It's War
I told you.
I told you.
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| I am loving this labor conference, aren't you, folks? | |
| This is everything that I said that they were going to do. | |
| I did a stream the other day saying Keir Starmer is declaring war on the right. | |
| And what did he do in his speech today? | |
| He came out and told everyone that you're the enemy. | |
| If you say or imply that people cannot be English or British because of the colour of their skin, that mixed heritage families owe you an explanation. | |
| The people who've lived here for generations, raised their children here, built their lives here, working in our schools, our hospitals, running businesses, are our neighbours. | |
| If you say they should now be deported, then mark my words, we will fight you with everything we have because you are the enemy of national renewal. | |
| I say it, Kia. | |
| People who are foreign are not British. | |
| People whose ethnicity you define by reference to a foreign nationality are actually not British. | |
| And you know how I know? | |
| It's because I have to reference another fucking country for you to even identify them as separate to us, Kia. | |
| That's why. | |
| That's why I know that fundamentally they are from somewhere else and we are not. | |
| That's just the way that these things work. | |
| And if you didn't have such an insane view of what it was to be from a nation, to be a part of a nation, to be someone of this place, then this wouldn't be a problem at all. | |
| If you would come out and say, you know what, actually, we're happy to have our foreign friends and guests living among us, but the concerns of the native people, the indigenous population of these islands, has to come first. | |
| Everyone will say, yeah, of course, that's very reasonable. | |
| Completely reasonable. | |
| Why would I object to that? | |
| If I'm a guest in someone else's country, no matter how many generations of my English descendants were guests in another country, I'd say the same thing. | |
| But you can't do that. | |
| You have to demand that they are in every way the equals to us in this country. | |
| You have to demand that they have as much claim to England as me, my children, my family, my friends, my community. | |
| You have to demand that these people have as much claim to England as they have to their home countries. | |
| As Shabana Mahmood, in fact, running around saying, I'm English, even though she can get a Pakistani passport at any time because Pakistani citizenship is based on the blood. | |
| Patriotism, a force for good, is turning into something smaller, something more like ethno-nationalism, which struggles to accept that someone who looks like me and has a face like mine can truly be English or British. | |
| She can call us racists and then say, I'm English, I'm English, I'm English, all she wants. | |
| But the facts of the matter are that she is in fact a Pakistani woman. | |
| She is not English. | |
| She has no English blood. | |
| She has no British blood whatsoever, in fact. | |
| And her parents chose to come here, as she put it, to look for a better life. | |
| Well, actually, that's not what I think my country is for. | |
| My country is not for foreigners to come seeking a better life. | |
| And then when you decide that actually you're going to put foreigners in positions of power above us and then act like we should not be concerned about this whatsoever. | |
| I mean, who among us is more British than Shabana Mahmood, the woman who says that Islam is her moral compass and guides everything that she does. | |
| we'll say things like this. | |
| Yeah, I don't know what she was saying either Keir, but she's your home secretary. | |
| I'm absolutely sick of it. | |
| They have countries of their own. | |
| They can go to other countries where their ethnic group is the majority and their ethnic group is served by the state, served by their institutions. | |
| And they can feel as if the country is run for them. | |
| And all I'm asking is to feel that way for me, for my children, for my wife, for my family, for my parents, for my great descendants long into the future. | |
| All I'm asking for is for my country not to be stolen from future generations through mass immigration. | |
| That's all I'm asking for. | |
| And you know what? | |
| That's actually a really, really low bar. | |
| It's a really reasonable thing. | |
| And what did you come out and do? | |
| You came out and declared everyone was a racist for thinking this. | |
| And also, you've declared war on them. | |
| If you think then that people who are not ethnically from these islands, as in English, Scottish, Welsh, or Northern Irish, if I think those people are not just as British as the rest of us, then I'm the enemy. | |
| So every Somali that jumps off a boat, everyone who breaks into this country, and then you just hand out documents to his citizenship as much as you can. | |
| If I don't think those people are British, then yeah, I guess I am your enemy. | |
| I am the enemy of national renewal, whatever that means. | |
| You know, I'll do a thing in more depth about the philosophy that Shibana Mahmood and the Labour Party more broadly is putting across here. | |
| Because it is bonkers. | |
| It is absolutely bonkers to suggest that all people in all of the world can just say, I'm English, and we have to accept that it is so. | |
| What prevents them from just doing that in their own countries, Kier? | |
| Why can't they just say, hmm, you know what? | |
| We may be standing in Hyderabad or something, but I'm English. | |
| Good point, chaps. | |
| I'm English too. | |
| All of India could declare themselves to be English. | |
| And what are we reconstructing the British Empire then? | |
| Are we going to be like, oh yeah, that's an English territory now? | |
| That's an Anglo-country now. | |
| No, it obviously doesn't work that way. | |
| And just because someone was born in England does not make them English. | |
| And it's not like anything other than a statement of fact to say that. | |
| Because fundamentally, this country is named after the people. | |
| It is not sufficient to be born in England to be English. | |
| Any more than it means that if you are born in the stable, you are a horse. | |
| To be English, you have to have at least some English parentage. | |
| One of your parents has to have been English. | |
| It is an ethnicity. | |
| It is passed down. | |
| And this doesn't make anyone bad. | |
| It doesn't mean that death squads need to march down the streets. | |
