The Political Cesspool - James Edwards - Radio Show Hour 3 – 2026/03/21 Aired: 2026-03-22 Duration: 54:49 === Motivated Young Americans (14:52) === [00:00:01] You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is the Political Cesspool. [00:00:13] The Political Cesspool, known across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program. [00:00:22] And here to guide you through the murky waters of the Political Cesspool is your host, James Edwards. [00:00:30] This is the fourth of four weeks in our annual March Around the World special programming series. [00:00:38] Tonight we continued it in Germany to kick things off. [00:00:41] There in Bavaria, Sasha Rossmuller was with us to give us an update on the overall demographic, economic, and political situation in that most important Central European nation. [00:00:54] Then we had a fun hour. [00:00:56] In hour number two, we headed down to the island nation of, well, it's not really a nation or is it, you know, is it a territory? [00:01:03] I guess so, technically speaking, Puerto Rico with Tony in Puerto Rico, who has not missed a broadcast in 15 years. [00:01:11] And we talked with him about everything. [00:01:14] First contact in 1519, history, culture, sex, the caste system of Latin America, geography. [00:01:22] We talked about it all. [00:01:23] But now we go to our dear good friend, Jared Taylor, the most frequently interviewed guest in 22 years on this program. [00:01:33] A very special March Around the World appearance. [00:01:35] Now you're asking me. [00:01:37] Now, why is Jared on March Around the World? [00:01:39] He's an American. [00:01:40] Well, he is. [00:01:41] It's a good question, but I've got a good answer. [00:01:43] The number one is because we can, and number two is because we should. [00:01:48] This is a special appearance. [00:01:49] It sort of bends the rules, but it doesn't break them with regards to us interviewing only international guests during this month. [00:01:56] Jared, with us tonight, to share with us observations from his recent travels across various European nations. [00:02:06] And those travels still to come very soon. [00:02:09] He's going to give us his assessment of the activists and movements he has engaged with. [00:02:14] Jared, welcome back tonight, and thank you for being a part of this special series. [00:02:19] Well, thank you so much. [00:02:21] It's always a pleasure and an honor to be on your program. [00:02:24] And you seem to have forgotten to remind your listeners that I am international in my own weird way. [00:02:31] I was made in Japan. [00:02:33] So in that sense, we're marching around the world all the way to Orient. [00:02:39] Well, indeed, as a matter of fact, now we may not have nearly enough time because you and I just actually did a special feature for the American Free Press where we touched on your origins there in Japan being born to missionary parents, although, Of course, entirely American, entirely Southern by birth, but you just happen to be deposited on the... [00:03:00] He's a rare bird. [00:03:02] Well, Keith was born in Minnesota, even though he's a southerner as well, so you got something in common there. [00:03:07] Well, I guess that's in common. [00:03:09] That's really, that is kind of a joke. [00:03:12] But as far as marching around the world with you, really, it is our white brothers around the world that we are most concerned with. [00:03:19] I have high respect for the East Asians, of course, but we are Europeans. [00:03:24] We are white men to the tips of our toes. [00:03:27] Well, we are, and we have been all over the map. [00:03:30] I'm going to see. [00:03:30] I may have already deleted it from my notes. [00:03:33] And no, I did not. [00:03:34] So, so far, just this month, now we've been running this series. [00:03:36] Now, we've been on the air 22 years, but we started the March Around the World series right around the COVID era. [00:03:42] So 2019, 2020, somewhere around there. [00:03:45] We're six or seven years into this, where every March, I mean, cleverly worded, the March Around the World, where we Interview almost exclusively, you know, people from international locales that can relate to the Western world. [00:04:01] And so, this year so far, we've visited with people live, and they're all live, nothing prerecorded. [00:04:08] These people stay up late. [00:04:10] England, Australia, Mexico, Canada, Estonia, Croatia, Brazil, earlier tonight, Germany and Puerto Rico. [00:04:16] But now tonight, Jared. [00:04:18] And Jared, for good reason, and the reason is this, that Jared has been all around the world in his own right. [00:04:25] So you have traveled extensively on the speaking circuit, my friend, and you have made several stops throughout Europe within the last year, within recent months even. [00:04:35] So the first question is to you this. [00:04:37] What are you noticing when you visit these ancestral homelands and how do the activists there compare to the counterparts that you know so well here in the United States? [00:04:49] Well, you know, I do not mean to detract from the unique and distinct flavor of each nation. [00:04:59] And that's one of the wonderful things about being an American. [00:05:02] We are part of this far-flung spawn of Western civilization that's taken its form in so many gorgeous, gorgeous, and stimulating ways. [00:05:14] But as far as what matters for us is how familiar all of these people feel. [00:05:23] And to me, the remarkable thing is that the real racial consciousness movement, not just in the United States, but in all of these European countries, it's very, very oriented among young people. [00:05:36] It is so encouraging to me. [00:05:39] And just by a strange coincidence, I wrote a forward for a book that is written by a Gen Z American. [00:05:47] He's not yet 30 years old. [00:05:49] And it's called American History Z. [00:05:53] And it's about how he came to this sense of crisis for our people. [00:06:00] And although I've never met him in this forward that I wrote for that book, I said, I feel as though I've met him already 100 times, maybe 500 times, not just in America, but in all of the nations I've been to, Slovenia, Italy, France, Portugal, Britain, all those places in the last year. [00:06:22] It is so remarkable to see young men mostly, and some women, who are smart, attractive, but the most wonderful thing about them is they understand what we are up against. [00:06:37] They know for sure, they feel it in their bones, what the stakes are. [00:06:42] And they are prepared to give their lives to make sure that our people and Western civilization survive. [00:06:50] That to me is the most compelling thing about it. [00:06:53] I tell you, it is a thrill to be in a room full of 400 young Portuguese men. [00:07:02] And, you