I don't know why I'm laughing, because we were just talking about a spicy subject.
Welcome to the podcast, Let's Eaters, for Thursday the 20th of October.
I am joined by Nick.
Hello.
And we'll be talking about the meltdown of the Conservative Party because of a globalist coup.
Why Black Lives Matter is worse than you expected, and why Madonna can't have some dignity about herself and accept that she is the age of a grandmother at this point.
It's not an important segment, just to preface it, it's just something that keeps coming up in my feed.
I'm just sick of seeing Madonna's weird alien face and so I'm just tired of it.
But before we start, we have some announcements.
So as we're moving on to our second birthday, we have made a new article free, which is "Relationship Wisdom" from Patrice O'Neill.
This is a premium video which is really popular and a really good one because of course Patrice O'Neill being the famous comedian who had opinions.
Yeah, that was a really good video.
Me and Connor did it, and I'm so glad it's free for a bit, because I watched it the other day.
It's actually really good.
Michael did a brilliant job of the editing, and I was impressed with how well we remembered some of Patricia's bits, and he edits it together.
Definitely watch it.
Yeah.
We've got some news.
We've had a strike on YouTube, because we...
The Democrats put out one of their campaign adverts saying, if the Republicans take over, the KKK will be rampaging through the streets.
And Callum and I were like, no, they won't.
I mean, the KKK were a Democrat institution.
And also, that's just not going to happen.
And YouTube were like, well, that was a spicy advert, wasn't it?
It's like, our bloody advert.
We were criticizing it.
And they're like, yeah, no, you're getting a strike for that whack.
We've appealed it, but, you know, probably be off YouTube for a week.
So instead, come and follow us on Rumble, because we've started streaming to Rumble now, where we've got like 35,000 subscribers, which I didn't realize Rumble was getting that big.
So go there and give us a few Rumbles, lads.
And, right, let's get into it.
There appears to be something of a globalist coup taking place in the Conservative Party, which is why the whole thing is melting down, and it seems to be based around the untenable economic position that Britain is trapped in.
And so we're going to talk about how embarrassing and pathetic the Conservative Party has become.
But before we begin, you might be sick of politics, right?
Because that's all anyone ever talks about these days.
It's just politics constantly, non-stop, live update of Liz Truss not lasting longer than a lettuce and things like this.
So if you want to talk about something that's not politics, there's this series I've been doing on LotusEast.com of Bigfoot accounts, historical accounts from Bigfoot.
Weirdly popular.
More views than your Patrice O'Neill one.
Really?
Yeah.
How dare you.
I know, I don't know why.
We can't compete with Bigfoot.
Exactly.
Everyone loves Bigfoot.
Exactly.
And obviously Callum is a Bigfoot denier, which is disgusting.
But, jokes aside though, like, basically there are loads of historical accounts where, like, my favourite one is this one salmon cannery in Alaska that disbanded, this entire town disbanded, because they said they're being terrorised by a Bigfoot, which means that someone in a head office somewhere has got this report from, like, 50 different people, being like, yeah, we're leaving.
It's like, what do you mean you're leaving?
That's where we get a salmon from.
Yeah, there's a Bigfoot terrorising.
It's like, I can't write that down, can I? It's just really funny.
So anyway...
I believe it.
Isn't he just like very deep in woodland and that's where no one can find him?
I don't know.
Yeah, I've watched some stuff on it.
He's real.
I've watched some YouTube videos and I've become radicalized on the Bigfoot question.
Anyway, so let's begin on the 15th of October where Kwasi Kwarteng got yeeted.
I didn't think his budget was a terrible idea, to be honest, but then I'm no economist.
No, well it was the communication of the budget, wasn't it, which we may get onto, but rather than necessarily...
The measures themselves weren't that radical if you looked at them compared to Labour.
We're going to reduce your tax by 1%.
Yeah, and the 45p rate was the same as new labor and blah, blah, blah.
It was more the lack of OBR scrutiny.
They didn't tell anyone what they were going to do, and the markets freaked out.
And Dominic Cummings' theory on quieting is that he's perhaps the highest IQ in Parliament, but the laziest MP. So that may explain, he was certainly very cavalier about it.
He was like, here you go, here's the budget.
Toby Young's very generous explanation was, because of the Queen's death, they didn't properly preface it.
But that's quite generous.
Most people just think they just didn't bother.
Yeah, but again, I looked at it and I thought, well, it doesn't look terrible to me, but as we get an explanation from The Economist, if you can get to the next one, sorry, it's on MSN, but it's The Guardian.
They've got this really long live updates of markets freaking out, and as I said, I'm no economist, but we're talking about the full-scale liquidation event for pension funds and things like this.
And the Bank of England having to buy its own bonds back from Goldman Sachs, so Goldman Sachs skims off a profit.
And like I said, I'm no economist, so I'm just going to defer to Dan Tubbs' wisdom on this, where he's like, look, basically, the economy is in a position of checkmate, and the Prime Minister is the king.
So it doesn't matter who you put in this position, they're still in the position of checkmate.
So really, there's nothing they can actually do that won't essentially liquidise the entire board position.
Yeah.
Well, there's the very weak macro situation, isn't there?
There's the post-lockdown situation, the war, some people say Brexit.
So there's lots of pressures already, and then they come in with this budget, and they freaked out.
Yeah, the liability-driven investors, they were at risk of crashing the pension funds.
Bank of England said we're going to do $5 billion a day.
We'll buy $5 billion a day, if necessary, for 13 days, which stabilizes things a little bit.
But then if you go back to Bank of England, people blame Andrew Bailey, their head, Raising interest rates way higher.
Everyone says, what was he doing?
That's pretty much across the board.
I have no idea.
The thing I do know is that we've been in a global economic crisis since the beginning of the Ukrainian war, and if not before, because of the lockdowns.
And so everyone's looking at Liz Truss, the Not the brightest bulb on the tree.
And acting like she's entirely responsible for all of this.
It's like, look, I don't really like Liz Truss, but let's be fair, she didn't cause this.
This has been a position that we've been in for a little while now, since before her.
But anyway, moving on, lots of Conservative MPs decided that actually...
The time is right to ask Liz Trust to stand down.
Jamie Wallace was one that just came out on the...
If you can get to the next one, sorry.
Oh, no, this is it.
No, no, sorry, that is it.
He put out his statement going, oh, enough is enough.
It's like, really?
Enough is enough of what?
What are you talking about?
You've been backstabbing prime ministers for ages now.
Not the most reputable guy in the party.
I think it's fair to say.
But that's...
Who is?
Yeah, but he had the thing where he fled the scene of an accident dressed in women's clothes, didn't he?
Did he?
Yeah, allegedly.
I don't know what we can say, but yeah, he's the worst.
I just retweeted it.
I said absolute dregs of the party and got several hundred likes just for that because we don't listen to what Jamie Wallace says about anything.
But there are 12 Conservative MPs now who have called for her to quit.
Lots of them.
Matthew Offord was the 12th.
And George Osborne thinks that she'll be gone by Christmas, saying that there will be a way for the party to remove her from Downing Street.
Except there actually isn't a way for the party to remove her down the street.
Yeah, she gave Starmer a good line there.
And when you're losing to Starmer at PMQs, you know you're doing badly because he's not the best at it.
But he did say there's going to be a book about the Prime Minister's time in office out by Christmas.
He goes, is that the title or the blue state?
Oh, he got dunked on by Keir Starmer, of all people.
But no, as the Scotsman here point out, the current Conservative Party rules forbid another confidence ballot for another 11 months.
And the general election is not due until 2024.
And so basically the 1922 committee of the Conservative Party are like, look, we either have to live with trust if we can't pressure to resign, or we have to change the rules.
And if you're just going to change rules arbitrarily, then what's the point in having these bloody rules?
Yeah, and I think she's meeting with them pretty much as we speak.
So by the time we finish this, she might be out.
Yes, this might age very badly.
Or really well.
Yeah, but the events are moving very swiftly.
Although, can I just point out, Dominic Cummings is always saying you can actually just change Prime Minister in an afternoon.
He says that the Constitution means you don't even have to be party leader, so you can actually just put someone in if you want, even though it seems like a farce.
But they have to ask her to resign.
She has to resign.
And she's not a quitter.
She's a fighter, not a quitter.
Until she apologises and then puts Jeremy Hunt in charge.
But anyway, so the point is they're kind of stuck with her until they can bully her into leaving.
And so the question is, well, who would replace her?
And people, Mail on Sunday, were speculating Mrs May.
Theresa May coming back.
I mean, I forget that Theresa May was in power for three years.
I know, it's bonkers, isn't it?
Yeah, it's wild.
Because it feels like a dream, like, And Boris was only a little bit longer than her.
That's what you forget.
Yeah.
So, I mean, the Conservatives really are...
You know, there's lots of bloody knives in the Conservative Party at the moment.
So anyway, Liz Truss fired Quasi-Quartain because...
He had put out what I thought was a good budget because it was going to lower my taxes.
And Jeremy Hunt came out and said, don't worry everyone, don't worry, we're not going to lower your taxes.
That would be crazy.
That would be ridiculous.
How dare we lower taxes?
And just reversed everything Truss put forward.
And then Truss had to come out and apologise, which was deeply humiliating, in my opinion.
Which is why she looks like she's a mouldy potato at this point.
Can I just say, I call Jeremy Hunt the right honourable member for Beijing because he loves China so much.
Well, he is married to a Chinese woman.
He does appear to be in the pocket of China.
And he was complaining that we didn't do lockdowns like China did.
Exactly.
We covered this on a segment the other day.
But you are completely correct.
He is a Chinese asset.
You're right about the apology as well.
Everyone's like, are you going to apologise?
Prime Minister, are you going to apologise?
It's like, you're thinking, don't apologise.
Then she does apologise.
Then Starmer at PMQ just goes, the Prime Minister's apology means nothing.
What?
And why do it?
Exactly.
So anyway, I do want to accept responsibility and say sorry for mistakes that have been made.
I don't even know what the mistake was, really.
If lowering taxes is now the mistake, I think the system itself is the problem, actually.
But like I said, I'm not an economist.
I don't know.
So let's go to the polls.
So between the 6th and 7th of October, it wasn't looking good.
Labour on 55%, Conservatives on 23%.
Really not good, actually.
By the 14th, this had essentially become the same, 52-22.
And then by the 16th, we got one poll from Redfield Wilton that was just, I mean, nearly three times there.
Like four points off being three times the difference.
