We Need to Talk About Britain
Things are beyond the pale.
Things are beyond the pale.
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| Sorry for the delay there, but you know these things take time to prepare, don't they? | |
| Hope you're doing well. | |
| I just thought we really need to have a very serious, very serious conversation about the absolute state of Britain and how this is just at the point where it is totally unacceptable, right? | |
| I don't want to hear about Israel and Palestine, right? | |
| I just want to be very clear. | |
| My timeline for the past week has been dominated by Dave Smith and Douglas Murray talking about Israel-Palestine. | |
| I'm like, fuck, I'm going to try not to swear. | |
| And I'm just like, listen, man, my country is literally falling apart. | |
| It's literally swarming with invaders. | |
| I don't care. | |
| I just don't care. | |
| I'm not interested. | |
| And that part of the right that wants to talk about Israel and Palestine over my country can just go jump off a cliff as far as I'm concerned. | |
| I'm just not interested. | |
| Don't bring it up to me. | |
| Don't care. | |
| It's a million miles away. | |
| And for some reason, my tax money on either side. | |
| But I'm just, I'm just not interested, right? | |
| It's so far down my list of priorities that it makes me feel that the people talking about it are fundamentally unserious and I'm not interested in actually dealing with the problems that we have. | |
| Because we have got so many problems. | |
| There's such a multitude of problems that the idea of being like, yeah, so what we're going to do is fix the problem to be this and around the time like there is no fixing their problems. | |
| The problems is them themselves, okay? | |
| I'm just not interested. | |
| Don't care. | |
| We have got real problems right here. | |
| And I really want to deal with those. | |
| Like, they're so much more important. | |
| I can't even turn my AC anymore. | |
| God damn it. | |
| I need to replace the batteries. | |
| Our problems are so much more important and so much more proximal to what is happening here. | |
| And it just blows my mind that a single ounce of energy, a single second of airtime is spent on it. | |
| It's just not our business. | |
| And if it is your business, don't bring it to me. | |
| Go away. | |
| If you're not here to help with the problems of the intrinsic structural issues of Western countries, and I don't include Israel as a Western country, I include it as a Middle Eastern country, then I'm not interested. | |
| And I just don't want to talk about it. | |
| So it's just one of those things where it begins like everywhere in this country. | |
| There's no good one place to start, right? | |
| With the problems of this country. | |
| But I've been studying a lot recently, as I always want to do. | |
| And I'm reading through just the foundational texts of liberal democracy over and over and over. | |
| And from John Locke onwards, to Montesquieu, to Rousseau, to any of the others that you'd care to mention, the way things are at the moment would have them genuinely up in arms and stacking bodies in the fucking streets, right? | |
| They've got this. | |
| Well, imagine, says John Locke, if your government was to be against the life, liberty, and property of the people. | |
| Well, that would be justification for a right to revolt, wouldn't it? | |
| And I'm just like, Jesus, man, I paid like 40% tax or something. | |
| You know, I'm just, I am so fucked. | |
| Liberty, at liberty to do what? | |
| You know, I can't even criticize the invasion of my country without fearing that the government is going to come down on me. | |
| And I'm reading this stuff and it's just like, yeah. | |
| And so then when you look at the American Revolution, it's like, oh, 2% stamp tax, that's it. | |
| Revolution. | |
| And I'm just looking at this thinking, Jesus Christ. | |
| People who we base the legitimacy of liberal democracy on would be like dude, grab your fucking rifle. | |
| What are you doing? | |
| And i'm just sat here like well, I can't advocate for a revolt. | |
| Obviously and just to be clear, i'm absolutely not. | |
| I'm not a liberal, for a start, but i'm absolutely not advocating for anything at all other than a serious, goddamn conversation with and I I want the political leaders to hear this and understand. | |
| Listen right, I will not vote for any of you, I will not support any of you and I will actively campaign against you. | |
| Unless deporting every single invader in this country is not the very top of your list right, there are going to be somewhere around the the government's official figures are a million. | |
| Right bollocks, it's going to be somewhere between two and five million. | |
| Right, two and five million illegals just swatting around making up the black economy. | |
| Like, just get everyone in every single barbershop in the entire country. | |
| Just deport them. | |
| Right, just deport all of them. | |
| Deport anyone who looks like they might be illegal, go. | |
| Just grab them off the street, run them through the database and if nothing comes up, they're gone. | |
| Right, they've all got to go. | |
| And this and so if, if that's not the very top of your list. | |
| I will never vote for you and I will actively campaign against you. | |
| Nigel Farage, I hope you hear me on this. | |
| I will be actively campaigning against you if you don't up what you're doing here and actually get something done right, actually show some results. | |
| Like, do something, god damn it man, do something. | |
| I just sorry. | |
| I know this is all really like. | |
| This is just, I just sit on this all day and then it's like, right, i'm just gonna do a stream now and i'm just absolutely steaming, absolutely steaming. | |
| I hate the way this country is being run and it's being run into the ground and i'm just gonna, we're just gonna go through it, right? | |
| So it begins, of course, with the Labor Party, but one might say, well, the Labor Party have been the party of communists and congenital traitors for decades. | |
| Why get angry at them? | |
| It's like, yeah, that's true, although at the moment, the Labor Party are actually more right wing than both the Conservative Party and the Reform Party. | |
| So that's a bizarre thing, isn't it? | |
| I mean, like there's this. | |
| There's this very odd occurrence at the moment where nearly half of the population doesn't vote in our elections and for some reason, every single party is like, oh, we need to tack to the, the dwindling center, to try and capture voters there. | |
| It's like, look, has it occurred to you that 40 of the country doesn't vote in elections because they feel disenfranchised, because there's no one who represents their opinions? | |
| Right, it could well be and I think this is true that the country is a lot more right wing than our politics would represent, and actually a credible party moving to the right might actually start creating a bit of a wave. | |
| Anyway, the point being, the Conservatives have just always been, at least since the early 2000s, just a woke party. | |
| Right, listen to this from David Cameron and think to yourself, who the fuck does he think he's serving? | |
| As i've said many times, for a party like the Conservatives just to open the door and say, come on in. | |
| If all you see is a sea of white Christian faces, you need to see people from your own communities getting to the top of the army, getting to the top of the legal profession, getting to the top of the business and yes, getting to the top of the conservative party and politics too yeah. | |
| So the truth is, if we're going to build that strong, vibrant and inclusive society, we need more role models like this, many more Muslim men and women at the top of British businesses, many more Muslim soldiers in the highest level of Qarm and, of course, more Muslims in our club. | |
| So there's not just one Muslim in the cabinet and one in the shadow cabinet, but British Muslims all across government in positions of leadership and authority. | |
| In positions, leadership and authority. | |
| I actually don't want my country to be run by Muslims. | |
| Right. | |
| I know that might sound highly Islamophobic and deeply exclusionary, but I actually don't want that. | |
| There are lots of Muslim countries, some are like 40 Muslim countries. | |
| They have their own countries. | |
| This is the country of the British. | |
| England is a country of the English. | |
| Wales is a country of the Welsh. | |
| Scotland, Northern Ireland, etc., etc. | |
| Why is it that they are obsessed with making minorities rule over us? | |
| And this was the leader of the Conservative Party, right? | |
| This was the leader of the right-wing party. | |
| And lo and behold, where are we now? | |
| Well, Rishi Senak, first Conservative Prime Minister, deep Cameronite slash Blairite. | |
| And now we've got Kemi Badenok, an actual immigrant leading this party. | |
| And it's like, look, sorry, no, I'm not for this. | |
| She can go and be the president of Nigeria, right? | |
| I don't want foreigners running my country. | |
| And I don't see why I should have it. | |
| I don't see why I should be belligerently attacked in this kind of representative way. | |
| Why can't I have a British person in charge of Britain? | |
| Why is that out of bounds? | |
| And again, if you're like, well, I mean, I guess you're going to vote reform. | |
| What? | |
| So Nigel Farage can step down and give zia use of it. | |
| No, sorry. | |
| I don't want foreigners and foreign religions being put in positions of power around the country. | |
| I don't think that's actually unreasonable, right? | |
| If I moved to a foreign country and there was an active, like, an active campaign, and they were like, brilliant, you've moved to Uzbekistan. | |
| Well, guess what? | |
| We don't have any English politicians, so you're going to have to be the English politician. | |
| I'm like, why? | |
| That's hardly why I moved here. | |
| I didn't move here to take over. | |
| Like, that's not the plan, right? | |
