Radio Show Hour 1 – 2024/10/05

Radio Show Hour 1 – 2024/10/05

Our people are hurting after suffering a devastating blow from Hurricane Helene. What are we doing if we are not here to help at such a time as this? We put politics aside and dedicate the program to hearing from both those who have been affected and audience members who are in the disaster zone assisting in relief efforts. Padraig Martin, Rich Hamblen, John Hill, and Rick Tyler join James Edwards in a powerful conversation.

[00:00:01] You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is The Political Cesspool.

[00:00:12] The Political Cesspool, known across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program.

[00:00:21] And here to guide you through the murky waters of The Political Cesspool is your host, James Edwards.

[00:00:40] Ladies and gentlemen, hear my voice when I tell you that the next three hours could be perhaps the most important.

[00:00:48] Ladies and gentlemen, hear me when I say that over the course of the next three hours, what you hear may be the most important broadcast we have ever done here on TPC.

[00:00:59] Welcome to the program.

[00:01:03] I'm your host, James Edwards, and we are live this Saturday evening, October the 5th.

[00:01:12] We are going to put politics aside this evening and dedicate the program entirely to hearing from those affected by Hurricane Helene and those among our family of listeners who are assisting in the relief efforts.

[00:01:23] What is being done?

[00:01:24] How can you help?

[00:01:24] To what extent is the government impeding from help being given?

[00:01:27] Joining us on the air tonight, one guest per segment, 12 guests total, and we are going to be talking about our people.

[00:01:35] Our people are hurting tonight.

[00:01:36] Our community is suffering.

[00:01:38] It has suffered a devastating blow.

[00:01:40] What are we doing with this radio program if we are not here to help at such a time as this?

[00:01:45] Joining us right now, Patrick Martin to get things started.

[00:01:49] Patrick, how are you tonight?

[00:01:51] I'm doing very well.

[00:01:52] Thank you so much, James.

[00:01:53] It's been quite the couple weeks, to say the least.

[00:01:56] Patrick, are you with us?

[00:01:57] I'm here.

[00:01:59] Can you hear me?

[00:02:01] Can you all hear me?

[00:02:03] It certainly has.

[00:02:06] I can hear you fine.

[00:02:08] Okay, good.

[00:02:09] We hear you.

[00:02:10] Okay, great.

[00:02:11] Yeah, I'm here, and thank you.

[00:02:12] There seems to be a lag for some reason, and I don't know why.

[00:02:15] Patrick, please take it away.

[00:02:17] Okay.

[00:02:18] I just want to do – I mean, this last week has been a real challenge for everybody.

[00:02:22] I work in shipping.

[00:02:24] So my biggest concern the last few days has really been the port shutdown at the same time as Helene.

[00:02:31] So we had really a back-to-back hit, a real blow in the south.

[00:02:36] For those of you not aware, the port shutdowns began in the Gulf Coast.

[00:02:40] So it really began in Houston and into Savannah and then went all up down the east coast.

[00:02:45] So between the port shutdown and having Helene hit at the same time, it has been an astoundingly challenging last 10 days.

[00:02:54] Thankfully, with the foresight of Governor DeSantis here in Florida, we have the Florida State Guard.

[00:03:00] And for those of you who are not familiar with the Florida State Guard, it is not the National Guard.

[00:03:03] It's not the Florida National Guard.

[00:03:07] The Florida State Guard, the purpose of it was designed as a result of 2022.

[00:03:12] There were a series of tornado outbreaks that happened.

[00:03:15] At that point, the governor, DeSantis, he had pushed back against Biden's COVID mandate.

[00:03:24] And as a result, when those tornadoes hit, the federal government would not provide any assistance to the state of Florida.

[00:03:30] Absolutely refused all assistance to the state of Florida.

[00:03:33] FEMA refused.

[00:03:34] There was roughly about 35 homes were destroyed.

[00:03:37] And so the Florida State Guard came about as a result of that and started out very small, only about 150 folks.

[00:03:46] It's now at 1,500.

[00:03:48] And it has four different divisions, including a maritime division and an aviation division.

[00:03:53] And so they were on the ground very quickly.

[00:03:55] The state of Florida, especially in the west coast of Florida, just got hit hard.

[00:03:58] And for those of you not aware of the way it hit, this hurricane hit what a lot of folks call the elbow of Florida.

[00:04:06] It's essentially where the peninsula meets the – or the panhandle, excuse me, meets the peninsula.

[00:04:10] But a lot of the surge hit during high tide.

[00:04:14] So that was where the damage was for the state of Florida.

[00:04:16] Now, the Florida State Guard was able to assist.

[00:04:19] Florida National Guard was able to assist as a result of the state of emergency as well.

[00:04:22] But then, of course, he continued to travel north.

[00:04:25] And for, again, my wife, almost all of her people, they're in either Georgia or Alabama.

[00:04:30] And so as it went into Georgia, it continued moving forward and really carved out a path of destruction.

[00:04:37] Interestingly enough about this hurricane, which is very weird, hurricanes tend to travel the path of least resistance.

[00:04:43] They go after water.

[00:04:45] It went around Atlanta.

[00:04:46] It strangely circled around Atlanta on the eastern side, circled into the north, and then really hit the Western Carolinas.

[00:04:53] As we're all aware right now, Western Carolinas are a disaster as well, a horrible disaster, horrible human tragedy, as well as eastern Tennessee.

[00:05:01] And so Florida Guard was deployed to the Carolinas.

[00:05:05] They were deployed as early as Sunday, actually Saturday night into Sunday, to provide relief in Western Carolinas.

[00:05:12] And so the Florida State Guard arrived.

[00:05:42] And Tennessee's governor worked with the Florida State Guard.

[00:05:45] So Johnson City became a new base of operations, while Governor Cooper continued to stop any kind of outside assistance.

[00:05:52] So right now, the Western Carolinas, or especially Western North Carolina, is just not being served, as we understand it.

[00:05:59] And getting a lot of reports from Florida Guard members really frustrated about the fact that they were there, they're ready to assist.

[00:06:07] And even DeSantis himself had said earlier in the week that, you know, we got the money to do this, but we're not the federal government.

[00:06:16] You know, Florida's got a $30 billion budget surplus, does not have an income tax.

[00:06:21] So we are just good with our financial health, as such, in Florida.

[00:06:27] So we're able to sustain the support for all the Carolinas, as well as Georgia.

[00:06:32] Georgia Governor's camp has been working with DeSantis.

[00:06:35] They opened up areas such as Valdosta, which is in South Georgia, is being assisted by both a joint program between the state of Florida and the state of Georgia.

[00:06:43] And really what you're starting to see is a state guard out of Florida that has largely just gone out and did what he needed to do for the South.

[00:06:53] And I can't really, I can't overemphasize and overstate how amazing that is.

[00:06:59] You know, we don't need the federal government.

