May 10, 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.
Ladies and gentlemen, a busy night continues right now on TPC.
In our first hour tonight, you heard from Lou Moore, a former Congressional Chief of Staff for many years in Washington, D.C.
He was also Ron Paul's national campaign manager during his presidential run in 2008.
Very historic campaign.
Lou Moore was with us in the first hour to grade President Trump's first 100 days of the second administration in the last hour.
You just heard from geopolitical analyst and historian Christine Lynn on the 80th anniversary of Germany's surrender.
That was a fun hour and thought-provoking for sure.
But that's not all.
No, we're not done yet.
Right now, our good friend Paul Fromm, one of my best friends, and in terms of just a stalwart and a mainstay on this program, Paul and I go back so many years.
Every time he comes on, every time he is scheduled for this show, I perk up.
He is the director of the Canadian Association for Free Expression, and he is back tonight to explain what went wrong.
What the heck happened in the recent federal election in Canada.
Paul, how are you doing tonight in the great white north, or at least the formerly great white north?
I'm doing well, and I do regret it's no longer so white.
Or so great.
what happened to canada was trump happened to canada all right well this is it well take it away The better part of the Indian subcontinent has descended on us in the last few years under former Prime Minister Trudeau's immigration policy.
No matter where you go, whether it's cities or small towns across the prairies or northern Ontario, East Indians are everywhere.
In the fast food joints, gas stations, it's an absolute invasion.
Convenience stores.
Sorry.
Convenience stores.
That's what they seem to thrive in in Memphis.
Yeah, convenience stores and so on.
And they're everywhere.
You know, traditionally was the big cities.
But what I observed this past year, I drove across the country in October, and you shake your head.
It's population replacement.
And maybe on another show, we could talk about a document that has just come our way dated back to 2007.
And it's a memo within the federal government pointing out how they will engineer the replacement of the European founding settler people of this country completely by somewhat after 2030.
And the banks are in on it.
It's a scary memo.
And it sort of validates what you see with your eyes.
We are being replaced, and we are being replaced by policy.
Well, I was just going to say, Paul, we had you back on in, I was looking at the broadcast archives.
Of course, you were here to represent Canada during our March Around the World series in March.
Right.
But we had you back on prior to that to ask you if Trump's election could be a forecast to the shift to the cultural right in Canada that we would take this entire North American continent not so fast.
In the next issue, the May 12th and 19th edition of the American Free Press, it's not even out yet.
It's coming.
This is the next issue, but I get a preview for it as a writer for the American Free Press.
Remy Tremblay, your friend and mine, a fellow Canadian, he of the French variety, you of the English-speaking variety, he writes this.
Canada votes, elites win once again.
And I will just read, I won't read the entire article, but just a couple of paragraphs and excerpt and have you respond to this, Paul.
And this is Remy's take on what happened in your recent elections.
On April 28th, Canadians from coast to coast went to the polls for the first time since former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stepped down.
The result, a country split down the middle.
43.7% voted for Trudeau's successor, Mark Carney, while 41.3% backed the Conservative leader.
How did this happen?
How does a liberal government, after years of growing unpopular and with economic stagnation, manage to cling to power?
A fall election would have been a clear win for the Conservatives.
So what changed?
Five letters, Remy writes.
T-R-U-M-P.
As Canada edged away from liberal rule in recent years, the unexpected re-election of Donald Trump in the United States sent shockwaves up north.
The media jumped and to overdrive Carney, the globalist technocrat who headed both the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England, was suddenly marketed as Canada's adult in the room, the one man capable of shielding the country from Trump's nationalist agenda.
Remy continues, interestingly, just a day after the election, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, a fierce critic of Ottawa, passed the Election Statutes Amendment Act, slashing the threshold for a referendum on Alberta's independence from 600,000 signatures to just 208,000 signatures.
While Smith denies being a separatist, a new Angus Reed poll shows growing support for secession.
So this is interesting.
