Dec. 7, 2025 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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Radio Show Hour 2 – 2025/12/06
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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.
Fill up the stocking.
I may be rushing things, but deck the halls again now.
For we need a little Christmas, bright this very minute.
Candles in the window, carols at the spinner.
Yes, we need a little Christmas, bright this very minute.
It hasn't snowed a single furry, but Santa, dear, we're in a hurry.
So climb down the chimney, put up the brightest string of lights I've ever seen.
Slice up the fruitcake.
It's time we hung some tinsel on that evergreen barn.
For I've grown a little leader.
Well, you know, for as long as I live, Keith, Angela Lansberry's voice will always be heard at Christmas time here on this program.
First of all, that's a good Christmas song.
And secondly, is for all the hours, the countless hours I spent watching murder, she wrote with my grandma.
That's a great memory.
Indeed, it was.
So welcome back.
That having been said, welcome back, everybody.
Good first hour.
We've got a surprise for Keith this hour that even he doesn't know about.
We've got a surprise for Keith, a surprise caller.
Not a subpoena.
Yeah, well, the day ain't over yet.
And in the third hour, a first-time guest, Richard Parker.
We're going to make his introduction to you, our beloved audience.
But as I mentioned, let me pull up this file here now if I can find it.
Okay, so as we mentioned, we sent out our Christmas letter, our Christmas update that went out.
Most of you, a lot of you, it is the USPS.
I can't say for sure.
Some of you should have gotten it by now.
Others will next week give it a read.
It's been a great year.
It's been a great year for TPC, for our cause, and we have been able to use this program for the betterment of our collective and in a lot of different ways.
Of course, last month we were talking about it the last couple of months, you know, arranging the partnership between the author and the publisher that brought to life the expanded third edition of Kevin McDonald's Culture of Critique.
This book has enjoyed an explosion of acclaim and fanfare in recent months.
And for that small role we played in making the call that made it happen, that's something we celebrate.
And then this conference, again, we go back to this conference we had back in May.
This sold-out groundbreaking conference that featured as speakers both sitting and former elected officials at the highest levels in the United States and Europe, as well as prominent leaders of our own movement, blending those together, skillfully integrating the old and the new.
I think in so many ways, Keith, the time for talking is over.
I mean, this is something we mentioned in the letter that I sent out to established donors of this program, and we do need your support at Christmas time.
It is our most important quarterly appeal.
But so many people now, I mean, we know that establishing our own institutions and media outlets is crucial.
We know that.
And we are the longest-running radio program of its kind, a longest-running pro-white radio program.
We have always selflessly showcased fellow travelers who are producing good fruit and engaging in meaningful work.
But those who share our beliefs now, Keith, have proliferated in recent years to unimaginable levels.
Our talking points are everywhere.
I mean, the president of the United States, we talked about the first hour, he sounded no different than we did 20 years ago or that we did 20 days ago.
Now is the time to put our chips on the table and take a real shot at something.
I mean, take a shot at something.
And I think that we have, just very quickly, I think this program, the work of this program, due to our proven ability to establish and grow relationships, we're uniquely positioned to carry the flag.
Yeah, and I was going to say that the left not acknowledging the import of what Donald Trump has said over the past week speaks volumes to the progress that we've made.
They would never have lost an opportunity to go into high dudgeon about this in the past, but now they know that the popularity of these ideas is such that the best thing for them to do is ignore it.
Excellent point.
That's a great point.
And we touched on it, but I think that you stated it even better that time.
And I've come back to Twitter a few months ago.
It's really sort of dormant.
I mean, I haven't posted very much.
We lost all of our followers.
It happened to a lot of people.
You don't regain all of the followers.
Anyway, I've been too busy, frankly, to really do much.
We did post.
We post on it once a week or so, but not what you need to do to build it back up to where it was.
But it's been interesting, though.
It's been interesting to have a three-year absence from Twitter and then to come back because I've noticed two things.
Here's the two things I've noticed after a three-year absence is, number one, I have never seen so many people on social media say the things that we've always been saying.
That's number one.
And that's first and foremost.
But number two, you know, certainly it existed 10 years ago.
Certainly 20 years ago, even some of our lions in winter, some of our elder statesmen might have had beefs with one another.
But I have never, ever seen in my entire career, and I've been doing this professionally my entire adult life.
I have never seen so much public dispute of people in our ranks, especially the generation younger than me, 10 years, 20 years younger than me.
I'm 45, openly sharing personal criticism and condemnation, airing out dirty laundry, just not ready for prime time.
We have to show poise.
I did not see that even as recently as three years ago to this extent.
And perhaps my zeal for professionalism stems from, you know, that formative experience in the Buchanan campaign.
I have always sought to position TPC above that sort of silliness and just stay focused on playing a role in elevating our issues and our movement to heights not seen in generations.
