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Oct. 8, 2021 - The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters
01:30:32
The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #237
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Hello and welcome to the podcast, the Lotus Seaters for the 8th of October, 2021.
I'm joined by Carl.
Hello!
And today we're going to be talking about worldwide COVID fascism is forming before our eyes.
Also the cult of the NHS. Give your lives for it, my comrades.
Also, why women want sugar daddies.
And why that's bad for them as well.
Right.
Yeah, it's not good.
Another sermon from the Book of Dadism.
Yeah, but it's not good, and it's got to be talked about.
So, a couple of things to mention for us on the website.
The first thing here being the Tories in the NHS article that Hugo wrote.
There is an audio track.
I believe this is new.
So for Silver and Gold Tier members to go and check out.
If you didn't get a chance to read it, or you just don't like reading, that's for you.
Anyway, so we have the next article up, which is a new article, The War with China.
Yeah, I listened to the audio track of this last night.
It was brilliant.
It's absolutely brilliant.
I take it you haven't read this yet?
No.
It's a really, really delicate look at the difficulties that the West faces when it comes to the inevitable confrontation with China.
It's really well written.
John's done a brilliant job here.
Both Johns.
Are they both John, actually?
Or I can't remember.
John Tangney is.
John Tangney is the author.
John...
Jonathan Crowe is the guy who did the voice.
They both did a great job.
Sorry, I'm getting confused with names.
So go and check that out.
You've got to subscribe for that one as well.
And also Silver and Gold get the audio.
But that's that.
Moving on, we have Epochs.
You want to talk about something?
Yeah, I just wanted to promote the Epochs because this is...
We're doing a sort of mini-series on the Hundred Years' War, which is a wonderful period of history through the Middle Ages and the sort of high Middle Ages.
And it's really fascinating.
Me and Bo could talk at unbelievable length.
And this is the Battle of Cressy.
On Sunday, you'll have the Battle of Plattier.
And then next week, we'll have the Battle of Agincourt.
And I will do a fourth one about the Battle of Vanille.
Vanille?
Vanille?
I can't pronounce it.
It's a French word.
I'm not supposed to pronounce it.
And why?
Because there are a lot of copes, right?
It's like, how did the English defeat the French so often?
It must have been the ground, or it must have been the longbow.
This is all sounding like massive cope, because at Van Nol, none of those advantages were present, and yet the English still waxed the floor of the French.
So there's got to be something else going on there, but we'll talk about that at the time.
Sounds like a competence to me, honestly.
LAUGHTER Well, we'll talk about that.
You can watch the podcast, in fact, to find out.
Anyway, so let's get into the worldwide COVID fascism, which I think has a preface, doesn't it?
Yeah, so we're seeing a worldwide COVID fascism forming before our eyes.
And when I say this, I don't mean this in the sort of use of the word fascism as in I just don't like that.
I mean it in the intrusive totalitarian managerial state that is run by what are going to become unaccountable elites that take control of every aspect of your lives.
And it's not going to be in one country, it's going to be in all countries.
If the way the current trends are going is Playing out.
But the problem that we have is that if you're watching this on YouTube, we can't really talk about this on YouTube because YouTube has editorial policies.
And these editorial policies prevent us from talking about certain aspects of vaccination.
And the aspects of vaccination we'd want to talk about come directly from the Office of National Statistics in the United Kingdom and the Center for Disease Control in the United States.
We will just be quoting directly from their websites, but And while YouTube guidelines say, well, no, no, if you say certain things in a certain way, you might be okay.
Personally, I feel like it's skirting a bit too close to the line, and an uncharitable moderator at YouTube might just give us a whack, and that means that we can't put anything up for a week.
And so we're going to leave a link in the description and pinned in the comments to the full podcast that you can watch on lotusseeds.com, because unfortunately, it's just not safe for us to upload this segment to youtube.com.
And so, moving on.
Justin Trudeau, in the recent Canadian elections, squeaked back into power.
You may remember this.
Nothing really changed in the Canadian Parliament.
And that means Justin Trudeau has not, from the electorate, been given a mandate for radical change.
If you barely squeak in, you've got to form a coalition government like you did last time.
You weren't given a majority.
You don't have a mandate.
That's just pretty sensible, straightforward.
I mean, you've got a mandate for government.
Yeah, you've got a mandate to govern, but you don't have a mandate for implementing a radical agenda of change to the country.
You could argue about whether or not it's in his manifesto, because I know there are conventions on these things.
Yeah, but he didn't get a majority.
So he has to be...
Still doesn't hugely matter with these things.
No, on a moral sense.
Not in a practical sense.
Well, still then.
I mean, he's got a gun.
He did form one.
Yeah, but it's a government of coalition, which means it must be morally a government of compromise, which means he can't, well, he shouldn't, be implementing a form of vaccine fascism over Canada.
But let's play the clip.
This is what Trudeau is doing to this once free country.
Christia has outlined what the mandatory vaccination that's in place immediately for federal employees will look like.
The bottom line?
Proof of vaccination will be required by no later than the end of this month for all federal employees.
And by mid-November, enforcement measures in place will make sure that everyone is vaccinated.
This is about keeping people safe on the job and in their communities.
And the same goes for the second commitment we made, mandatory vaccination on travel.
By the end of October, everyone 12 or older on a plane or train within Canada should be fully vaccinated.
But by the end of November, if you're 12 or older and want to fly or take the train, you'll have to be fully vaccinated, as will staff.
Testing will no longer be an option before boarding.
If you've done the right thing and gotten vaccinated, you deserve the freedom to be safe from COVID-19.
To have your kids safe from COVID. To get back to the things you love.
And if you haven't gotten your shots yet, but want to travel this winter, let's be clear.
There will only be a few extremely narrow exceptions, like a valid medical condition.
For the vast, vast majority of people, the rules are very simple.
To travel, you've got to be vaccinated.
These travel measures, along with mandatory vaccination for federal employees, are some of the strongest in the world.
Because when it comes to keeping you and your family safe, when it comes to avoiding lockdowns for everyone, this is no time for half measures.
Already, we're delivering on the first of our vaccine commitments, and in the weeks to come, we'll get the job done on a vaccine passport for international travel, we'll be there to foot the bill for provinces and territories that roll out proof of vaccination programs, and we'll introduce legislation to make it a criminal offense to threaten or harass healthcare workers.
So, a COVID Iron Curtain is falling over Canada.
And notice his tone.
Notice the way he approaches this.
As if you're doing some sort of bad thing by not getting vaccinated.
As if you have committed a moral sin by not.
And as if they're doing something to harm people, right?
But the thing is, even though the vaccines do protect people, they don't stop people spreading COVID and they're not foolproof.
But it's this one line that I want to talk about.
If you've done the right thing and gotten vaccinated, you deserve the freedom to be safe from COVID. It's a hell of a statement.
It's insane.
It's mad.
It doesn't make any sense.
No, of course, right?
So if you haven't done the right thing, you don't deserve freedom.
So freedom is not an inalienable right of human beings, according to Justin Trudeau.
Now that's even outside the French conception, the liberal conception of what freedom should be.
They at least think that every citizen should have freedoms.
But this basically means that your freedoms are totally contingent on Justin Trudeau approving of your behaviour.
Why the hell should it be?
That's not how freedom works.
And who bestows this deserve?
Because he says, you deserve freedom to be safe from COVID. Freedom to be safe.
Freedom to be safe.
Freedom to be safe.
Freedom isn't safe.
That's one of the aspects of it that is just commonly accepted in the Western Enlightenment tradition.
Like, I mean, this is, you know, I'd rather be a free man than a safe slave.
That sort of conception.
But who bestows this deserve exactly?
Who gives the authority to Justin Trudeau to tell people what they deserve in his new Soviet-Canada COVID dominion?
The authority seems to derive purely from Justin Trudeau's minority government, and the reason I'm hammering this is that he was not given some sort of overwhelming mandate for radical change.
He seems to be squeaking this through just because he's just about got enough power to do it.
And the thing is, well, freedom to be safe.
Are you safe from COVID if you're fully vaccinated?
Well, not according to the CDC. By the end of September 2021, the CDC reported that 4,500 fully vaccinated Americans, people who've had two vaccinations, have died from COVID-19.
Of course, there were more who'd only had one shot, but never And of these, 86% were people age 65 or older, blah blah blah.
And the Office of National Statistics in England reports something similar.
There have been 38,964 unvaccinated deaths from COVID, with 65,000 non-COVID deaths, and 12,000 single or double-dosed vaccine deaths out of 149 non-COVID deaths.
So the vaccines do reduce one's chances of dying from COVID, but they are not a guarantee of anything, and tens of thousands of people are still dying after being vaccinated and dying from COVID. So this absolute position that Justin Trudeau has set up to create this kind of tyranny where you can't leave the country isn't true.
No, it's not based on scientific reason.
No.
It's not based on any moral arguments that make any sense.
It's not based on anything, really, other than just, I need to justify all the money I've spent on these, and also, I need you to show compliance.
That's the point I think that's really important, because nobody cares about politicians having to justify money being spent.
Politicians are pissing money up the wall all day, every day.
No one cares.
No one cares about that at all.
What this is about is compliance.
This is about making you do what you're supposed to do in order to balance the books for the managerial elite that is currently taking over the world.
So let's have a quick look at Canada's international COVID passports.
This is what OnlineVisa.com have told us, global travel services.
So the Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino, however you pronounce it, has announced that Canada is implementing this vaccine passport for its citizens to facilitate international travel.
Makes it in the long line of countries to adopt such a measure, such as the EU Digital COVID Certificate for all 27 member states of the European Union that came in July 1st.
So the European Union has something like this as well.
The vaccine passport will very likely be digital, will involve a code, it will be standardized, so when Canadians are traveling abroad there will be a hallmark that readily identifies travelers are from Canada.
This is starting to get into Alex Jones territory of I was right, I was right, I was right.
Didn't he campaign on this though?
Possibly.
Like, I remember him talking about these sort of things, like, this is what we need.
Passports are travel.
He failed to get a majority.
No, but that's what I'm thinking about, which is, he campaigned on this very issue.
Like, no one's surprised that he's doing this.
No.
And the thing I disagree with you on this is that, ultimately, people largely do get the governments they deserve.
