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July 30, 2024 - The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters
01:28:38
The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #967
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Hello and welcome to the podcast of the Lotus Eaters for the 30th of July, 2024.
And today I'm joined by Carl and Stelios.
Hello.
And today we're going to be talking about.
Yeah.
Uh, can you turn that light off please?
We've got, we've got extra lights on.
Thank you.
Sorry.
Gonna have a very illuminating podcast today.
It's been a, an unprofessional day today.
To be fair, it is going to be 30 degrees very soon.
That's why I'm not wearing a tie, and I look like I'm about to go on holiday.
Our bloody AC is still broken.
And we're in Britain, so it feels horrible.
Stellios can approve of this.
I've wore a tie in 40 degrees Celsius.
Don't tie shame me.
I intend to.
Sorry, let's carry on.
Yes, so today we're talking about the Southport stabbing and then Karl will be talking about how diversity is almost certainly our strength.
Oh yeah.
And Stelios will be following in a similar vein, just in the context of New York.
New York is finding out... It does.
Exactly.
So it's going to be a pretty migration heavy podcast, I'm afraid.
And it's not going to be necessarily a cheerful one, but I suppose I may as well get on with it then.
Also, it's worth mentioning as well, Rumble Rants as per usual.
And of course, we're going to get to all the comments, video comments, etc as well.
But anyway.
Here is Southport.
This is a northern small town, I think it's fair to say, close to Liverpool and Manchester.
And there was, you know, summer holiday break from schools and so children are off enjoying the nice weather that we've had recently.
And yesterday morning there was a workshop for children between 6 to 11, which included dance, yoga and bracelet making.
And it was attended by 25 children in total and then a man in a face mask arrived in a taxi which he refused to pay for.
He then went into a building with the children and what followed is safe to say is absolute mayhem.
So the children began screaming, as you can imagine, as he tried to attack them with what is reported to be a knife.
I've also heard machete as well.
Some of the children were able to escape, some of which took shelter in a neighboring house.
However, multiple children were reported as being Out on the street, lying on the street, bleeding in the road after they had been stabbed.
And at this point, many of the parents actually started turning up and obviously seeing what had happened, reacted as you can imagine they would in utter horror.
You know, people screaming, people panicking that their children had been hurt.
And so far, three children have died from this and eight have suffered from critical injuries and are currently in hospital.
And the children who are okay are still, you know, physically okay, still reportedly incredibly traumatized by what happened.
And I think a lot of the people that actually witnessed it have said it's one of the most horrific things they could ever imagine.
And I can certainly see that being the case.
So part of it is this.
There was a businessman who shares a building with this, I suppose, dance hall community center.
I'm not entirely sure what role the building has.
But he heard the screaming and ran in and tried to intervene.
So well done to him.
Well done to Jonathan Hayes.
That is an incredibly brave thing to do.
And I want to read about what he did to try and prevent this from happening.
So I'm going to read from the Telegraph article here.
A businessman tried to disarm the Southport knifeman after hearing screams from his office, the Telegraph can reveal.
Jonathan Hayes, 63, was stabbed in the leg after running into the dance studio in a desperate attempt to intervene.
His wife Helen, 57, told the Telegraph that he regrets he could not do more to stop the ferocious attack that left two children dead at the time of them writing it.
Asked if Mr. Hayes had tried to put himself between the knifeman and the children.
She said he did.
He heard screams.
Our office is in the same building as the dance studio.
He heard screams and went outside, saw the attacker, saw he had hurt a child and tried to take the knife off him and got stabbed in the leg.
The dance studio is tucked away down a little alley.
You wouldn't know it was there, that there was a children's dance studio there just by walking past, sorry.
You would have to know it was there.
I've been with him all afternoon at the hospital.
He's very upset.
He wasn't able to do more to help.
Physically, he will be okay.
Mentally, I don't know.
So, obviously, this is a very brave man.
An actual hero.
He is, yeah.
And obviously, Heartfelt thanks to him and the sacrifices he made to do what I think everyone would like to do in that situation, but it's another thing to actually go through with it and to be stabbed and then still be beating yourself up about, I could have done more.
is really quite impressive.
So obviously I hope his family are doing okay as well, as well as the family of the children, because this shouldn't have to happen to anyone.
It's a really quite horrible thing.
And another aspect of this Telegraph article is that they revealed, as Nick Buckley points out, I'm going to read this directly.
Merseyside police confirmed that a 17 year old boy from the village of Banks, about five miles away from Southport, had been arrested and was being questioned on suspicion of murder and attempted murder.
The youth, who cannot be named for legal reasons, is originally from Cardiff in Wales, moved to the Southport area with his Rwandan parents when he was aged six.
So Right here we know that this is... A second generation immigrant.
Yes, a second generation immigrant.
Born and raised in the United Kingdom and still decided, for reasons unknown, to do this.
I think there are some really interesting questions this raises.
As the businessman points out, you wouldn't know it was there, so why did he target it?
I mean, obviously he knew it because of local knowledge, because he's been there since he was six, right?
So why did he do it?
Yeah, well, that is the question people are asking at the minute.
I mean, it has the character of a terror attack, doesn't it?