[00:07:00] We don't need them.

[00:07:01] And they're proving that they are absolutely useless.

[00:07:03] I mean, completely useless.

[00:07:05] But if I could just very quickly, because this is the point of your segment, and we had to switch to the phone.

[00:07:10] We're reconnecting some equipment here in the studio.

[00:07:12] We had a little bit of a delay there.

[00:07:13] People didn't notice it.

[00:07:14] But the Florida State Guard, much more than just doing what they were constituted to do, which is to provide for the state of Florida in times like this.

[00:07:24] They have done that and more.

[00:07:25] They've spread their efforts throughout the South, Tennessee, North Carolina especially.

[00:07:30] And again, just compare and contrast how the Florida National Guard has functioned logistically and otherwise versus that of other state guards and, of course, the federal entities especially.

[00:07:42] About two minutes left.

[00:07:43] It's a great question.

[00:07:44] And thank you.

[00:07:45] So the Florida State Guard is unique in that it has its own procurement program.

[00:07:47] It's the only state guard that has that.

[00:07:49] So they have a weapons procurement team.

[00:07:52] They're almost entirely led by combat veterans.

[00:07:54] They have nobody who, at the very top of it, who has any kind of hurricane or disaster relief experience.

[00:08:00] So it's unique in that it has a – it's structured differently.

[00:08:04] It's structured more like a private military in many ways.

[00:08:07] In fact, there are some discussions that some private military contractors have been giving advice there.

[00:08:12] But so from a deployment perspective, they're just – they really have the kind of deployment assets and the deployment capacity that most militaries would envy around the world.

[00:08:22] And it's only based out of Florida.

[00:08:24] It gets very small at this point.

[00:08:25] But they are operating in areas of the South that are being completely neglected.

[00:08:29] And I would dare say that the reason why they're being neglected is because the victims are white, the victims are Christian, the victims are Southern.

[00:08:36] And so if they weren't white Christian Southerners, they might get assistance.

[00:08:39] We saw what happened with Katrina.

[00:08:41] We saw what happened in other areas of the country when those people were suffering.

[00:08:45] But now that our people are suffering, the only group that's standing up for our people are ourselves.

[00:08:51] It's us and God, and that's what we need.

[00:08:54] And we're showing the world right now that when the South gets punched, we stand up.

[00:09:00] And you're going to hear that.

[00:09:01] I wanted Patrick Martin to lead tonight's program off to share that message.

[00:09:06] You're going to hear it reinforced many times throughout the program.

[00:09:10] But much more importantly than that, much more importantly than even making a very important political and cultural point, a point that cuts to the very marrow of our bone about our identity and our future.

[00:09:22] As Patrick has made, we're going to talk to people who are on the ground in the epicenter of the disaster zone, providing relief to our people.

[00:09:30] Generators, food, water, supplies, cash, whatever they need.

[00:09:34] We've got people you won't hear from tonight who are going to share their testimony.

[00:09:37] Patrick, with about a minute or two, let's see, about a minute remaining before break.

[00:09:43] Final word to you, my friend.

[00:09:44] I know you are at a function actually right now that is related to this.

[00:09:48] We've got to let you go for that.

[00:09:49] Tell us about that and a final parting shot as we kick off this very important broadcast.

[00:09:53] That's right.

[00:09:54] We're raising money right now for Helene victims around the South, especially with an emphasis on the Carolinas right now.

[00:10:01] Florida donors are putting money into coffers.

[00:10:04] They're not just as a Cedar Key, which is an area that's got hit pretty hard, as well as portions of western Florida, but also the Helene victims in Carolinas, who I believe have absolutely been abandoned by everybody but their own people.

[00:10:17] And I think that's the most important thing they need to stand up and understand is that there are people who love them.

[00:10:21] There are people that care for them.

[00:10:23] There are people that are working very hard for them.

[00:10:24] And there are people that have not forgotten them, even when their federal government has.

[00:10:28] Their state governments and their own people do care about them.

[00:10:31] And God loves them.

[00:10:32] Jesus Christ loves them.

[00:10:34] And I hope that through their salvation and through their trusting God, they'll stand back up on their own two feet again.

[00:10:40] What a powerful message from Patrick Martin, my friend and yours.

[00:10:44] He's there at an event tonight to raise money.

[00:10:46] Places in the Big Bend area of Florida, like Don Hatches, completely wiped off the map.

[00:10:50] Patrick is there to help.

[00:10:51] And we're here to offer assistance, too, with this radio program and the resources available to us.

[00:10:56] Thank you, Patrick.

[00:10:57] Rich Hamblin up next.

[00:11:01] God tells us in Hebrews 10.25 that we should gather together to worship him.

[00:11:06] This isn't a request.

[00:11:07] It is a command.

[00:11:09] Going to church isn't an option.

[00:11:10] It is your Christian duty.

[00:11:11] With the hellish apostasy of mainstream churches, attending church these days can be difficult.

[00:11:18] That is why your King James only traditional services in the ancient church of St. Mary Magdalene are live online.

[00:11:26] And I invite you to gather with our congregation to study God's Holy Word.

[00:11:30] Join us every Sunday at thetemplarchurch.com.

[00:11:34] And especially on the first Sunday of the month for Holy Communion.

[00:11:38] This do in remembrance of me is also a command that all Christians must obey.

[00:11:43] I'm Reverend Jim Dowson, ordained Puritan minister, nationalist and a veteran pro-life campaigner.

[00:11:49] Tune in to my weekly sermons at thetemplarchurch.com.

[00:11:54] Based in Ireland, this old-time religion is the faith that built America.

[00:11:58] God bless you.

[00:12:02] The Foundation for Moral Law is a non-profit legal foundation committed to protecting our unalienable right to publicly acknowledge God.

[00:12:11] The Foundation for Moral Law exists to restore the knowledge of God in law and government and to acknowledge and defend the truth that man is endowed with rights not by our fellow man, but by God.

[00:12:22] The Foundation maintains a two-fold focus.

[00:12:25] First, litigation within state and federal courts.

[00:12:28] Second, education.

[00:12:30] Conducting seminars to teach the necessity and importance of acknowledging God in law and government.

[00:12:36] How can you help?

[00:12:37] Please make a tax-deductible contribution, allowing foundation attorneys to continue the fight.

[00:12:42] You may also purchase various foundation products as well at morallaw.org.

[00:12:46] Located in Montgomery, Alabama, the Foundation for Moral Law is a non-profit, tax-exempt 501c3 founded by Judge Roy Moore.

[00:12:54] Please partner with us to achieve this important mission.

[00:12:57] Morallaw.org.

[00:13:09] Ladies and gentlemen, Paul Craig Roberts pointed out on his excellent website last week, the Weather Channel and the National TV Networks are always selling advertising,

[00:13:19] and oftentimes they play the Hurricanes as if it's gladiators in the Roman Coliseum fighting to the death against human opponents or lions.

