March 8, 2026 - The Political Cesspool - James Edwards
54:44
Radio Show Hour 3 – 2026/03/07
James Edwards mourns doo-wop legend Neil Sadaka while addressing a critical 20% budget loss from a donor, urging listeners to sustain support for rising airtime costs. Guest Paul Fromm critiques Liberal economic mismanagement, equalization payments, and immigration policies, arguing Canadian Medicare lags behind the U.S. He condemns the U.S.-Israel attack on Iran as a catastrophic Zionist error and highlights the rise of nationalist parties in Canada and Japan amidst housing crises. Ultimately, the broadcast underscores the fragility of free expression funding and the deepening political fractures within North America. [Automatically generated summary]
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.
Remember when you held me tight and you kissed me all through the night.
Think of all that we've been through.
And breaking up is hard to do.
Well, you know, we were very busy last week, and we didn't have a chance to make mention of this, but Keith knows I've been struggling pretty bad since the evening.
He's talking into his cup and not to his mic.
But on February the 26th, we lost Neil Sadaka at 86 years of age.
He was the king of the tra-la-las and the doobie-doos, one of the originators of the doo-wop sound and those late 50s and early 60s vibes, a rock and roll legend, Neil Sadaka.
Hold on, you got to turn that mic on.
James is dressed in all black tonight.
Have been for two weeks.
With a black veil and everything.
That was his biggest hit.
Breaking up is hard to do.
How about oh, it was Pauline can put your head on my shoulder.
Yeah, people confuse.
I don't know why Neil is so often confused with Paul Anka, whose biggest hit was Diana.
And what a hit that was.
But Neil Sadaka, no.
Breaking Up is hard to do.
Calendar girl, next door to an angel, my favorite.
Happy birthday, Sweet 16.
He was the king of the tralla la's and the doobie-doos.
And that voice has been silenced.
I had the, I actually saw him in concert not very long ago and was hanging out with him after the concert.
And I said, you know, what happened to DooWop?
You know, and he said, 1964, the Beatles, not good.
He and Ricky Nelson and the Everly Brothers.
I wouldn't say they were all, you know, doo-woppers, but yeah.
No, they were the ones that basically, they all suffered as a result of the Beatles.
Who didn't?
Who was alive in America?
But no, that was good stuff.
And, you know, that happens.
And we're talking about family here.
I often refer to our listening audience as a family.
Send a letter out to everybody this week.
Valentine's Day, you know, we had a few weeks ago this panel of women that included a mother and a daughter pair, two sisters, two expectant mothers.
And in some cases, some of these ladies and their husbands have been friends and supporters of the program for over two decades.
Well, as is so often the case, as the years go by, we lose members of our listening audience.
We lose members of our listening family.
And we lost one in February who for the last 16 years had generously and without fail provided about 20% of our annual budget.
And let me tell you something about the budget.
It only goes up every year.
The cost of postage, the cost of airtime, the cost of everything that it takes to keep us here every Saturday night for the last 22 years.
There's never been a year where it went backwards.
And it's interesting.
You go back to the very first year.
It costs more now to send out a letter to our donors than we were receiving in contributions in that first year.
So on one hand, that's a good indication of growth.
However, if you lose 20% of your budget, when inflation is factored into the bottom line, that is absolutely untenable.
And if left unaddressed, it will be fatal.
So we have to bring that to your attention.
And so I would say during this time, I respectfully ask our donors, our regular donors, whether you donate annually or quarterly, to just maintain your level of support this year while I explore other avenues to make up the difference.
That's all.
Just maintain your level of support.
Now, if you can comfortably afford to give a little more, of course, that would be graciously received.
And if you have, if you're one of those listeners who has not given in a while, then I invite you to come home and once again stand with the media standard bearer of our cause because there is no show like this on the AM airwaves and we were the original.
And I still think, you know, listening tonight, you know, to that first hour with Nick Griffin the second hour and all the networking that occurred as a result of this program.
I mean, if you could consider this show to be like the iceberg that sunk the Titanic, only a little bit is what you see above the surface.
There is a lot of networking and a lot of behind-the-scenes stuff that you don't see.
And I can guarantee you that we are providing a service to this collective that would really astound you.
And of course, as the Bible advises us, only a fool speaks his entire mind.
So we can't tell you everything we're working on and everything that we're doing, but we are plugging people together and we are making connections and a lot of good things is happening.
So we've had a setback.
And in terms of setbacks, we've had a lot.
We've had some victories and we've had a lot of advancements, a lot of accomplishments in the last two decades.
No doubt about it.
More than the alternative.
However, you know, in terms of setbacks, I think of a few years ago when we lost our ability to process credit cards.
I was concerned that we might not survive that.
And we did.
And we have thrived for years since.
Relative to that, I would say losing this particular donor who provides matching funds at the end of the year.
And, you know, again, you know, 20% of our budget is nothing to sneeze at.
