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March 2, 2024 - 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.
If it gets any better than this, ladies and gentlemen, I might not be able to stand it.
What a wonderful kickoff to our 2024 installment of March Around the World.
You know, in this special series each year, we feature exclusively leaders and elected officials from different European nations as we seek to discover how our kinsmen are faring throughout the Western world.
It's an exclusively international collection of guests.
Except, I mean, maybe we're being too clever by half in this, our third and final hour.
I'll tell you more about that in just a second.
But first, let us laud the guests we have had thus far tonight to kick off this special series, which is now four years running here on TPC.
We're now in our 20th year on the air, 20 years.
But for the last four years, we have had this March Around the World series where we feature these international guests exclusively in the month of March.
Tom Sunich in the first hour, Dr. Tomislav Sunich, former diplomat in Croatia, professor, author.
He kicked it off for us this year from Zagreb, and then we backtracked a little bit to Canada with Paul Fromm.
And now we have Paul Kersey.
You say, well, Paul Kersey is an American.
Yes, and maybe, maybe we're being too clever by half, but Paul Kersey is here to represent what could have been the interplanetary community of the Western world had we not taken a different path.
So let's now welcome Paul.
Or at least on the other hand, he's pretty close to the Mason-Dixon line.
I assume he's from the D.C. area, which we consider down here to be a separate country.
But nonetheless, well, no, I tell you what, the South is near and dear to his heart.
Let's welcome now prolific author Paul Kersey back to the program.
Paul, it's been far too long.
How are you doing tonight?
You know what?
I am doing phenomenal.
It's no longer Black History Month.
No, I'm doing wonderful.
Congrats.
I didn't realize it had been 20 years.
Congrats on the world on all the incredible work that you've done, the program.
And it's a great honor to be part of such a prestigious show.
And I tell you what, Paul, we sure, we all miss stuff black people don't like.
Your excellent website.
Paul's still out there.
He's everywhere.
His fingerprints are everywhere.
He has just been a wonderful, wonderful representative for all the right causes.
As I say, everybody, we had all the right enemies, just like us.
Well, I'll tell you, I mean, he is one of the site actually does still exist.
I'm one of the two key bloggers, Ron Unz's site, un.com forward slash SBPDL.
But the blog's still there.
I've obviously liked it from the waste in time, so I'm not doing that.
There you go, Kate.
It still exists.
Yeah, Ron Un is one of the great men.
I think he's been on your program before a couple times, probably more than that.
And he's doing great work.
And as, you know, the world begins to shift from the global American empire, which I think is fracturing before our eyes.
And that's a great thing.
I can't wait for that.
You know, I love before we were celebrating tonight the fact that our previous guests, Tom, Tom Sunich and Paul Fromp, and I, and Kevin McDonald, we all got the acts on the same day at the same time, about a year ago now, from Twitter or X, as it's now called.
But you're still there, and I love everything you post, everything you write.
It resonates with me.
Of course, you and I know each other, and we've spent time together in the flesh and broken bread together.
You're just one of the best of the best.
And it's great to have you back on tonight, even in March Around the World, which I, again, I think it's a clever way to work you in because Whitey on the Moon, this is one of your books.
You are a prolific author.
We're going to talk about some of your titles, but we want to focus on a whole series of things about cities that have gone black.
We're going to talk about that.
Thanks for the foreshadowing, Keith, but we will talk, we'll touch on that.
But just recently, not too long ago, Antelope Hill Publishing, which are partners of ours and friends of ours, they acquired the rights to republish with new citations and a new remastered version, I guess you could say, of two of your books, two of your iconic books, Whitey on the Moon and Black Mecca Down.
Before we get to Whitey on the Moon, how did that come about, this partnership with Antelope Hill?
You know, it's simple.
Back during the summer of George Floyd, which is coming up for our four-year anniversary when our country went mad, I had initially kind of just done all this as a joke, and then it became an abocation to write about subjects near and dear that I care about.
And unfortunately, Amazon, that's self-published on Crate Space, they were nuked after being on Crate Space for God, almost a decade.
I think the first book that I did was SCP-DL Year One, kind of a play on Batman Year One by Frank Miller, which is one of my favorite graphic novels.
And so they were language me, basically.
I wasn't trying to get them republished.
All of them were removed from Amazon.
I mean, I was probably making, on average, $1,000 a month just on revisits.
And I wasn't really promoting them.
I think there are 15 books.
And unfortunately, when everything happened, Amazon got rid of a number of wonderful titles from Jared Taylor to rename it, Greg Johnson.
All of his books got nuked.
So Annelope Hill contacted me in December of 2022, and they're going to be reprinting all of the books, actually.
So these are the first books.
Wow.