And I think that's something that, hey, what are we doing?
What do you do anything for if not to take power for yourself or at the very least have access to it?
That is the purest application of our efforts.
And you know, Keith, we have a chance here with this program to take a stake in it.
I'm not saying we're going to be the president.
I'm not saying, you know, we're going to take over the world, but we have positioned ourselves to people who can, you know, we're working with them to get there.
And we understand that.
That's what we'll say right now about that.
We understand something that a lot of people seem to miss, which is that argumentative, fractious people are not attractive.
And we need to attract people to our movement, not drive them off.
And that's what all this bickering and arguing amounts to.
And turnoff.
A lot of targets on the left.
And I think a lot of people just try to be entertainers.
A lot of people just enjoy sort of having, you know, clicks and super chats or however they're making their money.
But listen, I can't guarantee you any result, but I can say that with us, you're going to enter the arena and going to be competing at the very highest level of power politics.
And a chance for success is all you can realistically ask for.
So what we ask for is your support of our Christmas fundraising drive.
As I say, it's by far the most important of our quarterly appeals.
We'd be thrilled if you could look at that letter you sent.
We sent if you are an established donor and try to remember us during this season of hope and goodwill.
Put TPC on your Christmas list, if you will.
And we have, I can say, I think, with great certainty, at no point in the last quarter century have conditions been more favorable for us to push forward.
I mean, you see it just in what we covered in the first hour.
But we must move forward with great purpose before something changes.
And I don't want to be an online spectacle.
I just want to win.
I just want to win.
That's all I care about.
You can help with your support.
Help us win.
Let us win one together in 2026.
And as you know, we talked about it last week: $100 or more.
You're going to get a copy of the brand new book, Memories from the Front by Shark Hunters.
This illustrated book covers the memories and letters of young German soldiers.
We've done Airmen Luftwaffe.
We've done the U-Boat Waffle.
This time it is the German soldiers on the ground to their families and their remembrances when they were fighting on both fronts of World War II.
And the second tier donors are going to get a signed copy of a hand-signed photo from one of the German servicemen of World War II.
And then one last time, if you reach our third tier, we have a leather-bound gold foil-paged copy of Pat Buchanan's Death of the West.
You know, Pat just turned 87 years old last month, and we just got a new box of these exceptionally rare books.
Death of the West is probably the best in his canon.
I think it is, and it's a groundbreaking book.
It basically stood out and transformed an entire generation of people over to white advocacy.
So, again, if you can take a look at that letter, if you're an established donor, you'll get all those details there for you in black and white.
Return a check and help keep us on the air and help keep our other projects funded.
Special projects, our newspaper column every week in the American Free Press, our conferences, our special events, everything else, our travels, our speaking appearances, everything else we do.
One more little surprise.
Well, two more surprises coming this hour.
One for you and one for Keith.
My wife's going to come on next.
She has a little special announcement.
Maybe you heard about it earlier.
We'll tell you again.
She'll tell you when we come.
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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A pair of humalong boots and a pistol that shoots is the wish of funny event.
Dolls that will talk and will go for a walk is the hope of Janice and Jen.
And mom and dad can hardly wait for school to start again.
It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas.
Soon the bells will start a lot like Christmas.
Soon the bells will start.
And the thing that'll make them ring is the carol that you sing right within your heart.
It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas everywhere you go.
But the prettiest sight to see is the holly that will be on your own front door.
So it's crazy Such a beautiful time of year, such a beautiful promise.
And as this month continues to roll on, we will wrap it up a little bit later.
Well, with a year-in review, of course, that last week after Christmas, but that last Saturday before Christmas, we will have, of course, Pastor Brett McAtee to remind you the true reason for the season, the birth of Jesus Christ, and can't wait for Christine Lynn to come back and all of the things we'll do between now and then.
With what little time we have left, there is still a lot to be done.
But first, before we continue the show tonight, and we do have another surprise coming up in the next segment for Keith, and then in the third hour, we are going to get back to business proper with Richard Parker making his debut appearance on the program to talk about some interesting things, I think.
But first, my wife is on.
And for years, I mean, every time we have a quarterly fundraising drive, I put a lot of thought into what we're going to offer as the incentives.
Now, the last couple of years, we have had this incentive with this partnership with Harry Cooper.
It's just been so well received, we can hardly stop it.
But my wife always wants to do something crafty, something creative.
And we did do some mugs a few years ago.
But normally I say she thinks calendars.
She's thinking memo pads, pens, you know, things, you know, with the TPC brand on it, keepsakes, things like that.
But anyway, this year she really compelled me.
And she had a good idea.
And she got a mock-up made of it.
And went to Hobby Lobby and all the other places.
Michael's at the craft store.
Got all the material.
And I'll let her tell you what's going on.
I think we mentioned it.
I guess you probably heard it in the ad that she voiced.