know, we've got to be honest, we Americans, we rarely think about Portugal. [00:07:06] We don't think of it as a particularly important country, but Portugal has its own identitarian movement, Portugal for the Portuguese. [00:07:15] These guys are just as committed, just as sharp as any group of, say, Patriot Front or American Renaissance attendees that you will ever find in the United States. [00:07:26] They see things in a very similar way. [00:07:29] They're groping towards the same solutions. [00:07:32] They realize we have the same enemies. [00:07:34] And they see us in the United States as 100% blood brothers in everything they undertake. [00:07:41] I tell you, it is a thrilling thing to be part of what I like to call the World Brotherhood of Europeans. [00:07:46] So yes, go ahead, please. [00:07:49] I was just going to say, you mentioned Portugal, the very next remigration conference, which was very famously held last year. [00:07:55] I mean, there was one. [00:07:56] And then now this year in May, the next remigration conference will be held in Portugal. [00:08:03] Yes. [00:08:04] And you've been there, and this is a place. [00:08:08] Let's talk about remigration. [00:08:10] How likely do you believe it might be that this grows from theory to practice? [00:08:19] You know, I think that it will eventually come to pass. [00:08:24] In which country? [00:08:25] I don't know. [00:08:26] And I have several reasons for thinking this. [00:08:29] One is that unlike the United States, I mean, the United States has been a multiracial country right from the get-go because there were Indians here first. [00:08:37] And then in 1619, we stupidly imported yet another horrible racial problem. [00:08:44] We imported Africans. [00:08:45] In the case of Europe, I was thinking about this. [00:08:48] I first went to Europe when I was nine years old. [00:08:51] My parents took me. [00:08:52] I don't think I ever, I mean, I wasn't paying any particular attention, but they were all Europeans. [00:08:57] They were all Europeans. [00:08:59] And it is within the lifetimes of people who are my age that there has been this crazy, crazy, avoidable transformation. [00:09:08] And so you have many, many people who have seen this horrible thing happen to their countries, and they live through it. [00:09:16] They don't like it. [00:09:17] And I think it will be much easier to persuade large, large numbers of people who are living in Britain, living in France, living in Italy to say, we made a mistake. [00:09:28] We made a terrible mistake. [00:09:29] We let these people come and they have not assimilated. [00:09:34] They can't assimilate. [00:09:35] We have discovered that they are not us. [00:09:38] They cannot be us. [00:09:38] They don't want to be us. [00:09:40] We made a mistake. [00:09:41] Please go. [00:09:42] I think that there is going to be some country, will it be Britain? [00:09:46] Will it be France? [00:09:48] Will it be Austria? [00:09:50] That is going to take the plunge and set the example for all the other countries. [00:09:56] Another reason I think this is possible is because, as I say, the movement seems to be so motivated by the younger generation. [00:10:05] And this is something that I find interesting in the United States too. [00:10:08] All of these Gen Z guys, they didn't grow up in an America that was 90% white or 80% white or even 70% white. [00:10:15] And yet they are the ones who are more nostalgic in a way because they didn't see it happen. [00:10:21] But compared to my generation, people who did live in a real America, the younger people are much more fired up, much more determined, much more absolutely bound to die before they are going to be a despised minority in their own country. [00:10:38] And so it's that combination of things, that the transformation is taking place more recently in Germany. [00:10:44] You've got political parties that are talking about it, and the people who are really behind it are the young people. [00:10:50] And every movement has to start with young people. [00:10:54] And I see that really moving forward in a very, very encouraging way. [00:10:59] Jared, this is Keith. [00:11:01] What happened to Europe and America to allow this takeover to happen? [00:11:06] You know, I grew up in the 50s and 60s when 90% of the population was white. [00:11:13] I think that a lot of people in that generation suffer from Stockholm syndrome. [00:11:17] They were so beaten down by the civil rights movement and things like that and the loss after loss after loss, they lost the will to fight. [00:11:27] And in Europe, it seems that they're very supine to the governments. [00:11:31] You know, we talked with Saussum Rossmüller of Germany, and even though he has good ideas on this, he admitted that the German government isn't going to change anytime soon. [00:11:41] What can we do? [00:11:43] Well, I think that It's just a matter of working, working, working, working. [00:11:52] We have to set a good example. [00:11:55] We have to be credits to our race. [00:11:58] We have to be the kinds of white men and women that in their bones, all of our deluded brothers and sisters, in fact, really want to be. [00:12:08] I think we have to be examples of honesty and integrity, dedication, courage. [00:12:15] And I believe that in practically every white person, there is some little tiny glowing ember still of racial consciences. [00:12:26] Because how do they live their lives? [00:12:28] Where do they buy a house? [00:12:30] Where do they spend their free time? [00:12:32] There is something in there that tells them, no, I'm not going to go to worship in this church full of black people. [00:12:38] Oh, no, I'm not going to send my children to school when they're all these Puerto Ricans. [00:12:43] There is something still in there. [00:12:46] And it's our job to find that little spark and blow on it patiently and lovingly until it bursts into flame. [00:12:52] I am optimistic about our people. [00:12:54] And as I said, particularly in Europe. [00:12:57] Now, every European's got a different situation, but I'm very optimistic. [00:13:02] Well, Jared, actually, what you just said resonates very, very strongly with me. [00:13:09] Because, as you know, my friend, because you've been appearing on this show for the entirety of its run, in fact, you are the most frequently interviewed guest we've ever had. [00:13:18] 22 years now and counting. [00:13:20] You've spoken at many of our conferences. [00:13:23] But you, in American Renaissance, surpass us by many years of activism. [00:13:31] And so when you say that you are encouraged by where things are now, that is a testimony that I very much invest in my heart. [00:13:42] And so let's talk about this. [00:13:44] Again, going back to the places you visited just within the last 12 