I'm very excited.
Wow.
So they're going to be to make it official here.
Because I got to say this about Antelope Hill.
Taylor Young, the entire staff and crew there, we have partnered with them for the last couple of years.
And once per month, they provide us with one of the authors from their stable of talent.
And it's fantastic content.
It's a wonderful addition to the program.
But of course, as far as the written word goes, they are excellent.
But they're going to, am I hearing you right?
They're going to take not just Whitey on the Moon, which we're about to discuss, and Black Mecca Down, which we'll discuss later, but they're going to take more of the Kersey catalog there at Antelope Pillars.
They're going to publish the book on Birmingham, on Selma, the truth about Selma.
Yes, yes, yes.
They were all gems.
We were waiting for that one.
And I've got a suggestion for you, Paul.
If you're looking for somebody to fill out your staff at stuff people don't like, consider Ian Connolly.
He was with Amran early on, and I see that he's still a person that makes comments.
I mean, that guy had some excellent stuff early on, and I imagine he still has the same ideas today.
Well, I'll tell you this, Paul.
We'll talk more about Selma.
I'm going to put a pen in that, but I am excited to know.
And I didn't know that.
So, not only is he breaking news to the audience tonight, he is breaking news to the hosting staff that more of the cursed catalog will be published by Antelope Hill.
But they have already republished.
They have already republished with newly edited and thoroughly cited new editions of Whitey on the Moon and Black Mecha Down.
Let's start with Whitey on the Moon.
I definitely have to touch on Selma before the end of the hour because, as you probably know, Jared and I went down to Selma last year.
Selma is near and dear to James's heart.
Thanks for good content for him.
No, I mean, Dean, you know, I'm, you know, I'm as southern as they get.
I might not have an accent, but I have ancestors involved in both sides of the World North Aggression.
But I definitely consider myself without a doubt of Alabamians.
And so, Selma, I remember visiting Selma and just being labbergasted by one of the more shocking.
It's basically our version of Hayden in a lot of ways.
Yes.
But this is where they send the Pilgrims.
The Pilgrims go to.
All right.
Well, that's actually happening, by the way, this month.
And I think in a couple of weeks, they're all going to be down there.
Is this the end?
This is the anniversary of the entirely misnamed Bloody Sunday.
It was bloody what they did to the officers.
Across the Edmund Pettis Bridge.
No, I mean, Why You on the Moon, I think it's such an important book because, and again, it's Why You on the Moon, Race Politics, and the Death of the U.S. Space Program 1958 to 1972.
Really, it's just about how incredible the heat of starting the Mercury program basically after Sputnik happened with Russia in 57.
We, I mean, think about this: the Wright brothers flew in 1903.
We're on the moon 65 years later in July of 1969.
And yes, it was a feat that was accomplished by, you know, white Anglo-Saxon Protestants.
And yeah, guess what?
There were Germans who were over and bought a paperclip.
It's the greatest achievement of all time.
And to all the people who might be listening and saying, oh, God, we could fear the moon.
You know what?
Take your flat earth theory out there and go away because this is the most incredible achievement in the history of not just our people, but humanity.
Let me say one thing, though.
I remember Jesse Jackson and Martin Luther King making comments back in the 60s about how tragic it was that all these resources are being diverted to piring to put somebody in the moon when they could be put to such good use down and together.
Well, that's the thing.
And Paul, that's part of the book.
I mean, this is Whitey on the Moon.
Let me read the back page description here.
And by the way, the brand new, republished, newly edited and thoroughly cited edition available at antelopehillpublishing.com, Whitey on the Moon.
On July 20th, 1969, man first stood on the moon.
On December 18th, 1972, man stood on the moon for the last time.
What happened to end the dream of the space exploration?
Paul Kersey argues that the U.S. government neutered by NASA, neutered NASA, rather, by forcing a much different mission upon the space agency.
Diversity at the expense of the initial dream of exploring the stars.
And a much less successful project than that.
You can have excellence or you can have equality, but you could not have both.
And that's the thing, Paul.
I mean, how much further would we have been?
You go back now to 1972.
That's eight years before I was born.
You and I are nearly the same age.
That's several decades now, four decades plus.
How much further could we have been as Western mankind had we pursued the stars instead of something entirely more impossible to say the thugs rather than the stars, we focused on thugs and bars.
How much further could we have been, Paul?
That's a great question.
It's really simple.
And as your co-host alluded, the black newspapers in the 60s were up in arms about what they believed was the misappropriation of fund.
The title was, of course, taken from a song by Gil Heron, I think of his name, a black singer who said, you know, a rat thug bit my sister while he's on the moon.
That was actually a very big belief within the black community.