We taped that earlier this week, and it'll be in heavy rotation.
But here she is now to tell you all about it.
If you give anything to the program in the month of December, you are going to get a homemade, handcrafted Christmas ornament for the tree.
I thought I was supposed to.
Well, first of all, those mugs did not turn out how I had dreamed for them to a couple years ago.
When was that that we did that?
That was, you know, it seems like a couple of years ago.
It was really about 10 years ago.
It was a long time ago.
Well, what happened with those mugs?
The mugs looked great.
But because they were, you know, a handcrafted, handmade here at the Edwards home type of thing, it was what happened was when they got ran through the dishwasher, the TPC logo man and the lettering all sort of came apart.
So that didn't, you know, that was the only time we really had a, it was good as long as they didn't drink out of it and wash it.
You live and you learn.
But anyways, this year, that's not going to happen.
We're doing a really nice wooden ornament, and I'm really proud of it.
We have a friend who's helping us design the lettering and stuff, but we're putting it together as a family like we do everything else.
And it's turned out really well, and I'm excited, and I hope you all love them as much as we do.
If you go to our Twitter page, the new one, the one that we barely post on, but it's at TPC James Edwards, at TPC James Edwards.
You will see a version of this.
This is the prototype of the ornament.
And this is the Edwards tree.
That is our actual, that is a picture I took at the house before we came to the studio tonight.
That is a picture I took at our house on our tree of what the logo, of what the ornament looks like.
So you can take a look at it.
And you don't have to donate at the level that unlocks the other incentives we were talking about, anything.
And we're going to do that for you.
My wife really wanted to make some ornaments this year.
I think everybody likes an ornament.
I like it.
It looks really good.
It looks really good.
Anyways, I'm excited.
All right, so what else do you want to talk about?
You know, I'm not good at this.
Well, we've had, listen, you can't keep a good man down, a good family down.
And we've had a little bit of a bug.
I was talking to Sam.
I was talking to Jared earlier this week and Lou and all the people we talk to on a normal basis.
We've had a couple of down days, but we're still kicking.
We're still here.
We're still making these ornaments.
I feel like sometimes the Lord gives you a bug to force you to pause in a busy season.
And we have had a busy season.
We have hosted a ton, had a lot of friends come over, and I've really enjoyed that.
We've really been blessed.
But Caroline got sick on Sunday, and then James on Tuesday, Henry on Thursday, and Isabel tonight.
So I guess if the cards align, I'm in for it on Monday.
But hopefully not.
Hopefully I can stay strong and not get it.
Get all those ornaments done before you get sick.
I hope you don't get sick.
I hope you don't get sick.
But I love you and thank you for that.
and you always have good ideas.
She always is trying to – listen, not only is she always trying to help with ideas and things that she could want to make for the show or make to give away to the audience, she has ideas about – I always want a t-shirt, like a pink t-shirt with your logo.
You know, anytime you have something that you love, you want a t-shirt with it.
And so I want a TPC pink t-shirt.
Yeah, I mean, the t-shirt, we've done t-shirts before, and Dixie Republic is great at making these custom-made t-shirts.
It's just the only thing is it's not like a universal item.
You can order book because everybody's got to get a different size.
I mean, no, we could go through.
Yeah, we could definitely do that.
We could definitely do that.
But no, she has great ideas on everything we've ever done.
Everything we've ever done, she's had a hand in.
Believe me when I tell you that every piece of mail we've ever sent out, she has probably been the one who put the stamp on it or sealed it or did something to it.
And a lot of years now.
Professional stuffer and stamper.
There's no doubt about it.
If there was a pro level for that, after 21 years, you'd be there.
21 years and four quarters.
That's about 100 times, you know, very near.
That is true.
All right.
Well, thanks for coming in and thanks for talking.
Anything else you want to say to the audience before we let you fly?
I really don't, except for thank you for all that y'all have done for us and thank you for helping to keep the lights on at the Edwards home.
And the lights on in the studio and the lights on the on-air light on.
That all-important red light that keeps it going.
All right, well, but it is a nice ornament and we've got all the other gifts too.
I know I'm behind the scenes and behind the curtains, which is where I prefer because that's where I've been called to be.
But I really am thankful to be able to do the things I get to do and be a mama and get to stay home and do the things that need be to keep the behind the scenes going for him to be able to do the show and keep everything going as it is.
So I really am so thankful for everything that y'all do to help us keep us on the air.
Well, actually, one more thing.
Liz and Jay over on the other side in the production room, we've played it twice already, but I don't know if she got to hear the whole thing.
I want to play it one more time because actually I wrote the script, helped her write the script for this ad, and then she took it and marked it all up and actually made it a lot better and a lot more her.
Is there any way we can actually cue that up one more time?
Well, I know it just played.
I know it just played.
We'll play one more time.