[00:13:34] Good evening, James.

[00:13:35] I'm glad to be here.

[00:13:39] Okay.

[00:13:41] Go ahead, Rich.

[00:13:42] Sorry about that.

[00:13:43] I'm back, but we're going to turn it over to Rich Hamlin.

[00:13:44] I was just going to say a lot of times these hurricanes are exaggerated for effect.

[00:13:48] This one was most certainly not, and we're going to give you three hours to let you know what you need to know and, most importantly, how you can help.

[00:13:54] Rich, take it away.

[00:13:55] Yeah.

[00:13:55] If anything, this was underplayed.

[00:13:59] It surprised the crap out of me.

[00:14:01] I know that, but what I take away from this is the lack of response of not only the federal authorities, but the state authorities somewhat to this disaster.

[00:14:16] And it's a lesson that we need to think of this is that no one's going to come save us.

[00:14:21] You know, if we're going to help, if we're going to take care of this thing, we've got to do it on our own with people like John Hill

[00:14:28] and people with other volunteers that are showing up and taking care of things.

[00:14:33] To give you an example, let's compare and contrast what was up until now the worst hurricane response in recent U.S. history, and that was Katrina.

[00:14:47] And remember that Bush got all kinds of grief for not even, you know, taking three days to show up down there in New Orleans.

[00:14:55] And, and, and, and, and make it, make it an appearance.

[00:14:59] Well, bear in mind, there were eventually over 45,000 U.S. troops, plus numerous National Guards, that were deployed down in New Orleans.

[00:15:11] Contrast that to with only 1,000 troops that's been ordered in by Biden and approximately 5,500 National Guard troops.

[00:15:21] You've got the 82nd Airborne that's sitting at Fort Bragg, or whatever they call it now, awaiting deployment to the Middle East.

[00:15:30] They're not even allowing the soldiers in that division to go to Western Carolina to check on their families who they're not even hearing from.

[00:15:40] You've got the, you've got the Tennessee National Guard contingent of the 278 ACR.

[00:15:46] It's on its way to Kuwait.

[00:15:48] You know, in fact, it left on Saturday, the day after the hurricane hit.

[00:15:54] And then, of course, you can...

[00:15:55] Let that sink in, folks.

[00:15:57] Yeah, and you might ask yourself, well, what about the, the biggest division in the U.S. Army that's got helicopters?

[00:16:03] Well, that's 101st.

[00:16:06] Well, where are they?

[00:16:07] They're in Poland.

[00:16:10] So that takes you where the priorities are of the U.S. government.

[00:16:13] They're helping everybody but us, and because we are white, southern conservatives, you know?

[00:16:20] It is hard to argue against that, my friend, because you're looking at it and you're thinking, you know, this wasn't just a storm.

[00:16:26] It wasn't a tornado.

[00:16:27] I mean, you're talking about something that hasn't been seen since Noah's time in some respects.

[00:16:35] You know, at least when a hurricane comes, you have a couple of days to know about it.

[00:16:39] And as our friend made mention of, you had a couple of hours to know that the flooding was coming.

[00:16:46] But when those dams bust, you've got 30 minutes.

[00:16:48] I mean, you're talking about biblical devastation.

[00:16:50] Entire town's gone.

[00:16:51] The entire terrain forever altered.

[00:16:53] Grassy fields are now five foot of rock.

[00:16:55] Interstate's gone.

[00:16:56] I mean, this is one of the worst natural disasters in American history.

[00:17:00] And I understand.

[00:17:01] Listen, those National Guard, those state guards, they had deployment orders.

[00:17:06] You canceled those orders.

[00:17:07] You don't go to Kuwait on a Saturday when this thing hits on Thursday.

[00:17:10] So when people say, hey, is it because of who the people, who the victims are here that we're not getting more out of the federal government?

[00:17:15] You have to think, yeah, it is.

[00:17:18] Yeah.

[00:17:19] And another thing, you know, FEMA and FEMA, whatever North Carolina calls their FEMA, NC FEMA or whatever, they're getting in the way as much as they are helping.

[00:17:29] I mean, they are refusing to let people in with supplies to deliver the stricken areas.

[00:17:35] They're trying to confiscate the supplies.

[00:17:38] They're threatening helicopter pilots, for instance, with arrest if they navigate in the areas.

[00:17:44] And they're all about, I watched this one episode of this fellow that went up and rescued one half of a couple that was stranded.

[00:17:51] Their house was washed away.

[00:17:53] And he got the Wi-Fi out of there.

[00:17:55] And as soon as he landed near what he thought was a command post of responsible people, the local, the deputy or whatever, cleared an area for him, gave him frequencies to communicate with and all this kind of stuff.

[00:18:08] And then the assistant fire chief shows up and threatens to arrest him.

[00:18:12] Now, this assistant fire chief looks like, if you've ever seen the movie Escape from New York, remember the fight where Snake Plissken is fighting the big fat guy with the Fu Manchu mustache.

[00:18:23] Well, that's what this guy looked like.

[00:18:25] And he threatened to arrest this individual for doing what he was doing, even though he explained to him, look, I'm a pilot.

[00:18:32] I've got law enforcement experience.

[00:18:34] I'm a firefighter, rescued, all this kind of shit.

[00:18:37] And the guy still threatened to arrest him.

[00:18:39] He said, look, I'm not leaving anybody behind.

[00:18:42] And he went back to pick up his co-pilot.

[00:18:43] He didn't pick up the old man who was there.

[00:18:46] I would have, you know, given that chief a finger and said, look, I'm going back.

[00:18:52] You can arrest me if you want to when you get back.

[00:18:54] And then we'll see what the news media thinks about it.

[00:18:57] Well, I mean, these people are dying.

[00:18:58] Rich, these people are dying.

[00:18:59] I mean, you hear the horror stories.

[00:19:00] There's this torrent, this torrent of raging river and places where roads once were taking cars and coffins, pulling up coffins from six feet under.

[00:19:11] And people being sucked into this maelstrom.

[00:19:13] I mean, fathers and grandchildren.

[00:19:16] People die.

[00:19:17] And they're cut off from civilization.

[00:19:18] There's no way in, no way out.

[00:19:19] If you can get in there, you've got to get help.

[00:19:21] And the community wants to help.

[00:19:23] They're not even letting the community help itself.

[00:19:25] You've got people who are there tonight.

[00:19:26] You're going to hear from them.

[00:19:28] Yeah, the area is hard to reach with cell service, even in good weather.

[00:19:31] You know?

[00:19:32] And, of course, I-40, both directions is cut off.

[00:19:36] And they're saying it won't be fixed until.

[00:19:38] It's gone.

[00:19:39] I mean, there's pieces of it that are just gone.

[00:19:41] Right.

[00:19:42] Right there.

[00:19:42] Anybody knows the area.

