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Feb. 1, 2026 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
54:45
Radio Show Hour 1 – 2026/01/31

Sam Dickson deftly examines the legal and political ramifications of the madness in Minneapolis.

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Kavanaugh's Threatened Position 00:14:24
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.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to tonight's live broadcast of TPC.
I'm your host, James Edwards.
Not a second to waste, so let's just get right into it.
During tonight's second hour, we're going to have former January 6th hostage Christian Sikour back on the program.
Lots happened in the last year since his release.
Dandy has an updated second edition of his book that tells his story.
He'll be on to discuss that tonight and much more.
But first, our friend Sam Dixon is back to further weigh in on the political and legal ramifications of the madness in Minneapolis.
He was tuned in last week when Jim Lancia was on.
He was listening, and he's going to continue that conversation now.
Sam, welcome back.
I'm honored to be here.
I'm eager to talk.
Well, we have a lot to talk about.
So I think last week you had tuned in, and well, one of the things you wrote was that you enjoyed Jim Lancea's appearance and that his stance on the shooting in Minneapolis must have taken me and others in the audience by surprise.
But that we rolled with the punches with a plume.
And, well, here we are.
What did you think about that program?
And I know you have some big, major takeaways from not just that, but the overall situation before we get into some of the details that have developed since last Saturday.
I'm a great fan of the WOPCOP, the guy you had on.
I think he's great.
I really like him.
And I was pleased what he said, because I think he's right that the ICE officers did not follow correct police procedure.
Maybe I'm wrong on that.
I certainly have empathy for them.
They were under tremendous pressure.
They're constantly being obstructed, yelled at, threatened, docks, their families are being threatened.
And so it's natural that they're going to be under a strain.
None of those extenuating circumstances, of course, will be of any use to them if and when they're put on trial.
Just like they're not of use to any of us, anybody that's a quote racist, end quote, or a white one.
The other kinds of racists are absolutely supported.
But I think the first thing we have to do is we need to take a step back.
I think it's easy to lose sight of the forest if you get focused on the trees.
And I think that's exactly what the establishment wants to do with things like the shooting of Petty and Renee Goode.
They want all this stuff to turn around the pathos.
I call this reaching for the pathos.
And you see the establishment, the media, and the politicians do this all the time.
They distract people into supporting policies that people would not normally support because of some heart throb.
And this is just standard fair.
I think we often fall for it and fail to see it for what it is.
Before focusing directly on this, consider the case of Emmett Till.
We're told that he was lynched.
Emmett Till was not lynched.
Emmett Till was murdered.
It's a garden variety murder in which Emmett Till had attempted to fondle another guy's wife, a white woman, and her white husband was outraged, and he went and ended up killing Emmett Till.
As his widow, the widow of the husband said, Tenet Till did not deserve to die for what he did.
But it's not a lynching.
It's not really significant at all.
It's simply a garden variety murder, of which there were probably a couple hundred this week in America, largely involving blacks who killed white people.
But that's been made into a huge seminal issue.
And the mother of Emmett Till is hailed because she didn't close the coffin, but let her son's putrefied body that was found some days after be seen publicly.
And somehow that's supposed to mean that there's more significance to the story than there really was.
When you look at the Kavanaugh hearing, this woman became the star, and her allegations became the center of the confirmation of Kavanaugh on whether or not when he was a 17-year-old high school junior and drunk, he came on to a woman in an unacceptable way.
Well, setting aside all the things we know about that, about all the facts of that, how there's nothing to support her story, assume for a moment it's all true.
Who wants to be judged by what he did when he was 17 years old and drunk?
Would the liberals really like it if we started judging black people by what they did when they were 17 years old and drunk?
I mean, it's just not even an issue.
Not a minute should have been wasted on it.
The guy was 53 years old.
There was nothing on him.
There was a lot of stuff he had done that in an adult society, which America isn't, would have been the subject of the senators' concerns.
Kavanaugh was one of the people that wrote a memo saying it was okay to take American citizens and fly them to other countries and have them tortured.
This was not a violation of the Fourth Amendment prohibition of torture.
Well, as an American, I would have liked to have heard Kavanaugh interrogate about that rather than whether he actually came onto a woman in a rude and crude way when he was a drunk 17-year-old.
You just go down the list, these things that Rodney Floyd, set aside again all the stuff we know about the level of fental and the unlikeliness, the unlikelihood that Chauvin, the white cop, killed him.
Just assume for the sake of argument that every single thing they said about that was true.
It's simply a white guy killing a black guy, one white guy killing one black guy in a city a thousand miles away from Atlanta.
Why should we be concerned about that?
It's not important because it goes on, the reverse of that goes on all the time, a black guy killing a white guy.