Yeah, but Rwanda is a Christian country, mostly.
Yeah, supposedly.
Who knows?
But either way, I feel like this was something that was preventable.
There are lots of things that could have been done to avoid this happening.
Immigration policy, for a start.
Yeah, but we're far too down that road.
It's difficult to know what we can do anymore, isn't it?
Well, I think one thing that people need to remember is that we are not the high-trust society you grew up in.
That's just not the case.
Too many strangers have been introduced to our country who Have very strange ways of looking at the world and do things that we think are abominable.
I have no idea why he's done this.
And we're just going to be told that, oh, he has mental health issues.
It's not really good enough, is it?
No, no, not at all.
And that's the point.
He knew exactly what he was doing.
If he turns up in a taxi and a mask, this isn't a mental health episode where he's just lashing out at anyone around him.
This is a conscious plan, so I've got my weapon, I've got my disguise, I'm going to pick a particularly soft target, I'm going to try and massacre a bunch of English girls.
For what reason would a 17 year old do this?
I have no idea.
But we're not the high-trust society that we used to be.
These things happen.
I mean, these things have happened in France, these things have happened elsewhere, and now they happen here.
And so people need to just become aware of that.
It is also particularly telling that they have to phrase it in such terms as if that this is not obvious.
Someone who would do something like that doesn't have mental issues.
I mean, come on.
Yeah.
So the very fact that we are even discussing this in such terms is also another manifestation of what you're talking about.
It is also just a quick thing that I'm actually kind of I've actually come to really hate the terms of mental health problems when it comes to this, because what it presupposes is that we have the one correct way of looking at the universe, and anyone who diverges from that is somehow not correct in their mindset.
Now, I'm obviously not saying this guy was correct in his mindset, but what I'm saying is there are different ways of looking at the world that different cultures have, and we don't understand them because we assume everyone really will come around to our way of thinking about things.
And so saying, oh, it's a mental health problem puts them on the path of being... it's a therapeutic issue.
We just need to get this lunatic in line with the way we think and then everything will be fine.
It's like, no, we just need to accept that some people... It's worth mentioning as well here that Rwanda is a country that's only one generation removed from genocide in its own borders.
People macheting each other to death.
It's not people macheting each other, it was the Hutus macheting the Tutsis.
A couple of years ago, I read a book on the Rwandan genocide, and literally every Hutu man was culpable in this, because the Hutu authorities all rounded them all up, and they all had machetes because they worked on, I think it was banana or pineapple plantations, and so they all had machetes, and so every single man in Rwanda and so they all had machetes, and so every single man in Rwanda of a certain age - Yeah, hang on, Stelios.
Yeah, so there's no reason-- - Not that I'm saying anything about his parents, they mean they might be Hutu.
They might be Tutsi, you know, and have fled it.
I don't know anything about the parents.
Why, though, are people from this violent background allowed in our country?
Why should the people of Britain shoulder the burden of the dangers that they bring with them?
I don't see it as our responsibility.
But it's not just this.
This is just a particularly awful example.
I mean, this happens all the time, where I mean, there have been so many different terror attacks and things like that, and which is expected.
Well, and the general response has been, well, you know, this is just kind of the way things are now.
We can't change it.
I mean, Humza Yousaf didn't tweet out any condolences for the parents, but he did tweet out, well, far-right protesting in Southport now.
That's a problem.
We just need to grieve for the families.
No, this wasn't an act of God.
This was an act of some foreign lunatic who obviously shouldn't have been here.
I personally have no problem in just condemning it and thinking that I'm wrong and saying that this is absolutely evil.
And I think that every society requires a degree of the rule of law and of basic public safety considerations.
So I don't think that it's just us bad people who are trying to impose another way of life.
I mean, this person is here.
You would presume that he would have to respect the laws of this country, and he does not.
But not only that, like, this isn't just about breaking the law.
Like, okay, fair enough, you know, young people break laws, right?
That doesn't mean that there's a natural or inherent contradiction between, and second-generation immigrants are often more radical than their parents, more opposed to The society in which they've been brought in their parents.
But this isn't just about breaking the law, right?
I mean, this kid, apparently he was some sort of introvert, obviously didn't have a criminal record or anything like this, and has consciously planned to commit this atrocity.
And the police have said, well, it's not terror-related.
It's like, okay, but this was a conscious act.
When you attack the children of a society, you're attacking literally the softest, most vulnerable underbelly of that society.
You are literally stabbing a knife as deep into the heart of the society as possible.
So this was a conscious act done by an evil person, for reasons that must assume to be political, right?
Yes, and I have to add, you also attack its future symbolically.
It's not just the most vulnerable, it's also symbolically its future.
Absolutely.
So this isn't just This isn't a rule of law question or anything like this.
This isn't the machete gangs who are running around London macheting each other over drug territory or something like that.
This is something far worse than that, which is why I think it's resonated so deeply in the hearts of so many people.
And the old points of, well, you know, it's just, we just have to accept it.
We just have to grieve with the family.
It's like, no, this is something that could have been prevented.
If we had a better understanding of the foreign peoples which we've brought into this country to live with us, then maybe it would have been.