| When you go to another country, you accept this is someone else's country and you just want to live that lifestyle in their country. | |
| It's not that you're going to be taking over. | |
| You're going to be all levels of government. | |
| You're going to be leading the army. | |
| So are you mental? | |
| Are you actually mental? | |
| So you seek actively to disenfranchise the British people from their own structures, their own institutions, their own governments, their own army, their own police, their own cockpit of power. | |
| You actively have that in your mind that I'm going to do that or else these minority communities won't vote for us. | |
| It's like, okay, well, then we have a real problem, don't we? | |
| We have a real goddamn problem. | |
| So it's not just that this has been obviously the mission of the Labour Party the whole time. | |
| Not that they've even had a female party leader rather than prime minister. | |
| The Conservatives, of course, are on like, you know, their second female prime minister. | |
| They've had an Indian prime minister and they're going to put an African prime minister in if they win again. | |
| It's like, oh God, like you can see the two cheeks of the same ass. | |
| The Labour Party are the ones who lie about what they actually want. | |
| The Conservative, well, I mean, the Conservatives lie too, but they're the ones who actually do it. | |
| They're like the executive wing of the Labour Party. | |
| And it's so, what is happening, man? | |
| Like, I can't take these people seriously, and I'm not going to. | |
| Like, I view that as just total betrayal, right? | |
| Total betrayal. | |
| Labour opened up the gates and the Conservatives are like, well, we need to put them in charge. | |
| Just what are you doing? | |
| No. | |
| Right. | |
| So then that's not bad enough, right? | |
| We have 14 years of the Conservatives. | |
| The Boris wave swamping the country, right? | |
| Absolutely swamping the country. | |
| And then we get the two-tier system. | |
| Now, we've had the two-tier system. | |
| It's been informal for quite a while, right? | |
| And we'll get to how it's informal in a bit. | |
| But then we've got the two-tier guidelines sentencing council controversy. | |
| So the sentencing council is a quango, right? | |
| Labour have set up an unaccountable, non-executive governmental body that provides authoritative advice and guidelines to judges. | |
| And so the judges take these very, very seriously. | |
| It'd probably be like, you know, a ruling from FIFA or something, right? | |
| And the other football clubs will be like, oh, okay, well, you know, we don't have to do that, but like, we're going to take that seriously because it's FIFA, right? | |
| It's that kind of like arrangement, that kind of authority that they have. | |
| And they were like, yeah, so when it comes to sentencing, because we want everyone to get the same sentence, right? | |
| Because even though people aren't all the same, I mean, if you've got a much greater history of recidivism in your community, well, then your community is going to get much longer sentences, right? | |
| But no, they just said, you know what? | |
| The Browns, basically, is literally like the non-white communities. | |
| They get too much time in jail and we want to cut that down. | |
| We want the only people in the country to in fact serve the normal sentence that they would be allotted to be straight white men, incidentally. | |
| And you can imagine that that hit the wall like an absolute bag of shit, didn't it? | |
| Like people weren't happy about that because, I mean, it's not that we already know we live under a two-tier system. | |
| Having the legal system, the judges being like, yeah, we're just going to make it official, really. | |
| I've got bloody daddy long legs in here somehow. | |
| So if I get dunked by that, prepare for me to scream like, girl. | |
| But if it's not bad enough that it's informal, now they just want to make it de facto, right? | |
| Sorry, it's de facto. | |
| They want to make it du jour. | |
| And it's like, oh, great. | |
| Absolutely great. | |
| And this kicked up a massive shitstorm. | |
| Eventually, the government said, okay, no, we are actually going to intercede. | |
| Again, Labour more right-wing than reforming Tories. | |
| We're actually going to intercede and the sentencing canceled back down. | |
| So this shows that the Labour Party is now more right-wing than the Blairite quangocracy that it itself has established, right? | |
| The Kwangocracy is getting away from the Labour Party. | |
| And they're like, well, no, no, no, no, hang on. | |
| You were meant to be our institutions that made sure we had like a permanent labour establishment and bureaucracy that actually runs the country. | |
| And you're getting way out of control. | |
| We can't have you formally instituting racial caste systems in British justice, actually. | |
| And, okay, great. | |
| Great. | |
| Bravo Labour Party. | |
| Wow, that sounds like fucking crickets. | |
| That sounds like absolute cricket. | |
| So no, no, no, no. | |
| Who's being fired? | |
| Who's being fired? | |
| How are they being brought to account? | |
| Like, they literally tried to impose an India-style racial caste system on us, and you had to intervene, and no one's been punished. | |
| No one's been fired. | |
| No one's been arrested. | |
| No one's being charged for a breach of the Equalities Act. | |
| Like, what is happening here? | |
| Why are you just leaving them in their positions of influence, authority, and power to go, okay, well, we didn't get it this time. | |
| I guess we'll wait until you're out of government. | |
| Because it's only going to be four years. | |
| Because I don't think the Labour Party is getting another four years or five years, sorry, right? | |
| It's only going to be four years now. | |
| So he's like, yeah, we're just going to kick that down the road. | |
| It's like, oh, right. | |
| So you're fine with the Quango. | |
| You're fine with the people in the Quango. | |
| It's just on this point as a bit politically bit of a hot potato, a bit unfeasible at this point. | |
| We couldn't do this. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| It's like, no, this is totally unacceptable, right? | |
| Totally unacceptable. | |
| If your manifesto isn't abolish every Quango on day one, I won't vote for you, right? | |
| I won't vote for you. | |
| And I will campaign against you. | |
| If you aren't coming out and frothing at the mouth and saying, no, we're going to tear these Quangos up. | |
| We're going to frog march these people to Traitor's Gate and then literally try them. | |
| I'm not voting for you. | |
| Do you understand me? | |
| Like, this is too far. | |
| This is unacceptable. | |
| I don't want to be a second-class citizen. | |
| I don't want my children to end up living under a racial hierarchy in the land of their ancestors. | |
| Like, I live in Wessex for a reason. | |
| My family comes from here. | |
| Like, this is not acceptable. | |
| God damn it, man. | |
| I just trying to enhance my calm, right? | |
| But it's so unbelievable that this is what is happening in the year of our Lord 2025. | |
| And it's not like, it's not like, it's not like they even pretend. | |
| It's not that there's any fucking pretense, right? | |
| So this came out this week. | |
| Literally, the police chief of West Yorkshire Police. | |
| Just like, no, no, I want to discriminate against white people, right? | |
| Do you understand? | |
| And when he says white people, he means English people. | |
| Obviously, he's not like, we can't have any Poles. | |
| No, he's not saying we can't be French. | |
| No, he's saying we can't be English in the West Yorkshire Police because this is not providing equality. | |
| Weirdly enough, right? | |
| When people move to another country, they generally don't want to be in the government, in the army, in the police force. | |
| What they generally want to do is set up a little business and make money while living with the benefits of the fruits of the culture they've moved to, right? | |
| And so they literally, right? | |
| And can you get a more English name? | |
| Constable John Robbins. | |
| Thanks, John. | |
| You actual traitor. | |
| You are an actual traitor running the West Yorkshire Police, right? | |
| But he's like, well, look, we need to change the law to boost the number of ethnic minorities in my force because otherwise I just can't get them in. | |
| Then don't. | |
| Then don't. | |
| If I moved to Uganda and the police force was run full of Chinese people or South American people or bloody Russians or something, like, where the hell are the Ugandans, man? | |
| And if they're like, well, I mean, we've got a Ugandan police chief and he hired a bunch of foreigners to police the Ugandans because for some reason Ugandans weren't acceptable to be police in their own country. | |
| I'd be like, wow, right. | |
| So you're living under a racial caste system as well. | |
| You need to get, where's the accountability? | |
| You need to get rid of these people. | |
| They have to go. | |
| They just have to be fired. | |
| The government should be stepping in and be like, no, you are stepping down or we're going to legislate against you personally, right? | |
| We are going to make sure that your position, John Robbins, is totally untenable unless you fucking step down. | |
| How dare you do this? | |
| How dare you prioritize foreign peoples over your own? | |
| This is the issue, man. | |
| This is the entire, the mentality, the total mentality of this. | |
| And it's just bonkers. | |
| This is unacceptable. | |
| It is just unacceptable. | |
| And again, if your manifesto doesn't say fire John Robbins out of a cannon off the cliffs of Dover, I'm not voting for you. | |
| Do you understand that? | |
| This has to be the core of your mission to clear all of this shit out, fire all of these people and prosecute them for being racist. | |
| You guys care about racism, don't you? | |
| I love the way they've got here. | |
| I was accused of having a racist recruitment policy. | |