[00:19:43] It's where the tunnels go through the mountain there when you go on from Knoxville to Asheville.

[00:19:48] And there's a chunk of it missing there.

[00:19:50] And they're saying it's going to take until September of next year to get it repaired.

[00:19:55] I-26 is cut off, too.

[00:19:57] It's not going to take quite as long to repair it.

[00:19:59] Although, the thing is, they can't get in there to do the proper assessments.

[00:20:03] They're untold.

[00:20:04] And not even- I mean, the local and county roads are even more devastated.

[00:20:07] I mean, it's just-

[00:20:07] Oh, there's untold bridges.

[00:20:09] I mean, you can watch all kinds of YouTube videos and see these things being washed out

[00:20:13] or drone footage of all the devastation.

[00:20:15] To give you an example of where the priorities of the federal government is, I haven't told this

[00:20:19] all up.

[00:20:27] $11 billion to Israel.

[00:20:29] They've given almost $2 billion to Ethiopia.

[00:20:32] You know, you're going, Ethiopia?

[00:20:34] What the heck are they doing over there?

[00:20:36] And so on and so on and so on.

[00:20:37] And each illegal alien is lawbreaker.

[00:20:42] You know, we used to call them- well, illegal aliens was the old term.

[00:20:46] They call them migrants.

[00:20:48] Now, they're getting nine grand when they walk across the border.

[00:20:51] And this is FEMA.

[00:20:52] This is FEMA-assisted.

[00:20:53] It's a FEMA.

[00:20:54] You would think would be- we know better, but you would think would be allocated for situations

[00:20:59] like this.

[00:21:00] FEMA's using it to resettle so-called migrants.

[00:21:03] Yeah, Mallorca came out and said that they are just about out of money for hurricane relief.

[00:21:11] The season isn't even over yet.

[00:21:13] And bear in mind, they spent $650 million housing, taking care of the migrant crisis.

[00:21:20] He's saying he can't send refrigerator trucks up to put the bodies in because they're all

[00:21:28] tied up on the border.

[00:21:29] I mean, that's a laugh.

[00:21:30] These people lie, and I won't even get into what ethnicity they are, but the Biden administration

[00:21:40] is rife with them.

[00:21:41] Kamala- Kamala, whatever she says, she's going to give $750 to the sufferers of the flood.

[00:21:48] But, you know, and I've heard that even that money is going to be given in the form of a

[00:21:53] loan.

[00:21:53] Hey, listen, I mean, $750, that's a couple of nights at McDonald's if you've got a family

[00:21:58] of five.

[00:21:58] Try to buy a piece of furniture with $750 if your house has been flooded, if your house

[00:22:02] is even still there, if you haven't suffered death or total loss of property.

[00:22:06] $750?

[00:22:09] Especially when contrasted with the numbers that you just shared, Rich, about how many billions

[00:22:15] have been given away this year to all of these non-Americans.

[00:22:18] And I've got to say this very quickly, Rich.

[00:22:20] Rich will be back with us in the second hour.

[00:22:21] It is Rich Hamblin who is in large part responsible for the show tonight.

[00:22:25] He and I and a couple of friends started texting after the show last week, and I said, you know

[00:22:29] what, we're going to clear the deck.

[00:22:30] I don't care what's going on politically.

[00:22:32] This is the show tonight, and it's the entire show.

[00:22:34] So, Rich, I want to give you credit for that while you're on the air.

[00:22:36] You've got about a minute or two left, my friend.

[00:22:38] Anything else you want to share this segment, though?

[00:22:40] Yeah.

[00:22:40] I mean, like I say, FEMA's being, to a larger extent, the local authority, are being a hindrance.

[00:22:46] Elon Musk was even tweeting about he couldn't get one of his guys down there with a load

[00:22:51] of Starlink terminals.

[00:22:52] They wouldn't let him in.

[00:22:54] I mean, communications is a big thing that's lacking down there.

[00:22:57] And it reminds me of an episode in The Sound and the Fury, which was written in 1929 by

[00:23:05] William Faulkner.

[00:23:06] There was a druggist in there who got in trouble with the Federal Drug Administration or whatever

[00:23:11] it was over storage of his opiates.

[00:23:13] And Faulkner made the comment.

[00:23:15] He says, the federal government doesn't care if what you do works just so long as you do

[00:23:23] it the way they tell you to do it.

[00:23:25] And the whole beef that this city manager there that supervised that fire chief, the

[00:23:33] whole beef she made to the local television interviewer was, well, we turned him awake

[00:23:39] because he didn't go through proper channels.

[00:23:42] There's a whole lot of that stuff going on, Rich, where, well, we've got this ready to go

[00:23:47] for you, but we've got to wait for the orders to come in.

[00:23:49] I mean, waiting for bureaucratic signatures and things like this.

[00:23:53] And it's just sitting on pallets, presumably, if it's even really there.

[00:23:56] But they're not allocating it because they've got to go through the proper channels.

[00:23:59] They've got to get clearance.

[00:24:00] They've got to get signatures.

[00:24:00] They've got to get orders.

[00:24:01] And these people are just sitting here either starving to death.

[00:24:04] They need water.

[00:24:05] They need medical supplies.

[00:24:06] They're cut off.

[00:24:06] I mean, they can't get anywhere.

[00:24:07] They don't have power.

[00:24:08] They don't have roads.

[00:24:10] But everybody's just on standby except for some of our people, which we're going to be

[00:24:13] showcasing tonight, Rich.

[00:24:14] Yeah, that's it.

[00:24:16] That's it in a nutshell.

[00:24:17] So the takeaway from all this is nobody's going to save us except ourselves.

[00:24:24] God Almighty and our people.

[00:24:25] And our people, you know, we've talked about this, Rich.

[00:24:27] Sometimes God sends suffering to teach us a lesson.

[00:24:30] I'm not saying I'm going to teach you a lesson.

[00:24:33] We're going to punish you.

[00:24:34] Sometimes we need to know who we can count on and who we cannot count on.

[00:24:37] And that's something that's in sharp focus tonight and this week for all the victims.

[00:24:41] We're doing what we can with this program to raise awareness.

[00:24:43] If you can't count on the government, who can you count on?

[00:24:45] We've got three endorsed relief efforts we're going to tell you about next.

[00:24:50] Exposing corruption.

[00:24:52] Informing citizens.

[00:24:54] Pursuing liberty.

[00:24:55] You're listening to Liberty News Radio.

[00:24:59] The approach to everyday aches and pains is to mask them.

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[00:25:58] A new study on hurricanes in the U.S.

[00:26:30] deaths that the government counts in a hurricane's aftermath.

[00:26:34] John Scott reporting.

[00:26:35] In Oklahoma, the top education official there in the Sooner State is seeking to purchase 55,000 Bibles.

[00:26:44] That request is part of the Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walter's ongoing efforts in the state

[00:26:51] to require a Bible in each and every classroom.

