July 13, 2025 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
54:46
Radio Show Hour 1 – 2025/07/12
Summer fun on TPC resumes when Rémi Tremblay, editor of Le Harfang, a French-language magazine based in Quebec, joins James Edwards and Keith Alexander live in the studio! What did our Canadian visitor think about his day in the South? He tells all this hour.
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, welcome to tonight's live broadcast.
It's Saturday evening, July the 12th, and summer fun on TPC officially resumes in full tonight.
Thankfully, Israel didn't put us into any more trouble, and we don't have to reschedule anybody tonight.
We are going to have tonight the kind of fun we had intended to have all summer, but better late than never.
And let's get going right now.
What makes tonight's show so fun?
Well, we're joined in studio tonight.
Right now, he is sitting in between Keith and I as I speak.
The one and only Remy Tremblay, a mainstay during our programming, our March Around the World programming.
Remy, of course, is the editor of a French language magazine based in Quebec.
And he is here in Memphis tonight directly from Canada.
We're going to have some surprises, some laughs, just an overall good time as we talk about the issues in a relaxed and laid-back manner.
Remy, it is great to have you tonight.
We've had such a good time with you today, Keith, more so than I, because y'all got started a few hours earlier, but we've been together for the past few hours.
It's great to have you in the studio.
In the studio, always good to have you on, but have you in the studio is a real treat.
Well, thank you very much for having me tonight.
It was a great day, and I'm sure it's going to be a great evening with you and Keith.
I am adjusting your mic as we speak, and I think it will be.
We're going to talk about the day.
So here's what happened, folks.
Remy flew in late last night, and Keith went over to his hotel in Memphis and picked him up at about 9 o'clock this morning.
And they went on Keith's legendary politically incorrect tour of Memphis, just one-on-one.
Now, I didn't join them because I had to get some things ready for the program.
I did meet them over at a diner that is 102 years old.
This restaurant opened in 1923.
And we met there a couple of hours before showtime.
And we have just had a wonderful afternoon.
We're going to take you behind the scenes this hour on Remy's Day in Memphis with Keith and your humble servant.
And we're going to talk about what they saw.
I haven't even heard all of these stories yet.
And Remy's take on Memphis and why he's down here in the U.S. tonight, especially the American South.
We're going to get to all of that.
But first, let's just talk a little bit more.
A quick reminder about the work of Remy Tremblay.
Now, English is not Remy's first language.
French is.
And we may have him give a critique of Memphis in the French language before the end of this hour.
But Remy, talk a little bit about, of course, that magazine that I always dodge trying to pronounce.
Yeah, sorry for that.
You're talking about le Arfant, which means snow owl.
Basically, it's the voice of French Canadians in Canada.
It is from ethnic nationalist perspective.
We're the only one, like, we're only the only media, printed media pointing in that direction in Quebec.
So we've been around for the last almost 15 years now.
And it's tackling issues from a perspective that would be well known to this audience.
This is a political magazine.
Yeah, it is a political magazine.
So basically, We have had you, we have had different guests, many guests who have come to the political cesspool have also participated in a way or another to le arfant.
We're giving a voice to different people who are not accepted by mainstream media.
We have had Nick Griffin, we have had French populists, we have had like Tom Sinek that your listeners probably know by now.
So basically, we are the like the black sheep of French-Canadian media.
We're the only voice, like in a different, like using a different voice.
Well, you were very kind enough, Remy, to send me a complimentary copy of the interview for that magazine that I participated in.
And we would promote this magazine much more robustly here on TPC, except for the fact is it's written in French, so nobody could read it.
But this is an interesting thing.
So your magazine services, of course, the French-speaking part of Canada.
And I guess people in France who may want to read it, who can speak the language.
What is, again, remind us, the French part of Canada.
What area does that entail?
Well, right now, the French part of Canada is mostly Quebec.
But there is also a French-speaking region in the Atlantic provinces, which we call Acadia, where Acadians come from, actually.
There's also the north of Manitoba in Ontario, where there are large communities of French-speaking people.
What would you say the overall population of this vast expanse that we call Canada, this place that is substantially larger than the United States?
What percentage of that landmass is French-speaking?
That is a good question.
I would say for the whole of Canada, I would say about 20%.
Oh, interesting.
That's interesting.
Of course, Canada itself, I mean, the entire continent is, what, less than the population of California, something like that.
I think they were talking about that.
If it became the 51st state, it would have, anyway, back a few months ago when that was a ruse that people were talking about.
Well, of course, the writings and ruminations of Remy Tremblay are not only confined to that magazine.
Your writings are found, since you are bilingual and you write in both languages.
You are published by many English-speaking journals and publications and newspapers as well.
