Radio Show Hour 1 – 2024/10/26

Radio Show Hour 1 – 2024/10/26

It all started on this night. Twitter and YouTube had not yet even been invented when TPC first debuted on October 26, 2004. Hosts James Edwards and Keith Alexander reflect on the journey and celebrate the official date of TPC’s 20th Anniversary while also taking the time to cover the most recent election news.

[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.

[00:00:29] Let's have some fun tonight.

[00:01:09] Keith Alexander and I have had so much fun in the hour before the show.

[00:01:14] We got to the studio a little early tonight, and we're going to extend that fun to you as well on this.

[00:01:22] Well, we've been celebrating our 20th anniversary all year long, but tonight is actually the day.

[00:01:28] This is the birthday of our show.

[00:01:30] Our Saturday night, regularly scheduled Saturday night broadcast actually falls on the very day it all started 20 years ago.

[00:01:39] Oh, October 26, 2004 was the day it all started.

[00:01:44] And so I know what I was doing 20 years ago tonight.

[00:01:46] That's for sure.

[00:01:48] And so many nights since.

[00:01:50] Welcome to tonight's live broadcast.

[00:01:51] Saturday, October 26, last Saturday before Halloween.

[00:01:54] The election is coming right up around the corner.

[00:01:57] And wow, 20 years ago tonight, Twitter and YouTube had not even been invented yet.

[00:02:04] That's how far back we go.

[00:02:06] We predate Twitter and YouTube the night TPC first took to the airwaves in its debut.

[00:02:13] We're going to do this anniversary show a little bit different because, again, as I said, we have been celebrating it all year.

[00:02:18] And we had a conference already back in May.

[00:02:21] Now, we did it in anticipation that there could be some unrest.

[00:02:23] I think that they took another track.

[00:02:25] They just tried to kill him to avoid all that, but he wouldn't die.

[00:02:29] And then you had the floods and the hurricanes.

[00:02:32] And so it still worked out well.

[00:02:33] We did the show early.

[00:02:34] We have celebrated these anniversary shows in a variety of different ways, either with conferences on the nearest Saturday to October the 26th,

[00:02:42] with shows where we have some of our most regular guests call in to share reflections and memories of on the air and behind the scenes moments.

[00:02:51] And some years we have we just do open mic and we have listeners call in throughout the whole show and share with us how they first came to know the program and what they like about it and other things.

[00:03:01] But we're not doing any of that tonight.

[00:03:04] And it's impossible, I think, to do a highlight reel of 20 years in three hours.

[00:03:09] So it's a little bit different.

[00:03:10] It's going to be a hybrid show.

[00:03:11] We're not going to dedicate the full three hours tonight to Vainglory.

[00:03:16] We are going to cover some election news as well.

[00:03:19] It's too close not to.

[00:03:20] But I'll tell you, next week, next week, we are going to have a full three-hour election roundtable preview show.

[00:03:27] Stay tuned for that.

[00:03:28] Two weeks from tonight, we will have our post-election recap show.

[00:03:33] So the next two weeks, sir, a lot are going to be going on.

[00:03:36] That's for sure.

[00:03:37] And then we're going to get into all the fun we have together every year for the Christmas season here at TPC.

[00:03:42] That's not too far away either.

[00:03:44] But tonight, tonight is the night that it all began.

[00:03:46] So we are going to cover some stories that we haven't told you even after all these years.

[00:03:52] If you can believe it, we're going to plumb the depths of our memories and share some stories and a couple of news pieces that TPC was a part of, both local and nationally, that we've never played before.

[00:04:04] These are actual clips from the original videos that we'll revisit a little bit later tonight and with some news as well.

[00:04:11] But before I welcome Keith, let me just say this.

[00:04:14] Always an incredibly special week.

[00:04:16] You know that because this is when it all started.

[00:04:18] Our journey together first started on this day 20 years ago.

[00:04:21] And now, even though we've been celebrating it all year, we're looking back now on 20 full years on the air.

[00:04:27] And it continues to be, it always has, and continues to be a real honor to work with the members of our listening audience.

[00:04:35] You have all helped define the entirety of my adult life.

[00:04:39] You've been a constant and have added so much value and purpose along the arduous path.

[00:04:44] You've sustained us.

[00:04:45] You've kept us going.

[00:04:46] We have and always will be a family.

[00:04:48] Have been and always will be.

[00:04:50] We've shared some unforgettable experiences.

[00:04:51] And we'll celebrate that tonight with some other things.

[00:04:54] Again, we're not going to go through all of the history.

[00:04:57] Impossible to do so.

[00:04:58] But if you go to thepoliticalcessible.org, you can check out an interview that I did with the American Free Press a little earlier this year.

[00:05:07] And it really sort of broad strokes the highlights.

[00:05:10] So take a look at that.

[00:05:12] And I think you'll like it.

[00:05:14] I think I liked it.

[00:05:15] Great questions.

[00:05:16] And it really opened me up for some good storytelling there.

[00:05:21] And then we also have on the website a little print special feature, 20 years, 20 endorsements.

[00:05:29] I had gone to 25 of our most regular guests hoping that if we asked 25 friends that 20 of them would respond.

[00:05:40] All 25 responded.

[00:05:42] But I only needed 20.

[00:05:43] I needed 20 years, 20 endorsements.

[00:05:44] That was the theme.

[00:05:45] And so you can read those two, just some really kind, almost embarrassingly kind statements that some of our peers have written in celebration of this milestone occasion tonight.

[00:05:55] Perhaps more than any other institution on our side, we have been able to build and maintain productive friendships and collaborative partnerships with really everyone throughout our movement.

[00:06:05] And it just, again, look, what can I say?

[00:06:08] Except for it continues to be a privilege to be able to work with the finest men and women in the world.

[00:06:12] And that extends to our roster of guests and, of course, you who are listening.

[00:06:18] And you've made this possible through your prayerful and financial support that we draw from our beloved listening audience.

[00:06:24] Without you, everything we've done over the past two decades would quickly vanish.

[00:06:29] So it continues to be a joy to serve as your voice in the media.

[00:06:32] And you've kept us going for a long time.

[00:06:34] Keith Alexander, you've been a part of it for a long time.

[00:06:37] Looking back on it now, we've got a busy show tonight, a lot to cover, both in terms of this celebration of ours and in the news.

[00:06:44] But, you know, if you don't stop for a moment just to reflect, nobody's going to do it for you.

[00:06:49] And I think this audience deserves a pat on the back for all they have accomplished.

[00:06:53] Through them, we've been able to do some things as their proxy.

[00:06:57] Well, it's been serendipity, actually.

[00:06:59] I feel a great amount of pride and good fortune to be associated with this program.

[00:07:05] It just happened by circumstance.

[00:07:09] It did not.

[00:07:10] It was not planned.

[00:07:11] But the way this has grown, and it's basically an expression of James' gregarious, personable personality.

[00:07:18] If you don't get along with this political cesspool and you're in the right wing of the political spectrum, it's your own fault.

