Jan. 11, 2026 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
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Radio Show Hour 3 – 2026/01/10
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You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool.
The Political Cesspool, going across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program.
And here to guide you through the murky waters of the Political Cesspool is your host, James Edwards.
Well, for the first time in 2026, although this is only our second show of the new year, what a busy year it has been already.
Kicking things off last week, slammed with guests so far.
And, of course, you know, breaking news with what's going on in the world.
But this, our third hour of our second show today will be the first time Keith and I have had a chance to stretch our legs, so to speak.
We had David Zetty on last week in the first hour, followed by Harry Cooper, followed by Rich and Janice Hamblin live from South Africa.
What a fun hour that was.
Simon Roche making a special guest appearance that hour as well.
Jam-packed first show of the year.
And then tonight, of course, Patrick Martin and Jose Nino continuing to break down the situation in Venezuela and elsewhere.
But now, it'll be just yours truly and Keith for the next half hour.
They're going to close the show up with Taylor Young making his first appearance of 26 from Antelope Hill Publishing.
We look forward to that.
But let's start this hour now in Minnesota.
So very interesting.
Keith Alexander just this week turned 75 years old.
How's 75 feel, first of all, Keith?
Much like 74.
And if God wills it, 76 will be just as good.
But interestingly, you are a Southerner through and through.
Your father was born in Memphis.
Now, your mother was an English war bride, so that's interesting, but that's still keeping it all in the family as far as I'm concerned.
And you have Confederate ancestors.
Your wife had Confederate ancestors.
So you're all Southerner.
But your dad was working in Minnesota 75 years ago this week when you were born.
And as you just mentioned before the last break to close out the second hour, you spent the first three years of your life up there.
So as far as I'm concerned, you're an expert on Minnesota.
I really don't recall much from my first year.
Yeah, the first three years.
Yeah.
What was that second month in Minnesota like?
What were you doing in Minnesota 75 years ago today?
Well, my father was a GI he had been in.
No, no, what were you doing?
What was I doing?
Yeah, so what would you say?
You would have been, what, about four or five days old?
Doing whatever little newborn babies do.
But your father was up there working, and that takes us to where we are now.
So anyway, all kidding aside, Minnesota been in the news also.
This would have been easily the most explosive story of any normal start to a year had it not been.
Benjamin Netanyahu, who had other plans.
What is going on in your surrogate birth state?
Well, here's what my father told me.
Okay.
My father, it was hard to come by jobs for returning GIs after World War II.
Well, he had some Army buddies who were from Minnesota.
And they said, come on up here and we can get you into an electrician's apprenticeship program.
So he came up there and we lived in Litchfield, Minnesota.
I was born in Litchfield, Minnesota, which is the county seat of Meeker County, Minnesota.
It's midway between St. Cloud and Minneapolis.
It's a typical bucolic little small town.
I've been there, at least when I can remember what was going on.
I remember visiting there twice during my childhood.
But My father told me that the people in Minnesota were kind of a puzzle to him.
He said they were salt of the earth people.
He said they would basically, what do you call it, give you the shirt off your back off their back.
But they had strange ideas like I guess a lot of their Scandinavian forebears and German forebears.
There are actually more people of German descent there than there are Scandinavian.
But there's a significant Scandinavian group.
And these people seem to have a glaring blind spot in their psyches about black people and about non-white people.
They seem to think that everybody is the same.
They're just like soybeans, only they have darker skins.
And my father used to endure all sorts of lectures from Minnesotans back in the day about how badly white southerners treated blacks.
And he said he would just shake his head and roll his eyes.
He said it was like people that lived in the desert, presuming to tell people that lived in the jungle about jungle survival techniques.
But he said they were still good people, but he had to, you know, you had to just understand that these people didn't know what the heck they were talking about when it came to race relations.
So fast forward is 75 years, and great job setting up this particular discussion.
Fast forward 75 years, and the black Somalian population of Minnesota is just causing a statewide, absolute political meltdown.
It has gotten so high and so hot that the very cucked out Tim Waltz is not going to run for governor again as a result of this.
Well, they're apparently having some type of great awakening on race relations up there.
Remember Shiloh Hendricks, I believe, was from Minnesota.
I believe so.
Yeah, and, you know, all it takes to, you know, to know them is not to love them, basically.
And they are understanding now what my father and other white southerners tried to tell them.
