Hosts James Edwards and Keith Alexander update the audience on a couple of hot topics before training their focus on the destructive Brown vs Board of Education travesty of justice, which was decided on this weekend in 1954.
[00:00:01] You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is The Political Cesspool. The Political Cesspool, known across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program. And here to guide you through the murky waters of The Political Cesspool is your host, James Edwards.
[00:00:30] We've got a barn burner of a show for you tonight, this Saturday evening, May the 16th. James Edwards and Keith Alexander here with you for another live broadcast of TPC. This is the Brown vs. Board of Education Decision Weekend, and it has become an annual part of Keith's repertoire. That's exactly right.
[00:00:54] So we are going to train our focus this hour on that destructive travesty of justice, which was decided on this weekend in 1954. Later tonight, our featured guest of the evening is Germar Rudolph, a German chemist and prolific author who will update us on his latest news and take questions from the audience. That's coming up in the third hour.
[00:01:18] In the second hour, Dr. F. Roger Devlin, the author of Sexual Utopia in Power, will be back to discuss the allegations of Thomas Massey being a sexual deviant, which have conveniently dropped less than a week before his primary election. That election, that primary election in the state of Kentucky is on Tuesday.
[00:01:40] And just as we saw with Judge Roy Moore in Alabama a few years ago, here comes an ex-girlfriend who just couldn't carry the burden any longer. Had to come out the week of the election, don't you know? We'll get into all that in the coming two hours. But first, before we even get into Brown, I just want to do a quick tidy up on a couple of the stories we've been covering in recent weeks. And one is, of course, the SPLC story.
[00:02:11] Alabama. This is an update on that. Just a very quick hit. Alabama, the state of Alabama, is now having its own independent investigation of the SPLC. So you have a federal investigation, which we'll see where that goes. And now a state inquiry or investigation into the SPLC. And again, as we say, you know, this doesn't happen certainly without Trump. And as far as it goes, I guess we could all agree to say that we'd rather have the DOJ be weaponized against our enemies than against us.
[00:02:40] And certainly if the SPLC, contrary to our friends Peter and Lydia Brimelow and what they have had to suffer, if the SPLC had incorporated in New York, certainly they would not be under state investigation right now. An article in the New York Times reads, In a statement, the Alabama Attorney General's Office applauded the Justice Department's action and said that it was separately investigating the law center to determine, quote,
[00:03:06] whether the SPLC's activity within the state also ran afoul of the state's Deceptive Trade Practices Act or state laws related to charitable organizations. Thanks to the U.S. Justice Department's deal, action to deal with the SPLC, the state's efforts have now received a shot in the arm, state attorney general Steve Marshall said in a statement.
[00:03:29] We look forward to learning more about the inner workings of an organization that we have long believed was rotten and but until recently has been impervious. So this is the state AG in Alabama saying that because of the DOJ, they are now emboldened to go after the SPLC as well. Well, I'm glad they're doing it. I'm primarily glad because all of us have feared that this will be basically when all is said and done, more will be said than done, that the DOJ will come after them.
[00:03:57] They haven't gotten any names or they don't seem they haven't sued anybody on any individuals. And that may be a strategy. And what they could do is drop the prosecution at any point and then we have nothing. But now we have the state of Alabama backing it up and they can go. I think they can be trusted to go all the way to the mat on this and get the individuals named and get real discovery done in this case.
[00:04:26] If the DOJ does not for one of any variety of reasons. Well, here again, though, you have the state AG saying essentially and I'm reading between the lines here, but they certainly wouldn't have done this had not the Trump administration's DOJ done this. And yes, let's put on the ledger Trump being basically controlled by power and influence on some things and on the war in Iran. But we've got to put this in the.
[00:04:52] Well, of course, the SPLC is a Jewish run organization first and foremost. OK, that's where the money all comes from. That's where it comes from. You know, there's no doubt. There's no question about that. But at least this way we can back it up. And if they haven't done something that we would like them to do as part of their investigation or prosecution, then the state of Alabama, I think, can be trusted to do to follow up and do all those things.
[00:05:20] I'm very happy to find that that's happened. But like you said, Trump has done so many good things. And this is one of them on the state and, you know, domestic level here in America that, you know, my I wish that things weren't happening the way they are in Gaza or in Iran.