months. [00:13:50] France, Britain, Italy, Slovenia, Portugal, Finland. [00:13:54] You have more appearances forthcoming in the next few weeks even. [00:14:00] And you're talking about the fact that so many people here that are on the cutting edge of this thing for our people, for our movement, are sharp, motivated, young, ready to devote their lives. [00:14:14] They see the struggle. [00:14:15] They feel this challenge, and they're moving towards the same solutions. [00:14:20] Where are you seeing and investing the most hope? [00:14:24] Because again, I mean, the big talk of the town right now in Europe is Rupert Lowe and Restored Britain. [00:14:30] Where are you seeing it, though? [00:14:32] Because your opinion really counts for a lot. [00:14:36] Well, a lot of it has to do with where the places I have been and the vibrations that I felt in particular places. [00:14:47] I was fortunate enough to be at the first Re-Migration Summit in Milan, Italy. === Estonia Versus Yankees (12:05) === [00:14:53] And that was so refreshing because there were people from all over Europe who were there. [00:15:00] One of the things that's been holding the Europeans back is that, say, in Italy, they have Casa Pound. [00:15:06] Casa Pound is a very good nationalist-oriented organization. [00:15:11] But it doesn't have that much contact with comrades in other countries. [00:15:15] And so there is this kind of cross-fertilization. [00:15:19] Now, in my own case, I was, as I say, particularly impressed by the dynamism that I felt in Portugal. [00:15:30] This is an organization. [00:15:31] It's called Reconquista. [00:15:33] That's Reconquest. [00:15:34] We know exactly from the name what their plan is. [00:15:38] They had been in existence only for three years. [00:15:41] In their first Congress, as they called it, they had 50 guys. [00:15:46] The second Congress, they had 200 guys. [00:15:49] And then the third Congress, which I was invited to speak, they had 400 people there. [00:15:55] 400. [00:15:57] At the height of American Renaissance conferences, we could have them in hotels that were conveniently located next to international airports. [00:16:04] We had maybe 400 and 450 people. [00:16:06] In three years, they've got 400 people who are super dedicated. [00:16:11] Their leader is a charismatic, determined young guy, and he's got a whole bunch of people under him who are charismatic and determined. [00:16:20] And so the experience I had there was very, very encouraging. [00:16:25] Also, I don't know who your Estonian was that you spoke to. [00:16:29] I'm guessing. [00:16:30] Ruben Caleb. [00:16:30] I'll tell you right now. [00:16:31] It's Ruben Caleb. [00:16:32] Yes. [00:16:33] That's a very informed guess. [00:16:35] And you could guess where I became acquainted with him as a result of. [00:16:40] Reuben Caleb, yes, he spoke at two American Renaissance conferences. [00:16:45] Now, I don't know. [00:16:47] Often it seems that the grass appears greener elsewhere. [00:16:51] But how was he assessing the situation in his country? [00:16:56] When I was there some years ago, that was before I was banned, I got a very good sense that Estonians have a real pride in their country and they want to keep it that way. [00:17:06] Just out of curiosity, for my own purposes, what was your sense of his idea of the prospects of remigration or real racial consciousness and awakening in Estonia? [00:17:16] Well, it was very interesting, Jared, because the parallel that I drew was from where he sees the relationship between Estonia and Russia, vis-a-vis where we see it as southerners versus Yankees. [00:17:29] You know, where, you know, from afar, we can see no difference between the people. [00:17:33] I don't see a great difference between Russians and Estonians, but he does. [00:17:37] Perhaps from that part of Eastern Europe, they don't see a great difference between Americans of northern and southern distinctions, but we do. [00:17:45] And so that was primarily the, you know, when it came down to compare and contrast, it was on that level. [00:17:54] But overall, he was encouraged by the trends of Europe, you know, even though, you know, of course, you know, he is a nationalist from an Estonian perspective, and he sees Russia as an aggressor and sort of as an enemy, I guess. [00:18:12] Whereas most Western Europeans see it as very different. [00:18:16] And we see Russia as sort of the good guys in the NATO balance of power. [00:18:21] So it was a very interesting conversation all the way around. [00:18:24] Well, Brother James, we think we'd die and go into heaven if our threat was that it was the Russians coming our way and not the Somalis and the Guatemalans. [00:18:36] Or the Mexicans or the blacks or whatever. [00:18:38] I mean, we talked about that. [00:18:40] I even brought that up. [00:18:41] I said, Ruben, you've got to understand, you know, Keith and I, we were live on the air. [00:18:45] This was just last week. [00:18:46] And I said, you know, Keith and I live in a majority black city, Memphis, Tennessee. [00:18:50] I said, you know, from our perspective, what you've got there in Tallinn is heaven on earth. [00:18:58] And he said, well, you know, it can always be worse. [00:19:03] But of course, that's something very important, too. [00:19:06] All of these people, all of these people, they love their country. [00:19:10] They love their nation. [00:19:12] They're here. [00:19:13] And one of the most moving experiences, perhaps, I've ever had in my life was listening to these 400 young Portuguese singing their national anthem. [00:19:22] I think I might have talked about this on your show the other time when I was discussing this, but they sang it with such fervor, such passion, practically tears running down their cheeks. [00:19:35] I couldn't understand a word. [00:19:36] But yes. [00:19:38] No, no, you go ahead. [00:19:39] Finish that. [00:19:40] Now, I want to come back with a quick response. [00:19:43] Well, and I thought, wow, I felt like I was lifted off the floor by the enthusiasm, the patriotism, the joy, and the force of these young men singing. [00:19:57] And I went and looked up the words. [00:19:59] And the words are all about our ancestors marching into the cannon's mouth for Portugal. [00:20:07] There's a real sense of, yes, yes, it is really a great national anthem for people who want to save their country. [00:20:16] I mean, we have an interesting national anthem. [00:20:18] I mean, I call it the Yankee national anthem, but it doesn't have this sense of us as a people. [00:20:25] They sang that with such enthusiasm and sincerity. [00:20:29] It was just wonderful. [00:20:31] Well, I mean, you get it. [00:20:32] But you get it. [00:20:36] The reason I bring this up, the reason I bring this up is that, yes, from our point of view, if it were