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July 27, 2025 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
54:15
Radio Show Hour 3 – 2025/07/26
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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.
Well, welcome back, everybody.
It is the third hour, the first two hours.
Dynamic Dynamite.
David Duke, the first two hours, third hour tonight.
I am very much looking forward to this conversation with Taylor Young of Antelope Hill Publishing.
You know, the third hour of every last Saturday of any given month belongs to Antelope Hill Publishing, with the rare exception if we have to do some little schedule flexing.
But tonight, especially so, well, always, but tonight especially so, looking forward to the topic of discussing their brand new reprint, which will be available for purchase within the next couple of days at antelopehillpublishing.com.
It's one of the titles from David Irving's library, Nuremberg The Last Battle.
But just before we move on from our guest for the first two hours, David wanted me to be sure to tell you, Taylor Young, that he is a big fan of Antelope Hill Publishing and that he is excited about your new reprint here and that he was living at an apartment complex with David Irving when he was writing My Awakening.
And David said David is still upset.
Irving is still upset with Duke that he always used to beat him in tennis.
So I told him I would share that with the audience because he asked me to.
But Taylor, it's great to have you back on tonight.
The stories you learn in this thing.
How are you doing tonight, my friend?
I'm doing great.
Very happy to be on here.
And thanks for the storytelling.
You're very welcome.
We've got a lot of them to tell.
But let's talk about this.
Let's let you tell this story.
Now, this is exciting.
When I heard that Antelope Hill was going to be reprinting Nuremberg The Last Battle, well, it brought forth a lot of things that we could talk about.
But first, let me just ask you this, the obvious question of all of the titles in the Irving library, why was this one the one that you wanted to go after?
So we were actually put in touch with Irving by a mutual friend.
And I mean, we have a great admiration for his whole body of work.
This particular work has been out of print for a while and they wanted to try it out.
What it would be like to republish with us.
So this is the one we started with.
And we've basically, you know, just made sure it's all polished.
There's nothing new about the book.
It's just a new printing.
But I know you can't see it yet because it's not on our website yet.
It will be on our website Monday.
So to everyone listening, definitely check back in on Monday.
Should be up there.
And we've got a beautiful new cover for it.
It's a hardcover only edition.
We've got all the images and everything that was in the original book.
So basically, this is the one that made sense.
It's been out of print, and we're very honored to be able to bring it back.
Well, I assume that this is Keith, by the way, Taylor.
I assume that Nuremberg is the Nuremberg Trials, and that's very intriguing to me because I think that was, you know, the information there, basically the accusations and the replies of the accused intrigue me a great deal.
Can you give us an idea of some of the tidbits that are in this book?
Yes, certainly.
So it's Nuremberg, The Last Battle, is the title of our printing.
And it's, like you're saying, it's about the Nuremberg trials that took place after the defeat of Hitler's Germany.
And it's about the trials themselves, as well as also some of the history that led up to them and kind of what are some of the how the trials came to be,
the viewpoints that the different Allied leaders and other political figures had on the war and how to really how to punish the not just the Nazis, but really the Germans.
And that makes up probably some of the least known content and some of the most interesting content, as well as just the trials themselves, because a lot of people know that they took place, but they don't really know how and what happened.
But there's also a lot of background in the book about what Churchill's views on it were, Eisenhower, FDR, as well as other lesser known people in the American administration, as well as in the British cabinet.
And basically, there were a lot of people who were very, very bloodthirsty about the whole thing.
And they were really, honestly, like to, you could almost see the trials, as we'll probably talk about, as kind of grotesque as they were from a standpoint of judicial procedure.
They were a lot of people had ideas to do much, much worse things to Germany, including just straight up killing tens of thousands of people.
Let me ask you this.
And we will continue throughout the course of this hour as this interview further develops, talk to you more about the contents of this book.
Any book by David Irving is going to be a must-read title.
He is brilliant and was very much renowned for being an accomplished historian before that term became attached to him because his pursuit of the truth led him wherever it may flow.