And then to get down to the subject at hand, the deaths of these two people are not the center stage.
They're an effort to distract people from the issue, which is whether we're going to become a third world country, whether we're going to have Somalis and people like them overrunning our country.
And this is a serious issue.
These weird people that are out there fighting ICE and some of them weeping.
I hear them on NPs on National Radio breaking down and crying over the migrants.
They want these people, they want their children to have to grow up in a city where 100,000 of these people have been, according to the black Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, that 100,000 of them were deliberately settled.
He's proud of it by the Democrats in Minnesota to make it a blue state.
And we know now they stole $9.5 million of money earmarked for assistance for poor people and stuff.
They stole that money and they took it back to Somalia.
But these people, do they really want maybe 300,000, 500,000 more of them?
These are really sick people.
And they're engaged in a criminal conspiracy nationwide.
21 cities have these same groups.
They use the same placards.
They're connecting each other on the internet.
They're being funded.
They're being supported.
And what they're doing is an organized campaign to obstruct and prevent law enforcement, to dox the ICE officers so that their family, their wives, and children can be threatened.
They're taking tag numbers.
This was on NPR, National Royal Radio.
They had a woman riding around with one in Chicago who was just thrilled.
They started out staking out the ICE building, getting pictures of the ICE cars and their tags, calling people, alerting the network that they're going into such and such a neighborhood and get the word out to the migrants to hide.
So they're trying to tell the culprits to hide from the law enforcement.
And then she was bragging, oh, we're blocking the ICE cars.
This is amazing.
I mean, why has Trump not moved to prosecute these people?
That's the real story.
That's the story of their criminal conspiracy is the real story that outweighs these two shootings in Minneapolis.
Great opening statement.
And we are going to go from there into many different branches.
So much to cover.
I told Sam before we started tonight that we could go the full three hours and it wouldn't be enough with all the emails and comments that have been sent in to me as a result of last week's show and the show before that.
As Sam mentioned, of course, this is all sort of spawned as a result of apparently the state of Minnesota aiding and abetting these Somalians to swindle the taxpayer for $9 billion and counting.
But let's go through a couple of comments here, Sam, and get your response.
And then I want to compare Charlottesville to Minneapolis, Minnesota to Mississippi, Arkansas, and Alabama in the 1960s and just sort of really just sink our teeth into this thing.
But as I mentioned last week, the show with Jim Lancia, I mean, it was a real lightning rod.
People either loved it or hated it.
And I can't ever remember a guest eliciting such, generating such inflamed emails for better or worse.
Bob in Montana writes that Jim Lancia's observations on the Minneapolis shooting were insightful.
His law enforcement experience and passion are exactly what's needed right now.
We're all on the same team with the goal of preserving our people and promoting their advancement.
It is vital that we maintain different perspectives and avoid getting boxed into ideological or tactical corners.
You've been successful in bringing people with different ideas together to discuss our situation.
So I think that's a baseline that people need to remember because I got a lot of emails.
People were very upset with what Lancia had to say last week.
Some very much in favor.
Here's one, and I would like to get your response to this, Sam, and then we're going to, again, focus very directly and very narrowly on the situation in Minneapolis.
But Jack Antonio writes, this is war.
The enemy hates you.
The enemy hates your family, past, and future.
The enemy wants you dead.
The enemy is well supplied, well-financed, well-trained, ruthless, and deadly.
There is no time for reasonableness, fairness, niceness, retreat, explanations, compromise, or kumbaya.
There's no time for asinine whining about the Constitution.
That document is toxic to us or for us.
You cannot reason or compromise with people who want to kill you.
This is the time to press our advantage.
Stop the nonsensical talk about generational solutions.
We have no time.
We are one bad election cycle away from disaster.
Alex Predi and Renee Goode were vermin, and I don't care if they were citizens, they were traitors.
Better that they had never been born.
If that sentiment is too strong for you, I suggest you clutch your pearls elsewhere.
To those who think that Trump will save us, think again.
He blinked in Minneapolis.
He never went hard enough.
He should have crushed the insurrection immediately and forced ICE to go all in rather than playing patty cake with blue-haired psychosexual misfits.
Now the enemy smells blood.
Trump, in my opinion, has not been our guy.
He has no racial consciousness.
He's a self-serving narcissist with the compulsive need to be liked.
His value to us was that he gave us a window of opportunity to speak about racial interest that raised the expectations of whites, only to be disappointed.
However, this has whetted our appetite for a true leader.
We need to prepare for the post-Trump world.
Let's redeem our generation, and this is coming from a boomer with imaginative, stealthy resistance.
So, two emails there.
Respond to that, Sam, and then we're going to really get after this.