[00:07:27] Because we don't censor people.

[00:07:30] We don't, you know, get mad, hold grudges, do things like some people do.

[00:07:37] And as a result, James and this show have become the nexus of right wing politics, cutting edge politics in America today.

[00:07:47] And a lot of the growth in the dissemination of our ideas, in the popularity of our ideas, I think you can lay directly at James' feet.

[00:07:57] Well, I've worked with a lot of great people.

[00:07:59] You know, it is, I don't know if you, because as you know, as we always say, none of us play a character here.

[00:08:06] But natural personality, I think, sometimes has something to do with one's success or lack thereof.

[00:08:13] And we've just, frankly, always been able to get along with people and pull together as a collective.

[00:08:16] And that's what we are.

[00:08:17] We have to see ourselves not as individuals, but rather part of a collective.

[00:08:21] And what we do is for the greater good of our community, our race, our people, however you want to frame it.

[00:08:26] Well, James is a true Southern gentleman, and that comes through in everything that he does.

[00:08:31] Well, I appreciate that, brother.

[00:08:32] And I appreciate all the years you've been here.

[00:08:35] We're going to have a segment later tonight where we remember all of the cast members, current and past.

[00:08:42] And there's been a lot of them, you know, after all this time.

[00:08:45] And it's been wonderful.

[00:08:47] Of course, I remember that first show.

[00:08:49] Really, I mean, this 20th anniversary show that we're doing tonight started in the third hour of last week's show,

[00:08:54] that interview with Godfrey Dullias.

[00:08:55] I don't think, I think that that TPC at 20, the retrospective series that we've been doing each month,

[00:09:03] a lot of these interviews, you've got to remember, folks, even we haven't listened to since they originally aired.

[00:09:08] So I think so many people in the audience have never heard some of these before.

[00:09:12] And I think revisiting these forgotten gems for one hour per month during this, our 20th anniversary year,

[00:09:17] has been a good allocation of airtime.

[00:09:19] It's, you know, again, especially for the folks who have never heard them before.

[00:09:22] And we still have parts 11 and 12 forthcoming in November and December.

[00:09:27] So stay tuned for that.

[00:09:28] But, yeah, you know, a lot of shows in 20 years.

[00:09:30] And we've been highlighting some of our favorites each month.

[00:09:34] And you know what it shows to me, James, is just how important the work of the political cesspool has been.

[00:09:40] We have given a voice to people that otherwise would not have had a voice or much of a voice.

[00:09:46] These are people that were very instrumental in the rightward drift of American political thought over the past 20 years.

[00:09:54] And, you know, if it had not been for you and Bill Rowland and people like that who went out and sought these people out,

[00:10:04] their stories would have been lost to time.

[00:10:06] But now they are preserved because of the work of the political cesspool.

[00:10:11] So many people, I say this all the time, I joke about it sometimes.

[00:10:14] It's not a joke.

[00:10:15] I miss these folks.

[00:10:16] But so many of the people that we've interviewed, that we worked with, have passed away and are gone now.

[00:10:23] And I still have all their contacts.

[00:10:25] I never have deleted a contact on my cell phones.

[00:10:27] If you ever get in there, it's like Hotel California.

[00:10:30] You can check in, but you can't check out.

[00:10:32] So I'm scrolling through, you know, to find a number.

[00:10:34] And 30% of the people there are in heaven now.

[00:10:37] But, yeah, we got these people on record.

[00:10:39] And I think in many cases, I mean, you know, that interview last week with the Luftwaffe pilot, Godfrey Dulias.

[00:10:45] I mean, nobody would have had anything like that.

[00:10:48] And Drew Lackey, I don't know of any other media, audio media, audiovisual media that had anything with him.

[00:10:57] He wrote the book that, you know, wasn't very widely known.

[00:11:00] And then we had that interview with him.

[00:11:02] And it's just marvelous.

[00:11:02] Well, think about George Wallace Jr.

[00:11:04] And the insight he provided for the true Elvis, not the Elvis that the left-wing media would like you to believe existed.

[00:11:12] We might have to play that one again.

[00:11:14] But we did that, I think, a year or two ago.

[00:11:16] We still got two more installments in this series, but we'll see.

[00:11:20] But I do remember that first show 20 years ago tonight.

[00:11:23] It's more like 10 years ago than two years ago.

[00:11:25] Well, the George Wallace thing we originally aired 10 or 12 years ago, but we did replay parts of it a year or two ago.

[00:11:32] But anyway, the first show, obviously, October 26th.

[00:11:37] It was right before the Bush-Carrie election.

[00:11:40] Right.

[00:11:41] And it was an election primer, like we'll have next week.

[00:11:43] But this was Bush and Kerry.

[00:11:45] And then, of course, it didn't take us very long until the SPLC had gotten us our first shot of national media attention after we got added to the hate list.

[00:11:54] And they thought that it was somehow going to cause us to wilt and die.

[00:11:58] It had just the opposite effect.

[00:11:59] It basically allowed us to grow and thrive and get to a much broader audience.

[00:12:04] If you're not being attacked, then something's not firing right.

[00:12:08] And you have to have friction and controversy.

[00:12:12] And every hero needs a villain.

[00:12:14] And so it just – I mean, you know, they've certainly hurt us.

[00:12:17] But at the same time –

[00:12:18] They've also helped us.

[00:12:20] And that – it's just – it's true.

[00:12:22] And in those early years especially, we were constantly in the news.

[00:12:28] Part of it, of course, because the SPLC and the ADL lavishing so much attention on us.

[00:12:32] I think the SPLC in those early years did an article about just about every month on the show.

[00:12:42] It was like their blog was basically the diary of our program.

[00:12:46] And they were dead set to, you know, drive a stake through our heart and end our careers.

[00:12:52] But, you know, it's funny.

[00:12:54] You know, the manure pile enriched us that they created.

[00:12:58] I think the reason we got so much attack was because of the novelty of us being on AM radio and still being on AM radio.

[00:13:08] But being on AM –

[00:13:08] We were not chicken-hearted at all.

[00:13:11] We did not curb our message to try to please people that were never going to be pleased with our show.

[00:13:18] We told the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

[00:13:20] Well, I wrote about that.

[00:13:21] And if you go to that interview with the American Free Press, the vision we had for this program and what set us apart.

[00:13:28] And what made us gain so much notoriety or celebrity or whatever, just being the news so much in those early years,

[00:13:35] was, of course, we were talking about racial realities in a way that nobody else was doing and the fact that we were mainstream media.

[00:13:43] In a candid, intellectually honest way.

[00:13:46] Exactly.

[00:13:46] And so it just – it caught on very quickly.

[00:13:50] And there's not an exaggeration to say that every organ of the establishment media has covered us at some point.

[00:13:56] There's no publication, no program that hasn't covered the work of this show at some point in its run.

[00:14:02] Everybody has had a shot at trying to kill us off, but we're like the old Timex watch in the commercial.

[00:14:08] We take a licking and keep on ticking.

