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Dec. 7, 2022 - The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters
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The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #540
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Hello and welcome to the podcast of Lotus Eases for today, Wednesday the 7th of December.
I am joined once again by the other hilarious Abby Roberts.
How are you?
I'm very well.
How are you, Connor?
Good, good.
Back by popular demand, of course, because you were the only person that made my presenting style palatable, so of course we had to get you back on.
Today we're talking about how all the Tory wets are dying.
We love to see an exodus, don't we?
How Britain is no longer a Christian country.
and then ending with some surprising truths about birth control.
But before we get into the news, we'd like to draw your attention to the fact that we're hiring.
So you can come put up with me and Harry talking about comics all day in the office forever.
Come and live in Swindon.
Seriously though, it is a really rewarding career and I can personally speak now that I've been here for six months that I wouldn't rather work anywhere else.
Because we keep producing so much content, because you guys keep subscribing to the website, we've got another video editor coming on board.
And our former video editor has had a promotion because we will have some exciting developments that we would like to announce very soon.
But without further ado, let's get into today's worst stories, shall we?
Okay, so the Conservative Party seems to be facing an extinction event.
Not only are they set for electoral death, they'll languish somewhere in the place where they wail and mash teeth, currently occupied by the Lib Dems, of course, because they'll be so politically unpalatable, one would hope, that they're just the third wheel of the British political establishment and Unfortunately, we don't really have much of an opposition at the moment that would provide anything tenable on the right, and it seems like Labour are set for a default victory.
But, well, with a bit of time in the Westminster bubble, maybe I can tell you how they've lost.
And it's not just the MPs that have become the architects of this failure, but it's actually their aides in the think tanks.
Not exactly brilliant for us, but we'll see if we can improve things.
I'd just like to draw your attention to the website.
If you like this kind of content, you can subscribe for £5 a month.
And we won't scroll down to show you the thumbnail on this content, and you will truly have to subscribe to see for yourself.
But you can watch content like this, where Parliament covered the vaccine damage hearings.
And plenty of, of course we can't say on YouTube anything other than, MPs were spreading vaccine misinformation.
Safe and effective.
Very.
Very safe and effective, of course.
Like a magic potion.
Yes.
Doesn't do anything bad at all.
No, no, exactly.
The most safe and effective medical treatment in history.
And we definitely want to move on.
Anyway, so let's look first at the polling, shall we?
The Conservative Party are in, well, absolutely dire straits.
If you can look at the three-year average here, you can see around April of 2020, they were doing all right.
They were pretty out in the lead.
And the entire thing is just utterly inverted.
Labour are now polling X amount of points ahead.
The Conservatives, I think, are at 20% in the polls, totally.
Oh, that much?
Yeah.
So they're really down in the pits.
And it's not shocking, considering Boris Johnson had multiple scandals.
Yes, the media definitely ginned it up a bit because they're anti-Conservative party, which is surprising, considering the Uniparty does all of the policies they'd want to anyway.
It's not like Boris wasn't on board with the Green Dream.
was it but they were very keen to oust him um also very keen to oust Liz Truss for a one percent tax cut despite Rishi Sunak tanking the economy years earlier and suddenly the banks don't react at all but of course it would be conspiracy theory to call it a coup speaking of Rishi Sunak let's look at the identity crisis we we have conservative home here who are very introspective fellows within the party going what is the prime minister even standing for it's not the best position when you've got your third Prime Minister inside a year and you don't even know what the new one's meant to be doing
And also, please, Rishi, wear some trousers that actually reach your feet.
Just absurd.
To be fair, he does have to shop in the kids section.
The one time he was likable was, and even then it was fleeting, was when he was doing the campaign trail and he's giving these self-prepared speeches endlessly.
And he gets up on the stage and says, oh, as a politician, you go around, you shake hands, you kiss babies.
And I took a photo with a couple and their young child.
And I said, oh, finally, someone that makes me look tall.
Yeah.
Why are we governed by manlets?
And that's amazing.
They're not kissing babies.
They're killing babies with medication.
That's where we are at the moment.
Yeah, the abortion issue specifically, which we'll get on later, unfortunately.
If we go to the next one, why are they failing?
Well...
As Matt Goodwin points out for UnHerd, as we've covered endlessly on this channel, immigration has reached a record peak, despite Brexit being the main campaign box which Boris Johnson stood on.
They just thought of it as a different kind of Brexit, where we thought Brexit as in gaining control of our borders and lowering immigration and lowering pressure on housing.
They thought, right, great, free pass for immigration from the rest of the world.
And now it's hit 504,000 net migration increase in the last year.
It's highest on record.
So that means, as Matt's done the numbers here, that's a city the size of Liverpool moving into Britain every year.
Crikey.
And we're wondering why the NHS can never keep pace with demand, despite funding endlessly going up.
We wonder why there's nothing in the pension pocket.
We wonder why all of our hotels are full with fighting-age young men who I have to go to work for them my paycheck to be taken as a tax so they can go piss it away on the JD Sports.
Do you think a country is going to run like that?
That might be why you might be slumping in the polls ever so slightly.
Yeah.
I was just thinking, would I rather have those immigrants or scousers?
And I have to say, it is a close call.
Well, the immigrants don't nick nearly as many car tyres.
You know what, the SNP... Anyone listening who's a fan of Liverpool, I'm really sorry.
I'm not.
When the SNP do eventually get their independence referendum, they can just take Liverpool with them.
It's fine.
They can annex it.
It's all right.
You can fit the bill.
So we go on to the next one.
There is some rebellion within the Tory party, and there has been suggestions that Richard Tice has met with some Tory MPs that might have defectors to reform.
But the likes of Lee Anderson, who is of course a Red Wall MP, and who, by all accounts, is one of the few, like maybe handful, of half-decent MPs left.
I mean...
He's a good mate of Calvin's.
He's a former single dad.
And he just says there just needs to be a cap on asylum claims.
Just a flat, hard limit.
You don't let anyone into the country where they've applied from a safe country.
And we can pick and choose which countries they come from.
And we can just say, right, we've had our fair share.
That's enough.
We've taken plenty of Hong Kongers.
Why not?
They used to be under the British Empire, they're industrious, they're fleeing communism, they've got a real legitimate claim.
If you're from Albania and you're a former stockbroker, which one woman and her husband was, and you just made a couple of bad bets and voted in the socialist government, I don't think I should pay for you to stay in a Premier Inn.
Did you hear about the Ukrainian couple that came over to Nottingham and then went back three days later to Ukraine?
Because Nottingham's that shit.
That is an actual true story.
I've actually got a mini-story about Nottingham, funnily enough.
I went to view the university.
I spent four hours on the train getting there.
I stayed there for 40 minutes because it was chucking it down with rain.
Didn't even bother visiting the town and went straight back.
It's not worth it.
Again, we're all insulting, aren't we?
Just bit by bit, parts of the United Kingdom.
Yeah.
But we love you, really.
Yeah, you're okay.
We're in a bit of a story state in the country at the moment.
We can fix the regional issues once we have a country again.
That would be quite good, wouldn't it?
Yeah.
Unfortunately, as we've already alluded to, the Tory higher-ups are completely out of touch.
They're not interested.
So Suella Braverman put forward the concerns of the likes of Lee Anderson and said we need to ban people from coming from safe countries and claiming asylum because they're from safe countries, like Albania, who's a NATO member, who we literally give money to.
And saying that, well, there's far too many people coming over in totality, so why don't we have some kind of immigration limit?
Why don't we stop all of those students, for example, bringing in from Nigeria and Syria more dependents and family members than actual students?
Why don't we just stop that?
And Richie Snow went, no thanks.
Nope.
So you can pretend on the campaign trail to give a damn about grooming gangs or the cost of housing all you like, but you see a systemic unwillingness to address the actual problem.
And as we were saying off air, how many times can you put every single government department down to the Hanlon's razor incompetence when they all seem to be working in concert to conduct a controlled demolition of prosperity and security in the country?
They are literally destroying the country.
And it's been happening, I think I said this the last time I was on, the first time I was on, that this has been happening for, I mean, before Tony, well, Tony Blair kind of accelerated it.
He was the apotheosis.
Yeah, exactly, the apotheosis.
And now we're just, now they're just taking the piss.
That it's literally going, oh, well, it was really bad, but I tell you what, let's just bring some more people in.
Because it's almost like they're doubling down.
It's like a, is it the sort of sunk cost fallacy?
Sunk, and actually a very appropriate phrase.
Nearly sunak.
Sunak policy, because the country is literally sinking under the numbers, and it's so disgraceful that people's opportunities, especially young people like yourself, because you're 24, my darling, you're a little spring chicken compared to me, and it makes me furious that people's opportunities are being taken.
Because of the, not incompetence, the deliberate multiculturalism that's been propagated for the last, how many years?
It was cultural eradication, and they keep talking about sustainability.
The numbers aren't very sustainable.
And then the ultimate mask-off moment, I think, is when they turn around and say, build more houses, build more houses, build more houses.
It's not immigration.
And then, did you see Michael Gove got rid of house-building targets this week?
Odd.
Right, so they just want you poor and renting forever.
Yeah.
Because I won't be able to afford anything.
See my first podcast with Callum on exactly why immigration destroys the housing market in the UK. What happened, by the way, to the story about Michael Gove?
Do you notice there was a story last year?
Which one was this?
I'm looking at me slightly nervously.
Well, there was a story about certain things that he likes to get up to.
I'm going to be very careful here for the legal reasons.
Was it the mountain of recreationals in Scarface, by any chance?
Exactly.
The Peruvian marching powder that he likes, and also the company of, shall we say, certain people in nightclubs.
Well, I can...
I can neither confirm nor deny that I have seen Michael Gove partying in a gay nightclub in Manchester with Liz Truss at the Tory party conference but I'm sure there was nothing to that.
Please don't sue us.
Please don't.
But you know, honestly, Michael, the level of our politics, it just depresses the fuck out of me.
He's failed upwards endlessly.
He sabotaged the education system and then clearly knows where the bodies are buried because then he stabbed Boris Johnson in the back for Theresa May and then now he's been in cabinet multiple times despite clearly being a Machiavellian.
Not that was a great fun.
Speaking of ruinous politicians...
And he's kissed so much arse.
His lips, you know, they're in a permanent kiss arse.
Are you trying to get us back into a lawsuit scenario?
Sorry, everyone.
Speaking of terrible politicians who have been in Cabinet, this is basically causing an exodus from the Tory party.