| Racist, quote unquote. | |
| His statement is literally, I want to discriminate against white candidates. | |
| If that doesn't count as a form of racism, then nothing does. | |
| And I don't want to hear anyone whining about things being racist in the future. | |
| I can't even imagine what you would need to be more, how much more explicit you could be to make it count as racism. | |
| Chat, give me an idea. | |
| What could they say about white people that would actually count as racism in the eyes of the Telegraph? | |
| Just unbelievable. | |
| I can't stand it. | |
| And you'll remember the REF being like, well, we keep getting these useless straight white males applying for the jobs. | |
| It's like, oh, really? | |
| Just, and that was bad enough because that shows you, that shows you the intrinsic bias of the people. | |
| And again, these are all English people running these. | |
| Shows you the intrinsic bias of the people in the establishments, in the institutions, running the institutions. | |
| But then they just come out and say it. | |
| It's like, yeah, okay, well, my bias is used to strain my men. | |
| But now it's just like, yeah, but can't I just discriminate against them? | |
| Can't I just racially render them the bottom tier, the untouchables of society. | |
| It's like, well, legally, no. | |
| And that's why John is like, yeah, I want to change the law so I can make English people the untouchables of English society. | |
| I just, I just, I love this. | |
| A spokesman said, the chief constable's position has not changed. | |
| It's a national view that he holds. | |
| Then he should be fired. | |
| Then he needs to be fired. | |
| He needs to be fucking fired. | |
| Why are we having this conversation? | |
| Conservative MP said, well, I mean, this is not good. | |
| Then do something. | |
| You're an MP. | |
| You must be able to do something. | |
| I mean, Jesus. | |
| Anyway, moving on. | |
| So, two-tier justice. | |
| Let's talk about two-tier justice. | |
| So there's a lady called Lucy Connolly who's currently three years in prison because when a foreigner stabbed a bunch of children in a school near Liverpool, killing three, stabbed eight, I think it was, killed three. | |
| Most horrific massacre since like the Manchester Arena bombing or something like that. | |
| Like it's genuinely like everyone, everyone, everyone was shocked, right? | |
| It was just genuinely like shit. | |
| That could be my kids because they were a Taylor Swift dance class, right? | |
| Genuinely shocking. | |
| People went out and rioted. | |
| Of course, don't go out and riot. | |
| That doesn't doesn't solve anything. | |
| People also posted things on social media. | |
| And one of the things that Lucy Connolly had posted was, and she was clearly upset by this. | |
| She was like, I don't care, or set the mosques on fire for all I care. | |
| Just get them out, right? | |
| Now, I personally don't really interpret that as a call to violence, right? | |
| That's saying, you know what, I don't care what you do to them now. | |
| I just want them gone, right? | |
| That's what that means to me. | |
| Now, that's not what that means to our judges. | |
| But of course, our judges have been trained and are supported institutionally with the idea that there should be a racial caste system against the English in England. | |
| And so Lucy Connolly was treated as if she was calling for these people all to be burnt to death, which again would be bad, and sent to jail for three years. | |
| She hadn't done anything. | |
| She hadn't hurt anyone. | |
| She hadn't like, you know, caused anything. | |
| The number of people who saw her post was probably in the double digits, right? | |
| But the judge was like, boom, boom, you're in. | |
| Fuck you. | |
| I'm going to make an example of you because Keir Starmer has told me to make an example of you. | |
| Keir Starmer came out and just literally said, listen, you far-right shits. | |
| I'm going to crush you and crush them. | |
| He did. | |
| I was like, oh, Jesus Christ, man. | |
| Okay, so, I mean, don't be wrong. | |
| We know Keir Starmer absolutely loves Islam. | |
| He loves minorities. | |
| He hates the native English population. | |
| We know what Keir Starmer is about. | |
| I don't need to relitigate this. | |
| But even now, Kemi Badenok is just like, hang on a second. | |
| This appears on just because, of course, there was a thing where she was due to come out on temporary release so she could see her daughter. | |
| She's got a very young daughter, which incidentally in the court sentencing guidelines is a mitigating factor. | |
| But don't worry about it. | |
| Don't worry about it. | |
| Right? | |
| She's been unfairly treated. | |
| It's time to acknowledge this. | |
| No shit. | |
| No shit. | |
| English people shouldn't be able to go to jail for things they post online. | |
| It's just that simple. | |
| Like, things posted online can't hurt people. | |
| Actions can hurt people. | |
| Therefore, it should literally just be the person who takes the action who hurts someone, which actually goes to jail. | |
| Hey, i'm a free speech radical on this, I guess, and you know, I would even. | |
| I would even be like yeah okay fine, if it was a direct call, kill that person. | |
| But that's not what Lucy did anyway. | |
| The point being, we can see exactly how the justice system works for us. | |
| How does it work for those illegal invaders who are literally breaking into our country apparently, today? | |
| Today, 623 small boats uh migrants have crossed from France, So 600 a day. | |
| And this has been ramping up under Starmer because he'll say things like, oh, I'm going to smooth the gangs. | |
| And yet, hundreds and hundreds every single day are crossing, right? | |
| The French are giving them life fests. | |
| It's like, what? | |
| Why? | |
| Oh, we don't want them to drown. | |
| Oh, okay. | |
| Good point. | |
| I mean, God forbid. | |
| Why don't you stop giving the fucking dinghies then? | |
| Right? | |
| They're getting hold of these dinghies somehow. | |
| Someone's paying for this. | |
| You could intercept those dinghy shipments and stop them from going. | |
| But of course, the French don't want to do that because they don't want them in their country either. | |
| And they don't have the balls to just kick them out. | |
| But story of the fucking West, isn't it? | |
| So anyway, we've got hundreds of them just invading every day. | |
| And that's just life now. | |
| And then suddenly the people say, like, oh, women are being assaulted on the tubes and on trains. | |
| Why is this happening? | |
| Who knows? | |
| Who can imagine why this is happening? | |
| I mean, like, I don't like, I've got two daughters. | |
| I don't want it to be dangerous out there. | |
| I don't want to be dangerous. | |
| My wife goes out, right? | |
| I don't want that to be the case. | |
| And yet, you do everything you can to make sure the country is packed with men who have genuinely barbaric views about women and how they ought to treat women, right? | |
| Now, that, in and of itself, terrible, right? | |
| Absolutely atrocious. | |
| You don't want that to be the case. | |
| It's just not good for anyone, right? | |
| It's not good for the women of your country, especially. | |
| But then when you pair that with an institutional structure, a governmental structure, right, that obviously hates the native population and gives you privileges and gives you money and tells them, if you even fucking complain about this, I'm going to come down on you like a ton of bricks. | |
| And then you give them, you know, free hotels, free food, free money. | |
| You know, they're all going to pay for this for you. | |
| What do you think those people think you think? | |
| Those people think that you are on their side and against us. | |
| So if they do something bad to us, then you will protect them and harm us for them. | |
| They think that you are their government and not our government. | |
| They think you are an occupying force in their benefit. | |
| And so what does that do? | |
| That encourages it. | |
| That encourages attacks. | |
| That encourages danger. | |
| That encourages them to think this is a conquered land. | |
| And I get to treat the people here as my spoils. | |
| Because that's what you're fucking doing. | |
| And you might be like, no, no, I'm just protecting human rights. | |
| Like, these people come from countries that are still stuck in the seventh century. | |
| Okay. | |
| They don't think about human rights. | |
| They think about barbarian warlords conquering places, right? | |
| If the West hadn't invented the modern world, they would currently be soldiers in some sultan's army. | |
| Do you understand me? | |
| Like, they wouldn't be living as they do now with smartphones. | |
| They would be just wearing armor and having a sword and riding on a camel or something like that, right? | |
| They would genuinely be like janissaries or something. | |
| And yet, for some reason, you're like, you know, invite them in, give them all the privileges they can ask for, and then just let them run in the country and see what happens. | |
| Mr. Beast style. | |
| It's like, oh, well, I wonder what fucking happens. | |
| What is the result of this? | |
| Well, actually, it's atrocities, right? | |
| Daily fucking atrocities that we see in this country. | |
| And let's go through a few, right? | |
| We'll get to this daily atrocity in a bit, actually. | |
| Right? | |
| This one and and this one, just I just, oh god, like this is the sort of atrocity that just is emblematic of everything that's wrong with the country, right? | |
| So here you have a man called Sekei Miles 23, right? | |
| He murdered a chap called Bernard Fowler, who's 87 years old now. | |
| Bernard Fowler 87 years old, so he was born like, literally like during World War Ii. | |
| Imagine how he has seen the country change right, he's grown up in the aftermath of World War Ii, so he's seen the country in rubble probably, but building itself back up. | |
| And then he's lived through the difficulties of the 70s. | |