You are very frequently featured in the Barnes Review, also the American Free Press, Occidental Quarterly, and other places.
So talk a little bit more about where else your writings can be found, and then we're going to have some fun to talk about your time and methods.
Well, great.
Yes, as you mentioned, I'm mostly working for American Free Press and Barnes Review.
But I've also written for V-Dare when it was up.
I've also written for MRAN, American Renaissance, Alternative Right, Affirmative Right, and other various websites as well over the last few years.
So you have been at this for a while.
I can't remember when you and I first got in touch with one another, but it was many, many years ago, suffice it to say.
And as a matter of fact, I want to thank you not only for the interview that we did in your publication, your French language publication, but you did me the honor of writing a 10-year review for my book, Racism-Schmecism, on its 10-year anniversary, which that book was published in 2010.
So this would have been back in 2020.
And I know American Renaissance published that review, and I think it landed at a couple of other places as well.
But I'd known you, of course, prior to that by a good margin as well.
So I don't know exactly when we first met, but it's been many years now.
And I appreciate your work and your friendship.
But this is our first time to meet in person.
And I knew, because you told me a little bit about your background and your family, I knew that we were around the same age.
I was just thinking, you know, like everybody else, surely you must be a little bit older than me.
But in fact, you're a little bit younger than me by about five or six years.
But as equally dashingly handsome, I must say, Remy and I had the same hairstyle, right, Keith?
We got the same hairstyle.
But anyway, so but no, it's great to have you down here.
Remy got a chance to meet my wife and my three kids today before we came down to the studio.
And I want to thank you again for that, Remy.
You participated in this homeschool project my wife was putting on a year before last where the kids were learning about different places in the world.
And we had a lot of our friends from around the world, Tom Sunich in Croatia, Nick Griffin in the UK, so many others, Drew Fraser in Australia.
I mean, I could go on and on, to send in informational packets about their respective countries, postcards, just things that the kids could use to learn from, along with some written information.
Everybody that we asked to participate in that did.
But you sent a wonderful, you and your kids put together a wonderful thing talking to help them learn about the nation of Canada a couple of years ago.
We were talking about that earlier.
So I appreciate that.
Everybody we work with are really just good people at the end of the day.
I haven't worked with any that I said, you know, that guy's a jerk.
So thank you for that.
Being in the same season of life and all, you know, we appreciate it.
You're very welcome.
It was a very interesting project.
I'm very happy I could help.
Okay, now that has been reestablished.
Who we're talking to?
Let's talk about your day in Memphis.
Now, we're going to bring Keith into this at the start of the next segment, but I'll just ask the first question.
It was you and Keith today for the majority of that tour.
And we're going to get Keith on the mic to y'all just take us through it step by step.
Because I found the story interesting at supper tonight, so maybe y'all will too.
But your day in Memphis, just talk about, first of all, we could ask you about southern culture, southern hospitality.
What about southern heat and humidity?
Well, it's the first thing you notice.
You've got the impression you need to bring the heat down, but there's no thermostat.
So, well, honestly, I'm very impressed that people are actually able to bear the heat and the humidity all day long, like every day.
Doesn't get quite this hot up.
We were talking about the lines of latitude as well and how far down this is compared to where proper Europe proper is.
And of course, you're a little closer to that up in Quebec.
But yeah, no, it does take some getting used to.
But you did see some rural parts as well, including the place where we just broke bread.
There is some music.
I got a question.
A question that's already come in very quickly.
Is it true that many French Canadians would consider a black African who spoke French more of their countrymen than an English-speaking Canadian?
Yes or no?
It used to be the case, but it really depends.
This is a very important, this is a very interesting question.
All right, we'll come back with that because the music is playing.
We're going to get Keith to tell you about that.
But that came in from a listener, and I thought, well, let's go ahead and see.
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Well, welcome back, everybody.
Already in real time, questions and comments coming in for Remy Tremblay.
We are, over the course of the three hours we're together tonight, we are going to talk more about some issues, some current events, you know, the normal standard fare type of thing.
The difference being, of course, we've got our featured guest tonight live in the studio with us.
But this first hour is a little bit more about his time here in Memphis and where they went and what they saw.
And I think we'll have a little fun with that.
But listener in Washington, D.C. writes, Canada is the second largest country in the world in size.
I had not considered that.
In fact, I don't guess I knew that because I hadn't thought about that.
But the question before the break, and then we'll bring Keith in and talk about what y'all did today.
Is it true that many French Canadians would consider a black African who spoke French more of their countrymen than an English-speaking Canadian?
Remy, to you.
This is extremely sad, but it has been the case, especially at the beginning of the 20th century.