I suppose they do.
And sure, he didn't get a majority, but there are a hell of a lot of people who went out and voted for that guy after he campaigned on, I'm going to tyrannise you, and they voted for it anyway.
Yeah.
It tells you a lot about Canada, doesn't it?
All glory to the people who campaigned against him.
Maxine Bernier.
He's the only person who is against vaccine passports.
The Conservatives are for it.
They're sort of New Democrats or whatever they call them for it.
The People's Party are the only people really against it.
Exactly.
So the party he also forms a coalition with, they also agree with him on all of this.
So I disagree with the idea he doesn't have some kind of mandate to do this.
He does.
I suppose.
It's the Canadians people's fault for not shutting it down.
Okay, well, the plot was with the Canadian people.
Well, who else is it with?
Fair, fair.
But anyway, this will allow people to easily present their proof of vaccination and things like that.
And it's like, okay, so Papers, Please, is the Iron Curtain view of the Canadian government.
And the Intergovernmental Affairs Minister, Dominic LeBlanc, has suggested that the passport would launch now, basically, once this has all been linked up to the vaccination data from provinces and territories...
We just need to have the safe, secure way to access the data in order to produce this proof of vaccine credential.
So you are now being tracked as to where you go.
All of this government data is going to be linked up into a kind of international database of individuals.
Total International Governmental Surveillance.
Not good.
I just love how the dystopian future books, written in the 50s, couldn't get it as bad as what they're proposing.
No, but I mean, if you want a vision of the future, you can go watch our Brave New World book review.
Or 1984.
Or 1984.
So, this is allowing the international technocrats to gain control of every aspect of society, and in the United States, you can see this mentality at work.
So this is just a statement by Biden, and it's amazing.
It's so revealing, right?
He says, when you see the headlines and reports of mass firings and hundreds of people losing their jobs, look at the biggest story.
United went from 59% of their employees being vaccinated to 99%.
So what?
That means 40% of their workforce has just been fired?
The concern is entirely for the number on the spreadsheet.
That's exactly right.
Nothing to do with the people who have lost their jobs and are now trying to find new ones.
Exactly.
And that is going to get worse before it gets better as well.
But look, the bigger story.
What's the bigger story?
The bigger story is just further abstraction, isn't it?
Further away from reality until we are purely just looking at the spreadsheet.
Look at my numbers.
Look at these numbers.
They're all tallying up.
I'm happy that the numbers are tallying.
But how wise is that?
He's subtracted all of the actual, like, real information about the people who are on the ground suffering now because they've been put out of their jobs and they're going to be in worse conditions than before.
And we can speak to these people.
You can see who these are.
Like, if we go to specifically nurses, because, of course, during a pandemic, the first thing you do is fire a bunch of nurses, which, again, really makes me wonder just how serious they are about this.
So he announced earlier this month a vaccine mandate for healthcare workers, so 17 million healthcare workers in America would be impacted.
And so states including New York, California, Rhode Island, Connecticut set these vaccine mandates, and so hundreds and hundreds of nurses have just been fired, basically.
Which is exactly what you want to do in the middle of a pandemic.
Yeah, if there is such a terrible pandemic going on, why would you do this?
You know, last time, remember when this all started?
Mm-hmm.
Like, what was it, 2020?
Mm-hmm.
And we just fired all the nurses?
Yep.
Like we didn't?
No.
Nope.
ABC News contributor John Brownstein, an epidemiologist and professor at Harvard Medical School, said, we can't afford to lose anybody at this point.
Well, too bad.
And so you've got a bunch of hospitals where you've got, like, you know, North Carolina's Novant Health Hospital system that fired 175 of his workers for failing to get vaccinated.
Another, like, one in Texas, sorry, fired another 153 employees, quit and fired.
Cedar Sinai in Los Angeles, a bunch of them as well.
And it's just like, right, okay, so that's just how that's going to be, is it?
People have probably had COVID as well.
Well, moving on to the next one, that's exactly what is the problem.
Because, of course, as we learned in the United Kingdom, it turned out hospitals were a great vector of transmission for COVID.
When the entire country is shut down and you can go to the hospital or the supermarket, where do you think COVID gets transmitted?
Because you're concentrating people into very small areas.
And so it turned out that it was hospitals and supermarkets that were spreading COVID around the country.
So, okay.
And so this is one nurse that spoke to Fox News.
Jennifer Bridges, a registered nurse who's having a lawsuit against the Houston Methodist Hospital, said that she had been basically pressured into getting the vaccine.
And she said, absolutely not.
I had COVID last summer.
I don't need the vaccine.
And Methodist did not care about that.
It was not an option at all.
So why wouldn't that be an option?
Especially as we saw from the recent Pfizer leaks from Project Veritas, that the Pfizer scientists themselves recognize that you get better protection from COVID. from having COVID.
This person is better protected than anyone who has had a vaccine, and yet they've been fired.
Because they're not complying.
Because they're not complying, exactly.
Doesn't make sense until you put it in the view of gaining control over people's lives.
And the thing is, this is horrible for her.
She's like, we worked so hard last year.
I mean, we were there through thick and thin when we had no help.
It was horrible.
And all these people that are putting forth these rules right now and kicking us to the curb, they weren't there.
They weren't even in the building to be seen for months.
They were staying at home while we were doing all of the work.
But the problem is she didn't tick the vaccinated box on their spreadsheet.
I think that is a great point that doesn't get enough voice, which is that all of these people influencing it were all at home during 2020.
They're miles away.
They're abstracted away from the reality of what's going on, looking at their spreadsheets.
This is awful.
We are so going to regret this.
And of course, that is not to say that there are no risks associated with the vaccines.
As the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System reports, they've had loads and loads of these.
Now, proportionally speaking, compared to the number of vaccine doses that have been given out, it is rare.
That's not debatable.
That's definitely true.
They say that 396 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been given out.
And so, yes, all of these are very, very rare.
But then if you're that one in a million person who gets the thing, that's not much consolation, is it?
No, it's very rare that you died.
It's a risk versus reward gambit.
Exactly.
And if you're in your 60s, it's an obvious choice.
So I'll get the vaccine then.
And if you're 12...
Yeah, exactly.
If you're literally not at risk from COVID and you may have already had it like that nurse...
Why would you take an additional risk?
Or podocarditis among people ages 30 or younger.
They've had 200 reports of Guillain-Barre syndrome.
Thrombosis has had various reports.
Anaphylaxis.
There are loads of small things.
You can go through numbers.
There are loads of small things.
But they report 8,390 deaths from people who have received the vaccine.
So it's not that the vaccines can't kill you, it's just unlikely.
But then, if COVID is even less likely to kill you, then why would you take a risk?
Anyway, moving on to Australia, which has been cut up into pieces because of their lockdowns.
That's how the Washington Post has described it, because state borders have been closed, states and territories have shut their borders with New South Wales, where a Delta variant outbreak began in June and has grown to an average of more than 1,000 cases a day.
Eleven deaths, I think it was.
One was five deaths, one was eleven deaths.
Let me see if I can...
I can't remember.
But very, very few deaths.
Hardly any problems.
Totally irrational.
Quickly, kill the puppies.
Yeah, shoot the puppies.
Closures upended domestic travel and stranded scores of Australians internally, even as vaccination ramp up means that some states and international airports will soon open up, meaning that Sydney could find it easier to fly to Singapore or Los Angeles than to Adelaide.
So they have dismembered the country.
Not good.
Not good if you considered yourselves a nation.
Now you're proportioned out.
So at the border between South Wales and Queensland, you get various residents who are just stuck there, not allowed to travel in.
And because Australia is a massive place, but it's got very few long roads connecting it, it's very easy to bottleneck these things.
And again, this is over hardly any cases.
So Victoria's recorded 1,838 cases, 5 deaths.
New South Wales, 646 cases, 11 deaths.
Quick, burn everything to the ground.
None of this is justified.
I've, of course, got far more sympathy for Australia and the United States because you didn't vote for this.
Yeah.
Whereas in Canada, well...
You voted for this.
He literally campaigned on it during the...
Yeah, I suppose, yeah.
So Victorian MPs who refuse to disclose their vaccination status may be banned from voting and entering Parliament in a motion that's going to be debated in their upper house, so they might vote for it.
Amazing.
Amazing.
Yep.
There are just like random lockdowns being introduced, like a seven day lockdown was introduced in Mildura, while various other places are coming out of lockdowns, because they're just having rolling like random lockdowns when the authorities feel like it, because Australia is just being run by Nazis at this point.
It's being run by a random number machine.
It's just lockdown, no lockdown, like red light or something.
I mean, Victoria's going to make face masks mandatory for all children in grade 3 to 6 in an effort to reduce the spread, things like that.
And then you get to hear from the Australian authorities exactly how they think about this.
3 to 6?
Yeah, grades 3 to 6.
Not 3 to 6 years old.
Nothing's going to stop them.
No, exactly.
Why wouldn't they?
Sorry.
No, no, no.
You're absolutely right.
But anyway, so yeah, we can listen to their governments talking about why they're doing this and the way that they're treating the population who they view as being the enemy.
Let's watch.
So first of all, I can announce that by Friday the 15th of October, every single authorised worker that is on that authorised worker list, whether they be in Melbourne or in regional Victoria, will need to have had at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
That is, if they want to continue working.
If there's people that don't want this mandatory vaccine, how do we manage this?
Well then they won't be going to work.
Merciless.
It's very, very simple.
It's very simple.
We want to open the place up.
I'm not taking lectures on freedom from people who will hold all of us back.
Right?
We want to be free.
We're going to be free.
We're going to be open.
And the key to that is getting these vaccination numbers up and up and up.
You don't have confidence in that 80% number anymore?
No, no, not at all.
We've just got to get as many people vaccinated as possible, and it's not about the ultimate number.
Will there be exemptions?
I know you've just said there's a lot of...
No, there'll be detailed consultations, and I'm not looking to exempt anyone.
I'm in the business of encouraging, and when necessary, through orders signed by the Chief Health Officer mandating people getting vaccinated where they pose a significant risk.
There's too much at stake.
You will need to be double-vaxxed.
As an authorised worker.
Even when after we get to 80% and the authorisations are no longer there, the mandate, the rule, the Chief Health Officer direction will stay in place because cases will still be an issue then.
No, that's not the case.
We're going to have a vaccinated economy and we're going to lock some people out because that is far better than locking everybody down.
That's the decision that we've made.
And I would appeal to people, these vaccines are safe and they work.
So please go and get one.
Dude's a bloody lunatic.
Yeah.
Well, that's what I say.
You know, people...
Like, oh, you could just call them Nazis.
Well, they just really sound like Nazis.
Yeah.
They're targeting a segment of their populations being the problem that are holding the rest back.
I mean, okay, comrade.
Yeah.
Dinah Komaraden.
Yeah.
The Nazis would say.
It's absolutely insane.
And the thing is, I should have got this up, and I forgot to get this up for this segment, but there was one statesman in Australia who had to resign because it turned out that she was being paid literally tens of millions of dollars by Big Pharma.
I am so shocked.
Exactly.
Shock and surprise.
And so I'm in the business of getting all vaccinated.
The numbers don't matter.
Just do it, do it, do it.
And even when we get to this 80% part, we're not going to ease up on this.
Yes, because you're being paid.
And you're a lunatic who wants to install this global fascist bureaucratic state.
I've heard immunity reached.
Don't care.
Yeah, doesn't matter.
And again, like, we're going to have a vaccinated economy, as if that's a thing, and lock some people out.
The entire economy's run on vaccines.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, Pfizer's is.
And again, as the Project Veritas stuff showed, like, they're basically being funded by the vaccine at this point.
But I'm not going to take lectures on freedom.
We're going to lock some people out.
So we have established a portion of the population that we are going to persecute, says the Premier of Victoria, I think that was.
They don't deserve freedom.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
Good luck, folks.
That was awful.
Anyway, speaking of cults, cult of the NHS, because there actually is a cult of the NHS. Yes, there is.
We've been through a lot of these examples before with the dancing nurses being very not good for public relations, let's say, for the NHS, because it makes it look like something absurd.
Also, the clapping in the streets with your pots and pans, all the rest of it, the holy cow that is the NHS. But there's one guy who went further than that and decided to publish an opinion piece on The Guardian that I have to talk about.
Ask not what the NHS can do for us, but what we can do for the NHS. I pledge my life to the glory of the NHS. I will fight and die for the NHS. I will kill as many children as it takes to save the NHS. We will fight them in the wards.
We will fight them in the operating theatres.
We shall never surrender.
What a friggin' lunatic.
I love that website that was like, you could make meme Guardian articles, and they got shut down because people kept making meme ones, and people kept believing they were real.
And then The Guardian got upset that people were thinking they were writing stuff that they weren't.
It was like, yeah, but no one can tell the f***ing difference.
Yeah, exactly.
That's only because you're such a meme anyway.
Anyway, so this is real.
You can go read it in your own time, but let's get into it.
This chap says, we love the National Health Service.
Oh, the dear leader.
God.
It's a pure, unconditional love.
What?
That's his opening line.
There's unconditional love.
It can do no wrong.
What?
Ever.
Most of us have experience of great treatment within the NHS. Are you serious?
Just to be clear, right?
I live in the southwest of England.
Every time I've used the NHS, it's been good service.
I've had some bad stories, but...
I've not had a problem.
A lot of waiting lists.
Let's just put on that one.
Sure, but I don't deify the NHS. To me, it's just a service.
It's something you pay for.
Anyway.
And terrible treatment, too.
Okay, fair enough.
Yet our love for the institution seldom wavers...
What?
Treated badly.
When things go well, we praise the NHS.
But when things go badly, we tend to blame individual hospitals, doctors, or whole groups of doctors, such as GPs, who are getting disgraceful kicking just now.
But it's never the NHS's fault.
Right, so this sounds like he's about to start condemning the NHS as an institution.
You would have thought, but no, he gives you the roles that you can do to save your holy NHS wherever you are.
This is mad.
As a member of the NHS Home Guard.
What I love about this as well is they act as if there was no healthcare in Britain before the National Health Service.
No.
Everyone just died.
You should have plague doctors or something.
I would rub toads on you.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, like, not even that, you know.
There was just nothing.
There was no healthcare at all.
And then the NHS descended from the heavens.
Clement Attlee came out of the mist and was just like, hey, what about state-funded health service?
Yeah, exactly.
Wow.
Thank you, Lord Attlee.
But the thing is, it was exactly like you were saying at the Labour conference.
Your clips was...
The, you know, we owe our lives to the NHS. So if it wasn't for the NHS, none of us would even exist.
No.
Also, we have no purpose.
Yeah, oh yeah, of course.
We have no one to pray to, or to be children for.
God.
Except...
Bring back religion.
Okay, bring it back.
He continues.
So, we venerate the NHS, and howl at governments to fund it better.
Oh yeah, because the NHS funding is not just a straight graph straight upwards.
But as individuals, what can we do to help this institution we profess to love so well?
I love my dog, so I feed and walk him.
I love my football team, so I follow them everywhere.
But what about the NHS? I don't know, you could sacrifice your children to it if you feel like it.
I don't care what you do, mate.
Anyway, he says, yes, I pay my taxes and, during the pandemic, applaud in the street.
Because you're a literal legging.
It literally goes out and he goes, NHS. Yeah.
Why such...
Actual religious rituals, though.
Yes.
Why such was the vigour of my saucepan banging that I broke my favourite wooden spoon.
No way!
No way!
This has to be satire.
Again, it's the satire website, but it's not.
It's real.
I've also, on occasion, slotted coins into charity tins.
Oh wow, the bare minimum.
It's not a charity either.
I mean, it could be.
But now I'm wondering what else it is we should be doing.
I'll tell you what, I know what.
What you could do is go down to the NHS and offer free foot rubs to all the nurses.
No, seriously, they'd probably be thrilled with it.
Yeah, go for it.
You know, and that'd be a good use of your time.
You'd be doing your sacred duty to the NHS. Like I kicked out a bit of a creep.
Sure, but like, you know.
Just comes in like religious robes or whatever.
It's just like, can I please rub your feet?
Literally, yeah.
It's dirty.
No, that's what they used to do to Christ.
Okay.
They'd wash his feet and you can do the same for the nurses.
So, in other words, he says, I ask not what the NHS can do for us, but what we can do for the NHS. He goes on, this thought came to me while I was speaking to medics involved in the COVID vaccine trials I'm taking part in.
And this is what he then goes on to argue.
What you can do is take part in drugs trials.
I suppose that is something you can do for the NHS. There's nothing wrong with drugs, trials, or all the rest of it.
I do find it weirdly creepy that this guy's invoking your religious duty to take part in them, though.
Go and be an experiment for the NHS. Please go and do your religious duty of being a guinea pig.
This is so creepy.
I think that's a religious duty, but okay.
Anyway, he continues to write further down.
Dr.
Suki Belandra is Life Sciences' lead for this alliance and has a very clear answer when I ask her what we, as individuals, can do to help the NHS. Quote, I think?
Right.
I don't work for the NHS, so no.
I'm not going to be involved as...
But literally, come and be our guinea pigs.
Yes.
Which, again, nothing wrong with drug struggles if you want to take part in it.
No, but they usually pay you.
It's meant to be voluntary, paid, and not a service to the dear leader.
Yeah.
And the thing is as well, there are side effects from taking part in drugs trials that are not always good.
Yeah, so he then goes on to say, okay, got it, what else can we do?
And then he lists someone else.
Samantha Bat-Rolden is an intensive care and air ambulance doctor who helps lead an organisation called NHS Million, which aims to create, quote, a super team of a million people who love and cherish the NHS. What's my job?
I'm going to create a cult.
And what is my purpose?
I'm going to get a million-man cult of the NHS together, that's what.
I mean, marching down the street, just, like, hymns about how, I don't know, we will stay together.
Or maybe it's going to be those TikTok songs, and they're going to be all dancing together with their asses out.
God, this is so creepy.
I don't know.
Literally a church.
Yeah.
Get together in congregations.
Oh, God.
It's a million man march, a million simp march.
Anyway, so her first suggestion is the simplest, to remember the NHS staff are human.
But are they not more than human?
They do work for the NHS. They could be angels.
There is a glow around them when you see them.
We all have feelings, emotions, our own issues, sure.
This doesn't seem a lot to ask.
On practical matters, she implores us to get our flu or COVID vaccines.
When driving, to wear seatbelts and not use our phones.
To not call an ambulance unless we really need to.
And always keep our doctor's appointments.
The bureaucrat's mantra.
Always keep your doctor's appointment.
It's like your mother's death.
It's a holy duty.
I mean, as you mentioned, some of those things are illegal anyway.
I don't know what the hell she wants us.
Okay, whatever.
But remember to clean your teeth too, folks.
Yeah.
Anyway, so I think we may...
I mean, you seriously do do that, but like, carry on.
We think we may owe it to the institution to try our best to be healthy.
That's right, you literally live for the NHS. That's it.
The reason I cut sugar out of my diet was just for the NHS, Catlin.
You're such a saviour.
I know.
Thank you.
I'll take the applause now.
Thank you.
Even if we feel we don't owe it to ourselves, but you do owe it to the holy NHS. Don't get thin for yourself.
What, are you living longer?
That might harm the NHS. Quit smoking because of the amount of hospital time you'll take up.
Actually, no.
If you want to help the NHS, you should take up smoking.
Oh, really?
Because if you smoke in the UK, loads of that money goes to the NHS to pay for it.
Also, you die younger, therefore you don't take up hospital beds.
Oh, that's a good point.
Do your duty and light one up.
Yeah, I mean, this leads to such absurdities, as I've seen on some stickers, I think, in Exmouth, actually, which was, do your duty for the NHS, kill yourself, because that's how this logic goes eventually.
Well, that's where it gets to.
Just kill yourself.
So he says, and I'm slightly in disagreement with Batraudan on this.
She gets the last word in anyway.
Quote, the beauty of the NHS is that ultimately you owe us nothing.
Oh, that's right, because we fucking pay for it!
No matter who you are, where you come from, all the illness you have, we will be there.
But to those who don't recognise how special this is, we want to give something back.
Please know how much we appreciate you.
No, but I hate this so much, right?
Okay, it doesn't matter who you are and where you've come from, right?
Because if you're some foreigner who's just turned up, you do owe us something.
You owe us money to pay for the service you're using.
I pay a goddamn extortionate amount of my taxes to the NHS. And so...
Like, you guys owe me!
Literally.
I think they have, like, a health surge or something now.
When you get a visa, you have to pay, like, this amount of money.
It's several grand.
Good.
To stay for a certain period of months or whatever.
Which is the same for you getting health insurance when you go to some rest as well.
But I love how she's, like, giving this version of events, and itch, you could argue, is, uh...
Creepy and weird.
No, but, like, a soft cult.
A soft cult?
In which she's just like, you ask nothing.
But he's like, yeah, I disagree with that.
I think you do everything to the NHS. Literally.
Your entire lives, your existence, your food, your money.
My life's for the NHS. Anyway, so if we move on from this, we've got an example of what he's talking about, where you can stay healthy to save the NHS. Give up meat.
It's alright, I've basically doubled my meat consumption to cancel all of this out.
I know, but also, Carl, you need to cut the meat out of your diet, and that'll make sure you get thinner.
No, it's the opposite, actually.
Yes.
Which is the absurdity in this.
They're just like, no, no, no.
Do the thing that doesn't seem to work, but whatever.
But see, the health and environmental reasons.
Yeah, well, I'm pro-global warming.
So Britons have cut meat consumption by 17% over the last decade, but they need to double these efforts in order to meet the targets for healthy diets and sustainable food production set out by the National Food Strategy earlier this year.
Meat production is a major contributor to global heating and land degradation, while eating lots of red and processed meat has been linked to greater risk of developing cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and certain kinds of cancer.
Hmm.
I have some doubts.
I've seen Tig talking about this as well.
You know the guy I mentioned in the Hitler's socialism video?
He's very suspicious of the, all of a sudden, everyone needs to eat bread all the time.
Rice, carbs, you know, the food period, all that stuff.
I think that's more about control than about people's diets.
Quite possibly.
I mean, I think there's probably something to do with processed meat.
I think there might be something there.
Yeah, that's right.
But when it comes to just like, you know, just, you know, cuts of steak, I think you'd be fine.
We've been eating them for literally thousands of years.
There's also a quote in here I found really funny.
So they looked at a survey of people eating meat and they said, What was quite surprising was that a lot of the literature suggests that people from lower socioeconomic status groups consume more meat.
And more red and processed meat.
Yeah, because hot dogs and things like that, right?
Yeah.
Junk meat.
No surprise whatsoever, you would have thought.
But also just like, people eating meat who are poor can't stand it.
They're not eating prime cuts of steak.
But no, you should give up meat.
You should do literally whatever they tell you because your life is for the Holy NHS. You live for the NHS. You will eat what the NHS tells you.
You will do what the NHS tells you with all of your time, free and otherwise.
And if you don't, then you're a bad citizen.
And I thought we'd go to the Labour conference, as you mentioned, for an example of their position on all of this.
So if we can play the first clip, please.
The pandemic has made us see how fragile all of our health can be and the implications of becoming seriously ill.
We owe our lives to the NHS. Yeah, as you mentioned, literally.
And in the context of that, she's not going on like, oh yeah, well I got COVID, was in the hospital, therefore, you know, I owe some debt to the NHS. No, she wasn't.
I owe my life to the NHS. She was just talking about racial disparities within the NHS. Literally, God.
But, okay, that's the Labour position.
You definitely owe your life to it.
I also thought we'd destroy the myth again of the funding.
This is the graph here.
If we can scroll down to see this.
This is funding in real terms, as I forgot to mention last time.
So this is with inflation taken into account.
And it's a straight line up.
Yep.
And then the little violet increases are extra money for COVID. Yes.
$63 billion in 2020, $22 billion so far in 2021.
And before that, $159 billion, highest it's ever been.
And you can see before about 1997, it was much, much lower, weirdly enough.
I wonder why.
Yeah, and I have some sympathies, though, with people who work at the NHS who complain about their salaries not going up, or the equipment not being there, or so on and so forth, because the money keeps going up, but you guys' situation doesn't seem to get better, and I have some thoughts on that, because we all know about the 70,000 diversity and inclusion hires that Boris hired, and then the 200,000 managers, 200,000 a year.
Yeah, you want to move laterally, so you're going from being a nurse to being an advisor on race and gender.
Yeah, and if we can go forward, this is something I got sent a while back, which is the BAME badges that were being handed out at the NHS. I mean, look at this.
Oh my god.
Literally has the word BAME. Literally put it on your...
Wear the star.
Just wear the star.
I can't get over it.
These were being handed out.
There was a lad who sent me this, and I think his girl worked at the NHS, and she was given this.
She was just like, this is cringe.
I don't want this.
Listen, Untermensch, put it on so we can identify you as a non-white.
But yeah, more of that money that we keep throwing in is not going to where it needs to be.
If we go to the next one here, we have a new story.
Who's just won a £220,000 contract to push gender ideology through the NHS? Stonewall.
Oh, fantastic.
So expect more rainbow badges, rainbow flags, rainbow cupcakes, rainbow stairwells.
Also expect men to be allowed to self-identify into women's hospital wards.
Fantastic.
Wonderful.
Yeah, so we go to the next one here.
This is the article.
This article is fantastic.
I'm going to give full, you know, glory to this person.
So badges of obedience.
Recently, when the government broke an election pledge and announced a tax rise for millions of workers so to provide extra funding for the supposedly cash-strapped NHS and adult social care, Savid Javid promised to be watchful for waste and wokery within the NHS. Wasn't very watchful, was he?
No.
Following Keir Starmer's spine-lacking declaration that you shouldn't say that only women have a cervix, Javid tweeted, total denial of scientific fact, and he wants to run the NHS. Because Javid will literally say anything if he thinks it's popular by the looks of it.
So the Rainbow Badge scheme started out by the Elevina Children Hospital in London.
The intention?
Inclusivity and welcome.
But soon, someone had the bright idea that you shouldn't be able to just wear the Rainbow Badge, you should earn it.
You should earn the badge.
We're going to suck a dick.
Um, not quite.
For example, by, quote, making a pledge on social media about how you will be an effective LGBT plus ally...
You've got to say the Shahada.
Yes.
Or you could write a blog on being an ally or an LGBT plus inclusion.
And she notes here.
Oh, amazing.
Václav Havel described why, in the Soviet block, greengrocers put similar signs of compliance and conformity in their shop windows.
Also, straight out of the Soviet block is another way to earn the rainbow badge.
You can snoop on others.
Oh.
Of course.
By, quote, looking at LGBT plus representation of our applicants, participants, and other people working within the academy.
Amazing.
Define the class traitors.
Then, by June this year, the NHS had decided to take, quote, this vital initiative to the next level.
Bigger badges, perhaps?
No.
Why stop at badges when you can start a new scheme to benchmark and award NHS organisations for their work on LGBT plus inclusion?
By July, the tendering process had started.
The contract value, £220,000, from the purse of the overstretched NHS. The goal?
To build a more systemic approach to LGBT awareness and inclusion within the organisation, and to address issues around monitoring culture, education and training the workforce more consistently.
Sajid, this is the wokery you were supposed to be looking out for.
It's as blatant as it gets.
And I love how she writes here.
My, how the scheme has grown.
Why stop at badges and obedient blogs when you can enforce compulsory education and training on all staff across the NHS? Amazing.
For 200 grand.
Another 200 grand of everyone's national insurance down bloody drain.
If you're in Sajid Javid's constituency, please email this to him and say, Sajid, why are you allowing this to continue?
I wonder.
It is already possible to get an indication of what the scheme will promote.
Some trusts have participated in this trial.
The Queen Elizabeth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust in Kings Lynn was delighted to be selected for the pilot.
They proudly flew the LGBTQ flag to commemorate the holy month of Pride.
The deputy chief executive said Pride Month is just one of the many opportunities we have to celebrate the LGBT community.
They also celebrate a Queen's Hospital LGBTQ +, an allies network.
Again, all non-queers.
We're just allies.
I think gays who don't buy into this as well are allies or something.
Or are they enemies?
Oh, they're class traitors, aren't they?
Yeah, they're literal enemies.
They're counter-revolutionaries.
That's what they are.
Fantastic, because you only need allies for a war.
Mm-hmm.
Anyway, moving on from there.
So the Queen's Hospital got bronze in this award.
They don't know what they didn't do to get...
Not gold!
Not gold or silver.
Some other hospital, I think it was Newcastle, got silver.
Don't know what they did, but whatever.
And no one can get gold, it seems, according to Stonewall.
They're not going to give gold to anyone until they, I don't know, start doing foot rubs.
Yeah, I guess.
So, she talked about the rainbow staircases and the rainbow cupcakes and stuff they did to try and get the bronze.
If we go to the next one here, we have the rainbow stairs.
They're real.
And if we go to the next one, we have the rainbow cakes, which they also did, to try and get their bronze award.
I love it, it's like Scouts or something.
Yeah, this is.
This is just like that.
So let's move on from there, so we keep going.
Just a note on the rainbow fetishisms as well.
I love this.
So this is a pride walk.
A racial pride walk.
What is this?
A zebra crossing?
And instead they do the racial pride flag as the zebra crossing, with black and brown segregated.
And people putting up notices saying, guide dogs can't use these, so please change it back.
Shut up, blind person.
We're celebrating transgender brown people.
We've got better things to do than care about the people who live here.
Anyway, so let's go back to the article because there's some other stuff in here that I thought was funny.
So, 40 further trusts are now participating in this scheme that costs 200 grand.
Expect more rainbow badges, rainbow flags, rainbow cupcakes, and rainbow stairwells.
Also expect men to go into the bathrooms.
Accept Stonewall to defend all of this as well.
Most of all, we should expect the Health Secretary, Savage Javid, to do something about it.
Back in August, he said he would review NHS transgender policies.
Now he has promised to drive out waste and wokery at the Conservative Party conference this week.
He also raised those concerns again.
Now we need not words, but actions.
In your own time, Sajid.
Let's go to the next one.
They're pissing away my money!
He ain't gonna do anything.
I ain't buying this for a minute.
After he tweeted this, which is just like, yes, I stand with Black Lives Matter.
Yeah, I don't think this guy cares at all.
I think he'll say literally anything, because this was when he was out of the cabinet as well.
He was trying to shame the cabinet for being racist.
I thought we'd just end on this as well.
There's one more story that came out just before we were going to leave, which I had to add.
So if we go to the last one here, NHS policy documents compare patients who want to stay on single sex wards to racists and offenders who need trans education to improve their attitude, whistleblower claim.
Oh, they need re-education.
I love that, though.
The NHS has whistleblowers.
What are they whistleblowing on?
Well, the Soviet-style re-education camps.
Exactly.
It's never on treatment.
No.
It's never on like, oh, we don't have this or that.
No, it's always ideology now.
So anyway, that's the cult of the NHS, which we owe our lives to.
And we're forced to pay for.
Anyway, so, for the last one, I wanted to talk about why women want sugar daddies.
This was an article on Unheard by Zoe Strimple, who is a historian of gender and intimacy in modern Britain and a columnist for the Sunday Telegraph and has written a book about this.
And she's got some really interesting things in here that I wanted to talk about.
Before I clear my throat.
After I clear my throat.
Anyway, so she talks about a young man she had lunch with, and his peers were on Instagram swanning it around Europe, and he was staying in America.
And what it was is very attractive women who were swanning it around Europe.
And so, like, they're all his age, you know, either still in college or freshly out of it, she says.
But the reason they, rather than the young man, were able to go yachting off Sardinia while sipping Dom Perignon was because rich older men had hired them to come on a luxury holiday with them.
The job, which was to look nice, look hot, be nice, and be ready to accommodate more without crying a salt, is called sugaring.
So this is essentially being a high-class prostitute.
Sugar daddies, or babies might not want to admit it, this is sex work.
My friend betrayed no sense of surprise at the arrangement.
Such things had, he said, become totally normal in this age group.
So there is a privilege here that young women are able to enjoy, young attractive women are able to enjoy.
So they're at the height of their social power when they're young, and this is being taken advantage of by older men who are buying up this time while young men are forced to go without and have their dating prospects hurt by this opportunity that is only open to the women.
Any thoughts on that?
Probably better for the men.
Well, not really.
Well, they can go out and actually do something with their lives, like once these sugar babies are 10 years older.
Well, yeah, exactly.
What have they got?
Exactly.
But anyway, these arrangements are apparently booming, with increasing number of female students in the UK and the US advertising on these websites.
Unlike traditional sex work, it's popular among young women at elite institutions.
Destined for fine careers, they nonetheless see it as a time-efficient way to offload student debt.
As one 22-year-old sugar baby who read PPE Oxford told me to get a taste of luxury.
In 2019, nearly 1,000 students at Cambridge alone were signed up to Seeking Arrangements, which is apparently a top sugar-broking site in the Anglosphere.
And according to their annual 2020 report, the number of university students in the UK seeking a sugar daddy or sugar mommy increased 36%.
And in total, they have 4 million people signed up to this site.
Most of them being students, with 2.4 million of them being in the US alone.
So this is big.
There are lots of people doing this.
This is a generational thing it's turning into.
So basically, put simply, the cost of university is turning young women into prostitutes.
Women being 60% of university admissions now as well.
So, that's not good, is it?
There's got to be something wrong with that, inherently.
Yeah.
Anyway.
I mean, at least the universities are doing something more useful than what they're doing at the moment.
Well, send your daughter to university.
She'll be turned into a man-hating feminist who makes herself look weird.
Or a prostitute.
Or she'll be a hooker.
Which one's worse?
Well, hang on.
Let's get into it.
Because these are still feminists who hate men.
They're just also hookers at the same time.
So they've got the worst of both worlds.
Yes.
So this is, as you say, symbolic of two profound and rather shocking shifts.
One, that dating with all its meaningless and built-in possibility if things go well of an actual relationship, complete with compromise, give and take, and real intimacy, has imploded.
And two, that feminism has morphed from a movement with ideals, which envisioned, for instance, a socialist world in which women might be free from sex work, into a hard-nosed, misandric, mercenary pragmatism.
So feminism has introduced women to the world as purely material biological working machines, competing against a class of people that they are trained to hate and exploit at the cost of their own sanctity.
Someone has habituated these women into this worldview where they will never make an acceptable wife, girlfriend or mother because they lack the ability to love men.
This is what she's saying.
Molly says, But it's more misandry than feminism.
It's men are scum.
Both parties sort of despise each other.
Aria, 25, a Cornell graduate currently in law school in DC, has been on Seeking Arrangements for over five years.
She, too, despises her clients.
Telling me over a WhatsApp video from a Balkan city, men are nothing.
They're just effing idiots.
The hardest thing about being a sugar baby is pretending to give an S what these older men have to say.
Older men are so archaic and out of it.
What an incredibly hateful and mercenary attitude.
What a world that these people inhabit.
Imagine being in a room with them.
No.
For these women, the sex is the okay bit.
The easy bit.
Why?
Because there's nothing sacred about sex to these women.
They don't care.
It's everywhere.
Look at all the media.
Look at the way that they're taught.
Like, you know, sex work is real work and all this sort of stuff.
There's nothing special about sex.
They've had dozens of bodies by the time they're this age anyway.
That's a great point about the sex work is real work slogan that gets used by the left all the time.
We'll get into that in a minute.
It just means that sex work is just work.
It's just work.
It's just labour like any other.
There's nothing special about it, right?
Aria can, quote, have sex with someone without feeling anything towards them.
I don't even have to like them to have sex with them.
Being a sex worker, that's nothing.
I can always pretend sex is easy.
The sentiment, almost down to the word, is echoed among other sugar babies.
So these people, these women, have lost the ability to even see these men as people, right?
They can't be loved because they are just mechanistic means to materialist ends.
That's what the men are.
These are like, literally, okay, I have to perform a function and then I get paid.
That's all it is.
To be honest, the daddies probably see it that way as well.
No, they don't.
We'll get into that.
No, of course not.
I thought they'd be very mercenary about it.
My wife's dead, so whatever.
Nope.
So she says, this callous terrain was created by 10 years of dating apps and misapplied sex positivity and seems to have rendered physical intimacy a shiny token whose value lies in shifting the needle of power up and down while the relationship of sex to things like romance or affection has been cauterized.
Increasingly, relationships are seen as exchange mechanisms.
And this is what happens when, as an intellectual feminist, you are trained to view the world purely in terms of power dynamics.
Romance, love, affection, relationships themselves, they're all metaphysical things.
They are not measurable, not quantifiable, they're not material, but they are real and they're an important aspect of the human life.
And this has been denied to these women by intersectionality's focus on pure power relations.
This is what's been done to these young women, right?
She says, last week, influential sex podcaster Dan Savage reassured a well-spoken sugar baby who had called his advice show to express worries about telling her new real boyfriend about her arrangement.
Yeah, no kidding, because I bet the boyfriend's going to be like, you do what?
Hang on, how's that allowed?
What?
I thought that would be part of the rules, it'd be like, you know, you get a sugar baby and then that's yours, kind of thing.
No, you're basically renting them for a period of time, like a prostitute.
Oh.
Oh, well that's even worse.
Yes.
Okay.
I thought it'd be like, you know, hire a girlfriend kind of situation.
This is what feminism has done to Generation Z women.
What is the difference between that and prostitution then?
There is nothing.
It's just the class of it.
Like, this is a higher class of prostitute that spends longer with the punter.
Right.
Right?
But anyway, so she's worried about telling her new real boyfriend about this because her boyfriend's going to be like, you, you, what?
You're a high-class hooker.
Yeah, I'm worried that he's not going to like that.
Weird, isn't it?
Anyway, she says, I think all relationships are transactional.
We all pay for it.
We don't always pay for it with money.
We pay with time, affection, diligence, intimacy, care, but if we don't pay in the end...
And the thing is, in a sense, this is true, but it's also very much a thinning out of what a relationship is into just a very, very narrow view of what it is to love someone.
And in fact, this is what we were talking about in the Thick Concepts video that we did.
So you can flip onto that, John, show people what...
So on the website, we've got this Thick Concepts podcast where I go through how concepts, like moral concepts, are many layered.
There are many different layers to the things and they intersect, dare I say, with lots of other aspects of your life.
And this is something that is deeply important to understand, that some words mean multiple things at one time.
And these all have real, like, consequences to how you view the world.
But anyway, if we return to the article, who has hollowed out these emotional capacities?
Well, the answer is, of course, feminists.
She says, in the 70s and 80s, feminist sociology focused on the extra emotional labor women had to do at work, or often on top of full-time jobs at home.
In a twisted reinterpretation of that sociology, nowadays, quote, women my age see all relationships as sexual labor, says Molly.
Why not get paid for it?
Hence the widespread acceptance of OnlyFans.
If it's all just sexual labour, if you're not getting anything emotional out of this, if this isn't about creating a firmer bond with your husband or partner, and if this isn't for your own pleasure as well, and I see a lot of this going around with women on social media going, well, I've never had an orgasm.
A man's never made me an orgasm.
So why would he?
He's got no investment in you.
You just see him as a transaction.
He just sees you as a wet hole.
He doesn't care about you.
But if a man did care about you, he would spend the extra time to make sure you got off as well.
This is what happens when the magic of the love of a relationship is hollowed out by intersectional power-focused feminists and imbued and indoctrinated into a younger generation.
They don't even understand there was something there that has been taken away from them.
That's what's really sad about this.
And it's not like men aren't trained to see the relationships this way as well.
That's what I'm trying to say.
The men are just literally like, pfft, don't care.
But anyway, the problem here is they kind of view themselves and relationships in a kind of meta sense, right?
They look at them as sort of second-order concerns.
As in, yeah, this is what I'm doing, but I'm not really in it while I'm doing it.
I'm detached from that.
I'm looking at the relations between the things.
So, yeah, but step into it.
Don't worry about what's going on over there.
Step into it and live it, you know, as if you're at the front of the roller coaster rather than at the back of the roller coaster.
You know, it doesn't matter how the person in front of you is reacting.
How are you reacting?
How are you enjoying it?
You know, live it for the love of God.
But anyway, so she points out that Twitter is full of women who think men should pay a deposit before they go on a date with them.
Why wouldn't they?
Why wouldn't they?
You view men as just a financial interaction.
Why shouldn't these men be like, well, this is just financial interaction then?
How could they think anything else?
Aria put it more scathingly still.
Men have a dearth of people they can share their feelings with.
Thanks a lot, toxic masculinity.
Nonsense.
Don't take a feminist's advice on what men think.
Anyway, Aria doesn't know what the hell she's talking about, but she says, So if I'm performing all this emotional labour, I have to listen to a man complain for an hour, I should get $500.
So this blithering feminist nonsense has destroyed young people's relationships.
If everyone is a mercenary, nothing is worthy of self-sacrifice.
Nothing is noble.
The mercenary is incapable of nobility.
Can you imagine having a...
There is no concept of a romantic relationship even around that.
Imagine being with your girlfriend or whatever, or your boyfriend, right?
And just after an hour they're complaining, money please.
That's not a relationship.
No.
Not even slightly.
Sex work has been transformed, or rather wishfully squeezed, into the same category as any form of work.
At the same time, all relationships have been reduced to a form of sex work.
To complete the bitter triangulation, these developments are seen as compatible with empowered young womanhood.
Lay24, another brainy American sugar baby who messaged me on Instagram from wherever, speaks the language of ambition.
We want that financial security while we go after our goals.
Everyone sells their body.
Construction workers sell their bodies.
What's different?
Well, I mean, there's two things.
One, honour.
It's honourable to be a construction worker.
It's not dishonourable.
But if you're a purely materialist person and everything is just a financial transaction, what does that mean to you?
Nothing.
You know, there's nothing sacred about this.
There's nothing romantic, enduring.
There's no specialness.
And that was the thing.
Like, a relationship that you have with someone else is not a relationship you can have with anyone else.
You will only ever get that relationship once.
It's unique, it's special, and all of this has been destroyed by feminist materialism.
I also have to ask what goals?
Oh yeah, that's a great question, isn't it?
What goals do you have in your life?
Well, I don't know, Nobel Prize maybe?
Just that 500 bucks, is that it?
Yeah.
Like, what's she going to spend the money on?
Just some clothes?
Yeah.
I'm just thinking, is it the Quebecois family song?
It's like your grandmother had 16 children or whatever and you have none.
And sometimes you wake thinking of a table surrounded by children.
Yeah, your great-grandmother had 16 children, your grandmother had 8, your mother had 2, and you've had none.
You have 12 abortions, and you sit around your table crying at night.
Yeah, stuff like that.
You know, this is just awful.
And that's all I can think of when I'm reading this.
She says it's no coincidence that sugaring has flourished since the Me Too movement because basically the Me Too movement has ruined everything.
The discourse of Me Too pitches heterosexual sex as a barbed power play in which young women must aggressively have or be had.
Intimacy no longer comes naturally.
Boundaries have had to be erected and policed and the status of sexual consent constantly monitored.
Against this backdrop, sugar relationships offer something more tranquil and easy to control.
Something that photographer Alicia Nicole Downing says is much easier to navigate and manage because I'm not emotionally attached.
I feel whole and like my needs are being met.
I feel whole because I'm not emotionally attached.
Who did this to you?
Who took that away from you?
If you feel whole because literally half of your life is gone and all that's been met is your material ones, you have been deprived of more than half of the human experience.
It used to be that people were emotionally attached to each other and so being poor didn't matter.
It didn't matter if you were poor and you had nothing to do because you had each other.
But you're incapable of forming emotional attachments.
You don't even see that emotional attachments are important now.
This is disgusting, what has been done to these young women.
But, all of your relationships will be remotely managed by the social police of political correctness, so I guess that's one fear put to rest.
Anyway, so however lucrative, helpful, or easy the apparently empowered lifestyle is, life as a sugar baby erodes a woman's sense of self.
But if the women are losing something wholesome, the men seem to be gaining, even gobbling it.
I don't know if I agree with that.
But anyway, after all, sugar daddying is about more than renting a hot body.
It's also about getting a friendly sex therapist.
Someone who will listen, even nurture.
Sometimes the men just want friends.
Aria's political lobbyist prefers office gossip to sex, which fades into the background when they're together, taking up less than five minutes of a three-hour session.
So this isn't good for the men either, right?
Because they are pouring their hearts out to people who do not care at all.
They should be pouring their hearts out to people who love them.
Aella, a versatile star and OnlyFans, has described some of her relationships with clients in strikingly therapeutic terms.
These men desperately want to be valued by women.
But the only women they're coming into contact with are women who don't value them at all.
Like, if you died, they'd be like, oh dear, I'll take his wallet and leave.
That's it.
her after talking about his life.
They apparently held each other and sobbed for a while.
I imagine he was doing the sobbing.
Then we took off our clothes and just had skin-to-skin contact, so we lay entwined, hugging.
That was the entire session.
He said he didn't have any other outlet like that.
From then on, he would hire me about once a month, and I would come and see him, and he would just hold me and cry.
Sounds like things aren't going great for those rich men.
You need to be held while you cry.
Sounds like you don't really have much going on in your life you're very happy with, no matter how much money you have.
Weird that I have to keep pointing out that money isn't everything and can't make you happy.
It's your relationships that make you happy, and this is him desperately trying to create a facsimile of something that would resemble a relationship, while someone who hates him holds him while he cries at her because he's just so desperate for human contact.
Some millionaire.
Like, I'm telling you, we are so screwed.
It's the irony of not lost on the girl as well, that this guy's got all the money, and yet he's miserable.
Unbelievably miserable.
Like, the money didn't bring him happiness.
And she's like, okay, if I get the money, I want a channel like this guy.
Yeah, right, exactly.
So anyway, sugar babies repeatedly describe providing the very same service.
It seems easy.
The babies I spoke to, who are his accounts I read, all said the ease was their primary reason for pursuing these arrangements, but in the end the cost is high.
Molly felt despair and had a breakdown after her sugar daddy paid off her student debt.
She is still struggling with the long-term effects of seeing all relationships with men in terms of sexual quid pro quo.
Like Molly, I suspect a generation of sugar babies will eventually discover that money is worth an awful lot, but it's not worth everything.
Exactly.
What happens to these women when they're old and lonely, when they're unable to form relationships with men, unable to love anyone else or probably even themselves, because what is there about herself to love?
What do you do?
I'm a prostitute who prostitutes herself to people I hate.
Why would I love myself if that was my own opinion of myself, right?
So they're lost and alone with a wasted youth and they haven't invested in anyone else or themselves or their futures.
We are so screwed.
Imagine what the consequences of this is going to be in 20 or 30 years' time.
2 million, you said?
4 million.
Sorry, 4 million.
In America and Britain alone.
That's a lot of people.
That's a lot of upwardly mobile, intelligent women who have been ruined by feminism.
And that's just the ones who have chosen to do that as well and have the ability to do that, right?
So that's the hot ones, basically.
Below that, you're going to have a strata of women who are still feminists, who are still ruined by feminism.
The ones you see at protests.
Exactly, but are just not hot enough to become the sugar babies.
You know, and so the entire generation of Generation Z women seem to have been corrupted by intersectionality.
Absolutely disgusting.
I found a song.
Sorry, not mine.
Go ahead.
October, I'd like to make a special announcement.
You see, my girlfriend Francesca used to be very blue-pilled, but I've been giving a little bit of a project to red-pill her, including making her watch the load-seaters.
So, of it being the 8th of October, I'd like to say something to you, sweetie.
My Francesca...
Happy birthday to you.
Happy birthday to you.
Happy birthday.
Happy birthday.
Yep, happy birthday.
I hope you're cringing along with the rest of us.
Let's go to the next one.
Gonna be spending this Thanksgiving Sunday with my parents and three brothers and probably not my sister because she's out of town and probably won't be able to make it.
My mum is making ham and homemade pierogies, so that's going to be awesome.
And it's also my birthday.
I'm turning 27, so looking forward to it.
If you have any questions about the things I'm doing in these time-lapses, or being an electrician, or anything else, I'd be happy to answer them in future videos.
Awesome.
Just love watching stuff getting put together.
I wonder how much does it take to become an electrician just out of interest.
Like, is it a years thing or, like, apprenticeship thing?
It's going to be an apprenticeship for a couple of years.
I assume so.
Yeah.
Let's go to the next one.
What the hell was that?
I wouldn't want to guess.
Not on my watch.
Not on my watch.
No, we're not having this.
We're going to shut you down.
Who even cares, to be honest?
I'm sorry, but this has no bearing on any reasonable aspect of human life in any common place.
I mean, to be fair, if you look at it logically, right?
I'm not even going to engage with it.
But thanks for letting us know.
I'm not blaming you.
Yeah, it's a topic of future investigation.
Thank you and goodbye.
What?
Slowest time in Olympic history by far.
Okay.
Bye.
Sorry, I didn't recognize the song yesterday.
Someone redid it, so it was the Lociers intro.
Right, okay.
What was the song?
It was the Lociers intro.
Oh, right, right.
He didn't get it.
Let's go to the next one.
I don't know how low you guys can hear, but I started a new job.
And this is what I do now.
I'm milling some aluminium three bits.
And in a second, No, no.
So, again, my Facebook feed presents me loads of these, like, milling and...
What's the spinny one?
Oh, I know what you mean.
Lave or something like that, where, you know, they're laving stuff.
And it's just like...
I just watch them.
I don't know why.
Just watch it.
It's like it's making something.
Love it.
But yeah, no.
Good.
Enjoy your job, man.
Initially, I thought he'd made, like, a massive mess on his first day.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It looked like that.
Oh, crap.
Anyway, let's go to the next one.
Carl, I hate to be the one to tell you this, but Red Dead Redemption 2 is probably one of the wokest games I've ever played in my life, which is just bizarre given the time period.
You'd think you could say all you wanted about the oppression of women and minorities without having to resort to modern identity politics, but the creators couldn't help themselves.
If I had to recommend a game, though, I'd recommend Mike Tyson's Punch-Out from the Nintendo Entertainment System.
Just pure quality racism the whole family I didn't know read the red ocean - you had workers a minute.
Oh Oh yeah, you've got a lot of suffragettes and stuff like that.
Yeah, but I thought they were just going to be normal suffragettes.
No, no, they're like modern ones, because the suffragettes were massively racist.
And these ones weren't.
Can't be allowed.
I did love the YouTuber who tied up the suffragette and then tied it to a train track to be run over or something.
Yeah, and then he got suspended and then the next video was deporting a Mexican.
And then the one after that was taking a black guy to the Ku Klux Klan in the game.
I just love how he's like Dan Kilo.
As soon as they do me for the video I'll just go upload it again.
And what?
Let's go to the next one.
During the height of the mask mandate hysteria here in Michigan, I did a little something to cope and bring cheer to other folks.
I put this on instead of wearing the stupid face diaper.
You don't know the power of the dark side.
Yeah, I totally stand that.
Because I saw Peter Hitchens got a gas mask from World War I or something, and he wore that on the train as a protest against how obviously dumb it was.
So I had a gas mask as well, so I was like, I'll do that.
I was kind of upset because the protest thing didn't really take off, but gas masks are expensive, so it was funny.
It's also actually weirdly more comfortable than the face masks.
I can believe it.
Those face masks are bloody uncomfortable.
Because the gas mask just goes around there, so nothing in front of you.
Change the perception of reality to such an extent that no one is able to come to sensible conclusions.
It takes from 15 to 20 years to demoralize a nation, educate one generation of students without being challenged.
People who graduated are now occupying the positions of power.
You are stuck with them.
They are contaminated.
If we are talking about capitalists, they are selling the rope on which they will hang very soon.
The process of demoralization is complete and irreversible.
The next stage is destabilization.
That's so good.
Send me that, John, afterwards, and I'm going to put that on my social medias.
That is so good.
I look forward to next ones as well.
Yeah, and it's so true.
That's the thing.
That's what we were talking about with the women and doing the sugar daddies.
They are the ones who have been demoralized.
They have nothing about themselves that they care about.
It's disgusting.
I hate what's happening.
Hey Lotus Eaters, Tony Day and Little Joan with another legend of the Pines Cold Spring Village in Cape May, New Jersey.
This is a colonial historical town where you've got re-enactors.
You have the Dennisville Inn, which is haunted, built in 1836.
You also have the Spicer Learning House, built in 1820, where the re-enactors saw a woman in colonial garb through a window and took her for an actor.
Turned out she was a ghost.
Get yourself a girl, get yourself a B&B, go on a ghost tour.
That's Halloween weekend in South Jersey.
If I'm ever allowed out of the country again, I'm definitely going to do that.
I was going to ask, because I saw the old-timey dress and people dressing up like that, and I've seen a few of those things in America, but I remember this YouTube channel, it's a Jones Townsend, I'm sure people will get it, but it's a guy who dresses up and acts like it's the 1700s, and just makes food like it was the 1700s, and then films it and shows you the different meals you could make from stuff, and it's always really basic, but it always sounds amazing.
Doesn't have to interact with the black guy, does he?
No, I don't think so.
Good.
Disavow.
Different time period.
Anyway, but I was wondering if there's anything like that around, because you've got that lady there who's dressing up and doing the old-timey stuff, but I'd love to see some old-timey food.
Hmm.
I've been thinking a lot about several semi-related problems facing our society, and I think I may have hit on something interesting that sort of crystallizes a common thread.
It's not a new idea.
It's sort of a new framing that I haven't really heard broken down in this particular way.
You can't just dispose of the elite.
They are not a problem in a vacuum, but they are a problematic solution to a different problem.
You can't get rid of the elite without finding a better solution to the problem they solve.
This, I believe, broadly explains the failures of all unsuccessful revolutions.
Don't eat the rich, obsolete the rich.
I think that's easier said than done, though.
Also, I'm not sure that really makes sense.
There's always an elite.
The point, though, and I think that the dissident right are coming to this conclusion, is that we're supposed to be the new elite and say, yeah, good luck with that.
Just good luck.
It's going to be done.
You're going to get persecuted out of existence before the current elite allow that to happen.
I'm not saying they're wrong or anything, but I just don't see it happening.
Let's go to the next one.
Yeah, lads.
So yesterday you were talking about the co-op boss who wanted to know more about the experience of being black and working for the co-op.
I wonder how long it'll be until he does a program like Secret Millionaire.
But instead of being a millionaire, it's a secret white guy.
He goes to work on the shop floor at co-op with blackface.
At the end of it, he's like, Oi, Terry, I've got a secret I need to tell you.
And Terry's like, Oh, why?
You want to give me a thousand quid?
He's like, No, I'm actually a white guy.
And he takes off his makeup, just tells Terry to get back to work.
I mean, I'd watch it.
Also, I love the idea of the boss lecturing all the white employees in some seminar.
He's segregated off of his special Alaria as well.
He comes back in.
But imagine the makeup's really bad as well.
He's got the Obama face mask.
Like Robert Downey Jr.
in Tropic Thunder.
Yes, that's what I'm thinking.
So Carl was talking about having something physical in your hand when you're making stuff.
These are all of the songs that I have written.
And I am so glad I made this.
I look at this and I feel so good and so proud.
And I could just pull it out and show it to my grandma.
And she took the time to go through it and read all of the text.
And she was clearly really proud.
It feels so good, man.
That's awesome.
Yeah.
That's really awesome.
Super wholesome as well.
Yeah, it is.
Hey guys, long time viewer, first time caller after deciding to upgrade to gold after meeting you guys at a live event.
I wanted to introduce myself by saying that I used to be a wet liberal, but through engagement with content such as your own and Jordan Peterson, I've become a better man.
I'm now 23, I've got a house, a fiancé and a dog.
This is Rex, he's the most base breed you can possibly get a Rhodesian Ridgeback.
He's bred for lion hunting and he's an all-round goodest boy.
Dude, that's awesome.
23-year-old, fiancé in a house already.
Nailing it.
There's something about Rhodesia that's so meanable.
Yeah, there is.
The fact that it keeps coming up in the...
When I was like 15, I used to walk a Rhodesian Ridgeback for like, you know, one of my parents' friends, they had one.
And so they'd pay me like 10 Deutschmarks or something to go walk this.
This dog's massive, absolutely massive.
And it's got a ridge of hair going down its back, which is how I guess the name Ridgeback.
That's obviously a very young one.
But they get really, really big and they're really, really strong.
And when you're 15 years old, when this thing wants to go somewhere, you just go, you know, you're gone with it.
But it was a lovely dog, lovely dog.
And the thing is, it loved people as well as I said.
So it was always like, ah, a person across the road.
Bam, bam, bam.
It's like, no, God damn it.
Because this is a massive dog that's just bowing at you.
It's a terrifying thing if you don't know what it is.
But no, it was a really fun dog.
I was just going to say, there was a guy who came to the, I think it was AA's conference and the live event, and I've been mentioning him on Twitter about Rhodesia as well, and he was the guy who sent me the article, which was in the Rhodesian, some media magazine, where it was like, yeah, Indian girls go off with white boys.
It accidentally mentions that they're having sex across races in the middle of it.
It's like, how's that happening?
Okay, but then the funniest thing is that his parents were both born in Bombay, and then they're in Rhodesia, and they're both white.
That's right.
Their grandparents, also Indian.
No white people there.
But in Rhodesia, they're both white.
And literally, they have a certificate declaring them white.
Officially white.
Yeah, so it's like, Mr.
Rajampaji, white.
I love why he's literally legally white.
He's got the certificate for his dad and his mother.
It's fantastic.
It's really funny.
It's like the legally black thing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, no, no, that happened because it was during some French congress where...
I told you about it.
They went to Paris and it was a congress of the Negro world or something.
And the French delegate was going to let the American black delegate come up and speak.
And he turned to him and went, hang on, you're not black.
And the American delegate was like, well, I'm legally black in America.
I was like...
But this guy actually has a certificate for it as well, from Rhodesian.
Baystate says, the freedom to be safe is an oxymoron, especially in this context.
You may as well have said, you have the freedom to have your life restricted for your own safety.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, you don't have the freedom to be safe.
That's nonsense.
Clayton says, the key to freedom is compliance.
Yep.
Again, another oxymoron.
Kevin says, I love the way all these pillocks completely ignore the thousands of fully vaccinated people who are still getting spreading COVID, even though they haven't been in contact with unvaccinated people.
A negative test makes you safer than being vaccinated and untested.
Correct.
But of course, that doesn't fit the agenda of total control.
Of course not.
And that's what this is about.
It's very clearly about that now.
M1 says, so the COVID state up till now was a half measure.
I don't know what Trudeau's final solution to the COVID question will be.
I forgot to put Jacinda on the end, because we had quite a lot there anyway.
But Jacinda recently, and she looked very broken about this, we're going to have to give up COVID zero as a target?
It's like, yeah?
Lunatic?
Like, did you think there were going to be zero cases in your entire country forever?
You freak!
You know, but it's like, at least there's some breaking of reality through the sunshine through the clouds.
It's like, we can never do that.
Well then don't.
Mel's finally noticed there might be something wrong.
Yeah.
Jacinda declares herself a rightist all of a sudden.
Ross says, As a nurse for the NHS, I'm worried that I'm going to get sacked for not being vaccinated, despite having had COVID twice.
All of these arseholes who haven't worked through it are yet forcing their ideas infuriate us.
We are no longer allowed even our own mugs in the staff room, as they claim they're a COVID risk.
What happened to the evidence-based practice the NHS is supposed to follow?
Well, it's gone to ideology now.
This is going to be the sort of modern version of Lysenkoism, so you need to put the seeds twice as close together and about half a metre down, and then we'll have bumper harvests forever, comrade.
Ryan says, the amount of times I've been able to use the are we the baddies meme when people are in favour of implementing COVID fascism.
Yeah, it's scary, isn't it?
David says, the problem is that Trudeau is in coalition with the NDP who are even further left than he is.
Yes.
But as Callum rightly pointed out, this is what you get Canadians for not voting Maxime Bernier.
You asked for it.
But on the plus side, in like five or ten years' time, when literally Bernier's like the only person who's like, I'm going to abolish all of this when you're ready to not be tyrannised.
Because if you think it ends here, you're wrong.
At least he should do alright.
You can hope.
Dave says, I'm legitimately terrified how many people are okay with this.
Big Brother is one in Canada.
Can we stop calling them Canucks and just call them Cucks?
I've got Canadian friends.
I don't even want to call cucks, but I might.
They could have voted him out, but they didn't.
They deserve what they get, yes.
But again, glory to the people who fought against it.
Oh yeah, yeah, absolute heroes.
heroes of the empire, but you know Canadians Kobe says Castro Jr. is not the one making decisions in Canada, the Canadian branch of the global state is just feeding him lines therefore argues about him having a mandate or not are relevant well that's true, you know Well, the mandate's on the votes.
Yeah, the mandate's from the country to do what it does.
But you are right.
I mean, the global state, as you describe it, is definitely...
The Build Back Better buddies are definitely feeding him his lines.
Sure, but he was fed those lines, went out and campaigned on those lines.
And the Canadians voted for it, yeah.
Yeah.
That's why I don't think that follows him.
Yeah, well, I mean, yeah.
Tiber says, while the powers that be look to track every citizen in the Western world, they will be stopping people from coming from poorer countries who can't or won't implement the same, or will there be an outcry of white supremacy?
Who knows?
I think eventually the entire world will have China's social credit system.
XYZNZE says, Kamal Zhou wants to track all bank transactions of $600.
Really?
Really?
I didn't even hear about that.
So even if you find your under-the-table odd jobs, he wants to control that.
Let's cross this with the fact that they want to phase out cash transactions.
Think about the number of wave pays you make now.
Yeah, I know.
Like, honestly, I hate the way things are going.
It's scary, you know.
Free Will says, with the NHS, how about putting that money into frontline services, not BS ideological instruction, and then people like my father, who was dying of pneumonia, would not have been left alone in a cold room.
Luckily, I got him home before he passed, but whilst many in the NHS do work very hard for their patients, many elderly patients are not treated very well.
Yeah, I imagine there's a kind of ideological bias as well with the NHS, because you hear them saying, well, people are living longer.
Burden on the NHS. Gotta get foreigners to work for the NHS to take care of those people living longer.
You think that doesn't translate down into some kind of unconscious bias among the staff?
You know, if there's unconscious bias in everything else, why not there?
Why not you constantly saying the old people are the burden on the NHS that they are, and therefore that's not going to be an unconscious bias in the staff?
Bollocks.
Well, it is actually part of the Equality Act, so if you want to make the argument that we have anti-racist training for such things, anti-ageism training is also valid.
Clayton says, the Guardian's about to institute NHS Sharia.
Death to those who insult the NHS. I mean, like, that's on the road on their eye.
I mean, like, I just can't.
Late Pi Conference 2022 predictions.
Yeah.
Anon says, the United Kingdom is no longer a nation, but a healthcare service with a nation.
I assume that's Peter Hitchens.
Does sound like him, yeah.
It does sound a lot like him.
But yeah, I think it's a play on Prussia not being a kingdom, but an army with a kingdom or a state.
Matthew Hammond says, you've convinced me that the US should never start universal healthcare outside the Veterans Administration and the Indian Health Service.
Yeah, well, I mean, I didn't have to convince you.
It's just what they're doing, isn't it?
Duffy says, Like, I already pay my arms by force of gun.
Is that not enough?
My tithes are going through the roof.
And yet, no.
I need to become a licensed guinea pig.
Mad, isn't it?
Anyway, Michael says, True story.
I couldn't afford health insurance when I was a broke student in the USA.
I got drunk one night, fell over, dusted myself off, and then some paramedics sprang out of nowhere and pretty much kidnapped me.
They told me if I didn't come with them, they would call the cops on me.
They strapped me down to a stretcher and drove me to a hospital.
When I was there, the doctor looked at me, puzzled, and dismissed me as there was nothing wrong with me, as I was just drunk a couple of weeks later.
The bill came through for the post for $1,000 or so.
Now I'm back living in the UK.
Part of me thinks it's nice knowing that I won't get ripped off for non-necessary medical intervention.
Part of me supports getting rid of the NHS, though, are wasteful and full of overpaid managers and diversity rubbish.
Yeah, the thing is, right, you're going to get ripped off by them either way, is what you're saying.
Because you're definitely getting ripped off by all of the diversity money they're pissing up against the wall.
You still have to pay for all of that.
We're still paying for all of this.
I think the Spectator found a statistic of over 50% of NHS staff now don't work in the front lines at all.
They're all managerial or behind the desks as bureaucrats or blah blah blah.
What was the guy from Yes Minister again?
Jim Hacker.
Yeah.
Jim Hacker.
Get rid of it all.
Fire the administrators, hire some doctors and nurses.
Yes.
And the answer was no.
Well, the answer should be yes.
Ava says, why do women become sugar babies?
Ask Kamala.
Oof.
Vice President.
Most popular vice president.
George says...
Good things from all the guys.
Yeah.
Sugar Danny phenomenon isn't anything new or even something feminism created.
No, no, that's true.
You know, men have had mistresses their whole lives throughout history, blah, blah, blah.
Not saying that's the case.
But your analysis here that sum up the article, Women are Hypergamous, Women Most Effected, is a bit thin as an analysis, I think.
I think there is something more that's going on here.
And it is that feminism has actually destroyed women's ability to love.
That's what is revealed by it.
I thought you were talking about the ideological shift in the women taking part.
Oh yeah, that's what I... But George is trying to say this has always been the case.
I don't think it has at all.
Sugar daddies have and sugar babies have.
But the ideological shift is...
Rich men and mistresses have always been there.
But even then, the mistresses were never historically just a one-dimensional transactional thing.
Right?
Like, there are lots of examples in history of men who have had very romantic and emotional relationships with their mistresses, right?
Because often...
French come to mind.
Exactly.
But often because the wives are political, or something like this, and so they have a mistress for love.
Whereas this is the other way around.
There's no love involved at all.
It's just transactional.
But also the author spreads the usual lies about the first two waves of feminism, not being about man-hating.
Okay, that's fair.
While ironically completely demonising the men at every opportunity in her piece.
Yes, she wasn't as generous to the men as she may have been, but to be honest with you, they're the ones playing into it.
If this market wasn't available for the women to take advantage of...
Then, you know, we're all guilty of this.
Well, not we, but like they.
Adria says, I'm 24, never had a girlfriend, and it seems it's going to be that way for a while.
Oh, well, back to the grindstone, I guess.
Yeah, I guess you have to save up and get yourself your own sugar baby when you're older.
Thanks, feminism.
I know.
Harry says, these brainy American sugar babies sound like sociopaths.
That's because they are.
They've been programmed to be sociopaths.
I love the way it says it.
The emotional side of them has been cauterized by feminism.
That's correct.
Viewing everything as a power relation.
Thomas says, do you think that that current advertisement can be treated as men's molestation?
How can men not be horny when there are boobs and asses everywhere in the media, on billboards, in music videos, etc.?
Yeah, well the culture's so saturated in sex and it's all totally meaningless sex.
That's the thing.
It's just a physical transaction now.
There's nothing special about any of it.
Lord Never Are says, I can confirm that female university students are getting more and more degenerate.
My first was four years ago.
Comparing then and now, they're getting worse fast.
Well, any limiting principles have been removed, haven't they?
Northamptonian Knight says, Modern feminists are atypical of Orwellian doublethink.
Wanting something they've been conditioned to genuinely hate.
Yes.
Benjamin says, in a bifurcated adversarial society, is anyone really surprised that these man-haters have decided to sling gash for cash?
There's an alternative way to get a taste of luxury.
Find a good man and work together to earn it, you mercenary minges.
You know those guys with the signs, they spit them on the cash for gold?
Cash for gash?
But mercenary minges is another very good one.
True.
For the cash for gash.
But they are literally mercenary minges.
If you didn't have this minge, you wouldn't have any of this money.
Oh, mingers.
Minge, yeah.
It's in the vagina.
Mercenary vaginas.
I don't like the word minge.
That's why it's good.
It sounds gross.
Right.
Sordid.
Unclean.
Yeah.
I just love the idea of driving down the...
You know in America, I've seen all this footage of people with the signs.
Yeah.
Driving down, there's just women in skimpy outfits.
Cash for gash.
Yeah, we call them prostitutes.
Yeah.
But I mean, prostitutes don't do that much work.
They don't get little signs and...
Well, no, no.
I mean, I guess now the market's getting more flooded with prostitutes.
Maybe the competition's going to be higher.
But there are probably more people who are paying for it these days.
Noel says, never date a feminist.
It's a waste of time.
You have a good look finding not a feminist.
Alex says, can confirm the sugar daddy nonsense.
I was talking to a deeply confused Danish girl in the pub last night.
After she'd introduced herself to the long list of personal instabilities and neuroses.
I don't know why he didn't just walk away at that point.
I'd commented on the book she was reading.
You won't be able to read this title, The C Word.
She was reading the book, The C Word.
See you next Tuesday.
That's the name of the book.
Why would you read this?
But anyway, we've got chatting.
Eventually she got onto the topic of her sugar daddies in the pub, one of whom was nearby and seemed to object to her talking with me.
The Danish girl opined that there was not a problem with girls being trophies to rich men, especially since sex was not necessarily required.
Yeah, right.
But, I mean, in her defence, it wasn't necessary.
It's obviously a part of it.
But, like, as the woman said, it's like five minutes of a three-hour hanging-out session, you know?
Um...
She started to get animated when I pointed out that she was treating herself as a product, not a person, and that she was degrading herself.
My friend interrupted, cutting off the conversation, probably a good thing, just to state how disturbed she was.
She also talked about ordering men by using her Tinder app for hookups most evenings.
I burst out laughing when she said that.
Don't use Tinder.
I mean, I imagine for you it must have been like being at the zoo or something, talking to this girl, where it's just like, what world are you living in?
Yeah.
But look at that.
Ordering men.
Just like, who knows what her body count is?
She won't even know why that's a bad thing.
I don't have the idea of talking to someone that just lists off all their mental disorders as well.
Like, Twitter bios.
I would just honestly be like, who did this to you?
Just be like, what?
Who told you this was acceptable?
Ask your father.
Ah, suddenly we know what the problem is there.
Anyway, I think we're out of time.
We're out of time?
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