Carl Benjamin critiques the UK Labour government's incompetence and net zero failures, arguing that energy dependence and food insecurity signal an impending political paradigm shift. He champions Rupert Lowe's Restore Britain party over Reform UK for its focus on national security and halting mass migration, while condemning multiculturalism and globalist policies as existential threats to Anglo-Celtic unity. The discussion highlights the necessity of nationalist self-sufficiency against bureaucratic "quangocracy," predicting that traditionalists will smash the current system to restore British sovereignty and achieve a lasting victory against perceived external dangers. [Automatically generated summary]
So I had to spend a bit of time delaying on the background to make sure I actually got it working.
So don't crucify me for being late.
I was actually retarded.
I was actually too stupid after, what, 13 years of doing this to be able to figure out how YouTube live streaming works.
So checkmate puts you in your place.
How are you doing, chat?
I hope you're doing very well.
You know, we've got a lot going on.
And everything's going great, by the way.
Like, everyone's working really, really hard.
Everything's going really well.
And it feels like our time is coming, right?
But it means I'm tired all the time.
I've got, you know, family stuff, work stuff, and then this stuff.
But I'm never not happy to do it because it's going well.
And I really, you can feel like there's a shift, a paradigm shift that's about to happen.
Something's just about to flip.
That's what it feels like to me.
The moment feels pregnant with expectation.
Enough is enough.
And everyone can tell it's enough.
Everyone can tell no.
Everything until this point was just wrong.
And we are now bearing the consequences of it.
For example, I got into a bit of a thing on Twitter.
I tweet very rarely these days, you know, once or twice a day, just because, you know, got to make money.
But I got into a bit of a Twitter thing because I was like, look, Played Cymru in Wales, the Welsh nationalist party, are going to clean up at the local elections, it looks like.
And they're just like all the other Celtic traitor nationalists.
They're exactly the same.
Where their policy on demographics is more foreigners.
We must have more foreigners.
We must diversify ourselves because look how well it's gone for England.
And the English are against diversification now.
And therefore, they're bad, we're good, and we have to do the process of this.
It's literally the what would Hitler do?
Just substituting Hitler for the English.
The English would restrict borders, impose border control if they could, if their own governments weren't full of traitors.
And so the Celtic nationalists are like, well, then we'll do the opposite because that's bad.
Okay, okay.
And some guy retweeting me going, oh, they want Wales to be actually Welsh.
And I was just like, but you're not going to get it, are you?
You're not going to get that.
What you're going to get is unbelievably stabbed in the back.
And the Welsh people will find themselves with just the worst kind of woke government, SNP on steroids like government.
And everyone will be like, how did this fucking happen, man?
How did this happen?
And I swear to God, you should just take from our example.
Just take from our example.
Like, if your party isn't explicitly stating that it is for your people first, then that party is a party of traitors.
And we've just got to be completely concise and clear on this.
If you cannot, as a party, find it within yourself to say, no, we are for this people first.
Whoever it is you are for, you say it clearly, you say it loudly.
We are for these people first.
Because then at least we all know where we stand.
Because this, I think, is one of the primary reasons that our politics is just falling apart, man.
It's just absolutely falling apart.
And I couldn't be more happy to see it falling apart, by the way.
It's about time because chaos is a ladder, right?
It's all opportunity, isn't it?
It's all opportunity.
I don't know where I was going with this.
Chaos Is A Ladder00:02:30
It's just like, as I was waiting, as I was setting this up, I was like, yeah, no, this is great.
I didn't want to get into it quite yet.
I want to let people arrive.
This is just ad hoc stream.
And I'm terrible with ad hoc streams.
I was like, right, okay.
I've got an hour.
Oh, yeah, I was working a lot.
That was right.
I found myself with a bit of not free time necessarily, but I could make some time this evening.
I was like, right, great.
I'll do a stream.
Talk to the chat.
I always enjoy talking to the chat.
I don't talk to the chat enough, frankly.
And I've probably got massive bags under my eyes, but I'm sure it's all going to be worth it.
Everyone in my orbit is just working really, really hard and just doing the best they can.
I see them doing it every day.
Every day I see people working their asses off, being as diligent as possible.
And then I'll log on to Twitter and like someone will be siding us off.
I'm like, that just doesn't represent anything that I actually see in my daily life.
Like, sorry, no, I'm, as far as I can tell, surrounded by the best and brightest and the most diligent.
And I'm just really proud of everything that we're doing.
I'm just incredibly proud that we've managed to arrive in a place where we've got so many competent and capable people.
And I'm not just talking about load seeders, but obviously I do include that in what I'm saying here.
I mean, just because I'm friends with most of the people on the British right.
And I see them working really hard and doing really well and coming up with brilliant takes and making great observations and facilitating important conversations.
And I'm just like, you know, this is a movement whose time has come.
All of the people in it are that they're not noobs.
You know, they're not amateurs.
We've all been through the ringer.
Everyone's got their scars.
And it's, and, you know, whenever we go to conferences, like my R2C put on a great new media conference last year.
It's a really, really nice conference, really fun, really good.
And it was nice to be in a room full of people who were broadly in the same category and on the same side, right?
Because of course, you know, the lefties didn't turn up to the new media conference when it was hosted by MayR2C, but they could have done.
That's their loss, right?
And I was, I, I, I think about this quite regularly, but it's just like we've got genuine sort of veterans on our side at this point.
Everyone I know is not wet behind the ears.
Global Crisis Consequences00:15:35
They're not long in the tooth necessarily, but they have enough experience under their belt to know exactly what they're doing, why they're doing it, and why they're being successful at what they do.
And so it's just really great to see this, the British right generally on the march.
Now, there's a lot of infighting, obviously.
Obviously.
And it's like people like, oh, look, the left, the constantly infighting, they can never get anything done.
Well, I mean, their infighting didn't stop them from getting loads of stuff done, actually, if you think about it.
Like, woke hasn't been put away.
Everything is still insufferably woke.
Although we did have a nice victory the other day, which is the girl guides are going to make sure they have girls in their guides now, which good.
Good.
That's small wins.
But in other areas, you can see woke is still on the march.
But it was just nice to sort of sit back every now and again and take stock of actually where things are.
And the thing is, even our young guys are smart and have been following the content for a long time.
It's been formative to them.
So they're hitting the ground running.
They understand the game because they've watched the slings and arrows coming at people like me, people like Paul Joseph Watson, people like Meyer, people like whoever, Tommy, whoever it is, right?
They've seen we've been the bad example.
They've seen what happens when you step on the rakes.
And so they're like, okay, this is how this game is played.
We know what to do.
We are picking up the baton and carrying it.
And that is just spectacular, isn't it?
That is spectacular.
And I saw about kissing the wall in chat.
That's another interesting thing, isn't it?
Like a lot of people have managed to avoid the obvious pitfall of jumping on supporting Trump's Iran war.