There was no connection between French and Anglo-Canadians.
And the French-Canadian government, Quebec government, actually decided to increase mass immigration in order to bring in Africans who spoke French or Arabs who spoke French.
And it was a very short-sighted policy.
So I would say that this was a case a few decades ago, but it's no longer the case.
Most French Canadians realize that the real danger to our survival may not be the Anglos from the West Island from Ontario, but mass immigration from various places around the world.
So thank you very much for that question.
I really appreciate it.
That question comes from a listener in East Tennessee, our good friend.
And we were talking again about the differences between this part of Tennessee and East Tennessee, to put it mildly.
All right, Keith, we bring you the spotlight now on you, my friend.
So Remy got in town late last night, and he wanted to start his day at 9 a.m.
Now, Keith has a very famous tour of Memphis.
We'll let him describe it to you, and then we'll start talking about the stops that they made and get Remy's take on that.
But we've taken a lot of people on this tour.
Philip DeWinter, Anka Von de Mersch.
We've taken Tom Sunich, Paul Fromm, David, I mean, a lot of people, dozens of people, either regular guests on this program or listeners of the program.
Keith likes to do it and the people like to go on it.
So Keith, give a quick breakdown of what your tour entails and what you want people to see.
This isn't a tour they could get from the Chamber of Commerce, I think, to put it mildly.
And then where your stops were.
Well, basically, Memphis is a study in contrast, and a lot of people have misconceptions about what Memphis is actually like and what it's like to live in Memphis.
They look at the statistics for crime and whatnot, and they think this must be a hellish place to live.
Well, it can be, depending on where you live.
But on the other hand, it can also be a bucolic, you know, sanguine place to live.
And you have to know where you're going in Memphis.
And let me tell you, Remy was trying to get a room in Memphis, and I told him, never try to save money when you book a room in Memphis.
Yeah, but I did save a few bucks.
And now I do regret, though.
I won't next time.
Now, that being said, you know, the statistics on Memphis, it's quite frightening if you think about it.
Memphis is about like 617,000 inhabitants.
And in 2023, I read like 398 murders.
Now, if you consider like Montreal with 1.7 million people being the most dangerous Quebec city with 37 homicides in the same period, I mean, like, Memphis gets a first place like big times.
Well, that's true enough, but then it's localized.
Memphis is not like soybeans.
It's not homogenous.
It's not the same in one part of the town as it is with the other.
And it really is a tale of two cities in Memphis.
We have something, a phenomenon I call the Poplar Corridor.
And that is the safe, i.e. white part of town.
And it may as well be 1955 and Leave It to Beavers on the TV.
You know, that's what it's like.
And I took him through there, and I'll get his impressions about where I took him.
What we did is we went to his hotel, then we went down Mount Moriah, and then we went down Shady Grove, which is in the heart of the Poplar Corridor.
Take it from there, Randy, and tell us what your impressions were.
I guess they were heading back downtown.
Yeah, right.
Well, I have seen what we call in Canada like two solitudes, meaning like two different people living side by side.
That was my impression.
There really is a separation.
I want to say the word segregation, but I know it's not politically correct, but I see like two really, like I saw white neighborhoods and on the other side of the railroad track.
Yeah, the railroad track, like it became all of a sudden like, you know, like close to a slum with like boarded up houses, things I had only seen on documentaries.
It's something that like I was really shocked to see by myself.
I had heard a lot of things, but it was the first time I actually saw a neighborhood like this.
Well, this is something that Keith often says.
Whoever said the wrong side of the tracks had Memphis in mind, because you can go from these very upscale, very safe neighborhoods to urban slum and decay within walking distance, no problem.
And somebody just crossing the tracks, actually.
We just got a message.
Is he staying at the Lorraine Motel?
No, he didn't stay there, but they did see the Lorraine Motel.
This is where Martin Luther King took his Sainted Last Breath.
So the places y'all went to today.
I'll just hop over the place a little bit.
Y'all started with breakfast at the cupboard, which is this.
How would you describe the cupboard restaurant?
The cupboard is a home cooking place.
We actually had an early lunch there.
But we went there and they had breakfast.
And I think Remy was afraid we're going to have an expensive ticket there.
$4.50, basically.
It's like that 1950s pricing.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, it's like Back to the Future.
But y'all, y'all.
Okay, so y'all, of course, went there to get started.
And then you showed him the place where Nathan Bedford Forrest grave used to be before the ghouls dug him up.
And you went on into downtown.
You saw Bill Street, the Orpheum Theater.
You saw the Pyramid.
You saw the Mississippi River, Arkansas on the other side of that.
Name some other places you saw, Remy, and some of your takeaways.
