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March 15, 2025 - 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.
As our march around the world continues after stops in Germany and Ireland tonight, we circle back to a nation that we visited at the beginning of this tour.
It is a big nation.
It is a big one.
This is Canada.
Indeed, it is.
And this is the French-speaking part of it.
So that's a little bit different than Paul Fromm's port of entry.
And we're with the one and only Remy Tremblay, who is the editor of a French-language magazine based in Quebec.
And he's going to be following up, indeed, on Paul Fromm's recent report from two weeks ago about the escalating tensions between Canada and the Trump administration.
But before we do that, we will say hello.
Remy, it is great to have you back on tonight.
Well, I'm very glad.
It has been a while since I last came to your show, and it's always a pleasure.
We will let you, because it just rolls off the tongue better in the appropriate language, pronounce the name of your publication.
It is Le Arsant, which means snow owl, which is our national emblem in Quebec.
That sounds a lot better than Le Harfang, as I would have pronounced it.
We don't pronounce the final G.
It's a final G that we don't pronounce, but the rest was great.
Sounds big.
Oh, thank you.
It sounds exotic when you pronounce it.
Well, no, to us it does when you pronounce it.
But nevertheless, it is a wonderful publication.
I mean high quality.
I have had the honor of being interviewed in that.
It's the only interview I've ever been in, well, one of the few that I couldn't read or understand because it is all in French.
But anyway, we appreciate your work there, Remy.
And so let's just go back to it.
So two weeks ago, we had your friend and ours, Paul Fromm, on, and he was talking about, of course, all things Canada, including, of course, the trade wars, the tariffs, what was going on with Trudeau.
But what was going on with Trudeau two weeks ago is not necessarily what's going on with Trudeau now.
He is not there anymore at all as prime minister.
And he has been replaced by someone who Paul Fromm describes as being a smarter version of Trudeau, which I'm sure is to the detriment of your people.
Do you agree, disagree?
What is going on there with this new prime minister?
Well, as I said, we no longer have Trudeau, which is a relief in itself, but we need to be extremely careful because Mark Carney is way more dangerous.
Mark Carney is a banker.
He's not a politician.
He's not a lawyer.
He is a banker.
And he's part of the globalist elite, a little bit like Emmanuel Macron and Mario Monti in Italy.
So basically, what we have is the globalists cutting in the hierarchy, and they're just like sending one of their own to rule Canada.
But we're supposed to head to elections pretty soon.
So I don't think Mark Carney is going to stay there for too long.
Let me ask you this.
Now Trudeau will have enough time to check ancestry.com and see whether Fidel Castro is really his father.
We may never get to the bottom of that, but there is certainly cause for suspicion there.
Well, let me ask you this.
So Paul was originally, now, this goes back a couple of weeks, even prior to his interview with us two weeks ago.
I was interviewing him for the American Free Press, which, of course, you, Remy, are another star contributor to that publication, as well as the Barnes Review, too.
But Paul seemed to think that, like the USA is experiencing, that Canada would either in the near term or at least in the not too distant future experience a shift to the right as well.
Do you see that coming?
Is there any indication as the way things have shaped up over the course of the last, say, month or two months that that may be coming?
And what does right-wing mean in modern day Canada?
Yeah, this is a point.
This is exactly the danger.
We may experience a shift towards the Conservative Party.
Unfortunately, the Conservative Party is pretty milled.
It's pretty center-right.
And when it comes to demographics, the immigration question, I don't think Poetiev is any better than Trudeau is.
As a matter of fact, I even think it may be worse.
Well, being worse may be extremely hard.
The thing is, I'm pretty sure that Poirotiev will be able to sell the mass immigration better than Trudeau has been doing for the last few years.
I mean, Trudeau had very high immigration targets and everything.
But the thing is, Poetiev, when it comes to immigration, he has been very unclear if he wants to decrease it and what target he wants to have in terms of immigration.
So I don't think he's going to be the real change when it comes to the great replacement of our people.
All right.
Well, is there anything going on that is encouraging on an ethno-nationalist level in Canada?
Now, when you're talking about Canada, as Keith mentioned, you're talking about a wide swath of geography, perhaps not overly populous, only the population of California in its entirety, but a lot of land.
And everybody's liberal.
Well, not everybody.
Well, let's talk about that.
Where are the conservative provinces?
For lack of a better word, conservative.
The conservative provinces are mostly the western provinces, such as Alberta and Saskatchewan.
This is where the real conservatives are.
As for the rest of Canada, they will probably elect conservative MPs.