Now, you know, I'm not saying you're bad for supporting Trump's Iran war.
What I'm saying is it's obvious that this is going to age badly, right?
This is not Trump acting with a good plan.
This is not something that's been well thought through.
And this is not something that is going to be easy.
And the thing is, it was known not to be easy in advance.
Everyone was like, look, Iran is not Iraq.
Everyone knew.
The groundwork wasn't laid.
And so, like, Nigel Farage and Kemmy Baynot jumping on that immediately.
Say, yes, yes, we're so totally for it.
It's like, well, it doesn't really feel like it's in our interests, actually.
It's like, oh, Iran are bad.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I know.
I know.
I know Iran are bad.
Everyone knows Iran's bad.
But we're really poor.
And if we start fucking around with Iran, as we've seen, the global oil price is going to go up a lot.
And it has.
And also, because we're so poor, we're just not really in a position to fight a war.
We've only got a few, I mean, literally like a handful of genuinely seaworthy warships.
Thanks, Conservatives, by the way.
That's their fault.
And so it was just very clear from the start that it just wasn't worth jumping on for us.
And I'm not saying don't do it.
I mean, do what you're, whatever, not my problem.
I'm not really for it, though.
But I don't care if the mullers get knocked off.
I mean, who cares?
It's just that there are going to be consequences to this.
And we're starting to bear them now, right?
And so you can feel that the winds of change are genuinely blowing.
And this is what causes genuine regime change, right?
When things start becoming actually difficult.
Because up until this point, we've been a really prosperous country for a long time.
And so all through the 90s, the 2000s until the 2010s, we're a very, very prosperous country.
Everything was, you know, whatever happened was always secondary to the fact that we had money and we were doing all right.
Demographically, things weren't that bad.
So when you walk down the street, it didn't feel imminently dangerous.
It didn't feel like you're in a foreign country, unless you went to a certain particular area of the country, obviously, or certain particular areas.
But now all of these bubbles are being burst one by one in quite rapid succession.
Like the green energy bubble.
It's just mad.
Like this, this fiction that we're going to have the entire country running off renewable energies.
And then the Iran war starts.
And everyone's like, fuck, we really need that oil.
Why did we just leave it in the North Sea?
It's like, yeah, great question.
You thought you were saving the world.
You fucking idiots.
You fucking idiots.
Like, I saw, was it New Statesman podcast?
They were like, yeah, yeah, yeah, milibandism.
Ed Miliband's like a rock star in labor because he was trading on a fiction, which was that there would be a persistent level of stability that would essentially indulge us ruining ourselves with green energy.
We play the highest energy prices in the world, right?
The highest.
Now, that's a really stupid thing to do.
There's no such thing as an advanced industrial economy that has like poor energy generation.
You need a lot of energy to maintain our level of civilization.
I mean, thankfully, though, you would think this isn't a problem because Britain is an island full of the world's best coal with a massive deposit of oil and gas off the North Sea.
So just offshore.
So you'd be like, okay.
And that's not even talking about like the space age, the modern forms of energy generation like nuclear, which we could have done, which we have done in the past, and that the French are leading the way on, much to my chagrin.
It's not that it couldn't be done.
It's being done everywhere.
It's just not being done here.
And we were covering this on the podcast the other day.
Like for us, it's like, well, yeah, not only does Britain have amazing coal, but there are modern cleaning methods, like modern technologies that can clean the coal.
So you're not just polluting with it either.
And it's like, oh, great.
Good thing we don't need that.
And so, anyway, basically, the boondoggle that is the net zero agenda has shown to be on top of a series of assumptions about the stability of the world that clearly don't obtain.
The world is clearly not stable enough for this.
And actually, strategically, and it's not just, sorry, not just energy either, is it?
What about food?
What about food supplies?
What about fertilizer supplies?
What about all sorts of things that we take for granted?
Because we thought we had arrived in the end of history and that nations become irrelevant.
And we could just outsource manufacturing to China.
We could just outsource gas and oil and energy to Russia.
We could fertilize production to Russia.
Like all of these things that have just come crashing down.
And it's like, yeah, okay.
No wonder Starmer is in PMQs today, head in his hand, right?
No wonder.
The situation is actually the complete inverse of what these people had assumed it to be for their entire adult lives.
The complete opposite.
No.
Actually, what you need is energy nationalism.
What you need is food nationalism.
What you need is national security.
You need to know who's in your country.
Because, I mean, one of the reasons, and I mean, I can't prove this, but I strongly suspect that one of the reasons that Kier Slam was so reluctant to get into a war with Iran is because he's afraid of the Muslim community.
He's afraid there might be pro or sympathetic, Iranian sympathetic terror cells located in the country.
And he doesn't want a series of terror attacks in response.
I genuinely think that was a driving motivation for Kioslam.
I mean, luckily for him, we just can't anyway, because I mean, what are we going to do?
Send a fleet.
And so we find ourselves in a position where it is obvious that actually looking after the interests of your own country has become, and this has happened so, so quickly, just overnight, paramount political importance, right?
Paramount.
All of these fictions of Russia meddling in the elections, blah, It's like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's all hypothetical and essentially unproven.
But moreover, kind of irrelevant, right?
That is a luxury belief.
All of these were luxury beliefs on the assumption that tomorrow we would have enough fuel for our cars, that we'd have food we could put on the table.
And like the rewilding bullshit, right?
The UK government, in Wales, this is the law, right?
You have to put 15% of your farmland as wild land for biodiversity.
And the British government literally pays farmers not to fucking farm for biodiversity, right?
It's so unbelievably short-sighted.
Because now there's God knows how much farmland that is available that we're not using.
And food prices are through the roof.
Through the roof.
Anyone done their grocery shopping recently?
Unbelievably painful.
It is so painful to be like.
Jesus, I don't know how I'm going to afford this.
I don't know how I'm going to afford this.
And yet, all of these problems.
And this kind of whiplash is the end of a paradigm whose fictions cannot sustain themselves anymore, right?
That we have the international community and we all agree on how the world should be run and therefore, no, no, no.
Well, that's not the way things are now, is it?
And so suddenly all of this has come crashing down.
You've got the Prime Minister.
I mean, like, next to him here is Rachel Reeves.
Remember, not so long ago, she was bawling her eyes out in the fucking parliament, like, genuinely crying.
Ah, you know, and it's just like, God, she's the person in charge of the economy.
And she's crying in parliament.
Fuck.
How bad must things be?
And she never looks happy either, by the way.
How bad must things be?
And this is the thing, isn't it?
There's a tremendous insecurity embedded in the British political class at every level.
So, for example, the Labour front bench, it looks like if an election was held tomorrow, every single one of them would lose their seat.
Normally, the Prime Minister keeps his seat.
Even if he doesn't win the election and they become the opposition, they still end up keeping their seat.