But he was a renowned historian by any standard of measurement before he began to talk about these issues.
And of course, those who controlled the media were able to sully his reputation to an extent, but it did not diminish his brilliance and his loyalty to the truth.
But what was the process, Taylor, of going about obtaining the rights for this?
You touched on it, but I think it would be interesting to hear more.
Did you deal with Irving directly or members of his estate or team?
Yeah, both.
We've dealt with him and family members, members of his estate and his company.
So I don't know too much about the ins and outs, but basically this was, you know, this is something very much in cooperation.
This is something that they wanted to have done.
They wanted us to do it.
So again, it's something we're very excited about and glad that it was able to work out the way it did.
Well, I'm glad it worked out the way it did as well, because there was some great concern.
I believe it was, you know, I was down with Congressman Steve King back in January of last year, January of 24.
So this was a year and a half ago now.
But I remember Nick Griffin, of course, in the UK and others who believed that Irving had died.
I mean, there was some information on the internet and some pretty compelling information that he had died.
Luckily for all of us, it was a serious health issue, but it was not something that was that serious.
But nevertheless, had that had happened, this would not have happened.
And we're all thankful that this reprint is now available because this is a very interesting topic.
And the fact that it was out of print and people could not get it until now or until Monday at Antelope Hill Publishing is something that is worthy of celebration tonight.
And again, the reason for your appearance this week.
So on Monday, people will be available to purchase this.
At what price, Taylor, have you set?
And what kind of book, what will this look like, this reprinted new edition at antelopehillpublishing.com?
Well, I'm afraid you caught me on the back foot with that question.
But we'll find out on Monday, right?
Yeah, like I said, it is a hardcover only.
So we do have a hardcover style, which is, you know, of course, a nice physical hardcover, which is in this case, a plain black with gold lettering for the title and the author.
And then we have a very, very nice dust jacket to go with it that's got the cover art, which in this case prominently features a picture of the Nuremberg trial.
Well, was this something that perhaps Irving himself or members of his team were insistent on, or was this an Antelope Hill Publishing decision to go with it in that way?
I mean, will it be available in PDF form or any other form that may make it more accessible to people at any price point?
Yeah, we always have an e-book version, so you can always get an e-book.
It's usually not released at the same time.
I think it's released maybe like a month after or so.
But yeah, there's going to be an e-book version as well for sure.
Wonderful.
So this will be accessible to people at different price points.
I appreciate the fact that a work of this importance is going to be given the sort of display that it deserves with a very fine hardcover edition, but making an e-book available as well opens it up because, again, the most important thing we can do is share this information.
And thanks to Antelope Hill Publishing, this book is going to be made available again to the public in a way that it is not, as of, as we said here, even live with Taylor tonight.
It is not available.
Monday, it will be available again.
Keith, very quickly before the music plays.
Okay, I don't want to let the cat out of the bag, but are there any particular heroes or villains that came out of this information in your mind?
Well, I tell you what, we will let him ponder that.
I hate it when, you know, it is live radio, when we hear the music play right before a guest can answer an interesting question.
But we will circle back to that and we will continue with Taylor Young, a member of the editorial board of Antelope Hill Publishing.
We're talking about their brand new reprint, which will be released on Monday of David Irving's Nuremberg, The Last Battle.
Much more about this book.
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Well, I was an extra on a soap opera for three years.
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Yeah.
And you're going to play our parents for how long?
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I said to you quite tastelessly that more women died on the back seat of Senator Edward Kennedy's car at Chapercritic than ever died in a gas chamber at Auschwitz.
It is my pleasure to introduce Professor Deborah Lipstadt.
Whatever the reasons that people become deniers, they often have an agenda which they won't admit to.
Why do you continually denigrate the work of David Irving?
You can have opinions about the Holocaust, but I won't meet with anyone who says the Holocaust didn't happen.
Professor Lipstadt, I am that David Irving.