| He's arrived in the 90s where Tony Blair decides, you know what? | |
| This country, i'm gonna bomb it with fucking foreigners, i'm gonna bomb it with Quangos, i'm gonna ruin everything about it. | |
| And then, 20 years later, one of the progeny of this project gouges his fucking eyes out at a London train station, tube station, and beats him to death with his own walking stick for no reason whatsoever. | |
| Do you hear that? | |
| That is the, that is the sound of barbarism, barbarism in England that you are facilitating, that you are making happen. | |
| Right? | |
| If your political platform is not, we will remove the barbarians. | |
| I'm not voting for you. | |
| I'm going to campaign against you. | |
| I'm going to do everything that is within my power to make you fail. | |
| If your platform is not explicitly, we will remove the barbarians. | |
| I will come to your hustings, I will come to your your, your public debates, your public appearances, and I will put a fucking microphone in your face and go, when are you removing the barbarians? | |
| And if not, why not? | |
| Why does Bernard Fowler's memory mean nothing to you? | |
| Why are you in favor of the guy who gouged his fucking eyes out? | |
| And the thing is right, a healthy society which will be like, okay well, we can deal with this, right? | |
| What we'll do is we will string him up by his neck until he's dead. | |
| We will publicize it. | |
| We will do it in front of his entire community. | |
| We'll do it in front of all of them and say, listen, if any one of you does anything even vaguely similar to this, you get the same treatment. | |
| I'll tell you what. | |
| And then it'd drop off a cliff, wouldn't it at least be like, okay well, these guys are serious, I might just wind my neck in. | |
| Maybe I don't even want to be here, actually. | |
| Uh, maybe all the free money isn't worth it, right? | |
| But no instead, he's not even going to jail right, he has got an indefinite hospital because oh, he's just mental mate, he's just mental. | |
| It's like, no, you just don't understand him, right? | |
| You just don't understand what he thinks, because he comes from a time and a place and a culture that is different to yours. | |
| You don't get it, and so you're just like, well, I guess he's just mad. | |
| It's like, or he's just not like us, and you don't understand him, and what he would understand is force, what his community would understand is force. | |
| They would understand things differently to you. | |
| But instead no he's, he's gonna be, he's gonna have a lovely cushy, And then God knows how long he'll spend in there. | |
| I mean, maybe it says actually, I can't even remember. | |
| But he's going to just spend his life in a mental asylum. | |
| Okay, great. | |
| Just great. | |
| Just, oh, it's schizophrenia, guys. | |
| It's just schizophrenia. | |
| It's just schizophrenia. | |
| So, yeah, amazing. | |
| Amazing. | |
| Don't care. | |
| Don't care. | |
| A just society would hang him. | |
| End of story. | |
| And then, so let's get to the grooming gang thing. | |
| Well, I mean, grooming gangs, no one wants to deal with that, really. | |
| The only person who's actually taking affirmative steps on it is Rupert Lowe. | |
| He's going to conduct a non-statutory national inquiry into it. | |
| To be honest with you, we know what it's going to turn up, but it's probably going to turn up a bunch of stuff that we didn't know. | |
| And it's good to keep it in the public eye anyway, right? | |
| It's good to keep this in the public eye because this is the sort of story that they will just quite happily let whisper away. | |
| No, we don't really want to. | |
| Oh, we've got other things to deal with now. | |
| We've got other things to deal with. | |
| And so you've got people like this. | |
| This is Zafar Khayyim, who kidnapped a 13-year-old girl on her way home to school, way to school. | |
| He drugged her, raped her many times, poured acid into her eyes when she was trying to escape. | |
| She's now blind. | |
| And then he invited 23 of his friends to come and rape her as well in Leeds. | |
| Just give me a second. | |
| Just let me get my phone out. | |
| Let me scroll through my contacts. | |
| It's so weird. | |
| I couldn't call up one of these people. | |
| If I called up any single one of these contacts and was like, oh, hey, by the way, I've got a 13-year-old girl that I've blinded and I'm raping in my house. | |
| Do you want to come over and have a go? | |
| They'll be like, I'm calling the cops, right? | |
| Every single one of them would be like, I'm calling the fucking cops. | |
| 23 of his friends were like, yeah, sure, I'll be over in a second. | |
| I think this speaks to a much deeper problem with his community than we are prepared to actually deal with, right? | |
| Than we're prepared to actually think about. | |
| I mean, look at him. | |
| He looks fucking smug. | |
| He looks like he's smirking. | |
| Like, sorry. | |
| How is this not worthy of the death penalty? | |
| How is what he did to this child raped her dozens and dozens of times and then blinded her? | |
| How is that not worthy of the death penalty? | |
| Right? | |
| But, okay, oh, well, we've arrested him. | |
| He'll spend nine years in jail or something. | |
| Okay, but what about the 23 friends? | |
| How much jail time are they spending? | |
| None, right? | |
| Fucking none. | |
| So there are currently 23 child rapists just wandering around the community in Leeds with nothing happening. | |
| It's like, sorry, how is that acceptable? | |
| How is that acceptable, right? | |
| If you're not, I'm going to find all of the men who raped a British child as part of the grooming gas scandal and fucking imprison them for life. | |
| I'm not voting for you, right? | |
| I'm not supporting you. | |
| I will be in your face saying, why are you just letting the rest of the rapists run free? | |
| Why are you in what? | |
| Where do you benefit from that? | |
| Why is. | |
| Why is it that this doesn't bother you? | |
| Right? | |
| And then, again, let's just get the judges involved quickly. | |
| So there was a grooming gang trial going on. | |
| And apparently the transcripts, you know, you can't hear the transcripts, right? | |
| You can't hear the transcripts because the judge has decided that it'd be contrary to the public interest. | |
| And what that means is the things that these men did to these children are so fucking horrific, they're worried about another Southport event. | |
| They don't want more riots. | |
| And so that's why we, no, no, no, we've got to protect this community because otherwise you'll go fucking ballistic. | |
| And it's like, right, thank you, Judge, for once again protecting predators and making sure that English girls don't get any justice, right? | |
| Just again. | |
| Thank you, Judge Jonathan Rose. | |
| Again, another wonderfully English name, right? | |
| The traitors are coming from inside the country. | |
| I know there are lots of people like, oh, it's this group of people, it's that group of people. | |
| Is this far? | |
| No, no, no, no, no. | |
| They're all fucking English making these decisions. | |
| They're all English. | |
| And it's just anyway. | |
| So, break into the country illegally, and we can't even deport you because, of course, one judge, again, the judges will say, Oh, I mean, returning him to Somalia, it'd stress him out. | |
| God forbid. | |
| God forbid. | |
| We don't want to stress him out. | |
| God forbid. | |
| The idea that this poor, I mean, you don't know anything about this man. | |
| He's literally an illegal alien. | |
| You don't know anything about him, but you don't want to stress him out. | |
| If your platform is not rooting out every single one of these judges and then trying them for some sort of crime, I'm not voting for you. | |
| I'm not interested. | |
| Again, I'm actively against you. | |
| And again, it's just there are so many examples. | |
| So you may remember Black Lives Matter Bristol, right? | |
| One of the people who topped the Colson statue had raised apparently £70,000 plus pounds and she spent it all on herself. | |
| She was just funding a lavish lifestyle. | |
| Can you believe it? | |
| She was a total fucking crook. | |
| And she's ordered by a judge to pay back just one pound. | |
| Why? | |
| Why are we doing this? | |
| Oh, it's because she's black. | |
| That's why. | |
| It's because she's part of the privileged caste. | |
| And if this were you, Mr. Straight White Englishman, you would be paying loads more back as well as having to go to jail for this. | |
| It's just the world we live in. | |
| And you get just some of just some of the stories. | |
| This is Judge Mulrady, right? | |
| If you look at just foreign rapists who claimed he didn't know sex with sleeping women is wrong can't be deported. | |
| I've seen that before. | |
| Bisexual rapists escapes deportation due to safety fears in Jamaica. | |
| COVID made me commit crime, claims drug dealer spared deportation. | |
| Why is why? | |
| Why is she a judge? | |
| Get rid of her. | |
| Fire them. | |
| Come on. | |
| This is all just beyond the pale, right? | |
| And so the consequence of all of this, and this is, it's really just it's inevitable, and you would just expect it to be the case that the country is turning to total shit, right? | |
| The country is just running into the fucking ground. | |
| Because obviously, I'm not even covering the many billions we spend on legal and illegal immigrants in all manner of ways. | |
| We pay for their housing, we pay for their healthcare, we pay for their social needs, like we pay for the, we give them money, we give them benefits, we give them fucking everything, and so we are poor. | |
| Britain is a poor country. | |
| So it turns out that London dropped for the first time in probably like a thousand years out of the top five richest cities in the world. | |
| So London is no longer one of the top five richest cities in the world. | |
| Well, I'm not surprised. | |
| It fucking looks like shit. | |
| It looks terrible. | |
| It's one-third English. | |