We have to make that up.
And so we're asking for your help this quarter.
You listen to the show.
You value the work of this program.
You're a regular contributor.
Maintain your level of contribution.
If you can give a little more, do that.
If you haven't given in a while, please come back to us.
Throw us a life preserver.
We'll make up the rest.
We'll make up the rest.
There is not one right-of-center, pro-white organization or media outlet or whatever who could come on and tell their donors, we've got so much money, we don't need you.
And we're certainly not one that can do that.
So we're out on the right.
On the left, they're probably one of the things that we're going to do.
I'm talking about on the right, on our side, on the pro-white right.
We can't say that.
I mean, we've never had any sort of a propping up of a big bequest after death or a big foundational grant as, you know, probably we deserve.
We haven't had that.
We rely on $25 and $50 donations.
$100 or more, you get a great incentive gift every quarter.
You get $200 or more, and you're in rare air for us.
We've always made do and made unprecedented advancements with relatively little, respectively speaking.
And we always give you gifts.
It's like my pastor said when the Southern Baptist Convention was coming after him for me being a member of his congregation.
He said, James, I'm going to go to bat for you, not because I love you.
I love you.
But that's not why I'm doing this.
I'm doing it because it's the right thing to do.
And that meant a lot to me then, and it still means a lot to me now.
And I've always tried to live up to that.
And we don't have to send gifts to everybody.
Some people say, don't send gifts.
I just want to give you the support.
That's the way I'm built.
We want to send you gifts.
We want to express our appreciation.
And we've done it every year, every quarter, for every year for 22 years.
And we're doing it again this quarter.
And this quarter, and we always try to give you thoughtful gifts, gifts you can't get anywhere else, whether it's a piece of Jefferson Davis's home or a signed book by Pat Buchanan or a signed hat by David Duke or anything that aren't offered to the general public.
Well, we've got another one for you.
And $100 or more before March 31st, you're going to receive an autographed copy of Sam Dixon's monograph, Shattering the Icon of Abraham Lincoln.
This was originally published by our friend Mark Weber back in, I think, the 80s.
But this is an out-of-print book that we received the rights from our friends Mark and Sam, respectively, to reproduce through our print shop that we work with.
So you're going to get an autographed copy of this book.
It's rare.
It's out of print.
It's been brought back to life exclusively for TPC's crucial first quarter fundraising appeal and even more crucial in light of recent circumstances.
$100 or more, you're going to get a signed copy, not just a copy of this out-of-print book, but an autographed copy.
They are in Atlanta as we speak.
Sam is signing them right now, and he's going to send them back to Memphis.
We're going to send them out to all of you for $100 or more.
$250 or more, you're going to get the book.
You're going to get a copy, not a copy, but a one-year subscription to the Barnes Review, the Barnes Review for a year.
And if you're already a subscriber to the Barnes Review, you will get a comp year for your support of TPC.
And that's another thing we like to do here.
We're going to take this break here, this first segment break before we get to Paul Fromm in Canada.
But we like to help other people that are pulling in the same direction.
So when you support us, you're also supporting other folks, whether it be Kevin McDonald, the signed book we gave you from him in the third quarter of last year, the revised edition of The Culture of Critique.
We like to help fellow travelers.
And so by supporting us, you're not just supporting us and keeping us on the air.
You're supporting other people as well.
And you'll be doing that with the Barnes Review.
If you're an established donor, check your mailbox.
You should have by now received a letter from us to you that details all of this.
But we do need your help this quarter, especially this quarter in light of our setback with one of our generous contributors having been gathered unto his father's.
And we've got to keep this show going.
And we are listener supported.
This is how we do it.
We'll be back as our March around the world continues in Canada.
Stay tuned.
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?
That's right.
The American Free Press has officially partnered with TPC to expand our audience into the realm of print media.
I encourage you to read it for yourself by subscribing today at AmericanFreePress.net.
Did you know that regular TPC contributors like Nick Griffin and Jose Nino also have their own exclusive, insightful, and hard-hitting columns published in every issue of the American Free Press?
I love this paper and read it as soon as it lands in my mailbox.
Whether you prefer to receive the print edition or a digital subscription, the choice is yours when you subscribe at AmericanFreePress.net.
We are advancing, but we need to be wise and well-informed.
Enhance your intellectual ammunition today by subscribing to America's last real newspaper.
If you enjoy listening to this broadcast, you'll love reading the American Free Press.
Subscribe today by calling 1-888-699 News or by visiting AmericanFreePress.net.
As a parent, is receiving a faith-based, character-focused education for your children difficult to find?
Do you believe that godly principles should be a central component in your child's education?
Imagine a school where faith and integrity are at its center, where heritage and responsibility instill character.
For over 40 years, American Heritage School has been educating both hearts and minds, bringing out academic excellence.
