had more time tonight.
I'd love to.
Appreciate your work and for the standard you've set, for the example you've set.
Thanks for your insights.
Okay, I appreciate you having me on the show.
We'll do it again.
Alan Baylog, everybody.
He's with the National Justice Party.
What they did up in Wisconsin recently was quite astonishing and astonishingly good and effective.
So we'll talk more with the Bailaugh family.
We'll learn more about NJP.
That's just going to be one of the things we'll do in the new year.
Stay tuned.
Exposing corruption.
Informing citizens.
Pursuing liberty.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
USA Radio News with Tim Berg.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is continuing his tour Saturday through the areas in Kentucky which were devastated by last weekend's tornadoes.
McConnell saying that there is a looming economic reality that municipalities are facing as they attempt to recover and rebuild.
After those first period of 30 days where the federal government picks up the entire cost of their cleanup, you're going to do a much more challenging period.
How do you build back?
How do you pay for it?
Governor Andy Brashier saying 78 people have died from the tornadoes in Kentucky and adding that everyone reported missing has been accounted for.
A federal appeals court is reinstating the Biden administration's vaccine or test mandate for companies with 100 or more employees.
This coming after the mandate was blocked in November by a lower court.
USA Radio News.
Folks, you know how cancel culture has affected Mike Lindell.
Well, MyPillow may have gotten canceled out of retail stores, but you can say big just in time for Christmas at mypillow.com.
The classic standard size MyPillow that sold in stores for almost $70 is on sale for Christmas for just $19.98.
Standard size, $19.98, Queen and King size, slightly higher.
But only if you go to mypillow.com, click on the Radio Listener Square, use my promo code USA, get a MyPillow for that special person in your life.
You also get a free press impact bag so you can take your MyPillow anywhere.
Save big on anything on the MyPillow website, but only if you use my promo code USA.
Support Mike Lindell and American Jobs.
Get the best price ever on a My Pillow and do your Christmas shopping at mypillow.com.
Promo code USA or call 1-800-951-8175.
Merry Christmas.
The United Postal Service is reaching a settlement from the USA Radio News Cape Cod Bureau.
Chris Barnes explains.
The U.S. Postal Service is reaching a settlement with the NAACP over mail delays and their effect on election ballots.
The Postal Service has agreed to take what it calls extraordinary measures to get ballots delivered for the 2022 midterm elections.
Weekly reports will be provided on service performance starting six weeks before the actual elections.
Mail in ballot guidance will also be publicly posted no later than February 1st for federal primary elections and October 1st for general elections.
The NAACP filed a lawsuit in 2020, arguing the changes made in the delivery system made it unreliable and led to confusion before the election.
President Biden and First Lady Jill Biden spending the weekend in Delaware.
This is USA Radio News.
We started off this Christmas season the last Saturday in November and on that particular show we had Glenn Allen on the, the former attorney for the city of Baltimore, Glenn Allen, a longtime friend of ours.
And We kicked off the Christmas music with Good King Wincesless, the traditional English hymn.
Hard to believe that Christmas is next week, and well, we'll let Jack tell you who we Jack's almost as old as Christmas itself, who we play, just like me.
How you doing, Jack.
The temptations killed Jack.
You know I was afraid that could happen or no, it's not us.
I think we're still going out.
Are you there, Jack?
He's somewhere.
He's somewhere in the uh atmosphere out there.
You know, I saw the temptations at the Mid-South Fair one year back when you could go to the Mid-south obviously I'm dating my own self here now back when you could go to the Mid-south fair and not get shot.
Well, I went so far back that I remember when Stevie Wonder was 12 years old singing fingertips at the Mid-South fair in the early 60s.
What a great time that was.
Well, while we wait for Mr. Producer I heard Jack a moment ago Mr. Producer can come in my ear and let me know when Jack's back on the line.
But yeah, I want to thank again Alan Baylog for being with us and yes, I mean, this is a guy who Definitely goes back.
And he was country and country one.
We're going to, again, continue what has been our legacy of working with as many people as we can who are pulling on the right side of the rope.
And this is certainly one of them.
And for coming on, just short notice, not even having any sort of game plan of what we would talk about, just coming on and just starting to talk, which is what we did tonight.
It left me wanting more.
