Feb. 12, 2022 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
The Political Cesspool, 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.
It's all the time before you.
I love you.
Yeah, I love it.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back again to the third and final hour of tonight's very special Valentine's Day installment of TPC James Edwards and all the ladies tonight and how special they all are.
Janice is with us now.
Janice Hamblin and her husband, Rich, have been such, like several of the people you've listened to this evening, longtime friends of the program, really have become more like family over the years.
And that is what we're here to talk about tonight.
Raising healthy families, guiding healthy children, and keeping marriages strong.
And Janice will help us do that now by taking on and focusing on a different topic related to the overall theme.
And that is the adverse effects of radical feminism on the family unit over the course of especially the last few decades.
Janice, you have been a mainstay on these Valentine's Day broadcasts since we started doing them a few years ago.
Great to have you back on with us tonight.
Well, thank you for having me again.
I know I'm the old woman of the group.
Well, we're going to be able to do that.
We all have to be all these girls, mother.
We need that experienced and guiding hand.
My wife is laughing as she listens.
But no, listen, we couldn't respect you and your husband more for so many reasons.
But I'll tell everybody that for this particular show, I started planning this a couple of weeks ago, identifying the ladies I wanted to have on and the topics that they would discuss.
And when I was batting it around with you, Janice, you focused on your topic and you even went the extra mile so much to the extent that you bought a book and you ordered it and you read it and you prepared notes just to inform your segments tonight.
So tell us all about it.
Yes.
Well, actually, Pastor Brett McAtee had mentioned this book on Facebook.
And it's called Why is Feminism So Hard to Resist by Paul Harris.
And the quotes and the comments that he made about it just really kind of, you know, got my interest.
And so I thought I'll read the book and see what it has to say.
And now he might have been a better person to actually have talked about it than Nick.
He's much more well-read than I am.
Him and Richard just amaze me.
But I decided that I would go ahead and read it and try to talk about it.
And I want to open up with Proverbs 14, 1.
It says, every wise woman builds her house, but the foolish tear it down with her hands.
And that is what has happened with feminism.
Women have been tearing down their own homes, destroying their marriages, and ruining their children by feminism.
And I want to preface this.
This is more of an informational.
I do not think that any of your actual lady listeners need this except for the information.
I found it very interesting.
I mean, he starts out with saying that this goes all the way back to the Garden of Eden, and he traced several other of the matriarchals in the Old Testament.
And he said that Satan got to Eve and made her dissatisfied with what God had given her.
And she lives in a perfect society.
And, you know, all the rest of us are fallen.
We have a fallen nature at birth.
And so how much more susceptible would we be to it than Eve was?
I mean, it's just amazing.
If you have a question, jump in, but I'll keep going.
No, no, no, no.
I wanted to give you, you and Courtney, especially this last hour, I know that y'all had prepared so much.
I want to give you a wide runway.
I would just say to you, you were mentioning Pastor Brett McAtee and how he had recommended this book and presumably one of his sermons that we listened to online and how you got it and how it's sort of the catalyst of what we're talking about tonight.
Yes, we would have had Brett on if only he had been a female tonight.
This is ladies that after all.
Of course, Janice, Bret is one of our favorites.
And he was on with us again most recently, just a couple of weeks ago, to talk about the reconciliation of our faith and heritage.
And Bret is fantastic.
So I know that anything that has his fingerprints on it will be great.
And by all means, continue on because this is something that has afflicted the family.
It has broken up families.
It has broken up couples, and again, this is something that goes...
The worst thing is it's ruined children.
It's ruined children.
Okay, so what we want to look at is basically feminism is a tool by Satan to divide women from God.
But he had to first get to the men.
And one thing about the book I did not like is it jumped back and forth in every chapter from like pre-1700s to 1800s and that.
But the main thing is, is men were infected by enlightenment, where all of a sudden, you know, it's knowledge and things like that.
And the Bible is just a bunch of silly fables.
