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June 8, 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 back, everybody.
I want to thank again all of our contributors to tonight's discussion about the Donald Trump verdict.
In the first hour, Congressman Steve King, Congressman Steve Stockman.
In the second hour, attorneys Sam Dixon and Augustus Invictus, along with, of course, our co-host here, Keith Alexander.
Just to put a cap on that discussion before we transition into a totally different discussion, I received this piece of correspondence this week from a listener and a supporter, and of all places, Hollywood, California.
And this is what he writes.
Dear James, in light of the Stalinist show trial in New York and the deep state globalists and the neocon warmongers, I can truly say that the disdain that I've felt for this country has risen to a new level.
I wonder if even a Trump victory will claw us back from the brink.
Foreign leaders are laughing at us and third world banana republics are welcoming us into their ranks.
The words of the great author and historian David Irving ring true now more than ever.
Quote, if all the dead Allied soldiers could see their countries now, they would have thrown down their weapons and fought with the Germans, end quote.
Your voice and the guests of TPC are more important than ever.
Keep up the good work and keep fighting for our people and for the country that we lost in 1865.
That is not a letter you expect to receive from Hollywood, California.
But nevertheless, Keith Alexander holds it in his hand right now.
There it is.
So with that said, we are going to transition into what is a two-week overdue appointment with our friends at Analope Publishing.
We have been delayed with the conference that we had and some recaps of that.
And anyway, we're getting to it now.
Taylor Young is back with us.
Let's let him say hello and let's say hello to him.
Taylor, great to have you back tonight.
Well, hello, everyone.
It's wonderful to be back here again, as always.
Very happy.
And Sam, I know that you might not necessarily enjoy or like receiving praise, but perhaps I know you can give it when it is due.
I'm very impressed with Antelope Hill Publishing.
You got to meet some of their principals a couple of weeks ago.
I think you are as well.
I'm very, very impressed with them.
The quality of their books is extraordinary.
They're way beyond the typical American so-called conservative or right-wing publisher.
They have really significant books.
I'm very, very impressed.
I'm impressed that they have a Russian.
I met one of the three people who is Dimitri, and I got to practice my Russian with him.
And I'm very, very impressed with them.
They published some very fine things from Russia that are obscure that other people wouldn't do.
I'm very impressed.
Well, they have a wonderful, I mean, of course, we've had this partnership with them going back over a year, year and a half now.
They have fantastic original titles, original works put together by their statement of authors.
But they also have, and Sam, a quick comment to you and then to Keith, but the reprints that they are able to put back into circulation.
That's something that you noted, Sam.
Yes.
Yes, this is fabulous work.
They got Gentile's book on Marx.
I can't wait to read it.
Gentile was the main philosopher of the fascist party in Italy and was murdered by the communists in the so-called liberation in Florence.
And a crime that even the left cannot defend nowadays.
He's simply a philosopher and they murdered him.
But anyway, but I can't wait to read what Gentile said about the philosophy of Karl Marx.
Well, this is Keith.
And the thing that, you know, we've all heard that foreign immigrants will do the work that Americans refuse to do.
Well, Antelope Hill does the printing that American publishers won't do.
We're getting all sorts of, like you said, reprints or things that have been out of print getting printed by Antelope Hill that otherwise would not be seeing the light of day.
And it's an incredible job, an incredible task.
And my hat's off to you guys for doing such a good job of it.
All right.
If only the late Bill Regnery could have lived long enough to see the rise of Antelope Hill, it would all come full circle.
Well, that being said, Sam, I know, listen, I got to say this about Sam Dixon, or maybe this is just an admission I'm going to make that perhaps I shouldn't do.
But in all of these years and all of these authors we've had on, I have to admit that I have not read every single book of every author we've ever interviewed about their books.
But Sam goes the extra mile.
Sam and I co-interviewed Virginia Abernathy together a few months ago about her autobiography.
He read it first and he read it on short order.
And when I asked Sam, who is our resident Rutophile, if he would participate in this conversation tonight, he ordered the books straight away.
No questions asked.
