May 10, 2025 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
54:49
20250510_Hour_2
|
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.
That was the Red Army Choir Alexandrov, the Sacred War.
Why are we playing that one right now?
Well, as you may know, just a couple of days ago on May 8th, May 8th of 1945, Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel signed the German Instrument of Surrender, an unconditional surrender to the Allies.
This date became known as Victory in Europe Day or VE Day.
Exactly 80 years to the day later, plus two, I guess.
Geopolitical analyst and historian Christine Lynn is back on the show tonight to assess what was won and what was lost in World War II.
Christine, it is great to have you back.
How are you tonight?
Oh, James, and in regards to the first selection for our audience tonight, the Sacred War was actually became, I would say, the undisputable anthem of the Great Patriotic War, which is what it is referred to in Russia and the Soviet Union at the time.
And amazingly, I wanted to let everyone know it was written within the first one to three days by a Russian poet, then set to music, then reset to music by Alexander Alexandrov of the Red Army Choir.
It really is such a powerful song, and since most of your audience doesn't know Russian listening to it, I would just briefly say it repeats so powerfully stave, stave, arise.
It's telling everyone to rise to the fight to the death against the dark fascist force.
And it's also very powerful in that it repeats, this is the people's war, a sacred war.
And to this day, when it is played, which really has become the anthem representing the great patriotic war for the Russian people, everyone in the audience stands due to the story.
And they did in this.
I was watching this.
Yes, we always stand when that is played.
And it was actually performed at a railway station on the 27th, five times as the Soviet troops were leaving to go to the front.
Now, this is, Christine has also selected two of the German anthems from this time that we will also play, along with another selection from Russia for each of the four segments of this hour.
This is something that is being celebrated.
What is there to celebrate?
This was the destruction of the West.
And it created a vacuum that has been filled by the weak and the timid and the unworthy.
This was a terrible war for all of the belligerents, the United States included, certainly Russia, certainly Germany, certainly all of Europe.
So, Christine, but it is timely.
Eighty years, that is a milestone date.
Eighty years ago on May the 8th, Germany offered its unconditional surrender.
What a terrible loss of life on both sides.
White Christians fighting white Christians is basically what it was.
So what are your feelings about this today, being that this is the anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe, how it's being commemorated and how it impacted our people worldwide?
Okay, well, first I would like to answer that in a very personal way.
You know that I am a very strong, I think my entire adult life, anti-imperialist, and I'm also an Orthodox Christian.
So I'd like to answer that first in a very personal manner, and then I would like to completely discuss how this impacted our people.
And I appreciated your comments there.
I mean, when you think about the enormous loss of life.
But personally, I would like to express that I have a profound sense of gratitude to the Soviet people.
And I would like to remind everybody, because it's very common, despicably, disgustingly so, in the United States and other countries of the collective West, to minimize the loss of life that the Soviets suffered.
This was over 27 million Soviets died because of this, and about 17 million of that being civilians.
I think about the people suffering in Leningrad after the Germans did their blockade, the seize of Leningrad.
One and a half million civilians starved to death.
And so my gratitude, I, in fact, watched the great Victory Day parade live from Moscow May 9th.
Stayed up very late Thursday night between 1 and 2 a.m., 1 and 3 a.m. to watch that.
And I just have to say I'm very impressed with how the Soviet, the Russian people today remember all of those who lost.
And it is true, not a family in Russia today has been left untouched by that.
This is interesting to hear you say that.
I see what you're saying.
I mean, you know, obviously, when you go back in Russia's history, and we've talked with you about Russia a couple of times, the beautiful history of Russia, certainly prior to the revolution, I mean, you know, this was a Christian people, the Tsar Nicholas and his family.
Obviously, during the time that World War II was being waged, it's a different Russia.
It has been, it's communist.
You separate, I am sure, Stalin and these people from the people, as we do as a Southern Baptist, I separate the Southern Baptist leadership from the people in the pew.
But, I mean, you know, at that point, though, at that point, though, you know, I can't say I was rooting for Russia, not the Russian people, but for the communists to win that war.
I would have been on the America First Committee, to be sure.
I think this is key for me.
Christy, let me just say this.
I'd like to answer that to him before we go to break, though.
Go ahead.
Okay, what do you think about General Patton's famous comment that we fought on the wrong side?
We should have lied with the Federalists.
Yeah, I know all that.
Well, I'm in complete disagreement.
I mean, I'm in complete disagreement with that, and I will tell you why.
That sentiment is falsely equating the Red Army, the people fighting, as if they were fighting for communism.
And these millions of people did not die fighting for a government or an ideology.
And when you take a look, it was men, women, and youth fighting.
And I would liken it to this, James.