So what are the Somalians doing?
What's going on?
Well, the Somalians, you got to understand, they're dumb even by black African standards, okay?
They have like average IQs in the 60s.
I looked it up.
I actually looked it up right before we started this segment.
68.
If you are a genius Somalian, I think they cap out at 84.
All right.
No, no, it says that.
I mean, it says that, you know, this is statistically verifiable.
The average Somalian IQ is between 68 and 84.
So you're looking at low 70s on average.
Basically, they're operating at a level of mental retardation in normal circumstances.
I think the lowest in the world are Australian Aborigines.
Yeah, that's right.
And Drew Frazier has enlightened us to that reality there in Australia.
That is a fact.
But as far as black goes, Africans or otherwise, this is about as low as you get.
This is not the top dresser drawer of the world.
And it's not just that they have that low of an IQ.
They're just generally nasty people.
Yes, exactly.
And so, I mean, you think about the pirates, you think about, well, what's going on in Minnesota, of course, is this shakedown where they have all of these daycares that were bilking the taxpayers to the tunes of hundreds of millions, billions of dollars over the years in this scam where I guess the left-wing, anti-white, white Minnesotans thought it would be racist to sort of check in and see if any of these businesses are legit.
But it's so interesting.
And you see this with Indians as well, the DOT Indians as well.
They can have such low IQs, but they can run cons and schemes to defraud people at such a sophisticated level that white people can't really have the minds for it.
And I'm not talking about Jews like Bernie Madoff.
They've got the minds for it.
But white people really couldn't come up with a scam like this or at least get away with it.
Whereas, you know, you have got these Somalians working with low 70 on average IQs and they've been able, so many of them have been able to live in the lap of luxury, basically running these scams where they say they have these daycares and they get taxpayer-funded subsidies for each kid they have, except the daycares don't exist.
The students don't exist.
There is no real enrollment.
And they've been running this not just a handful, but on a scale so wide that it is absolutely blown up politics in Minnesota to where the governor's not going to run again.
Well, the government money just keeps rolling in, as they say, and that's what they live on.
I don't know.
There must be something in intelligence testing that doesn't quite capture everything because these people, they're not intelligent.
They're not the people that are going to figure out calculus or trigonometry and stuff like that.
But on the other hand, there's something else.
They are shrewd.
They are, you know, it's kind of like the kingfish syndrome from the old Amos and Andy show.
You know, they know when somebody's got some money, they've got some angle they can work where they can get that money away from the person that has it.
And when it's the government and it's a government of people like white Minnesotans who are totally naive about other races, then it's just Katie bar the door.
You know, that's what happened in the Sioux Wars.
They brought over all these Scandinavians to Minnesota, Wisconsin, and places like this, North Dakota, because they were looking for people to settle those areas that could deal with a harsh, cold climate.
Well, they got them over there, and these people were just sitting ducks for the Sioux Indians because, again, they didn't have any defense mechanisms like the Scots-Irish did, having dealt with stragglers from armies coming through their land and whatnot, which they knew how to, you know, spot trouble and sense trouble.
They didn't have, and as a result, the Scots-Irish made ideal pioneers, people like Daniel Boone, Davey Crockett, people like that.
On the other hand, the Scandinavians were just sitting ducks.
Furthermore, they had blonde hair.
Let's get this one list.
They had blonde hair, and the blonde hair was very prized by the Sioux to have on their war belts, their scalps.
So they were really being decimated over there.
And that's why they had to get General Custer and the United States Cavalry in there to protect them.
But see, that's just another facet of this problem.
There are a lot of white people in the world.
And generally, the further north you go, the more innocent they are.
They just do not know how to protect themselves.
And that's what's happened on a grand scale financially to Minnesota.
Minnesota is basically stealing the corners off a dead man's eyes up there because the white people up there, one, they don't naturally think about how to scam stuff and how to bamboozle people.
And two, they also have this problem with white guilt.
They are probably primary exponents of white guilt in America.
Yeah, it's awful.
And it's a perfect storm.
You know, if Somalians know that, they'll put up with the cold weather because remember several years ago, there's some little white child up in the mall of America that got thrown.
Yeah, yes, absolutely.
See, miraculously survived.
But, you know, how in the world that these people just cannot protect themselves?
They're as defenseless as dodo birds.
You know, well, I mean, there's a, you know, as you said, a little bit of an awakening.