Wow, there's a lot to respond to there.
The standard conservative response would be how terrible what he says is.
But I think really he's got his head screwed on right.
We have to understand, like he says, our enemies hate us.
They hate us, and they would like to see us all dead.
Now, you know, when I say our enemies, I mean most of them.
I don't mean a few nutcases like AOC or Omar Ehan, or whatever her name is, in Minneapolis.
I think the whole body of these people, they are immoral, they're ruthless, many of them are homicidal.
You look at things like the Virginia Attorney General's election in 2025.
The Democrat candidate, Jay Jones, was caught sharing with people his desire to kill the children of his white opponent, to kill them, and as he himself said in his texts and messages, to have the children die in the arms of their mother.
I mean, and he got 53.14% of the votes.
Communist Revolution Nostalgia 00:11:52
He won the election, despite all that coming out.
And I don't think you can excuse the people that voted for him.
They let them just say, well, we've got to vote for him.
No, they weren't deterred by that.
I think they would like it too, many of them.
These racial minorities truly hate us.
And the psychotic white minority, they are eager to join in on the hate.
You see this in things like the New York Times launched its coverage of the century, the centennial of the Communist Revolution.
And the headline of the initial article was, a nostalgic look at the communist revolution.
Nostalgic?
One in five Russians males died?
This led to mass murders of white people, white Christians, the death of 200,000 Christian clergymen, mostly of the Orthodox Church, and they're nostalgic for it.
They're sitting in their editorial rooms in the New York Times dreaming of it.
And that's the way these people are.
And he's right.
I personally think there is no hope for reform.
The system offers no hope for reform.
And we are coming into a confrontation with people who are utter most of them are utterly unlike us in race and religion.
But all of them are people we cannot live with.
Here are two other comments, both from people that are familiar to you, Padrick Martin, number one, and Jason Kessler, number two.
Here's Padrick's take on the events of the last week.
The answer to Minnesota is not the suspension of immigration enforcement and the withdrawal of Bovino.
The answer was the suspension of Pase Comitatas, 10,000 armed Marines, and the expansion of immigration enforcement.
There was a better way that was ignored, either due to ignorance or lack of will.
Regardless, if you back down, you embolden every single leftist state entity to double down on chaos as a means to force Trump onto his knees.
There's no sugarcoating this.
Trump lost.
Antifa beat him again.
That's Patrick Martin.
Jason Kessler writes, alternatively, the nationalist Trump critics never offer constructive or measured criticism.
They always want to judge Trump against some Hitler in their head rather than the reality of American politics.
The good is not perfect, so it should be opposed, leaving evil unchecked.
Would I like Trump to crush Antifa?
Of course.
But sending Tom Homan to oversee a controversial operation in an election year is cognizable.
Obtaining the cooperation of Minnesota law enforcement while deportation efforts continue is not a bad thing.
And Bolvino is still on the job in Los Angeles.
Time will tell.
Also, the criticism would make more sense if it wasn't in the context of relentless negative appraisal of Trump on every issue.
Too much passive-aggressive revenge politics over Trump's Israeli support, obscuring accurate appraisal of his tenure.
So this is, again, the pro and the con take on how the chips have fallen since last Saturday, Sam.
Yes.
Are you buying or which one are you buying or selling?
Well, you know, it's a difficult subject.
You know, there are things about Trump that we don't support.
There are things about Trump that we should support.
And I think when you look at his policies on immigration and stuff and similar issues, it's quite surprising.
He's trying to ban birthright citizenship.
I never dreamed in my lifetime that we'd have an opportunity to finally put a stop to birthright citizenship.
That's a huge thing.
And he has stood by people in his government, appointments he's made, who've been attacked by the ADL.
The woman that was attacked because she dared to tell the truth that Leo Frank was in fact guilty.
He was not convicted because of anti-Semitism, as the ADL claims.
He stood by people like that.
He's appointed people like that.
So he's a lot better than a lot of people think.
And so give him credit.
He has polarized the nation, and our nation needs polarization.
He has seduced the GOP.
He has swung its base over where really there's no market now for Mitt Romney's or Dwight David Eisenhower's or Nelson Rockefeller's or William Sclanton's or all these people we've had before who are not on our side.
Those people seem to have lost control.
I think that is a very balanced take, what you just said.
I don't think it splits the difference between Patrick's comment and Jason's.
I just think it's an honest, fair, sober assessment, which is what we try to deliver here on this program.
I mean, we try to deliver the right takes, right?
But again, I want to compare and contrast this right now with you, Sam, because I think you are the perfect voice to weigh in on this matter, you know, going back all the way to the 1950s and 60s.
