I know I always say I'm excited about this week's special guest.
But I'm not excited.
Because it's not a special guest.
It's just a guest.
to the Delic Pod with me, James Delic Pod.
And I know I always say I'm excited about this week's special guest, but I'm not excited because it's not a special guest.
It's just a guest.
It's Dick.
Hello!
It's been too long, hasn't it?
Dick, I think people have been starting to wonder whether you were dead.
And actually, you were almost dead, weren't you?
We've got so much to catch up on and we're going to catch up.
We have a near-death experience.
We're going to catch up on the podcast, but because we could have had, like yesterday, when I called you to give you lots of notes for this.
Yeah, yeah.
A day's notice is doable, but shall we do one this afternoon is normally pushing it.
I know.
It is how I roll though, Dick.
You should know that by now.
I know, I realise that, yeah.
I'm a fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants kind of brother.
You certainly are.
Yeah.
But we thought, didn't we, we thought we'd just catch up in podcast time.
Well, there's no point ruining all the juicy bits and then trying to repeat that falsely for a poddy.
But our beloved viewers may notice that I'm in a new location.
I am in my shed, which has been a long time coming.
And here it is in all its glory.
And this is where I get to go when I want to do manly things like military uniforms and painting and it's just everything is in here.
Everything that's mine that wife doesn't want in house is here.
It's fantastic.
Everything a man needs.
Yeah, people could have stretched a 25 meter internet cable, ethernet cable from the house, buried it sort of alongside the lawn.
And yeah, I've now got internet here.
So absolutely everything I need, except a fridge with gin and tonic and things like that, but that will come.
Yeah, I think, you know how people of a certain disposition, when you put up a picture on Twitter or whatever, and they start analysing the background and stuff, and people are going to have a field day with yours.
You've got to be completely aware when you're putting stuff behind you.
As we all know, the politicians all love to make sure they've got the right books, Make sure Mein Kampf is displayed in pride of place, and I was completely aware of what a great backdrop this would make for the show, but it is how I've laid it out.
It isn't sort of artfully designed to show off bits and pieces, but yeah, a lot of French stuff going on back there, and there's the uniforms and World War II French mess tin just there.
It's all happening.
It's all happening in the shed.
It's good.
Well, my backdrop, as you know, it's got various reasons behind it.
One of which is that I want to remind people of the English countryside, which is why we fight, isn't it?
Absolutely.
emblematic of it.
It's like sunlit uplands.
It's that kind of thing.
Secondly, I think it serves the key purpose of annoying people who whine about my video quality.
And, you know, look, it's like I'm backlit, aren't I?
And it breaks all the rules and that annoys people.
And your sound quality is often wonky.
No, no, don't say that!
You're doing it through a You're doing it just through an app of headphones.
It can't be that.
I'm not!
I've got this, Dick!
Look at that!
Have you?
What?
That big thing I've got.
Oh my god, it's Foffle.
Yeah, it's a... It's a monster.
No, it's an actual... Why haven't I got one of them?
I've got a... I've got a professional... Actually, I could borrow Oliver's.
I could... I could borrow my son's because he... He's gaming.
No, he uses it.
He does streaming.
He does this thing where people watch him while he's playing various games.
It baffles me, but I suppose we can't judge.
No.
It's just stupid youth crap.
I hate being young.
I do apologise as well.
I've got Sunday moustache.
It's not waxed like it normally should be.
We also, Dick, didn't we decide, we debated whether or not to do a live stream and we thought we wouldn't because we get distracted by the writing on the side.
Yeah, and people giving us money and you have to thank them, which is only right, but then it's difficult enough to remember what the hell you were talking about without constant interruption.
So we thought for this one, for a big catch-up because it's been too long, we would just get Everything out of the way in order and then we'll do a live one soon because they are good fun and it is nice to be able to actually answer.
I tell you what it's like doing a live cast with all the comments and donations and stuff.
It's like being a greyhound and you're trying to go around the track And these hairs keep appearing at intervals and sort of... And you are instinctively forced to go for the hairs.
Yeah, exactly.
And often jumping over the fence and forgetting where you were on the track and the other greyhounds overtake you.
They do.
And you lose.
And then what happens is you probably get shot and turned into dog food.
Or sent to China.
Korea.
Yeah, it's quite racist of you.
Korea, I think, is where they eat dogs, not China.
They eat dogs in China too.
Do they?
Yeah, and they shoot horses.
And in Venezuela.
To be honest, Dick, we're going to be eating dogs pretty soon, I think.
The way things are going.
Well, I'm making sure my two stay nice and well fed because I'm depending on them.
That's if we run out of courgettes and rhubarb.
Yeah, yes, I saw that.
I saw that tweet.
Which we do have in abundance.
I'm not sure that... I'm not sure that... I suppose at the Siege of Leningrad they would have been grateful for... They'd have been really grateful for both of those, but I picture a time where we go down to the local barter market and, you know, have them in a wicker basket and all the other people who have allotments or what have you are there with their
They're pathetic little potatoes and onions and what have you and we just barter and exchange because we'll be back to the back to the Middle Ages that we will have bombed ourselves into.
I think we'll be lucky.
That's our future.
I think we'll be lucky if we get really the Middle Ages.
I think it's going to be, I think it's going to be way worse than the Middle Ages.
Yeah, it is, it is.
And then you have to ask yourself, what's really the point?
I mean, somebody made this comment a while back.
They said, look, if you If you look at what happened in Chechnya, in Grozny, and who it was who survived and who didn't, it's basically the United Factions with the most guns, and everyone else just dies.
Well, this is what I've been saying to people who have been preparing to grow their own food, and it's like, well, unless you're prepared to fight, off the people who will come ready to take your food, then, you know, there's no point in having your own little vegetable patch unless you're armed to the teeth to defend it.
Because if you're at the moment where you've actually got to depend on that for your only source of food, there's going to be lots of others who have been eyeing it up.
So it's sort of like...
But also, so then you have to decide, how are we going to die, do you think?
Are we going to, Is it going to be starvation?
Or is it going to be violence?
Or is it going to be being guillotined in a prison after a period in a sort of concentration camp type scenario?
What's your...?
I think internment camps, first of all.
Yeah.
No, it's going to be injections, isn't it?
The favourite way of dispatching people right now.
Yeah.
I mean, that's definitely one option.
I also think in my case there's a possibility I might get either suicided or cancered or heart attacked by the cabal.
I haven't worked out yet whether I'm important enough.
I mean, there was an interesting thing the other day, I don't know whether you saw it, where Danny Finkelstein, so this is pretty good at getting... No, I saw this one, yeah.
So Danny Finkelstein, Lord Finkelstein to his friends in the House of Lords, has a He sort of has a sort of passive-aggressive go at me.
He does one of those what Morgoth calls a hatchling question.
That's why you said hatchling.
Right.
Okay.
Have you come across Morgoth?
Not until your podcast with him.
And obviously, I think he's great.
You know what, just listening to your podcast and London Calling, I might get one other podcast in during the week and I don't get enough pod time.