It's just...
Yeah, it's very disturbing.
There was one the other day saying Labour could get a 364 seat majority and the SNP would become the official opposition.
How about that?
That was in the mail.
That's mainstream news.
This actually translates into a voting projection of 468 for Labour with one seat, one Conservative MP. Just Jacob Rees-Mogg.
Yeah, exactly.
The grandfather of Somerset.
But that's the thing, isn't it?
It's like, this is just so radically bad.
In fact, if we go to the next one, let's have a quick look at how the polls have been for the Conservatives over the past couple of years, right?
So in 2019, the Conservatives and the Labour are at their lowest ebb, with reform being on 26%, and Labour on 20%, and the Tories on 18%.
So the Reform Party was actually the most popular party in the country, a very brief window of time because, of course, of Brexit.
And then in July 2019, Boris becomes the Prime Minister, and you can see the Conservatives start going back up because the Conservative base are fundamentally Brexiteers.
And so by April 2020, the Tories are on 53% because Boris is doing his daily COVID briefings and things like that.
And by May 2021, this is stabilised somewhat.
So Labour's on 30, Tories on 45.
Everything's looking quite good.
And then it's just downhill slide from there to now, yeah, the Tories being on about 22%, Labour on about 52%, reform on 5%.
Mad, isn't it?
From a simple perspective of winning, they were five points down or something when they got rid of Boris.
Nadine Doris was saying, now look, they're virtually obliterated.
So you sort of blame them for getting rid of Boris, which was stupid.
But you also blame Boris for just being an idiot and abandoning his mandate to listen to his girlfriend, basically.
Yes.
Well, Boris, I mean, I don't even know why they got rid of Boris.
Because what, in the globalist agenda, wasn't he on board with?
Hmm.
I know what you mean.
He was net zero.
He was lockdowns.
Yeah.
Weird, wasn't it?
He was attending all these conferences, and he was all for everything.
So I don't know, you know.
Do you not believe it was the moral stuff, like the crisp pinch of the party gate and all that stuff?
Sure, but that's just the media trying to play kingmaker, isn't it?
Yeah, yeah.
Being like, ooh, don't you care about party gate?
And the British public, when polled, they didn't care about party gate at all.
No.
He was mad to get rid of Boris because he was this so-called unity candidate and he was the only one that had the mandate and followed sort of what Dominic Cummings calls the vote-leave agenda, the sort of pro-Brexit, big pro-NHS, pro-science and technology, but a bit tough on immigration.
But he didn't actually follow that.
He started off with it.
He was absolutely terrible on immigration.
Yeah, exactly.
Anyway, so, come the 19th of October, it turns out that the Conservative Party members who voted for Liz Truss now actually want her gone.
She only retains support from 38% of the party membership, which is similar to Johnson when he left, which was 36% of the party membership.
So, the Conservative Party doesn't really know what it wants, and we're all watching...
I can't swear...
I don't want to swear, but, like, it's just a complete cluster F or S show.
It's just like...
They don't know what they are, and they don't know what they want, and they don't know how to get out of the absolute mire that they find themselves in.
So, Swallow Braveman got sacked because Liz Truss is like, yeah, we need to start growing that line by importing more foreigners.
And...
One thing I think is important to know is when the Conservatives go down in the polls, that doesn't actually mean that the Labour Party are going up in the estimation of voters.
That doesn't mean they're increasing their vote share because it's represented as a percentage.
But what happens is Conservative Party voters just say, I'm just not going to vote.
I'm just not going to vote for them.
We've covered this before.
And so there are lots of Conservative voters who are just like, nope, I'm off.
I'm doing something else.
I'm not going to pay attention to your terrible politics because you're rubbish.
And so...
Braveman, anyway, got sacked for, apparently, over net migration, according to Darren Grimes.
Yeah.
The ostensible reason was she sent an official email from a private account, but no one believed that reason.
And then it's just, how much was it her opposition to trust on immigration, or how much was it the revenge of the blob?
Exactly.
That's exactly right, because she was, of course, saying, well, hang on a second, can't we get the flights for Rwanda on the front of the Telegraph?
That's my dream.
I mean, that was my dream too, actually.
Did you read her resignation like that?
No.
It was like a passive-aggressive masterpiece.
It was like, we can't just go on pretending we haven't made mistakes.
We need to admit to them.
And then she's allegedly talking about the email.
She goes, I've made a mistake.
I accept responsibility.
I resign.
And it's like, we're still talking about the email, Swallow, because she's basically telling Truss what she should be doing.
Yeah, and Theo Usherwood, a correspondent for LBC. Sorry, you didn't have to get these up, John, because I added them at the last minute, but it's okay.
Apparently, the commitment in the 2019 Conservative Manifesto to cut net migration has been ditched.
Not that that happened, so, you know, at least they're not lying to us now, I guess, is something.
Wow.
They say now, the PM's spokesman will only say we have a commitment to control migration.
Yeah, but you controlled it right the way up to a million people last year.
Trust wants it as part of her growth plan that's now abandoned anyway, but we're keeping the immigration.
We got rid of all the growth parts of the mini-budget, except we're going to keep the immigration up.
It's ridiculous.
Worst of everything.
Exactly.
It's the worst of everything, which is why conservative supporters are just like, well, I'm not voting for this.
If you do something useful, I might vote for you.
Anyway, so moving on, we've got Tory MPs denouncing her in the Commons, of course, which is nice.
William Ragg.
I've never actually heard of this guy, but he was worried that he'd lose the whip if he voted as he wished.
It's like, well, maybe you should.
But anyway, there came then a vote on the fracking ban, because the Labour Party were, I believe, it was the Labour Party, or someone was proposing, that there'd be a ban on fracking.
And this was widely viewed as a vote of confidence in Liz Truss, as in if the Conservatives didn't vote with the government against the ban on fracking, Then that would show that the party has lost trust in trust.
And so this, they think, is a trap that's been set by Labour, which has got a bunch of targeted adverts ready to go, because, ooh, fracking's scary.
I mean, I don't know anything about fracking.
I don't care, really.
And in the wake of this, it has been carnage, we are told.
Just absolute carnage.
Again, we hear reports that MPs are variously describing tonight's voting process as total carnage, utter madness, with Cabinet Minister Jacob Rees-Mogg reportedly shouting, it's not a confidence vote, and Tory colleagues apparently telling him to F off.
Did you hear that you allegedly manhandled people?
Yeah, I didn't hear it was actually Mog, but I heard that people were manhandled into the...
Apparently it was Mog himself.
Really?
Who was physically manhandling Tory MPs into the vote.
I didn't know he had it in him.
I'm impressed.
Yeah, he doesn't look the type, right?
But one rival MP, Ian Murray, says, I've never seen scenes like it at the entrance to a voting lobby.
Tories on open warfare, Jostling and Riesmog shouting at his colleagues, whips screaming at Tories.
They are done and should call a general election.
Two Tory whips dragging people in.
Shocking.
Yeah, and the chief whip resigned, Wendy Morton, and her deputy, although now I think she's unresigned.
I don't know what the latest is.
But yeah, it was that bad.
Apparently she was just shouting it in a corridor because they hadn't told her that someone briefed that we're going to remove this three-line whip, but no one had told her.
So apparently she just immediately resigned and was shouting, I'm no longer the chief whip.
Just pure chaos.
Yeah, absolute chaos.
But despite all of this chaos, the ban on fracking was rejected by the Conservatives, 230 to 326, which is actually good, and would actually show that, you know, 326 of the Conservative MPs voted for trust there.
If this is a vote of confidence, which, you know, Jacob Rees-Mogg is denying, government majority of 96...
Hmm.
That's pretty good.
Like...
How many of them have to be manhandled?
That's what we don't know.
Well, at least a couple, we hear.
But, you know, the point is, like, all of this seems to be kind of surface level, right?
Like, all this chaos.
Like, weirdly, they're still doing what they're supposed to do.
But anyway, so the optics of all of this is quite bad.
And as...
Conservative MP Charles Walker decided to go on the BBC and tell everyone he's livid about all of this, don't you know?
So let's watch him inform us.
I really shouldn't say this, but I hope all those people that put Liz Truss in number 10, I hope it was worth it.
I hope it was worth it for the ministerial red box.
I hope it was worth it to sit around the cabinet table, because the damage they have done to our party is extraordinary.
Sorry, it's very difficult to convey.
You look just furious about this.
I am.
I've had enough.
I've had enough of talentless people putting their tick in the right box, not because it's in the national interest, but because it's in their own personal interest.
To achieve ministerial position.
And I know I speak for hundreds of backbenchers who right now are worrying for their constituents all the time but now worrying about their own personal circumstances because there is nothing as ex, as an ex-MP. And a lot of my colleagues are wondering, as many of their constituents are wondering, how they're going to pay their mortgages if this all comes to an end soon.
Oh no, when someone think of the MP's mortgages, I'm so concerned.
But as you can see, I think what is important there is talentless people, as in the membership, voted for other talentless people, as in trusts and her government, to put them in charge.
And there's a sort of certain, what I'll just call the globalist faction of the Conservative Party, that is not having any of this and is tearing the party apart, as Steve Baker points out.
The point I'm making is that they have not got an option to remove the Prime Minister.
All they're doing at the moment is just destroying our capacity to govern.
And all they're going to do is find themselves standing in the rubble.
The better thing to do is to try and deal with this privately.
And I know that's a big ask, but it's the only path that leads to success.
I mean, he's right.
None of this is external to the Conservative Party.
There is a faction within the Conservative Party that is sabotaging what we'll call the...
I don't want to call them based or populist or anything like that.
The Brexit wing, the sort of...
Even now?
Do we even go that far?
The not lunatic leftist side?
The slightly less awful Tories.
Yes.
And speaking of slightly less awful, just as a quick thing on Steve Baker, let's play this.
You are a prominent figure, I think it's fair to say, on the right of the party.
You're now a government minister.
And the government that you serve in has two supporters of Rishi Sunak and two of the great officers of state, and Jeremy Hunt and now Grant Shapps, and Liz Truss as prime minister enacting Rishi Sunak's policies.
How do you feel about that?
I'm very comfortable.
Look, the Conservative Party's always been a coalition of conservatives and classical liberals like me.
I mean, I like to think of myself as being on the free market left, but that's for another occasion.
But the point is, our party is a broad church.
Yeah.
The free market left?
Well, Christian and Gurimuthi called him something else last night.
Did you see that?
Exactly.