And I've got $1,000 to give anyone who can show me a document that proves the Holocaust.
I will not debate you.
Not here, not now, not in God.
Well.
Irving's just sent us notice of a suit to be filed in the high court.
Miss Nitchstad has done very real damage to my professional existence.
What did you say about him?
I think I called him a liar and falsifier of history.
You better get yourself lawyered up.
The man accuses you of something and it's your job to prove he's wrong.
In the U.S., there's a presumption of innocence.
Yeah, not in the UK.
This case is happening to you, but it's not about you.
Auschwitz is at the very center of Holocaust belief, so it's at the very center of Holocaust denial.
There were no gas chambers anywhere at Auschwitz.
Here is one of the largest killing machines in human history.
You know what it is?
It's how we prove what it is.
What if we lose?
Suddenly it becomes acceptable to say the Holocaust didn't happen.
The word denier is particularly evil.
Freedom of speech means you can say whatever you want.
The phrase is a poison to which there is no antidote.
What you can't do is lie and expect not to be accountable for it.
There are no holes in that roof.
Therefore, there never were any gas chambers.
No holes, no Holocaust.
He wanted a catchy phrase.
He's got it.
Where's the evidence?
Where's the proof?
Not all opinions are equal.
But I'm not a racist.
The earth is round, the ice caps are melting.
And Elvis, it's not a lie.
I'm not attacking freedom of speech.
I've been defending my right to stand up against someone who wants to pervert the truth.
That was a movie that came out about 10 years ago now, Denial.
And I don't know, Taylor, of anybody else who, adjacent to our cause, who has received a treatment like that from Hollywood.
I mean, that was an A-list film.
Of course, the narrative is pro-Jewish.
Pro-Jewish.
But and it it leads you to believe, you know, of course, certain conclusions.
But, you know, I think it's important to watch these movies.
I've seen that movie a couple of times.
They cast Timothy Spall in the role of David Irving in that movie, and he did a wonderful job, frankly.
Interestingly, creative casting for the role of Deborah Lipstadt, Rachel Weiss played her, who and Rachel Weiss is a gorgeous woman.
Lipstadt certainly did her a favor in that casting, that's for sure.
But she's an Academy Award winner, and then Tim Wilkinson plays in that.
He's an Academy Award nominee.
The point is, everybody takes interest in David Irving, and Hollywood had certainly take interest in him.
And that movie revolves around his library trial in the early 2000s.
Anything to do with David Irving is a big deal.
So I played that clip only to sort of just emphasize the point that this reprint is a big deal.
Now, you have the Enlighten Pill publishing catalog is very impressive as is.
Did you feel though, Taylor, that working on this, getting the writers to this, reprinting this was something that was a little extra?
Oh, absolutely.
I mean, it's I don't think I can really say how much or how honored we are that, you know, it's to us, it seems like it's only been a few years since we were just like spinning up a book publishing company just basically for fun because we wanted to read some of these books and they weren't available.
So it's like, well, why not work on it ourselves?
Why not make it available to other people?
And now we're reprinting David Irving.
So it's really pretty amazing.
Very, very honored to be able to take part in such a small way, but take part in the legacy of someone who's done such really monumental and indispensable work.
Did working on this change your mind about David Irving or about his trials and travails in any way?
Or did it give you any particular insights that you'd like to share with our audience?
Well, I think James mentioned earlier just David Irving's stature as a scholar.
And that definitely comes through.
It's one of those books where if you want to be really kind of strict about something, you always want to get every possible side of the story.
But sometimes you'll read something and you'll just think like, well, there's so much information presented here and the quality of the sources is such that it's hard to not just take it as credible.
And that's definitely what comes across.
I mean, like the rigor of his scholarship and the quality of his sources.
I mean, you know, in some cases, had to even wait a long time for different archives to become available to kind of complete every possible side of the story.
He had access to a lot of as well personal writings such as by the American Supreme Court Justice Jackson.
