Gammonzilla
Islander 4: https://shop.lotuseaters.com/
Islander 4: https://shop.lotuseaters.com/
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| Good evening, folks. | |
| I'm not late. | |
| Well, actually, I'm two minutes late. | |
| But what you don't understand is that I was milling around making time. | |
| So if I wasn't spending all of that time making the time itself, we wouldn't have time to have this stream, would we now? | |
| Events are what dictates time. | |
| We create the time ourselves. | |
| You guys know how this works. | |
| So don't give me any of this nonsense. | |
| Don't look at a clock and expect that to tell you when something's going to happen. | |
| What a ridiculous colonialist Western mindset that is. | |
| Absolutely preposterous. | |
| I do love Africa Time, man. | |
| It is one of my favorite memes at the moment. | |
| Hello, chat. | |
| I can see you. | |
| YouTube just notified you. | |
| Well, to be honest with you, I've only just started. | |
| So this is pretty good, to be honest. | |
| Yes, there is an Islander ad, of course, because I'm just making sure that once Islander 4 is gone, when it's gone forever, people aren't like, oh, I didn't know. | |
| Can I get a copy? | |
| Even though it's like six months after you stop selling it and you keep repeatedly telling everyone, this is not coming back. | |
| I don't want to have to pay 300 quid on eBay. | |
| So can I get a copy? | |
| It's like, yes, you can. | |
| You can get it now. | |
| Because again, these are moments in time. | |
| But it is a beautiful thing and it is a wonderful joy to read. | |
| I've, of course, read it all myself because there are loads of essays in there that I don't get to see because I'm not the editor of it. | |
| I, of course, have my essay in there, which is called After Progress. | |
| Is it what happens once we realize that actually progress has a limit? | |
| I know my essay, but I don't know anyone else's essays in advance. | |
| So I also get the pleasure of flipping through, reading the essays, and finding out what other people think about the current moment of time we're in. | |
| So anyway, link in the description, go and get it as we're waiting for people to realize and get notified by YouTube, I suppose, that we're actually doing something here. | |
| But six months in the future doesn't exist. | |
| Well, I mean, you say that now, but trust me, I'm looking at the past. | |
| What was it called? | |
| The Zamzizi, Zamini, something like that. | |
| And there are many, many people in the Zamini who are like, I don't have a copy of Islander. | |
| Why do I not have a copy of Islander? | |
| I deserved a copy of Islander. | |
| I should have got a copy of Islander when I had the opportunity. | |
| And so all I'm saying is take that opportunity now. | |
| So, yeah, you know, do what you can. | |
| Anyway, how are you all? | |
| I hope you're all doing very well. | |
| Because this is very interesting to me, what's happening at the moment. | |
| We've arrived in a particular moment in time in which you can feel the tectonic plates moving under your feet in British politics. | |
| Everyone is highly strung. | |
| Everyone is feeling the pressure because the current order just cannot sustain itself. | |
| It is running out of money. | |
| It has run out of political capital by a long way. | |
| Labour, there was a latest poll the other day that said 11% of people approve of what Labour has done and what they're doing. | |
| And I don't know, but somewhere like two-thirds, it's like 70% or something like that, disapprove. | |
| Which makes me wonder who are the 11% who approve? | |
| I mean, that's lower than the number of foreigners in the country. | |
| So it can't be that it's the foreign communities that approve of labor. | |
| Nobody approves of labor. | |
| Labour are terrible. | |
| But it's not, in a way, it's kind of not their fault because they've been saddled with the baggage of the past. | |
| And, well, now make the best of it. | |
| It's like, but we can't. | |
| This is what we wanted. | |
| And so this is where we are, and there's nowhere they can go, and all they can think of to do is squeeze. | |
| They're like, right, okay, well, we can't grow. | |
| We can't cut, and so we're just going to have to squeeze those people and wring out of them as much tax money as we can. | |
| Ah, labor guzzling the country. | |
| And that's what Rachel Reeves is currently panicking about as she prepares the next budget. | |
| We're screwed, basically. | |
| They know there's nowhere to go and there's nothing they can do. | |
| And nobody is happy with how things are. | |
| I can only imagine what it's like being a labor activist, knocking on doors. | |
| Hello? | |
| Would you be interested in talking about the Labour Party? | |
| I mean, you're going to get two responses. | |
| I'm going to kill you. | |
| And yes, come in because I'm going to kill you. | |
| So it can't be a pleasant thing to be a Labour activist at this point. | |
| So anyway, let's begin. | |
| Because this genuinely has gone completely viral in Britain and elsewhere, in England and elsewhere. | |
| The St. George's flags, and not just the St. George flags, of course, you've got the Union Jack. | |
| But it's, like I've said, most powerful when it's the St. George's flag because everyone can tell this means something different. | |
| It's not the football season. | |
| Patriotism hasn't been siloed off into the regime-approved clap you seals mentality. | |
| No, this is something else that's going on with the St. George's flags. | |
| And everyone can tell. | |
| There are loads of videos of migrants or people descended from migrants who are like, this is a bit weird. | |
| This is a bit intimidating, actually. | |
| I'm a bit worried about this. | |
| And to be honest with you, I'm not saying they're wrong even to be worried about it. | |
| Because, and for anyone who doesn't know, this is a statement of raw ethnic domination. | |
| This is a statement. | |
| The St. George's flag is telling everyone England belongs to the English. | |
| And this is how politics is going to be realigned. | |
| Or else, and they can feel it, as we will explore later on. | |
| They know that this is one of those things where, like I said, it's the primordial tectonic plate that is shifting under the crust of British politics. | |
| And they're normally happily stood on top of the crust of British politics, not having to worry about any of these things because normally it takes a lot of energy to make a political tectonic plate move. | |
| But here we are. | |
| And I mean, I saw an estimate there was a million of them that's gone up. | |
| I mean, it's probably not that many. | |
| But it's definitely tens of thousands. | |
| And that is, I mean, I've never seen anything like it. | |
| And no one else has either. | |
| Kai Bar's BBQ. | |
| Go and watch the podcast today. | |
| We covered why the German politicians are dying randomly. | |
| Seventh AFD politician has just died. | |
| But go watch the podcast. | |
| We covered it on there. | |
| And so, yeah, this is one of those things where they are aware that this is not politics as usual. | |
| And something unprecedented is happening. | |
| And they don't really know what to do about it. | |
| But this is today's political satire in Private Eye Magazine. | |
| So Private Eye Magazine is an unfunny boomer magazine that's meant to be lampooning politics. | |
| But this cartoon really summarizes a lot of the issues. | |
| Because, I mean, of course, many people were painting the St. George's Cross on roundabouts because they're conveniently white and it means that everyone gets to see them as they're going around the roundabout. | |
| And as you can see, the Aged white upper middle class person, presumably a lib dem voter, or possibly a remnant Tory voter, uh, is looking at the working class person who's just painted the roundabout, and the caption is, quote, I'm not sure I want to give way to the right. | |
| That's quite interesting, actually, isn't it? | |
| Uh, because, of course, in Britain, for anyone who's not from here, uh, the route, the rules of the roundabout are you just have to give way to the right. | |
| There's someone coming to your right, you just have to stop and wait for them to go, and then that goes on around the whole thing, and you have quite a autonomous and intuitive system that makes roundabouts actually really a rather good idea. | |
| But if you don't give way to the right, what happens? | |
| Well, the people on the right think that you're going to give way, and they have right of way, which are very interesting thing. | |
| Again, this cartoon is really fascinating. | |
| They have right of way, and if you just pull out without giving way to them, you're going to have a massive car crash, which is actually really prescient that they happen to. | |
| I don't even know if they thought this through because Private Eye is a anti-Gammon, anti-Brexit, anti-populist magazine, right? | |
| They're part of the old order. | |
| So, they I don't think they thought this through, but yes, no, the implication is, oh, I don't want to give away to the right. | |
| Ha ha, so clever, but it means you're going to have a massive goddamn car crash if you don't, because they have right of way, and you don't, and you should think about that. | |
| So, even if you don't want to give way to the right, the pressure that has been building because of these tectonic plates grinding against each other, uh, when I mean, this has never happened before, right? | |
| In all of my life, and I'm sure never in history, actually. | |
| Uh, it's never happened that people have just started randomly graffitiing the country with the national flag of England because they feel like they're losing their country. | |