| If you were a millionaire and there are 10,000 of them leaving every year, why would you live in London? | |
| Like, you could live anywhere else and the weather would be better. | |
| Like, the people around you would probably be better. | |
| Like, why would you live in London? | |
| Why would you want to live in the rest of Britain? | |
| Like, there's no good reason for it. | |
| And again, if you look at my video going around Swindon the other day, it's just a paradigm example of what the country is like now. | |
| Every, like, you know, well, what was a well-to-do town 20 or 30 years ago is now a ghost town filled with vape shops, barbers, and like Bangladeshi luggage shops and shit. | |
| And everyone can see it. | |
| Everyone can see that this place is just going downhill. | |
| It's going straight downhill. | |
| And so it's just, why would you? | |
| Why would you? | |
| And it's not like things are looking good in any of them. | |
| Like at the moment, the Birmingham thing is amazing, right? | |
| Because these areas of Birmingham are like 90% Muslim. | |
| So you've exchanged the population with a foreign population and now shit is piling up in the street. | |
| So I love watching shit libs like Tom Swarbig, right? | |
| Again, English, work at LBC, going down there and being like, huh, this is disgusting. | |
| Can he find an Englishman in this area? | |
| No, obviously not. | |
| Everyone in this English, in this area is foreign. | |
| And he's just like, you, this is kind of crazy. | |
| It's like, Tom, this is what your entire belief system creates, right? | |
| Birmingham went bankrupt a couple of years ago. | |
| It's got no money. | |
| And it's currently in the middle of a rubbishman strike, Binman strike. | |
| And so the residents are just piling up in the streets. | |
| Isn't that disgusting? | |
| Like, I would take it, I would take my rubbish to the rubbish dump, right? | |
| You've got to pay some money probably to do it. | |
| But okay, I'd pay like, you know, 20 quid or whatever it is, rather than pile it up in the fucking streets outside my house. | |
| But apparently, that's just not an issue for the new occupants of Birmingham. | |
| And Tom is just like, this is crazy, bro. | |
| It's like, this is what you believe. | |
| This is the consequence of what you believe. | |
| What you believe has made this possible. | |
| And you're saying that, oh my God, I mean, what could have been done? | |
| Anything. | |
| Anything else could have been done. | |
| At any point in this chain of events, it could have been incepted, stopped, and this wouldn't be the case. | |
| But it is the case. | |
| And it's gross. | |
| It is making our country just a total shithole. | |
| And it's making us. | |
| There are people around the world who pity us, right? | |
| They pity what England has become. | |
| And I'm not surprised. | |
| I'm absolutely not surprised. | |
| I mean, just look at his fucking face. | |
| Eeeh. Eeeh. Like, eeeh. Yeah. | |
| I mean, it is. | |
| It is just so bad that I really have to modulate what I say on social media. | |
| And I don't think it's unfair to say, look, deport illegals. | |
| I think that's totally fine. | |
| Bring back the death penalty for people who gouge out pensioners' eyes. | |
| I think that's totally fair. | |
| I don't think any of this is beyond the pale. | |
| I don't think any of this is extreme or an unfair characterization of people or anything like that. | |
| I think this is all perfectly normal that normal people think. | |
| And actually, when polled, almost everyone agrees with me. | |
| Like more than half the people in this country want the death penalty brought back, especially for extreme cases. | |
| It rises to like 65% in really extreme cases for like terrorists and child murderers. | |
| And something like 67% of the people in this country want every illegal just removed. | |
| And that's 52% of liberal Democrats as well. | |
| Like Liberal Democrats want illegals removed. | |
| So I'm representing here incredibly mainstream positions. | |
| And again, no one in the country wants a racial caste system instantiated into law. | |
| No one wants that. | |
| Like, if you, I haven't actually seen a poll about that, but I know that people don't want this, which is why the Labour government, even like, oh, God, we're going to have to incede and make sure that it doesn't happen. | |
| Because my God, if I think they're calling me two-tier care now and that's bad now, imagine what it's going to be like when we actually have it de jure in this country. | |
| So just saying, right, if you're not on your political, your political commentary in Britain talking about this and you were a political party and this isn't top of your agenda, you ain't getting anything from me, bro. | |
| I'm not having any of it. | |
| I'm not in any way, shape, or form interested in your party. | |
| Your party is not fit for the job that is needed for, right? | |
| The job that is ahead of us. | |
| It's just that simple, right? | |
| It's just that fucking simple. | |
| God, I hate, I hate having to cover this sort of stuff. | |
| You know, I would much rather just do like, you know, 10, 15 minute philosophy videos. | |
| They're so much easier to do. | |
| because they're just abstract. | |
| I just write, you know, four-page script, record them, and then just, just fill it in with some images, and then boom, done. | |
| But I just feel that I have to cover this, right? | |
| I have to try and drive the conversation to be about these things. | |
| Because otherwise, they're just going to try and avoid it. | |
| They're just going to try and avoid dealing with these issues. | |
| And these are the pressing issues of the time. | |
| These are the things that are making the country shit. | |
| Making it unworthy of us. | |
| And that's not acceptable. | |
| It's absolutely not acceptable. | |
| Anyway, let's read your comments. | |
| Ethel Wolf says, I missed the simple 90s Saturday morning DMTV and Power Rangers. | |
| God. | |
| Back when the country wasn't shit. | |
| Going back to going to the arcades and playing in the back lane. | |
| Now I know words like Islam and halal. | |
| We were brought up to live in a world that never existed. | |
| I miss home. | |
| Yeah, man. | |
| I didn't learn the word Islam until I was about 20 years old and at university. | |
| Because it just wasn't a thing in my life. | |
| And it was only when I went to university in Coventry that I met Muslims. | |
| And they seem fine. | |
| Those people, as far as I could tell. | |
| But like, you know, it was just something totally alien, right? | |
| Russian says, angry, twist, stream, more of these, please. | |
| That's my blood pressure, man. | |
| Johnny Thunder says, it's the women. | |
| A lot of it is, but a lot of it's men. | |
| A lot of, like, there's no group that is beholden and responsible to this. | |
| A lot of them are just honestly English men. | |
| Like the judge, the police constable. | |
| Like, English men. | |
| Keir Starmer, English man. | |
| It's like, God, this is just so insufferable, man. | |
| We're being totally sold out by just genuinely midwit traitors from our own people, right? | |
| Tribacea says, for most of the online world, politics is just entertainment. | |
| For you, it's dangerously personal peril. | |
| Yeah, and this is the thing. | |
| I don't want to hear about Israel and Palestine. | |
| If you want to talk about Israel and Palestine, I'm not talking to you. | |
| Filipino White Boy says, I recently started rereading books from my childhood, such as Wind of the Willows. | |
| It's incredible how well written a children's book is from 1908. | |
| Modern writing sucks in comparison. | |
| Yeah, I did reading with my son today. | |
| When I was in America, I got him a US Army survival manual. | |
| And at the moment, he's also reading Robin Hood book, which is again, like, Victorian translations into Victorian English of Robin Hood Tales. | |
| And it's really well structured. | |
| Really, really good. | |
| It's kind of like the Robin Hood canon in this book. | |
| I'll probably do a video on it at some point because it's just such a good set of tales. | |
| And the thing is, I've read the original medieval stories, fables, in the medieval English, and I know them. | |
| And I know that these are great translations because I've had to sit there and like figure it out myself, you know, what is going on in this story. | |
| And we just got to the one with Will Scarlet. | |
| And so, and I asked my son, what do you want to do? | |
| The survival manual or the Robin Hood ones. | |
| He said, oh, the Robin Hood ones, which was great. | |
| And we got to the one now with how Robin Hood meets Will Scarlett. | |
| And basically, Will Scarlett is looking for Robin Hood because he himself is Robin Hood's cousin and has become an outlaw. | |
| But Robin Hood hasn't seen him in years because he's been an outlaw for years. | |
| So it doesn't recognize him. | |
| So he sees this guy walking like some sort of dandy, like wearing a bright red outfit down the road. | |
| And him and Little John are like, right, okay, we'll rob him. | |
| But the thing is, Little John's like, you know what, Robin, this guy's pretty big. | |
| He looks pretty strong. | |
| Like, you better watch yourself, you know? | |
| And so they jump out. | |
| They threaten to mug Will Scarlett with their quartz stars. | |
| And Will Scarlett pulls a sword out. | |
| And Robin's like, look, we're going to break that sword with our stars. | |
| It's too good a sword. | |
| Just get yourself stuff. | |
| And so Will Scarlet's like, fine, I will. | |
| Goes over, finds an oak sapling and just rips it out by the roots. | |
| And Little John's like, Jesus Christ, Robin. | |
| This guy's going to kick your ass. | |
| And Robin's like, no, no, be fine. | |
| Will Scarlett does kick Robin's ass. | |
| And then they discover that they're related. | |
| And Will Scarlett joins them. | |
| It's a great, great little story. | |
| And it's just one of those things where it's beautifully written in comparison to modern writing. | |
| I'm not going to keep going on about it, but it's so much good. | |