And so it got its roots in that, because what it did is it first turned men's hearts away from God.
And what does fallen men do?
Well, fallen men cheat on their wives, have mistresses, or don't get married at all.
And so, and that made that opened the door for women to become dissatisfied.
But before we get into that, I do want to share two times, as late as just after World War II, he gave two great examples of when people from the East Coast were moving out west.
A lot of times women had to take on a man's role in that travel.
And at World War II, women worked in the factories.
And both times, as soon as the women did not have to do those kinds of tasks, they went back to being homemakers.
And I find that really interesting that back then when they didn't have to do it, they went home.
They knew where their place was.
It was comfortable.
It was safe.
Their husbands loved them.
They protected them.
They provided for them.
And that kind of coverage over a wife.
What?
Janice, I would just interject here if you don't mind.
This is something, again, this is a quote that I've recited quite often since he said it.
And this was at one of our South Carolina broadcasts last summer.
Jason Kuno was co-hosting with me that night.
And he said, when the river is allowed to flow naturally, it leads back here.
And in that context, he was talking about here being a southern pride and people affirming who they are in terms of their cultural identity.
But with regards to women and women's issues, when the river is allowed to flow naturally, it leads them back to the home.
And it is unnatural for them to live a life in an office cubicle.
We'll talk a little bit more about that with Janice when we return tonight on this, our very special Valentine's Day weekend broadcast.
Stay tuned in.
Why don't we say to the government writ large that they have to spend a little bit less?
Anybody ever had less money this year than you had last?
Anybody better have a 1% pay cut?
You deal with it.
That's what government needs, a 1% pay cut.
If you take a 1% pay cut across the board, you have more than enough money to actually pay for the disaster relief.
But nobody's going to do that because they're fiscally irresponsible.
Who are they?
Republicans.
Who are they?
Democrats.
Who are they?
Virtually the whole body is careless and reckless with your money.
So the money will not be offset by cuts anywhere.
The money will be added to the debt and there will be a day of reckoning.
What's the day of reckoning?
The day of reckoning may well be the collapse of the stock market.
The day of reckoning may be the collapse of the dollar.
When it comes, I can't tell you exactly, but I can tell you it has happened repeatedly in history when countries ruin their currency.
You know where the solution can be found, Mr. President?
In churches, in wedding chapels, in maternity wards across the country and around the world.
More babies will mean forward-looking adults, the sort we need to tackle long-term, large-scale problems.
American babies in particular are likely going to be wealthier, better educated, and more conservation-minded than children raised in still industrializing countries.
As economist Tyler Cowan recently wrote, quote, by having more children, you're making your nation more populous, thus boosting its capacity to solve climate change.
The planet does not need for us to think globally and act locally so much as it needs us to think family and act personally.
The solution to so many of our problems at all times and in all places is to fall in love, get married, and have some kids.
If the COVID-19 shot is safe and effective, then why are 20% of health care workers refusing to get it?
If the COVID-19 injection is safe and effective, then why is big tech silencing anyone who opposes it?
If the COVID injection is safe and effective, then why is our federal government's reporting system recording over 14,000 deaths from the vaccine and an additional 650,000 plus serious adverse reactions?
If the COVID shot is safe and effective, then why did Dr. Gert von den Bosch, recognized as one of the world's chief vaccine experts, risk his entire career and his reputation to plead with the medical community to immediately halt all COVID-19 vaccinations, calling mass COVID vaccinations an uncontrollable monster?
Doesn't sound very safe and effective.
Maybe it's time to call a spade a spade.
At no time in history have the people forcing others into compliance been the good guys.
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Here I feel alive.
Here the flags don't.
Even if I'm right, girl, you'll be my bride.
You'll never be alive.
How in the world are we already halfway through our third hour tonight?
I could go 10 hours tonight with these ladies and you're asking, well, how many more ladies could you have had on tonight?
Let me tell you folks, a lot.