But And I don't want to continue to talk about last week's guest, but I think that some of the people who were upset with Jim's take, I tell you where Jim was coming from last week, in my opinion.
He's put out with Trump over the Jewish issue.
It blurs his vision, maybe, to an extent.
But he also did say, in fairness, invoke the Insurrection Act, arrest Governor Waltz and Mayor Frye.
But that since he won't do it, in his opinion, the whole thing's a farce.
He also believes that the ICE agents are weak and poorly trained, which annoys him as a cop, and that they will do the same thing to us next.
All right.
So when he talks about civil liberties, this, that, and the other, don't misunderstand him.
He believes that these folks could very easily be trained on us, and he has a general opposition to militarized law enforcement.
Not saying I agree with him on all of that, but I can understand where he's coming from.
And this gets to this question.
And this was Ron Uns writing in an op-ed this week.
Uns writes, personally, I find it hilarious that a huge number of right-wingers have now loudly declared that government agents should be authorized to summarily execute any American citizen who exercises his legal right to own and carry a handgun.
Now, I did not lose any sleep overseeing that antifa activist or whatever he was, whoever he was, you know, he was impeding the operation there.
He was disobeying orders.
He was doing all of this, and he got shot.
I couldn't have cared less.
However, for all of the people who say, you know, we're cheering that on, had it been one of us.
Now, listen to me here.
Let's just say, for instance, it happened to be a winger in Charlottesville who, you know, was recording and not necessarily obeying, and yes, was armed, which is a right that you have.
I admit freely, Sam, in that situation, had it been one of our guys, say in Charlottesville or wherever, I'd have been totally opposed to it.
In this case, I'm all for them mowing these people down.
And again, you know, where is the consistency there is?
Well, it just depends on what flag you're carrying.
But help reconcile all of that for us.
I mean, Charlottesville versus Minneapolis in that context for all of our people who fail to see the nuance in this.
Well, I'm conflicted myself.
You know, I would not have shot those two people.
I don't think if I'd been an ICE officer, I would not have shot them from what I've seen on the internet.
I haven't seen the whole thing, but it did appear, as Lancia said last week, that the petit guy had been disarmed and that he was just shot down.
And clearly, that is wrong.
But to put it in a broader perspective, I think we are in a fight for our lives, the survival of our people.
And it's not going to be pretty.
And I'm not the guy to do all this stuff.
I'm a kind person.
I don't get my jolly taking other guys down to the basement and yanking their fingernails out and hammering on their balls.
But it's not going to be done, as the American Revolution was not done by people having debates in Independence Hall and signing a parchment document.
The crimes committed by the American troops in the American Revolution, a legion, the crimes committed by Abraham Lincoln to save the Union are just horrific.
But, you know, so I have to go back and give an example.
Like I think y'all did it.
I think you did it last week.
That is, we saw a video of a black policeman on January 6th, 2021, just shoot down Ashley Barrett, who had no gun, was simply trying to get into the Capitol, and he just pulled his gun out and he killed her in cold blood.
And there was no weeping on national public radio.
Mary Louise Kelly didn't get her patties in a while.
There was no concern by Nancy Pelosi or AOC or Charles Schuma.
None of them gave a damn back.
In fact, they supported it.
And the government hid the name of the police officer for months and then announced, the Biden government announced that he had been exonerated.
How is he exonerated?
I mean, if it had been reversed, as you point out, and a white cop had shot down a black person, so yeah, these things are being depends on which tribe you belong to.
Exactly.
Sam, another great example to Ashley Babbitt shooting.
I mean, again, we all oppose that.
Why?
Because it's where our interests are, who our people are, where our plastic is.
Using the Constitution as our guide, you're listening to Liberty News Radio.
News this hour from town hall, I'm Mary Rose.
Several people are injured after gunfire breaks out during a Mardi Gras parade in Clinton, Louisiana.
Local outlets report at least three people were shot, possibly as many as six.
President Trump says he made the right choice by deciding to nominate Kevin Worsch to lead the Federal Reserve.
He's very smart, very good, strong, young, pretty young, and I think he's going to do a good.
I mean, he was the central casting guy that people wanted.
He once supported higher interest rates to fight inflation, but more recently has backed lower rates.
Two Republican senators have pledged to block President Trump's nominee for the Federal Reserve.
White House correspondent Greg Kluxton explains why.
GOP Senators Tom Tillis and Lisa Murkowski won't support the president's Fed pick unless the criminal investigation into current Fed chair Jerome Powell is resolved.
The senators object to the Justice Department's investigation, and Powell himself has called it a pretext by the Trump administration to force him to lower rates.
Tillis described nominee Kevin Worsch as a great qualified candidate, but is concerned about the president undermining the credibility and the independence of the Fed.