So, you know, it's got a lot of details of conversations between Churchill and Roosevelt and members of the American Cabinet and other people, as well as a lot of, obviously, information about the trials themselves and the testimonies and how they were, you know, what the whole process was.
So I think that you definitely, it definitely is really a masterful showing of historical scholarship.
Let me ask you this.
It kind of follows up with that question I asked before the break.
Did you think there was, you know, did this cause you to rethink people?
Who wouldn't be the villains of the peace?
Who would be the heroes of it?
Who did you change your mind about?
One person in particular I have in mind is Robert Jackson, but I'd like to hear your comments on all of this.
Yeah, so some of the villains are probably people you would expect, you know, FDR, obviously the Jew Morgenthau, who came up with the Morgenthau plan, which was fortunately not implemented, but which basically had the intention of just destroying Germany as a nation for all time.
And Churchill as well, like I said, I think earlier, there's a lot of conversations recorded, a lot of the internal politics that show how bloodthirsty a lot of the Allies were and how much they, there were a lot of people like that who really were, at some point they were just kind of like looking for any way to just kill Germans even after the war was over.
I think the one that surprised me was Eisenhower also was really not much better.
He had a lot of the same opinions and talked about the potential of just— He supposedly was responsible for the deaths of about 10 million German POWs, who he wouldn't classify as POWs, so he basically let them die of exposure and starvation, which, on the other hand— George Patton came out as one of the big heroes and said, we fought the wrong enemy in this war.
We should have allied with the fascists to fight the communists rather than ally with the communists to fight the fascists.
But particularly in the trial, are there any people that stand out either as villains or heroes to you?
Well, I will say you mentioned Justice Jackson, and he is a very prominent part of the narrative as well.
And he's an interesting figure.
Just very quickly, Taylor, if I could interject, for anybody who may not know who we're talking about, that is Associate Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson, who was sort of a lead prosecutor.
Did he become a Supreme Court justice after the Nuremberg trials, or was he one before?
I don't know.
But nevertheless, another movie, another movie.
Alec Baldwin plays him in the movie.
And, oh, the actor who plays Goering, Brian Cox.
But nevertheless, yes, I mean, so, I mean, I don't guess it would be surprising from our perspective that he would be the villain.
But what did you learn about him through David Irving's scholarship?
Well, he's a major, obviously a major part of the trials.
And so in that sense, major participant in the judicial farce of the trials.
It is somewhat interesting to contrast him with, for example, a Jew like Morgenthau, who wanted to just wipe out the Germans.
And Jackson was definitely a liberal.
He had a lot of liberal opinions just in the American context as well in the context of American politics while he was sitting on the Supreme Court.
So he kind of ends up in this interesting position of being the head of this trial, which is, you know, kind of his intention is to outlaw war.
That's one thing that Irving talks about.
And, you know, obviously we can talk about how the trial prosecuted the Germans for things that the Allies had done as well.
But it's also interesting to contrast him again with some of the other figures in America and England, American England especially, who were kind of like another possible way that things could have gone, which is, you know, in that contrast, the trial is kind of the softer option that occurred.
So I guess what I'm saying is that, like, you know, while he is a liberal and while he is the head of this proceeding, it's interesting to still see how he nevertheless differs from, again, from someone like Morgenthau, who sees, as a Jew, sees this as a matter of like an existential racial war against the German people.
All right.
We will continue this conversation about the book, Nuremberg, The Last Battle.
Soon to be, it's already been reprinted.
It will be available for purchase at AntelopehillPublishing.com on Monday.
If you're listening live here on Saturday night, it'll be Monday.
If you're listening in the archives, get your checkbook.
It'll already be there.
Check it out.
We'll be right back with Taylor Young.
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News this hour from townhall.com.
I'm Jason Walker.
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Victor Davis Hansen says the president is succeeding in part by taking away the Democrats' tactic of dividing the nation by race.
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So the Republican Party now is saying to the Hispanic truck driver, the black truck driver, the white truck driver, you all have more in common than you do with your self-appointed leaders on TV or media or the view or in politics.