Like, it's highly unusual for a prime minister to lose his seat, let alone the entire front bench of the party.
And it'll be the same with the Conservatives, by the way.
Literally about, well, probably not 100, probably about 80 of them will lose their seats, which is just a bloodbath.
I mean, you know, you had 150 or so under Rishi Senak losing their seats.
And then you're going to have just two rump parties that are left over from this paradigm of internationalism when the world has suddenly realized, actually, not only was that bollocks that people didn't want, but it's left us profoundly exposed on the world stage.
Where are we getting our energy from?
Don't know.
Russia?
Why are we going from Russia?
Where are we getting our food from?
Ukraine?
Oh, yeah, that's stable.
Like, what are we doing?
What are we doing?
What's our border defense like?
Well, we don't have any and we keep getting invaded every fucking day by 200 small boats.
Like, what?
Okay, there's a crisis somewhere in the world.
They're shelling Cyprus.
Can we do something about it?
No, we've got one boat we can send.
Just what are we doing?
This internationalist paradigm is coming to an end.
And the national paradigm is being born.
It's being just so profoundly obvious that the future of this century is going to be built around national security on various different levels, right?
Not necessarily like, not even necessarily like physical security from invasion, although that might be something that genuinely is in the forefront of people's minds.
But it'd be about quality of life security.
Do we have our food?
Do we have our energy?
Do we have communications?
Do we have access to things?
Do we have these things?
And this, thank God, this is being borne forth, right?
Thank God.
And the thing about all of this, where we're in this position of tremendous insecurity, tremendous difficulty, the challenges ahead are going to be quite significant.
And never have such mediocre people been entrusted to carry these things out and to look after us.
Like, I wouldn't trust the Labour front bench to run a kid's birthday party.
I'd expect the Bouncy Castle wouldn't arrive on the right day or something if you put Lamy in charge of it.
I'd expect it to cost twice as much if I put Rachel Reeves in charge of it.
I'd expect no one to turn up if I put Kier Starmer in charge of it.
I wouldn't trust these people with mundane things in my own life, let alone with the running of the country.
And yet here we are.
Like, God, we're moving into a time of profound crisis and political change.
Who have we got in charge?
Fucking retards.
Excuse me.
Just absolute, absolute fucking retards.
You know, genuinely a machine man and his idiot sidekicks.
And so you just, you just got to stare at it and be like, okay, well, this can't last forever, right?
This is going to just implode.
Come the actual moment of crunch, right?
When the election comes, all of these parties are going to implode.
This is so good, to be honest.
So good.
I mean, look at their faces.
I hate to use the Tory Twitter feed, but look at the faces, man.
That's Ed Miliband.
How's the energy policy, Ed?
Was it fucking ridiculous?
Just preposterous, you say.
Just so high in the sky bullshit that the second the rubber meets the road, the whole thing comes crashing down.
That's fascinating, Ed.
That's fascinating.
Weird that you are still carrying the bullshit.
And the thing is, the energy policy is basically Ed Miliband's brainchild, as far as anyone can tell.
He is a true believer, a genuine zealot in solar panels in Britain.
He would solar panel Scotland.
The joke about Scotland is, of course, that once or twice a year, the sun god arrives and scares the primitive natives.
Labour Party Energy Policy00:15:28
Right?
Just, you know, this wasn't an idea that was hatched in Britain because it relies on good weather.
Like, it's so stupid.
Like, yes, yes, yes, Ed.
Why don't we rely on China to import wind turbines?
That's right.
We can trust China.
They're not going to do anything crazy.
They're not going to...
There's no rivalry between the West and China.
What...
Why wouldn't we make our energy entirely dependent on them?
Just, it's so ridiculous.
It's David Lamy.
I imagine someone has asked him a history question.
And then, of course, you've got Rachel Reeves, who, this was when she was crying in Parliament over the budget, I assume it was.
I can't remember now why she was even crying.
It doesn't really matter because they're just inadequate people who are not up for the job, frankly.
And everyone knows it.
And it's because you can't squeeze any more juice out of this paradigm, right?
This globalist internationalist anywhere person paradigm, it's failed.
It's over.
We've reached the end of it.
And everyone can tell.
And that's why the politics of this country looks like this.
If I can actually get this to show on the screen properly.
There we go.
So it's a bit small because for some reason Politico doesn't have a left-right slide.
But as you can see, you've got reform on 26, Labour on 19, Conservatives on 17, Greens on 17, Lib Dems on 12.
That's a mirror that has been shattered.
That's nobody getting a majority.
Nobody getting a majority.
And this is bad for everyone, right?
This is a hung parliament.
This is a parliament in which it will even be difficult to form coalition governments because the people who would go into coalition with one another don't sufficiently have enough people in their parties as MPs to actually pass that 325 seat threshold.
This is where we are at.
Where it may be we can't even get a coalition government.
And so, yeah, it's just mad.
And that's that's that's just on average.
Like the best pollster in the country is you gov. Now, that's an unpopular thing to say.
People don't like to hear it, but it's true.
YouGov most accurately predicted the last election.
I think they predicted that reform are going to get six seats or four seats and they got five seats.
So it's literally within a seat that they predicted.
And they regularly have reform on under a quarter of the votes.
That is quite mad, isn't it?
Like, look how close the top four parties are.
That is, that is genuinely mental within six points from reformed conservative.
And it's, I mean, that is a brutal thing to see.
And the problem that they all have is fundamentally, they all believe the same things.
They believe in a slightly different version of the same thing, but they all believe in that thing.
For example, Labour are the ones who set up the quangocracy and reform like, ah, we need to fix the quangocracy.
I don't really think we need a quangocracy at all, actually.
I mean, a great example of this was Jenrick saying, oh, we're not going to make the Bank of England subject to the ministers.
We're not going to do anything about the Office of Budget Responsibility.
We're just going to kind of tweak them.
Because that's what reform looks like.
Reform of the system as it is is tweaking things to try and make them work.
But that's not going to fix any of the problems because the problems have come from the system itself.
And so the system has to die for something new to be born.
And if that doesn't happen, well, the problems, the pressure keeps building.
The problems still are growing.
You might be able to ameliorate a symptom, but the problem is, why are these symptoms coming up at all?
And so let's have a quick look at the other parties.
We hear over and over that the Tories are coming back.
Coming back from what?
Like, sorry, what you, I mean, polls regularly have you in fourth place.
I don't really think you understand that when times become nationalist, having a foreigner as your party leader is not the most persuasive argument on the face of it.
And I'm not even saying I dislike Kemi Badenock.
I'm sure she's fine, but I don't think she's a great charismatic leader.
I actually think she's mildly unlikable in general.
And I'm not saying there isn't a use for her either, but just being the party leader isn't it.
And I don't know whether you've noticed, but you've sunk to fourth place.