If we go to the next one, please.
Sajid Javid's resigned, so there's some good news.
He's not going to be standing as an MP next time.
He's still sitting in the Commons for now, but when in one or two years we get the next general election, he's not going to be going again because Uncle Fester here has held every single position in Cabinet possible and buggered them all up.
And he must have gotten enough kickbacks from Moderna, I'm sure.
So if we can just go to the next one.
This is Rishi Sunak congratulating Sajid Javid on his hard work.
He's not dead, Rishi.
And then it ends with, may the force be with you?
Now, when you insulted him as looking like a child, he didn't necessarily have to act like one.
And this is coming from a man who has a series running on the website for premium subscribers about comic books.
So even I was embarrassed by this.
And look, you can like things like Star Wars and that.
That's fine.
Yeah.
Fine.
You can't like the terrible new ones.
If we go to the next one, which one were they referring to?
Oh, it's the shit Disney ones.
Look at this photo, please.
This is who we're governed by.
That's who locked you up and was going to take away your job if you were a healthcare worker who did not have the most safe and effective medical treatment ever in existence.
This was a man who crashed the economy and installed himself with the assistance of the financial sector when he was roundly repudiated by the Tory base multiple times.
And these are the clowns that are championing Disney's latest cultural product.
Bankrupt you, I will.
I mean, bloody hell.
Is that the one with Jar Jar Binks?
Sorry, I only like the original ones.
They were the ones in the early 90s, the Jar Jar Binks ones.
Jar Jar Binks.
Which, funnily enough, that's quite an apt comparator because he accidentally led to the rise of the Emperor by being rather naive.
He gave him all the power in the world.
Liz Truss does have a look of Jar Jar Binks about her, doesn't she?
She does have a bit of a Binks...
Yeah.
Binks, look about her!
Notably competent politician, Jar Jar Binks and Liz Truss.
Yeah.
If we go on to the next one, please.
Sajid Javid, again, is a typical Tory because he's just the one saying...
Has he got a beard there?
Or am I getting so excited?
Yeah, he does, yes.
I'm not going to make the joke.
He's upside down.
Someone dropped an egg on the carpet.
It's Yul Brynner from King and I. What do you know?
It's descending into alecky.
I love it.
Basically, as you can see here, he's got the typical attitude of, we need to build more houses, endlessly.
And you wonder why you're roundly repudiated by the base of young conservatives who can't get a house and older conservatives who realise that their high streets and culture has been utterly eradicated and is changing around them.
So, again, typical Tory establishment, waning away.
If we go to the next one, please.
Do you remember when Nigel Farage talked about the census data?
And my critique of him is he says white here.
What he really should say is English, because it doesn't matter if you're white as in Romanian, Polish, things like that, because that's actual cultural change.
What he means is minority English.
Sajid Javid just says, so what?
So he's rather apathetic about our cultural eradication.
Again, one of the reasons why the Tories are roundly despised, including by me, who went to their recent conference and noticed the unbelievable amount of cope on display.
Although they all know they're going to lose, it's just a who is now the question.
For guys, the next one, Faraj decides to have the last laugh of when Javid announced he was designing, Faraj just went, yeah, so what?
Yeah.
Good man, Nigel.
Well done, Nigel.
I'd like to see that kind of energy behind...
Now get back into politics and sort the fucking shit out.
Stop talking about it.
It would be nice to see that energy behind the podium, but there we go.
Yeah, if we go on to the next one, also there's Dehenna Davidson's resigning and nothing of value is lost.
Oh God, she was on GB News for a bit, wasn't she?
Yeah, she was.
She's a 2019 intake MP who's a member of Conservatives for LGBTQ +, and does TikTok.
Right.
So we've been elite captured by...
Oh, also, some little anecdote.
She...
I believe he was a councillor.
I don't want to get sued here again.
Yeah.
So I could be wrong.
Look into it.
But when she was about 20-odd, she married a 60-year-old man who then gave her a leg up into politics.
Gave her a leg up?
Over her up?
Well, both.
Naughty.
Naughty.
And then she ran for MP, and when she won the race, she divorced him.
Okay.
Okay.
Just saying.
Very meritocratic industry here in the UK. If we can just go to the next one, yeah.
I could sing a bit of Gold Digger by Kanye West, but I'll refrain.
Yeah.
Because then we're into a whole other ball of wax.
Given Kanye's recent opinions, we will not touch that minefield.
is because having just mentioned Dehenna Davidson, she seems to be a flashpoint example of why the incompetent intake of current MPs are being led by the nose by their 20-something know-nothing staffers who are hired straight out of university and changing the face of the Tory party, both politically and strangely demographically.
It's not like demographics is destiny, but back when the Tory party used to be a really old boys club and that, it's definitely not the same anymore.
It seems to be a feminist cabal, which is pretty surprising.
And as I said to you off the podcast about our mutual favourite politician Steve Baker, who unfollowed me because of this, we were talking about how young conservatives here are very upset with politicians.
But don't worry, we have the experts, the researchers to come in and tell us we're wrong and we're actually a minority of bigoted fascists.
Let's go over to Substack.
David Jeffery, he says the kids aren't alt-right, and Farage is alt-right.
Okay, bugger off, because first of all, alt-right means white nationalist, and Nigel Farage is not a white nationalist, neither am I, for liking him.
But he did some data breakdowns, shall we?
In Meet Britain's Radical New Right, the unheard piece that we covered in that segment...
Will Lloyd experienced slash endured the Reasoned Student Summit in, where else, London.
Well done to Jess Gill for putting that on, by the way.
His coverage of the event makes for depressing reading for anyone concerned with the future of British conservatism.
He describes angry young men for all they seem to be men.
They do all seem to be men, rather.
They weren't.
The person questioning Steve Baker about sponsoring black-only reading hours was a girl called Elizabeth.
So, he got that one wrong, of course, but...
Tar on the same brush, I suppose.
Eager for a hard-edged, nasty, and nativist form of politics.
I believe that Will Lloyd called it conservatism as hay fever, as in you are so allergic to the left that you're sneezing violently against it.
It's like, well, I have been...
Some, physically, me, metaphorically, kicked repeatedly over and over by the leftist mob who destroy everything I love.
So, apologies if I swing back once in a while.
So he decided to look at the British election study data.
So we can just scroll down to the graphs, please, John.
Graph 1.
Young people today don't have enough respect for traditional British values.
So this was the proposition.
And this is meant to be an authoritarianism scale.
As you can see, the 18 to 25 bar chart line is the lowest here.
But then some of these are the questions that you asked.
For some crimes, the death penalty is the most appropriate sentence.
So they're against that.
Even the 58% of the British public are for that, for convicted terrorism suspects.
Well, perpetrators, like the Lee Rigby killers.
I see no problem with hanging the Lee Rigby killers in public.
Schools should teach children to obey authority.
Bit mixed on that one.
Censorship of films and magazines is necessary to uphold moral standards.
I mean, depends which, because I'm kind of okay with taking all the drag queen stuff off there, which is on every bloody channel at this point.
And people who break the law should be given stiffer sentences.
And they were against that.
Wow.
So the Tory party, again, are led by a bunch of 18 to 25 year olds who are very out of touch with what the British public want.
Graph two.
They want more equality along racial, gender and sexuality lines.
Because as you can see, the bar graph there for the big thick red line is pretty much the lowest for ethnic minorities, women and gays and lesbians.
And they say, attempts to give equal opportunities.
So that's the government intervening.
To create equity among these identity groups rather than just repealing legislation which is actively in the way.
And we see this with many government departments saying white men need not apply at the BBC and MI5 and the like.
Again, led by a bunch of left-wing 18 to 25 year olds.
Graph 3, they want more mass immigration.
Lovely.
Immigration is good for the UK's culture and economy.
They're top of the line there.
So they're just pricing themselves out of the housing market, I guess.
Graph number four.
They're very managerial by instinct.
They're the least populist out of everyone.
Now, of course, what was it some Iranian gentleman said?
The masses are retarded, so democracy can be retarded.
Occasionally true, as we see with the mass compliance of lockdowns, for example.
Yeah.
But when you're saying that we should basically appoint ourselves the political class and you've got a bunch of left-wing opinions, you're very much out of lockstep with the far-right British public who just don't want tons of Albanian men coming over on dinghies.
Yeah, without their wives and kids as well.
Where are all these wives and children who are fleeing at terrible places?
Do you know what the actual stat of breakdown by gender is?
What is it?
Directly 95% according to the Home Office is men.
85%.
And yet people are still going, I'm sure there's nothing untoward going on.
It's just so bizarre.
But also, you know, the thing about the young people, you know, I agree about the 18 to 24-year-olds, this sort of woke...
Vanguard.
Yeah, Vanguard.
But then what about the cucks?
What about the soy boys who are older politicians who aren't saying, piss off?
Yeah.
The testicle-less careerists.
Precisely, yeah.
There's no cojones.
Just do something about it.
Just let it be taken over.
Do you think it's because they're thinking, oh, they're good with technology, these young people.
Yes, they'll know how to put...
It's definitely part of it.
They'll know how to do stuff.
So they're almost like, oh no, we'll let them get on with it because they know best.
It is also complacency because they're setting themselves up for thinking, okay, well I'm set for life with the business deals I've got after this, with the connections I've made, with the second job I'm doing, I've got a mortgage to pay for, I've got kids to pay for.
And these people who are perpetually young, they've had their adolescence elongated by university, who will just rent a flat in SW1 and go...
Doing extracurriculars and going out clubbing every night.
Well, they're just an eternally rootless underclass of political ambition that I can operate off the back of.
I can put myself a tiny little nest egg away.
And when it comes time to lose an election, well, it's all right.
I'll be gone.
They'll be out of a job.
They can't blame me.
And they can just float off into the ether and keep doing partying and things like that.
And just keep relying on the state.
The state's getting bigger and bigger, isn't it?
They're barnacles of the Westminster bubble.
That's probably the best way to put it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Number five.
Yep.
They're just boilerplate libertarians.
So that's sort of top.
So we're talking off air about Dan Hannan and Steve Baker, who consider himself a man of the free market liberal left in the Tory party.
Same sort of people.
What a mixture.
Graph six.
They're significantly more gay.
What's that graph there?
The flatlining one.
The flat...
The flat one.
Yeah, that's the libertarian or authoritarian placement, I believe.
If we go down, John, slightly.
Yeah.
It's the next one.
There we go.
Sexuality one, please.
Okay.
Oh, the sexuality.
