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July 23, 2024 - The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters
01:39:45
The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #962
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Hello and welcome to the podcast of the Lotus Eaters for the 23rd of July 2024.
I'm very pleased to have the Voice of Wales, Stan and Dan, here today.
I'm also joined by Beau.
I'm very sunburned.
So today we're talking about Ireland's fury against migration.
We're going to be then looking at Wales and the resignation of the First Minister there.
And then Beau's going to be giving us his signature white pill here and talking about Just Up Oil being arrested and going through some of their greatest hits.
Excellent.
Okay, we're having some problems with the video wall, so I've been told not to start just yet until this... This bit doesn't go on YouTube, you can be crazily based at this point.
Yeah, right.
Say what you really feel.
Remigration now.
Gloves off.
There we go.
Remigration.
Microplastics are stored in the balls.
We got any rumble rants?
There aren't any yet.
Oh yes of course!
I have an announcement rather than nonsense that I was saying earlier and that is we are still doing the rumble rant so if you want to send in a comment relating to a specific segment we will read out at the end of the segment and of course we're going to leave some time for comments afterwards as well.
Just waiting on the video wall and then it's going to start because it's very annoying when it starts flashing.
It wouldn't be Lotus Eaters without technical difficulties would it?
Okay, I think we are in business.
I wouldn't know where to start with all this.
We good?
Okay.
Now then, let's get back into the frame of mind of it now.
So Ireland's obviously been in the news quite a lot recently for their pushing back against asylum seekers and migration more generally to Ireland and I think that there have been a lot of sympathies from abroad and I'm one of the people that thinks actually you know they have a right to say no we don't want this in our country and we're going to look at some of the reasons why and some of the pushback
in recent times because this month in the past week or so has been quite hot, if you pardon the pun, in the protests against lots of these migrant processing facilities.
So let's remind ourselves quickly about why the Irish might be opposed to these sorts of people.
So here's a case here, this was from 2022 and he was imprisoned in 23.
Yusuf Polini murdered two Irishmen, he is Iraqi Kurdish, And this was just this week or the prior week and it says this week the court saw one asylum seeker jailed for sexually assaulting a woman in Dublin while another internationally protected applicant was charged with the rape of a woman in Limerick.
And apparently the 26-year-old Algerian Adil Karay had arrived in Ireland only five days before he sexually assaulted the woman who was waiting for her boyfriend on O'Connell Street.
And apparently he had four previous convictions in the UK.
I don't know how they didn't screen that.
And was only jailed for two years and three months.
Which is disgusting.
I think that sex crimes like this, particularly from someone from outside of the country, you know, that's what the death penalty is for.
I don't have any sympathy for these people.
I don't think that person can be rehabilitated in society and I don't think they should be.
I think that they should be punished for what they have done.
Then we have this one as well, Syrian refugee jailed for three years for the deplorable rape of defenseless woman.
He's called Ahmed al-Sabahi.
And then you have This, of course, this was the anti-immigration riots in Ireland.
This was back in November after three children were stabbed by a foreign national.
This guy was called Riyad Bouchakha and he was from Algeria.
Apparently he'd been living in the country for 20 years and he was of no fixed address, I'm sure.
Ireland was better off for having this man who stabbed innocent children in their country.
He was neither a rocket engineer nor a surgeon.
No, he wasn't.
He was a vagrant.
And of course there are articles gaslighting people who are angry about this.
How misinformation and far-right groups sparked a riot in Dublin after the stabbing of three children at a school.
That last part sort of makes the former part a bit redundant in my opinion.
What was the misinformation?
Who knows?
Because they've just said what the issue was.
I think the stabbing of three children is enough to be angry about, all on its own for this kind of reaction, right?
It doesn't need to be any more explanation.
And of course the Irish Prime Minister has pleaded not to link crime with immigration.
And these sorts of things, this failure of the political system to deal with what is obviously A problem that is caused by government policy.
They made a choice to let these people in the country and they failed the Irish people in letting them in.
In much the same way that is happening in lots of European and North American countries at the minute.
I often say to people that when you go to fly abroad and you spend two hours going through security taking your shoes off and your belt off and stripping off That's down to what we've allowed in.
When you see these diversity barriers in towns and cities throughout the country, that's due to this.
Why is Britain nearly on a war footing?
And yet nobody points to the fact that we are less safe because of immigration, mass immigration.
I mean the crime figures vindicate this view Unequivocally, don't they?
In that the per capita crime rates for certain groups of people are massively disproportionate to the native populations.
And I think that's a perfectly just reason to not have these people in our country.
Not that we have to justify it, I think.
Sorry, were you going to say something, Bo?
No, I can do that.
Go ahead.
The crime of having our countries flooded by these foreign criminals is completely unprecedented throughout all of human history, certainly in the British Isles.
Nothing like this has ever, ever happened before.
And I just hope that in years to come, the people that are responsible for it, people at the top of governments and civil servants and all sorts of people, the leaders of NGOs that have allowed it or physically made it happen, should be held to account at some point.
Because they are responsible for the crimes of the people who they're letting in, right?
By supporting these policies.
Like that guy, what was his name?
He's not the Prime Minister anymore, is he?
No, he's just gone.
He lost the major vote.
He's exactly the sort of person who should be held to account, should be put on trial for crimes against the Irish people, crimes against the Irish state.
Treason.
If you think five years ago, six years ago, the population of Ireland was round about 3.1 million.
It's now touching six.
It's five and a half million people and they ain't people seeking to go back to their Irish roots.
You know?
And that's the problem.
The issue is that you've now got emigration from Ireland from the Irish.
If fleeing their own ancestral homeland.
They're fleeing their own land because of the plantation that's now being in operation now by this guy and of course you've got the president of Ireland as well and the name escapes me because he's not even known in his own front room let alone anywhere else.
Well, it is at replacement levels.
That's one of the things the globalists always hate anyone saying or pointing out or even daring to suggest.
Whatever it is, it's not a replacement.
That's just the word a far-right fantasist might use.
That's just misinformation.
Well, no, not at all.
Not at all.
That's exactly what it is.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely correct.
But to carry on with some of the gaslighting that's going on to the Irish population, because I do agree with you both that that is what's going on, right?
They're saying, every migrant woman I know, including myself, has suffered from depression.
This is in, I believe, the Times of Ireland.
And then if you read the subheading, It reveals a little bit about why women in Ireland's direct provision system suffer sexual violence and many live in fear of their hostile environment.
But hang on a minute, isn't that just revealing that the people they're housed with aren't safe for the Irish population?
The fact that all of these sex criminals, these Monsters, a house with them, suggests that maybe they shouldn't be in Ireland in the first place.
They're in the wrong country.
Exactly.
So I'm going to look at some recent cases of protests against migrant processing facilities as well as just more general reactions against pushing these sorts of narratives which, you know, journalists and politicians seem to be pushing but it seems like there's a pretty organic pushback.
from the Irish population.
And I am going to mispronounce some stuff.
I'm English.
Yes, I'm trying.
At least I'm sympathizing with you.
So if you're Irish, you know, give me an easier time about it.
But first going to Dundalk.
I think it's pronounced.
I don't know.
That's better.
Thank you.
It's, you know, in the north of Ireland, close to the Northern Irish border there.
And There was an incident where a bunch of migrants, taxi drivers coincidentally, always turns out to be taxi drivers, beat up a couple of kids.
And there was a post to Facebook, I believe, which we should have somewhere.
Where is it?
Here we go.
So this is a guy, I presume this is legitimate but you know take it with a grain of salt.
I was out last night for drinks with my friends and we went to a chip shop in Park Street where we saw a little 16 year old boy that just came back from a concert being jumped by the gang that lives up over five taxis.
Of course we got involved to help make sure the wee boys are okay.
It was about 15 of them foreign nationals that ended up attacking myself and others, leaving the little boys with busted faces, one child with a broken leg.
Guards couldn't get an ambulance so they had to phone for the wee boy's mother to come and get him and take him to the hospital.
the gang ran back up to their flat and was hanging out the windows, laughing at us in front of the guards.
Guards wouldn't do a thing about it.
But of course, when I reacted back, I got arrested.
They were throwing things out their windows and spitting down at us.
The guards were there to protect them when it was the children that needed protecting.
This is the country we are now living in.
Shame and disgrace.
And this led to a protest here in the UK.
Hopefully this plays without the audio because it's quite loud.
But there was a counter-protest outside the house of these people.
I'm just going to leave this to play in the background.
And yes, a bunch of people turned out pretty organically to counter-protest the house of these people who did this and it's people in the community and the police were just there to keep these people safe but there's no word of them being arrested or facing any crimes and in fact there was a counter-protest Of a bunch of left-wingers.
Everyone deserves a roof over their head, a bed to sleep in and food in their belly.
All in a safe place.
These people that came from Dublin do not represent this town.
I love Dundalk so much and I'll always be there to shout against this racist hatred.
But they represent the country more than these people do.
So it doesn't matter if they come from Dublin.
That's irrelevant.
It's Ireland.
The issue is... The Irish people.
And people forget it.
And people forget it in this country, including the government.
Your rights as a refugee are pretty limited.
To be kept safe, that's one.
But that could be on a Royal Air Force station or an army base.
It doesn't have to be in a town or a home.
It could actually be in Arabia.
It could be anywhere, as long as they're safe.
There's food and sustenance.
That's it.
Why are we now giving them iPhones and money and free pizzas on taxes and stuff like that?
It is over the top.
It is driving a wedge between people that have not and these people that have everything, including housing, including housing.
In Wales, it is appalling.
We're doing battles with stupid, low-calibre councillors in Llanelli that believe that the housing waiting list is not there for you or I.
And neither is the private sector housing.
But it is.
It's there.
And the reason why you're on a waiting list is because there isn't private sector housing to put people for emergency accommodation.
And it's going on in Ireland.
It's going on across Europe.
And it needs to stop.
It should be hard to line even.
We shouldn't be obliged to give them anything.