And then, you know, this has been brought to light.
And it'll be interesting to see if the pillow king, Mike Lindell, can be elected governor of Minnesota as a result of this tumult.
By the way, Lauren Witzke works for him.
She helps run his TV network, Lindell TV.
You know, everybody's a media bear now.
They've got an internet connection.
But I would, of course, like to see him win.
We'll see.
It won't be Waltz anymore.
This has taken him out.
And it wasn't just the daycares.
I mean, I've seen some allegations that they were doing this with private ambulance companies as well.
These private ambulance companies basically haul patients around.
That's not 911 emergency.
It's basically like paramedic assisted chauffeur services to take people to dialysis appointments primarily.
And apparently the Somalians got in on that racket and were billing the state for trips to and from doctor's offices that didn't exist because there were no patients.
Tune into an old episode, you can get them on the internet, of Amos and Andy and watch the kingfish.
This is typical kingfish behavior.
The kingfish would listen closely.
And if he saw that somebody wanted something, like if somebody needed a roof, he'd become a roofer.
Somebody needed his car fixed, he'd become a mechanic or get a mechanic.
If somebody needed flight instruction, wanted to learn how to fly, he would reinvent himself as a flight instructor.
He would find some way to get whatever money you had for whatever your perceived need was.
And that's what the Somali population in Minnesota is doing.
Here it is.
Here it is.
I've got the actual hard data here for you now.
I didn't want to just guesstimate on the amount of fraud involved here.
The recent audits and probes estimate that $9 billion, $9 billion with a B, boy, billion, in schemes involving daycares and food programs with 85 of 98 defendants of Somalian descent.
And so what they were doing with these scams is it was fraud in Minnesota's child care assistance and federal nutrition programs disproportionately involving Somali-owned or operated daycares.
You know, this is not just the money of the Minnesota government.
This is federal money coming from all of the countries.
100%.
Yes, absolutely.
And it involved some of the tactics involved with this fraud included ghost children.
I mean, so, of course, they were billing for kids who weren't actually enrolled or in fact existed, often using fake attendance records, inflated claims, shell entities, you know, even actual business entities that didn't even exist.
It was just all made up.
It's just all on paper.
And again, this was almost exclusively $9 billion worth.
I mean, what could you do with a quick $9 billion, $9 billion in totally fraudulent claims?
And almost to a man, every one of the perpetrators were Somalians living in Minnesota.
Well, these Somalians were laughing all the way to the bank.
See, I mean, how could they be functionally retarded but still be smart enough to pull off a swindle like that?
Well, that's it.
Watch Amos and Andy and watch the kingfish.
Some things never change.
My God.
That's something, though.
I mean, you almost have to Have sort of some type of shrewdness.
You almost have to admire the brass to be able to cook that up and pull it off for so long.
I mean, this goes back years, by the way.
This wasn't just something that they just started out.
The white Minnesotan outlook is that if I'm being nice to you, how could you ever be bad to me?
Bad to me, great song, Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas, written by Paul McCartney.
But yeah, so we'll see.
But good luck getting that money back.
I mean, they say, you know, forget piracy.
Let's just move to Minnesota.
It's open to a daycare.
That's the way it goes.
For example, Memphis built a trolley system.
And the reason they built a trolley system is that they decided to get with the in crowd in urban planning and turn a perfectly functional main street that we had into a pedestrian mall.
And to do this, they hired a black contractor because this was back in the days of affirmative action and preference for black contractors for government contracts.
Well, the guy did a terrible job on it.
In fact, people were complaining because they couldn't go out to lunch walking down the Mid-America mall without having dirty water squirt up on their trousers or dresses or whatnot, and they'd have a big dry cleaning bill.
So the Memphis government had to figure out a way, like the kingfish, to get someone else to pay for it because they knew that suing the contractor wouldn't be worthwhile because that money had flown through him like, you know what, through a goose.
So what they did was they got the federal government to finance a mass transit system, which is how they pitched this trolley system.
They put them in the trolley system in there and told the builders of the trolley system: by the way, while you're doing this, fix this damned Mid-America mall, pedestrian mall, and they did.
But see, this is the type of problems you get because of liberalism.
Liberalism is not only the modern face of evil, it's incredibly stupid and it's very expensive as the people of the United States generally, Minnesota in particular, are learning.