I can't remember his name, but the guy who ended up taking over for Marty the King for his shakedown.
There was a famous song, too, Paul, by a howling wolf called Coon on the Moon.
You need to look that one up.
There was the Poor People's March that went around the country in a horse and mule drawing carriage to try and bring attention to the black community and the differences in the socioeconomic situation.
And they showed up on July 16th, 1969.
And I actually, in researching this book, I found the Jet.
I read the Jet magazine and I actually found the photo.
I'm sure you guys have seen that amazing photo of a very corpulent, fat black woman that's, and she has a sign.
Her son is in like a, you know, stroller, and it says, billions for space, pities for the poor.
Well, you know, the thing about that, yeah, yeah, they were, as Keith said, and as you are responding to, they were very upset about that at the time.
But also at the time, and nearly around the time, they had the Zambian Space Program, which we, you know, we always bring up during Black History Month, which, as you said, mercifully just ended rockets on a school bus and trying to buy a lot of stuff.
Well, that was the, yeah, that was, that was actually the parody.
But no, anyway, the actual thing was actually entirely more ridiculous.
But it was just, you can pursue excellence, you can pursue the stars, you can pursue equality, and the stars are more reachable than equality.
There is no such thing as equality, not between two men and certainly not between two people groups.
And I love that article that you wrote recently about the Memphis mayor meeting with the thugs.
Well, we love that because we're from Memphis.
The secret is just to give six-figure salaries to all these black gangbangers, and that will solve the problem.
Yeah, better ping pong tables and community centers.
So James actually said that story to me.
And it goes, it's just so incredible because, oh, by the way, the guy's name who led that campaign was Ralph Abernappy.
He was the one who took over for Martin Luther King.
And again, they arrived.
He's the one that blew the whistle on Martin Luther King about all of his sexual impropriety.
Well, probably because he was a rival.
Not that he was any better, but anyway.
No, no, and again, there are amazing photos.
I mean, think about this.
You juxtapose blacks showing up on a horse and buggy.
It's probably the most pathetic moment in human history when you have the Saturn V rocket getting ready to take three white men to the moon, and these people show up to complain.
I mean, you can't have a more parasitic moment, a more shocking moment.
And then just to show you how evil things already were there, back in 1969, Time and Life magazine, you know, these were the sources, the organs of power.
You talk about having millions of subscribers.
You know, you didn't have the internet then, so everything was so centralized.
And even those magazines complained about how it was just a bunch of white people watching this Saturn V rocket take off to the Apollo 11 mission.
To think about that.
I mean, America at that point is roughly a 90% white country.
You know, you think that, oh, yeah, nominally, we've got Richard Nixon as president.
And unfortunately, he was the one who ended the Apollo program.
You know, Von Braun, who still has the Coliseum, I believe, in Huntsville, still named after him.
He's beloved in that community.
I mean, he wanted to build a space, he wanted to have the rockets actually built in space to have a permanent space station.
Because again, the hardest part is getting the vehicle out of Earth's atmosphere.
And so the idea was we would build, we would take the load into space and start building stuff there, eventually go to the moon.
When he was actually a prisoner of the United States after World War II ended, he and his team surrendered to the Allies.
Thank God we got them as opposed to the Soviets.
He actually wrote a book about how to get to Mars.
He's in jail and he writes a book about how we would get to Mars.
So he was already thinking these grandiose ideas.
And then just to finish up this thought, in the 1950s, before NASA was even created, Walt Disney, to his everlasting credit, popularized the concept of space that he read all of Von Braun's stuff.
And it was on the show Tomorrowland, where he would have Von Braun come on and give all these presentations about the importance of space exploration, the importance of basically continuing on the concept of what Christopher Columbus and all the great European explorers, the pioneers.
I mean, it's time to go into space.
This is our destiny.
This is about doing this.
And again, it wasn't just for Europeans, for white people, but it was for humanity to aspire to something greater.
And the whole point of the book is there are unfortunately egalitarians in our society and our nations who decided, nope, we don't want to do that.
And, you know, a guy like Elon Musk with SpaceX, he's trying to push things and he wants to colonize Mars.
And it's really simple.
I see that every day.
We will not colonize Mars if the third world colonizes the United States.
Because this is it.
This is it.
Actually, I have to.
That's how we can get the blacks involved and they can be the colonists.
Well, I got to interject here.
Here, Paul is reading correspondence to you in real time.
This is from a listener in Arkansas.
He writes, My uncle is retired from NASA.
He retired during the glory days.
I made sure to send him a copy of Whitey on the Moon.
My uncle wants Elon Musk to head NASA.
I'm reading this as you're speaking that in real time.
That's incredible.
But yes, this is a book that everybody should read.
Available now at antelopehillpublishing.com.