[00:14:10] Those are the cheap watches, right?

[00:14:11] Yeah, but I still have one from my high school days.

[00:14:15] And it's – I swear, I've had all these expensive watches that are, you know, inoperable and can't get them fixed.

[00:14:22] Those Timex watches are still operating just like the day they were bought.

[00:14:27] And we were on a budget just like people who would buy a Timex.

[00:14:31] So we've always been on a budget.

[00:14:32] Now, you fast forward to 2015 and 16, and then there came that proliferation of new content creators who were adjacent to our issues and offered new and in some ways more fertile targets.

[00:14:46] So we have always consistently been in the media.

[00:14:49] We have not been in the media as much in the second decade as we were the first.

[00:14:52] We were the only target.

[00:14:53] And I think at some level, once you call a guy a white supremacist and a neo-Nazi and a racist and all of these things until you're blue in the face and nothing really happens.

[00:15:06] Yeah, you hit us with your best shot like the old song.

[00:15:09] Well, you move on.

[00:15:10] And a lot of these folks, when they were calling us that, for people who would look us up, they find, what, church-going family people with kids, wives and kids who never had any sort of scandal on AM radio?

[00:15:24] And you do start to look a little foolish.

[00:15:26] And as much as they really did try to make that stick, I think it helped us more than it hurt us in some ways, Keith, as you were talking about.

[00:15:32] It reminds me of Tim Walsh who called J.D. Vance weird.

[00:15:36] Basically, compare J.D. Vance with Tim Walsh and tell me which one is weird.

[00:15:40] Well, the same thing.

[00:15:41] They tried to make us meet their portrayal or their idea of weird.

[00:15:47] And instead, we looked normal and they looked weird.

[00:15:50] I think there was some of that to it.

[00:15:51] And so even though we're still in the news every year here and there, we're not in it incessantly to the extent that we were.

[00:15:59] And there's a reason for that.

[00:16:00] I think we've always come across as what we are, which is, I think, mainstream, professional, likable, relatable.

[00:16:09] We haven't made a lot of unforced errors that many people have.

[00:16:12] And we never try to be shocking or sensational for the sake of getting negative publicity.

[00:16:17] A lot of people do that.

[00:16:19] And we haven't made those unforced errors that a lot of people do.

[00:16:21] The reputation of the people who work on this program and the program itself is pristine.

[00:16:25] You go back and you look at that blog entry that I just mentioned, the 20 years, 20 endorsements.

[00:16:31] And I'm proud of that.

[00:16:31] I'm proud of the relationships that we have maintained.

[00:16:34] And so all that being said, it's a different kind of anniversary show tonight.

[00:16:40] The past anniversary shows set it at the top of the program.

[00:16:44] We've done events, live broadcasts.

[00:16:47] We would have done that tonight, but, of course, we did it earlier this year.

[00:16:50] And we've had anniversary of shows where a parade of guests hop on to share reflections and memories and experiences with us.

[00:16:56] And shows where we open the phones from coast to coast.

[00:16:58] And we fill those three hours.

[00:17:01] But tonight it is a little different.

[00:17:03] We do have to cover election news.

[00:17:05] But one thing we are going to do tonight, we're going to keep it in-house.

[00:17:09] So you're going to hear from Keith.

[00:17:09] You're going to hear from Sam Bushman, a couple of other folks on the team.

[00:17:14] But we're not going to go outside of the core tonight.

[00:17:17] But what we are going to do is we're going to revisit a couple of media hits that we had,

[00:17:24] one local and one or two national that you've never heard before.

[00:17:28] You've never heard before.

[00:17:30] Unless you watched it live on television in the mid-2000s, you will have never heard these exchanges before.

[00:17:37] And as is a terminology similar to which you would hear likened to a hurricane,

[00:17:43] the rapid intensification that TPC enjoyed from those formative years of 2004 to 2007.

[00:17:55] And then from there, it was minted and the brand was established.

[00:17:58] And that was that.

[00:18:00] You know, there is nothing that you could do, basically, more than what this show has done to normalize right-wing thought,

[00:18:08] the type of thought that normal right-wing people, people churchgoing, people that are, you know,

[00:18:16] take care of their obligations to their families and to the community.

[00:18:19] Compare, for example, a photograph of Heidi Byrick or Mark Potok at the Southern Poverty Law Center with a picture of James, for example, you know, and his family.

[00:18:30] You know, basically, people said, you know, I want to be on their side, not the SPLC side.

[00:18:37] SPLC and other groups like that that have come after us have basically shown the world just why they deserve the vilification that we give them.

[00:18:46] I think that, well, you've heard us mentioned by Rush Limbaugh.

[00:18:50] You've heard a lot of people ape our talking points.

[00:18:53] And that's what we want.

[00:18:54] We don't, we didn't ever patent or trademark any of these ideas.

[00:18:59] There's no ideas under the sun that are new.

[00:19:02] But I think that TPC has, without question, popularized our viewpoints to an extent that we will never be given full and complete credit for.

[00:19:14] A lot of people now are saying what we were saying 20 years ago because it's gotten much more safe to do so because of the people, not just us or like us, but many people before us.

[00:19:26] And we got in on the ground floor, too, of the Internet.

[00:19:30] And that just opened up all sorts of vistas for right-wing thought.

[00:19:34] There were other audio broadcasts prior to the political cesspool.

[00:19:40] But in terms of being on AM radio and the Internet and it being live and archived and continuous, nobody else had ever done that.

[00:19:48] Now, I think going back, people like William Pierce, I believe, and certainly Kevin Alfred Strom, there were some people who would record things and then upload them to the Internet.

[00:20:00] But in terms of a broadcast program, obviously we were the very first to do anything like this.

[00:20:06] And now, over the last 10 years, and especially the last two or three, four years, it's just proliferated to an extent that you can't even keep track of all of the content creators.

[00:20:17] Many of them are very good.

[00:20:18] Many of them are, frankly, clownish and buffoonish.

[00:20:22] But there is a certain style to our presentation and the way that we present ourselves and our movement and our cause and our ideas that has certainly caught on and people feel very comfortable being related to this program for the most part.

[00:20:36] Yeah, and just think about this, too.

[00:20:39] How ascendant the left was, let's say, 20, 30 years ago, 40 years ago.

[00:20:45] And now they're basically back on their heels.

[00:20:48] They feel real pressure and real heat.

[00:20:51] And it's culminating in this upcoming presidential election.

[00:20:55] And we're going to get into that with some depth, hopefully.

[00:20:59] We absolutely are, Keith.

[00:21:00] And as a matter of fact, after we take our first break of the night, we skip the first break.

[00:21:04] Once we take this break, this bottom of the hour break, we are going to offer some commentary on the most recent election news and things we found interesting.

[00:21:12] That is right in our wheelhouse.

[00:21:14] So we'll spend the rest of the hour, this first hour, doing that.

[00:21:17] Then in the second hour, though it would be impossible to remember all of the media coverage TPC has generated throughout its run,

[00:21:23] we will look back on a couple of forgotten television appearances, as I just mentioned.