| So much better than what we have now. | |
| That you just can't beat it. | |
| Get old books for your children. | |
| It's good for them. | |
| Stephen says, you're the cooked, moved to America. | |
| No, I'm not going to move to America. | |
| Kate the Swiss says, wooden pole arms. | |
| I don't remember what that was in response to. | |
| Magnum North says, the UK's problems are my business, because not only am I a proud descendant of the UK, the US actually needs allies in the West. | |
| We will not abandon you unless you abandon yourself. | |
| Well, I really appreciate that. | |
| And I've got no plans to go anywhere at all. | |
| Things could get really shit. | |
| Things could get worse, is what I mean. | |
| But yeah, no, it'd be right. | |
| I can't read some of these super chats because YouTube. | |
| Johnny says, general standards, bloated welfare state, immigration, freedom of expression, mental health being an excuse for everything, where to start. | |
| I know, I know. | |
| It's where, where to start, man. | |
| It's so bad. | |
| It is just so bad. | |
| Lord of the Nerds says, English manners and hospitality has been its undoing. | |
| The thing is, this isn't about English manners and hospitality. | |
| This is about an ideology that has captured the entire state. | |
| Both parties, all of the structures of government, all of the structures that regulate society have been totally captured by this ideology. | |
| And at some point, we're just going to have to say, you know what, just get fucked. | |
| Just get fucked. | |
| I don't care about your judgments on this. | |
| Tearful Spark says, I'm sorry to say this, but this was allowed by not only by the government, but by the people. | |
| I agree. | |
| The midwit masses, let this happen. | |
| The government and police are happy too. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| And this is another thing as well. | |
| It's like, I cannot imagine what's going through the minds of normies at this point. | |
| Like you keep voting red or blue and look where we are. | |
| How can this be like, so when, when you see like, Oh, women are being harassed on the tube. | |
| Well, you fucking voted for this. | |
| Like, you know, voting actually does have consequences. | |
| And you being harassed on the tube by a bunch of random foreigners is one of those consequences. | |
| Just FYI. | |
| Tiego says, hi from Portugal. | |
| Problem, not only illegal migrants and legal migrants. | |
| I thought the victim of Manchester Genocide and Southport murderers. | |
| Yeah, no, I'm not saying it's not the legal migrants as well. | |
| You know, we need to end immigration full stop, obviously. | |
| The last Russian says, they're taking over the system. | |
| 2024 list of new barristers. | |
| Read the names. | |
| Oh, Jesus Christ. | |
| First name on the list. | |
| Mohammed Kashif Riaz. | |
| M.D. | |
| Ripon Mia. | |
| Shanantu Dev. | |
| Yusuf Ali. | |
| Naurash Daz. | |
| Alagamir Hussain. | |
| Maidal Islam. | |
| Christian Nadasian. | |
| Dean Maximin. | |
| Monaira Parvin. | |
| Shah Jahan Khan. | |
| Jesus fucking. | |
| Chloe Elizabeth Steele, about 20 names down. | |
| So we've got an English name there, probably. | |
| Lee Nguyen, maybe? | |
| Lauren Williams. | |
| There we go. | |
| Holy shit, man. | |
| I'm going to send this to Callum. | |
| I'm just going to. | |
| he's gonna hate it. | |
| Robert Boyce says, Evening Carl, love all you do. | |
| The kind of Britain is depressing. | |
| People like yourself give me hope for the future. | |
| How do we vote another way out of this reform being Tories 2.0? | |
| Basically, I honestly think that what we need is for Rupert Lodestar's party that's actually based. | |
| And I think it would be based because Rupert himself is pretty fucking based. | |
| And we need to just step past Farage. | |
| Honestly, Farage seems to want to put Zia Youssef in charge. | |
| He keeps dropping this. | |
| Well, you know, if someone younger and better looking than me comes along, they can lead the party. | |
| It's like, well, there's only one other person who can control the party, Nige. | |
| So I guess you've chosen your man. | |
| So, unfortunately, Robert, we're kind of blue-balled at the moment. | |
| Thank you, Mutley. | |
| I appreciate that. | |
| Ye Master says, much love Sargon, but as an American, I have no faith in Europe's ability to dig itself out of this immense cultural hole. | |
| For all its flaws, the USA is so lucky we have a right-wing populace like Trump, but Farage is not Trump. | |
| I agree. | |
| And it's not just that, though. | |
| The people of America value themselves, right? | |
| The people of Britain do not value themselves. | |
| And that's part of the core problem. | |
| Mark, I can't move to the US, man. | |
| I can't. | |
| I mean, technically, it's probably possible, but I don't. | |
| No, no. | |
| Like, I can't. | |
| I don't want to leave. | |
| I don't want to. | |
| Much appreciated, ZXY. | |
| Tiego, non-Europeans should not be voting in Europe. | |
| Yeah, I mean, so Athens had this thing called a Metic, right? | |
| So they had their citizens, they had slaves, and they had metics. | |
| Slaves, of course, had no rights, didn't own property, and were owned by the people. | |
| Obviously, slaves, bad. | |
| But the Metic class were the class of foreigners who worked in Athens, paid taxes, and ran businesses, but were not politically enfranchised. | |
| And I actually think there's something to this. | |
| Why would you come to another country and demand political enfranchisement? | |
| I would totally understand that. | |
| If I moved to another country, and they were like, well, yeah, no, you can work. | |
| You can have rights of residency. | |
| You've done everything by the book. | |
| Feel free to, you know, set up a business, earn some money, buy a house. | |
| Your children can be enfranchised, but you can't. | |
| I could totally understand that. | |
| You know, that kind of system. | |
| And I would be like, it would be baffling to me if they weren't running it like that, right? | |
| Like, why wouldn't you run this that way? | |
| Why would you give political power to foreigners? | |
| This is the thing. | |
| Like, there was the thing where, like, two fucking Labour MPs went to Israel for some reason, neither of them Jewish, and got refused entry, right? | |
| And there's a big uproar. | |
| And everyone's pissed off. | |
| And, like, there's loads of other Labour MPs complaining. | |
| And Kemi Badenog has to come out and make a statement about it. | |
| And it's just like, none of the people involved in this were born in this country. | |
| Apart from Kemi Badenog, who's an anchor baby. | |
| She moved to Nigeria, like almost immediately after she was born, and then lived there until she was like 16. | |
| And then moved back. | |
| But all of the other ones, the two MPs, a bunch of the other people complaining. | |
| None of them were born in this country. | |
| And it's like, why is this happening? | |
| Why are we permitting this? | |
| Generico says, now the state has explicitly abrogated their responsibility to the nation, the ethnos. | |
| We need structures and systems that can exist outside of the state and act in the interest of the people. | |
| Yeah, and this is why literally all of the liberal thinkers that liberal democracy is predicated on would be like, no, the state has absolutely broken the social contract as they defined it. | |
| And so really, you need to just replace it. | |
| Sani says, get your country back. | |
| Enoch Powell foresaw all of this. | |
| No, no, he didn't. | |
| Enoch Powell did not know nearly how far this would go, right? | |
| His prediction was, well, one day Birmingham might be one-third white. | |
| No, it's two-thirds non-white, right? | |
| It's two-thirds non-English, one-third English in Birmingham, right? | |
| He had no idea how far this would go. | |
| Captain Bogrell says, the only party that is in containment right at this point is Homeland. | |
| Their grassroots support from the youth taunts reform, UKIP, and the Tories. | |
| Maybe, but they've got like a thousand members, man. | |
| You know, it's like, yeah, we need people who have reach, who have gravitas, who have positions already to come in and build something up. | |
| Like, the British public just don't go for this kind of thing. | |
| And I don't know why, and I wish it wasn't the case. | |
| It just is. | |
| It's just not going to get to where we want it to be. | |
| And so it's just like, okay, well, sorry. | |
| You know, what can be done? | |
| Alex says, they are traitors and commit treason. | |
| I lived in Spain for 10 years, northwest, hardcore Spanish. | |
| I embrace the culture, not reviolate. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| I know. | |
| Like, this is the right thing. | |
| Digital ID would be presented as a solution to all, says the last Russian. | |
| Yeah, well, Tony Blair has been banging this drum for many years now, and he'll eventually get his way, won't he? | |
| John Smith says, play any good games recently. | |
| Not really. | |
| They're really busy. | |
| The only thing I've played recently is, actually, it's quite good. | |
| It's called Bell Right. | |
| It's kind of like a cross between Ark and Bannerlord. | |
| I'm quite enjoying it. | |
| It's not perfect, and there's definitely a lot more that could be done to it, but it's pretty good. | |
| Generico says, to the British, you think you're mad, and you think you're not nearly mad enough. | |
| Find this stealing your spines. | |
| England expects that you do your duty. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Stephen says, hundreds of boats and the channel is right over there. | |
| Well, yeah, but the thing is, you need to show some sort of ID, right? | |
| With the boats, they don't have to show any kind of ID. | |
| Tiego again says exactly the same here in Portugal. | |
| European countries need to need a First Amendment for European people. | |
| I mean, it's just, it's crazy that our countries are being run in the interests of foreigners and invaders, right? | |
