[00:00:01] 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
[00:00:30] The free cheese of the street, land, love with EIC, land where we are Ladies and gentlemen welcome to this year's annual TPC Fourth of July Spectacular I'm your host James Edwards this Saturday evening July the 6th that we're live once again from the up country of South Carolina
[00:01:10] Let your ancestors be proud with a big rebel yell everybody! Charging boys, charge them! It is great to be here every year Didn't know if I was going to make it we've had a pretty ambitious travel schedule this week
[00:01:26] But we are here and there's no place I would rather be a year ago this week We were here with two of the guests that are going to be featured this evening The two guests who will be featured this evening, Sam Dixon and Michael Hill
[00:01:35] They are not with us tonight they will be with us over the phone as we broadcast live a little hybrid program tonight Happy Independence Day weekend to you Sam we've got a lot to cover how are you? I am fine how are you?
[00:01:48] I am fine I would be better if you were here but I am happy to be joined with you on the radio Now you and I have been talking about this show for a little over a week and we have a lot to cover
[00:01:57] So with regards to the 4th of July the founding fathers, the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution All of the things people are thinking about or supposed to be thinking about this week Give us that opening salvo make that opening statement
[00:02:10] I think it is important that we remember all the 4th of July that our ideas, our form of government The way we practice business and run politics These things are our legacy from our ancestors in Great Britain
[00:02:28] The establishment uses the 4th of July as one might expect for destructive purposes And they tell us that we were broke free of British tyranny Britain was the freest nation on earth in 1776 and the Americans were the next freest We did not break free of any tyranny
[00:02:49] In fact, the ideals that Americans cherished came to us from Britain The Bill of Rights is as you had as its template the Declaration of Rights Which the British Department passed in 1692 And compelled the new king to sign guaranteeing things like freedom of speech, right to a council
[00:03:11] And prosecuted by the government and so on And they deliberately fabricated this claim that we will re-escape British tyranny Because they want to sever us from our European roots And this is a very, very bad thing that has haunted our country throughout its history
[00:03:34] I mean it should be stopped We should honor our British heritage just as we honor the founding fathers of our country How do you reconcile, Sam? And we're going to get into what they fought for, what they didn't fight for
[00:03:49] How a lot of it has been lost in translation But I want to ask you this with regards to the accusation that King George was this most wicked, horrible tyrant How can you reconcile? How can this nation reconcile over the course of the first 80 years of its founding
[00:04:04] Maybe a little less than that That we had to fight this revolutionary war against the tyrant King George But at the same time Abraham Lincoln was our greatest president And an example for others to follow
[00:04:15] When you compare the tyranny of one versus the other, what do you come up with? Well, there's no question that Lincoln was a tyrant And George III was not There's an interesting book that came out recently called America's Last King Which is a biography of George III
[00:04:30] And the historian reveals that George the Thurbs is a very sincere person He wanted to be a good king He wanted the support and love of the subject including the Americans He was not a tyrant During and after the French Revolution he became a symbol all over Europe
[00:04:50] Of decency and order and dignity and freedom In the face of the radicals in Paris who unfortunately were friends of The embraced by Thomas Jefferson who applauded the lane of terror Which is a bad chapter and otherwise very admirable life Of Jefferson But even you compare them
[00:05:11] Most people don't have time to study these things And Americans in general live in what Gorbittal called the United States of Amnesia We learn very little about history and certainly nothing about real history But most Americans just in common sense will think back on what they've heard of
[00:05:28] The War for Independence Did George III ever burn down whole areas of a colony that were disaffected from him? Do you ever do what Abraham Lincoln did from Atlanta all the way up
[00:05:40] To Savannah and then across South Carolina all the way up to the border of North Carolina when we surrendered? No, King George never did that Did King George arrest members of parliament who opposed him and exiled them?