Well, it would be, and we touched on this earlier, if the administration could pay a little more attention to cleaning up the act in Minnesota instead of Venezuela or Iran or whatever.
I mean, the trick would be to get organized jury to be opposed to what the Somalians are doing.
But of course, that's not the case.
They love bringing people like this in because it disrupts white society and wreaks havoc and weakens us.
They see us as their primary competitors for hegemony, and they will do anything to weaken us.
And one of the best ways to weaken us is to get our population watered down with non-white.
Kevin McDonald, this is what the culture of critique is all about, their evolutionary strategies, why they do this to host societies.
But yeah, I mean, so, you know, you're not going to get any help from them on what's going on in Minnesota because the Somalians are doing exactly what they were brought in to do.
Although this was a little bit entrepreneurial in nature, I don't know if the business is a kingfish.
I don't know if they exactly expected the Somalians to have that much enterprise, but it's just something, a $9 billion scheme that they got away with for years.
And, I guess you got to give some credit that the administration is sitting in federal investigators to, I guess, stop this now.
But I mean, all that money, all that grift, all that waste going to these third world savages who are no credit to Minnesota or society at large.
The people in Africa look down on them.
They are a disgrace to the people in Africa.
Makes me want to watch Captain Phillips, you know, the Tom Hanks movie.
The lead pirate in that we want money.
We get paid.
Everything is going to be okay.
Well, remember Albert Schweitzer, the famous, you know, humanitarian doctor who got Nobel Prizes and things like this.
He said, and this is not advertised, but he said, black people are childlike, but you've got to understand one thing.
Never let them think they've got the upper hand on you or have control or power over you because they will destroy you if they feel that.
Childlike like a pit bull puppy.
That's right.
Well, we'll see where it goes in Minnesota.
Big stories.
My goodness, if the rest of the year is going to go this way, we're two weeks into 26, and we've got some pretty big stories we've had to cover so far.
We'll see what the bird brings in next week.
But I do want to say, check your mailboxes next week.
Finally, after a month and a half, the United States Postal Service did, in fact, deliver all of the Harry Cooper books we were waiting on.
And so we've got gift packages going out all over the world.
They started going out this week.
Perhaps by now some of you will have received them.
If you have not and you donated to our Christmas fundraising drive back in December, check your mailbox by next week's show.
If you're a domestic listener, international, be a little while longer.
But they should all be there to you.
Thank you again for helping us stay on the air.
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That's it.
So that having been said, I want to thank everyone again that sent in letters, that sent in emails.
We have read them all.
We will respond to them all.
I promise you.
I'll tell you how my day starts off every morning.
I wake up and the first thing I do before I even get out of bed is I try to respond to as many text messages as I can.
That's always the best way to get a there's no prompt response, but it's a prompt as I can be.
I try to, I get a couple of hundred text messages a day, and that's not to say that it's from a couple of hundred different people, although it'll be from dozens, I assure you.
And then emails, they pile up.
I try to start every day by answering correspondence, whether it be text message emails or written correspondence.
And then the day begins, the workday, and there's never a down day.
There's never a day where we can say, well, there's not much to do today.
There's always more to do than we can do.
Never a down day, but there is a dull moment every once in a while.
Well, we haven't had one yet on this show, I can tell you.
But anyway, we thank you for your support, prayerful, financial, moral, and otherwise, and hope you enjoy these gift packages.
And just let me say this as a closing jab on the Somalian Minnesota situation.
Yeah, back to that.
You know, what do they say?
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
You know, unfortunately, everything that was being told to us back in the early 50s and Amos and Andy is playing out in the modern way here in Minnesota.
They've all got to go, and it's not just them, it's so many others.
They've all got to go.
Always is the case.
There's going to be some pull-at-your-heartstrings story about one individual that's an exception to the rule.
But unfortunately, they've got to go too.
They've all got to go.
You can't set government policy based on one or two exceptional individuals.
That's exactly right.
That's exactly right.
We'll be back with Taylor Young of Antelope Hill Publishing to wrap up show number two this year in Newswire.
You're listening to Liberty News Radio.
Breaking news at Town Hall.
I'm Bob Agnew in Washington.
A federal agent has shot and killed a Minneapolis motorist when she allegedly tried to run over law enforcement officers during an immigration crackdown.
The incident took place in a Minneapolis residential neighborhood, according to a Department of Homeland Security statement.