There will be a wave, but it's mostly based on the fact that Canada has been really, like the last government was extremely bad in everything.
When you look at the metrics, it's been bad for in every single field.
Economy, taxation, border protection, security, it's been bad everywhere.
So most people are not really turning to the right wing.
They're just one modern management at the top of the country.
Well, okay.
So, I mean, as we were saying before, for better or worse, and for the last century plus, 150, long time, America has had very bad policies that have washed up ashore throughout Europe and beyond.
But a lot of the white Western world does eventually or seemingly eventually follow American trends.
Again, for better or worse, and for the last long, long time, it's been for the worst.
But if you are seeing a change here for the better in the last couple of months, is there any chance that I know, well, this is one of the things you wanted to talk about.
I was going to ask you, is there any chance that that eventually washes up in Canada or crosses the border?
Does it have to wash up?
Canadian Donald Trump in the wings.
Because you are talking about now, as a result of Trump, you have this wave of anti-American patriotism.
Is that a good or a bad thing that Canadians are sort of circling around their Canadian identity?
I think that's a good thing.
But it's also something that is causing white brothers to war once again, rhetorically speaking.
Well, the question is extremely.
It's an extremely urgent question.
And I think what we see is mostly like a wave of civic patriotism, which is not real nationalism.
You know, Tamislav Snik talked about it.
It's not based on a common identity, this new wave of patriotism.
It's based on the rejection of a common enemy, which is in this case, the United States, that is seen as an external enemy that we must shout against.
Now, is that really a wave of nationalism?
I don't think.
I don't think.
And I think it's very shallow.
People are waving the flag or very proud of buying Canadian, but I've seen very few people ditching Netflix or Amazon.
So it is really when it comes to the grocery or stuff like that.
When they have an alternative, they're going to prefer the Canadian product, which is good.
Economically speaking, it's a good thing.
It's a good reflex to choose a Canadian food rather than foreign food.
But I mean, it's still very shallow.
The culture, the prevalent culture here is very Americanized.
And I don't think it has changed that much.
What happens when you're talking about the food?
Let me just get to that before we leave it.
Does more food get exported by Canada to America or vice versa?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, totally.
But when it comes to a wave of nationalism, what we see in Quebec is extremely troublesome.
Right now, we see a wave of Canadian nationalism and patriarch in Quebec, while Quebecers have never experienced that before.
I mean, Quebecers were not feeling any sense of being Canadian.
They did not feel Canadian as Canadian citizens.
They felt like as a part of a nation, which is Quebec.
And now all of a sudden, they're waving Canadian flags and they're very proud of being part of Canada.
While in the end, Canada has denied us the right of self-government for Quebec.
The right, like we're not recognized as a real autonomous nation.
So I see this trend as something very potentially dangerous.
Seeing like Quebec nationalists suddenly waving Canadian flags is very, it's, well, it makes me very pessimistic for the future, actually.
Well, does that mean that they're going to be in solidarity with the rest of Canada?
Or are they going to basically make them more likely to go their own way as a French-speaking nation?
Well, we will let Remy mull that question over during the break.
We have him for one more segment on the flip side, and that will enter into a broader question about the differences culturally and politically between French-speaking Canada and English-speaking Canada.
This was a question that one of our friends asked for Paul a couple of weeks ago.
I'd like to dig a little bit deeper into that.
Stay tuned.
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Morallaw.org Back to Canada now, from Germany to Ireland to Canada.
You see which way we're flying tonight on the radio.
Remy Tremblay with this wonderful French language publication out of Canada.
He is a wonderful writer and a wonderful thinker for our people.
And keeping in mind, Remy, the question that Keith had before the break.
And this is, again, I think what we're talking about here is nationalism.
So you have the whites in Canada who are becoming more nationalistic, but it's wonderful.
That's a good thing.
But we don't want that nationalism to be drawn against other whites, whites in America, especially when you combine it with, because that's what got us into so much trouble in the world wars, of course.
And then when you combine that with, well, we're nationalistic, but we are at once with the wretched refuse to channel Emma Lagara Lazarus' doggerel.
We're nationalistic against the white Americans, but not against all the people we want to import from the third world who share nothing in common with us.
So let's talk about the differences between French-speaking Canada and English-speaking Canada.
Now, French-speaking Canada is the minority part of Canada.
What are those provinces and what are the differences in terms of cultural and political?
Okay, well, the main province where French Canadians live is Quebec.
Well, this is the only province where we are a majority.