Oh, I feel like you're testing my memory there.
I was going to say exactly where you said.
Yeah, I saw Graceland.
We didn't stop, though.
Keith was too scared I would bring a wig back.
But let me just say this.
We were talking about this a couple of hours ago.
People from all over the world who are Elvis fans, and I like Elvis too.
I love the 50s and 60s music.
Everybody knows that.
And I've been to Graceland.
I'm a local.
I've been to Graceland probably 10 times in my life at least.
They got a pretty good tour.
If you like Elvis, you'll love Graceland.
That's for sure.
People from all over the world come to Memphis to visit Graceland.
It's not going to Mecca.
It's not like Disney World, though, where Walt Disney bought thousands of acres and insulated his properties where nobody else could build around him.
Elvis didn't do that.
The area around Graceland, and I mean immediately adjacent to it on all sides and for many miles in every direction, how would you describe that?
A reality check.
If you're a liberal from France or whatsoever, like you come from Europe and you've never seen racial differences or anything that way, and you get to Graceland, well, that's going to be a reality check.
You're going to learn way more than you intended to learn on your trip.
Well, pretty much I'm sure people who went to Memphis saw Graceland and the neighborhood around.
So, well, how would you describe it, Keith?
Well, I used to live there, so I have a lot of personal experience there.
You didn't live that?
I lived within half a mile of Graceland.
Well, and it was called, ironically, Whitehaven is the name of the.
It is now known locally, colloquially, as Blackhaven.
The area around it is boarded-up liquor shops, check caching establishments.
It's not quite gas stations.
It's not as ghastly a ghetto as a lot of others that we have in Memphis, but it is definitely a black neighborhood.
You know you're in a black neighborhood when you go to Graceland.
On the other hand, Graceland is, you know, they're very lucky in Whitehaven, the former Whitehaven, now Blackhaven, to have to make it confusing.
Because if they didn't have it there, there would be nothing that is drawing people there.
There would be no good-paying jobs in the tourist industry.
So consequently, and quite frankly, if Elvis had lived another 10, maybe even five years, he would have moved out.
Yeah.
So they're lucky that he died when he did and that they have that place there.
And where else than the political cesspool have you ever heard the fact that Elvis Presley had a George Wallace for president yard sign in the yard at Graceland?
George Wallace's own son told us that story here on this radio program.
Well, again, not too long after that, he would have been gone.
There's no way he would have still been living there.
If he made it to Frankie Valley's age, he would still be alive and he wouldn't be living there.
No, that's for sure.
But you also saw another very famous home with Remy today, the Pink Palace.
Clarence Saunders Avenue on our way into downtown Memphis and went past there and I told him the story of Clarence Saunders.
Memphis has had a lot of very high-profile entrepreneurs in its history.
We had Clarence Saunders first who developed the supermarket concept.
Then we had Kemmons Wilson who developed the motel by the Cloverleaf.
And then you had Fred Smith who developed this kind of private mail service that FedEx and Holiday and exactly right.
All these things came from homegrown, white Memphis entrepreneurs.
And we talked about— Clarence Saunders was the inventor of the first modern-day grocery store known as Piggly Wiggly.
Right.
Right.
He went bankrupt before he could finish the Pink Palace, which is a museum.
I think James' children have gone there.
I know that my children went there.
Yeah.
But he also, in bankruptcy, after he got out of bankruptcy, tried to open a new chain of grocery stores called Clarence Saunders Groceries, and the trustee in bankruptcy said he couldn't use the name Clarence Saunders because that was part of the goodwill of Piggly Wiggly.
Hold on right there.
We got to take a break.
Keith and Remy don't have their headsets on because we don't have a guest on the line.
But I do and I hear the music, so we've got to take a break.
Stay tuned.
More from Remy Tremblay next.
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News this hour from townhall.com.
I'm Jason Walker.
In less than three weeks, a new round of tariffs will be on the way.
Here's correspondent Donna Warder.
President Donald Trump is announcing tariffs of 30% against the European Union and Mexico, effective August 1st.
Trump announced the tariffs on two of the U.S.'s biggest trade partners and letters posted to a social media account.
In Trump's letter to Mexico, he acknowledges the country has been helpful in reducing the flow of fentanyl into the U.S. and migrants entering the U.S. illegally.
But he says Mexico hasn't done enough to stop North America from turning into a, quote, narco-trafficking playground, end quote.
In his letter to the European Union, Trump says the U.S. trade deficit is a national security threat.
I'm Donna Water.
Also at Townhall.com, President Trump touring the devastation in Texas, where he spoke to a number of parents who lost children.
They lost their child or two children, and just hard to believe what I've never seen anything like it.