Hansen spoke this week on the Salem Radio Network.
It's almost time to catch another double meteor shower.
The Southern Delta Aqua Ridge and Alpha Capra Cornid meteor showers peak in the early morning of July 30th.
With minimal interference from moonlight, the meteors should appear bright and clear if viewed away from city lights.
Each shower is expected to produce up to a dozen visible meteors per hour.
The Alpha Capra Cornids may have tales that linger longer in the night sky.
Viewing of each shower lasts through August 12th.
The next major meteor shower, the Perseids, will peak in mid-August.
Keith Peters reporting.
And more on these stories at townhall.com.
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I think the Jews have to ask themselves the question, right?
Is it that every time they've arrived as pitiful refugees in a country after a few years, they have to move on?
They don't seem to ask themselves that question.
I know that I'm disliked as an historian.
I know that I'm hated by some people.
I know the reason why, and I know what I could do to change it, instantly change my opinions.
I'm not going to do it.
They don't ask themselves what they could do to change the way that they are disliked.
David Irving was once one of the world's highest paid historians.
His books defending the Nazis and attacking established accounts of the Holocaust have sold thousands of copies and earned him a small fortune.
Well, I don't know how well he's benefited financially and career-wise by seeking the truth.
This was, of course, part of a hit piece.
Anything in the mainstream media about Irving has been a hit piece.
Does not change the fact that he is brilliant.
It shows you who's in control, doesn't it?
Well, but nevertheless, and that was David Irving in his own words, not a movie about him.
That was David Irving in his own words there at the top of that clip that we came back out of the break with.
Just to re-emphasize the point that Antelope Hill Publishing.com will on Monday release the reprint of David Irving's Nuremberg, The Last Battle.
So, you know, Antelope Hill has been partnering with TPC and us with them for the last couple of years, and it's been a wonderful partnership.
And every time they're on, it's an interesting conversation, whether we're talking about some of their original titles, and they've got some great ones coming up and some great ones that have already been published.
They're translations taken from a foreign tongue and put into English, perhaps for the first time.
And then these reprints.
They've also got Little Frog Hill, which is some children's books.
They've got Jackalope Hill, which is a fiction imprint.
It's all there at AnalopeillePublishing.com.
But, you know, Tato, we've been working together for the last couple of years, and everything you come on to talk about is interesting, but there's just something about this.
I don't know what it is about World War II or David Irving or whatever.
But this one, I was pressing because I knew that when you came on tonight, it would be just a couple of days in advance of it actually being available for purchase.
But I pushed.
I said, no, let's just do it right now.
Let's just do it.
What is it about this topic, about this author, about this title that I think, and as we hope, will pique this interest in sales come Monday?
Well, that's a very good question.
And I think that it is, you know, you think about all of our modern political mythology and how it all boils down to World War II and how it ended.
And then specifically how it boils down to the Nazis and the Holocaust and everything that has been taught about that.
And how, you know, all of the white guild is based on that.
All of the attacks that any kind of nationalist politics receive are all based on that.
And, you know, myself, I grew up thinking that this was a supremely documented, inviolable historical event.
And so this book is one of those things that just gets right to the heart of it.
And, you know, you have this really unique historical event, the Nuremberg trials, where the victors actually put to trial, you know, supposedly according to the universal principles of law.
They put to trial a government that they had defeated.
And when you kind of stop and think about that, you're like, that's kind of interesting.
You know, that's not something that usually happens.
So what was it actually like?
And when you start reading this book and you read more about it and you see like the torture that the defendants were subjected to, you read the records of them giving, you know, after days of torture, they would give confessions or they would sign confessions that weren't even in a language they understood or that were full of errors,
possibly even intentional errors or stuff that was just impossible or that we know today could not possibly have been true.
And that's the basis of this whole idea that people have about World War II and about the National Socialist Germany.
So I think that that is really a very big part of what makes this feel so unique.
