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Dec. 7, 2025 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
54:33
Radio Show Hour 1 – 2025/12/06

What has Donald Trump done that has some of our regular guests saying that last week was the president’s best ever in office? James Edwards and Keith Alexander walk you through it as we get cozy and fully settle into the Christmas season on TPC!

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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.
Here we come a caroling among the leaves so green.
Here we come, a wandering so fair to be seen.
Love and joy come to you and to you glad Christmas too.
And God bless you and send you a happy new year.
And God send you a happy new year.
Merry Christmas again, everybody.
We are now in December, the 12th and final month of this year here.
Another great one on TPC.
I'm your host, James Edwards, along with Keith Alexander.
It is Saturday evening, December the 6th.
We are live on your radio once again.
And since last week, since we were last with you, we got out our Christmas letters to all of our contributors.
Many of you probably have received them by now.
I can't say all of you have, especially our international supporters, but they are en route.
Do give them a good read.
And it wasn't without incident.
Last year really was tough because I think a box of them got lost.
We ended up having to send two letters out to a lot of folks.
And then some people received two.
Some people received them about 20 days in.
But they all went out this week.
But I had to go to not one, not two, Keith, but three different post office branches, postal stations, to find stamps.
To find stamps.
Two post offices in a row.
Why am I not surprised?
Did not even have stamps.
And so, but nevertheless, we got them out.
And check your mailbox.
They may be there even now.
So we're going to settle in tonight.
We're going to get cozy with you folks.
And we're going to fully settle into the Christmas season here on TPC.
We kicked it off last week for the entire rest of the month of December.
We're going to have some fun and we're going to have some good conversations, of course.
We're going to settle into the spirit of the season.
But tonight, we have a few things to talk about.
This was an interesting week in so much as the entire year, the entire year, from the time we started all the way through, we have always been a week or two behind.
There have been several occasions this year.
There have been so much going on.
We've had to bump guests.
This was the first week where we had time to fill.
And we sort of had a little gap week.
We're booked up for the rest of the month already.
And then tonight, though, we had a little bit of leisure time.
So we're going to enjoy it by just taking some time with you, if that's okay.
So still some first-time guests coming up in the third hour tonight, Richard Parker.
You'll learn more about Richard Parker later.
But a first-time guest, still people making their debuts on TPC after all these years.
And, well, another surprise or two before then.
But first, what has Donald Trump done this week, or I guess it was last week, that has some of our regular guests saying it was the president's best week in office ever.
Well, Keith and I are going to walk you through it and unpack it, as it were, right now.
So what is going on?
Is it more bluster?
Is it more fool's gold or is there some good to be found in it?
Has Donald Trump turned the corner on race?
That is a video where Jared Taylor asks that question.
Has he?
Almost?
Maybe?
Well, we'll let Jared Taylor explain in a moment, but this is from the statement the president made after an Afghan opened fire on two National Guardsmen in Washington.
Donald Trump unleashed a mighty blast against immigrants that ended with these words, quote, I will permanently pause migration from all third world countries and remove anyone who is not a net asset to the United States.
I will deport any foreign national who is a public charge, security risk, or non-compatible with Western civilization.
Only reverse migration can fully cure this situation.
Will it happen?
Is it going to be another over something that is over-promised and under-delivered, something that is under-delivered upon?
Probably.
However, is there value in hearing the president of the United States say those particular and those exact words?
And Keith, I think that there is.
That is probably the most powerful statement I've ever heard him make.
I will permanently pause migration from all third world countries, remove anyone who is not an asset to the United States, depart blah, blah, blah.
If they are not compatible with Western civilization, only reverse migration can fully cure the situation.
Just for the president to speak those words has some power and a residual effect that we hope will come later.
And I'm talking about later beyond the Trump era.
Well, it's the strongest statement on race uttered by a U.S. president since Calvin Coolidge with the passage of the 1924 Johnson Anti-Immigration Act.
This is great news.
Trump is never going to address race per se.
Okay.
If you're waiting for that, don't hold your breath because you'll pass out.
He's not going to do that.
But on the other hand, what he is going to do is he's going to end immigration from third world nations.
He's gone on record to say that's what he's doing.
Now, most third world nations do not have a white population.
White people don't create third world countries, but he has adroitly managed not to step on his shoelaces on this and mess up by saying he's going to keep the non-white races out, but that's about what it comes to.