And there was one in particular that I had wanted to have on this evening, Liv Haida, who is the proprietor of whitedate.net.
And I couldn't find her contact information.
I couldn't find it.
And it's not on the website.
So I had to send one of these form emails through the website.
And I didn't get the reply until just now because it was in my spam folder.
But she wrote me back yesterday and I didn't see it.
But I would have loved to have had Liv back on the show to talk about pairing up and finding mates.
I mean, we've been talking about that with the other ladies certainly.
But with the work she's doing there at whitedate.net, I am going to email Liv back at the end of this show and we'll get her scheduled for a forthcoming broadcast even above and beyond what we're doing tonight here on this Valentine's Day weekend.
But back we are now with Janice.
And Janice, as I was saying before, we're talking about feminism and how it's negatively impacted the family.
And by design, of course, deconstructed the family unit, deconstructed a safe nest in which our people and our children would flourish.
You give people a stable nest and they will replenish themselves.
If you give them a nest that is disturbed, they don't do that.
And that's what society has certainly done for white people.
But with regard to feminism, I was saying before, when the river is allowed to flow naturally, it leads back here.
And here in this case is women in their biblically defined and God-ordained roles serving as the backbone of the family unit there at the home.
And that's where women naturally want to be.
They do not want to naturally, they do not want to naturally be in an office cubicle.
Janice, to you.
Well, okay, let's go back to enlightenment.
Enlightenment took the men away.
But that also, what happened was all of a sudden ministers, and this happens first over in Europe, ministers all of a sudden had no influence over politicians or over their businessmen.
So they went to the women.
They had a lot of influence on the women.
And all of a sudden they came up with that women are superior spiritually.
And that really, you know, in feelings and things like that.
And that really fed into the feminism because all of a sudden we're better than men at something.
And then we, United States had its first women's rights meeting in 1848.
You know, growing up, I thought this was just a 1960s thing.
No.
1948, I mean, 1848.
And weird enough, it was Quakers, a religious group, that were way behind it.
So, and the first state, and that was in the 1800s, that were going to give the women the vote, I think, was Massachusetts.
They let the ladies vote in it.
It was the men that voted to let women have the vote.
And men and women said, no, we don't want any part of it for the most part.
So abolition of slavery was really part of a feminist movement because there was a lot of women in it.
And suffrage, the right to vote.
If they said women couldn't vote tomorrow, I'd be just plain happy.
We shouldn't be voting.
We shouldn't be holding.
We should not be holding public office.
So women's suffrage was part of it.
Then came the lovely Civil Rights Act in 1965, 64.
And there was a senator that thought, well, I'm going to sneak in the word sex in there and nobody's going to pass it.
And lo and behold, they did, which is now where we're in this whole mess of everything, homosexuality and transgender, on top of feminism.
You know, another thing is, is that before feminism, women weren't depressed.
And now they're some of the most depressed people on the face of the earth.
We're overworked.
I think women of my age, we were the first women as a whole that it was like we were forced to work.
And it was more forced to work because husbands were not paid a living wage where they could afford to pay for everything.
And, you know, we're going to have a different set of health issues because we've had to work.
And I hate to say this about men, but men don't usually help a whole lot around the house when you work.
At least my truth must be, Janice, the truth must be told on this program.
Am I wrong?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, yeah, I mean, if you have to, if your husband makes a wife work, which was what happened to me the first time around, he ought to be helping around the house.
And, but a lot of them do not.
There are some that do.
But, you know, and there's also the big lie about that there have been, like the Amazon, one of the examples they gave was the Amazon women.
And even anthropologists have gone through all kinds, there's names in there.
I can't remember all of them.
Gone through all kinds of history and looked at things.
And you cannot find any historical evidence that there was ever a civilization ran by a woman.
They've always been ran by men.
Always.
Go all the way back to whenever you can find them.
So that's a lie.
There was something else I wanted to talk about on there too.
Oh, because the difference in feminism, early feminists never attacked motherhood or childbearing ever.