Now, and Remy continues, and if you're a subscriber to the American Free Press, be sure to check it out.
Remy, just in conclusion, writes, in the end, the election changed almost nothing.
The status quo remains, except now Trudeau is out and Carney is in.
But make no mistake, while Trudeau was mocked as a woke lightweight, Carney is the real deal, a clever, calculating left-wing globalist, and that makes him far more dangerous.
So when the dust settles, where are we at, Paul, with Canada?
And do you agree with Remy's take?
Yeah, Remy is a subscriber of mine, and I would agree with every word he wrote.
It is very, very depressing.
In December of last year, the polls had the Conservatives beating the Liberals by between 20 and 25 percent.
It might have been, if an election had been held then, the liberals might have been almost eliminated as a federal party.
They might be reduced to between eight and ten seats out of a parliament of 338.
It is really bad.
Now, I've got to give it to them.
Credit where credit is due.
What we call the Laurentian elite, that's the Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Axis, or the globalists.
They managed to snatch certain defeat, Snatched victory from what could have been certain defeat.
And they pressured, maybe not such a long story, they pressured Justin Trudeau to resign.
He was massively unpopular.
And even among the psychophants of the Liberal Party, they were scared.
They could see themselves losing their seats.
So there was a rebellion.
He stepped down.
He had wanted to appoint Mark Kearney, the globalist, as his finance minister.
And that's what started the rebellion.
Again, it's kind of complicated.
You don't need to know the details.
So, I mean, Kearney was very much from the beginning the fair-haired boy.
But they had to have a leadership convention.
They did.
Kearney was massively backed with mega bucks, and he won.
And he was marketed as, well, as Raymie said, the adult in the room.
He was marketed as a seasoned international banker and economist.
And it's probably only in circles like ours that the international banker makes you reach for your gun.
And somehow, I wouldn't say he's colorless, but I mean, he doesn't have a strong personality.
Probably bloodless.
Yes, like a lizard.
And he managed to, he didn't win, but he got the number keeps changing, but I think he got about five seats more than the conservatives.
The conservatives did very well, increased their percentage of the vote.
They increased their seats, but the upfront socialist party, the New Democratic Party, imploded.
And many of their votes went to Kearney and the Liberals.
They managed to do, I guess, COVID had been a useful trial run.
How can you control a people short of a police state where people are being beaten on the streets and dragged off and bloody to prison?
Well, fear.
And they managed to get Canadians to operate like sheep.
Not all.
There's quite a good freedom resistance, and I was part of it.
But a lot of Canadians were scared out of their wits during COVID.
They took the jab, even though it was utterly unproven.
They consented to wear ridiculous masks, six-foot distances, and all that.
And it was a useful run.
The elite saw that if they could scare people, they could get them to do what they wanted.
And they managed to scare them with a man named Donald Trump and the threat of tariffs and so on.
And, you know, I'm a big Trump supporter.
I love what he did destroying DEI.
Of course, I don't approve of his Middle East policy, but I saw real achievements in the first hundred days.
But believe it or not, and he must know better.
I mean, he's not a, he's, you know, he's well informed.
He endorsed Kearney.
He said, I can deal with this man.
He says he had a lot of respect for him.
He didn't respect Trudeau, and I don't, I mean, I don't, I'm not, I'm not surprised.
Why?
I called him for that.
No, I don't follow from that, but he was signaling he supported Kearney.
He didn't have a good word to say for the conservative leader, who is aggressive and I think would stand up to Trump in the tariff.
And if I may add one more conspiratorial thing that was accomplished, and the former premier of Alberta, Jason Kenney, and one of the big noises on the Globe and Mail both mentioned this on election night.
The election results and Paulie Evras' campaign managed to destroy the populist People's Party of Canada, which was the best party.
It had a great platform.
I wouldn't say destroy it, but their vote total was reduced by about 50%.
And the reason was fear.
People feared either the return of the Trudeau liberals under Kearney.
That was very much to be feared.
Or Donald Trump.
