March 9, 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.
I met a strange lady.
She made me nervous.
She took me in and gave me breakfast.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, once again, representing Australia during TPC's world tour are marked around the world.
Drew Frazier is a former professor of law at Macquarie University in Sydney and author of The Wasp Question.
amongst other titles, which we'll mention later in the program.
But he's back to answer that year-round question we yearn to learn every year when he appears.
How are our people faring down under?
Drew, you know, I tell you, we've gotten off to a blistering start during March Around the World.
We've been to Croatia, Canada twice, England, Brazil, now Australia, four continents tonight, in fact, alone.
But you are the one I always marvel at because you are the one we're talking to in the future.
You are, we are talking to you on Sunday afternoon as we broadcast live on Saturday night here in the States.
So I don't know, maybe novel things marvel me, but nevertheless, I'm happy to have you with us.
However, we make it happen.
It makes you glad you lived this long.
Yes, and it's a beautiful late summer day here up in the mountains behind Sydney.
Couldn't mess up.
It's summer in Sydney.
I mean, you know, imagine that.
So everything is upside down and topsy-turvy down under.
That's why they call it the land down under, and that's why we played that music.
We always play it for Drew.
He is a mainstay.
He is one of the people who have appeared on each installment of March Around the World since we instituted it a few years back.
And, well, we're all the better for it.
So, Drew, glad to hear you are doing well on Sunday afternoon, your time, Saturday evening, our time, and glad to be connected with you live.
Likewise.
All right.
So there are some things we need to talk about first.
And actually, I'm going to do something that I don't know if we've done before.
Even after all of the appearances you've made on this program, we're going to dive a little bit deep into your past and into your background of some of the battles you fought and how you appointed yourself in those battles.
And I think that'll make for interesting content.
And we'll get to that a little bit later.
This, our third and final hour tonight.
But first, let's go to, well, what's going on in Australia?
What is the latest news from Australia?
You emailed me some notes and some topics you wanted to address.
Let's start there.
Oh, well, I mean, the most depressing thing is looking at another, what, four, five, six, seven hundred thousand immigrants this year in the middle of a housing crisis where there's close to a zero vacancy for rentals in cities like Sydney and Melbourne.
So it's getting a bit crazy and worrying.
If you've got children in particular who are old enough to be hoping to find a place to live, and that is hard enough, buying a house if you're a young family has become impossible.
Well, you know, we've seen that here, even in the South and even in the rural South over the course of the last four years, especially since the COVID era, there have just been an influx of people to the red states, as you might know it here in the U.S. from California, New York, and all of these other places.
I mean, certainly they're fleeing their governments, but unfortunately, they're not always voting differently than they might have there.
And they're certainly jacking up the price of real estate.
The price of real estate in the South where I live, the southern part of the United States, Dixie, has at least doubled since 2020.
And in four years, I mean, it's made it impossible for a native-born southerner to really afford housing here.
And I guess you're saying it's the same way in your part of Australia.
Yeah, and I think comparatively speaking, housing is probably more expensive here.
No, I would certainly say that.
Yeah, I mean, you know, even here, I mean, you could sell a fishing shack in Los Angeles for a million dollars, buy a mansion in the South for half a million, and have a half a million in the bank.
So, and that's certainly what they're doing.
And it's to the detriment of all of us.
But, you know, so how did the Aborigines live?
How do they get by there in Australia?
Well, I mean, that's an interesting question down here because how do we define an Aboriginal in Australia?
There was a radio guy down in Melbourne who got hounded by the Human Rights Commission because he referred to the exceedingly high number of fair-skinned Aboriginals here in Australia.
But I guess Australian Aborigines don't include the founding stock of Europeans who actually turned the place from a primordial state of being into a first world nation.
I mean, they don't get any sort of privileges, do they?
Well, the Aboriginals don't get any privilege.
I'd say they're a fairly privileged group of people, especially.
No, no, no.
I'm saying the founding stock of the European people who developed Australia from that primordial state into a first world nation.
There's no privileges there.
Yeah, no, absolutely not.
And our numbers are rapidly decreasing.
The number of when I, when I came to Australia back in 1975, the Anglo-Celtic or Anglo-Saxon population of Australia was about 75% of the total.
It's now just slightly over 50%.
Wow.
So it's really.
Okay, so when you're talking about the Great Replacement, you're talking about Australia being more advanced even than the United States by that regard.