[00:05:55] No, he did not. He allowed them to sit in the parliament and criticize the war And support the colonists throughout the entire seven-year war Because he respected parliament's rights Abraham Lincoln on the other hand arrested people who You're talking about him being the chief one
[00:06:14] Expelled them to the United States if they criticize Lincoln's policies Lincoln had southern prisons of war tethered in front of Northern health fortifications To compel the South to fire on its own men King George never did anything like that But there's just no comparisons in the truth
[00:06:34] And then of course, I was just going to say Of course Sam going forward, Stalin was our great ally We fought with Stalin, we had a problem with so-called tyrants in the 1700s But Stalin was a great ally who helped us make the world safe for communism
[00:06:50] So what is the point here? The point is that there's some amnesia There's some hypocrisy with our standards versus the practice The theory rather than the practice Or what would be the takeover for the audience and us comparing King George to Lincoln and Stalin
[00:07:05] So on and so forth The fundamental point is to remember the wisdom of Stephen Wise I've quoted this many times and I'm sure your listeners have heard me quote it But we learn from studying what other people think and do and how it works
[00:07:25] And the most successful people on the planet are the Jews Stephen Wise was sort of the boss Jew of the first half of the last century in America He was the major figure in American Jewry And he's stressed over and over again to Jews
[00:07:42] Never to forget that they had been Jews for 3,500 years But they've been Americans for only 200 years That their heritage as Jews infinitely outranked their status as American citizens And this really is a very healthy thing And we also must remember that our history did not begin on July 4, 1776
[00:08:09] Our history goes back to the Athens, to Rome, the Roman Empire, the Middle Ages Anglo-Saxons arriving in Britain, Hengis and Horsa Who by the way are on our national seal Because there was some recognition even in those early days of the country
[00:08:26] Shortly after the war that we have an Anglo-Saxon heritage But we have been robbed of 2,500 years of our history By this tactic of betraying Europe and our European ancestors as tyrants And oppressors and brutal people And somehow we came here and Thomas Jefferson had a good day
[00:08:50] When he grew up the Bill of Rights at his plantation at Lantzicello And he sat at his desk and he scratched his head and said, you know, Females Street is that big, I'm going to write that down. No, that's not how it works.
[00:09:06] It came straight from Great Britain, straight from the British Parliament Straight from the rights of Englishmen, which is what the revolution started out being about It wasn't about such a secession from Britain It wasn't about breaking free of so-called British tyranny
[00:09:21] It was about asserting rights that we believe we had because we were Anglo-Saxons Because we were Europeans Well, absolutely. And as this hour continues, ladies and gentlemen We're going to be talking with Sam Dixon. They're learning one about proposition nations versus blood and soil nations
[00:09:39] What did the founding fathers really believe versus what we are told they believe today And how their message and perhaps intentions have been perverted Thinking about Independence Day We are going to cover it all as this dynamic duo
[00:09:53] Sam Dixon in the first hour, Michael Hilda closed the show later tonight Return to the Broadcast for TPC's annual Independence Day Spectacular. Sam, I want you to be thinking about this As the break rapidly approaches
[00:10:07] It was actually, I was talking with our friend Rich at lunch today here In the upcountry of South Carolina About where I heard this from And he said, well, Michael said it But it was actually an email I got from you
[00:10:20] I see it right here in my notes It was an email that you had responded to Another gentleman in conversation about the declaration being at war With the Constitution So we are going to cover that as soon as we return With Sam Dixon
[00:10:35] Sam, before the music begins to play And I hear it now We are here in the upcountry of South Carolina Which I know is a place near and dear to your heart A quick word to you From you to the faithful here very quickly
[00:10:46] What would you say to those here assembled? I guess we would say it's time for a time out We're going to take a quick break We all have a good time so far ladies and gentlemen Hey friends, James Edwards here again To remind you that Anilopill Publishing
[00:11:06] Is America's premier provider of dissident literature They print books that mainstream publishers Are too afraid to touch Providing you with information you need To challenge the status quo Whether your interest includes contemporary dissident politics History that would otherwise be censored or slandered
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[00:12:36] Children develop better listening skills themselves They also tend to have more self-confidence And are more likely to avoid alcohol and drugs Now sit down here and tell me all about it When you really listen, love is what they'll hear Thank you for sharing that with me
[00:12:53] From the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints For more tips on strengthening your family Visit family.mormon.org One native country deep land of the Lord We'll stop it right there We are an extension of Europe obviously And for that reason and others