So it's got to be the case.
And then you've got like Ed Davy.
Here he is saying he's quite worried about Zach Polanski's policies, which is just hilarious.
Saying we should pull out NATO, get rid of nuclear deterrent.
And as Ed points out, the world's in such a crisis point.
Really, I think that's dangerous.
So, I mean, what kind of coalition is even going to be built out of this?
I mean, Labour and Greens wouldn't get enough seats.
Maybe they'd need the Lib Dems as well.
But if the Lib Dems like, but the Greens are fucking nuts, and that's coming from the Lib Dems, just what are you?
What are we doing?
None of these people are forming a government.
And then we have this amazing thing from the Greens.
Right, this is a chap who joined the Greens in 2019, well, he's elected as councillor in 2019, and he was in favor of environmentalism.
And Zach Polanski doesn't really ever talk about environmentalism.
And so, in the Greens, you've got the Islamo-Communist Alliance, and everyone has forgotten that it was meant to be the party of environmentalists.
And so, the environmentalists are like, well, I'm out then, I guess, because I'm not an Islamo-communist, at least not explicitly.
I was here for the environment.
And so, what the point of this is, though, is it shows you there is definitely an upper limit to the Greens.
Like, they're doing quite well, and they'll probably cap out about 20% at maximum, but they're not going to have a commanding majority in any way, right?
They represent too narrow a constituency, so they exist only to destroy the Labour Party, which, bravo, you have my blessing.
Go ahead.
The Labour Party, if ever a party deserved to be destroyed, it's the Conservative Party.
But second to that, it's the Labour Party.
They also deserve to be destroyed.
And so, that's fine.
That's completely fine.
I'm actually quite eager for that.
Then you have Nigel Farage, and he has a different problem for the Labour Party, because Nigel Farage begins in the sort of conservative space, and they set up what eventually becomes reform, and they start cannibalizing the Conservatives.
And Conservatives are, oh no, Nigel Farage, he's slightly to the right of us, and that's eating us up.
But then Nigel Farage has a problem in Rupert Lowe, who's to the right of him, and it doesn't really seem there's anything to the right of Rupert Lowe.
Rupert Lowe has basically sucked in everything to the right of Farage, and now he's eating him up from the right.
And here we have Farage just browbeating.
He's using irresponsible language.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, well, so that was the attack leveled at you for your entire career, and now you're going to henpeck and tome police everyone to the right because everyone actually wants the things that out of one side of your mouth you promise, and out of the other side of the mouth, you condemn.
The problem with Farage is the U-turns on everything.
He's not really a man with a backbone, and everyone can see it.
And I think this is why, essentially, the reform coalition is just collapsing.
I think that the reform vote share is going down because Nigel Farage has made a series of tactical blunders and is unable to actually stay the course on anything.
And, okay, well, sorry, Nige, this is the way you've made it.
For some reason, and this is really, this was Nigel Farage's big mistake, is leaving anything to his right, right?
Because when you are disavowing the right, what you are doing there is saying to the left, I want to be your friend.
They fucking hate you, Nigel.
They have always hated you.
They will never like you.
They will never respect you.
They might fear you.
And even then, I think that's trailing off.
But they will never be your friend.
And so you're going, oh, yeah, no, no, my career, the best thing I did in my career was stop the far right.
Oh, yeah, I'm not against racism.
I'm a pro-immigration party.
This is literally what he said the other day, by the way.
He said, I never said it was an anti-immigration party.
I'm a pro-immigration party.
It's like, fucking hell, Nigel.
How are you fucking ruining yourself this quickly?
How are you dropping the Ming Vas with such greasy hands?
Like, people who support reform think that you're basically the second coming of Hitler, right?
On the left and in your own party.
I'm overrating that, admittedly, but that a lot of reform supporters wanted a much more hardline stance on this.
And the people on the left genuinely think he holds a hardline stance.
But Farage has gone out of his way over and over to say, I'm not a populist.
We're a pro-immigration party.
We're not concerned about demographics.
And we're not concerned about Islam.
It's like, right.
Well, those are pretty much half the country's primary concerns.
They're genuinely like, if you, I mean, and the thing is, all the polling has been done on this stuff, right?
Like, half the country is worried about Islam.
Half the country is worried about demographics.
Half the country is worried about immigration.
Half the country.
And for some reason, Nigel Farage has counter-signaled 50% of this entire country in order to make some SW1 journal not give him such a hard time in an interview.
It's like, no, Nigel, they should be screeching at you that you are the devil and that you have arrived to ruin them.
And if they don't screech at you, then that means you are not the insurrection, right?
You are not the opposition that you need to be.
And if you are not that thing, then the thing that is that thing will eat you up because of your inauthenticity.
Because you bullshitting out of one side of your mouth and then telling the truth out of the other side of the mouth.
Well, either way, you're going to get picked off by both people on both sides.
You won't be the thing that you probably genuinely are and trying to virtue signal to the left.
And you will just get eaten up by the authentic thing on the right, which is what I think is genuinely happening at the moment, by the way.
And I watched today's podcast of The Lotus Eaters, and it was really good.
Really, really good conversation between Dan, Josh, and Harry.
Really, really enjoyed this segment about Matt Goodwin attacking Restore.
Because Matt Goodwin is assuming a level of he's assuming the previous paradigm still holds, right?
And this is the thing about reform.
They're all swimming in draining waters.
And the bath they're in is getting shallower and shallower and shallower.
And they're just like, no, no, you're not going to, you can't get in and swim in here.
It's like, yeah, we know.
And so we're going to do something else.
Right.
So Matt went on a bunch of podcasts recently promoting his book, which he's been excoriated for.
Excoriated.
Like, it's been honestly, right?
I actually feel quite bad for how badly Matt is being treated over his book because, I mean, I don't know whether he got ChatGPT to write it.
And I don't, I don't, I haven't read it or anything.
And I don't know why he didn't include any citations or whatever, you know, citations to his own blog and stuff like this.
I don't know, right?
But it has been brutal watching the mainstream political class just round on him and bludgeon him, frankly, just completely bludgeon him with what they think is a lazy AI written book.
And it's okay.
Don't know why you've done that.
And then he decided to go on a round of podcasts and tell everyone, if you support Restore Britain, you're dead in the water.
And you're not just not a bad person necessarily, but you're making a tactical error.
It's like, well, the thing is, we can see that you guys have made a lot of tactical errors and that the current situation is winding up, right?
It is winding up.
This is coming to an end.
And something credible needs to be positioned to go next.
And we are actually, I think, doing that thing.
Restore, for example, has been putting up just, and again, this is like, oh, it's a very online phenomenon.
Well, only until it becomes offline, right?
Like, this is a great, striking message.
A party that will put the British people first, restore Britain.
Rupert Lowe, the leader.
What's he doing?
He's just on his farm.