| And so, if you are some detached, disconnected, above-it-all aloof Radio 4 listener, maybe you should, and I really mean this if you're a Radio 4 listener who happens to have tuned in, shut your fucking mouth. | |
| Shut your fucking mouth. | |
| You are the problem with this country. | |
| You are the fucking problem. | |
| Shut the fuck up and give way. | |
| That's what's going to happen. | |
| Because otherwise, things are going to get really rad and you're going to be the one causing the crash. | |
| Shut the fuck up. | |
| Just go away, sniff your own farts, think you're better than everyone else, and let what's happening just fucking happen. | |
| Do you understand me, Radio 4 listeners? | |
| Shut your fucking mouths. | |
| Anyway, so that's, I think, a really good and prescient political cartoon at the moment, which I don't think Private Eye even intended it to be. | |
| I really don't think they thought this through well enough because these are the sort of people who would listen to Radio 4 instantly. | |
| Anyway, so this has been going on for a little while, a couple of weeks now. | |
| And this is something that has percolated up to Starma's cabinet. | |
| So, when this first started happening, there was a statement from 10 Downing Street, but not Starmer himself, that was very, very neutral. | |
| It's like, well, we support waving flags. | |
| We think the Union Jack is fine. | |
| There's nothing to talk about here. | |
| And we're going to move on. | |
| Now, that to me didn't feel like a statement of honest assessment, actually. | |
| What that felt like to me was they were looking at something and going, oh, something's happening here, isn't it? | |
| Right. | |
| I just, I don't think it's wise to be in the way of this juggernaut that has begun moving. | |
| So we're like, oh, yeah, no, that's fine. | |
| You carry on. | |
| And as you can see here from a later, about a week later, I think this was, video, you can see the England flag bunting in the background. | |
| Now, that's not normal for Keir Starmer, especially. | |
| That's not normal at all. | |
| You can tell, as I put here, one of Starma's advisors was like, look, Kier, just put the fucking bunting up and just carry on with your day. | |
| Just seriously. | |
| And kids were, bunting? | |
| That's racist, isn't it? | |
| Yeah, but it doesn't matter. | |
| Just put the goddamn bunting up or else something terrible might happen. | |
| So just put the bunting up, stand in front of it, do your cabinet reshuffle, talk about the asylum row, talk about how nobody's got any money, talk about how you're going to tax the peasants into oblivion. | |
| Just do it in front of the English flag bunting or else. | |
| Or else something really bad might happen. | |
| Just do it. | |
| And so Keir Starmer dutifully appears in front of the England flag bunting because they know something is going on. | |
| Something is happening here and they don't know what it is. | |
| Then you had Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, appearing on BBC breakfast and she apparently has bunting everywhere. | |
| Apparently she loves bunting. | |
| Apparently she's got Union Jacks all over her house, which no one believes you. | |
| We'll watch this. | |
| Do you have a flag on display in your home? | |
| On your home? | |
| We actually have Union Jack bunting on our garden shed at the moment. | |
| I've got St. George's flags. | |
| I've got St. George's bunting. | |
| I've got the Yorkshire Rose bunting as well. | |
| I've got Union Jacks flags and tablecloths. | |
| We've got the lot. | |
| Do you have a flag on display? | |
| Let's watch that back with no sound just for a second, shall we? | |
| Because look, watch her body language, right? | |
| Watch this body language. | |
| She's like, yep, you can see she's very on edge. | |
| Oh, brilliant. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| No, I've got lots of flags. | |
| Flags everywhere, actually. | |
| Look how proud I am to tell you just how many flags I have in my house. | |
| It's not, she looks very highly strung here. | |
| Her body language is very tense. | |
| I don't believe for a second that she has a goddamn flag in her house. | |
| I don't believe that she has St. George's bunting and Union Jack tablecloths. | |
| Nobody believes this, right? | |
| But she's been instructed. | |
| Oh, wait, you know, by what's his name, McSweeney. | |
| Listen, the Gammons are really angry about something. | |
| And basically, they're moving in a herd. | |
| There's a giant swarm of them. | |
| And you just tell people you've got bunting up. | |
| You don't have to prove it. | |
| Keir Starmer will stand in front of an England bunting in the 10 Down the Street. | |
| You don't have to do anything else. | |
| Just say you are because otherwise something terrible might happen. | |
| And don't count signal. | |
| Well, we finally arrived at the counter signal. | |
| Now, this has been something that people have been discussing for a long time. | |
| It's like, look, AA in particular had this point, and he's not wrong on this, that the flag protest doesn't have any definite goals. | |
| It doesn't have a demand. | |
| It doesn't say, we want this agenda. | |
| We want this particular actionable item or else, right? | |
| And so that's true. | |
| And therefore, the establishment will absolutely try to stay on the right side of it and co-opt it and channel it into the direction that they want. | |
| And that's true. | |
| They will try. | |
| But the problem that they have is the St. George's flag is the flag of an ethnicity. | |
| It is not the flag. | |
| It's the flag of a nation, not the flag of the British state. | |
| It is not universal and inclusive. | |
| It's actually particular and exclusive. | |
| And so they can say, yes, I wave the St. George's cross. | |
| Look, I have one behind me. | |
| But, and here's the butt. | |
| I'm proud of our flags, a patriotic symbol of our nation. | |
| Well, okay, well, let's talk about that. | |
| Our nation. | |
| What the hell is our nation? | |
| Does our nation involve Pakistanis? | |
| Does it involve Jamaicans? | |
| Does it involve anyone from anywhere in the world? | |
| How long do they have to have been here to be part of our nation? | |
| But, I mean, a nation, an ethnicity. | |
| what is the NATIO? | |
| That actually is done by inheritance. | |
| So you are born into a nation, and if you marry into a nation, that's probably the best you can get by actually incorporating into one. | |
| And so it's a good question, isn't it? | |
| What does our mean here? | |
| But anyway, I'm proud of the flags, a patriotic symbol of our nation. | |
| Yes, no one, there's no patriot quite like Keir Starmer. | |
| Like lots of people, I've got one proudly at home. | |
| No one believes it. | |
| However, using our flag to divide devalues it. | |
| Interesting. | |
| Interesting. | |
| I mean, Luca here has got a good point, I think, that actually really summarizes the issue. | |
| I mean, I put England is for the English first. | |
| If that's divises to your client communities, then so be it, because that's the way it is. | |
| But Luca points out, but the flag does divide us. | |
| That's what flags do. | |
| They demarcate one group from another. | |
| In fact, in Britain, we have at least four national flags, but we also have lots of smaller regional flags to denote those smaller regions and the people who are indigenous to those areas. | |
| They separate loyalties and identity for different people. | |
| The English flag belongs to the English people, not the French, not the Indians, not the Turks, the English. | |
| You devalue it in your attempts to dilute it. | |
| A flag for everyone is a flag for no one. | |
| That's correct. | |
| That is 100% correct. | |
| And Rupert Lowe there, post would have been just fine without the second paragraph. | |
| So you so nearly did something right. | |
| Exactly. | |
| But he couldn't help but counter signal, right? | |
| He knows he's got to stand in front of the bunt. | |
| He can't be like, oh, I'm against this because this is a juggernaut that is emerging from the earth. | |
| And so he's like, right, okay, don't counter, don't oppose. | |
| Just slightly counter single. | |
| Be like, yeah, well, but, you know, it's got to be some inclusive symbol, doesn't it? | |
| It's like, nope, no, it doesn't. | |
| And you know it's not. | |
| And that's what you're paranoid about. | |
| I mean, he even came out and said basically the same thing in BBC Radio 5 into you. | |
| A supporter of flags. | |
| We've got the St. George's flag in our flat. | |
| So you're encouraging people to put up more flags. | |
| I'm very encouraging of flags. | |
| I think they're patriotic and I think they're a great symbol of our nation. | |
| I don't think they should be devalued, belittled. | |
| And I think sometimes when they're used purely for device and purposes, it actually devalues the flag. | |
| I don't want to see that. | |
| I'm proud of our flag. | |
| Right. | |
| So again, the counter signal. | |
| Yeah, no, I have a St. George's cross at home. | |
| Yeah, no one believes you. | |
| No one believes you. | |
| No one thinks you do. | |
| You're not the kind of guy to have a St. George's cross like in the background on the wall or something. | |
| This is an effort of containment. | |
| He is afraid. | |
| He can see they have told him something big and important is happening with the flag. | |
| This is turning into a kind of national movement. | |
| Now, like AA said, it hasn't got a definite goal and it doesn't mean a definite thing other than England for the English. | |
| That's what the statement underpins the entire thing is. | |
| It's the same. | |
| I recently got into a bit of a kerfuffle with him on the Tommy protest on September the 13th. | |
| And I'll be speaking there, obviously. | |
| I think everyone should come because it's not that the protests, and I've said this before, it's not the protests in the immediate sense will have a direct impact on politics or it's very unlikely that would happen. | |