[00:26:55] Breaking news and analysis, townhall.com.

[00:27:00] And now, of all things, a totally different problem has popped up for the thousands.

[00:27:06] Deadly flooding from Hurricane Helene in western North Carolina has also disrupted the underground nest of yellow jackets,

[00:27:13] bees, and other insects, causing them to swarm and sting people struggling to recover from the storm.

[00:27:19] It's caused such a surge in requests for medication to protect people allergic to stings

[00:27:23] that the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services is buying Benadryl and epinephrine injections

[00:27:29] to help fill requests through hospitals, emergency medical personnel, and doctors.

[00:27:34] And the humanitarian aid group, Direct Relief, says it has sent more than 2,000 EpiPen injections

[00:27:39] to community health centers, clinics, and pharmacies across western North Carolina.

[00:27:44] I'm Norman Hall.

[00:27:45] On Wall Street Friday, Dow Industrials gained more than 340 points.

[00:27:51] The NASDAQ was up 200.

[00:27:52] S&P climbed 51.

[00:27:54] More on these stories at townhall.com.

[00:27:57] Hey, y'all!

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[00:28:59] It is common for politicians, major media outlets, and nonprofits to hype white on black murders aggressively.

[00:29:06] Or even claim that blacks are living in fear of white people.

[00:29:10] Lends 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.

[00:29:17] This is why National Conservative launched the Interracial Homicide Tracking Project.

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[00:30:10] We're going to open a one-of-a-kind show tonight.

[00:30:12] The entire show is I don't care about the vice presidential debates.

[00:30:16] I don't care about Iran and Israel.

[00:30:17] I care about our people tonight.

[00:30:19] And our people need us and our people need you.

[00:30:22] Thanks to 12 great guests, two of whom you've heard already, Patrick Martin and Rich Hamblin,

[00:30:28] kind of laying the foundation of who's not helping us.

[00:30:31] So what can you do?

[00:30:33] TPC has announced a list of officially endorsed hurricane relief efforts.

[00:30:39] We have identified and endorsed three of them.

[00:30:42] If you go to thepoliticalcessible.org, click on the blog entry at the very top of the page,

[00:30:46] the one that says listen to the political cesspool live tonight, Saturday, October 5th.

[00:30:51] You go to that blog entry, you'll see our three endorsed hurricane relief efforts.

[00:30:55] We'll talk about all of them in turn.

[00:30:56] But first is the efforts of John Hill, our guest right now.

[00:31:00] If you would like to financially help the victims of Hurricane Helene,

[00:31:04] then I encourage you to financially give to the relief effort being administered by the A.P. Hill Legacy Society.

[00:31:10] John Hill, the closest living descendant of Confederate General A.P. Hill,

[00:31:15] is on the ground at the epicenter of the damage in North Carolina this week, helping those in need.

[00:31:21] His message about what he has seen has generated over 4 million, now 5 million views on Twitter.

[00:31:28] I know John personally.

[00:31:29] In addition to his appearances on TPC, I've had the pleasure of working with him at several events.

[00:31:33] His honor, his trustworthiness are beyond reproach.

[00:31:38] And you can be sure what you give to him is going directly and immediately to those who need it most.

[00:31:43] He's got pictures on his Telegram of what he's doing every day.

[00:31:46] He's going to tell you more about it.

[00:31:47] But we've got a link to his Give, Send, Go at the top of thepoliticalcesspool.org.

[00:31:51] If you click that top blog entry, you can link right over to his Give, Send, Go,

[00:31:55] and you can give right now, and he can have it immediately.

[00:31:57] And he's going to tell you what he's doing with it right now.

[00:31:59] Now, John Hill of the AP Hill Legacy Foundation.

[00:32:04] John, you, like your Confederate ancestor, rode to the sound of danger.

[00:32:08] You rented a truck.

[00:32:09] You loaded it up with supplies.

[00:32:11] And you headed down to North Carolina.

[00:32:13] What have you seen?

[00:32:14] What have you done?

[00:32:14] What are you doing?

[00:32:15] Go, John.

[00:32:16] Well, first I'd like to say, you know, thanks for having me on.

[00:32:18] And I'm a little exhausted, so I'm not going to sound like I usually do.

[00:32:24] I just felt, you know, I couldn't sit at home in a clean, dry house and realize all these people were suffering.

[00:32:31] So I went and talked to my job, and they were really supportive, and they gave me this past week paid off.

[00:32:37] And they donated $500 and two pallets of supplies with one day's notice.

[00:32:42] So I went and also drained my paycheck and got a Penske truck, which they're never going to let me rent one again after the videos and how I've been driving.

[00:32:54] But rented a truck and went around all over Northeast Ohio and got supplies and donations.

[00:33:01] And it was going really well.

[00:33:03] And I drove down to North Carolina to Marshall, to my cousin's house.

[00:33:08] And then I went out the following day, and the destruction in Yancey County and Mitchell County and Burnsville, Spruce Pine.

[00:33:18] These people don't have driveways.

[00:33:19] They don't have roads.

[00:33:21] I was at a gas station, and I was paying for people's gas.

[00:33:24] They were waiting.

[00:33:25] I was waiting in line.

[00:33:26] And one gentleman pulled up, and I asked him if he needed help because I saw supplies in the back of his truck.

[00:33:33] And I gave him $100, and we both – he teared up and gave me a hug.

[00:33:38] And I get emotional when I talk about it.

[00:33:41] But these people, they just tell me they're just like, we just want help, man.

[00:33:45] And FEMA is going around and confiscating pallets of donations.

[00:33:50] I've heard from 10-plus people firsthand.

[00:33:52] Wow.

[00:33:53] Hear, hear, ladies and gentlemen.

[00:33:54] This man is on the ground.

[00:33:56] This man is on the ground with the victims.

[00:33:57] This is what he's hearing.

[00:33:59] So they're taking pallets of supplies from small towns and saying they're not from FEMA-approved vendors.

[00:34:06] And there was a restaurant up on the bypass that opened up in Marshall to feed people.

[00:34:12] And FEMA came in and said everybody can finish their food.

[00:34:15] But once you do, we're shutting it down.

[00:34:18] So I didn't want to – I don't trust the government.

[00:34:21] I don't trust dropping any supplies off at any drop-off station.

[00:34:24] So I've been driving the back roads in the mountains by the water sources that got hit the worst.

[00:34:30] And I've been going door-to-door and giving supplies, jumping over driveways that are completely gone to give people stuff.

[00:34:37] And I went up 80 off of 90 – or 80 off of 19 East.

[00:34:43] And a lot of people there need generators and supplies.

[00:34:47] And one man needed a chainsaw.

[00:34:49] So I've been giving out water, perishable goods, a whole truckload that I got, and then more that I've picked up along the way.

[00:34:56] And he's not talking about a pickup truck, folks.