A little narrow river that becomes a monster.
President Trump says the damage there is simply unprecedented.
It's hard to believe the devastation.
Trees that are 100 years old just ripped out of the ground.
I've never seen anything like it.
I've seen a lot of bedwins.
I've gone to a lot of hurricanes, a lot of tornadoes.
I've never seen anything like this.
This is a bad one.
And flooding in the Northeast.
Communities in parts of Massachusetts and Vermont have faced damaging homes and washed-out roads.
Some areas got up to eight inches of rain.
In that part of the country, thankfully, there have been no reports of any fatalities.
Russia is intensifying its bombing campaign on Ukraine, launching hundreds of drones and missiles overnight into Saturday morning.
Ukraine says six people were killed, dozens wounded.
More on these stories at townhall.com.
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As a pretty little flower bed of white cardinas.
A parked in a rickety old rudge as a brand new shiny red source dark guys.
And everybody's saying that there's nobody meaning the little old lady from Pasadena.
She's the terror of Colorado Blood.
It's the little lady from Pasadena.
Well, there's some of that summer fun music, and I told you we'd get back to it.
And surest thing you know, here we are now.
Keith is sort of like the opposite of the little old lady from Pasadena.
Keith and I will be going down Highway 64 if he's driving and I'll be worried we're going to get pulled over and get a ticket for going too slow.
And then 45 miles.
45 miles an hour, you know, speed limit and Keith will be going 27 or something.
That's an exact way.
Back me up on this, right?
All right.
All right.
Well, I'll tell you, we'll get Remy to critique your driving today, but Remy told me something I could not believe.
I met them at the restaurant we ate at before the show, and Remy rode home with me, or rather home with me and then to the studio with me so we could spend a little time in conversation.
No, since Keith had him for the early part of the day, and Remy told me you turned the air conditioner on.
I couldn't believe it.
You ran the air conditioner in your car.
The thing is, I knew I had a guy from Canada, and being the thoughtful soul that I am, I said, I don't think he's really going to like this.
I've been in Keith's car a lot of times that he doesn't turn the air conditioner on, no matter how hot it gets.
Hey, we got another comment in here.
I can't believe y'all took a man from the great white north on a tour of the dirty south, but Keith did it.
The dirty is part of the dirty south.
Yeah, well, and you show him how diversity has impacted Memphis, that's for sure.
Pull no punches.
I know that y'all saw the Peabody Hotel, the South's grand hotel, as it is built.
You also saw the place where the hotel was where Nathan Bedford Forrest went in there on horseback.
No, it really was William Forrest, his cousin or brother or something.
Under the command, yeah, I mean, you're right.
Rode up the stairs to the Guyosa, the Hotel Gallosa, and ran out the Union General Washburn out the back door.
And you still got in downtown General Washburn's escape alley.
Exactly.
Which it's marked as such on the street.
And, you know, a little story on that, though.
They captured not General Washburn, but his uniform.
And Forrest had it cleaned, impressed, and then delivered, hand-delivered back to George to General Washburn.
General Washburn responded by finding out who Forrest Taylor was in Memphis and ordering a full-dress Confederate general's uniform for him.
We talked about wearing that sort of stuff in this heat and how they managed.
But you saw the famous bridges of downtown Memphis today, Remy.
Bill Street.
You saw Bill Street, which is Memphis' answer to Bourbon Street, complete with the crime.
And the black people.
The river and, of course, Mississippi River, world famous.
The Confederate history of Memphis and so much more.
But Remy, back to you, my friend.
Again, thoughts on the day, what you saw, demographics?
You told me, I said, I'm going to give you my mic, Keith.
I said, you know, there's a town in East Tennessee that's 95% white.
And you said, well, my town's 100% white.
But for us, this is like incredible.
But anyway, you've seen a lot today.
Continue.
Well, yeah, of course, for somebody coming from Quebec and not from Montreal, it was a cultural shock.
And I'm very, very impressed that there are white people who are still fighting for white rights.
And up to a certain point, I was wondering, what is your intake?
What is your objective?
Do you plan in what Greg Johnson called ethnostate?
Or do you aim what Ricardo Deshane has been working for in Canada, which is giving a voice to white people within a multicultural society?
Well, what it is really is we want segregation like we had before, racial segregation.
White people cannot live cheek and jowl with black people without white people becoming extinct.
You've got to have your own little nest.
You've got to have your own little refuge.
And that's what the popular corridor is in Memphis.
And it's still great.
Well, I mean, it's a very, look, Memphis is a very civilized city.
You'll have to admit that.
It's not this wild west.
Well, you know, I'm telling you that, you know, it is a tale of two cities.