[00:05:47] But what I would prefer is, you know, what happens on the other side of the world doesn't bother me nearly as much as what's happening here in my own backyard. All right. Let's move forward to one other thing. Quick update. Quick hit on this. And then we're going to move forward for the rest of the hour on the Brown versus Board of Education decision. It's legacy and it's ramifications. But we were talking with Lou Moore last week.
[00:06:12] Love Lou, political savant, a professional at the highest levels, but also cares about the people who created this nation. He's really the best of both. He can give you just stone cold, sober political discourse. But he comes at it from our side on our issues. And he's also worked in D.C. So he's an insider in that way. Well, we were talking to him last week about all of the redistricting that's taking place as a result of the Supreme Court, Trump Supreme Court's decision on the Voting Rights Act.
[00:06:42] And here we were talking about Steve Cohen is almost certainly going to be removed from Congress. He represented the one black district or the one blue district in the state of Tennessee right here in Memphis. I was looking at the new lines. The city of Memphis has been carved up into three different congressional districts now.
[00:07:01] So parts of the city limits of Memphis are now split into three different congressional districts so that the Republicans in those seats can absorb the underclass here in Memphis and still maintain their red signature. And Cohen himself got put into Andy Ogles district. And Andy Ogles just so happens to be the Republican we mentioned a few weeks ago who's making news by putting forth legislation to remove the Hart-Celler Act to overturn basically it as being law.
[00:07:30] So he is certainly on our side on some big issues. And Cohen will have to contend with him. And who's going to take Cohen's old seat in District 9, you ask? Well, nobody will know who this is but me and Keith. But Brent Taylor says he may throw his hat into the ring. What do you think about Brent Taylor? I think he's the strongest out of the contenders for it on the Republican side. I'm really glad to see him. And tell everybody who he is. If they're outside of Memphis, they're not going to know. Steve Cohen? No, Brent Taylor.
[00:07:56] Brent Taylor is kind of a maverick right-winger by national standards who basically was on the city government, then the county government in Memphis and Shelby County. And now he's in the state government. State Senate. Yeah, state Senate. And he's always been the one to press the type of issues that we would like to have pressed. So I think he would be a wonderful replacement for Steve Cohen.
[00:08:24] Steve Cohen, for example, the other ones would be like David Kustoff, who's another Jewish guy. And basically he's a Republican, but he's not any type of— Well, he's already a congressman. He's got one of the other districts. Well, I know, but on the other hand, he is not the strong T that Brent Taylor is. No, no, he's not. You're saying there could be another one like him. I mean, he wouldn't take that seat. I said, yeah, right. You know, it'd be much better to replace Cohen with a strong conservative. And Brent Taylor is the nearest thing we've got in the state legislature as a strong conservative.
[00:08:54] That Cohen got placed into Ogles District. And now that—anyway. So that's what's going on. White Republicans in the South seem to be fighting back or taking their own side for once. And here's Ron DeSantis, Governor DeSantis of Florida. Both the Hart-Celler Act of 1965 and the additions to it in the early 90s need to be repealed, which led Peter Brimelow to write this or to repost this at his Twitter account.
[00:09:20] In 2013, dozens of Republicans in Congress were trying to negotiate an amnesty deal that would have granted citizenship to millions of illegals. In 2015, one of the leading candidates for the GOP nomination for president was openly running on amnesty. Today, sitting governors and members of Congress are calling for a repeal of Hart-Celler. Don't let anyone tell you that nothing ever changes or that politics is a waste of time. The mainstream debate within the GOP shifted from should we grant amnesty to 10 million illegals
[00:09:48] to should we cut immigration by 85% in just one decade. The ship is turning. You can say it's not turning fast enough. That's fine. But it is turning nonetheless. Politics works by turning what was previously considered sacrosanct into a hotly contested debate. The left figured this out decades ago. We're about to be talking about this. They eventually forced their will on the country by taking things that were previously considered not up for debate and endlessly politicizing them until they could dismantle a prior consensus in favor of one of their own choosing.
[00:10:18] We can do the same. And it should be treated as a non-negotiable litmus test for Republicans in all primaries to be in favor of repealing Hart-Celler. And what Brimlow is saying there is that if you go back to where we were 10 years ago and you look at where we are now, there does appear to be a true and fundamental turning of the rudder ever so slightly maybe but one that is noticeable nonetheless. Well, redistricting is a perfect example.