It just looks completely normal.
It looks like, and look at the look how much it's needed.
Like, look at the fucking state of this.
This could be in Swindon, by the way.
Like, we see this in Swindon as well.
Just shit graffiti everywhere.
Shit graffiti on a shit fucking road that didn't used to be shit with a fucking kebab.
Foreign kebab house there.
It's like, yeah, no, I want Britain brought back.
Good God.
This couldn't be a more impactful image.
This is what we actually need.
We don't need Nigel Farage carnival sideshow.
What we need is something genuinely serious.
And if this whole paradigm is circling the plughole and about to go down, well, it's good that something credible is being built in its place, isn't it?
And so I'm sorry.
I just, I completely reject the wisdom of the old paradigm, the conventional wisdom of the old paradigm.
I reject it.
We're moving into something different.
Memes are very, very quick to spread these days.
Ideas are very quick.
I mean, look at Zach Polanski.
They're not eight months where he's taken them to like third or fourth place.
Nigel Farage took two, maybe three years nearly to get to where he is.
We've still got three years left because the Labour Party are not giving up power.
So, sorry, I think actually we have plenty of time.
And actually, this is what is genuinely called for.
And it comes down fundamentally to Rupert Lowe's core message, which is this will be very painful.
We, the stewards of the land who care from generation to generation, unlike Richard Tice, being like, I'll be long gone then.
We who care, the people who genuinely feel that we are holding this country in trust for future generations are going to have to make a series of very difficult decisions.
It's not about us.
Painful Decisions Ahead00:04:34
It's about what the future looks like.
And the future, given the current paradigm that is winding up now, that future's awful.
Genuinely awful.
Like, it's a curse.
An actual curse is being laid across this country.
And it will be normal people.
And it has to be people who come from outside of politics who address this.
Because otherwise, and this was Matt Goodwin's argument: yeah, yeah, we need normal people, but we need them controlled by a series of insiders who know the system.
It's like, no, no, no.
That presupposes that the system is going to survive.
I expect Restore Britain's mission is to smash the system.
Genuinely smash it.
And Harry on the podcast made, he told us, told a really good anecdote where he bumped into an old friend.
He hadn't spoken to him for years.
And they're in the pub.
And he's talking to them.
The friends like, yeah, I'm going to vote for the Greens.
And he's like, why?
He's like, well, they're against the system.
They're against the establishment.
And that's true.
The Greens are mental, but they are still against the establishment.
And this friend of his had found Harry's Twitter account.
Now, Harry's of quite a right-wing disposition.
But the friend was like, well, yeah, but I do agree with everything you're saying.
And it's like, right.
So what it is, is a lot of people in this particular chap's case are against the system.
They know the system is rotten.
They know the two parties or three, four parties now who are part of the system are all bad.
And they just don't know what to go for on the outside.
So I think everything is to play for here.
I think everything's playful.
I mean, don't know if anyone's been watching John Cleese's Twitter feed recently, but Rupert Lowe seems to have fully radicalized him.
It's like John Cleese, the liberal, is retweeting like Rupert Lowe memes and stuff like that.
It's like, Jesus, all right.
Let's get it on.
And condemning Islam constantly.
Let's get it on.
Because the times are changing.
What came before is not going to persist into the future.
This thing that Farage, Goodwin, and the rest have nailed their flag to is dying.
It's a sinking ship.
and restore my god man the energy around this has been incredible and that will end up translating because rupert lowe has the magic power we don't care what you call us right And I said this in the last stream I did.
So that was the thing I was waiting for forever.
Just a leader who's just turned around and say, you know what?
Not my problem that you have that opinion.
We know what we're going to do.
We're following the North Star.
We know what we have to do to fix this.
And our priority has to be the people of the country.
And until they're flourishing, all of your luxury beliefs, the net zero, the method, all of this, all of this bullshit can just wait.
It's just over.
It's done.
Those arguments, all those magic spells you're trying to cast, it's over.
We don't care.
We have a job to do to actually fix the country now.
And that's what's, you can feel it in the water.
You can feel it.
It's just coming.
And I'm absolutely convinced that there's no recovery for the previous paradigm.
And slowly but surely, they're going to be eaten up.
And this is brilliant.
These billboards, brilliant.
And this is just the beginning of the billboard campaign.
This is the beginning.
Like already the local branches are forming.
I'm part of one.
We're going to be leafleting.
We're going to be out actually pounding the streets.
People are going to be aware that no, there is something that's outside of the system and actually against the system.
And it can win.
And also, like, we know that basically restore believes what the majority of people believe.
Because everyone's been polled a million times about every single subject.
And there's a kind of triangulation in the what you can do is that this, right, the most of the public believe this, most believe that, most believe this.
And then you realize that you just get this.
About half the country are traditionally minded people who want to stop immigration and send millions of people home, who want to bring about the death penalty, who want to just make sure that the country is running their interests as Britain traditionally always had been.
And it's not that much for them to ask.
And they deserve political representation.
And this is going to be the party that does it.
Triangulating Public Beliefs00:04:05
So honestly, right, I realize things are bad, but I'm very optimistic.
And I've always been, you guys know me, I've always been a natural optimist.
But I'm genuinely optimistic.
Because again, Kiersta has to hang on for a couple of years.
I don't think it'll take that long.
The memes travel fast because people are hungry for them.
People are hungry for this change.
And so, honestly, I'm up for this.
I'm completely excited about how quickly this could all change.
And so, yeah, I guess we'll take the lectures from the failed paradigm under advisement.
But we're plowing new ground here.
Things are going to be done that haven't been done before.
And so actually, all of the experience that you thought you had was not as valuable as you might think it is.
So I guess I'll leave that there.
I've waffled on at length.
But I think you guys get my point, right?
I think we can see it.
And I think in every way, I watch so many of the sort of mainstream podcasts and they're all just baffled at what's happening.
They don't know what's happening next.
And all the politicians are heads in hand, don't know what to do.
And yet there is the kind of inevitability of Rupert Lowe slowly, jump, just eating people up.
And I love it.
I absolutely love it.
I'm very optimistic.
For the first time in a long time.
Very optimistic.
Anyway, guys, we have a live event on the 11th of April in Swindon.
And if you are a VIP ticket holder, you'll get to come and have beers with us after the event.
We're basically all going to be there, by the way.
I don't know if they haven't got the lineup listed on this one.
But basically, the entire crew is going to be there.
We're going to be drinking, laughing, having fun.
It's going to be really, really good.
And the energy, I can already feel it.
Because I mean, all of our live events have been brilliant, right?
Every single one of them has been insanely high energy.
But this feels different.
We haven't done a live event in a long time.
And you can, you know, there's something in the air.
You can feel it.
So, yeah, anyway, link in the description.
And I will go through the super chats.
Sorry to leave these to the end, but it's like I don't lose my train of thought.