| What it is, is about psychological warfare. | |
| It is about pressure. | |
| It is about making sure that just every single day they are aware that actually huge numbers of people hate them and would love to see them absolutely go off the edge of a cliff on a bus or something, right? | |
| Like people despise the Labour Party and they despise what has happened and what the Labour Party has done to this country. | |
| And so the point is continual pressure. | |
| The pressure is building. | |
| This is what is so good about the flag Raise the Colours campaign is that the pressure is now everywhere, all over the country. | |
| And I really mean all over the country. | |
| England flags are going up. | |
| And so now they feel embattled. | |
| Instantly, they're already on the back foot and going, oh yeah, no, we've got our England flags. | |
| We like England flags, except we don't want to be divisive. | |
| Oh no, that's what it's for. | |
| It's here to be divisive. | |
| Us versus you in particular and your client groups that you keep importing into the country against our will. | |
| That's what this is. | |
| And the thing is, you know it. | |
| And so that's just one layer of pressure and then another layer of pressure. | |
| If Tommy can get, I mean, last time we got somewhere between 50 and 100,000 people out in Trafalgar Square, which was just colossal. | |
| Absolutely colossal. | |
| I've never seen anything like it. | |
| Like people just down the streets. | |
| And I got to speak to that number of people. | |
| In itself, it's a kind of miraculous thing. | |
| I mean, how many times in your life will that happen? | |
| You know? | |
| And it turned into this giant, not like, I don't know how to describe it. | |
| It was like, it wasn't an angry protest. | |
| That's the thing. | |
| It's a giant political rally. | |
| And what was interesting is it was full of men, women, and children. | |
| It was families that went down there. | |
| And so the atmosphere was a lot more relaxed, a lot more jovial, and a lot more directional. | |
| People are aware that this is the sort of consciousness of the country coming together and saying, oh, no, we have a real problem. | |
| We all have to be on side at this point. | |
| And so it's a morale raising exercise, a consciousness raising exercise. | |
| But also, there were lots of GB News presenters there who went down there and were like, oh, right, so this isn't football hooligans. | |
| These are the concerned parents of Britain with their children who have come together to make themselves understand that they're not alone. | |
| And the Raise the Flag campaign, well, that's showing everyone, it's not even that we're not alone. | |
| We're the majority here by a long way. | |
| All over the country. | |
| We are in every part of this nation and we guard you while you sleep. | |
| You do not know the forces you are ignoring and about to unleash with all of this. | |
| And the flag protest is a warning. | |
| The Tommy race, the giants' Tommy rallies are a warning and they're an aspect of psychological warfare. | |
| Pressure on the regime. | |
| Continual pressure on the regime. | |
| And the thing is, like I said, in each individual case, sure, nothing much is going to happen, but it's straws on the camel's back, straws and another straw and another straw and another straw. | |
| And the point is to draw them out, to make them counter signal, to make them stake out themselves against us, but also to make them react. | |
| Because if they do nothing, then they win because they are the establishment. | |
| The Zelensky 101, they have to be reacting to you. | |
| And Kierstama is currently reacting to us. | |
| If you're explaining, you're losing. | |
| The dialectic is going in our direction. | |
| And that is bloody spectacular. | |
| Because this has been against us for a long time now. | |
| And so, yeah, he's going to have to explain this. | |
| Who knows what happens at the Tommy rally? | |
| He'll have to explain after that. | |
| And remember, these people are human. | |
| They see the huge number of people. | |
| They see their own replies on Twitter and they get the emails that are in their inboxes and they know everyone is angry. | |
| And if people are prepared to actually make the effort to go to big rallies, well, that shows that you have a very engaged activist base that is forming for the England flag protest, forming for a huge nativist movement that is actively bought in to what they are doing. | |
| And so this is, again, all huge amounts of political pressure. | |
| And then they'll look at their approval rating at 11%. | |
| They'll be like, right, so the country just hates us. | |
| They're actually on the streets. | |
| They're putting up the flags everywhere. | |
| What are we going to do? | |
| And they have to do something. | |
| And that's when they'll screw up. | |
| That's the point. | |
| Draw them out, give them every opportunity to make mistake after mistake after mistake until it finally buries them. | |
| That's the point of the flags. | |
| That's the point of the protest. | |
| That's the point of doing all of this. | |
| It's not that individually any one thing is going to work. | |
| What it's doing is establishing that this is a hostile environment to leftism, to mass immigration, to woke stuff, to the labor government, to the civil servants who betray us. | |
| It's a hostile environment to everything about the system itself that is that is, I mean, literally, Graham Lennon got arrested for tweeting when he was in America. | |
| He is not a British citizen and he was tweeting in America and yet he still got arrested when he came here, right? | |
| And the tweets were, I don't want women, men in women's bathrooms. | |
| That was literally the sum total of the message of his Twitter, of the three tweets they arrested him for. | |
| And so it's just like, no, look, the pressure is on. | |
| Everywhere, the pressure is on. | |
| And that's the point. | |
| This is a hostile environment against the system itself. | |
| And eventually, the system is going to break. | |
| The system cannot take this. | |
| And the thing is, they know it. | |
| That's why they've got such a cowed reaction to the flags. | |
| Because, I mean, seriously, before the Southport riots, if people were going into, I mean, they have not responded at all to the vandalism on mosques. | |
| The St. George's Cross and Go Home Muslims or whatever has been spray painted on mosques and mosques have been vandalized. | |
| You've seen nothing, right? | |
| There has been no widespread outcry. | |
| Nothing like after the Southport riots, when mosques were vandalized and attacked, nothing like that, where Kirstener came out and said, I'm going to get you. | |
| I'm going to stamp you down and I'm going to put you through 24-hour courts non-stop and you're all going to jail for this and you will regret this. | |
| He's not responding like that at all. | |
| He is cowed. | |
| He is quiet. | |
| He understands this is a hostile environment and anything he does will be an unwelcome intervention into the discourse. | |
| It will just blur up in his face. | |
| So I'm not surprised. | |
| And that just shows that we now have the leverage. | |
| That's the point of the protest. | |
| That's the point of the flagging. | |
| It is to make them feel like they are in enemy territory because they are. | |
| And moreover, they need to feel that they're in enemy territory and they have nowhere to go. | |
| This is actually very similar to the Chinese civil war where Mao defeated the nationalists. | |
| The nationalists controlled the cities, but Mao controlled the hinterland. | |
| And so he locked them up in their cities and made their lives very difficult until they cracked. | |
| That's what we're doing because we control the hinterland. | |
| That's where we live. | |
| And the thing is, they know this is a problem. | |
| Now, this is, again, Yvette Cooper, who's desperately, I mean, look at the very framing of this. | |
| Strengthening border security and reform to the asylum system. | |
| This is her following the right-wing agenda. | |
| She has no choice. | |
| There's nothing more that she can do. | |
| And this is, of course, her pointing out that, oh, well, yeah, I mean, this is bad. | |
| We haven't fixed the problem. | |
| Everything's bad. | |
| Everyone's furious about this. | |
| We're going to try and do something about this. | |
| But what's really interesting is the way this ends. | |
| Very, very long talk, she gives. | |
| And so she gets to the end. | |
| What we will never do is seek to stir up chaos, division, or hate. | |
| That's not who we are as a country. | |
| That's not what Britain stands for. | |
| A practical plan to strengthen our border security, to fix the asylum chaos, and to rebuild confidence in an asylum and immigration system that serves our national interest and protects our national security and reflects our national values. | |
| Stop you right there, right? | |
| The idea that anyone could plausibly believe that the Labour Party are in any way concerned with immigration reduction or the national interest is just fucking laughable. | |
| I mean, the Chagos Islands deal is just the best example of how they obviously don't care about the national interest. | |
| But there are, of course, many others. | |
| But I'm not going to go into that because that's not the issue. | |
| The point is, notice the framing, notice the positioning. | |
| She is just saying, oh, no, we are doing everything the far right wants us to do at this point. | |
| We swear to God. | |
| What we don't want is for chaos. | |
| We don't want you to cause trouble. | |
| It's like, yeah, of course you don't. | |
| You're the people in charge. | |
| You benefit from stability. | |