We're also very present in the north of Ontario, sorry, and in the north of New Brunswick.
The Acadians, where the Cajuns come from, live in certain parts of New Brunswick.
So we're probably half the population there, a little bit less than a half.
Now, the main differences, of course, besides language, is we have a stronger ethnic bond, meaning that we're conscious of who we are.
We're a little bit more nationalistic in our perspective.
And we really, French Canadians have never embraced multiculturalism.
And this is something that we see with the current nationalist wave, which is really more patriotism than nationalism.
Because one of the elements that Canadians rely upon is the concept of multiculturalism.
It's part of like English Canadians see that as part of their identity, as opposed to the militant part of the Americans.
So letting people come here and live according to their own values and customs is part of like the Canadian way.
And there are many Canadians who feel like this makes us better than the Americans.
So multiculturalism is something that is waived right now.
It's something that is used as a rally crystal against Americans in the current tariff war.
All right, so this is interesting.
I want to dig a little bit deeper into this, and then I'm going to get your thoughts on Trump.
But you were just saying that there is more of an identity between the French-speaking part of Canada, and you named the provinces where you predominate.
And it was not the provinces that you said were the most conservative, which is Alberta and Saskatchewan.
So how do you reconcile that?
How does that work out?
Are you liberal or something else over in Quebec?
The Liberal Party in Quebec is, well, provincially speaking, it's not a party that is really relevant.
It's a third party right now.
It's not a big party, and very, very few French Canadians actually embrace the Liberal Party.
The thing is, it's extremely complicated to explain, but I would say the French Canadians are a little bit more left-wing when it comes to government, social issues, and even socially, I could say that we're more left-wing on economic issues as well.
But the thing is, we have a stronger sense of identity.
So many of the things that our politicians in Quebec will say, to defend our language, we have strong laws to defend our language, to defend our culture, to defend our identity.
Our politicians will say things against mass immigration, like destroying the social fabric.
Those are things that there's no one in the rest of Canada who dares things like this.
We have more freedom of speech or way less woke in Quebec, even if we're more left-wing on the issues.
Very interesting.
So this is something that makes us very different.
And for example, we have like Justin Chudo named somebody against Islamophobia.
And all the politicians of Quebec were outraged.
And they thought that it was something an insult against Quebec.
Because in Quebec, you cannot be a policeman if you're wearing religious symbols.
So you cannot have veil teachers, teachers wearing the hijab or wearing a turpan or any religious symbols that will be foreign.
But this is something that the rest of Canada cannot like, even the right-wing, the so-called right-wing Canadians cannot even imagine.
How would you divide Canada in terms of its general population?
How much are conservative?
How much are traditional liberals?
And how many are separatist Canadian French?
A very quick answer on that, Remy, and then we'll close out this segment.
I got two other things I want to get to you on that is unrelated.
But a good question, a quick answer.
Yeah, this is extremely hard.
I would say that in Quebec, maybe 10% are hardcore separatists.
For conservatives, in Quebec, I'd say about 10, 15%.
And the same thing maybe for liberals when we talk about the French Canadians.
Most of the newcomers are attracted to the Liberal Party.
And if you look at the polls and statistics in Quebec, most of what we call minorities, maybe English-speaking or ethnic minorities, Liberal Party, but those are the only electors who are drawn to that party.
Okay.
Now, with about five minutes remaining, I want to first ask you this, and that is to plug any information, contact information, information about your publication that people will want to check out.
Well, our publication is a French-speaking publication.
Yeah, if you don't speak French, if you can't read, so maybe Jared Taylor, if he's listening, he would be interested.
Jared Taylor actually speaks very well.
So for Jared, if you're listening, you want to check this out.
But for everybody else, it might not do you any good unless you can read French or speak it.
But nevertheless.
Yeah, so basically, you can reach us by email at leAfant at pros and mail.com.
Le Arfant, which is L-E-H-A-R-S-A-N-G at prosandmail.com.
So well, Jared Taylor knows the address.
Here we are.
Any other French-speaking listeners in the audience tonight, that's where you're going to want to email.
Now, we'll just move on quickly then.
So Remy, with four minutes left.
Two-part question.
Take them one at a time.
Number one will be, well, I'll first say that I'm looking at the nations we've stopped at so far during this march around the world and where we're still scheduled to go, and France is not among them.
So I'll ask you a two-part question, and you can serve as France's surrogate proxy.
But first, your thoughts on Trump, your thoughts on Trump, and then anything going on in France that you think would be of interest to the audience.