| People who literally break into our countries are prioritized. | |
| And it's the tyranny of human rights that are doing this. | |
| The concept of human rights has made the government think that its first priority is to protect minorities against the majority, rather than to protect the majority against the government. | |
| And so it's totally inverted what liberal democracy was meant to be for. | |
| And so we're in a position where we're totally fucked at this point. | |
| Hendon says, some white UK elites use social engineering to thin undesirable whites, blaming them for colonial crimes, samely in the USA, but I negated them. | |
| Yeah, but I mean, it's not even that they go on about that, right? | |
| It's not even that that's how they do this. | |
| What they're mostly doing is just saying, no, you're a fucking racist, and therefore, right? | |
| And therefore is how it does. | |
| Matthew says, they brought them here to kill Bernard Fowler. | |
| They wouldn't say this, right? | |
| They don't think like that, I don't think. | |
| That is just the inevitable consequence of bringing these people here. | |
| Pistachiok, what are you going to do about talking besides talking about it? | |
| Well, I'm certainly not going to Fed post on YouTube, so don't ask stupid questions, man. | |
| Come on. | |
| NY Patriot says, the problem isn't immigrants taking over. | |
| It's the people who vote to let them in. | |
| They are truly the rotten society. | |
| Yeah, it is. | |
| It's the governments. | |
| It's the establishment. | |
| It's the institutions. | |
| I mean, like, I don't even blame these people. | |
| Like, if you could understand, if tomorrow, like, I don't know, Denmark was like, you know what, we're just going to let as many English people in and we're going to give them loads of money. | |
| So if you can just get to Denmark, we're going to give you money and just allow you to swan around and have the run of the country. | |
| You could see a bunch of people. | |
| You'd be like, okay, well, you're going to attract loads of shit people who go over and just exploit you. | |
| And the Dane's like, yeah, no, no, we want that. | |
| We want that. | |
| And it's like, okay, but you are putting out a message loud and clear that will attract the shit people from England to your country and they'll cause trouble. | |
| And the Dane's like, yes, yes, we are. | |
| That's what we're doing to the rest of the world. | |
| That's what we are doing to countries way worse than ours. | |
| Ken for $100. | |
| Thanks, man. | |
| Says, greeting from the US, Sargon. | |
| Keep up the good work. | |
| Love the UK and wish you guys all the best. | |
| Well, thank you very much, sir. | |
| I am Russian. | |
| I am aware of the parable of the 15-second African. | |
| I'm not going to. | |
| I'm not going to say anything. | |
| Steven says, Dankula wonders why Carl just called him. | |
| Very funny, very funny. | |
| Pastasiok, voting will do absolutely nothing about this. | |
| Look, man, that's all I can say. | |
| And Generico, it's the same thing, right? | |
| Like, I am on YouTube and I live in England, right? | |
| Whenever you feel the need to say voting isn't the answer, just don't. | |
| Just honestly, just don't. | |
| There is no other series of words that can come out of my mouth, so just don't ask, right? | |
| Don't think, I don't think the things you think. | |
| It's just the words that come out of my mouth have to be, we will vote for another party, right? | |
| So there's just no other option. | |
| Don't even ask. | |
| Or he says, former local PMC, God, dude. | |
| If we did, right? | |
| If we did, the government would come down on us faster than you could speak, faster than you could blink, right? | |
| That is only a privilege extended to the foreigners. | |
| The natives do not have this. | |
| K Thoth says, your elites are protecting those that violate your children. | |
| I know. | |
| I know. | |
| I know, which is why it has to be the core of whatever we do politically going forward. | |
| That any party that isn't like, no, we're going to fuck these people. | |
| Right? | |
| You bludgeon a man to death with his own walking stick and gouge out his eyes. | |
| We're bringing back the death penalty for that. | |
| Like, again, if you're not bringing back the death penalty, I'm not voting for you. | |
| I'm not supporting you. | |
| I'm not doing anything, right? | |
| Kerry says we need a tipping point and need it now. | |
| I mean, I don't want, I wish, I just want this to be solved peacefully, right? | |
| I just want the sensible things to be done. | |
| The bad people are given what they deserve, and the good people are protected from the bad people, and things are restored to a point of normalcy. | |
| That's all I'm asking for, man. | |
| It's really not that much. | |
| Has the chat died here? | |
| I think the chat, my chat's died. | |
| There we go. | |
| Oil toast, nothing ever happens. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| I know. | |
| Burton Sausage. | |
| I don't see how the UK recovers from this short of a civil war. | |
| Well, that's what David Betts has been saying, a professor of war studies at like Imperial College London. | |
| And he's like, Yeah, guys, look, we have all of the conditions right for a civil war. | |
| The Tinder is all dry, and everyone is just waiting for a spark. | |
| Maybe it would be better. | |
| And I just want to be completely clear. | |
| I'm totally against political violence. | |
| I am totally against like doing anything that's illegal. | |
| I'm totally against it. | |
| I actually want a political solution, right? | |
| I actually do want a political solution. | |
| What I want is for the government to be like, look, we've just got to get rid of all this shit. | |
| We've just got to stop all this. | |
| Whatever we're doing to get to this point, we have to stop. | |
| S-Freak says, you Brits should never have given up your gun rights. | |
| We haven't. | |
| There are millions of guns in Britain. | |
| They literally confiscated all Rupert Lowe's guns the other day. | |
| Like, Americans have no idea what Britain's like. | |
| Jackson says, if your countrymen keep letting out all the violent criminal invaders, I hit El Salvador has prison space for lease. | |
| Our government will never do it. | |
| THEY DON'T NEVER DO IT! | |
| Yes, King Tesseract. | |
| That is exactly how things are at this point. | |
| Sensible Monika says, I enjoy the Load Ceases podcast, but how do we know that you won't do a Farage and decide it's all not worth it? | |
| So let's just enjoy the contributions. | |
| What do you mean? | |
| Like, what else am I going to do? | |
| I don't think I can just get another job, you know? | |
| It's my company. | |
| Why would I abandon it? | |
| Like, no, that's not going to happen, man. | |
| Like, I'm. | |
| I admit I'm in this until things get fixed. | |
| Because this just seems like the only worthwhile thing doing to do, you know? | |
| Like, everything's so fucking shit, man. | |
| It just can't be allowed to continue. | |
| Just can't be allowed to continue. | |
| Sorry, I've just refreshed it. | |
| Let me get back to where I was. | |
| Right, there we are. | |
| Wyatt says, hearts feel bad for the British. | |
| You let this happen. | |
| You allow self-hating people to rule your own universities. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| I know. | |
| I know. | |
| Again, I don't. | |
| The thing is, right, none of this was on the cards when they were running for elections. | |
| Like, they were never like, right, so we're going to open immigration, guys. | |
| They would never have won on that platform. | |
| The Conservatives were like, we're going to get immigration down to the tens of thousands. | |
| Boris Wave. | |
| Like, none of it. | |
| Like, Keir Starmer, I'm going to stop the boats from coming. | |
| Hundreds more a day. | |
| Like, every time we've just been betrayed by our political class. | |
| It's just crazy. | |
| Curious pondering says to your campaign fund. | |
| I could never foresee the country and the politicians uphold this culture extinction cult. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| No one saw it coming. | |
| No one thought this was going to be what they would do. | |
| Like, no one did. | |
| Big guy, love from Israel. | |
| Well, thank you. | |
| I know. | |
| I'm being funded by Israel now. | |
| Been subbed since 2014. | |
| Please get your amazing country back in order. | |
| Man, we want that. | |
| It's going to. | |
| Ambiguous Britain says, Carl, you've said before that you have been, that you would have been, had you been brought up in Christianity, would have been religious. | |
| In these dire times, we're running out of other sources of hope. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Frog Jupiter says, Sargon, apparently the left has crowned you as king of the manosphere. | |
| V did a live stream on it. | |
| It's the manosphere influence on young men. | |
| Oh, well, I'll have to go and check that out. | |
| So I was on GB News the other day. | |
| I was interviewed about, let me about, well, the Manosphere and Adolescence. | |
| When it loads. | |
| Boom, who's that handsome chap? | |
| So go like, so there's an hour-long interview that I've done that they've only released a couple of clips of yet. | |
| But the clips seem to be doing fairly well and people are quite enjoying it. | |
| So go check that out on GB News when it's out. | |
| Basically, I actually watched adolescents and it doesn't say what the left think it says at all. | |
| And you can't help but kind of feel sorry for the kid who's the killer because the society is just so entrenched against him. | |
| And, like, I mean, in the thing, he's the victim of a cyberbullying campaign by the girl that he kills. | |
| Right? | |
| And it's so, oh, right. | |
| So it's not just he just kills a girl for no reason. | |
| Like, she's been ruining his life. | |
| Anyway, I won't. | |
| I won't go into it. | |
| But it's kind of crazy. | |
| Like, there's a there are other takes on this. | |