[00:21:26] One local.

[00:21:27] We had some fun with that a minute ago in the pre-show.

[00:21:30] And a couple national, national prime time that you've never heard before.

[00:21:35] And then we will continue to have fun tonight as we sort of infuse celebration and remembrance and reflection,

[00:21:46] commemoration with some news items.

[00:21:48] We can't, we got to cover some news too.

[00:21:50] Got an email in from the great chief, Art Frith, today.

[00:21:58] And he sent me an email today and I'll read it.

[00:22:02] You hear his voice almost every week.

[00:22:03] You hear his voice in the intro still every week.

[00:22:06] In the intro of the first hour, you hear him announcing the program.

[00:22:10] And he said, happy anniversary, happy 20th anniversary.

[00:22:12] There's an old saying, time flies when you're having fun.

[00:22:15] So you must really be having a blast.

[00:22:19] When I came on board in 2005, I changed your life forever.

[00:22:25] Well, he did in a lot of ways.

[00:22:27] I remember he gave the professional face.

[00:22:28] He did.

[00:22:30] I, I, my co-host at the time, Austin, he said, when you and Austin came in, Austin was the co-host for almost the first year.

[00:22:40] And we saw a new guy sitting in the studio behind the, the glass on the control board.

[00:22:46] And he said, after the first hour of the show, I knew changes were going to have to be made.

[00:22:51] And the first night, when the first night was over, we had a little one-way talk.

[00:22:54] I gave you my opinion and what needed to change.

[00:22:57] And he said that Austin and I looked at him and said, who the hell are you?

[00:23:02] And he told us that he was a retired Navy chief with over 30 years of broadcasting experience.

[00:23:08] And he doesn't produce crap.

[00:23:11] Now, in those early days, I will admit to, and I'm talking about the first, you know.

[00:23:16] It was on the job training.

[00:23:17] Well, it was.

[00:23:18] And we would cut up a little bit.

[00:23:20] I mean, we would have a little bit too much fun sometime.

[00:23:22] And he kind of cracked the whip.

[00:23:24] And he really added a lot of production quality and gave us some really good sound advice.

[00:23:30] He sure did.

[00:23:31] I remember phone call conversations, conversations with him at the radio station.

[00:23:36] Learned a lot.

[00:23:37] And still to this day, he's a part of this show.

[00:23:39] E-mailed us today.

[00:23:40] You still hear his voice on every program during that intro.

[00:23:43] And we set a course.

[00:23:45] He wrote this.

[00:23:46] From that point, we set a new course for the political cesspool.

[00:23:50] And the rest is history.

[00:23:51] He remembers live broadcast from Shiloh.

[00:23:54] Interview with Colonel James Bo Grites.

[00:23:57] He mentioned Bill Rowland's amazing interview with Godfrey Dullios, which we aired last week.

[00:24:03] And so many other things.

[00:24:05] Just a few of the early programs that come to my mind, Art writes.

[00:24:08] And I'd be negligent if I didn't mention the Black Rat Snake invasion of 2005.

[00:24:16] And they really did get into the studio.

[00:24:18] And that was something.

[00:24:19] It looked like something out of, like, Anaconda.

[00:24:22] But he wrote, you've done a great job with the show, James.

[00:24:25] Don't screw it up now.

[00:24:26] Keep on keeping on.

[00:24:27] Well, thank you.

[00:24:28] We always call Art the Lord of the Board.

[00:24:30] And he had a lot of fingerprints on the development in the early months and the first couple of years of the show.

[00:24:37] We'll never forget it.

[00:24:38] When we come back, we're going to get into some news of the week on the election and then have some more fun.

[00:24:45] I promise you, you're going to have some fun in the second hour.

[00:24:47] So stay tuned.

[00:24:48] 20 years to the day.

[00:24:52] Protecting your liberties.

[00:24:54] You're listening to Liberty News Radio.

[00:24:56] Our approach to everyday aches and pains is to mask them.

[00:25:03] You know, feel better for a few hours only to have the pain return and then repeat the cycle all over again.

[00:25:10] It's time to try Relief Factor.

[00:25:12] And the good news is Relief Factor makes that easy.

[00:25:15] Their three-week quick start is just $19.95.

[00:25:18] Less than a dollar a day.

[00:25:19] Instead of masking pain, Relief Factor helps eliminate it.

[00:25:23] How?

[00:25:24] Well, its unique formula of ingredients helps support your body's response to inflammation.

[00:25:30] Relief Factor was developed by doctors.

[00:25:32] It's 100% drug-free.

[00:25:33] And for so many people, the results are game-changing.

[00:25:37] Even life-changing.

[00:25:38] So give it a try.

[00:25:39] Right now, their three-week quick start is just $19.95.

[00:25:42] Go to ReliefFactor.com or call 1-800-4-RELIEF.

[00:25:45] That's 1-800, the number 4-RELIEF.

[00:25:47] See how in a few weeks or even days, Relief Factor can reduce your pain.

[00:25:51] When you feel better, life is just better.

[00:25:55] So don't mask pain.

[00:25:56] Fight it naturally with Relief Factor.

[00:26:00] Well, cash relief payments are being made available for many affected by the recent hurricanes.

[00:26:06] Some homes impacted by hurricanes in North Carolina and Florida will receive a one-time direct cash payment of up to $1,500.

[00:26:14] The nonprofit GiveDirectly is using artificial intelligence to find low-income households in badly damaged areas

[00:26:22] and reaching out to them through an app used to manage SNAP benefits.

[00:26:26] GiveDirectly is hoping the tech-forward approach can inspire more cash relief programs for people affected by disasters.

[00:26:32] FEMA overhauled its own cash relief program called Serious Needs Assistance in January.

[00:26:38] I'm Haya Panjwani.

[00:26:40] Tropical Storm Dana bringing strong winds, heavy rain to India's eastern coast.

[00:26:45] Nearly 600,000 people have been evacuated.

[00:26:48] Rescue and aid workers have been deployed in preparation for the storm.

[00:26:52] Schools are closed as well as many businesses.

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

[00:26:58] On newspapers in the United States, closing at the rate of more than two per week last year.

[00:27:06] That continues a disconcerting slide in the industry that's been steady for more than two decades.

[00:27:11] But an annual local news study also found a gain of 81 new digital news sites, offering at least a glimmer of hope.

[00:27:19] The new digital-only sites, which include 30 that used to print a physical edition, are concentrated in metropolitan areas.

[00:27:28] And while the Medill Local News Initiative says that's good news, it doesn't do much for rural areas that have suffered the most.

[00:27:36] That is correspondent Jeremy House reporting.

[00:27:38] Delta Airlines suing the cybersecurity firm that's blamed for causing that global technology outage last summer.

[00:27:46] Delta filing suit against CrowdStrike, saying the company caused it to lose $500 million because of thousands of canceled flights.

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

[00:27:58] Hey, y'all!