Yeah.
So, again, okay, that should be a private matter.
However, if you're getting a lot of people involved in politics who will not have instinct, have families by instinct...
Then that does cause a problem for a conservative party who are meant to be investing in the next generation rather than just focusing on the material prosperity of the present so they can import a perpetual underclass to do cheap labour for them.
Yeah.
It's not great optically when the entire point of a Berkian covenant is between you, your ancestors, and the next generation which you're responsible for propagating.
And then Graph 7, just to really depress you, they really hate Farage.
Right, so they're definitely not going to be Reform UK voters in the future, at least the people that he decided to talk to, because he's picking out the Reason Summit as a group of extremists that aren't representative of the Tory party.
But I wonder who he did actually interview.
Perhaps it was some of the parliamentary staffers, who have public Twitter accounts, by the way.
So we've gone to the first one.
This is one woman.
I do believe she works for Dehenna Davidson, because she is in Dehenna Davidson's Twitter banner, I think, and she also is friends with Dehenna Davidson's other staffer.
So this one fellow decided to come up to Liz Truss and have a chat with her.
Yeah, while she was in a coffee shop.
Okay.
Former MP, former cabinet minister, former prime...
No, still MP. Former prime minister.
That was quick, wasn't it?
If we just scroll up slightly, John, so we can read her...
God, this is so effing weird.
And she's basically saying, why are you harassing this woman?
It's a private life in a coffee shop.
Sorry, if you get into politics as a public-facing official, and you've buggered up the country in many respects with Ukraine policy, with voting for lockdown, with being a bit of a wishy-washy prime minister who I don't think should have been out on her ear that quick, but nonetheless...
The public have a right to question you if they pay your salary?
Yeah.
Why are you so protectionist against this?
Yeah.
Very, very, very, very strange.
God, what a literally, what a shit show.
Yeah.
If we go on to the next one...
Nobody impresses me anymore.
I have to say, even though you probably won't like this, I mean, even Farage, you know, and, well, Tice and Oakeshott were out in Australia when Matt Hancock was in the...
Sorry, I can't even say his name without a bit of bile coming up in my mouth when he was in Celebrity.
I'm a celebrity, get me out of here.
So...
I'm more...
Skeptical?
I'm very sceptical.
That's fair.
I don't know what your viewers might think about that.
So, the fact that Oakeshott interviewed him for the Crypto Podcast is reprehensible.
Yes.
They should have arrested him.
Nigel...
Pinned him to the ground.
I agree.
Citizens arrest.
The amount of...
people in nursing homes whose excess deaths he led to is oh yeah i just uncomfortable for some reason he spends a couple of weeks in the jungle eating kangaroo testicles and suddenly comes third in the public mind and it just shows you how quickly people can be brainwashed yeah however i will question i have to ask is who else is there i don't think there is any other figure in public life who can lead a counter movement at this point than nigel And if he'd like to pass it on to a successor after he's established power, we'd be utterly delighted.
But who else can galvanise it?
That's the really crap position we're in in the UK. No, I agree.
And as long as the galvanisation involves the likes of people like us who are not part of the establishment, that's the bit I'm wary about.
If you've had a foot for too long in the establishment, then you aren't able to see through things like we do.
Well, hopefully as well, given that...
One of our staff members has had a recent chat with Richard Tice, and if you pay for the website, you'll be able to watch that soon enough.
Maybe we may be able to win them round with some of our more robust, less-establishment ideas.
And stop supporting Zelensky.
Stop just constantly saying...
Yeah, stop putting money into the back pockets of FTX and Democrats would be fantastic, considering we're all bloody freezing to death.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, it'll be great, yeah.
And also definitely have trials for all the medics who pushed a certain...
The lockdowns, yeah.
Yeah, the lockdowns.
Just the lockdowns, yeah.
And the Britney Spears.
Yes, yeah, definitely.
That's code, by the way, for something else.
Yes, yes.
Here's another staffer, by the way, former Dehenna Davidson staffer.
When Liz Truss appointed non...
straight white men to her cabinet.
She was retweeting something very supportive, also retweeting things, scaremongering about Roe v. Wade.
And one of her tweets here was, oh, poor straight white men elected in 2019 with no experience in the department, let alone cabinet role, for being overlooked for a job that their only qualification is feeling entitled.
This is about another Conservative MP, by the way, saying that I felt like I was overlooked for a cabinet role.
But again, obsessed with identity despite working for the Conservative Party.
So affirmative action within cabinet among staffers.
Not a great look.
We can go to the next one, please.
This was a guy that, funnily enough, I used to work with in an environmental group.
And he decided to say that Kamala Harris's appointment when Joe Biden said, this morning little girls woke up across the nation, especially Capital B Black and Capital B Brown, who feel so overlooked and undervalued in society, potentially see themselves in a new way as the stuff of presidents and vice presidents.
Because Joe Biden's black, of course.
And he said this is powerful stuff.
For all Kamala's policy faults, this is supremely important and often overlooked.
The reason I've highlighted this, right, he's a senior communications officer for the House of Commons and works at Dominic Raab.
Who was Deputy Prime Minister.
Wow.
I think he's currently Justice Secretary as well.
Yeah.
So, identity-obsessed leftists, staff in the Conservative Party, 20-something know-nothings, who are, by the way, writing speeches and persuading MPs on how to vote and what issues to push after.
Yeah.
You wonder why the Overton window is massively shifting leftward here.
Yes, yeah.
If we go on to the next one, I got into a spat with him about this, and he called me a misogynist for saying that Kamala Harris slept away to the top when I literally cited an article by former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown saying, yeah, I shagged her while I was married and I gave her a start in California politics.
Is that about Kamala Harris?
Yes.
Who always reminds me of Woody Woodpecker.
You know, when she talks, I'm like, oh, how can you be anywhere near the White House, you crazy loon?
All of her speeches as well are predictive texts.
It's like the passage of time, and we're thinking about time and how it passes and the passage of time.
Do you remember when she was talking to kids about going to the moon?
She's like, oh, apparently the moon is really amazing.
It's made of cheese.
I can pair it with my box wine.
Yeah.
I mean, she's just off her rock.
Loop de loop.
Yeah, loop de loop.
And go to the next one as well.
We also have the female Tom Harwood.
Now, I believe she advises Greg Smith.
And anyone who is in conservative politics on Twitter, lots of people follow this girl.
Bella Wallersteiner.
And she is like a bad take machine.
It's embarrassing.
Again...
20-something know-nothings, rent-only, advising our politicians.
She said, with Labour going for a stricter approach on immigration, there's definitely space for a fiscally conservative, socially liberal party in British politics.
One that is prepared to carry out the necessary supply-side tax reforms.
Liberalised planning, more immigration and cut tax.
Right.
More immigration and cut tax.
So, how are you going to pay for the public services that the immigrants keep using?
Liberalised planning, so we're going to concrete over the entire countryside to make the entire of the UK mega-city one for a bunch of economic chances.
Do you think there might be a reason why the budget is going bust when cities the size of Liverpool every year arrive and need housing and healthcare at the immediate point of access?
No?
Okay, love.
I wouldn't put you in charge of my personal budget, let alone the bloody countries.
Just go to the next.
She...
Oh, she deleted this tweet.
Fantastic.
Of course she did.
Well, she almost got it.
She almost started talking about the problem with housing, was demand.
If we go to the next one...
She then just says, well, housing is basically a right.
As a 27-year-old professional living and working in London, I'm deeply uncomfortable to be a member of a party which appears to have turned its back on Mrs.
Thatcher's promise of creating a home-owning democracy.
Bear in mind, Margaret Thatcher did once say that Tony Blair was the best part of their legacy, and he was the cause of all the immigration reforms.
So, again, the problem comes within the Tory party.
So if she can't answer the next one, she almost gets it and then she just flops.
There's no public appetite for major reforms required to make Brexit work.
More immigration, liberalised planning, tax cuts.
To her credit, trusts tried to do this and Tory polls plunged.
Johnsonian cake-ist Brexit was always a fantasy, so it's sensible to seek closer ties with the EU.
Seditionist fifth columnists working for our MPs, trying to get us back involved with the EU bureaucracy.
And constantly upping immigration to immiserate us.
And there's a Ukraine flag in her bio.
That's a fantastic point.
I'm surprised there isn't a blue heart and a rainbow.
I'm on board with a current thing.
Yay!
Yay!
Bella Wallensteiner.
Is that even a real name?
God knows.
Speaking of sounding weird, then we have the actual Tom Harwood, who I just thought I'd finish on because this is the most egregious treat I've probably ever read.
In the real world, the only way to reduce rent costs is to cut demand or increase supply.
Hold on.
I like how he's sounding here.
Okay.
So we either institute a state sacrifice of the firstborn, Sorry, run that movie again.
So we either institute a state sacrifice of the firstborn, or maybe we just think about building more houses.
So literally, kill your baby before we lower immigration.
So let's be Mao's China.
Essentially, in fact, no, it's full stop.
Let's just be Mao's China.
That boy is an alien-faced fascist.
Well, I'm not surprised that anti-natalism is coming from a genetic cul-de-sac, but I'd rather that the people that didn't have an investment in the future, policy-wise, were not running the Conservative Party.
But I hope this has provided a little bit of insight as to why it's been so led astray.
And the argument is just, moral of the story...
Stop hiring 20-year-old know-nothings who are left of centre and bereft of sense to run your campaigns.
I suppose we must await the creation of a tenable opposition to kick them all out, shall we?
Yeah.
Any ideas?
Come on, everyone!
Yeah, I know.
They need to mobilise it and get it together.
All right.
Part two, then.
That's what...
Unfortunately, we must move on to how Britain is not a Christian country anymore.
Okay.
I'm not trying to dispirit everyone.
According to the recent census data, we're in a minority here.
For the first time in a census of England and Wales, less than half of the population, 46.2%, so that's 27.5 million people, describe themselves as Christian.
A 13.1 percentage point increase from 59.3% in 2011...
Despite this decrease, Christian remained the most common response to the religion question.
So the main issue is twofold.
Christianity is still the most popular religion.
However, the decrease is coming from a rise in atheism.
So no religion was the second most common response, increasing by 12 percentage points to 37.2 million people.
37.2%, 22.2 million, up from 25.2% in 2011.
So within 10 years, it's gone up 12%.
But then mass immigration has also caused the Muslim response to go up by 6.5% from 2011.
Sorry, 2.6.5% up from 4.9%.