Well, that's irrational.
And I must say, I cannot explain why Trump would want to deal with a globalist who imposed DEI with massive fervor when he was head of the Bank of England.
He is, as Remy said, a cunning globalist.
He's Trudeau with brains.
He's committed to impoverishing us by reducing our carbon footprint net zero by 50, which almost any carbon footprints, Paul, and Alberta.
What's going to happen with Alberta now?
To Keith's point, do you think there could be a secession movement afoot?
Because that part of Canada is very different than Toronto.
They're being very badly treated by the central government in Canada.
And they have been since Trudeau I.
I know Alberta very well.
I know the man who formed the first separatist party, the late Doug Christie.
Yeah, separatism is now supported by about 30% of the people in Alberta, and they don't know yet what Carney's going to do.
But if you read his book, I mean, it's all there.
His book is value values, but there's a parenthesis around the S.
I don't know what that stands for.
But he's quite clear.
We have to make major sacrifices.
We've got to accept a poorer future, less heat in the winter, less cooling in the summer.
We've got to change our diet, which means, I think, more eating crickets rather than much less travel for the average guy.
And you have to travel a long way in Canada to get anywhere, don't you?
Don't ask me how this would be implemented, but that's his vision.
You heard almost nothing about that during the election.
The conservatives, to their credit, did try to bring it up and did try to get across the idea that Carney may look different and might maybe be able to conduct himself without being a clown.
Old wine and new wineskins.
You know, the thing is, though, Paul, Paul, the thing is, though, with this, I mean, it wasn't like it was an overwhelming mandate.
I mean, it seems to me, as an observer from afar, just looking at this, I mean, you're there in the middle of it.
I mean, you've been engaged in Canadian politics from a nationalist perspective for longer than I've been alive.
and I'm getting, you know, kind of old now.
I need to do.
But the...
But, excuse me.
I have been actively involved since the War of 1812, I think.
Well, do you think Alberta might be able to just say we're going to be an independent state and then ask for America to defend the military?
Maybe Alberta could be the 51st state.
Alberta, yeah.
Yeah, well, if Alberta was the 51st state, you would have probably a solid Republican 51st state.
I could never understand Trump's fixation on making Canada the 51st state.
Because it would be too democratic.
It was too provocative.
See, he likes to provoke stuff.
Well, buying Greenland.
But Paul's point is, if Canada was the 51st state, never mind the fact that it's more landmass than all of the United States combined, it would be two Democratic senators in perpetuity, plus all of these Democratic Congress people.
But the thing is that with this election, though, but Paul, the election was, it was not some overwhelming mandate for the globalist banker, Mark Carney.
I think I'm just saying, I'm guessing from afar, you correct me, that they got, you know, just enough Canadians got a little bit antsy about Trump's proclamations about annexing Canada.
I mean, this thing went by 2%, 43.7 to 41.3, the liberal globalist banker versus the so-called conservative.
Two points.
Two points isn't a lot, and that's certainly not a mandate, but it is enough to consider it to be a loss.
Yes, you're quite right.
The more conservative and more patriotic and somewhat anti-DEI and anti-woke Conservative Party did very well.
This is not a crushing defeat, but the man with the power right now is Mark Carney.
Trump could help us greatly if he would knock it off about the 51st state.
I don't even see how that would benefit America.
If we were one state, we'd be counting.
I don't think we want all of Canada to be one state.
We want Alberta to join us and get off the old slogan 5440 or fight.
Well, the only problem is Paul doesn't live in Alberta, but maybe he could move there.
He deserves to be able to do that.
If you become an American, if you become an American, if we did annex Canada, Paul, you could actually travel back down to Memphis.
You could travel back.
I'd love that.
And then I would leave Alberta and probably retire to Pennsylvania or Tennessee.
But anyway, if Trump would just lay off the tariffs or lay off the threat, make a deal that both sides can live with.
This is being, you know, I don't want to get into the tariff since it's somewhat complicated, but There has not really been a problem or a major problem with Canada.
Why provoke it?
And that's that's unfortunately just stamped people.
Yeah, sometimes with bluster, you bluster, you bluster too much.
Sometimes you become too blustery.
Well, the thing is, you got you can't, there's no dealing with a Mark Carney or Justin Trudeau.
You got to, you know, on the other hand, I'm, I'm, I'm fine with making them enemies.
Let's just get to Paul's point, to Paul's point.
And by the way, if you want more, Paul from Cafe, just like a cafe, dot nfshost.com, Canadian Association for Free Express.
Indeed.
Cafe.nfshost.com.
But I think, you know, Paul, what you're saying is if he'd have just laid off the 51st date, you know, bluster, that Carney probably wouldn't have won.
No, and also the tariffs.
51st state is kind of political science-y.
It's a bit insulting, but what people are really worried about are job losses.
The Alberta, the separatist sentiment, though, is really interesting because that may be one way to tame any inclinations Carney might have to go full bore the way Trudeau was on suppressing our natural gas and oil industry.
It's the biggest thing Canada, brings in the most revenue, and being good disciples of the World Economic Fund and the Great Reset, they want to both want to wean Canada from oil and natural gas and have a nation of windmills.
What I think the Premier of Alberta is threatening is: look, if enough people here in Alberta want a referendum, they can have one.
She has reduced the threshold to get the referendum on the ballot, which is good.
And the threat of separation might be the one thing that in the short run can prevent Carney from going to the city.
You'll have Carney's nuts in a 210 twist if you, you know, if he looks at losing Alberta.
I hope that happens.
And also the tariffs.
That seems to be a too good to be true type of scenario that Alberta would really let push come to shove or advance it to shove from push.
But I hope so.
But we'll see.
But Paul, let me ask you this.
And again, cafe.nfshost.com.
Paul, with a minute remaining, thank you again, first of all, again, by the way, for being with us this evening.
So many times you've been featured in this program.
You are both a great and a good man.
There can sometimes be a difference.
There can be good men and there can be great men in terms of what they accomplish and good men in just terms of being good, but not all great men are good men.
Paul is both.
Paul, what is the hope, besides you, what is the hope?
What is the hope of the Lone Ranger in Canada?
What is the hope of Canada right now in the aftershocks of this election?
Well, the results were disappointing, but a lot of people have awakened, despite the fact many people got scared and voted against their best interests.
But there is a growing awareness of freedom in Canada.
So I think there are a lot more recruits to the freedom cause than there might have been 10 years ago.
So that gives me hope.
And there's been a lot of, well, more than there used to be sensible criticism of immigration.
There was a time when you couldn't criticize immigration and make it into the mainstream media.
Well, you could criticize it by saying, well, we're not doing enough to bring in refugees.
We should have no borders, blah, blah, blah.
But any real criticism wasn't possible.
Now it is.
Now, maybe not quite the criticism you and I would make that basically we can recover from economic folly.
We can't recover if our population is replaced.
That's exactly right.
Put them all up in the Northwest Territories.
You would think so.
You would think so.
But the last time I was in the Yukon 10 years ago, who runs the cab business?
Freezing their brown bums off.
East.
Come on.
All right, Paul from everybody, the great and the good and a hero of ours and a friend of mine.
Cafe.nfshost.com.
Thank you, Paul.
We'll talk to you again very soon.
Proclaiming liberty across the land.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
News this hour from townhall.com.
I'm Jason Walker.
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.
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Although I might be the laughing loud and money, deep inside of blue.
So take a good look at my face.
You'll see my smile face.
The close size easy to chase the Jacksonville tears.
If you don't think, ladies and gentlemen, I can sing that song word for word as loud as I can.
That is the, what do you call it, the karaoke special for Jennings?
Oh, come on.
That is Smokey Robinson.
And I tell you, that is also Johnny Rivers.
Johnny Rivers, you know, Johnny Rivers was an interesting artist.
He's one of my favorites.
One of my favorites.
I've seen Johnny, well, they call him that.
Johnny Rivers, I have seen in concert with my mother, my father, my brother, my friends, my grandmother.
I have seen Johnny Rivers in concert for many years, many times.
But he was an interpretive artist.
He was a white artist that took these songs by black artists in the 60s and then he was a little bit more.
He sang Memphis.
He sang Mountain of Love by Charlie Pride.
I believe it was Charlie Pride.
Was it Charlie Pride?
Charlie Pride.
It was a guy in the 50s.
Come on.
Who was it?
I got to get to the bottom of this.
There's a point to this.
Well, he sang Track of My Tears by Smokey Robinson.
Sang Memphis Polytechnic.
It was Charlie Pride.
Yeah, it was Charlie Pride.
I knew it was Charlie Pride.
Charlie Pride.
Yeah, Charlie Pride sang Mountain of Love.
That's all there is.
That's all you original of it was.
That's all you need to know a little bit.
Anyway, but nevertheless.
But he did that.
Johnny Rivers sang a lot of these songs, and that's the only reason he was held out of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame was that a lot of his hits were sung by a black artist.
But anyway.
And how do you like Secret Agent Man that he made out of it?
That one was straight up.
That one was straight up.
That was just a matter of fact.
Maybelline.
You know, Chuck Berry, he did the Maybelline cover, and he did a lot of covers.
Anyway, but that's not the point.
The point is, we came in with Tracks of My Tears by Smokey Robinson because I was dismayed.
He's in the news again.
Smokey is in the news.
CNN, Smokey Robinson accused of sexual assault by four former employees.
People.com, Smokey Robinson accused of rape.
USA Today, Smokey Robinson accused of sexual assault by four women in new lawsuit.
New York Times, Smokey Robinson accused of sexual assault by former housekeepers.
NPR, Smokey Robinson accused of rape, sexual battery.
NBC News, Motown legend, Smokey Robinson accused of sexual assault.
All right.
What does this show?
So here is this.
This is the, I'm reading from the actual complaint now.
Smokey Robinson, one of my favorite artists.
They're all Jane Doe's, by the way.
One of the Jane Does alleges that she was sexually assaulted at least seven times between 2023 and 2024.
Now, Smokey is 85.
So in 2024, he'd have been 84.
He's a rooster.
Jane Doe 2 accuses Smokey Robinson of raping her at his home on 23 occasions between 2016 and 2020.
Now, you know, again, Keith, if I'm getting raped every time I go to work, I quit going to work, right?
I mean, you know, I really didn't like it.
Look, I'll tell you what.
No, no, no, no, quick.
Just one more.
The third Jane Doe alleges that Smokey Robinson repeatedly raped her throughout most of her employment as a housekeeper between 2012 and 2024.
So again, you know, what do you do?
I mean, you know, what do you do?
Do you say, well, you know, I'm going to get raped if I go and dust the cabinets today.
I need that $1.50 wage.
So, I mean, you're a maid.
Why not just go be a maid for somebody else?
And this goes on for 20 years.
For me, this reeks of Roy Moore's treatment during that senatorial campaign.
Smokey's 85.
He's a rock and roll legend.
He is an artist.
He knows he's rich, and they want to tap into his wealth.
I mean, I'm incredulous.
I'm incredulous that, you know, you work for someone for 20 years and he's raping you for 20 years, you say.
And right before, you know, he's 85.
I don't know how many more years he's got, hopefully 100 more.
They want to share in his estate.
That's plain and simple.
I mean, come on.
You only now talk about it after all these years and all these rapes.
What it shows is what Roger Devlin has been pointing out in his series of articles on the sexual revolution in countercurrents.
Basically, there is no way that a man can have sex with a woman and be safe.
It could be his wife.
It could be his maid.
It could have happened 30, 40, 50 years ago.
But if the woman decides to make a claim, if she decides, you know, I was all down with it back when it happened, but now, upon reflection, I think it's rape.
Look what happened to Donald Trump in New York.
Heaven to Betsy.
You know, our judicial system and our legal system has gone mad.
And basically, it's toxic to males.
Males are supposedly toxic, but the females basically making a decision that, you know, something that happened long ago in the days of yesteryear that was not complained of back then is now rape.
Please, folks, you know, when does common sense have a place at the table, James?
Apparently not.
But nevertheless, I will tell you this.
This is something that I, you know, and there was another one that came out this week.
You know, basketball, basketball player, we'll call him that.
Byron Scott for the Lakers.
Headline comes out this week, Byron Scott accused of rape in 1987.
And this woman apparently languished.
It wasn't even, I don't even think rape, but supposedly he took her into a janitor's closet in 1987.
She's been in a coma ever since and just snapped out of it.
I just, I don't even care.
I mean, you know, this is just not right.
I mean, Lou Moore, excuse me, not Lou Moore, not Lou Moore.
But I just said his name, the guy in Alabama.
Roy Moore.
Roy Moore.
He got all this, and then they all faded away.
I mean, and this will fade away.
This is something that the media should be taking to account for.
The, you know, running with this on every national avatar.
Every national.
I mean, Smokey's already said he didn't do it, but I'll tell you this.
I mean, he had some of the greatest music of all time.
Stevie Wonder had a tune.
He attacked an icon of James.
Listen, I like his music.
I like Motown.
Motown was interesting.
It was this little house that looked like a little house off Wells Station, you know, over by Jerry Snow Cone.
That's where all these hits came out of.
And they had some of the greatest music of all time.
Steven Wonder had a song in his head.
He wrote the music to it.
He said, Smokey, I got this song in my head and I got the music to it, but I can't think of any lyrics that would fit it.
And Smokey said, let's make this song about Pagliachi.
You know, this is an Italian opera in the 1800s.
So, you know, first of all, Smokey's, you know, 20-something years old when he writes the lyrics to this song.
Stevie Wonder wrote the music.
Go to Atlanta or Memphis or Birmingham or Detroit, and you ask a 20-year-old black man, who was Pagliachi.
You know, it was a different time back then.
But he said, no, I got a song.
I got something I can do with this.
He goes, you got the music.
I got the lyrics.
And this is what it turned out.
And it was one of the greatest songs ever made.
I've had some sad taste of men.
Based off the Italian opera of the 1800s, Pagliacci, that was Tears of a Clown, 1967.
And let me just say, hey, I don't know.
Let justice be served, but I don't think an 84-year-old man was raping too many people last year.
That's what they're saying.
Well, look, what it does, it shows you that there's a reason why we have birth dearth, a reason why we don't have a replacement-level reproduction in most of the West, because they entertain foolish, phony lawsuits like this.
The lawsuit is a casino now.
You basically, the courts have become a casino, and the lawsuits are the bets you put down.
And if you can get somebody to believe a load of rubbish, then you can cash in and get millions of dollars.
This is what these, I guarantee that's what's on the minds of these people.
You know, they're not offended by having sex with Smokey Robinson.
It was probably a feather in their cap at the time.
But, you know, if it even happened at all.
Yeah, but on the other hand, you know, we've got to be, you know, is it any wonder that men are afraid to, you know, have sex with women or to get married nowadays?
Marriage is no protection.
We'll be back.
You can sue your ex-spouse.
Go read about Pagachi tonight.
Go read about Paliachi and make it happen.
That was the album it was on.
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All right, welcome back.
Hey, listen, one more thing for you tonight, folks, is tonight was the annual Dixie Fest at Dixie Republic, DixieRepublic.com.
This is the first and hopefully only, and I mean ever, Dixie Fest that I miss.
Was not able to be there tonight due to scheduling conflicts, and I've been on the road.
I mean, we've been everywhere.
We were in Arkansas last week, Michigan two weeks ago, Dallas four weeks ago, and we've got some more trips coming up.
March and Traveler's Rest.
That's absolutely right.
We got more trips coming up later this month, and it was just too much travel.
But listen, we've never missed one.
We were at the inaugural one.
We normally do three hours of coverage at Dixie Fest, but it happened today.
The 2025 installment of Dixie Fest was today, and I hate that I was not there, but I want to hear all about it.
So we don't have three hours, but we do have 10 minutes.
And so we go to Paul Lawrence, the owner of Dixie Republic.
He's going to tell us, how was it today, Paul?
What was this year's installment like?
What did I miss?
And please make me jealous.
It was great, James.
It was great.
The rain, we dreaded the rain all day.
For the most part, it held off.
It's just now coming in.
The band just stopped playing.
Everybody had a great time.
It was, we had people from all over the world.
We had a guy from Georgia, and you know, he was asked, and Hunter elaborated on this.
Yeah, not Georgia, America, Georgia, the country.
Wow, you know, that does not surprise me.
I have seen international visitors to Dixie Fest for years now.
They come just for it.
It's that big.
It's a gathering of our people.
It's a natural gathering of our people.
And that's what we're creating here.
And there's going to be even bigger and better things, more exciting things that are coming this coming year.
There are things that we're working on to where this can truly be a destination for our people, whether it's your food, produce, ready to eat meals, places to stay, accommodations.
We're really going to step it up this year because I think our people need it most during today's day.
Hey, let me tell you something.
Let me tell you something, and let me be sure to tell you this.
It is already and has been a destination for our people.
But I know a little bit of what you're talking about, and I'm not going to spill the details on the radio live right now.
I know some things are coming big that will expand it, but you are already that.
And the excitement that comes from knowing that it will be even more so is incredible, Paul.
Did the band play I'm a good old rebel?
You know they did.
We did the flag raising.
No, the Dixie will play.
That's it.
I tell you what.
God bless you.
Yeah, absolutely.
DixieRepublic.com.
Great people there.
Yes, sir.
And we will see you.
We will see you again soon.
Not soon enough, but soon.
And as we welcome Hunter to the program, one of the jolly boys.
Oh, Hunter, you know, it pains me not to be there.
I told Henry knows, my son.
My son knows that today was Dixie Fest.
And he is just asking about it.
He's been downtrodden all day.
Why didn't we go?
I mean, could you just have taken an Uber?
He asked.
Could he have just gone by himself?
Henry, you mean the guy with the mean left hook?
Well, you were training him.
The last time I saw Henry, me and him were shadow boxing, and he had a mean left hook, James.
That was in February.
That wasn't that long ago.
We drove home on the day of the Super Bowl.
We didn't watch the Super Bowl.
We were driving home from Dixie Republic on the Super Bowl.
We love St. Henry every time he comes down, man.
Well, it's a family-friendly festivity there.
And I have, in the years I have been there, it has been people from infants, toddlers, grade school kids, all the way through people even older than Keith.
So all generation.
Is that possible?
What did we miss today?
I've seen you as Joe Biden, Hunter.
I've seen you as Joe Biden in the dunk tank there, Hunter.
What did we miss today?
Do you remember that?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
You waved at me when I came in.
Yes.
That's how long we've been doing it since 2020.
And every year, it's had its ebbs and flows as far as the amount of people that have come here.
But the quality of people that come here continues to be better and better.
I mean, this isn't an event that's publicized very well.
It's not all over social media.
It's not everywhere that you could imagine, but it is in the right ears, and those people do show up.
And so today we had how many 20 or 30 young guys, young and willing guys of the 18 to 22 range that we were networking with and listening to the bandwidth.
We just got done listening to some steel guitar.
We had a there's a wonderful band on the stage here tonight.
It's a we have we we hear a little bit of pitter patter of the of the uh of the mid May rain on the tin roof now.
It's a it's a wonderful experience.
If anybody's not been please come here.
This is a home away from home.
It's not just an advertisement.
This is a it's not just a destination.
It's a home for our people and you'll experience it when you come here.
You're not taking a trip there.
You're taking a pilgrimage.
Well, yeah, it's it's I've had actually people who have never been to Dixie but have just heard about it on the show.
The remote broadcast we've done there, they refer to it as Southern Mecca.
Not to be sacrilegious or blasphemous, but it's our Mecca.
It's our Mecca.
Yeah, it is.
my home away from home.
It is all of that.
So I know we missed a big one today with all you guys.
I've been there so many times, so I can, I know, I know.
What did I miss today that I don't know?
Was there anything extra, anything special?
I mean, you know, it went from the political cesspool broadcasting there as sort of a one-of-a-kind type of thing to there are many shows on many different networks now that broadcast from there and that's just so encouraging to see and to know.
I know we got to get to Ian.
Um well they, they had uh, they had several radio shows going on earlier in the day here but uh, we also had just, there was just a a lot of uh, young people here with the Active CLUB Network that showed up and we were, oh yeah, doing our thing this is a kind of a youth group kind of thing, if you could put it that way and we were.
We were out here sparring wrestling, we had the mats uh, the the rain was happening and we were still going in in in the middle of the rain, so we had the flag raising.
I mean, this is a huge flag.
It's uh, Paul.
What's the dimensions of that?
It's a 20 by 30 flag on the side of a highway that probably gets 50 000.
I've seen it.
I've seen it, one that Bill Rolling used to have, James.
Yeah, this is bigger.
Yeah, it's a big flag.
This one's pretty big.
So uh we, we had that going on, we had the flag raising and uh, i'm really impressed with the acting Active club network that uh, these people show up to uh participate in the exercise that is wrestling uh sparring boxing, boxing.
You know let's, let's bring it back to ancient Greece here.
Uh, that that's what's going on this.
This is not only a place for revolutionary thought.
It's a place for camaraderie, jokes and also um, old-time sports and good to see.
You know, my son, my 10-year-old son, they're sparring with you shadow boxing, as you say.
But it was good for him and uh, good for everyone, no matter your age.
We have a minute left and I I certainly Ian was one of the show stealers when we were at Dixie Republic back in february.
Uh, can we get?
We got one minute left.
One minute left, Ian.
Uh, give them a take from what you got tonight, buddy rich, Southern culture, many men that came here to have fellowship with us and jump on the mat.
A lot of guys that weren't just in the youth groups of today who did exceptionally well, but men who are in their 30s and 40s who stepped forward to show uh example and leadership and and good and good fellowship of what they did.
And we had excellent training and physicality, but not only that and camaraderie and classic southern fellowship of camaraderie.
They came forward, they put on a very good show, handshakes among all and many that have been repeat customers and that will be here in the years to come, and a lot of really good connections to find out oh, this person lives near me oh, this person lives near them.
Why don't you come to my gym?
Why don't you come to my home?
We'll have dinner, we'll have family, we'll have training.
It was wonderful to see here, here and uh, in the middle of all that, everybody on the highway.
I mean Ian just, I mean Ian whooped my butt earlier and uh, everybody on the highways like honking their horns.
Is they that?
That's key, because that's something i've seen.
This was not just like the insiders coming to this by invitation only, this is something that the entire community sees.
They see a bunch of Confederate flags.
Yeah, that the public, the general public, comes and they honk, and i've been there for several years.
This started during the year Of Covid and uh, I have seen it.
I mean people just in the general public, not a part of any groups, not any part of a mailing list, and they come and they love it.
When the river is allowed to flow free, it flows right back to us and uh, the general public.
If they hadn't had it before, they'll get it when they get here.
That's absolutely, thank you.
You can get it.
Thank you, Keith.
hey thank you hunter and thank you ian and thank you paul man's jolly and the jolly boys as we we call them and uh god bless you all at dixie republic and feedback just as soon as we can hunter as you know and i can't wait to see y'all when we get there and we will uh talk to everyone else next week next week