| And then she says, when we wave the union flag, when we wave the St. George's flag, when we sing God save the king and celebrate everything that's great about our country, we do so with pride because of the values that our flags, our king and our country, represent. | |
| No, this is a statement of ethnicity. | |
| The values of the English people have changed over the centuries because we're a very old people. | |
| We're one of the oldest around. | |
| And the values of, say, the Anglo-Saxons or the medieval English or Victorians, they're not the values of now, are they? | |
| And so don't give me this bloody sieve that bullshit about values this, values that. | |
| No, this is about this is a statement of ownership. | |
| That's what the flags are. | |
| And she knows it. | |
| She's like, oh, well, it's together, fairness and decency. | |
| No, no, not really. | |
| Respect for each other and respect for the rule of law. | |
| Bit late for that. | |
| Bit late for that. | |
| The rule of law has been used to persecute us. | |
| And it's not like you or your client communities have shown us much respect. | |
| Not really feeling it. | |
| And so she's trying desperately to silo this off into the kind of safe patriotic box. | |
| But that's not happening. | |
| And they know it's not happening. | |
| They are, again, completely nervous. | |
| But the thing is, we know what they really think. | |
| Such as, I mean, like, we know that when she says this, waving the flag is a great thing. | |
| You know that she's saying this only under duress. | |
| When Keir Starmer says this, he is saying it under duress because he can feel the juggernaut that is laying under the land. | |
| And what they really think is what Clive Lewis came out and thought and said, which is the people hanging the St. George's flags are extremists. | |
| He's a Labour MP. | |
| Now, if I were Keir Starmer and I was sensible, I would fucking suspend him. | |
| And it's not like Keir Starmer is in any way shy of suspending his MPs. | |
| Keir Starmer kicked out bloody Jeremy Corbyn and John McDonnell and made them independent MPs. | |
| He's just out of the party, as well as a bunch of others. | |
| Clive Lewis is the radical left of the party and he can't keep his mouth shut. | |
| And if I were you, Keir, I swear to God, I would just kick him out. | |
| I'd be like, how dare you call the patriots of Britain far-right extremists? | |
| Get out. | |
| But again, he can't help himself. | |
| But he said they're extremists who are using it to mark territory. | |
| That's correct. | |
| Clive is correct. | |
| But Clive is a communist. | |
| And so for him, it is extreme for the English to lay claim to England. | |
| That is extremism to him. | |
| And so, okay, well, fair enough. | |
| Let's take them at their word because that is exactly what Keir Starmer believes. | |
| That is exactly what Yvette Cooper believes. | |
| That is exactly what Clive Lewis believes. | |
| And these are all cut from the same cloth. | |
| They can lie. | |
| They can prevaricate. | |
| They can try and deflect the energy that has been brought up against them. | |
| But we know that this is truly representative of their beliefs. | |
| So the Daily Eastern Press quoted Lewis saying, most people say they fly the St. George's Cross out of pride. | |
| And that's probably even true for some of those, putting them on lampposts. | |
| But far-right groups are using these flags to mark territory and intimidate the vast majority who reject their extreme views. | |
| Well, maybe, but that would imply that the entire country is just filled with far-right people, right? | |
| Because far-right groups control everything in this country, I guess. | |
| Because this has happened everywhere. | |
| Like, there isn't an inch of England that hasn't had this happen in their local area. | |
| So, what are we saying here, Clive? | |
| What are we saying? | |
| The English people in particular are far-right extremists. | |
| They're trying to drag the flag back into just being their flag, used only for the purposes of division and intolerance, undoing the brilliant way our multi-heritage England teams turned it into one of unity and pride. | |
| Well, again, the English woman's team came out and said, Oh, we won because of our English blood. | |
| And if you look at it, it's a very monoethnic team. | |
| There's only one foreigner on the team. | |
| So, I don't know, man. | |
| I mean, she seemed to do that. | |
| But also, notice the goal. | |
| Notice what they've been doing. | |
| They have been working on you for a long time. | |
| They've been trying to make our multi-heritage England teams co-opt the England flag as a symbol of diversity, inclusion, and equality. | |
| They've tried to make it woke, but basically they know this isn't going to hold because actually the people who use the flag are actually English patriots. | |
| They are not multi-culti woke nonces. | |
| This is not the case. | |
| And they know that this is going to be something that snaps back to division and intolerance. | |
| Because really, it is kind of about division and intolerance in a lot of ways. | |
| This is about the fact that the English have not been listened to in the case of immigration. | |
| And it's just unacceptable. | |
| It's just gone far too far. | |
| And we shouldn't be tolerant of them literally turning us into a minority in our own homeland. | |
| There's no reason we would want this. | |
| This is not advantageous to us in any way, shape, or form. | |
| And we keep voting against it. | |
| The democratic will of the country has repeatedly, over and over and over, expressed that this is not what we want. | |
| And yet we're here. | |
| And so now, yeah, you get the statement of division and intolerance. | |
| And I want you to be nervous because you should be. | |
| And I know that you are. | |
| I know that you're worried where this goes because honestly, you shouldn't have done any of this. | |
| You should have accepted that the answer is no. | |
| We do not consent to what you are doing to our country. | |
| We do not want this. | |
| And we never have. | |
| And like I said, they're worried. | |
| They're very, very worried. | |
| They are afraid that this is going to unleash something Titanic that's beyond their control. | |
| Because remember, they are not in a good position. | |
| Like two months ago, police leaders say they were struggling to fulfill Labor's promise to recruit 13,000 officers. | |
| Well, why is that? | |
| Why wouldn't I want to be part of the police of diversity and inclusion? | |
| Why wouldn't I want to be the Stasi of the regime? | |
| I mean, there are armed men who need to arrest comedians as they come in through the airport because they oppose men and women's toilets. | |
| Like, don't you want to sign up for that? | |
| Isn't that what you're here for? | |
| You know, wonder. | |
| They wonder why they can't do this. | |
| And it's like, yeah, that's a real issue. | |
| Well, I mean, maybe if you hadn't been blocking white applicants to boost diversity, people wouldn't feel quite as attacked in the way that they have been. | |
| And they wouldn't be like, you know what? | |
| I'm putting up my England flag. | |
| I don't care. | |
| I'm sick of this. | |
| I'm absolutely sick of this. | |
| And you know what? | |
| You get what you deserve. | |
| You know, you get what you deserve. | |
| If you've decided that you are for the immigrants and not us in our own police forces, then I'm not surprised that you can't recruit. | |
| I'm not surprised that you can't retain. | |
| And man, they are worried, right? | |
| This is one of the Chief Constable Gavin Stevens, chair of the National Police Chiefs' Council, and they are afraid. | |
| They're like, look, we are under too much pressure. | |
| We cannot hold the line here. | |
| He said. | |
| The BBC, he told the BBC that people in leadership positions in the UK need to think about how to reduce and diffuse tension and not sow division. | |
| You hear that fucking Clive Lewis, you communist prick? | |
| Shut your fucking mouth. | |
| The time in which we listen to this kind of nonsense is over. | |
| The time in which we are browbeaten by you is over. | |
| We are the majority by a long way and we are everywhere. | |
| And I don't know whether you've noticed, but Nigel Farage is curb stomping you all in the polls. | |
| Not that Farage is going to fix any of the problems, not that he's any good, blah, blah, blah. | |
| But he represents a protest vote in the mind of the British and predominantly English public that we are sick of this. | |
| We are done with it. | |
| I mean, I'm probably going to have to vote for Farage. | |
| I've got, you know, no choice, really. | |
| But it'll be better for him to win and you to lose your seat than the opposite for you to continue like you are. | |
| It'd be better for Keir Starmer and Angel Raynor and Jess Phillips and all the rest to lose their seats. | |
| And they're gonna. | |
| They are going to lose their seats, if not to Farage, to the Muslim independents. | |
| You're going to get great replaced. | |
| After bringing these people in, they realize we don't need you, actually. | |
| Jeremy Corbyn is going to come back and destroy the party that kicked him out. | |
| It's going to be hilarious to watch, frankly. | |
| But he's going to do to Labour what Farage did to the Conservatives. | |
| And honestly, I'm kind of for it. | |
| Yeah, no, I want them gone. | |
| Let the two zombie parties that have been propping each other up, let them go. | |
| Scythe their legs out from under them. | |
| Batter them down. | |
| Let's see some change. | |
| But anyway, as you can see, the protests are ramping up. | |
| There's 928 in 2023 of 3,000 this year so far. | |
| So, you know, good stuff. | |
| And this has, of course, been pushed up by the campaigns against the asylum hotels. | |
| And they can't deal with it. | |
