July 6, 2024 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
54:30
20240706_Hour_3
|
Time
Text
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.
Ladies and gentlemen, we're back for the third and final hour tonight, live from South Carolina.
What an audience we have here in the upcountry tonight for our 4th of July spectacular.
This annual installment.
We've been doing it here the last three or four years.
Sam Dixon, the first hour, live audience participation the second.
And now, our chief, Dr. Michael Hill.
If you are a fan of Michael Hill, if you think Michael Hill could lead you into battle, let him hear it with your Rebel Yell.
Get ready.
Chief!
Chief, they're ready.
I just made my day right there.
There you go.
Well, you know, a year ago, Michael, we were here together, and that was a fantastic show.
We want to let you know from afar that you are here with us in spirit and then some.
And it's great to have you on the show tonight.
You know, of course, you closed out our wonderful 20th anniversary conference as the final speaker on Sunday morning back in May.
We saved the fire and brimstone for Sunday.
For anybody who heard that speech, it was all you, Michael.
You nailed it.
You nailed it big.
I appreciate that, James.
Thank you for the opportunity.
And Courtney from Alabama was in attendance for that talk and for that weekend, that conference, and she became quickly enamored with you, as all of us are.
And she had the idea, or I don't know if it was her idea or my idea, but together the idea came that it would be fun to pair you two together for this 4th of July show.
And she's worked very hard.
She's a regular contributor to the show.
To put together this line of questioning and topics.
We're going to give her an opening statement and then toss it over to you.
Take it away, Courtney.
Thank you.
Thanks for having me and setting this up for us.
So basically, we just had the, you know, we just celebrated the 4th of July.
And so I kind of wanted to talk about the founders of America and the people descended from them, the founding stock, people like you, myself, and James, most Southerners, and a lot of other people in America, too, who are descended from the founding stock.
I feel like the founding stock Americans are the most attacked in this country by a long shot.
We are attacked constantly while immigrants are always celebrating.
Even white people who are descended from immigrants don't get ridiculed nearly as much as we do.
Now, when it comes to tangible discrimination, like affirmative action, et cetera, yes, all white people are discriminated against equally, and we all have to work together on that.
But when it comes to the current narrative in the form of academia, Hollywood, the media, founding stock Americans are uniquely attacked more than anybody else.
This whole nation of immigrants myth, I think it was the most dangerous myth that we ever came up with in this country because it's a way for liberals to point their fingers at white people and say white people should be supportive of non-white immigration because most white people are themselves immigrants.
And that's such a lie because as you know, so many of us are not descended from immigrants.
And also the whole narrative that immigrants built America.
Yes, we should give white immigrants who came here later, you know, credit for what they contributed.
But what irritates me is as our ancestors, the founding stock, we no longer get credit for anything.
We just get attacked.
And I just wanted to hear your thoughts on that, being a fellow descendant of founding stock Americans.
Well, I think you're absolutely right.
You know, our ancestors who came over here in the 17th and 18th centuries, mainly from the British Isles, but other parts of Northern Europe, I don't call them immigrants.
I call them settlers, frontiersmen.
They are the people who took the steps that were necessary, and they were very courageous steps to turn a howling wilderness into a civilization and then bequeath it to us and to state in the founding document that they were creating this polity here, the United States, for themselves and for their posterity.
I don't think that there's any question that we are the rightful heirs to this country.
And that is the reason that we are under attack to the degree that no one else is, is because our enemies know that our claim on this land here in North America, this beautiful place that God has given us, is a legitimate claim.
I mean, the legitimate claim.
And whites, I've worked now for at least 30 years, probably longer than that, to get whites to have the guts to claim, or in this case, unfortunately, reclaim what is theirs by right and by law.
I mean, if you look back, the preamble to the Constitution, and that's certainly an official legal document, states without any equivocation that, you know, this is white man's land.
I've always believed as a southerner that the South was and should return to being white man's land.
But the whole country, really, was bequeathed to us.
And let's never, never confuse an immigrant who comes over here mainly to collect welfare and all the other material goods that they can get has no standing beside a heritage American who is descended from those men and women who came over here and risk everything to establish this place for us, their posterity.
That was an excellent take.
I mean, you gave a summary exactly like I thought you would give.
You did not disappoint.
I know you and I kind of bear to eyes on this.
How much time do we have left, James, in this segment?
More than you think.
More than you think.
See, I told you it would be okay.
We actually have, I told Courtney we had to abbreviate things.
We had to move quickly because we're here and we need to tap into the live audience for a group singing of Dixie later at the program.
But Michael, you and I were singing it together last year.
That's right.
I remember asking you.
I said, Michael, are we going to win?
You said, son, it ain't even a question.
Absolutely.
So, no, we do have time.