And, you know, to segment the pleasure, this is a thing that theme parks do.
Disney's great at it.
So we'll segment the pleasure.
If a guest leaves you wanting more, and me as a host, then you know he was a good guest.
So, okay, Jack, take it away, buddy.
That was the temptations.
That was the temptations.
And I'd like to encourage our listeners to hear it a little bit longer.
So, a lot of Christmas songs get overplayed and things like that.
But this was the first time I've heard the Temptations version of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.
And it's a beautiful, beautiful song.
The chorus that goes in, it's really good.
So, yeah, I'd like to encourage our people to hear traditional Christmas classical music themes, but also soulful ones and try to find some new music.
So, the Temptations version of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, it's the greatest one I've ever heard.
Well, of course, the original is by Gene Hawtry, and that's hard to beat too, but this is the best soulful version.
I will grant you that.
Well, okay, yeah, it can be competitive, but the chorus was just awesome.
And so I'm harmonizing on this one.
It's great.
Yeah, no, it's really good.
But just hear the whole song, not just the 10-second intro and something like that.
So I'm loving it.
I think it's great.
And I'm just really proud that to all of our listeners, our enemies, these communists, these antifa, these cultural Marxists, they're attacking Christmas.
They're trying to do new holidays like Kwanzaa and stuff like that.
But don't forget to do that.
Yeah, I think most Americans really like a traditional Christmas.
And I think they have some soulful Christmas music and then some, you know, the secular.
I don't think anybody likes Christmas more than the black community, really.
You know, at least I think that black Americans do like Christmas.
And I think that these communists are trying to incite them and trying to get other holidays, Kwanzaa, Juneteenth, all these things like that.
I think regular black Americans like our traditional holidays of Thanksgiving, Christmas, Easter, 4th of July, Labor Day.
Lots of our black Americans do do labor.
They're workers.
So our enemies are not regular black Americans, but these communist anti-Christian cultural Marxists.
Yeah, we do.
But it's not just one ethnic group that's doing all this stuff.
Obviously, this one ethnic group that dominates our media stuff is doing a lot of their stuff.
But we're not negative tonight.
I think this last week of Christmas, let's be positive.
Let's play good music.
Let's do family-oriented things and the things that our grandparents did.
And I think we can do that now.
Well, that's it.
That's what we've been doing tonight.
In fact, that's been the show tonight.
And we spent an hour in the mailbag in the second hour and now wrapping it up with you.
And this is it.
This is the countdown is on.
I was just talking to my wife.
It seems like just yesterday.
I mean, you could say this about something that happened 10 years ago, much less something that happened just a couple of weeks ago.
But it really does seem like just yesterday it was Thanksgiving night and we were putting away the all of the platters and the plates and the dishes and cleaning up from Thanksgiving dinner that we had here at our house and getting the Christmas tree down as we do every Thanksgiving night and just beginning to really get into the spirit of the season.
And now it's nearly come and gone.
Are down to the last week before Christmas.
So, what are you going to do about it, Jack?
What's your plan for the next week?
How are you going to ride this?
Not that we're riding this thing out as if we wanted to go away, but what are your plans over the course of the next week?
How are you going to take it?
I'd like to have a spiritual Christmas, not monetary, but I just have to give payments to all the people that protect me in Chicago, all the people in my buildings and things.
Your Christmas gifts to the entire police department, then, right?
I'm paying the people to see that I'm not killed and murdered and things.
But, you know, but I also give some Christmas spirits and some things like that.
So, that's really what I'm doing.
I'm trying to protect the self, protect my property.
100 years ago, my grandfather was in Russia when these communists took over and he added his stuff like that.
So, I'm trying to survive and things so we don't have a communist bloodbath when I get nailed here outside of Chicago.
But I'm just doing regular Christmas stuff.
I got to give gifts, just simple things, but also the people that work for you that protect you, they do want money and things like that.
Well, tell me this: what is your gift of choice?
Is it alcohol?
Is it money?
Is it something else?
That's something to get you into the Christ-centric spirit of the season.
Money and alcohol.
No, I don't give alcohol.
I do, you know, I do the thing like Christmas cards and money.
But if you've got a nice bartender, a female one that looks after you or things like that, give her some perfume and then a pepper spray mace self-defense canister and stuff.