I mean, you know, certainly you weren't starting out at near 100% as we might have been after, you know, colonization, but from 75% to just barely 50%, that's remarkable.
And of the other 25% in 1975, at least probably between 15 and 20% would have been other white European, people of white European stock.
And the Aboriginals would have been essentially the only significant non-white group in the country.
So who's making up the remainder now?
Well, large numbers of Chinese, especially in Sydney, large numbers of Indians, especially in Melbourne.
And then there are, you know, a large and growing refugee population of sub-Saharan Africans who, and I tried to warn people 20 years ago that this was a bad idea, but right now we are going through an amazing black crime wave in every major city.
Imagine that.
Yeah, well, I mean, I live in Memphis, Tennessee, so I could have told you that that might have occurred here.
But, well, isn't that something?
That is amazing that the demographic displacement of Australia is that advanced, even compared to Europe and America.
I think that's remarkable.
So you're saying it's 50% white in Australia now?
Well, 50% Anglo-Australian.
I mean, as I say, there'd be another maybe 20% of Italians, Germans, you know, Croats.
So that puts it about on par, maybe a little bit better than America, but still not where you'd want a first world nation to be.
Yeah.
It's not as bad as Canada either.
I mean, Canada, where I came from, is a horror show now.
Toronto.
You came from Canada, but you're representing Australia on our march around the world because you've lived there since the 70s.
So, I mean, so you've spent the bulk of you, obviously, the bulk of your life in Australia.
Yep.
The majority.
All right.
So that's how Drew landed as our Australian representative here in TPC's March Around the World.
So anyway, we're coming up on our first break.
We will talk to Drew about a couple of other contemporary issues afflicting Australia, and then we will get into his background, which even after all these years of having Drew on, and I don't know how many times we've had you on, Drew, more times than I can count at least.
I don't know if we've gotten into your background to the extent into the depth that we will tonight, but it's all to your credit and to your benefit, I assure you, as far as this audience is concerned, and that's all coming up as we continue.
So we're going to take our first break of the evening.
Drew Frazier, Professor Drew Frazier, representing Australia in TPC's March Around the World this year.
Four guests, four different continents tonight.
We were in Croatia and Canada last week.
So many more places still to visit as this month continues.
Hey there, TPC family.
This is James Edwards, your host of the Political Cesspool.
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I'm back from a man in Brussels, full of muscle.
After you speak about me, I bet you might be a sandwich.
I'm going to do something I've never done before on this program, even after all of these years.
And I know better than to do this.
But I'm going to do it because I know you will receive it, ladies and gentlemen, in the listening audience as his credit.
If you read my Wikipedia article, the Wikipedia article on the political cesspool, oh, you'll read all kinds of things.
Anti-Semitic, neo-Nazi, racist, xenophobe, homophobe, you name it.
It's all there.
So when I read these things, I can translate them.
I have a mind that works and I know what they really mean by these things.
And so when I'm reading the Wikipedia article for Andrew William Frazier, our guest here from Australia live tonight, it reads that he is a Canadian-born academic and was an associate professor in the Department of Public Law at Macquarie University in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
He holds a BA and an LLB from Queen's University, also a degree from Harvard University, and a degree from the University of North Carolina.
It goes on to say that he is notable for his opposition to non-white immigration and his support of white nationalist policies that will not run afoul to anybody tuned in tonight, such as the revival of the white Australian policy.
Drew, I got to ask you, because we have Virginia Abernathy on this program, who also was educated at Harvard, Jared Taylor from Yale.
What's it like for a guy like you to go to Harvard?
Well, this was back in 81, 82.
And it was, I enjoyed the experience very much.
And the libraries and Cambridge and Boston, it was a wonderful experience for me.
So it wasn't as oppressive then with regards to the diversity of opinion as it has become?
No, no, not nearly.
There was, I mean, in those days, I'd have to confess, I was sort of a recovering academic leftist, and I was interested in critical legal studies.
And there were a little knot of people at Harvard Law School involved in critical legal studies.
And I have to say, encountering them up close and personal, it sort of cured me permanently of my academic leftist tendencies.
So it was a very therapeutic experience.
Well, we've all benefited from that henceforth.
So let's continue on.
Two things you wanted to talk about with regards to current issues in Australia.
And then in the last half of our final hour here, we're going to talk to you a little bit more about some of the battles you faced and how you appointed yourself in those battles.