Courtney, so take it anywhere you want.
But, Courtney, I would first ask you the question: if you don't mind answering, we were talking about Michael Hill's speech to close out that monumental TPC 20th anniversary conference a couple of months ago.
What did you like about it?
What about that really led you to become a Michael Hill fan?
It was unapologetically pro-South, and there was no mincing of words.
And as I told you, James, I really wanted to approach him at your last event and talk to him one-on-one.
But he's so tall in stature and so he's got to be.
You know that Aunt Anifa would never mess with him.
And so I myself was a little intimidated.
Come on, I'm really sweet.
To the people I like, to the people I like anyway.
Oh, I know.
Without a doubt.
But I'm so glad we're getting to you talk now.
I really wanted to set this up.
So this is great.
And I would remind everyone listening right now, of course, Michael Hill is one of our most frequently interviewed guests going back to the very founding of the broadcast.
We know him as the president of the League of the South.
We just call him Chief.
But he's also a former university professor, and he wrote two books on Celtic warfare, which we have detailed.
And one of them we have used as a fundraising incentive in the past.
And so go back to any interview in our broadcast archives, as many of them as there are.
You find Michael Hill's name.
It's going to be a can't miss show.
And Michael, I've always enjoyed talking with you.
It's something that I always bring up.
You talking about the ancestral.
I was talking with Nick from the UK, who was here with us live tonight in the second hour, the previous hour, about how when you first went to the UK, it stirred your ancestral memory, as you put it.
And I've never forgotten that.
That was a wonderful conversation a few years ago.
We talked about that.
Yes, I remember that, James.
And it's a feeling I'll never forget.
I really felt like I was home.
Obviously, I'm home when I'm in the South, but I was across the Atlantic Ocean in my ancestral home, and I still felt those same things.
It was truly amazing.
Something I'll never forget.
Courtney, we have just seconds before the end of the break.
You can share with us a thought or a comment and maybe a preview of what's coming in the next segment.
Well, there's the music.
So maybe not.
But when we come back, she's got much more for you, ladies and gentlemen, topics two and three, and maybe we can work in even topic four before segment four because we're live tonight.
We're live tonight in the cradle of the Confederacy, ladies and gentlemen.
South Carolina.
If you're proud to be a South Carolinian, let Courtney and Michael hear it.
Hey there, TPC family.
This is James Edwards, your host of the Political Cesspool.
Folks, I want you to subscribe to the American Free Press, America's last real newspaper.
Against all odds, AFP has and continues to publish a populist, independent print newspaper with an unparalleled track record.
Founded by a dedicated group of experienced patriots, AFP pulls no punches and tackles the most controversial and pressing issues facing America from an America-first perspective.
I've worked with the American Free Press since even before the beginning of TPC.
Now, that's something.
You can subscribe to the print edition by visiting AmericanFreePress.net today or simply pick up a handy digital edition subscription.
However, you do it.
Subscribe to the American Free Press, America's last real newspaper, by visiting AmericanFreePress.net or by calling 1-88-699 News, AmericanFreePress.net.
Abby Johnson was once director of a Planned Parenthood clinic in Bryan, Texas.
After a moral crisis, she quit, and now she campaigns against what she wants endorsed.
They implement abortion quotas in all of their clinics.
What do you mean, quotas?
You have to perform a certain number of abortions every month.
One of the reasons that I left...
Are they explicit about that?
Yes.
Yes.
It's in your budget, right there on the line item.
One of the reasons I left Planned Parenthood was because in a budget meeting, I was told to double that abortion quota.
And for me, as someone who had spoken to the media and had said, you know, we're about reducing the number of abortions.
We're about, you know, prevention, all these other services, I was shocked.
So since you actually worked at a Planned Parenthood, give us some sense of the relative number of abortions.
Okay.
Abortions Planned Parenthood provides over 330,000 abortions a year.
They are the largest single abortion provider in our country.
I like
a good John Philip Sousa march as much as the next man.
But what I really like, what I really like to hear is a rebel yell.
Gentlemen and ladies, and there are some fantastic ladies in the audience tonight, beautiful ladies.
Give us the rebel yell as our ancestors would have given it to the Yankees.
One, two, three, go!
Their faces are turning blood red.
Even our friend from the UK giving the rebel yell.
That is right.
Michael Hill, Dr. Hill, why was this?
You wrote the book on it, on these battlefield tactics.
If anybody has ever actually read the history of the rebel yell, it was a blood-curdling scream.
And to read the description of wolf's howl mixed with the banshee, mixed with all of these other terrifying things, and it terrified them.
And they could hear it from miles away.
And it terrified them.
As a battlefield tactic, Michael, what was going on?
What were we doing?
Well, basically, it's an old Scottish tradition.