If you wear this pepper spray, you're probably going to need that pepper spray self-defense, things like that.
But yeah, I just feel that you should be sociable out there.
And then, you know, just things like sugar cookies and things like that.
And so the Christmas season is pretty good.
I think that the communist, anti-American stuff, trying to create these other holidays, I don't think it worked for them.
I think most Americans like Christmas.
I think it turns them off just like wokeness turns them off.
Wokeness, wokeness, feminism, network television, Star Wars, revisionist crap.
These last three Star Wars have been horrible.
Just god-awful, dreadful.
But one good thing is like that.
One thing we had that Harvey Weinstein would always open up a horrible anti-American movie on Christmas, a day like D'Ango and Change or Bad Santa or the things like that.
So Harvey Weinstein got taken down.
He's no longer with us.
So I don't think they really have any answers.
That's the punishment he deserves, or he's in the process of getting it.
Now, that's something you mentioned something.
I don't know.
Did we talk about this last week or the week before, Jack?
This Bad Santa, or was it Bad Santa?
No, that's Billy Bob Thornton, or is this one also called Bad Santa?
With Sarah Silverman and Seth Rogan.
There's people that were, yeah, they're bad center and bad, bad ethnic group of people that doesn't like Christmas.
So we don't really have to beat the debt, we don't have to really tell our listeners what group is doing this.
But the best thing I have is that these people are so unhappy around Christmas that they are so miserable.
They feel like they don't really belong here and it's not their country and they feel left out of it.
And I feel just so great when I see that.
Well, this is, it's called Santa Incorporated with Seth Rogan and Sarah Silverman, two Jewish actors and activists who are mocking Christmas and it has just bombed.
It got historically bad ratings and they're blaming that on white supremacists.
So now go broke in Hollywood.
If you're somebody who doesn't like people mocking Christmas, you're now a white supremacist.
That's how far the line has been redrawn.
We are all white supremacists.
We'll be right back with Jack.
Stay tuned, everybody.
As the United States boldly stepped forward in the glorious light provided by its new constitution in 1787, the nations of the earth were in awe of the newfound strength and hope of this free land.
Today, the nation stands at a crossroads.
A divergence from the original intent put forth in the United States Constitution has brought grave threats to our beloved nation.
A miracle is needed if the United States is to survive.
That miracle is again the pure application of the United States Constitution.
I'm Scott Bradley.
In my To Preserve the Nation book and lecture series, I bring forth truths that will help raise up a new generation of statesmen like those noble Americans who founded this land.
Vigorous application of these principles will invigorate and restore the nation, and we may become again the freest, most prosperous, most respected, and happiest nation on earth.
Visit topreservethenation.com to begin that restoration.
Okay, girls, about finished with your lesson on money?
Daddy, what is a buy-sell spread for gold coins?
Well, when you sell a gold coin to a coin shop that's worth, say, $1,200, you don't actually get $1,200.
But don't worry, we're members of UPMA now, so we don't have to worry about that.
Daddy, why somebody seals that gold?
We don't have any gold at the house.
It's stored safely in the UPMA vault, securely and insured.
But the SP 500 outperformed gold.
Daddy, gold is a bad investment.
Some people do think of it that way, but actually, gold is money.
And as members of the United Precious Metals Association, we can use our gold at any store, just like a credit card.
Or I can ask them to drop it right into Mommy and Daddy's bank account because we're a UPMA member family.
Find out more at upma.org.
That's upma.org.
Why don't we say to the government writ large that they have to spend a little bit less?
Anybody ever had less money this year than you had last?
Anybody better have a 1% pay cut?
You deal with it.
That's what government needs, a 1% pay cut.
If you take a 1% pay cut across the board, you have more than enough money to actually pay for the disaster relief.
But nobody's going to do that because they're fiscally irresponsible.
Who are they?
Republicans.
Who are they?
Democrat.
Who are they?
Virtually the whole body is careless and reckless with your money.
So the money will not be offset by cuts anywhere.
The money will be added to the debt, and there will be a day of reckoning.
What's the day of reckoning?
The day of reckoning may well be the collapse of the stock market.
The day of reckoning may be the collapse of the dollar.