[00:10:43] These people that tell you, well, you know, it would be nice if this change had come about, but you can't do that. Well, you can do that. Redistricting shows that. All right. We're going to take a break. I wanted to tidy up those two issues, redistricting and the SPLC. Now we're going to move forward to Brown. Roger Devlin and Germar Rudolph still to go. Hey, folks. It's your friend Harry Cooper here. You know, it always feels like home when I'm on this show, and I want to invite everyone to check out Shark Hunters.
[00:11:11] Head on over to sharkhunters.com where we tell the honest history of World War II without propaganda. And we've always worked to bring former enemies together as friends. There's no other source available that publishes this history like Shark Hunters because we got our information, photos, and memories directly from the warriors who fought the battles. Sharkhunters.com has an unmatched collection of more than 300,000 photographs right from the veterans themselves.
[00:11:41] The Shark Hunters magazine will keep you up to date on real history, so send us an email to sharkhunters at sharkhunters.com, and we'll send the current issue of our magazine by email. No charge, of course. What are you waiting for? Head on over to sharkhunters.com, and I'll see you there. As you all know, Roe v. Wade has resulted in some of the most permissive abortion laws anywhere in the world.
[00:12:10] For example, in the United States, it's one of only seven countries to allow elective late-term abortions, along with China, North Korea, and others. Right now, in a number of states, the laws allow a baby to be born from his or her mother's womb in the ninth month. It is wrong. It has to change. Americans are more and more pro-life.
[00:12:40] You see that all the time. In fact, only 12% of Americans support abortion on demand at any time. Under my administration, we will always defend the very first right in the Declaration of Independence, and that is the right to life.
[00:13:08] Oh, life could be a dream If I could take you up in paradise up above If you would tell me I'm the only one that you love Life could be a dream, sweetheart Hello, hello again Shaboom and hoping we'll meet again Oh, life could be a dream If only all my precious plans would come true If you would let me spend my whole life loving you Life could be a dream, sweetheart
[00:13:38] Now, every time I look at you Something is on my mind Da-da-da-da-da-da-da If you do what I want you to Baby, we'd be so far Oh, life could be a dream If I could take you up in paradise up above If you would tell me I'm the only one that you love Keith, do you know what year that particular song came out? Can you name that tune? 54
[00:14:08] 1954 That was Shaboom By the Crew Cuts 1954 As they sing in the song, Keith And that was at the dawn of the doo-wop era They talk about life being a dream Paradise on earth That was sort of, in a way What you had in the heartland of America In the mid-1950s America, a very resilient nation Even after the founding stock of America Lost the war between the states And even after America contributed mightily
[00:14:38] To make the world safe for communism In the 1940s Still you had culturally, in many ways A high watermark for the U.S. in the mid-50s But there was something else that happened in 1954 Other than the release of that particular song Which is a personal favorite What was that, Keith? That was the infamous Brown vs. Topeka Board of Education Supreme Court decision Which basically said Racially segregated schools were going to no longer be considered
[00:15:08] Appropriate under the 14th Amendment Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution In other words There was going to have to be wholesale change And what we would call Racial integration in the schools And what that has led to Is a decline in the quality of public education in America That basically You know, people would not believe it If they looked at what people were learning in 1954 In a normal public school in America
[00:15:38] And then look at what's happening Particularly in areas like Memphis That has a large black population There's no comparison Actually, in terms of the quality of the education It can be said that not only white kids Got a better education back then But also black children I think certainly, Keith You would say that your average 12th grade diploma The diploma you get graduating high school as a senior
[00:16:06] You would have had a superior level of education And a superior knowledge And a superior intellect in 1954 Than you would having graduated after 12 years of high school And four years of college If you're coming out of Memphis What we call Memphis State The University of Memphis Which is a state-funded university People graduating the University of Memphis now at 22 Aren't nearly as smart As people who were 18 in 1954 Coming out of these segregated public schools Well, see, there's been a change
[00:16:36] Where liberalism has infiltrated Not only into public secondary education And primary education But into the, you know, colleges as well You don't have to Back when in 1954 You couldn't graduate from college Unless you took math classes And hard science classes as well Now you can get through By just taking fluff Like black studies Or gender studies And things like that And get a degree
[00:17:05] And basically You haven't learned anything That's going to be helpful to you In making a living All right So let's talk about this Now we've done this so many times In the past Matter of fact Every year Around the turn of the month of May Keith starts talking about Are we going to do a brown hour this year And he asked it a couple weeks ago I said, you know, Keith I guess we could But, you know, we could just tell people To go back in the broadcast archives We've covered it so many times in the past But he wouldn't have it He really wanted to do it Why is it important to do this every year?