And Sam, let's begin there, or rather, I should say, with Taylor too.
Well, Sam, which of the two books would you like to cover first?
Well, the only one that I have really read is a 60-year Caucasus War that's written, it was written actually under the Czar.
At first, I ordered it at first in Russian, but my Russian, it would take me a long time to read it.
And it's printed in the orthography that the Soviets changed, and I'm not good at reading that.
So, fortunately, Taylor sent me an English version as well as a PDF, which I should have read but didn't read.
So, I was able to read in English.
It was really a remarkable book.
It's about the conquest of the Caucasus by the Tsarist Russians in the 1800s.
And that's the one I've read.
And the other one I've just had bits and pieces of.
I read in Wikipedia and online accounts of the author of the other book, which is a modern novel, Chechen Blues.
And he seems like a remarkable person, someone well worth knowing more about.
I'd like to ask that, you know, obviously, Taylor knows more about this than I do.
And so the first question I have for Taylor is: is there any kind of meaning to Antelope Hill?
You chose that name for your publishing company?
So, first of all, thank you all very much for the kind words about our books and everything.
And it was wonderful meeting everyone in person at the conference.
I mean, I think if you the name Antelope Hill, if you think about what the initials are, what the initials of the company would be, then you probably can guess where that comes from.
I'm sorry we went there.
Anyway, well, I did not even know that.
Not everyone picks up on it.
It's just kind of funny.
It's just out there.
And, you know, if you see it, you see it.
If you don't, you don't, in either case, then it's just, you know, we're just like antelopes.
So, I guess.
I thought it was a clever name, nevertheless.
I had the old West rugged, you know, frontier type of vibe.
Yeah, it's just kind of, I think it comes off as kind of like vaguely quaint and, you know, just misogynistic.
It had a frontier Americana type of vibe.
Sam, back to you.
Well, I'd like to shift over.
Your book purchasing company is interested in Russia, in the old Russia, which very few of the people on our side and the various little segments of this movement are interested in.
I'm very interested in it.
I've been interested in it all of my life, and I have known people who were czarist Russians and people who fought for the white armies.
But I'm the only one I know until y'all came along.
So how did you get interested in the old Russia?
Well, so the mission of the company is to publish works that are difficult to obtain or that would otherwise be censored or that are not even available in English and that we do our own original translations for.
And in particular, you know, I'm sure you got kind of the vibe from looking at our catalog.
It's works that are important to the philosophical, the right-wing traditions of the European peoples, primarily in Europe, but in America as well, certainly, as well as events and periods of history that would be particularly censored or maligned.
So we look to publish anything that basically tells the truth about our history or that comes from a perspective that people might not otherwise be able to hear, that might be withheld from them or just drowned out entirely.
So we've actually, as you noted, we've published a number of books at this point about Russia.
A lot of the, frankly, they span.
So when I was planning this appearance, which I wanted to focus on the 60-year Caucasian War because it's the latest book that we've published.
And I was thinking about what to pair it with to kind of help fill up the time because we have a number of books about Russia now.
And they really span from the very beginning of its prehistory up till the present.
I hear the break music coming on, so I can continue when we're back.
Like Sam Dixon, Taylor Young is such a regular guest.
He knows what to do when the music starts, and that means we have to take a quick time out.
But we will refocus, folks.
You've got to understand when friends come together, we engage in a little bit of fraternal gladhanding from time to time, and that's what that segment was.
We're going to refocus the 60-year Caucasian War.
Hello, TPC family.
It's James, and I've got to tell you that I sleep better at night knowing that there are organizations like the Conservative Citizens Foundation.
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That's M-E-R-I-C-A-1-S-T.com.
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Regrets?
Oh, we're all going to have them.
Doesn't matter who you are or what you do.
At some point, you're going to wish you'd done something differently.
You know, the woulda, coulda, shouldas.
But let me tell you a couple of things you'll never regret.
You'll never regret spending extra time talking to your teenager.
Trust me.
You'll never regret answering your three-year-old's question about where the water in the bathtub comes from.