This is the school where character and embracing the providence of a living God are fundamental, where students' national test scores average near the 90th percentile.
With American Heritage School's advanced distance education program, distance is no longer an issue.
With an accredited LDS-oriented curriculum from kindergarten through 12th grade, your children can attend from anywhere in the world.
American Heritage School will prepare your child for more than a job.
It will prepare them for life.
To learn more, visit American-Heritage.org.
That's American-Heritage.org.
Instrumental there as our march around the world continues.
This very first edition, we are robbed of one Saturday this month.
There's one last Saturday in 2026 as there has been in the last couple of years.
So we have four shows in March Around the World this year as opposed to the five.
They'll be jammed up and jelly top.
They are.
Tommy James and the Shondells, if I'm not mistaken, Tommy Rowe.
Oh, that was Tommy Rowe.
Alberta's Handouts Problem00:11:57
Okay, well, thank you, Keith.
Well, we've already made a stop in England with Nick Griffin tonight, then over to the land down under in Australia with Drew Fraser, and then to Mexico.
Now to Canada we go, and with music appropriate to the occasion, Keith dialed up the Maple Leaf rag tonight.
A little instrumental there.
Yeah, and the Maple Leaf, of course, is the national symbol of Canada.
So that's why he wrote it.
And hopefully someone else picked up on that.
Now you know.
Well, Paul Fromm is back with us.
He's the director of the Canadian Association for Free Expression, and he's going to update us on a few things.
We're going to talk to him about Iran as well.
Paul, welcome back.
Always great to have you representing during our March Around the World series, our neighbor in the great white north.
Right, John, glad to be on.
And by the way, Paul, we will be glad to swap you Minnesota for Alberta if you want to make a trade.
Well, here's a sad fact.
During the Stephen Harper years, which ended in 2015, our dollar was a penny or two more valuable than yours.
Right now, the exchange is somewhere around 75%.
So we've dropped 25% in the power of our dollar and in wealth.
Alberta, you know, you look at Palmer as a valuable province, and it is.
It's our richest province.
Did you know, though, it is poorer than Mississippi, which is your poorest state?
Mississippi, other than good agricultural land, has very little wealth.
Alberta's got wonderful agricultural land, coal, oil and natural gas, which our green government does not want to properly utilize.
That's why they need freedom.
That's why they need freedom.
But that means that all of Canada, every province in Canada is more destitute than Mississippi, which is supposed to be the last place finisher in America for prosperity.
So that's pretty bad.
I think you need a new government down there, up there.
Excuse me.
It's not that we need natural resources.
We've got them.
We've got a relatively intelligent population.
We should be rich.
We should be living like kings.
Instead, the liberal government under Trudeau for 10 years, and now Mark Carney, it's a slow management of a slide into decline.
Well, what it is, what you need is you need a Jonas Salt to come up with a vaccine against liberalism.
And if you can do that, don't we all?
I mean, don't we all?
Paul, I got a lot I want to get into you this hour.
A lot about Canada.
But and especially, I mean, I would just ask you, Keith mentioned Alberta.
Why is Alberta the outlier of Canada with regards to its, you know, for lack of a better word, conservative politics?
Because they've got common sense.
But I mean, why?
Why that particular province?
They have built.
See, we have something called equalization, which means that the rich provinces, which are primarily Alberta, Saskatchewan, because of its uranium and other mineral wealth, and British Columbia, give handouts to the poorer provinces, including my own, which has a big industrial base.
It's just criminal mismanagement.
So there's a lot of resentment in Alberta because of the transfer payments or equalization payments.
And there's also great resentment because the radical environmentalists under the previous Trudeau government managed to stymie the necessary pipelines to go to the East Coast and another one to go to the West Coast.
You know, our maritime provinces, which should be getting Alberta gas and oil, are importing their gas and oil from places like Nigeria and Venezuela.
It's just insane mismanagement.
There was a great Canadian historian about 100 years ago named Arthur Lauer.
And even then, this is what he said: Canada is rich by providence, but poor by policy.
In other words, we have been constantly mismanaged, usually because of socialist delusions.
Not because we've got a big military, it's not like your country, which is spending a fortune on going around the world and intervening.
But we have no good excuse other than folly.
Well, liberalism is a modern face of evil, Paul.
I've always said it, and exhibit one would be Canada.
You know, this is a place that should be a garden spot, but instead, you know, they do everything they can to impoverish the productive part of the citizenry, at least it seems to me.
Is that wrong or right?
No, no, that's right.
And despite the Medicare that came in about 60 years ago, that many Canadians are very proud of.
We have state-funded medical care, unlike the Americans who can die for lack of medical care.
Well, that's a bit of an exaggeration.
But our Medicare, of course, is feebled by anything run by a government.
There are huge wait times for procedures.
And it's just not all that efficient or competent.
But many Canadians who haven't traveled or don't know much about other countries have this mistaken illusion that we're great.