[00:17:35] And then I got some questions for you on this Because more and more people Are becoming more and more conservative And they're beginning to question More and more of the Customary Before unchallenged Assumptions About the goodness And righteousness Of liberal movements Particularly the civil rights movement We now even have people like Matt Wallace That have apparently had an epiphany And think that The civil rights movement Wasn't all good We have people like Glenn Beck
[00:18:04] And unfortunately Even somebody as smart As Ann Coulter That still holds to that opinion But I lived through it And I can tell you It was a disaster And America has been In steady decline Ever since The advent Of the civil rights movement I mean And the Brown decision When you look at All the machinations That were used To reach that decision And what it has made The effectiveness
[00:18:34] Its effect On public education And Basically the quality Of a high school diploma Since then In America It's really astounding Most people You know That's never focused on You see all these people In Congress And in D.C. All these politicians All these bureaucrats That You know Want to worship At the shrine Of the Brown Versus Board of Education Decision But guess what Ask yourself How many of those
[00:19:03] Congressmen How many of those Senators How many of those Bureaucrats Are willing to send Their children To the Washington D.C. Public schools Flat zero Absolutely zero Yeah you know Actions speak louder Than words As they say And those actions Show That they are aware Just like we are That public education Has gone in the toilet Since Brown And because Of Brown Okay So I want to just Ask you a few Questions about this We're going to get Back into the nuts And bolts of it
[00:19:33] And then the big picture And where we go From here The full name Of the case Was Oliver Brown Et al Versus Board of Education Of Topeka Et al And I asked you Tonight during our Pre-show dinner I don't even know If I've asked you this Even after all these Years But why was it Topeka, Kansas That received The dubious Distinction Of being the The one picked To be the Namesake For this particular Case It was a public
[00:20:03] Public opinion Type of Driven Decision To do this There were actually Five cases Four of them From the south One of them From the midwest Topeka And the Powers that be Back then Did not want People to think That the south Was being picked on About segregation So they made The bellwether Case on this You know The lead case And the one Whose name Is remembered From you know
[00:20:33] Back then To be one In Topeka Which was not A southern state Not a former Confederate state But there was One in South Carolina One in Virginia There were others And they were all In the former Confederate states But And they all Were affected By this decision And the decision Was basically It was Unfortunately Governed by By the one Jewish guy On the Supreme Court at that Time
[00:21:02] Felix Frankfurter He was not The chief justice No he was not The chief justice Was a guy Named Fred Vinson Who was a Southern gentleman And after the First hearings
[00:21:39] They were going Vinson for a Rehearing And Fred Vinson Of Kentucky Being a Southern gentleman Grant it to Him Later Between The first Hearing And the Second hearing In September Of 1953 Fred Vinson Died of a Heart attack And Frank Frankfurter Was meeting With a guy Named Philip Elman Who had Another Son of Israel Who was A former Law clerk Of his
[00:22:08] In the 40s And at The time He was Working for The U.S. Solicitor General's Office Helping The NAACP Prosecute This case They were Meeting Like Deep Throat In The Watergate Situation In Parking Garages And Things Like This And What Frankfurter Told Elman He said Elman Wrote An Article In The 1987 Edition Of The Harvard Law Review Disclosing
[00:22:38] All Of These Shenanigans He Said That He Met With Him And With Mock Sorrow In His Voice Said I'm Shocked And He Said Vincent Death Is The First Real Proof I've Had In My Life Of The Existence Of God Okay This Shows You What Type Of People We Were Dealing With In This And Then There Was A Underhanded Type Of
[00:23:18] Who To
[00:23:48] in as the chief justice and led to and he let his tenure was the infamous warren court where the court just veered wildly to the left even eisenhower said this after his presidency they asked him if he had made any mistakes as president he said only two and they're both sitting on the supreme court that was earl warren and william brennan another uh storied liberal
[00:24:16] on the u.s supreme court in the warren court era let me ask you this very quickly before the music plays we're going to stay on this for the next uh half hour then roger devlin in the second hour i'm going to be talking about the thomas massey sex scandal which has dropped just days before his re-election bid on tuesday third hour germar rudolph actually i do hear the music now so when we come back i'm going to ask you if this decision was ideologically driven by the justices
[00:24:42] or if they fantasize that uh little black boys and girls would erect monuments in their honor one day we'll be right back stay tuned pursuing liberty using the constitution as our guide you're listening to liberty news radio wrecking news this hour from town hall armich thomas primary day in louisiana seeking re-election