They still thought that was a necessary part of society.
And most people, even I think it was Margaret Mead, who's an anthropologist, said that it was necessary to have that structure of women.
And in 1960s is when they started attacking motherhood.
You know, I can remember being chided for being a college graduate and staying home with my kids because I did get to stay home two, three years with my children.
And, you know, oh, you should be working.
Why?
And then came the 1970s and abortion.
They started to attack childbearing.
And that is, that is just such a huge evil in our country, huge evil to have that.
So it's, you know, something that needs to be done away with.
But, you know, all you can do is just get women to understand, A, you know, don't be having children before you really need them or want them.
And then they are a blessing.
They're a great blessing.
They're our protege, you know, our offspring, our heritage.
And I've got to see if I can see more of my notes because there's so much stuff in that book.
There's just not enough time.
You're another one tonight that we could have gone a full hour.
This is such an important and in-depth topic.
And then there's the music.
I hate that.
I hate that because I wanted to talk to you, you especially, about relationship advice for a multi-generational audience.
You know, I mentioned this earlier with one of the ladies.
Well, you'll just have to have me on another time.
We will certainly do that.
Perhaps you and your husband in tandem because there are listeners tuned in tonight in every stage of love and life.
And you can offer perspective that I think is very unique.
Janice, I love you.
Happy Valentine's Day to you and to Rich.
You're the better half, of course.
We'll talk to you again soon.
Protecting your liberties.
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AAA says the national average for a price of regular gasoline is $3.45 a gallon.
This has Democratic senators on Capitol Hill calling for suspending the federal gas tax for the remainder of the year to help consumers struggling with rising fuel prices.
The federal gas tax has remained at just over 18 cents a gallon since 1993.
The money goes into a trust fund that helps pay for highway construction projects and public transit.
New COVID cases and hospitalizations remain on a downward trajectory, but the rate of deaths have not leveled off.
That's how CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walinski opened a news briefing.
Dr. Walinski adding that the latest weekly average of COVID deaths is up about 3% over the previous week.
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A Michigan judge will continue to hear testimony this month to determine if the parents of a teenager accused in a high school killing spree should face an involuntary manslaughter trial.
15-year-old Ethan Crumbley is accused of killing four students at Oxford High School in Michigan on November 30th.
On Tuesday, several witnesses took the stand in a preliminary hearing for his parents, James and Jennifer Crumbley.
Multiple witnesses told the judge his mother, Jennifer, focused on horse riding as her son Ethan complained he was haunted by demons.
The preliminary hearing resumes on February 24th.
In the USA Radio News Midwest Bureau, I'm Katie Lewis.
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In a statement Wednesday, the electric car company saying the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing intends to file a lawsuit over alleged misconduct at its factory in Fremont, USA Radio News.
Here I stand, head in hand, turn my face to the wall.
If she's gone, I can't go on, feeling too foot small.
Everywhere people stare, each and every day.
I can see them laugh at me and I hear them say, Hey, you've got to hide your love away.
Hey, you've got to hide your love away.
Ladies and gentlemen, we are turning the corner now to the home stretch of our Valentine's Day broadcast.
What a special show.
What an important show.
This is, like so much we have done, been trailblazing in so many regards with this particular broadcast going back now longer than any of the others, any of our peers, and has certainly been covered more by the establishment press.
And I'm very, very proud of the legacy of TPC.
And this, too, is something that I think is unique unto us having the ladies on for Valentine's Day broadcast talking about relationships and families.
And I put a little bit more work into this one than we normally do inso much as because you're having so many different guests and lining everything up takes a little bit of work and practice.
But I will say of the ladies you've heard from tonight, as much as I expected from them to begin with, I think that they have exceeded those expectations.
And I think our final guest will be no exception to that.
And that is Courtney from Alabama, who has just been a mainstay on this program going back nearly to our very beginning, or at least as far as I can remember.