People from the Middle East or Africa or anywhere.
No, Britain and Ireland isn't an overflow car park for the detritus of the rest of the world.
As simple as that.
We should accept none of them.
None.
So these people here I think have come over legally because they're working in taxis but it goes to show that even legal migration is a massive problem.
I know I'm focusing on illegal migration and what you were saying Just to say that really quickly, on the taxis, so we know, we've uncovered it in Wales, you'll have one who'll have a taxi medallion, and all his friends will use it.
So that taxi will be out all day, every day, because it'll be the unlicensed taxi drivers, the illegals, that are using it.
And that's, I'd put my life in it, that's exactly what's happening there.
I would not be surprised, because it's the same sort of crime across the board, isn't it?
Across all of Europe.
The council protesters, they're the most insane.
We use the analogy all the time, don't we, of a fox getting a chicken coop.
You sort of don't blame the fox.
The fox is going to do what foxes do.
You blame the farmer that failed to build the fence.
These are these lefties.
So let's sort of shame them here.
Here is the great turnout according to this person.
It's not as big as the crowd protesting the people who attacked those children.
They're very diverse.
Turkey's voting for Christmas.
What do they think they're doing?
Yeah.
These are Sinn Féin IRA, probably, aren't they?
They are the power that stand behind the government, which is Sinn Féin.
And these signs, interestingly enough, At Pen Alley, the same signs, these types of signs were the demonstrators, the illegals that were kept there, they broke out, went into the town and they were holding the exact same signs up, I want a home.
And when Dan questioned them, they said, oh we've been in prison, we don't want to stay in a prison.
Yeah, we've just come from prison.
We've just come from prison.
So these are the people who are being let in.
And these are the ones, at the same time, these people are saying, well these are dentists and doctors.
Astronauts.
Well we didn't get that one.
But that's what they were saying.
So it's the same people.
It's the same people.
And interestingly enough, the Labour Party in Wales has sister affiliations with Sinn Féin IRA.
I'm not surprised.
It's funny how the world has moved on.
In the 60s, 70s or 80s, Sinn Féin or the IRA, they wouldn't be these types of people, would they?
How subverted Sinn Féin is.
The Nationalists, now, unless you're an English Nationalist, which is obviously far right, they're far left.
Welsh Nationalists, far left.
Well, I mean, the Welsh Nationalists, they scorn me because I'm English.
But they will do all this all day long for people that have not got any interest other than to draw social security in this country.
Like the SNP being super lefty and wanting to rejoin the EU and stuff.
They're destroying their own country just so they can sort of Poke a stick in Westminster's eye or in English people's eye and they'll destroy their own nation and society.
Cutting their nose off to spite their face aren't they?
Madness, absolute madness.
So moving on to somewhere else and we're now moving into lots of places in Dublin starting with Corlock, I think I'm pronouncing that right, that's here in the sort of north of Dublin for those outside of Ireland and There's a former factory that is being repurposed as an asylum seeker center.
And this is, ironically enough, the Crown Paint Factory, which formerly employed 150 people and began laying people off in 1997 and struggled on until about 2016, where it closed production and was outsourced to a different country with cheaper labor.
There's a bit of irony here, isn't there?
And now it's being turned into a migrant facility.
So this sort of epitomizes the failure of lots of Western governments that our industries are being gutted from beneath us and we're having third world people flown in to terrorize our communities.
Same for, you know, same for Ireland, same for England, same for Wales.
And it is so frustrating and it's good to see, at least in Ireland, people aren't taking it lying down in the same way that perhaps we are in England.
Well everybody knows that paints are very highly flammable.
So it's worth mentioning as well that the site owners have received millions from the Department for Provisions of Accommodation and I'm going to name them as well.
Paul Collins and Tanya Hennigan.
There we go.
So those are the people you need to direct your anger towards.
And the site has been set on fire many times.
Here's a video showing the third time it was set on fire because the counter protests, the protests against the site, sorry, I think have been setting fire to it quite a bit.
It wasn't climate change then?
It might have been.
We need an investigation.
Yeah, absolutely.
If you roll down the screen, the comment just at the top of that, it was plantation.
Yeah.
And that's what's happening in Wales.
It's happening in England, but in Wales, again, we have very similar size, 3.1 million in Wales, and suddenly there's been a birth boom, hasn't there?
I wonder where that's come from, yes.
So it's also been set fire to a fourth time and I think the attempt is here to just make the building so uninhabitable that they give up.
Which, following the logic of what they're doing, could work.
I don't think that the fire brigade put the fires out the first time.
I think you've been very harsh.
That they didn't do it properly.
Yeah, it's the same fire, just setting light again and again.
Migrant centres just spontaneously combust, like churches do.
They just spontaneously combust, there's nothing anyone can do about it.
Just doesn't need any investigation or anything.
French cathedrals, much the same, right?
Yeah, French cathedrals, they just burst into flames of their own accord.
And the police found some incendiary devices.
Planted.
There we go.
That were produced by climate change.
If I can get the picture to stay.
There we go.
It looks like a bottle of water.
Molotov cocktails.
Molotov cocktail.
Or did the police actually put them in in the first place?
Who knows?
But here is the kind of sentiment being expressed.
This guy goes over at night time and holds up a sign.
I'm just going to skip forward and there's You can hear it being cheered on.
Women and children are not safe.
We are scared to walk our streets.
And it's that simple.
It is.
That's all people are protesting about is the safety of their women and children.
Correct.
Of the well-being of their community.
That's all it's about.
The first duty of all governments is the defence of the nation and the protection of its people.
And it doesn't matter whether it's Ireland or whether it's the United Kingdom.
That is the first duty of any government and they've lamentably failed.
Well, we can see them protecting them here by pushing them back and macing them in the face.
Here you'll be able to see, there we go, a bit of mace spray.
That's supposed to be a last resort.
It is, yeah, and it was completely unnecessary there because people were moving back organically.
It wasn't like they were necessarily clashing with the police.
Talking of unnecessary here, here they are You know, moving back.
There's hardly anyone here.
There's sort of people loitering around having a look.
And this guy's sort of not moving quickly enough.
What?!
And they just shove him to the ground.
See, you know, and the problem is if he got up and whacked him, which in my self-defence he's entitled to do, he'd be serving time.
Exactly.
And it's sort of trying to provoke reactions out of people to justify the level of policing that's being used.
And this is used quite often in protests that are not politically expedient, let's say.
But these again, you see, with the indigenous, they've got full riot squad out.
With others, they're in shirtsleeve order.
Leeds is a good example.
And the same in London, just stop oil.
And others, you know, they're not in riot gear.
It's only when you're waving a St.
George's flag.
It's because they know they can get away with it, isn't it?
Because, you know, ethnic Europeans don't stand up for ourselves in the way that we used to.
And it's sort of disgraceful.
And I think that we do need to start standing up for ourselves because the police reaction, you know, the people calling the shots are still morally culpable for it.
But there's still more that could be done.
I think that clip, one of them was saying that the French police put down their batons and shields and stood with the people and the guy was actually asking them to do the same and they rewarded him with tear gas in his eyes.
Well that's eventually what needs to happen in a lot of revolutions.
Two that spring to mind is the October Revolution in Russia in 1917.
Eventually the state, the Tsar, calls out the Cossacks to whip the people into line, physically whip them into line or charge them.
And the Cossacks refused to do it and joined the protesters.
Another example was Ceausescu.
In the end the army was just called out to put the people down.
They were like, no, how about we kill you instead?
So eventually you will need the police and all of the military people to side with The right side of history.
I have heard from plenty of people in the police that say they're really not happy with the way things are going.
It is there.
It is there, but the problem is, and I've been on the side of the local barbie, the ones who are there, you know, thinking they're following orders.
I know that's not an excuse, but the ones at the top are the ones that are giving these orders.
The ones at the bottom are the ones that are just following them.
But what I've seen, Ireland, Leeds, Wales, all the time in Wales, is the police, they seem to enjoy it.
You know, they've been to conditions.
So I find it really hard now to support the police in any way.
You know, as far as I'm concerned, you're carrying out them orders, you're as bad as the ones at the top.
So we speak to people, we've got serving police in South Wales Police and ex-inspectors who speak to us.
They can't wait to get out there, they're coming in on a day so they can collect their pension and go.
Because the new recruits that they're getting in are university graduates, they've gone through their full indoctrination process through university, and they believe what they're doing is the right thing to do when they're turning on their people.
I don't know.
I don't have much faith in the police anymore, unfortunately.
No, because they have the morals and then they open their paycheck.
Wow.
They've got mortgages, they've got kids.
And that's the end of the morals, because down there you've got the overtime.
And actually, as a young man, it was the miners' strike and the police came to, was it Scampton now, was it?
RAF Scampton.
And we did riot training with them.
We were the enemy.
We were the miners.
And they loved it.
Yeah, I think there is a certain element of, particularly when they're screening for political views these days, with the, as you say, the university student admissions, they're screening for people with a specific political ideology, that they're trying to basically get the police to police one side and not the other, is ultimately what's going on here.
So to move on, another place, Baliogun in May, also here it is, it's just a small area, sort of Quite south of Dublin here.
There was more unrest, if you will.
There were 13 people arrested and a number of the guards injured after protests against another asylum seeker site.
Again, this was set fire, there's a video here.
And this was actually, no it wasn't the The migrant facility that was set fire, it was the camp that the locals set up outside the facility to protest because they'd been there for quite some time and presumably someone set fire to the protest against the facility.
I just remembered what was going on there.
They're saying fake UGs.
Anti-asylum seeker campsites just spontaneously combust.
Apparently so, yeah.
Just throw it on the list of things that spontaneously combust.
And of course lots of people are being prosecuted for their involvement with this.
And then moving to somewhere else as well, Tala, I think it's pronounced.
This is again near Dublin.
Two men were arrested for a break-in that was petrol bombed.
This was another proposed asylum seeker site and You know, in that same area, a man jailed for rape and sexual assault of two young girls.