[00:25:07] two-term gop senator bill cassidy being challenged by louisiana state treasurer john fleming and congresswoman julia letlow who is the endorsement of president trump mr trump calls cassidy a disloyal disaster among other pejoratives cassidy is among a handful of republicans who voted to convict mr trump during his impeachment trial five years ago republican national committee chair joe gruters tells the salem radio network that the party is fighting hard to maintain or even grow its congressional
[00:25:36] majority in the upcoming midterm elections and is making slow but steady progress we've already deployed field staff and we've hired state directors and election integrity directors and i think 17 states we've deployed people already and those are obviously where the targeted races are and some of the more competitive seat close on the heels of president trump's state visit to china his summit with chinese president xi there is word that russia's vladimir putin will be traveling to beijing
[00:26:05] a two-day visit by the russian leader planned next week beijing and moscow have grown closer since russia invaded ukraine the two countries that also signed a friendship treaty back in 2001 president trump says the u.s has an eye in the sky and it is trained on iran president trump says the u.s is closely monitoring iran's nuclear material highlighting space for surveillance that can identify
[00:26:29] individuals approaching storage in real time he calls securing that material a top priority and warned of decisive military action if iranian forces try to access it he is urging tehran to comply with nuclear agreements correspondent ken lorman an aggressive redistricting plan by virginia democrats is dead so says the u.s supreme court more on these stories townhall.com
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[00:30:44] it sounded like in the 1950s uh but that happy feel good time the best music ever made uh there was a cloud
[00:31:10] that was forming and uh it all started this disastrous period in american history from the mid-1950s through the mid-1960s and beyond where so much uh was legislated through the courts started with brown versus board now we've got to move very quickly kith i got a lot of questions for you but i want to ask you about the makeup of this court uh you mentioned earl warren who became the
[00:31:35] chief justice and how he became chief justice if you ask most people who know anything about it they could name two people off that court they could name earl warren and felix frankfurter also on that court just to let you know sort of the ideological leanings of some of the members was robert jackson and if that name sounds familiar to you it's probably because he was the lead prosecutor in the nuremberg
[00:31:58] trials that kangaroo court he was the lead prosecutor for the allies uh and that's a farce of uh that show trial of uh the german military uh leaders and administration leaders at the time so that was robert jackson he was on that court were most of these justices compelled by their own political opinions uh because i certainly don't think there was anything that they found in the
[00:32:25] constitution that prior to 1954 had not been discovered well no they did not a lot of them were opposed like stanley reed and i think those people were uh subject to duress or even blackmail but he wasn't on the court yet uh it was a non it was a unanimous decision yeah i know i know that oh yeah stanley reed was on the court yes it was i'm sorry you are correct he was on the court
[00:32:49] it was a not it ultimately was a unanimous decision though well basically the naacp and the american jewish congress wanted a unanimous decision because this was such a revolutionary change in american jurisprudence by that happening so they were uh you know frankfurter was using every trick in the book to force people to do this uh if it had been decided like it should have been after the original hearing
[00:33:19] it would have been a uh six three or a five four decision in favor of saying that well you've got the separate but equal doctrine separate you've got but equal you're working with you don't have that so consequently you need to equalize the expenditures per pupil between black students and white students
[00:33:44] and their schools and if you do that then you will have satisfied uh the constitution and if not we might have to consider taking stronger measures like racial integration that's what people like jimmy burns a former member of the u.s supreme court who was talked into resigning by franklin roosevelt to head up the office of war mobilization after pearl harbor uh if he had been on there he was a staunch segregationist
[00:34:14] he would have uh prevented this decision from going down because he wasn't going to change he was a mental giant and he was not going to be intimidated by the likes of frankfurter on the other hand he became the secretary of state for a while got disgusted with truman at yalta resigned ran for and was elected as governor of south carolina and thereafter led the massive resistance movement of southern governors
[00:34:42] against the brown decision now so again the brown decision overturned previous ruling uh rulings in the cases of plessie versus ferguson cumming versus richmond county board of education and beraya college versus kentucky but as we said there wasn't something that they found that said oh well all of these rulings got it wrong because of this basically you were saying earlier today that this