But we spend absolutely zero time trying to get that kind of understanding, or putting any emphasis on what their obligations to us are.
It's always about our obligations to them, to make them feel comfortable.
It's like, well, okay.
But I think there is a conversation about how that goes the other way as well.
Well I think that my sort of reaction to this is that it seems like there are certain peoples that come to the UK that have a much higher propensity to do things like this and this to my mind means that their culture is simply incompatible with Western civilization and we should bear that in mind.
Yeah.
And it might be seen as a bit of a hard line, but I don't want this sort of thing going on.
And, you know, someone not being able to make as much money as their host nation is not a reasonable concern.
Too bad!
Why don't you build your own civilization?
Yeah.
But there have been a bunch of other incidents like this in recent times, Stelios.
Sorry, just before we move on, I think that's a perfectly reasonable point as well.
Countries with particularly high violent crime rates, yeah, we should just refuse anyone from those countries.
Of course, yeah.
Sorry, you've got, like, you know, South African levels of murder or rape or something like that.
We've got the crime data.
Yeah, exactly.
We could do it overnight, say, right, no more people from these countries, and it could be done like that.
It's a political choice that these sorts of things happen.
Like Trump did with the Muslim ban.
Exactly.
Okay, well, lots of terrorists come from these countries, so we're not going to accept people from these countries.
That's totally reasonable.
People lost their minds about it.
Yeah, and nobody's rights are violated.
You don't have a right to move to the United States.
You know, nothing bad happened to anyone.
They just had to live in their country of origin like they had been doing right up until this point.
Nothing bad happened, no rights are violated, and it's a completely sensible policy.
Absolutely.
So Celios did a very good job talking about all of the recent stabbings and you framed it as sort of knives with mental health issues because... That's how they frame it.
Yeah exactly.
As in that is what the media has been saying about it.
Like these knives got up themselves.
There's no There's no agency to the people who do it because then people would realize, hang on a minute, why are they doing this?
Why are they even here in the first place?
Yeah.
Sorry.
And just one thing, we didn't cover all of them because there are just too many.
I am going to do some quick fire mentioning.
Here we have the UK Independence Party, who we haven't heard from in quite some time, talking about the riots in Leeds.
It was mostly Muslims.
I don't know why they've called it Roma Gypsy, but that's their host family.
Yeah, but there were also Gypsies.
I mean, it was a Gypsy Roma guy.
I don't know what the politically correct term is, who set fire to the bus, for example.
So it was a mix of both communities.
The Bangladeshi riots in Whitechapel.
British soldiers stabbed in Kent.
Two men attacked a firearms officer in Manchester Airport.
There was actually a large counter-protest against the treatment of that, even though the guy who stamped on the person who'd already assaulted three police officers and broken a woman's nose, He had a gun in his hand, I think, which is why he stamped on him because it's better than getting shot, I imagine.
And they're saying now children have been stabbed in Southport.
And there's also another list here.
There's the Gillingham Army Barracks one.
There was a girl 15 among two arrested after a man stabbed in the London Underground.
Teenage boy stabbed to death in Hackney.
And a short-tempered cyclist stabbed a BMW driver to death in London.
Just to go back to the violent crime thing, there are so many cultures around the world where violence is viewed as a legitimate form of settling personal disputes.
That's the issue.
We've allowed lots of these people who culturally just view violence as a part of life to come here, where we don't.
Well yeah, this has been imported into Britain, it's not home grown.
And there was also this that happened yesterday, which we still don't have all the details for, and seems curious.
Two people were taken to hospital with breathing difficulties after a woman approached them with a bag.
It seems like some sort of chemical attack.
Because supposedly people were being hosed down in the street and you know Bath is a lovely place as well.
I actually lived there at one point and I went to university there and so to see this happen in what is one of the nicest places in the UK seems to indicate that no one is really safe from this sort of thing and I know that sounds a bit sensationalist but I remember covering the incident in France where
A group of Muslims attacked a bunch of teenagers in a small town of 100 people and they stabbed a 16-year-old boy to death.
And then you have the knife attack, I can't remember where in France it was, where the guy was just walking through a play park, stabbing babies.
Just Syrian refugees.
What is happening?
Then you have the incident in Ireland, where you had that guy stabbing children again.
There's just too much of it going on to say, oh, there's no pattern, you know, it's an isolated incident.
No, it's not.
We know what kind of people are doing this and they don't belong here.
It's isolated incident number 200,700.
Exactly.
75, yeah.
And it is also worth mentioning as well, they're not calling this a terror attack whilst people like Tommy Robinson are being arrested under the Terror Act.
So the law is being enforced.
For screening a film in London?
Yes.
The law is enforced so selectively these days that the notion of there being any justice in a sense that would actually satisfy both the aggrieved parties and society as a whole is sort of a laughable notion at this point.
And here's some more here.
This was the Valdo Calocane.
This is all the not terror-related things.
These are all explained away as mental health.
He, I believe, ran some people over in a van.
And then you've got the Kent soldier, Stabber.
There's another North London knife attacker there, Gabriel Abdullah.
Just attacked random shoppers with a knife.