But let's talk about the failed voice referendum and the immigration Ponzi scheme that now serves as the foundation of what used to be called the economy and the big issues down here these days.
You're talking about Australia.
What are we talking about here, Drew?
Well, I don't know whether you heard anything about the voice referendum over there, but essentially it's part of what I call the cult of the other.
You know, anybody but an Anglo-Austral, white Anglo-Australian is really regarded as being of sort of elevated, almost religious significance, right?
And the Aborigines fit into that character, into that slot.
And the government had this idea that because there are so many Aboriginals out in the bush who are really doing it hard,
partly because it's very hard for these people who are not the highest IQ people in the world to adapt to a modern sort of used-to-be industrial society.
So there was going to, they had this idea that they would create a body, a government body in Canada or in Canberra, that would be entrenched in the Constitution and empowered to pass judgment in effect on any and all legislative proposals that would be sent to the parliament.
And this, in order to be entrenched in the Constitution, it had to be approved by a referendum.
And that referendum to succeed would require majority support in a majority of states, that's four out of six, and a majority of the population.
And for all of the great and the good, you know, the academics, managerial, professional class politicians and so on, this was just simply a thing that could not be questioned by any normal, decent person.
But as it turned out, it did not get majority support in a single state.
And 60% of the people in the country as a whole rejected the proposition.
And this was a major disaster for our prime minister, Anthony L. Beniz, who hasn't really recovered, I don't think, from it.
But that occupied the entire country for most of last year.
And it was, I think, a silly idea.
And most of the population here in Australia agreed with that view.
But even though it didn't succeed, the various local and state governments are still trying to push it in their own jurisdictions.
And as I say, I mean, the people who would benefit from this proposal would be not the full-blooded Aboriginals out in the bush, but essentially the urban, fair-skinned, educated, pretty much assimilated into Australian life, Aboriginals in the city.
So it's another sort of scheme that benefits the educated middle class, essentially.
So it was a rare win for what you might call right-leaning people here in Australia.
We'll certainly take a win anyway and anyhow, and any win we can get it.
But let's now ask you one more thing, Drew, about contemporary issues in Australia before we pivot into the last half of our last hour.
A little bit more about your personal background, some battles you fought.
And these are interesting things we've never shared with you before on the program, folks.
If you know Drew's history, you might know them, but it's a testament to his character.
But let's talk about the state of affairs with the Australian Defense Force, the ADF.
And as with other countries, they seem keen to go to war with Russia and or China.
What's going on on that front with that particular institution?
Again, I mean, the armed forces here are small.
They have a quite distinguished history, you know, in the World Wars and in Korea.
But now they're small.
And as with the American armed forces, the Woke Brigade is really infiltrating both the Officer Corps and the enlisted.
So they're making every effort to diversify the recruiting base and so on.
And so they're actually, as, again, is happening.
Everybody in the Army but the people who are keen to fight, which is...
Yes, exactly.
That's exactly right.
And I was just reading an extremely good article in a magazine called Quadrant here about the state of the officer corps in the Army in particular.
Apparently, the education that officers receive has almost nothing to do with the military arts, if you like.
I mean, the Defense Department has outsourced their, what would you say, continuing on postgraduate education to civilian universities.
And you know what universities are like these days.
They're not exactly of hotbeds of the warrior spirit.
So there's that.
And, you know, it's become very careerist and so on.
And in a situation where the Americans seem to be doing their best to provoke a war with China over Taiwan, and we're relatively close to that theater of operations, should it ever become active?
It really is worrying, especially since there are over a million Chinese. living here in Australia.
You know, and they live cheek by jowl with each other.
I'm in a million Chinese Australians.
Yeah, yeah.
And that and about 700,000 to a million Indians and so on.
And they're all, as I say, concentrated in the Sydneys.
And, you know, in World War II, as in the U.S., there weren't many Japanese down here at that time.
But the ones who were here, and the Germans and the Italians, were all rounded up and put in a camp.
How about that?
How about, hey, listen, folks, I guarantee you, it's interesting as the first half of this hour has been.
The second half will be even more so.
I've got some questions for Drew you don't want to miss.
Stay tuned.
We're down under with Drew Frazier when we continue.
Protecting your liberties.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
I'm Laura Winters.
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As if our democracy is on the line, because it is.
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Let's see.