So, Steve, you're trying to genuflect the people who hate you?
I should say, I do like Steve.
I've met him.
He's a nice guy and he will reply to a message and stuff.
As a person, I like him.
I'm going to message him.
Offensively.
As a person, I like him, but he can be a bit woke.
He had this thing, the 2022 group, which is basically like, hey, let's all be diverse and have identity politics in the Conservative Party.
You're like, Steve, what are you doing, bro?
Yeah.
Well, I agree he's on the left.
But that's the thing.
If the interviewer's like, so you're on the right of the party, he's like, well, I'm a leftist.
It's like, oh, that tells you everything about the Conservative Party, doesn't it?
There is no right of the Conservative Party.
Anyway, so this is interesting.
Sorry, I know this is going on, but there's a lot that's been happening.
At the beginning of October, William Hague was like, look, the MPs themselves, not the party members, should decide on the leader of the Conservative Party.
William Hague being a former leader of the Conservative Party.
Because, of course, Truss was made Prime Minister after winning over 160,000 party members this summer.
But Sunak was the choice of the MPs.
And, of course, Sunak being a globalist was the choice of the MPs.
Truss doesn't appear to be.
And so this is kind of elite internationalists versus dunce-like populists.
They all started saying the same thing.
We can't go to the members.
And Tobias Elwood was agreeing.
We can't go to the members.
And there was even an anonymous Tory MP who said, we can go to the members when we're in opposition because then it doesn't really matter.
It's like saying the quiet part out loud.
We'll go to them when it's not important.
It's that whole thing.
If voting made any difference, they wouldn't let you do it.
But that's the thing.
This very much looks like a globalist coup.
In fact, there was a good clip on GB News about this.
Let's watch this first.
There's talk of a triumvirate of people taking over.
I received a text message over the weekend.
It said simply this, Rishi P.M., Hunt, CHX, Chancellor.
Right.
And Penny, Penny Mordaunt, Foreign Secretary.
That's all I got.
And they said it's a done deal.
That applies.
A coup.
When Suella Braveman told me there was a coup coming against Liz Truss two weeks ago on my podcast, two weeks ago today at the party conference, everyone thought she was joking.
Well, they're not thinking that now.
It does seem like there's an attempt to move Liz Truss on.
Yeah.
I saw that.
Christopher Hope in the Telegraph.
Shocking.
Yeah.
I mean, Penny Mordent wrote a book that had a foreword written by Bill Gates.
Bill Gates, yeah.
Yeah.
So, you know...
And she's a full-on gender ideology woo-woo person.
That's why she fell behind in the leadership contest.
Everyone found out how woke she was.
And she had to come out and declare herself to have defined woman.
Yes, and she's got an ultra-woke activist twin brother.
They're just both really woke together.
She should be in the Liberal Democrats.
Yes.
Jeremy Hunt is, of course, controlled by China, and Rishi Sunak is just a Keynesian neoliberal.
Who the membership explicitly rejected because he lost.
Which is why we need to take it away from the membership, because the membership keep voting for things that the global agenda doesn't want.
Anyway, so there are people who are like, what are we going to do?
And of course, the Reform Party keeps coming up, which, I mean, why not?
They seem to make a point.
The official Prime Minister is a puppet.
Yeah, that's Liv's trust.
Puppet of Jeremy Hunt.
The actual Prime Minister is a globalist Remainer.
Yep, that's Hunt.
And the wannabe Prime Minister is a woke rejoiner.
That's Starmer.
Yep.
I mean, they're not wrong that these people are terrible and we need an alternative.
And so Farage, the looming specter of Nigel Farage, haunts this country.
Spectre of Brexit.
Let's play this.
If we're going to replace this Conservative Party, if we're going to build a new centre-right movement that believes in the individual as opposed to the big corporate that believes in national security as opposed to just-in-time supply chains and all of those things, what is clear to me is I absolutely could not do that on my own.
It would need several major figures to recognise the Conservative Party is dead.
Now, whether Osweiler Braverman or others like that have got the courage to strike out and do this, I don't know.
When the SDP launched in 81, and goodness me, they came within a whisker in 83 of replacing the Labour Party.
They didn't, but they got Tony Blair, so they kind of won.
There were four major former cabinet ministers that set that up.
So we need to replace the Conservative Party.
We need something that is sincere, that is genuine, that is not, as they all are now, centre ground social democrats.
I can't do that on my own, but if there are other major figures that want this to happen, if there are major media organisations that want this to happen, then it can, but I can't do it on my own.
What do you think of that?
I've got so much to say.
One thing that's quite funny is Neil Hamilton said to me at GB News, hey, do you want to be deputy leader of UKIP? And I felt like he wasn't 100% joking and now Rebecca Jane has just taken it over and she's at GB News all the time.
That sort of confirms to me it was actually on the table.
But what I think is it's complicated.
It's like, Should we destroy the Conservative Party?
If so, what replaces it, right?
Because we might like an actual Conservative Party, but then again, would that win enough votes?
Would it have to be some sort of Dominic Cummings vote-leave type party where it's pro-big NHS, but tough on immigration, but big on science and technology?
Because the party we might want, would it win enough votes?
Or do we want a kind of pressure group party?
Do we want reform and all these ones to get together, much like UKIP used to be, much like the Brexit party did, and act as a kind of pressure group to make sure the Tories are in line, which has happened before.
I mean, you've obviously been involved with it.
The other question is, will we end up with proportional representation?
Faraj in a video the other day at a Bitcoin conference was banking on PR.
He was saying if Labor get in-- - That's how he won his elections.
That's how he won his elections. - Yeah, he was saying if we had PR, he would do a lot better.
But will PR actually happen?
Because if Labour actually just win this massive majority, they won't need to make a total issue.
What inclination would they have to put it in?
Right, exactly.
So, I don't know.
What's your solution?
I think the Conservative Party has obviously been co-opted by globalist interests, by people who aren't in any way conservative.
I mean, they're conservative in the way that in, like, 20 years we'll be like, yeah, well, I mean, you know, Steve Baker will be there being like, well, the Conservative Party's always been in a big tent from the neo-Leninists to the genderqueer furries.
I mean, there's always been a big tent of conservatism.
And that'll be Steve Baker in 20 years.
So it's like...
Get rid of it.
You know, have a party that actually cares about this country and is not a globalist party.
Like, explicitly.
It's this conquest like second law.
You know, anything that's not, you know, explicitly right-wing just drifts to the left over time.
So, okay, we've found something that is explicitly right-wing.
And Farage is there going, okay, well, look, swell a brave man.
And people like Braveman, Bain Nock, basically all of the diversity in the Conservative Party is allowed to actually be conservative.
and they're actually pretty good actually and so if a bunch of them did come over to the reform party Farage heads it up and then if the conservative voters because people always complain about democracy but at the end of the day it is all these quiet conservative voters who are like yeah I'm not voting conservative so you can get slashed in the next election but the attendance will be like you know 40% or 50% or something you know it'd be really low attendance
If you can get all of these actual Conservatives to come out and actually vote for something they want, like they did with Boris, then you can win, and you can have a staggering win.
And so maybe we could get Farage in a bloody seat.
Maybe he can win South Thanet.
Yeah, interesting.
I mean, of course, like you say, the members really like Kemi, and the party made sure she couldn't get through, but the members like her.
And she described herself at the conference as the child of Roger Scruton and Thomas Sowell.
So pretty base.
She's great.
Yeah.
So that would be good.
But like you say, it might have to be a new...
Then again, she's got a role in this party, so maybe she'll just...
Well, that's the thing.
Defect.
If a slew, like four or five high-profile ones, who've actually got a moral commitment to something that the Conservative base actually wants, which is kind of the Brexiteer worldview, then they could do well.
At one point, like I said, the Reform Party was polling at 26%.
Yeah.
There's nothing to stop that coming back.
It's just it requires an attitude to kind of sweep through the voting base and be reflected in the polling.
Like I said, it happened before, so...
I was thinking of it, because we have a lot of US lists, and I was thinking of it in terms of the US. They have the coastal elites, both Democrat, then the big main part of the country is Republican.
But for a while they had nothing to represent them because the Republican Party was a bunch of establishment shills until they got Trump.
And we never had a Trump, but what we had Brexit was our Trump.
So we have Brexit, and that proves that there's a thirst for that.
So we need a Brexit party, not the Brexit party necessarily, but a Brexit party.
Do you agree?
Oh yeah, totally.
And this is why Farage is, you know, like, if, if, if, and that's the, he's putting out feelers there.
Look, conservatives, and as Politics UK have pointed out, well, there are a bunch, there have been a bunch of Tory councillors that have already defected to reform.
If not now, then when?
If not when there's an open globalist coup to take over this country against the will of the people and the membership of the Conservative Party, then when are you going to start fighting back about it?
You're right.
This is the time.
Peter Hitchens has wanted it for 20 years.
Now, finally, Farage is saying the same.
And people say, well, these small parties haven't done well.
But Hitchens' point is always, they can't prosper until the Conservative Party is destroyed.
And that's where...
And look at the lowest ebb you're possibly at now.
Yeah.
Come on.
Although I was speaking to Toby Young yesterday on my podcast, and he was saying it was just a bit of a punt to say that we'll get rid of this proven successful party and just have this new start-up party.
It's a complete gamble, isn't it?
It's a total gamble, but if you can get a bunch of, you know, it can start attracting a centre of gravity.
But anyway, breaking news, Liz Truss is going to resign as Prime Minister after meeting with the 1922 Committee.
So there we go.
What's the point?
Let's do a new segment.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
We're going to get Penny Morden as Home Secretary.
We're going to get Jeremy Hunt as Chancellor.
And we are going to be ruled by Klaus Schwab forever.
And then, meanwhile, in the Caribbean, we've got...
If you can go to the last one, John.
Somewhere.
Hasta la vista, baby.
Before Boris comes back, they should get moving and get a bunch of defections and get something else going.
He needs to just shove her out the way and just runs back.
But anyway, let's move on.
Okay.
Alright, so I thought we'd do a segment called BLM is even worse than I thought.
So you probably already thought Black Lives Matter were a pretty bad organisation, pretty much totally malevolent, but that's what I thought.
But it turns out they're even worse than that somehow.
There's something about an epic grift I kind of respect.
Like this level of grifting is just beyond my own comprehension, really.
Okay, well this is all based on Candace Owens' new film and we'll get into it, but do you want to plug the premium again?