Russians coming across the border, we'd think that wasn't so bad. [00:20:43] But Estonians, they too have this sense of being Estonian. [00:20:48] It is deep, deep. [00:20:49] It's like being a southerner. [00:20:51] It's like being all of these things that mean so much to us. [00:20:54] And so the idea of being attacked by the Russians, that is a real threat. [00:20:58] That is a real threat. [00:20:59] Now, of course, for us, yes, compared to what we're going through. [00:21:03] Well, but it is a military threat, too. [00:21:05] And we don't see that. [00:21:06] We don't have that threat on our border at all. [00:21:08] All right. [00:21:09] So there's so much you unpack there just now that I didn't necessarily intend to get into tonight. [00:21:14] But since you brought it up, I mean, no better person to ask than this, and Confederate History Month is coming up. [00:21:20] Every March is marching around the world. [00:21:21] Every April is Confederate History and Heritage Month. [00:21:24] So we're in the midst of these two special novelty series that we do every year. [00:21:30] But, you know, perhaps if you just go to Amran.com and you don't know Jared as I do, maybe you don't know him well, but maybe you don't know that he is an ardent Southerner and how much revere and affection he has for people like Robert E. Lee and Thomas J. Stonewall Jackson. [00:21:50] And so I would ask you this, Jared, with that being in mind, at what point, what is the dividing line between we are, you know, with regard to our friend Ruben Caleb in Estonia and our friends that we have in Russia, what is the dividing line between we are all one brotherhood of Europeans versus we are all, you know, at the same time, we have our nationalistic dividing lines that, you know, we will not relent on. [00:22:20] Well, I think we can answer that question by observing how we Americans work together with our Yankee comrades. [00:22:31] I think that it's safe to say that although we are, you and I are, and people like Sam Dixon, we are deep-dyed Southerners, but we harbor no resentment towards our Yankee brothers. [00:22:46] And I think I've never met a Yankee who had anything, at least who was a racial nationalist, who had anything but respect for our ancestors. [00:22:56] We have solved that problem. [00:22:58] It doesn't mean that we have lost an identity as southerners. [00:23:03] And I believe that as far as what I call the World Brotherhood of Europeans is concerned, there still are some lingering border issues. [00:23:13] The Hungarians, for example, they resent the fact that at the time of the Treaty of Traanon in 1919, a big part of their territory was taken away by the Slovaks and by the Romanians. [00:23:28] They still think about these things. [00:23:30] But what it comes down to it, I think that all of us, all of our nationalities and all of our sectional loyalties in the United States, all of that gets set aside and we can respect and love each other because ultimately what we are is white men. [00:23:48] And that is the sense that I get wherever I go in these identitarian movements. [00:23:53] You can talk to AFD people. [00:23:55] You can talk to people who are in the French nationalist movement. [00:23:59] You can talk to people in the Legonord, and they will agree, yes, we are white men and that's what matters. [00:24:08] But on the other hand, look at Minnesota, Minneapolis, Seattle, Portland. [00:24:14] Those people have a very different outlook from, you know, the red state America, you know, from Corinth, Mississippi, and Selmer, Tennessee. [00:24:25] Someone told me recently that there's no such thing as red states and blue states. [00:24:30] There are red states and red states with blue tumors called cities. [00:24:36] Well, look, we have to admit as well that there are people who have magnificent surnames from our Confederate history who are just as bad as the worst Yankees. [00:24:50] That is the problem. [00:24:51] And there are people whose roots go back many, many generations in places like Maine or even Oregon, those places who are just as racially Mark Weber. [00:25:05] He's one of your great guests. [00:25:08] 100%. [00:25:09] Yes, yes. [00:25:10] There's nothing southern about him at all, but he is a comrade. [00:25:15] I'd want him in my foxhole along with James Edwards. [00:25:19] These people are committed. [00:25:21] And I think that that's one of the great things, I think, that Europeans are coming to realize. [00:25:26] All of their identitarian and nationalist movements have been pretty much localized. [00:25:31] You know, the Vlams belong. [00:25:32] It's the Flemish group in Belgium. [00:25:36] They have this kind of Fleming, Flemish nationalism. [00:25:40] And yet they are realizing that we are all in this together, that we have to work and cooperate. [00:25:46] Every one of us faces the same challenges. [00:25:49] Every one of us has the same opponents. [00:25:51] And that to me is very, very gratifying. [00:25:54] Now, will we succeed? [00:25:56] I am, you know, when I talk to some of these groups, even in Europe, it is surprising that young people will come to me and say, The president's statement came as more warships and Marines were being deployed to the region. [00:26:16] Greg Klugston, Washington. [00:26:18] Hawaii Governor Josh Green says this is the worst flooding Hawaii has had in about 20 years. [00:26:24] This is going to have a very serious consequence for us as a state, though we have support. [00:26:29] We are now beginning to contemplate the reality that this storm could cost over a billion dollars of damage in both the private and public sector. [00:26:37] And that includes things like damage to the airports, a major hospital that's been damaged on Maui. [00:26:42] Airline passengers are saying that Transportation Security Administration workers need to get paid. [00:26:48] At Atlantis, airport travelers are arriving up to four hours ahead of their flight departures because they're worried about delays. [00:26:55] More on these stories at townhall.com. === Support Think Factor Daily (03:25) === [00:26:59] 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. [00:27:06] Now there's a way to support it every single day. [00:27:08] Think Factor. [00:27:09] From the makers of Relief Factor, ThinkFactor is built to help you stay sharp, nurture your memory, boost your attention. [00:27:15] It unlocks the mental clarity and precision you need to stay ahead of the game, no matter the challenge. [00:27:21] After a couple of weeks of taking Think Factor, I noticed a dramatic difference in my clarity, my focus, even my memory. [00:27:27] And look, the longer you take Think Factor, the better it works. [00:27:30] This is not a one-off. [00:27:31] You want to take ThinkFactor regularly. [00:27:33] If you're