Well, it was basically a farce.
It pretended to be delivering due process and a new look at things.
And it was just the opposite.
It was a kangaroo court of the First Order, wasn't it?
Yeah, exactly.
And it's, you know, We, as Americans, we grew up believing all these things about justice and due process and all that and the sacred process of the law.
And then you learn that the whole moral basis of our modern political establishment is based on this show trial.
And you start asking, well, why aren't we taught about this?
Why is it so difficult to learn about this?
Why is David Irving, like, why does he receive the treatment that you guys have been talking about?
Because he just dug up the historical records of this.
All right.
So let's get back to this and let's reiterate the point that on Monday, if you're listening live tonight, on Monday, if you're listening in the archives, that will be July the 28th.
Go to antelopebillpublishing.com and there you will be able to buy this reprint.
It is out of print.
You cannot find it anywhere right now, but come Monday you will be able to, thanks to Anelope and thanks to David Irving for giving them the rights to reproduce this particular book.
And I know, Taylor, that we have talked about why.
I mean, there are so many books by David Irving that have tackled World War II, the different figures, the different everything, battles, you name it.
I mean, he is the preeminent historian on World War II, particularly from our side, which is to say the right side.
But this book, again, it was out of print.
Yes, it was an opportunity for you to work with them.
Yes.
But what is it?
Let's just get down to this.
Let's ask it this way.
What is it about this book that you think people should know, that you think should pique their interest to make a purchase and to expand their knowledge?
I think that kind of just going off of what I was just saying, it gets to, again, like the event of the Nuremberg trials is such a historically unique event.
And you think of a trial, I mean, the trial is a presentation of evidence, right?
So, you know, everything that you've been, it kind of like is a capstone for a lot of Irving's other work.
You know, you talked about like his books about Hitler and German generals and other stuff like that.
But this is, you know, the historical, a look at the trial in which they were supposed to be looking at what actually happened, at the evidence, and, you know, and where's the evidence.
And that's the thing that kind of like it's kind of, I guess you could say it's both the start point and the end point of any serious inquiry into World War II for a lot of people because it's, you know, your first kind of introduction to the fact that the mainstream narrative might be wrong.
And then the more you look into it, the more you come to see all the issues with it.
And it kind of both starts and ends with Nuremberg.
Well, let me ask you this.
It seems to me that at least the impression that I got when I was a student and a child about this was that it was an effort to bring people to justice and to have due process.
Instead, it turned out to be basically just a vehicle for Jewish revenge.
Am I wrong about that?
Or how did you made to appear as though it was some sort of legitimate proceedings?
Right, but it was basically just motivated by malice.
No, I think you're right on point with that.
And like I said, that's one of the things that you read in the book a lot as well is, again, the malice that a lot of particularly Jewish allied figures have toward, you know, not even to like the SS or Hitler or the Nazis, but the German people, the whole German nation.
They wanted to use this as an opportunity to just take revenge on the whole German nation.
All right.
So this, again, ladies and gentlemen, will be available for purchase on Monday, July the 28th at AntelopeHillPublishing.com.
Whether you're listening live or after the fact, that date is the one you need to remember.
Monday, July the 28th, antelopehillpublishing.com.
I'm looking at the boy, I'm looking at the upcoming titles at the website there.
There is just a lot coming up, a lot already available.
So many titles that we have featured and profiled here on the program over the last couple of years, but so many things still to come.
Y'all are busy at AHP, Taylor, and we will talk about that when we come back in our final segment.
But is there anything else that you'd like to mention about this particular title that we haven't yet covered?
I think we've covered a lot.
I could just, I guess, add on to what I was just saying, that another of the examples of the farce that the trials were.
And I think Keith was talking about like the, you know, who is on trial.
One of the people.
Let's resume.
Hold that thought, my friend.
Hold that thought because the music is playing.
Hold that thought.
We will resume right there, and then we'll give you a preview of other titles still to come.