Whitey on the moon.
How far, Walt Disney, by the way, I got to give you credit for bringing him up.
I still like going to the Magic Kingdom.
I got to say that.
Tomorrowland.
I mean, Walt Disney's vision, all of that.
Von Braun.
How far could whites have been, European mankind, Western civilization?
How far could we have been had we taken had we not taken the off-ramp in the late 60s, early 70s, the civil rights movement off-ramp?
How far could we be?
Von Braun had a plan to get to Mars in the 1980s.
And of course, remember, he was never going to be the head of NASA because of pressure from the certain community.
He was, of course, a member of the invented the B-2 rocket.
And he basically, and again, there are a number of incredible Germans.
There have been a number of books written by scholarly publishing houses that attacked how many Germans, how many Nazis were, of course, involved with the space program.
And again, that's why Von Braun was never going to be made the head of NASA, which is just a crime.
Von Braun is single-handedly.
It's his dream.
Why is it?
It should have been excellence instead of equality.
Whatever, whatever they, I don't have a problem with any of that.
The best for the position.
These were the best.
And that's why they rose to the occasion.
That's why we were at the cusp of so much.
So much for the I've got the perfect paradigm for it.
What is more difficult?
Defying gravity or defying black, you know, in competence.
Okay, that's it.
You know, basically, black incompetence is a much more difficult thing to overcome than gravity and space flight.
Yeah, no, I was very, you know, I grew up in suburbs of Atlanta, so I got to go to Huntsville, space campaign at the time.
And in fifth grade, everybody in my school district, we always got a big trip to go to the space command center there in Huntsville.
And it was such an impactful experience because it's like, well, wait a second, we've got to the moon.
Why did we stop?
You know, it's a question I asked in the mid-90s.
It's like, this doesn't make any sense.
Imagine that.
We got to the moon with, you know, with an advocate, with a slide rule.
And now we have all this computing power, all this technology.
Like, what in the world is going on?
And researching, I remember reading Tom Wolfe's amazing book, The Right Stuff.
Such an amazing book.
It's a good movie, too.
And they actually tried to push, John F. Kennedy himself wanted a black astronaut because he thought this would be great if he could find someone.
And there was a guy named Ed Dwight who has actually become a prolific sculptor.
He actually sculpted James.
I'm not sure if you know this, but he sculpted this statue.
I forgot the guy's name.
He tried to lead a slave rebellion in Charleston where they were going to kill all the white people.
There's actually a statue to this guy now who wanted to kill every white person in Charleston.
And he sculpted it.
And this was the guy that they tried to make the first astronaut.
And, oh, gosh, why am I blinking on the amazing pilot Chuck Yeager was in charge of the entire recruitment of this?
And he would not pass Ed Dwight because he said that was Denmark VZ, by the way.
Yeah.
That's right.
Denmark Vasey or VZ.
Yeah, and that's an amazing story where in Charleston, South Carolina, there is a statue erected to a black guy who in 1822 tried to launch the largest slave rebellion, which would have made Matt Turner's rebellion look like Child's Boy.
His goal was to do what they did in Haiti and San Domingo, and that was to kill every white person.
And guys, there's a statue to this guy now that was put up in the past.
Oh, yeah, right.
Well, you know, they don't differentiate.
Unfortunately, the mob doesn't differentiate.
They see white differentiating between black and white.
Yeah, if they see Abraham Lincoln or Winston Churchill, it's coming down.
They look white to them.
And so Matthew Broderick's character and glory notwithstanding, although they're taking care of that now on the internet.
And with artificial intelligence, they've turned Abraham Lincoln into a black man.
Not a laughing matter, according to Greg Hood and his latest feature at Amran.
But this is, you know, getting to movies, this is something that you and I, and we've got about a minute to the break.
We skipped the floater break to maximize our time with you tonight, Paul.
But a minute before the hard break, you and I are both of the same generation.
We like movies.
We like modern movies.
Keith doesn't have a movie that didn't appear on TV.
I have all of Disney's stuff up through 1966, the year that he died.
I wouldn't let my kids see anything after 66.
But there are still good movies like Apollo 13, which I know you appreciate as I do.
That's a fantastic cast of white men.
Bill Paxton, Ed Harris, Tom Hanks, Gary Sines, who actually appeared on this radio program.
His son just passed away a couple months ago.
Condolences, Kevin Bacon.
But we had Anthony Cumia on.
We're doing a 20th year retrospective, 20th anniversary retrospective, where we go back and we look at some of our most popular interviews.
And Anthony Cumeya was talking about, and we revisited this interview with Anthony Cumey, who will be speaking at V-Dair's conference in a few weeks.