And I've never seen anyone wish they hadn't sat in the kitchen laughing with their children and tell them goofy stories about when they were kids.
Yeah, sure.
We're all going to have regrets, but talking too much with our kids won't be one of them.
No matter what you talk about, love is what they'll hear.
A thought from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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It just worked out so well tonight.
We had Sam Dixon on to talk about the Trump verdict, which, as an attorney, I certainly wanted to have him on to do.
And since he is, as far as I'm concerned, a very astute scholar of Russian history, I thought it would be fun to have him stick around and join us in the conversation with Taylor Young of Antelope Hill Publishing as we talk about two books this month and their monthly appearance on the program that pertain to Russian history.
And the first is the 60-year Caucasian War.
I'll read just the back of page synopsis of the book.
For 60 years, the armies of the Tsar fought a multi-generational ethnic and religious war against the mountain peoples of the Caucasus, leaving a deep cultural impact on the participants and their descendants, which resounds to this day.
Translated into English for the first time, again, this is a translation that Antelope Hill makes available to you, not an original work, although those are certainly noteworthy as well.
The 60-year Caucasian War is the seminal account of this tumultuous contest.
I could go on from there, but Sam, you can break it down better than I. You've read the book.
Well, there's a lot to be said for the book.
I did not know much about.
I knew Russia had conquered the Caucasus when I was young.
I read Turgenev's novel, Prisoner of the Caucasus, which is about those wars and about a Russian taken prisoner by one of the tribes there.
But I learned so much from this book about that that I did not know that this area of the Caucasus had been Christian until a couple generations before, and that the Muslims had basically forced an Islamicization of most of these people, and they were engaged in an attack on the Georgians.
Georgia, I think, is the Georgia or Armenia, the oldest Christian kingdom in the world.
And the Russians came in to help the Georgians defend themselves against Muslim jihad.
And of course, today, the Russians are defamed as colonizers and racists and so forth for going into the Caucasus.
But they went there to rescue the Georgians and the Christians from the Muslims.
And they were fighting an officially vigilant form of Islam called murdism, which I'd never heard of either.
This was kind of a leveling creed that had come in and had liquidated the aristocracies and kings and princes of the peoples here and united all these disparate tribes on a very crude level of Sharia law to lead them into a crusade since they're Muslims, but a war of extermination against the Christians.
And oh, very interesting.
I learned a lot about Sharia law that I didn't know.
I would say, before we go back to Taylor and let him talk maybe give us more information about Adelaide Hill, he used the word our, our history, referring to Russia.
And I think that's the right possessive pronoun.
And one thing about Americans, and I think Anglo-Saxons at large, is that we don't appreciate that we have a common European history and that we have got to show and cease these Peloponnesian wars, these quarrels among white people, because our entire white Christian European civilization and race are under siege.
And we never should have done this to begin with.
And the last two terrible wars of the last century may spell the end of our race.
But Russia is the guardian of the gates.
Russia protects us from what my Russian tutor calls, which is literally the yellow peril, which we saw of an America a century and a quarter ago.
But, you know, they are our people, and we share a common history with them.
And their conquest of the Caucasus was something like our conquest of the West.
And it's a shared thing, and we should be supporting the Russians.
That's why we go back.
Well, indeed, Sam, you were about to toss it back to Taylor.
Taylor, is that as Sam just mentioned, and as he described, is that one of the reasons you wanted to put this book forward as a title at Analope HillPublishing.com?
Yes, certainly.
I think that he gave a very comprehensive and a very good review of what a lot of the book is about and why it is relevant and why we wanted to publish it.
And, you know, it's probably a conflict that very few people know even happened.
And, you know, it doesn't seem relevant to us really as Americans.
But in Russian history, their whole history of conflict with the Caucasus region looms much larger.
It is, I think, a very good analogy, as Sam put it.
It's basically kind of like the subjugation of the West was for us.
And the book goes into why this was such an important region geopolitically, especially at that time for Russia to exert control over, partly in order to be able to protect the Christian kingdom of Georgia, as well as to just be able to protect its own borders and its own interests in the face of aggression from Islamic civilization, from the Ottomans, as well as from Europeans, such as the British and French during the Crimean War.