You know, if I lose my train of thought, I'll never get it back.
There is not free beer in the VIP.
Stop saying that.
There isn't free beer for anyone.
I don't get free fucking beer.
I'm going to pay for my own goddamn beer.
We won't be live streaming either.
So if you want to see it, you'll have to be there.
Coming to Swindon event as VIP, any dress code, says AJ.
Well, I mean, dress nicely.
You know, don't dress like a slob.
Because obviously, you know, if some shitty comes and takes photos, you've got to at least look presentable, right?
And the thing is, right, we should be trying to look presentable in our daily lives anyway.
This slackening of everything.
Go back 100 years and you see the videos of just people in London.
They're wearing three-piece suits.
Come on, we've got to bring this back.
I'm sick of this.
Sick of this.
We've got to fix ourselves.
Brute Life says, can't make the live shows.
I'm moving to escape Bristol.
Love the content.
You've helped me a lot.
Thank you very much.
Well, thank you.
Cryptic says, as late as Keir Starmer's aborted political career.
I mean, to be fair to Keir Starmer, his political career has been pretty successful, right?
He only became an MP in 2015, and now he's the prime minister.
So, I mean, whether you like him or not, that's a success.
You know, give him his dues there.
Obviously, he's terrible.
Aidras says, see you at the live event, Carl.
Can't wait to experience Swindon for the weekend.
Infinite Labor Supply Curse00:12:24
Yeah, I know.
I mean, it's the center of Swindon that's bad.
The rest of Swindon around it is lovely.
And if you're traveling from outside, there are loads of lovely places to go.
If, you know, but just it's the high street of Swindon is just like every other high street in every other town in England now.
It's terrible.
But, you know, it won't be like that forever.
We are going to restore these things.
Dr. Jam says, too many people think if migrants work, what's the problem?
But not enough people know that to be a net gain of their lifetime, you need to earn 40k.
Yeah, and also they just don't know that basically, if you haven't got European or North American migrants, there's basically no point having them.
Sorry, Western European or North American migrants.
They're still not net contributors overall.
So, and not only that, you think you think to yourself, well, do you want more competition for your own jobs?
Do you want the billionaire class who themselves want the infinite migration, which is why the Financial Times were so, so like this is what Boris Johnson was bowing to.
Do you want them to have infinite free labor or do you want your labor to be worth more?
That's what you need to ask yourself.
And I really mean that to like the Jimmy the Giants and the sort of green voters.
No, seriously, you are being screwed by billionaires because they love immigration.
And they have mind fucked you to the point where you're like, oh, yeah, I love immigration too.
Against your own interests.
Your objective class interests is not being pro-immigration, which is why Bernie Sanders and Jeremy Corbyn were always anti-immigration.
It's a Koch brothers plan.
Yes, it is.
You fucking morons.
You have been mind-fucked by their propaganda.
You fucking moron, Jimmy.
Honestly, you fucking retards.
Sorry for swearing so much, but it's just so crystal clear that if you have an infinite supply of labor and that labor is cheaper because it comes from it's willing to accept lower standards than the natives, then you are just fucking over the natives by bringing it in.
Like for Christ's sake, you don't have to be a genius to understand this.
Leo says, I can't watch you since this week is stupid.
Wife and I recently had our first son.
Well done, son.
She is a Yank and I am English.
Been interesting to watch your jenny.
Blessed Mary, walk with you and your set.
Well, thank you very much and congratulations, man.
Sergeant Steele says, speaking of warships, check out Mark Felton's productions on our Navy.
What a shame.
I haven't seen it.
I've just saw the information that's been going around about the Navy and being like, wow, that's embarrassing for Britain.
Not so good says, how do you feel with the constant news of religion of peace enthusiasts, grapes, 12-year-old, etc.?
Yeah, I know.
It drives me mad, and there's not really a lot you can do about it on an individual basis.
But you know what to do.
You know which party to join.
Go and join your local branch.
Get the leaflets.
Go out and post them.
We're going to win.
And there will be fucking hell to pay.
Right?
We are going to bring back the death penalty.
That's what's going to happen.
That is what is going to happen.
We are going to bring back the death penalty.
And then these people are going to get fucking hanged.
Right?
For doing terrible things to children, man.
Or just.
Every day.
It's every day.
I mean, there was one that's going around today of someone who had caught on video this fucking African migrant who was raping a kid or a woman in the face or something.
And it's just like in an alleyway.
And I'm just like, I can't watch that.
I can't watch that because holy shit.
Just we're going to win.
We have to win, right?
Americans for restore.
Yeah, I know.
God willing, one day you'll get your own restore as well.
Tempcent Scottish says, I support President Trump and his efforts, but I sympathize with Restore's position.
We need to fix our country before anything.
Yeah, that's exactly it.
Right?
That's exactly.
And that's the thing.
I'm not even against Trump knocking off the Iranians, to be honest.
If he wants to do it, I don't care.
But we need to fix ourselves.
That's just the only mission that the British people have at the moment.
I'm not worried about foreign entanglements.
We can come to those when we're a rich and powerful country that actually has a navy in the future.
A5 says, any chance reform and restore unite?
None at all.
None at all.
It will be a brutal fight to the death, a blood sports style fight to the death.
But on the plus side, we're going to win that.
So, Generico says, every action of every Western government can only be explained if the people in charge actively hate the native European peoples, they rule over and want to see them destroyed.
Ah, yes, John Conquest's third law is it Robert Conquest?
I think it's Robert Conquest, actually.
His third law of politics.
The only explanation for the behavior of any bureaucratic organization is if it has been captured by a cabal of its enemies.
And that's exactly what it is.
CHVQ says, Carl, can we get a Dominion Society of Canada shout out sometime on the podcast?
We're the Restore Britain of Canada, but we are years behind you guys.
Well, shout out to the Dominion Society of Canada.
I haven't actually looked into it, so I don't know anything about it.
But if you're watching my stream, you must be good folk.
Dr. Jam says about 65% of UK land is farmland.
It's not enough because the UK imports more food than it exports.
One reason why not to build houses for migrants.
Yeah, I mean, they just don't care about food sustainability.
They just don't care.
The nation's ability to feed itself is just not their problem.
And it's like, look, if we had a giant empire and a giant fleet to police it, then maybe that wouldn't be a problem.
But we don't have those things.
And so we are buffed on the turbulent winds of politics like everyone else.
And therefore, we need to care about these things.
This is what I mean about the paradigm just snapping shut all of a sudden.
It's like, no, we need to be nationalist about everything.
You've got no choice because otherwise people are going to starve.
Otherwise, we are going to be, you know, we're going to lack fuel.
We are going to be in some serious trouble if we don't.
Brute says, when we win, can we implement laws against parachuting candidates, please?
Yeah, I would love that.
I would love that to be the case.