Then on the other hand, what do you do about homegrown non-whites, which have always been a problem in America?
Well, he's doing a great job in getting the worst of the worst off the street with his National Guard initiative, sending the National Guard into a lot of these minority-run cities like Memphis, like Washington, D.C. When you and I, Keith, along with Ethan Ralph a couple of weeks ago were catting around Memphis, you couldn't turn a corner without seeing a contingent of guardsmen.
Yeah, and the crime rate has gone down dramatically in Memphis.
I'm sure the same thing is happening in all these other places.
Now, crazy people in crazy places like Minnesota may not embrace that, but let me tell you, anybody that has a shred of common sense and decency and doesn't endorse criminality, even in places like Minnesota, has got to be behind this.
course in Minnesota, you're not going to be very popular if you support Trump, but Trump is actually making a difference in blue states with blue cities and red states with blue cities.
And basically across the board, he is the anti-crime president as well as the anti-immigration president.
And so again, here as we are now entering in the final weeks of his of the first of his second term in office, he is ending it on a high note with this.
There's been some ebbs and flows and some ups and downs, and it's been a roller coaster in some ways, but he started off exceptionally strong, historically strong.
And as you just said, I agree with this statement alone.
Even if he, I wouldn't even say necessarily doesn't intend to, but I would say if he cannot or will not or whatever happens is not able to do anything, there is power in having these words be spoken by the President of the United States.
And another statement, I will permanently pause migration from all third world countries to allow the U.S. system to fully recover, terminate all the millions of Biden illegal admissions, and remove anyone who is not a net asset to the U.S. or is incapable of loving our country.
That was a follow-up statement.
Now, okay, let's be fair, though.
As we have always been, listener, our friend Ed in British Columbia wrote a nice letter.
Ed just sent you a reply.
I ran out of ink on two Sharpies writing responses to correspondence.
I try to do it when we do each of the quarterly mailings so I can just add a note to that person's envelope.
But I was responding to correspondence that's piled up the last two or three months.
And Ed, I put a note in yours, my friend.
You'll receive that whenever the Canada Post delivers it, but it is out.
Ed wrote, he tunes into us because we give him the take on Trump that is not either starry-eyed or clouded, I guess.
I mean, it's not too high.
It's not too low.
We just try to see things as they are.
It's like Goldilocks and the Three Bears.
It's not too hard.
It's not too soft.
It's just right.
Well, we try.
I mean, some people are so opposed to Trump.
Some people are so enamored by him.
I mean, we just try to see it.
And there are people like that on both the right and the left, by the way.
I know some right-wingers that just, you cannot say anything positive about Trump without having them go off.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, even on our side.
That's right.
Well, but there is the other side of it.
Brad Griffin takes that side.
If anything comes of these statements we've been talking about, Brad writes, I imagine it'll be like the Muslim ban, which eventually became the Trump travel ban on a grab bag of countries like Venezuela, Iran, Myanmar, Congo, and Sudan.
The Muslim ban never applied to our Arab allies in the region like Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar, UAE, and Jordan.
We'll continue on with the pros and the cons, the potential pros and cons, and we'll just, listen, we're going to put it all on a balance.
Stay tuned.
Hey, TPC family, it's Danny, James's wife, just dropping in again to say hello and to thank you for all you do to keep the work of this program going.
Over the years, we have met so many of you at conferences and events.
Y'all have been such a blessing to me and my family, and most importantly, the cause.
TPC's Christmas fundraising drive is by far the most important one of the year.
As always, James has put together a wonderful selection of incentive gifts for donors.
But this year, he has finally allowed me to do something creative for you.
I'm very pleased to announce that all donors who contribute to the program this month will receive a homemade Christmas ornament for your tree.
I've been hard at work, with a little help, of course, getting them done, and I hope you all like them.
From our home to yours, I want to wish each and every one of you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
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Unodasher and dancer and prancer and vixen, comet and cupid and donner and blitz.
But do you recall the most famous reindeer of all?
Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer had a very shiny nose.
And if you ever saw it, you would even say it glows.
All of the other reindeer used to laugh and call him names.
They never let poor Rudolph join in any reindeer game.
That's the singing cowboy, Keith.
There's none like him.
None can compare.
I tell you what, that just takes me back to my childhood, the late 40s, early 50s.
That was a much better time, and there's no singer and no set of songs that more exemplifies that bucolic era than Gene Aldrich.