You have about four minutes left.
French kind of.
No, just France, the nation.
Macron's France.
Yeah, I'm going to go.
Well, first, for Donald Trump, my perception is from across the border, so it's definitely not the same perception as you.
Well, what I would like to see is real concrete policies, like the end of real deportations and the end of illegal immigration.
For the moment, this is not what we've seen, well, according to the media.
So this is something that he needs to act upon those promises.
More than just TV shows of ice raids and things like this.
When it comes to France, well, the big news is you may have been, well, you may have followed it, but Jean Marine Le Pen, the circle founder of the French National Front, which has become like the French National Rally, has passed away recently in January.
So this is something big.
You probably have heard of him.
Jean Marine Le Pen.
Jean-Le Pen.
Oh, yes, of course.
It's his daughter that's heading out the party now.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
So he has passed away at 96 years old.
Well, yeah, he was a great leader.
And he was the main leader of the French nationalists for decades.
So it is a moment of history.
A page is being shown in France when it comes to the nationalism.
Well, as for the rest, France is living its own problems.
The French government is not very solid with several counter-ministry changes in the last few months since the elections of June.
So they are experiencing a surge in nationalism as well.
Well, you see, and then, of course, the Le Pen girls always do so well in the first rounds, and then they were always boxed out.
They fight in the future.
I wouldn't say they fade.
They're just boxed out by the way the system works before The final rest for power is concluded.
But no, that's very interesting things going on in France between the Le Pen family and all of those various factions and warring factions of that family.
And then, of course, some more.
I mean, so do you see a positive turn in France's future?
We have about a minute left.
Oh, yeah.
Well, the last elections, we've seen the capitalist liberals setting up with the far-right leftists.
And like in France, those are the real far-right leftists.
Those are like communists.
And, you know, like there's an NGF in parliament right now.
So they have been like the economy censor, the censor Ryan liberals, have sided with the extremer left wing.
So I think in the midterm, that's going to help the nationalists because they are the only option left.
They are the only alternative to the current system.
And they have gained a lot of MPs in the last election, and that will just go growing from there.
Hope Springs Eternal.
Good things potentially coming in the near future in France, according to Remy Tremblay.
French is his native tongue.
He's a French Canadian and always a highlight of our March Around the World Series.
Remy, thank you so much for joining us from Canada tonight.
We'll talk to you again very soon, and I look forward to working with you on your book.
Your daily Liberty Newswire.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
News this hour from townhall.com.
I'm Jason Walker.
Death count continues to climb.
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In Missouri, Wayne County coroner Mark Smith says this is the worst he's ever seen.
It's very heartbreaking.
I mean, I've got people dead everywhere, people injured, a lot of people without houses.
So, I mean, I'm paramedic, I'm firefighter, I'm coroner, and it's hitting me on all sides.
United States launching huge strikes today in Yemen.
President Trump has promised, quote, overwhelming lethal force until Houthis seized the shipping attacks on American vessels.
Also at townhall.com, the president's tariffs leading to a rare bipartisan alliance among Kentucky's political leaders.
The president's escalating trade war prompted the European Union to announce a 50% tariff on American whiskey starting next month.
As a result, Kentucky Democratic Governor Andy Bashir and Republican Senators Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul have bonded together to voice their disapproval of the White House tariffs policy.
They point to potential job losses in their state's bourbon industry as well as higher costs for the American people.
Greg Klugston, Washington.
President Trump signing into law the bill funding the government through the end of September.
That ends the threat of a partial shutdown and caps off a struggle in Congress that deeply divided the Democrats.
That measure largely keeps the government funding at level set during Joe Biden's presidency.
With some changes, it trims non-defense spending.
More on these stories at townhall.com.
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You know, the only thing holding us back, Keith, was an intro like that.
That's right.
Well, man, if we could.
Whoa, man.
You know, there's even rumors that that intro is so old, they don't even know where that, where Joey Reynolds originated.
Was it Hartford, Connecticut?
Was it Buffalo?
Where was it?
But that was back.
You know, they did it for Cousin Brucey, too.
Cousin Brucey, you know, I have the box set of, you know, all of the four seasons.
I don't even know if the Joey Reynolds theme song made it, but Cousin Brucey did.
Have you heard the Cousin Brucey intro music?
Not in a long time.
All right.
So, anyway, we'll do this very quickly.
I mean, this is WABC.
This is a little bit bigger, but this is actually, I mean, I would like to listen to this as a hit.
This is just an intro to a radio show.