Not only did they use the scurrl of the bagpipes to frighten their energy, but they did their own version of what we came to call the rebel yell.
And there's no mystery as to why Southerners used it.
We are descended largely from those people, and we inherited and carried forth that battlefield tactic, I guess you might say, in order to terrify our enemies before they even saw us.
They even saw the glint of that cold steel coming toward them.
One thing attributed to Stonewall Jackson that gives me chills every time I think about it, at the Battle of Chancellorsville, when you charged, yell like furies, give them the bayonet and yell like furies.
And of course, they overran one of the greatest victories that our ancestors were able to garner.
Courtney, perhaps that will lead into your second segment topic to you.
Okay.
Before I get specifically to the South, I wanted to, this is a little bit of a continuation of what we were just talking about, but I want to kind of summarize my notes here so we can get through it more quickly.
But we were just talking about how the founding stock is ridiculed, but they're also greatly, what word am I looking for?
Like they're, they get treated, we get treated like we're non-existent now.
Like with censuses, the way they do their censuses, we are greatly undercounted.
A lot of white people, mostly outside the South, because there's a lot of white people outside the South that are descended from immigrants.
And whereas in the South, it's not as common.
And outside the South, a lot of people like to associate themselves with an immigrant ancestor who came over later instead of associating with their larger ancestry that goes back to the founding.
And this is why everybody says there's so many Germans in America.
A lot of it is based on self-identified ancestry.
But a lot of people are doing DNA tests and their ancestry DNA tests.
They're finding out they're more Scottish, Welsh, English.
And this goes back to the immigrant nation narrative and why it's so dangerous.
It's like people are proud to be descended from immigrants, but they're ashamed to be defended from the founding stock.
I'm not ashamed to be descended from the founding stock.
I'm very proud of that.
There's other reasons we're undercounted.
I don't know if there's enough time to get into all of it.
One of the reasons is instead of having a British ethnicity, they divide it up into English, Scottish, Welsh.
And the British, to me, especially in the American sense, we are an ethnicity.
All those people on that island are very closely related, which they found from genetic studies, even the English.
And also in the South, another issue is in the South, you have a lot of white people who, instead of claiming their British heritage, they say they're American on the census.
So that also brings down the number.
So based on everything I've studied, I would say the founding stock, or at least British Americans, are still the largest group in this country, but they're trying to erase us.
And I see it as an issue because, again, when we celebrate immigrants too much and we convince everyone that most white people in this country are descended from immigrants, even when we're not, then that produces this narrative that any immigrant should come here.
You know, if we're all immigrants, then none of us have a claim to this land.
And it's just, it's one of the most dangerous narratives that I am always trying to speak up against.
And anyways, that's just an addition to what we were just talking about.
I don't know if you have anything to add to that.
Well, the idea of America as a nation of immigrants and a melting pot has come from Jews like Israel Zangwell, I think, who coined the term the melting pot back in about 1908.
And then, oh, gosh, what's her name?
The Jewess who's responsible for that doggerel poetry, if you can call it that, on the basis of the Statue of Liberty, talking about, you know, these huddled masses and all that kind of stuff.
I think that's the official policy.
It's a poem on a statue.
It has nothing to do with government or law.
They think that's the official American policy.
Exactly.
But yeah, Courtney, I think you really hit on something important.
You know, I don't consider myself to be British in a sense.
I think that's kind of an artificial construct.
But I do consider myself to be a Scot.
I consider myself to be a Scots-Irishman, an Irishman, a Welshman.
And I've got a little bit of Scandinavian thrown in there through my Norman French grandmother.
But largely what we are, we're Northern Europeans.
But, and I've said this in several articles I've written and several speeches.
We're a peculiar people in the South because we come from this Northern European ancestry and culture, which has a lot of similarities to one another.
But we've been here in the South for 400 years, and that has molded us into something unique, and that is Southerners.
And that's something we should never, ever give up or never lose.
We are Southerners.
That means we are not Americans other than in a sense that we live on the North American continent.
But our real identity should be Southerners, and an understanding will take us back to our Northern European roots.
So we have really the best of both worlds, the South and Northern Europe.
So I think you're right on track with that.
Oh, thank you.
And that actually goes into our next topic if we have time.
Yes.
Go ahead and start that, Courtney.
Go ahead.
Yeah, let's go ahead.
We got about three minutes left, this segment.
Let's try to make haste.
Okay, okay.
Yes, you're right.
Mostly Northern European, but also mostly specifically from the British Isles.
I believe that's good to describe our people.
Right.
And the reason I was elaborating on that, I know in a lot of ways ethnicity over in Europe doesn't matter, but in many American sense, but when it comes to this immigrant narrative that everybody here is an immigrant, I kind of get tired of that.