We do have a higher violent homicide rate than New York, which is 10 times our population.
I'd like to see it broken down by neighborhoods and see what's committing to crime, and it's mostly black on black.
But, I mean, you know, look, segregation, whatever.
But, you know, an ethno-state, if this thing breaks apart, I mean, what's West for white people?
Our job, I think, here as I see it on this radio program is to provide commentary, opinion, and analysis on the issues that our people are facing.
And then the solutions, when they come.
I mean, if it was as easy as us to write the solution, you know, we'd implement it.
Theory to practice is a different thing.
But whatever the solution our people make, we want to give them good information.
Well, see, the segregation thing, what is the option?
The option is Jesse Jackson's ominous forecast.
He said, wherever you all move to, we will find you.
Okay.
And that means they're going to basically take over the whole place.
And we can't allow that.
And we're not going to allow it if we can help it.
I have an answer.
A listener in Arkansas, we have the smartest audience.
What are we even doing this job for?
Our audience is smarter than us.
I'm trying to open up the mic to those smart people.
They wore wool uniforms during the war between the states because wool repels chiggers.
And let me tell you something.
Chiggers are no laughing matters.
No joke.
I was out in the woods the other day and they got all over my feet.
My feet look like I got the plague or something.
It looks like you've got measles on them.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, they're bad.
And you can't even see them.
And you don't even feel them until it's over and you start itching.
And then it's just, it's like a mosquito bite, but like 100 times worse.
And they're awful.
So thank you.
Phil in Arkansas.
Thank you for that answer.
So, Remy, one more.
Take a couple of minutes.
Any other observations, takeaways on Memphis and what you saw and anything else?
Well, I must admit that the South is very, like the hospitality of the South is something.
We're a thousand kilometers away from New York.
I mean, like, you go to places, everybody's super friendly.
This is something you don't get into, like, in the New England big cities.
And Memphis is a big city.
Of course, if you go to Maine in the small town, everybody's going to be super friendly with you.
But what I've noticed is people are actually very open to, well, they're very welcoming.
And I've only met like great people today.
Well, people that I would meet in Quebec as well.
Let's put it that way.
Tell me about where we went to eat supper or not.
Well, we went to Bozo's Barbecue in Mason, Tennessee, and that place is a time capsule.
It was founded by the owner in 1923, so it's now 102 years old.
And I guarantee you, they haven't changed a thing in there.
They've still got the same linoleum on the tables that my mother had on her breakfast table back in the 1950s.
Everything is, you know, it's really, if you really like nostalgia, this is where to go.
The food is great.
The people are friendly.
They're nice.
They're staffed with a bunch of high school girls from the area that are just as sweet and nice as anybody.
And it's all a rural farming community.
Everybody that comes in there hasn't met a stranger.
We were leaving today and a bunch of old Codgers pulled Keith over for a conversation.
And it's just great.
It is like this guy was a former highway patrolman, and he gave us the little plastic figures of Jesus.
That's just what it was.
See, this is what, you know, I tell you, Remy, what you saw was the old South of the 1950s in that diner.
That is what it would have been like.
And I must admit that Southern food is great.
Yeah, yeah.
But you know what?
Like, there's one thing that I still don't get is the catfish thing.
Wait a minute now.
I've seen it on every menu.
And I was in reality.
These are fighting words now with James.
I'm going to see the cage mag.
If I was on death row, my last meal would be, and that may happen, but fried catfish.
I actually had some today with my barbecue.
No, talk about the catfish for now.
Mississippi farm-raised catfish.
Yeah, farm-raised, look, it doesn't have any of the scavenger turnoff that a lot of people think of when they're thinking of.
Because it's good.
You know, I don't know, it's catch and release when we do catch catfish.
So I've had some.
I'm going to draw the line at buffalo fish.
Now, he's asking me.
He asked me about fish.
I said, they have some professional fishermen.
He said, in this area, he said, really?
He said, what do they catch?
I said, catfish and buffalo fish.
And he was talking about how, you know, basically he wouldn't like to eat a catfish.
I said, well, this farm-grown catfish is, you know, you don't have to worry about what went in to the catfish.
It's good and the catfish is a very mild fish.
Now, buffalo fish is another matter.
Now, buffalo is rough as a cob, and I don't recommend that to anybody who is civilized.
But on the other hand, the catfish, you know, all the catfish I've had around here anytime in the last 30 years has been very tasty.
And I'm assuming that there's something that I really love about Southern food.
First, it's very hard and very comfy food.
But the thing, the biscuits, I've never seen anything like this anywhere else.
The biscuits are great.
I didn't have it with gravy today, but it's something that is part of like the first thing I want to do when I go through the South is have like biscuits in the gravy.