I mean, if you can believe it.
I mean, it's just incredible.
Hey, hey, don't you wanna flat your hands down, baby?
Come on, let's go, go, go, wanna do the show.
Come on, and go with Cousin Bruce.
See, look, I mean, I'm telling you, that's the only thing that hell is.
We talk about obscure music.
I tell you, that's our specialty here at the political session.
The Joey Reynolds intro in the Cousin Bruce.
Well, I think a lot of people know Cousin Brucey, especially if you're in the New York, New Jersey area.
But I'll tell you this.
I'll tell you one thing we got is March Around the World.
I mean, these guys tonight, last week, two weeks ago, every week we do this.
Next week, two weeks from now, before we get into Confederate History Month, and then that's a whole nother ball of wax.
I love this series.
I love this series.
Jim Dawson, Sasha Ross Mueller, Remy Tremblay tonight, Germany, Ireland, Canada.
This is serious professional analysis.
These are the people who are going to be able to do this.
We need to get a map of the world and put pins from every guest we've had, and then we'll figure out who we need to get.
Yeah, I guess we're going to be able to get it.
Well, I mean, we can't cover every article.
We can't cover every white nation in one month of commercial talk radio.
But I tell you, it's a representative sampling, and it is very good.
And these guys tonight, I mean, they've all been good.
You can't say, well, these guys tonight were really good, but does that mean that the guys last week and two weeks ago, they're all good.
They're all good.
Yep.
You know where to go to get a good harvest of opinion.
Well, every week of the year, every month of the year, but tonight during March Around the World.
I love this series.
I just love it.
Now, let's talk, though.
We have 30 minutes left tonight, and it's just going to be Keith and I talking about stuff going on stateside.
And here's one thing.
I mean, again, one thing that is happening because Trump is president, and it would not have happened if Trump had not been president, and that is this, as I'm reading now from Jason Kessler's Telegram.
Jason writes, Black Lives Matter Plaza is being dismantled in Washington this week after Republican Congressman Andrew Clyde introduced a bill that would withhold federal funding from D.C. if the plaza was not renamed.
So now you have crews that are out there on the streets tearing up the plaza with jackhammers.
So they're just drilling it out, which includes the removal of this mural, these large yellow capital letters spelling out Black Lives Matter across a two-block stretch of road near the White House.
That's gone now.
So it went from Keith, you know, what was going on 10 years ago, where they were desecrating the grave of a true American hero, Nathan Bedford Forrest.
And of course, don't forget our first quarter fundraising drive.
If you support that, you're going to be supporting the building of a visitor center, an event center at the Nathan Bedford Forrest Boyhood Home in Chapel Hill, Tennessee.
Our friend Gene Andrews will receive your benevolence.
But it went from that and the desecration of the monuments and even the graves of great Americans like our Confederate ancestors to now, it turned about as fair play.
Let's take a quick listen to this.
And this would, I guarantee you folks, this would not have happened if Trump were not elected president in November.
Let's take a listen.
Tonight, the days are numbered for D.C.'s Black Lives Matter Plaza.
Supporters say it inspired and raised awareness about racial injustice and inequality.
But after pressure from Republicans in Congress, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser says it will be changed.
Fox Monchamari Stone is in Northwest tonight with the details.
Tonight, there are dozens of protesters here at Black Lives Matter Plaza.
Many of them walked up to me and said that they are upset about D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser's announcement.
You see them right over here, and Black Lives Matter Plaza has become a landmark here in the district.
As you can see, we are just right by the White House, and it has been here since the summer of 2020 after protest over racial injustice and police brutality.
Tonight, Mayor Bowser is saying it will be replaced as part of D.C.'s America 250 Mural Project involving students and artists from across all eight wards in the district.
Black Lives Matter Plaza was created after protests and unrest broke out nationwide following the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, becoming a place for people protesting against racism, police brutality, and the justice system.
Now, there have recently been efforts in Congress to force the mayor to make the change or lose federal funding.
No worries.
All right, let's just stop right there.
Now, I played specifically the coverage from the local D.C. affiliate there because you can hear the lamentations in their voice.
Their protesters on the street.
They don't want that garbage, that graffiti, which is, you know, they, you know, that Nathan Bedford Forest Monument in Memphis was that equestrian monument was perhaps the most beautiful equestrian monument in all of history.
I agree.
But this is graffiti.
This is just huge yellow spray paint letters that read Black Lives Matter on a city street, you know, for two blocks.
It stretches.
But it's getting torn out now.