It's not terror-related.
Okay.
That doesn't mean that we ignore it.
That doesn't mean we go, well, there's no collective guilt that's brought upon the country and the communities or anything like that.
We don't just, okay, well, that's memory hold.
He didn't have a manifesto.
So what?
So it wasn't a conventional terror attack.
Yeah.
Then you've got the Albanian woman there who slit a seven-year-old girl's throat.
Yeah, that was awful.
Absolutely awful.
Pure evil, isn't it?
Yeah.
How is she still alive?
Yeah, I know, it's just... And then again, they've got the Southport attack there.
That's from Turning Point.
The worst thing this country ever did was abolishing the death penalty, I swear to God.
I'm certainly coming around to that, yeah.
It's just...
There's such moral debt incurred that's not being repaid.
So you actually put me onto this article, Carl.
Yeah.
Controlled spontaneity.
This is the government response.
The secret UK government blueprint shaping post-terror planning.
And this is actually from May 2019.
And it's still going on to this day, it seems.
Oh yeah.
And I'm going to read a little bit from this article so please humour me.
The British government has prepared for terrorist incidents by pre-planning social media campaigns which are designed to appear to be spontaneous public responses to attacks Middle Eastern Eye has learned.
Hashtags are carefully tested before attacks happen.
Instagram images selected and impromptu in quotation marks street posters are printed in operations that contingency planners term controlled spontaneity which is horrifically Orwellian term.
Politician statements, vigils and interfaith events are also negotiated and planned in readiness for any terrorist attack.
The campaigns have been deployed during every UK terrorist incident in recent years.
Of course, this was published in 2019, including the London Bridge attack in June of 2017 and the Finsbury Park mosque attack, which took place two weeks later, Within hours of an incident, campaigners are swiftly organised with iHeart posters designed and distributed according to the location of the attack.
Plans are also drawn up for people to hand out flowers at the scene of the crime in apparently unprompted gestures of love and support.
The purpose of the operation is according to a number of people involved in their creation who spoke.
to the Middle Eastern Eye is to shape public responses encouraging individuals to focus on empathy for the victims and a sense of unity with strangers rather than reacting with violence or anger.
So if this is legitimate, which to be fair it does sound like there's some truth to this, this is one of the most abominable things a government could possibly do.
They're importing people, they're choosing to import people that are terrorizing the native population.
But from countries with notably high crime rates.
Exactly.
And then gaslighting them into just accepting it as part of their way of life.
If that isn't evil, I don't know what is.
I mean, it's like Sadiq Khan saying, you know, it's just a part of living in London is stabbings.
It's that same philosophy at play here.
Part and parcel of being in a big city.
That's the exact quote.
Part and parcel of having mass immigration.
There's a huge contradiction in this that shows how a lot of progressivist governments are treating their own people.
They're asking us to basically not look back in anger and also to be unburdened by what has been.
Forget the past, forget what happened.
And in the meanwhile, they're pushing down a particularly anti-Western agenda in the name of addressing historical inequalities.
This is absolute hypocrisy.
Why doesn't it apply to them as well?
Exactly.
So this video has been circulating online and I think it speaks of part of the problem.
If I can get the mouse to actually work.
Okay, here we go.
The government has rightly scrapped the Rwanda scheme, but the UK is falling behind our international counterparts in providing safe routes for refugees.
We are now one of the only countries in Europe where refugee children in the UK cannot sponsor their family members to join them.
Organisations like the Refugee Council have documented the harm this causes.
Will the Home Secretary please confirm that the government's mission to improve opportunity for all extends to refugee children and will amend the Immigration how is it our job to provide opportunity for all no it's not actually it's the job of the british state to benefit the british people and no one else by definition that is the purpose of a nation state that's why they exist and the fact that these people are also framing it as children when we know it's young 19 adult adult men yeah yeah fighting age men
many of whom have criminal records in their home countries That's probably part of the reason why they're fleeing and they know they can get away with it and they know that they can also get involved in the pre-established ethnic crime gangs that exist in the UK and make our living arrangement worse whilst we're having to pay for it.
These are the people that are causing these sorts of things.
Green party MPs, basically.
Yeah, just left-wingers.
People who think that we should open the gates to barbarians.
It's absolutely sickening.
Anyway, the final thing I wanted to mention is Merseyside Police are monitoring a possible far-right rally.
That's Politics UK's words, via the iPaper.
In Southport this evening after fake news spread on social media claiming the unnamed 17 year old suspect was a Muslim asylum seeker.
Just to be clear, that is fake news?
It is.
We don't think he was necessarily a Muslim.
Or an asylum seeker?
No.
His parents may well have been, but he was born here, but he was from Rwanda.
However, you know, I think that people rallying to protest this sort of thing, framing it as a political event, I think The vast majority of people should be opposed to stabbing children.
I don't know what kind of ideology you must have to be opposed to that, but yes, I don't think framing people going to this, protesting against the fact that this happened, need to be framed in that light.
Just to be clear, I wouldn't recommend going to any protests or anything about this yet.
The wounds are too fresh, I would say.
Yeah, but until something is done about this, which I don't see happening, I'm not optimistic about, you know, the Labour Party changing its mind about immigration.