| Stephen said that it's everyone's responsibility, including the police, to set the tone. | |
| We all want to live in places where we can be safe and we can feel safe. | |
| Oh, well, that would be nice. | |
| Maybe the government shouldn't be desperate to keep rapist migrants in the hotels in Epping near the schools where they have been attacking children. | |
| Maybe we could feel safe if they weren't even in this country. | |
| And that's just the tip of the iceberg. | |
| I won't go into it in any great detail. | |
| This is the point that is being made, right? | |
| And so, of course, this is they've got to bring in extra people. | |
| They're under great strain. | |
| They know that this is an issue that they can't do much about. | |
| Because if really another South Port happens, and any day, you know that Keir Starmer gets into work and he's like, there'sn't been an atrocity yet, has there? | |
| And they're like, not yet, sir. | |
| And they're like, oh, thank God. | |
| Thank God. | |
| Right. | |
| Okay. | |
| Well, let's just hope nothing happens through the day. | |
| Because if a migrant or someone descended from migrants goes on another killing spree, and there have been plenty, yeah, it'll be hell to pay. | |
| There'll be riots, there'll be chaos, there'll be anarchy in the streets, there'll be sectarian style attacks. | |
| And I just want to be clear, I'm not for sectarian-style attacks. | |
| What I am for is the political class listening. | |
| They have to listen and accept that the way that they have done things, which is to give non-British people the same grace and privileges and attention that the British people have had for 30 years now, that paradigm is coming to an end, right? | |
| The British people are going to be put first. | |
| That's what the demand is. | |
| And that's not an unreasonable demand. | |
| And so that means if the British people decide they have had enough of all school meals being halal at this point, which is something Rupert Lowe is going on about, then that stops. | |
| Then we don't have halal. | |
| If we want to ban halal meat, we ban halal meat. | |
| And if nobody, if the communities that want that to happen don't like it, then they can just go somewhere else because they have countries of their own. | |
| It's going to be the same for everything. | |
| We are done with the way things were happening. | |
| We are not going to be permitting this. | |
| And like I said, they are afraid. | |
| They are deeply afraid of losing control because the system is creaking. | |
| The system is falling apart. | |
| And they know it. | |
| They're the ones telling us it. | |
| I mean, we can see it for ourselves, but they're the ones telling us: look, we don't have the manpower for this. | |
| We don't have the public support for this. | |
| The people are not being policed by consent at this point. | |
| The people are not being governed by consent either. | |
| The people are not happy with things that are happening. | |
| And so we are looking at this. | |
| Now, this was a cartoon in The Times magazine, another political cartoon. | |
| And you can see at the top there, you've got British people before boat people make Epping safe again. | |
| We're not far right. | |
| We're worried about our kids, etc., etc. | |
| So just regular looking people protesting and then coming up from under the ground is gamanzilla. | |
| The thing they fear most, which is basically the politicization of the English ethnicity itself. | |
| That's like, well, if you didn't want that to happen, maybe you shouldn't have spent so much time ignoring their demands. | |
| Because if you make them, you force them to be political along the lines of their own ethnic identity and you say, it's you lose England or you do this, I think people are going to do this. | |
| And this Mary Harrington coined Gamanzilla here. | |
| And I just love, I love the little summary she's got here. | |
| This Times cartoon on the Epping protest is the single most eloquent expression I've seen ever since Brexit of how our governing class still thinks about the English masses. | |
| A terrifying giant subterranean gamonzilla that must be at all costs prevented from erupting. | |
| Yes, but like I was saying earlier, the tectonic forces, the gamanzilla, is moving and a juggernaut was being birthed. | |
| And they're not going to have the power to stop it. | |
| And so it would be better if they just conceded the fight and said, you know what? | |
| You guys are right. | |
| We went way too far. | |
| We apologize for trying to steal your country from you. | |
| And we're going to call the election. | |
| We're going to let Nigel Farage take over because it is his time. | |
| Every Kier Starmer is just an illegitimate person in charge at this point. | |
| And everyone knows it. | |
| Everyone knows Keir Starmer is illegitimate. | |
| Like when you've got 11% approval rating, you're trying to bring in digital ID and shit like that. | |
| You don't have the fucking authority for this. | |
| When you're like, oh, yeah, we're going to make it so 16-year-olds can vote. | |
| You don't have the authority for this. | |
| You don't have a mandate at all for any of this. | |
| And what you're going to do is summon up Gamanzilla. | |
| And it's like, okay, well, if you wanted that to not be the case, then you should stop. | |
| You should just say, you know what? | |
| I think the country is in a position where I can't do anything about it. | |
| And so let's call an election. | |
| If I were here, I wouldn't even bloody run, obviously. | |
| And we'll see what happens. | |
| A wind of change is blowing. | |
| And they're deeply, deeply afraid of it. | |
| And I think that's genuinely the only way this could be stopped. | |
| At this point, I don't think it can be stopped other than giving the Gammons, the Gamanzilla, the English people of the country, giving them what they democratically voted for over and over and over and over. | |
| System did everything it could to stifle the thymotic desires of the English people that they voted for. | |
| And okay, if you're not going to play nice, then it will stop being nice. | |
| And like I said, I'm not in favor of this. | |
| I think you should concede. | |
| I think that you are actually at this point outmaneuvered. | |
| I don't think there's anywhere that you can go. | |
| I think that the system is at the point now where it just can't sustain itself in the face of the amount of resistance that it's going to start finding. | |
| And they know that they are, they are close to breaking point and they know it. | |
| Like, Angela Rayna was on TV today crying over some tax thing and a third home or whatever. | |
| It's like it's again, constant pressure, constant pressure in every single conceivable way. | |
| We want the regime to be under pressure. | |
| The system has to be under pressure because eventually they will crack and therefore we will get what we want finally from democracy. | |
| And maybe, just maybe we can save our country and actually have a place to live. | |
| And I am not, I'm not, like I said, I'm not, I'm not in favor of violence. | |
| I don't want violence. | |
| Don't go out and do anything violent. | |
| And especially not at the rally on the 13th. | |
| You know, again, as Alexander put it, on the fate of the conduct of one depends the fate of all. | |
| You have to behave yourselves. | |
| We have to behave ourselves. | |
| We have to just go out there and make sure that we're adding our vector of pressure on the government. | |
| And I mean, there was an article on this, the spectator, the new statesman today, that was the era of mass deportations is upon us, something like that. | |
| It's like, there we go. | |
| We're winning. | |
| And I was at the Wittown the other day. | |
| You saw the speech. | |
| And I asked everyone afterwards, like, I'd said like two years ago, I'd given a speech saying, look, people don't feel like we're inevitable yet. | |
| But do you feel like we're inevitable now? | |
| And everyone put their hands up. | |
| They're like, yeah, we are definitely going to win now. | |
| Everyone can feel it. | |
| The vibe shift is complete. | |
| The Labour Party can feel it. | |
| The police can feel it. | |
| And it seems to be the sort of like most remote people, the judiciary and the Conservative Party who can't understand that the vibe shift has moved already. | |
| So just make way. | |
| Everyone's waiting for the election. | |
| And the longer that you make it, the more difficult it's going to be for you. | |
| And the worse it's going to be for you. | |
| So just get out of the way. | |
| Your timing's done. | |
| Anyway, I'll go through the super chats in a minute, but of course, go and buy Island of Four. | |
| It is amazing. | |
| Link in the description. | |
| And I'll probably do another sort of teaser video about some of the articles in there. | |
| Because like I said, I've read all the articles and they're all spectacular. | |
| And there are things in there that help join dots for me. | |
| So, you know, I want to make points that I otherwise can't make without referencing the thing. | |
| So we'll see. | |
| But anyway, go get your copy now. | |
| And I'll go through some super chats when I figure out how exactly I get to my super chats. | |
| Yes, I'm banning energy drinks for under 16. | |
| Stuff like this. | |
| Don't get me wrong. | |
| I'm not sure under 16 should be drinking loads of energy drinks, but like you just don't have the authority for this. | |
| You are just not, you're not the boss. | |
| You're not the guy people want in charge. | |
| That's just what this comes down to. | |
| And until he can learn to accept it, frankly, he's going to find himself just under pressure all the time, outmaneuvered all the time, and in the face of a rising ethnic consciousness. | |
| And so that's why the protests are good. | |