So the Russian Empire basically came to realize how strategically important it was for them to conquer this small little region of dense mountains, or otherwise they would lose their ability to exert any influence in Asia or any control over the peoples and the trade routes there and everything.
So it's, you know, it's certainly, you can understand from a Russian perspective why this is important, but I think that Sam was also talking about why it is an important conflict with lessons for us today,
and that it was a clash of white Christian civilization against Islamic civilization that expressed itself in this sect of Islam that basically, you know, turned all of the religious...
character of that into a call for holy war against the infidel, against the invaders, against the Russians, and that it took 60 years basically to pacify.
And it does go very much to that idea of this being a Christian civilization whose contributions to defending Christendom and to defending white European civilization from the East and from Islam are often underappreciated and kind of thrown to the wayside in the face of our often.
not very, ultimately, you know, not that important Intra-European squabbles.
I would interject very quickly before we toss it back to Sam for a response.
The title we're discussing right now, The 60-Year Caucasian War, available for you tonight at antelopehillpublishing.com.
Antelope Hill Publishing is proud to present the 60-year Caucasian War as a must-read for anyone interested in the intricacies of 19th century warfare, the nature of ethnic and religious struggle, and the enduring legacy of the Russian conquest of the Caucasus.
Sam, I enjoy having the opportunity, the privilege really, to put forth on this program great minds when talent meets talent, great things happen in talk radio.
So to pair you with Taylor tonight was something that I was eager to do.
A response to you from what you just heard from him.
Well, I think that people need to realize that the two branches of our common race that are done the most to spread our race and its civilization around the world are the Russians and the Anglo-Saxons.
The Anglo-Saxons expanded their sea power to the West and brought out Canada and the United States and eventually Australia.
But the Russians carried our race and religion and culture from Eastern Europe all the way to the Pacific and Siberia.
And Americans don't appreciate the tremendous racial struggle this was.
Russia was completely subjugated by non-whites in the 1200s.
The most brutal and unattractive non-whites you can imagine, the Mongols.
And they ran Russia for two centuries of brutal occupation until the Grand Duke of Moscow, Dmitry Danskoy, one of the great white heroes of our history, in one of the great battles of our history, the Battle of Kurukova Field in 1380, defeated the Mongols and broke Russia free of Mongol control.
But then they also ringed on the south and somewhat to the east, they were ringed by Islamic civilizations, also semi-alien racial agents, the Tatars.
And they had to fight for centuries to drive the Turks out of Ukraine and to drive Islam out of Ukraine, to drive the Tatars, to conquer them and drive them out.
So, you know, Russia had a much harder racial fight than we Anglo-Saxons sheltered on our island, only invaded once successfully in our history by the Normans in 1066.
We have a much easier task than the Russians did.
The Russians are entitled to our admiration and friendship, and not to all this stuff you hear from Biden about how the dictatorship and all this little prissy, self-righteous garbage that you hear from people like Biden.
So it is a shared, we share in their glory and they and ours.
And we have got to get along.
There are going to be no more brother wars.
We cannot afford the kind of war that Putin, that Biden wants us to get into against Russia.
We've got to take a quick break.
We're going to transition into another title presented to you or made available to you by Antelope HillPublishing.com in the next segment.
Sam Dixon and Taylor Young discussing it.
This title, though, available for your purchase tonight, The 60-Year Caucasian War.
You are a student of history.
You want to know more about Russia?
You like Russia?
Check it out.
Antelope HillPublishing.com.
Protecting your liberties.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio. USA News.
I'm Tim Berg.
The heat wave that's been slamming the West is expected to continue over the weekend and into next week.
Temperatures are forecast to reach their highest since last summer for parts of California into Oregon and the Rockies, affecting a dozen states.
Temperatures in Phoenix and Las Vegas expected to be 10 to 15 degrees above average, while Salt Lake City will see highs in the 90s over the weekend, and Boise could approach 100.
Hunter Biden may take the stand in his federal firearms trial in Delaware.