This is a really horrible story.
But a guy named Hamed Aziz targeted a girl between 6 and 8 and a girl between 8 and 10.
Unbelievable.
And the government, not doing anything about it, he'll remain in Ireland.
So he should be sent back home, in an urn.
Agreed, yes.
Glad you said in an urn, yeah.
And another one, outside of Dublin here, Dundrum, not to be confused with Doldrum, in Tipperary, of course, historically rebel country.
There was this case where there was this nice hotel which was previously used for Ukrainian refugees which the town didn't necessarily have a problem with because you know they're European.
They can exist in our civilization without problem but now the demographic has changed and now they're pushing back against it because supposedly there are plans to house up to 280 of these IPAs, not to be confused with the pale ales, these presumably Middle Easterners, Africans, that are causing all the problems in the first place.
And yes, there is actually, according to this article, been 50 days of protest outside of this hotel.
So people are really dedicated.
And this is a small town of 165 where there are going to be 280 potential foreign nationals, undocumented.
Who knows who they are?
But that's the story in Wales.
They say Ukrainians are coming in, families, and everyone goes, oh, it's all right.
And then it changes.
Yeah, they lie.
It turns out they were lying.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But look at that place.
Look at that.
It's lovely.
You know, you'd get married in a place like that.
The gardens, the grounds, you know.
Yeah, it's lovely.
And 280 odd in a community of 165.
OK, that destroys that community.
That's not even replacement.
Absolutely.
Yeah, it's far beyond replacement.
That's such a crime.
Yeah.
It's such a disgusting, sickening thing to do to your own people.
Yeah.
So there have been some very obvious reactions here.
Sinn Féin has uncomfortably softened their position, but not really.
Party seeks to end a two-tier system favouring Ukrainians and calls for audit of services before asylum seekers are moved into any area.
So they want to find out, you know, some details about the area before moving them in, but the final decision still rests with them.
They're still responsible for it and they're just trying to save face.
They're not actually doing anything meaningful to stop it.
They don't actually care.
Well, no, what they're doing there is they're not looking out for the people.
They're looking out for the facilities for the illegals.
They, you know, well, you know, there's a hundred odd people.
I don't, I can't imagine there being much services around, so it wouldn't be fair for these poor people to be dumped in that luxurious mansion.
Yeah.
And this, this kind of wording is exactly the same what Angela Rayner's come out with.
That, that, um, you're going, every local authority is going to have Migrants, whether you like it or not.
That's her quote.
I don't like it and we should make it stop is what I think.
Well I think it should be 0.10 of the population.
I think there should be none at all, it's not our responsibility, but 0.10 is certainly specific.
Paul Gerkers you see.
I can live with that, yeah.
Fair enough.
Again, what a perverted thing to do, like Sinn Féin, how subverted or inverted could it have been?
You know, if there's members of the British Army on the streets, well we'll shoot them, we'll blow up checkpoints, we'll blow up pubs, but Forget all that, now we'll flood our own country with foreign people that despise our values.
We'll blow up musicians, we'll blow up horses, we'll blow up pubs, we'll blow up anything.
But suddenly...
It's all right now.
It's a complete flip.
It is, yeah.
So this is from the 15th of July, condemning reprehensible violence.
They're more concerned about the reaction than they are the actual problems causing the protests in the first place.
This is the narrative that politicians are taking.
They're only going to force people to take more desperate action.
And I never thought I'd say this, but the Telegraph summed it up quite nicely.
The Irish elite would rather destroy their country than reduce immigration.
And you know, hear, hear to The Telegrapher publishing that.
Oh, but the Irish voted for it.
You get what you vote for, lol.
No.
They voted for it, lol.
No, they don't deserve this.
Yeah, no, of course they didn't.
They didn't vote for it, no.
No, we were never asked.
They, like us, were never asked, yeah.
So yes, obviously... Maybe they can vote harder next time, lmao.
So, obviously, it doesn't mean much coming from an Englishman, but, you know, I have my sympathies for the Irish people here.
I think that they're suffering the same kinds of injustices that lots of other countries are suffering, and I hope they sort it out.
And this is actually why, as the nations, whether it's Ireland as in Ireland, Northern Ireland, Scotland, England and Wales, why, yeah, we take each other, we rib each other, But this kind of thing we're united on and we do not want our own characteristics in our own countries decimated, which is what this is doing.
Absolutely.
Come a hated minority in your own ancestral homeland, right?
Mad.
So, uh, unbelievable.
Vaughan Gathing.
Vaughan Gathing, we're going straight on to that, is it?
The Rumble Rants.
Oh, we got a bunch of Rumble Rants.
Yes, Rumble Rants.
So, that's a random name, says, if you look at a lot of countries throughout history, the moment the Muslim population passes a certain percentage threshold, they try to violently take over the host nation, Lebanon, Afghanistan, etc.
That is true, yes.
Josie Angels, of course Sinn Féin is challenging, they've already got enough illegals there to ruin Ireland.
That's a random name says, most cops and government workers are akin to mindless automatons, they will obey any order they receive without much question, therefore the solution is to find a way to become the ones giving them orders.
Yeah, well, we're trying.
I don't understand that one.
Josie Angel says, it's a quote from Hilia Nua, says, Algeria, where are your Jews?
I think that's a comment more on their ability to tolerate people they disagree with.
Ramshackle Otter says, I was evacuated from a train as a child.
There was a bomb on the tracks.
Where is the Irish spirit?
Yeah, well, that experience has long since gone, hasn't it?
Bold Eagle 1787 says, I bet terrorist organisations are loving the amount of money laundering that's going on through these refugees.
It's my job to review money flow and there's a large influx to high-risk areas.
Interesting that, isn't it?
It's almost like a lot of the businesses that are staying open are run by foreign people.
It's almost like there's some sort of...
Of a money stream coming, Gary.
A name that I'm not going to read because it's going to make me swear.
If we keep taking the overflow from Middle Eastern and African fecundity, they'll never learn to live within their means and we'll still be dealing with this in a hundred years.
Make them fix their own s-holes.
And yeah, this is my same problem with immigration from India is that millions and millions of Indians are leaving, but they've got to sort out their own nation first.
If loads of people move away, then they're not going to tackle their overpopulation problem in India, are they?
They're not capable.
They've had a longer civilization than we have.
It's not going to happen.
That's what I never get about it.
We need to help Sub-Saharan Africans build infrastructure and roads and bridges.
They've had a longer time to do that than we have.
It should be helping us.
Yeah.
Axis the Eternal says, is there any virtue or morality in advocating peaceful treatment of these invaders, legal or illegal?
If our law enforcement won't protect us, when does the time come for us to do it ourselves?
Well, for legal reasons, I can't avow this comment, but I understand that Were it legal to protect yourself, I would support it.
I'm jumping for a lot of hoops there.
See, I'm totally different.
I think it is a self-defense now and the police are failing them.
So, you know, good men need to break bad laws sometimes.
And it isn't just, you know, a small thing they're protesting against.
This is the future for their children and their safety.
So, you know, if the police ain't going to do it, the people need to.
And don't forget what Emmeline Pankhurst did and the suffragettes.
It was illegal for them, originally, and they had to break laws to get justice.
So, Hero San Shaban says, I think the Irish should take those invaders and wait.
Can we be based in these post shows, like the post show site comments?
Yes, you can, because these are not going on YouTube, so it's fine.
And that name again that I'm not going to read.
People like Carolina Rackete, the German chick who runs a ferry service on the Med, should be held as a co-conspirator in all the crimes her cargo has committed in Europe.
Wholeheartedly agree.
There's more comments, is there?
That's a random name.
Says, I guess the silver lining in all of this is that the UK will finally truly be united in their love for their nation and dislike for the barbarians.
Stay strong, lads.
The righteous must prevail.
Here, here.
Kalev Knight, per the arch-liberal NPC James Lindsay, your reaction is their action?
Yeah, he's carrying water for people who oppose us, there's no... Okay, so Josie Angells qualifies, Hylia Newer's speech to the UN speaking on how Jews and Christians were found across North Africa and now have almost all been murdered, say hello to your future.
Yes.
OK.
That was a lot of comments there.
OK.
It shows that you've got them gripped.
Yeah.
I like to think so.
That's good.
That's good.
So Vaughan Gaithin, or what have you called it, is Gaithin out here.
We came up with the name in the end.
So a lot of people, I don't think what's happened in Wales has been publicised as much.
You get a little bit, Vaughan Gething's resigned, or questions about a donation, or he sacked this person for leaking messages, but that's pretty much it.
No one really has taken a deep dive into what exactly has happened in Wales with the appointee, because he wasn't elected by the people, he was elected by the party, and that's Vaughan Gethin, who marketed himself as...
The first black European leader...
Yes, and that was his campaign, you know, basically all the way up.
He's going to be the first black one.
So you had one black character and then you had one homosexual.
So it was it was a sphincter or It's interesting that he got in not being elected.
Jeremy Miles, he marketed himself as that he'd be the first gay leader.
Then you had Von Gethin saying I'm going to be the first black leader.
So you were voting for him on their characteristics rather than their ability.
Rather than I have done this, I have done that, I have done the other.
It's interesting that he got in not being elected in true African spirit there.
The melanin in his skin should be very proud of itself.
I mean that's what's really done all the hard work.
Absolutely.
That and the election limit I understand was £45,000 and he was given a donation of over £200,000.
I say over £200,000 because it was two donations from the same person.
Well, that's what we've got here, and I think that is where it first started.
So, it was announced Von Goethe, he's going to be First Minister, and literally that followed by a £200,000 donation by some company.
So, just to look into the company a little bit, because this is what isn't happening, so hopefully it's up on the screen now, but this is the company that he actually had the donation from.
Now, it was David Neill of Dowson Environmental Group.
The company was given a suspended prison sentence in 2013 for illegally dumping waste onto a conservation site.
So, you know, there was questions about the ethics of this company anyway, especially with Von Gethin being, well, 20 mile per hour behind the climate change.