When it comes, I can't tell you exactly, but I can tell you it has happened repeatedly in history when countries ruin their currency.
I saw mommy gets a saint of loss.
gentlemen what one week until Christmas.
And again, next week will be our year-in review show.
What a great year it's been with all of you and with all of our guests, the mainstay guests that we continuously feature, and also, of course, so many of guests making their first time appearances on TPC this year.
We had more than you think.
That's why we're going to do the year in review show so we can remind you.
This has been a phenomenal year of radio.
Jack Ryan, of course, part of the family.
This would be the last time you hear from Jack until 2022.
Not that that's that far away.
Next week, we're going to close the third hour, Jack's customary hour, with Pastor Brett McAtee.
We always close, or what we, well, at least we have in the last few years.
We like to close every year anyway, with the biblical accounting of the Christmas story to be our last hour on record on radio in any given year, that last Saturday of the year, nearest to Christmas.
But then we'll do it all over again in 2022 with all of our special series.
Already looking forward to our march around the world, Confederate History Month series.
Have a lot of fun throughout the year.
The Valentine's Day show with the ladies and just a lot of fun to be had.
Jack will be a big part of it last year, as he has been for the last several years.
So, Jack, this last segment is all yours, brother.
To take it in any which way you can and you will.
And thanks again for being part of the team this year.
Okay.
Well, I just wanted to say that that last song was by a young Michael Jackson of the Jackson 5.
And I really like the music of the Jackson 5.
But I want to tell my Michael Jackson joke, which is, only in America can a poor black boy grow up to be a rich white woman.
But it's something sad that not only of our black American pop stars, actors don't age very well.
Most American young actors who've had success.
Who was the actor in Home Alone, Macaulay?
What was that good guy's name?
Macaulay Holkins.
Hawkins.
C-U-L-K-I-N.
He certainly got it.
It looks as though he may have abused some of those opioids.
This is just my.
I mean, they love very, I can only think of a few child actors or pop singers that did really well, okay, in later life.
I think the tough to think that you come to the realization, Jack, that you peaked out in life at age 12.
Well, who knows?
I have all your time with Michael Jackson.
Right.
No, that they had.
Well, Donnie Osmond did pretty good.
And what was that singer that ended up being a United Nations ambassador?
The dancer.
Shirley Temple.
She ended up having a good later life.
And I thought that she did very good.
But most of our actors, the different strokes actors, Donnie Bonnet.
All the rascals.
Look at all the little rascals.
Look what happened to Al Falfa.
No, it just really, it's just really rough.
So we want to encourage our young people, but probably you have to be really careful about children that are actors and then spokesmen.
Like they get some success.
And then do we really want to care what Harry Potter's girlfriend, I think she's now a United Nations special envoy on feminism.
That one is.
What about J.J. Walker selling all that Medicare gap insurance?
Yeah, no, it is.
You got to separate the art from the artist.
And so you can appreciate a piece of art that was younger.
And then I liked the Home Alone shows.
And I thought it was okay.
And the fact that the guy, that guy looked like he was a meth addict, you know, when he was like 22.
He looked like he was like 87 or something.
Well, you're talking about, yeah, he probably was on drugs.
Holly Culkin.
And he probably came, you know, had some unfortunate experiences with the aforementioned Michael Jackson.
The thing is, people think they can continue to make money the way they used to.
They don't grow into their new adult self.
And it's tough for a kid to realize anybody that they peaked out in life at age 12.
But on the other hand, he made all the money he would need for life by the time he was 12.
So there's that.
If his parents didn't spend it.
Well, I got to ask you this.
This we're talking about movies.
It's actually, we had a let me pull up where this listener's from.
And he's a good guy.
So, but he asked the question.
And this is a question for both of y'all.
So I'm actually glad that you brought this up, Jack.
Jack, we'll let you answer first and then Keith.
But he wants to know what Christmas movies we could recommend.
Now, he, of course, knows some of the classic Christmas movies, but we can certainly mention those as well.
But he was talking about and specifically wanting to know what would be some contemporary Christmas movies that he could watch that wouldn't be filled with the woke nonsense.
He's from Effingham, Illinois.
Effingham, Illinois.
Effingham.
Or is it the Buckinghams or the Buckinghams?
Buckinghams.
Anyway, he wants to know.