John seems to be showing me it, so go and watch our premium podcast with Patrice O'Neill, but we're releasing it free, a freemium for a week.
It's coming up to our second birthday, so we thought we'd put out some of the stuff that people liked, just so everyone can see it.
Yes, and young Connor worked very hard on this video, and we did a good job, so go and watch it, and it's free.
Alright, so let's do this.
Candace Owens has a new film out called The Greatest Lie Ever Sold with The Daily Wire, and it's an interesting movie.
I've watched it, and there are sort of two main strands to it.
One is the kind of, what was George Floyd actually like, busting myths around his death, and then the other strand is BLM are even worse as an organisation than we thought.
So they're the kind of two strands I picked up on.
And one interesting thing straight away in the film was that no one even came to get George Floyd's stuff.
We see his roommates.
And, you know, there's all this rhetoric from the family about Floyd, but no one even came to his house to pick up his stuff and say, hey, or see how he lived.
Right.
So let's have a look at the clip.
You know, to meet with the president and the vice president and for them to show their concerns to our family and for them to actually give an ear to our concerns and how we feel on the situation.
I have pleased you.
Because that's what he wanted me to do.
I ain't never met a sister.
I ain't never met a brother.
None of them ever came here.
Floyd's been living in this house.
We've been in this house going on six years, am I right?
But for the four years, no.
He just...
They never wanted his stuff.
I mean, I would think that if my son...
They didn't even come and look at where the man lived at.
They never came to see where Floyd lived.
They never came to get none of his stuff.
Nothing.
So, seemed a little bit weird.
They didn't seem to have an interest in actually where he lived.
And at the end, Candace ends up, spoiler alert, she ends up paying a year of her back rent for George Floyd and getting the car move that they'd just left outside his house.
Yeah.
And it's quite a sympathetic portrayal in a way.
And, um...
Because Floyd, he was sort of like trying to be a good guy in that house that we saw where he lived.
He was reading his Bible.
He was like, I want to do better and be a good guy.
But he was like a multiple felon, but he didn't bring any of that back home, so they didn't know about it.
But he was a multiple felon.
And this is not me saying it.
It's all in the film, guys, because people are being sued, so I'm very keen to avoid being sued.
It's all alleged.
Well, the multiple felon thing is proven, but...
So Candace, why did she get involved in it?
It was this particular crime where Floyd and some other people dressed up as if they were from the water department, and they came to someone's house, then they got in, pistol whipped someone, and this all happened to a woman in front of her seven-year-old son.
Jesus!
Yeah, and her seven-year-old son identified George Floyd, and this was what motivated Candace to do the film as she explains.
You imagine how absolutely traumatized that child was.
And then you think to yourself, just a few years later, and you will have children that are wearing his shirt, referring to him as a hero, as some sort of savior, right?
That's wrong.
It's not right at all.
And it was this case that I couldn't stay quiet on, and I had to make that video.
Yeah, so she just couldn't take this.
This criminal, and you're saying he's like a saint, just rubbed her the wrong way.
And they go through and they look at Derek Chauvin as well, of course.
He's in prison, 23 hours a day in solitary confinement.
I think he got moved to a medium security, but still not great.
His mum wouldn't talk, which she thought was a mistake.
She's like, you're letting the media control the narrative.
But everyone sort of said, you know, Chauvin was like a nice guy, no history of violence or racism.
And then, of course, she goes into...
George Floyd's death.
No, you know he's shouting out Mama during the...
Yeah, that's his girlfriend.
But it's actually his girlfriend.
Yeah, so you'll know a lot of this.
This is why we'll get into...
Callum covered this extensively.
Oh, really?
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
It's all right.
We'll skip through some of this bit then.
And we'll get to the more...
I'm just running through it in case people don't know.
And, you know, the body cam makes it look like the knee's more on the shoulder blade than the neck.
He was saying that I can't breathe when he was in the car.
And he said, put me on the floor.
Yeah.
And all that kind of stuff.
Three times the dangerous level of fentanyl in his blood or something.
Yes.
And this is where you don't want to get sued.
Pills in his mouth.
Those chewed up pills found in the car with DNA, his DNA. Yeah.
And this is where we don't get sued, because the family is suing Ye for saying all this on a podcast.
But in the film, it says that the chief medical examiner calls it a, you know, he points out this is a potentially fatal level of fentanyl.
And this guy, so have you covered this criminologist?
Or do you want to play the clip?
This guy, Dr.
Ron Martinelli.
It was ages ago we covered it.
And he explains it.
So we'll just play this one quickly.
The autopsy is generally broken down by, number one, how the body is presented.
And, you know, what is height and weight is.
And then it goes through the neurological system, exterior trauma, interior trauma.
But I go right to the cardiovascular system.
And there I look at the heart weight.
How much does the heart weigh?
And then I take a look for key words.
I compare the heart weight to the height and weight of the individual.
To what the toxicology report says, and I look for certain words or evidence of something called cardiomegaly.
Cardiomegaly means an enlarged heart.
If a person has cardiomegaly, their chances of sudden cardiac arrest Rise by 150 times.
Not 150%.
150 times.
That is significant.
And then we have the whole issue of the police.
We get the idea.
He's in bad shape.
Yeah, and there was another guy in the car who pleaded the fifth because he had ongoing criminal charges himself.
Only the drug dealer.
Yeah, yeah.
So, and that same guy there, Dr.
Ron Martin, he goes into how there was no evidence of neck trauma and all this kind of thing.
But we all know, it was trial by media, but I'm not making any claims.
They're all in the film.
But the part that was interesting to me was, I go into it thinking I hate BLM. It's one of the worst things ever.
But I was like, oh, it's even worse than I thought because...
They attacked this guy, Fraser Ross, of the Kitson store.
His store was looted for over $400,000.
But then Chrissy Teigen said she would bail the rioters out.
Then he replied, thanks Chrissy, I've just had my sword destroyed.
Her reply was to say, well no one shopped there in 10 years anyway.
Not really the point.
But also obviously not true if he's got $400,000 worth of goods.
Yes, just a sort of sassy diss and like, shut up.
Then he basically got called racist for complaining.
And this blogger, who's a mate of Chrissy Teigen's, essentially did a shakedown on him where she said, you better apologise and I'll remove all the posts.
If you apologise, they all posted about him.
She said, I'll remove them, but you have to apologise.
And then he ended up calling her up.
And let's just play the clip and see how it went.
So this blogger, just to recap, has essentially jumped in on behalf of Chrissy Teigen.
Right.
So we got on the phone for 53 minutes, and most of the conversation was, you need to apologize to Chrissy Teigen.
I said, I'm not apologizing to her.
There's no reason to apologize to Chrissy Teigen.
But what are you looking for?
Are you looking for money?
I was worried that how aggressive they were, and the looting was still approaching.
And my main store, the value in that store is much greater than the store that got looted.
Right, so because she's publicly posted your store as being owned by a racist...
Right, right.
...concerned that they're going to come loot you some more.
Who was the check written out to?
To Act Blue.
To Act Blue.
Right, which is BLM. Black Lives Matter.
Right.
So she was basically saying, if you make a donation to Black Lives Matter...
I'll take down the post.
Okay.
And then after she got out the conversation with me, she texted me from a phone number, and if you don't make the donation, I'm going to repost this.
I'm going to make another post, an unfortunate post that won't be good.
So ActBlue is the Democrat Party's funding mechanism, one of them.
Right.
So you can go on the website, and the money goes to the Democrat Party.
Isn't that just a straightforward shake, guys?
Yeah, it is.
I'll call you, I'll take that on the post, but if not, she even just reminds me, like, hey, I've got your, you know, remember to give me the receipt, make sure you pay that check, otherwise there's another post coming.
This is literally a mafia.
Why text that?
Have I texted that?
Yeah.
Nice store you have.
It's a shame you've got looted again.
Yeah, if anything happened.
Nice store.
I mean, literally.
And Candace goes on to say that, you know, there was an interesting 2.3 million donation she sort of raises some questions about.
And it's just, she just, you know, gets to the heart of all this.
There's a great sort of Michael Moore style bit where she just goes to the house.
So, you know, Patrice Cullors, the co-founder.
One of them, yeah.
You know all about it, don't you?
Yeah, the trained Marxist, yeah.
Yeah, and she lives in a very white neighbourhood, Candice pointed out.
It was quite ironic.
She's like, don't they feel unsafe here?
There's so many white people.
They're meant to be white supremacists.
And she just goes to her house and it's quite funny.
So we may as well play this bit as well.
We're just trying to figure out if this house is actually being used for black people in a creative space at all.
And it doesn't seem that way.
What happened this morning is not safety.
It's not...
What I deserve is not what any of us deserve.
I can't see how this purchase helped black lives anywhere in America.
I can't even find a black life on the property.
The dog's not even black.
So, what's that?
So they're literally trying to destroy us.
They're trying to destroy me.
They're trying to destroy the movement.
And I really just need us to be stronger.
Thank you, sir.
Have a great day.
Oh, no, there's some tears there.
There you go.
Well done.
We covered...
Callum found...
They were at one of the mansions they purchased, sat in the garden, right?
They had this amazing spread.
It looks like the most posh, upper-class dinner spread.
And they're sat there clinking champagne glasses and essentially talking about how they got away with this giant grift.
Really?
Yeah.
That's hilarious.
I'm not even joking.
I'll get Callum to send it to you afterwards.
It's amazing.
It's like the end of a cartoon.
Yeah, yeah.
No, no.
It's like the end of a heist movie, right?
Right, right.
And then she's like, oh, yeah, they're coming through.
Yeah, well, you don't deserve any of this.
Yeah, I love that.
Cry-bullying from Colors and just good editing from the Daily Wire.
Candice just...
It's very hilarious about Candice just relentlessly showing up at your door.
Hello!
Just being really polite, but just sort of relentless.
Just wondering if there are any black people here.
Yeah, yeah.
No?
Oh, what a shock.
Just a sort of polite Terminator.
She's so funny.
But...
Yeah, and anyway, I just thought I'd give you a little bit of the movie.
The too long didn't read of the movie, so that's what it's mainly about.
And her conclusion at the end, of course, and she goes to this Malcolm X quote throughout about how the media can make the innocent look guilty and vice versa.
And Candace's conclusion is just that the media is the enemy and BLM is a fraud.
Let's have a look at the clip.
The media is your enemy.
That is what I will say.
And I believe that from the bottom of my heart after examining every corner of this case.
The media scared the jury.
The media scared even politicians into agreeing in lockstep.