And so I think Founding Stock Americans, the more they do their DNA test, the more they'll see that they've been here longer than they're claiming they've been.
So we'll start showing up on censuses more, hopefully.
But anyways, to the South.
You've talked a lot about a Southern ethno-state, and I think I share your thoughts on that.
As you've said, we're one of the last regions, if not the last region, that is largely descended from the founders and largely has a distinct culture, and we'd like to preserve it.
I know a lot of other white people in the movement don't, they might not understand where we're coming from because a lot of them came over here as immigrants.
They might have more mixed backgrounds.
They don't understand the idea of a southern ethnostate.
It might even offend them.
But the thing is, I noticed a lot of them want to come here to live.
Well, if they want to come here to live because they love our culture, they love the people, then they should support us in wanting to preserve our people.
I don't mind a select, you know, small percentage coming in, and there might be time to talk about that later.
But what's going on now, this huge invasion of northern transplants, both white and non-whites coming in, it's a major issue.
We're losing our culture.
And anybody in the movement who truly loves the South and wants it preserved and even wants to live here, they should be respecting our thoughts on this.
The other thing is that we never wanted to stay a part of this union in the first place.
So white people, especially in this movement, should understand why we see ourselves as separate.
We're not asking for Southern supremacy or southern rule over everybody else.
We're asking to just maintain our identity down here in the South.
And for anybody to deny us, that is actually pretty hateful.
And There's nothing stopping from other white people in the country from being proud of their own heritage, their own region.
They can do the same thing we're doing.
They can look at us as an example instead of trying to make us like the rest of the country against our will.
Those are my thoughts.
We have seconds remaining, but start and then we'll continue after the break.
Yeah, one comment.
As my old friend Professor Clyde Wilson used to say, we don't need Yankees coming down here from Columbus, Ohio to Columbia, South Carolina, trying to turn it into the place they left.
So we don't need Columbia, South Carolina being turned into Columbus, Ohio.
So, yes, we need to retain our southern identity, which is a unique identity, a white identity, but a unique white identity.
And the great Dr. Clyde Wilson was, of course, with us.
We were all together back in May in South Carolina.
So good people do still exist.
Great men do still exist.
And you can listen to them every Saturday night here on TPC.
We'll be right back, everybody.
Liberty across the land.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
Summer is upon us and the weather is beautiful.
Everyone has a favorite outdoor activity.
Golf, bike riding, birdwatching, long walks.
Ask 100 people and you'll get 100 answers.
But if everyday aches and pains are keeping you on the sidelines, I have one answer, Relief Actor.
Relief Factor is a 100% drug-free daily supplement that helps your body fight pain naturally.
Developed by doctors, Relief Factor uses a unique formula of natural ingredients.
It doesn't just mask pain.
It helps reduce or even eliminate it.
Wherever you're hurting, back, neck, joints, or muscles.
In three weeks or less, you'll start to feel the difference all day, every day.
So whatever you like to do, swimming, pickleball, hanging out in the garden, Relief Factor can help you feel good again and let you enjoy all your favorite outdoor activities all summer long.
ReliefFactor.com, the 1-800-4 Relief 1-800-473-5433.
Fight pain naturally with Relief Factor.
Japan's foreign minister announcing a joint project with Cambodia to share knowledge and technology on landmine removal with countries all around the world.
Foreign Minister Yoko Kamikawa made his comments during a visit earlier Saturday to the Cambodian Mine Action Center.
It seeks to deal with an estimated 4 to 6 million landmines and other exploded munitions.
New British Prime Minister Kier Starmer doesn't take much belief in taking a breather after a brutal six-week election campaign.
He's getting straight to work.
He's assembling his government, taking on a number of domestic issues and putting his stamp on UK's relations with the rest of the world.
And next year, or next week, he'll attend a NATO summit in Washington, where Ukraine will be high on the agenda.
Breaking news and analysis, townhall.com.
The Interior Department approving a proposed Atlantic Shores offshore wind farm in New Jersey.
The approval gives a major boost to a project that would be the state's first.
The project still requires an additional federal approval of its construction and operations plan and two state-level permits before construction can begin.
Interior Secretary Deb Holland says this is the ninth offshore wind project approved under the Biden administration.
Atlantic Shores will be built between Atlantic City and Long Beach Island with 195 wind turbines.
John Scott reporting.
Crews searching Lake Michigan for two men.
They were part of a large group of people boating along the northwestern Indiana coastline.
Spokesman says strong winds and high waves hampering the search.
All the people on board, one man decided to jump in the lake.
He began to struggle.
Another man jumped in after him.
He too ran into trouble.
More on these stories, townhall.com.
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.