a go-getter who refuses to settle, ThinkFactor can help you perform at your best and keep your edge. [00:27:39] Call 8004Relief. [00:27:41] That's 8004RELIF. [00:27:43] Or just visit relieffactor.com to order ThinkFactor. [00:27:46] Go to ReliefFactor.com or call 800 the number for Relief. [00:27:50] Your first bottle is just $19.95. [00:27:53] Think Factor. [00:27:54] Think clearer, perform better daily with ThinkFactor. [00:28:00] Hey, y'all! [00:28:01] Do you enjoy great tasting coffee but are tired of supporting companies that hate you? [00:28:05] If so, let me tell you about Above Time Coffee. [00:28:08] Above Tap Coffee is a privately owned and operated small business. [00:28:11] They hand-roast coffee and ship it to customers throughout the United States and abroad. [00:28:16] Above Tap Coffee was launched because they saw a need for more pro-white businesses serving our people. [00:28:21] The time has come to take our own side. [00:28:23] And did I mention their coffee tastes great? [00:28:25] It's the best coffee I've ever tasted. [00:28:27] When James brought home a sample from a conference, I was hooked and threw out all the other brands. [00:28:32] I think you will too after you make an order at abovetimecoffee.com. [00:28:36] Living a healthy and active lifestyle is important to us. [00:28:39] And I appreciate the effort Above Time Coffee invests in keeping its products organic. [00:28:43] And there are so many flavors to choose from. [00:28:46] Check it out for yourself by visiting above timecoffee.com. [00:28:49] It's the only coffee we drink at the Edwards Home. [00:28:52] Delicious Coffee, a company that serves the interests of our people. [00:28:55] Check out their selection today at abovetimecoffee.com. [00:29:00] 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. [00:29:10] Lynch for simply being black. [00:29:13] Hard to believe, but that's what was done. [00:29:15] And some people still want to do that. [00:29:18] This is why National Conservative launched the Interracial Homicide Tracking Project. [00:29:22] 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. [00:29:34] We plugged the gaping holes in data left by other homicide trackers and government crime stats. [00:29:40] 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. [00:29:53] Visit natcon.life, N-A-T-C-O-N dot L-I-F-E. === Empirical Evidence for Truth (14:31) === [00:30:25] What happened to that bunny face? [00:30:31] My little tomb boy now wears that maze lace. [00:30:37] I can't believe my eyes. [00:30:39] You're just a teenage dream. [00:30:43] Happy birthday, sweet 16. [00:30:46] Well, certainly after all these years, Jared Taylor does not only feel like family, he in fact is a family. [00:30:53] And as a matter of fact, Jared called me a few days ago. [00:30:58] And at the time of his call, I just so happened to be in the car with my wife and we were out birthday shopping for my daughter whose 16th birthday was today. [00:31:09] And Jared, I don't know if you'll remember this, but so many years ago, you and I were in Washington, D.C. [00:31:18] And man, it was a long time ago. [00:31:20] I only had one kid then. [00:31:21] I have three now. [00:31:22] But the daughter who turned 16 today, Isabel, She was a baby, and I knew that you had two girls, and I was talking to you about that. [00:31:34] And I don't remember what hotel we were at, but it was at some boutique hotel in D.C. [00:31:38] And we were just talking about this, and that seems like a lifetime ago. [00:31:42] But here we are now here, still collaborating and still doing the work. [00:31:47] But I just want to thank you for being a part of it all these years, both here on the air, here professionally, and behind the scenes as a part of the family. [00:31:56] Well, James, I remember that conversation distinctly. [00:32:02] I think we were standing before a fireplace. [00:32:05] I remember that. [00:32:06] Indeed, how do you remember? [00:32:08] I am shocked that you remember that. [00:32:09] That is exactly how I remember it. [00:32:12] That means a lot to me that you would remember that. [00:32:15] It is because for the first time, you and I connected as human beings at the most basic level, as parents, as southerners, as people on the same team. [00:32:30] That was the first time I thought to myself, you know, I've known this guy politically. [00:32:36] I've known this guy in various meetings of one kind or another, but now I know James Edwards is a brother. [00:32:44] It was on that occasion. [00:32:46] I remember that conversation vividly, James. [00:32:50] I had no intention whatsoever of bringing that up tonight. [00:32:54] It was only on the cusp of the moment during the break that I thought that because my daughter's party was here. [00:33:00] My parents were here. [00:33:03] My father-in-law was here. [00:33:04] Her friends were here. [00:33:06] We had this all, you know, prior, you know, earlier today before coming into the studio tonight, we had this party. [00:33:12] And I was just thinking about you. [00:33:14] I would have never thought in a million years you would have remembered that conversation. [00:33:17] But what I remember that conversation was everything you said, but the fireplace. [00:33:22] And I was asking, you know, how do you do this with daughters when they become older? [00:33:25] You know, what about this? [00:33:26] What about that? [00:33:27] And my daughter was just, you know, just barely toddling at that time. [00:33:31] And, you know, well, anyway, we've got enough time on that. [00:33:36] Yes, indeed. [00:33:36] Congratulations to you. [00:33:38] Congratulations to you. [00:33:40] Happy birthday, Sweet 16. [00:33:43] Indeed. [00:33:44] My wife is in here. [00:33:45] My wife is here in the studio tonight. [00:33:46] She has the headset on. [00:33:47] She just heard that and smiled. [00:33:49] And of course, you know her well as well. [00:33:51] All right. [00:33:51] Well, so let's get back to it. [00:33:54] Work must intrude. [00:33:55] If we're going to break through on the European continent, my friend, where's it going to be? [00:33:59] Is it going to be in Britain? [00:34:00] Is it going to be in Germany? [00:34:01] Is it going to be in Portugal? [00:34:02] Is it going to be in any of these other places where we are making advancements? [00:34:06] This is our march around the world. [00:34:08] You've had appearances recently in Italy, Slovenia. [00:34:12] Finland, you'll be back in Scandinavia soon. [00:34:14] Where is that punch going to happen for our people that's going to knock a blow? [00:34:21] You know, I would hate to have to be held to a prediction. [00:34:24] And all the countries are different in so many ways. [00:34:28] Finland, I'm going to be going back to. [00:34:30] I just saw that Finland was listed as the happiest