The Twin Cities are the target of a new DHS operation where some 2,000 agents and officers are expected to participate in an investigation tied in part to allegations of fraud involving Somali residents.
Separately, on Capitol Hill, the House Oversight Committee opened a hearing on those allegations.
George Williams, Washington.
And HHS Secretary Christy Noam has given a brief statement saying that law-abiding citizens should feel no fear from her agency, merely enforcing immigration law.
U.S. forces boarded one tanker in the North Atlantic today after pursuing it for weeks.
The U.S. European Command says in a social media post that it seized a merchant vessel for violations of U.S. sanctions.
The vessel, which, according to records, is flagged to Russia, had been pursued by the U.S. since last month after it tried to evade a U.S. blockade on sanctioned oil vessels around Venezuela.
That is correspondent Donna Warder reporting.
Meanwhile, a second ship, also tied to Venezuela, was seized in the Caribbean.
Gas prices in the U.S. this year could be the lowest they've been since 2020.
That's according to a new analysis by GasBuddy.
The average price of gas around the United States this year is expected to dip to $2.97 per gallon, down 13 cents from 2025.
GasBuddy is citing strong refinery output, lower oil prices, robust crude production, and softer seasonal demand as the main reasons behind this decline.
Nettie's correspondent Bill Alexander reporting, it was a booming session yesterday on Wall Street.
Today, the Dow is giving some of those gains back.
Right now, it's down by 227 points.
The NASDAQ thriving, though, it's up by 142.
More at townhall.com.
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I would say we're settling into another year of broadcasting, but we've had to hit the ground running this year with everything going on geopolitically and otherwise.
But it is great now to be joined once again by Taylor Young of the Antelope Hill Publishing editorial team.
And it's just been a real privilege and pleasure to partner with Antelope Pill these last few years.
And we work with them in a variety of different ways.
But the way most readily apparent to you, our beloved listener, is the fact that we have a monthly showcase for Antelope Pill products and books and items from their catalog the last hour of the last show of every month.
So I know what you're asking.
Well, then why, James, are we doing this on January the 10th?
Well, the reason for that being is every now and then we have special programming.
We've got to flex a little bit.
We were having the year-in review show there that last Saturday of December and then last week kicking things off with special programming from live from South Africa.
And so Taylor is joining us now and then we'll be back on regular schedule henceforth for the rest of the year, barring any sort of Any sort of further adjustments.
So, Taylor, it is great to have you back on tonight.
And as we were texting with one another in preparation for this evening's appearance, I said, you know, the second week of the year, we're not too deep into 26 to be able to not go back and do a little retrospective of Antelope Hills 2025.
So let's begin there.
And welcome back, Taylor.
Happy New Year to you.
Yeah, Happy New Year to you, James, and your family and all the listeners.
It's always great to be on here with you.
And you as well.
So let's look back very quickly on the year that was for Antelope Hill Publishing.
Pretty big year as things just get bigger and better and the realm expands for you and your team there.
Recap for us some of the highlights of 2025 over there at antelopehillpublishing.com.
Sure.
So it was easily one of our best years.
It might have been our best year sales-wise yet.
I think I was looking at this a little while ago.
And we published a lot of some very big names this year.
And I think that definitely contributed to our success.
So we started off the year with Escape from Detroit by Paul Kersey, which brings our number of Paul Kersey books to three, I believe.
And I think we might have some more scheduled for some point in the future.
Certainly would be happy to have more in the future.
So Escape from Detroit by Paul Kersey.
Then we had Intolerant Interpretations by Josh Neal.
Josh's previous two books were published with Imperium Press, and this one was published with us.
And it was definitely a big success story of the year.
A very important book, I think.
Josh is a very, very smart guy.
And we're very proud to be able to present his work.
And we hope to do more of that in the future as well.
Then we had Peasantry as the Lifeblood of the Nordic Race, which is a prequel to New Nobility of Blood and Soil that we had published a couple years before.
Then we had another big name.
We had Greatness and Ruin by Dr. Ricardo Duchesne, which is a book about the role of individualism in both the rise and fall of European civilization.
It's a big book.
It's got a lot of information in it.
It covers a wide variety of topics and basically looks at all of European history and analyzes European contributions to art and science and culture and all of that and makes the case for it being really unique and from this arising from unique aspects of the European character.