After the jury was sent home on Friday, Hunter's lawyers said it's undecided if he will testify and have until Monday to make a decision.
The president's son is accused of illegally buying and possessing a gun while being addicted to drugs in 2018.
President Biden is expected to remain in Europe the next several days as D-Day commemorations continue.
USA is Ryan Daniels with more.
Reuters reports the president, during part of his meeting with Ukrainian President Zelensky on Friday, apologized for the delay of new weapons shipments from the U.S. and other allies in the West.
Ukraine's war with Russia crosses the two and a half year mark in August, with Ukrainian troops still holding a 600-mile front line.
It's mostly been a bloody war of attrition all along the line for months as neither side is gaining much ground.
The May Jobs report is beating expectations.
The report on Friday showing 272,000 jobs were added last month, well above predictions of 190,000.
The unemployment rate wasn't much changed at 4%, just to tick up from 3.9%.
The NBA finals resume Sunday in Boston, where the Celtics will look to take a two games to none lead over the Dallas Mavericks.
This is USA News.
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Well, welcome back, everybody.
I want to thank again everyone who's contributed to tonight's broadcast, This Third Hour, Taylor Young and Sam Dixon.
Again, you ask, what's the connection between Donald Trump's verdict and the commentary on that and these books on Russian history?
Well, the answer is Sam Dixon, because he could talk about everything and do it very well.
Truly has no peer, but we have a standing engagement, and I'm proud to have it with Antelope Hill Publishing, a monthly appearance made by one of their contributors, Taylor Young, a member of the editorial staff there, frequently makes these appearances.
And in the last segment, you heard us talking, or rather, heard Sam and Taylor talking about the 60-year Caucasian War.
Available for you tonight at antelopehillpublishing.com.
I'm going to shift gears right now for this segment and talk about another title made available for you there entitled Chechen Blues.
And here's the synopsis.
The fall of the Soviet Union was a defining event in world history.
A swollen, decrepit empire burst apart and rained down despair, nihilism, and a deep uncertainty on the Russian people.
Overnight, Russians were immediately exposed to the trials of secession, lawlessness, and economic depression.
The resulting moment of weakness in their country caused multiple nations within the Russian Federation to attempt to break away.
Many independence movements sprang up in Russia without any significant opposition.
I have to pause to ask, could we be so lucky here?
But I'll continue.
All of that came to an end when, in 1995, Russia regained her footing in the Caucasus to thwart a violent Chechen rebellion.
Available for the first time to the English reader, Anlip Hill Publishing is proud to present Alexander Prokhanov's Chechen Blues.
It is crucial to immortalize the unique first-hand account and the printed word to tell the tale of Russian history and the story of the men who fought to preserve the integrity of their nation.
Taylor, tell us a little more about Chechen Blues.
Certainly.
So I think that it, first of all, it was very interesting for me because I was reading both these books for the first time in preparation for this show.
And I read first the 60-year Caucasian War and then Chechen Blues.
And it makes a very interesting story put together because you have in the first one, which we were just discussing, Russia's original conquest of the Caucasus, and then you have in Chechen Blues the story of its more modern, I guess you could say, reconquest of Chechnya specifically after it attempted to break away right after the end of the Soviet Union.
So this is, it's a novel.
Basically, it's kind of a fictionalized take on those real events.
It follows a set of characters.
It follows this group of soldiers that go into the capital, Grozny, and they have this, there's this great plan that's dreamed up from on high in Moscow to just drive their tanks in, and that'll just scare all the Islamists away.
It doesn't happen.
They end up being ambushed and are initially inflicted this severe defeat.
And then you have kind of a parallel storyline to that, where you have all these aristocrats and especially it follows this Jewish banker in Moscow who is scheming to use all of this to his benefit to get control of the oil fields in Chechnya and foment unrest against the Russian government,
and even ends up with him plotting to actually aid the Chechens with weapons and with publicity in the Russian media that he controls.
So it's a very different book, but it's very fascinating as well.
And really the hero in this book is the ordinary Russian soldier who, as you kind of got an idea from reading the back text there, was put in this position to do his duty for the sake of Russia and her integrity.