And they're all out there protesting it.
You know, turnabout is fair play.
We need to absolutely eradicate by any means necessary all of these so-called art, the so-called monuments.
And I love to hear, I wanted to play the footage from the D.C. affiliate there because they are lamenting this.
And it's wonderful to see these people out protesting it in vain and to no avail.
And none of this would have happened, none of it, if Trump had not been elected.
Now the Republicans are so emboldened because of the force behind Trump.
And that's us.
And that's us and others like us.
And as a result of that, that cumulative effect, their monuments are going down now.
They are being obliterated.
And it couldn't have happened soon enough.
And it wouldn't have happened at all had that election not gone that way.
Well, that's a perfect example of the phenomenon I mentioned earlier in this show that we now, for the first time in memory, has been that we're in charge of the national politics of America.
We're doing stuff like that.
But the way I look at it, James, well begun is half done.
Let's go ahead and restore Monument Avenue in Richmond.
Let's restore Nathan Bedford Forest Park, Confederate Park, and Jefferson Davis Park in Memphis.
All of these other Confederate, and then also he's restoring the names of the old forts, but he's saying that, you know, they're not named after Braxton Brown.
Okay, I mean, so this is like a little sleight of hand.
I mean, it's sort of silly.
It's silly.
It's silly.
I mean, so they're renaming it to Fort Bragg and Fort There was another one.
Yeah, but anyway.
But they're renaming it for like nondescript privates in World War II that you've never heard of that just happened to have the name Bragg.
I mean, it's sort of like a clever thing, but what they are really is that they're Congressional Medal of Honor winners.
But no, let's do the whole thing.
Let's just ram it down their throat like they did to us.
We're in charge.
All that blacks are in charge of in America, politically, are cities.
They don't have a majority in any state, and cities don't have sovereignty of their own.
Any sovereignty they have now, some cities can sink a state, like Memphis can't sink Tennessee, but Chicago sinks Illinois, Portland sinks Oregon, whereas the vast majority of that entire state are already that they're already sunken, okay?
Chicago, you know, what are they?
Well, Illinois only voted against Trump by single-digit percentages.
Well, you know, I would love for the people that are not in Cook County to secede from that state.
But there's a lot of talk about that still happening in Greater Idaho.
We need to be pressed in Oregon.
These people that have pushed us around as white conservatives for so long, they need to get some pushback.
They need to see what it feels like to get their heroic monuments and whatnot abandoned and have the ones that were our heroic monuments restored.
Do you see Black Lives Matter getting just ripped out of the pavement, just getting pummeled by sledgehammers and jackhammers if Trump doesn't get elected?
I mean, and is this a good thing?
Do we want to see their monuments torn down or do we not?
And if we do, it only happens one way and it only happens the way it happened.
The way we do it is that we say damn the torpedoes full speed ahead, like Admiral Farragut and Kennedy.
We didn't like him, though.
We didn't like him, though.
I know, but we're not.
Look, we're in his face.
He farmed the wrong guy.
JD Vance said there's a new sheriff in town.
Farragut fought for the bad guys.
Right?
Well, he did.
We'll be right back.
But he still had a good quote.
I mean, we can still quote bad people on good quotes.
It's a good quote.
It's a good quote that he had.
Hey there, TPC family.
This is James Edwards, your host of the political cesspool.
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Just looking at the calendar here, going back to March the 1st.
So Nick Griffin, that's the UK.
Paul from Canada.
We had friends from Puerto Rico and Brazil.
Last week, Tom Sunich in Croatia.
Drew Frazier, Australia.
Tonight, Sasha Ross Mueller, Germany.
Jim Dawson, Ireland.
Remy Tremblay back to Canada.
But the French-speaking part, that's a pretty wide assortment, Keith, of nations and continents that spanned the Western world that were conquered by whites under the banner of Christianity.
And we still have two weeks left to go after tonight.
And we're going to make stops.
So we've got more stops to make.
We've got to try to hit Sweden.
We're going to hit South Africa.
We're going to try to hit Russia and some other places as well.
Let's get some place in southern South America like Chile or Argentina.
If you know anybody down there, we'll call them.
Well, I was going to ask you.
I don't.
I don't know anybody in Chile.
Any of our fans are from down there.
Well, I'm sure you don't know.
If you are, chirp up and let us know.
There you go.
Yeah, because you don't have to be an elected official or a former elected official or a thought leader or anything.
Hey, you know, if you tune in from down there.
We're more interested in the man on the street anyway.
Maybe we'll go to Estonia.