And she's back with us tonight to wrap up another very special show.
Courtney, how are you?
I'm doing good.
Hopefully I don't cough in the middle of this, but I've already warned you about that.
So far, I'm doing fine today with that.
So we'll see.
I have to say, I felt so good when I heard that song playing, which I requested.
If the audience doesn't recognize that, that was a much younger, better, better off than what he became.
You know, 1965, 1964, 1965, John Lennon, you know, like in the middle 60s when he was still cute and he was still talented and gosh, he was, he was so, the songs he wrote, him and Paul.
And I'm sorry, I just have such admiration for that group.
But, you know, and I'm going to talk about this a little bit later.
You know, he, you know, later on.
Finally, we're getting to the important stuff.
Finally, Courtney, we're getting to the important stuff.
It took its whole time.
Oh, man.
But yeah, he gets to the Beatles.
That was one.
That was one of his songs from the mid-60s.
Oh, my gosh.
I just, the middle 60s were their best part of the decade.
I thought so, so much talent.
Oh, man.
And, and I'm going to touch, I'm going to talk about, you know, him some more a little later.
I'm going to tie it into my talk.
And I didn't, I didn't listen to the previous women.
You know, I didn't get a chance to listen to them.
So if I say anything that contradicts anything they said, I don't want anybody to think it's intentional or I'm trying to be hostile because I honestly haven't heard them yet.
So these are just strictly from me, my talking points.
And I'm going to discuss men and women, specifically white men and women and their different roles and how they're fulfilling them.
And I'm going to, you know, say good things about both sides.
And, you know, men are more suited for the workplace and being on the front lines in so many areas.
And, you know, whereas women are supposed to be supporters of white men.
And I have good things to say on both sides about how they're fulfilling their proper roles.
And again, I just don't, I don't believe in only blaming one side for our overall issues because if we're in the same society or nation or whatever you want to refer to it as country, you know, we're in it together.
It's impossible to say we're not influencing each other or accepting each other's behavior or, you know, so unless we're in separate societies, I don't think you can just blame one and not the other for a problem.
But, you know, I want to start with men in the workplace and just how they're better suited for that position, specifically white men.
You know, they're better suited for that position and especially around only other men.
You know, it's good for them to have their own spaces and not have women around a lot of times.
And I'm going to talk based on things I've seen in the past.
I don't think women should be in the workplace.
But me and, you know, me and many other women, we've been in situations where we had to work, unfortunately, just the way our society is now.
We had to.
We didn't have a choice.
So I'm going to base a lot of my observations on things I saw with my own eyes when I was in the office.
And I am going to use the Beatles as an example.
Everybody, anybody who's a fan of the Beatles, they know the famous story of what happened to them.
They had a rule that most people know about it who follow them.
Like they had a famous rule that they were not allowed to bring their wives into the studio.
And that rule was honored for a very long time.
If you look at the women, of course, they were famous, so they switched their partners around.
But the women, but they were all with a particular woman throughout the 60s while they were Beatles, like very beautiful British women for the most part.
And so for the duration of the 60s, this rule was always honored.
The Beatles kept their women out of the studio and the women honored that.
Well, later on, John Lennon, you know, he met Yoko Ono and he decided to bring her into the studio.
And, you know, and we know how things ended for them after that.
And I know there's a lot of theories on how the group broke up.
And a lot of people like to blame Yoko Ono.
that's what most people say i really don't know i mean there's so many theories about it but we all can agree that when she was in the studio it caused problems that weren't there before and um and you know and and geez i have to say you can't i'm not a fan of yoka ona but we can't direct all our anger at her i mean geez look at what look at how much of a cuck john winnen was for letting her in i mean geez I mean, you know, that right there is the problem a lot of times.
When you have women going into men's spaces, usually there's a man who cucked and let them in.
Hold on one second.
I'm sorry.
My daughter's here.
Finally, yeah, I've been waiting on this.