And he was talking about, hey, look, I look at NASA in the 1960s, and it's a bunch of white guys with glasses drinking coffee and smoking cigarettes, and they put a man on the moon.
White shirts and solid color and dark ties.
Paul Kersey wrote a book about that, Whitey on the Moon, Antelope HillPublishing.com.
We'll come back and revisit that for just a second before we get to Black Mecca Down.
Stay tuned.
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There was a lot of political action at the Texas-Mexico border this week.
USA's John Schaefer explains.
President Biden and former President Trump both visited the U.S.-Mexico border Thursday.
Trump met with Texas Governor Greg Abbott and held a rally in Eagle Pass.
Very dangerous border.
We're going to take care of it.
Thank you.
That rally at a riverfront park, which has become the focal point of Texas's struggle against illegal immigration.
In Brownsville, Biden urged GOP lawmakers to approve a bipartisan border security deal.
Persons thinking about entering the United States understands the case is to be decided in a few weeks or months instead of five to seven years.
They're less likely to come in the first place.
He also met with local leaders and border patrol agents.
The leader of the Republican impeachment push against Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas changing course on his retirement plans.
House Homeland Security Committee Chair Mark Green has decided not to leave Congress at the end of his term following appeals from fellow lawmakers, constituents, and former President Trump.
Green has previously declared his intention not to seek reelection shortly after the House voted to impeach Mayorkas.
A wildfire continues raging out of control in Texas, and it's recently become the largest ever in the state's history.
USA's Ryan Daniels with more.
It's already become the largest ever in the state's history.
The Smokehouse Creek fire has burned over 1 million acres.
It is only 3% contained.
The U.S. government's wildfire tracking map shows it originated outside the small Texas panhandled town of Stinnett, near several oil and gas fields.
Ranchers also have to figure out how to handle the thousands of cattle that have been killed.
This is USA News.
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Welcome back with Paul Kirstie.
This is March Around the World, where we feature exclusively international guests.
But we're having Paul on tonight to represent what could have been the interplanetary Western civilization community had we not taken the off-ramp in the late 60s, early 70s.
So we've been talking in the first half of this hour about his book, which has been newly re-released by Antelope Hill Publishing, Analope HillPublishing.com, Whitey on the Moon.
1969, we landed on the moon.
1972, we landed there for the last time.
And what happened for the last 50 years?
All of it.
What happened?
Well, we've been talking about it.
But first, let's go back to, we were talking about movies, Paul, just before the break.
Apollo 13 with all of those, that was a movie in the 90s, which seems a little bit late for there being a good movie having been produced, but it really was.
But you mentioned Walt Disney, how we went from Davey Crockett, Walt Disney's championing of Davey Crockett, all the way through the astronaut era and astronauts versus cowboys.
How did you put it, Paul?
Yeah, you know, it's great because you've, of course, ABC, you only had a couple channels.
So everyone in America is watching Walt Disney's program that he had every week, and he could have Von Braun on to talk about the importance of space exploration.
And so quickly, the Davy Crockett hat, which was the biggest phenomenon in the 1950s, it quickly became superseded in research with this idea of space.
And that was famously seen in the phenomenal first Pixar film Toy Story.
Because all the people, John Lashner, all the people who were involved in that grew up during that.
They were influenced by seeing that transformation, seeing this idea of pioneers, the people who conquered this continent and created the United States with Manifest Destiny.
Manifest Destiny then was put into the idea of, hey, the moon is ours, Mars.
We have a destiny greater.
There's something more important to live for, to strive for, to push for.
And that whole concept is in the movie Interstellar.
It's famously Lionized and First Man, which is a 2019 movie.
It's the best movie of the past 10 years.
Interstellar has that same concept.
But again, going from Matthew McConaughey.
Matthew McConaughey, Enstellar, great movie, 2013 or 2014.
But it comes down to this.
Everybody went from wearing the Coonskin Davy Crockett hat, Battle of the Alamo, to, hey, let's put on a space cap.
Go from Sheriff Woody to Buzz Lightyear.
And because every generation should have something to aspire to.
And our kids and our posterity should live in a better world.
And unfortunately, our leaders, our elected officials, bureaucrats, they decided to bend the knee in the 1960s and give up that for the time being.
I think that we're beginning to reclaim it.
You've got the richest man on the planet, Elon Musk, who has a vision that we should colonize Mars.
And because, again, we have to do something.
We have to inspire people.
And to his everlasting credit, it was Walt Disney who popularized all of this in the Tomorrow Land.
Amen.
I'll end with this.
Walt Disney was.
You think of the heroes of our people as being war heroes, Robert E. Lee or whomever.
But it's not just that.
It is the inventors.
It is the artists.