I'm again, like, especially when you get such cynical, yeah, well, you know, Rishi Senek's a great example.
Yeah, he's from Southampton.
Well, we'll put him in Richmond in Yorkshire because we can.
Yeah, I'm against it.
I'm against it.
Principled Uncertainty says, no one of any quality enters politics these days as the locus of power resides elsewhere.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
Which is why the Kwangocracy essentially has to be abolished.
But more likely is having almost all of it brought to heel as input directly under ministers who can hold the people in the Quangos directly accountable.
And that way the public has a measure of control over what's going on.
So yes, I mean, personally, I'm for completely abolishing them and flogging the people involved.
But I probably won't get my way on that.
Cameron says, I can sympathize with the Celtic parties.
I don't see them supporting for what they see in Reform and Restore as an essentially English Anglo-nationalist party first and foremost.
Yeah, I mean, I do think that Restore should have Celtic nationalist parties, essentially, branches, you know, restore Wales, Restore Scotland, Restore Northern Ireland.
Where, just to be clear, you know, run by local Celts for their own interests and actually in their interests.
Because I actually don't think the interests of the Celts and the Anglos are divergent at this point.
I think we're all in the same boat together.
I think we need each other.
I think we're going to need each other to get out of this.
But on the plus side, when we do work together, there's no fucking stopping us.
So on the plus side, we're definitely going to win.
Yeah, Drill Doggerland.
Yeah, I'd love to.
There's so much we could do.
I'm not going to get into Anglo-Futurism, but there's so much we could do.
Lord of the Reef for $50, thanks, man.
Says, with everything going on in the world, I thought it'd be a good time to mention the music video for my song, Lamp Posts Exist, featuring all your favorite US politicians.
Long walks music on platforms for those interested.
God bless.
Well, thank you.
And yeah, go check out the song Lamp Posts Exists.
I've never heard of it, I'm afraid.
Lars says, I hope loaded seaters will have on restore candidates as soon as they get established in their local constituencies, both on the podcast and on Landshaw.
Yeah, I mean, obviously, you know, we have the Reform Lads and Rupert Lowe on all the time because, of course, they're our party.
You know, we support them.
We're here as a campaigning arm for them, which is why you'll see in the description, sort of like, promoted by Carl Benjamin on behalf of Restore.
You know, that's Legalese for this is who we're for, right?
We're not hiding it.
We are 100% for restore.
Chaos is a ladder and Rupert's going to climb it.
Yeah, I know.
What about the Ukrainian rent boys?
Yeah, what indeed?
What indeed?
It's just that mystery that no one's looking into, no one's interested in looking into.
B-Prince says, hey Carl, GamingGate Unk here started reading Bertrand's history.
Bertrand Russell's history of Western philosophy seems okay, though his bias is obvious.
I listened to the audiobook of that on a flight over to California a few years ago.
It was like 36 hours long, and I got through most of it on the flight.
I actually did quite enjoy it, though.
You are right, his bias is obvious.
But I did actually quite enjoy it because it's only really until you get to the Enlightenment that the bias is a problem.
But before that, when he saw my Greek philosophy or whatever, you know, it's perfectly good.
Is the trivium course still available?
It's Autodidact Season again.
Yes, it is.
If you go to courses.locias.com, you can indeed buy the course.
We've got the trivium, but we also have Stellos's course on ancient Greek virtue ethics, which will teach you how to be a good man in the classical mold.
Which, honestly, I asked him to do this because it was after I'd spent years studying Aristotle, Plato, and various others.
That I was just like, yeah, okay, this is the important stuff, right?
The Greeks, they were wrong about a few things, but about the nature and character of man, they were not wrong about.
And that's the important stuff.
17 million fuck offs.
Isn't that Dominic Frisbee's song?
I watched a short video earlier called Why Gen Z are so obsessed with World War II.
It's well worth a watch.
You know what?
I haven't seen that, but I will put that in my browser and see if I can find it.
Remember, lads, we're not far right.
We're just right so far.
Oh, hell yeah.
Steve Watson says the quangocracy originated with St. Margaret.
Someone else who wasn't actually a conservative.
Yes, Margaret Thatcher was actually a liberal, a hardcore libertarian liberal.
And you're right.
She did begin the quangocracy.
In fact, a few other things originated with Thatcher as well.
But these are all, I mean, the Race Relations Act, for example, is one of those things.
It was 1984.
So, yeah, Margaret Thatcher was a liberal.
And she said that my greatest achievement was Tony Blair, because, of course, he was a liberal.
And so it's all part of the same thread that goes back.
And we're going to do it all, by the way.
Disaffected scientist says, jealous of Yol.
Happy from Britain.
Britain seems much more further along than we are with the legislature and what needs to be done.
We must save our civilizations.
Yeah, the good thing about Britain is that we don't have the written constitution that holds America and other places, Germany in particular, back.
500,000 migrants came in under Thatcher.
I didn't know it was that many.
Didn't know it was that many.
But she was a liberal, right?
This is libtardism.
And this is the thing.
Well, I'm for her stealing your milk at school.
I'm against her, bringing in half a million migrants and setting up a bunch of race relations acts and setting up a bunch of quangos.
Thatcher Migration Legacy00:09:43
Squareblatt says, Can't we need a long-form dismantling of Matt Goodwin after he tacitly threatened the cohort and most of your staff and friends of a channel reside in?
I don't know if we do.
They covered him on the podcast today, and I did actually record a podcast this afternoon that's going out tomorrow that's got loads of great detail on a bunch of subjects.
So definitely go watch that when it comes out about the current infighting.
Because essentially the theme of it is everyone's going down the polls.
And when you start going down the polls, you start squabbling and infighting.
And we're seeing that all over the place in reform, in labor, and in the right generally.
And that's honestly good for us to see.
Because if there's one thing I don't see in Restore, it's infighting.
Everyone's like, nope, we've got a job.
Everyone's got a job.
Where are you?
Where are you?
What can you do?
How can I help you?
It's cooperative because we know what the goal is and we know how to achieve it.
So I don't even know if it's worth the effort.
That's the thing.
We've done enough podcasts on it.
I think, okay, that's a crash and burn.
You know, the flaming thing as you're driving past.
It's like, okay, sorry to see it, but not my problem.
Generico says, as the dog returns to his vomit and the dowel returns to her Maya, so the burnt fool's bandage finger goes wobbling back to the fire.
Yeah, I know, man.
I know.
We can't ever vote for them again.
Not so good.
Says, I get the feeling that once the intelligence agency see where the wind is blowing, things will get a lot easier for us.
I hope so.
I mean, there's already been a couple of dirty tricks that have been played, and more dirty tricks are coming.
I guarantee it.
I can just feel it.
Basically, what we need to do is just keep our heads down and be aware that a bunch of bullshit is going to be flung at people.