There's no other way to examine the media but to recognize that they were the enemy.
And they're not going to stop being the enemy.
People were deluded, and people were lied to, and people should be angry.
People should be rightfully angry that they acted the part of a marketing agency for what, in my opinion, is a complete fraud.
A fraudulent organization that uses black emotion and black pain to extort dollars from white America.
That's what happened.
You were all lied to.
That's the truth.
That is the truth as well, actually.
We've gone through Black Lives Matter's finances and just tens of millions of dollars just not spent on anything of any note.
It's like it's all on properties and consulting fees and stuff like this.
And it's just huge, huge amounts of money that have just been put around to a bunch of Patrice Cullors and that sort of cabal of people.
And it's gone straight into their bank accounts.
This has not gone to improving communities or anything like that.
I think they raised something like 90 billion overall, like all of the different sort of chapters and the whole thing.
Something like 90 billion dollars.
It's such a staggering amount of money.
It's such a colossal growth.
That's why I'm just like, you know what?
I'm not even mad.
I didn't pay any money.
Yeah, I mean, you just reminded me, Sharon Osbourne donated some absurd amount and she said she regretted it, didn't she?
Was it 900,000 or 800k here it says?
Amazing.
Incredible, isn't it?
Yeah, and it's, like you say, anyway, they did a long cope thread that got heavily ratioed.
It's got like 1,400 likes there, but it was like 5,000 replies.
Today, or someday soon, Candace Owens will release a purported documentary, inverted commas, that will attempt to further divide black people and uplift white supremacy.
That's right, that was exactly Candace's pitch.
You know what, Daily Wire guys, I want to further uplift white supremacy by dividing black people.
Ben Shapiro's like, that's great, Candace.
We'll do that.
That was exactly the pitch.
Totally fair characterisation.
I love the tactic of putting documentary in inverted commas.
People always have done it to me and they're like, comedian.
It's like, I've done 11 years of professional comedy.
This doesn't really faze me.
I don't even think it's a particularly great thing, but it is literally what my job was.
Documentary is what it was.
Today Candace Owens will release a documentary that's called Birth of a Nation.
They go on, from what we've seen, we know there will be lies, hateful speech, racism, homophobia, and or transphobia, get the and or in there, embedded in her work, which BLM does not condone.
We've looked at it, and we just know there's a series of bad buzzwords, guys, so don't watch it.
We don't like this in the story.
They're not even trying.
There's Islamophobia.
There's not that one in there.
Delete that.
Where's the Islamophobia?
And she kicks a puppy, I think.
And then they go on.
Abolitionism.
She stole some food from orphans.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And or kittens.
We don't know.
I like this one as well.
Abolitionism is one of the greatest social movements in history.
Can we see this one?
So, yeah, thanks to Abraham Lincoln and the English.
Oh, Candace Owens, pro-slavery!
Yeah, yeah.
But I love this, like, what's that got to do with you?
Abolitionism.
Like, yeah, yeah, that was the English and Abraham Lincoln.
Why are you taking credit for that?
Abolitionism.
Even if there's, like, nothing to do with them, it's like, as if Candace Owens is like, yeah, so I'm thinking about those plantations.
I'm thinking we as black people made a mistake here.
You know, no one thinks, no one on earth thinks that Candace Owens is opposed to abolitionism.
Right, right, right.
She's a slaver.
I know, and it's a tough sell.
I know, it's just a non-sequitur.
Abolitionism is one of the greatest social movements in history.
I mean, true, but what's it doing in your tweet?
We will not be deterred, intimidated, or distracted from that work, both from internal and external attempts to tear us down.
They think they're abolishing slavery, do they?
And just, it's hilarious.
And they go, we will continue to ensure the narratives around the globe are as abolitionist and black as possible in the capital letters.
And we will continue to create structures that allow for the fullness of black joy to be experienced.
So you guys grifted everyone and now you've been caught.
That's what this is saying to me.
Because this is just like airy, remote, abstract rhetoric that has nothing to do with your tax returns.
Yes, in advance of the film coming out as well.
We've heard of bad films coming out, and black joy and transphobia.
Yeah, we needed this money.
Everything was fine.
Don't be a homophobe.
Yeah, yeah.
Also, you're pro-slavery.
Yeah, yeah.
The responses absolutely just nail it.
I mean, and they get far more likes, of course.
Jake Shields, trying to scam more money from your followers.
Obviously.
3,800 likes.
Constantly saying, yeah, those mansions are going to buy themselves, bro.
Exactly.
Yeah, you don't even have to try that hard.
They've lost at this point, really, the public opinion.
And a nice one from Ash here.
She says, we knew before Candice put this out, she only highlighted where your donations went.
By the way, how does bondage, sex workers and drag queens help the black community?
Good question.
4,500 likes.
Typical homophobe.
Yeah.
Transphobe as well.
And Candice simply concludes...
Sex negative turf.
That's what Ash is.
Yeah, and kind of puts it very simply, I broke Black Lives Matter.
And she did, really.
She broke them.
And if you're still not convinced after all this that BLM are awful, I don't know if you've covered this, Kyle, but there's a BLM activist called Nandini Balial.
Do you know this?
No, no.
I don't mean Leo Kers.
I've gone to Leo Kers' tweet because this original tweet was deleted.
Yeah.
Now, there was a Chicago woman who was accused of murdering her landlord, 65-year-old white landlord, this black woman, allegedly murdered her landlord and dismembered her and the body was found in the freezer.
And this Black Lives Matter actor, who has Black Lives Matter, has her bio, Nandini Balial, wrote, where's the bail fund I want to donate?
It's either a very dark joke or it's absolute insanity and she wants to donate to this killer.
Some masks are coming off here.
Alleged killer.
Let's not get sued.
Yeah, and that's who these people are.
And by the way, if you weren't convinced that this woman was dodgy enough for allegedly dismembering her landlord, she also, last year, the same woman was accused of trying to kill someone else by stuffing an inhaler down her throat and singing, I'm a doctor, I can kill you.
Singing it.
Seems like a lunatic.
There he is at the top.
Singing it, I mean, that's even more insane than just saying it.
Some weird supervillain.
And this is the person that a Black Lives Matter activist wants to bail out.
Well, I mean, you know, George Floyd is starting to look somewhat of a saint at this point, isn't he?
True.
He was alright.
He tried his best, you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, you know.
Like, really not as bad as some of their masters.
No, and it's not really about, like, dunking on George Floyd after his death.
It really is about how disgusting the organisation is.
And I think we've covered that.
I mean, to be honest with you, like, from what I've seen with George Floyd, it looks like, towards the end of his life, he was trying to improve himself as a person.
So he had a bad youth.
There's a clip of him going around being like, man, these kids today, everything's going downhill sharp.
So he doesn't seem like an evil guy.
No, he was reading his Bible and doing his best.
And maybe this is why Candace paid a year of his back rent, got his car towed away.
She's actually put her money where her mouth is.
But no, she's an evil slave or transphobe or something.
Bringing back the plantations, one documentary at a time.
There you go.
So that's the Candace Owens bit.
Okay, so let's talk about something that isn't important in any way, shape, or form, but keeps coming across my timeline, and so I'm absolutely sick of it.
Madonna, just please stop.
Please have some dignity.
You're 64 years old.
It's gross.
So anyway, before we begin, Madonna is actually making a great...
Case study for Louise Perry's The Cases Against the Sexual Revolution, which you can go and watch as our book club on lowseas.com if you want to support us and find out why this was actually bad for women.
And again, Madonna is a fantastic example of this.
And so let's begin with Madonna.
She was a famous pop star when I was young, a long time ago.
I mean, you know, she was, wasn't she?
Oh, as big as it gets.
Yeah.
She was born in 1958.
What?
She's 64.
Like, she was born during segregation.
That's how old she is.
Wow.
And people have been pointing out, well, she isn't exactly aging gracefully.
We can go to the next one.
You can just scroll down this slowly.
If you scroll down, you can see her when she's, like, young and in her 20s.
Go down, go down.
So there she is, this young woman, you know, normal looking.
Keep going, keep going.
You know, this is, like, in the 80s, 1984.
And then, you know, still, like, 1985.
And then this is 1985, where she's not wearing makeup.
And keep going.
This is 1986.
Keep going.
Keep going.
So she looks normal.
And then we get to like the 90s, 1993, where she's looking a bit older because she is a little bit older.
It's fine.
Still quite dignified.
You know, this is 1996.
Nothing weird, you know, in the 90s.
She's just, you know, gracefully aging.
And then she starts getting a bit weird.
And then she starts doing a Jennifer Aniston look in 2000.
And then she starts...
Becoming a woman in her 40s.
And this starts getting weird.
This is her in 2013.
This is her in, scroll down a little bit, I can't remember what year this is, 2020.
And you'll notice that she...
I mean, she's literally 63.
And then this one...
And now this is from her TikTok in 2022.
This is someone who is not coping with ageing well.
Right.
Right.
And so a lot of her fans are like, what's she doing?
Why is she doing this to herself?
It must be hard when you've been like the hottest woman in the world.
She was kind of the ultimate.
Yeah.
To go from that, that's going to make you a bit mental already.
And then to lose that.
I mean, imagine how that feels.
I noticed Brittany the other day.
I think it was just yesterday.
40 years old and posting nude photos.
Yeah.
Did you see the caption?
She tweeted.
She said, I have a premiere for a movie this week.
The legislative act of my bleep.
Word for a cat.
So it's like...
What?
With a naked photo?
With Britney Spears, I think she's probably abused.
So I think she probably has mental issues when she was abused.
I don't know.
That's my speculation.
But with Madonna, it just seems to be a person who is unwilling to proceed into the next stage of a woman's life.
Because you're attractive and successful when you're young.
And then as you grow older, you...
Move into a more sort of matronly and eventually grandmotherly sort of place.
And once you're 64, actually spending all of your money trying to get rid of the wrinkles on your face, probably a waste of time and effort.
And it makes you look like a weird alien, which is what her fans are saying.
I mean, just look at that picture.
Would you know that was Madonna if I didn't tell you?
It looks more like Marilyn Manson, doesn't it?
You know, that's exactly what a fan said!
The new look had fans comparing her to Marilyn Manson.
That's not flattering, is it?
It's not ideal.
By the way, did you see that Lorraine Kelly said that she looked like a boiled egg?
Which is fair.
Yeah.
Do you know what's funny about that, though, is that the other day Lorraine Kelly also tweeted at Eddie Izzard, you go, girl.