country in the world. [00:34:36] Iceland came in as number two. [00:34:39] The United States was pretty far down the list, you know, 25 or 26 or something like that. [00:34:45] Finland is still a country that is overwhelmingly white. [00:34:50] Iceland has only a few non-whites. [00:34:53] And so it may be that the real achievements are going to be places like Finland, places like Iceland and Estonia that just remain white. [00:35:03] That's not nearly as dramatic as remigration. [00:35:07] But that, too, is vitally important. [00:35:09] In terms of which of the big nations is it going to be Austria? [00:35:13] Is it going to be Britain? [00:35:15] I mean, there's a lot of excitement about Rupert Lowe, but he's got a very, very, very tough job ahead of him, as we all do. [00:35:23] I would hate to make a prediction, but as soon as there is a single breakthrough, I think it'll be a wonderful model for the rest of us. [00:35:30] In terms of political advancement, probably the national rally in France has as good a chance of having Maureen Le Pen or Jordan Bardella, who's her number two guy, elected president of France. [00:35:44] Now, what will that mean? [00:35:46] How solid is Maureen Le Pen? [00:35:49] How solid is the national rally? [00:35:52] You just don't know. [00:35:53] I suppose you haven't had any Frenchmen on to talk about this. [00:35:56] No, we have not. [00:35:57] It's difficult to find them. [00:35:59] Well, you know, I should have worked harder. [00:36:01] I could probably have dug up some English-speaking Frenchman for you. [00:36:06] I tried to get the fellow from Portugal, this really charismatic guy, Afonso Goncalo. [00:36:10] I forgot about that. [00:36:11] I forgot about that. [00:36:12] Yes, I wrote to him. [00:36:14] He's a very busy guy. [00:36:16] But someday we're going to get him to the United States. [00:36:19] You remember Dries von Langenhove, the Belgian who spoke at the American Missile. [00:36:23] And as a matter of fact, you know, of course, our mutual friend Philip DeWinter spoke at our conference last year, which you had a conflict with because you were over in Europe the very same week. [00:36:31] It just goes to show the cross-pollination and the advancement on so many different levels that they overlap now. [00:36:38] But yes, of course, Dries and Philip are familiar. [00:36:42] Yes, yes, great guys. [00:36:43] And in Italy, I'm going to be seeing a guy named Andrea Ballarati, another one of these really young, dynamic guys who they wouldn't hesitate a moment to give their lives if they thought that by marching into their graves they could save our race, our civilization. [00:36:59] They'd do it in a heartbeat. [00:37:00] And I think every one of those 400 men in Portugal, every one of the, must have been 300 or 400 people at the Re-Migration Summit, they would have all done the same. [00:37:10] They are committed. [00:37:10] They are committed. [00:37:11] They are lifers in this movement. [00:37:14] And yes, I think it's very exciting that the next re-migration summit is going to be in Porto, Portugal. [00:37:21] I think everyone who was at the Reconquista, the Reconquista meeting where I said I was so impressed by the way those young men sang their national anthem, everybody wants to be in Porto, Portugal because that is such a dynamic and inspiring movement. [00:37:37] In any case, it's going to march around the world, I suppose. [00:37:40] And I plan to be there. [00:37:46] I would love to have been asked to speak. [00:37:48] I really enjoyed speaking at Porto, but these are Europeans. [00:37:51] They make their own decisions. [00:37:52] And they're all so young. [00:37:53] I'm a geezer for heaven's sake and by their standards. [00:37:57] But as you said, as you said, an inspiration to so many of them. [00:38:00] And I'm sure you're doing yourself a disservice in the extent to which that is. [00:38:07] Well, you know, I'm going to go just to be part of it because there are going to be so many great men and women there and so many people I know. [00:38:16] It's going to be wonderful just to sit there in the audience and sing that national anthem again. [00:38:21] I tell you, I can't get over. [00:38:23] Also, it is right up there with another experience I had, and that was in Estonia with Ruben Callup. [00:38:30] They have a national day. [00:38:32] I forget which day it actually is, but it's their Independence Day. [00:38:36] They have a torchlight parade right through downtown. [00:38:40] And they are there singing, and they have this expression, est. [00:38:47] And that means Estonia is. [00:38:50] And they all gather in the center of the city. [00:38:53] And there's this huge crowd of people, men, women, children, all Estonians, all happy, proud to be Estonian. [00:39:03] I tell you, it is moving. [00:39:05] It is wonderful. [00:39:06] And to be part of that is really absolutely unforgettable. [00:39:11] If you have a chance, I mean, you'll have that feeling in Porto, Portugal, if you can go. [00:39:18] Get your wife to tell you that you can go. [00:39:21] It's coming up at the end. [00:39:23] As a matter of fact, Jared, we already have our correspondent live from the scene there in, I believe it's in May. [00:39:30] And he'll be there. [00:39:32] It's in May, and he'll be there and he'll be live on the scene. [00:39:35] He'll be reporting live that evening. [00:39:37] It's on a Saturday. [00:39:38] And so that works well for us. [00:39:40] And he's going to be staying up late as all of our guests during our march around the world do. [00:39:46] But he'll be staying up late in May to give us the live report from the scene. [00:39:51] And it was a very big time last year. [00:39:52] I know Roger Devlin was there. [00:39:54] Cyan was there. [00:39:55] I mean, a lot of the folks we know were there last year. [00:39:58] And it's only getting bigger and more influential every year. [00:40:02] And that's something that we can take stock in and invest hope in in this our March around the world 2026. [00:40:10] Yes, indeed. [00:40:10] Well, then I won't urge you any further. [00:40:12] If you've already decided not to be there, then I will not trust you any further. [00:40:18] But my view on that is be there or be square. [00:40:21] It's just, it's going to be a wonderful time. [00:40:22] Absolutely. [00:40:23] You're going to be there. [00:40:24] You're going to be there. [00:40:25] I will be there. [00:40:26] Yes, I will. [00:40:27] Jared Taylor will never beat Square. [00:40:30] So the choice of being there or being square, you know, he's going to be there. [00:40:35] Keith, music begins. [00:40:37] Well, I was just going to say, one of the advantages, few advantages of America's hegemonic rule over Europe is that they haven't been at war with each other for a long time. [00:40:49] And