So that's a pretty significant jump of some incompatible worldviews.
And, of course, it would be haram to mention some issues that might arise from this, like female genital mutilation or...
Cousin marriage.
Or intolerance towards your gay neighbours and thinking that they should suffer the same penalties are in most Islamic countries.
Or sex-selective abortion might be one, which actually gets raised in the abortion debate, which we'll be covering very shortly.
Or in divorce courts, the ability to say, I divorce you, I divorce you, I divorce you.
That's what happens in Islam and that's it.
And then the candy man appears in the mirror.
You're done!
Yes, lots of Sharia law.
So what, says Sajid Javid, I suppose.
So what?
Well, here's a segment we did a little while ago.
This segment we're actually going to be exploring the implications of abandoning the sanctity of life under the Christian principle in the UK. This segment about a week ago, Harry went through the fact they want to bring Canada's assisted dying policy to the UK. Yeah, and Canada, it's one of their leading causes of death now.
They're offering it to disabled veterans who can't get their stair lifts installed quick enough.
They're doing adverts about women who are terminally ill and their treatment will take too long, so they just off themselves and they say it's beautiful.
They've offered it to people whose only listed health conditions are either mental or they've had hearing loss, so they get offed.
And some of them, they've said, oh, your treatment's going to take too long, even if you're not terminally ill, why don't you just do this as an option instead?
One man got euthamised because he was homeless.
Yeah, there was a lady who'd got a stair lift installed.
Do you see that?
Yeah, she was a veteran.
She was in her 50s or in her 60s.
And yeah, and they'd said...
They offered it to her.
Yeah, they offered it to her.
Do you want to bump yourself off?
Canada has gone down such a dark...
Well, all countries have, but particularly the last two and a half years, has gone down such a dark path.
I can only come to the conclusion that Satan is walking amongst us.
Well, it's what happens when you penetrate your cabinets, isn't it?
When you install people that think that China's model is the one to be emulated.
And as we said in our prior segment about the fact that housing is under such stress, or something like the NHS, for example, you can either decrease demand by lowering immigration, but we couldn't do that because of course that would be racist and unthinkable, or you can just Bump a lot of the population off.
Yeah.
It'd be really compassionate for you to save the NHS by not using its services.
But this is what happens when you don't have a ring around the sanctity of life.
And one of the things that Christianity does undoubtedly provide, whether or not the members of our audience can make the leap to faith, or just very sceptical about the existence of God without any empirical proof.
Okay, that's fine.
Have that conversation.
But you can't deny about the fact that Christians really do think that you just can't arbitrarily kill people.
Catholics as well are on board with the death penalty, but that's a question of innocence.
But you can't take an innocent human life.
You can't just euthanize someone.
You can't be a Harold Shipman.
You can't be Kermit Gosnell and mass abort babies.
And so that's a good bulwark as a moral sentiment to create legislation around.
When you take that out of civilization, what happens?
You get the unconscionable abortion debate that we've currently got going on in the UK.
If you'd like to learn more about the intricacies of this sort of stuff, you can subscribe to And look at two very handsome men.
Well yeah, Josh will be glad about the compliment in this one as well because Josh and I decided to debate the biological and moral implications of abortion procedures.
We didn't particularly agree but we did so very civilly and hopefully it gives you guys some new ideas and always happy to read the arguments in the comments.
So Pay a fiver a month is better than giving it to Netflix and you might learn something new.
Speaking of abortion in the UK, this is tied up very much with the loss of Christian sentiment because we are seeing an expansion of abortion permissions up until the point of birth and a complete moral apathy to the life of the child.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So here's a recent case that was lost on appeal because last year she lost it and took it up again.
I believe she's now taking it to Supreme Court.
A woman with Down syndrome called Heidi Crowter, she's 27, she's from Coventry, has lost her appeal over the fact that in the UK we have a 24-week limit on any abortion that is not without a medical reason.
If it's for a medical reason, including Down syndrome or a cleft palate or even a club foot, it can be up until the point of birth.
So, as the mother is dilating the baby's being produced, you can just crack its skull open and chuck it in the bin.
To put it crassly.
And she decided, well, as someone with Down syndrome has had quite a full and wholesome life, I don't think we should all be killed in the womb.
We wouldn't have David Starkey.
You know, he was born with club feet.
Really?
I didn't know that.
We would not have David Starkey as a historian.
Well, one of the most egregious cases, for example, and I can speak of a bit of personal outrage on this, and depending on where you think Twitter's going, you're glad that Elon Musk is around.
During COVID, there were do not resuscitate orders placed on children on ventilators because they had autism.
Yes.
Yes.
The evil...
Sorry, just going slightly aside from what we're talking about, the Christianity, is what gives me some hope is that I was at an event on Sunday and a lot of people in the room were talking about Christ and God.
And you don't have to be reverent.
You can be like me.
I'm a Christian.
Someone said to me, actually, God, you use the C word an awful lot for a Christian.
I said, yeah, but you can still be a Christian and use the Z word and be irreverent.
That's okay.
It's good deeds.
People talk a lot about what things people say and their appearance.
You don't have to wear tweed to be a small C conservative or a libertarian.
You don't have to wear a dog collar to have faith in Christ and believe in good deeds.
You can't be...
A woman with big tits and big blonde hair and also have faith in Christ.
And humanity.
And humility, of course.
And humility.
I won't be getting into a pulpit any time soon.
We'll leave that to Calvin.
One of the things that I spoke about with Carl recently, funnily enough, is that I think it's pretty clear that there is such a level of evil at work at the moment, you could describe it as demonic.
And there are some people so incapable of reason, they act as if they are possessed.
So if 2,000 years ago there was a book that was slightly right about that...
head around the God thing, but it's right about a lot of other things, it's more likely that my contemporary doubts about the existence of the deity that it bases everything on is wrong than all of the things it gets right are correct, but it's just wrong about the God part.
It's more likely that I'm wrong for doubting than the book that gets everything else right It's correct.
And seeming as it's predicted, the weird demonic possession of people that take their children to Drag Queen Story Hour, for example, I'm willing to bet that if there's that level of evil that aids and abets that level of abuse, there must be some sort of example of good which we can all follow, which is an antibody reaction to that.
So perhaps I'm just living in naive hope, but it seems to have something to it.
And also, interestingly, this goes slightly to the heart of things I've been looking at recently, the Hippocratic Oath, which is the original thing in ancient Greece that the doctors, they were all a brotherhood of, you know, it was very important.
The Hippocratic Oath is all to do with this, ethics and first principles and first do no harm and do not administer poison into another human being or do not recommend, it actually says that in the original, do not recommend that a poison be administered, otherwise you should leave the The profession.
You're sort of cast out.
So we have to go...
This all ties in.
Christianity, its first principles, is what's at the heart of this.
It's God.
God and Christ are at the heart of it.
And if they're not in the centre of it, then that vacuum will be filled.
And that's what we're seeing now.
It's being filled by something very putrid and...
Sulfur-like.
Funnily enough, speaking on the abortion issue of, if we can just go back slightly, John, of injecting the poison into children, they're doing it because the children are disabled.
It's just horrific.
1930s Nazi Germany, anyone?
Ring any bells?
So, the abortion care provider, BPAS, leading in Britain, said that her case to stop Down syndrome babies being aborted up until the point of birth was, quote, a full-frontal attack on pregnant women's rights.
Right.
So we're not going to have any conversation about disability here.
The woman who brought this case said that she's going to keep fighting, so all the best with her on that.
Unfortunately, Parliament...
Well, some of the MPs have voted this motion down, but for legal reasons.
But Parliament, the sentiment, especially if Labour win, are going to be very much against her on this.
Because we go to the next one.
This petition passed recently to include abortion rights in the Bill of Rights that we're creating after we leave the ECHR. Right.
And that would be not just decriminalisation, but...
Just open the door.
It's sort of encouraging it.
It's going, oh, go on then.
It's like buying a pair of curtains.
If you have rights to an abortion, there's no reason to make it safely and rare, is there?
Because if it's a right, why should it need to be rare at all?
What's the prohibition on it?
Yes.
Because it would be contradictory to say it's gross and it's your right.
And so this would open the door to abortion up until the point of birth in Britain for any reason.
They're not even hiding the fact that it's just for disabilities anymore.
Yes.
This was recently debated, and this was after Roe v.
Wade was overturned, and some American dual national said that in the wake of the United States Supreme Court overturning Roe v.
Wade in a landmark decision, the United Kingdom must enshrine abortion rights in the new UK Bill of Rights.
Abortion rights are healthcare rights, an Orwellian phrase, not just for individuals who wish to be pregnant, mothers, women, but also for those who do, for ectopic pregnancies, to finish a natural miscarriage, or if the mother or fetus's life is at risk.
Again, in It's an infinitesimally small part of that.
And those are concessions, all of which will be made by people who are against abortion in every other case.
But say, in the instance of saving a mother's life, it's a tragedy, but it's not something to be promoted.
So this is just a sort of Trojan horse thing.
If we go to this one, there's a transcript here that you can read the full debate for yourself.
I just wanted to play two quotes, though.
They're both from Jacob Rees-Mogg.
And Jacob Rees-Mogg is one of the few outspoken Catholics in Parliament.
A couple of his colleagues, Northern Irish fella, Fiona Bruce, they spoke quite eloquently.
But I will say that Jacob Rees-Mogg came hot off the heels of Stella Creasy.
Stella Creasy spearheaded this, and she's spearheading it in Parliament.
And she said...
Platitudes like abortion as healthcare, that she'd allow abortion under any circumstances because a doctor would not be able to refuse abortions, of course, upon request without being penalised because it's a right, you can't confiscate rights.
And then she compared abortion to vasectomies and ankle replacements and said, we don't treat any other procedure this way and it doesn't matter that this is the only procedure with another life involved because it's the woman's body.
So she was just dogmatically repeating left-wing talking points.
Jacob Rees-Mogg, however, really grappled with the historical, the philosophical and theological arguments.
And it's a shame we don't hear other politicians Talk this way anymore because Christianity has retreated from public life.
So we can just play the first one, please, John.
To the point made by my right-hand friend, the member for New Forest East, he said we can't look at it in terms of numbers of cities and people like that.
But we can because there are over 100,000 people in Northern Ireland who are alive today, who would not be alive had Northern Ireland had the abortion rules that we have in England, Wales and Scotland.
And that seems to me to be a modern tragedy, that there is this number of people who are no longer, had no opportunity for a life because they were ripped untimely from their mother's womb.