Then we had Nuremberg The Last Battle by David Irving, also a very important book I know we've discussed here on the show and another one that we're very proud to have put out.
Then we had a novel Stimulosis by Mark Time, another one of our returning authors.
He's also a very interesting guy and his novels are a lot of fun, frankly, and there's some very interesting ideas in them as well.
Then we had probably our biggest book of the year and definitely biggest in every way, really.
And that's Culture of Critique by Dr. Kevin McDonald, the third edition specifically, which is much expanded from the previous edition as a huge new forward where he has a lot of new information and responses to his critics.
He has a whole new chapter in there and then just updates to everything else in it as well.
So easily one of the most important books that I think we've published, although we do think all of our books are important.
So, yeah, so we had Culture of Critique.
Then we had our compilation of winners and successful entries for our annual writing contest, which was If Not Us, Who.
That was the theme.
And then we closed out the year.
We had some back-to-back releases.
We had Rise of the Reich and Rise and Fight, which are some 20th century works from Germany and Italy, respectively.
And then lastly, we had a book about Jose Antonio, which is actually written by a modern historian, Jose Antonio, one of the fascist leaders of Spain, that looks at the development of his ideology and the development of his organization.
And we also had another unique book for our catalog, which is The Theory of Japan's National Polity and Pure Socialism, which is a hefty tome, let me tell you.
And it is basically a work of Japanese nationalist ideology.
So that is our year in review in terms of the books we published.
That is a tremendous accounting of the catalog that was put forth at antelopehillpublishing.com.
And of course, during the long-standing now, I think it goes back this tradition of ours at least two or three years now, where we do a monthly showcase with either you, Taylor, or one of your authors or another member of your team.
And so each of these books had been profiled on the program going back each month throughout 2025.
But to have them all listed there one after another, as you just did, with Paul Kersey, our longtime friend, and Josh Neal, Ricardo Duchesne, Kevin McDonald, and we'll talk a little bit more about this after the break.
That is really a banner year.
I know we've been doing this a few years.
There's never a year where you say, well, you know, it was a pretty good year.
They're all very good, but that is just truly exceptional.
They're always swinging for the fences.
Well, I mean, now you may almost be intimidated by your previous success.
And I want to talk a little bit more about some of the things Analopeal does behind the scenes.
And we'll get into that in the next segment.
But 2026, then, Taylor, and by the way, all of those titles that he just mentioned and so many more going back to the founding of Antelope Hill Publishing a few years ago, antelopehillpublishing.com, you can get each of those titles price to sell right now, e-format for some and hard copies for all.
But how are you going to match that in 2026?
The bar has been raised, my friend.
Oh, yeah, certainly.
Certainly the bar has been raised high.
But we do have some interesting stuff lined up for 2026 as well.
We have pretty much our whole catalog of releases worked out for the year.
Obviously, this stuff always changes a bit, so we'll see what actually ends up happening.
But we have some more historical works.
We have more stuff about National Socialism and fascism, as usual.
We have some more new stuff being written as well.
And I can talk a little bit more about that.
But it'll be, I'm excited about some of the stuff we have going on.
So I can either get into it right now or after the break.
Yeah, well, we'll continue this conversation after the break, but just a reminder that whether it's children's books, and there is a pretty healthy assortment of children's books there at antelopepublishing.com or books pertaining to historical occurrences, current events, fiction and nonfiction.
I don't sleep on the artistic work and play with some of these novelists.
I think that is important.
For whites to be engaged in the arts is important.
And then, of course, books that cover so many different current political issues.
It's all there at analopillopublishing.com.
And one thing that is, you just mentioned the last book, the one that's top left, if you're there at the website right now, As I Am, this book on the theory of Japan's national polity.
Now, that is an esoteric topic, to be sure, but this just goes to show that some books are going to be more...
Well, it's like they say, he said, if not for us, who?
Exactly.
If it were not for you guys, who would be publishing this type of information and, you know, these works?
And, you know, my hat's off to you all.
There are all sorts of books that are de facto banned that need to find their way to town.
Well, Analope Hill.
That's another thing.
I mean, they work in translations as well, bringing to the English reader books that were otherwise shut out.
Some books that, well, like the Nuremberg book by David Irving that had been discontinued, they brought that back to life.
There's just so much there.
Well, we'll continue on with it when we continue.