So it's like, some consistency, please, Lorraine, because it's like, Madonna looks terrible, Eddie Izzard's a beautiful woman.
Really?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, one of them is right.
But obviously this is because of the massive amounts of plastic surgery she's had.
This article just details from loads of different plastic surgeons just...
I don't know anything about plastic surgery.
I can't see myself ever getting plastic surgery.
I'm just going to grow old and sag.
I'm fine with it.
I think the most I'll probably do is get hair implants because I don't have a cold head.
Yeah, I might need them.
Leo went to Turkey.
You could probably afford the good stuff.
I'd have to go to Turkey.
I'm worried about it.
The good ones still cost quite a lot of money.
You'll be okay.
I don't know how much money you think I've got.
I've checked those Sargon numbers.
Yeah, I don't know.
I thought you would...
I don't know, mate.
But, more than me.
But, if you live in the...
I don't know if I'm allowed to say where you live, but it's not as expensive as London, let's say that.
Exactly!
So you've made money and you're saving it.
Let me give the Madonna argument though, Carl.
You're someone who's made money from your mind.
She's made it mainly off being hot, so it's more like you losing your brain, isn't it?
It's more like if you became thick.
Sure, but she's a talented singer, you know.
It's obviously been a lot of work to get to the position she's in, so I don't begrudge her any of that.
It's just that she's just in this weird, gross place where she's unable to mature.
Yeah, I'm just saying that the comparison with you, you were saying, oh, I might just get hairpaws.
Maybe it's not a fair comparison.
The comparison to you would be, what if you lost your brain power?
You see what I mean?
Where she's lost her looks.
I don't know if I'd go that far if I've had any.
But anyway, they detail that she's had loads of Botox injections and face pulling back and her cheeks are swollen.
It's just like all this work.
It's like, oh my god.
Just to pretend that you're not 64, everyone can look up your Wikipedia bio.
Everyone knows how old you are.
But then she's out doing really gross things.
There's one thing, like, you know, acting like, you know, trying to look like you're younger.
But then trying to act like you're in your 20s is just gross.
If you want to scroll down, there's some, like, would you tongue Madonna?
Not for me, thanks.
It's just gross.
I mean, so she was doing a video with some 26-year-old rapper woman.
And so it's like, you're nearly three times her age.
Yeah.
That's a me too, isn't it?
I don't know, but it's really...
Who's got the power in this relationship?
It's just...
Gross.
Other scenes showed her twerking and grinding in a crowded club before posing in a very racy position.
Like...
Grandma, please, no.
But Madonna has children.
Yeah.
It's just, Granny, why are you doing this?
Granny, you look like a boiled egg.
Granny, you look like Marilyn Manson.
Grandma, can we please just sit down and watch cartoons?
You know, like, what are you doing?
It's just disgusting.
This is absolutely disgusting.
And then Madonna was like, yeah, so I'm gay?
Yeah.
What was this video?
I never understood this one.
Well, this is her coming out.
And the thing is, you can see the sort of, like, bingo wings flapping.
Oh, if I miss, I'm gay.
That's like a kind of weird OCD thing.
That's like that meme.
You've seen that meme of, like, a man lifting...
The girl's, like, thinking, like, oh, she's thinking about it.
What's he thinking?
And he's just trying to lift, going, if I fail this, I'm gay.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's just like, if I miss, I'm gay.
But she, you know, without all of the makeup and the correct lighting, she's starting to look a bit more age there, right?
Look on the arms.
Everything about this is totally bonkers.
Yes.
And the thing is, nobody was impressed either.
It was quite a widespread meme of just people being like, no one cares.
You know, I'm gay now.
Okay, let's get you to bed.
You know, like, what time at night do you think Madonna goes to bed?
64?
I get to bed at about 10 o'clock.
Yeah, I stay up very late because I work late.
But Madonna, you imagine she's just got a weird schedule.
I imagine her life's a bit odd, Carl.
I can imagine it is.
But the point is, no one cares.
It's 2022.
You're stuck in the 60s or something where it's like, yeah, I'll come out as gay, that'll be edgy.
It's like, oh, Jesus Christ, everything's gay these days.
But the thing is, the question is, oh God, well, if she's gay now, does she still have a 28-year-old boyfriend?
Good question.
Just gross.
Why?
Who cares?
Would you go out with Madonna?
No!
Imagine you're 28, and I've seen some of the guys she went out with, they're like good-looking guys in their 20s.
Why are they going out with it?
Yeah, why her of all people?
Strange choice.
Yeah, but it's not like all the plastic surgeries made her attractive either.
I'm going to date Marilyn Manson now.
Anyway, so the reason I bring all of this up is because this has been going past my timeline for ages.
But then, alternatively, something else came across my timeline, which was a sort of case study, a compare and contrast, with Drew Barrymore.
Now, do you remember Drew Barrymore?
She was, again, another sex symbol in her day.
She was excellent in The Wedding Singer.
Yep.
Very, you know, attractive woman who was very desired.
And she has aged differently to Madonna.
She has aged with grace and dignity, which I think is a really good example for young women rather than going down the Madonna route.
So basically, people in Hollywood were like, oh, Drew Barrymore hates sex.
And Drew Barrymore was like, what?
And they're like, no, shut up, incel.
You hate sex.
And so she says this.
The other day I walked to a workout class and this woman said, oh, you look just like Drew Barrymore, except you look like you have mental wellness.
And besides, she hates sex.
And Drew Barrymore was like, why would someone be saying that about me?
Like, what a weird thing to say about anyone.
It's like, Drew Barrymore is mental because she doesn't need to have sex.
It's like, look, she's nearly 50.
You know, she's got kids.
She's like, I did not know what this woman was talking about.
Then a few days later, I learned that someone, somehow, a comment I'd made on a show about abstaining for sex for six months just didn't seem that long to me, because at my age, with my life experience, it just doesn't.
She's 48, so, yeah, I mean, probably doesn't seem like that big a deal, you know.
Seems like a much bigger deal when you're in your 20s.
You go six months without having sex than when you're in nearly 50, right?
Because someone, an actor, had been like, yeah, I abstained from sex for six months to do a movie part.
And so, okay, fine.
And she's just like, well, look, I'm 48 and I have very different feelings about intimacy than I did when I was growing up.
I'm just in a completely different place in my life.
Maybe in the near future I will get into a relationship, but it simply hasn't been my priority.
So I'm not a person who needs sex and has to go out there and engage with people on that level.
I'm someone who is deeply committed to fostering how young girls, my daughters, and myself as a woman are supposed to function in the world.
For the record, I do not hate sex.
I've just finally come to the epiphany that love and sex are simply not the same thing.
I've searched my whole life for, which is to be a calm woman and not a bombastic party girl.
She's a female MGTOW. I said in my Patrice O'Neill video, there's no female MGTOW. V-Brain was the first one.
She's not a female MGTOW. Oh, we got rejected on YouTube, apparently.
So thanks, YouTube.
And, yeah, we actually...
Vicky wrote an article about this.
Her Majesty's Grace to the Last of a Generation.
The way that Her Majesty gracefully aged rather than doing Madonna.
But that's the point about Drew Barrymore.
It's like, you know, she's...
Moved into the position of a matriarch.
I'm not going to be a weird...
I'm not going to try and pretend like I'm in my 20s as I'm growing older.
Other things take priority.
You become a richer and fuller person and your life doesn't revolve around sex, Madonna.
Yeah, there was a natural progression of moving on to a different phase of life that we all used to respect.
But now it's just all about, can you be young and hot?
Did you see that Paulina Poroskova, she was like a hot model.
Then she wrote this piece, like, she feels invisible at 56.
And quite a lot of people were saying, quite a lot of men were saying, well, we've always been invisible, like most of us and stuff.
But she was complaining because she's no longer like a supermodel, but she still looks quite good.
But it's just like, maybe there's something else in life.
Yeah, I saw some French actress saying the same thing.
And she was complaining about George Clooney.
Because George Clooney, as men get older, they get gravitas.
And it's like, yeah, because they have to develop skills.
And skills actually don't just...
They don't evaporate as you grow older.
They actually compound.
So, anyway...
Yeah, Madonna, you're being gross.
Take an example from Drew Barrymore.
Anyway, so let's go on to the comments, the video comments, in fact.
Carl's talk about the Bigfoot incidents in Alaska reminded me of that movie Ghosts in the Darkness, which is about the Zavo lion killings around the Ungandan Railroad in the 1800s, where they were basically eating all the Indian railway workers and causing everything to come to a halt.
There's a funny scene where the Corpo boss comes down from London to dress down the main character saying, You mean to tell me that we're three months behind schedule because of local father?
That was a true story as well.
These two lions murdered like 50 people or something.
Interesting.
And the listener, they're really committed to that performance.
Yeah, I appreciate that.
Here's the next one.
They have said for years that with equal rights come equal responsibility, and the issue with all of these equal rights activists is that they want all of the privileges but none of the responsibilities.
No, that's not how it works.
Yeah, now women, blacks and gays have the rights to be lawyers, but that also means it's our own responsibility as individuals to make it happen, not societies.
Also, happy Halloween!
Man, I had to carve a pumpkin yesterday, and this has totally put me to shame.
Like, I am...
Possibly fast as well, but yeah.
Well, I assume that was sped up.
Was it?
Yes.
But the point is, my pumpkin was terrible compared to this.
Like, I mean, it's just literally like, you know, like triangle eyes, square mouth and a couple of teeth.
And I was looking at the car, I'm proud of that.
But that's just made me embarrassed.
Obviously, I'm against Halloween as a sort of satanic pagan festival, but impressed on a sort of technical level.
Let's go to the next one.
Not everyone will have heard of Reading Jail, but some may know that its most famous inmate was Oscar Wilde, sentenced to a term of hard labour because of homosexual crimes.
Well, a local pub alludes to this and gives little history that the jail was not always in the same location.
The claim is that it used to be at the site of St Mary's Church, and in that location the author of the Pilgrim's Progress, John Bunyan, was imprisoned.
The only trouble is that my own research shows no evidence of this.
I didn't know anything about that subject In one neighborhood of San Francisco, they wanted to end the FICA war zone.
The cost?
$1.7 million for a single toilet.
The build time?
Three years.
Citizens and politicians alike are outraged, but neither will ever admit it is their exact voting habits and policies that led to this.
California in a nutshell.
To learn more, watch this John Stossel video on a similar New York bathroom.
This is the California refugee.