| That's why we've got to keep going. | |
| But again, be lawful and reasonable and decent, of course, you know, in all ways. | |
| Obviously, don't break any laws. | |
| Just keep going. | |
| We are winning. | |
| We 100% are winning. | |
| And so just keep doing things, keep supporting people, keep tweeting. | |
| You know, I know they want to come down to you, but they're only going, well, they will go for everyone, but like, just keep tweeting. | |
| Just make sure you're not giving them an excuse to arrest you. | |
| Just keep the pressure on. | |
| We are winning this. | |
| David says, when can we get a Superman 2025 review from you? | |
| Never. | |
| I hate Superman, I'm afraid. | |
| Mini Mobile Review says, just order a copy of Underde for you, legend. | |
| Oh, he has just ordered. | |
| Well, good man. | |
| And yes, again, like, you'll regret it afterwards if you don't. | |
| I promise you. | |
| I get so many messages. | |
| The Empress Champion says, England stands. | |
| And honestly, that's what this is about. | |
| This is about the Gamanzilla, like, you know, pulling itself out of the earth and raising its head up and saying, right, I've had enough. | |
| I've just had enough. | |
| And I'm not taking it anymore. | |
| And like I said in my Witten speech, look, the more you resist this, the more difficult you make it, the more hardline the response and the snapback is going to be. | |
| And it could be that it's not that bad. | |
| It's just you have to make way and actually let the people get what they want, which is millions of people who shouldn't be here. | |
| The entire Boris wave, all of those people should be denaturalized and told to go home. | |
| Incentivized to leave. | |
| Cut off their funding. | |
| They will just piss off because they are not from here and they haven't got any particular investment in this place. | |
| They will just leave. | |
| And then once millions of people have left, we can start talking about the future dispensation of this country. | |
| Or you can keep resisting. | |
| See if you think you can break us. | |
| We've got nowhere else to go. | |
| Like, we don't have other countries. | |
| We don't have other careers. | |
| We don't have anything else to fall back on. | |
| We are literally back against the fucking wall at this point. | |
| So no, you're not going to outlast us. | |
| We have nothing else that we can do all day, every day. | |
| So we'll see who breaks first, you know. | |
| And again, the more pressure, the more resistance, the more friction that is encountered by us doing this, the worse it's going to be for your precious client communities. | |
| So just get it over with. | |
| Just let us win. | |
| And then we can be kind. | |
| And I mean this, like, there are going to be people, I know there are people who are far harder line on all of this than I am. | |
| I'm a bloody soft, wet, centrist moderate compared to some of the people who are coming up at the moment. | |
| And I'm telling you, you know, if you don't want the worst timeline to happen, you've got to accept that you've lost the argument. | |
| You've lost the battle. | |
| Roundabouts only work in high trust societies. | |
| See for yourself, says the last Russian. | |
| Well, I can't see for myself right now, but I think it's not just high trust. | |
| You've got to be fairly well socialized. | |
| If your country hasn't been socialized into using roundabouts, then I can see I can see why you get some accidents. | |
| Mason says, Labour's dilemma, have a balanced budget or give every non-English speaking child molester free housing, food and healthcare. | |
| Well, and they've made their choice, haven't they? | |
| We all know where they say where they stand on that. | |
| Lemonade, I'm not a liberal. | |
| And I really mean this. | |
| You do not know how not a liberal I am. | |
| My entire intellectual career in academia at the moment is dedicated to dismantling liberalism. | |
| So be quiet. | |
| You are ignorant. | |
| Gimli says, rise, Gamanzilla, and save England. | |
| Also, still waiting for my copy of Ireland. | |
| I would order them 12th of August. | |
| The support is already on it, though. | |
| Well, that's good. | |
| I'm sure they'll just send you out another one. | |
| But it should be it. | |
| The delivery, the new delivery system we've spent a lot of money on has been really good in all other respects, as far as I can tell. | |
| So hopefully you'll get it very soon. | |
| And if not, just keep emailing and we will get it sorted. | |
| Mason says, you're wrong, Saga. | |
| African philosophy teaches us if you have an island of magazine, no, I don't, you've stolen it from me. | |
| That's true. | |
| Sensible Monica says, living in hope that I can hear, so Carl say Kierstama is a wanker. | |
| He is a wanker, obviously, but like, you know, it's kind of an uninspiring thing to say because it's like, well, it's so self-evident, like, that there's just no point. | |
| You know, Kierstam's a wanker, the sky's blue, grass is green. | |
| You know, it's all the same. | |
| Mana Yud Sushashi says, it'll be 30 years around the sun for me this year. | |
| Any advice for men reaching this milestone, especially those who neglected their 20s? | |
| Thanks for all you do. | |
| Get to work. | |
| I neglected my 20s too. | |
| I didn't get to work until I was in my 30s. | |
| And I just wish I'd got to work in my 20s. | |
| Whatever it is you're doing, like whatever your interests are, whatever you want to make a career out of, you need to build that in your 20s. | |
| You shouldn't wait till your 30s. | |
| Don't be lazy. | |
| Don't mess around. | |
| Don't do what I did. | |
| I've had to do a lot of catching up in my 30s and 40s. | |
| You can lay all that groundwork while you're young and then enjoy yourself when you're older. | |
| That's how you should work. | |
| Subai says, let's go, UK. | |
| Let's hope so. | |
| Sleety says, the 11% must be lefty Muppets that would vote for them no matter what. | |
| Laborer is going to destroy a once beautiful, wonderful country faster than I thought possible. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Oh, yeah, absolutely. | |
| It's crazy how much they're doing to destroy us and how quickly they're doing it. | |
| And they're definitely trying to, they're trying to speedrun the French Revolution at this point. | |
| They know they've only got a couple more years in power and they're like, right, okay, vote to 16-year-olds, digital IDs, get every migrant in those hotels. | |
| Like, we're going to get all of the radical left things we've been asking for forever. | |
| We just need to quickly get this over the line. | |
| And it's like, no, what you're going to get is a radical right-wing government that, and it won't be Farage, but you will get a radical right-wing government at some point that comes in and says, no, all of this is scrapped. | |
| Because Farage will never say, this is the end of immigration, right? | |
| He will never, ever, ever in a million years say, we've had enough immigration. | |
| We're just not going to have it anymore. | |
| Right. | |
| And that's what people really want. | |
| A sensible right-wing politician who wanted to win the debate would polarize the issue. | |
| He would come out with a campaign that was basically called Not One More. | |
| No more migrants ever, ever again. | |
| How dare you? | |
| Not only was this a massive betrayal, but it hasn't done what it was promised to do. | |
| It was supposed to grow the economy. | |
| It was supposed to save the NHS. | |
| It was supposed to make the world wonderful and fluffy and diverse. | |
| And instead, it's done all of the opposite things. | |
| If the sort of 15 million immigrants that we brought into this country are not sufficient to accomplish the goals of immigration, then the goals of immigration cannot be accomplished through actually mass immigration. | |
| So end. | |
| The end of it. | |
| And once you radicalize, sort of polarize the conversation in this regard, you will force the British public to come down on the side of yes, immigration or no immigration. | |
| And it will literally be you and everyone else, including Nigel Farage. | |
| You'll say, oh, no, I still want immigration. | |
| Of course, I still want immigration. | |
| For some reason, it'd be bad if we didn't just let everyone in this country. | |
| And so you would be the only person on the other side of the argument. | |
| And so people would be like, you know what? | |
| If it's more or none, I'm going for none. | |
| I'm just going for none. | |
| It would be better to have none, right? | |
| And I think that would be the winning strategy. | |
| Jonathan said, birthday monies. | |
| The good point. | |
| Even the families in the UK have their own flags. | |
| Well, yeah, they have coats of arms and whatnot. | |
| But yeah, it was my birthday yesterday. | |
| So thank you very much. | |
| 46. | |
| Hopefully I did. | |
| Do I look 46? | |
| Let me get a picture of myself up. | |
| Hopefully I don't look 46. | |
| I feel like I have a youthful demeanor either way, even if my eyes are cracked and my skin's grey, my beard's white. | |
| Like, hopefully, I still have a youthful demeanor. | |
| The only flags Kier Starmer has are the red flags he raises with every speech he makes. | |
| Well, yeah, I believe it, to be honest. | |
| I mean, Kierstama is an unreformed trot, you know, student radical. | |
| He never stopped being a communist. | |
| So I completely believe it. | |
| Elijah says, does Nick 30 donate to Tommy Robinson for raising 26k for Maori to perform a hacker at an immigration protest? | |
| Well, you've got to understand that Tommy's protest is more a kind of legacy of the British Empire in the 20th century. | |
| And so people in his mindset view the Empire as kind of like the dominion of the English. | |
| And so the things that come under it are in some way to be incorporated. | |