[00:34:57] He drove from Ohio down to the disaster zone in a big Penske U-Haul-type truck filled with supplies.

[00:35:06] You can see the pictures for yourself.

[00:35:08] Don't take my word for it.

[00:35:09] He's got everything he's doing, handing out money to people, handing out supplies to people.

[00:35:14] It's all documented.

[00:35:15] And, John, the Lord Jesus Christ has blessed your efforts.

[00:35:20] You went down there on faith.

[00:35:23] And what happened?

[00:35:25] He really has.

[00:35:26] And it's a 15-foot box truck.

[00:35:29] And I've been driving over roads that – well, I'll explain about the side-by-sides is that I was driving around – I forgot, Mitchell County, I think it was.

[00:35:38] And that was after I met that man at the gas station.

[00:35:41] He brought me to his uncle's house.

[00:35:43] And he left.

[00:35:45] And his other family members left.

[00:35:47] And I went up to give supplies to his uncle.

[00:35:48] And he's on oxygen.

[00:35:50] And he was trying to start his generator and almost passed out.

[00:35:52] So I kept his generator running for him until his family got back and gave them supplies.

[00:35:58] They needed baby formula.

[00:35:59] So I went out the next day and got baby formula and came back and brought it to him.

[00:36:04] And they're just – everybody's suffering.

[00:36:06] Nobody's going to have power until after Christmas.

[00:36:10] Unbelievable.

[00:36:11] Oh, man.

[00:36:12] Wow.

[00:36:12] The government's not doing anything to help.

[00:36:14] Not the small towns like that.

[00:36:16] But you are –

[00:36:16] I mean, those people are completely forgotten about.

[00:36:17] And I've got to say this.

[00:36:19] You are.

[00:36:20] And, folks, if – listen, who do you give to?

[00:36:23] Okay, yes.

[00:36:24] We want to help our people who are suffering in these affected communities.

[00:36:27] How can you see that it's done?

[00:36:29] How can you know what you give is going to where it is needed most?

[00:36:32] I've got the answer.

[00:36:33] You donate to the AP Hill Legacy Foundation.

[00:36:36] You donate to John Hill and his efforts.

[00:36:38] He is there.

[00:36:39] He is a man whose integrity I trust 100%.

[00:36:44] You can give to him with 100% certainty that your giving will be properly allocated.

[00:36:52] And, John, you have, in the last few days, raised $130,000.

[00:36:59] It's over $149,000 now.

[00:37:02] $120,000.

[00:37:03] It was $130,000 this morning.

[00:37:05] Folks, we have played a small part in that.

[00:37:07] We want to play a bigger part in that.

[00:37:08] We have sent out his Give, Send, Go to our website, to our email list.

[00:37:12] I am seeing some TPC donor names there that I recognize.

[00:37:15] If you go to thepoliticalcessable.org, you can give financially.

[00:37:19] We're going to talk about if you want to give items, hygiene items, household items, baby food, food, water.

[00:37:24] Dixie Republic is handling a physical item distribution effort.

[00:37:31] But if you want to give financially, if that's the way you want to give, this is where you're going to talk to the Dixie Republic guys later.

[00:37:36] So stay tuned for that.

[00:37:37] But if you want to give financially, TPC endorses one hurricane relief effort that is dealing with financial contributions.

[00:37:44] And it's John Hill and the AP Hill Legacy Foundation.

[00:37:47] And we've got the link for you at the top of thepoliticalcessable.org.

[00:37:51] Click the first blog entry.

[00:37:52] You'll find it.

[00:37:53] John, what are you doing with that money?

[00:37:55] Well, right now I'm in Bristol, Virginia.

[00:37:57] I still have about a quarter truckload of supplies.

[00:38:00] That's because you left North Carolina.

[00:38:02] I'm sorry, John.

[00:38:03] Pardon this interruption just so the folks will know.

[00:38:05] We've got three minutes left this segment.

[00:38:06] You left North Carolina where you've been doing this aid work to go up to Bristol to get generators.

[00:38:11] And you're driving back down with a bunch of generators.

[00:38:14] So my bank has a $10,000 spending limit.

[00:38:17] So I got 10 generators and a hand truck.

[00:38:20] And I got a saw for the one gentleman who needed a saw.

[00:38:24] There's people that have hospice patients and old people and infants and stuff like that need the generators.

[00:38:30] So tomorrow I'm going to be handing out the generators and the chainsaw.

[00:38:34] And all the money, 100%, is going to the victims.

[00:38:38] And I have people that I met in the side-by-side.

[00:38:41] I turned down this road.

[00:38:42] I don't know why I turned down there.

[00:38:44] Something just told me to go back.

[00:38:45] And when I did, back the way I came.

[00:38:47] And when I did, I saw six side-by-sides pull off the road.

[00:38:50] I went and asked them, are you all bringing supplies to people?

[00:38:52] And they said, that's exactly why we pulled over.

[00:38:54] Our trucks are over an hour away.

[00:38:55] And we were trying to figure out how we can get more supplies.

[00:38:57] I said, well, I'm here.

[00:38:58] And I pulled up.

[00:38:59] And that was God that put us together.

[00:39:01] And three or four of them are construction workers.

[00:39:04] And I want to rent heavy equipment for them to run to fix these people's driveways,

[00:39:09] fix the mountain roads that need fixes.

[00:39:11] The government's not going to fix.

[00:39:12] Buy people a car if they need it.

[00:39:15] Fix one elderly couple.

[00:39:17] Their power lines got hit by a tree and it got ripped out of their house.

[00:39:21] And they said they won't fix that part of it.

[00:39:23] It got ripped out.

[00:39:24] It needs to be done by an electrician.

[00:39:25] So I told the daughter-in-law, I said, I'll pay for it.

[00:39:28] John, hold on right there.

[00:39:29] I want to give that information.

[00:39:31] Yeah, I want to give that to folks.

[00:39:33] If you want to follow him at Twitter, at JohnnyReb1989.

[00:39:38] That's for John Hill and the AP Hill Legacy Foundation.

[00:39:41] You can find there.

[00:39:43] His top post has now 4.9 million views.

[00:39:46] At JohnnyReb1989.

[00:39:49] See for yourself what he's doing.

[00:39:51] Give to him.

[00:39:52] If you want to give and you want to know that your dollar is going to where it is needed most,

[00:39:57] John Hill is your man.

[00:39:58] John, how are you identifying and determining who to give to?

[00:40:03] Driving around.

[00:40:04] And I'm not leaving.

[00:40:05] I'm not going to leave.

[00:40:05] I told my job I'm not leaving until all the money is spent and everybody that I can has helped.

[00:40:10] So they're going to give me a short leave, and then after that I'll have to figure it out.

[00:40:15] Right now we've raised – I mean, listen, everybody pitch in.

[00:40:21] We're a collective.

[00:40:22] John Hill and his foundation has raised $150,000 in the last couple of days.