If it's going to take a couple of minutes to get it queued up, we want to.
All right.
She's embarrassed now.
She's cowering.
So anyway, it just played.
She said it just played.
Well, anyway, she marked that up and actually improved it and put her own little spice and sauce into it.
So anyway, thank you.
I love you.
Thank you for doing all these ads and the ads and the ornaments.
And she was out spray painting them earlier today with some gold metallic spray paint.
So what do you think?
It looks pretty good, Keith, right?
Yeah, who is that humanoid figure on there?
That's just our TPC logo.
Our TPC man.
Yeah, that's the TPC man.
Except instead of wearing the Uncle Sam hat, he's wearing a Santa Claus hat.
Same logo you've seen for two decades plus on our website.
Well, I'd always had that question and never asked it before.
Well, it's seen at the political cesspool.
So it's the bath, you know, it's the male bath, you know.
Yeah.
Anyway, well, that's another thing.
But we stick with the one who took us to the dance, that's for sure.
But in terms of the name and all that.
All right, watch your cords on your way out of the studio.
I love you.
Thank you.
Wearing her David Duke for Governor t-shirt, no less.
Here on a cold, very cold.
I've never seen that actual green, David.
He had white and he had navy blue.
A green David Duke t-shirt.
That's the color of money.
That's a hard one to get.
I love David.
I got to call David.
I haven't talked to David in a he's waiting for a Christmas greeting, brother.
Well, I sent him a Christmas card.
Did you get our Christmas card this week?
You did get it already?
All right, say yes.
Hang on.
Yes, I did.
Wait, then you were waffling.
Now you're acting like you don't know if you did.
Well, I got it, but I haven't opened it yet.
Oh, this afternoon, and I was too busy to do all this, so I wanted to give it appropriate time to let it soak in and whatnot.
So I'm going to do that.
Okay.
Well, that actually makes me feel good.
It means at least somebody, the mail worked for somebody.
At least you got yours.
We'll have to talk to David and see what he thinks about David about Lane Kiffin coming to LSU.
Let me tell you something about that.
So here we are.
I was wondering when that was going to happen.
Here we are now, exactly at the halfway mark through the show.
There has not been a single show in the last two months where Keith has not mentioned Lane Kiffin on his own volition.
I'm not talking about answering questions about Lane Kiffin.
I'm talking about Keith has found a way, no matter what we were talking about, to work it in.
And it actually gave the opportunity to play in to our surprise.
Lane Kiffin live next.
Pursuing Liberty, using the Constitution as our guide.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
News this hour from Town Hall.
I'm Harry Rose.
The man accused of planting a pair of pipe bombs on the eve of the U.S. Capitol attack has confessed to the act in interviews with investigators.
Brian Cole Jr. confessed to investigators.
Cole was ordered to remain in jail.
He did not enter a plea and is due back in court in about 10 days.
An FBI affidavit says investigators identified Cole as a suspect through analysis of credit card charges related to the purchase of pipe bomb components, information from cell phone towers, and a license plate reader.
The bombs were rendered safe at the time.
No one was hurt, but the FBI says the devices could have been lethal at Donahue, Washington.
Qatari's prime minister is reportedly saying that the proposed next phase in the Gaza ceasefire should only be temporary.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdullahman Al-Tani spoke at a conference in Doha, noting that international mediators led by the U.S. are pushing for a second phase to solidify the deal.
This next phase is just also temporary from our perspective.
It's not enough because there is a route for this conflict.
And this conflict is not only about residents.
It's about residents, about the West Bank, it's about the rights of the Palestinians for their state.
The first phase of the U.S. peace plan began halting fighting and exchanging hostages.
The next phase, involving an international security force in other measures, has not yet started.
I'm Ricard Garcia.
Republican Congressman Andy Gibbs of Arizona says the millions of illegal aliens that snuck into this country during the Biden years contributed to our current affordability woes.
Russia has launched a significant missile and drone attack on Ukraine, coinciding with ongoing U.S.-mediated peace talks.
The talks involving U.S. and Ukrainian officials aimed to end the nearly four-year-old war.
They have made some progress on security framework for post-war Ukraine, but still work to do.
More on these stories, townhall.com.
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Hey friends, it's James.
Did you know that every issue of the American Free Press now features my own published Q ⁇ A interviews with one of your favorite guests from the radio program?
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Hey, TPC family, it's Dani, James' 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.
Here's Santa Claus.
I want to wish each and every one of you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
That's what they're singing in Oxford tonight.
Keith, you brought it up, and this was a surprise I had for you.
And it's Don Wassel of Cass Football, who we just talked to a couple of weeks ago on the program.
But Don had forwarded to me this week a great article written by Scott Greer, who we all know.
And the article is entitled, and now I got to pull it up.
I've mentioned it, and I'm not prepared here.