Greg Klugston, Washington.
Double Winter Whammy 00:15:16
States like North Carolina are getting a double winter weather whammy this weekend.
Much of North Carolina was coated in a thick sheet of ice last week, causing stores to run out of just about everything.
This weekend, the prediction is for heavy snow in some areas, followed by strong wind as another wave of dangerous cold is predicted for the South all the way up the eastern coastline to Maine.
Originally from Alaska, Dan McClellan says he's ready for the cold snap to be over.
It's been difficult.
I'm Lisa Dwyer.
The U.S. Coast Guard has announced that the search for survivors from the commercial fishing vessel off the coast of Massachusetts has been suspended.
More on these stories, Town Hall.
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I don't know if I've ever been as eager for a commercial break to end so we could get right back with Sam Dixon and continue this conversation.
When I say Sam Dixon, I don't guess I need to introduce him any further than that.
Not after all these years and all these conferences that he's spoken at.
I was just texting with someone who was at our most recent conference last May in Greenville, of course.
Sam was there and addressed the attendees as he always does when we put on an event.
And Sam, you brought up Babbitt.
And again, folks, I would like to think I have the ability or would have the ability if I had any power to be ruthless.
I mean, when I see people like this guy that was up there, I would have no moral qualms about seeing tanks, you know, just roll through.
You know, I'm old enough to, of course, remember Sam when, you know, rioting was punishable by, you could be shot for rioting.
You could be shot for occupying public space and not, you know, streets and things, shutting down cities and not obeying direct orders.
I mean, but things have changed, of course.
Here in Memphis, just a few years ago, you had Black Lives Matter terrorists who went on the I-40 bridge that spans the Mississippi River, connects Arkansas and Tennessee right there in downtown Memphis.
And they shut down interstate traffic all day until the police chief of Memphis came out along with the Memphis mayor and offered them bribes.
All right, so this is where we're at now.
But again, I would have had no problem at all seeing ICE just take these, you know, remove these people with extreme prejudice.
Let me just put it that way.
Now, again, had the shoe been on the other foot and it been a guy with a Confederate flag, even if he was armed with a SIG sour that had been modified with extra clips as Predi had been, you know, they, you know, eight guys tackle him and shoot him.
I would have seen this thing differently because, again, I'm seeing it through the lens of this is our side and this is not our side.
But let me ask you this.
We sort of already talked about that.
It does look like Tim Waltz.
And imagine being outmaneuvered to such an extent where at least in public relations, Tim Waltz looks more manly than Trump right now.
I have to say, I don't know if that's true or not, but it looks that way.
In the PR battle, I know the establishment media is framing a lot of this, but just seeing the way he has positioned himself versus the way Trump has responded, it looks like he got outmaneuvered by Tampon Tim.
And I would like to ask you to go all the way back to your early years and compare Tim Waltz in his handling of this situation from his perspective and for his people versus Orville Faubus and Ross Barnett and George Wallace.
How would you compare and contrast Minnesota today versus Mississippi, Arkansas, and Alabama of the 1950s and 60s?
Well, there are many, many compares and contrasts there.
One thing, people like Walsh know that they are supported by the big corporations, the banks, the utility companies, the insurance companies, the FBI, the New York Times, the media.
So, you know, people like Trump are constantly under siege, whereas people like Walsh are constantly being ballyhooed and played up.
When you come to the Southerners, I am a Southerner.
All of my ancestors fought for the South.
But as you know, my ethnic background is somewhat different from most Southerners in that I'm heavily French and I'm heavily New England.
And I think that made us something somewhat different from a lot of Southerners.
But we're all loyal to the Southern South.
I mean, I want to make that clear.
But we saw the differences between the way the ICE, the organized ICE conspiracy is being treated and the way the students at the University of Mississippi were treated at the University of Georgia when they opposed the Kennedy regime's decree to racially mix the colleges in the South.
They sent armed troops in, they sent them in to Little Rock.
As one of my uncles said at the time, Eisenhower will send the troops to Little Rock, but he won't send any aid to the Hungarians in Budapest.
And that was very true.
And the behavior of the federal troops was terrible at the University of Mississippi.
There was a set of hearings and a report by the Mississippi legislature.
They beat the hell out of those students.
And nobody wept them.
So, yeah.
But getting back, another point, the long-range point that I would like for the listeners to think about.
The Southerners were always defensive.
I remember as a child listening to, for instance, Marvin Griffin in Georgia debating Carl Sanders, who was the race mixer hiding as a moderate segregationist in the 1962 election on television.
And I would listen to them face the nation and meet the press and all that stuff.
And they would not come out with a strong defense of segregation.
They would say things like, our Negroes love our way of life.
It's our way of life.