| Black Cloud says, what level would Britain have to hit for you to move out? | |
| Where would you move? | |
| No, I wouldn't. | |
| It would just things would have to get things would just be different, right? | |
| I'd probably have to give up being on YouTube. | |
| Sick says, your namesake Salgan of the Cat had to deal with the exact same problems. | |
| He threatened any foreigners and didn't agree with him. | |
| Well, they weren't exactly the exact same problems. | |
| But yeah. | |
| John says, sort of on the side, but I watched 90s TV advert compilation for nostalgia. | |
| And even they were better made than now. | |
| Some are genuinely clever. | |
| I believe it. | |
| TextGen says, I'm conflicted. | |
| Maybe you can provide some wisdom. | |
| I know Muslims who are friends. | |
| They're good people. | |
| Is the issue truly Islam allows this even to exist? | |
| Do we have to drive out completely? | |
| No, and I'm sure that the Muslims you know, I'm sure they genuinely are good people, right? | |
| Because there's a kind of selection bias, right? | |
| Like, they moved to the US, which I'm sure wasn't easy, and they didn't just give them a bunch of free stuff. | |
| And they're treated like normal citizens, right? | |
| They're probably not being given privileges by the Texas state. | |
| Our country self-selects for different kinds of people from Muslim countries. | |
| So, you know, not all Muslims are the same. | |
| I'm sure that you've got some nice people there, but there are lots of people who aren't nice who decide to come to Britain because we're easy meat. | |
| Oaks says, in 2017, you responded to my tweet. | |
| It meant a lot to the kid, to a kid. | |
| Well, my pleasure, man. | |
| The question is about libertarians. | |
| I wish I could go back to those silly debates. | |
| I hope Britain can do the difficult work that needs to be done. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| I miss when things, and it's only eight years ago, man, when things were a lot more frivolous. | |
| Things weren't shit. | |
| And I know this sounds crazy, but honestly, like the country used to be half decent until about COVID, frankly. | |
| Pyromaniac Bro says, now, many agree the extreme should be dealt with harshly, but it's the myriad of other petty, abundant instances that should be dealt with harshly to change behavior and stem that constant flow. | |
| Yes, absolutely. | |
| Absolutely the case. | |
| For the sake of time, I'm afraid I'm going to have to skip over a couple of them. | |
| Dan says, Yuri Bezanov told us exactly what was going to happen to Western society back in the 70s. | |
| Why do you think his warnings were ignored? | |
| Well, I mean, lots of different reasons, but I think arrogance is the first one. | |
| And of course, the people who the people who took over were the communists he was warning us about. | |
| Doug says, do you feel the current leadership in the West has lost the mandate of heaven? | |
| And if so, it's our future nothing but chaos. | |
| Oh, absolutely. | |
| Like, I think that, I mean, the Labour Party, out of the total potential votes they could have got, they got 20%, right? | |
| 30% of the actual, 33% of the actual votes cast. | |
| That's not really very democratic. | |
| And we are going to have a series of kind of limp governments where they'll get a large number of seats, but nobody will support them. | |
| It'll be a very, very small percentage of people that support them. | |
| Natoriani says, Hey, Salgon, did you receive my animation? | |
| No. | |
| Where did you send it? | |
| Rusty says, Don't you think this is all on purpose to get us all super angry? | |
| Then the false flags are going to happen. | |
| No, I know, I don't think that's the case. | |
| I think they're desperate for nothing to happen, right? | |
| But they're just essentially, like, I had a conversation with an Afghan taxi driver trying to persuade him: look, no, they truly believe in human rights and democracy. | |
| Like, this is their religion. | |
| And it is true they were doing it for resources and stuff like this, but like they truly believe they were going to set up a democracy in Afghanistan and Iraq and things like that. | |
| And he was just like, well, really? | |
| No, no, seriously. | |
| They seriously fucking believe this. | |
| Like, you believe in the Quran. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| It's they genuinely believe it. | |
| Napoleon wasn't French. | |
| Hitler wasn't German. | |
| Stalin wasn't Russian. | |
| These men were more of the nations they ruled than anyone else. | |
| Yeah, that's a great point. | |
| And that's a great reason not to put foreigners in charge. | |
| When are we getting the rules right now? | |
| Good question. | |
| Great question. | |
| Ricky says, I've watched your content since this week in Stupid. | |
| Thanks for your contributions to the overall discourse. | |
| I lament for Britain. | |
| I really hope things can turn around. | |
| Much love from New Zealand. | |
| Thank you. | |
| Much appreciated, man. | |
| Ironic keyboard: there is something you can do besides vote, which is pray. | |
| Again, I'm not religious, but I do appreciate when people say, Oh, I'm going to pray for you. | |
| Like, if nothing else, that to me means just I'm going to send you good vibes. | |
| I wish well for you. | |
| It's a very kind thing, even if I don't have any spiritual leaning myself. | |
| I don't understand why people get funny about it. | |
| Isn't that they're saying something nice to you? | |
| Be grateful. | |
| SG says, Carl, I'm 24. | |
| I'm about to bring my first son into the world. | |
| Congratulations. | |
| Do you have any advice? | |
| Just be diligent. | |
| That's all you have to do. | |
| You just have to pay attention. | |
| You just have to. | |
| You will be fine. | |
| None of the problems you'll encounter will be too bad, I'm sure. | |
| Like, everything will go fairly smoothly, fingers crossed. | |
| And unfortunately, you're just going to have a few sleepless nights. | |
| You're going to change a few nappies in the middle of the night. | |
| You'll have to take the baby at some point in the afternoon so your wife can go and have a nap and catch up on her sleep and she'll do the same for you. | |
| But it's they're the worst parts of it. | |
| And the rest of it is just golden. | |
| Like the first smile is the best thing in the world, right? | |
| Sorry, let me refresh because a bunch of people are setting more things. | |
| Sorry about this. | |
| Just such. | |
| I just can't get over just how completely everything has been miscarried. | |
| Garlic says, the UK is gone. | |
| You've been reduced to an EU WEF puppet state. | |
| You've got to seek asylum in America as a political refugees. | |
| You tried your best for years, but now it's only a matter of time until you end up locked up and persecuted like Tommy Robinson. | |
| Yeah, it probably is. | |
| Not going to lie, like every day I wake up and I think, right, okay, has YouTube done something to me? | |
| Has not Twitter, but like, you know, any of the services I use online done something to me? | |
| Am I going to get a letter or a knock from the police? | |
| Like, am I going to get something from the UK government? | |
| Am I going to get stigmatized in the media as being someone who's radicalizing people or something like that, even though I'm 100% committed to the democratic process? | |
| It's probably going to happen, right? | |
| So, and I just want to be clear. | |
| I don't really want to run away. | |
| I don't like running away from things. | |
| You can call me a lot of things, but you can't call me a coward because I've never backed down in the face of the enemy so far. | |
| And I've got no plans on doing so in the future. | |
| So, well, I guess we'll take things as they come. | |
| CJ Westman for $200, Australian, but thank you, man, says, my parents could vote in the UK when my family lived in Scotland in the early 1980s. | |
| They refused to vote because why should Australians be voting on the future of English and Scots? | |
| Great question, right? | |
| Again, if I moved to Australia or something, I wouldn't be like, okay, I need political rights. | |
| It'd be so weird. | |
| So fucking weird to do. | |
| And if I did, if I was like, okay, I've moved to Australia or wherever. | |
| And, you know, Australia is a lovely place. | |
| But if I've moved to Australia or wherever, and I'm like, right, I'm going to vote in their elections. | |
| I'm going to maybe run in their politics or something. | |
| I'd be like, right, what's the hardest right position I can take? | |
| What's the position that is most in the direct, immediate interest of the Australian people? | |
| That's the position I'm going to champion. | |
| That's what I'm going to vote for. | |
| That's what I'm going to represent. | |
| Were I to be in Australian politics? | |
| It would be no, no, no, none of this globalist shit. | |
| None of this fucking selling up the nation. | |
| No, no, no. | |
| It would be ultra hardcore conservatism. | |
| What I would be fucking supporting. | |
| Like, find me the most right-wing person. | |
| That's the person I'm supporting. | |
| Because it would just be for the long-term good of the Australian people. | |
| That'd be the only reason. | |
| But, right, I'm going to have to call it a night here, man, because I'm really tired. | |
| And I work a lot, man. | |
| I work an awful lot. | |
| I spent all afternoon just studying. | |
| This is literally like five straight hours. | |
| I've dealt with the kids since then. | |
| And then I come into the stream. | |
| And then Monday. | |
| After tomorrow, I've got to do basically the same. | |
| Look after the kids. | |
| And then Monday I'm back at work. | |
| So no rest of the wicked, I guess. | |
| But anyway, sorry if I've missed your super chat. | |
| I really apologise. | |
| I'm just shattered, man. | |
| But I will see you all soon. | |
| Thank you for supporting me. | |
| Thank you for enjoying the. | |
| A lot of people seem to have enjoyed the content recently, which is great because I'm working really hard. |