This is going to carry on, it's going to get worse, you're going to be gaslit into accepting it and nothing will get done.
Matthew says, I'm in despair at the moment.
Our people aren't safe yet.
The regime seeks to suppress our speech.
Remigration is essential, whatever sanctions the international community might place on us.
I don't care about the international community's opinion at all.
No, I mean, I was going to say that actually the international community, I think that there is an element, I think, of people waiting for a country to make the first move because it might be similar to the lockdowns where if Italy does it then all of a sudden it's okay.
If people start, like, re-migrating people en masse.
Okay, Pakistan did it.
Four Afghan terror attacks and they ejected 1.7 million Afghan asylum seekers in Pakistan.
If it's good enough for Pakistan, it's good enough for me.
Caleb says, be me, join stream three minutes late.
Here's about child murder attempt.
One's about modernity.
Cameron says, rest in peace to those little girls, feeling a great sense of helplessness.
I know, and that's why people want to go and protest.
But the thing is, I mean, I just don't want to be encouraging people to go because with emotions running so high, there's a much higher chance of something bad happening.
No, I agree.
We should be organizing our protests on our terms, not on sort of the terms of the events.
So I don't recommend going.
Ramshackle says, I'm millennial and my mum used to send me to the bakery on our road when I was six.
Totally safe because everyone in the village knew each other.
It could be that way again.
The Last Russian says, my anger still isn't subsiding.
Trying to think of productive ways for it and trying to suppress it while it worked down.
To be honest with you, I had a bloody awful day yesterday because of this.
Like, everyone I knew, like, I saw my normie friends on Facebook posting about this and they were just furious and it's like, yeah, I know.
Hero Sanic says, the managerial elite always excuses them having a lack of agency for any number of reasons, thus never afforded to a native European.
Yes.
Reticulium says, this is clearly a tough subject to talk about.
It's obviously affecting you and lots of people in the UK.
I just want to praise your continued professionalism on subjects like this.
Well, we're doing our best.
Well, thank you.
That's a random name.
It says, Uruk-hai killing of the people of Rohan did bad, but clearly they can't help it when Aymer and his Rohirrim keep oppressing them.
Yeah, I know.
Um, and, uh, OPHGK says deport non-assimilated with whatever violence.
Well, I'm not going to carry on that, I'm afraid.
No Fed posting in our chat.
Thank you very much.
Um, so let's, uh, let's move on to further fruits of diversity because there's been a lot of them.
Diversity is all the rage.
We know that it's good for us.
And we also know that 90% of the people who have illegally arrived here have been, uh, men, fighting age men, incidentally.
It's just not a question.
The government keeps the statistics and x-rays their teeth, so we know exactly how old they are at this point.
And this is a very interesting thread from a guy called Alma on Twitter, who's just gone through and, I mean, The Distribution of Asylum Seekers by Nationality, 2019-2023.
I mean, as you can see the charts, almost all very weighted towards men.
And I mean, look at Egypt.
Why are we taking asylum seekers from Egypt?
You know, Pakistan, Iraq, but you can see they're all very distributed towards the 20 to sort of 30 range, or 15, 30.
So it is the sort of men who would otherwise, in previous eras, be conscripted into the Lord's retinue or army to go and fight for the kingdom, right?
And massive amounts of them are given asylum.
Why are we taking asylum seekers from Sri Lanka?
Algeria?
I don't understand.
None of these countries are at war.
Vietnam?
Nigeria?
Vietnam hasn't been at war for quite some time, yeah.
When was the last time Kuwait?
I mean, El Salvador?
Like, are we going to be applying for refugee status there?
Yeah, all the criminals are fleeing.
Those oppressive standards.
Turkey, the popular holiday destination of Turkey, and we accept 80, what, 90% of the asylum seekers from Turkey.
Like, what is happening, man?
This is mad, right?
So anyway, moving on.
We're mental.
Like, someone like Libya I could actually understand.
I'm not saying it's necessarily a good thing, but at least, you know, there has been a war there.
It is a failed state.
There is a reason that people would seek asylum from Libya.
Vietnam... Same with Sudan as well, yeah.
Yeah, same with Sudan.
Okay, yeah, fair enough.
Like I say, I'm not saying I'm in favour of it.
No.
But, like, you know, they're just... India.
What are you talking about India?
Why are there any asylum seeks from India?
Nepal, like... We've got loads of Indians already.
Yeah, exactly, you don't need to... We've got Indians at home.
Pakistan, it's like 50%, 60% of Pakistani asylum seekers.
None of these people, not one of them, is our problem.
They don't qualify as far as I'm concerned.
But anyway, moving on.
I would move on if the focus wasn't there.
So what we're getting for our money is massive amounts of fraud on the benefit system.
Now, I'm sure, I'm sure that someone's going to say, well, isn't this just native British people committing fraud against your benefit system?
And to that, I would say, probably not.
Obviously, we don't have the breakdown of it, unfortunately, but as you can see here, fraud and error, losses by benefit, this 6.46 million, so six and a half billion, basically, in fraud, Every year.
It's astronomical, isn't it?