Good friend of mine.
When Hillary Clinton told us how wonderful the health care was in Cuba and how we all should aspire to having a Cuban-style system in America, I think we have it now.
I noticed she didn't move down there, though, did she?
Well, you know, interestingly, Paul, and I would say, speaking of Cuba, this is a bit trivial, but of course, since we have been doing this March Around the World series, and we haven't done it since the beginning of the show, in other words, it doesn't date back 22 years, but we've been doing it for several years now, every March, March Around the World, Clever Play on Words.
We interview these international guests.
You've always represented Canada.
You've been a mainstay in this from the beginning.
And with regard to Canada and Cuba, you know, I guess one of the things of note in the supermarket tabloids, at least, is that your former prime minister, Fidel Castro's son, Justin Trudeau, has married, or at least is having a kid with American pop-tart Katie Perry.
You want to weigh in on that one?
Be some polar background.
I hadn't heard that he was having a kid with her, but yeah, he's apparently dating her.
The charm is lost on me that idiot dispensation.
Maybe I don't know if his dad would be proud or not.
I mean, it's one of a little more even traditional culture than that, but maybe his grandfather would.
All right.
Well, you know, Paul, I was looking back on this, and a year ago when you were on the show in the 2025 installment of March Around the World, we were talking about, you know, Trump's threats to make Canada the 51st state and these tariffs and this, that, and the other.
What is the news du jour from Canada right now as it applies to our sensibilities racially and culturally?
What is the big story in Canada right now?
Well, there is a big rebellion against this huge influx of third worlders that sped up after COVID under Justin Trudeau.
So much as it just hurts them, the government has reduced slightly the annual intake and the annual goal for temporary foreign workers who often are not temporary.
They get to stay.
And student visas, which are massively abused.
They get in on a visa and then go to one of these make-believe colleges set up by other East Indians.
They don't teach them much, and they're not an academic institution.
That's being hugely abused.
And so there's a little bit of cutback on that, but there isn't what we need, and that we need a complete moratorium on immigration and a term that is getting.
Well, they can move them.
They can move them all to Labrador or Baffin Island.
You know, Paul, we were actually talking with Nick Griffin earlier in the show tonight about Rupert Lowe and the Restore Britain Party and his thoughts on their prospects.
Is there anything even remotely good happening in Canadian politics, either nationally or at least provincially, that we could sink an anchor in tonight?
Take a heart from in terms of electoral politics.
No.
The best hope is the People's Party of Canada under Maxine Bernier.
He started that party back in 2018.
It didn't do too well in the last election because the media managed to convince everybody it was a choice of, well, who was going to fight Donald Trump the best?
The Conservative leader, Pierre Polyevre, who seemed to me, because he's nasty and young, would be the better choice.
But instead, they chose enough Canadians went with this international banker, Mark Kearney, who is suspected of a deep state creature, if there ever was one.
An Eskimo.
Oh, yeah, and utterly committed.
What the world called value.
Hold on right there, Paul.
Don't freeze over.
It's springtime almost, but we'll be right back with you.
The UK military is rejecting criticism of its response after last week's strikes by Israel and the U.S. Britain's Chief of Defense, Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Knighton, reject criticism that they were ill-prepared for the conflict in Iran.
Well, what the Prime Minister and the Defense Secretary have made clear, and what's very clear to me, is that this is probably the most dangerous time of the last 30-odd years that I've been in uniform.
And it's very clear that the demands on defense are rising.
And that's why I think the Prime Minister said in his Munich Security Conference speech that we need to spend more on defense and do it faster.
And you won't be surprised that I agree wholeheartedly with what the Prime Minister said.
He also said that the UK could join more proactive strikes in the future, while the focus remains on protecting British interests and personnel.
Rika and Garcia, London.
The opening days of March have delivered some major news and political developments.
Rising Defense Demands00:03:14
In like a lion, out like a lamb refers to stormy weather at the beginning of March.
For President Trump, the first week of March was like a lion politically.
Over the past few days, he launched a war against Iran, which led to a spike in oil prices.
He fired controversial Homeland Security Secretary Christy Noam, and he received a Labor Department report that saw the economy lose tens of thousands of jobs in February.
The flurry of activity came as the president tries to convince voters to keep Republicans in the majority in Congress.
Greg Klugston, Washington.
President Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff has revealed that Iranian negotiators open boasted about stockpiling enough highly enriched uranium to produce 11 nuclear bombs during the first pre-strike meeting.
And stranded Americans across the Middle East say they've been left to navigate flight cancellations and confusing government guidance on their own.
More on these stories at townhall.com.
Whether you're climbing the corporate ladder, launching a new project, or just looking for that extra edge, your brain is your most valuable asset.
Now there's a way to support it every single day.
Think factor.
From the makers of Relief Factor, ThinkFactor is built to help you stay sharp, nurture your memory, boost your attention.