[00:13:42] There are still things to be celebrated About being an American But we'll get to that more in time Sam Dixon back with us tonight Sam, you wrote on an email that Alexander Stevens The Vice-Presidents of the Confederacy In his cornerstone speech in Savannah On his way to Richmond
[00:14:00] Recognized that the Declaration of Independence And the Constitution were at war with each other That is something that I think might come as a Surprising statement to a lot of people What do you mean by that? Well, I think we can fight two very different figures
[00:14:14] Contemporaries of each other Who recognize this and had different takes on it You've mentioned Stevens, who I'll mention second But Abraham Lincoln himself Recognized that the revolutionary principles Of the Declaration, the wild extremism Of the Declaration, was in conflict With the stability of the Constitution
[00:14:37] On his way to take his oath of office 16th President of the United States He stopped in Pennsylvania And he gave a speech in Independence Hall In which he said explicitly That the Declaration and the Constitution Are in conflict with each other And as to the two
[00:14:55] His sympathies had always lain With the Declaration As opposed to the Constitution So we have him the great man himself That he recognized the revolutionary principles That he would implement as President Like burning down Georgia and South Carolina Like arresting members of parliament You know, tethering soldiers
[00:15:17] Something soldiers in front of fortifications That make their own men fire on them These things were of the nature Of the Declaration of Independence And not in the Constitution At the Constitutional Convention It's interesting that they set up A rather stable government, maybe too stable
[00:15:38] It wasn't perfect, but it was certainly A very opposite thing of the Declaration There was only one moment Catholic At that convention, a guy named Carol From Maryland from the aristocratic Carol family Which is mentioned in the Maryland song, Maryland by Maryland
[00:15:56] Or they refer to Carol's sacred trust Which is by one of his ancestors Carol went to the convention and afterwards He wrote that the Constitution Represented the triumph of human experience And history over theory But they tried to draw up a document Based upon human nature
[00:16:17] And human history and experience Rather than on theory Whereas the Declaration of Independence Is by a Frenchman named Lindsay And theory Alexander Stevens, like the vice president Confederacy, and like Lincoln Also recognized that the two documents Are in conflict His approach was the exact opposite of Lincoln
[00:16:37] In his quarter sense speech since Obama On his way to take off That the capitalist being moved to Richmond He said that the Civil War Is being fought To end forever The claims of the Declaration Of Independence that all men are created to equal Which shocked Americans
[00:16:55] I'm sure it shocked people in your audience There in Greenville But it's very true The words and the Declaration That all men are created to equal The, as I thought it would say These are the words of a madman No one can believe such things
[00:17:11] There's never been one human being Ever equal to another There's never been a cherry Equaled another cherry Anything about equality And you have to take leave of your senses To believe that all men are created to equal And to me with the arguments
[00:17:27] That people make that Jefferson didn't really mean it But that's how he wrote it And that's what's inscribed in the Monuments And that's what Americans believe And it's a hopeless task To try to argue them out of this By explaining the nuances
[00:17:41] That Jefferson could have put in there So it's a very different document And it's Really an expression Of the kind of nonsense One expects from French philosophers As opposed to empirical, solid Workbound Granite-like Agro-facult It's not only Go ahead. No, I'm just going to say
[00:18:07] While we're on this topic Because as you know, I wanted to Inject this retort And it's, the context is important You mentioned it yourself at one of our conferences You mentioned the context of that That he and they Saw themselves as King George's equal
[00:18:23] I would read very quickly from a Classic article posted by our friend Jared Taylor At American Renaissance He wasn't the author, but The author's name escapes me I believe it was Charles Callas And I'll just read very quickly Those who want to rewrite American history
[00:18:39] Love to try out Thomas Jefferson's phrase All men are created equal And the contents of the declaration Is a detailed list of 28 grievances That justify separations from Britain Again, I'm reading this In this context, all men are created equal
[00:18:53] Asserts that the colonists are equal to the British crown And have the right to sever ties Jefferson and the signers are announcing That they're equal with the king Not suggesting that human beings are biologically equal You obviously just addressed that, Sam But just to wrap up this
[00:19:07] Recitation as has been often pointed out The declaration itself does not treat Talking about the king, has excited domestic Insurrectionists among them and has endeavored To bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers The merciless Indian savages Whose known rule of warfare is Then undistinguished destruction