This is live radio.
The article is titled Lane Kiffin in the Messy State of College Football.
We're actually going to talk about this because there are some political points to be made here.
Keith has been bringing up Lane Kiffin unsolicited for at least two months now.
And I was wondering at what point tonight he would bring it up, but it was just at the same time we just so happened to have Don Wassell scheduled.
And I know, Don, first of all, welcome back.
Cast football, your claim to fame, along with American Freedom News, going back to the Populist Party and so many other ventures.
I know you wanted to check in on Keith tonight.
You were concerned about him, weren't you?
Scared me, too, because your exact quote before you went through this last break was, Lane Kiffin live next.
I thought, darn, I've been bumped for public enemy number one.
Nobody could bump you, Don.
Keith, yeah, I heard you're on Up Suicide Watch now.
I hope you're doing good.
No, I never did.
Look, let me tell you, it is a move that Lane Kiffen will live to regret.
And the reason is to be one of these top-flight schools in the SEC, like Alabama, Georgia, LSU, Florida, it comes with a lot of baggage.
And the baggage is that a lot of losers identify with your school because it's a winner and they aren't winners in any other aspect of life.
So they got to hatch on.
And as a result, they make the pressure almost unbearable for a coach.
Urban Meyer won the actual national championship in 2009, but he quit the job at Florida before the next season started.
He had a heart attack.
He said, there's just too much pressure here.
And the pressure comes from the nutsoid fans.
And that's what he's going to find out.
If he wants to have a bunch of big boosters telling him who his starting quarterback ought to be or who his defensive coordinator ought to be, well, that's what he'll get at LSU and stuff like that.
And one more thing, one more thing.
If you were watching the SEC championship today, you saw Georgia putting, you know, beating Alabama like a barred mule.
And that's the job that Kiffin really wants is to be the head coach at the University of Alabama.
Florida is kind of, I mean, LSU is kind of like miscongeniality.
That's the second place position.
And if he had just waited and not jumped prematurely like he did and left before the playoffs, he would be in a position to take that job because I really believe the Alabama people, if Alabama does not get into the national championship, I can see a Palace Revolt developing.
You're talking about this, Keith, like this is a sports show.
I don't think anybody listening really cares who wins or you raise the topic now.
No, you don't blame me.
You brought it up every week for weeks now.
But there is a reason for talking about it tonight.
And Don, you can get us to that.
I mean, let's tap into Scott Greer's thing.
I mean, the thing that was interesting to me about this is, I mean, yes, if you do follow college football, Lane Kiffin is a larger-than-life personality.
He's sort of, you know, a cockshore.
He's the latest thing.
He's a cockshore, kind of a goofy jerk, but he's social media savvy.
He's gregarious.
There's a lot of, he has the X factor.
He has the N factor.
He's got the N factor.
He's got charisma.
He's handsome.
And he plays into drama.
He's made for media.
And this became a bigger story.
Where Lane Kiffin was going to go, was he going to leave Ole Miss?
Was he going to go to LSU?
It became the biggest story in the country.
It really did transcend anything that happened in politics in the last 10 years.
Talk about the blacks in football.
The driving force in college football today is the Jews, particularly the gambling interests and whatnot.
I think there was more money bet on what Lane Kiffen would do, leave or stay, than was on actual college football games over the past couple of weeks.
Okay.
Now, that all being said, Keith's, again, commentating on it from X is the No College Football.
Why are we interested in it, Don?
Well, there's a lot of different reasons, and part of it's just regional and how important football, college football is in the South.
And one thing that really struck me from Scott Greer's article, he wrote, the South, in the South, SEC football has replaced the Confederacy as a defining cultural symbol of the region.
I mean, that really sounds like, yes.
And that's pretty sad, really, when you think about it.
And the SEC football, from my perspective, from a cash football perspective, it's the main reason that the NFL is so black because the SEC recruits so many blacks.
There's something mystical if you're from Florida.
And they do that because this is the part of the nation that has the largest percentage of blacks in the population.
Yeah, but the media has helped build this whole thing, too.
From the SEC, you're automatically the best, whether there's any evidence about it or not.
And there's a lot of evidence.
Another way of saying of worshiping at the shrine of black people.
That's what they always invariably do.
Yeah, but then so many things are intertwined now.
Gambling, like you said, the Jewish factor.
These kids come out of high school now, and they're instant millionaires, and they can play different schools off each other, and the coaches do the same.
I was looking at Kippen's background, his coaching career, and he's been a mercenary his whole coaching career.
He became an NFL assistant coach when he was 22.
He was hired to be the head coach of the Oakland Raiders in 2007 when he was only 32.
He was one of the youngest head coaches ever hired by the NFL.
But he only coached two seasons.
He was fired halfway through his second season with the Raiders.
His Jewish owner, Al Davis.
And then he went on.