The purpose of the Conservative Citizens Foundation is to promote the principles of limited government, individual liberty, equality before the law, property rights, law and order, judicial restraint, and states' rights, while at the same time, exploring the dangers posed by liberalism to our national interests and cultural institutions.
The Conservative Citizens Foundation also seeks to educate the public on the dangers of extremist ideologies like critical race theory and cultural Marxism.
I've worked with the good people at the Conservative Citizens Foundation for many years, and their work comes with my complete endorsement.
For more information and to keep up with all the latest conservative news headlines, please check out their website, MericaFirst.com.
That's M-E-R-I-C-A-1ST.com.
MericaFirst.com.
Hey, friends, James Edwards here again to remind you that Antelope Hill Publishing is America's premier provider of dissident literature.
They print books that mainstream publishers are too afraid to touch, providing you with information you need to challenge the status quo.
Whether your interest include contemporary dissident politics, history that would otherwise be censored or slandered, philosophy, or exciting and thought-provoking fiction, you'll find plenty to love in the Antelope Hill Catalog, which includes books such as Generation 68, The Elite Revolution and Its Legacy, about the elite-driven cultural revolution of the 1960s, which transformed America.
Why the on the moon about the demise of the space program due to diversity, the sword of Christ, which argues for restoring Christianity as the foundation of the West, and combating heresies like Christian Zionism, speeches by Mussolini and other historical figures, and much more.
With new titles added every month, there's no doubt that they have something for everyone.
So check out their catalog today at antelopehillpublishing.com.
30 more minutes remaining in TPC's annual 4th
Of July Spectacular.
And you couldn't be more spectacular than having Sam Dixon and Michael Hill on the program for this holiday weekend.
And we've covered a lot of ground, historical in nature, and then some.
Of course, both Sam and Michael were with us in South Carolina last year when we did this show, joining us on the phone tonight, along with Courtney from Alabama.
But I wanted to thank again the huge crowd that turned out to hear the show tonight.
We've done this here three or four years in a row now.
I think at least in this is probably the most impressive crowd.
I mean, they've always been impressive, always been high energy, high energy.
These shows.
You can feed on that for months.
It'll propel you.
But tonight, I want to thank all the women, the children, the men, just all sorts here tonight, but all fantastic.
And it's always great to be here.
I don't know ever if it's been greater than tonight.
And so thanks again to our host here.
Full building here tonight and overflow area outside listening on the speakers.
And they're listening to Michael Hill of the League of the South.
Michael, a quick plug for the league.
Why do they need to join and how can they?
Well, we are fighting on the front lines of this fight.
I won't mention much about this now, but I'd like to maybe talk about it in the future sometime.
But we're not satisfied with the result of the appeal in the Fourth Circuit Court up in Richmond.
And we're going to take this thing all the way.
We're going to take our appeal all the way to the Supreme Court if we have to.
A fighter, like his ancestors were, we fight wherever we can, whether it's on the battlefield, in the court of law, court of public opinion.
We know the odds are stacked against us, but when have they not been, right, Michael?
That's right.
And it's something we're used to.
And we got a new website that's going to be coming online here pretty soon.
I actually met your web czar today.
He's here.
Great guy.
Yes, he is.
He's a great guy and very professional and very talented.
And that's going to be up very soon.
And we'll give you all the details about our legal offensive that we're going to take moving forward on this.
So we're going to need a lot of help from people, but we're willing to put it all on the line for y'all.
So you tell me, brother, when you're ready, and we'll set aside an hour.
We'll talk about that exclusively.
And I look forward to doing that when you tell me the time is right.
Now, in the meantime, how about Courtney tonight, Michael?
Setting up this kind of questioning and the topics.
Yeah, she's on fire.
I'm telling you.
She is ready to go.
She's got commentary.
She's got questions.
She's covering both angles, hostess and contributor.
So, Courtney, I don't know exactly where we left it off because that middle of the hour break, the bottom of the hour break is our longest.
But pick it up where we were and take us forward.
Thank you.
Okay, this is my last topic.
See, it looks like we were able to get everything in.
That's great.
So, so, anyways, let's say for the future southern ethno state, like if I was in charge, I mean, I don't want to be.
I'm a woman.
I really don't want to be a leader of anything.
But, like, hypothetically, Courtney's Confederate States of America or future South, it's like, like, who would I want?
Who would I let in and who would I kick out?
Like, if we, like, let's say we were starting from scratch, like, most of the transplants who are already here, you know, they weren't here right now, all the immigrants who have come in, like, the population was still like it was in the 1960s down here, you know, something similar to that.
Well, you know, I would let a small percentage of other white people in who truly love the South more than where they came from, and also people who have made substantial sacrifices for the South, like people who were at Charlottesville and all that.