Well, I don't know if we're more interested, but we're equally.
I mean, listen, we were equally interested.
We need to be unique.
Yeah, we could go to Estonia.
We'll see what happens.
We've got two weeks left and six hours to go before we turn our attention to the South, Confederate History Month in April.
But it's been just an absolutely rollicking start to 2025 here in our 21st year.
And so much is going on outside of the studio as well.
Don't forget, if you're enjoying this programming and the programming to come, there's only one way you can guarantee that it continues.
We've never received a bequest.
We should have, I mean, for the good we've done.
We've never received a, you know.
We're old enough that we've had a lot of listeners pass on a grant.
We don't have institutional support like that.
Pay us Joy Reed's salary.
That's all we need.
What we need is just enough to get by, and that's all we've ever needed.
And pound for pound, penny for penny, the good we've done, I'd put it up against any resume out there.
I would.
But we do need your help.
I don't think that the Trump revolution could have happened without us, quite frankly.
No, we played a part.
We played a part.
This is the thing.
I don't get hung up on individuality and what I or we did versus others.
It's a collective, and we are here to advance the common group interest of our collective.
And so there's no I and team, as they say.
It's a cliche, but I mean it.
But we do play a part of it.
On the other hand, think about Hillary Clinton.
She said we were key in Trump's first election.
She did say that.
Well, I mean, and those opinions are theirs, and a lot of people do say that, but I'm not concerned with that.
But I am concerned with staying on the air because I think we're doing good work, and we need your help to do that.
So if you received one of those fundraising appeals, if you're an established donor in the first quarter, if you received that in the last few days, maybe send something back to us if you can, and if you would.
Now, other things that are going on that are good, Keith, is that, so here again, you look at all of these center-right people who are saying things now that they were certainly not saying 21 years ago when we first went on the air, but they're saying it now.
They got enough courage to do it now that it's popular.
Matt Walsh, America's Not a Melting Pot.
Now, that's, you know, that's.
We were arguing that back in 2005.
Yeah, before he was born.
I talked to a girl the other night, and I said, how old were you in, I can't remember what year, 2001.
And she said, I was one.
So, I mean, you know, we went on the air 04.
And then you have Tucker Carlson now talking about, you know, he's having these interviews about USS Liberty.
Yeah, he's having USS Liberty interviews.
How long have we been doing that?
And these guys, you know, Phil Turney and all the good people from the Liberty, one of the ones that, you know, helped Jason Kessler publish his book.
Like Tucker Carlson invented that.
We're the ones who invented that.
Well, I don't know if we invented it.
I mean, the Liberty people were certainly talking about it ever since the day it happened.
When he does a retrospective on the Montgomery bus boycott or they're doing that now.
They're doing all of that now.
And, you know, but again, they're not going to say, well, you know, we actually heard about this first on Rush Limbaugh before he died, like two weeks before he died.
He was talking about us.
But, you know, they're not going to say, well, you know, I actually first heard about this from James Edwards, you know, but they're not going to do that.
But they are talking about the things we were talking about years ago.
And you know what?
God bless them for that.
I'm not going to call them out and say, hey, you know, where were you when it was hard to do it?
Thank you for doing it now.
Thank you for doing it now, at least for doing it now.
So USS Liberty for, you know, America's Not a Melting Pot.
I mean, that's like TPC 101 that goes back a couple of decades.
But I'm glad that people who reach audiences larger than our own are doing it.
And forever, whatever role we played in that.
I'm thankful for that.
I'm going to write history so that it's accurate.
We're both on the editorial board of the Barnes Review.
You can't be better on getting true history from people in a publication than the Barnes Review or the American Free Press Review.
Well, I'll tell you the one thing I'm very proud about is my involvement with those.
And that was actually something that was mentioned in the first quarter fundraising appeal that we mailed out a few days ago, a couple of weeks ago now, I think.
But it's my involvement.
TPC will always be the center of our universe.
But I mean, we've expanded to so many places now, Keith.
I mean, you see, we have regular features every issue in the American Free Press and Barnes Review now.
And I am very proud that, you know, all I did was recommend these people.
Okay.
All I did was that.
I mean, I'm not saying I did this.
The editorial board, Paul Angel, Chris Pethrick, John Friend last year and a couple of years ago.
You know, I just said, you know, Jose Nino would be a great contributor, I think, to the American Free Press.
Nick Griffin would really be a good contributor to the American Free Press and the Barnes Review.
And now, I mean, Nick's in there and Jose are in there like five articles.