His idiot son, now running the team.
And then he went to Tennessee for a year.
He went to Southern Cal for four years.
He went to Florida, Atlantic for three years.
And then Ole Miss, actually, from 2020 till this year, that's the longest he's ever coached anywhere.
Before Florida, Atlantic, he had an incubation period to develop as a coach on the staff of none other than Nick Sabin, another son of Israel.
But he was a defensive, I believe he might have been the defensive court anyway.
He was on the staff.
Offensive court.
He's always on offense, never defense.
All right.
And so anyway, but in every stop, there's been high drama, and he plays into it.
He loves being the heel.
And nevertheless, I mean, ultimately, I mean, what happened was he left a job for what he considered to be a better opportunity.
I mean, plumbers and painters and everybody in regular daily life do that every day, and nobody turns them into the villain.
But it is interesting.
Well, that's the thing about it is, though, that is the college football calendar.
Well, I mean, but that's the calendar.
The calendar is that signing day for high school football athletes is in the middle of bowl season for college football teams.
And so in order for recruits and commits to decide what school they're going to go to in college, they want to know who the coach is going to be.
So we had to make a decision in the middle of Ole Miss's playoff run where they could very have realistically or maybe still on the outside win a national championship.
Why would every other sport, the pros, free agent season is in the offseason?
Why in the hell I ask you both?
Why does college football put this in the middle of bowl season?
Why they would have to make these decisions and why coaches would have to transfer to teams in order for recruits to make these decisions.
That is terrible planning on behalf of the NCAA.
Well, you're right, but then Johnny Vaught and Adolph Rupp both predicted this when they both retired coincidentally on the same year that the SEC integrated the league.
And the reason I have a friend that was an apprentice for a sports writer that handled an olemiss beat for a local newspaper.
And he asked Johnny Vought exactly at the time, confidentially, he said, did the integration of the league have anything to do with your decision to retire?
And Vought said, well, you're sworn to secrecy.
He said, but yes, it did.
And the reason is this.
He said, black players will insist upon being paid.
They don't care that it's against the rules because they don't play by the rules.
He said that if they do this, they're going to put the coach in a terrible dilemma.
You can either cheat with them, pay them, win for a while, then you'll be discovered.
You will be fired and disgraced and no longer have a job in college football.
Or you can take the high road and not pay them anything.
You won't get the black players.
And as a result, you'll probably be fired for losing.
So he said, I've been doing this for 25 years, so I thought it was high time for me to retire.
At the time, Johnny Vaught was the best football coach in the SEC, and Ada Fromp was the best basketball coach, and they both retired.
And suppose, according to the report I got for the same reason.
Well, and again, though, there was a third thing that came up after the fact, Don, as you're well aware, they legalized paying college athletes, and that's what they're going on.
That's what Vaught and Rupp predicted.
Well, but they always did it.
Now it's legal, and now everybody's just, well, and that's the thing, that's another thing that got Kiffen is that LSU was going to, now it's $25 million a year to pay these college student so-called.
Let's give it to Don.
Let's give it to Don.
You know what, though?
Do you know Outkick, the sports website, Outkick.com?
It was started by Clay Travis, who's sort of a Fox News type conservative.
Bucking Clay, they've taken over Rush Limbaugh's time slot.
Yeah, he's one of those type of coacher conservative type.
He started and it did have an edge to it for a while on each sold at, I guess, Fox and made off of a lot of money.
But at any rate, you can go there.
He's been paper trained.
There's a snippet of a press conference of Lane Kiffen.
And he says, you can go there.
Believe it or not, he says he had no idea what he was making at Ole Miss.
And he has no idea what he's making with LSU.
And then he says this had nothing to do with money.
I mean, this is what a bald-faced liar he is.
You can go to Outkick and see it.
I saw that.
I saw that.
Well, Jimmy Sexton's his agent.
Jimmy Sexton is the Italian hand behind all of this.
And he is basically by whipping up this thing with Kiffen.
There were so many changes in coaching, and he represents all of these coaches.
So he's making, I mean, he's carrying it off in Bushel Basketball.
Well, so here's the thing, though, is that, well, this is again from the Scott Greer article that you sent me, Don.
I'll read it and then get your response to this.
Ole Mist should know this sort of game as well as anyone.
Scott Greer writes, college football is a business, and like all businesses, it changes with the times and the market.
If traditions get in the way of profit or player recruitment, they'll be cast aside.
Ole Miss fans should know this better than anyone.
The team banned Confederate flags from its stadium, discontinued playing Dixie, scrapped its beloved Colonel Rebel mascot, and even pressured the state to change its lost cause theme flag to make itself more accommodating to black recruits in a national market.
Ole Miss might still play in powder blue jerseys, but the mascot on the sidelines is no longer Colonel Reb.