It's not often that I meet very many people who come here and love it, truly love it down here more than their home where they came from.
And that's true for leftists, normies, and people in our circles, unfortunately.
But there are a small percentage of people.
You know, a lot of times, a lot of people, like the people in James's audience, would meet that criteria.
You know, they'd be allowed in.
And then, you know, we would have to kick certain, we would have to kick certain people out.
We would have to kick out some traders, like, you know, people like Lindsey Graham, etc.
But I'll mention Russell Moore.
Of course.
Well, there might be, you know, and there might be people in the audience wondering, well, what about the large number of normie Southern Baptist church attendees who are conservative, love Trump?
You know, they understand the black crime issue, but not the Jewish issue.
Well, in my world, they would stay.
Those are our people.
And, you know, let's say there's millions of, let's say hypothetically, there's millions of whites outside the South who understand the Jewish issue, but otherwise they're very different from us culturally.
There's no reason I wouldn't let them in in exchange for all those normie Southern Baptists I just described.
I mean, that's not what an ethnostate is supposed to be.
That's more like a society based on ideology, not ethnicity or blood.
And, you know, I don't really see Eastern European leaders saying things like this.
I don't hear them saying, oh, I'm going to kick out these people from our country and let in all these Anglo-Saxons who think like us.
I just don't hear that from other leaders around the world.
It only seems to be an Anglo-Saxon preoccupation where we feel guilty about having ethno-states based on blood as opposed to ideology.
And I think in the South, we need to be specific about that sort of thing.
But I'm going to turn it over to y'all.
I'm done.
Well, I do agree with you about that because if you believe in blood and soil, and the League of the South does, I mean, that's two of our watchwords right there, blood and soil.
You've basically got to try and help your own people along and help them to understand what they need to know and to help them to become good Southerners.
And I truly mean that.
They've been misled.
They've been propagandized.
They've been lied to.
You know, one of my earliest friends in the league, he's passed on now.
He said, Michael, you know what the problem with our people is?
I said, what, sir?
He says they believe lies.
And that's absolutely true.
Our people have believed lies.
We need to help them, as our people overcome those lies.
They should be a natural part of our ethnostate.
Even though they're not where we are right now, we are the vanguard.
I mean, there's absolutely no doubt about that.
And they've got to catch up, but it's our job to help them catch up.
So I'm with you on that.
I think there are a certain number of non-Southern whites who have shown that they can contribute to our society who we could take in without disturbing the balance, if you will.
But, you know, there are certain groups that have got to go.
We cannot live with Jews dwelling among us.
They need to go back to their homeland, whether that's Israel or Madagascar or wherever.
They don't belong here.
They've become a corrosive influence in the South and they do not belong here.
And if I were in charge, they would be told to find somewhere else to go and live.
But I would let in small numbers of refugees, white refugees from places like South Africa, Zimbabwe, the old Rhodesia, of course, and places like that.
I would let some of those in because they are in dire straits, as it were, and they need help from other whites.
And I don't think anybody but us would give it to them.
But I do agree generally with you that the South is for Southerners exclusively.
We have a unique culture and heritage and history and language, cuisine, you name it.
We've got something worth preserving.
And I can remember a few years ago when Richard, I was on Richard Spencer's podcast.
Y'all, please forgive me for that.
But anyhow, I told him, I said, look, I don't believe in all this pan-European stuff.
Yeah, we're cousins, and I certainly wish you well.
And when I'm able, when I get everything the way it should be in my part of the world, then I wouldn't mind helping you out.
But I got my hands full with the South right now.
I'm a Southerner, first and foremost.
Southerners are my brothers and sisters.
All other white folks out there are part of my family, sure.
But they're my cousins, and I love my brothers and sisters more than I love my cousins.
And I think that made a point.
That is the most sensible way to put it.
Michael, I gotta.
Welcome.
I gotta say this before the music starts.
One more segment tonight.
These shows, these are the shows I wish I could do all night long, and I think I could go for days.
But Michael, here amongst those assembled is Mark Tommy, and he was on with us to kick off the second hour tonight.
Such a wonderful ambassador, such a capable spokesman for our cause.
And I would just like to ask you to.
He's listening.
I'm looking at him right now.
He's shaking his head.
He's waving me off.
But please tell the audience what you think of Mark Tommy.
Oh, man, Mark.
Mark is, hey, first and foremost, Mark is a friend.
But he's been around for almost the entire time the league has been here.
We started the league 30 years ago in 94, and I think Mark joined in 96.
And he has been loyal from day one.
So God bless you, brother.
We'll be right back.
Rich Hamblin here, too.
And I know the same could be said for him.
We'll be right back.
Stay tuned, everybody.