Singing the classics.
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Frosty the Snowman.
I like those reindeer names, too.
A lot of German-sounding names in Santa's contingent there.
Of course, you know.
Santa was German, right?
There was no Laquanza.
Chris Kringle.
Yeah.
Santa Claus is a German.
But anyway, I guess he's Father Christmas in England.
He's a lot of things, but we like him.
I always get to kick one of the Memphis stores and see him black Santa Clauses, but he certainly was.
I remember a song they had back in the 70s: Santa Claus was a black man.
Yeah, that was a great one.
I like that one.
All right.
Well, anyway, back to Trump.
So as Keith said it, this was the strongest statement on race made by any president since when?
Calvin Coolidge.
Brad Griffin, though, taking the objective side at this, and look, we're not saying that this is going to happen.
What we're saying is there are good things that come from the President of the United States speaking such a declaration.
That's what our position on this is.
Not that we expect all of these people to be moved or stopped from coming in, but it is a good thing to say.
A follow-through would be even better, yes, but this is progress.
You understand where we were 20 years ago, right?
I mean, where we were 10 years ago.
This is good, that this is something that is completely publicly acceptable for United States, a sitting United States president to say.
Brad writes, if anything comes out of it, though, I imagine it'll be like the Muslim ban.
I read this just before the break.
I'll read it again very quickly, which never became the Trump travel ban, but rather a ban on a grab bag of countries.
In the worst case scenario, it could be like the mass deportations or the sweeping crackdown on Antifa that was hyped with a big executive order rollout after Charlie Kirk's assassination, but will never materialize.
It seems like we will be celebrating another Overton window victory.
And there is something to celebrate in that, I say.
But Brad continues, I refuse to celebrate the seated rhetoric until I see that immigration from India has been permanently suspended.
That is fair.
And we have to say that that is fair, and that is the other side of it.
And we're going to give you both sides.
Well, I was going to make that comment.
Just like the Muslim ban wasn't really a Muslim ban, it was Muslim ban for nations, Muslim nations that don't support Donald Trump.
He's not going to have a Muslim ban against people from Saudi Arabia, for example, or Qatar, but he is going to have them from Iran and some other nations that are strongly against him.
On the other hand, when it comes to third world countries, he's always going to be reined in by Silicon Valley and the business roundtable generally.
Basically, he's going to keep foreigners from third world countries out if they are low skill and really don't offer anything to the people of Silicon Valley and to the business community.
On the other hand, I'm sure he's going to make an exception for India because Silicon Valley wants him to.
He'll also do it for the Chinese and others.
You know, I don't know whether India and China really qualify as third world, but on the other hand, there are dark-skinned immigrants that are going to be welcomed despite all of this rhetoric.
And I'll eat my hat if I'm wrong.
Rhetoric, call it rhetoric, if you will.
Propaganda is still a weapon, and I like propaganda like this.
And it's not just me.
When you've gotten the attention of Jared Taylor and Greg Johnson and others of that sort of style and substance being in this for decades, as they have been, as we have been, Jared Taylor marveled this week at the president's explanation of why America is, quote, at the tipping point, and it is due to identity, all right, as you know, race, if you will.
And then there was Greg Johnson writing for Countercurrents.
Greg texted me this, and I said I would cite it tonight.
So I will make good on that pledge.
The headline at Countercurrents reads, Trump embraces remigration.
Greg Johnson writes, Donald Trump gave me something to be thankful for.
On the day before Thanksgiving, an Afghan refugee shot two National Guardsmen about two blocks from the White House.
One died, one is in critical condition.
You cannot expect colored people not to shoot or stab.
You can only blame white people for getting in the way.
Policing crime-prone Democratic constituencies is, after all, the definition of racism.
In response to the shooting, Trump made one of his truth social posts.
Despite shooting from the hip, he made several good points.
And here are some of the points.
This is points that the sitting president of the United States, Donald Trump, made.
Listen to these points, folks.
I don't know.
I mean, I would say yours truly, your humble servant and Keith would be hard pressed to come up with better points, talking points, in response to a non-white on-white shooting of a National Guardsman than this.
This is the president speaking now.
According to the census, there are 53 million foreigners in America, most of which are on welfare from failed nations or from prisons, middle institutions, gangs, or drug cartels.
The real migrant population is much higher.
A migrant earning $30,000 with a green card will get roughly $50,000 in yearly benefits for their family.