It's our way of life.
They never gave any, the only person who gave sociological, scientific basis segregation was a Yankee, you know, Carlton Putnam in his book, Race and Reason.
The Southerners, you know, I would listen as a child.
I think, well, if the Negroes love our way of life so much, why don't you want them to vote?
It was obvious that they were ashamed of their product, or at least they were pulling their punches.
And I'm not a great Bible student or recorder like the Baptists are, but there is that very nice verse in Corinthians.
If the note of the trumpeter be not certain, who will prepare for battle?
And we have to be explicit.
We have to be clear.
No pulling of the punches.
And, you know, so yeah, they did not have the resolve of the people who were pushing for integration.
The southern leaders did not, and they did not have the resolve of Waltz.
Well, that's a fine answer, Sam, and I appreciate that.
And it just reminds me every time you're on or every time we have one of the guys on who, frankly, their shoulders, this program has been built on.
It just reminds me.
I love what we do here.
I mean, even after now, 22 years, it'll be later this year.
I love having these conversations with you.
You just don't get this anywhere else.
People who can have this historical knowledge, this encyclopedic knowledge, you can just pull at will and on call.
And it's why we keep having you on as often as we do.
And I hope it continues for another 22 years.
But I'll give you another Bible anecdote, Sam, since you mentioned it.
I mean, the political ramifications as we are looking at this, not good.
I mean, Christ himself said he spits the lukewarm from his mouth.
It would have been probably better politically for Trump if he had just ignored the Somali fraud and not sent the troops or the ICE agents in there at all if he wasn't going to go all in.
And here's another thing, and you touched on this earlier, and it really needs to be, we need to take a little bit deeper dive into this.
And this is the fact that this is a military operation that the other side is engaging in.
I mean, you have military-level communications with these Antifa folks.
You have spotters, supply lines, coordinated signal chat groups that allegedly go all the way up to the lieutenant governor in Minnesota.
Who's funding this?
I mean, people have brought up the fact that Trump can go into a sovereign nation, Venezuela, and kidnap the president from his own bed.
But you can't, I mean, with the FBI, the CIA, the NSA, you can't figure out who's behind this.
You can't figure out what these violent idiots are up to and who's funding it.
And you can't go in there and cut it off and arrest the situation.
It doesn't even begin to make sense, or does it?
No, and we see this throughout.
The failure to go after the real people that matter.
People that matter, the people organizing and funding this stuff nationwide.
You start at the top and you knew that.
This is not a generic, organic, you know, people coming together and just figuring this out on a moment's notice.
This is very highly trained and organized and funded.
Yep, I will, you know, you look back through history, in the so-called Red Square, Red Scare of the Wilson administration, you know, under Attorney General Palmer.
They went after people that had handed out some communist pamphlets somewhere or something.
Well, they should have arrested Jacob Schiff, the president of the Kunlo Bank that funded Lenin and Trotsky.
You should go after the people that finance the Bolshevik Party.
You don't start with some little nobody that's handing out his pamphlets at the subway station in New York City.
But that's how things generally work.
I've got probably 100 comments, anecdotes, messages.
We'll never get to them all.
I'll read two or three at a time, and you can just pick one to comment on, and we'll just keep going so I can try to work as many of these in as I can.
The Army went in.
This is one comment.
The Army went into the South to make everyone's kids go to school with Tyrone, but now we have to watch them turn Minneapolis into Mogadishu because the federal government isn't allowed to enforce immigration law.
Well, I guess that's a simple one enough, Sam, right?
I mean, we've touched on that.
The powers that be were in favor of integration.
They're not in favor of what's going on here with enforcing.
All the left had to do in Minneapolis is wipe out the federal government, prevent order from being reestablished, and they will demonstrate to the world that Washington does not meaningfully control its own territory and is therefore not sovereign.
Let's see what else we've got here.
If Trump doesn't invoke the Insurrection Act today, he's doomed to lose in 2026.
He looks weak by allowing this to continue, show some leadership, shut down this insurrection in Minnesota.
Well, that ship's already sailed.
I mean, this is over now.
Well, one wonders, you know, maybe it's a thought.
Maybe it invests Trump with too much shrewdness, but maybe he's just giving them rope with which to hang themselves.
Maybe he's luring them out.
I'd like to hope that.
He's luring them out by the thousands and thousands all over cities in America so they can be rounded up and jailed.
Well, if not now, win.
You know, if not now, when?
I mean, when is he going to tighten the legal noose there, so to speak?
I seem to doubt that that's the case.
But you even have here, you know, the well, I had something from Matt Walsh here.
I don't know.
There's just so many comments, so many comments.
But, well, it says the Trump administration is reviewing everything about the Minneapolis shooting.