| I don't mean a subordinate way, but like it's still to be there. | |
| So if you don't like that and you're like a hardcore English nationalist, and of course, I, you know, don't donate. | |
| It's your choice. | |
| But it's not going to be a deeply exclusionary event. | |
| And I think it's kind of wrong to expect it to be. | |
| I just don't think you would. | |
| I just don't think he'd have the kind of support that he has if he was that way. | |
| So I don't know why. | |
| I just don't think you should expect that. | |
| But again, if it's not for you, it's not for you. | |
| Freddie says, I'm going to go. | |
| Europe and the West is being destroyed while Israel is emptying the Middle East to expand. | |
| Hmm, greater Israel in the making. | |
| Well, Firas did a, he's back from his wanderings in the Middle East now, actually. | |
| And he did his first Real Politique on Greater Israel, actually. | |
| The first one he got back. | |
| I was like, Jesus Christ. | |
| But he's a very, very reasonable and sensible commentator. | |
| And so go to Lizus.com and watch that if you are curious about what the Greater Israel Project's about. | |
| Scoop says, I appreciate your power, respect and love from Yorkshire, God's own country. | |
| You take that back. | |
| Wiltshire is God's own country. | |
| It's only a small token from a poor fellow financially crippled since the lockdown. | |
| Well, I mean, it's been the same for all of us, hasn't it? | |
| But thank you so much, man. | |
| And don't worry, we're going to win. | |
| We're going to win. | |
| And when we win, right? | |
| And it's another thing. | |
| The economics of this country is just so backwards. | |
| So, so backwards. | |
| I mean, things are way worse than when Liz Truss was in charge. | |
| It was 4.8 on the bonds, and now it's 5.7. | |
| And yet everyone's just crickets. | |
| The bank of things are just like, well, I mean, this is the party we want to be in charge. | |
| And we're screwed. | |
| And everyone's screwed. | |
| And no one can do anything. | |
| So we know why we're screwed. | |
| It's because we are taxing the shit out of people and importing millions of people to compete with them in the market and making it impossible for anyone to get ahead. | |
| But when we win, that's not going to be the case. | |
| Handouts to foreigners will go. | |
| The amount of money we spend on all of this, it'll go. | |
| Millions of people will leave and therefore wages will rise. | |
| Things will get better when we win. | |
| Trust me. | |
| Shaker says, best of luck from Canada. | |
| This is resolved peacefully and soon. | |
| Wish we weren't worse off in national identity. | |
| Flounderized to be anti-conservative USA. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| It's not easy, is it? | |
| For Canada. | |
| And I don't even have any advice for you either. | |
| Legalize Adulthood says, make England great again, mega, for $50. | |
| Thanks, man. | |
| I really appreciate that. | |
| Mr. Spencer says, make Albion great again, merch when? | |
| Well, the thing is a bit, it's a bit too much of an American import. | |
| And weirdly, people are really sensitive about that. | |
| But I am too, which is why we haven't done it. | |
| But we will create. | |
| I mean, we've got Patriotic Merch, obviously, on the store. | |
| We will create more. | |
| Dreadnought says, they can see the minefield we're laying for them. | |
| Yeah, that's a great way of putting it. | |
| That's a great way of putting it. | |
| Why is Kier Starmer out in front of the English bunting? | |
| Because he's just realized he's in the middle of a minefield. | |
| That's exactly the right framing. | |
| He's in the middle of a minefield. | |
| He's like, okay, well, if that's what I need to do to avoid stepping on the mine, it's like, yeah, that's great, Kia. | |
| Don't count signals. | |
| I'm going to count signal. | |
| I can't help but count signal. | |
| You shouldn't be using the flag to divide. | |
| Shut the fuck up, Kia. | |
| That's the point. | |
| Blink twice at Britain's help. | |
| Well, I'm not even blinking twice. | |
| telling you uh you guys i want to get vanned if you mention oh well no i'm not going to do that um Thomas says, Carl, thanks for the amazing content of the years. | |
| Many think it's this long. | |
| Currently enjoying Island of Ford. | |
| Cheers. | |
| Well, thank you very much, and I'm glad you're enjoying Island of Ford. | |
| Knight of Grim Fury says, keep safe on the 13th. | |
| Greetings from the Netherlands. | |
| Well, obviously, you know, I expect everyone to be well-behaved. | |
| And everyone at every protest prior has been well-behaved. | |
| The thing is always really well-coordinated. | |
| People are always, again, just decent, really, really decent. | |
| And so, yeah, obviously. | |
| And you know what? | |
| If you've got a food van, it'd probably be a good idea to come down with it. | |
| Because you'd probably make a lot of money. | |
| Go and sell drinks or something. | |
| Not alcohol, but like water. | |
| You know, cold cokes would be good. | |
| What they want is unfeasible, says Bunny Noah, but what they fear is very plausible. | |
| And they fear losing more than anything. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| They know that they're standing on top of Gamonzilla and his emerging bald head. | |
| They know that that's the case. | |
| It's like, okay, well, you know, if you want to just keep poking the bear as it is, then I guess you'll find out what happens, won't you? | |
| But it's really, really stupid. | |
| And honestly, like, it would just be more sensible to just concede. | |
| Just concede you're in the wrong. | |
| Like, it's not fair to do to us what you've done. | |
| That's all you have to do. | |
| And just stop it. | |
| Sleety says, I think a national strike by all until we get an election is the only way we can call an election early. | |
| As they will not want to relinquish power like all dictators. | |
| Yeah, I mean, the Labour Party will probably never see power again. | |
| It's probably the end of the Labour Party at this point. | |
| And you are right. | |
| I mean, the people in Epping are going to counsel tax strike. | |
| And you know what? | |
| Maybe, maybe that's the way to do things. | |
| Unoriginal username says, respectfully, Carl, you had it right. | |
| You called it the Tommy Rally because it always becomes about him and he's still a colorblind Civnat. | |
| Yes and no. | |
| Like, yeah, it does become about him, but it is his rally. | |
| And he's the one getting huge numbers of people out, right? | |
| I mean, if you think you can do better, go ahead, is my advice. | |
| But the, and it's not that simple of being colorblind sinat. | |
| He is like, he's not someone who is racist and who hates other people of other races. | |
| But he does understand that it is England itself that is in danger. | |
| It's the same with Lawrence Fox. | |
| They understand that it is England itself that is in danger, but they don't have the philosophical tools to be able to properly articulate how that should be described without saying that all of the non-white people are bad. | |
| And that's not what we should be saying anyway. | |
| It's not true. | |
| So it puts them in a difficult position that they're not adequately prepared for, in my opinion. | |
| Airbox says, if I recall correctly, you've called the British state torrent in the past, but tolerance is putting up with what you dislike. | |
| It does not tolerate migrants. | |
| It likes them. | |
| See how it treats those it dislikes instead. | |
| Well, I mean, the things they do are done under the auspices of toleration. | |
| But, yeah, I mean, the people involved are actual fetishists for foreigners at this point. | |
| So, anyway, would you ever do a deep dive on the Fabian Society? | |
| Maybe I could ask Beau to do that. | |
| Shake Silver says, on state banning access to internet for teens, a lot of your audience came from disaffected youths by the MSM plantation. | |
| Why limit their access to info? | |
| Well, it's about doing what's right, I think. | |
| I honestly think it's bad for children to have access to social media. | |
| I don't think they should be on it. | |
| But you say that, but actually, most of my audience didn't do that. | |
| It's probably about 15% of my audience who was under 24. | |
| So, or like under 18, I'd say. | |
| But, like, it's not a huge percentage at all. | |
| The average age of my audience is about 30 to 35. | |
| So, it's not a huge number. | |
| But there are a lot. | |
| I mean, that is a large number, though, on its own. | |
| But even then, it's just about the right thing to do. | |
| I just don't think children should have smartphones and access to social media because it's bad for them. | |
| Like, it's not good. | |
| Even if I personally benefited, it's still not good for them. | |
| And I don't want them to be harmed by it. | |
| And you know what? | |
| You know, if it's like 16 and over, I'll just talk to you when you're 16. | |
| I'll explain things to you in 16. | |
| I'm sure you'll still get it. | |
| Like, you know, like most of my audience have been adults of my age or older, frankly, when I've been talking to them. | |
| So it's not like, you know, I need to brainwash people. | |
| I'm happy to persuade. | |
| You know, like, yeah, people in the chat, like, you know, we're not, they're not young. | |
| Some people do, like, Visible Sun there. | |
| I found you when I was 15, which is great. | |
| But no, my audience has always been relatively mature. | |
| So I'm not worried about that. | |
| Harrison says, an African is never late, nor is he early. | |
| He arrives precisely when he intends to arrive. | |
| Yeah, Africans are very much like Gandalf the Grey. | |
| Adam says, what do you make of us in Scotland having such wet wipes for politicians? | |