Even as we have progressed technologically, immigration policy has eroded those gains and living conditions for many.
Then Trump moved on to solutions.
He vowed to do this: permanently pause migration from all third world countries, as we have told you, terminate the millions of Biden illegal admissions, remove anyone who is not a net asset or can't love the country, and all federal benefits and subsidies to non-citizens of our country, denaturalize migrants who undermine domestic tranquility, and that would be all of them, and deport any foreign national who is non-compatible with Western civilization.
That is also all of them.
And so, more importantly, Trump ended by saying, and this is sort of a regurgitation of what we said in the first segment, I'll admit, only reverse migration can fully cure the situation.
So, you know, that's right, Keith.
The idea that remigration has now moved from the margins of white nationalism to the president of the United States is still something I think at the end of this first year of Trump's second term, we can say, hey, you know what?
We all, our collective, we have a part.
We have played a role in a president speaking like this.
I do believe it wholeheartedly.
Then we have states like Minnesota where this type of common sense doesn't get much of an audience or much acclaim.
The one thing, though, that you need to realize is that the people that are leaving are people that were going to be destined, if they were working at all, to be working at very low-level, low-skilled jobs, like being a garbage man or something like this.
The ones, the third world immigrants that take jobs that white Americans would be qualified for and would like to have, they're not going anywhere.
The people from India and China working in Silicon Valley, for example, or with tech giants, believe me, don't hold your breath waiting for those people to be remigrated back to their countries of origin.
Again, white people need to insist that they be cut into the goodies.
We need to get the good jobs, not just get rid of garbage men so that we can compete for garbage man jobs.
We need to get, you know, STEM jobs because I can tell you this from my childhood, before the racial integration of the public schools in America, there are plenty of working class and lower middle class white children going to public school that got a good education in those public schools before they were racially integrated.
And then they could handle those jobs.
They were very good at that.
There were a lot of them.
The reason we don't have them now is that if you can't go to a private school and if you don't have real conscientious parents that can really provide you with STEM education in homeschooling, you're not going to learn calculus or trigonometry or physics in a typical urban public school in America.
If you're a white kid that is unfortunate enough to have to attend one of those schools, the only thing you're going to learn is self-loathing.
Marjorie Taylor Green, the embattled and beleaguered Marjorie Taylor Greene, whom I generally have a good favorable opinion of, she commented on Twitter this week after Trump's pretty in-your-face declarations that be careful to not over-promise and under-deliver.
Some very big promises are being made right now.
If you over-promise and under-deliver, people will not be thankful for even the good things you've done.
And there is a lot of truth in that.
That is a true statement.
And I don't want President Trump's policies freeing up garbage man positions for white people.
Want to see him freeing up computer programmer jobs.
But nevertheless, to Marjorie Taylor Green's point, this is a metapolitical win, which is a win worth celebrating.
Trump blasted several of our most important talking points to a global audience from the Oval Office that thereby normalizes them.
So we should say thank you, President Trump, for that.
I mean, that is my position on this.
And that is seeing things clearly.
That is not saying, hey, listen, and Greg Johnson says this in this article that I've been reading from.
It is important to appreciate that this is a win for us, even if Trump himself does nothing to follow through on it, or if his policies are undermined by incompetence or sabotage or the courts or whatever, if its efforts are blocked or reversed by the left.
Why?
Why?
Because ideas matter and because changing what we think and say comes before actual policy changes.
And if enough people want what Trump has promised to hear, it will happen, even if Trump is not the one who eventually sees it through.
And furthermore, the presidency is a bully pulpit, and making these pronouncements from that bully pulpit has a value in and of itself.
We will take a break.
We're going to continue on with this story.
I think this story is significant enough to dedicate more time to, and we're going to hear from Jared Taylor on it in a matter of speaking.
So stay tuned.
Still a lot more to come.
We're just getting started.
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News this hour from Town Hall.
I'm Mary Rose.
President Trump claims that a renewed focus on affordability is a con job carried out by Democrats.
When it comes to the cost of living, the president has repeatedly claimed progress, and he's irritated with Democrats for talking about an affordability crisis.
Affordability is a hoax that was started by Democrats.
However, the high cost of living remains a top concern for Americans.
A new Yahoo YouGov poll shows almost twice as many respondents saying the president has helped raise prices rather than lowering them.
Last month, the White House removed some tariffs on food imports in a bid to lower grocery prices.