If we were threatened as a nation, and let's say we had a government, a president that was completely rejected, but they were threatening your life and your home and to steal your land for their own Liebensraum.
But when we think about the blood tied to the land, with the Soviet people, their blood and toil was tied to their land as well.
And they were defending their motherland, their country.
And again, as I started out saying, I am anti-imperialism.
Up to that point, what Hitler had done was for the German people and the oppressed German people in several of the areas that it was right that he regain, restore, and protect their lives.
But he made a horrible, tragic, and I feel an evil mistake by going against the Soviet Union.
I liken it to the Civil War.
Think about white Christians fighting white Christians.
To get to the second part of your question about how it impacted our people, consider this.
These were, and even at the time under a communist government, James, the majority of the people remained Orthodox Christians.
And I find it to be tragic that Germany, who had been intertwined with Russia and even the Soviet Union, who allowed them and helped them when they were suffering from the Versailles Treaty, the Soviets allowed them to have factories in the Soviet lands because nobody else would allow them to produce weapons.
They had an excellent, it went back, of course, to the 15th, 16th centuries.
And even while the communist government was there, the Russians or the Soviets, excuse me, were interacting with the Germans.
Thus, I feel this to be an act of imperialism, unlike what came before that the Germans.
Let me ask you this.
This is a very interesting conversation.
And we can agree and disagree on parts of it.
And I'm sure we will, and perhaps that we already have.
One thing you say that is absolutely right, I mean, this whole thing about communism and there being no classes and all of that, when it came time to go to war, they didn't say, are you ready to fight for your class?
They said, are you ready to fight for your nation?
Are you ready to fight?
For the war.
Are you ready to fight for Mother Russia?
Because that was the only thing that is worth fighting and dying for, not abstract ideas, but for your blood, for your soil.
And so when it came time for that war, when Operation Barbarossa, they all became nationalists.
They did.
They did.
I'll say this.
Let me add this.
We had even our Orthodox priests volunteering to go fight.
We had people who had previously, old men who had previously been incarcerated in a gulag.
It didn't matter to them about the government.
They volunteered to fight.
This, just as our opening song said, was the people's war, and they were fighting for their lives, their family, and their land.
And I stand with them.
Absolutely.
A German selection as we come up next.
Interesting conversation, a conversation that perhaps you didn't expect tonight.
But this is one, and we're going to look at several different angles.
A terrible, terrible war and the white world lost.
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.
Introducing managed IT services from NPI.
We offer top-notch data backup and recovery, email, spam protection, and network security tailored to your needs and budget.
With 20-plus years of experience in the medical field, our HIPAA certified consultants know what it takes to protect sensitive information.
Don't settle for less.
Give us a call at 801-706-6980 and experience the difference with managed IT services.
Remember, your IT support should be fast, efficient, and reliable.
Introducing PrepStartsNow.com, your ultimate guide to readiness and peace of mind.
We offer practical preparedness tools, training, and education to take your family's household readiness to the next level.
Browse the prep shop for essential products, check out our planning guides, and stay informed with our prep blog.
Visit prepstartsnow.com and subscribe to our emails for exclusive offers, new products, and future events.
Remember, preparedness begins with PrepStartsNow.com.
Well, I think we all know that wasn't a Russian song.
Christine, what did we just hear?
And it was actually originally a German folk song.
And of course, we all associate it with the Wehrmacht now.
And it really became the most popular marching song of any country during the World War.
And it's interesting because Arika in German is referring not only to the sweetheart's name, it's coming from the perspective of a soldier longing for his sweetheart and her name.
And then at the same time, it is a German flower.
It's the name for a German flower.
So a beautiful song, excellent marching song, and I think popular with everyone to this day.
Well, and ladies and gentlemen, let me remind you that we are talking with Christine Lynn.
She is a historian, a geopolitical analyst, as we mentioned, a writer and author of four books, a commentator, speaker, former talk radio host on a 50,000-watt station for over 30 years.
Her essays and articles have been published in magazines and newspapers worldwide.
And you can check out her website, AmericanOrthodoxChristian.com.
She is Russian Orthodox, as you may have figured.
And so her sympathies, of course, lie with the Russian people.
And again, you have to differentiate, I mean, the Russian people, the German people, both great people then and now, and even prior to World War II, certainly going back throughout history.
And so, you know, again, I'm looking at this, Christine.
I'm looking at it.
And, you know, I take the take of Charles A. Lindbergh.
I mean, looking back on it, I wish America had not involved themselves in that war.
Oh, we shouldn't have been.
You're right there, James.
I'm listening to World War I.
Well, I think we made the world.
It was a war to make the world safe for communism.
And that is not to disparage the Russian people who were and are and will always be.