It's Tony the Land Shark, a completely nonsensical yet inoffensive mascot.
It's the perfect representation of corporate thinking triumphant over tradition.
So, I mean, Doc, the question is to make news that to Don.
I mean, should anybody shed a tear for Ole Miss, for Lane Kiffen trading when they traded their entire heritage, their entire everything their institution, their university was based on the University Grays, every member of the student body would from the state flag to all these things.
Yeah, it's been a steady march in the direction that the Powers of B1 and the Powers of B are mostly they want sports corporatized.
There's no question about it.
But if I can, just real quickly, Keith, you might remember this, and James, too, Rich Rodriguez, he was the head coach at West Virginia.
He was very successful.
Rich Rod.
And yeah, Rich Rod.
And late in the 2007 season, after he'd signed an extension for, I think, four or five more years, he decided that he was going to become the head coach of Michigan.
He signed a letter and saying he was resigning.
He would finish the season out.
This is like December of 2007.
He would coach the team through the bowl game that they were going in.
And then a few days later, he decided he wasn't going to.
And then he quit on the team basically and he was a mercenary, just like Kiffen.
And he went to Michigan.
And this is back in 2007.
And the bottom line was he was so hated for doing this.
It's unbelievable.
But I can make a point here because I'm from Pittsburgh and Morgantown is only like 70 miles away.
So WVU gets a lot of coverage in this market here.
I mean, Pitt and Penn State are the two big college football programs, but WVU isn't that far behind.
So he's got a lot of publicity here.
And he was the most hated, and Rich Rod was the most hated man in West Virginia for a long time.
But guess what?
It's now 2025.
Guess who the head coach of West Virginia is this year?
Rich Rodriguez.
He's back.
The man everyone hated.
So what's that tell you about the American attention span?
You know, just wait long enough.
And probably the same thing with Lane Kiffen.
I wouldn't surprise me if 10, 15 years from now, he's back at Old Miss.
I mean, that's the way things work in this materialistic, corporatized society, unfortunately.
Well, everything has changed.
And quite frankly, what has happened to Ole Miss is just a microcosm of what's happened to American culture generally.
Black people have been transformed into these wonderful people that, you know, represent the best of America in terms of their spirituality and whatnot and their athleticism and things like this.
And if you have anything to say in the least bit negative about black athletes or about the college football system, then you are just a hater.
Okay.
So that's how much control do the coaches, how much control are the coaches actually have over players anymore?
And the pros, they have virtually none.
Think back to 1997.
Remember Latrell Spreewell.
He decided to choke his coach one day in the NBA because he said something he didn't like.
I mean, he really, I don't know if you're aware of the Hodge, the Hodge twins, James.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah, they have a couple million followers, and they focus on one thing they repeat over and over again is how blacks hate white authority, which is true.
I mean, if whites exercise the same kind of authority they do over fellow whites.
Well, the star player for the Memphis Grizzlies is just like Latrelle Spreewell.
He's basically gotten one white coach fired because.
Well, they all do that.
Yeah, but he didn't joke him.
But I mean, yeah.
But the inmates are running the asylum now, even in college ball.
I mean, it's just, it's incredible the way it's all.
It's so mercenary and corporatized, and everything's like inverse.
Everything's become this thing.
But, you know, Kiffen sort of has like that street cred to where he can kind of, he can kind of snap him to order a little bit more.
But like I said earlier, he moved too fast on this.
If he had moved slower, he could have gotten the job that he really wants, which I think is going to come up shortly, and that is for the University of Alabama.
But now he's got such a large payout at LSU.
I don't think anyone, even including the University of Alabama, is going to entertain.
Well, he'll probably win championships at LSU.
He might have won one this year with Ole Miss.
But that was the thing that made it such high drama was that he had to leave.
And then other coaches have left too.
Not in the media circus that Lenn Kiffen has an affinity to draw, but other coaches have left for other better jobs.
And they are still allowed to coach their current teams.
Ole Miss would not let him coach them, even though it's their best season since integration, by far, 11-1 since integration.
And they have a chance to win a championship, but Ole Miss was spited and decided to cut off their nose to spite their face.
Look, every other team.
He'll bring his best players from Ole Miss to LSU is what he'll do now.
Yeah, what you're missing, James, is this.
At Penn State, he was fired, and he went to Virginia Tech, and he's bringing all his best recruits from Penn State to Levinson.
Well, look, what's happened in this part as well?
Oh, sure.
It's a circus, and the ringmaster is Jimmy Sexton, and he's going to be the one that makes all the money from every coach who's now emboldened to ask for multi-million dollar contracts because of Lane Kiffin and Lane Kiffen.
Well, they're all getting multi-million.
No, no, they weren't.
They weren't getting $100 million like he's getting, but nobody was working for $1 million.
Look, okay.
Can I get the money?
Jimmy Sexton raised it.