you know, that's if only the first half of the 20th century could have been like that. [00:40:53] Second half. [00:40:54] Well, an interesting point to be sure. [00:40:56] Thank you, Jared Taylor. [00:40:57] Amrin.com. [00:40:59] Support Amran.com. [00:41:00] We'll be back with our opposing second next. [00:41:04] Find your inner rebel at Dixie Republic, the world's largest Confederate store, located in Traveler's Rest, South Carolina. [00:41:11] The anti-white, anti-Christ, anti-Southern world ends at the asphalt. [00:41:16] Welcome to God's Country. [00:41:18] Log on to DixieRepublic.com to view our Southern merchandise from flags to t-shirts to artwork. [00:41:24] At the store, browse through our extensive collection of belt buckles and have a custom-made leather belt handcrafted in our Johnny Rev's gun and leather shop. [00:41:32] That's DixieRepublic.com where you can meet all of your Southern needs. [00:41:38] While you're waiting, drop by our Confederate corner for a free cup of coffee and good conversation. [00:41:43] Remember, there are no strangers here, just friends who haven't met yet. [00:41:47] Dixie Republic, we're not just a roadside attraction, we're a destination for our people. [00:41:54] For more information, visit DixieRepublic.com. [00:41:58] Have you ever had great honey? [00:42:00] No, I mean really good, all-natural, raw honey. [00:42:04] Well, now you can. [00:42:05] Thanks to localhoneyman.com. [00:42:07] We can ship out our locally made honey all across the U.S. [00:42:11] So don't worry, you won't miss out. [00:42:13] Plus, Local Honeyman has so many different flavors like Utah Wildflower, High Desert Delight, Happy Valley, and Blackberry, just to name a few. [00:42:22] So purchase your delicious raw honey today at localhoneyman.com. [00:42:28] As you are aware, America is divided over every fault line possible. [00:42:32] This is intentionally fostered by those who do not love God, family, or country. [00:42:37] We believe a peaceful future as a free people absolutely depends on civility. [00:42:42] Clarion Call for Civility is looking for funding and volunteers at every level to make our hopes and efforts a reality. [00:42:48] Please donate, sign our pledge, and help us in our sacred cause. [00:42:52] Please visit callforcivility.com for more details. [00:42:55] Callforcivility.com. [00:43:02] Love will keep us together. [00:43:06] Big a bee, whenever some sweet talking girl comes along, singing a song. [00:43:16] Don't mess around. [00:43:17] You just gotta Keith and Keith Alexander. [00:43:37] Hey, first of all, Keith Alexander, how about installment number three of four in TPC's March Around the World 2026 tonight? [00:43:48] After all the ports of calls we've visited so far this month, but tonight, Germany with Sasha Rossmuller, Puerto Rico with Tony Miranda, and then Jared Taylor, a very special guest appearance on March Around the World for very special reasons. [00:44:05] How about March Around the World 2026? [00:44:08] One stop left to come next week. [00:44:11] Well, as they said, ain't no stopping us now. [00:44:17] Well, we actually played that song during our Will to Power conference last year. [00:44:23] Nothing going to stop us now. [00:44:24] But how about coming back from the break after Jared Taylor, his very special, and for very special reasons, his March Around the World appearance tonight, Love Will Keep Us Together. [00:44:36] What do you think about that selection? [00:44:38] Why do you think that's timely tonight by Captain and Tenil? [00:44:41] Because that's our message to the white people of the world. [00:44:44] That's good. [00:44:45] That's a very good cover, a very good answer. [00:44:47] Do you know who wrote that song? [00:44:50] Come on, mic to mouth. [00:44:53] Who wrote it? [00:44:54] Screaming Jay Hawkins. [00:44:55] I don't know. === Love Will Keep Us Together (03:13) === [00:44:56] Neil Sadaka. [00:44:58] And we're still mourning and we're still playing the songs. [00:45:02] Even tonight, happy birthday, Sweet 16. [00:45:05] Happy birthday, Isabelle 16. [00:45:08] Talking about a white hero. [00:45:10] How about Chuck Norris, who just passed? [00:45:13] 86. [00:45:13] You know, Neil Sadaka was 86 a couple of weeks ago when he died of cardiovascular disease. [00:45:20] Yeah, I have no idea exactly what Chuck Norris died of, but he was in a hospital in Hawaii, apparently. [00:45:30] Well, let's just get it real here, though, about, you know, a big part of the program is good music, right? [00:45:36] Yeah. [00:45:37] You know, I've talked to a lot of people who say they just tune out when we're talking. [00:45:41] They just listen for the music. [00:45:45] But so Captain and Teniel, now you wouldn't expect that to have been written by Neil Sadaka, or would you have, Keith? [00:45:51] Did you know that? [00:45:52] Did you know that? [00:45:53] Don't bullshit me. [00:45:55] I didn't, but then when I think about the words and the tunes and everything, it makes sense that he wrote. [00:46:02] So with my daughter, who turned 16 tonight, when she was younger, we met with Neil Sadaka after a show. [00:46:09] He was in Tunica. [00:46:10] He was in Tunica. [00:46:12] And, you know, so I was. [00:46:18] Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:46:19] He was at the horseshoe. [00:46:21] I don't know the exact casino, but he was definitely at a casino. [00:46:25] And I was talking to him about all the hits, you know, Breaking Up is Hard to Do, Calendar Girl. [00:46:29] My favorite, my favorite is Next Door to an Angel, but Happy Birthday, Sweet 16, O'Carol, you know, all the hits. [00:46:37] But we were talking, you know, we got into, you know, the songs that he wrote for other groups, like Love Will Keep Us Together. [00:46:45] And he wrote that for Captain and Denil. [00:46:46] And he said, you know, Tenil was okay, but the captain was pretty weird. [00:46:52] That's what he said. [00:46:53] That's what he said. [00:46:54] And I've actually got a picture. [00:46:56] If you go to my WobiGone, you know, I never got reinstated at Twitter when I was at James Edwards TPC. [00:47:06] They never reinstated me after, you know, we broke the story about the SBLC Guy that was there as a legal observer, don't you know, when they were attacking the Atlanta law enforcement facility. [00:47:22] Got a million views, and then I got banned. [00:47:25] And they never reinstated me. [00:47:27] So I re-christened myself just a few months ago as at TPC James Edwards. [00:47:34] And I've got like one follower and built a bag. [00:47:40] We've got a couple of thousand followers. [00:47:42] It is far less than the, you know, upwards of six-figure followers. [00:47:48] That's right. [00:47:48] When you get a big enough profile again, they will knock you off again. [00:47:52] So we