[00:40:27] I want it to be a million.

[00:40:29] I want it to be two million.

[00:40:30] I want it to be as much as it can, as much as God wills,

[00:40:33] because I know this man, not our government, but this man is getting it to our people,

[00:40:37] our people who need it.

[00:40:39] And, John, sit tight.

[00:40:40] Sit tight.

[00:40:41] We've got Rick Tyler to close this hour out.

[00:40:43] But if you could, I'd like to just carry you over two minutes more into the next segment

[00:40:47] so we can repeat some of this information, give you a final word,

[00:40:50] and then we'll hear a response from Rick Tyler.

[00:40:52] So stay tuned for that.

[00:40:54] All three hours tonight on this topic.

[00:40:56] Stay tuned.

[00:40:56] John Hill.

[00:40:57] We'll be right back.

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[00:43:12] Ladies and gentlemen, if you live in the affected area and you need help,

[00:43:17] email me, and we'll get you in touch with people who can help you.

[00:43:21] People like John Hill.

[00:43:22] We just received an email from longtime listeners in a devastated area.

[00:43:30] John, I'd like to get you in touch with these people.

[00:43:32] Coming up later tonight, you're going to hear from Kirk Lyons.

[00:43:34] Kirk Lyons and his family have been displaced by the hurricane.

[00:43:37] Kirk Lyons has been a champion for Confederate causes in court for decades.

[00:43:43] True friend and champion.

[00:43:45] We need to help him.

[00:43:46] We need to help each other.

[00:43:47] Nobody else is going to do it.

[00:43:49] This is our ethnostate.

[00:43:50] These are our flesh-and-blood kin people.

[00:43:53] You look at the people who have been affected.

[00:43:54] They could be my grandparents.

[00:43:57] They could be my parents.

[00:43:58] They could be my brothers and sisters.

[00:43:59] They look just like us.

[00:44:00] They have our customs and our folkways.

[00:44:02] These are our people.

[00:44:04] This is our family.

[00:44:06] We're going to talk about the relief effort sponsored by Dixie Republic later.

[00:44:09] If you want to send physical items, food, water, essential items,

[00:44:12] how you can do that and how they are distributing those items.

[00:44:15] But if you want to send cash, if you want to send cash, John Hill is your man.

[00:44:19] That is the man that I trust to get it to where it needs to go.

[00:44:22] John, final word to you on that.

[00:44:23] Take one minute, and then we're going to go to Rick Tyler.

[00:44:26] Well, I'd like to close out with what the one woman said to me that will stick with me forever.

[00:44:30] She said, you're giving us hope.

[00:44:32] That's all we need.

[00:44:37] That's going to stick with me for the rest of my life.

[00:44:40] Thank you for your sacrificial heart, for having the idea to leave your home in Ohio,

[00:44:47] drive back down to Dixie where your Confederate ancestor, General A.P. Hill,

[00:44:51] so valiantly fought, that is in your blood, and you came back home,

[00:44:55] and you are out there doing what we should all be doing right now.

[00:44:59] What we are doing pales in comparison to what you're doing,

[00:45:01] but we are using the reach of this radio program to raise awareness.

[00:45:05] If you want to give it to the A.P. Hill Foundation to help these flood victims,

[00:45:10] go to thepoliticalcessible.org, click on the blog at the top of the page,

[00:45:14] and you'll see the donate button to get it to John Hill,

[00:45:17] and he'll get it to where it needs to go.

[00:45:18] Thank you, John.

[00:45:19] I know you are busy.

[00:45:20] I know you are traveling.

[00:45:21] I know you are exhausted.

[00:45:22] We will talk to you again soon.

[00:45:23] I'll call you later, and I want to put you in contact with some people as well.

[00:45:26] Thank you, John, and God bless you, and God bless your efforts.

[00:45:30] And let's go now to Rick Tyler.

[00:45:32] Rick, you have been listening, I know, to the entirety of this first hour.

[00:45:36] How would you respond?

[00:45:37] Where do we start?

[00:45:38] Well, James, it's been a very compelling and extraordinary first hour of the broadcast,

[00:45:45] and we're just scratching the surface.

[00:45:47] This is the tip of the iceberg.

[00:45:50] John Hill personifies, he epitomizes what is so noble and notable about our people,

[00:45:57] the caretaker race of the planet.

[00:45:59] We even reach out, and beyond our extended racial family,

[00:46:03] and we care for the whole world as the caretaker race,

[00:46:06] but especially we are compelled and called upon to take care of our own.

[00:46:10] And so what you're doing here is ultra timely,

[00:46:14] and you're hitting the nail on the head.

[00:46:16] But I would like to encourage everybody to momentarily at this juncture

[00:46:21] to look at the bigger picture,

[00:46:23] because if we don't learn from all of the calamitous circumstances

[00:46:28] that befall us on a routine basis,

[00:46:30] it's a regular thing in this time that we're living in today.

[00:46:33] We're always being hit by unexpected, catastrophic events,

[00:46:38] and we need to learn, and we need to back up,

[00:46:41] and we need to look at the bigger picture.

[00:46:42] Let's remember that the horror stories that we're hearing right now,

[00:46:46] and by the way, I know a bank president locally.

[00:46:48] He has law enforcement connections.

[00:46:50] He told me a direct report in northeast Tennessee.

[00:46:54] People he knows in the sheriff's department were told by the feds to vacate the area.

[00:47:00] They found dead bodies in the trees.

[00:47:02] They were told by the feds to put a lid on this information.

[00:47:04] Do not talk about it.

[00:47:05] Do not report it.

[00:47:06] Vacate the area.

[00:47:07] We want you out of here.

[00:47:08] In other words, the feds told the local law enforcement to get out of Dodge.

[00:47:14] They didn't want them there.

[00:47:16] And, of course, they have superior manpower, firepower, et cetera, et cetera.

[00:47:20] Remember, the United Nations is from whence the DHS emanates.

[00:47:25] When we set up the Department of Homeland Security after 9-11, we brought in Marcus Wolfe,

[00:47:30] the former head of the East German Stasi, to put our Department of Homeland Security together.

[00:47:35] Now, this is what I want to ask everybody to do in the midst of the, you know,

[00:47:40] frontline urgent mission of helping our people.

[00:47:44] But remember that this is just the beginning of sorrows.

[00:47:47] This is just the commencement, the beginning of cyclical events that are going to be bombarding us

[00:47:54] and challenging us.

[00:47:55] And more than ever, and you're right, this is our ethnostate in its extended form.

[00:48:01] But we need an ethnostate in a concentrated form.

[00:48:06] And more than ever, we need to concentrate on secession somewhere at some level,

[00:48:13] no matter how small to begin, because the people that deserve our care and attention the most

[00:48:19] are those of like mind, of like purpose, of like dedication and commitment,

[00:48:25] willing to lay their lives down for their racial kinsmen,

[00:48:29] and especially those who are willing to stand in the trenches and fight shoulder to shoulder

[00:48:34] these battles that are facing us and looming in the foreground.