Greg Klugston, Washington.
House Majority Whip Tom Emmer says that there is a common factor in the growing Minnesota fraud case.
Start with the $250 million feeding our future fraud case during the pandemic, largest pandemic fraud case in the country.
You've had, what, 80-some people have been indicted?
78 of those are Somali immigrants.
Congressman Tom Emmer, who is from Minnesota, made his comments to the Salem Radio Network.
Treasury Secretary Scott Besant says the U.S. economy is on an upward trajectory.
The tens of trillions of dollars that have come in in investment, both the portfolio investment, investment by companies, investment by countries, is turning into a CapEx boon for the U.S. Besant says capital expenditures are up by 15%, and he adds that when CapEx is up, jobs will follow.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has defended U.S. military strikes on alleged drug cartel boats, saying that President Trump has the right to take military action as he sees fit.
The comments were made Saturday at the National Security Forum at the Ronald Reagan Library.
More on these stories at Town Hall.
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It is common for politicians, major media outlets, and nonprofits to hype white on black murders aggressively, or even claim that blacks are living in fear of white people.
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N-A-T-C-O-N.l-I-F-E.
Slave bells ring.
Are you listening?
In the lane, snow is glistening.
A beautiful sight.
We're happy tonight.
Walking in a winter wonderland.
Gone away is the bluebird.
Here to stay is a new bird.
He sings a love song as we go along.
Walking in a winter wonderland.
Hey, folks, thank you so much for making us a show of all seasons, for being with us for so many winters now.
Used to, they marked your age by how many winters you had been through, which I don't see really what's the difference between how many years and how many winners.
I guess this is the same number, but thanks for being with us another Christmas season here.
And getting back to the topic at hand, Keith, I want to go back to this article because all the points I think people need to settle on are made here, which is why I am so proud of the company that TPC keeps.
It has always kept.
Inso much as you were mentioning it earlier, there are so many people that are ostensibly on our side or pro-white or right-wing or whatever you want to call yourself who just do not have good takes on the president.
And I'm not saying the president is a white nationalist.
I'm just saying things are happening now that are benefiting us.
And here we go.
Don't let the excellence be the enemy of the good.
We need some good statements from the presidency.
And we haven't had them basically since the 1960s.
Here is, again, Greg Johnson.
Let me just read through this and I'll finish and then you go because I think all the points we could want to make this hour are made here, but this is it.
So again, going back to that pattern of promising big, especially in reaction to major events and not following through now, that goes well beyond being impeded by rogue judges issuing frivolous injunctions.
Trump did fail to crush the left even after the assassination of Charlie Kirk.
We've talked about that.
The FBI remains unreformed even after attempting to destroy Trump and his followers.
But in this most recent case, at least for now, there has been some follow-through in the last week.
First, let me give you some examples.
First, the administration has paused all asylum asylum adjudications and will begin review of all Biden-era decisions.
Now, that's a good thing.
That is a real thing.
But those whose applications have been paused should wait for adjudication in another country.
Really, any other country would do.
But number two, the administration has clarified what it means.
Listen to this, Keith.
What it means to be third world by pausing authorizations, green cards, naturalization, and family sponsorships for nationals from 19 countries.
I think the president and the White House and the administration know what you said earlier.
White people don't make third world countries.
These are where they have paused these things.
Burma, Burundi, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Cuba, Equatorial Guinea, Haiti, Iran, Laos, Libya, Somalia, Sierra Leone, Sudan, Togo, Turkmenistan, Venezuela, and Yemen.
And so all of these Biden-era approvals from these countries are up for review.
And Christy Noam and Caroline Levette have said many more countries will be added to the list.
So I say again, you know, this is a great start, but it leaves out such countries as India and Mexico.
That's what you were talking about a second ago, Keith.
But let's just pause right there and take an assessment of what you just heard.
Well, that's what the problem is because the high-paying jobs for third worlders that white Americans need and want are going to be left inviolate because the big shots in Silicon Valley and in the business community generally want the access to this Indian labor, for example, at half the price of what American labor is.
We have an engineering school here in Memphis, Christian Brothers University, and it is basically an engineering school.
Well, they have increasingly graduated qualified engineers that can't find jobs because they won't work for $50,000 a year rather than $100,000 a year, or at least they're not happy with it.
We need to realize that we've got to pay our people enough for people to have a middle-class lifestyle in America now.