So he, you know, there's questions on that anyway.
But there's a lot more questions to this.
Now, The biggest question on the money, I would say, a loan, it was given to, they applied for a loan, £400,000 loan from the Welsh Development Bank.
This was given to a Neil Soil Suppliers, which is part of Dowson Environmental Group.
So, previous to this £200,000 donation, This company was loaned £400,000 by the then Economy Minister Vaughan Gething.
So he was the man that authorised the £400,000 loan, of which £200,000 then comes back for his election campaign.
It's funny that, isn't it?
Well, you know, it's... yeah, yeah.
And the same guy funded his prior election campaign because he went for it twice.
He failed that time.
Got in this time.
So there's a whole thing going on there.
The latest one, after he'd resigned, about four hours later after he'd resigned, it then came out that one of the workers at a recycling plant that this guy owns perished.
He was crushed.
And so did he jump because he knew that the headline was coming up?
The headline broke a few days after.
Or was he racked with remorse?
Everything you've just said, I take it, because most of it's new to me, it's just a matter of record, it's definitely fact.
Yes.
So he's just completely corrupt then, there's no other way to describe that.
That is just corruption.
Absolutely.
A kickback, whatever you want to call it.
Yes, but they've done it in a legal way.
The other thing is, if it is a matter of public record, all those things, how did he ever think he would get away with it though, if it's in such plain sight?
Because he followed the rules.
Yeah, he followed the rules.
So there isn't actually, well, ethically no, but apparently everything that went on with this donation is allowed.
You know, what happens in closed doors with them too and they discuss whatever isn't public record.
But what we know is that he received £200,000, which is a huge donation.
But didn't you say there was a limit of £45,000?
Yeah.
So right there?
Yes.
Then that is definitely... Well then, after this was all discovered, he then tried to say, oh, well the excess money I'm going to give to the Labour Party.
And Labour Party are going, oh no, no, no, no.
Yeah, we don't want to touch it.
No, they don't want to touch it.
So the stench of this is absolutely Yeah.
You know, but the issue is, you're now dealing with a man that went to a COVID inquiry.
Is this coming up?
No.
He went to a COVID inquiry, told them, he lied to them, and then it came out that he'd actually deleted a WhatsApp group Saying that if you don't delete your WhatsApp messages, it could become under freedom of information.
Yeah.
So he went to a COVID inquiry, told them a stack of lies, told other ministers to do this.
And of course, this was all kept dry because of course, the Labour Party are all in it together.
Yeah, yeah.
And it only came out because And the, you know, the £400,000 loan that this company wanted as well was to fund the purchase of a solar farm.
So, you know, again, it comes back into the green cycle.
That was the main thing, or the first thing at least, that brought his name into the spotlight and to distribute.
The second thing was his attitude.
The way the Senate is set up is that it very much relies on cross-party cooperation, which is what we've had with Labour and Plaid Cymru that have basically done that.
They're the ones that control it.
They've got the same values, they may as well be called the same party.
So that's how it's worked.
But the way he's acted has been that he's got a massive majority, that he is the head honcho around the place and he doesn't need anybody else.
So it's his way or the highway.
They actually had a partnership with Plaid Cymru.
So there's 30 Plaid Cymru, there's 30 Labour and a presiding officer that always votes Labour.
And so they used to get through even on the narrow votes, but they were in partnership up until about Nine weeks ago, just before the elections, as it happened.
And after they'd stitched up, I don't know if you know that there's going to be an increase of 36 members of the Senedd.
It's going to cost another hundred and odd million pounds a year.
Never voted on.
And never voted on.
And as soon as Plaid Cymru got that across the line, because of course they've now changed the way people vote in the country, it's going to be harder for independents to get even a seat.
As soon as that happened and they got the Welsh, they've got this 36 extra members, they've got the 20 mile per hour, they've got the environmental chaos that they've caused, they've screwed the farmers, they pulled out of this compact and suddenly That's when it all began to fall apart with Gething.
And of course, it didn't help with Sick Note Waters, who was the instigator of the 20 mile per hour being sick.
But that's what we've got next coming up.
So that's the next thing that happened.
So this is all in a very short period of time.
So first you had the donation, then you had a lot of people within the Senate complaining about his attitude and the way he speaks to people.
Then came a vote of no confidence, which should be up on the screen there.
And You know we've got to give a shout out to Lee Waters.
Lee Waters particularly doesn't like us because we call out the 20 mile per hour man that he brought in.
Now Lee Waters is quite known for going on the sec and he was one of the ministers that didn't turn up to cast his vote so it's because of Lee Waters that he lost the vote to no confidence but you can see I just wanted to play that video Just there really quickly, just so you can see how Gethan took the news of the vote.
Hopefully he'll just play and there's no advert.
If there's an advert we can just crack on.
There we go.
So he's obviously very upset.
Holding back the tears.
You do get to see him wipe one away.
You can see his nice Pride lanyard though.
So, you know, that got it.
- Got it.
- Yeah.
So, you know, I don't like-- - Bye bye, Sam, bye bye.
- Yeah, I like you.
- So long.
- Off you pup. - The worst thing about this vote of no confidence, though, is that he still refused.
He still said that no, this is just an attack on me and I'm not accepting the vote with no confidence.
It's an attack on my colour, it's an attack on my ethnicity, it's an attack on me, it's an attack on... it's politically motivated.
So we have to forget all the dodgy stuff.
Yes.
Of course it would be politically motivated.
That's what politics is supposed to be about, right?
Well, you'd think so, but not in the Senate.
They don't deal with politics in there, unfortunately.
It's all jobs for the boys.
So he completely ignored the vote of no confidence, which again, the Welsh people are looking at this now thinking, What's going on?
You know, this guy is just completely disobeying what the public want.
They've already ignored the petition when nearly half a million people signed to reverse the 20 mile per hour.
Now he's ignoring this and is starting to highlight to people in Wales that actually the Senedd, it is more of a dictatorship.
It is more communist than people realise because people aren't engaged in politics in Wales.
You know, they're just not.
The go-to answer is You've probably heard it yourself.
What's the point of voting?
Nothing's going to change.
So they get away with doing what they want and they have done for a long time.
I think the 20 mile per hour has opened a lot of people's eyes and people are scrutinising what's going on.
But the last thing or the nail in the coffin I think for Vaughan Gething was he sacked A minister, Hannah Blythen, she's a popular member of the cabinet, social partner minister, after accusing her of leaking information to the media.
Now Stan just mentioned the leaked messages and it was for the Covid inquiry, him instructing his ministers that he's deleted messages.
I think we might, is that one there?
Yeah, if you scroll down you can actually see the text message.
There we go.
So I'm deleting these messages in the group.
They can be captured in an FOI and I think we're all in the right place on the choice being made.
So the FOI he's talking about there was the COVID inquiry.
So when people want to get information for the COVID inquiry, these wouldn't exist, even though he'd just gone and said to the COVID inquiry that You didn't have these messages anyway, or I lost them when... I lost them with an update on my phone.
Yeah, with an update on my phone.
When we changed the phone over, I lost everything.
Same as Mark Drake for ten, exactly the same.
Dodgy.
Same as Boris.
Yeah, Boris did the same thing.
Boris did the same, yeah.
Did you see Rishi in his one?
He did the whole, I don't recall.
I think he said, I don't recall, 20, 30 times.
I just don't remember.
But the same, don't forget about Scotland.
The same happened there.
So they're all in cahoots with this.
They're all keeping information away from us, the public.
The people that they serve.
He's just a snake.
Yeah.
And the worst thing is, and I'm not, you know, I'd like to think I'm quite a moral person where I don't like anything this Hannah Blythen stands for.
She's, you know, she's in charge of, she pushes the LGBTQ stuff a lot.
But mistreatment of anybody is wrong.
And she was sacked.
She was just booted straight away.
She came out and here is the tweet from her.
You can see one and two just underneath it.
I'm deeply, deeply shocked and saddened by what has happened today.
And clearly, I'm clear and have been clear that I do not, nor have I ever leaked anything to the politics.
I can't even read my eyesight terribly.
But she came out instantly, you know, saying, no, this isn't true.
I didn't do this.
She ended up having to take a lot of time off because she started to struggle with her mental health.
But then, Vaughan Gething still doubled down and said, well, it was you that leaked it and you were the one that's going to get sacked and I'm going to still stand by my decision and keep you out of the Cabinet.
And how he came to that conclusion was because he'd obviously launched an internal investigation and there was a shot of her phone.
Not her, but her phone.
And he said, it can only be you, and it's the position of the, you know, the angle of the camera and what have you.
He was doing a Clouseau, effectively.
Yeah.
But he was, you know, this is how... They don't need to justify anything.
...tribal they are.
Yeah.
But then you've got... Sounds like commies stabbing each other in the back.
That's exactly it.
Absolutely.
Absolutely right.
We've got then the video.
She did come back then to the Senate a little while later and this is what she had to say.
It does go on for a little bit longer but I've just clipped it to the main part.
This is not a statement that is easy for me to make nor one I take lightly.
Indeed there have been times in the not too recent past when I was not sure I would or could stand and speak in this chamber again.
I do so today because I know my removal from government has been a focus of discussion in this place while I have not been here.
I also feel a sense of responsibility to those closest to me and to my many constituents who have demonstrated great patience, understanding and confidence in me.
Clwyd, I will start by just briefly addressing the circumstances around my leaving government.
I know that I can look all my colleagues who sit on these benches in the eye and say that I have never leaked or briefed the media about any of you.
In fact, I can say that to everyone in the chamber.
Whilst I will not share the detail, I will share that I have formally raised concerns about the process by which I was removed from government, including not being shown any alleged evidence before being sacked, not being made aware that I was ever under investigation, and that at no point was I advised or was it evidenced that I may have broken the ministerial code.
So the important part here is that Vaughan Gething could have just deselected her, just said, you're not the right fit, sorry, and he doesn't have to give a reason.