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Well, it's interesting that we're talking about David Irving tonight because the only other contemporary of ours or the only other person that we know and talk to on this program and have known in other capacities that has had a major Hollywood movie made out of him.
I can't think of anybody else but David Duke, who was on, of course, the first two hours.
But that Spike Lee movie, Black Klansman, was sort of like a parody.
They had an Ashkenazi Jude Topher Grace play David.
I mean, at least the denial movie they gave him, a Gentile played David Irving.
But it is remarkable.
And I have, you know, David never come on the show.
I knew him and never asked him to.
I mean, it seems ridiculous now to even consider that now that we're having the conversation.
I remember being with David Irving in Atlanta for a talk that he gave.
And then my wife and I were actually on vacation in Florida.
We pulled up to the curb.
We pulled up to the curb and we were just about to check in and we were going back to this gate that led to a courtyard with a swimming pool.
And we had our luggage.
I had my luggage and we had not been married long.
I don't even know if we had had kids yet.
Maybe we had one.
It was a while.
It was a few years ago.
But I had luggage and my wife had luggage and a guy opened the gate to let us in and it was David.
It was David Irving.
Now, if you knew where we were staying, it would make a little more sense.
But nevertheless, he was just as charming and as wonderful as anyone could be.
He had a reputation for being difficult, and certainly he could be that.
A lot of geniuses could be.
But none of it, none of it takes away from his brilliance and his pursuit of the truth at all costs.
And he paid a terrible cost in his personal life for this, losing that libel trial, all the money and being put into prison for a time.
But he never, never, never backed down.
And still to this day, still to this day is not backed down.
So you were going into something, though, Taylor, there before the break about some of the defendants that were on trial there at Nuremberg.
We'll touch on that and then we'll move into some upcoming projects for Analo Pill.
We don't want to look too far ahead because this one's still yet to be available.
On Monday, it will be, but we'll get to all of it.
So anything else you want to say about the book, Things You Learned, the People on Trial, that whole thing?
Yeah, I was just going to briefly just talk about Rudolf Hess, who, as some people may know, some people may not.
He actually flew to Britain to try to personally negotiate peace between the British and the Germans.
And he kind of presented a particular problem for the Allies after the war in the lead up to the trials because all of the things that they wanted to specifically charge Hitler's government with didn't apply to him.
For many cases, he wasn't even in Germany anymore at the time.
But they included him anyway, just because they thought that it would look weird and would be unpopular if they didn't.
So that kind of just, again, goes to show just how much of a farce and What a travesty from a perspective of fairness the whole affair was.
All right.
Well, listen, you don't need to be sold on a book about Nuremberg written by David Irving, do you?
I mean, do you really, folks?
I mean, if you're listening, did we need to spend this much time?
I wanted to spend this much time.
I wanted this interview and I wanted to talk about it tonight.
But for no other reason than to tell you that on Monday, it's going to be available for your purchase at antelopehillpublishing.com first as a hardback premium edition, later as an e-book.
So it will be available.
But I am looking at the upcoming titles, Taylor.
You've got a lot of translations that are coming up, some original works, including The American Regime.
Now, we interviewed Kristen Sikor back in late January, I believe, on this program, right after he was released from prison by Donald Trump.
He was one of the J6 hostages.
But you had published a book from him before and during that whole ordeal before he was sent to prison.
A second edition of that is coming up.
A lot of translations.
Go to antelopehillpublishing.com and click for the upcoming titles.
I mean, one thing that I always bring up when I'm texting you or talking with you via email or even on the program, we've got a big third edition of The Culture of Critique coming up by our mutual friend, Dr. Kevin McDonald, one of the all-time leading guests, a number of appearances on this program.
There's a lot of good stuff coming up at Antelope Hill Publishing.
But of course, first and foremost, on Monday, this reprint of Nuremberg, The Last Battle.
But let's talk about some of those other forthcoming titles.
Taylor, what do you want to focus on?
I mean, we will get to them in time and your monthly appearances.