These are all people I would catch up with if I had limitless time on my hands.
This is the problem.
The only time one can really listen to podcasts is in the car, going places.
And what I find is that a chunk of my journey is spent trying to find the podcasts to listen to, or trying to upload them.
When they're on BitChute, for example, It takes ages for it to kind of, before the sound appears, it has to do some buffering or whatever.
Anyway, I wish there was some kind of resource, some sort of central resource.
I tried to establish one on my Telegram channel called James Delingpole Digital Resources or something, but it's never quite as full of podcast fodder as I'd like.
It's a nuisance, but you're right, there isn't enough time.
We are, unfortunately, not as tech savvy as we need to be or would like to be, but I think we do just enough to get by with what we do.
Again, if I had limitless times, I'd get all of this sort of thing sorted.
But just going back to that point about Danny the Fink, who sort of poses I mean, he is quintessential establishment journalist.
You couldn't be more establishment.
I mean, I think he's one of The Times' gatekeepers.
He almost defines there, over to the window, what is acceptable, what is not.
He's one of their star columnists, for no discernible reason, as far as I can see.
I mean, he writes perfectly okay columns, but he's an ex-Lib Dem, I think, or SDP, one or the other.
He sits on the fence.
He got ennobled for presumably services towards brown-nosing David Cameron.
I mean, he was one of the people that kind of took the Conservatives in their even more leftward than they were already direction, isn't he?
Anyway, he sort of trolled me on Twitter in a pretend benign way.
And I what I found interesting about this was this was the first experience I've had in some time of having anyone from the kind of the establishment or the elite or even the sort of the junior level cabal but fake stream yeah um pay attention to me and I thought it was interesting you know I almost don't want their attention I I prefer it for them to find me an embarrassment rather than for them to kind of Oh, I'm sure that right across the country, they're all saying, oh, we do, James, we do.
Ha ha ha.
But yeah, they can be safely ignored because your fans hold them in as much contempt as you do.
So, you know, they're not going to win any of your people over.
They're not going to win you over.
So why would they even bother?
Do you think I'm more likely to be got assassinated by the cabal and one or another, or do you think I'm more likely to get? - Well, they sometimes leave people like you alone because you're good nutcase outliers, aren't you?
I think if they obviously took out dissenting voices, it would be, ah, you took out the dissenting voice.
I was thinking about this the other day.
Did you catch any of that thing on the Jeremy Vine show, when someone got through his researcher by saying that they'd had the vaccine, they hadn't had the vaccine, they'd caught COVID, and now they regretted it?
Yes.
And they got past the researchers.
That was the line, wasn't it?
And then he comes on and says, so you've had the Vax, sorry, you've had COVID, didn't have the Vax and now regret it.
Tell me more.
He said, no, that's not the case, Jeremy.
But you told our researcher that, no, no, I haven't had the vaccine, I don't intend to, and I don't regret it for one moment.
So you lied to our researcher.
Yes, Jeremy, it's the only way I could have got through.
But he prides himself, Jeremy Vine, because he tweeted about it later on, but I let him talk.
Now, if he'd cut him off straight away, it would have been a victory for the sceptics because they said, see, when you do get on with sceptical views, the BBC cut you off immediately.
So I don't think Jeremy Vine did that for noble reasons.
He did it because he was caught between a rock and a hard place.
He had to let the guy talk.
And as far as our side is concerned, the guy nailed it.
and left Vine with egg on his face, but as far as they're concerned, the guy was a nutcase who spouted nothing but rubbish.
Yeah.
So, you know, it's so polarised that you're not going to get anywhere with these things, but little victories like that are very satisfying.
Yeah, it was very interesting, that encounter, because I hadn't realised how brazen the enemy, I mean, Jeremy Vine is definitely the enemy, How brazen they are in rejecting the truth, in denying the truth, in gaslighting the truth out of existence.
So he was questioned on the yellow card deaths, wasn't he?
And Jeremy Vine's answer was, well, none of these deaths are real or to be taken seriously because the yellow card is merely a reporting system.
So anyone can report in and claim that their relative died of a COVID vaccine, but it doesn't mean it's true.
Is that the line he took?
Yes, absolutely.
Which is an interesting extreme.
It's the opposite of the line that our side would take, which I think is a more accurate side, which is that that the yellow card system underestimates adverse reactions and deaths by an order of magnitude.
In other words, 10 times at least more people.
They're saying about only 10% of the of the genuine adverse responses come through, which goes back to that doctor's receptionist that you had on, who was saying how the lengths they go to to prevent people from accessing the yellow card system.
Yeah.
They get told anything to prevent them actually recording an adverse reaction.
Yes, they get reassured.
Oh, no, no, no, it's not that.
This is perfectly normal.
No, the foaming at the mouth is, of course he's going to be foaming at the mouth.
It's probably dinner time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was also thinking about how much our world has changed Um, like, I used to be friends with Jeremy Vine.
I mean, you know, not you were on regularly.
I didn't have around for a spliff or anything.
But but yeah, he was a mate.
He was like, yeah, I'd love to do.
And he was always on the level, wasn't he?
He would always listen to whatever you had to say.
And you were reliably cozy, right wing nutcase.
But you know, still within the within their Overton window.
Yeah, and I never felt he was trying to undermine me, which was actually quite unusual on the BBC, that in most cases they would try and shaft you one way or another.
But Jeremy Vine never did.
And it's weird that he's now become such a... Well, he's actually become quite a zealot in a number of respects.
He's become a complete bicycle Nazi.
Of course he has, yeah.
He's the very worst kind.
But also his approach to the whole vaccine thing, it's like there's no honesty there, there's no integrity anymore, it's just he's pushing the establishment line in defiance of any Evidence to the contrary, which is shocking.
Well, it's bad enough if you let the BBC into your house.
I mean, a fair time ago now, I stopped paying my license and I'm straight up.
I don't watch it on the quiet or anything.
Who'd want to?
So I've got no sort of mainstream live TV coming into the house.
I have no newspapers.
I don't listen to the BBC, even on the wireless.
So it's sort of, there is no BBC coming into my house and it's like the Stopping an open sewer flowing through your home.
But imagine what it's like living and working in that open sewer, like Jeremy Vine does.
I mean, he's essentially at the sewage farm, isn't he?
And so it's going to affect you ultimately, isn't it?
I suppose it is.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely.
And I was going to say something else to you about this world-changing thing, and then I got distracted.
Other things that have changed since we last talked?
Well, yeah, I mean, so much has changed, hasn't it?
It's just like, I mean, what about the C-word?
Our adventures in Christianity?
I mean, how weird is that?
Oh, I was thinking Covid?
Covid, yeah.
No, you know the weird thing about our white pilling?
Yes.
I was trying to work out at what point it occurred because... Yes.
One obvious suggestion would be, and it hasn't been put to me, but, oh, I'm going down that route just because my brother is.
I mean, I'm often accused of doing stuff that you've done just because you've done it.