[00:19:23] Of all ages, sexes, and conditions And then you get on to Early American history all the way to the 1960s The United States naturalization law Of 1790 passed by the first Congress Was explicit in its Inegalitarian conception Of American citizenship Which limited it to free white persons
[00:19:41] Of good character Obviously that includes Indians, white, indentured Servants, slaves, free blacks, and later Asians Were excluded. On and on and on We can talk about that But yes, as you mentioned That has been forgotten because history has been Reinterpreted And that is what we're left with
[00:19:59] Was the words, not the context, not the background Not all of the nuances, correct? Well, yes And you can't win that battle The average person doesn't have the time Of education to follow these arguments And when you're trying to deconstruct A ringing declaration
[00:20:15] Like all men are created equal You will lose that argument And we won't win that argument It was a terrible phrase It's one of the most destructive phrases Ever written in human history And it appeals to the basis To instincts of people Of human beings
[00:20:33] That's why we have the 10th commandment Which is when the 10th commandments were given One of the worst features Of human character is envy Thou shalt not covet And the thing about all men are created equal The people who embrace that Are never looking below themselves
[00:20:49] And saying, hey, all you guys You're equal to me They're always looking above With resentment The good doctor looking above The poor doctor, rather Looking above the poor doctor The poor doctor, rather Looking above and resenting the great surgeon That kind of thing
[00:21:09] And so it appeals to a really bad instinct Of jealousy and covetousness Instead of an appeal to excellence And it isn't limited just to that There are other things that the declaration says That they're destructive I know almost everybody there will disagree with me And I respect that
[00:21:29] But I am a Christian But the statement that all men are created Are endowed by their creator With certain animal rights That's just not true That's in 70s In 1776 Tibetans had no rights They had no rights today People in New Guinea had no rights
[00:21:49] Even the Congo had no rights People who had rights were Anglo-Saxons And related Europeans Who had a very different world view Than Asian and Blacks And Latin Americans And these rights we had They did not come from Mount Sinai They came from the Magna Carta
[00:22:11] From the Declaration of Right By the parliament in 1692 They came specifically out of our heritage And that's where our rights came from And that's why we have these rights Because our ancestors in Europe Won those rights for us
[00:22:25] And decided that this is how they were going to live with each other This is how they were going to creed each other The idea that That everybody in the world has these And animal rights is just factually false These rights Not only could be alienated
[00:22:39] They don't even exist No Tibetan in history has ever known these rights It's just foolishness Alright, so fast forwarding now I will work this question In just very quickly Before our second break Of the hour and another show Very very fast Sam was with us here live
[00:23:01] In South Carolina last year For this program here at this location Tonight on the phone And we're happy to have him any way we can get him I want to pause the conversation From the history of it all Sam as we reflect on this Independence Day weekend
[00:23:17] Long weekend The American flag today You look at it, what does it mean to you? Well, I have a schizophrenic view I'm dissented from general In the revolution But my father regarded the revolution With reservations He said that we should have stayed with Britain
[00:23:36] That we should have had a monarchy We separated That there's a lot to be said for a monarchy Giving a dignified Head of state Even if only in a figurehead As opposed to the head of state Being the most successful candidate Every four years
[00:23:54] My ancestors fought for that flag I wore my country's uniform I believe that Like Dr. Jean said If you're a citizen of the city The police You have to obey its laws And I Try to be a good American But I also see so many things
[00:24:14] So many evils that have been committed In the name of that flag That flag is formed over so many evils It's too old It's too old With a terror bomb in Europe It's too old to speak That's just wrong too It's A sick feeling
[00:24:34] I'm going to take a quick break, Sam And I want you to finish that point when we come back We've got a five minute break Ladies and gentlemen Are you enjoying Sam Dixon tonight live on your radio? Let him hear it! News Radio News Radio News News Radio
[00:27:01] News News
[00:28:04] News News News News News time if you're enjoying our guest Sam Dixon tonight. I don't know if he heard you before let him hear it now if you're enjoying what he has to say an extra
[00:30:47] hearty round at Rebel Yale from Rich over here to my left that's for you Sam listen folks I realize it's incredibly difficult to get excited about or celebrate anything associated with modern-day America because of course this
[00:31:00] system now that governs us and rules us now stands for everything that is in vile but if you listen to some of these early American anthems and I will say the Star Spangled Banner is a wonderful anthem I mean you thinking