I said, with all the mothers we have on tonight, and I told them all it would be endearing if we had a little child background noise.
My wife has been listening and she's had Caroline in here and then all of the others babies.
So finally, we've had a childlike interruption.
Oh, goodness.
So, yeah, she's wonderful.
But yeah, so yeah, what a cuck he turned into.
I loved him in the early and mid-60s.
He was cute.
He was talented.
But geez, what happened to him?
Oh, my gosh.
So anyways, we got to blame him, too.
And anyways, I want to go into the specific examples here.
For one thing, men don't have to worry about competing or impressing or showing off or showing favoritism to women if they're not there.
It's like they get along better.
They work well with each other when women aren't there.
And when Yoko Ono was in the studio, I highly doubt, you know, the other Beatles were competing for her attention.
But that's the thing, Courtney.
I got to say this, if we're going to talk about the Beatles, what I've always wondered is, here you are, as the Beatles so often said about themselves, they could sing the phone book and make a hit out of it.
They're more popular than Jesus.
And then I'm looking at John Lennon with Yoko Ono.
I'm like, you're the most popular rock band in the world and that's the best you can get.
I mean, I will never understand that.
Never understand that.
Me neither.
You and me both and Beatle fans everywhere.
But yeah, so that wasn't an issue, them competing for her attention.
But what was an issue was he showed favoritism to her, obviously.
I think there was one famous story where she ate George's sandwich and he got mad.
He called her the B-word.
And then John, you know, John, John wanted to beat him up after that.
You know, whereas if it was another man, if Ringo ate his sandwich, she'd be like, oh, well, you shouldn't have eaten your sandwich.
You know, so stuff like that goes on.
And then, and then also, you know, I'm just, I'm just so, I'm so impressed with how, you know, just observations I've noticed in the offices I was in, men get along so much better than women do with each other.
I don't know what it is.
I think it's evolutionary.
Men were always away from the home hunting together, whereas women were usually, you know, by themselves in the home watching the kids.
And so men were just made to work together.
They were out away from the home hunting together and doing whatever they needed to do.
And so I think a lot of it is evolutionary, Eric, but you know, it's like, I'm just so impressed with how well men work together and get along.
I mean, God bless us women.
Geez, I don't know why we don't get along as well.
But, you know, and then also men aren't as into gossip and drama.
That's something I've always appreciated.
When I was in the workplace, I would, I would never go run to an older male superior, not by any means, but I would go run to my peers, like the, like sometimes I would go talk to, I would go ask, you know, one of the men my age, you know, who I could kind of joke around with at times and everything.
And I would ask them, you know, I'd be like, oh my gosh, is she talking about me?
Is so-and-so talking about me?
And they would put me in my place right then and there.
And they would say, Courtney, I don't want to have anything to do with it.
I'm not interested.
Weed me out of it.
And so, you know, it was embarrassing and it was like, oh, geez, I better shut up about it.
I can't believe I'm already hearing the music.
I thought.
Yeah, that's right.
I mean, we do have the greatest of the 60s bands right now taking us into that break.
This is stayed by the four seasons.
Stay with us one more time.
If you can, ladies and gentlemen.
Courtney will be back right after this.
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I think that my family has always had a big influence on me for not smoking because since I was little, I was taught that smoking was wrong.
Recent studies indicate that smoking among teens often leads to the use of alcohol and other drugs.
I think having faith in God is a big part in it because the way I was raised has helped to avoid smoking.
Smoking, if you think you're old enough to start, you're smart enough to stop.
Public service message from this station and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
You know
that she's just everything about a guy, everything about a guy.
Certainly an appropriate song to be dedicated to each and every one of the ladies who have made this certainly a memorable broadcast.
Dare I say myself that this has been my favorite of all of the Valentine's Day installments, but not just to the ladies who have been on the show with us tonight, but to all of the ladies in TPC's listening audience across the country and around the world.
You're just my style.
That's Gary Lewis and the Playboys, another one that Courtney handpicked for tonight.