The music is playing.
We're going to take another quick break.
More from Remy Tremble the next segment, the next hour, the whole rest of Marxist.
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If you see her on the street, don't try to choose her.
You might rub a gold, but you'll never lose her.
Well, she's gonna get a ticket now sooner or later.
Don't you get a cup of accelerator?
And everybody's saying that there's nobody from Pasadena.
She's the terror of Colorado for the bars.
It's the little lady from Pasadena.
I'll tell you about someone with a lead foot, and that's yours truly.
I never want to pass up an opportunity on this program to tell a Buchanan story.
And this has triggered a memory here listening to this song.
So, Keith, how far is it from Memphis to Nashville?
200 miles.
So, two and a half, three hours, you know, to get there.
An hour if you're with James.
All right.
So, I was going to Nashville, all right, to do a to get Pat on the ballot.
And we were, we were working a fair booth up there, and we were getting signatures.
And on that particular trip, it was in June of 2000.
My grandmother and her sister, we did this thing last week with what is my dad's cousin to me, you know, but he's just my cousin.
So, my grandmother's sister, I just called her Aunt Joyce.
And my grandmother and Aunt Joyce were in the car.
And I was driving.
And before I got to Jackson, how far?
It's about 45 minutes to Jackson.
75 miles.
Okay.
45 minutes.
So before I got to Jackson, before I got to Jackson, the pedal of the medal.
Listen to this.
Before I got to Jackson, we were going up.
It was me and my grandmother and her sister.
We were going up, and they were just going to hang out in the hotel and do antique shopping while I went out and did the campaigning.
It was me and a few other guys.
We were working a booth to ballot, get him on the ballot.
And before I got to Jackson, I got pulled over, got a speeding ticket.
And then we start going again.
Okay.
Still before we get to Jackson, which is only 75 miles, I'm driving past another state trooper, and the lights instantly come on.
And I knew if I got two tickets in the same day, you know, that could be trouble.
But there was a long line of traffic, and it took him a minute to get back onto the interstate.
And there just so happened to be an exit.
And I took the exit and took a left.
And I figured if he caught me and pulled me over, I was like, oh, I'm sorry.
I was a fugitive from justice.
It wasn't like I was.
I was just going to say, you know, it wasn't like I was evading.
This was just my exit.
You know, if he caught me, he caught me.
But I figured if I got off the exit, I might have a chance to get away.
And this, you know, this is a rural part of West Tennessee.
And there was a cornfield.
And I was in my grandmother's Cadillac.
And I drove straight into the corn.
Corn.
And I park, you know, because I'm hoping the trooper will pass.
And then after a few minutes, I can get back on the interstate and continue my trip.
And I look over at my grandma, and she's got, you know, just this bewildered look on her face.
And her sister's in the backseat just laughing herself, you know, to death.
And my grandma says, James, you get us to Jackson and you take us to a restaurant.
We need to sit down and collect our thoughts or something like that.
But anyway, I used to get speeding tickets going to the radio station all the time.
When we were at 1380, Art Frith would give me that.
She's famous for saying rules are made to be broken.
Anyway, but speed limits.
More comments coming in.
Did Remy try chocolate gravy and biscuits today?
No, no, not yet anyway.
That might be tomorrow.
Keith has been eating those catfish from McKellar Lake.
And then another one, how was the Orange Mound leg of the tour?
Did you go to Orange Mounds today?
No, we didn't get to Orange.
Well, you got to get on the mic.
Didn't get to Orange Mound today, but we saw a lot of Orange Mound equivalents.
And I told him about my Uncle Ray, whose father, Wallace Lambert, developed some of it, and there are two streets named after his children, Raymond Street, named after Uncle Ray, and Ethel after Wallace Crump's daughter, Ethel.
All right.
So they're still down there.
You don't go down Park Avenue and you can see those streets.
Was there anything else we wanted to cover about Memphis before I read this letter from a Canadian listener?
Since Remy is here with us tonight, there was something we said we were going to talk about.
Do you remember what it was?
I think we got off track with that cornfield story.
Yeah, down in the catfish bag.
Oh, catfish, catfish.
Okay.
All right.
Well, here's a letter that came in recently, and I saved it knowing that Remy was coming in.
Dear James, I'm sitting outside by our campfire as I write to you.
We are surrounded by tall West Coast trees and are only one minute from the ocean.
In our yard, we have an archery set and a basketball net.
We feel fortunate that we live here on Vancouver Island, isolated from the madness that is occurring in other parts of the world.
As I'm sure you are aware, we have a new prime minister here in Canada.
His connections to the globalist ideology are many.