[00:31:14] about Francis Scott Key on this ship at the Battle of Fort McHenry and he's trying to find out how the battle is going by when the bombs explode to see if the flag still there they at least they fought for something at least
[00:31:27] they fought so it's okay it is okay we give you permission this Independence Day weekend to listen to songs like my country tis of thee and let your mind slip back to a time when our nation actually attempted to realize
[00:31:38] some sort of potential and so let these songs stir your spirit know that our people will endure our people will endure and that's all that matters it does not matter if a country indoors or system of government indoors or lines
[00:31:50] on a map endure our people are what matters our collective is what matters and we want to tell you all those who are here tonight in South Carolina listening around the country and around the world that we love you and we
[00:32:01] hope that you and your families are enjoying a wonderful holiday weekend together so Sam getting back to the declaration and the founding fathers I know you take the position that was it even a war worth fighting considering
[00:32:14] how it all turned out I would defend them though to a certain degree by mentioning that and I would love to have your response to this that they could not have foreseen in the 1770s the hellscape that America would
[00:32:26] become from their vantage point there in that century and at that time had we remained a part of the crown would we not just be another generation or two down the current path that were on in terms of not having a first or second
[00:32:42] amendment as our friends and brothers and cousins in Europe do not have I mean was it worth not fighting at least for the first and second amendment well that's a lot to talk about I think that the we would have what we had now basically in Britain today
[00:33:00] despite the anti-hate laws which have been part passed by all both parties the Labor Party and the Conservative Party making it a criminal offense to say things that offend black people or Jewish people still you know you you
[00:33:15] have you you don't have anything like the Soviet Union in Britain you don't have anything like Abraham Lincoln in Britain you know you still have courts you still have juries who still they still have to formally tell
[00:33:29] you what you're charged with you still have a right to a lawyer to defend yourself you know 95% of it is still there and as in the real constitution as you said is in the people it's not in a document you
[00:33:45] could take the American Constitution and give it to other countries it would not change the situation there Franklin Roosevelt who's one of the worst presidents that we ever had was a great admirable communism he was very close
[00:34:00] friends and surround himself with Congress he loves Stalin he has even more more pro-cognitive wife were determined to save communism and he he once read he said these things called the fireside chats which previous generations
[00:34:19] would know more about but he would be he would make these have these chats with the American people on the radio broadcast and one of these he read out the Soviet Constitution which guaranteed freedom of religion and he told
[00:34:34] the American people he read that out so it's refused the falsehood said by bill by anti-cognitive who claimed that the church was persecuted in Russia but right here it's right in the Constitution you've got freedom of religion and Roosevelt gave Haiti it's a new constitution after the
[00:34:55] evacuation of that was it used the American Constitution he gave it it wasn't about a damn bit of good for Haiti but the real Constitution is the people and if we had not broken free of Britain we would have a much wider
[00:35:09] country we would have a country that would be more coherent with understanding of history and I think you would be better off and certainly we are we're in a bad position we're told to hate our ancestors
[00:35:22] that we we broke free you know it's like somebody appearing on Oprah Winfrey and talking about the parents having a bus you and talk how bad their parents were stirring up intergenerational hatred this doesn't work well and the
[00:35:40] demonization of our British ancestors doesn't work well either well Sam you know of course London is getting pretty dark it's at least as dark as the big watermelon so you know they've got their problems with regards to to multiculturalism and multiracialism as well but you mentioned Haiti doesn't
[00:36:01] Haiti have a better Constitution than the United States in some regards well you remind me of something I said before you asked well you said that it could not have been anticipated where all this would go I don't agree I
[00:36:15] think educated people often have been able to anticipate it why we're knowing the history of Egypt the history of racial amalgamation the history of you've been conquered by foreigners all these things why would you not foresee the problems that would be created by
[00:36:37] preaching that all men were created equal and every all men everyone is endowed with these rights well the blacks the abolitionists could say quite quite correctly well what about blacks are they endowed by their creator was
[00:36:50] certain in any of our rights but anyway in Haiti they have a very blood thirsty head of their state the decilene for whom the national anthem is named he in 1803 ordered the murder of all remaining white people in the island