Well, I think here's another point.
Here's another point that I think many, many people on our side, that the solid rock, the demographic core of America, does not realize.
States' Rights vs. Ideology 00:13:10
And that is, the battle is here at home.
It's not in Caracas.
The role of, well, I can't think of his name now.
The president of Maduro, if he's shipping fennel to America, the people who are taking it are not being made to take it by it and kill themselves by it.
And we really are better off without them.
But the battle is not in Venezuela.
The battle is here.
That's where our enemies are.
That's where the Attorney General of Virginia lives, who won't fantasize about seeing white children dying in their mother's hands and who is then sustained and voted for by the base of his party and the atrociousness of this idea is played down.
You look at the real thing is the story there again.
It's not the immediate insult.
It's all the surrounding forests around that guy.
There were state senators, one named Louise Lucas, another one named Nami Locke, who put out a little weak sister thing that they found his remarks disturbing, but warned against allowing that to change how you vote.
And they characterized him as a father raising two young boys who has demonstrated the character and compassion in the office of the office of Attorney General Good.
Really?
Character and compassion, talking about like babies, kids dying in their mother's arms.
Well, that tells us all we need to know about Louise Lucas and Mamie Locke.
You know where their hearts really are.
All that jabber about women and feminism.
Uh-uh.
No, that's just cover.
That's just a way to stir up a sexual divide, especially in white society.
That's all that means to them.
And so, you know, these people, like that first writer said, you know, they really hate us.
And we're not in a boxing match, like I've said before, between two 10th graders in physic class.
You know, this is a very different situation.
And the rules of the Marquis of Queensbury don't apply as they do when you're boxing with a classmate, as opposed to when you're downtown and you're being attacked by a gang of urban youths.
Here is another great observation.
Yes, indeed.
Well, here's another one of our fellow travelers, Matt Parrott, writing the side with more courage and resolve one.
He's talking about Tim Waltz.
I saw this, actually, Sam.
This is incredible.
Think about this.
I mean, this really happened.
This happened this week.
Waltz did call up the Minnesota National Guard.
Now, unlike in the case of the University of Alabama, the University of Mississippi, University of Arkansas, they weren't federalized, right?
So Waltz called up the Minnesota National Guard, and they arrived at the site of the unrest, and they were delivering donuts and hot chocolate to the Antifa people.
And when ICE would call in for backup, nobody would go and help them.
Not the National Guard, not the State Guard, not the local police.
Only after Trump sort of started negotiating, apparently, I mean, I'm just going by what I'm inferring here and what I'm seeing, started negotiating a surrender, did they allow the cops to go in and break up this one riot at a hotel?
There was one ICE agent securing this hotel where other ICE agents were believed to have been staying, and they had a riot outside.
He was with just one guy.
I mean, one guy got his finger bit off by these animals.
But not the local police and not the Minnesota State Guard, National Guard were allowed to go and help until Trump sort of offered concessions.
But they got away with it.
I mean, they were able to do that because they had, I think Parrott may be right, more.
Of course, it's easy to have courage and resolve when the system is behind you.
It's very different than what we had in the South in the 60s, I understand.
But nevertheless, you saw all of that this week.
And, you know, Waltz is taking a victory lap right now.
Yeah.
Well, you know, Sam Francis had his, what do you call his law, one of his laws, and that was that the leadership of every conservative right-wing organization is to the left of its base.
They believe in it less than the base does.
And the same is true of leftist organizations.
Their leadership is to the left of their base.
They believe in it more than the membership.
And so given the different level of commitment from the leadership of both sides, it's no surprise that we are losing.
Some Greeks said, I'd rather have an army of lambs led by a lion, an army of lions led by a lamb.
But anyway, I don't know about that, but I do know that we have to be aware of the tactic of distracting people when they reach for the pathos, about, you know, whether it's about Emmett Till, George Floyd, or what's Renee Goode. they are deliberately distracting us and public attention from the real issue because they've got a heartthrob story.
And we've got to guard against that.
We have to be radical ourselves.
And we have to understand the good thing about all the stuff that's coming out, the presidential executive orders, all this stuff which is violating traditional conservative and southern thought.
To me, the good thing is that the solid block core of the nation, the demographic core of the nation, is coming to see that limited government, the Constitution, states' rights, all of the decentralization.
This is a dead on arrival idea in dealing with the situation we have now.
We're going to need powerful leadership, strong government, centralized government that will take decisive action to put an end to these people that threaten us, to put an end to the threat that is against us, to face it better.
You know, no doubt about it, and it should be made very clearly here while we still have a little bit of time this hour, that all of those illegals have to go.
All of them have to go.
And everyone from Matt Walsh to Steve Bannon, and neither of those guys are my tempo.