Walt Disney was a hero of our people as much as anybody ever was.
He was a true artist.
And, you know, he, for example, created Zorro so that Latino, as he called them, boys would have a hero and Latino girls would have a heartthrob.
So he's, you know, his, everything that he did was good.
Wholesome.
Wholesome.
And, you know, he was the one that basically the Jews tried to bring down in Hollywood, you know, when he was down to his last chip, which was Dumbo.
And if Dumbo had been a failure, he would have gone bankrupt and they would have picked up his company for peanuts.
Instead, it was a big hit.
And after that, you know, he was basically the only non-Jewish studio head in Hollywood until 1966 when he died.
Well, let me ask you this with regards to movies, Paul, in regard to the topic, and we really do have to move on to Black Mecca Down, which is something I certainly want to do.
But I'm fascinated about this conversation about Whitey on the Moon.
Again, available, newly re-edited, antelopehillpublishing.com.
But the movies, you and I are from, as I said this before, the same generation.
We like movies.
We like contemporary movies.
like Apollo 13.
How would you compare and contrast Apollo 13 to Hidden Figures?
Hidden Figures is a wonderful fiction.
It's a story that tries to deflect what was almost unanimously a white accomplishment with these insignificantly triplets, very light-skinned black individuals.
Again, you have to understand that every black newspaper in the 1960s was really against the misallocation of public funds to basically do something that was just sending white people, white men to space.
And if NASA wanted to do something during that decade to try and show, well, hey, guess what?
Blacks are, you know, blacks are part of this.
They aren't just janitors, you know, cleaning up and throwing away the trash down in Houston and Cape Canaveral.
They would have tried to beat women out.
And I mean this, because if these women actually were making the contributions that that movie claimed, which is an absolute lie, and Charles Murray, the guy who wrote the bell curve, his first book, guys, was about the Apollo 11 program.
It's called Apollo.
It's an amazing book.
And he was too cowardly to come out because I read that book.
And there's not one mention of any of the women that were lauded in the Hidden Figures nonsense.
And I tweeted him all the time.
It's like, why didn't you come out and say anything when this movie came out, you flipping coward?
You know, you wrote the bell curve, you've written all these other books.
What possessed you to be quiet?
And last summer in 2023, he actually came out with a very large article dispelling every aspect of that movie.
And it's like, you could have said something when the movie came out.
And now you're just doing this for, you know, it's almost like a posthumous neoculpa.
And it's just so embarrassing.
And I just have no time to read people because it's like, hey, dude, America's gone.
You know, he wrote a book about that, basically, about critical race theory and DEI and all this nonsense and the race riots of George Floyd.
But he was too cowardly.
Well, Samuel Huntington, too, was bowling alone.
The thing about the left is they have no shame.
They will put a blatant lie out like that.
Like Hidden Figures of the Cleaning Staff was actually the brains behind NASA.
Then they have like Red Tails where these guys that were relegated to supply duty because there were such poor pilots turn out to be all Baron von Richthovens and blackface during World War II.
Yeah, that's always been something that's always upset me, the whole 50 airmen nonsense.
And I, there's actually been a number of great books written by a, I forgot the guy's name, but back when that came out, he, you know, because it wasn't, it wasn't until, what, 50, 60 years after that whole idea came out of the people who never lost a bomber that they escorted, that it came out that, oh, yeah, this is a total lie.
They lost a lot.
They had a terrible ratio.
And there's a couple books that have come out on that.
And it's that.
They'd crash on the tarmac.
They would crash into each other on the land.
Keystone Thompson airplanes.
They were taking down these German ace.
You know, to beat an American ace, you had to shoot down five.
I think that was like a cold day for a German.
But these guys, according to the movie, were taking down the building.
I mean, you know, they just cleared the sky of the Germans.
They were, you know, I've never seen anything more fantastic.
Of course.
Well, actually, you did.
That was when the black women's secretaries and hidden figures cracked the landing.
I thought they were the cleaning crew.
Well, depending on what story you hear, but they actually landed the astronauts.
That's the story.
Kevin Coster told me it was true, Paul.
I've actually never seen hidden figures.
I actually never saw it either.
I've only read your review of it.
I would never watch it all.
I've seen Kevin Costner in Yellowstone, and that's about as anti-wide as it comes, too.
We haven't watched that one with Whitney Houston.
But anyway, go on, Paul.
The bodyguard?
Yeah.
No, again, it's just one of these things where, you know, Walt Disney had to put a bow in this conversation and wrap it up and put it into the tree for everyone.
I mean, Whitey on the Moon, I think, is probably the more, it's the most important book I've wrote.
So that's all I'll say.
Well, there it is.
All right, listen.