And it's interesting because you can kind of see it as an anti-war book in a sense, but by the end of it, it's clear that it's a very deeply patriotic book.
And it's very deeply pro-Russian, and it's basically taking a look at a lot of the corruption that was going on in Russia specifically at that time with the end of the Soviet Union.
And all these new threats that had arose and had arisen to threaten Russia and that it eventually, in hindsight, it was able to overcome.
But it's a very fascinating look at that specific point at which they were kind of rising up to confront it.
Again, Sam Dixon on this interview, participating as a co-host in this interview, because, well, for a lot of reasons, he had a Russian tutor.
He's very well read on Russian history.
He actually traveled to Russia just a few years ago for the 100-year commemoration or remembrance of the murder of the Tsar.
He was there for that.
He saw that.
It was actually, that actually led to two of the most memorable hours in the history of this broadcast.
Him telling us what he saw, what he witnessed, why he went.
It was fascinating.
But anyway, so Sam, respond to what you just heard from Taylor with regards to this particular book.
I barely read novels.
I've got it.
I read a little of it, but I can't quite, I don't have the ability to discuss it.
I was very interested, and Taylor may be able to tell us more about it, in reading about the author, Alexander Krokhanov, online.
He has an interesting background.
He's both sort of an anti-communist and a pro-communist.
He's a very interesting guy.
And he edits a newspaper, Zostra, which is obviously the largest nationalist newspaper in Russia.
He is skeptical of capitalism and economic liberalism, which used to be in our country that everybody on the so-called right.
And again, I don't like left or right.
I don't think I'm on the right.
I'm not on the left either.
Now I'm not in the center.
But anyway, I don't like these labels that are put on people.
Sam's above it all.
Yeah, well, we should be above it all.
And we are members of our tribe and servants of our people.
We're not devotees on ideology.
But reading about him, it made me think that, you know, when I was young, the conservatives were just gaga over big business and capitalism.
I think in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement, when we've seen what a danger to the health of our people big business can be, I think there's a lot more openness among our people to a moderate sort of socialism and skepticism of the inherent goodness of big business.
So anyway, I would throw it back to Taylor to tell us what he thinks about that.
Yeah, well, I mean, I certainly would agree personally.
I think that it's the the attachment of capitalism and kind of a, dare I say, reactionary defense of a big business is is you can almost see it as a psyop that's been perpetrated on, you know, what we would like to identify as the genuine right wing or the genuine rightist philosophical tradition and neuter its ability to be genuinely.
nationalist and to confront all of the threats and issues that are facing our people in America and in other countries.
And just like you said, I think Black Lives Matter was an excellent example of that.
And really the whole civil rights movement more broadly and all of its different iterations are examples of how when you don't have any control over especially very wealthy international interests they tend to They tend to see nationalism as a threat and to work against it.
And the reason is because their interests are not aligned and they're ultimately not aligned with the people of any given country.
And that is again one of the themes that you see in Chechen Blues as well is how this played out at that time in the early 90s in Russia.
You had individuals like this character named Berner, who's a Jewish banker, who, for one, had a lot of control over Russian industry and media and newspapers and television stations and ultimately used it to just destabilize and demoralize the country.
And for two, another thing that you see throughout the book is kind of his intrinsic distaste and hatred that he has for things that are intrinsically Russian, that are culturally Russian and nationally Russian, and people who kind of exemplify that.
Even if they're not, you know, the best people themselves, this knowledge that they are Russian and that he is not is something that causes him to seethe in hatred toward them.
So, you know, I think that let's put it as a bit of socialism.
I think we understand it's not in the left-wing sense, in a destructive sense, but it's in a pro-nationalist sense.
The books we're talking about, the titles, The 60-Year Caucasian War and Chechen Blues, both pertaining to Russia and one way or another, available for you tonight at Antelope HillPublishing.com.
Steph Dixon, Taylor Young, back with you one more time.
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All right.
Welcome back, everybody.