Always make a big distinction between the Russians and the communists.
Exactly.
But nevertheless, nevertheless, so you know, and Buchanan mentioned, I mean, say what you will about Hitler.
I mean, at the very least, Stalin killed 10 times more than that.
And that really happened.
So where are we with this then?
In your opinion.
Now, again, it was ideological.
I think a lot of it was ideological with Hitler.
He always wanted to take out communism.
I don't know if Russia would have ever been an enemy of Nazi Germany had there not been that revolution and the murder of the Tsar and everything that happened.
But in your opinion, who was responsible for igniting World War II?
Well, I know most people always say Hitler, but I don't.
I do, as I've already expressed, feel it was a tragic and evil mistake to invade the Soviet Union.
Nevertheless, to me, the most evil, and we could say the villain, war criminal, responsible for World War II and what we're looking at, what, 60 to 80 million, depending upon how you calculate it, loss of life.
To me, that's Winston Churchill.
You're here.
You got it.
We're on the right.
I consider him.
Yeah, I consider him a mass murderer, in fact, not only because of all the evil and the war atrocities he committed in World War II.
I mean, when we think about the firebombing of Dresden, that's just one.
That's the one everyone knows.
But there were many numerous cities that he bombed unnecessarily because he particularly wanted to target civilians.
I will also say, even before World War II, Churchill was a mass murderer.
He got glee.
When you take a look at the transcripts, his conversations, even his own book thereafter, yeah, that and so much more.
This man enjoyed killing, and civilian life meant nothing to him.
And it is my opinion, based upon much research, that it was his plan.
And sadly, as we just discussed, the United States should have never been involved in World War II.
But that was also part of what Churchill did with his lies to Roosevelt, Roosevelt's lies to the American people, because he ran on, we're not going to be involved in a foreign war.
But back to Churchill, I believe that it is his plan to have as many Germans die as possible and as many Soviets die as possible.
He hated them both.
And that is, I would say, I would call him a diabolical character in world history.
Yeah, he was on the verge of that.
Look, Churchill and Britain were on the verge of invading Russia.
Hey, the lady's preaching right now, and she's on to something big.
Keep going, Christine.
Listen, Hitler never wanted war with Britain.
Okay, that, I mean, he tried numerous times.
Neither.
He did not want to have to be at war with the British.
In fact, he held back.
When I think about the Dunkirk situation, the only reason they didn't die wasn't because they escaped and were, they were allowed to escape, because Hitler always hoped that when all of this was over, these brotherly people would come together again.
I remember when I did Mein Kampf.
He had a great admiration for the, yeah.
I want to hear this.
Yes.
Well, let me just say this.
Hitler, you need to understand he was a grassroots anti-communist.
And when he saw what the communists had done in Weimar Republic, Germany, that's one of his main animating points against.
But, you know, the Russian people transcended all of that in the war.
And what Stalin realized.
All right.
When you read it, what were your takeaways?
Well, there was something, you know, I read it years ago, and I've reread it or read from it most recently again.
And there was a quote that struck me, and I won't quote it exactly, but I'll just paraphrase from my memory, where Hitler said, one doesn't form an alliance with someone whose aim is the destruction of themselves, of their partner.
He said, you don't enter into alliances with people when you know that no treaty with them is sacred and they have no honor and no sincerity.
It's a great quote.
And he said, you don't bind yourself with parasites for some profitable bargain.
It's a great quote, and those with their copy can probably find it.
And of course, he was, well, I would assume most of your audience is more historically inclined in their reading.
But I would say that he worried that the Soviets were going to use poison gas in the cities of Germany.
He was worried when you talked about that he was against the communism.
Yes, I've read that, and I know that, but I also know what else he wrote in Mein Kampf about the Slavic people.
But my point being, this quote is perfect for today.
We should never form an alliance with such a person.
He was attributing this in his thoughts to the Soviets.
And the great irony, the tragic irony, is it is Britain who betrayed him.
And it is Britain who care nothing about the lives of the German people.
It is Britain, it is Churchill himself who refused any attempts by Hitler himself or by Stalin in order to make a block against further, let's say, eastward movement.
But this quote of Hitler is true today, except he thought it was toward the Slavic people.
If he had thought about this way in regards to the British, it would have been much better because, well, he may have succeeded against Britain, and, well, history would be quite different.
But no, I don't, and oh, excuse me.
No, I was just going to say very quickly as a quip, I wonder what history would look like if the English Channel hadn't existed.
But continue on, Christine.
Yeah, and by the way, in terms of, I think it was something Keith was saying there, Hitler's goal was not because he was fighting communists.
Of course, he was a very strong anti-communist.