And when we think about this, and we think of the numbers of 214,869, in a four year period, in a four year period the destruction of life It's as great as it was in the four-year period of the First World War.
Those are the numbers that we are dealing with, and that is the tragedy of abortion.
When you put it in that scale, it's...
I don't want to say depressing, but you are taken aback by the fact that we've extricated a sense of the sanctity of life from our politics instead to say that it is entirely only the concern of the woman having it.
It's definitely not the concern of the man, as was brought up in this and immediately shot down.
Yes.
And the child has no obligation by its own parents or the medical establishment, as you said, to be protected.
That's the scale of devastation we have, the level of many war deaths.
Yeah.
But nobody else puts it in that level of poetic language.
And I think the reason is, and as we'll come onto in clip two, is the conviction of his faith that actually lets him stand behind this, because very few other people will throw themselves on the sword, unfortunately.
Yeah.
And what would be nice is if people like Jacob Rees-Mogg, the conviction of his faith also extended to other things that have been given to children, to babies.
I agree.
And we'll leave it at that.
Yes.
Certain big pharma entities.
I agree.
You can't just be...
You can't be selective.
Yeah, you can't be partly Christian.
You have to go the full gamut.
Well, I spoke to Rhys Mogg once about the online harms bill, and he seemed pretty apathetic about putting that through, when that would have been rather punitive to Christ's worry around.
And someone else asked him about the abortion bill and they said, is there any appetite for legislation?
He said, well, I and a couple of colleagues have put it forward, but it is just the axiomatic belief in the Conservative Party that it's a woman's right to choose to kill a child.
And as we saw in the previous segment about the leftism that's in the Conservative Party, it shouldn't be shocking.
There's also the absence of an objective, inviolable sense of life Has fundamentally damaged British legislation is leading to more dead babies and eventually more dead adult disabled people, people with mental health problems, or just people who are too inconvenient for the system to pay for anymore.
Yes.
I mean, it is.
It's dark.
It really is dark.
A sort of tyranny...
I don't know, wrapped up in a, you know, called something else.
It's a sort of things, it's things we've seen in history that are usually more dramatic, more obvious, like, you know, Stalin, Hitler, Pol Pot, Mao.
It's a purge masqueraded as compassion.
Yes, we're back to the long marks of the institutions.
It's seen, it's silently been creeping up to this point.
And, I mean, I just hope it's not too late.
I mean, that's why it's good that we're talking about this kind of stuff now, because we need to get cracking.
Exactly.
You know, we need to get on with it.
So, if we'd just like to play the second one, this I thought was just the best way to put it, and it's because it comes from his conviction of faith.
I just slightly correct what he's just said.
It's not the destruction of life in many cases, it's the destruction of potential life, unless one agrees, as I think he would agree with our honourable friend from Congleton, That life begins at the moment of conception.
But most people don't agree with that.
They believe it develops during the course of gestation.
And that's why my right honourable friend and neighbour is right when he says that the embryo acquires rights along the way, but not from the outset.
Well, my right honourable friend raises the question of the viability of life.
The viability of life.
When does that start, Sir Charles?
When do you think a life becomes a fully independent, created life?
Perhaps my right old friend thinks that we should be like the ancient Romans, the newborn baby.
Saint Marcina, who rescued newborn babies who were exposed in ancient Rome because their life wasn't viable without intervention, without support.
They were allowed To die.
Until the early Christians went and saved them, thought to be peculiar for doing so.
Particularly, as it happens, disabled babies.
And we know that the abortion laws that we have allow for full term termination, full term abortion, For babies with minor disabilities, as my humble friend, the member for Congleton, pointed out.
This is the tragedy of abortion, of the destruction of life.
And my right-on-friend wants to quibble about when life begins.
And I accept this is perhaps more a theological question.
What is the start of life?
But that new embryo, Has that potential for life.
It has been formed as a separate being that is separate and different from the parents from which it came.
Except when Stella Creasy gets on.
Yeah, she does start shouting at him.
Well, I thought Stella Creasy was particularly morbid, considering last year she complained that she couldn't bring her newborn baby into the sitting session of Parliament, and now she's saying you should be able to kill it up until the point of birth.
Right.
You would feel very uncomfortable as her kid watching her contributions back.
Yes, there was a lot of leftist contradiction in there.
They just love, don't they, they love nihilism.
They love destroying things.
Because nihilism is a prerequisite to totalitarianism.
Yeah.
And often it's unfortunately Christianity that is used as a weapon against this because it keeps saying, oh, Jesus would have let all the refugees in, don't be a bigot.
Oh, Jesus would have given up all his material possessions.
They're using your principles against you, which they only half understand, because Jesus was fairly militant.
He did say, sell your cloaks so you can at least buy a sword to defend yourselves from these Satanists.
Yeah.
Right?
And in using your own principles against you which they don't hold, they get you to concede ground to their ideological goals and then they just conquer you because they don't share the inviability of life principle that you have as well.
Mogg finished his section just with the quote of, I think this petition, misfires, I think it is wrong constitutionally and much more wrong morally because it prefers death to life.
Now, it would be wonderful if everyone else had Mog's conviction.
Unfortunately, they don't.
So, this was a follow-up from this segment here, saying that you can't talk about abortion in the UK, which got fact-checked by the NHS, saying that here's where you can access abortions under our video.
What?
The NHS put that under the...
Yep, it's a little bar there, context, abortion health information.
There's a link to the website talking about where you get the abortion zone.
Well, it hasn't got COVID-19.
Are you infected with...
Yes.
National death service.
So, this was a segment on the Bournemouth Conservative Council, who were lobbied by pro-abortion activists to institute a censorship radius around abortion clinics.
So, a no-go zone, basically, where you could be arrested if you were perceived to be protesting, drawing, or praying.
So, you can't pray in the vicinity of an abortion centre.
LAUGHTER I have an update on this.
We go to the next one.
They're being sued, so that's nice.
Bournemouth Christchurch and Pool Council is being taken to court for introducing the buffer zone to, as the BBC frames it, protect staff and visitors from protests.
So this is Christian and Cern, who have worked with Calvin before, who have said the council's consultation held prior to its introduction was questionable.
BCP council said it was seeking legal advice in considering its position.
Of course they were.
Fix the TV. Supported by the Christian Legal Centre, the group said that the 429ft 150m buffer zone around the British Pregnancy Advisory Group's BPAS Clinic in Opair Road in Bournemouth makes prayer illegal, which it does.
It can punish it with jail time, up to six months in jail in fact.
Now, I wish them all the best with this, but they're fighting an uphill battle because if we go to the next one, the MPs want to make this nationwide, led by who do you think?
Stella Creasy.
Plans to enforce buffer zones around abortion clinics in England and Wales have been backed by MPs.
The amendment to the government's public order bill, remember the one that was censoring noisy protests, that was meant to be for Extinction Rebellion, and wasn't.
Instead, it persecutes Christians, right?
Of course it does.
It was approved by MPs by 297 votes to 110.
I believe this was at the end of October.
Foreign Prime Minister Theresa May and Leader of the Commons Penny Mordaunt were among those backing the buffer zones.
So one's childless, and the other one works for the WEF. Home Secretary Suella Bravman...
Fellow Cabinet Ministers Jacob Rees-Mogg and Kemi Badnock voted against it.
So, the few that are picked out as maybe, hopeful, Kemi, I'm still a bit iffy on, but she's right on some issues.
Stella Creasy said that the buffer zones protect women accessing a very specific type of healthcare.
That's like saying that the ritualistic shamans of the Aztecs are practising a particular type of meteorology when they're cutting out children's hearts to stop the storm god for sending a thundercloud.
That is quite a niche reference.
But yeah, it's true.
Well, it is child sacrifice.
Child sacrifice for a completely different religious reason.
But Creasy says, it does not stop free speech on abortion.
Well, yeah, it does, by definition.
It stops you speaking out against abortion if you're near an abortion clinic where the abortions happen.
It doesn't stop people protesting.
It simply says you shouldn't have the right to do this in the face of somebody.
And very often these people are right up in front of people.
Yes.
Quietly praying right up in front of someone.
Absolutely disgraceful.
How dare you quietly pray?
I suppose informed consent no longer matters.
Oh, but we can't go there because we're on YouTube, can we?
Yeah, damn.
Unfortunately, and we'll finish with this, the Anglican Church are complicit in this because you have apologists like this who...
Appeared on Calvin Robinson's Sunday GV News show, best one on the network by the way, go and watch it every Sunday, he really appreciates it, River Michael Coran, who has since cried about the amount of Twitter messages he's got on here saying, oh Jesus wouldn't have hated me for this, has said, there is nothing in the Bible that speaks out against abortion.
Let's listen to this clip, shall we?
Let's redefine what's really going on here.
In the United States, many, let's say pro-life, I would say anti-choice, but to use your terminology, pro-life organizations have been classified by the FBI as terrorist groups.
Doctors who perform abortions have been killed.
They've been disabled for life by being wounded.
People have been attacked, beaten up, arson attacks.
We had an arson attack in Toronto on an abortion clinic.
There's a context here.
It's not actually about the...
I would agree, in this case, if they're outside the buffer zone, it is outrageous that anything should happen to them.
But I do believe in buffer zones so that women who are taking advantage of their right, whether you agree with it or not, of reproductive health, to go in for a termination, I know you disagree, but they should be able to do that without harassment.
The fact that these women were...
Praying is not harassment.
Hold on.
Within the buffer zone, outside...
Even within the buffer zone, there is never harassment.
No, inside the buffer zone, I say no.
Outside the buffer zone, shout, pray, because that's what the law is.
You can't extend the law in an arbitrary way and say, you're outside the zone, but even so, I'm going to move you.
I disagree with that.
I'm sorry, Father, the law is immoral.
You should never be able to outlaw prayer.
And for a cleric...
You're going to protect women.
For a clerk in Holy Orders to be on national television saying it's okay to outlaw prayer, I'm baffled by that.
It is not okay.
It is absolutely vital to protect the right of women to go into a clinic and say this is my choice and for them to be harassed, to feel threatened, to be intimidated, that is sinful.
Not only are you condoning the outlaw of prayer, you're condoning abortion as a Christian minister.
Well, scripture defines life as beginning at the first breath.
The Old Testament also recommends abortion in certain cases.
And if you want to get into that argument, you can.
But be reasonable here.
There is not going to be one group saying, we have one, we have lost.
Abortion is part of the law.
Women who want an abortion should be allowed to have.