Yeah.
The problem is, is that he told her the reason that he's deselecting her because she leaked the message.
So then he's then got to prove that.
She wasn't given any fair trial, so to say.
She wasn't shown any evidence.
It was just, look, you've done this, you're gone.
We'll play the next video then, because this is what Vaughan Gething had to say.
This is in the inquiry in regards to her sacking.
But just have a look at this.
This gives you a good taste of who this man is.
The scrutiny and the questions here are going into the weeds of where we are.
They don't get away from the essential facts.
And I've set this out in the statement yesterday.
But it's the fact that... Let me finish!
- Let me finish. - In the response on Wednesday, I made very clear that the photograph could only have come from one member's phone.
I made it very clear, having cross-checked that with other versions of the conversation, that it is a real part of that conversation.
And you're then left with an inescapable conclusion about where it comes from.
But it's also inescapable if that individual denies this and therefore the onus is on you to prove.
I am going to start... No, I reject that completely.
The onus is not on me to prove that.
There is a very clear and simple way of looking at this and it comes down to Can you be clear about where the photograph is taken?
And once you are, that is it.
So you can see, you know, his attitude at the start.
Let me finish, let me finish.
And then, when he says, well, you've made this accusation, and it's true, the person who makes the accusation, the onus is on you to prove, especially in high government.
But he seems to think, well, no, the onus isn't on him to prove, and it's just do as I say.
This is how it is, and you will just accept it.
If you're like a body language analyst, that was like a field day for you.
I was just going to say something that's very Anglo-English centric right now.
I wonder how you react to it.
Yeah.
I think all of this, all this assembly, all this Welsh government was a mistake.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
The whole devolution thing is nonsense.
It's design.
This whole thing is silly.
Having your own assembly like that, you're pretending you're your own government.
No, no, no.
Do away with it all.
Go back to having your MPs, Welsh MPs, sit in Westminster with all the other MPs.
Absolutely.
And you won't need a First Minister of Wales.
I mean...
And such a low calibre one.
But the point is, they've all been demoted.
Did you not know that?
On the first two days of the new Labour government, Keir Starmer went to Scotland, went to Northern Ireland and went to Wales and told them, you're all going to be demoted because I'm going to make all the mayors have similar powers to you.
So I think we should call him Lord Mayor.
We can't call him that now, he's gone.
But if anything, that is, I see that as diving deeper into deep news.
I mean, it actually takes a bit of power away from these assemblies.
But it's not retracting what Blair did, it's going further down that rabbit hole, if anything.
The best situation that we had in this country was that you had economic development boards and I think from memory there was about seven of them split regionally so that you had all the presence and you had all the cards for that area and you could bring in inward investment and also spend on specific areas and that was obviously then ...brought down to Westminster, and that's where it should be.
This is just a pig in a poke.
It's just rubbish.
It says division.
Simple as, you know, you've got to un-unite the kingdom with devolution.
Yeah.
You know, that's my view.
It's Blairite perversion of our political system.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Classic socialist red nonsense.
Absolutely.
And the best thing is, is Nation Scumry, who they don't like us neither, but they were the ones that broke the story about the leak.
Now it turns out that, if this is up on the screen now, Nation Scumry actually put a post out then saying she wasn't the leak.
So Vaughan Gething was wrong.
So, but obviously there's no onus on him to prove anything, you know, but it's all come out that he was totally incorrect.
His word is law, yeah.
Can I make one observation?
You'll have to tell me.
Anyone out there from America or who might not know, you've got a fairly strong Welsh accent.
Right.
Neither of those two seem to have any sort of Welsh accent that I could hear.
No, no.
They sound about as English as us two.
Yeah, about as English as me, innit?
Yeah.
Well, they don't represent the Welsh people.
They never have, you know, they never will.
You do get the... Are they actually from Wales, even?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
A lot of them would be from Wales.
He isn't.
He isn't, no.
But you've got, you know, you have actually got a divide where the ones, the North Wales will only speak in Welsh as well, you know, and there's that.
So I'm not a fluent Welsh speaker, so I, not that I would want to, but I would struggle to sit and actually watch Parliament debate because the majority of it's in Welsh.
I can't understand Welsh fully, so it'd be pointless.
But Nation Cymru, just to bring it back to that, Is that they had to announce then, because of she taking time off for mental health, Floren Gareth obviously wasn't the Labour Party candidate that Nation Cymru wanted, their more Welsh nationalist Plaid Cymru.
But that's not to say they did come out and they hold their hands up saying she's not our source.
But with the next links, I'm just going to flick through them really quickly.
They run with it enough time, you know, so they leaked it.
They knew she weren't the source and they watched her get tortured for, you know, well, I've got the dates on these, but we could flick through.
So Welsh Government in turmoil.
Go to the next one.
Form Gareth in Axis Cabinet Secretary.
Go to the next.
Gareth in grilled over sacking of junior minister.
Just keep on flicking through.
Apply company calls for Gareth in statement on sacking of junior minister.
And then next one.
Gareth insists sacking of minister was behind the leak.
Next one.
I think this is the last one.
Pressure mounts on First Minister.
So, you know, yeah, OK, they came out and held their hands up and said, look, you know, this witch hunt of this poor lady, it wasn't her.
We've got a duty to say the right thing.
Well, nah, you've hammered it for months and you've made, you've poured fuel on it.
I said yesterday, you know, it's like Starting a fire in the building and they turn up three weeks later with a fire extinguisher.
You know, that's exactly what they've done.
So, you know, they're no good people for running this and I just wanted to give them a shout out because I don't like them neither.
Can I ask another question?
Because this isn't quite as fascinating as, say, the Watergate hearings.
Yeah.
But what's the key element of this here?
You said there was a picture where you could only draw the conclusion that it must be one minister, i.e.
her.
Yeah.
So how was that proven not to be the case then?
That seems like the crux of this.
Yeah, so basically it was Nation Cymru who broke, who had the leaked message, who had the leak.
So they announced that, oh, this is what Vaughan Gething has been saying, we've had a leak from inside the Senedd.
And then obviously this is why they've had to come out, because it wasn't her that had given them the information.
But everything that Von Goethe said... So the original leak was just incorrect?
Yeah, well no, the original leak was right.
Von Goethe assumed that it was this Hannah Blythen.
What it is, it sounds like her phone is on a desk with it open and someone's taken a picture of her phone and that's what they've sent in.
So he's gone, that's Hannah's phone.
And it just simply wasn't her phone?
Simply wasn't, yeah.
Right, I think I've got it.
So yeah, but this is it.
It should be black and white.
You know, can you prove she did it?
No.
Well, you can't do anything.
You know, that's what it should have been.
But instead, you know, like he does with his iron fist.
Zero tolerance.
He's got an inkling it's her.
Gone.
And a kangaroo caught.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But then the pressure really came on.
I know we're pushing time, so I'm going to fly through this bit now.
Four Ministers resigned.
This is the day that he resigned.
So four Ministers said enough is enough.
You had Mick Antonew, who was the Consul General, Julie James, Housing Secretary, Leslie Griffiths, Culture Secretary, and then Gerry Myles, who was the one who ran against Vaughan Geirthin.
Now, later that day, after the pressure, Vaughan Geirthin did finally concede that he wasn't wanted and that he had to go.
So he did.
He gave out a video.
He put out his resignation statement.
It is long and it's full of the usual rubbish that you'd see.
I have clipped it just because this is the point where we were all waiting.
We were like, right, when's he going to play the race card?
When's he going to play it?
And this is it.
So if you could play this one.
To those people in Wales who look like me, I know they feel personally bruised and worried by this moment.
I know that our country can be better.
I know that cannot happen without us.
There will and there must be in the future a government that looks like the country it serves.
A government for all of us to make Wales a better place with and for all of us.
Diolch yn fawr.
Thank you very much.
Oh, just shut up scumbag.
Go away.
Don't want to see your face anymore.
Get lost.
Well, and that's it.
Corrupt, lying scumbag.
Am I wrong?
And you will still stand there.
The rest of the video there is him saying I did nothing wrong.
It wasn't me.
I was picked on.
I've been targeted.
Blah, blah, blah.
But, you know, that last point is quite poignant because, you know, all he cares about is the people of Wales that look like him.
And Wales can only survive with us.
Couldn't survive without us.
I'm sure we've survived long enough.
So that's just, you know, it's just untrue.
But it's again, it's the government narrative that the minority is what's important, not the indigenous people of Wales.
And it's the same with governments all across.
But then some positive news came that instantly 20 mile per hour speed limit is going to be scrapped, it looks like.
It sounds like good news, but it's 32 million down the drain.
And then the next article is going to cost another 5 million for them just to review it.
And then is it going to cost another 32 million to then put it all back?
So what a load of money.
Think of all the potholes you could have filled in with that money.
Wales could have paved in gold.
At least one third of them would be sorted.
They don't want potholes filling in.
They want to turn Wales back into a third world country.
More like, probably where Gethin originates from.
Yeah.
Well it's half Zambia, isn't it?
Zambia.
Zambia and English.
So if he's very worried about being involved in politics with people that look like him, he can feel free to go to Zambia and get involved in Zambian politics.
Do you speak English in Zambia as well?
I'm not joking.
If that's what he cares about.
Yeah, absolutely right, absolutely right.
He brought his politics to here, didn't he?
Because he was judge, jury and executioner for something that was patently not right.
Wales did fine without half Zambians for most of their history.
Were there many half Zambians at Agincourt?
Were there many of those?
No.
In fact, it was an entirely Zambian regiment.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They might have been at the back of Rorke's Drift.
But, so where are we now with Alida?
So, just to give a quick whistle stop, we've got... This is Baroness of... It's just not on the screen yet, it's not on the screen yet, it will come to it in a minute.
So, just to give a whistle stop, so on Wednesday, tomorrow, it is the last day for people to put their hat in the ring.
At the moment, there's only one.
There'll be a Hustons period on August the 20th, voting by post will take place, three weeks, August 22nd, and then Sen's returns from summer recess, September 16th, New person appointed on September the 17th.