[00:28:01] Do you enjoy great-tasting coffee but are tired of supporting companies that hate you?

[00:28:05] If so, let me tell you about Above Time Coffee.

[00:28:08] Above Time Coffee is a privately owned and operated small business.

[00:28:11] They hand-roast coffee and ship it to customers throughout the United States and abroad.

[00:28:15] Above Time Coffee was launched because they saw a need for more pro-white businesses serving our people.

[00:28:21] The time has come to take our own side.

[00:28:23] And did I mention their coffee tastes great?

[00:28:25] It's the best coffee I've ever tasted.

[00:28:27] When James brought home a sample from a conference, I was hooked and threw out all the other brands.

[00:28:32] I think you will too after you make an order at AboveTimeCoffee.com.

[00:28:36] Living a healthy and active lifestyle is important to us.

[00:28:39] And I appreciate the effort Above Time Coffee invests in keeping its products organic.

[00:28:43] And there are so many flavors to choose from.

[00:28:46] Check it out for yourself by visiting AboveTimeCoffee.com.

[00:28:49] It's the only coffee we drink at the Edwards Home.

[00:28:51] Delicious Coffee, a company that serves the interests of our people.

[00:28:55] Check out their selection today at AboveTimeCoffee.com.

[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.

[00:29:22] We have now documented well over 2,000 confirmed interracial homicides since January 2023.

[00:29:28] And created the most comprehensive overview of these killings anyone has ever made.

[00:29:34] We plug the gaping holes in data left by other homicide trackers and government crime stats.

[00:29:39] Rather than engaging in hyperbole and vitriolic rhetoric like everyone else,

[00:29:44] we are simply creating a massive sample size of empirical evidence

[00:29:48] so people can form rational and informed opinions about a sensitive and politically charged issue.

[00:29:53] Visit natcon.life.

[00:29:55] N-A-T-C-O-N dot L-I-F-E

[00:29:59] I just moved in my new house today

[00:30:04] It was hard, but I got squared away

[00:30:08] Bills started ringing and chains rattle out

[00:30:19] Well, 20 years ago tonight, the trick was on the left

[00:30:23] and hopefully a treat for all you good people out there tonight and still to this day.

[00:30:29] Well, let's shift gears for a moment and get back to the election.

[00:30:34] Paul Manafort, who for a time was one of Trump's campaign managers,

[00:30:42] stated that on Tucker Carlson's show a few days ago,

[00:30:47] their internal polling indicates that independents are breaking 2-1 for Trump.

[00:30:56] Interestingly, I saw something, I think it was MSNBC,

[00:31:00] they were saying how you couldn't vote for Trump because he has said something that he would take away

[00:31:05] the licenses from media outlets that he doesn't like.

[00:31:08] Well, and they, you know, of course hate that, except for when Zelensky does that.

[00:31:12] They love it and they give him billions of dollars.

[00:31:16] And when they try to censor us and other groups like us.

[00:31:18] Well, we got an interview with that Sasha Rossmuller did that was in the most recent issue of American Free Press.

[00:31:25] And it's up on TPC on Monday.

[00:31:27] Check that out with a Ukrainian journalist.

[00:31:29] But they love it when people that they like suppresses freedom of speech,

[00:31:34] but they don't like it if somebody, they don't like, threatens to do the same.

[00:31:39] Now, again, we've talked about this a lot.

[00:31:42] He's polling 10 percentage points better than he did in 2016 when he won,

[00:31:45] and 2020 when he purportedly lost.

[00:31:49] You know that he lost three swing states last time by their count,

[00:31:55] less than a football stadium.

[00:31:57] We've mentioned that several times.

[00:31:59] Unimaginably small margin.

[00:32:01] Now, if you flip those back this year, he's the president, and according to the polls,

[00:32:04] he's leading in all of these swing states right now.

[00:32:07] I said, look, it's a good year for it to not be the incumbent because of inflation

[00:32:12] and the cost of living being skyrocketed as it has.

[00:32:15] Economic concerns are always a bigger motivator than any of the issues that we like to talk about.

[00:32:20] And it's hard for an incumbent party to be rewarded when it costs $100 to eat fast food.

[00:32:24] But that and frankly, I still think there's a lot of people that don't want a shrill,

[00:32:29] a little cackling woman of color so-called to be the president,

[00:32:33] especially when she became the nominee only because of a transparently corrupt political coup

[00:32:38] to be the head of state.

[00:32:40] She hasn't been elected to anything in a long time, folks.

[00:32:43] That's what you have to remember.

[00:32:44] She shows you just how anti-democratic the Democratic Party is now.

[00:32:49] Now, they have got someone that didn't garner a vote and was in last place back in 2020 for the –

[00:32:57] or 2019 for the run-up to the last presidential election.

[00:33:01] That's the person they have handpicked to be their standard bearer.

[00:33:06] There's a good article, Kevin McDonald's The Occidental Observer.

[00:33:10] By the way, Kevin posted something this week about TPC's 20th anniversary.

[00:33:15] Ron Unge did as well.

[00:33:16] Thank you, guys.

[00:33:18] But this is pretty interesting.

[00:33:20] Real clear polling currently gives Trump a one- to two-point edge in swing states,

[00:33:24] Michigan, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Nevada, Arizona.

[00:33:27] Assuming trends, it's going to be – going to take some moonlight action,

[00:33:30] the article reads at Kevin's site, with mail-in ballots from the Harris campaign

[00:33:34] to flip results late in the vote count.

[00:33:37] The legal reform to massively liberalize postal voting was the great coup of 2020.

[00:33:42] Keith, you're going to love this.

[00:33:44] Let me read it.

[00:33:44] You've got to chew this up.

[00:33:46] And the same logical infrastructure is still in place,

[00:33:49] be it on the ground or embedded in the U.S. Postal Service.

[00:33:51] Don't call them vote riggers.

[00:33:53] Their preferred pronoun is ballot harvesters.

[00:33:56] As Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton charges,

[00:33:59] all of the battleground states that flipped for Biden in 2020 ignored federal election laws

[00:34:04] and unlawfully enacted last-minute changes that meant voter ID was not required.

[00:34:09] Using the COVID-19 pandemic as a pretext,

[00:34:14] with just signature verification enforced, the result was immediately palpable.

[00:34:19] Texas and Georgia used to vote the same way,

[00:34:21] but due to the difference in local law,

[00:34:23] Trump managed to lose Georgia while winning Texas by six points.

[00:34:27] And since proving fraud on the basis of signatures is practically impossible,

[00:34:32] you saw what happened in the election in 2020.

[00:34:36] Now, the article continues,

[00:34:38] By some unexplained mechanism of demographics,

[00:34:40] two-thirds of postal and absentee ballots went for the Democrats in 2020.

[00:34:45] The official explanation for this is that Trump's critique of postal voting

[00:34:49] led to extreme partisanship in the method of voting,

[00:34:52] though this seems inadequate.

[00:34:54] Republican voters tend to be older and more rural,

[00:34:58] so it should follow that Republicans do better in the postal and absentee category.