It's so much money.
I think people forget just how much money the government's throwing around here.
It's unbelievable.
And so this guy was like, well, fraud and error are not the same thing.
He's like, good point.
They're broken down.
Fraud is 5.1% of all the losses, of all the total.
7.3 billion.
And error only accounts for 1.5 billion.
So okay, we spend 1.5 billion in making mistakes, fair enough.
But that's only claimant error as well, there's also official error.
Yeah.
Which is another 780 million.
Yeah, but OK, it's mostly fraud, right?
We're getting unbelievably defrauded.
And then it's like, OK, what about the NHS?
Now, the NHS technically, on the books, is not supposed to give treatment to illegal immigrants.
Actually, I think they're a carve-out for the asylum seekers.
But for most immigrants who are in the country, they're not supposed to allow you to do it.
But the thing is, as Migration Watch point out, they just don't check.
So when you go to the NHS ward and you see a bunch of people who don't speak English there, the NHS just doesn't charge them.
They don't identify them or charge them.
So we're losing about 400 million each year on just health tourism.
It's like, right, okay, so we have an international health service, great.
And this is known about by OK, we're missing a link there, but don't worry.
So there was the massive benefit ring fraud that came out the other day, where five members of an organised criminal gang falsely claimed £53 million.
Five people claiming £53 million in England and Wales.
They were jailed for about a decade, something like that.
There we go.
There's the Crown Prosecution Service's post on it.
They didn't look very English, did they?
No, they were Bulgarian, of course.
And so it's like, right, so we're paying out huge amounts of money, we're getting actively defrauded, and when we're paying out for the health costs of illegal migrants, this is the kind of response that you get.
Oh, asylum seekers smashing up Farnham Road Hospital in the UK, why would they be doing that?
Well, I actually looked into this.
Oh yeah, go on.
So he was angry because he wasn't getting as much money as he wanted.
Wow.
Wow.
Imagine the gratitude.
Imagine the absolute gratitude of these people.
And all that is a political choice.
All of this is a political choice.
All of this is being done by policy.
By government policy.
Anyway, so, that's us saving the world, using our benefits system to make their lives better.
Don't they deserve it?
But we need them, you see.
We need asylum seekers, because business owners are like, well hang on a second, we need skills for the economy.
Ah yes, the skilled people who we're bringing in to support them.
I'm sure the window companies are paying them a lot, aren't they?
I'm sure Deliveroo's, yeah.
And so the business leaders are like, well look, we need foreign workers to help ease labour shortages.
Because Keir Starmer decided he was based in the far right and was like, actually maybe a net figure of 700,000 a year has to come down and actually can't be sustained.
Also, the economics behind this are just wrong.
Actually, you don't need to fill jobs and actually having vacant jobs is a sign of a healthy economy.
Also, they're justifying it by saying, well, we've got an ageing population and a sub-replacement birth rate, therefore we need to import foreigners, but isn't that just kicking the can down the road anyway?
Yes, it is.
And we'll get to more of that in a second, actually.
Because, I mean, Starmer has actually made a good point here.
Businesses have become far too reliant on workers from overseas, and Labour would train Britons to do jobs in areas where there were labour shortages.
That's a great idea!
But this is, let's look at some examples of how the industries in this country have become really, really lazy and reliant on foreign workers.
So let's, what about pilots?
That was only four years ago.
Pakistani pilots grounded over fake licenses.
Feeling confident about flying these days, are we?
I mean, airlines, you know, if only there was something that happened with fake airline passports and an airplane in the early 2000s.
I mean, that's what it's setting up for, right?
No, no, it doesn't even matter, right?
Well, it's not setting up for terrorism, it's setting up for incompetence.
Because it turns out that countries outside of the West actually have much lower standards when it comes to things like fraud, when it comes to just questions of honesty, and they don't seem to care.
They don't seem to understand the reason their countries are not as efficient and productive as the West is because they allow these things to happen.
It is accepted as inevitable.
Exactly.
Which is very worrying when we see politicians in the West trying to tell people that this is inevitable, that you have zero choice over the matter.
And also, it's also very concerning when politicians say, we'll just get foreign experts or, you know, skilled people from overseas.
And it's like, well, hang on a second.
They're not all the same.
These standards are not interchangeable.
If these people come from countries where they just treat corruption and lying as an inevitability of life and they're not really bothered about it, then it's not a surprise that foreign doctors are 13 times more likely to be investigated for incompetence than native doctors.
Why would that be?
It turns out voodoo medicine's not as good as it- It's not even voodoo medicine!
It's qualification fraud!
Like, these people come from cultures where fraud is a normal part of life, where corruption is a normal part of life.
We're like, yeah, well, I mean, look, he's got a degree that says he's a perfectly qualified doctor.
Who am I to disagree with it?
So, yeah, no further thought necessary, bro.
You know, it's only people's lives on the line.
You know, it's only an airline.
It's only a doctor.
It's only people who are, like, literally unqualified foreign nurses who get access to the drug supply of the NHS and just start handing it out, whether it's needed or not.
This is total institutional corruption.
And it's just mad how it takes Kirstein being like, well, I mean, the problem is you're just becoming over-reliant on these people.