So that's where we are with that.
And the only person who's put their name in the hat so far is this lady here, Elenid Morgan.
Or to go by her real name, the Baroness of Ely.
But of course, using that name makes you more working class, doesn't it?
Are there two Elys?
Because there's definitely one Ely in England, in the south of England, right?
Is there another Ely in Wales?
There's an Ely in Cardiff, yeah.
I was going to say exactly that.
I thought it was in England.
Or as Dan says, Steely.
Yeah, it may as well be called Steely, yeah.
No, there's some good people in Ely, but there's also some, you know, again, of maybe foreign persuasion.
So this is going to be her.
This is the lady that we're looking at going to be getting.
Just to say a couple of things.
She's done in November 2010.
She was given a life peerage to the House of Lords.
I just mentioned Health Minister in 2021.
So she was the one that dealt with Covid.
So she had a big part to play in the tightest, toughest lockdowns in the whole of the UK and strictest measures.
And running, of course, the health service into the ground.
Yeah, she backed Gareth in for First Minister and when Gareth in came in she was asked if she'd like to be or would you like to be kept in the cabinet for, that you're on the moment for Health Minister and she said not necessarily because it's a very difficult job.
So, but now she wants to be a First Minister, so now she wants to leave the country.
That's easier I suppose.
Yeah, so that's pretty much where we are in Wales.
We went from one Corruption filled guide with Mark Treakford to Vaughan Gathing that didn't last very long at all.
No, full corruption.
Full corruption, yeah.
And this lady, ex-BBC, so she's got no redeeming features, an MEP, And votes remain.
And also she is definitely going to be against the 30 mile or 20 mile per hour speed limit because she lost her license for speeding consistently.
Other than that she's a continuity candidate.
Yeah absolutely, well absolutely you know it's the only option people's got so you know when it says people are going to go and send their votes off Well, if there's only one person to vote for, then it's going to be a bit difficult to lose.
But a new rule should be that those who've resigned, the ministers who've resigned, should not be able to have a ministerial seat in a new government, because it's a coup d'etat.
Yeah, and that's pretty much where we are as it stands with Wales and its leadership.
We've got a bunch of comments again.
Okay.
Fred Nort says, in order for the demographics of Wales and Scotland to resemble their government, there needs to be a thing that begins with... Oh, I can't read that.
No.
Ramshackle Otter says, Grandfather's family were a long line of Welsh Whig MPs.
If I weren't a woman I'd stand to do my duty but I don't think Parliament can take any more oestrogen.
I respect that.
That's Random Name says, as an elite... Why did I read that as an illegal?
Sorry.
As an immigrant, I just don't understand these traitors' issues.
If the West is truly so horrible, then F off back to your asshole.
Thanks for self-censoring.
The absolute ghoul to treat their hosts like undesirables.
Remigration now.
Hear, hear.
And Josie Angel says, if that's all getting had to be concerned about, then he does not need the demotion.
Yes.
That's A Random Name says, all this shows is that laws and rules only exist to create the image of legitimacy that the elite needs to justify their grip on power, but events such as these prove that the elite is illegitimate.
Yes.
JC's Angel says again, they should all quit in tears if everyone supports Ireland's fight for freedom.
Wales would only get easier, wouldn't it?
That's true, yes.
Just to say, you know, I forgot to mention it there, you know, he's there justifying himself for sacking someone, for highlighting something that he had done which was illegal.
You know, so it's like, you called me up to do something illegal, how dare you?
Sacked.
Yeah, she should actually be promoted for being a whistleblower.
Yeah, you know, it's just bonkers.
Well, it wasn't her that did it, so... Yeah, exactly.
That's A Random Name says, uh, the reason these politicians all do such naked corruption is because they know there won't be any repercussions for their crimes.
Once again, I fail to see a peaceful resolution for these problems.
Yeah.
In fact, the Welsh people actually call it Corruption Bay.
It's Cardiff Bay, but they call it Corruption Bay.
That's how endemic people know how corrupt these members of the Senedd are.
Okay, Bear.
Alright, so I'm going to do a relatively short segment, I think.
Does this mouse work?
It should do.
There you go, okay.
So, we're going to talk a little bit about Just Stop Oil and some prosecutions that have happened or finally gone through.
Some people have been sentenced.
A few people have been sentenced.
There's a tweet there from Lotus Eaters where four or five different Just Stop Oil protesters, quote-unquote protesters, have been sentenced to something in the order of four and five years apiece.
And there's been a bit of a backlash from lawyers, celebrities, academics, artists and the like.
Oh no, not them!
Yeah, oh no!
Obviously for most people, most normal people, that's nice.
It's actually a bit of justice fronts.
The gears of justice might turn slowly, or very much do turn slowly.
Unless you're Donald Trump and then sometimes very quickly.
But at least some of these got their comeuppance a bit.
Completely deserved it.
I mean if you closed down a big motorway like the M25 or something, or any road really, but certainly a big motorway.
You just completely illegally just go into the motorway and close it down.
That's a pretty serious crime in my book.
Well, yeah, it is, yeah.
Well, it's economic terrorism, but also there were people who were... I saw one clip where they were trying to get the woman to the hospital.
She was pregnant and they were blocked and they wouldn't get up off the roads.
So they were putting people's lives in peril as well.
So it's not just Tamara's, you know, poor Tamara who's now locked up for five years or whatever her name is.
That's the consequence of doing something so rash.
Wasn't there a case of a woman who had some sort of spinal injury that needed to be rushed to the hospital and she faced paralysis because of the delay?
And of course they calculated some of the, was it the M25 delays or something like that?
But it was like, 50,000 hours worth of delays for people.
Lots of examples of people with medical emergencies.
Lots and lots of examples of the fire brigade needing to get somewhere.
It's absolutely mad, it's absolutely mad.
I think the girl's name, one of the girl's name was Cressida and her mum, how classic is it really?
Anyone in America might not know that, it just sort of gives you away as middle class, very very middle class.
Well it's posh, it's sort of upper class isn't it?
Well that's another thing actually I need to mention about Brits and Americans have a different concept of what is and isn't middle and upper class.
Because I've said before about other people I talked about that Sam Bankman Friedan I described him as middle class, upper middle class and some Americans said you don't know what you're talking about look at his family and look at his He's upbringing, how much money, but for us, for a Brit, you're not upper class unless you're landed gentry.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You can have millions and millions and millions of pounds, but you're not upper class.
You still remain middle class.
Anyway, I think Americans have a bit of a different definition.
Well, they have a financial definition, don't they?
Whereas ours is sort of cultural.
It's actually to do with if your family's titled.
Yes.
On land and things like that.
So don't get my back too badly if I describe multi-multi-millionaire Americans as still being middle class.
Anyway, a slight aside, Cressida's mum Had something to say.
Can we play that clip?
Can you do it?
Oh, Samson's got it, I think.
So her mum... Samson, are you going to do it?
There you go.
Look at this state of this.
My daughter is Cresta Gathin.
At the age of 22, she was the youngest defendant.
And she has just been sentenced today to four years in prison.
This means she will not be present at her brother's wedding next fall.
I want her to bring me to life.
For those of you who were not present in the courtroom, Cressida grew up in the countryside and is one of those nature-loving defendants that you've heard about.
She is an extremely talented musician.
She worked hard growing up.
She achieved highly.
She has ambitions, dreams, and hopes like all young people.
Don't commit crime in jail.
No she did not.
She broke the law you dumb bitch.
Oh lord.
No, she did.
She broke the law, you dumb bitch.
Lord.
No moral compass.
No, they're not.
I don't know.
Like many of the defendants... Says a woman wearing clothes made of fossil fuels.
...to protest and to persuade, to effect change.
The end times are coming.
But when she heard the science and saw that no one was paying attention, she felt she had no option.
She often mentioned this statement to me from a renowned climate scientist.
The world's response to date is reprehensible.
What do we have to do to get through to people how bad this really is?
There's a bit more.
Can we stop playing this?
This woman's too obnoxious.
There's a bit more.
You get the idea.
Her daughter's now in prison for four or five years, and if it's not that woman's fault, I don't know what is or isn't.
Twenty-year-olds are still a massive reflection of their parents.
And she has obviously indoctrinated her classic sort of virtue signaling Karen Boomer.
She's brought up her child to do what she did.
And so it's her fault.
No sympathy, zero sympathy.
There are some optics in this because she's a talented musician so she could be in the prison band and she's first year of university so she can think of this as a gap year.
I'm sure she already had a gap year planned.
A gap year or five in Holloway, good stuff.
Yeah.
You're absolutely right, though.
The mother has to take full responsibility.
She's there reading a paper as if, you know, trying to justify her actions.
She knew right from wrong and all this.
And she had so much going for her.
Well, you destroyed that for her.
She might have had a lot going for her, but she doesn't anymore.
And she's happy about it.
You can tell.
If you look, she's quite happy for the one, the attention she's got for herself and one that she's made some sort of martyr out of her daughter.
Yeah.
These people are the problem.
And it is something approaching domestic terrorism, isn't it?
It is.
Oh, it is, yeah.
Same as those guys gluing the hands on top of the rail carriages and somebody pulled him off.
Did you see that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Ripped him off.
Have you seen the video, I think it was in France, of a climate protester, similar to Joseph Boyle, where his hand just came off and then he must have gone to the football school of acting because he's like rolling around on the floor like he was in agony when his hand just came off like that.
A lot of these people, again Americans might not appreciate how posh or middle class or well-to-do or not working class, not in need of any money, not struggled, should grow up in the country very horsey or whatever it is.
People nickname me Posh Josh, but these people are a rung above what I grew up with.
If we could play the next clip, this is Indigo.
Are you kidding me?
No, it's about Indigo.
Her full name is Indigo Rumbelow, by the way.
From the beginning again, just try and see how obnoxious she is.
This is the 28th, this is the 27th COP conference.