They're not quite my tempo.
But they see it.
And whatever the reality is, everybody from Matt Walsh to Steve Bannon to our side to the other side see this as basically, at the very least, a blink by the administration, if not an outright surrender.
And all of those people need to go.
But Trump is now saying, well, only the criminals who have committed an additional crime, in addition to being here, we need an ethnostate.
We have the same right to an ethnostate that the Jews claim for themselves in the Middle East.
It's outrageous that the Jewish community in America takes the position that we are not entitled to a country of our own, but they are.
Just first blush, you know what that means in terms of hypocrisy.
Absolutely.
Well, I mean, again, the left has never tripped themselves up on hypocrisy or double standards.
And I try to avoid it too, because I can sometimes very much take conflicting thoughts, but we reconcile it by it's what's best for our people.
And, you know, that's something I got from you, Sam.
And it's so important.
Well, that's what they do.
That's what they do.
They quite rightly ask, is it good for the Jewish people?
And that determines everything, not some kind of set of abstract political principles.
And when you're in a fight for your life, that's where it has to be.
That's why at once I can say I would have been against the hypothetical Confederate flag guy in Charlottesville meeting Alex Pretty's fate.
But when Alex Pretty met that same fate, you know, I certainly shrugged my shoulders.
But so here again, though, is I want to ask you this one thing.
And that is, and we've seen a lot of this going on.
People can engage in a riot.
They can engage in the direct disobedience of orders from law enforcement so long as they call themselves legal observers.
This is something that has really proliferated on the left and with Antifa.
I'm a legal observer, so therefore I have a right to be here and impede you.
I mean, what's going on with that?
And we saw that in Atlanta with Cop City.
Well, yeah, they've had this organization, the National Lawyers Guild, which is a far-left extremist organization.
And they've done that for decades.
They've had their people wearing some sort of an armed band to show that they're legal observers.
And they're there to help direct the rioters and to get, you know, to prepare some sort of plausible argument of how they were right.
And no, they are part and parcel.
In Charlottesville, on the trial of the defendants at Charlottesville, who did nothing.
They were victims of violence, as you and I know.
They were not perpetrators.
The judge says that mere physical presence can make you part of a conspiracy.
You don't have to intend to be part of the mill.
So, yeah, they're physically present.
They're working these people.
I've dealt with those national lawyers, you know, people.
They're completely, you know, they're fanatics.
They are ready to twist everything to suit themselves.
They're not interested in fair play.
They're not interested in abstract justice.
They're there to push an ideology.
I saw another video.
I was just going to say, I saw another video today of a woman who was impeding the ICE, and she tried to drive away after they came after.
She said, I'm a legal observer.
I'm a legal observer.
So therefore, you have, it's their get out of jail free card, no matter what they do, as long as they say that, it's okay.
Anyway, that's an aside, I guess, but it's certainly more than tangentially related.
Sam, we have a minute left.
We did the best we could with the time we had.
It was a great hour.
I had a lot more I could have thrown at you, but give us a final word on this whole thing.
You must realize that the thing that binds all these people together is that they hate us.
They hate white people.
And that hate overrides any kind of political philosophy.
They're not wedded as we are to states' rights.
You see this.
They have done a complete flip on the issue of presidential pardons.
I now read stuff in the New York Times that could have been published by the John Birch Society in 1965 about how terrible presidential pardons are.
The New York Times has supported presidential pardons and presidential executive orders rather, by people like Roosevelt, terrible orders for a century.
And all of a sudden, they're principled.
They're upset about Renee Good.
They weren't upset about Ashley Barrett.
Everything is reversed.
It's strictly what advances their hatred of us and their desire to remove us from the stage of history.
It is a religion to them.
They're fanatics about it.
And we have to accept it.
We must say we accept your hate.
And we should respond in kind with that righteous hatred.
And we accept to protect ourselves.
We know your hate.
We see your hate with Ashley Barrett.
We see your hate with Attorney General Jay Jones in Virginia.
The way you voted for him.
We see the hate.
We understand the hate.
Wait, you said something.
States' rights.
That's another one.
Big time.
Listen, I'm for states' rights if we're going up against a centralized government that seeks to destroy us.
If we have our hands on the livers of institutional power, I'm for a strong centralized state that can crush our enemies.
Where's the consistency?
That's exactly it.
Political philosophies are determined by the facts on the ground, not by abstract thinking.
That's it.
What a great way to end this hour with that thing being the last thing on folks' minds.
That statement by Sam Dixon, my good friend, and yours all these years, Sam.
We look forward to the next one already.
Thank you for a fantastic opening hour.
Thank you so much.
God bless you again.
Take care.
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