But nevertheless, when you read Mein Kampf and what he said about the Slavic people, and he considered them subhuman, and he did believe in Liebensraum, but not into Soviet soil.
That had nothing to do with the Germans, and that is why that part of what Hitler did, I consider imperialism and wrong.
Up until that point, he appears, and you can make quite an argument that he was justified.
Well, I think that the Weimar Republic he saw as a Jewish and communist initiative against the German people.
And that's why, that's how he got his power.
People were so repelled in Germany by the excesses of the Weimar Republic that they voted him in as chancellor.
All right.
So again, I want to give the website AmericanOrthodox Christian.com.
I think, what is this now, Christine?
Is this our third, fourth time you've been on the program?
Yeah, it's our second time doing an hour, but we've done a few shorter ones before.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Well, listen, I tell you what, you are thought-provoking, and we should do more of this.
And I think we will.
We are, of course, talking with you about this particular topic at this particular time because this is the 80th anniversary of Germany's capitulation.
I am going to read something at the top of the next segment that was sent to me by a writer by the name of Richard Parker.
It's very thought-provoking, and it touches on some of the things you just said.
It is a perfect, perfect thing to add to this conversation.
We'll do it after the next break, but we've got about a minute left in this segment, Christine.
So, before we move on, and what we'll be talking about in the next segment is the fate of the prisoners of war.
We're going to ask what has changed, what's the status of the then-allied and Axis powers today, and has anything been learned?
We're going to get to all of that before this hour with you wraps up.
But the last minute of this segment is yours.
Well, we've talked so much about Churchill and Britain.
We didn't also get to who I think is behind all of this.
Certainly, we can identify Churchill and what he did.
But I would really like when we come back to discuss the single most group that I feel ignited World War II.
That doesn't get enough attention, and it's just a statement of fact.
And I don't have time to begin it right now, but on our comeback, I would like to address the second part of your question.
Well, we'll leave you.
We're writing with baby breath.
We'll leave you all hanging in suspense, ladies and gentlemen.
Christine Lin definitely, definitely starting the pop tonight.
President Trump continues to urge the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates.
Here's White House correspondent Greg Klugston.
On Wednesday, the Fed left its benchmark interest rates unchanged.
Reacting to the news, President Trump criticized Chairman Jerome Powell for holding rates at current levels instead of slashing them.
He doesn't want to do it.
I think he doesn't want to do it.
Probably he's not in love with me.
Powell has warned that the president's tariffs were creating uncertainty, and the Fed could afford to wait until more data shows the impacts on the economy.
Greg Klugston, The White House.
Pennsylvania Republican Congressman Scott Perry says Congress must work to help President Trump balance the federal budget and keep taxes low for everyone.
He also says that Pennsylvania Democrat Senator John Fetterman is fighting with his very own party, a party when it comes to policy and on agreeing with the president.
He knows that people are struggling and that they don't want to be forced to buy an electric car or disallowed from eating ice cream or whatever crazy thing that the left is coming up with now.
India has accused Pakistan of breaching that ceasefire deal made hours earlier after U.S.-led talks to end the most serious military confrontation between the rivals in decades.
India's foreign secretary says, quote, there had been repeated violations of the understanding arrived between the two countries.
Saudi Arabia says it wants U.S. help in developing its own civil nuclear program.
Trump administration says it's very excited about the prospect.
U.S.-Saudi cooperation in building reactors for nuclear power plants could shut the Chinese and Russians out of what would be a high-dollar partnership for the American industry.
More on these stories at townhall.com.
Healthcare is complicated.
It doesn't have to be.
If you don't love how your health insurance works, maybe it's time to leave traditional health insurance behind.
Take charge of your health care with Christian Healthcare Ministries.
CHM offers you flexibility.
Enroll anytime.
Choose your own provider and select the program that fits your needs and budget.
CHM is the original faith-based way of taking care of your medical bill costs.
Learn more at chministries.org/slash wellness.
Let's see if something costs less but people are happier with it.
That sounds like something to look into, and that is MetaShare.
Maybe you've heard joining MetaShare can save families up to 500 bucks a month, and obviously that's a big deal, but they like it too, especially being part of something that reflects their values instead of working against them.
So, yeah, really, you can save a ton and like it better.
Imagine being happy with how you're taking care of your health care.
Find out more.
Call 83334 Bible.
That's 83334 Bible.
God tells us in Hebrews 10:25 that we should gather together to worship Him.
This isn't a request, it is a command.
Going to church isn't an option, it is your Christian duty.
With the hellish apostasy of mainstream churches, attending church these days can be difficult.
That is why, your King James Only, traditional services in the ancient Church of St. Mary Magdalene alive online.
And I invite you to gather with our congregation to study God's Holy Word.