It's like, can we not talk about the quality of the people themselves?
And to your point, economically, it's not even true, right, that we need these people.
According to the Labour force, and this has been true for years, right?
As you can see, this is from 2002.
This is a point that's been hammered home for over 20 years now.
There are hundreds of thousands of people unemployed.
If you have job vacancies, you should train those people.
This is an old point.
Again, it's such an old point.
And it's still just as true today that we are not training our own people.
And Keir Star was like, I'm going to train our own people, guys.
It's like, okay, when?
Get on with it.
This should have been priority one.
But anyway, so that's just the economics of it, right?
Let's get to the social enrichment of it.
It's just incredible how, like, you've just got machetes and knife attacks everywhere.
On the bus?
In a taxi?
How about after calling AAA after a car accident?
Like, what is happening, man?
But then what about the delivery driver who was just spotted the other day Going about his Deliveroo deliveries, presumably, with a bloody machete.
What is this person doing in our country?
Sorry, he's just riding around with a machete.
It's totally normal.
It's totally normal.
This is what happens, man.
And so when I hear things like this, it's like, oh, what we need is greater diversity in hiking.
I don't really want greater diversity in hiking.
The whole justification for this, which is stupid from the outset, is that I don't feel comfortable in the countryside because there are too many white people.
Well, good.
It's one of the places we've been pushed to.
We've already been pushed out of our cities.
I don't want machete guys coming to the countryside.
I don't want them here at all, no.
Yeah, exactly.
But anyway, so I love this.
This is just the most preposterous nonsense in the world.
I'm a black Scottish adventurer, of course I leave no trace.
I'm a black Scottish adventurer.
Of course, I exercise my right to roam responsibly here in Scotland.
I'm a black Scottish adventurer.
Of course, I'm aware of the benefit of spending time with nature.
I'm a black Scottish adventurer.
Of course, I'm breaking barriers.
None of these people are Scottish.
No, they're not.
None of these people, they've all got African accents, they're all obviously recent immigrants, and they're being lied to and they're lying to us, calling themselves Black Scottish Adventurers.
So great.
There is an active push to get these people to come into the countryside, to come into the shires.
And what are they going to bring with them?
They're going to bring In Richmond, obviously.
So in Derbyshire there's a place called the Dovedale Stepping Stones.
I've never actually been there.
But apparently it's a lovely area next to a crossing a river.
And of course there was a migrant brawl there over some nonsense.
Like someone was trying to get a wheelchair across and apparently they don't know how to queue and so there's a massive brawl.
And it's like, for God's sake!
The tranquility of the spot and the fact that they've turned it into what looks like the southern US border here, you know, is such an abomination.
It reminds me, in a way, of the desecration of Stonehenge by Just Up Oil, in that these are the parts of England that should be considered sacred to us, these beautiful parts of our countryside that we should be preserving, and these people are coming here, not respecting it, turning it into what looks like, I don't know, some North African market or something.
We'll get to North African markets in a minute.
So they've brought their enriching culture with them, which is wonderful because that's what multiculturalism is.
And then you'll get people coming back from the pub, you find just some guy taking a dump in your front yard.
Even though you've got a sign that says, don't take a dump in my front yard.
The fact that that sign had to exist.
The guy obviously doesn't speak English.
There are so many Indians in his front garden that he's got to write a sign saying, please, don't go to the toilet in my front garden.
But the guy obviously doesn't speak English, so he can't read your bloody sign.
But this is totally normal, remember?
There's constant, they're on the beach, they feel the urge, they may as well.
It's always open, isn't it?
I sent a video to Stelios recently of an Indian just in the bush, basically, going to the toilet and he got bitten by a 15-foot python.
There are reasons why you don't do this sort of thing, right?
But anyway, just to finish this off, they are going to settle in and make the place their own.
Ipswich Bazaar has taken over the former Woolworths and Poundland site.
In Ipswich Town Centre, because, of course, the town centre is going down like every town centre is.
And so they had to save it with diversity and multiculturalism.
Amazing.
Amazing.
Also, this picture doesn't look very diverse, does it?
No, not really.
It's rather South Asian.
But what do I know?
Yeah.
But this is just what diversity has brought to our country.
These are the fruits of diversity.
And I'm really tired of them.
Right, so Mr. Bosch says, first time rumbling, long time listener.
Good afternoon, gentlemen.
Just watched the speech, Carl.
Magnificent.
Thank you for all the great work you're doing in the movement.
Thank you very much.
We'll have to skip over the $1 ones, I'm afraid, just because we're running out of time.
So, Stelios.
New York is finding out.
New York for some time now is a sanctuary city and a lot of people are expressly welcome to illegal immigrants and you will see how this narrative has brought New Yorkers to find out that sometimes there is too much of a thing, there is an overdose of immigration and there is generalized unrest, uncleanliness and lack of civility coming with it.
Really?
So they've adopted the culture of New York then by the sounds of it?
Exactly, yeah.
So, you see that there's an issue of cultural compatibilities and incompatibilities, and New York has this issue here.
We are going to talk about it, and we are going to look a bit about what has happened in the last year.