The last segment, if you can believe it, after three hours tonight, been a fantastic three hours tonight with Congressman Steve King, Congressman Steve Stockman, Sam Dixon, and Augustus Invictus and Keith Alexander, Esquire, all those last three.
And this hour, Taylor Young again from Analytophille Publishing.
We're talking about two topics, two books pertaining to Russia made available to you.
And for your purchase tonight at AnalypHillPublishing.com, the 60-year Caucasian War Chechen Blues.
And it's good stuff.
It's stuff you need to know.
And we're proud to be able to present it to you.
Keith, you had a quick comment.
I know you've been chomping at the bit here.
Well, not really chomping at the bit, but you talk about this Jewish industrialist named Berner, who basically seemed to have an instinctive disdain for the Russian people, Russian Gentiles.
And I just wanted to ask you, what is that based on?
What's the rationale behind that?
I've heard people say different things, but it seems like there's a special animus that the Jews hold against Russian Gentiles.
What's your understanding about what their rationale is for that?
That must be a question for Sam Dixon.
Well, for either one.
Let's let Taylor take care of that.
That might come in.
Well, so I would say that it's probably, I don't know if it's necessarily any less than they would have for any other elite Gentiles, but I think that it really, you know, I think that what you can see is there's a very strong reaction toward any group that was able at any point to exert its own interests over theirs.
And Russia having been an authoritarian state for so long and having been able, you know, probably in many cases to push back against Jewish interests.
And, you know, there's a lot of there's a lot of Russian history that was quite unfriendly to Jews.
I mean, I might be wrong, but I think the word pogrom itself is something that comes from the Russian cultural context.
And, you know, so, and I think that, again, you can see that in some ways in the modern day where you have, again, under Putin a more authoritarian form of governance over Russia that, again, is able, you know, perhaps imperfectly at times, but to exert a genuine Russian national self-interest.
And that is always going to be something that is threatening to an international Jewish self-interest.
I will say very quickly here, as southern as I am and as southern partisan as I am, we read a letter earlier this hour from a listener in Hollywood, if you can believe it.
Now an attorney in Washington, D.C. writes, say hello to Sam for me.
I always enjoy his interviews, very erudite.
Well, that's to say the least.
But that comes from an attorney in Washington, D.C., from Hollywood to Washington, D.C., TPC Nation is tuned in tonight.
Not from flyover country.
I'm sure there's a few from there as well.
But Sam, go ahead, please.
I wanted to say something about the question that Taylor was addressing.
Sure.
First in a broader sense, and then in a specific Russian sense.
It's really very unfortunate that we have this Jewish problem.
It's the worst problem that bedevils us.
And it is not a matter of our antipathy toward them, I believe, but it is their antipathy toward us that has created this.
And the Southerners have very poor understanding of Jews.
Evangelicals have a very poor understanding of them.
There's a very fine book that was published by Princeton University Press called Jesus in the Talmud.
It was published about 10 years ago.
It's a short book, and it's by two scholars and coming from an Ivy League press.
It's very credible.
And the two authors sum up the attitude toward Jesus in the Talmud in the conclusion.
They say that there are two schools of thought in the Talmud about Jesus.
One is that he is boiled forever in a cauldron of excellence.
And the other is that he is boiled forever in a cauldron of semen.
And this is the debate.
This is the level of the debate.
These Baptists, the kind of people that follow Pastor Hagee and the evangelicals, they have no understanding of this.
I think Russians do.
But the antipathy between Jew and Gentile goes back even beyond the coming of Christ.
The Greeks and Romans had terrible problems with them.
And the key to the problem is that they are necessarily hostile to any society in which they live.
And dealing with Russia specifically, the dynasty, the czars, presented a problem to them.
They've always had a problem with monarchy.
There's a danger that a monarch might actually consider the interests of his people.
Whereas with a democracy, they can always bribe people and corrupt people and finance candidates.
It's a much better system for them.
But Russia discriminated against them and did not let them get the kind of economic grip that they got in Germany or France or Britain or America.
So they have very strong feelings about that.
And then when they staged the Soviet Revolution, I think Russians in general saw that.