My vision for tonight was to spend 30 minutes on Whitey on the Moon and 30 minutes on Black Mecha Down.
As you can see, we spent 45 minutes on Whitey on the Moon for good reason.
Antelope HillPublishing.com, you can find it.
With the time remaining, we will shift gears.
Black Mecca Down.
Are blacks in America immune from criticism?
We'll find out.
The author is here again to remind you that Antelope Hill Publishing is America's premier provider of dissident literature.
They print books that mainstream publishers are too afraid to touch, providing you with information you need to challenge the status quo.
Whether you're interested through contemporary dissident politics, history that would otherwise be censored or slandered, philosophy, or exciting and thought-provoking fiction, you'll find plenty to love in the Antelope Hill catalog, which includes books such as Generation 68, The Elite Revolution and its Legacy, about the elite-driven cultural revolution of the 1960s, which transformed America.
Whitey on the Moon, about the demise of the space program due to diversity, The Sword of Christ, which argues for restoring Christianity as the foundation of the West, and combating heresies like Christian Zionism, speeches by Mussolini and other historical figures, and much more.
With new titles added every month, there's no doubt that they have something for everyone.
So check out their catalog today at antelopehillpublishing.com.
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What a fantastic way to kick off March Around the World.
Next week, Nick Griffin was talking with Nick today.
In Italy tonight, just recently, just this week, denounced by the current sitting prime minister of the UK.
What's that all about?
We'll tell you next week when Nick joins us as we continue this march around the world, which started tonight in the first hour in Croatia in Zagreb.
Tom Sunich staying up till 1 a.m. to join us live, followed by Paul Fromm in Canada, of course, and now Paul Kersey, who is here to represent what could have been the interstellar, at least interplanetary contingent of Western civilization.
Paul, we have to switch to Black Neckadown.
But do you think we could have been there by now had we done what we had always done, which was rather than divert assets, pursue our Faustian spirit to search beyond the horizon and the highest peak?
Do you think we could have been there by now?
Yeah, I'll just say that.
I'm not endorsing this view at all, but the novel, The Man in High Castle, which is made into, I believe, an Amazon climate series.
In the novel, the Nazis had already colonized Venus and Mars by the 1990s.
So Von Braun and NASA, they had a vision to send the man to Mars in the 1980s, had Nixon not canceled.
I mean, again, I think that, yeah, we would have a permanent base on the moon.
You probably would have been to Mars by in a different timeline well before the millennia ended.
And yeah, had the American American colonization society succeeded?
It's hard to tell where we'd be, actually.
Yeah, it is because how can you know?
How can you know?
But I mean, you look at where trajectory was up to and including as late as the 1960s, and where could it have gone if you had extrapolated it from that point had you not taken a hard stop and a reversion?
Well, who's to say?
But anyway, well, like Jared Taylor said in a recent article, race ruins everything, right?
Well, I mean, what we know is this: not only did we not colonize the planets, we couldn't even maintain our own cities.
And that is another book that has been republished by Antelope Hill Publishing, antelopehillpublishing.com.
You heard the new ad just there in the last break.
Black Mecca Down.
Are blacks in America immune from criticism?
Are they ever responsible for their own failures?
And most importantly, is Black Roll the end for an American city?
Paul Kersey, our guest right now and the author of the book, Black Mecca Down, answers these questions with an emphatic yes in this controversial account of the fall of Atlanta through 45 articles on the topic originally posted to his stuff black people don't like blog and the UNS review.
So this is the question, Paul.
I mean, not only did we not pursue the stars, the moon, the planets, we couldn't even maintain what we had already won.
What's up with that?
What we'd already built.
Yeah, I mean, it's really simple.
Any major city across the country, it's not just Atlanta, but you basically had, after the Civil Rights Act in 1964, we had the end of Freedom Association, which was what the NAACP was founded to destroy.
And that happened in 1947 with the disastrous ruling of Shelley B. Kramer, which ended restricted covenants so that people were not allowed to decide either to sell their homes to a neighborhood, which ended freedom association.
Because again, if you have freedom association, you have the freedom to discriminate.
And that is the ultimate freedom.
That's the ultimate liberty that was taken from us.
That's what the NAACP was found into destroying it in three decades.
Atlanta is no different than St. Louis, than your hometown of Memphis, which was majority white up until the Civil Rights Act, and now it's 25% white, 64% black.
And you have the current black mayor of the city meeting with gang members, black gang members, to ask them, please stop shooting each other, please stop killing each other.
And they're asking for more community centers and ping-pong tables to lay down their weapons and not kill one another.
Same thing with Birmingham, same thing with New Orleans, same thing with Washington, D.C. All these cities were majority white up until the Civil Rights Act.