And what has happened every single year, the emissions have risen and risen and risen.
If you were doing your job properly, everyone would be out on the street.
But they're not.
And I really want you to understand, do you know how grave the situation is?
And do you have children?
Oh my gosh.
- And do you love those children? - Oh my gosh.
- Please, I understand the point you're making.
You are here today to justify the tactics.
You're effectively committing- - Do you love those children more than you love fossil fuels? - You are committing a crime.
Why should- - That's what we're asking you to do.
We're asking you to side with young people- - Young people? - Who are asking our government very corpently in line with the UN saying that we need to come off You're not talking to the help anymore, love.
With the knowledge that we're going to go over 1.5 degrees and this will undermine the rule of law.
We're asking people to just... I'm 28.
This is the 27th COP conference.
Make it stop!
No!
Yes!
I'd have a bucket of water.
I would.
I'd have just gone...
Yeah, just a bottle.
She's 28 and, you know, we've got to make sure that the rule of law isn't undermined by temperatures going up, which doesn't seem to actually be the case.
Well, no, and, you know, we've got a climate guy that does a lot of work with us.
He's been on GB News quite a lot.
He's on there arguing with Jim Dale quite a lot.
He's great.
You really enjoy chatting to him, I have said to Karl.
But he has said, you know, these people, They got no logic behind them.
They got no science or evidence based, you know, theory behind them.
It's just anger and you can't speak to them.
And that's a perfect example of that.
You just can't speak to them.
One thing I'm going to say now, and will I have to chop this out when we put it on YouTube or not put this segment on YouTube at all.
Because it's to do with that CO2 drives climate change.
That's just not the case.
That's just simply not the case.
And they love to say that all scientists are in complete agreement about that.
No, they are not.
So CO2 in the atmosphere is something like 400 and 420 parts per million.
420 parts per million, that's 0.04% of the atmosphere.
So it simply doesn't drive climate change.
If you look on geological time frames, we're at some sort of all-time low.
It used to be a bit lower in the 19th, 20th century.
I think it was as low as about 250 parts per million.
Since World War II, it has gone up a little bit.
But again, if you look on the scale of tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands or millions of years, it's been many, many, many times higher.
I think dozens or hundreds of times higher in prehistoric times or even dinosaur times.
Fantastically higher.
And then we had megafauna and megaflora.
Giant plants.
CO2 is plant food, essentially.
So the idea that if CO2 goes up a bit, Then there's some sort of existential crisis for the planet.
That is nonsense.
It is nonsense.
Absolute nonsense.
So you might have to cut that bit out.
I think that's actually okay.
Yeah, isn't it?
Yeah, I'm the guidelines czar these days and supposedly it's all right for YouTube.
But let's have a quick look because Scrappy's ticking on.
Some of their greatest hits.
So the snooker.
If we could get the audio, can you play that Samson?
Make sure we get the audio on this.
Oh.
This one, if you can hear what people are shouting at the guy.
Yeah, I did, yeah.
Oh, you prick!
They are, though, aren't they?
The level of CO2 in the atmosphere has got nothing to do with snooker.
It's big snooker, that's the problem.
The Wimbledon one's not that good.
Play the football one.
This guy zip-tied his neck to a football post.
Do you remember this?
It was in the Premiership.
I think it was an Everton game.
Go on, play it.
If you want to play the GP one.
Everton Newcastle.
Had a just left in there and started kicking penalties.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, he stayed there, yeah.
I love that he's going all in Zepty as well.
Yeah.
He will face Tred Fundy there.
If you want to play the GP one, now this was actually pretty crazy.
Wow.
Go and play it.
Go and play it.
This was in the British Grand Prix.
It was either a year ago or two years ago.
I think it was a year ago.
I didn't see this one.
Now, people have been hit by Formula 1 cars, Martians, and it's not pretty.
No, no.
They're going pretty quick.
Yeah, it was actually, they did take a moment where it'd been red flag, or yellow flag, no, red flag, so the cars were actually just...
You can see there, they're not on race speed.
And then someone comes round the back, one of the Alpha Towers, I can't remember if it was Danny Nicciardo, the Honey Badger or not, but... Sitting on a Formula 1 racetrack while there's cars out there, even if they're just pootling round, it's kind of mental.
Like that's still pretty, you know, it doesn't look as fast, but when you're driving it does seem faster.
It's probably still going 80 miles an hour, 100 miles an hour, something like that.
If you got hit by that, it would blow you apart.
Yeah, yeah.
That's like an even dumber version of Emmeline Pankhurst, isn't it?
Yeah, yeah.
Crazy.
Can you scroll down?
Wait, let me scroll down here a bit.
There's one at the Garden Show.
Again, if we can get the audio, make sure we do get the audio on this one.
Play this one.
Oh, for God's sake!
No!
No!
Yeah, we don't need to hear her.
We don't need to hear her.
Let's play the next few in sort of quick succession.
Oh, this.
Oh, this is awful.
That's obviously a Van Gogh, one of the most famous Van Gogh paintings.
There was a bit of glass in front of it, so that hasn't actually gone on thin, but nonetheless, it's probably at least damaged the frame, but still just a complete disrespect.
Idiot kids, yeah.
The next one is the Mona Lisa.
Again, it's got a bit of glass over it, so the actual painting itself wasn't damaged, but it's not really the point.
Um, at the National Gallery, they did the Rokeby Venus, very famous painting.
They're actually breaking the glass this time.
So that is actually potentially damaging it, potentially.
Back in the Emily Hankhurst days, they broke the glass.
Stop playing that, if you can.
That's also an homage to an earlier, much, much earlier protest.
If anyone remembers this one, this is the Magna Carta of one of the copies, surviving copies, original 13th century pensioners.
She's a retired vicar, one of them's a retired vicar.
Not that women can be vicars.
Need to bloke to do it.
It's pure vandalism.
Pure virtue signalling.
It's a vanity project.
And the worst thing is, is that these, you know, these are important pieces.
You know, important pieces.
No, that was in London somewhere.
In the British Library.
In the British Library, that's right.
Luckily these are fact-fed.
But if they were damaged, they're irreplaceable.
So these entitled brats, and I don't know why they're doing it at this age, but they just got sick.
Absolutely out of their minds.
One thing to say, I think it's one of the most important points to make, is that they will always say it's to raise awareness about climate change.
Everyone knows!
Everyone knows!
You're not raising anyone's awareness.
Okay, so that's nonsense.
I remember when Vivienne Westwood went on the Jonathan Ross Show 15 years ago, and she started talking about climate change.
Jonathan Ross goes, everyone knows though.
Yeah.
Everyone already knows.
And didn't you get an aeroplane here from New York?
Like, you know, so it's like, it's just complete virtue signaling nonsense.
Screw these people.
Yeah.
There's a Stonehenge one, that wasn't very long ago, as you can see there.
Do you know, on this one, we went to Stonehenge on the way back from London last time.
And the people... It's not very far from here at all, is it?
No.
It's about half an hour from here, is it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But these people that guard these stones, we asked them if we can go over and go closer, and they asked, no.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, you're not allowed.
That's the lady.
Well, I thought that was the lady as well.
But that is such disrespect, such a level of disrespect for these people who were, you know, yeah, OK.
You could talk about whether or not you should be worshipping stones, but it's harmless, you know?
But these people do.
You talk about Magna Carta as being something like, at least a secular, have some sort of sacred meaning.
Well, the Stonehenge, absolutely, absolutely, is one of our most prized things.
Yes, absolutely.
Well, a quick, a few more, they tried to, they thought this was Taylor Swift's private jet.
Turned out it wasn't actually.
- So some random jet.
- Yeah, yeah.
It's like a private golf show.
I don't know if it's a golf show.
- Do they know how many fossil fuels that are needed to remove all that paint from a great big jet? - Yeah, loads of money, yeah.
They squirted paint all up.
Aston Martin in London.
Just Aston Martin.
Not particularly guilty of anything more than any other.
...mobile, er... Just that they can't afford them, that's why.
Well, maybe with Mummy and Daddy's money.
Well, ask Martin, you know... They make so many... so few vehicles!
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, er, the Department of Energy, they did.
This is the Department of Energy.
Erm, again, let's just whip through the next few.
Carrot, the next one.
Just to remember, just to remind everyone.
Harrods, they did their... Actually, er... Again, just a few seconds.
Despite their money, there's probably a shop in there.
Yeah.
Like Rolex?
What Rolex has got to do with anything?
I don't really know.
But the next one is really surprising to me.
Scotland Yard.
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
That's audacious.
If anyone doesn't know, that is the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police, i.e.
the police for London.
Broken clocks, you know?
Yeah, but that is... Who's the commissioner?
Yeah, right.
So he'd probably say, turn a blind eye, lads.
But that is audacious, that is like going to a senior politician and cuffing them across the face with a glove or something.
Yeah.
That's really... quite provocative, isn't it?
And then the next one, just... you can see they did... what was this?
The MI5 building.
Ballsy.
Bank of England.
I think that's the Bank of England.
Stop making me support them!
What else did they do on that one?
MI5 Home Office and Bank of England.
The Home Office, that's it.
Yeah, so again, does the Home Office control the men?
So it's going above the head of even the police!
Can we get a spray of orange paint all over you?
Anything?
Look at these people.
I know.
Yeah, actually, let's listen to this.
I think they asked them a bit about... Nobody is listening to us!
The messages are clear.
The scientists tell us just this last week in the news.
The UN have said we're running out of time.
People are dying across the world.
Is that Tamara's mother again?
Even if we here in London don't care anything about the rest of the world, we must care about ourselves.
I care about the rest of the world.
I believe everybody else cares about the rest of the world.
And I believe that they have just got their heads in the sand because they are so busy with business as usual that they can't bear to think about Is that her marbles going?
It might be, yeah.
I believe lots of things.
It doesn't mean I spray paint it on walls.
It's everyone else that's got their head in the sand.
Is it love?
And the other thing is, they will go after the Bank of England, or an Aston Martin dealership, or something, or Stonehenge.