| That the British Defence League is suddenly going to kick down doors and club people for being non-English. | |
| What it means is we accept the tacit implication of all of this is that actually the English have the primary claim to England. | |
| And if they have had enough, if they feel that they have given up enough of their country to foreigners who, remember, have no claim whatsoever to this country. | |
| They are here at our grace. | |
| No one from anywhere else in the world can say, I deserve to live in England. | |
| I have a right to live in England. | |
| No, only the English can say that. | |
| Even the Irish don't have a right to live here, Kier. | |
| No one other than the English has the moral claim to England. | |
| And if they're here, and many of them are, and many of them are here, and they're not a problem. | |
| And if they're here, they are because we allowed it. | |
| Well, actually, in reality, it's because it was enforced upon us, wasn't it, Kier? | |
| But the point being, you cannot just declare war on us for being against your UK. | |
| And if you want to set up Nigel Farage as the totemic opposite of your politics, that's fine. | |
| I've got my disagreements with Nigel. | |
| But on this, if it's you or him, I'm going to choose him. | |
| We will teach Starmer a lesson next May that British political history will never forget. | |
| I am now, as a result of this week and the abuse that has been heaped upon our supporters and our voters, more determined than ever. | |
| Don't underestimate that. | |
| And in fact, I think it becomes imperative that Nigel Farage crushes you. | |
| You are not allowed to approach the British people with this kind of attitude. | |
| Do you understand me, Kier? | |
| You are not allowed to openly declare for the foreigners against us and expect to have any grace from us, expect to have any sympathy, expect to ever get elected again, right? | |
| Nigel Farage, God willing, is going to crush you. | |
| I'm going to do everything I can to support Nigel in crushing you because you declared the battle lines. | |
| You declared it. | |
| You said, you know what? | |
| And you know, Nigel Farage was so kind to you as well. | |
| He was like, well, I disagree with Kier Starmer, but he seems like a very nice guy. | |
| And you've just come out and called him the enemy. | |
| All of his supporters, the enemy. | |
| You do not get to speak to us this way. | |
| That is not how this works. | |
| You do not get to side with the foreigners. | |
| You do not get to tell us that we are bad people for wanting the country that we grew up in for our own children. | |
| You do not get to do this. | |
| And I realize that the penny hasn't dropped yet, that you haven't actually arrived at a point where you realize, oh, I fucked it. | |
| But that day is rapidly arriving. | |
| Trust me, in May, you're going to get what you deserve. | |
| People are going to remember exactly how you've treated them. | |
| And everyone hates you anyway. | |
| You're the most hated prime minister that has ever been. | |
| And Nigel Farage, amongst young people, is the most popular candidate going. | |
| He is as popular as Jeremy Clarkson. | |
| Okay. | |
| He is as popular as mainstream celebrities. | |
| And you are hated by everyone other than the closed borders room that you are in with an absolute echo chamber of people from the previous paradigm who have screwed up this country. | |
| And everyone is pointing at going, look, it's what you support, what you are offering more of that has done the damage to us. | |
| And all you can do is come out and declare for the opposition, the foreign. | |
| And all you can say is, well, this was how it was meant to be. | |
| Don't you understand? | |
| You don't love the UK like we do. | |
| It's like, no, I don't. | |
| Look at the fucking state of it. | |
| I don't love this. | |
| I love what it used to be before you and your Blairite friends got your hands on it. | |
| It used to be magical. | |
| And I realize that there are a bunch of Zoomers going, what are you talking about? | |
| What do you mean? | |
| I really mean this. | |
| Britain, all of it was genuinely magical. | |
| It was like a place out of a fairy tale. | |
| And we didn't even realize what we had. | |
| We didn't realize how good it was until they took it away from us. | |
| And now my children will never see the country I saw when I was growing up. | |
| And it breaks my heart. | |
| And if all you can do, Kir, is say, you know what? | |
| I'm going to make sure there are millions of Pakistanis here. | |
| I'm going to make sure there are millions of Africans here. | |
| I'm going to make sure there are millions of Asians here. | |
| I'm going to make sure there are millions of foreigners here. | |
| And you're going to treat every single one of them as if they were from 9000 BC, hanging out with Cheddar Man back in the day. | |
| I'm not having it here. | |
| There are millions of people in this country who shouldn't be here. | |
| And you could easily siphon these off and go, well, look, Boris let in a bunch of people who are just a drain on the state. | |
| Don't know why he did it. | |
| And those people should probably go home. | |
| We don't need indefinite leaf remain for them because they're not here legitimately. | |
| They're here against the will of the British people through the betrayal of a conservative prime minister. | |
| You could easily win all of this back, but you won't because you are deeply ideological. | |
| You're a blockhead, frankly. | |
| And you've got no dexterity and you're not able to pivot. | |
| But that's fine. | |
| That's good. | |
| You're going to get crushed. | |
| I want you to get crushed. | |
| I want the two old parties, the two traitorous parties, Labour and the Tories, to be absolutely annihilated. | |
| And if Nigel Farage is the man to do that, then Godspeed, Nigel Farage. | |
| I hope you manage it. | |
| Fundamentally, Kier, if it's war you want, it is war you will get. | |
| We have nowhere else to go. | |
| All of your foreign charges all have countries of their own. | |
| When the heat gets too high and they realize, okay, actually the British public are never going to vote for us again. | |
| In fact, they're going to take away our benefits. | |
| In fact, they're going to render us marginal as we ought to be, they'll leave. | |
| And you'll be left without all of your friends and neighbours. | |
| And we will finally have a country that works for us. | |
| They have options, Keir. | |
| We do not have options. | |
| We are in this for the long haul. | |
| We have nowhere to go. | |
| This is the last England that we have. |