They'll be in there at least twice each article, each publication.
You can't say they owe their place at the American Free Press and Barnes Review to you.
Well, thank you for saying that.
I mean, they would probably say that too.
And I'm not looking for credit for that.
I mean, I did recommend them.
So, I mean, yes, I mean, I was a part of that.
But their work is so damn good.
When I get the preview, I get a PDF preview of every issue of the American Free Press before it goes to print.
First thing I do is I look for Nick Griffin and Jose Nino.
I mean, they're so damn good.
And so I'm just happy.
I mean, but that's what we've always done here is we have been part of a collective where we promote one another.
We don't exist in opposition to anyone else.
And that are far-right people.
Unfortunately.
Fighting with each other all the time.
We never get involved in that.
And it's not that we don't have opinion on that.
It's just that we're not going to do that.
That's just not, we operate at a level above the turbulence.
We operate at a level above the turbulence.
And I love some of the people that quarrel with each other.
And even if they do it publicly, which we don't do, that's not to say that they're not good people and they don't have great ideas.
And we'll always close rank with a brother, and we're not going to publicize any of that.
But what we do exist to do is to promote and encourage and advance one another.
And again, we see ourselves as part of a collective, not a group of individuals.
And if you like that sort of mindset, support the work that we're doing here.
Support TPC during this first quarter.
Help us get off to a good start this quarter.
A signed book from Philip DeWinter.
Are you kidding me?
You can't get that anywhere else.
And then this stuff that's going to help promote the building of this new structure at the Nathan Bedford Forrest Boyhood Home, which is just a beautiful, beautiful property.
Where other people tear down, we build up.
Hey, how about that?
Thank you, Keith.
Yes.
How many monuments to the South have been torn down in recent years?
We're helping build a new one where you can have events.
You can have meetings.
You can have conferences.
You can have weddings.
You can have whatever.
Celebrations, birthdays.
We're helping Gene Andrews with that this quarter.
And so everything you send in to us, it's going to help keep us on the air, but it's also going to help advance it.
And I thought that that was an interesting thing to do, to offer our gift incentives for this first quarter to pair it with our ongoing programming of March Around the World, a book from Philip DeWinter, one of the most influential figures in all of Europe, a sitting member of the Flemish Parliament in Belgium.
And then in anticipation of our Confederate History Month series next month, to do something that would benefit the Forest home right here in Tennessee, our good friend Gene Andrews, and he's going to be our first guest during Confederate History Month that first Saturday in April to talk about what we've done and what he's doing.
And we'll fill you in on more of that.
But yeah, you've got to support us to do any of it, to keep us on the air, to help other people.
We're here to help one another and to advance our show.
We're going to do this to get back on the political trail.
What do you think about Elon Musk and Doge?
Well, obviously, I like it.
I mean, for the most part, I mean, hey, that's a great question because we only have a minute left.
I just saw, so, you know, Linda McMahon has just been installed to the Secretary of the Department of Education.
Her job is to shut it down.
Well, just this last week, as part of Doge, they fired hundreds, I think a couple of thousand employees, and over 50% of them were from the civil rights division of the Department of Education.
So basically, whenever a black has a bad day, a black student has a bad day, he has to do his work.
He has to turn into his homework, whatever.
They claim to be a civil rights violation.
They've just gutted the civil rights division.
They just gutted the civil rights division of the Department of Education.
And that is all of these frivolous things where anything that happens that a black doesn't like is a civil rights violation.
That's always been rubber stamped.
It's not rubber stamped anymore.
And it would be if it were not for Trump and Musk.
Say what you will about them.
We know about the Jewish issue.
Vis-a-v.
Trump.
But this is good, and that is happening.
And that department, that branch of the Department of Education is being gutted as a result of Trump and Musk.
Well, that's a good start, but well begun is half done.
Let's do the same thing to the EEOC, which is really a bigger bureaucracy than the Department of Education.
He's been in office less than two months.
Let's see what he can do.
You know, we got four years here.
But so far, so good, as far as I'm concerned.
Some people don't agree with me.
But, you know, I love you.
And I'll always be in your foxhole.
And I appreciate you.
And we'll always be together.
We can disagree on this and still be together.
But I like a lot of.
I never thought I'd see anything like this coming out of Washington.
Let me just put it that way.
And it still continues.
And I think our guest tonight did a good job of mentioning that for Sasha Ross Muller, for Remy Tremblay, for Jim Dawson.
I'm James Edwards.
He's Keith Alexander.
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