Some contemporary movies that won't make him throw up.
That's a very, very good question.
And I have to confess that I just don't see a lot of really any new movies.
I don't want to be some old person that there's no new movies.
I think, I mean, the Hallmark Channel, the Dove Network.
So I don't know any new Christmas movies.
Does Home Alone count as being a new movie, even though it came out in like 19?
It does for me and probably for Jack, but not for you.
You were 10 years old when they came through, John?
Well, if it came out in 90, I was.
And it came out right around there for sure.
I don't want to be confessed to be an old Phobie, but yeah, I just do the classic one, Miracle on 34th Street, get the Wonderful Life, Bells of St. Mary.
But we haven't had any new movies.
Well, I think you're going to have to look to Central and Eastern Europe.
Maybe they've got some things.
Leningrad is now St. Petersburg.
And so I don't think movies, but try to like PBS still has great Christmas shows from Minnesota, St. Olaf, and they have classical music presentations.
And then I can highly recommend the Radio City Rocket's Christmas Spectacular.
Those girls are so healthy, good looking.
And they have a Christmas theme at the end, which is the birth of Jesus.
And it is so great.
If you ever get the chance to see it, they've got some videos on other ones, but you really should see it on a live performance.
And the Radio City Rocket's Christmas Spectacular.
You feel so good to be American.
These girls are so healthy.
They're so athletic.
And then the final scene is a Christmas pageant.
It's the birth of Christ.
It's the best ever.
So I cannot recommend that enough.
That's really good.
Well, I tend to say amen to everything that Jack said there, but for traditional Christmas time fair, I break with my normal instinct of thinking older is better.
I think that the George C. Scott version of the Christmas Carol is far superior to the Reginald Owen or the, you know, the Scrooge one done by Sir, I forget, it's not Sir Cedric Hardwick, it's somebody else, but a knighted actor in England back in the 30s or Alistair Sims version from the early 50s.
Although all of those have their various merits, I think George C. Scott nailed Scrooge.
Scrooge was not as one-dimensional in the George C. Scott version as he is in all those earlier ones.
Right.
Okay.
Well, good.
We'll go.
I'll have to check out all of these ones, but maybe we don't have, I think actually, we can't hope for some movie coming out.
We don't own a single Hollywood movie studio.
So go to your local there, and there could be a Christmas Dickens version of that in your local scene.
So try to promote local theater and things like that.
There's so much crazy music out there.
Yeah, that's right about local theaters.
And as far as relatively contemporary Christmas movies that just aren't offensive, I think that's about a high a bar as you can put up.
You know, you would say certainly Home Alone.
You would say, I think Chevy Chase's Christmas.
Home Alone one and two now.
Home Alone 3, 4 and whatever.
He's like Smoking the Bandit later.
Tim Allen's name, but they're not the real thing.
Tim Allen's The Santa Claus.
I mean, these are fluff and they're frivolous, but they're not offensive.
It just depends on what you're looking for.
If you're looking for a family movie for kids, something like that.
If you're looking something that has some type of real family message and has some intellectual heft, something like the George C. Scott Christmas Carol.
And what year did that come out?
I think it was in 1985.
I guess that is contemporary for this show.
Hey, Jack, we love you, brother.
With a minute or two remaining, hard to put another year.
Just a minute or two.
I meant to say a second or two.
That clock slowed down.
What's going on here with the clock?
Jack, we love you.
Merry Christmas, brother.
Thank you for all you do.
Merry Christmas.
Last show with the Hamilton Messiah.
Camel's Messiah is the first one.
Exactly.
Or the Nutcracker Ballet.
Pretty good.
All right.
Well, God bless you.
Merry Christmas to all the good people in the South.
God bless you all.
Love you.
God bless you, and God bless everyone.
And we will talk to you next week for our last show of the year.
We're going to have a surprise up our sleeve year in review show.
Pastor Brett's going to tell us the Christmas story.
And then we're going to do it all over again in 2022.
I can tell you that.
Don't forget to support our Christmas fundraising drive.
If you've not yet done so, we don't do it for vanity's sake.
We really do need it.
And please stand with your fellow listeners who've already done so.
Thank you for those who have.
If you haven't, there's still time to take advantage of our incentive offer this year.