[00:35:07] was the first case ever the first supreme court case certainly of this magnitude where the judges just ruled because they wanted to do it there was no basis in law for this ruling well there's a reason why the left chose the courts and this was the first case of lawfare that like you said was as big as important as it was and uh it was also the the decision for lawfare that was basically done because
[00:35:36] the judiciary is supposedly according to federalist number 74 the weakest and least dangerous branch of the federal government it's also the least democratic supreme court justices are not elected they are selected appointed for life and can only be removed for high crimes and misdemeanors basically by impeachment which is a very high standard so this if you wanted to get things done without having
[00:36:02] the pesky will of the people uh affecting what you're doing lawfare is the way to do it and that's what they did lawfare in the federal courts in particular state court judges tend to be elected and they will be responsive to the will of the people the people on the supreme court are basically segregated from the people so that they do not have to you know they are not subject to the same type of
[00:36:30] pressures that elected officials are here is uh some interesting trivia for you folks with regards to brown versus board the question would be in which states was racial segregation in education required by state law and the answer is of course all of the states in the old confederacy including
[00:36:56] missouri and kentucky which were quasi-confederate states but also oklahoma west virginia maryland and interestingly delaware and washington dc those are the areas kansas so no no okay so almost they were not required to do it but they had the choice of doing that is exactly right it was so in kansas wyoming uh new mexico and arizona it was optional you had the choice to do it or it was
[00:37:25] limited it was done everywhere else in all the other states it was either there was no legislation on it one way or the other or in places like california new york it was forbidden but it wasn't just the confederate states but it was all of the confederate states plus a couple of surprise entries like delaware and dc now that all ended on may the 17th 1954 except for it wasn't as if on may 18th 1954
[00:37:48] all of the schools were integrated as we know them to be now uh there was in the south a uh reported noisy and stubborn resistance to it because racial segregation was deeply entrenched in society and for good reason we knew who these people are and how they and how they are i mean it's easier consequences would be of racial and whereas people like in vermont who had never met a black person it's easy for them to sit high and mighty uh minnesota places like that well see that's what
[00:38:17] happened they basically didn't listen to the common sense voices of people and they actually know what they're talking about and disregarded that altogether and what people don't understand about the brown there were actually two decisions they had brown one which said that it was unconstitutional to racially segregate uh schools and number two which was the all deliberate speed uh decision about this was a couple of years later brown two they call it this was a couple of years after
[00:38:46] the original brown decision because again uh all of the southern states just said okay well make us and so the supreme court didn't have the the mechanisms to force the the the states that were mandating racial segregation and so it was really not until years later really until the late 60s and early 70s when you had busing when busing became prevalent that's it and we'll get to this in the next segment but that's when you started having these segregation academies aka private schools or
[00:39:15] christian schools begin to sprout up but it was years after the brown decision that the schools really became integrated to the extent that they are now which is well they're all black now well see the thing in brown too was they could experiment somewhat about how to go about integrating and what they did in memphis for example they had what was called the freedom of choice plan we had a staunch uh jewish anti uh integrationist uh mayor named henry lobe who was jewish had an ivy league education but he's six
[00:39:44] foot five and looked and sounded like john wayne he was a staunch event defender of segregation and we had what they called freedom of choice in other words if a if you wanted your child to go to a school in which he would be a racial minority a black go to a white school or white to a black school all you had to do was petition the school board and they would find a way to make it happen even if they had to go
[00:40:08] so far as to hire a taxi cab every morning and every afternoon to take them back and forth but that didn't satisfy the uh social engineers on the left because too few black people wanted to attend white schools the old expression is birds of a feather flock together blacks wanted to go to school with other blacks and whites wanted to go to school with other whites except for people that were at the top of
[00:40:34] the hierarchy in the local NAACP chapter well what do you think about the music's playing so give me 10 seconds on this what do you think about the irony of brown in so much as in 1954 a high a public high school in memphis was all white now it's all black it's still segregated it's still very segregated and the only difference is the quality of education in that school has dipped down uh precipitously as to where it had been in 1954 take a quick break stay tuned