It unlocks the mental clarity and precision you need to stay ahead of the game, no matter the challenge.
After a couple of weeks of taking Think Factor, I noticed a dramatic difference in my clarity, my focus, even my memory.
And look, the longer you take Think Factor, the better it works.
This is not a one-off.
You want to take Think Factor regularly.
If you're a go-getter who refuses to settle, ThinkFactor can help you perform at your best and keep your edge.
Call 800 for Relief.
That's 800 for Relief or just visit ReliefFactor.com to order ThinkFactor.
Go to ReliefFactor.com or call 800 the number for Relief.
Your first bottle is just $19.95.
Think Factor.
Think clearer, perform better daily with ThinkFactor.
Hey, y'all.
Do you enjoy great tasting coffee but are tired of supporting companies that hate you?
If so, let me tell you about Above Time Coffee.
Above Time Coffee is a privately owned and operated small business.
They hand roast coffee and ship it to customers throughout the United States and abroad.
Above Time Coffee was launched because they saw a need for more pro-white businesses serving our people.
The time has come to take our own side.
And did I mention their coffee tastes great?
It's the best coffee I've ever tasted.
When James brought home a sample from a conference, I was hooked and threw out all the other brands.
I think you will too after you make an order at abovetimecoffee.com.
Living a healthy and active lifestyle is important to us.
And I appreciate the effort Above Time Coffee invests in keeping its products organic.
And there are so many flavors to choose from.
Check it out for yourself by visiting abovetimecoffee.com.
It's the only coffee we drink at the Edwards Home.
Delicious Coffee, a company that serves the interests of our people.
Check out their selection today at abovetimecoffee.com.
It is common for politicians, major media outlets, and nonprofits to hype white on black murders aggressively or even claim that blacks are living in fear of white people.
Lynn's for simply being black.
The Far East's Resilience00:12:05
Hard to believe, but that's what was done.
And some people still want to do that.
This is why National Conservative launched the Interracial Homicide Tracking Project.
We have now documented well over 2,000 confirmed interracial homicides since January 2023 and created the most comprehensive overview of these killings anyone has ever made.
We plug the gaping holes in data left by other homicide trackers and government crime stats.
Rather than engaging in hyperbole and vitriolic rhetoric like everyone else, we are simply creating a massive sample size of empirical evidence so people can form rational and informed opinions about a sensitive and politically charged issue.
Visit natcon.life.
N-A-T-C-O-N.li F-E.
If I should smile with sweet surprise, it's just that you grown up before my very eyes.
You turned into the prettiest girl I've ever seen.
Happy birthday, sweet 16.
Tra la la Happy birthday, sweet 16.
Tra la la Happy birthday, sweet 16.
Well, that's too up, ladies and gentlemen.
We were just mentioning earlier tonight the passing of Neil Sadaka.
My daughter, Keith, turns 16 years old this month.
And of course, she was born six years after we started this show.
And so you can start doing the math on that.
And that's how fast the years go by.
And we're all still here together.
Indeed.
And you know, one of the guys who has been here with us since the very beginning, he's on with us again right now.
And Paul Fromm, I can't thank you enough for that.
You know, we have been together.
I mean, you're looking at it.
You were one of the first guests on this show when we first got started in 2004.
And here we are in 2026, still doing live radio together.
It means the world to me, brother.
You've done fantastic work keeping that show going and keeping it relevant.
It's a huge contribution.
I'll never forget meeting with Paul over at Shawnee's on Sycamore View.
You know, Paul was one of those guys.
I mean, he was doing a cross-country tour of the United States.
I mean, he did it all the time.
Traveling road show.
We had him at, you know, we had Paul at major conferences.
I mean, I was with him in New Orleans in 2004 with hundreds of people.
We did it in small dining rooms.
I mean, he was a guy and still is, of course, a guy that will go everywhere and is doing the work, toiling in the vineyard.
And, Paul, by the way, that's one of the things.
Oh, he had something to sell, too.
I remember that.
Something to say and something to sell and good products and good information and good things that we could use.
But, Paul, this was one of the things I wanted to talk to you about is, you know, that has not changed over the course of at least the last two decades plus.
You were out on the streets today, and whether you're in a major media venue or on the street in the bullhorn, you're taking that message with a lot of heart and charisma.
Where were you at earlier today doing some activism?
This is a twice-monthly freedom rally that is held in a small town about 60 miles north of Toronto called Shelburne.
And a lot of the people are veterans of the Truckers Convoy.
And it's important to remind our fellow citizens of the dwindling freedoms we face.
And there are similar rallies in various cities across the country.
There's one in the city I used to live in, Port Credit, which is just on the edge of Toronto, every Sunday afternoon outside a major mall.
So when I can, I like to go to these freedom rallies.
And there's a lot of Canadians who have learned over the last 10 years just how imperiled our freedoms are.