And then, you know, with what happened at Little Rock in 57, when it was forcibly integrated with the whole first airborne having bayonets pointed in the backs of whites who dared try and say no to this, white people just fled.
White people gave up the city, and unfortunately, what happened, you know, democracy is nothing more than a racial headcount in a multiracial state.
Atlanta goes from majority white to majority black.
And you have an elected black bureaucracy, black elected officials.
You know, you have entire divisions of the government that are occupied solely by black, by black employees all throughout Fortnite County, all throughout Atlanta.
I actually all throughout Shelby County here in Tennessee, too.
And let me say, let me chime in at this point, Paul.
I am older than you and James.
I actually lived through the civil rights era.
I know what segregated Memphis used to be like.
And let me tell you, it was vastly superior to integrated Memphis.
You had black people of all, you know, statuses living together, high-class, middle-class, low-class, criminal class.
The high-class blacks were not allowing the criminal element to take over.
So what they did in conjunction with the white so-called racist leadership, what did the white racist leadership do?
They hired black patrolmen to patrol the black precincts.
It was always a problem with blacks to have be arrested by whites.
So they allowed them to be arrested by blacks, even though black cops, even back then, were known to be much more brutal towards the blacks than the whites were.
They would rather have the stuffings beat out of them by a black cop than just be arrested by a white.
So we said, you know, if that's what you want, that's what you get.
And, you know, basically all the businesses there that you had the black upper class living in the same part of town as the other classes.
And it had a salutary effect on their behavior.
Most of the businesses were owned by local blacks, not by Palestinian refugees or people from the subcontinent of India running all the stores.
And the crime was much less than it is, and it was dealt with in a summary fashion by blacks.
And actually, the black schools were a lot better because they had very strict disciplinarians as principals, and they wouldn't put up with any monkey business.
If you were a disruptive student, you were gone.
So by the time you got to high school, most of the ones that were left by that point were people that were able to learn.
I think, again, Paul, the overlying concept here is we went from the cusp of exploring the galaxy to not even being able to maintain the cities that our people built within a lifetime.
Public education, for example, has gone down the toilet since Brown versus Board, and so has the quality of life for black people.
But no one will speak about it.
Everybody is scared to death to touch that third rail.
We could have gone a full three hours with Paul Kersey talking about Whitey on the moon and black Mecca Down, two minutes remaining, black Mecca Down.
I mean, that's the thing, though.
We could have gone to the stars.
We decided to go for it.
We had a good thing and we didn't make it.
Where do we go from here?
It's really simple.
You stop apologizing for the past greatness of your people.
You stop apologizing that when you compare the individual contributions of members of the white versus the black community versus the Asian versus the Hispanic, and you then collectively aggregate them.
And my gosh, certain groups come out better than other groups in certain categories and certain demonstrable aspects of life, creating better life or creating worse life.
You actually say, hey, maybe we need to do something about it.
And our ancestors, they realized things were wrong.
You know, I am.
Paul, we had this old commercial, things go better with Coke.
Well, a variation of that is things run better when white people are in charge.
Well, I mean, that's what Robert E. Lee said.
He said that everywhere you find the Negro, things are declining.
And in one of his private letters in 1869, before he passed away, I have no problem with Jim Crow.
I think it was a stopgap.
I think that repatriation should have happened after, you know, the Civil War ended and the slaves were freed.
The American Colonization Society, I think that they, sadly, you know, it was largely members of the North, abolitionists, the South.
There were a lot of very good people within the South who realized this problem needed to be addressed.
And I think we see with the destruction of our major cities, the evidence is abundantly clear that our ancestors knew there were vast differences.
And we see what's happening with Fulton County, with Stanny Willis, her attacks on President Trump, and her extracurricular activities, which are going to disqualify her.
Yeah.
Well, look, Letitia James and Fannie Willis, both of those show the problems that you have when you put blacks into leadership positions.
The civil rights movement.
Yeah, Letitia James should not get a pass.
Yeah, and see, the thing is that the civil rights movement was basically an exercise in gaslighting, making white people feel guilty about segregation when segregation is natural and normal among all people.
Birds of a feather flock together.
Well, that's what Virginia Abernathy said.
Dr. Abernathy, professor of psychology and anthropology at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.
That's what she said in our most recent print QA in American Free Press.
You can get it now.
Paul Kersey, thank you so much for your time tonight talking about Whitey on the Moon and Black Mecca Down.
Available for you in newly re-released fashion at Anthler PillPublishing.com.
Paul, Godspeed to you.
Thank you for your service to our people and to our cause.
And if it were up to you, keep up the good work.
And your work, we would be colonizing the stars.
We love you, buddy, and we'll talk to you again soon, but not soon enough.
We will call it.
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