[00:35:03] Biden voters were so overrepresented for mail-in ballots in 2020

[00:35:08] that they even exceeded their comrades voting in person.

[00:35:12] Can you believe this?

[00:35:13] Listen to this.

[00:35:14] 58% to 42% according to Pew Research.

[00:35:18] Can you believe that?

[00:35:19] Forget chasing the white working class or Latinos.

[00:35:22] The new number one voting constituency for the Democratic Party is absentee and postal voters.

[00:35:28] On the other hand, listen to this.

[00:35:30] A Rasmussen survey found that only 36% of Biden voters reported casting a mail-in ballot.

[00:35:36] Draw your own conclusion regarding the 22-point discrepancy.

[00:35:40] And if we go further and isolate early postal votes from late ones,

[00:35:44] the distortion gets even more grotesque.

[00:35:46] Folks, please listen to this.

[00:35:48] Official data doesn't provide this, but anecdotal evidence indicates that the lopsidedness was off the charts.

[00:35:56] With 92% of the vote counted in Wisconsin, Trump led in 2020 by eight points,

[00:36:01] but he would lose because of a late vote dump of incredibly uniform ballots.

[00:36:06] Similar reversals were seen in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Georgia, and Arizona.

[00:36:09] A Dominion employee gave an affidavit stating that an arrival of 100,000 votes at 4 a.m. in Michigan went 100% for Biden.

[00:36:17] That claim being corroborated by independent contractors.

[00:36:20] Now, when the world's greatest technologist, Elon Musk,

[00:36:23] even argues for return to simple paper ballots and a photo ID like virtually every other country,

[00:36:28] it's with good reason.

[00:36:29] Record-low trust in elections and media is bipartisan.

[00:36:33] An astounding 42% of independents and even 7% of Democrats say that Biden didn't win the election in 2020 fairly.

[00:36:40] Evidently, not all of the Democrats have forgotten the primary rigging against Bernie Sanders.

[00:36:45] Nowadays, the Democratic Party is so efficient in its corruption that it foregoes primaries altogether

[00:36:51] and installs candidates at will out with Methuselah in with Jezebel, and they don't bat an eye.

[00:37:00] All right, so that's what we're looking at, Keith.

[00:37:02] And a Democratic judge in Georgia just ruled a few days ago that hand-counting ballots,

[00:37:07] against hand-counting ballots, so watch for that state to have some, maybe some irregularities again.

[00:37:14] They have money for trainees and illegals, but not enough to hire people to count ballots in an election

[00:37:19] in which they claim democracy is at stake.

[00:37:21] But don't take our word for it.

[00:37:24] This was reported by the establishment news itself in Pennsylvania just this week,

[00:37:31] just this week, a county election committee, a county election, county election officials

[00:37:39] in Pennsylvania have reported 2,500 fraudulent voter registrations already.

[00:37:48] So state officials are investigating that.

[00:37:52] I'll read this article.

[00:37:54] A criminal investigation has been launched after thousands of suspected fraudulent voter registrations

[00:37:58] were discovered in the critical swing state of Arizona.

[00:38:01] The Lancaster County Board of Elections announced Friday that staff members identified 2,500

[00:38:07] suspected fraudulent voter registration applications which have been dropped off at the election office

[00:38:11] with false names, suspicious handwriting, questionable signatures, incorrect addresses,

[00:38:16] or other problematic details.

[00:38:17] So this is a county, Lancaster County, their Board of Elections are already saying,

[00:38:22] we've already got 2,500 fraudulent pieces of mail in that we know seem very, very suspicious.

[00:38:29] You know, this is not some fanciful notion.

[00:38:32] This is something that has been going on since the advent of the 1965 Voting Rights Act,

[00:38:39] one of the Civil Rights Acts that came in.

[00:38:42] Basically, by the time people in the South were suffering from Stockholm Syndrome,

[00:38:46] from all the losses they were having despite having good arguments to oppose the civil rights agenda,

[00:38:55] so it blew through.

[00:38:57] But basically, what has happened is this.

[00:39:00] And, you know, this may be a little bit too strong a medicine for some people,

[00:39:05] but I'm sorry, the truth is that way sometimes.

[00:39:08] Basically, the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was supposedly based on the sacred principle of one man, one vote.

[00:39:16] But what if the man can't be bothered to vote?

[00:39:19] That was a problem that the civil rights advocates ran into with black voting.

[00:39:27] So they basically created through this law mechanisms that virtually invited voting fraud,

[00:39:36] things like long, you know, early voting periods, unfettered, what would you call it,

[00:39:48] unfettered absentee balloting, and also mail-in balloting.

[00:39:55] And C, they felt like they had a right, an innate right to do proxy voting for black people.

[00:40:04] If black people can't be bothered to get out and vote, well, we know how they would vote,

[00:40:09] so we're going to vote for them.

[00:40:10] And they basically harnessed the black clergy to do this for them, and they paid them.

[00:40:17] And they used to have one of the first things they came up with was called Souls to the Polls,

[00:40:23] where they basically paid them $25 or $20 a head to load up the church bus and take them down on election day to vote.

[00:40:32] But that didn't work.

[00:40:32] The best thing that worked was mail-in voting and just filling these things out.

[00:40:37] And that's what they've done.

[00:40:38] I've got a story, Keith.

[00:40:40] I'm so glad you mentioned that in your commentary there.

[00:40:42] I've got a story about black churches and voting when we come back as we are infusing news of the day commentary,

[00:40:51] opinion and analysis, along with what will continue to be our celebration of 20 years on the radio,

[00:40:57] 20 years ago to the day.

[00:41:00] It started on October 26, 2014.

[00:41:02] Antelope Publishing is America's top publisher of the books The Other Guys Are Too Afraid to Touch,

[00:41:06] providing you with the information you need to challenge the status quo.

[00:41:09] Whether your interest are contemporary dissident politics, history that would otherwise be censored,

[00:41:14] philosophy, or exciting novels from talented new authors, you'll find plenty to love.

[00:41:18] The Antelope Hill catalog includes books you won't find anywhere else,

[00:41:22] such as Pelface, The Philosophy of the Melting Pot, which criticizes white self-hatred,

[00:41:27] The 60-Year Caucasian War, and other books about Russian history and politics,

[00:41:31] The Sword of Christ, which argues for restoring Christianity as the foundation of the West

[00:41:34] and combating heresies like Christian Zionism,

[00:41:37] Books on the Spanish Civil War, speeches by Mussolini and other historical figures,

[00:41:41] original translations of previously unavailable 20th century works, and much more.

[00:41:45] With new titles added every month, there's no doubt that Antelope Hill Publishing will have something for everyone,

[00:41:49] even children.

[00:41:50] These books will enhance your personal library, and they also make great gifts,

[00:41:53] so be sure to check out the complete catalog at antelopehillpublishing.com.

[00:41:57] Order online today at antelopehillpublishing.com.