[00:37:09] he first saw the danger of having white people around and he wrote into their first constitution which remained the law until the American Marines changed it in the 19 teens that no white person could own so much as a square inch of
[00:37:24] Haitian soil only people who had the blood of Guinea in their right brain veins only people so he first saw it his IQ may have been higher than people well I mean listen it's hard to argue with it I guess you know again you have the
[00:37:47] declaration you have the context which you say is an unwinnable argument because Americans now have the attention span of a goldfish and the historical knowledge of perhaps even less than that so trying to get into the nuances
[00:37:59] in the context is you know a difficult task people don't want to hear it it's just easier to say all men are created equal and that's the that's the motto of the country that in emula emula as well as is gibberish but the
[00:38:13] Haitian constitution didn't do that but we did have all of the other laws and the immigration acts and you know up until the 1965s it was pretty much a subtle question I mean we made it that far but you think though the seed was
[00:38:25] baked into the cake and it just took what nearly 200 years to germinate yeah I think we had our enemies working you know you had these radical people all the Quakers the very first Congress the Quakers showed up and said that under
[00:38:42] the general welfare provision of the Constitution that the federal government had the power to outlaw slavery and that's already it was starting in 1792 in the Congress a sample and you go from there the crazed abolitionists you know the John Brown element that wanted a race war in
[00:39:01] the south they wanted to found wanted to be rated part of sparing to give arms to the black in the hope that he could instigate a Haiti style race war and exterminate southern whites you know you had a lot of people half they have
[00:39:15] the elected officials of the Republican Party at that time endorsed the John Brown raid well I'm not as big a southerner as Michael Hill maybe out of these because my bloodlines are diluted three of my great grandparents being of
[00:39:31] New England origin but yeah I am a southerner and I'm a loyal souther but the you know the idea of solving the problem by this massacre of southern white people there were a lot of people like these Republicans who believe
[00:39:50] and why wouldn't our ancestors have left the United States whether with the president's elected for an outrageous party like that of people who've answered to a slavery problem was mass murder so it's always been there Woodrow Wilson cranked it up
[00:40:06] Woodrow Wilson you know mixed the units of the army that previously had been raised the sort of some state units now they were all mixed up and they have these posters Americans all in World War two this became the theme of
[00:40:21] movies that you'd have these movies over over again you'd have a southern southern farm boy you'd have a someone from the Bronx and a Jew and so on there but they're all American uh this stuff has a good place to pause your point well take and we're
[00:40:42] going to take one more break with Sam Dixon then in the second hour folks we're going to feed off the energy of the live audience here at this live remote broadcast broadcast back to back live remote broadcast from Louisiana to
[00:40:57] South Carolina traveling the width of the Confederacy in a week and we'll be right back James Edwards here again to remind you that Anilope publishing is America's premier provider of dissident literature they print books that mainstream publishers are too afraid to touch
[00:41:11] providing you with information you need to challenge the status quo whether you're interested through contemporary dissident politics history that would otherwise be censored or slandered philosophy or exciting and thought provoking fiction you'll find plenty to love in the Anilope catalog which includes books such as Generation 68
[00:41:30] the elite revolution and its legacy about the elite driven cultural revolution of the 1960s which transformed America righty on the moon about the demise of the space program due to diversity the sort of Christ which argues for restoring Christianity as the foundation
[00:41:46] of the west and combating heresies like Christian Zionism speeches by Mussolini and other historical figures and much more with new titles added every month there's no doubt that they have something for everyone to check out their catalog today at anilopelpublishing.com
[00:42:01] Have you ever heard of loving liberty ladies? Well the loving liberty ladies are here to help you learn our American heritage and the way it affects today's society. The loving liberty ladies also have a discussion guide called Proclaim Liberty and with this guide you can start your
[00:42:16] own group in your hometown get yours today on our website at lovingliberty.net look for our lesson supplements too they're free to hear all the special offers and to join the fight for freedom and liberty please go to lovingliberty.net
[00:42:31] The spirit of the American West is alive and well in Range Magazine the award-winning quarterly devoted to the issues of the American West each issue contains informative articles breathtaking imagery as well as the culture of Cowboy's spirit today and gift ideas like this year's buckaroo calendar