But, hey, let's go ahead and give them a sneak peek.
Yeah, so like you said, we do have the upcoming third edition of Culture of Critique, which has been working on for a while.
And just like you were very, very excited for that one.
So that will be out pretty soon.
We're working probably a little bit farther down the line.
We're working on another Kerry Bolton book as well.
Of course, the second edition of American Regime, this time with Christian's name on the cover.
It used to say an anonymous January 6th prisoner, and he is now out of prison.
He is now pardoned.
It's going to have his name on the cover as the author.
And probably in the near future, we're going to have another book about one of the fathers of Spanish phalangism, Spanish fascism.
And we are also going to have a book actually about Japanese national socialism or Japanese fascism called Japan's National Policy and Pure Socialism.
So that's going to be a unique one for us, but we're pretty excited about that one as well.
And of course, we're also working on our writing contest book for this year, which is the compilation of all the best entries and the winners from our writing contest, which this year the theme was, If Not Us, Who.
So that is the theme on which you can expect all the short stories and poetry in that writing contest book.
Hey, folks, don't sleep on their children's books and their fiction titles through Frog Hill, Little Frog Hill, and Jackalope Hill, respectively.
But antelopehillpublishing.com, the originals and the translations and the reprints.
I mean, the only reprint right now currently in production is Nuremberg The Last Battle by David Irving, available on Monday.
So just hours away, really, if you're listening live.
But so many translations and then these original titles when you're talking about Kevin McDonald, Kevin Bolton, Kristen Secour, this J6 hostage, revised second edition, expanded second edition.
This is exciting stuff.
The work never stops at Analope Hill, does it, Taylor?
Nope, it never does.
Well, let me say this in closing, at least on my part.
I think this is a very important book because really World War II was the watershed for Jewish power and influence in America.
You know, it started there, the camel's nose got into the tent under the Woodrow Wilson administration.
But by the end of World War II, which is this period, the consolidation of Jewish power and influence in American government was complete.
Everything after that, the civil rights movement, the feminist movement, the homosexual rights movement, all of that came from the same source as this Nuremberg trial, which was Jewish power and influence.
And to really understand how control, this was an unprecedented event in Western history.
I don't think that, you know, with the possible exception of Napoleon, I've never thought about Western nations actually trying the people that, you know, they defeated in war.
And this was revolutionary, and it was not well done.
It was a kangaroo court, I think.
Well, read all about it, as they say, at antelopehillpublishing.com come Monday, July the 28th, David Irving's Nuremberg, The Last Battle, reprinted.
Brand new cover, brand new, everything at AnalopeillePublishing.com.
And, you know, thank God for the fact that we have lived in the age of David Irving and David Duke.
And David Duke, when we were talking in the break between the second and the third hour before Taylor came on tonight, I mean, everything he was saying about David Irving, because we had previewed this hour throughout his appearances, his appearance earlier in the program, it was all endearing.
I mean, it was the tongue-in-cheek comment about, yeah, you know, I used to beat David Irving in tennis, but, you know, I always thought he had really good-looking girlfriends, David said about Irving.
So listen, I mean, you know, it's a wonderful time to be alive, and there are some Titans out there that if you've been able to work with them as Analope Hill Publishing has been able to do here on this endeavor, I'm sure it was to the credit of you and your colleagues, Taylor, to be able to tell that story, a story we've been talking about tonight.
So again, folks, AnelopehillPublishing.com.
Taylor, the music is about to begin.
Final word to you, anything we've left out that you think needs to be put on the record?
No, I think you've stated very well.
Thank you guys so much for having me on.
As always, it's really a pleasure to be on here and talk to you, and I hope your audience enjoys it as well.
Well, audience, check it out on Monday, July the 28th, AnelopePublishing.com.
Taylor, we will talk to either you or one of your associates, same time, same place next month at the end of August.
For the rest of y'all, we'll talk to you next week.
Good night.
God bless you.
God save the South.
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