Jimmy Sexton, Don, Don.
Let me just say this.
Jimmy Sexton raised the ceiling.
That's what it was all about.
Fine.
Yeah, that's what agents do.
Go, Don.
Okay, guys, looking on cash football and what some of our guys were writing about on this thing, because obviously we view things from a racial perspective.
And there's a poster called Hunter fan, who's a really, he's our best expert on college football.
Actually, if I had the resources, I'd hire him to start his own scouting service so that whites are getting more of a break than they're getting now because they get screwed over big time.
But anyway, I posted this article, the Scar Career article, and he wrote underneath it.
Not a bad article, but doesn't delve at all into the racial aspect of college football and the rampant anti-whiteness, which is burned into the psyche of recruiters, boosters, DWS, which means drunk white fans, coaches, school chancellors, et cetera.
Not even the most conservative pundits or observers dare question this.
Also, Wayne Kiffin is an absolute tool, pure cast cuck clown.
That's what we call coaches that just go along with the let me say this, Don.
Don, this is what is it.
Basically, what you're seeing is a transformation of football that has been changed by the infusion of gambling money, i.e. Jewish gambling interests from Las Vegas and Nevada and people like this.
Those are the people that have transformed us.
That's why we now have this NIL situation, which is out of control and is going to leave basically most of college football on the sidelines looking in.
The SEC and the Big Ten may have enough resources to be able to live in this brave new world of NIL.
But again, look back, Johnny Vaught and Adolph Rupp predicted it all, and they were right as rain.
All right.
So, Don, a final word.
I mean, not a final.
We got a couple of minutes remaining, but let's start wrapping this up.
And I guess, I mean, why do you think it was that this story fixated everybody in the last week?
Because I'm not a fan of college football.
I don't watch it.
I don't follow it very much.
No, but he sure does love the NBA.
I know who is playing, who's winning.
But this was a story that I was, you know, I was talking about a guy that likes the black players.
His favorite team was the Portland Trailblazers, known as Portland Jailblazers, back during his childhood.
Well, my childhood was a lot younger than that, but my childhood was Clyde Drexler and all that team.
They should have beaten me.
You brought that up the last time I was on the show.
Yeah, they probably had more white people on that 12-man team than Ole Miss did.
Now he's defending them now.
Okay.
If you mention Ole Miss or Boomers, Keith has the IQ, excuse me, the impulse control of us outside Chicago.
And likewise, if you talk about the Trailblazers, you're going to have a fight on your hands with James.
Hey, listen, I mean, we're talking about David Duke and his love of LSU and Michael Hill and his love of LMM.
It is funny.
But even our thumbnails.
No matter what offenses and how corrupt and unethical and disgusting ways college sports goes, what they know is that come Saturdays in the fall, 70,000, 75,000, mostly white people will fill up these SEC stadiums and cheer no matter what.
I can't imagine how many white millionaires we have that have no impulse control that are actually financing this NIL drive and whatnot.
Millions and millions of dollars.
They asked Lane Kiffin at some point during this whole charade, would another $2 million do what he needed in order to change schools?
And he looked at the interrogator and said, you know what?
$2 million will get you in this new NIL portal situation.
One defensive bag.
All right.
We've got to give Don the last word.
Don, why was this the biggest story in the world or in the country this last week?
And give us your contact information for CAS football.
Well, I tell you, maybe you have a little bit of a regional bias on that because I don't think it was for the whole country.
I mean, where I'm sort of here in the Northeast, it wasn't the biggest story, but I understand what you're saying, too.
It combines all the different strands that's going on: the materialism, the mercenary aspect, the selling your story.
Jewish behind the scenes situation.
So, yeah, but if I can get a plug-in there for CAS football, it's CAST football, C-A-S-T-E football.us.
And if you want to be really, really well-informed, go to AmericanFreedomNews.us, which is daily reading.
Hey, Keith.
Is Eddie the Bombardier?
When I found out you were on that, I was so proud of you because that's my favorite of all of our daily reads.
Keith has always said that's the best daily read there is.
And he didn't even know until you came on a couple of weeks ago that you were the one doing cast football.
So they're both in our daily reads.
Well, we'll get cast football up on the daily reads.
It's the best thing for white racial readers.
It's really long past due to have cast football on our face.
Well, right, right, right.
When it comes to sports and how racial dynamics apply to sports, that's where you want to go.
Don, thanks for coming on tonight.
Thank you.
Thanks for having me on.
Hey, we love you, buddy.
And we actually did have Keith.
I got, I won't say countless, but more than I can recall, people from around the country checking in on you since last week.
Checking in to see if you were okay.
How's Keith doing?
I just started telling him he's on Suicide Watch.
One person asked if you were, and I said, yeah, he's on Suicide Watch.
No, I'm not.
Like Mark Twain said, the reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated.