All Episodes
Aug. 3, 2023 - David Icke
20:01
"It's all about the money" - Gareth Icke Tonight Speaks To Scott Newgent About His Transition
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Whatever you think you're experiencing, you aren't.
E-wan.
You may look out the window at grey skies and autumnal drizzle and feel somewhat puzzled.
You may even feel, as you're slipping on your fleece-lined jacket in August, that you're living in a different world to the one that's being portrayed by your television.
But did you learn nothing from the pandemic?
The UK is suffering from asymptomatic climate change.
Just because you weren't ill, it didn't mean you weren't ill.
And just because you didn't have something, didn't mean you couldn't pass it on.
So just because you're cold, it doesn't mean you aren't boiling.
And of course, just because you're a man, doesn't mean you aren't a woman.
Everything is nonsense, nothing is what it is, because everything is what it isn't.
Simple, innit?
As humans, we like to have a grasp of things, at least a little bit.
You're not going to enjoy a film you don't understand, or a book with pages missing, or...
A Sam Smith video.
Confusion and uncertainty are stressful feelings, and when nothing makes sense, when your own reality and the reality you're told you're experiencing are so far removed, it can drive you a little bit crazy.
Sure, there can be short-term pleasure in uncertainty.
What restaurant is your partner going to book for your birthday?
Or whether the Rangers will finally bring home the Stanley Cup?
But that's only really enjoyable when all the other aspects of your life are in at least some kind of order.
Now, maybe not perfect alphabetical chronological all-ducks-in-a-row order, but certainly not the punch lasagna we call reality right now.
All this, of course, is by design.
Because there's an order, of sorts, waiting in the wings.
Now, it's not an order that benefits us in any way whatsoever.
It's an order that's designed to take away freedoms, our civil liberties, our ability to travel, to farm, to raise our children, to speak our minds, to protest authority, in fact, to do anything that isn't first pre-approved By the state.
But first, they need to get us to agree to it.
Hell, even beg for it.
So you create more and more chaos, more flux, more confusion, more suffering, until the point where people have almost, almost reached their limit.
Not far enough so that people will overthrow you, but far enough for them to demand you provide some sense of order out of the chaos.
And at this point, in true TV cooking show style, Here's one I made earlier.
They don't have the numbers to control society through force, not yet, although AI may give them an edge in the not-so-distant future.
But for now at least, they rely on consent.
Governments work like protection rackets all over the world.
They create the chaos and then they offer to protect you from it.
And all you need to pay is a little bit of money and a little bit of freedom.
Now, you repeat this cycle enough times and you have a populace With very little left of either.
That's what's happening all over the world.
With COVID as an excuse, climate change as an excuse, rising energy bills being blamed on Russia despite providers making billions in additional profits.
Of course, there's not enough money to help homeless people or those struggling to pay those bills, but there is money for a proxy war in Ukraine.
There's money to house illegal migrants in hotels all over the country.
There's money to fund drag camp, puberty blockers and rainbow road crossings.
Now, People have eyes and people have ears and they can see and hear what is going on.
But then, the party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears.
That was their final, most essential command.
Our first guest this evening became a hero for many after appearing in Matt Walsh's What Is A Woman documentary.
Scott Nugent is a transgender man who's spoken openly and honestly about the transition process, the problems and medical issues caused by it, and is using this experience to speak out against the transitioning of children.
Now, Scott became a hero because many people are trying to speak up for the children but are instantly labelled transphobic or a TERF or worse.
but that's an accusation they can't exactly level at Scott and so the message is given more validity
in the eyes of those that would look to dismiss it as bigoted.
Scott thank you so much for joining us mate. You must get asked this question so many times but
and I'm sure actually it's probably quite hard to condense it but what was your transition
experience? Oh god that's uh I actually usually don't get that.
I usually get, you know, why do you transition?
My transition experience, the medical transition experience, I like to describe it as they sell it to you like candy land, but you're actually getting Vietnam.
It's a long process.
It's hard.
There's medical complications.
There's lifelong complications that come with it.
And they sell it like it's just kind of a snap.
And so, you know, for most people, When they get to the end of the medicalization process, they kind of go, wow, that was very, very difficult.
What led you to go down that road?
Well, you know, now that's a big question.
I do get that a lot.
So let me try to condense that for you.
I did it the wrong way around Scott.
Sorry, mate.
You caught me off guard there.
At 42, I kind of found myself in a vulnerable situation.
I was married to a woman who just was not okay being a lesbian, loved me, and kind of sued herself with the idea that, hey, you know what?
You're just a man in a woman's body.
And I used to laugh that off.
And for a long time, I thought that's the reason why I medically transitioned.
But the truth is, is that my whole life from, you know, the day I was born until 42, I was always told that, you know, hey boys, Boys do that, girls don't do that.
And, you know, don't be an alpha female.
You shouldn't do that.
And, you know, sports, you probably shouldn't, you know, beat all the boys in sports.
You probably should do this.
And I never really acquiesced, and I never really fit in from that perspective.
Now, I did physically.
I mean, I went to finishing school twice.
I used to do hair and makeup in my early 20s, so I knew how to present myself.
But I had a very, very dominant personality and in a vulnerable place, you know, watching Jazz Jennings and, you know, all that other stuff on TV.
Just one day I said to myself, well, God, I wonder if I was born in the wrong body.
Next day I was in front of a, or next week I was in front of a trans woman therapist asking me how long I had been dressing like a man, which would have been idiotic if you would have been there and had earrings on.
Anyways, that sentence kind of shattered me to medically transition, quite frankly.
Was there anyone like around that period asking you, you know, kind of difficult questions, I guess, and really digging to see if this was something that was actually right for you and not just, you know, maybe a phase or a result of being in a vulnerable position?
Well, that's the number one question is, you know, how long did it take?
Did you get any pushback?
No, I did not get any pushback.
I got instant affirmation and within probably about A week I was on synthetic hormones and under, you know, probably 40 days I had my first surgery.
So it was kind of like I'd spent my whole life not really fitting in and all of a sudden somebody told me that, you know, I could fit in.
And then everybody around me that loved me, you know, had experienced that.
My mother, my sister, everybody with the idea of never fitting in and kind of always being the oddball.
So we all kind of went, well, maybe this is it and kind of embraced it.
What do you think is behind the rise in transgenderism?
Because if I think back to when I was young, I mean, I'm not that old.
I think we're probably a similar age actually, Scott.
When I kind of look back, you know, there were people that maybe were in a position where they didn't fit in or they might dress differently.
In fact, I was one of them.
I had, you know, long blonde hair.
I wore eyeliner, nail varnish.
My sister, on the other hand, played football and was called the Tank.
Well, I think that there's two things that are going on.
smash, smash through people. And so I think now, you know, God,
you know, how would we have been seen actually, but back then it
was just like, well, no, it's just a guy that just dresses up
like that, whatever. But what do you think is causing the rise in
it and particularly in the young?
Well, I think that there's two things that are going on.
The first thing is, is the monetary side of it. And I know that
you guys have social socialized medicine. But what I like to
say is, you know, people do blockers are eight times more
profitable when when they're prescribed to children.
We make those Lupron here in the United States.
I can guarantee you when we get your order, Lupron's not sitting around the boardroom going, hey, that's for the UK, that's free and socialized medicine.
So there's lots of money.
And, you know, from that perspective, I didn't realize that activism is a business.
You know, I've been doing this for five years.
I thought that people just did this because They did it from a place of their heart, something heavy on their heart.
But, for example, in the UK, Stonewall, in 2015, claimed bankruptcy.
Did you know that?
I didn't know that.
Okay, yeah, in 2015.
And you have to ask yourself why.
It was one of the biggest, you know, donation organizations, you know, the LGBTQXYZ, WX, you know, I don't know how many they have on there.
But anyways, they claim bankruptcy.
And the reason why is because for decades we were fighting for what I call righteous rights, which are doesn't matter how you believe in homosexuality.
Every human being should be able to live where they want to live without getting kicked out or losing their house because they're homosexual or their job and be able to love, you know, consenting adult and be in the same hospital room at 50 years old when they're passing away and not kicked out by their family.
Those are what we call righteous rights and we fought for those and we fought for those really, really hard with the idea of helping people understand that we weren't after kids.
We weren't a recruiting agency.
We were a soft place to fall for adults and adults only.
Well, in 2015, we won all those rights.
Yay!
Well, that's the worst thing that can happen in activism, especially for an organization, because all the donations stop, right?
So, in 2015, they claimed bankruptcy.
Now, that bankruptcy did not come to fruition.
What actually happened is, is they had a 32% year-over-year growth in that year.
So, what took them from bankruptcy to a 32% year-over-year growth?
Do you know that?
I'm guessing the rise in transgenderism.
They signed with mermaids.
They signed with mermaids to promote the medicalization of children.
So think of that all the way around.
And when we talk about money, your audience members don't understand the enormity of the money that is at stake.
So for example, in 2015, the same year in Texas, a gender clinic called Genesis Gender Clinic, Had 22 children on puberty blockers.
Now, those puberty blockers are prescribed for four years, and that profit is $4.6 million in profit that would be generated in that time frame.
In 2015, our governor started taking money from a gender clinic, a very, very anti-LGBTQ kind of governor, in a tune of $2.4 million in two years.
So that went from a $4.6 profit It increased 4,000% the kids that were prescribed puberty blockers in those two years.
So we went from 4.6 million to how much do you think that we could go in 4,000%?
What do you think would be a ridiculous amount for one gender clinic in Texas?
I'm assuming probably in the billions.
Well that would be over years and we can talk about that but in four years that little gender clinic went from generating 4.6 million dollars for puberty blockers to just under a hundred That's a lot of money to buy politicians off.
That's a lot of money for, you know, donations and activism.
That's a lot of money for all these people.
And then there's a second reason, but that's the first reason.
Does that make sense to you?
Yeah, yeah.
Generally, with any form of, you know, corruption, it's about money.
But there's always another reason as well.
Yes.
And so, the other reason, I believe, is that you and I, you're right, we're pretty close to the same age.
And when we were growing up, we were fighting for gay and lesbian rights.
We were fighting for those righteous rights.
We were fighting for the idea that, you know what, conversion therapy doesn't work.
You know, who people are attracted to, it doesn't change.
I mean, you could make a decision that, hey, I'm not going to be in a same-sex relationship or whatever, but the core of that doesn't change.
So, we kind of helped society understand that.
So, we had all these decent gays and lesbians that were helping people understand all of the enormity of the hurt that comes with homophobia.
And, you know, of course, activists making money on all of that.
So, our generation were the ones with the children.
You were just speaking about your children.
We're the ones with the children.
We're the ones that saw all those heartbreaking stories back then.
So we don't want to do what we saw everybody else do to our children, which is, you know, not accept them for who they are.
And the transgender activism, you know, people, what they're doing is they're taking that talk track and they're placing the homosexuality talk track on top of transgenderism.
And the truth is, is that medical transition, transgenderism is a choice.
It's cosmetic surgery.
It doesn't, it's not life-saving, doesn't save anybody's life.
It could enhance some people.
But the truth is that it doesn't enhance very many people.
It ends up making people more suicidal, and people don't understand that.
So what you're doing as well is you're going from, like you say, back in the old days where you're trying to accept people for who they are, basically.
This is who they are, they love who they love and they should be allowed to be who they are.
To now a case of, well actually, if you really want to be who you are, you sign here and you have four years worth of puberty blockers and this surgery and whatever.
Something I thought I saw quite interesting, I think it was Gays Against Groomers tweeted it, where they were saying basically, if your sexual organs don't define your gender, then why does removing them affirm it?
Yeah, absolutely.
No, here's the thing, gender ideology in general, unfortunately, anybody that thinks that they're born in the wrong body, me included, it's probably a couple sandwiches short, you know, I was missing a couple of things and probably needed to do some soul searching.
You know, nobody's born in the wrong body as Hogwarts.
Tell somebody that, you know, a hundred years ago, people would be like, what?
But now it's like, oh yeah, you were born in the wrong body.
So we have all of these, these people that, you know, need help mentally, that are not doing well, are being basically promoted and lifted within society.
And we have a canceled culture.
So if you start talking about, you know, Gender dysphoria or transgenderism or anything, you speak anything negative, you're cancelled out.
But this is a topic that if you have a logical debate with somebody for 10 minutes, if you put me in front of any transgender person or anybody that believes that the medicalization of children is beneficial or life-saving, there's nobody that's watching that's going to walk away and go, yeah, Scott's an idiot, doesn't know what he's talking about.
And so that's the problem, right?
Don't put me in front of the camera.
I mean, I have a speech on Twitter that has over 22 million views on social media.
To give you a concept, Daily Wire and What Is A Woman is streaming live, and it's been streaming live for about a month and a half.
And it has, you know, just under, I think it's got like 190 million views.
Now, me, I didn't have an Elon Musk or anybody promoted at all.
It was just little old me.
I did a speech that has over 22 million Yeah, but this is the thing, they can't, like I said at the top, they can call me a transphobe or a TERF or whatever else they call, but they can't call you that.
So you're a problem, Scott, for their ideology.
we do with the kids. Yeah, well, this is the thing they can't they can't like I said at the top, they can call me a trans
phobe or a turf or whatever else they call but they can't call
you that. So you're you're a problem, Scott for that for their ideology. You're a real problem. Yeah.
Yeah. And you know what, it's It's about to kind of blow up.
We're announcing who and with a worldwide college speaking tour.
So, for the first time, we're going to have a trans lesbian that's speaking from a different perspective in college campuses, a professional speaking tour.
So, we'll go to the UK too.
The link is on my website.
Yeah, if you guys want a college tour that comes in that just knocks people's socks off, listen, it's going to be announced here pretty soon.
You want to get on the roster, go to my website at ScottNugent.com and get your college or whatever on there, because it's going to fill up like that.
Oh, that sounds great, mate.
And if you do come to the UK, please let us know, Scott.
I'd love to come along, mate.
And it would be great to meet you.
And thanks so much.
Thanks so much for coming on and for speaking out, mate.
Because, you know, like I said at the top, you know, your voice, because of what you've been through yourself, it gives so much more validity to what you're saying.
It's fantastic, man.
Yeah, and also having three kids of my own.
So I'm a mom.
With it, yeah, there you go.
And that changes the game, doesn't it?
Because you've got something to protect.
Yeah, absolutely.
Thanks so much, Scott, mate.
I really appreciate it.
I appreciate it.
You guys take care.
Take care, mate.
That's all for this week.
Thank you for tuning in.
Twitter, sorry, X, are suing the Center for Countering Digital Hate.
Now, followers of this show, and indeed my dad, will know who the CCDH are.
They are the apparent non-profit that calls for tech firms to censor anyone they disagree with.
They coined the term, disinformation dozen, and they attack doctors like Sherry Tenpenny and the late Rashid Batar for warning people about the dangers of the mRNA tech, dangers they were proved Correct about.
The CCDH claims to be a non-profit anti-hate group, but really it's just a narrative management firm.
Anyone speaking against the pre-approved status quo seems to be a target for them.
Formed by Morgan McSweeney, who's now Labour Party leader Keir Starmer's right-hand man, and fronted by Imran Ahmed, a former investment banker and Labour Party spin doctor turned censorship guru.
They even tie into the Centre for American Progress through a man called Simon Clarke.
He's another banker.
You may recognise the name Centre for American Progress because that's John Podesta's gig.
And the links to the US Democratic Party don't stop there.
Twitter, now X, is suing them for claiming racism and hate speech has risen since Elon Musk took over.
Musk's lawyer alleges that the CCDH are supported by funding from X Corp, so Twitter's commercial competitors, as well as government entities and their affiliates.
The CCDH have hired Hillary Clinton's mate, Roberta Kaplan, to represent them.
I'm sure she comes cheap.
So it begs the question, who is funding the CCDH?
They don't have a fixed address and, as far as I can see, provide no list of their donors.
John Podesta, a Democratic stalwart, will oversee a $370 billion clean energy investment handout.
That came from Joe Biden last year.
I wonder how much of that will go towards trying to silence those that are speaking out against the climate change scam.
The MSM here in the UK and in the US, they roll out Imran Ahmed to comment on COVID climate change, so-called hate crimes, as if he is the fountain of gospel truth.
Hopefully, this legal case will bring to light who the CCDH really are.
Because if someone has the ability to control or at least influence what we're allowed to see and hear, then we deserve to know who they are and who funds them.
But I won't hold my breath.
Export Selection