Find your inner rebel at Dixie Republic, the world's largest Confederate store, located in Traveler's Rest, South Carolina.
The anti-white, anti-Christ, anti-Southern world ends at the asphalt.
Welcome to God's Country.
Log on to DixieRepublic.com to view our Southern merchandise from flags to t-shirts to artwork.
At the store, browse through our extensive collection of belt buckles and have a custom-made leather belt handcrafted in our Johnny Revs gun and leather shop.
That's DixieRepublic.com where you can meet all of your Southern needs.
While you're waiting, drop by our Confederate corner for a free cup of coffee and good conversation.
Remember, there are no strangers here, just friends who haven't met yet.
Dixie Republic, we're not just a roadside attraction, we're a destination for our people.
For more information, visit DixieRepublic.com.
Have you ever had great honey?
No, I mean really good, all-natural, raw honey.
Well, now you can.
Thanks to localhoneyman.com.
We can ship out our locally made honey all across the U.S.
So don't worry, you won't miss out.
Plus, Local Honeyman has so many different flavors like Utah Wildflower, High Desert Delight, Happy Valley, and Blackberry, just to name a few.
So purchase your delicious raw honey today at localhoneyman.com.
Do you treasure your liberty?
Well, at lovingliberty.net, we most certainly do.
And we want to help protect your liberty too.
Become part of the family.
Everyone knows that the core of any society is the family.
Therefore, the government should foster and protect the integrity of its family.
We the people.
Won't you join us as a Loving Liberty sponsor to help us promote the principles in the 5,000-year leap?
Let's restore the miracle that changed the world at LovingLiberty.net.
That's how we close the program way down south in Dixie with a song like that.
We've been hearing this patriotic music all night.
Now, we are closing with our national anthem.
I want to thank everybody again for being with us tonight, whether you're listening in the South or across the country or around the world.
If you're here tonight at South Carolina and so many of you are, thank you.
And thank you to Sam Dixon.
Thank you to Michael Hill and Courtney and everybody who's appeared on the program during the second hour, all of our friends.
Michael, I want to close with this.
Courtney, don't go anywhere.
But Michael, our mutual friend, Michael Perutka, who, of course, was the Constitution Party's presidential nominee in 2004.
He served as an elected member of the Ana Rundle County Council in Maryland.
And most recently, he was the GOP nominee for, I think, what, Attorney General in the state of Maryland.
He won the GOP nomination last cycle, lost in the general, but that's something for a founding, for a member of the League of the South, a former member of your board, Michael, Michael Perutka.
But he writes this.
We're talking about the 4th of July, of course.
At the end of the day, this is the Independence Day Week program.
And he wrote an article all the way back in 2005 that I always like to reference on the Saturday nearest the 4th.
That's what we're going to do right now.
We're going to get your take in response, Michael Hill.
Fireworks Gettysburg in a bittersweet 4th of July.
Michael Perutka writes, a sadness comes to me on Independence Day weekend because of the historical proximity of the defeat of our American forces at Gettysburg.
On the 4th of July, 1863, after three days of brutal and desperate fighting to defend and preserve the American way of life, American soldiers retreated in the rain through Frederick, Maryland, and slipped back across the Potomac River to the relative safety of Virginia.
I wonder what Independence Day thoughts went through the minds of these men as they marched away from that horrific scene where they and their brethren had sacrificed life and limb for the cause of American independence.
Fly.
What singular faith and courage led them to continue the struggle to defend America from the growing tyrant?
Though most people living in America today don't realize that the Army of Northern Virginia was the last force capable of countermanding the centralized tyranny that had succeeded in undermining the concept of the Constitutional Republic.
When Lee lost at Gettysburg, no earthly force remained that could stand against the Washington Leviathan.
The growing monster would eventually murder 50 million American babies, would send our daughters and sisters and sons and brothers off to die stupidly and needlessly in order to satisfy its lust for blood and power, would undermine fatherhood and our families and seek dominion over our children,
would stare at us from every street corner with its cyclops eye to make sure we have our seatbelt buckled, would number and monitor us, and would drug our children to make sure they grow up without any idea of what liberty means or the knowledge of the true source of law and liberty and government.
As I said, most people living in America might not see the connection between the defeat of Lee and Longstreet and Pickett and Armistead at Gettysburg and the death of America.
Most people in America wouldn't understand.
In large measure, this is because most people in America have been led to think that America won that war.
But the evidence is more and more clear to me that America and our Constitution lost that war.
That's Michael Perutka.
Michael, a response to that and how a southerner should treat Independence Day week very quickly.
Well, Gettysburg and Vicksburg, two words.
My family never really celebrated the Fourth as a patriotic holiday.
We remember Gettysburg and Vicksburg as we should.
And as Granny Clampett used to say, the war between the states was when the Yankees fought the Americans.