Like Connor Tomlinson tweeted out the other day that he had been visited first thing in the morning by police officers.
And he was like, okay, what's going on?
Oh, we have an anonymous report of coercive control that you're abusing your wife.
And his wife's like, no, like, what are you talking about?
You know, like fake bullshit like this is going to spring up in order to try and ensnare people in the system and essentially try to punish them and persecute them.
That's coming, right?
We know that's coming.
Just have to hold the line and be like, yep, no, we know who we are and why we're doing what we do.
And we know the kind of dirty tricks you're going to pull.
And like I said, with the comment, they've already begun.
Already begun.
Like, who?
Just some anonymous thing.
Oh, yeah, Connor's abusing and controlling his wife.
It's like, how do you do?
Anyway, obviously, not true.
And so we move on.
Pretty dispirited from the utter betrayal here in America.
Says, L from the right.
So I just want to support you for being one of the few genuine voices out there.
You should be saving money for gas, but you speak truth.
Well, yeah, I should.
And honestly, you wouldn't believe the prices of everything over here.
The prices of fucking everything.
It's so bad, man.
It's so bad.
Because we're in such a fragile position.
That's the point.
Britain is so fragile.
And we assume so many things, like I said at the beginning of the podcast, they're just not sustainable.
They do not obtain anymore.
And this kind of energy, food, security, nationalism is coming back quickly.
Yeah, the strong gods were always going to return.
And they will not have mercy for the men who worship weakness.
Yeah, I need to read that book.
I've seen the meme of the strong gods a lot.
And I need to read that book.
I never got on, I never got around to it.
You should do a video with Dr. David Wood on the motivation and nature of Muslims.
Well, I mean, I've watched loads of his videos.
And I mean, I love David Wood.
He's great.
And I love the way he addresses Islam.
But I mean, he was planning to come to Britain, but I think he didn't get let in because of his criticisms of Islam.
So if he ever manages to get into Britain, would love to have him on.
Would love to.
Is there a PDF we can download?
It's an A4 size leaflets we can print off and leaflet for a store.
Maybe with a QR code to a great video by Rupert.
I don't know.
I'm not in control of policy or creating the thing, you know, the leaflets and stuff.
But I'll pass it along.
Maybe it's an idea.
Is a Scott leaving in Canada in full support of restore and load seaters.
I live on Vancouver Island.
Came from yours, bought two Islander magazines.
Well, thank you very much, sir.
Hope you enjoyed them as well because we're really proud of Islander.
Really, really proud of Islander.
What's your take in the American midterms?
Is MAGA fucked?
You know, I haven't been following it that closely, but I've seen Trump's approval rating has dropped significantly outside of MAGA.
So MAGA seems to be sort of circling the wagons on what Trump does.
But the thing is, Trump, his presidency is built on a coalition between MAGA and the Independents and the Rhinos who had nowhere else to go, right?
the rhinos seem to have kind of taken over trump's policies which has completely alienated the independents and unless he's going to return to a proper MAGA position i i don't i know i mean maybe it's too late to be honest So I think he's probably going to get fucked.
Sorry.
I don't like to be the bearer of bad news, but it doesn't look good.
But I haven't been looking to it that closely.
Timpaul probably knows better than I do.
Maxentia says, as a Canadian, the only party with the start deportations of the PPC, but Canada hasn't suffered enough to start voting for Maxim Bernie.
I saw a bunch of people call me up on that.
We're like, no, no, no.
He's a libertarian.
It's like, well, I mean, how libertarian is he?
He might not be that libertarian.
I mean, yeah, I thought he was going to be the mass deportation candidate.
So American here, been following you since Game Agate when I was in high school.
Love to meet a veteran.
Been praying for you.
Can't wait to see you guys finally attain victory.
Yeah, I know.
We're going to do it.
We're going to do it.
I feel it.
The Aussies watching, join the British Australian community, says Janerica.
Yep.
Again, we've all got to stick together because it's become just dramatically apparent that we stand together or we fall alone, right?
No one is coming to save us.
No one.
There is no one coming to save us.
Or we are surrounded, beset by enemies on all sides.
You are under attack in every conceivable way.
And for some reason, I still see people bitching in the Anglosphere amongst themselves.
And I include the Celts in that.
Like, sorry, guys.
No, no, no, no.
We are all together or we're all going to fall.
And a thousand years of darkness, right?
That's what we get if we allow that to fall.
Thousand years of darkness.
So, no, we have to win.
And that means sticking together.
No enemies to the right is what I'm saying.
You know, if you're against the system, if you're not an evil globalist communist, you know, bullshit artist, then I have no, no argument with you.
Jeremy says, have you done long-form video discussion about how America is kind of screwed on the demographic shift discussion?
Yeah, I think we probably have done.
But I mean, America really has problems when it comes to demography.
So it's a tough thing.
Yeah, Margaret Thatcher, there's no such thing as society, comrade.
Yeah, exactly.
That's such an abominable statement, actually.
As sort of like, you know, proper conservative traditionalist, I'm just like, no, society is the thing we need to actually think about.
And Brute Life says, if they undo, if we undo what they've done, then what stops them undoing it in 15 years?
Nothing.
We're doomed long term.
No, Because the thing is, when we undo what they've done and we provide people with a civilization worth living in, all we'll have to do is show them what we got rid of.
It'll just literally be education in the classroom.
This is what the country was like.
And now the country is good and works for you.
Why would you want to give it up?
There'd be no reason to give it up.
So I'm not worried about that at all.
I think when we win, our victory will be complete and final and will last for centuries.
It would be ridiculous to think that we should sacrifice English children on the altar of multiculturalism in the future.
You'd be like, no, that's monstrous.
That's absolutely monstrous.
Let's keep our Celtic, Scottish, and English identities, but fight as brothers to defend what we both built together.
Exactly.
We shouldn't resurrect old wars, but focus on family and defend against Islam.
We will fight with you.
Yeah, I agree.
I completely agree.
We're all on the same side.
I want Wales for the Welsh.
I want Scotland for the Scottish.
Northern Ireland for the Northern Irish.
And England for the English.
France for the French.
Germany for the Germans.
I don't know if I'd say that now.
I'm joking.
You know, Australia for the Australians.
These are our countries.
They are ours.
We are the rightful possessors of them, not someone else.
And we have the duty to pass these on to our children as we inherited them from our forefathers.
It's literally that simple.
There's no argument that can be made to persuade me to give them up.
No, I'm not giving up my country.
No, I'm not giving up these things.
You shouldn't give up yours either.
These are ours.
They have their own countries and they can live in them.
And if they're not happy with the state of their own countries, well, then they can do something about it, can't they?
You know, they can change the way that they act.
They can change the things that they do.
We want our countries.
It's that simple.
And we're going to get them back.
Anyway, thank you for joining me, folks.
Like I said, live event, 11th of April, link in the description.