[00:42:50] order online from rangemagazine.com loving liberty network salutes the spirit of the American West at rangemagazine.com the folks may think that pomp and circumstance is an unusual tune to play on a 4th of July weekend broadcast but perhaps i would have thought of that
[00:43:54] an hour ago until i was talking with sam in pre-gaming and he made the suggestion and explained why sam explain it to the wider audience if you would well our our direct graduation tune that we play is called pomp and circumstance which was it originated
[00:44:12] as something that was played when king george the sixth i think it was really the fifth uh... editor westminster cathedral after his coronation there was a song hailing the british empire but anyway it is a patriotic german british song
[00:44:29] and it uh... it's lyrics are a land of hope and glory mother of the free and um they like to call their parliament the mother of parliament so so yes these ideas do come from us despite the claim in the declaration of dependence that
[00:44:46] george bird was a tyrant by the way most of those claims are false where the historians will concede that they're untrue are there a few of them that are true there are a lot of them that are some of them that have been exaggerated and twisted
[00:44:58] but uh... you know this is our heritage and it's a common heritage and we we should be comfortable with being being europeans or those americans mit romney used to love to say we don't want to be like europe
[00:45:12] but we are like europe and that's and we are europeans and we're happy to europeans and we're not eager to be deceived by people like mit romney uh... whoever the peps of the military industrial complex who want to sell us on this idea that we're supposed to be
[00:45:29] fighting wars all over the world to make it the dick and rich chenny rich through their munitions industry right? i think you nailed it well and now the more you know folks you learn something on every program certainly every time samson and you learn
[00:45:45] something tonight the next time uh... your friend or loved one uh is walking down to get their diploma and you hear just instrumental now you know the rest of the story behind that song uh... just... by the way was by virah
[00:45:58] virah lin who is the most popular singer uh in the middle of the last century and uh... was very famous for singing patriotic music because if you google it and look for virah lin and why nn and land of hope and glory
[00:46:15] you'll find that fight. you asked me if i was familiar with her before the show and i couldn't place her i said no i thought about it a little bit more as a matter of fact it was our guest speaker or friday night surprise speaker at the conference
[00:46:32] uh just a couple of months ago who told me about her a couple of years ago and because he had spent so much time in the uk and i did place it after the fact so anyway folks check it out you know good stuff
[00:46:42] uh sam before we get back to the topic i asked you a question at the close of one of the earlier breaks and i think the music was playing you might not have heard it just a
[00:46:50] a quick if you don't mind a quick word from you to the folks here in south carolina uh what this upcountry of south carolina means to you personally and the folks here uh who are always eager to see you
[00:47:02] when you come. well i feel great attachment to it my father was born there he was a he we were not aristocrats we were presentable people were not the leads of virginia but he was the descendant of general andrew pickings and he was born in
[00:47:18] pickings county which was named for his ancestor and he uh i feel great affinity there my ancestors are buried there the my matthew henry dixon one of my first full bear from europe is buried near anderson south carolina and what is now a
[00:47:36] baptist church cemetery graveyard and you know i as a child my father took me to the long kames massacre site in your eddieville where the calhouns ancestors were murdered by the chariots indians and a racist hate crime against eminence you won't ever hear the indians reproach
[00:47:57] in that way but you hear us reproach that way but anyway the racist indians murdered the calhouns my ancestors were able to escape as well her brother who was the father of john c anyway my father took this to the grave which was a
[00:48:13] scottish can of written and said that this was our deed to south carolina was the blood of our ancestors that had shed their blood to make south carolina where it was so i agree it was great whenever i close the river from georgia to south carolina i feel
[00:48:29] that i've come home very well stated thank you for sharing that with only five minutes remaining i want to pivot back to the proposition nation versus blood and soil nation argument and conversation and i want to read just the opening two paragraphs
[00:48:49] from a very classic and comprehensive piece that was written by jared taylor it was written for radix journal back some years ago which is now defunct but uh we still have the words and the citations and it is something that everyone needs to read we
[00:49:04] repost it at our website every 4th of july it's on there this week at the political cesspool dot org what are the founding fathers really believe and jared begins his argument with this today the united states officially takes the position that all races are equal
[00:49:18] our country is also committed legally and morally to the view that race is not a fit criterion for decision making of any kind except for promoting diversity or for the purpose of redressing past wrongs done by whites