That's good.
Very good.
She was absolutely right.
You know, Virginia is really the mother of America.
And Virginia at the time obviously gave us Lee and Jackson and several other of our greatest heroes.
So, yeah, America lost that war.
It really is not funny, but in a way it is what all these damn Yankees keep saying.
Oh, you know, we kicked your ass once and we'll come back down there and kick it again.
And I just say, hey, you know, America lost the war.
You know, we lost and you lost too, because you didn't have the sense to let us go and do what we could do to increase liberty on this continent by having a free and independent South.
Can you imagine how the history of the world would be different for the last 160-something years if that had happened?
All right, set tight.
Michael, thank you for that.
I'd always like reading that from Michael Perutka, who again just had tremendous electoral success in Maryland as a former member of the league.
And of course, they always attacked him for that.
I don't think he ever backed down from it.
But that is an evergreen article, even though it was written nearly 20 years ago.
Courtney, we have a member of your sisterhood here at TPC, one who frequently appears with you when you are on.
Janice is with us, and we're going to give her a quick minute before we sing Dixie.
And we're running out of time, but we wanted to make sure we had time for Janice.
Janice, take it away as close as you can to that mic.
There you go.
It'll teach me never to open my mouth again when I'm in the same room as James.
All I said was that when I came down south in 1976, that I thought that Southerners did sound a lot like the Brits.
I said, we got to get you on.
And then he goes, oh, I guess we need to have you on.
So that means I do believe that when I moved down here, Southerners did sound a lot like the British.
But unfortunately, with all the people coming in, you sound less like it.
You guys need to get back to that good Southern draw.
Then I was also asked to say a few things by James that the Frank Cheatham Bibwack United Confederate Veterans, they have a monument in Nashville, and it has 400 names on it.
And on that, only a handful are not of Scottish or Irish descent.
So it's really important to remember that it was you guys that have a lot of Irish or Scottish in you that were the ones that were fighting for that.
And then he also wanted me to say that Michael Gatty, who's on another radio station, he said today that more Confederate generals have ties to Revolutionary Army personnel than any of the Northern generals did, which means that means they imported a lot of their generals.
They were the ideological and genetic heirs of the founding fathers, and they were fighting for not the side that won.
They were fighting for their freedom from tyranny again.
And one thing I told I had written before is that we gave up our tyranny from the king for the tyranny of the Constitution.
Hey, your husband's clapping for that.
Thank you, Janice.
And I think it's time for you to see.
All right, that is right.
So put your bike out towards the audience.
Ladies and gentlemen, we're going to close the show as we do every time here in South Carolina.
Get as close as you can.
We're going to sing our national anthem, the national anthem.
Where's Hunter?
Oh, dead.
Okay, there's Hunter.
All right.
Now we can sing.
All right, are you ready?
As we always do it.
Count it down, as you did earlier today.
Two, three.
Oh, I'm going to shall it in a land of cotton.
Old times there are not forgotten.
Look away.
Look away.
Look away, Dixie Land.
In Dixie's land, where I was born.
It early on frosty morning.
Look away.
Look away.
Look away, Dixie Land.
I wish I was in Dixie.
Hooray!
Hooray!
In Dixie's land, I'll take my stand to live and die in Dixie.
Away.
down south in Dixie.
Away.
Away.
You We're ready to go again and give it another try.
I tell you what, happy 4th of July, everybody.
We're a couple of days late, but this is the closest we could do it on a Saturday night.
I want to thank Courtney, Michael Hill, Sam Dixon, and all of the people who have joined us on the air here in South Carolina.
Give yourself another round of applause to Kyle McDermott back here.
Kyle, hurry, run, run, run.
Kyle, the music hasn't started yet.
Kyle, tell us your book and how they can get it.
It's available at the Dixie Republic, your Hero Travelers Rest online, DixonRepublic.com.
It's a declaration of white independence, and it will set our people free from this tyranny.
The centralized tyranny.
This is global judicial platocracy that's tyrannizing over us all.
That is a lot to work in that quick.
They can also find it online.
How?
DisitInMinds.com.
DisitInMindBooks.com.
And thank you for coming and sharing that weekend with us last month.
Was it two months now?
Yeah, back in May.
You were there.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
So many good people here.
So many celebrities and famous faces and people doing great work.
I got his book in my hand, The Declaration of White Independence by Kyle McDermott.
All right, you can pipe it up, Liz.
We are done.
We will talk to you next week.
Hopefully I'll be home.
Well, I don't know, maybe.
I'll be somewhere in the South.
Louisiana last week, South Carolina tonight, but I wouldn't trade it for the world.
All time well spent.
I wouldn't have been anywhere else tonight, but here in South Carolina.