But it was happening to me simultaneously.
Yes.
And that's what I found quite weird.
And then when I listened to your Alex Thompson podcast, as soon as you were saying these things about how you came to this awakening, He was saying it's happened to a lot of listeners of UK Column, because what they do, they see evil, they know how to combat it, and they know that that's through Christianity.
And he says, I see it so often.
And I was thinking, well, that's how that's how it got us.
And one of the things was our dear friend Jonathan Myles-Lee.
Yeah.
And talking very frankly about demonic experiences and how reciting Psalm 23 seemed to be like chucking garlic at a vampire.
And all of these things, they kind of stick in the mind and they build up a picture of a world that is is turning more gradually evil and you can't unsee that sort of thing and the more you see that taking on the good side into your life combats the bad the less likely you are ever to return to a time when you were sort of mildly atheistic but
I can't honestly say I ever was an out-and-out atheist, and I've been describing my own faith as a very faint flickering candle, and I now describe it as something more akin to a campfire.
It was just bubbling under.
But the thing was, we had a traditional British education, so we knew all the stories of Jesus and the stories from the Bible.
We knew basic prayers.
We were given basic Christianity survival skills without particularly enjoying it at the time.
You know, you went to chapel sometimes twice a day, you sang the songs, you sang the psalms, you said the prayers, and it's only now in my 50s that I realise what a fantastic set of survival skills that's been, and it's just getting stronger in a very pleasant way.
So this is actually what my next book is about?
Funnily enough, you've just described the chapter that I'm writing at the moment, and I'm hoping that... I've got a kind of an American publisher who might be interested, although he hasn't responded since I sent him the two chapters, so maybe he just read them and thought, God, that's a shit, I hate them.
But, you know, don't know.
I'm going to carry on writing the book anyway, because I think it's the right book for now.
But one of the The weird things is that, or let's put it another way, one of the barriers to becoming a sort of proper kind of professing believing Christian for me has been all the trappings of what you might call churchianity and all the kind of sanctimoniousness and stuff.
It's interesting that your route to proper Christianity has been much the same as mine, which is a realisation that it really is a battle between good and evil, that the bad guys really are in the service.
They're very, very serious about being in the service of Lucifer.
And that we need to put on the the armor of God, the armor of light.
It's a bit like the difference between joining the army in peacetime and being conscripted into the army in the middle of a war.
You know, you'll be given basic training and then sent straight out to the front because it's an absolute battle of survival and that's kind of what we are.
It feels like we've been conscripted into this army.
Yeah.
And straight out there.
So we won't have time for the nonsense.
We won't have time for the sanctimonious bits that we've hated so much over the years.
Totally not.
What people deem to be Christians.
But like you and Gavin Ashenden, I have my own personal vicar friend that you probably know who I'm talking about, but I won't embarrass him by naming him.
But the other day I sent him a message saying, He's fairly local.
I said, do you fancy having a pint and talking about God?
Yeah.
He said nothing would make me happier.
So we rearranged a date and we met at my local in Worcester.
He's a Worcester man as well who doesn't live here anymore.
And from the moment he arrived, he grabbed himself a pint of a beer called Vicar's Ruin, which set the pace quite nicely.
We only had a couple of pints each, but we were talking about our friends and our families and mutual acquaintances, you know, talking like mates, and then I'd go, I know what I wanted to ask you.
And I'd ask him some pertinent question about, you know, what am I doing right?
What am I doing wrong?
As far as prayer, church, belief, religion, all of this stuff.
And he had answers and anecdotes and stuff that he learned from his training.
And it was absolutely brilliant.
It was everything you ever wanted to know about God, but were afraid to ask.
Two hours just went by so quickly and we both came away from it feeling really, really excited and happy about it because he realizes there's a lot of, especially those of us on the libertarian side of things, who are coming to God quite late in life and have all the zeal of converts.
So it's rich pickings for him.
He's doing the job that he had a calling to do.
And he's meeting with enthusiastic taker-uppers.
It's great though, isn't it?
There are so many people that one likes being with are experiencing this, and it's a great feeling.
And it's nice to know that there isn't any judgment about, oh, you're so new to this.
I've been doing this a lot longer.
I'm a damn sight holier than you, I think you'll find.
I'm getting none of that.
All I'm getting is the sort of big smiles you get when you're at Glastonbury and you're among friends.
Like when you've had Lee?
We've dropped the white till and you're among friends and you don't need to pussyfoot around your language with them.
I mean I'm quite circumspect talking to people who might feel uneasy about me being an out-and-out Christian but And I, like you, I try to go easy on them and say, look, I'm really, I really don't care if you're not on board with this, but this is how I am.
So, you know, if you don't like it, well, that's sad, but we can talk about something else if you like.
No, I agree with you totally that my main fear is putting people off and thus denying them the opportunity of coming around later.
I don't want to frighten people off because it's nothing but a good thing but I want them to discover that for themselves and I certainly don't want to kind of Proselytize or evangelize?
Well this is an interesting one because my vicar friend had talked to a couple of others and Friends of mine.
And I was saying, you know what?
I think they're pretty much on board with all this anyway.
And he said, this was an interesting one.
He goes, they are so close.
They are, you know, it's almost like they're at the door and they've turned the handle.
And he said, I don't want to push them through.
They've got to open that door themselves.
And it's such a good analogy.
You know, you can't push people through that door.
You've absolutely got to be left to discover it yourself.
Because, you know, obviously it's not the same when you push someone through and they've got no choice.
Or they come through with any amount of reluctance.
One of the themes of my book is all the, you might call them, snares or traps or coltraps that the devil has put in the way of getting people into proper Christianity.
And I think a lot of those traps are within the established church.
You know, I think I mean, I've had a rant about this before.
I'm not sure that Lord of the Dance, I'm the Lord of the Dance, says he.
That sort of thing really, really puts me off.
So does, we have an anchor, grounded firm and deep in the saviours.
This kind of thing, where Jesus is your jolly dancing teacher mate, or he's your anchor or whatever.
I mean, I can see they may have made sense to the people who wrote those songs.
But at the same time, the kind of Geoffrey from Rainbow type Christianity, I mean, not that Geoffrey from Rainbow is a Christian necessarily, but you know, that sort of Rainbow level level of Christianity.
Yeah, Dungarees sort of thing.
Very prevalent in the 1970s.
I think there was a movement in the in the in the 1970s to completely Destroy the church from within using happy songs and well, you know with really crap tunes and and well I always saw lord of the dance as being a pagan thing.
Anyway, it's very much a green man type thing, isn't it?
I never saw the sort of outright dancing with joy as being a particularly christian thing.
Anyway, it seems very much like a like a green man type thing, you know, nothing got nothing against pagan chums and what they like to get up through in woods and mistletoe and all that sort of stuff, but I, you know, Lord of the Dance especially, I just instinctively felt it was not a Christian thing.
Yeah, do you know what, I mean, I think those of us who are attracted to the, you know, real God, you know, like hardcore God, hardcore Jesus, Um, he's, Jesus is much more like the Jesus on South Park, you know, he's, he's, he's, he's packing.
Ironically.
Yeah.
And, and he's, but, but also, I mean, there's definitely, you know, an old Testament element to God, which doesn't take any nonsense.
You know, he's, he's, he's not this kind of pussy character that, you know, like, I mean, he's all sort of merciful and all forgiving, but at the same time, he doesn't like the evil ones and he doesn't like evildoers.
I mean, he's all sort of merciful and all forgiving.
But at the same time, he doesn't like the evil ones and he doesn't like evil doers.
I think that or falseness or falseness or falseness.
But equally, I don't think he particularly values sanctimoniousness and churchiness.
Well, the more you delve into the Bible, there's all stuff about this.
I mean, the very basic one, the bit where we learn about the Lord's Prayer, where I Probably Mark or something like that.
But there's a bit where it says, when you pray, you pray alone in your closet, it says.
Not like the scribes and Pharisees who loudly pronounce and pray in front of everyone.
So he's already got these people nailed.
Yeah, yeah.
So in your closet, so that means he doesn't like gays.
Or doesn't like professing.
Joke, joke, everyone.
I'm sure we'll add a joke.
Yeah, exactly.
So, yeah, no, absolutely.
It's like, isn't it?
Like, it's like, it's a bit like getting into football suddenly and discovering all these kind of stats and histories and, you know, team histories and stuff.
And then, you know, all the players are in the same way, knowing what happens in the Psalms and knowing what the deal is with the Lord's Prayer and stuff.
Knowing which bits.
It's like there's a lot to learn and I'm not sure that we... One of the practical things that my vicar taught me, because one of the very straight questions I had was, look, I'm now saying the Lord's Prayer three times a day.
I feel a bit silly saying, give us this day our daily bread just before I go to bed.
He says, is there something, a better prayer I can do?
And he immediately reeled off.
All the prayers that are for different times of day and put me on to the nunc dimittis.
For the last thing before you go to bed.
And it's just practical advice like that.
So I've got a few new prayers to learn.
I sought out the King James Version because I wanted the language to be nice.
And that's another pitfall, isn't it?
Cutting through the horrible modern revisions where the language is subtly altered.
But yeah, it's a journey, isn't it?
Yeah, it is, it is.
Yeah, I mean, I'm reading this, I'm reading C.S.
Lewis at the moment.
I've got to get on to C.S.
Lewis.
Yeah, you've got to.
But I'm reading one of his sci-fi books, his Christian sci-fi books called... Oh, right.
Yeah, called That Hideous Strength.
It's very good.
I won't go on about it now, I just recommend it.
Highly.
Yeah.
Are we going to do any of our things?
Yeah, well, I've got a yes-no game lined up for you.
We are spoiling them.
We'd be in trouble if there wasn't one, actually, though, wouldn't we?
Especially for those who have just rolled their eyes and switched off and said, oh God, not Dick too.
We'd burn in hell.
I just wanted to mention that.
One of the things that really amuses me is people who say things like, they roll their eyes and they say, Oh yeah, you're just taking solace in a man-made, man-made religion.
It's just another form of, you know, authoritarianism and you go, yeah, yeah, that's really, that's really, that's really the clever fifth form attitude towards it.
You don't, you don't understand that this stuff is actually real.
It's not, it's not something... Again, you can't push them through that door.
They've got to find it themselves and a lot of them won't.
But we don't, we don't, we don't judge them.
Well, actually that was another thing my vicar friend said.
Don't judge.
Really, you don't.
It's not your place to do so.
Not your job.
No.
Totally.
Okay, leaving what we found blossoming faith to one side for a moment, we're back onto the yes-no game.
I wrote this, according to my notes, 17th of June, so some of these names are not as relevant now.
It'll be like a guessing game, guessing who this person was when he was relevant.
Or whether or not they've come over to our side or gone over to the dark side.
But anyway, see how we get on with this.
It starts off with an easy one.
James Corden.
No.
Obviously.
Yeah, obviously.
Dr. Fauci.
No.
Prince Harry.
No.
Eric Clapton.
Yes.
Obviously.
But he was very much in the news.
Oh, we love Eric.
Steve Baker MP?
No.
Tragically no.
He would have been a yes once.
He would have been an emphatic yes.
I think he may well have been when I wrote this list.
How sad is that?
That we lose our only insiders.
They were Few and far between.
You could count them on the fingers of one frostbitten hand.
Do you know how it would have felt, how this was?
This would have been a bit like when Judas betrayed, how the other disciples felt when Judas betrayed Jesus for 30 pieces.
So, Steve, Judas, Bacchus.
GB News.
If the answer is The Coast Guy, Neil Oliver, then I would say yes.
If we're talking Tom, Tom Harwood, and I would say we're in Fauci levels of knowness.
Right.
Rosie Millard?
Meh, don't know, don't care.
She was a resounding no, because she was coming on at this time, big time, about we must vaccinate children.
Yeah, she's a BBC, so she's basically evil.
Yeah.
Arcade Fire.
Oh, that's interesting.
Well, aren't they Canadian?
Mm-hmm.
So she's very unpromising right from the start.
Yes.
But but I presume you only mentioned them if they'd come out against the kind of the not.
I think I think they were full on cabal aligned.
But again, I should have written notes alongside as to what the story was in there that made me write it.
No, they're definitely not.
Winston, Winston Marshall.
Remember him?
No.
He's the banjo player from Mumford and Sons.
Oh, we like him, yes.
Mumford and Sons.
Yes, yes we do, yes.
He was a yes.
Jamiroquai.
Isn't he?
I'm going to do a Jamiroquai impersonation.
That's really good, Dick.
Yeah, it's almost like the room is moving behind me.
Um, you know, I, you know, I was, I was friends with, with, with, with, with one of the Jamiroquai.
Yes, he lived locally.
He lived locally.
And he was a lovely, lovely man.
And he was dying of cancer.
And he spent his last years riding to hounds, which I think is the best possible pursuit.
And yeah, he was really great, great guy.
Yeah.
But I don't think it's like that.
I think that was another one.
Here's one that dates it.
Gareth Southgate.
Yeah, he had a lot of pressure managing the England team and all our thoughts and prayers were with him and he's absolutely a no.
So what's he most famous for?
The two things he's most famous for are missing the penalties.
And then choosing people to miss penalties.
Yeah, absolute tosser.
I mean, you really are finding... It's almost like he was fulfilling his destiny, wasn't it?
It's almost like you're trying to test my Christianity, test my faith by introducing names which introduce devilish thoughts.
People you could never forgive.
Yeah, yeah.
That's exactly it.
Because that's one of the difficult things, isn't it?
We're supposed to forgive these people.
Forgiveness is bloody difficult.
Do you think, Dick, do you think we should ban this entire section?
Because, like, we're passing judgment on people.
Well, as long as we don't call it unforgivable people and we continue to call it yes, no, because yes, no, you know.
Yeah, that's true.
That's true.
OK, I think people might be concerned.
Everyone's shouting, no, don't stop.
Yes, no.
Anyway.
Um where was I?
Gareth Southgate.
Andrew Marr.
I would imagine no.
Yeah of course no.
Yeah yeah sorry sorry stupid me.
Um Gary Neville.
Was he at school with us?
That was Simon Neville.
Oh yeah.
He's an artist.
All right.
Sorry Simon.
Another footballer.
Oh, he was in the news or something.
Yeah.
Bad thing, wasn't it?
Bad to be bad.
Elton John did just just terrible.
I mean, he is absolutely he is so far up Satan's bottom, isn't he?
He even made a nice little advert for Satan, didn't they?
Yeah.
BBC, whatever.
Yeah.
Gary Lineker.
Dick, you're you truly you are spoiling us.
No, no, no, nay.
Dave Grohl.
No!
He messed up bad, didn't he?
I mean, talk about ruining any rock and roll credentials.
Apparently he is totally cabal.
He's totally cabal, yeah.
Ian Brown.
We love Ian Brown.
He's just great.
Yes.
Yes.
Mick Jagger.
Nope.
I'm just on the offside of Mick Jagger.
I'd written down Jagger lyric.
There's a song that was probably in the news when I wrote this list, and this is a line from it.
Okay.
Shooting the vaccine.
Bill Gates is in my bloodstream.
It's mind control.
The earth is flat and cold.
It's never warming up.
I think he's having a go at you and me there.
Do you think he is?
I think that's really, that's really touching that he thinks about us from his, you know, mansions.
Yeah, that's good.
Andrew Lilico.
No, he's just like, no.
Tom Harwood.
He's a journalist with GB News.
Never heard of him.
Dan Hodges.
Never heard of him.
Who are these people, Dick?
Bob Moran is a total mensch.
Dick, I was with him on the march.
I know, I saw the pictures and I was immediately very jealous.
I was stoned off my face at the time.
Do you know about this?
Yes, apparently you stumbled across a fan who was a friend with weed and therefore a friend indeed.
As I walked into the park, I was walking through Hyde Park Gate, And somebody, you know, greeted me, as they do, and he was smoking a reef and I said, oh, I'll have some of that.
I mean, you know, I feel that I'm able to do that.
And I thought, I thought, you know, like everyone else rolls in the same strength as I do, which is probably piss.
But they don't.
I mean, this was just, I had two puffs and it finished me for the entire march.
And I had to kind of talk to Jamie Franklin from Irreverent.
I don't know how approving he is of, do you think, I mean, is it sinful smoking dope?
I wouldn't want to test him on it, but I saw that there was a podcast you can watch where it says that is weed against God.
And I thought, I don't even want to watch that in case they say it is.
Only if the answer's yes.
I mean, sorry, no, the answer is no.
God actually likes it because it's because it's kind of natural, isn't it?
Yeah.
I don't think he likes coke very much.
I think he he doesn't mind coca leaf.
This is what our friend Mike says, isn't it?
About about cocaine.
He says that it's not a good drug because it goes through so much processing.
And actually, coca leaf was designed as a mild stimulant, and when it's used as a mild stimulant, it's a very, very good thing.
But it's been distorted into this thing it's not, and it's not a very satisfying drug.
You and I don't get utterly blitzed, do we?
We're sort of like... We don't.
It's not about that.
In a way, it's medicinal because it's seen us through some of the hellish nightmares that are going on in this past year and it's sort of like uh just just what you need to get to sleep at night.
I still want to do anyone's listening anyone help me I want to do um DMT um but probably I want to do it in a proper kind of situation where you where you know the sort of the ritual element is observed but apparently you understand the unit the secrets of the universe much better once you've once you've taken.
Is this the thing that Jonathan was talking about?
Where you see the little gray man Because this, by the way, Dick, this is the thing that I think a lot of people don't understand.
That God is real.
The devil is real.
Demons are real.
Angels are real.
And probably aliens are real as well.
Or maybe the demons are aliens.
I don't know.
But some people would be going, what?
No, no way.
Stop that.
Stop that nonsense.
But it's just like, This is probably why the Kabbalah won't need to have you bumped off because you sound crazy enough to not need it.
So do you think God is actually saving me from being bumped off by the Kabbalah because I believe in him?
That's a really complicated question isn't it?
We're not going to know the answer to that until... We're not going to be able to answer it tonight, certainly.
No.
Shall I finish off the list?
Bob Moran is a legend.
Bob Moran is fantastic.
I'm Hyde Park, anyway.
I've got three more, four more to do.
Hugh Grant.
I would have thought no.
I think he's a no still, unfortunately, despite being a one-time fan of yours.
He was my number one fan at one point, which is really weird.
It's a shame.
You didn't bring him on the journey with you, did you?
No, I feel sad about that.
Maybe there's still hope for him.
Maybe there's still hope for him.
The people that I've left behind on my journey, because it's been quite a, it's a bit like, I was about to say it's like going on the Bataan Death March, but it's not really.
It's been more fun than that.
It's a bit like going on an expedition, I'd say, up Mount Everest, hasn't it?
Maybe?
Or down the Amazon.
Down the Amazon.
Down the Amazon.
Something doable.
Yeah, where you can have people join you on the way, in that respect, because you're on Not going up a mountain.
We've had people sort of blowing sort of poison arrows with frogs on them.
And there are piranhas and jaguars and what else is there?
Rapids.
Rapids.
Mosquitoes.
But I think most people have clung to the raft alongside me or whatever we're on.
Are we on a raft or a sort of Or was it more of a Fitzcarraldo-type paddle steamer thing?
Or kayaks, like in Deliverance.
Yeah.
Well, whatever it is, a lot of people have actually I think that's been quite interesting, actually, for a lot of people.
They've followed me down the rabbit hole, and they too were normies, and they've become... I mean, we're not normies anymore, are we?
That's weird.
No, no, absolutely not, yeah.
Totally not normies.
In fact, I'm not even sure how much sense this podcast is going to make to people who are still normies.
There's going to be one million references.
I think it still will, because it's you and me, and people like that.
A lot of people are just listening for shits and giggles and they just want to see two brothers catching up and that's what they tell me anyway.
Last three names.
Christopher Biggins.
He would have been a yes, but I think he's a no, isn't he?
I think Christopher Biggins was once on our side, no longer.
I thought it was a good name to throw in there, and I think it's worth doing research.
Is Biggins still with us?
I don't think, yeah, I don't think he is.
I think again, when I wrote this list, he'd appeared in the news over something, and I think you might be wrong.
Has anything happened the other way, where people who weren't with us are now with us?
Well, that's what we're looking for, isn't it?
No.
People who weren't with us are now with us.
I don't think it goes the other way.
I don't think once your eyes are open, you, you know, you blue pill, like in that character in The Matrix.
No.
You know, the one who says, I know this steak isn't real, but it's the most delicious thing I've ever tasted.
Yeah.
No.
We're not going to do that.
Last two names.
Carrie Simmons.
She's great, Dick.
She's fantastic.
Yeah, she is.
Because lots of people... And Boris Simmons.
Lots of men have been attracted to her.
Yeah, no, she's great.
And also, she's very highly connected.
And absolutely hasn't been given a placebo instead of a vaccine.
And also, she hasn't... People have been claiming that, are very naughty.
What, the saline?
And also, she hasn't got high-level cabal connections which could off me for crossing her, so... No, that would be an awful thing to say.
I think our Prime Minister and her husband need all the support we can give them.
Yeah, exactly, so... So there we go, there we have it.
Now you talked about the lockdown marches.
I don't think we've even done a podcast since I've been on one and I did a couple with you and I'm glad I didn't go to the last one because it kind of ended badly.
It was like that woman saying the wrong thing and everyone trying to disassociate herself.
It's kind of like it's odd.
There's going to be someone at every march saying something that can be used against the rest of the people on the march and the marches don't work like that.
They don't.
I don't judge.
I think Loza, for example, made a mistake by distancing himself from them on talk radio, which is really not worth doing, and on GB News, which is generally not worth doing.
I think, look, the fact is, I said this before, I think, that people like David Icke, people like Piers Corbyn, people like Who else is there?
The ones who speak at these.
They've been fighting this fight for years and I think it all behoves us to hold our noses and go, ooh, ooh, they've said some edgy things which might make us look like extremists, you know.
That's just ridiculous.
We can't do that.
I think you said it on your Telegram channel.
You phrased it really well.
You put out a message on your Telegram channel.
And again, I was like, yes, that's exactly the way I thought about it when I saw that people previously we'd aligned ourselves to, if only nominally, had said something that It was completely taken out of context and in the wrong way.
And everyone's distancing themselves, not just from them, but from the whole protest movement.
And this is what our enemies want.
They're bound to drag up anything remotely controversial that happened at the march.
It's a bit like when the police come and arrest someone at the end of it, just so they can get an arrest.
And the Daily Mail will say, violence and arrests at anti-lockdown march.
And don't play our enemy's game.
As you say, these people have been fighting longer, harder, and better than us from the start.
Similarly, Morgoth.
Morgoth used to be... Obviously, it's a pseudonym.
You know what it's from.
No, is it Lord of the Rings or something?
Yeah, it is.
It's not Lord of the Rings.
It's the... What's the one that... Oh, Silmarillion, yeah.
Is it Silmarillion?
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, the Silmarillion.
And so Morgoth is... I think Morgoth is even more evil than Sauron.
I think Morgoth spawns Sauron or something.
You covered it on your podcast.
So Morgoth is from the North East and he used to be... Wayay, man!
Yeah, he used to be one of the commentators from Telegraph Blog Days.
And he's he's been you know following my stuff and on off over the years and I did a podcast with him the other day and I think he's absolutely brilliant.
He hasn't been corrupted by universities.
He's a genuinely brilliant mind.
I mean, he's got a first-class mind.
It hasn't been polished, if that's the right word, by formal higher education.
I always get higher and further education, you know, university education.
He would have done brilliantly at Oxford in the days when it wasn't quite so politicized.
Anyway, I'm a great fan of his podcasts and he did this beautiful one the other day, just a kind of half hour monologue where he talked about The problems that a lot of us face now, as we discover just how messed up the world is.
We've been brought up in a world of normies, normidom, and we think like normies, and we assume good faith on the part of our opponents.
We think that they aren't devious, or at least we're inclined to do so.
We don't always do so, but we're inclined to think that When people argue with you, they will use facts and they will endeavor to tell the truth and provide a reasonable response.
And he was making the point, which is absolutely true, that the other side are evil.
They don't care about logic or facts or honesty or any of the qualities that we've been brought up to value.
And he was talking about how this puts us at a tremendous disadvantage because we don't really know how to respond.
Anyway, so I mentioned this on my telegram channel and then various people sort of sidle up to me on social media and they say, oh Morgoth, you know, he's got dangerous sort of far-right links or whatever, you know, patriotic alternative.
And I'm thinking, hang on a second, if If he'd done a podcast saying, I hate all the Jews, and Hitler was fantastic, and A, I wouldn't be picking up this particular podcast, and B, I'd be very suspicious about him.
But I wasn't talking about such a podcast.
I was talking very specifically about this wonderful, thoughtful thing that he'd done.
And here you are saying, we should beware of this person.
I'm thinking, Do you really get what's going on right now?
All this kind of political factionalism to which we're... this belongs to the world pre-2020 when we didn't realize how bad things were.
Right now this is a struggle between we the people, us the people, and a Narrow elite which despises us, which views us as cattle, which wants to enslave us and have been planning this stuff for generations and here you are worried about kind of people's front of Judea versus Judean people's front stuff.
I feel kinship with, if fundamentalist Muslims want to come on my side, if Jews want to be on my side, it's It's us, the people, against the cabal.
It's good versus evil.
It's as simple as that.
This is something I've really been enjoying about, you know I'm part, you've come to meet them, the Ledbury and the Hereford and Worcestershire sort of rebel gang.
But incidentally, meeting up again next Wednesday.
I don't know when this is going to be going out, but you came along to see us at the Barn in Ledbury.
On again next Wednesday, third Wednesday at the Barn in Ledbury.
But this gang, this crowd, they are as diverse as you can imagine.
We don't really talk about what we once voted for because we don't want to have to worry about what once divided us.
So I don't know whether they're Brexit or whether they were Corbynistas, but none of them give a toss.
None of them give a toss about that I'm some ex-public school boy who is by and large supposedly privileged.
It just doesn't matter anymore.
And my lot get it.
They get that your mate is who is in the trench next to you and you've got a common enemy.
And we're all good with that.
And the things that are dividing us are just sent by our enemies.
And so, you know, it comes back to not dissing the Ikes of this world.
They are your friends.
Don't make the mistake of thinking there's one thing they've said that you find objectionable, and then throwing the baby out with the bathwater, because that's what the enemy wants you to do.
Well, equally, you know, I tweeted out the other day about how lots of people, a lot of the people who are getting this stuff are Christians or heading towards, heading that way.
And there was quite a sort of, there were a few sort of embittered remarks from people saying, you know, you mustn't divide us.
And I was thinking, well, hang on a second, I'm not, I'm not saying that Christians are, you know, I'm not saying you have to be a Christian to get this, because you totally don't.
But equally, it shouldn't be a threat to you.
It really shouldn't.
It's no big deal.
This is what I tried to say to my friends, even like I was talking to work colleagues about it the other day.
We had a big night out, which I'm still feeling slightly hung over from it.
But I got into this conversation with one of my colleagues and He was in complete shock for him to hear that I was a Christian.
He said, but I thought you hated the church.
I said, yes, that's the problem.
I still do.
So we had that conversation that kind of blew his mind.
Another guy then joined in the conversation, and he said, I don't believe in God and Jesus and all that, but I do believe in a spirit world.
He then proceeded to describe spirituality.
I said, you know what, that's probably pretty much the same thing.
As long as you acknowledge that there's stuff beyond our ken, and that there's stuff out there that you hitherto have had no idea how it worked, but are I'm starting to get an idea of it.
I think you're pretty much along the same lines as me.
It's just that what I've got is Christianity and what you've got is a belief in spirituality.
And I think the problem is people who won't acknowledge either, who say what you see is what you get.
There's no such thing as any of that nonsense and, you know, bring down the shutters.
Yeah.
When you're talking to spiritual people that there is hope with them.
Although I have to say, I do know just from Telegram and social media that there are people on our side who totally get it, who do fit into that camp of not believing in No, they rejected the spiritual.
Well, no, there's stuff like that in the group.
But if you're going to get trouble about your religion from anyone, it's going to be from them, not the people who have spirituality.
I've got properly Orthodox Jews on my telegram.
I've got Muslims.
And it's nice.
It's great that we've got this kind of this team.
It's like it's like one of those movies where you get sort of people from disparate backgrounds like The Magnificent Seven.
Or the Wild Bunch.
The Dirty Dozen.
Yeah, exactly.
Each of us has our own superpower.
It's actually quite useful.
When it comes to the zombie farmstead scenario where we've got the fence up and everyone's got a specialization.
There's going to be a weapons expert, there's going to be a farmer, a scientist, a doctor.
And obviously a vicar, you know, there's always a vicar.
And, you know, between us we've got this thing nailed, hopefully.
Or we'll go down in a blaze of glory.
Yeah, I think it's going to be that one, isn't it?
I mean, where do you think this is all... This is our last summer, isn't it?
I mean, of freedom.
Oh no, I think we've still got a fair bit of false war to go on before the gloves are completely off.
It might be as many as three or four years.
I don't think.
I mean, I think it's going to go bad again this autumn, but I think it will come back next summer and it will feel a bit more like this again.
I think it's going to go on for longer than you think.
All right.
I think it'll give more people a chance to wake up.
Mmm, yeah.
Yeah, I'm wondering, you see, I think there are going to be quite a few deaths this autumn, winter.
Well, this is what's going to bring people on board, isn't it?
Yeah, well, it ought to, but they'll lie about it and they'll say it's the fault of the unvaccinated.
That's what I'm thinking.
No, no, they will absolutely do that.
But just looking at our youth and how there's a lot of them saying, look, I'd rather catch Covid than have the vax and that sort of thing.
Little things like that give me hope that they've realised that there's something not quite right.
And that's the start of it, isn't it?
You just need the vaguest hint of suspecting that we are being lied to.
And there's so much lie going on that you can hardly fail to spot it.
This is the thing.
I'm hoping to get Cliff High on the podcast.
Have you come across Cliff High?
No.
How do you spell high?
As in joint.
H-I-J.
All right, okay.
And Cliff with one F.
Now the interesting thing about Cliff, I mean, he's, he's definitely, you know, he's, he's been, he's been down the rabbit hole for a long time.
I mean, he's probably, he's going to be general wound work level of down the rabbit hole.
I was going to say he'll have grown big floppy ears.
Yeah.
He's got, he's got big floppy ears.
I mean, the, probably the black rabbit of inlay is he's going to take him pretty soon, but, but you know, in a, in a good way.
so burning like fire how can you turn so pale - Mm-hmm.
How does it go then?
Anyway, how does the light that burns so brightly suddenly turn so pale?
Bright eyes, We've had a mass switching off, I think.
Do you think?
No, I think people... People like the Delingpole duets.
I think Ian Brown will still be watching.
He'll be saying, that's like my vocal on I Am the Resurrection.
Those lads have nailed it.
Completely nailed Bright Eyes.
They will.
One of my favourite songs.
What were we talking about before those fucking rabbits interrupted?
Oh, Cliff High, Dan Rabbit Hole, so long he's grown floppy ears.
Yeah, so unlike the one who got me loads and loads of YouTube numbers, but he actually talks rubbish.
What's he called?
That one lives in Spain.
Oh, the one who had some work going on.
Yeah, yeah, that one.
Yeah.
I mean, he talks, he talks a reasonable game.
He's incredibly popular.
I know.
As long as you don't know anything about this stuff, he's fine.
And, you know, I mean, he's got he's got a good going.
That's fine.
I'm not sure I'd be going.
I have him back on the podcast.
But the thing about Cliff High is he is definitely at The hopium end of things.
But he doesn't, he doesn't go, we need a bit of that.
He doesn't go, oh, Trump's got a plan.
He does a bit, but he doesn't, he doesn't approach it from that angle.
What he does is he's got these algorithms or something on his computer, which spots how Many times words appear and he can formulate, you can spot trends based on frequency of word usage and stuff and search terms probably.
I don't know.
I'll have to ask him about this.
I haven't had him on the podcast.
You know, I don't do my research unless I absolutely have to, you know, with a gun pointed at my head.
They're not giving the Kabbali ideas.
And he says that what's happening now is this massive awakening as many, many people are realizing that the world they've been taught to think of existing doesn't many people are realizing that the world they've been taught to think This is all a construct.
This is all a matrix and that this is the awakening.
This is, it's happening now and you can see it happening in real time on the internet.
And he says, you know, He's quite matter-of-fact about it.
He says there's going to be loads and loads of deaths and loads of bad stuff's going to happen but that this is a necessary process and it's inevitable process because obviously the bad guys have been doing these bad things all this time without us knowing and now we're finally finding out about it we're going to react and and they're trying to It's a race against time.
Can they close us down with vaccines and vaccine passports and the death shot and the control system?
Or can we resist in time?
He's quite optimistic.
This is why I think we've got a bit longer.
Yeah, well, good.
We need a bit of optimism.
When you're gathering with like-minded mates, like we do on my Wednesday drinks, and you're surrounded by people smiling and people you don't need to explain the whole situation to, and some people are more experienced on the tunnels of the rabbit hole than you are and have a few things to impart, you can't help feeling optimistic.
If you're with such good people, then there's got to be hope.
And even if that is only that you go down together fighting, at least you'll have someone alongside you doing that.
And there's so many people who think they're alone in this, that it's really great when you get someone new coming along who either listened to this or follows me on Twitter.
Someone coming along to our drinks for the first time and saying, oh God, I was the only one in my family or at work or what have you.
This is so great to meet like-minded people.
I think getting out there and getting together with people who are on the same page is absolutely the answer.
And that's the way we make things happen.
And that's the way we build up the resistance.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, no, no.
Yeah, no, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's really good that it's one of the things that, you know, gives me, gives me great cheer at some.
I mean, so that was, that was, that was interruption there.
So I, You're being told you've got to do something?
No, no, no, no, no, no.
I didn't want to be talking when I was, um... All right, okay.
So, yeah.
That kind of thing does give me hope.
Although, I have to say, it doesn't seem like we're, what, maybe 10% at the moment?
I think that's a good number.
I mean, what are they, so it's meant to be 3.5 to start a revolution or something?
I did like the fact that only 28% of black people in New York have been vaccinated.
Yeah, we're going to have a lot more brothers on our side after the dust has settled.
I know.
I want to do a podcast with Ramis at some stage.
That would be good, wouldn't it?
Who's Ramis?
I wonder whether even if Remis and I were to do a duet, I'd obviously have to... You could do a version of Bright Eyes.
If I blacked out, do you think that would give me more credibility or do you think that might... I think they'd appreciate the effort.
It always goes down well, that sort of gesture.
Yeah, it is.
It's kind of politeness, isn't it, really?
Yeah, I think so.
Showing that you understand their culture and you're prepared to walk a few miles in another man's shoes.
Yeah, so I'll probably do that.
And yeah, so I've got some, I've got some good, good podcast guests lined up.
I think we should do more of these, Dick.
I think, I feel that, you know, I feel like our sharklings have been starved of Well look, now I've got my fantastic shed set up, we can do little and often.
We'll do a super chat next, so we can talk with our friends and we'll get Simon to help us out.
I haven't spoken to Simon for a while.
Sorry Simon, I will speak soon.
Oh yeah, sorry.
I'd like to say, can I just take this opportunity to say sorry to all the people who write to me and I've yet to, look the intention is there, I do want to write back but I just, I just get overwhelmed by stuff.
Listen listeners, he's bad enough at getting back to me when I text or message him, so what hope you have, I don't know.
Yeah, that is very true.
I know you've got a lot going on though, so I do.
You're single-handedly trying to save the world.
Yeah, exactly.
It takes a lot of effort.
Yeah, exactly.
It's not easy saving the world.
It really isn't.
It's a big place to save.
Make a good film at the end of it though.
When we do.
Actually, that's the other thing I meant to say to you, Dick.
Do you not think that we are living in a movie for real right now?
That we are the characters in the film who are trying to warn disbelieving normie friends and family what's going on?
Everything has been played.
We've seen all the films that cover it.
You could make up this whole last 18 months by Slicing together bits and pieces out of various films and you wouldn't even need to do much editing.
We've seen it all already.
Yeah.
To the point whereby you'd think it was deliberate.
They've been trying to show us what lies ahead.
Oh, that's the thing.
Just briefly.
I got one of the points earlier on where I was trying to remember which of your points I wanted to pick up on.
Are you aware about the vampire thing?
You know, with vampires, how they can only come into your house if you invite them across the threshold.
Yeah.
And then you're screwed.
And whenever I think about that, I think about the terrible occasion.
It shows how naive I was when I invited Paul Nurse to film me with the BBC crew in my home.
For that, when the BBC did that hit job on me.
And at the time I thought, wow, a Nobel Prize winner who just wants to find out the truth about climate change and he's unbiased and he's good because he's so dedicated.
He's going to come to the home of little humble me and he's going to ask me questions and I'm going to make him cups of tea because I'm rather excited to have, you know, give him some cake and stuff.
In the same way, I don't know how much research you've been doing into the whole nature of our enemy, of these Luciferians that are ruling the world, you know, in the name of their evil fallen angel that they worship.
Part of their religious code is that if they tell us what they're going to do to us, it legitimizes it.
Because we've kind of given them permission.
They've been telling us exactly what they're going to do and everyone says, well, they wouldn't be telling us this if it had any evil intent.
Yeah.
We're going to take you up the bottle with a spiked dildo.
They have to tell you.
With poison on it and a little kind of side spines to make it extra uncomfortable.
And then we're going to squirt.
But yeah, yeah.
And everyone's going, yeah, but when they say they're going to rape us with spike dildos, with porcupine spikes on them, with acid injected at the end, they don't really, they're just saying it.
It's just like, everyone knows these people aren't real because, I don't know, reasons.
Oh yes, that's right.
Because it doesn't say it's happening in the Daily Mail.
If this were real, the Daily Mail and the BBC would be telling us.
We'd have read about it by now, yeah.
That old one.
Yeah, that's where we are, isn't it?
We'd have heard about it by now, but I'm telling you now, yeah, but you know, it's not been on the BBC or the Daily Mail.
It's like the impending food shortages and the famine which are being engineered around the world, probably as a a mechanism for making us depend on the government for rationing and thus making us more likely to accept these, you know, the death jabs.
Everything will be sold as the government helping us, won't it?
Yeah, yeah.
But even though you've got places like, you've got people like Ice Age Pharma collating all this data, showing from around the world that, for example, The Chinese are closing their ports to screw up the international trade system.
That farmers are being paid to destroy or burn their produce.
By whom?
I don't know.
Bill Gates is now the biggest farm owner in America.
And everyone is still going, well, I didn't read Sarah Vine writing about that in the mail.
So it can't be happening.
That is the mentality we're dealing with.
Well, the one thing we have got is that at least we won't be surprised when all this happens, but that's small bloody comfort when the whole world has gone to shit around us.
But, you know, it would be the biggest told you so moment in history.
Well, that and the fact that God has given his angels charge over us to keep us in all our ways, and they're going to bear us up with their hands, lest we dash our feet against a stone.
Which is good.
Well, there is that.
Which is nice.
Which is nice.
Good.
Right, shall we call an end to it there?
We're going to call an end to it.
For the time being.
Don't forget everyone, support me on Patreon, Subscribestar, and then with some of the money I'll be able to pay Dick for all the things that he does for me.
Fat chance.
And we'll do a live chat, a super chat.
I'm still freaked out by the fact that you've got your wife's name up on my participants, not yours.
I keep thinking, no, it's not.
Does it say Lydia?
Yeah, it does.
I can't see anything.
Is it some kind of sign-up?
Yeah, it's a sign-up, isn't it?
Am I able to change that?
Are you controlled opposition, Dick?
I'm quite happy to go by my new name.
I find that quite exhausting, don't you?
Sorry to keep coming back in.
One of the things about these times that we live in Is that just when one starts having faith in somebody, you'll get somebody else approaching, siding up to you on the internet and going, psst, you realize they're controlled opposition, don't you?
Or, yeah, no, they're talking absolute rubbish.
Don't trust them.
Don't trust them.
They're working for the enemy.
And it's kind of tiring.
And every now and again, they might be right.
So you've got to give it some sort of credence.
Ultimately, you've got to go with your gut, haven't you?
My final piece of advice to everyone watching, do not trust me or Dick.
Just don't.
Absolutely don't.
I would, my final piece of advice to everyone watching, do not trust me or Dick.
Just don't.
Absolutely don't.
You don't.
Because some, because.
What's that?
Do you not know the concealed hand thing? - Yeah.
No.
What's the concealed hand thing?
I know the concealed eye and all this.
Yeah, well, the concealed hand is another thing, you know.
Do you know about this one?
Boris Johnson's done it, Fauci's done it.
It's something to do with one of their planets or something.
One of the planets they think they've got on board.
What's that one?
Shadow Puppet.
Is it?
I don't know.
There's all signs, isn't it?
Anyway, on that show... That's probably beyond the 33rd level.