[00:42:00] In the medical field, IT security is crucial.

[00:42:04] Our highly skilled consultants are HIPAA certified and have 20 plus years of experience

[00:42:08] servicing medical clinics, billing and supply companies.

[00:42:11] We offer comprehensive endpoint protection, guarding your computers and servers against all stages of threats.

[00:42:16] And with our 24-7 monitoring services, you'll never worry about extensive downtime again.

[00:42:20] Ready to level up your IT support?

[00:42:22] Call 801-706-6980 today and discover how great IT services can be with Managed IT Services.

[00:42:30] Have you ever heard of Loving Liberty Ladies?

[00:42:33] Well, the Loving Liberty Ladies are here to help you learn our American heritage

[00:42:36] and the way it affects today's society.

[00:42:39] The Loving Liberty Ladies also have a discussion guide called Proclaim Liberty.

[00:42:43] And with this guide, you can start your own group in your hometown.

[00:42:47] Get yours today on our website at lovingliberty.net.

[00:42:51] Look for our lesson supplements, too.

[00:42:53] They're free.

[00:42:54] To hear all the special offers and to join the fight for freedom and liberty,

[00:42:57] please go to lovingliberty.net.

[00:43:07] An eerie sight for my monster from its slab began to rise.

[00:43:12] And suddenly, to my surprise, he did the match.

[00:43:16] He did the monster match.

[00:43:18] The monster match.

[00:43:20] It was a graveyard smash.

[00:43:22] He did the match.

[00:43:23] It caught on in a flash.

[00:43:25] He did the match.

[00:43:27] He did the monster match.

[00:43:28] What a fun time of year, folks.

[00:43:30] And what a fun rest of the year we're going to have.

[00:43:33] I will be, in a way, feel a sense of liberation when the election is over so that we can, at that point,

[00:43:40] go ahead and get on with it, get on with what comes next.

[00:43:43] But we will get on with what comes next throughout this beautiful season of Thanksgiving and Christmas.

[00:43:49] And it's just always so special to spend that time with our listening audience.

[00:43:53] The holiday season.

[00:43:54] They don't call it the holiday season for nothing.

[00:43:56] There's only two holidays, though.

[00:43:57] It's Thanksgiving and Christmas.

[00:43:59] Certainly not the ridiculous Kwanzaa and all of the other things they try to jam in there, though.

[00:44:03] But we have New Year's Eve.

[00:44:04] Well, New Year's Eve.

[00:44:05] And I like Halloween, too.

[00:44:08] But next week's going to be a great show.

[00:44:10] Twelve segments.

[00:44:11] Twelve different guests offering election preview and predictions and analysis.

[00:44:17] So stay tuned for that.

[00:44:18] We'll have Jason Kessler back on.

[00:44:20] He was on with us last week.

[00:44:22] And I like what he said.

[00:44:23] Listen, it just comes down to this.

[00:44:26] At the end of the day, Jason Kessler writes, you're either repulsed by Kamala Harris and don't want to be lectured by a sassy DEI girl boss for four to eight years.

[00:44:40] And even if Trump and Harris had the exact same policies, I would still prefer to see a white man in the news every day.

[00:44:45] That is true.

[00:44:48] And I think, look, I want Trump to win.

[00:44:52] I didn't buy everything, brother.

[00:44:54] Duke was selling last week in terms of yes.

[00:44:58] I in terms of I don't agree that the Democrats are any better on Israel than the Republicans.

[00:45:02] He said that he thought that they would be.

[00:45:04] I don't think so.

[00:45:07] Now, that's just a given that.

[00:45:09] Well, I mean, you know, he's right about just about everything.

[00:45:11] But in this one thing, I don't quite know.

[00:45:14] And, you know, the Jill Stein endorsement was interesting.

[00:45:17] And I'm I love David for the next election.

[00:45:20] Well, listen, no.

[00:45:20] The thing is, though, they are both bad on Israel.

[00:45:24] Trump is terrible on Israel.

[00:45:26] So it will be Kamala Harris.

[00:45:28] It's not like she's really going to be the president.

[00:45:30] She'll just be called president.

[00:45:32] But I think.

[00:45:35] While they are both equally bad on that issue, she is worse on literally everything else.

[00:45:40] And then there is this.

[00:45:41] And I keep going back to this and my desire to see Trump win if and when he wins.

[00:45:48] I expect that he will immediately begin to disappoint.

[00:45:53] I expect that.

[00:45:54] But as was written by a commentator on Identity Dixie this week,

[00:45:59] he writes this in the dissident community, we are always looking for that black swan,

[00:46:04] an event that will change the course of history, hopefully to our advantage in the Bible,

[00:46:08] especially in the Old Testament.

[00:46:09] The word evil doesn't always denote wickedness, but often is used to describe historically altering events.

[00:46:15] They are more accurately defined as calamity, sometimes small and personal,

[00:46:18] but also sometimes larger and cataclysmic.

[00:46:21] That's the beauty and awfulness of the black swan of calamity.

[00:46:25] You can see that beautiful bird from a distance as she floats ever so gently towards you.

[00:46:31] And although you know she brings danger, perhaps even destruction, you can't look away.

[00:46:36] You're captivated.

[00:46:37] And if you look beyond yourself and into the eternal, you know that these events bring hope of better days.

[00:46:42] History teaches us that pressing through until the end often brings great reward.

[00:46:47] Currently, this week, a few days before the election, the citizens of the United States are watching that terribly beautiful black bird meander up the Potomac.

[00:46:57] At the end of four years of presidential posturing from both sides is coming to a climax.

[00:47:02] Already, the signs of an approaching cataclysmic event are upon us.

[00:47:07] Joe Biden's demise, Kamala Harris's ascendancy, and multiple assassination attempts on Donald Trump are charging the political atmosphere for something unlike we've seen.

[00:47:16] Since the Vietnam conflict, it's like a hurricane.

[00:47:19] It's terrible but beautiful all at the same time.

[00:47:22] And regardless of the outcome, in a few days, the political landscape will be forever altered.

[00:47:27] Neither side will acquiesce to defeat.

[00:47:29] And in that aftermath, the black swan will spread her wings and take flight.

[00:47:35] Where she flies, there will be calamity in the American empire that it has not seen in decades, possibly 160 years.

[00:47:44] Brothers and sisters, our time to revive the fire of independence in the hearts of our people has come.

[00:47:50] And God willing, we'll rise like a phoenix.

[00:47:52] This is the unintentional benefit of Donald Trump.

[00:47:56] If Republicans lose, if conservatives lose, they will simply go back to work next week or the week after the election.

[00:48:06] The Democrats will not.

[00:48:08] And we need the political stress level to continue to increase.

[00:48:12] And only Donald Trump can provide that.

[00:48:15] Well, Donald Trump is the first real candidate we've had for president in a long time.

[00:48:20] One thing you've got to say about him is he is real.

[00:48:23] He is not a spokesman for a viewpoint.

[00:48:26] He has his own quirky viewpoint on a lot of different things.

