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May 18, 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.
Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, to tonight's very special live broadcast of TPC Saturday evening, May 18th.
And it is our 20th anniversary conference.
Let them hear it from you, ladies and gentlemen.
This has been one of the most incredible and special weekends of my life.
Surrounded by the people who have given life to this program over the course of the past two decades, we have had, so far, nine incredible speakers take the stage or join us via video.
We will hear from a lot of them over the course of the program.
You will also hear from people over the course of the next three hours that did not speak, but who could have and certainly probably should have.
And we have a lot of luminaries in the audience this evening, and we're going to take our time and talk to as many of them as we can.
Welcome to TPC.
Thank you for 20 years on the radio.
And to get things started this evening, I want to turn it over to my co-host.
Of all the co-hosts who have been a part of the TPC hosting staff over the last two decades, some have come and gone.
Some have gone to their eternal reward.
The blessed Bill Rowland has been mentioned, his name invoked this weekend.
Eddie the Bombardier Miller for many years.
But no one has logged more years and more radio hours on the political cesspool by my side than the one and only, ladies and gentlemen, Keith Alexander.
And with that, I'm going to relinquish the microphone to Keith for his take on this weekend's festivities before we start lining them up.
Well, thank you very much, James.
Can you hear me?
Am I speaking well into the microphone?
That's always been a problem with me.
A little bit closer.
Is that better?
Okay.
As loud as you can.
Well, let me just tell you this.
We have had the best lineup of speakers that I think we've ever had at one of these events.
And this is the 20th year of this show.
And I can hardly believe we've gone this long.
But it's just onward and upward all the time.
Things have changed a little bit in the format and what is a popular topic nowadays.
A lot of things that used to be taboo are now mainstream, as James has mentioned.
And I think that is an indication of the progress we're making.
Basically, the things that we said back 10 years ago and were the only people saying it, now they're mainstream talking points all the time.
And it's gratifying in a way.
Unfortunately, the powers that be don't want to change with the times and allow people to talk about these things on their venues.
They're doing the best they can to censor us from talking about these things.
And that by us, I mean we the people, not just people at the political cesspool.
But this is a great opportunity.
And I think people sense that we're making progress.
We've got to keep the momentum going on this because it's the only chance that white America has to avoid extinction.
You know, they plan to have us just kind of fade away like an old soldier.
But we're not going to do that.
I think that people all over the nation and basically all over the world, white people realize that the great replacement is real and they intend to replace us.
They intend to take us out.
They tend to blend us out.
It's not going to be taking you out with a gun at a wall and whatnot.
Maybe firing squad.
Maybe not that.
But whatever, it could be the tender trap they want us to breed out with other races and whatnot.
But whatever it is, we ain't going there with them, folks.
We're going to be fighting for it, particularly our show has a couple of trademarks.
We are southern.
We are Christian.
We are white.
And we don't try to softpeddle any of that.
We proudly stand up for our people.
And basically, our people, like Sam Dixon said in his presentation, are all over the world.
White people everywhere are our kinsmen.
We're not like Europeans.
You know, Europeans, you know, Latvians have bone to pick with Lithuanians and all this type of stuff.
We don't go into that.
You know, basically, if you're white, if you're anywhere from Sicily to Iceland, you're one of us.
And we're welcoming you into our midst.
And it's so glad we've got some foreigners here.
We've got people from all over the nation.
And I think it's really going well.
I think that this white restoration project, people have finally awakened to this.
Don't listen to the mainstream media about what's going on.
We will tell you what is going on, okay?
And we're not going to pull any punches on it.
Right, James?
That's right, Keith.
If anybody thought you weren't going to hear a speech from Keith Alexander this weekend, you were wrong.
There it is.
Give him a big round of applause.
He's not going anywhere, but just let him know how much you appreciate him.
Let me tell you a couple of stories about Keith.
I could tell you a lot, but.
Wait a minute.
Two weeks ago, he's leaving the studio and his car's not working.
It just petered out.
Yeah, it's petered out.
That was one thing.
It's only in 1999 Tahoe, too.
They just don't make these cars the way they used to.
So there was that.
Now he drives out to the studio.
It's about 45 minutes one way to the studio from his house.
Drives out every week.
No pay.
And he's out there every week to do the program for Sam Dixon counted it out.
I think a thousand weeks is what 20 years is.
A thousand weeks.
And you've been there almost the entire time.
And then, if that wasn't enough, though, all of that back and forth.
You say, well, you know, people commute to work.
Yeah, that's fine.
But on his commute here, do you want to let him know what happened on the way?
I think there's a few people who haven't heard this story yet.
He was traveling up here for the event on Thursday.
And what happened was this.
I have a car.
The newest car I have is a 2011 Mercedes, okay?
And I decided I had just gotten through with a $2,000 repair job on that.
And I said, I'm not going to trust us to this.
So we got a good friend, a friend named Chris and another friend named Phil that allowed us graciously to ride with them.
We were driving along.
Thank you, Phil, for the carpool for Keith.
But it gets more interesting.