The globalists, of course, as in the United States, want to take them.
Well, Paul, in addition to your activism on the streets of Canada and really across the country there, and that is a big country.
I mean, you know, Canada is a very interesting place with regards to its geographical position compared to the United States.
I mean, it is a vast country, although 90% of the population live within about 100 miles of the United States border.
But you've got all that land.
And you travel all of it.
We have listeners tonight in Vancouver, British Columbia, all the way to the East Coast of Nova Scotia.
A lot of Paul Fromm fans in Canada tuned in tonight here on TPC.
But Paul, you know, we're talking about our march around the world.
This series we do every March where we talk to international guests exclusively.
And tonight we've already been to, as I mentioned, England and Australia and Mexico, now Canada.
You were in the Far East.
And I don't mean the Far East of Canada.
I mean the Far East of the world.
What were you doing there just a few days ago?
Collaborating with the Commission.
I was in San Antokio, among other things, to interview the retiring head of the Japan First Party, Motoko Sakurai.
And His party, while it never elected anybody, started off 20 years ago with street demonstrations.
And the Japanese like to be very quiet and they like to settle.
They like to avoid confrontation.
But he put out a book criticizing the Koreans in Japan, which caused a lot of attention.
And he got a lot of attention with his street demonstrations.
And his party still does that.
And so he really put immigration on the map.
And now there are other righted center or nationalist parties that have picked up the issue.
And even the new prime minister, who is quite traditionalist, has said that there's no way Japan is going to give in to the pressures of the UN and the globalists to allow in large numbers of non-Japanese.
That's not going to happen.
And there's a big issue because there are some Muslims in Japan who want to bury their dead.
Now, that may not seem too unusual here in North America, but in Japan, the traditional method of interment is cremation, largely because there's very little land.
Even when you look at the Japanese islands, much of them are mountainous.
So the habitable land is quite limited.
Anyway, the Muslims, you know, used to the tolerance they get in the West where they jump up and down and demand and our prostitute politicians give in or they're allowed to occupy streets and flop down and block traffic.
The Japanese don't like to be bossed around.
And there's widespread opposition.
And the prime minister said if they want to bury their dead, they can take them back to wherever they came from.
Otherwise, the Japanese are not giving in to demands that Muslims not be cremated.
And the prime minister has also resisted demands for large-scale immigration, saying that, well, because the argument is made there as it is in North America, well, we've got a declining birth rate.
And she said, well, we may just have to make some sacrifices.
But we're not going to give, we're not going to let the whole third world, my words, not hers, but flood in.
And on a previous visit, I spoke to another fellow in the Japan First Party, and I posed that the thing we're always told that diversity is our greatest strength.
Wouldn't Japan be a whole lot better if they got, say, 10 million Africans or 10 million South Asians and 10 million Koreans?
As soon as you say Korean, the person just about goes into orbit.
They hate Koreans.
Anyway, so he wasn't quite sure whether I'd hit the socket too hard or I was just posing a question.
But he gave me an answer that I think is classic, and we could use it too.
He said, well, if we did that, we wouldn't be Japanese anymore.
And I thought, bingo.
That's the argument is absolutely valid for the United States, for Canada, and all of Europe.
If we allow in the third world, then we won't be.
Well, every nation, quite frankly, Paul.
I think the Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, they way survive this modern age where places like Europe and America go down because they just are not going to tolerate incursions from outsiders to try to take things over, i.e., Jewish power and influence, for example.
China does not allow them to get a foothold over there.
And that's one of the reasons why.
Well, you know, interestingly, there was a big report, Paul, about how China has been tacitly filio-Semitic for some years, but they are becoming a little more state-sponsored, anti-Semitic, if you use that term.
And it's going to be interesting to see where the multipolar world goes after this latest blunder in Iran.
But as we talk about our march around the world, the fact that you, my friend, have been in Japan, very interesting report and perspective, I think.
And let me ask you this: as we asked Drew Fraser in Australia, is there anything going on in Canada, anything at all that we can point to and say, you know, there's some advancements being made here for our people or not?
Yes, I don't want to paint an entirely gloomy picture.
There are a lot of, if you go on the internet, a lot of podcasts by young men in their 20s and 30s.
And they are angry because they see that their generation will be, for the first time in probably over 100 years, will not do better than their parents.
For 100 years, every generation knows that it will be better off than their parents.
And unless something radically changes, the present generation of people from 18 to 30 or so, many of them cannot even leave home because they can't afford the rent for an apartment.
They can't afford a house.
And there's an act of discrimination against them in the workplace.
Sounds like America.
Exactly.
Hey, we're going to get Paul From, our Canadian champion, our Canadian hero.
We're going to have him titanium.
Indeed, we're going to get his take on Iran.
All eyes on Iran no matter where we go during our march around the world.
We're going to hit Paul's take on it next.
Stay tuned.