And I'm going to talk a little bit more about Antelope Hill Publishing behind the scenes, where we see them at throughout the year.
They're always networking and the importance of that.
Hey, Bar Young, it sticks with us right after these words.
Stay tuned.
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And welcome back.
Well, the point I was going to make with Taylor Young of Antelope HillPublishing.com before the break is that, I mean, in addition to, of course, what we always say, there's something there for everybody.
And even this new book, The Theory of Japan's National Polity, I mean, esoteric inso much as it's not going to be something that the masses are, you know, that's going to be a big hit with the masses, although Taylor says it is selling quite well, which is it's selling quite well because it's forbidden information, and there are a lot of people hungering for this information, and that's the appetite and that's the audience that Antelope Hill serves.
Well, you put forth something that you can't get anywhere else, is again what you're saying, Keith.
And for anybody interested in that particular topic, this is the ones, this is the shop for you.
And again, I would compare and contrast that.
So every content is the content market is saturated, especially on social media.
I mean, you see all of these, you know, for instance, e-girls, they don't really have any new thoughts or ideas or particularly interesting, but because they look good, they have these, you know, these big followings.
But that's really here.
You've got something that is really serious.
And I get to see and work with Antelope Hill behind the scenes as well.
And another thing that really I'm really impressed by them is their ability to effectively network and build relationships that sort of goes cross-discipline.
They work well with everybody.
That's something that we're known for here with this radio program.
They would have gotten a check on their first grade report card and plays well with others.
Indeed, indeed.
And that is important.
And then you see them.
So, of course, Taylor was with us at TPC's 20th anniversary conference last year, or excuse me, I guess it was two years ago now in 24.
Last year at our Wheel to Power conference, Taylor was not there for that one, but representatives from his team were there.
And they also had a book sales table.
Author Josh Neal, of he wrote the book Intolerant Interpretations.
He was there and he sold out of every copy.
So thank you for those of you who are at that conference for making that a success.
And then Taylor and I were together in Dallas a few months ago with Kevin McDonald.
Same situation, the culture of critique.
And of course, for reasons well known to you and this listening audience, we were very proud to see that book come out from our long-standing friendship with Kevin McDonald being one reason.
And we were at that book signing together, Taylor, and Kevin sold out of every single copy there at that particular conference.
And so let's just talk a little bit about that.
Y'all are very active on the travel circuit with book tables, and you're working with other people.
You have your own legendary Christmas party every year for friends and associates.
Talk about the work Antelope Hill is doing in building networks that go above and beyond the publishing house.
Yeah, well, I think it's really been one of the keys to our success and to how far we've gotten is that we really make a conscious effort to build all the relationships that we can, really.
You know, if there's a door, we'll at least push on it.
We'll give it a knock.
We'll see if something happens.
So we're always happy to go to events.
We used to do a lot of, we would vend at events for the National Justice Party when that was around.
And since then, there have been less opportunities to do in-person vending at events, but they still come up occasionally.
Was actually just at a local one just this Saturday, which was very cool hanging out with a bunch of people there and selling some books.
So happy to do local events.
And yeah, we're always happy to partner with people with podcasts, with shows, with blogs, you know, with their own stuff going on.
If we can have some mutual benefit from each other, then that's the best for everybody.
And that's what we're here about.
And that's what's probably one of the biggest things that's helped us grow as much as we did and to expand as much as we did.
And so, you know, we're very happy when other people also find our books useful for their own purposes, for their own research or for the content or for the messaging that they want to put out.
So it's just really great when you can have partnerships like that come together.
And I also think probably you're alluding to this a little bit as well, that the networking is also important for other reasons.
You build connections that you can use for political projects and for other kinds of political work and to have a larger impact beyond just putting out the books.
So, you know, like I said, we're very happy to be doing all of that.
And it's a hit.
It's a hit every time I've seen it.
And I just gave two examples.
Last year, we were in Dallas in the fall.
Kevin McDonald was doing a book signing.
Every copy that was brought in of Culture of Critique sold.
Earlier last year, still back in May at the TPC conference, Analope Hill had a booth there.
Josh Neal was doing a signing, and all of those sold out.
And then I can't, I mean, time blurs now.
It's all relative now, but it runs together a little bit.
But I remember being with you, Taylor, and some of your associates at Peter Brimolo's castle.
I guess it was a year before last.