Well, see, James, we were about to go through from Memphis down south, a southern route here.
But James talked me out of that.
He said, go on Interstate 40.
That's faster, even though it's 50 miles longer.
So we took that advice, and let me tell you, West Tennessee is going to the dogs.
Keeping up with the infrastructure is not being kept up with there.
So there was a wreck over in the westbound lanes.
We were in the eastbound lane, and then either from rubbernecking or another wreck, there was a backup there.
So we were backed up when suddenly A car, which we think was driven by a 15-year-old girl who had a seven-month-old baby in there, and her mother ran right into the back of us at 70 miles an hour.
On the way to this event two days ago.
And it's a testament to the toughness and the crashworthiness of a Toyota tundra, which is what we were driving in.
The back bed was just totally crushed, but it looked like nothing had happened to the quad cab, you know, the portion of it.
And we, you know, we were at a towing company, and it just so happened Lord was looking after us.
Our driver had relatives within 30 miles.
He called them up.
They come over and they lend us a car and they wanted to take us to dinner.
They wanted to do all this stuff.
And otherwise, I think we'd still be sitting there outside of the, you know, on the west side of the Tennessee River.
You're in the middle of nowhere between Nashville and Memphis.
Yeah, we've called.
How are you going to get a rental car?
There's no town.
Well, we called the rental cars, and the earliest one they could get to us would be on Monday.
So thank goodness for small favors and thank goodness for the Lord Jesus Christ for protecting us through all of this.
Hey, he took a looking and he kept on ticking and he didn't turn around.
He came on to the event.
He got another car.
They moved their stuff.
And here's Keith Alexander after suffering what should have been a much rougher wreck.
All right, now that being said, before we start transitioning and bringing on some of the treasures that we have littered throughout the audience tonight, here are the speakers we've heard from today.
Brad Griffin, Tim Murdoch, Warren Baylog, Harry Cooper, Nick Griffin, Mark Weber, Jared Taylor, Sam Dixon.
These are the people who have given their talents.
I said this last night and I meant it.
We have the easiest job in the world.
We identify the best people and the best spokesmen that our people have produced and we bask in the glow of their luminescence.
So you heard them today.
You've heard them on the radio for all these years.
What would you say about all of the speakers and how it seemed as though it was a wave reaching a crescendo, how they continued to compliment and reinforce one another one after another?
You're right.
It's just the way that the topics, we didn't pre-screen or try to tell people to talk about one thing or another.
And instead, everything seemed to fall into place.
Everybody seemed to have a related topic to talk about.
It was like we had planned it all.
We'd like to take credit for that, but we didn't.
We just basically give people their reign.
And like James said, we allow them to carry the show because that's why we have these people on, because they have something to offer and something to say to people in our movement.
We don't try to micromanage anybody.
And basically, I think that's the key to the success of the show in many ways, don't you, James?
I would agree.
And all of the people we've worked with over all these years.
Is Bombardier Eddie in the room?
Is he out?
He's on a bombing run.
All right.
Well, can you grab him, Scoop, if you don't mind?
But yes, indeed.
So it has been a fun event.
It is not over yet.
And we did do this a might early.
Our anniversary is actually in October, but we just didn't.
We were afraid about this presidential election, what would be happening in October.
You know, we may all be in lockdown or may not or in jail.
So we decided it was time to do it now.
We moved up the timing of this event.
Normally, our anniversary events are on our anniversary, which the very first broadcast of TPC was October 26, 2004.
We normally have our anniversary events.
When we do them, we don't do them every year, certainly on the milestone events and sometimes more than that.
We always have them in October, but we're not doing it in October.
We wanted to move it up to May and make sure everybody was able to do this before in case things get dicey as we move forward.
Oh, that's right.
Normally, we do these things right in Memphis in our hometown.
And people say, Why do you, how can you do that?
And avoid we've had trouble like Jared has had in the past, like Peter Brimlow, with people trying to dox us and whatnot.
We found a perfect solution to all that.
What we do is lie like hell.
We tell the people, we don't tell anybody what we're doing.
Don't ever trust anybody that tells you they don't lie.
That's the biggest lie of all, okay?
But we have to do whatever we have to do to get on the air for you, and we've done it.
But this time we decided to come here, James loves us.
I'm not going to say where we're at.
We're in Maine, of course.
But James loves us.
Yeah, we're up there in Freeport, Maine.
But oh, did I say that?
I'm sorry.
All right.
Keith Alexander, we're going to let him take a break, let him get a drink.
We'll try to find Eddie.
Eddie is not where he needs to be.
Scoop, you can't find me.
He's on a bombing mission.
Okay, he is on a bombing run.
All right.
So that'll be fine.
Well, who is it?
I'll just.
Yeah, let's just stay right there.
Actually, is Roger Devlin in the room?
There he is.
Come on up, Roger.
Roger Devlin, sexual power.
Yeah, he's our resident sexologist, and we've got him here.
Keith, I know you are a man that knows more about sex than any other man.
Here he is, right?
Hold on, Axon.
You keep that.
I know you, Keith, are a very big fan and admirer of Dr. Devlin, as I am, and as we all are.
So we're going to give him a mic, and I'll let you two chew the fat for a second.
But first, come over here, Roger.
First, your assessment of the event.
You just came from a fantastic event at the V-DARE Castle.
So you've been on the circuit and you've been making the tour.
So size this one up for us if you would, and then we'll let you and Keith have a quick conversation.
Oh, it's wonderful.
I'm particularly happy to have heard from some people for the first time, like Harry Cooper and Sam Bushman.
Also, by the way, get closer than Mike.
Oh, I should say for the ladies here, I must warn you, I'm actually considered, I'm said to be a great misogynist and hater of women, according to our friends at the SPLC.
But yes, I do write about feminism and marriage and issues like that.
Well, you'll hear from her and you can judge for yourself.
It's G-rated.
It's, you know, it's well, tell us about this.
You, before you became famous in right-wing politics and commentary, you were a star in the manosphere because of a booklet you wrote.
Well, I don't commonly, but yeah, I was aware of the manosphere before it became a thing, really.
That was, you know, I call it slumming around on the internet.
I used to slum around on all the craziest sites, dating sites, pickup sites, and that eventually.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And that I didn't get many dates, but I did write a book based on all the things I learned.
And it really is a good book, by the way.
If you haven't seen it, look up Sexual Power.
No, no, no.
Sexual Utopia in Power.
Excuse me.
Sexual Utopia.
James Goddard Rodging 2.
Sexual Utopia and Power.
I've heard Keith give me the wrong.
That's all right.
James will blame me in every opportunity.
It's his fault.
The title is, there was a history of Soviet Russia called Utopia in Power.
And it was a play on that, the sexual revolution as a kind of utopia in power.
Well, give us a thumbnail of what that book is about.
Oh.
I've done that so many times on the stage.
Well, do it again.
You do it in your sleep.
Yeah, but it's basically that a lot of old-fashioned people, they didn't know what to expect when the sexual revolution happened.
And they have this idea that it's like this Woodstock festival and everybody's happy and free love and all that.
And actually what happens is sex becomes Darwinian.
It becomes highly competitive and it causes social trust to break down.
Well, see, monogamy is actually a good thing for men.
And when you don't have monogamy, you basically have a couple of alpha males with a harem or several harems and most men are left out in the cold, right?
Too many women chasing too few men, yeah, basically.
Roger Devlin, everybody.
Roger Devlin, final word, Roger, to the audience.
Yes, yes.
I noticed I haven't been on the show for about a year.
I think the last time I was on was.
Surely, it was when I came back from Europe.
Remember, we talked for an hour about three speeches I gave in town.
So we got to do this more often.
But I'm having a wonderful time at the conference.
So thank you very much, James.
And we're very honored to have you here.
Roger Devlin, one of our premier scholars and intellectuals.
Always good to see Roger wherever we may find him.
And you can find him all over the place.
As he said, he was on the speaking circuit in Europe last year.
Now, we're working through the TPC crew here very quickly, and we are cutting out some of the commercial breaks tonight.
So if you're wondering why we haven't gone to a break, we're skipping some of those to maximize our time.
Eddie the Bombardier Miller.
I was just telling Eddie a story or telling some people around Eddie a story of how we first got together.
It was during my campaign in 2002 for the Tennessee state legislature.
And as I said, I wanted to keep the Buchanan folks that I met together, the people that I had worked with on that campaign.
And I said, if I ran for the state house, would you stick around?
You know, could we keep this thing going?
Could we continue the fight?
And nobody told me that running as an independent third-party candidate against the Speaker of the House might not be the direct path to power.
But we ran to win.
And we were out knocking on doors every night and canvassing.
We ended up getting 17% of the vote, which I think was in a three-way race, the highest an independent had ever gotten for a state house race in Tennessee, at least up to that time.
But we did just enough to get a call to go into the radio because we'd made a little bit of news in the local area.
And then that's how it gave birth to TPC.
It was one stop after another.
And then for the last 20 years, the rest has been history.
But I was out campaigning in a neighborhood right by where the campaign headquarters was.
We actually had a campaign headquarters and a strip mall.
And I was knocking on doors and passing out my campaign brochure and talking to voters and missed, you know, sometimes people wouldn't be there, so you'd leave something with your information on it.
I got back to the campaign headquarters later that night after we were done, and there was a note on the door.
What did the note say?
It says something like, I have read your platform.
Everything you stand for, I am totally 100% for with you.
And you can imagine what that was.
It was like, pro white.
You know, we named the enemy.
We named the solutions.
At least he did.
I think it was actually tincare reform and taxes and school vouchers for that particular campaign.
But anyway, yes, Eddie was still on board with that as well.
And he left his name and number.
And as I told him a minute ago, I have regretted calling that number for the last 22 years.
It's been the worst day of his life.
No, no, no.
But Eddie has become a lifelong friend.
And that was actually, of course, two years before the founding of the show.
You look back now on it, Eddie, 20 years later, 22 years later from that night, but 20 years later, since the program for so many years you were on every week.
Let me just say this too.
Eddie is a singular individual.
They don't call him the bombardier for nothing.
Believe me, he holds nothing back.
He's in his upper 70s now, running in marathons.
I mean, look, this guy is indestructible.
He's like an old-time ex-watch.
He takes a look and he keeps on ticking.
The professor here said something about me once.
I'll never forget.
He said I was the only person he knows that had a holster built inside a King James Bible.
And you know what?
I've never caused anyone one second of anxiety.
I always try to calm everybody down.
Keep things going.
I try to keep them out of hand.
I make sure they stay politically correct.
You know, God forbid I would give James or Keith any ulcers or they worried about anything.
You ain't right, James.
Have you had a good weekend?
That's all I wanted.
Hell of a weekend.
Hell of a weekend.
You know, I love it.
You just did your show right before this one.
And then we got Scoop Stanton right after.
It's the whole Saturday night lineup on Liberty News Radio.
Scoop is on our show.
James is on our show.
We had a bunch of people out here on our show.
Golly, Mr. Cooper.
It's just been a great show.
And like one of the speakers said earlier, all you people know, you know the problem.
You know what's going on, or you wouldn't be here.
You know, and we all know the solutions.
But you know what?
Even if we don't win, I think most of you probably come from a Christian worldview.
We'll win.
We'll get to heaven.
But I'm kind of optimistic.
I think, you know, God has never worked through the majority.
God always works through the minority because God uses the weak to defeat the strong.
He uses the symbol to compound the wise.
So don't get discouraged just because most of the people are against you, because most of the people are.
You know, not to get too biblical, but Christ said, you know, he was persecuted.
Satan has persecuted him.
You're no better than Christ.
You're going to be persecuted.
You've got to hold strong.
You've got to stick together.
And I think we will win.
Do your duty in all things, as Robert E. Lee said.
And we will do our duty.
We will rejoice in the struggle.
Eddie the Bombardier Miller, so many years on the air with TPC.
He flew the coupe five years ago, but we still love him enough.
Glad that he's here.
Glad that he's here.
All right.
All right.
Sam, do you want to come up?
We got about two minutes before a break, and you've already heard from Sam this weekend, but I tell you what, you wouldn't be hearing from us right now.
Yeah, just Keith, can you give Sam your mic?
You wouldn't be hearing from us right now or any week, and we certainly wouldn't be going through the conference room here.
He is an IT genius.
He's our tech guy.
I can say in two minutes what everybody takes 10 minutes to say.
All right, go.
If that's all we got before the break.
All right, I'm going to tell you about this conference, ladies and gentlemen.
It's incredible.
Good people, good food, lots of fun, lots of education, commitment, desire, intent, and unity.
What more do you want, baby?
How's that?
Was that less than two minutes?
30 seconds, huh?
Now, have you ever regretted your decision to platform TPC and put them into syndication and put them on a nationally syndicated platform?
No, no, and no.
Have we had some fun together over the years?
Yes.
Yes, and yes.
Where are we going from here, Sam?
Well, I plan to take on the mainstream press like never before.
The new media is indeed taking center stage, and the yesterday your media has been relegated to the trash heap of history.
Where are they belonging?
That's where we're starting.
Where they belong.
Other than that, it's not so bad.
But I'm telling you, it's a wonderful opportunity for all of us.
I'm glad everybody got here safely, even though a few people had a little bit of a so last night.
James was talking about there was too much traffic.
He was running into traffic, and Zach made a joke.
My colleague here, he basically said, or traffic's running into you.
And boy, howdy, has that been true for Justin?
We're grateful they're all here safe and sound, though.
God bless.
We're going to take a quick break, Mr. Sam Bushman.
We'll be back in five minutes.
Dinner is served in the pre-function area.
Take time.
One table after another and do like you did yesterday.
We'll be right back.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio. News.
I'm Laura Winters.
I've always believed that the province of America is big enough for everyone to succeed.
And I mean that.
Everyone to succeed.
President Biden is busy courting black voters, which polls show he's been losing this election cycle.
Biden scheduled to speak at Morehouse College in Atlanta.
On Friday, he marked the 70th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that desegregated public schools in America.
Education is linked to freedom.
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But I want to just start off by saying hello, Minnesota.
This is a great state.
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Donald Trump speaking at the Minnesota GOP, Lincoln Reagan, dinner Friday night.
How about that before I get up?
The teleprompter fell down.
That's great.
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Then they want to know why I didn't pay the bill.
You know, I get a lot of heat.
Earlier in the day, Trump and wife Melania attending the graduation of their son, Baron.
The judge at his hush money trial in New York City at first denying the request and then allowing Trump to go.
World champion golfer Scotty Scheffler will continue to play at the PGA tournament in Kentucky today.
After being arrested yesterday and released, he has a tea time today and a court date on Tuesday.
Police arresting him, accusing him of assaulting a police officer after he drives around a fatal accident scene while trying to get into the golf course.
While it was dark out, he was in a player's car with a placard showing.
Scheffler booked his mugshot released.
He's facing four charges.
I did spend some time stretching in a jail cell.
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I felt like there was a chance I may be able to still come out here and play.
And so.
Scheffler's attorney says he will plead not guilty at the arraignment on Tuesday and that this is all one big misunderstanding.
And I'm Laura Winters, USA News.
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All right, ladies and gentlemen, we are back, and we are live.
We are live and on the road at TPC's 20th anniversary celebration.
We are celebrating the technology that makes this possible and I still marvel.
It makes you happy you lived this long.
This is true progress.
Nothing's getting progressively worse here.
The fact that we can do a live radio broadcast, it can be heard through the House BA system.
And if you're in Memphis, you're listening to it on AM 1600 WMQM.
And it's all happening right here as we stand, originating live from the source.
And now as we continue, a lot of people moving in and out as they get their dinner meals.
But we've got two of the standout performers, not performers, although it was almost like performative art.
These speakers and speeches were so good.
But two of our speakers, two of the finest spokesmen and representatives that our people have, Tim Murdoch and Warren Baylog, will take one after the other.
These were both featured speakers today.
And we're just going to give, for the benefit of those of you who were not with us live and in person, we're going to give you a quick snapshot of at least some of the speakers and what they talked about.
Tim, first to you.
You know, this is the first ever White Rabbit Radio.
What is it?
I was going to say War Strike.
Modern politics.
Crossover.
Modern politics.
Crossover.
War strike live on the political cesspool.
We've taken over political cesspool here for a couple minutes.
And you'll make it better.
The 20th anniversary for the political cesspool was very impressive.
I would actually hire James to do these full time because it came out really well.
Today, I basically did something very unique.
I did not do a written speech.
I did a set of bullet points and I just talked to the people about Bob Whitaker because the first time I had ever heard James was when Bob was on the show.
And 20 years ago, right?
Bob.
2004 is when it was.
Yes, Bob was one of the first guests at the very latest early 2005.
And not only that, you know, 99% of the time our guests call in, obviously.
It's a radio.
You don't have to be in the studio.
Bob drove to Memphis from South Carolina to be in the studio at the station.
I remember that.
I remember the pictures.
And so basically, I did a general overview, went back in time and talked about various different concepts and where we're at now, where we've been.
And everyone liked it.
They seem to like it, or they're lying to me.
One or the other.
And it was not a written speech by any means, but by and large, I did it that way a little bit more personal for a 20th.
This is a private gathering, so I treated it that way.
It was great.
It was good.
It was great.
No, no, I'm sorry.
If you did a punch by Keith was asking me a question, I missed it.
I was getting ready for you to chime in.
Sorry about that.
I did basically something special for a 20th anniversary of Political Cesspool because I've known James for so long, and we both have a mutual friend and Bob Whitaker.
So I feel like I listened to him since the beginning, since his first shows.
Well, we appreciate that, Tim, and we appreciate all your work with White Rabbit Radio, your groundbreaking work in popularizing terms such as diversity is a code word for white genocide.
Anti-racism, a code word for anti-white, all that stuff.
I think I'm probably known more for anti-racist Hitler than anything.
It sounds like from the younger.
Well, and for good reason, if anybody's ever watched that.
Anybody ever seen that one, folks?
And How Weitz, what was the one with the Indians?
How Weitz took over America.
That one has Bob Whitaker in it.
He played an Indian.
Yeah, he's an Indian.
He played an engine.
With that dry drawl of his.
Yeah, it's funny.
You know, I got to say, it's been a long time since I've been in South Carolina.
I'd like to get back there one day, but I was in South Carolina with Bob Whitaker in Charleston.
And you haven't had a drinking buddy until you went drinking with Bob Whitaker.
Oh, man.
He had the classic South Carolinian draw, too.
He was one of a kind.
And again, he is a guy, as you mentioned today, a former Reagan administration appointee who was all out for our issues.
And people forget that about him.
And I appreciate you dedicating so much of your talk to him because it is important that we remember our heroes.
It is important that we remember those who came before us, especially those who came before us that left the comfort of high society and Conservative Incorporated to pursue loftier goals.
Yeah, he could have retired or he could have done other things, but he decided to enshrine white genocide memes across the internet, which most people wouldn't do in their retirement.
Tim, where can people find all the information there is to know about you and tune into your work?
WhiterabbitRadio.biz.
There it is.
B-I-Z.
You'll be good.
Mr. Tim Murdoch, everybody, one of our featured speakers.
We'll let him get his meal now.
Yeah, I'll scoot up.
It might be easier for you.
And the gentleman who followed Tim on the speaking program today and who is now doing so on the program itself, a guy who I haven't admitted.
Well, you were just on the show last week.
I was.
Do you remember that?
Yes, and you were on my show.
A few days before that.
Yeah, and I didn't want to give it away, but I knew it was all in preparation for this tonight.
Of course.
I didn't say it.
Yeah, it was like an unspoken understanding and agreement.
I was like, you know, it'd be really good to have him on the week before he comes and talks to the event.
Yes.
Refresh everybody about how great he is.
And in any event, Warren, listen, I said it in my introduction to you.
I saw some of your speeches with NJP, and I was like, the next time I do an event, we've got to have Warren there, and you did not disappoint.
Well, thank you, James.
It was not a rah-rah speech.
It was basically just me and James bragging about how we were right about the issues right from the beginning.
Yeah, I talked about this a little bit on the political cesspool.
What was that, two weeks ago that we went on?
And then you were on my show.
So people who listen have heard this already.
But James and I just met, I don't know, two or three years ago for the first time.
But we discovered when we met that we had in common the fact that we were both involved in the Reform Party campaign in 2000, Pat Buchanan.
And it was the moment that we both broke into politics for the first time.
I was 18 years old.
James was 20 years old.
It was our big entry into politics.
And it was quite a night that night.
And I just discovered, actually, while I was writing my speech that it was August 12th of the year 2000, which is the same day as, of course, the Unite the Right Value.
It's an incredible testimony about that, that on August 12th.
Now, you've got to remember, ladies and gentlemen, when we were both delegates for Buchanan at that nominating convention in 2000, we did not meet.
I mean, we were at the same place at the same time, but we didn't meet until almost 20 years later.
Now, we had known each other through reputation for some time, but we didn't actually meet until 20 years later.
But we were at the same place at the same time at that event.
There weren't a lot of young people there either.
That was a mostly older crowd.
But it was a big crowd.
I mean, there were thousands of people.
Thousands of people.
You know, obviously missed seeing everyone.
Yeah, it was a huge fight.
I mean, it was like a real convention, like the old-style party conventions that they used to have, where there was a battle for who's going to be the nominee.
There was a run convention.
There was another convention.
There was a running convention.
And Pat Buchanan got the nomination.
He gave a speech, and that was the point of my speech, was that Buchanan's issues that he ran on in the year 2000 were all the issues that Trump later won on in 2016, You brought up all of the headlines about that and all of the...
Well, break that down because people forget...
So a lot of journalists, mostly with names like Bernstein, but a lot of journalists have figured this out and have written articles about it.
Trump ran a campaign in 2000 against Buchanan, and he was beaten badly by the Buchanan brigades, by me and James and others.
That's right.
And Trump's campaign was, he was still where he is now on trade and on immigration, but on social issues, he was almost to the left.
I mean, he was extremely pro-life all the way.
Not at all, or I'm sorry, not pro-life, pro-choice.
He was saying, I'm a New Yorker, I'm pro-choice.
Not at all.
You know, now he's famous for the Supreme Court.
Yes, he was the one who pushed through the Buchanan.
But he demonized Pat Buchanan as a Hitler lover, as a racist, as an anti-Semite.
I should keep that down a little.
We got the doors open.
He demonized Pat Buchanan as all the things that he would later be attacked by with the media.
And he also suggested Oprah Winfrey as his running mate at the time.
That's who he wanted.
But that was not just a publicity stunt.
He was seriously trying to get the Reform Party nomination.
And the Buchanan brigades were organized and mobilized enough to be able to do it.
And ideological and motivated, and they beat it.
And we learned something else today: that Mark Weber was at that event.
Mark Weber was there as well.
Yeah.
I mean, it was the Buchanan campaign in 2000, it was filled with WNs and NSs and all kinds.
And that's really what powered Buchanan's campaign and how he was able to get the nomination.
And Donald Trump didn't stand a chance.
And one of the points of my speech was just that it's a personal theory of mine, but some of these other authors have said it, that Trump learned from that.
And Trump is very good at spotting an undervalued property.
He brags about this in his whole life, the art of the deal, that he's very good at spotting a property that he can pick up at a steel.
Skip break list.
Okay.
And that's what he did with our issues.
He took our issues and he got all this untapped support.
Let's talk about that.
So, talking about being right from the beginning, Buchanan had an excellent quote, and it's almost bittersweet.
He said that I didn't make it, but the ideas did.
Everything that propelled Pat Buchanan's campaign in 2000 put Trump into the White House in 2017.
And there was a great line from one of his detractors.
Donald Trump, what did you read today?
Donald Trump was Pat Buchanan, but with good timing.
With better timing, yeah.
And also, another headline was when Trump ran against Trumpism, you know, because he opposed it.
But, you know, the other big point of my speech, James, was just that, and this is bittersweet.
It's not that the country, that the political elites have moved in our direction or that our people have gotten into power.
The same people are still in power that were in power in 2000.
So you could argue that it's gotten worse as it's gotten better.
Yes.
So my theory is basically that the reason we have all this pseudo-populist nationalist rhetoric right now, the reason that talking about immigration has come into the mainstream, that talking about trade has come into the mainstream, same thing with our foreign policy and America first foreign policy over a liberal interventionist imperialist foreign policy, is simply because the chickens have come to roost on all these, they've come home to roost on all these policies.
The immigration has gotten so bad, especially in the last few years, that no one can deny it.
And so you have the same thing with the foreign policy back in 2000.
This was before the Iraq War and the Afghanistan war and the debacles that those were.
It was before the trade policies really caught up.
You remember, James, when you would have white-collar workers say, oh, yeah, some blue-collar jobs will be over, you know, offshored or will be outsourced, but you've got to just get with the new economy.
Then all the white-collar jobs got offshored as well.
And we have no middle class.
We have retail jobs.
That's it.
You can go work at the dollar store.
And then the opioid epidemic.
So I feel like the policies that we were speaking out against, that Pat was speaking out against then, the results are in after 24 years, and it has destroyed the country.
And that's why you see figures like Marco Rubio or JD Vance, who ran against Trump, just started out changing their flags, flying new flags, completely reinventing themselves as populists and as nationalists.
So I don't think necessarily that we haven't won.
It's not just Pat that didn't.
We haven't won.
Our people are still not in power, and we have to fix that.
What's happened is, though, the situation has gotten so much worse that these issues are popular and people can't afford to not run on them.
So, I mean, the old adage: I always get this wrong: politics flows downstream from culture or something like that.
Which I disagree with.
I think culture flows downstream from politics.
But, but, but before any change is going to occur on our side and for our issues, you're going to have to reach a critical mass in terms of popular support, which we are inching towards, maybe even more than inching towards.
I mean, if you look at the movement, you look at where we were on the day of Biden's inauguration, and you look at where we are now with people like Charlie Kirk and all of these people, as Brad Griffin put it, Matt Walsh is eating our lunch, and they're sounding just like us.
Is that a good thing or a bad thing?
I mean, it's I think it's a neutral thing because the demographic situation in the country is that much worse.
The economy is that much worse.
It's neutral.
But I will say this: you mentioned Brad Griffin.
I met Brad for the first time last night.
Brad Griffin, everybody!
Yes, I met him last night for the first time.
We had a very interesting conversation.
This is a testament.
This is something else I spoke about.
I was puffing up James a little bit, and I don't want to do it on the air here.
The fact that this crowd that James brought together is a testament to this man and how great he is and the people he knows.
Within five minutes of arriving here last night, I met three people that I've admired.
I met Brad Griffin, I met Jason Kessler, and I met Dr. Michael Hill all within like five minutes of arriving.
You've never met them before.
I'd never met them before.
I'd never met any of them before.
And I met Keith Alexander, who's another hero of mine.
But all within about five or ten minutes of arriving here.
And the most interesting thing about this conference, in my opinion, is how much the speeches, and you guys talked about this, how much the speeches sort of echoed each other in the planning.
Without any plan.
No one knew what anyone else was talking about.
What Nick Griffin said.
What about Nick's talk?
Well, I thought that was so Nick Griffin is somebody that influenced me enormously when I was a young man.
In fact, I got involved with the Reform Party partly because I met Nick Griffin at an American Friends of the BNP meeting in 1999.
And I thought at that time, this is a modern nationalist politician, well-spoken.
This is what we need in America.
We need a political party like the BNP, because the BNP was doing very well back then under Nick.
This guy, I mean, you know, former member of European Parliament.
Oh, yeah, literally a world leader.
Yeah, he was, he was, and in those days, he was, he was, he spoke with David Duke and William Pierce also spoke in those meetings.
For the first time at a David Duke conference.
Yeah, and Nick, Nick, you know, David Duke said a line actually at that conference or at the American Friends of the BNP meeting.
He said, I remember he said this specifically.
He said, when this guy started talking, I thought, wow, he's pretty good.
Pretty soon they'll be calling him the David Duke of Britain.
And he said, by the time he was done with his speech, I thought, I'll be lucky if they call me the Nick Griffin of America.
That's what David Duke said at the time because he was that impressive.
He was that.
You saw him today?
Yeah, and he was great today.
He was great today.
But the point is that Nick inspired me a lot to get involved with the Reform Party and to stay in politics.
But what he spoke about today was just the decline of this empire.
And that's the thing.
I think that that's the big theme.
Jared spoke about it.
Pretty much everybody touched on it.
That this system is unsustainable.
Mark Weber gave a great talk about this.
One after another talking about this.
This system is unsustainable.
It's flying off the rails.
The chickens are coming home to roost.
And all these problems are going to reach a critical mass here.
And that was the thing about Nick's talk, which, I mean, again, it was just reinforced by Mark, by Jared, by Sam.
Again, completely organic.
Yes.
Completely authentic.
But what I loved about Nick's talk was the fact that it was a very sober but hopeful assessment.
We've lost, but it's not over.
We've lost it through the existing system, but why do I have hope?
And then he went into the reasons.
Normally it's either black pill or white, what is it, black, red, white, blue pill.
I don't know the pill colors, but it's either very negative or ridiculously positive.
Right.
And Nick just did a very sober analysis of the economy.
He went through the dollar, the strength of the petrodollar, the military factor, the moral factor.
He talked about how what Israel is doing in Gaza is destroying their victim card of the Holocaust, how that's being torn up.
So it was an amazing talk.