[00:48:38] Rick, how are you doing?

[00:48:39] You're down in southeast Tennessee.

[00:48:41] I know that it wasn't hit quite as hard as, obviously, northeast Tennessee

[00:48:45] and western North Carolina.

[00:48:47] But are you okay?

[00:48:48] I mean, we have to check in on each other.

[00:48:51] James, in every direction, you know, to the south, to the east, and to the north, certainly,

[00:48:58] it's been hit hard.

[00:48:59] We miraculously dodged the bullet here in Polk County with scarcely any bad weather at all,

[00:49:06] just some rain and gusty winds.

[00:49:09] But our county here, amazingly and miraculously, you know, dodged that proverbial bullet.

[00:49:17] I know that I have communicated with a gentleman that's up in Mountain City area and very much

[00:49:24] involved in the cause, the racialist cause, long time, you know, dedicated individual involved

[00:49:30] with a group of people up there.

[00:49:31] He said it is an absolute mess there.

[00:49:33] And again, this, you know, report that I mentioned to you from, you know, in the Johnson City area.

[00:49:38] But, you know, praise God.

[00:49:41] And I'm thankful that, you know, our little area here was spared.

[00:49:46] I tell you, it's, as we said before, sometimes these things are exaggerated, overly dramatized for TV to get Internet clicks.

[00:49:53] This one, unfortunately, was not.

[00:49:55] And that's the show tonight.

[00:49:56] Our people are hurting.

[00:49:57] We're trying to raise awareness.

[00:49:58] We're trying to take you to the scene.

[00:50:00] We're trying to help you understand and know how you can help these folks.

[00:50:03] I was actually on that stretch of I-40 that is completely gone one week to the day, one week really to the hour of when it hit.

[00:50:11] Thursday night before it hit on a Thursday, I was traveling that going up to a conference.

[00:50:17] And a week later, at the time that I would have been driving at Whitewater Rapids, moving at seemingly 100 miles an hour,

[00:50:23] these violent torrents of water were snapping bridges and taking I-40 down.

[00:50:30] Where our conference was in Greenville was completely flooded, in Greenville, South Carolina.

[00:50:34] I mean, this stuff is hitting close to home tonight.

[00:50:36] These are places I've been to this year.

[00:50:39] And these are our people, as we've said.

[00:50:41] Our celebrity speaker at the TPC Anniversary Conference, Rick, that you were at, two of his friends died.

[00:50:46] Two of his friends died.

[00:50:47] They drowned.

[00:50:48] Two people he knew.

[00:50:49] I mean, restaurants and shops that he had recently visited are wiped off the map.

[00:50:54] And I don't mean, you know, completely erased or destroyed.

[00:50:57] I mean, they're gone like they were never there.

[00:50:59] You know, you read the stories about mom, a mother watching her child sucked into this thing and dying.

[00:51:05] The death tolls still unknown.

[00:51:06] So many missing and unaccounted for, completely cut off, no roads, bodies in trees, caskets being brought up and washed away.

[00:51:13] You see this stuff.

[00:51:14] The footage is just unimaginable.

[00:51:17] And what good can come from this, Rick?

[00:51:19] What is the takeaway?

[00:51:20] What is it that our people need to know and understand in the last three minutes we have with you, my friend?

[00:51:24] And thank you for being on with us tonight.

[00:51:26] Your eloquence as a wordsmith was definitely something we needed for this program.

[00:51:32] Well, again, as Rich pointed out, it's been very much underreported, underanticipated.

[00:51:38] The takeaway, as I said, is that we have to leverage, you know, this disaster and all of the heartache and grief and misery that goes with it.

[00:51:48] We have to leverage that into an augmentation of our sense of awareness of that bigger picture, that wider angle view, because the days are coming that we are going to face even grimmer, you know, more ominous circumstances.

[00:52:03] You can rest assured.

[00:52:05] And there is an enemy at large.

[00:52:07] I recall in 2017, shortly after Charlottesville, when Dr. Michael Hill spoke at one of your events, and he talked about the coming red terror.

[00:52:19] And sometimes, you know, the terror that we face is at the end of a barrel of a gun.

[00:52:23] But there are other modalities and mechanisms that the forces of evil are using today to try to make war against our people.

[00:52:32] And, of course, obviously there is a connection into the election.

[00:52:36] This area that's been so hard hit is probably one of the strongest representations of the cream of the crop of our people, our type of people who vote the right way, who think the right way, who have the right instincts.

[00:52:48] So, again, the takeaway must be that we are determined to learn anything and everything we can from this situation to, you know, build our energies and our strength as a community of people and to be ready and prepared for whatever the next installment of challenge might be by the sovereign hand of God.

[00:53:06] Remember Romans 8, 28, a good fitting verse to end on.

[00:53:09] All things work together for good for those who love the Lord and are the called according to his purpose.

[00:53:15] We know his purpose is the advancement and the defense of truth, and we are called to that mission, that sacred mission.

[00:53:22] Rick Tyler, this first hour could not have been better executed as far as I'm concerned.

[00:53:28] Our first two guests saying, hey, the government, this is what's going on.

[00:53:31] Then you had John Hill saying, this is what I'm doing.

[00:53:34] This is how you can help.

[00:53:35] And this is an effort, by the way, that TPC officially endorses.

[00:53:38] It'll get to where it needs to go.

[00:53:40] You want to help these people, that's where you go.

[00:53:42] And then you here to sort of summarize it and tie it all together.

[00:53:46] I appreciate you doing that.

[00:53:47] Last question, Rick.

[00:53:49] Is this failure of government, the music's playing, 30 seconds, is it incompetence or by design, in your opinion?

[00:53:57] James, it certainly has an element of incompetence because of DEI and affirmative action type policies, but it's equally, if not more so, by design.

[00:54:06] We will continue on with that line of questioning with Michael Hill, who has some experience, as you just mentioned, the aforementioned Dr. Michael Hill.

[00:54:13] He has some experience with FEMA on the Gulf Coast during Katrina.

[00:54:16] We'll have him share that story as we continue on.

[00:54:19] We're going to hear from other people who have been in the affected areas, other people who are helping, how you can help.

[00:54:24] As we continue to blend all of this together throughout the entire three hours tonight, this is TPC.

[00:54:30] This is what this radio program is here to do.

[00:54:32] Much more than just give you commentary from a pro-white perspective.

[00:54:35] That's important.

[00:54:35] You need that.

[00:54:36] But we need to help our people tonight.

[00:54:38] We've got a voice and a reach to do it, and we're going to do everything we can to fulfill that mission.

[00:54:43] Thank you, Rick Tyler.

[00:54:44] We'll be right back with Michael Hill.

[00:54:45] Thank you.