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All right, folks, we're in the land down under with Drew Fraser here in Australia joining us here from the future.
It's Sunday afternoon in Drew's time.
We're still here on Saturday night in the States.
And Drew, I don't know if you heard early in the program when we were in England, Canada, and Brazil, respectively, but we are broadcasting from a remote location tonight.
We're not in our normal studio in Memphis, and we're in East Tennessee tonight in Knoxville, meeting some incredible people.
And they are listening attentively to your interview.
And they were actually doing some research during the extended break there at the bottom of the hour.
And according to their research, which is what I'm relying on here, that you were mentioning the number of Chinese in Sydney alone earlier.
But according to their research, there is only 750,000 Aborigines in Australia.
But they get a disproportionate amount of attention from the government.
Do those numbers follow with you, Drew, there in Australia?
Yeah, it'd be like that.
The numbers are quite low.
There are a lot, as I say, of fair-skinned Aborigines.
I mean, people of part Aboriginal descent.
But yeah, I mean, the country is about, what, 25 million all up.
And the number of Aborigines is quite small, but they receive something in the order of $40 billion in the federal budget.
Look at that.
Can you imagine, folks, listening?
$40 billion of concessions towards this population of 750,000 people.
I understand if I am, again, getting my research correct here, that the average IQ of Australian Aborigines is 62.
62.
And that some of them are even keen to sleeping in the road.
But 62 IQ, $750,000, $40 billion in concessions.
And then, of course, many laws are skewed to benefit them.
What?
About that.
Are you misunderstanding something here?
Yeah, and the Aborigines that live out in the Outbank are really completely dysfunctional.
I mean, I don't know what, you know, where Alice Springs is?
It's more or less smack dab in the middle of Australia, close to what used to be known as Ayers Rock.
And the Aboriginals there are so out of control, they've effectively destroyed Alice Springs.
I mean, it's becoming dangerous just to be white or a shop owner in Alice Springs these days.
And so it's kind of getting worse in that respect.
Why do you think that the government is so keen to kowtow to these people who obviously are a very small minority of the overall population?
They're obviously not contributing much to IQ.
On average, I mean, I guess I know the answer because I live in America and I see it, but how would you put it?
I mean, it's a strange phenomenon.
I mean, as I say, I mean, I call it the cult of the other.
I think it really is a kind of religious cult.
I mean, that's the best way to put it.
That is exactly the way to put it.
Yeah.
Because anyway.
And you would know about that too, because you went to Divinity.
Well, we'll get to that.
I mean, we've talked about this before, but let's go into this.
I want to go into a little bit about your background because this is actually a story of an inspirational story that I think should be shared because here you are now.
You studied advanced constitutional law at Harvard Law School.
You taught American constitutional history at Macquarie University in Sydney all the way up to 2005.
Now, in July 2005.
2006, 2006.
All right.
But around that time, you received national attention in Australia.
If this is all correct, you sent a letter into the local newspaper signed with your academic title in which you claim that importing Sudanese refugees, we haven't even touched on that yet, threatened to turn Australia into, quote, a colony of the third world.
And quote, experience everywhere in the world shows us that expanding the black population is a surefire recipe for increases in crime, violence, and other social problems, end quote.
So that is how you burst onto the international stage.
You are this Harvard-educated professor.
You're teaching at a prestigious university in Sydney.
And then you speak the truth, and you're not supposed to do that.
What happened then, Drew?
Well, essentially, at first, nothing much.
I mean, the administration, the vice chancellor happened to be away for a month or so when that story first began.
And the deputy vice chancellor just shrugged his shoulders and said, what are you going to do?
But when the vice chancellor, this lady, Guy Yerberry, came back, she was so shocked and horrified by it all, she immediately suspended me.
Without telling me anything about this, I arrived, showed up at a classroom one morning and behind these security guards blocking my way into the classroom.
I've not heard that even in all those years that you and I have known each other.
I've not heard that part of the story yet.
That is something.
Well, it was necessary to secure the safety of students, right?
From your ideas, from your truth.
I guess this is how the story continues the official narrative of it, that as you mentioned, that it was much new about nothing to begin with.
They responded with the normal platitudes, but that they recognized the academic freedom of speech and expression as essential to the conduct of teaching, learning, and research and scholarship.
But then this vice chancellor, you mentioned Yerberry, suspended you.
But I did not know that armed officers forbade you from accessing your classroom.
That's right.