And yes, I think there's just a general feeling that we are reaching a point here where this system cannot continue the way it's been.
It cannot continue.
And the other big theme that came out of this was secession.
Maybe it's just because we're in South Carolina.
Nick mentioned the word secession all the way over.
Now, Nick should have been here for anybody listening.
Of course, everyone here knows the story.
But Nick had purchased a plane ticket, booked his hotel room, and then turned away by U.S. Customs.
This man has never committed a crime.
We had the same problem with NJP with Mark Collette.
We tried to get him over to speak at our thing.
People know the story.
He spent a week in Tijuana trying to get into the.
I didn't get that creative.
I thought that, look, this guy's not committed to crime.
He's a former member of European Parliament, world leader.
But he surely didn't let him over.
Even he spoke about secession.
And there's a lot of Southern energy in this room, I've got to say.
Hey, if there's any Southern energy in the room, let's hear a big rebel yell!
And so I had to pull out my southern bona fides.
I'm from Eastern PA.
That's where all my people go back in the Lehigh Valley of Pennsylvania.
But my father had the foresight to name, my middle name is Forrest after General Nathan Bedford Forrest.
So I have that in me, that every time I write my name, I put Warren F. Baylog, and it's General Forrest.
So I'm an honorary Southerner with that.
And I grew up in West Virginia, which is almost the South.
But no, I do think that it's interesting.
So many of the talks talked about secession, talked about the national divorce and that type of thing.
And the overriding theme is, if this country, if this system hates who we are so much, what is our incentive to stay a part of it?
Why should we be a part of it?
I certainly don't want to die for it.
I don't want the Yankee flag on my property, as you know.
And that is something that was brought up by one of the speakers today, if not more than one.
The fact that even these Anglo-Celtic southerners who love to bonk heads and love to fight, they're not signing up for Smuel anymore.
You know, James, on that, I want to say one more point.
Something that I, a misconception that I had, because for everybody here, I come out of a political tradition through my father that is very, shall we say, it's very pretty radical.
We can say NS.
And I always, I had heard the name James Edwards before I met you, and I always thought you were sort of a conservative, sort of like a, you know, abuse you of that notion.
You did.
The first time I met you, you totally, totally did.
And actually, when we did, when you were on modern politics, you actually went further than I did in the second part on what you really think about this country.
And, you know, Jared Taylor said the same thing recently, and he said it again in his speech.
So that's the other thing is that I think people who maybe think that these southern guys are like they're just a bunch of conservatives.
They're just no, they're actually more radical, I think, with the prospects of this country than a lot of us in the North might think.
David's daughter clapped for that.
Oh, yes, yes, exactly.
Exactly.
No, I.
But no, it's an honor to be here.
This is an amazing conference, an amazing group of people.
And thank you.
Made better by Warren Baylock, I assure you, ladies and gentlemen, if you enjoyed this man today, before you leave, Warren.
And by the way, his beautiful wife, Emily, who is his co-host.
My wife, Emily Yucas, where is she?
She's back there.
There she is.
Modern politics.
She's talking.
She does not even hear us right now.
No, I was saying, though.
Stand up, Emily.
The saying behind every great man is a great woman.
That's true of us both.
You know, we got to the extent you and I have any greatness at all.
It's as much to do with our better half as it is anybody else.
I have a gift for you that I will present to you now live and on the air.
Oh, wow.
Going back to our nascent days in August of 2000, an autographed copy of Right from the Beginning.
Oh, my God, Pat Buchanan.
I don't know what that is.
I don't know what that is.
Oh, my goodness.
Hold on, let's.
There it is.
Wow.
Well, thank you very much.
Thank you very much.
That is yours to keep, and we'll always remember the good old days, but it was all still a hell of a moment.
Go, Pat, go.
Go, Pat, go.
We screamed that till we were hoarse.
I could not speak.
You can watch the C-SPAN video.
Go, Pat, go.
That was it.
I thought that was it.
I thought this is it.
Well, one of these days, when one of those monuments, after we have reclaimed an ethnostate of our own, one of those monuments that have been in the world.
Beat to Isola Foster.
I like this.
Isola is a nice lady.
She's been in my house.
I know, I know.
You told me.
You told me, yeah.
She died.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, God rest her soul.
I didn't mean to make a joke at her expense there, but a lot of us were scratching our heads, though, when they picked that up.
Well, a lot of people turned Pat down for that VP nomination, unfortunately.
And that was quite a lot.
But anyway, I'll get off of here.
But thank you, James, for inviting me.
Warren Bailock, ladies and gentlemen.
And this is just the first.
This is just the first.
And we will take this break, Liz, as the.
There it is.
All right.
This is just the first of three hours tonight.
I'm looking at the list of people still going to appear on the program tonight.
Folks, believe me, you ain't heard nothing yet.
Don't go anywhere.
Still two hours to come on TPC Live tonight.
From where are we at?
We're in.
Sam Dixon always wanted to have a conference of Pauter Prince.
Live from Haiti tonight.
We are.
TPC.
We'll be right back, folks.
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