haven't, all we regularly do is, you know, the regularly weekly promos. [00:47:59] But I do have a picture a few weeks ago when Neil Sadaka died of me, my daughter, when, you know, I don't know how old she was, you know, five or six, and Neil. === Presidents and Jewish Tensions (03:36) === [00:48:10] We like the music. [00:48:12] If ever I want you to remember us for anything, it's what, Keith, that we like doo-wop. [00:48:21] Well, that's for sure. [00:48:24] We do like doo-wop, don't we? [00:48:26] Yeah. [00:48:28] So there's that. [00:48:29] Well, what else do we have to get to tonight? [00:48:31] I got to get to something. [00:48:32] I got to get to something this segment. [00:48:33] Keith, give me one minute of content before I get to what I got to get to this segment. [00:48:39] Well. [00:48:39] Give me something good for one minute and then I'll get to. [00:48:42] No, not necessarily music. [00:48:45] Give me a recap of tonight's show, you know, maybe with Sasha, Tony, and Jared. [00:48:49] Let's just talk about current events right now, okay? [00:48:53] The war in Iran. [00:48:54] Okay. [00:48:55] We need to understand that Trump is not the first American president to have trouble with the Jews, okay? [00:49:05] He is one of many. [00:49:07] It started basically with William McKinley. [00:49:09] He was assassinated by a guy that was a member of Emma Goldman's anarchist club in New York City. [00:49:19] Emma Goldman was eventually deported out of the United States during the Warren Harding administration. [00:49:25] Then, of course, we had the Jewish connivance to get Teddy Roosevelt to run against William Howard Taft and Woodrow Wilson and thereby split the Republican vote so that Wilson got in. [00:49:41] Wilson was blackmailed by Jewish power and influence over a fair he was having with his next-door neighbor, and that's how America got into World War I. [00:49:54] Then you had Warren Harding during his presidency. [00:50:00] You had the Palmer raids and all these anarchist things, the Sacco and Vanzetti trial, whatnot. [00:50:06] And the Jewish contingent being left-wing anarchists themselves did not like that. [00:50:14] So they eventually got Harding disgracefully driven out of office by the Teapot Dome scandal. [00:50:24] Then you had Calvin Coolidge, who was the one bright spot. [00:50:28] He actually overcame their best efforts and passed the 1924 Johnson Anti-Immigration Act. [00:50:37] But they put so much pressure on him, he retired after one term. [00:50:41] All right. [00:50:41] And see, it just goes on like that throughout. [00:50:44] So, you know, don't think that Donald Trump is some unique person. [00:50:51] He is, he's just like every other American president we've had in the 20th century. [00:50:55] And since he has had to deal with Jewish power and influence that were trying to lead him by the nose, and like most of them, he succumbed. [00:51:05] I wanted to remind you that Our incredible March Around the World is going to begin to blend into April's Confederate History Month. [00:51:16] We're already preparing for it. [00:51:18] You want to prepare for it. [00:51:20] Donate to our first quarter fundraising drive. [00:51:24] You're going to have $100 or more. [00:51:25] You're going to get an autographed copy of Sam Dixon's book, Shattering the Icon of Abraham Lincoln. [00:51:31] All friends of Sam, to their chagrin, he has not written anything biographical or political other than this monograph. [00:51:40] Hopefully that will change. [00:51:42] But until then, get this autographed copy. [00:51:45] Keith, you got yours tonight. === DNA and Family Planning (03:02) === [00:51:46] What do you think about it? [00:51:47] I love it. [00:51:48] It's a little monogram and it is great. [00:51:51] It's jam-packed. [00:51:52] It's sound. [00:51:53] It's sound. [00:51:54] Jam-packed full of the wisdom of Sam Dixon. [00:51:56] And like Jared, Sam is a top five regular on this show. [00:52:02] Now, I got to ask you this. [00:52:05] I mean, we got to get real here. [00:52:07] So, Love Can Keep Us Together. [00:52:09] Where do I want to go with this? [00:52:11] So this is an honest question because I know young men are struggling with this here. [00:52:18] If you are in your late teens, early 20s, you're faced with the doggeral of modern feminized women. [00:52:29] Listen, the ideal is to go to, and I know that the Southern Baptist Convention. [00:52:41] Go to a rural Southern Baptist church in Mississippi and find yourself a wife. [00:52:46] That is the best, but it's praying. [00:52:48] Pray to God for guidance in finding a wife. [00:52:50] If you cannot, would you rather the average American girl or a 90% white girl in Peru that's going to be submissive and all in on the matter? [00:53:06] The wonderful thing about men is that they do not suffer from menopause. [00:53:10] Menopause is a misnomer. [00:53:12] It should be called womenopause because men don't get it. [00:53:15] Men can still reproduce as long as they're otherwise healthy up until the bitter or the blessed end. [00:53:20] Well, so that's like, you know, Peter Brimelow. [00:53:23] You could start another family now. [00:53:25] Yeah, I know it. [00:53:26] And you need to remember that. [00:53:27] So don't feel the pressure of time. [00:53:29] The people that really have to feel the pressure of time are racially aware white women. [00:53:34] Here's the thing. [00:53:35] I mean, you know, again, and this is not a gotcha question. [00:53:38] It is not like I want to be clever. [00:53:40] But at what point do you become white? [00:53:42] Is it 100%? [00:53:42] You know, my DNA is 100% white. [00:53:44] 100%. [00:53:46] Yours is. [00:53:48] My wife says, you know, she looks, you know, she has that olive skin complexion, but that's, this goes back to something Steve King told me. [00:53:55] I said, you know, Steve, you know, all exceptions for, you know, abortion. [00:53:59] He said, yo, you know, you don't think any of our ancestors were raped by the Romans? [00:54:03] You know, my wife's a little olive-complexed. [00:54:05] You know, she's a black Irish. [00:54:07] She's 100% white. [00:54:08] I've got her DNA too. [00:54:11] Her DNA results too. [00:54:12] But, you know, yeah. [00:54:14] So it gets down to it. [00:54:17] So at what point do you become 100% white? [00:54:19] And when is white enough? [00:54:20] Would you rather have 100% white liberal woman or 95%, you know, South America? [00:54:28] 95% that has the right outlook, okay? [00:54:32] That is not a gotcha question. [00:54:34] That's not putting Keith on the spot. [00:54:35] That's just, you know, everybody needs to answer that for themselves because I know we've got young men out there who are struggling with finding women in their 20s and 30s. [00:54:46] No fault divorce is what turned the uh