And, you know, you don't go to the trouble of equipping yourself to be proficient in STEM disciplines and then expect to be paid meager wages for it.
We've got to get these people in.
And the only way that you are going to see people have a natural equilibrium on what their salary should be is when you stop flooding the market with Indians, Chinamen, and other people from the third world that live Plus, when these people come over, they're not living on that income alone.
They're also getting, like it said, like you said, like $50,000 worth of government benefits for their families.
All right.
But again, with regards to this war of words against the third world, focusing on America's Somali migrant population, a group that is every bit as undesirable as the Afghans, this is a transcript.
Okay, Keith, I'm about to read from a transcript of a White House cabinet meeting on Tuesday, December the 2nd.
So that was earlier this week.
And this is what Trump said.
This is the transcript from the official cabinet meeting at the White House.
Trump said, and I quote, look, we've got a big problem up in Minnesota with these Somalians.
They've ripped off the state for billions.
COVID money, welfare, you name it.
And what's going on?
Right back to Al-Shabaab, those terrorists in Somalia.
Somalia stinks.
It's a hellhole.
No good for a reason.
These people come from hell, and what do they do?
They complain, they bitch, they do nothing but take.
They contribute nothing.
I don't want them in our country.
I'll be honest with you.
We don't want garbage in our country.
When they come from hell and complain and do nothing but bitch, we do not want them in our country.
Let them go back to hell and fix it.
Somalia stinks and we don't want them.
And Alan Omar, she's garbage.
Her friends are garbage.
These aren't people who work.
These aren't people who say, let's go.
Come on.
Let's make this place great.
We could go one way or the other.
And we're going to go the wrong way if we keep taking in garbage into our countries.
She's garbage.
So we're fixing it.
ICE is going in.
Deport them.
Send them back.
Make Minnesota great again.
That's it.
Meeting adjourned.
That was a word-for-word, verbatim transcript of a White House cabinet meeting.
That was the President of the United States speaking.
That's plain speaking, which is what we have had so little of over the past 70 years from the White House.
Now, again, explain to me how this does not advance our positions as white activists.
Well, it shows you that there's a correlation between people who are not contributing fairly to society and third world origin status.
No, no, I understand that, but I'm just saying, tell me how as white partisans, as white activists, as people who are pushing for the best interests of our group interests, the best interests of our people, how having the president of the United States make a statement that strong, that strong.
I mean, our own spokesmen don't speak that strongly sometimes.
Yeah, that's a wonderful statement.
The only objection you could have is that you need to basically realize that you can't have exceptions to this principle.
You can't make an exception for people from India or people from China.
But on the other hand, we're so much better off as white advocates by having a president that will make these type of plain-spoken comments on a very serious question.
And there's no fool me again type of thinking going on.
We understand that this isn't going to happen almost certainly, but we still find the value in statements like this for what it could mean going forward and it becoming normalized.
The next day on Wednesday, December the 3rd, Trump had a chance to back down, but instead he doubled down.
When asked if he stood by the previous day's comments on Somalis, Trump said this.
Listen to this.
This is what he said when the press cornered him on it the next day.
Stand by.
I stand by 100%.
Look, Somalia is considered by many to be the worst country on earth.
It's a failed state.
Terrorists everywhere.
And those people come here, they've destroyed Minnesota.
It's a hellhole right now.
The Somalians should be out of here.
They've destroyed our country.
All they do is complain, complain, complain, fraud, stealing our money, sending it back to al-Shabaab.
Billions.
We know it.
The Treasury's looking into it.
And Alan O'Marr, she shouldn't be allowed to be a congresswoman.
And I'm sure people are looking at that.
She should be thrown out of our country.
Garbage, I tell you.
We're pausing all applications from Somalia and 18 other dumps like it.
No more.
Deportation starting this week.
Minneapolis, we're cleaning it up.
ICE strike teams, 100 agents.
They violated the law.
They're gone.
Simple as that.
America first.
Well, like my wife's grandfather used to say, he'll call a spade a dirty shovel.
And that's a big advantage over previous presidents that we've had during the lifetime of most of our listeners.
We need somebody that will speak plainly and is clearly on our side.
And at least by these comments, that's what Trump is doing.
Now, on the other hand, it's totally correct for us to hold his feet to the fire and say, what about these people from Indian?
What about what you've said about having all of these H-1B visas going out for Indian computer programmers and whatnot?