Find your inner rebel at Dixie Republic, the world's largest Confederate store, located in Traveler's Rest, South Carolina.
The anti-white, anti-Christ, anti-Southern world ends at the asphalt.
Welcome to God's Country.
Crossed the Line00:13:26
Log on to DixieRepublic.com to view our Southern merchandise from flags to t-shirts to artwork.
At the store, browse through our extensive collection of belt buckles and have a custom-made leather belt handcrafted in our Johnny Revs gun and leather shop.
That's DixieRepublic.com, where you can meet all of your Southern needs.
While you're waiting, drop by our Confederate corner for a free cup of coffee and good conversation.
Remember, there are no strangers here, just friends who haven't met yet.
Dixie Republic, we're not just a roadside attraction, we're a destination for our people.
For more information, visit DixieRepublic.com.
Introducing PrepStartsNow.com, your ultimate guide to readiness and peace of mind.
We offer practical preparedness tools, training, and education to take your family's household readiness to the next level.
Browse the prep shop for essential products, check out our planning guides, and stay informed with our prep blog.
Visit PrepStartsNow.com and subscribe to our emails for exclusive offers, new products, and future events.
Remember, preparedness begins with PrepStartsNow.com.
Former Sheriff Richard Mack recounts in his book the proper role of law enforcement, how he came to realize while working as a beat cop how wrong the all-too-common orientation of police officers is when they think of their job as being to write tickets and arrest people.
Richard Mack tells of his personal transformation from by the number cop to constitution conscious defender of citizen safety and freedoms.
Learn what it really means to serve and protect.
Purchase your copy at cspoa.org.
That's cspoa.org.
Big Sam left Seattle in the year of 92 with George Pratt, his partner, and brother Billy too.
They crossed the Yukon River and found the Bonanza gold.
Below that old white mountain, just a little southeast of Nome, Sam crossed the majestic mountains to the valleys far below.
He talked to his team of huskies as he mushed on through the snow.
With the northern lights are running wild in the land of the midnight sun.
Yes, Sam McCord was a mighty man in the year of 1901.
Way up north we go.
Our northern neighbor, the great white north, and our champion, Paul Fromm, up there.
And well, it's not white Eskimos, it's not Alaska, but it's on the same lines of latitude as Alaska.
And has spring come early for you, Paul?
Because there was a mosquito here in the studio in the last segment, about as big as a hummingbird, and I killed it to protect Keith.
And it made me think of the Johnny Horton song when he said, when it's springtime in Alaska, it's 40 below.
How are you doing up there weatherwise, Paul?
Before we get into Iran, I don't know about where you are, but this has been the worst winter in at least 20 years in the part of where I am in southern Ontario.
Very cold, very windy, tons of snow.
It's got to be global warming.
How much are your utility bills in the winter?
It's going to be more next year.
I really like the music you play.
That Johnny Horton's a classic.
Indeed.
And he played also Johnny Reb, you know, the great song that he had a lot.
He's from Louisiana.
And I think he married on the rebound Hank Williams' wife.
But he was killed in a car accident about 1960.
Yeah.
All right.
Anyway, tell me, by the way, I'm really curious: what are your utility bills running up there in Canada?
Very quickly on that, we got to get to Iran.
What do you pay in utilities every month, Paul?
Is what Keith's asking.
He wants to know if he pays the winner in the bad winner.
You mean for water and heating and electricity?
Gas and electricity.
I'd say about $2.50 all told.
Hey, we pay more than that in Memphis.
I paid $9.20 last month.
I cannot believe.
$920.
Of course, we're supporting a lot of layabouts over here in Memphis.
I have compared to you.
Keith's house was built in 1901.
What year?
1903.
1903.
Mine was built in 2019, and I paid $600 in utilities last month.
USD.
We'll go up there to Canada and save money.
Jesus.
I don't want to blaspheme, but Paul Fromm in Canada pays less in utilities than we do.
What is a temperature?
All right, we got to get that.
No, no, no, is it really 40 below up there?
Tell me.
It's colder than it is in Toronto than it is in the United States.
It was about 50 degrees today in Toronto.
And so it's 70 here, and you can just do the math.
And it's going to be 10 to 20 degrees lower any day there than it is here.
All right.
Well, anyway, Paul, I got to get your take on Iran because even though we're doing this march around the world and we want to hear how everybody's faring, good, bad, or indifferent, across the different parts of Columbia.
I've got to say, I'm an admirer of Trump for many of the good things he did, getting rid of DEI, getting a handle on immigration.
I am just sickened and shocked by the attack on Iran.
That's a fair assessment.
Fair assessment.
I mean, we've, yes, I mean, you know, we've talked about common assessment.
Well, I mean, no, no, no, listen.
I mean, some people say that he was always bad.
Everything he's done is bad.
But no, I mean, Paul, yes, we have supported him.
I voted for him three times.