And I wasn't allowed to teach again at all until they finally got rid of me in the middle of 2006.
And so this went on.
But the thing was a year or two.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, it was just sitting around doing nothing out there.
Yeah, but again, you have to wonder what the thought processes are of a vice chancellor who acts like that because it just added fuel to the fire.
Well, you told the truth.
You told the truth.
You told the absolute incontrovertible truth.
You're banned from expressing that truth to your classroom and to anybody who may hear it.
But this is what I thought was so heroic of you, is that McCrary University offered to pay the final year of your contract, but you declined, describing the offer as, quote, a dishonorable discharge.
That's amazing.
Yeah.
Well, you know, in the end, I decided just to leave, you know?
I mean, because what is really the point of just dragging it out?
What is it?
No, by all means, go ahead.
You know, like, again, if the idea was to silence me, it backfired in a major, because I was sort of getting, I'd get an interview with a newspaper, and then that would cause a little brush fire, and that would die down.
But then I got interviewed by a major TV program.
I mean, it just kept going on and on and on.
And I managed to broadcast my views literally to millions of people, many thousands of whom expressed total support for what I was saying, you know.
And it really, to me, demonstrated that there is like this wasn't a matter of, let's say, Australian immigration policy, because obviously the Australian government is just following in the footsteps of, you know, the American government, the British, the French.
I mean, it's all over the Western world.
There isn't a single country that I'm aware of in the Western world that's resisting this drive to flood every white country with a third world population.
So I mean, I find it, and the longer this goes on and the way they're ramping it up.
I mean, Canada last year received a million immigrants.
Australia's 700,000?
That's as much as the so-called Aboriginal population at large.
Yes.
Do the Aboriginal population appreciate that?
You know, they are certainly given so many concessions.
Does their opinion matter on that?
One more segment with Drew Frazier, former professor of Constitutional History at Macquarie University in Sydney.
He's paid the price.
He stood on the firing line and he never backed down.
In fact, he doubled down and we'll be back right after this with him.
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I've done it in Bombay, not much to say.
Different continents all in one night.
I don't know if any other program has done that, but this one tonight.
Nick Griffin from Europe, the UK, Remy Tremblay in Canada, North America, our friend in Brazil and South America, and now in Australia, Drew Frazier.
Four guests, four continents, one night.
That's what we do here in March around the world.
And always representing Australia is Drew Frazier.
And for good reason.
Drew, I want to continue on because I think it's important.
People who have never faced the firing squad, so-called, are always quick with their opinions.
Oh, I would do this if I was in that situation, or why didn't they do that?
But have you been there?
Do you know what it's like?
Do you know what you're risking?
Do you know what the consequences are?
I do.
And Drew, you do as well.
And so when it comes to that, I defer to the people who have actually been there.
And so in August of 2005, this story reads that more than 300 Macquarie University staff and students attended a forum on racism and free speech at which you, Drew, as well as Sudanese community and university members, were allowed to put forth your views from the floor.
You ended up taking a suspension in an early retirement package because, I mean, what else could you do?
But you faced it and you faced it without apology and without regret and without surrender.
Did it ever occur to you to try to curry the favor of your overlords and just slink back into acceptability?
Or did you always know that this was the only stand you were going to take?
Well, I mean, I had had a lot of experience, really, from the beginning of my academic career of always being sort of an outsider.
I mean, I remember when I first started at Macquarie, I'd done history, studied history before I ever went to law school and so on.
And I was kind of keen on legal history and the law school was just starting.
So I, and we didn't know what to do in the first year course.
And so I proposed to do a history, put together a history and philosophy of law course, right?
And as I say, I mean, though, in those days, I thought of myself as a kind of an academic Marxist, okay?
But when I put this course together, it just seemed obvious to me that the Western legal tradition was grounded not just in Greek and philosophy and Roman law, but it was Christianity was a huge part of that Western legal tradition.
And much to my surprise, and I was surprised, most of my similarly leftist colleagues were really, really annoyed that anybody would be devoting so much time to exploring the influence of Christianity on the Western legal tradition.
So that came as a surprise.
And I mean, then I, one thing after another, I mean, I kept having these bruising encounters with the feminists on the law school staff.
And so I was used to being kind of an academic pariah by the time that stuff in 2005 rolled around.
It was no surprise.