That's perfectly legitimate on our part.
But on the other hand, we're halfway home with the comments you've already made.
If you want to read these, it's one thing to hear them spoken.
If you want to read them for yourselves in black and white, black and white, go to countercurrents, counter-currents.com.
Go to Greg Johnson's article dated December the 5th.
Trump embraces remigration.
You'll read the transcripts there and Greg's take on this topic.
We'll be back.
Gonna hear from Jared Taylor in the next segment.
Stay tuned.
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Have a Madman May.
Have a Madman, Merry Christmas.
Have a Madman May.
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Have a Madman Merry Christmas to Smooth.
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Merry Christmas to you.
It's a merry, merry Christmas business.
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And Christmas kiss my baby again and again.
Have a man, man, man.
Have a man, man, merry Christmas.
Well, I got to agree with Greg Johnson.
It's felt like Christmas had come early with those statements earlier this week.
The president of the United States just referred to a third world Muslim migrant population as garbage and said he wanted them deported to their homeland.
And people are still blackpilling.
Now, again, hey, listen, hey, we've covered it already this hour and many times, countless times over the 10-year age of Trump.
While Trump's fury is surely sincere on some level, he may, listen, he may be pivoting from his breakup with Marjorie Taylor Greene over the Epstein files or Zionism or the economy or ironically immigration.
It seems very similar to Elon Musk's pivot to grooming gangs after losing the great Christmas H-1B war last year.
And it could be an attempt to woo back his disaffected base, but that's not necessarily a bad thing because it shows that our opinions matter.
And if we know the right buttons to push, we can get what we want.
And we're going to keep pushing those buttons like we've always done.
That's the whole reason for our work after all these years.
Now, we want to play something.
I have been on the phone with Jared Taylor two or three times this week.
You know, people would be surprised, I think, to know all the different things TPC works on and the different groups and organizations and individuals we work with behind the scenes that you just don't know about.
We don't talk about on the air.
We're always working on different projects and team-ups and collaborations.
But nevertheless, Jared is not on the air tonight, but I talked to him earlier today even.
But this is a video.
We're going to let him have the final word on this conversation that we've been having this hour about Donald Trump.
We referenced this video earlier this hour.
Has Donald Trump Turned the Corner on Race?
This is Jared Taylor's take on everything we've been talking about this hour.
We'll listen to the clip now.
On Thanksgiving Day, after an Afghan opened fire on National Guardsmen in Washington, Donald Trump unleashed a mighty blast against immigrants that ended with these words.
I will permanently pause migration from all third world countries and remove anyone who is not a net asset to the United States.
Deport any foreign national who is a public charge, security risk, or non-compatible with Western civilization.
Only reverse migration can fully cure this situation.
He might as well have said, I'm going to make America white again.
Before Mr. Trump's second term, if a U.S. president had said those words, I might have thought it was time to retire.
But even though the White House rapid response account said it was one of the most important messages ever released by President Trump and added, read every word, his message didn't raise much of a stink for reasons both good and bad.
The New York Times wrote that Mr. Trump was furiously demanding limits on migration, but mostly stuck to what he said.
The Washington Post just dropped an AP story into the paper with a bland headline about pausing migration from poorer countries.
National Public Radio ran the same story.
Later, WAPO mentioned the president's comments in passing in an article about the decision to end asylum and visas for Afghans.
The Wall Street Journal tut-tutted about collective punishment against Afghans and quoted a refugee cheerleader saying that one Afghan's attacks do not reflect the sacrifices Afghans made during the war in Afghanistan.
But it also noted that many prominent Democrats restricted their remarks to condemning violence and calling the shooting a tragedy.
Back in 1984, the Journal wrote that the U.S. Constitution needed a new amendment.
There shall be open borders.
Big change.
Only Vox seemed genuinely upset.
In an article called The Ought-Right One, it worried that ideas that were toxically controversial less than a decade ago are now officially proclaimed from the highest offices in the country.
That's true.
And during a cabinet meeting a few days after his Thanksgiving message, Mr. Trump unloaded on Somalis.
They contribute nothing.
I don't want them in our country, I'll be honest with you.
Somebody would say, oh, that's not politically correct.
I don't care.
I don't want them in our country.
Their country's no good for a reason.
Their country stakes, and we don't want them in our country.
I could say that about other countries, too.
He added that the U.S. is at a tipping point, and we could go the wrong way if we keep letting in Somalis and other people he called garbage.