I will tell you that a secret of show business is to always leave the audience wanting more.
And if these ladies have left me wanting more, and each of them have, hopefully they have done the same for you as well.
So Courtney, we'll give it back to you.
But first, I would say with regard to the story you shared earlier about Yoko eating George Harrison's sandwich, you know, it was okay for George because he was still doing backflips off of couches into the 80s, as we saw in his Got My Mind Set on You video.
And we saw him do that, did we not?
Oh, yeah.
He, oh, man, that was a great song.
I love the 80s, too.
And yeah, he did some great stuff in the 80s.
Was he really doing that backflip, though?
That's the question.
That's what we all want to know.
Exactly.
In that famous video.
Okay.
Sorry, my daughter was there again.
But yeah, I have to quickly go through the rest of these.
I might have to summarize what was intended for the second segment.
But yeah, you know, guys, you know, men just aren't as into gossip and drama like women are.
They don't waste, you know, as much time.
They're not as easily distracted at work.
You know, usually if something's wrong with the kids, the women are the ones that leave and go take care of it.
They don't, you know, if it's just, you know, and I've come on in the past and talked about the, you know, the me too stuff.
So I don't want to spend too much time on that right now.
You know, I've already gone into that.
Well, how about we get onto this, Courtney?
How about I focus you?
And I know you've got a lot of notes, and I know it's always like with some of the other ladies, too much to get to, not enough time.
Let's focus on this, the angst between the sexes in this day and age.
Women blaming women, rather men blaming women for the problems with not being able to find a proper partner and spouse and whatever's going on with feminism.
Janice covered a lot of that.
Let's get down to it.
Now, you know, my position has always been: if you can't, as a man, command a woman, and if you can't go out and find a woman and bend her to your will, that's a problem that you need to correct first because women are hardwired to respond to such men.
Right.
And that was going to be, that was going to be a lot of my second segment.
I don't think, and those are good points there.
Don't think we spend enough time.
I think we spend, I think I don't know.
I just get the impression that a lot of time is spent talking about what white women are doing, are doing wrong, and but you know, I see a lot of good things they're doing too, and that's that's what I was gonna talk about.
You know their, their main role is supposed to be supporting white men.
Well, let's look at a few things, and you know they, you know, let's look at the movement itself.
I hear, I hear it come up a lot that there should be more women involved.
But should there really be?
I mean uh, think it, think of it.
It's, it's right now.
It's still a fringe movement.
It's really you're, you're taking a risk by being a leader in it and women, just women, just aren't suited.
Hold on a second.
Yeah baby, I see it.
Okay, put her on the radio.
Actually, that would be fine.
I, she is cute.
Uh women women uh, you know, men are men, are bigger risk takers, men are men, are bigger risk takers and they're more suited for that type of thing.
And, to be honest with you, i've seen um, you know and, and this, this movement just isn't mainstream.
I mean, I don't know what most white people are thinking privately.
I mean they probably they might have our views.
I mean, I know we talk about that a lot but as far as what they're doing openly most, neither mo, most white men nor most white women are involved in the movement.
We got to admit to that.
So you know it's not.
And i've been following the movement over the years, going to conferences.
When I first started going years ago there weren't many women at all, it was pretty scarce.
But now i'd say you know there's just about the right amount going.
And then you look at all the ones that are involved, like on your show, that call in and that have their own shows, and the ones that go and speak at conferences and um, you know, I just, it seems to me like it's about the right amount for something like this.
When, when the movement becomes more mainstream and we see, we see more and more white men joining, then more and more white women will follow and uh, you know.
And then another thing I just want to talk about.
You know, Normies in general and how they vote, like you know, the whole Republican mindset and everything.
Um, if we want to, if we want to just, if we want to just look at that um, you know, despite all the propaganda directed at white women, i'm pretty impressed with how closely overall, they vote with white men.
I mean, i'm not saying they should vote, I mean, that's a whole other topic.