But even after you came under fire and even after your position was almost determined by the Court of Public Opinion and you held the line all the way, in September of 2005,
which is a couple of months after all of this outcry, which we've been talking about, has come to light and you're under fire for your position as a professor at Macquarie University, you wrote an article advocating for the return to the white Australia policy, which, if again, this is accurate, which is entitled, Rethinking the White Australia Policy.
Now, this article was set to be published in the Law Journal of Deakin University, which is another prestigious university in Australia, but at the very last minute they decided not to publish it.
I wonder why.
But Rethinking the White Australian Policy has since been published and circulated across the internet.
This was something I think, again, drew, I mean, you're under fire.
Most people would be running for cover.
Most people would be trying to crave acceptance back from the establishment, back from the system.
And then you doubled down by writing this piece, Rethinking the White Australian Policy.
What was the White Australian Policy?
Well, I mean, as the name suggests, it was a policy of restricting immigration to people of white European, preferably British stock.
But one of the interesting things about that policy was that the British government at this time, back in 1901, the colonial secretary forbade the new Commonwealth government from actually making it explicit in the legislation that only white or British people would be admitted to Australia.
So actually for the length of time that the policy was in place, the immigration department had to use this subterfuge.
They gave a dictation test to anybody who wanted to be admitted to Australia at the dock or whatever.
And if it looked like they weren't white or were undesirable for some other reason, they would ask them to translate a passage in, oh, I don't know, Gaelic or Romanian to see if they knew and to prove their European status and so on.
It was a very famous case back, I think when was it, 1950s, of some actually Czechoslovakian Jewish communist who wanted to be admitted to Australia, and they asked him to translate this passage in Gaelic, and he couldn't, so he was tossed out.
And he was white, right?
Sounds good to me.
Well, you know, one thing that's so interesting about Drew Frazier is that he took his early retirement.
He didn't back down.
But then just for fun, Drew, and I could have gone three hours with you tonight.
We got a minute remaining.
You went and got a divinity degree.
What you said was like going to MSNBC at prayer.
But you wrote the book, Dissident Dispatches, an Alt-Right Guide to Christian Theology in 2017.
I met you for the first time that year here in the States.
And it doesn't seem like it was that long ago.
But you also published The Wasp Question, which I think is your seminal work.
To me, I mean, they're all great.
Your most recent book, even after Dissident Dispatches, is fantastic read.
But in the WASP question, you claim that Anglo-Saxon people in North America, Australia, and elsewhere have failed to defend their ethnic identity and the interest of the postmodern multicultural age, which would seem, I guess, fundamental to listeners of this audience.
But the fact that you wrote that after all that you went through there as a university professor, a man of high esteem and prestige, this is an example for the rest of us to follow.
I cannot overstate that.
You were there and you didn't bow down when you had something to lose.
So many people would have.
A minute remaining, Drew, the final word is yours.
Well, I mean, essentially what both of those books are about is the fact that I think we are in a religious war against the globalist plutocratic elite that is pushing another religion,
the cult of the other, to promote their own interests by basically having a whole mass of disconnected, brown, trans, homosexual people allied with the plutocratic oligarchy to squeeze the Anglo population in every Anglo-Saxon country around the world.
That's the situation we're in.
And, you know, when you're in a religious war, I guess you do feel as if you have something worth fighting for.
And we do have something worth fighting for.
And with people like you at the forefront, we have reason to believe that we can overcome and we can endure.
Ladies and gentlemen, Drew Frazier from Australia tonight, one night, four guests, four continents, whether they were appearing with us this evening or in the future, as Drew was.
This has been an episode to remember of TPC.
And we appreciate you, Drew, for joining us from Australia.
Is there hope for our people in Australia?
And if so, where do you find it?
Well, I think, yes, there is.
30 seconds.
Okay, yeah.
I mean, if there's hope anywhere, it's in Australia.
All right.
Well, you heard it from the man who has suffered there for our people.
And he's saying there is hope for our people.
And if it begins anywhere, it begins in Australia.
I only wish we had another hour with Drew to dive into that.
But for Drew Frazier, Nick Griffin, Remy Tremblay, our friend in South America and Brazil, who was with us tonight, four guests, four continents, one show.
I'm James Edwards.
We'll continue our march around the world next week from the land down under.
I salute you, Drew Frazier, our own crocodile Dundee.
And thank you for the example you set for all of us.
And, hey, folks, you can follow the example that Drew set, live life the way he does.