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[00:42:56] now more than ever it is hard to imagine how the soundtrack of such a disastrous era of american
[00:43:49] history could have been so full of hope and so uplifting the best music ever made coincided with one of the most destructive decades in american history the 50s of the mid 50s to the the mid 60s the doo-wop era you know doo-wop was at its high point and say let's just say 58 through 63 and then as neil sadaka put it the beatles in 1964 not good uh for them but they did bring us hermit's hermit so it wasn't all bad
[00:44:17] and a lot of the beatles stuff was good before they became you know drug addled but um you know there was one band that had a hit uh number one hit before the beatles during the beatles and after the beatles do you know who that was the four seasons yeah you got it frankie valley in the four seasons now i'm not saying that my favorite all-time band couldn't have done better had the beatles not come uh but uh sherry in 1962 number one hit walk like a man
[00:44:47] big girls don't cry number one number one then they had dawn and uh they thought the world was ending because dawn which is my favorite song that they ever had dawn go away peaked at number four and it was held out of number one because a beatles song was in number one number two and number three on the charts in early 1964 my favorite out of all the uh four season songs during that era was big girls don't cry that's 1962 63 that was one of the big three
[00:45:16] uh but uh nevertheless that was the good music time hey whatever was going on in the courts and on the streets it didn't stop that music from proliferating the culture didn't stop at the same time that the brown decision came down but when the brown decision came down there was a i really think the high point of american culture was may the 16th of 1954 and after that there's been a steady decline although
[00:45:43] there was still plenty of good left uh by the late 50s and even in the early 60s and even in the late 60s but but when busing came public education and public life for the working class and lower middle class whites of america went in the toilet well my mom was going to kingsbury i think at the time of busing and then the next day she was going to spurgeon academy all of these private christian schools
[00:46:09] you know the founder of briarcrest where i went to i think his name was dr allen he had dr clayton after him who was the president when i was there but uh dr allen just basically said we are forming this christian school because we believe it's god's will that the races be separate now of course all of these private schools they've conveniently forgotten that over at briarcrest baptist well all up with it's not briarcrest it used to be briarcrest baptist now it's just briarcrest christian that's the school but the church is still briarcrest baptist well there's no church anymore no they're
[00:46:37] all gone it's all gone it's all different it's all corporate now but they used to be yeah the churches were feeder schools to the school system well basically they what they did they use the uh sunday school building as a school that's exactly right yeah towering oaks they used to have a lot of satellite campuses i went to one called skyview academy i went to one called trafalgar uh which was the trafalgar campus out of trafalgar baptist church on summer avenue okay the baptist had a lot of them then by the by the 90s though it was dwindling down to just a couple and then they consolidated and it was
[00:47:05] anyway that that's inside baseball ones that were reasonable went out of business ones that showed uh the charge exorbitant uh tuition survived well they all got what happened was all of these feeder schools just got merged into one big campus now it's twenty thousand dollars a year to go there and you have to pay it because if you send your kids to private school i tell you if you send a blonde hair blue-eyed girl to an all-black public school in memphis there is a hundred percent chance they're getting sexual assaulted there's a hundred percent chance that there's going to be violence and it's
[00:47:35] just going to be furthermore the people in charge of that school will do nothing effective to protect her well and so here's the thing and this as you've said so many times before this has upset our our breeding grounds you can now only have kids if you can a homeschool them or limit the number of children to the number of children you can afford to send to private schools because you cannot send them to public schools in memphis yeah children are a luxury in places like memphis and it's not
[00:48:01] just memphis but it's anywhere like this now let's let's get into this then uh this leads me up to this uh using this local area that we know as an example what is the legacy the aftermath of brown versus board well the legacy has been one a reduction in white birth rates if you look at all of the left's uh machinations from the brown decision to uh heart seller to the voting rights act all of
[00:48:31] these things have had one common thread that runs through them and that is a reduction in white birth rates that's a problem it has on the other hand blacks have not suffered a diminution in their birth rates some of uh would say even that they've increased because life is better for them they get better jobs through affirmative action they get admission to selective colleges universities and