Reuters couldn't get very excited about that either, writing only that Somalis condemned Trump's insults, though some say he spoke the truth.
The New York Times did rouse itself to call the president's remarks unapologetic bigotry and a xenophobic tirade, and was upset that JD Vance banged the table in encouragement.
Nothing daunted, White House press secretary Caroline Levitt called Mr. Trump's Somali comments an amazing final answer and an epic moment.
When Donald Trump said the U.S. is at a tipping point and that reverse migration of garbage is the only solution, it astonished and encouraged white nationalists everywhere.
The most important person in the world sounds an awful lot like us, though in cruder language.
And DHS said, the stakes have never been higher and the goal has never been more clear.
Re-migration now.
It sounded like Martin Seller.
A few dams are yelping, but not all that many.
And I looked for, but couldn't find, a single Republican official who said the president went too far.
More people than ever seem to understand what some of us have been saying for decades.
Non-white immigration is crushing the West.
That is beyond wonderful.
However, for his opponents, Mr. Trump's very nature takes some of the sting out of his remarks, and for his supporters, some of the urge to celebrate.
Will he decide Indians are okay, or that Chinese are good for the economy?
Or will some pal in agribusiness convince him that America needs more brown stoop workers?
For now, he's operating under Section 212F of the Immigration and Nationality Act that says if the president finds that the entry of any class of aliens into the United States would be detrimental, he can keep them out for such period as he shall deem necessary.
Now, you can't even come as a tourist from any of these 19 countries, and the administration is considering expanding the travel ban to 30 countries.
I think 100 is a nice round number, but 30 is not bad.
Naturally, I wish the president would not just fly off the cuff.
He ought to take a position and stick to it.
America was founded by white people for white people.
Until 1965, immigration policy deliberately kept the country white.
Changing that policy was a catastrophe.
Whites have every right to be the permanent majority, and non-white immigrants are therefore detrimental, to use the word in the law, to cultural and, yes, racial unity.
We want no more of those people.
That would be a whole lot better than calling Somalis garbage.
And maybe in what's left of his term, the president will put Stephen Miller in charge of drawing up a calm, confident assertion of the vital interests of white people.
In the meantime, President Trump has laid down an important marker.
He has come a lot closer to saying what needs to be said than any president in 100 years.
Not since Calvin Coolidge wrote, Whose country is this? in good housekeeping in 1921.
Look at that lovely Valentine's Day cover, by the way.
Coolidge wanted white immigrants.
There are racial considerations too grave to be brushed aside for any sentimental reasons.
Biological laws tell us that certain divergent people will not mix or blend.
He called the United States a complete blend of varied strains in the same ethnic family.
This message was next to ads for morning frocks with a new charm.
Three years later, we got the Johnson-Reed Act that kept the country white for another 40 years.
Will we get a new Coolidge or do we have a Coolidge in the White House?
In the meantime, more power to our crude, erratic, impulsive, and sometimes brilliant president.
That is a great commentary.
I think that puts a fine point to everything we've been talking about.
And one thing about the normalization of our issues that I think Jared was touching on in that clip is that if Trump had said this exact statement 10 years ago when he first ran, the entire national media apparatus parties would have come down on him, including his own.
Now he says it, and it barely makes a blip.
That is something to be celebrated.
Keith, final word to you on this.
Okay, well, first of all, I was glad that Jared had the same idea that I did, which was that Calvin Coolidge was the last American president that spoke out forthrightly about the rights of white people and how the nation needs to remain white.
Trump hasn't said that in so many words, but he is a very strong advocate of Ox Day, or whatever the guy's name was, was the only person on the left that really addressed the issue.
The rest of them are trying to whistle past the graveyard and pretend that he didn't say what he said.
What he said is that basically we need to do away with the Immigration Act of 1965 and go back to the Johnson-Reed Anti-Immigration Act of 1924.
Folks, what do you say?
Was it a good week?
Was it Trump's best week ever as president?
That's what we've been talking about this hour.
And as always here, we try to give it to you on TPC with an even keel.
And we'll be back with more in the second hour.
We are going to shift gears and get off this singular topic, but what a big topic and what a great way to start the first hour of the first show of December.
So much fun to be had this month still to come.
Second hour, stay tuned.
We've got a few surprises for your night, including a debut guest making his first appearance in our third and final hour.
It's all coming your way.
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