[00:49:30] snot on whites many americans cite the all men are created equal phrase from the declaration of independence obviously we've been talking about that with sam this hour to support the claim that this view of race was not only inevitable but was also anticipated by the founders
[00:49:43] interestingly prominent conservatives like michelle bakerman and glenn beck have taken this notion a step further and asserted that today's racial egalitarianism was the nation's goal from the very beginning they are badly mistaken jared writes and then he goes into a very long
[00:49:59] an exhaustive argument which is every word carries freight i don't mean it's long and exhausted as if it's too long it needs to be read but since the pre-american days all the way through every major american president or every major american politician and all the
[00:50:15] presidents up to john f kennedy even lincoln the audience lincoln they all had similar views on race that wouldn't be able to step with us or anyone listening tonight you're but you think that the declaration the all men are created
[00:50:26] equal they've been able to boil it down to those a handful of words and it just outstrips all of this yeah well you just can't oh yeah you have to it's it's like a lawyer making a presentation to a jury you have to keep it simple
[00:50:40] uh and when you have to go into all this explanation of what jeffson really meant and the reference to the indian savages and so on and people you've lost it they most who just hear oh all men are created equal yeah it's very hard to argue against
[00:50:55] something that that seems so straight out yeah but let me ask you this i'm just gonna say but in your opinion though sam i i get that we've covered that and i don't disagree uh but the idea of propositionation versus blood and soil nation of course the only
[00:51:12] nation that can be a real nation as a blood and soil nation we're not going to get into all of that but as far as the early american leaders they didn't believe it do you believe that they thought it was a proposition
[00:51:24] no i i think that they uh they just didn't think very clearly and they also refared them you know these are people who engage in a rag tag fight you know we're on a personal level when you're in a bar
[00:51:38] and a fight breaks out over some woman you know your day to fail this day you know it goes from there all kinds of stuff fighting and stuff you know and the original source that you get it's called to get swallowed up
[00:51:52] in the in the fight and that's even truer when you're dealing with something like a war that's one reason why i do not believe i don't believe in states rights i don't believe in sense and in decentralized government i think we have to have a very powerful centralized
[00:52:07] government you know to solve this terrible problem that we have in america uh even i am supportive of michael hill's ideas of southern succession because i know that throughout history wars have started for one one purpose and and morphed into something else
[00:52:25] you know great britain had its own civil war in the 1640s that started out with people saying they wanted the rights of parliament against the absolute monarch and by the time it was over they established under all of the problem the nearest thing to an absolute monarchy
[00:52:41] that the people of great britain were ahead things just spun out of control and i don't think they realized that what would happen from this document they needed something to get France to declare war on their side
[00:52:53] they had the support of the royal government they wanted to get the people that were sort of the little terror type atheists and others do you think that's why they were a little drunk on the enlightenment to
[00:53:04] entice france to the cause oh yeah that's exactly that's well known that's not a theory that's it that's it it was written as a document and phrase to get France into the war just like romekin drew up the emancipation proclamation for the purpose of keeping
[00:53:23] britain out of the war well there you have it gentlemen i guess it's as simple as that in some ways sam seconds remaining final word to you thank you for being on with us this holiday weekend well i'm honored to be with you i
[00:53:38] wish over there was all your for your friends and supporters we we may disagree with each other but we are a band of roars and destiny i won't be here much longer i'm an old man
[00:53:49] uh but some of you will see the day our destinies are all bound up together amen to that and they're always perfect always have been always will be the disagreements are minuscule and few and far between compared to the bonds of
[00:54:04] steel cables that uh band us together and uh no better to join us this weekend than sam dixon we are going to enjoy a second hour talking with people here in the audience that uh is amongst us in south
[00:54:18] carolina and that's always a fun time that's normally how we do the entire show start to finish when we come here but we did want to work in these guests michael hillby with us in the third hour so stay tuned for all of that
[00:54:28] sam dixon everybody one more time let him hear it yes all right sam i'll talk to you again soon the little kids are covering their ears from the rapturous applause that you have elicited this we'll be back second hour next