That's a whole other topic.
I don't, I don't think, I don't think women should be voting, for a number of reasons.
I agree on that for sure.
Um, you know, but if that was something that Janice said earlier, just earlier this hour, so you know, there's amazing women on the program tonight but and that was something by the by the way Courtney, that that we caught quite a bit uh, a flack for in 2016, I said listen, I don't want, you know, a woman to be the head of my home or the head of my uh church, and I certainly don't want them to be the head of our nation.
With regard to Hillary and Donald Trump, and we caught some right, you know, press on that.
But again, that's the natural right right, Right.
And yeah, it's like it's amazing how closely they do vote with white men.
I mean, it's like during both Obama presidencies, I think there were just seven percentage points behind them, which overall isn't that much.
And then for both Trump presidencies, yeah, they went to 11 points behind white men in voting for the Republican candidate.
But yeah, there was a white woman running.
I didn't vote for her by any means.
I voted for Trump.
But despite all the propaganda and all the propaganda about him being, you know, treating women badly and all that garbage, you know, it's still over 50% of white women voted for him.
And then in the second Trump election, gosh, I think the gap between white men and women narrowed to 5%.
I mean, I was very impressed with that.
And then, you know, and then I want to give another example.
If you look at the Roy Moore and like Doug Jones election in Alabama several years ago, that whole thing is very upsetting.
I voted for Roy Moore.
I mean, I believe that was his name, Roy Moore.
And, you know, that was a very disappointing election.
Of course, he was done wrong by all the, you know, sexual allegations and all that garbage.
And but yet 60% of white women voted for him compared to 70% of white men.
So, you know, it was something like that.
So again, there was like a 10 percentage point difference.
And, you know, and the media, look at how the media attacked white women afterwards.
And, you know, and so I think a lot of that shows that, you know, in that election, despite all the propaganda directed at them, they went out and overall, you know, voted the right way for the right candidate.
I mean, gosh, there were so many reasons why that election went the wrong way.
A lot of it had to do with all the blacks and going out to vote and all sorts of other sketchy stuff going on.
But, you know, and then when Trump was fighting the fraudulent election, I was so impressed with all the all the white women like on Facebook, these Facebook groups I joined.
Gosh, there were so many that were on there, just as many, just as many as I saw men on there, you know, just so many on there just who were upset over it and standing up for him.
And, you know, they were president.
I saw so many of them at the January 6th protest when I was watching on TV.
I mean, yeah, they weren't among the people in the front, nor should they have been, but, you know, there were so many of them there in the crowd.
Anyways, I don't, you know, I guess I got my point across that.
But I just, you know, my point, you know, of course, I agree.
I agree women shouldn't vote and there's a number of reasons for that.
But as far as, you know, where, as far as, you know, where they stand, you know, white women stand in their roles of standing beside white men and supporting them, I think in a lot of ways they support them in more ways than they're given credit for.
And I guess those were the main things on that I wanted to get across.
There's other notes on it, but I know we're probably strapped for time.
Well, you know, because you've been appearing on this show since its inception, how the ebb and flow of the segments go.
And we are at the end of it.
But I want to thank you.
And I want to thank all of the ladies tonight.
Each and every one of you could have had an hour unto yourselves and would have still left some on the table.
I am very pleased with the way tonight's show has been executed.
Each of you came to the table ready to go and I appreciate it.
Courtney, we'll talk to you again very soon.
You're always a regular.
And for the other ladies that were on tonight, let me see if I can remember them all.
Janice and Kim and Lacey and Sarah and of course my wife at the very beginning of the show.
I'm James Edwards.
Happy Valentine's Day to you all, ladies and gentlemen.
Remember, it's on Monday, so that's the day after tomorrow if you're listening live.
Treat your significant other.
They deserve it.
We'll be back next week back to the Standard Fair.
And we've got some great guests for you.
March Around the World Confederate History Month coming up soon.