[00:48:30] On some things, he's liberal.

[00:48:32] On some things, he's an arch-conservative.

[00:48:34] And other things, he's just plain old common sense around the cracker barrel.

[00:48:38] On the other hand, Kamala Harris is a nothing.

[00:48:43] She doesn't stand for anything except what her sponsors want her to be.

[00:48:48] She is just trying to—her sole purpose in life is to defeat Donald Trump.

[00:48:55] She was chosen like, you know, something out of a barrel, basically.

[00:49:02] They wanted to find someone that checked all their left-wing DEI boxes.

[00:49:07] But they didn't really care that she was an empty vessel.

[00:49:10] That's what she is.

[00:49:11] She's basically slept her way.

[00:49:13] I don't think much sleeping was going on in that bedroom.

[00:49:16] But nonetheless, that's how she has ascended to where she is.

[00:49:21] And that type of corruption, the fact that that is embraced as a ho-hum event, so what, by the Democrats,

[00:49:29] shows you just how degraded and immoral they are.

[00:49:34] You see right here, this is an article from realclearpolitics.com.

[00:49:40] And it reports that congressional Democrats like Jamie Raskin have already stated that they will try to prevent Trump

[00:49:47] from being sworn in if he wins by declaring him an insurrectionist.

[00:49:50] So, again, I think that what I am concerned about is if Harris wins, conservatives, middle American working-class conservatives,

[00:50:01] will just go back to work because they're not violent like the left.

[00:50:04] And they do tend to, even when they're getting shafted, just growls over their beer and go back to work and provide for their families.

[00:50:11] But I've got to say this.

[00:50:12] If Donald Trump wins, we buy four more years of chaos.

[00:50:16] And what we cannot have is going back to business as usual with the uniparty going back to working together.

[00:50:22] You know, if Kamala Harris, if she won, and if her winning would force whites to get organized and push back and have all of these wonderful effects,

[00:50:33] then I would be all for her winning.

[00:50:35] I don't care about Trump personally.

[00:50:37] I care about what he can do for us, even if inadvertently.

[00:50:40] If Harris would bring back this wonderful backlash and if it would really all just accelerate to the point where it falls apart in our favor,

[00:50:47] then I would vote for her.

[00:50:49] But I don't know that that's going to happen.

[00:50:52] And, frankly, I doubt it because whites are lawful and they work, and I just think things would get worse under her.

[00:50:56] At least with Trump, he keeps things in a state of chaos,

[00:50:59] which is better than going back to where we were in the Mitt Romney, John McCain, George Bush era.

[00:51:05] Well, see, Trump goes back to even the pre-boomer days, okay?

[00:51:10] And if he would actually go after some of these people, that would be interesting.

[00:51:13] Yeah, that would be interesting.

[00:51:14] And we may hold our breath about that.

[00:51:16] They're certainly going to go after him.

[00:51:18] I mean, with more impeachments, more, you know, sentencing and more arrests maybe.

[00:51:23] Who knows?

[00:51:23] He can be a nice guy, but as Leo DeRocher said, nice guys finish last.

[00:51:27] He needs to inflict some of the same pain on his enemies that his enemies have inflicted upon him.

[00:51:33] But, look, they were the good old days.

[00:51:35] Listen to the music that we've been playing in this show so far, the bumper music.

[00:51:39] They don't make songs like that anymore.

[00:51:41] Our society has changed, and it has not changed for the better.

[00:51:45] We need to go back to the way things used to be.

[00:51:49] Honesty, for example, the idea of proxy voting is now, you know, very much in the—

[00:51:55] Well, how about this kind of vote?

[00:51:56] Keith, how about this kind of vote?

[00:51:57] You were mentioning it before the last break.

[00:51:58] Trump did this—probably the best I've ever seen.

[00:52:02] The media was crying it was a stunt.

[00:52:04] Well, of course it was a stunt.

[00:52:05] Everything like this is orchestrated, and the other side does it, too.

[00:52:08] It was a genius stunt.

[00:52:09] The McDonald's stunt may win the whole thing for him.

[00:52:13] But in the meantime, while he was at McDonald's for that just wonderful, relatable—

[00:52:18] Yeah, organic, spontaneous thing.

[00:52:20] Well, it was scripted, but it came across as that, and it was certainly relatable because everybody eats at McDonald's.

[00:52:25] Everybody, I think nine out of ten—

[00:52:27] It wasn't scripted on it.

[00:52:28] Like the reaction of the people in the cars coming through, I don't think that was scripted.

[00:52:32] They did vet those.

[00:52:34] Those were all hand-picked supporters.

[00:52:37] But, I mean, they still were genuinely excited to meet him, but everybody knew who was going to become—

[00:52:42] I don't think they put words in their mouth.

[00:52:44] They didn't put words in their mouth.

[00:52:45] No, they did not.

[00:52:45] They did not.

[00:52:46] But they didn't know who was going to become—anyway.

[00:52:48] But at the same time, while he was doing that in Pennsylvania, Kamala Harris was behind a pulpit at a—

[00:52:54] Black church.

[00:52:55] So-called black church.

[00:52:57] And on the pulpit, it had the clenched fist of the black power symbol holding a cross.

[00:53:04] And I see all of these cucked-out white conservative preachers are so afraid to endorse a candidate

[00:53:11] because they think that the government will take away their tax-exempt status.

[00:53:14] In the meantime, Kamala Harris is giving a campaign rally at a huge church in Atlanta

[00:53:19] with the black power symbol on the pulpit itself doing a full-on rally and ballot harvesting.

[00:53:25] And, you know, if there's ever a target for removing 501c3 status from a church because they are involved in politics,

[00:53:32] every black church in Memphis almost would be subject to having their license pulled and having to pay income tax.

[00:53:39] And see, this is—you know, we've got to stop abiding by a—out of so-called misplaced politeness instincts

[00:53:49] of calling out the other side for all of their illegal and improper behavior.

[00:53:56] Hopefully, Trump will get in there and we can start doing that.

[00:54:00] We need to not have sacred cows.

[00:54:03] We need to have sacred principles that apply to everybody.

[00:54:07] I'm voting for Trump.

[00:54:08] I will vote on Election Day.

[00:54:10] I am voting for Trump.

[00:54:11] I have no illusions of his shortcomings.

[00:54:13] This isn't an endorsement because I love him, but I want to buy a ticket to the show.

[00:54:17] And I want this thing to continue because we need the friction.

[00:54:21] We need the stress.

[00:54:22] We need the chaos.

[00:54:24] And if anyone has shown that they can live with chaos and stress, it's Donald Trump.

[00:54:29] And she truly is worse on every issue.

[00:54:31] You know that, folks.

[00:54:32] Israel may be awash.

[00:54:34] He's bad.

[00:54:35] Okay, he's real bad on it.

[00:54:36] She ain't going to be any better.

[00:54:37] That's the source of all of our problems, but leave that one to the next election vote.

[00:54:42] We'll be right back.

[00:54:43] Second hour.