I won't say a peep about the coal and oil industry of China or India, which accounts for the vast majority of CO2 output, if that's what they're really worried about.
But don't forget, the reason why they're doing this is because they will not come onto programmes like this and be challenged.
They can't.
They can only do that.
No new fossil fuel licences and I won't have to do this anymore.
The government has taken our future.
Listen to this dude, classic example of these virtual signal rings.
- Why are you doing this?
- What else can we do?
- There's loads of other things you can do, mate.
What else can we do?
- Loads of other things.
- No new fossil fuel licences, and I won't have to do this anymore.
The government has taken our future.
I want our future back.
- So do I.
- Take it up with your private school, mate.
Criminal inaction on the climate crisis.
The UN say you need to act.
The IPCC say you need to act.
The IMF, the World Bank, all say you need to act.
Well, the IMF says something.
Oh, the World Bank's telling us about climate is a schwab.
Every last drop of oil out of the North Sea.
OK, if you could stop playing that one.
Every last drop of oil out.
Are these serious?
I did have another bunch of clips of people pushing back, like dragging them out of the streets and stuff, but we've run out of time, basically.
But anyway, it was nice that some justice... there we go, quick... Whistle-stop tour of some of the thumbnails, you get the idea.
It was nice, at least, that some of these goons, some of these mindless, almost mindless, virtue-signalling buffoons have actually been sent down for a fair few years.
Well, there's evidence that every single one of them broke the law, so every single one of them should have happened to as well.
It's just vandalism.
It's just public order offences and vandalism.
Domestic terrorism.
OK, let's leave it there.
OK, Samson, do we have time to do a few more comments as well?
OK.
Okay, so that's a random name, says people like this indigo clown should be flocked in the public square every time they speak without written permission from the king.
Bring back corporal punishment for these societal parasites.
I think that was a pretty good one dollar spent there for me to read that.
That's a random name says, what else could we do?
Oh I don't know, literally anything else as a matter of fact you could have refrained from doing any of this nonsense in the first place.
Absolute balance they say.
Archbigot of Durham says, the biggest tragedy Funny name as well.
The biggest tragedy of some of these protesters is if you'd hose them down with a garden hose a bit, shove them into a beauty parlour for a couple of hours and teach them to shut up, they'd be smashable.
No!
No!
Those old ladies, what's wrong with you?
For goodness sake.
Stop being so thirsty, audience.
Tom Bolo says, I hope they do not come for this Rumbolo Indigo.
Yes, Indigo Rumbolo, her name is.
I couldn't believe that, yeah.
It's like a children's character name.
That's a random name, says traitors like that Cresta should be jailed.
They should be sent back along with the Barbarians to the Third World and have their citizenship revoked.
Traitors deserve no mercy and no absolution.
Blimey, you're very angry today.
Okay.
Someone's gotta go to Rolanda.
We've got some video comments.
A Gentleman's Observations of Swindon, Chapter 14.
With the canals abandoned in 1914, the phasing out of trams in favour of buses in 1929, and the death of the last Goddard in 1927, Swindon seemed to be on a downswing.
However, private ownership of cars and the construction of a purpose-built car park in the 1930s hinted at Swindon's increasing wealth and development, as did the expansion of Old Town and the construction of houses on Marlborough Road and terraced houses in Walcott.
In 1931, the town's first purpose-built maternity hospital was constructed, which is now the graded building Kingshill House, and is rather ironically and morbidly currently a funeral director's.
Good facts about Swindon there.
Yeah, this guy always gives us facts about Swindon.
I like this.
CrowdStrike was the largest outage of computers ever.
It's what happens when regulations meet with large businesses that just eat up market share.
It's like Amazon in that way.
The error affected massive hospital systems in the US and the NHS.
Lives were at risk.
It also halted heavy industry and really basic things that keep the lights on.
I was about to start making technology-related videos starting this week, anyhow, and I'm a layman at best with tech, but it's a bit of a blind spot on the lotus eaters I'll try to talk about more.
Well, thank you very much.
Yeah, I'm certainly no tech expert.
We don't do enough on tech.
I did a few times do a couple of little bits and bobs about space things, but the numbers didn't do that well.
I would do it more though.
I would like to do it more.
We talk about AI sometimes, but Carl does his sort of cyberpunk dystopia thing of dystopian technology.
You should have a show platform at Farnborough.
Alright, this weekend.
Is that this weekend is it?
Alright, okay, yeah.
Maybe next year we'll get Squadron Leader Tim Davies down there with us and talk about it.
Good idea.
There's these man-made hills for watchtowers and castles from back when we used to be a real country all over the place.
Here's one in the middle of the city, in what looks like a cul-de-sac but isn't.
What is it, sorry?
What are we looking at?
Part of a castle?
I think so, but it... She said old watchtower.
Old watchtower.
Looks unspoilt.
There's no litter on the floor.
If that were urban England, there would be crisp packets all over the floor.
Yeah, and hypogemic needles.
Yeah, that too, yeah.
Thanks for sharing.
Okay.
We've got one more rumble rant, and can we have some time for the website comments as well?
Is that alright?
Perfect.
Tom Bolo says, the news broadcast Australian fires and burning koalas in 2019 to cement image of unprecedented world on fire.
Koalas are only highly flammable trees and have evolved to do so for millions of years.
And in fact, to add to your comment there, the entire Australian ecosystem is dependent on wildfires for regenerating That's why when, I think it's eucalyptus, when they moved them to California they aggravated the fires because they were deliberately flammable because that's how their seeds spread.
It eliminates the competition and then they drop and then they grow up in the wasteland with the burnt stuff being fertilized.
It's similar to how volcanic ash and things like that help growth of plants.
It's misrepresenting it more than anything.
So we've got some general comments and Proletariat says I just wanted to say I love the semi-professional nature of the Lotus Eaters, technical difficulties and all, it's just lads read the news and it's far better than the legacy media.
Well that's very kind of you to say, thank you very much.
At least you know we're not, you know the moment everything goes smoothly you know the money's moved in.
When I can finally afford to run a car, it's over.
Lars Petter Simonsen says, got my Islander magazine in the mail yesterday, looking forward to reading it outside when the rain stops.
Yeah, well, here's hoping.
It's been one of the wettest summers in quite some time, hasn't it?
Always seems to happen, doesn't it?
Don't cry because it's Joe over.
Smile because it camela happened.
That is a terrible curse name.
I'd love to hear that the Voice of Wales lads speak Welsh.
Yes, a little bit, Tumminbach, not fluent, a little bit.
So on Ireland, Baron Von Warhawk says it's no surprise that Sinn Féin is doing this to Ireland.
Sinn Féin is a socialist party and socialists simply cannot help themselves when it comes to stabbing their own populations in the back.
Yeah, every single time, isn't it?
It's funny that.
It's almost like there's something about socialism.
Henry Asselin says, will it be Muslim invasion that finally brings the Irish and English together or will they never let it go?
I think they realise they have bigger enemies.
They're not talking about the English so much anymore.
We've done some podcasts with some people in Ireland and everyone we've spoken to have said exactly the same thing.
We can't look back anymore because we won't have anything to look forward to if we keep looking back and that's the message that I get from Ireland.
One person that I post every single day, Fergus, he actually put a little video up of him being an Irish nationalist, promoting me for my campaign, because my enemy's enemy is my friend.
And we know that.
We know that on a good, clear day, we get the cudgels out and beat each other up.
But On this issue we are resolute.
Most Irish people I've met have been perfectly fine, they're not holding history against me.
They love a good fight, what are you on about?
I've done boxing with a few actually.
Kevin Fox says history repeating itself when the British ran Ireland, the Irish fled, now the globalist leftist Muslim ran Ireland and the Irish are fleeing again.
It's very true.
And I'll do one more.
Small L Libertarian, hmm, amazing.
Seems like SF was never pro-Irish, they were anti-Western.
Now Ireland, I'm presuming that's Sinn Féin, now Ireland is part of the West, it must also be destroyed.
Yeah, it seems like it, doesn't it?
The globalist faction sees no nation.
OK, for the Von Goething stuff, JJHW says, Von Goething has clearly committed crimes, the police have not arrested him, therefore they should all be considered conspirators and enemies of the realm.
I wish they could be referred to as enemies of the realm.
That's a term that needs to come back.
Warlord Wututai says to be fair a lot of South and East Welsh people don't have particularly strong accents which can be hard to tell from an English accent to an untrained ear.
They sounded English to me.
Yeah Cardiff, see they call Cardiff Little London because they do quite English sounding.
Arizona Desert Rat says, aren't you the one who made the accusation?
Doesn't the UK have the whole innocent until proven guilty concept?
It's on you, sir, to prove the evidence, or provide the evidence, should I say.
I can't even read.
And for the Just Up Oil segment, do you want to read your own comments, Bear, or shall I do it?
No, if you go ahead.
Yeah, yeah, okay.
You can see it better than me, honestly.
It's a bit small there.
It's a young man's game.
Slammer101, sorry Bear, that was rude.
To that mother, womp womp.
I'm trying to amp up that I'm young because I'm 30 next year.
Furious Dan, if these eco-radicals cared at all about the climate, they would advocate for nuclear power every day, but they spend their days being societal pains instead, only reveals that they really want is to make everyone else as miserable as they are.
They do seem like miserable and neurotic people.
They're not happy people are they?
No.
You never see them smile.
It's the politics of resentment.
We're going to deface Rolex and Aston Martin.
I mean, could you make it more obvious that you've got a chip on your shoulder?
Annie Moss says, after hearing from Cressida's mum, I realised why she ended up in jail.
Sounds like an entitled bint.
And on that note, it's time to end the podcast.
I think.
Thank you very much for watching.
Thank you very much to the Voice of Wales for coming down.
Thanks for having us again.
Thank you again.
Always a pleasure.
Have a lovely rest of your day and make sure to watch us tomorrow at the same time.
Thank you for watching and goodbye.
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