As my Russian tutor said, it was not a Russian civil war.
It was a war of alien conquest.
And that's really what it was.
Thank you, Sam, for that.
And just very quickly, I look at the clock now and I'm aghast.
I wish we had so much more time with both of you tonight because this is such an important topic and we haven't even gotten into the current applications of it.
As we sit here, reading from the excerpt from Chechen Blues, many independent movements sprang up in Russia without any significant opposition.
I asked flippantly a moment ago, you know, could we be so lucky that it happened here?
The Donald Trump trial and the ongoing presidential election here has taken off our focus to an extent.
Even those of us here tuned into this program tonight, maybe the focus from what's going on in Russia right now.
How do current affairs in Russia, gentlemen, portend going forward here in this election year with everything going on, all the unrest here, all the unrest abroad?
How does this play out?
I mean, that's the million-dollar question to be sure.
Sam, a quick answer for you, and then we'll let Taylor close it.
America is engaged, as it has been engaged throughout most of its history, in an anti-Christian, anti-European, anti-white policy.
The U.S. provoked this war between Ukraine and Russia in a very cynical manner.
A war that people like Victoria Newland and the others who run the Biden administration and ran the other administrations, they want this.
This is a war they can't lose.
If Ukrainians and Russians kill each other, it's a war they can't use.
But on another subject, and I know we're almost out of time, but I would recommend, I think this has already been republished, but Adelaide Pilk could republish it too.
If you're interested in novels, I think one of the finest novels on our side was written by a Russian general in the Tsar's army.
It was called From Double Eagle to Red Flag.
Have you ever heard of that, Taylor?
I have not heard of that one, but I'm making a note to look into it.
It is a magnificent novel.
It is a matter of work.
If you read it and get 30 pages in it, you can't put it down.
It's written by General Peter Nikolaevich Krasnov, who was the only general in the Tsar's army who was not of aristocratic birth, but had made his way up by sheer ability.
He was later forcibly repatriated by Eisenhower, even though he had fled Russia at the end of the Civil War and lived in Paris since 1920.
The American and British troops grabbed him and sent him back to Stalin, and he was murdered in the Lybanko prison.
But anyway, it is a magnificent novel, and it really gives you the flavor of what happened in Russia in the last 20 years as the revolution came on.
It's so good that even Leon Trotsky quotes it in his book on the Russian Revolution.
He says that nobody described the way the communists destroyed the army and disciplined the army as well as Krasnov.
It also identifies the ethnic role that was going on in the revolution.
It's a magnificent book.
I recommend to everybody listening, you can get a copy of it from Double Eagle to Red Flag.
James, you and Keith should read it.
You will not regret reading it.
It's a window into another world.
It's right down our line.
It's not another Dr. Zhivago, in other words.
Duly noted.
It is duly noted.
It is a magnificent novel.
Well, thank you for that, Sam.
I appreciate it.
By a magnificent man, by a magnificent man.
Well, and coming from you, that's quite the endorsement, Sam, because I know you don't want to hear this, but you are a magnificent man as well.
I want to thank the congressman for being on tonight.
I want to thank the attorneys for being on tonight.
I want to thank Taylor Young and at the very bottom of the totem pole, yours truly for being able to put all of this together.
I'm not even on the totem pole.
No, no, no, you're up there with the attorney.
You're in the attorney tier of the totem pole.
I'm at the very bottom.
You and I belong to whatever.
All right.
Good night, man.
He was going to say something.
I wish he could have finished it, but the music is playing.
Antelope HillPublishing.com.
Sam Dixon, Taylor Young, Antelope HillPublishing.com.
Get the books, Chechen Blues, and the 60-year Caucasus War.
I'm James Edwards.
We'll talk to you next week because I can guarantee you between now and the end of the year, there's not going to be a dull moment on this program.
This is a year unlike any others.
With the Donald Trump trial, it's only going to get hotter from here and more impactful from here.
Thank you, everyone, for tuning in.
We'll talk to you next week if God wills it.
The Creeks don't rise.
Thank you very much, as always.
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