Join us every Sunday at the TemplarChurch.com and especially on the first Sunday of the month for Holy Communion.
This do in remembrance of me is also a command that all Christians must obey.
I'm Reverend Jim Dowson, ordained Puritan minister, nationalist, and a veteran pro-life campaigner.
Tune in to my weekly sermons at the TemplarChurch.com.
Based in Ireland, this old-time religion is the faith that built America.
God bless you.
Hey, y'all, do you enjoy great tasting coffee but are tired of supporting companies that hate you?
If so, let me tell you about Above Time Coffee.
Above Time Coffee is a privately owned and operated small business.
They hand-roast coffee and ship it to customers throughout the United States and abroad.
Above Time Coffee was launched because they saw a need for more pro-white businesses serving our people.
The time has come to take our own side.
And did I mention their coffee tastes great?
It's the best coffee I've ever tasted.
When James brought home a sample from a conference, I was hooked and threw out all the other brands.
I think you will too after you make an order at abovetimecoffee.com.
Living a healthy and active lifestyle is important to us.
And I appreciate the effort Above Time Coffee invests in keeping its products organic.
And there are so many flavors to choose from.
Check it out for yourself by visiting abovetimecoffee.com.
It's the only coffee we drink at the Edwards Home.
Delicious Coffee, a company that serves the interests of our people.
Check out their selection today at abovetimecoffee.com.
Another song of the German soldiers of World War II.
Welcome back our guest tonight, both feisty and well-read Christine Lin.
And her heart is with the Russian people as a Russian Orthodox Christian.
How many women in our movement are Russian or it's a growing trend and thank God for that.
But, you know, coming at this thing from a different perspective, which I think is very interesting.
I want to read this very quickly and then get back to her.
This comes from the writer Richard Parker.
This was published at theOccidentalObserver.net on May the 8th.
And the title is Finnis Germania, Reflections on the 80th Anniversary of Germany's Unconditional Surrender.
Finis was actually Jefferson Davis' middle name.
He was the 10th child.
And his mom said after that one, that's the end.
Meeny, meanie, miny nominum.
Don't want no more.
Jefferson Finnis Davis, President Davis.
This is what Richard Parker writes.
May 8th, 2025 marks the 80th anniversary of Germany's unconditional surrender to the Allies and the Soviet Union.
Many modern-day Germans are so deluded and so brainwashed that they actually celebrate their nation's catastrophic defeat and ruin.
The leadership of Adolf Hitler was, of course, ultimately a disastrous failure.
But as argued in my article denouncing Hitler for very different reasons, a more enlightened perspective denounces him not in the ways that conventional wisdom demands, but for many of the same reasons that his best officers and generals did for losing the war and for the immoral brutalization of certain white Europeans, Slavic peoples, and even the German people themselves.
That essay that also sets forth there is a fundamental distinction between the motivations and the reasons why the German people embraced National Socialism and the swastika on one hand and the many defects and failings of the political leadership at the top to not condemn the Allies and Soviets for their own particular evils and to celebrate the catastrophic ruin and devastation effected on Germany, replete with 80 years of occupation and cultural and linguistic colonization, is nothing less than the worst fit of ethnomasochist delirium imaginable.
And if Germans do not disabuse themselves of this madness and fast, Germany will perish, as will all of Europe.
You can read the rest of that at theoccidentalobserver.net.
And for Richard Parker's substack, it is the ravenscall, plural, theravenscall, dot substack.com.
Christine, you had mentioned a little bit of that with regards to the Slavic people and how they were seen by Nazi Germany.
But let's go back to what you were teasing us before the break, and that was who was responsible for the war?
What group of people?
We don't know.
We can't guess.
It's a puzzle.
Yeah, well, I don't think it's too much of a puzzle for either of you or your audience.
This most certainly was international jewelry that was responsible.
I feel they are the ones who declared war on Germany in 1933.
When you think about it, and we all know how much Germany had suffered under the Versailles Treaty, but what was going on here, Hitler had brought Germany from the poorest country in Europe, and in four to five years, it was flourishing.
And the employment was excellent.
There was wealth.
There was prosperity.
And what did he do?
He created his own currency.
And that, to me, when I take a look at the declaration of war, and when we say that the organized, the organized Jews declared war on Germany, we had, that was a headline.
That was done by like the American Jewish Congress, various Jewish groups.
It was international jewelry.
It was the headline in newspapers worldwide, including here in the United States.
No Jewish company or any company that was affiliated with Jews and investing and that they could control would do business with Germany.
This was devastating to Germany.
It was flourishing.
And I believe.
Yes.
And what was essential at this time, Germany was flourishing despite the Versailles Treaty.
But at that time, they did need food imported.
They were able to produce about 70% of their food.
30% is an enormous amount of food that you still need to import or starve.
And this Jewish Declaration was hurting Germany.
A lot of people looked to Kristallnacht and what went on there.
But that was actually staged.
And whatever became of that, that was in and against.
In fact, I believe that Hitler even made a timeframe for this boycott of Germany to stop, in which case they would cease the boycott of the Jewish businesses.
There was no place on earth, when I think about it at the time, that was better for the Jews than in Germany.
But international Jewish organizations didn't care what was going to happen to the Jews in terms of work camps and what would happen to those living in Germany.
They cared about one thing, and that is money.
And that is why you saw the United States involve.
That is why you saw the British involvement.
And that is because behind all of it, and I believe it to be a fact when you study it.
Also, I do want to make the point.
At the time in the Soviet Union, and this is something that we could do an entire show on that you may not be interested, but it's fascinating to me to see how the Germans were encouraged to move eastward.
Now, at this time, in terms of Jews internationally, their man was Trotsky.
And I won't get into the history of the Soviet Union for everyone, but Trotsky, a Jew himself, was the antithesis of Joseph Stalin.
And Stalin actually was quite aware of the Jewish infiltration and the negative effects in the Soviet Union.
And at this time, they had lost their control and would continue to lose control of the Bolshevik government, the communist government, and the Soviet Union.
So it appears to me that there was nothing better than to have both this economic power of Germany and try to end Stalin's rule simultaneously.
And thus, when we see the other players, the U.S., the U.K., Churchill, and Roosevelt, but I do believe this all goes back to greed and money and banking.
And it's all about profit.
Yes.
Yes.
And we had like 40,000 people in Madison Square Garden.
And that was just one of the protests, the rallies against Germany.
Tens of thousands were protesting.
And this was worldwide against Germany and in this boycott.
And no, Germany was not going to sit back.
Hitler's not going to sit back and let that occur.
And so as a fundamental, as a group, I do see it all goes back to money and Jewish control.
So this is what makes this hour with you so fascinating, Christine.
You, as a Russian Orthodox Christian, stand with the Russian people during that war while still understanding all of these other elements that have been discussed by people like Pat Buchanan and others.
But, you know, it's almost ironic that Stalin and Hitler were both national socialists.
The international socialist was Trotsky.
That's exactly right, Keith.
And that war continued.
Trotsky and the U.S. and the intelligence services, there's a whole story there.
Just like the lies against Hitler in Germany, there are a whole lot of lies against the Soviet Union, the Soviet troops, and Stalin himself.
And that all revolves around Trotsky.
But that's for another time.
Well, this whole thing, though, that everybody who fought for Russia was, you know, some sort of Jewish Bolshevik or the thing that I see about it, James, that after World War II, Stalin, in his reflection, said, even though we've persecuted the white Christians of Russia terribly, who was it that was willing to die for Mother Russia and who was it that was looking for an assignment in the rear with the gear?
That was all the Jewish leadership in the party and that's why he started to fill vacancies in the government with ethnic Russians.
Yes, he changed all the embassies.
He actually gave an order that all the Jews were to be removed, Soviet Jews, from the embassies worldwide.
And of course, just prior to his death, he most certainly seemed to be much more aware of their insidious.
He was killed by a Jewish doctor.
Well, that would be another show to discuss his death, but definitely very suspicious.
I tell you this, though, about the Russians at that time, it goes to show the power of blood and soil when even after the Holomodor and all of the murders of white Russian Christians, that when it came time to fight, they were still willing to fight for Russia itself, not the existing power structure in that country.
So there's a lot of lessons and a lot of takeaways.
That impressed and humbled Stalin.
James?
James, I agree with what you said there, except for your mention of the Holodomor.
That is a full fabrication.
And when you put it in the context of the starvation across the Soviet Union and across other parts of Europe, as well as what was going in other parts of the world, there was no intentional starvation of the Ukrainian people.
And that, I can tell you, is a fact.
Very interesting.
Agree or disagree, folks.
We'll be right back with Christine Lynn, always thought-provoking.
Stay tuned.
It is common for politicians, major media outlets, and nonprofits to hype white on black murders aggressively, or even claim that blacks are living in fear of white people.
Lynch for simply being black.
Hard to believe, but that's what was done.
And some people still want to do that.
This is why National Conservative launched the Interracial Homicide Tracking Project.
We have now documented well over 2,000 confirmed interracial homicides since January 2023 and created the most comprehensive overview of these killings anyone has ever made.
We plug the gaping holes in data left by other homicide trackers and government crime stats.
Rather than engaging in hyperbole and vitriolic rhetoric like everyone else, we are simply creating a massive sample size of empirical evidence so people can form rational and informed opinions about a sensitive and politically charged issue.
Visit natcon.life.
N-A-T-C-O-N dot L-I-F-E.
Why don't we say to the government writ large that they have to spend a little bit less?
Anybody ever had less money this year than you had last?
Anybody better have it a 1% pay cut?
You deal with it.
That's what government needs, a 1% pay cut.
If you take a 1% pay cut across the board, you have more than enough money to actually pay for the disaster relief.
But nobody's going to do that because they're fiscally irresponsible.
Who are they?
Republicans.
Who are they?
Democrats.
Who are they?
Virtually the whole body is careless and reckless with your money.
So the money will not be offset by cuts anywhere.
The money will be added to the debt, and there will be a day of reckoning.
What's the day of reckoning?
The day of reckoning may well be the collapse of the stock market.
The day of reckoning may be the collapse of the dollar.
It comes.
I can't tell you exactly, but I can tell you it has happened repeatedly in history when countries ruin their currency.
So the name of that one is Do Russians Want Another War?
Apparently they do, but that's what is entirely justified.
Um, they have to defend themselves, exactly.
There's a lot.
There's a lot of debate about whether Stalin was about to attack.
Uh okay, I want to ask that very quickly.
We got a lot to cover in only 10 minutes left.
I want to just say I want to thank Christine Lynn again for coming on tonight.
Uh I, I uh agree with most of what she's saying.
Perhaps not all, but I will tell you this.
She's an excellent guest and she is welcome on this show anytime.
30 seconds on this Christine, because I know we got to move quickly.
That is the thing.
Uh, or at least the um anecdotal wisdom is that Hitler believed he better attack before they attack him.
Do you think that attack was coming?
Uh no, I do not, and you and I could spend an hour on it and it would be quite enlightening for your audience.
Well then, we're gonna have.
We'll book that one for the next anniversary.
Let's see.
June 22nd june 22nd, you know my birthday, my birthday Christine, is june 22nd, which is the anniversary of Operation Barbarossa.
So I am booking you right now for the nearest saturday to june 22nd and we'll have no, I want to do that I I, i'm serious.
You got a deal.
All right, my friend.
Uh, so let's go into this very quickly.
Uh, we have to talk about um hey listen, 80 years in reflection um, and what has been learned, what was lost, who won um, etc.
But the prisoners of war give us a couple of minutes on that, the fate of the prisoners of war on all sides okay well um, that in itself is something that's very important to me.
Uh, the big myth is that it was better to surrender to the Americans or the British.
Uh and all of the uh propaganda Gobbles was an excellent propagandist and he had really made the Germans, both the troops and the civilians, fear the RED ARMY.
But the fact of the matter is, when you think about uh and you and I again, we could do a whole hour on the mistreatment by the allied forces of the German prisoners, the U.s prisoner camps uh, under Eisenhower's command, whether this the joint chiefs of staff, and we know Eisenhower hated Germans uh, I mean that that was quite apparent uh, was extreme deprivation.
And the food was available.
When I have read the testimonials from some of our U.s prison guards, there was ample food and instead they let people starve to death.
These camps could have like 50 000 plus, and there were many of them along the Rhine, uh and and they let the German prisoners and anyone that says, oh well, that was because everybody had low amounts of food.
We know that when those in authority came in a general and was able to feed them, and when they left it went back to starvation, it was disgusting.
They were even ordered to shoot any civilians or officers who tried to feed the German prisoners under in the United States camps.
You remember what Eisenhower's nickname was at West Point that had it in his yearbook?
Do you remember that?
The terrible Swedish Jew.
I remember that, but anyway, that's the brother.
Well, and also, also, when we talk about the transport of prisoners, I mean, that's why I'm going to digress here for a minute, and I know we hardly have time for it.
But when the United States calls this the good war, it's only good for them because it became a world power, and it benefited them financially.
There's nothing good about it.
Not for the Germans, not for any in the Soviet republics, not for anyone.
But I would remind everybody, Americans only lost about 400,000 people.
The Soviets lost 27 million.
It was just like it was in World War I. In World War I, we went in at the last minute and picked up the pictures.
Actions were in World War II.
That is exactly right.
They avoided opening the Second Front.
They continued to betray in their conversations and their meetings with Stalin.
Also, I would like to point out that the trains that transported German prisoners to the POW camps of the United States, how many Germans died in that transport.
They would open them up and they will have suffocated.
A lot of Americans don't know that.
And also to the British and their evil, I'd like to remind people of the three German ships that were carrying Soviet prisoners.
And thousands of them died.
The British came over, bombed the three ships, despite the fact they had contacted.
And this is from testimonials.
In fact, the FSB has recently released some of the documents in the Soviet Union.
I read much of the archives, CIA, as well as FSB archives in my study.
And they bombed the three ships.
The people were out there.
They had the white flag raised.
They were waving their white shirts.
And the British continued to bomb them, killing all of the, and this were German ships carrying Soviet prisoners.
This, I mean, it's just war crime and atrocity after an atrocity.
Yes.
We are barely touching the surface.
Barely touching it.
We will continue to touch it, though.
Christine, mark it down right now if you don't mind.
And if you have the availability.
Saturday, June 21st is the nearest day to the anniversary of Operation Barbarossa, June 22nd, 1941.
39 years later on Sunday, June 22nd, Sunday, June 22nd this year is on a Sunday as well.
I was born, and it was a hot Sunday.
I have a feeling it's going to be hot on June 22nd of this year, too.
But June 21st, let's do it, Christine, and let's talk about that.
And let's talk about, you know, interesting.
You know, would the Russians, the Soviets have attacked Germany if they didn't attack first?
We'll have that conversation.
We will talk about, hey, you know, you just mentioned Hitler's view on entering into alliances, and we'll talk about Molotov, Ribbentrop, and all of that.
That's on June 21st.
We'll go ahead and book it.
Now, let's talk about, here we are, with five minutes left this hour.
80 years later, what has been learned?
What is the status?
Yes, the Allies were absolutely war criminals.
There's no doubt about it.
Let's just not even pretend.
The United States were war criminals.
You could say that's our country.
We did it.
They did it.
Whatever.
The United States are war criminals.
Now, here we are.
What have we learned?
Has anything changed?
Where are we 80 years on, Christine?
80 years on.
No, in terms of the countries of the United States, Britain, and all of Europe and the EU, they are still playing a game of monopoly with people's lives.
Their focus, as we are seeing now, demonstrate it in the world, whether you take a look at the Ukraine-Russia conflict, whether you take a look at what's happening in Gaza.
And again, the Jews did get their Zionist state out of their World War II as well.
But when I take a look at it, yes, it was an enormous part of it.
But all of them operate by their corporate interest, their profit, and their hegemonic interest.
So no, I don't believe that we see any signs.
Now, as a people, the people in Europe, I would think, since they also suffered so much, just as the Soviet people did, that they do not want this to escalate.
If we think World War II was bad and it was horrific, the deadliest war in history, you imagine what any degree of a World War III is going to be about.
But these governments, no, I don't think they have learned at all because I see their arrogance and I see what they are doing now.
I also see the CIA operations, which their propaganda, their whole Cold War that they began and continue to this day.
The only ones that I think have learned something are probably the Russian people, not only from their suffering, but I would hope that they fully understand, as Stalin was understanding in those sense, that the United States and the British can never be trusted, just as Hitler himself learned they could never be trusted.
They are the ones who betray the treaties.
So no, I sadly have to say I don't think much was learned.
There was a tragic loss of life, but very little learned.
What do you think about the celebration going on in the United States?
And even in Germany, Germany celebrating their own destruction.
I mean, that is the saddest thing.
Oh, yeah.
That is really sick.
Well, I'll tell you, from my perspective, because you know I love the Russian people.
I identify with the Russian people, my love of them.
What I find absolutely disgusting is the President of the United States acting as if the U.S., regardless of what you think about the war and the, quote, sides, it's so much more to that.
It's much more, many more mechanizations coming behind it.
But to indicate that the U.S., quote, won it with some help from others is absolutely blasphemous on all of those who died.
Well, no, they did in a cowardly way, though.
Lynn, they did it in a cowardly way.
They waited till the last minute and then stepped in in 44.
But I will say this.
I mean, America, you could.
Go ahead.
Christine, please go ahead.
The EU, in the EU, they did not even allow, for example, the president of Serbia, Vucek, or Ficho from Slovakia to fly over their lands to go to the beautiful, poignant Victory Day parade in Moscow.
That's how petty the EU is.
They didn't let people even wear a ribbon of St. George and lay flowers at the memorials in their own countries in Germany.
And then we had a stupid and disgusting, quote, European Day or whatever the Ukrainians did, which I think Kalakalis of the EU went to.
It is just, so that's why I say I don't think anything has changed.
In the governments and those who people are allowing to govern their country, nothing has changed.
War and human life means nothing to the collective West.
It does to, I think, the people of Europe as well as to the Russian people.
AmericanOrthodox Christian.com.
That is Christine's website.
She is a Spitfire, if you don't mind me comparing you to a British aircraft.
But I will tell you this.
America lost that war.
You talk about the atrocities of the Allies.
I mean, Nagasaki, you're going to kill all these people to stop people from being killed.