Those who want to protest should be allowed to, but within a certain region.
What I've said is, if they're outside the buffer zone, no one has a right to stop them.
I think that's a reasonable compromise.
Right, so we couldn't be more wrong.
Especially considering this sounds like apologetics for an immoral law, much like a Christian saying, oh, it's alright, leave the Romans to feed the Christians to the lions.
It's the law.
You would have evaded and abetted the destruction of your fellow worshippers how many years ago.
But when he says that Scripture doesn't say anything about life starting before the first...
I can't remember if he said prayer or breath.
If a...
Breath.
No.
No.
It's literally the verse of Jeremiah that says, before I formed you in the womb, I knew you.
And he picked him out to be a prophet.
So no.
Also, you're superseding God's role in creating life there.
So you're...
Bestowing upon yourself the power of God to take a life.
Not good.
There's also this old chestnut, you know, Exodus.
Thou shalt not murder.
Might be a bit of a stick in the mud for people who want to go and kill their babies.
And then just, I thought I'd finish with this little verse here, which was Matthew 18.
If anyone causes one of the little ones who believes in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a millstone fastened around his neck and drowned in the depths of the sea.
Interpret that however you wish.
Of course there are immoral consequences from straying from, as we both said, the sanctity of life stemming from a moral source.
I understand there are people that genuinely haven't found it convincing.
Fair enough.
But I think we can all agree that this stuff is reprehensible.
And you can see a straying away from the principle that we shouldn't kill babies in the womb, and we shouldn't kill people just because they're old, because the state finds it convenient, has produced demonstrably terrible outcomes.
And it's gotten to the point now where our politicians are...
Well, as Nietzsche once said, God is dead in our culture and there is not enough water in the world to wash the blood from the hands of the people who are acting like Pontius Pilate and just going, not my fault, God.
Yeah.
Another slight point of historical interest, back to the Hippocratic Oath.
In the Hippocratic Oath, it actually says that a pessary should not be given to a woman to induce an abortion.
That's in the original Greek Hippocratic Oath.
Also, 1973, the US Supreme Court abandoned the Hippocratic Oath.
I was going to say banned, but I don't think they quite banned it, but they just said it's pointless, don't use it anymore.
Interesting.
Three years later, swine flu appeared, and then President Gerald Ford panicked.
Had to rescind it, yes.
Rescinded it.
Then there was a mass, shall we say, medical procedures on...
I think it's 40 million people in the States and that had to be withdrawn very quickly because of the deaths.
Is this ringing any bells?
So it was 73, Hippocratic Oath was, the US Supreme Court said, forget it, three years later, that's what we see.
I read that a couple of days ago and I thought that's when I knew I was coming off, that's interesting.
So again, we're back to this first principles things, Hippocratic Oath, Bible, First principles in politics, education, we've strayed away from this kind of central tenets of a lot of things.
Let's hope our first principles are a bit like Christ and quite good at resurrections, eh?
Yeah.
Yeah, good point.
On to the last one then.
I'm going to scare the crap out of you with this one, I hope.
Great.
Ladies!
Ladies!
We have one here, of course.
Dignified.
A biological lady.
Yeah, best kind.
Not Eddie Izzard.
You may have been on birth control for many years now.
What if I told you it might be having some unexpected effects on your taste in men, your taste in women, and worsening the total baby bust in the West in different ways than you might imagine?
Here's the truth about birth control.
Strap in.
Gets a bit weird.
For more on the social effects of the sexual revolution, you can pay £5 a month and go and watch Harry and I review The Case Against the Sexual Revolution by Louise Perry.
And yes, it is two blokes sitting around talking about an issue which mainly affects women, but we ran it by our girlfriends and they hated whores as well, so we're all A-OK. Alright, let's go to the first one, shall we?
So, we're talking about the contraceptive pill.
We're talking mainly about the combined pill.
And I'm using the NHS as a source just because in Britain, this is the one that doles out the most dosages.
But I believe in America, it's pretty much the same one.
It's progesterone and oestrogen combined.
The combined oral contraceptive pill is called just the pill.
that contains artificial virgins, depending on which one, but it's easier to extract that than get the proper hormone a lot of the time, estrogen and progesterone, which are produced naturally in the ovaries.
When taken correctly, the pill is over 99% effective at preventing pregnancy.
This means that fewer than 1 in 100 who use the pill will get pregnant every year.
Minor side effects include mood swings, nausea, tenderness, and headaches.
They They usually settle down in a few months.
There is no evidence the pill will make you gain weight.
There is very low risk of serious side effects, such as blood clots and cervical cancer.
There may be a link between the pill and depression, but evidence is mixed and further research needed.
Okay, seems pretty balanced.
They may be underselling the psychological effects, though, because we go to the next one.
I was calling the appendant.
Almost one quarter of women blame hormonal contraception for relationships ending.
Bit strange.
We're going to see a lot of testimonies emerge here.
Almost a quarter of women who have taken hormonal contraception say it caused or played a role in the end of their relationship.
Data from Britain's biggest law firm, Stowe Family Law, shared exclusively with The Independent, found that 85% said their marriage or relationship had been impacted by contraception side effects.
63% of women were forced to come off a form of contraception due to side effects altering their relationship.
Almost 9 in 10 women who had used hormonal contraception said it had affected their mental or physical health.
Researchers who polled 506 women aged between 18 and 60 found over 7 in 10 of them who had taken hormonal contraception said they suffered mood swings, while almost half had experienced depression and around 3 in 10 said they had anxiety.
So these weren't listed on the medical page.
Now, of course, these are just anecdotal testimonies.
It's a pretty significant survey, but still more research is needed as the NHS acquiesced.
But if the limit, relationship breakdown is pretty bad, but if the limit is something that therapy could hopefully mitigate, that's not too bad.
Right?
Okay.
Go next.
BBC are now doing documentaries on this, which is quite interesting.
So, it's beginning to gain a bit of traction, and obviously the documentaries are spearheaded by women, so this isn't just misogyny rearing its ugly head.
Countless studies have identified strong links between taking the pill and having poor mental health, and a new BBC2 documentary sheds the light on the severity of the problem, realising how it's left some women suffering from depression and experiencing suicidal thoughts.
One found women taking the pill, either the combined pill or progesterone-only pill, this is a study by the way, were more likely to be prescribed an antidepressant than those not on hormonal contraception, The difference was particularly noticeable for young women aged between 15 and 19 on the combined pill, another link found between hormonal contraception, suicide attempts, and actual suicide.
So, when we've had lockdown recently, when we've had TikTok accelerating girls' identity crises, that they've picked up things like tics and mental health conditions from watching other girls doing videos in this social contagion fashion, when we've got a massive over-prescription of young girls on mental health services in this country, this might be a factor exacerbating the social issues.
I mean, you know what's weird is, I mean, years ago when I was on the pill, this was nothing...
What's interesting to me is that this is kind of nothing new because things like weight gain, feeling insecure, you know, being a bit sort of like was definitely a factor amongst female friends.
And the reason...
I mean, this is just to put the slightly devil's advocate.
Yeah, please.
I think that the pill was sort of increasingly used was, because frankly, you know, men don't like using condoms.
There was a bit like, well, you know, it swings a roundabout.
Yep.
But, very definitely, I know a lot of my friends were like, yeah, I can't really stay on it because, you know, look at the size of me.
Because, you know, literally there'd be sort of slim women and then they'd be, the next time I saw them, the size of a house.
And then obviously, if you're with somebody who has been attracted to you as a sort of like slim, you know, this kind of, like the cracker, and then they see you next time and you're the size of a, you know, a mountain...
That's not good.
No.
But then you're back to what are your choices?
Yeah.
Do you see what I mean?
Male responsibility.
Male responsibility, yeah.
That was one thing.
The advent of the sexual revolution has encouraged women to sleep around a lot.
Put more demands on the men you're willing to sleep with by at least being in a relationship beforehand and...
The advice is tough, but maybe don't sleep with a man who you wouldn't want to risk ending up with a kid.
Because we just had the conversation about abortion being mass available and it's not done well for our concept of the sanctity of life in society.
Ladies, be a bit more careful who you bring home because he might not be the best for you.
And this is facilitating that irresponsible behaviour which will leave a lot of women broken-hearted or unexpected mothers or...
They might have to take very drastic measures to avoid being a mother.
But as I'm an honest person, I've flattened a lot of grass.
I have sinned in ways which I cannot go into now because this is a family show.
We've all picked the wrong person once.
I picked the wrong person one or two or several other times.
But what I would say is that, you know, and back to sort of Christianity, is that we are human.
We are flawed.
We are sexual beings.
And it is navigating that landscape.
I can say because I've been on the planet for quite a while.
And there are things, I mean, do I regret things?
No, I think regret is pointless because you become the person you are.
Mm-hmm.
And you're able to give advice or the benefit of wisdom.
But I would say this is something we're going to have to re-navigate, re-look at, because we've strayed so far from common sense.
Well, women are unfortunately making a lot of avoidable mistakes.
It's not leading to long-lasting relationships.
I think it's 30% of all men these days are having no sex at all, and a similar number of women is about 20%.
And that's really worrying.
That's population collapse levels.
That's really worrying, that men are afraid.
Didn't we talk about that last time?
We're afraid to approach women or, you know, meet them in a bar, say, you know, do you want a drink, blah, blah, blah.
Because there's this weird, almost...
De-sexualisation, which is...
We have to be careful that we're not running this in tandem with what we're talking about.
What I would say is form wholesome relationships.
Don't sleep around with everyone you know.
And even if the instinct to men and women wanting to have a little bit of fun without necessarily having a kid instantly...
Yeah.
Is going to happen.
Maybe the mass medication of girls from the age of 15 isn't the solution.
I mean, that is...
Very worrying.
The average age is about 14.
About 14.
I mean, that is getting younger and younger.
And there is no way you can know, as a girl...
I mean, you don't really know anything.
No.
You know what I mean?
That's definitely changed since I was that age.
Speaking of getting into a relationship and looking different by the time you come out of it...
This is quite interesting.
The pill is starting to have an effect on the women, how they choose the men that they're with.
This is interesting.
So, a group of women were asked in a lab condition to smell T-shirts that had been worn by a group of unknown and unwashed men.
All they had to do was say which shirts smelled the best to them.
Right.
So, most female volunteers had equivalent preferences to their rodent counterparts.
So, basically, mice prefer the scents of mice that smell the least like them so that genetic diversity is maximised.
That makes sense, yes.