Honestly, every day I see something about San Francisco or something like that.
I saw something I'll probably cover, where this guy was like, look, my business just keeps getting vandalized, I'm just going to have to leave.
And like with Black Lives Matter, in fact, they were like, ah, so you're a racist then.
You're against progress.
He's like...
Okay.
I have to be.
Let's go to the next one.
Tony D and Little Joan with another Legend of the Lotus Eaters.
This one comes from Harold Saxon of Istanbul, Turkey, and it's about the Perilli Kask, otherwise known in Turkish as the Haunted Mansion.
Built in 1911, the red brick structure was built for Yusuf Zaya Pasha, who was the Ottoman ambassador to the United States.
The workers, when they had to complete it later, claimed to have seen the ghost of his late wife walking the grounds and the faint sound of piano music in the background.
Do you believe in ghosts?
I haven't thought about it that much.
I'm sort of open to it, but I'm wondering, is it like anti-Christian as I think it's through?
Why would it be anti-Christian?
Well, it might be like a pagan idea.
Those ghosts are around.
Shouldn't they be in heaven or hell, I suppose?
I don't know.
I haven't thought it through, so I can't commit at this stage.
I'm always impressed with that guy.
He has a lot of recondite knowledge.
Yeah, I love it.
But no, I don't believe in ghosts.
I gave it like a politician.
Come on.
Yeah, you did.
Just commit, Nick.
I grew up in a very old house in the country.
My brother claimed to have seen a ghost, so you're calling my brother a liar, Carl.
I'm not saying he's a liar.
I'm saying he's delusional.
Okay.
No, no.
I just don't really believe.
Anyway, was that the last one?
Was it...
Yeah.
Was it?
I don't know.
I'm saying yes.
Yeah.
Right.
Casey says, always glad when Nick is here.
Yeah.
Thank you, Casey.
This is Nick's fan.
Bald Eagle says, don't forget to go over Rumble and subscribe to Los C's Boys and Girls and everything else that is a required pronoun these days.
Help Rumble topple the tyrannical YouTube and save the content creators.
Yeah, for some reason they've denied our appeal because it was like, okay.
That video was up for like four months.
Everything was fine.
Probably monetized and YouTube suddenly like, yeah, no, get out.
Colin says, saw both the Bigfoot videos.
Very interesting.
I've used some of the things Carl mentioned when talking about the King Kong movie last night.
I did give credit.
What?
That's not related to the King Kong movie.
You know, one of the strongest arguments I think I've made about it is that there are hardly any primate fossils.
But if we didn't have fossils of gorillas, we probably wouldn't really know.
If we didn't have real gorillas, we wouldn't really know what a gorilla was.
Is this your argument against King Kong?
It's my argument for Bigfoot.
Oh.
Because gorillas, if they didn't exist, we wouldn't know about them.
I see.
Because we would find a jawbone with a couple of teeth.
That's the fossil evidence of gorilla, basically.
So you're saying Bigfoot did exist or could still exist?
Well, people always say, where are the Bigfoot fossils?
Where the hell are the gorilla fossils?
Ah, I see.
Do you know when the first chimpanzee fossil was found?
No.
2005.
Really?
Yeah.
There's just no fossil evidence for hominids, basically.
Because they live in jungles, and jungles have got acidic soil and don't fossilise well.
To create a fossil...
Basically you need a large amount of silt or something to pile up over it.
So it's actually really difficult to find primate fossils because they live in forests.
And humans are actually better represented in the fossil record because they live in caves.
So in a cave you can dig stuff up.
And do you believe that dinosaurs were real?
Why wouldn't I? It's just a new theory on the internet that they weren't.
From where?
I've heard...
Apart from James Dellingpole.
Yes, I've heard him say it.
Why does he say it?
And I've heard some other figures say it who we won't necessarily mention because the kind of people you mention you get banned.
There's more evidence for dinosaurs than there are for chimpanzees.
Well, I'm not convinced about...
Way more evidence!
I'm not convinced about chimps either, but let's not go...
Wow.
No, you might be right.
I'm not sure about that.
I think the whole thing's probably an anti-Christian conspiracy.
Dinosaurs, evolution.
Really?
Yeah, it's all just meant to get you thinking that God's not real.
Why isn't God the progenitor of the dinosaurs?
Yeah, that's an argument as well.
I haven't thought it through.
LAUGHTER Wasabottle says, in lettuce we trust.
Yeah, to be fair, to the Mirror, it was quite a good idea.
Put up a lettuce and mistrust.
It sounds like the lettuce actually did last longer than mistrust.
Kevin says, Nigel Ferraris, Lawrence Fox, Sweller Braveman and Kemi Baynock.
Now, that's a party the general public would vote for, and it's diverse.
Yeah, I mean, being diverse is not exactly a selling point these days, is it?
It just makes me think leftism.
But it is a good party, a good lineup.
Did you vote for that?
I would certainly vote for that.
It's always a question, can you get these people together?
The obvious one is Farage and Cummings, because Cummings hates Farage.
Which is a shame, because I think Farage and Cummings would probably be a good team.
Yeah, Cummings just thinks he's an idiot, and Farage would be open to it much more than Cummings.
Yeah.
But yeah, no, I think that would be a good line-up.
I'd be happy.
Because the thing is, I mean, at the end of the day, I loved Suella Braverman's view on immigration.
I was the first person to say Suella Brabman would run, and then she did.
And I could just tell her she was lining up a run.
And I've always liked everything.
She's always been pretty base.
Unfortunately, she's not managed to hold a position and be very good at the political side, but no one is at the moment.
That's the globalist coup taking place.
Adrian says, Trost is a member of the WEF, though, so this is all just theatre.
It's like, well...
You know, Trump is on the WEF site.
I think they just put up profiles of people who existed.
Even our very own Connor, who is very like everyone's WEF, said that Trust isn't really WEF, she was just on the site.
So unfortunately it's not as easy as that.
Which is a shame, because I really wish it was.
You've got to look at their actions.
So someone like Justin Trudeau, obviously WEF, but Donald Trump, probably not.
Robert Longshaw says, Crazy idea, can the Conservative Party make Keir Starmer PM? Hear me out, then this entire mess will be his fault.
That's how this works, right?
Well, honestly, yeah, there's a part of me that thinks the Conservatives maybe would actually benefit.
Not that I want to benefit the Conservatives, but would actually benefit from just resigning, basically.
And go, okay, Keir, good luck.
You know, if Dan's right and we're in this checkmate position, you be Prime Minister.
See how you do.
Yeah, although Keir Starmer just went to Pink News Awards and did this ridiculous statement that he's going to make misgendering laws and everything's going to be even more severe.
It's going to be an absolute dystopia.
I mean, people...
I'm an accelerationist, though.
Yeah, yeah.
I want more.
More!
More!
I want them to literally go to jail for misgendering their own grandmothers.
Sadly, people need a dose of socialism to see what it would be like.
Or in this case, sort of wokeism.
In the 70s, it was socialism.
Now it would be socialism and wokeism.
I want every traffic light to be like a genderqueer...
It's not a man walking across the thing now.
No, no, no, no.
Now it's a genderqueer person.
You know, some sort of transgender.
I've been seeing some weird things, like this Andrew Lillico guy, I don't really know that much about him, but he tweeted that trust may as well give up and just advise the king to bring in Starmer, right?
Then a few hours later, he was tweeting, coming to a court near you.
So unless he's an acceleratist like you, in reference to the Starmer thing.
So it's basically he's saying, may as well get Starmer, Starmer will be awful.
It's like, can we have some consistency between like five hours later?
No.
But that's the thing, right?
If Dan's right about the economics, politically and culturally, I'm definitely right.
The rails that Blair has put us on have put us in this checkmate position.
You can't deny it.
There's nowhere for them to go that isn't totally outside of the paradigm at this point.
And the media freaks out, and everyone freaks out, and for some reason no one's got the balls to do it.
But I think if someone did have the balls to do it, then they'd find a great deal of public support.
You're right.
I mean, Thatcher checkmated Blair on the economy, so he had to become less lefty on the economy, less old-school Labour.
Then Blair checkmated Cameron, so Cameron just had his ridiculous diversity list, heir to Blair and all that.
And now we're still stuck in that paradigm, like you say.
I mean, Margaret Thatcher called Blair her most successful legacy or something.
Yeah, so she's becoming more and more blobbed together over time.
Yeah, exactly.
So now we just have two, what for our show, Social Democrat parties.
Yeah, and he's right.
They are.
They're all Blairers.
Yeah.
So it just needs to be overthrown entirely.
S.H. Silver, in fact, says, That's exactly how I feel about it.
Exactly how I feel about it.
Adrian says there is a way for the Conservative Party to remove trust, but we'll skip it because they've already done that.
Colin says the polls are absolutely terrifying, but to be honest, how much of it is people expressing their dislike of how things are going?
I don't know how much of that would actually transfer into electoral votes.
Well, that's exactly the point.
It's not that people are just flocking to the Labour Party.
It's just that people are refusing to vote Conservative.
That is mad that Liz Truss has resigned as we did this section.
And sparking a leadership race, like another leadership race.
I mean, it's such a disaster.
And she'll now be the shortest-lived Prime Minister.
You know, some people say she was trying to hang on.
Go on.
No, no, no, no.
She is currently the shortest-lived until the next one.
Oh, I see.
Because the next one inherits exactly the same problems.
And, I mean, well, actually, no, that's not true.
Rishi Sunak will probably be propped up by the media and the WEF establishment, won't he?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, George Canning was the shortest until now.
People say he had 119 days, some people say 118, but he died.
He left.
So you can't exactly order him.
Yeah, and she's now going to be the shortest.
What was I, 44 days, 45, something like that?
Liz Truss suicide bombs away out of Downing Street.
Crazy.
Yeah, Colin says, why can't the Conservative Party with the 96th majority actually be Conservative?
Because they are Blairites, frankly.
They're all Blairites, and they should be stigmatized as Blairites.
As Steve Baker put it, they're on the left.
Omar says, the government's solution to crumbling House of Cards always seems to be add more cards.
Let it fall and we can rebuild, but they would rather patch it up long enough to pass it on to someone else to pick up the cards.
Yeah, it's just embarrassing, frankly.
And it's just obvious that nothing they do is going to work.
It's either more degradation or someone getting destroyed trying to start to change course.
Other than that, it's just, you know, on the downward slope.