And you had an assortment of books and very popular.
It's always a big hit when Analope shows up at an event with these titles.
And it's not just that.
I mean, again, in the spirit of networking, yes, I mean, we have an Analope Hill showcase here every month.
But you get your authors out there on the interview circuit as well.
And we were talking about, of course, Kevin McDonald and Kevin McDonald's third edition of The Culture of Critique that came out in September.
And it was a big hit with our audience for our third quarter fundraising drive back then.
But Kevin is still doing interviews for this.
I saw just, I guess it was yesterday or the day before, where Jake Shields on his Twitter or X, if you will, is promoting an interview, a forthcoming interview with Kevin McDonald.
So you worked to get that out.
And again, you, Analope Hill, is in touch with Jake Shields and so many people that folks might not expect.
Oh, yeah.
No, and it's, it's, we do a lot of marketing for our authors.
Like you said, we try to get them on our whole circuit of shows and podcasts and friendly reviewers.
And it also certainly helps if the author is very energetic about it.
And some people have been like Dr. McDonald and Josh Neal as well.
We're really just willing to put themselves out there and talk to anybody.
But yeah, stuff like Jake Shields and interviewing Kevin McDonald or Joel Webb and interviewing Kevin McDonald.
We're very proud to make this kind of stuff happen because in a lot of cases, you're actually introducing these people and their work to a new audience that probably isn't very familiar with it.
And especially if it's such as important work as Dr. McDonald does, then that's, I think that's really another big aspect of what we're trying to bring to the political scene in general.
Well, I've got a potential sale for you.
You need to follow this lead.
One on Japanese culture, you need to get in touch with Jared Taylor since he basically grew up over there.
I'm sure he'd be interested in that.
You gave us a teaser earlier about books that you got in the queue, I guess, to do.
Is there any that you can share with us or any that you think we ought to know about?
And also, finally, have you ever considered doing Sol Shenitsen's 200 Years Together?
You know, that's kind of a banned book in America, the only one of his library, I think, that is.
But I think a lot of people are certainly curious about it.
It's a question of getting rights and all of those things.
I mean, there's a lot more to it than just wanting.
But, I mean, all good questions still.
I think a lot of people don't know exactly how the process of your selections are made, although we've certainly talked to you about how a decision is made and what you want to focus on publishing.
So good questions there.
Yeah, no, 200 years together is one of the most frequent questions we get.
And as you're saying, James, it is a copyright issue.
The estate just won't allow it.
So it's not something that we can publish.
You know, you can probably, I think you can get like a PDF of it online somewhere.
You probably have people that do kind of like fly-by-night publishing of it, but that's unfortunately not something that we can do.
But yeah, just to run through real quick some of the stuff that we have for this year.
So first of all, this month, probably in about a week or so, we'll be putting out the second edition of The American Regime by Christian Secor, who was one of the political prisoners that was pardoned for being at January 6th.
And that's a little bit updated with a new essay by him in there as well.
So we're starting off with that, and then some interesting stuff we have planned for the rest of the year.
We are going to have hopefully another Kerry Bolton book later in the year, which is about America's role in decolonizing the European colonies.
So very interesting work.
We're working on a title for that still, but it's a very interesting topic.
We also are working on, we had a very interesting submission kind of similar to the culture of critique in its subject matter, but specifically in the Hungarian context.
So looking at a history of the Jewish role in Hungarian society.
And that might end up being a three-volume work.
I think Dr. McDonald has actually reviewed it.
So very excited for that one.
We're hoping to publish the first volume of that also later this year.
We also have a book on Russian volunteers in the Spanish Civil War that'll be coming out later.
We have another history book that I believe is by a contemporary author about, it's called Germany in Stalin's Crosshairs, the Red Army's Entry into the Second World War.
Oh, that's going to be interesting.
It's always interesting.
Well, that's why we have to have them on every month, right, folks?
That they have these different authors, different discussions with Taylor Young or members of his team about these books.
And you can go make a purchase right now at Antelope HillPublishing.com.
Speaking of Christian Security, he just mentioned one of the J6 hostages.
Christian was on with us last year, the last week of January of 2025, right after he got out of prison.
And we may have him back on later this month to discuss the second issue of the American regime.
Taylor, young, working with a lot of great people.
More good stuff to come.
We're just kicking off 2026.
Looking forward to another good one with you, Taylor.