For immunity purposes.
Exactly.
You don't want to contaminate the bloodline by basically being incestuous accidentally.
Numerous studies in mice showed that, given the choice, they sniff out mates with genes for immunity which differ from their own, and this seems to increase their chances of producing healthy offspring.
Among the volunteers, there was a startling exception to this trend.
Women on the contraceptive pill showed the reverse preference.
They chose men whose genes for immunity were closest to their own.
So, the guy who ran this experiment, his name is Klaus Vedekind, it's Swiss, he says, my guess is that the pill simulates pregnancy, and maybe during pregnancy, odour preferences change.
The theory is that during pregnancy, a female is attracted to the smell of her own relatives, who have similar majority histocompatibility complex genes.
After all, family members have the greatest interest in seeing her offspring survive, so women whose bodies are tricked into thinking they're pregnant by progesterone might have the same tendency.
So you're not readying women to pick men to mate with.
You're smelling someone who will provide security, not other biological factors.
Well, that's interesting.
I mean, it could be that, or it could be, if it does cause depression, that you're...
Settling?
Yeah, exactly, you're settling.
- You're sort of-- - You're sleeping your way out of a bad mood. - Yeah. - Also not something to be encouraged because that's not a very sustainable way to build self-esteem. - No. - And that's certainly a crisis that women are having right now with TikTok and Instagram and all that.
It's interlacing the social issues.
Very worrying.
What about the pill on women's sexuality?
So if we go to a British medical journal study, placebo-controlled comparisons of combined oral contraceptives and progesterone-only oral contraceptives were conducted in Scotland and the Philippines.
Negative effects of the combined pill on libido in Scottish women, half of whom reported reduced sexual interest, was the result.
Now, in all fairness, if you're trying to sleep with Scottish women, I wouldn't be surprised if they're not on that up for it, because if you've seen Scottish women...
Maybe it's Nicola Sturgeon.
We Jimmy Cranky.
in the Philippines levels of sexual interest were not significantly reduced possibly because the women had much lower levels before starting the pill compared with Scottish women that's important as you said it does interlace playing devil's advocate with social factors but when you apply it to a very sexually revolutionised society where women are told not to settle down and go out and be a boss girl and sleep around at university disastrous effects for women's self-esteem and the guys they possibly end up with what if a large scale social movement had defined masculinity itself as toxic We'll go on to this one.
Study from The Atlantic.
Wow.
Basically, women's preferences for facial features change if they're on the pill.
And they prefer less masculine men the longer they're on the pill.
Also, if men are becoming less masculine because they've been emasculated, is it just the pill?
She says, like a lawyer, asking the other side of the question.
Partially, yes, because also, if you think about the effect of the pill, it's allowed women to enroll in higher education, stay in the workplace longer.
This was an ambition of the second-wave feminists who deliberately wanted to destroy the family, according to Simone de Beauvoir.
Yeah.
And what happens is a lot of women are complaining that they're out-earning the men.
But obviously women, understandably, want a guy who earns more than them, evolutionarily speaking, for security.
So you're having these competing goals of wanting a guy for more security and the fact that the pill has made you enter the workplace, men are not earning as much.
They can't provide you that security.
So that's why many relationships are either women settling with beta males or not having relationships at all.
Yes.
It's a self-fulfilling prophecy.
We've basically come to Yeah.
It's an Ouroboros of castration.
Not fun.
So if we just read this a little bit.
Researchers in Scotland designed several experiments that delved further into the hormonal quirks brought by birth control.
In the first, they gave young straight women the ability to digitally alter men's faces.
The participants tinkered with features like cheekbone prominence, jaw height, and face width.
It's like creating a character in Skyrim.
Attempting to find the perfect ratio of attractiveness for either a short-term or long-term relationship, some did the same but with female faces.
So obviously some were lesbians.
None of the women who were taking birth control at the start, after the experiment, they were given the option to start it.
About a third of them started taking birth control.
Right?
So you have a control group and you have a third that are on birth control after they make the initial faces.
Right.
Three months later, they replicated the experiment.
In the second study, volunteers were asked to rate the attractiveness of men in relationships based on their mug shots.
Half, 85 of these men, were dating women who had been on the pill when they first met.
After beginning a regimen of hormonal birth control, the women's ideal of attractiveness in a potential romantic partner skewed significantly less masculine.
They were more likely, for example, to prefer narrower jawbones and rounder faces.
These preferences appear to translate to real-life decisions.
The men whose partners who had been on the pill when they first started dating were found, as a whole, to be less masculine looking.
Wow, that is so fascinating.
Because I suppose, of course, the pill is dumbing down your...
Dumbing down, that's not really the right phrase, but, you know, it's squashing...
Suppressing.
Suppressing, yeah, your natural inclination, your biological sort of determinants to go...
Four, essentially.
The muscular bloke.
Yeah, the muscular bloke.
If you're not in peak estrogen, then that means that you're not as interested in the physical dimensions of sex, which means that you're happy to settle for a less attractive man.
And, not being funny, as we've learned with the amount of ugly Antifa protesters, a lot of the time...
Better looking people put the work in to be better looking, so a guy that's in shape is going to be more virtuous than a guy who's a sloppish beta male feminist.
And so they're settling for these beta male feminists and wondering why they're not man enough to have a relationship.
Yeah, a sort of straight Benjamin Butterworth.
I think of those sloppish...
Do you know what I mean?
A character from Arthur, yeah.
He's like, that is who I have in my head.
Yeah.
Don't sleep with Star Wars sequel fans, basically.
Also, is it making women angrier?
So if you think about it, they've got social animosity against men.
Now they've got an animosity to male features.
Yes.
And they're more depressed, anxious, and suicidal.
And you wonder why the feminist movements are getting screechier and screechier in the protest movements.
This is a BBC article published today, of all things.
Thank you to Rory for forwarding me this.
A BBC analysis of 10 years of data from the Gallup Word poll.
Women are getting angrier.
Every year, the poll surveys more than 120,000 people, massive sample size, in more than 150 countries asking, among other things, what emotions they felt for a lot of the previous day.
The BBC's analysis found that since 2012, more women than men report feelings of sadness and worry.
When it comes to anger and stress, the gap is widening with men.
In 2012, both genders reported anger and stress at similar levels.
Nine years later, women are angrier by a margin of 6 percentage points Wow.
So it could purely be ideology, or it could be a combination of both.
Yes, it could be, yes.
I mean, speaking personally, my anger, my fury is off the fucking charts.
Oh, yeah, because everything's going on.
Because of the last two and a half years and because everything that's still happening, you know, as we know, the WEF, the whole sort of global agenda.
But that is interesting that younger women are maybe, well, they're angry because they're not having their...
Because in evolutionary terms, they're having their opportunities sort of cut off, and so are men.
Yeah, they're having...
So are women definitely...
So they're more angry?
Yes.
Right, women...
Right.
Mm-hmm.
Connor goes, let me tell you, that's the truth.
You've met my missus.
Hannah's lovely.
But it's really sad.
The concerning thing is, are you familiar with the lesbian domestic violence rate by any chance?
It's massively higher than it is with straight couples and gay male couples.
No.
Oh, so the lesbian anger.
Lesbian domestic violence rate.
Lesbian anger.
Yeah.
I think it's something like 70% of all lesbian women have reported being hit by an intimate partner at least once in their life.
Good God.
So what if the birth control pill was making you a lesbian?
God, we're into...
Well, I mean, free speech.
We can put it out there as a theory.
So, yes, we can, actually.
This is posited by Dr Sarah Hill, who did an interview with Chris Williamson, who's a friend of the show.
I've spoken to him about this.
He's a Geordie, isn't he?
Yes, he is.
Never let him forget Love Island.
so a 2011 study of around 2,000 women published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B explored sexual satisfaction and partner attraction among women who met their partners when they were on the pill versus those who only started using birth control after the relationship starting relationship results showed women who met their partners when they were on the pill scored lower in both measures they also rated the partner's body and sexual adventurousness lower than in the control group another study published in 2018 by the University of Glasgow found that women's preferences for masculine faces were generally stable regardless of whether they took the pill or were ovulating
so there's counter-research as there always is in this sort of stuff yeah then there's a bunch of testimonies in this article about women who said that their bisexuality increased when they started taking the pill including some woman that said that I went off men completely and I now have a girlfriend Obviously this is just independent testimony.
So Dr Hill said, the jury is still out on whether the pill can cause significant shifts in sexuality.
My take on the preponderance of the evidence I've seen is that the answer to the question is it can have an effect, but I don't know it's going to happen all the time.
However, have you seen the recent reporting that Gen Z is 40% identifying as LGBT? 40%?
Yeah, I believe it's between 1 in 6 and 4 in 10.
That, again, could be purely sociological.
Could be purely.
Very speculative.
Right.
But it might be an exacerbating factor.
It could be a combination.
What it sounds like to me is a combination of medication.
Yeah.
It could not just the pill.
It could also be the antidepressants.
Let's be fair.
Absolutely.
But also because these women aren't finding men satisfactory in a sexual sense because they're looking at them and seeing...
Beta males.
Beta males.
This is what Cara Delevingne said the other day.
Not exactly the font of sense, but she said, men lack the tools to pleasure women.
Now, biologically speaking, that's bollocks, quite literally.
However, is she speaking from her immediate experience and the circle of people she's surrounded with in a very liberal, Californian, sexually revolutionised setting as to where she's going, all the men are weak male feminists and I just prefer the company of a woman, even if they're angrier.
Even if they're angry women?
Yeah.
I mean, we're basically seeing a major shift to sort of asexual.
It's got its own flag now.
Yeah, exactly.
It's got its own bloody flag.
Yeah, this is worrying.
The most worrying part we'll come onto right now at the end.
Oh my god.
There's more?
Yeah.
What if the castration was quite literal?
So, if we can look at this.
Birth control pills are adding 10 million doses of progesterone into the wastewater every day in America.
Now, that was three years ago, so you can only imagine it's increasing with the amount of young girls taking it.
In the US, 15 million women regularly take birth control pills, which typically rely on the synthetic form of estrogen and progesterone known as EE2. Since it's an endocrine disruptor, EE2 can interfere with reproductive hormones and development if consumed in excess or by vulnerable individuals like infants.
Yeah.
A 2010 study determined that birth control pills account for less than 1% of total oestrogen found in US drinking water.
So that might sound quite good.
It might just be plastics, right?
But since local water systems don't test for EE2, the study's authors noted, it's hard to say for sure how much the hormone is in our water.