They are saying that Mark Carney will be worse than Justin Trudeau.
Carney's heroes are Marks and Lennon.
No kidding.
He believes in net zero 100% and says Canada will have no gas-powered cars by 2035.
We shall have something to say about that.
I do appreciate your nuanced take on Donald Trump, no doubt.
The situation would be much worse if Kamala had won the U.S. election.
I believe four more years of Democrats and open borders immigration would have been the end of America and Canada.
Since January, almost 1 million immigrants have flooded into my country, mostly from India.
Anyway, it is concerning what Trump's role is in the attack on Iran might be.
I think Mark Weber said on your show, the main thing that Trump has done is to shake things up.
Thanks again for great radio shows.
I enjoy them all.
It is getting dark out here, so I better sign off.
Take care.
And that's from a listener in Vancouver.
Keith, if you can toss your mic over to Remy.
Remy, let's talk now if you would like to respond to this listener in British Columbia about the situation in Canada.
Would you agree with his assessment?
And what are some of the things that you have to say about that?
We'll spend a little more time on this at the end of the show as well, talking about Canada.
But this letter I thought was very good, and I wanted to share it while we had a Canadian guest here with us.
Well, the first thing is about Mark Carney.
The first thing that struck me is about Mark Carney.
First of all, everybody in Canada is very happy that Justin Chudeau's gone.
Justin Trudeau was a very despicable person.
People hated him.
And people like, it was the way he behaved, the way he was, it was more than just like political position.
He really raised hatred against him.
So now, Mark Carney is like Justin Trudeau without all the clown, grotesque character.
Mark Carney can be extremely dangerous.
And Mark Carney has been a globalist.
It's not from yesterday.
He's been close to an advisor for the G7 for Canada.
He's been close to the CFR.
He's been, well, as lad, the Bank of England and the Bank of Canada.
So he's not like a political outsider like the Liberal Party pretending him to be.
Now, he committed a book.
He wrote a book called Values.
And values is a very, Well, it's a troubling.
It's very scary book.
Well, it'd be a scary book if it was written by a university professor.
It is terrifying because it has been written by the Prime Minister of Canada.
Basically, it's a dystopia or a utopia where rights are limited because of the green, like a new green deal, if you will.
So it is extremely, extremely scary that we have that man in Canada.
I think you can do a lot more than Justin Trudeau could have because Justin Trudeau was so clown-esque, like Justin Trudeau was so goofy, while Mark Carney is an intelligent guy.
Mark Carney is down to business, and he can, and he may, and he will, if nobody stops him, bring a lot of changes in the exact same way that Justin Trudeau planned it.
but he will do it way more efficiently.
Okay, what about some of these outlandish things that we're reading from our friend in Vancouver?
No gas-powered cars in the entire continent of entire nation rather of North America.
It doesn't feel like Canada down here.
That doesn't even feel like we could be on the same continent.
But yes, indeed, I meant to say, thank you, Keith.
Nation of Canada.
No gas-powered cars by 2035.
Surely they jest.
Well, they always like, yeah.
Okay.
First thing, under Trudeau, we had one lithium mine.
Canada had one lithium mine, which is needed to make batteries for electric cars.
And we sold it to China.
I mean, the objective that they set, like in Quebec, I think it's like in 2030, there won't be any gas car anymore.
But the power grid is unable to handle it.
So it's just, is it threat?
Is it like objectives?
I don't know what it is, but it's clearly not likely to happen.
Well, let me ask you this.
He mentioned 1 million new Indians in Canada in short order recent recent time.
Very recently, I guess is what I'm trying to say.
So obviously here, Mexicans, people in Central and South America, predominantly, that's our immigrants.
I mean, they're certainly bringing them in from everywhere they can.
Indians are a big problem, too.
But in Canada, are Indians the primary people driving new immigration?
I don't recall seeing Indians, though.
But there are a lot of people.
Immigration, like the official targets are about $500,000 a year for a company.
Where are they coming from?
India, China?
Everywhere, everywhere.
Every West Coast, they come from China.
On the East Coast, they'll come from China.
They're just not coming from Europe.
Yeah, they're not coming from Europe.
It's very complicated.
Immigrating to Canada, if you're from Europe, good luck.
Can you imagine?
Almost like they planned it that way, right?
The great replacement is real, and it's not great.
First hour in the can.
Remy Tremblay, are y'all having fun tonight, gentlemen?
I'll ask the audience.
Are y'all having a good time?
We're doing it, man.
We're doing it.
We're picking them up and laying them down.
All right.
Well, we'll be back.
And we are going to talk about some other topics in the news here in the United States in the next hour.
We're going to continue to have a good time while talking about some of the issues you tuned into here.