[00:48:58] professional schools because of affirmative action so consequently the productive part of society has been punished and is suffering a diminishment in their birth rates on the other hand the other side of the scale the ones that are you know less intelligent less of uh capable of let's say doing stem work for
[00:49:23] example they have had an increase in their birth rates or at least the birth rates have stayed the same see all of these things were done not to help black people but to harm white people that's what you need to understand about the left all right now let's see what else we've got here and that is well you mentioned it earlier matt wash so there is uh matt wash uh who was i think one of uh ben shapiro's
[00:49:52] underlings but he has started to say more sensible things about race in recent years there's no doubt about it charlie kirk was one that was totally opposed to everything and you know started to see the light but we still have people like glenn beck and uh ann coulter that still uh worship at the shrine of the civil rights but matt wash did this whole three-hour feature i think on uh he was like you know sit down everybody i'm going to tell you something uh it's a conclusion i've come to and basically it was
[00:50:18] supposed to be some epiphany that nobody had considered somebody sent this to me and he was just saying you know i got to tell you the civil rights era all the civil rights acts and their heroes it was all a scam and there were comments and there were comments underneath his video saying uh the political cesspool has been saying this for 20 years james edwards has been saying this for 20 years keith alexander and uh but you know still it is good that other people are saying it now and
[00:50:46] that's certainly what we want but yeah liberalism what i've said if you want to put it in a capsule and a little nugget liberalism is the modern face of evil every aspect of it has had a negative effect on society on culture on the lives of white people and it's been uh you know it what it has done it has
[00:51:08] degraded our society and our capabilities we now have to import people from india and china to do stem work back in the day before racial integration of public schools lower middle class and working class whites were great at uh stem stuff i remember going to school with people like that and they you know
[00:51:32] unfortunately if you have to go to a private school you can still learn those things if you go to a public school you won't i've talked with people who tell me that their child signed up for an algebra class in a public school they went to the algebra class but all the time was spent teaching remedial arithmetic to the black students in the class all right you know my dog jolly yeah i do very well
[00:52:00] he reacquaints himself to me every time i come in the house so we have this terrier named jolly and my kids named him jolly because he was born right before christmas a few years ago but there's this one toy that if you bring it out as soon as jolly sees it his teeth start rattling he started his teeth start chattering his pupils dilate and he starts shaking and that's keith every every year around around mid may that's keith no seriously hey we actually had a listener who was in
[00:52:30] washington dc at a museum and took a picture of the original brown versus board decision right i mean the actual paper that it was signed on uh and they sent it to you so you are known for this annual commentary by a lot of people in our audience again seconds remaining this hour we're going to go to roger devlin and then germer rudolph uh in the second and third hour we're going to talk about george wallace a little bit in the second hour too this was the you know this is an ominous mid
[00:52:54] may is a pretty bad time of year may 15 may 17 1954 brown versus board may 15 1972 uh the week uh the day that um wallace was shot and a lot of people think he would have been president that year well but so why don't we do it why are we doing it the reason we're doing it is because it's important to realize that all of these uh false idols of the left that are supposedly so good are actually all
[00:53:18] bad for example in the brown decision they totally ignored the normal methods of handling appellate review which is stare decisis the principle started as such basing it on prior decisions of the court they base this decision on spurious sociological tracks by people like gunner miradol and a black sociologist named kenneth clark not the guy that did the civilization series back in the early 70s
[00:53:45] on pbs but this guy that came up with doll uh experiments where they would show black and white children white and black dolls and see which one you like the best well guess what they did that in two places massachusetts arkansas arkansas where there was segregation the blacks liked the white doll better than they did even in uh no excuse me massachusetts like the white doll even more so
[00:54:12] consequently uh their whole theory they they hid part of their theory from the court now let me ask you this do you think that whites like earl warren and robert jackson had some sort of uh you know fantasy as some sort of fetish that blacks would erect monuments in their honor for taking this supposed courageous stand i don't think they did i think they basically just wanted to win elections
[00:54:37] and they wanted to replace white southerners and white working class people in the north with blacks and other people of colors in their coalition we'll be right back stay tuned third uh second hour next you you