Alfred the Beta says the Conservative Party implosion is A, symptomatic of strong principled positions on policy regarding what's best for the UK, or B, cliquish infighting between factions of globalist CCP sellouts and globalist WEF sellouts about the near-term outcomes of their portfolios.
Yeah, it's the second one.
Kevin says, the pension funds and all the rest of the damage were not done by the mini's budget, but by the stock market's reaction to it.
They had more of an interest in the good of the nation rather than their own greed.
Sorry, had they had more of an interest, they might have had the testicles to stand behind it and let it run.
They could always panic later if it wasn't working.
This is what I hear about, like, markets.
Oh, God, what's happening when the markets are in chaos?
What caused the chaos?
They had a feeling.
Yeah.
Yeah, they were spooked, basically, by the mini-budget.
Do we not have, like, armed guards?
You know, do we not have men with sabres?
Like, send them in, see how spooked they are now.
Weirdly, a lot of my solutions to things have turned into cavalry charges.
The thing is, I don't think I'm wrong either.
What was it you said you wanted the British Imperialist Party?
Yeah, yeah.
Just return to Victorianism.
You know, we cavalry charge the problem.
And eventually the problem stops.
Radcheck was right today.
The worst part about the BLM stuff is that since the metanarrative is the BLM founders got away with it.
To those impoverished black communities, this only looks like an example to prove the neo-Marxist point of BLM. The only way to get ahead is to step over the bodies and gift the heartstrings of people for personal gain.
If they're not legally dealt with properly, their message will persist in these communities that they've crippled.
Another young aspiring trained Marxist will take up a similar banner in four years.
Whenever it's ideologically and politically pertinent to the Democrats, they wheel out Black Lives Matter.
And you can see, you can go and look at the Google results.
Over time, where it's just like hardly any, hardly any, and then election, black lives matter.
Hardly any, hardly any, election, black lives matter.
It's just remarkable how obvious it is a political tactic.
Spartan Okerga says, when Patrice Cullens talks about abolitionism, she's not talking about the abolition of slavery.
She means the police and capitalism.
Of course she does.
Yeah, that's that.
We should have picked up on that.
I forgot completely of that.
Ignacio says, Floyd died of an overdose.
That's the truth.
Did the knee on the back accelerate his death?
Probably.
But was he a dead man walking the moment he panicked and ate the drugs?
Derek got convicted by a contaminated jury and deserves justice and freedom.
I ate too many drugs.
I forgot to mention that.
Yeah, he did.
Which is kind of a clue that he might have eaten too many drugs.
No, in the trial, there wasn't even an allegation that Derek Chauvin was a racist.
They didn't even allege it in the charges.
Really?
Yeah.
So they're like, Derek Chauvin was a murderer, a racist, because he hates black people.
It's like, okay, but why isn't that in the charges?
Right, because there's no evidence.
Yeah, there's no evidence.
X, Y, and Z says...
I mean, how is that not an acceptable answer at this point?
Andrew says...
Yep.
Colin says, black lives don't matter to these people.
Black bodies do for the narrative to be pushed.
I always hate the term black bodies.
That's weird.
Anything bodies is weird.
Birthing bodies, all this stuff.
It sounds like a corpse.
Yeah, yeah.
It's gross.
It's weird.
It's disgusting.
Michael says, the fentanyl that killed Floyd was most likely from China.
Yeah, have you heard about this?
China's specifically spending a lot of money putting fentanyl in America.
Kind of thing they do, isn't it?
Put TikTok in, put fentanyl in, just demoralise them, psyops.
I mean, it's clever.
Playing the long game.
They don't have to worry about elections, do they?
No one said they weren't clever.
That's not the main charge against China, is it really?
No, no.
Rose says, Grandma, speaking of Madonna, for the love of God, stop trying to be hip and with it and get back to playing bingo with the rest of the retirement village.
If she has any more plastic surgery, she'll be able to blink her lips.
It is gross, though, isn't it?
I just can't get over it.
Kevin says, if Madonna was from Liverpool, she'd be old enough to be a great-great-great-great-grandmother.
Battle Walk says, this Madonna business reminds me of Rocky Balboa.
Time takes everyone out.
Time's undefeated.
Oh, Charlie, I don't want to read this out, because...
Once you put an idea out into the ether, it's got a habit of percolating and it might end up resolving in the thing that you're warning about, is what I'm afraid of.
I thought you were an accelerationist.
Yeah, but I'm a political accelerationist because I want the Conservative Party to collapse and the Blairite Order to fall in on itself.
I don't want Madonna to start an OnlyFans.
I mean, there's just something gross about that, isn't there?
Someone suggested it for Britney on Twitter, but slightly better than a Madonna one.
By 24 years, yeah.
George says, well, since when did Madonna have dignity?
It's like, good point, actually.
These starlets are manufactured to be shocking to generate attention.
People like her, Lady Gaga, and whoever is their modern equivalent will say they'll do anything to be in the spotlight.
Which is exactly what Madonna is doing all of this for.
It's just like, no one's writing articles about me.
Oh, by the way, I'm gay.
God.
The big thing now is trans Madonna.
Madonna is such a sad case, she was revered for decades as a sex symbol and has realized that no amount of plastic fillers can fill the hole left by her waning youth and relevancy.
Yes.
Absolutely.
Sophie says, I really hate BLM. I've seen so many stories, footages of poor black neighbourhoods, poor black people, good building, whose shops got looted, whose homes got burned down, who lost family members, they were actually killed, good people and poor people, and their home and life were destroyed by BLM rioters.
Do you remember when people were putting, sort of, please don't loot us, we support Black Lives Matter?
Yeah, and it didn't work at all.
And that security guard got shot.
Yeah, David Dorn.
Yeah.
Um, who earned millions of dollars on this and never, never gave a cent to these poor black people who lost everything to these monsters, never got anything.
There was, um, there was one that was a black guy, uh, saved up, like, basically his life savings to open a bar.
And, uh, I think there was actually COVID that got that.
But it was just one of those stories where it's like, man, if you're that guy, you're like, yeah, I'm going to get all this done, and then suddenly it's just taken away from you from events outside of your control.
It's just nasty.
I can't stand it.
Anyway, as we can clearly see in the US now, the number of homeless has skyrocketed.
For many reasons, of course, but this also made a lot of people homeless.
A lot of poor black people who never did anything wrong, and once they get, they have to suffer.
It's always these rich BLM activists who drink champagne in their million-dollar mansions.
Literally.
It's like, yeah, it is actually literally what has happened, actually.
Colin says, Well, how much do you think COVID contributed to the BLM riots?
Oh yeah, it was a big part of it because everyone was pent up and they were locked down and then suddenly they went mad, didn't they, for that one moment.
And there were some really disgusting justifications of it.
It was like, yeah, but they're so passionate about the topic that it's worth breaking.
It's like, oh, we're allowed to break all the rules suddenly.
Do you remember with the London riots, where they were like, was it the white supremacy is a pandemic that's worse than COVID or something like that?
It's just like, okay.
So yeah, that wasn't a super spreader event, even though none of them were wearing masks.
It was pathetic.
It exposed the whole COVID thing as purely political.
Well, not purely, but having a strong political element, let's say.
Yeah, it was embarrassing.
Bald Eagle says...
Well, this is the thing, right?
The Labour Party never did anything to the extent the Conservatives are doing now.
Tony Blair let in, I think, half a million.
Or by the end of the new Labour stint in government under Gordon Brown, I think it was half a million a year, which was a lot.
But the Conservatives last year were a million.
The top rate of tax was never this high under Tony Blair.
This is why there are a lot of people on the right who are like, well, if we had Tony Blair back, that would actually be better than what we have now.
True, yeah, some people say at least he was competent when he did all this.
There was a certain evil competence to him.
Yeah.
I mean, there was Iraq War, of course, which I marched against at the time, was completely against.
But yeah, they're basically the same.
Like you say, they're all Blairite now, to varying degrees.
But they're incompetent Blairites.
Incompetent Blairites.
Let's get the competent Blairite back.
Yeah, at least Boris had some charisma as well.
Which leader even has charisma now?
Yeah, and I kind of hate it.
It's just like, I don't want to be on these rails.
I would rather do something else, if possible, please.
Robert says, oh no, MPs wondering about how they'll continue paying their mortgages and stuff, because other MPs are doing what's best for themselves, not the country.
He just said every one of the MPs are out for themselves.
Yes.
I'm surprised they're not following in sort of Nancy Pelosi stock tips, frankly, at this point.
Yeah.
And Baron Von Warhawk coming back to the Tony Blair point.
At this point, I think the best thing that can happen in the UK is if Labour wins a total victory of the Conservatives, because then things will get so bad and terrible for an average citizen that a proper Conservative movement can form.
At the very least, I don't think Labour government can do a worse job.
I don't think the Labour government would do a worse job at this point.
I still think they would.
I still think there's another dimension of woke hell that they would unleash.
But I do agree that perhaps we have to go through it.
Much like the 70s, we have to go through socialism three-day weeks to get Thatcher.
I was hoping we could avoid that and avoid Corbyn.
We did avoid Corbyn, but it looks like we're not going to be able to avoid Labour.
This myth in British people's minds that we need to change, we need to swing back to Labour, then it's even more awful and people go, oh, not that.
Well, the thing about the woke stuff is the Conservatives have been in power for 12 years, and it was not this bad 12 years ago.
So all of this woke stuff has been under the Conservative government.
Well, that is true as well.
That is true.
And that's the thing, of course, the blobs controlling all that, the civil service, the woke stuff everywhere.
Suella can't stop her own department going to some woke training that she didn't want them to go to.
It's mental.
So, you know, like, at the end of the day, is it going to be worse under Labour?
Or is it just going to be exactly the same as it has been for the last decade?
Yeah, good question.
So, anyway, yeah, basically we need a Tavistock on every corner so every child can be transitioned.
And so, vote Keir Starmer.
Bleak.
Can I quickly do my Substack since John's put it up there?
Follow my Substack if you can, guys.
Or if you want to.
NickDixon.substack.com I call it the Conservative Rebel based on this article I wrote about Confessions of a Conservative Rebel.
Can Conservatives be Rebels?
That's one of my articles up there.
I've got free articles.
I've got paid articles.
I only launched it the other day.
I've got like 150 subscribers.
Some of them are even paid...
Really?
I was amazed, Carl, because I don't have your following.
So thanks to all the people that have done that.
And check it out.
It's good writing.
It's cultural writing, but it's funny.
Andrew Doyle rates my writing, so does Toby Young.