| We've been so wet for years and it hurts my happiness. | |
| How can it change? | |
| You need the Braveheart Party. | |
| Honestly, I really mean it, right? | |
| In Scotland, I keep telling Dank this. | |
| Just go out and go out with a mate, register the Braveheart Party. | |
| And it's like, yeah, we're Scotland's far-right nationalist party. | |
| We actually care about Scotland as Scotland and not Scotland as a vessel for universal human rights and mass immigration. | |
| We are the Braveheart Party and we're here for Scotland. | |
| And I bet people would vote for it just on the name alone. | |
| I bet you end up with double digits, like 10, 12% in the polls, just because, oh, the Braveheart Party, yeah, I'm voting for that. | |
| Fuck the SNP. | |
| Fuck the Labour Party. | |
| Fuck the rest of them. | |
| I bet you could do it. | |
| EHI says, seems like the plan was the hard right turn. | |
| Inevitable with this level of migration into an unsuspecting nation. | |
| We're going into the strong men phase. | |
| Yeah, this was inevitable. | |
| It was absolutely inevitable. | |
| Chance says, just ordered my copy of Islander. | |
| Wanted to say this movement is global. | |
| Even in Canada, we're starting to budge on immigration. | |
| Man, Canada's had it worse than England as well. | |
| Aren't you like a third immigrant now, or something like that? | |
| It's actually crazy if you think about it. | |
| But yeah, but thank you for ordering Islander. | |
| And yeah, it is a global movement because everyone is entitled to their own nation. | |
| It's so straightforward. | |
| Everyone is entitled to a nation that takes their interests first and puts them first. | |
| And that's, like I said, it's not that you can't ever have immigration. | |
| It just has to be done in the quantity and way that a nation wants it. | |
| And if a nation turns around and says, look, we actually don't want immigration, and we said that 60 years ago, then it should have been respected then. | |
| But instead, we're here where we are now, and Gamonzilla is rising. | |
| Is it just me on the September 11th protests feel like a trap? | |
| Something feels wrong just in my gut. | |
| Yeah, but everyone said that every single one. | |
| They've all gone off with that hitch. | |
| I'm not particularly worried. | |
| Sentinel says, my copy of Islander was stolen in the mail. | |
| Well, unfortunately, I can't do anything about that, mate. | |
| I'm really sorry. | |
| You've got to talk to the delivery people. | |
| But I mean, email us and we'll see what we can do. | |
| But I doubt there's anything we can do about that. | |
| Steel Manning says, happy birthday, Carl. | |
| Here's the purging the Varalis from the hierarchy of foreigners from England. | |
| St. George for England. | |
| Well, thank you very much. | |
| Well, thank you, everyone, for joining me. | |
| I hope this was interesting as well because I really think that we can feel the pressure building and we can feel the tectonic place moving. | |
| I really believe it. | |
| Anyway, thank you very much for joining me. | |
| Thank you for all the generous donations. | |
| Did I miss your super chat, Mka? | |
| Sorry. | |
| Sorry. | |
| Hang on. | |
| Maybe it came in after I last refreshed it. | |
| Sorry, there are a couple of others. | |
| I didn't see them. | |
| Favorite English monarch, I vote King Richard the Lionheart. | |
| Probably Alfred the Great. | |
| Probably Alfred. | |
| Alfred is himself just such a wonderful person. | |
| And we've got so much evidence of it from the things he personally wrote. | |
| Is that Rupert Lowe PM in my chat? | |
| I don't believe that. | |
| Let me go and check the channel. | |
| It should be MP, not PM. | |
| What am I looking at? | |
| Anyway, yeah, no, I'd say Alfred. | |
| Alfred's the just as a virtuous man, Alfred was such a good, good man. | |
| Imka says, I'm an Armenian immigrant, recent persistent, paid for visas, NHS, everything. | |
| Do you think I qualify to stay here or do you prefer I leave as well? | |
| Well, that's the point, isn't it? | |
| There are good people who are on our side who are not English, and I don't want to ostracize those people. | |
| The problem is quantity, and the quantity has been, well, kind of hostile, right? | |
| And there are many, many people who actually don't care about this country, who are just here to grift off us, who are just here to suck up money from us. | |
| And this is unacceptable. | |
| This is just unacceptable. | |
| But people who work hard, we must have a way of recording that. | |
| And basically, I think if you're a next tax next tax contributor, then we can allow you to stay. | |
| It seems fairly fair to me. | |
| And the thing is, I know that most immigrants are not next tax contributors. | |
| So I don't think that's casting the net too wide. | |
| Bim says, do you think Tommy's been compromised? | |
| I don't know. | |
| Maybe. | |
| It's hard to know about anyone, right? | |
| Anyone could be compromised. | |
| And so I hate this kind of conspiratorial, backstabbing mindset. | |
| I'd rather just operate on good faith. | |
| And if someone does something bad, then you respond to it. | |
| But acting in a really guarded and hostile way, it just seems like it is a deliberate kind of way of making sure you can never build alliances. | |
| And I don't want to be like that. | |
| I don't like living like that. | |
| Mr. Twisted Frenzy says, happy birthday, Carl. | |
| Wishing you all the luck from Ireland. | |
| With any luck, the rise of the National Party on one of our islands will help bolster the other. | |
| Stay strong, God bless. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| I mean, what's crazy is the Irish have got a much stronger sense of national self than the English. | |
| And Ireland doesn't have a right-wing nationalist party. | |
| It needs one. | |
| It should have one. | |
| Yeah, we can ban hostile ideologies. | |
| There's nothing wrong with that. | |
| Started watching you when I was 14 back in 2014. | |
| Thanks for your work. | |
| Well, thank you. | |
| And I hope you matured into a responsible young man. | |
| Definitely not Shiro says, Hi, Carl. | |
| I'm an immigrant myself, but with you. | |
| I'm intensely annoyed at all the handouts while I'm getting taxed over 40%. | |
| Hope there's still a place for productive people after you guys win. | |
| Go England. | |
| Well, that's the point, right? | |
| Like there, like I said, I've always said this. | |
| People who are well-meaning towards us, who are our friends and not people who grift off us, making them enemies, our friends should stay because honestly, there just aren't that many of them. | |
| Like The number of immigrants who are actually paying tax as a net contributor, I mean, almost you know, almost none of them, frankly, are when they come from outside of the European Union or the United States and Canada. | |
| So, basically, if you're from the Anglosphere or the EU, you're not a problem. | |
| But on an individual basis, we can track your tax contributions. | |
| If you've been a taxpayer, fine, you can say, Why not? | |
| It means you're actually doing what you're supposed to do. | |
| Like, I would say that's a relatively good judge of character. | |
| I saw Mr. H in the chat saying, Well, we're not in an economic zone. | |
| He said, That's true, but we can also use this as a proxy for judge of character, and then we can just deport all of those people who are a burden on us. | |
| Because if you've come over to be a burden on us, I can't help but feel that that's again an indictment against your character. | |
| You made that decision and you're making us pay for it. | |
| So, I'm not having that, you know what I mean? | |
| But uh, but yeah, no, but and that's the point. | |
| I don't want to just be you know, I don't want to get to the exact hardline position of just no, no foreigners ever, because I just don't feel that's very fair. | |
| And we have got friends who are immigrants, we don't need to deport everyone, uh, we just need basically about four-fifths of the immigrants to go home. | |
| Uh, right, I'm gonna refresh again, but I do have to go to bed of course. | |
| I'm shattered because I work all day, and I work some more, and then I do this, and I work some more. | |
| I'm not complaining, I've got a wonderful life, but it's like I'm tired. | |
| Um, the soup chat came in at African time, greetings from South Africa, and happy birthday. | |
| Well, thank you very much. | |
| Uh, no Islam out of the Middle East, can't be negotiable. | |
| There's no such thing as moderate Islam, they'll betray you. | |
| Well, like I said in my uh, in my Witan talk, you know, I think these things will be judged collectively in many ways. | |
| So, anyway, anyway, thank you again very much for joining me, and thank you for the very generous donations. | |
| I really appreciate them. | |
| Um, if you want to see more of me, uh, come on the podcast of the Lotus Eaters. | |
| We are now streaming to YouTube, so search podcast The Lotus Eaters. | |
| So, we're back on YouTube because YouTube's basically eased off the censorship, it seems. | |
| So, um, come and watch us, it's now as convenient as ever, and uh, I will see you then. | |
| So, uh, take care of yourselves, guys. | |
| And also, just keep the faith. | |
| Like, I'm really optimistic at the moment. | |
| Like, I see loads of people still blackpilling. | |
| It's like, why are you blackpilling? | |
| Like, they're all waving the England flag and saying, yeah, we're going to do everything you say, sir. | |
| We swear. | |
| And it's like, there's nothing to blackpill about. | |
| We're winning this. | |
| We are winning this by a long way. | |
| And when it's over, it will be unbelievable that the issue is ever in doubt. | |
| This is this is that we cannot lose at this point because, like I said, got nowhere else to go. |