We've got the same problem in the UK now, to the point of where it is making fish species, we go to the Guardian reporting, Go entirely extinct because it's involuntarily skewing most of their eggs female and it's making amphibians change their gender.
So they're putting chemicals in the water to turn the freaking frogs trans.
Now, I have heard this.
This is not a new theory.
No, it's not.
It has had some effects.
Obviously, things that are in the water are going to have some effect.
But I think mainly it is the left trying to destroy...
I think it's ideology, it's plastics, but there's also this.
The interesting thing is this was 10 years ago.
So they've invested $30 billion in to try and purify this.
The problem is they still couldn't test for it in the UK, so they don't know how much.
Not only is how much in the water, how much is in the human effect.
This is very speculative.
The last thing we're going to look at is some research that's published very recently.
We go to the final one, please, John.
Sperm counts worldwide have plunged 62% in 50 years.
62%?
Yes.
So between 1973 and 2018, it was reported that America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand, the nations that have the most access to reproductive pills and are sexually revolutionised, have plummeted by more than 50% between those years.
1973 was when the progesterone pill was made available to market.
Same time as, by the way, the Hippocratic Oath was banned by the US Supreme Court.
Ka-ching!
Could we find some...
That's just a pure coincidence, by the way.
I was looking at that the other day.
So we'll be going through some more stuff on Josh's Contemplation series, which you can see if you subscribe to the website.
And this will be out this Saturday at the time of recording.
But I hope I've given you enough to chew on here, and I advise you go and watch Chris Williamson's interview as well with Dr.
Hill and evaluate the evidence for yourself.
We're not medical doctors, of course.
Go talk to your doctor if you trust them and make sure that you get a solid diagnosis if you have any of these symptoms.
My point being, though, is I think...
Socially, we need to come to a much better solution that creates more wholesome families, better relationships, and starts putting the onus on women to mass medicate to avoid pregnancy than possibly producing these adverse side effects for women.
And if you're going to try out and go meet the love of your life, maybe switch off the pill because you might be picking the wrong bloke and not even know it.
You could be.
Is this the point where I should put my Christmas hat on?
Go for it.
Right, we'll do the video comments and then we'll get to some of your questions.
I'm sure we'll have some time.
Oh, I can see this is Sophie, isn't it?
Go on, Sophie.
Upset us.
Stonewall.
A building, an uprising, a revolution.
Two stables side by side.
For more a hundred years, we witnessed history.
We became part of history.
Oh, this is riveting for children.
Our neighborhood became a mecca for immigrants arriving from all around the world.
Visits have made their way to Greenwood's village.
Many of them stayed.
They're describing New York as a lecca for immigrants.
They're retroactively putting a Muslim woman and her baby walking into New York in the 1800s, are they?
Yeah.
So the story behind this is her sister runs an LGBTQ bookshop in Denmark.
Right.
So, she's related to a subversive.
I'm sorry.
The cliches are just unending, aren't they?
Yeah, well, judging by the 42% suicide rate, I'm sorry for your impending loss.
Here's the next one.
Keep it light, I've got a Christmas hat on.
What I'm finding hilarious about Twitter's political donations is that they're still 0.2% desperately hanging on to the Republican Party.
I think of the Twitter offices.
There must have just been one lone Chad who was refusing to give in.
Trump!
Trump!
We talked about this, Chad.
You're not allowed to say things like that.
Shut up, vagina.
Is that Chris Williamson?
Stupid name, by the way.
Maga forever!
What?
Is that actually happening?
Of course it happened.
I give this one a nine.
Quality me.
Basically, it makes some great edits.
I find Elon Musk quite sexy.
I don't trust him, though.
That's going in our best year clips.
John, save it!
Fucking hell.
You're not on the Kanye West train calling him a Chinese spy then?
No?
No, you fancy a bit of Musk?
You want to smell Musk's Musk?
That just sounds wrong!
Is that T-shirt sniffing experiment?
It is!
Oh my god, there's something about him.
I mean, he is a sociopath and a megalomaniac, but...
Yeah, I don't trust him as far as I confirm.
They're kissing up to the Chinese.
They're not sticking around to being an absent father.
Yeah, decarbonisation of Europe.
He's talking to Macron about all that.
On board with the fucking brain chips.
Yeah.
You've got me swearing now, bloody hell.
I know.
What's happening?
Bad influence.
I know, terrible.
Right, is that it for the video comments, John?
Wonderful.
Okay, so we've got some comments on the website.
George Happ, glad to see Abby is back.
She's a great guest.
It's a shame she didn't make the Getter Comedy Night.
I was looking forward to seeing her live.
Oh, sorry.
Yeah, I was unwell.
But I'm back, and I'm raring to go, and hopefully there'll be more Getter events.
You've got gigs coming up.
You were recently at the Backyard Comedy Club.
Backyard Comedy Club on Sunday, James Dellingpole.
Yeah, so there'll be lots more, so just watch out for those.
Yeah, and you can obviously see over on Abbey's website, you'll be announcing those on Getter, I assume, your tour dates and things like that.
Yeah, my tour dates on Getter and Telegram and Substack.
And this is your merch site.
And this is my merch site, Cathy Crunt, obviously my newsreader character.
And if you scroll, there should be a merchandise.
There you go.
So Woke Zero is the new one, which I think is really cool.
I've had loads of people going at that.
And then my pronouns are tits.
Josh!
That definitely won't get you in trouble with the HR around the office.
Is there a t-shirt with the pronouns tits?
You've got one there, haven't you?
I've got one.
There we go.
This is an old, as you can tell, very old.
I don't know if people can see it.
Yeah.
Yeah?
Yeah.
You can get that.
Because I don't take any prisoners, everyone.
Because we're in a spiritual war.
We're in the fight of our lives.
Stop pussyfooting around.
I'm talking to you, fellow comedians and so-called free speech warriors.
And terrible conservative politicians, unfortunately.
Trigonometry.
I didn't say that.
I do find them fence-sitters.
Yeah, fence-sitters.
Go on, splinters in the arse.
Carl's desperately trying to pull them down off it.
We'll get there eventually.
Hopefully Constantine Kissin is a little bit more fortitude of the more kids he has, eh?
Yeah.
Alright, let's read some comments, shall we, just before we wrap up.
Lord Nerevar, the Tories simply cannot survive through the next election without help at least.
They've totally and utterly usurped their mandate from the British public from 2019.
They've accomplished exactly zero of the things they were elected for and actively made those issues worse over time.
Can anyone point me to anything they've actually achieved since their historic victory?
Except for destroying Jeremy Corbyn, of course.
What a shambles.
They've filled every holiday in from here to Timbuktu, haven't they?
It's a feat, I suppose.
It's an achievement.
It's not Not at our expense, but they're shite.
They're terrible.
SH Silver.
The Tories and Labour are two sides of the same neoliberal coin.
Acura.
Britain needs to get past the Thatcher and Blair paradigm in order to get politics to actually represent its people.
Yeah, completely agree with that.
Yes.
Absolutely.
Who is that?
That's a very smart comment.
S.H. Silver.
Yeah, we need a political revolution in this country.
I'm not advocating, by the way, any violent revolution at all.
Because we're not allowed to.
Because we're not allowed to, precisely.
But we need...
Stop pussyfooting around.
We're out of the paradigm now.
We're out of the matrix.
So any of this like, oh, maybe we could have the good old days.
No, no.
We've moved on.
It's no longer the good-faith opposition.
That's not a thing.
When they want to actively subvert all you stand for, they don't want you to have children.
They want you to be a dependent serf plugged into the metaverse and then powered by renewables.
And then, well, if you've got a brain chip and suddenly you said the wrong thing in the metaverse or on Twitter, well, they could just turn your power off, can't they?
Yeah.
What a shame.
You should have consumed all that carbon, comrades.
Omar Awad.
The minister defending the prohibition zone on abortion is absurd on so many levels.
Harassment is okay outside the zone.
Abortion is a right.
Defending the lives of the unborn is not a right.
Prayer is not a right.
Prayer is harassment.
The same prayer outside the zone is not harassment.
That priest is as Christian as the Tories are conservative.
I think we should con the uni...
coin uni religion since they all believe in the same woke dogma regardless of their denomination of faith.
Well, they've just got this sort of underlying consensus of we're just going to listen to international institutions and go full throw.
How can anyone at this point as well deny, say, oh, it's a conspiracy theory?
Like, I had one woman tell me this about the Rishi Sunak coup, and I said, well, Jeremy Hunt's financial advisor at BlackRock, and BlackRock do work with World Economic Forum.
She went, oh, it's a conspiracy theory.
And I was like, well, it's written on their website here.
How can anyone deny it's a conspiracy theory when everyone is doing 2030?
It's a deadline year for literally everything, and you're telling me it's not coordinated with every government.
And the church and the state, when the state and the church are interchangeable, like they were in Stalin's Russia, what you do is you create true faith in the catacombs.
It runs parallel.
There are ways, and I think that's what's happening now.
People are looking around and going, well, the church shut its doors the last two and a half years, so they're not Christian.
Definitely not.
So we're going to have to go for authentic faith.
I've spoken to some priests, funnily enough, who may be keen to come on the show at some point, who watch our show, circulate the clips through WhatsApp, and when I called the Pope a communist satanic subverter, they entirely agreed with me outside the church.
So there are a contingent of very disaffected men of the cloth, much like Reverend Calvin Robinson, who are sick and want to reform the institutions.
The question is, how long is it going to take?
Yes.
Both Protestantism and Catholicism is captured to the point where they're now of Drag Queen Story Hour, Greta Thunberg, and permitting abortion.
We're going to have to rethink the saying, is the Pope a Catholic?
Yeah, now it is genuinely a question.
No, he's definitely not.
We've got time for one more.
Captain Charlie the Beagle, speaking of a Catholic, he's a good lad, he's going to scare the hell out of us even more.
Connor, the thing about the pill is it's currently impossible to filter out the synthetic estrogen out of the wastewater.
So if you're drinking treated water, there's a possibility that men are microdosing themselves of estrogen.
Right.
So my theory might be right then.
You're right.
Yeah.
And on that bombshell, thanks very much for watching.
We'll obviously have you back.
We always enjoy having you on.
Love you guys.
Happy Christmas, everyone.
Yep, happy Christmas very tentatively.
I mean, I'm still going to be sticking around until the 22nd, so you're still going to hear from me.
Until next time, tomorrow, back at one o'clock.
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