There's some good, and that good is not entirely negated, but this is not good.
And here it is.
Iran is ringed on all four sides by mountains.
It's not just ringed by mountains.
The entire topography is just jagged crags, 13,000 to 18,000 feet.
The average altitude of the plateaus is 4,000 feet.
You couldn't even design a more difficult terrain for ground forces.
This is an insurgents' dream.
Your take on what's happening?
Why did Alexander the Great conquer them?
He didn't.
And so a major problem I have is the assassination of the Ayatollah Khomeini and many of the other leadership potentials.
And then the attack on a meeting of, I guess, the committee that was going to try to appoint a successor.
And that heard Trump shortling that, well, there were some people he could deal with.
Oh, but they're all dead.
And this is all done by those Israelis.
They're shameless assassins.
And this is crossed a big line.
In the First World War, no side tried to assassinate the king or the Kaiser or the president of another country.
Germany didn't try to assassinate the British prime minister, and Britain didn't try to assassinate the Kaiser or the Austrian emperor or the Turkish sultan.
It wasn't done.
Even in World War II, it wasn't done.
There were attempts on Hitler's life, but not by the Allies.
There was never an attempt on Churchill's life or Roosevelt's life by Germany or Imperial Japan.
They've crossed a huge, huge line.
And I don't want to take it any further, but I think you can fill in the rest.
A basic rule or understanding among civilized people is you don't do that.
But the Israelis have been doing that for years.
Including the Nuremberg trials.
Yeah, I mean, like in the past year or so, they've gone into Lebanon a couple of times and assassinated certain people.
They've gone into Syria the same thing.
They went into Doha and attempted to assassinate one of the Hamas people who they were negotiating with.
I mean, they are without principle and they are shameless.
And I tend to disbelieve the reasons for the aggression.
That is, oh, Iran is on the verge of building a nuclear, perfecting a nuclear bomb.
Well, we were told that about six months ago when they bombed the hell out of a certain mountain.
We've been told that for the last 30 years, actually, you know, by the New York City.
You're told much the same thing with Saddam Hussein when 600,000 dead Iraqis and several thousand dead Americans, and they killed Saddam Hussein.
And what?
Well, more importantly, trillions of dollars of U.S. tax money being used to finance this dead-end war.
I have a very bad feeling.
And it really shows the Zionists basically control American politics, at least in terms of foreign policy.
And there are more and more people speaking out.
Like Tucker Carlson's come a long way.
And if this thing begins to turn bad, I think the Republicans could be creamed in the midterms.
This has happened, though, too, since Woodrow Wilson's administration.
We got into World War I because of Jewish power and influence, too.
So it's nothing new.
Paul, you know, I would say very quickly, I mean, if the Republicans are going to get wiped out in the midterms, I mean, that may have been a fact even before this folly because of the affordability crisis, but now it's almost guaranteed.
And Paul, but we go back to, and again, I have been supportive of Trump much more so than many of my contemporaries.
And for arguably good reasons, you were part of that panel that we did for the American Free Press that last week of December of 2025, just three short months ago.
And Trump fared well amongst 15 movement lifers.
He graded on average seven out of 10 on the likability scale.
And then now here we are.
And so, I mean, how much does this discredit all of the good he's done?
Where do you see this going from here?
I mean, are the Democrats going to be any better if they take power?
We've got a minute remaining from Canada, Paul From.
The Democrats will not be any better.
That's the sad thing.
There was not on the horizon right now an alternative and and this does not cancel the good things uh Trump did, but uh uh, I think this is going, this is going to be uh ruinous.
And the and you know to, he's not even declared war.
I mean, we haven't done that since World War Ii.
You know, we didn't do that in Korea, we didn't do it in van in uh, Vietnam.
And the thing about, as uh bad as this thing is, do you think it'd be better or worse under Kamala Harris?
Uh uh I, I don't think she'd get into it, but uh I, I could be wrong, she'd do it because basically, she'd allow herself to be uh pulled by the nose by the Israelis as well.
Seconds Remain Paul the the the uh, the final thought to you, yeah uh well I I, I pray for America.
Uh, I think this is a, a colossal mistake and uh, it's sickening to see how the Israelis basically run American foreign policy.
It's, it's humiliating, it is, it is humiliating, it's disgraceful, it's a shame.
But when you have the scales fall from your eyes, you realize it's been going on since Woodrow Wilson got into the presidency.
That's all well and good, but then you can see, I mean, but you still have to be nuanced.
I mean, what good has been done with the?
You know, the pushback on Dei, the border security?
I mean, you know it's a big debate, but there is no debate on that.
This is catastrophic.
There's no perfect candidate in the wing, the white Western world and for America, and that Trump is being totally owned by Israel on this issue and in this action.
For Nick Griffin, for Who, Fasier for all from Four different nations, tonight represented.
We'll continue our march around the world next week.