Obviously, this goes back decades, but especially in the last year, we are seeing a lot of developments that are really interesting.
Actually shows what happens when a lot of the progressivists, and not just the politicians, the people, the people who support progressive politics, actually confront, become confronted with the consequences to their own actions and the consequences to the policies that they have implemented.
Because usually what happens with progressivists is that they want others to To pay the bill.
100%.
I mean you see this in Britain in particular, in the fact that around Westminster in London and sort of the very centre and the heart of government, there aren't these problems.
There are tourists wandering around.
It's not that you don't see any foreign people, they're all tourists taking photos of Westminster Abbey or the Houses of Parliament or whatever.
They don't get these problems there.
In 2024, this is political choice.
It's not just... Oh, 100%.
This is not just an error.
So, I will show you something that happened here because it shows lack of civil, let's say, civility and basic stuff about civil obedience to authority.
There was a park in January that people were there in close to Times Square.
It was a central park.
It's everywhere, basically.
It's everywhere.
And the police went there to try and tell some illegal migrants to leave the place, and they started assaulting them, kicking and hitting them.
And you will see that a lot of them just weren't particularly punished.
Not particularly grateful to the people, not particularly Yes, so there's a question of whether the response to their actions was particularly relaxed.
So you will see here there was, under the terms of the deal offered by the Manhattan District Attorney's Office, Darwin Gomez Isquiel, 19, will serve 364 days in jail.
The other migrants, Jorge Henry Breda, 24, and Ulysses Vujorkas, 21, were offered plea deals to serve a year in jail in exchange for pleading guilty to second-degree assault, the New York Post reports, citing the DA's office.
So, we're talking about three people here, but there were many more, and people can watch the video and they see how basically a whole gang just started assaulting the officers.
And there is a debate that has been sparked.
They're lucky they didn't get shot.
Yes.
It's just another day ending in Y. And there has been a debate about whether this person should be deported.
Yes.
What's the debate?
Yes, but you would expect progressivists to not engage in this.
And this is what is interesting in New York City.
You see one of the cases where the state is in clash with the federal government.
And in fact, you have a progressivist mayor who is basically blaming the federal government for not addressing the migrant issue, the migrant crisis.
And you have a Democrat mayor, Eric Adams, who is also saying that migration will be our end.
And he has been saying so for a while now.
Okay.
So, this is a particularly interesting case that is going on in New York City.
They are literally finding out.
They're literally finding out.
So, let's see here about generalized uncleanliness.
So, New York City neighborhood turned into giant toilet as migrants litter park with poop, leave cups of urine on doorsteps.
That's a very weird custom.
It's sort of like a gift.
You know how a pet cat might bring you a dead, beheaded mouse or something?
The migraine brings you a cup of wee.
It's my bodily fluid.
It's like June, isn't it?
It's a gift.
And basically it's beyond control.
Yeah.
The cleaning workers are saying that things are so filthy that they can't handle it.
They say the loos have become so filthy, the workers gave up on maintaining them, according to locals.
There was a cup of what I thought was somebody's discarded hot chocolate that turned out to be not hot chocolate, said street cleaner Josh Cashman.
Somehow managed to import the most disgusting people on earth.
On warmer days, it can smell like a toilet over here, and not a well-kept toilet.
I like how they had to specify that.
They say, in the past week, locals and volunteers said they have spotted cups filled with urine around the park's entrance near the former school, along with human-sized poop in tree beds and between parked cars.
Most of them want to pee in plastic cups rather than the ground, and they leave them on people's door steps.
That's so weird.
Why?
Yeah, it is weird.
Surely you would want it to go in the ground or in a toilet, ideally, but... It's like, okay, I really need to wee.
I need a cup.
Why?
Just pee against a tree or something?
It could be women, I don't know, but surely most of these people would be men, right?
Yeah, but you see here footage from the public toilets.
They are beyond... Okay, let's move on.
That's a disgusting photo.
I like the graffiti that just said hell on it.
That was quite fitting.
So, here we have a very interesting video, which I will play for about a minute, showing the residents who are finding out.
Showing the people who voted for this.
Exactly.
Some here are frightened now just to go outside.
Now it feels like that whole section is just not available to the community anymore.
Our parks are not available.
- I've got multiple audio playing.
- And give us a list of all of the - It's someone else.
- Migrants from a 4,000 bed shelter nearby fill the sidewalks.
They sit on park benches, on stoops and curves under the VQE overpass.
So many people crowded in here, residents feared what was coming.
We have been witnessing the escalation in violence on the street and in the community for months now.
We've been pleading with the mayor, as we've seen increased violence, that this was going to be inevitable.
And on Sunday night, it came.
Two people were murdered here, a third critically injured just outside one of the two adjacent shelters in Clinton Hill.
It is a neighborhood now pleading for help.
Residents came together tonight to demand the city provide more protection for them now and move to downsize the two enormous and crowded migrant shelters in Clinton Hill.
So basically everything that we have been talking about whenever we're talking about issues concerning mass migration, you see New Yorkers expressing.
How about all of these people that are Democrat?
We're going to see a new movement, Democrats for Trump.
Well, unfortunately, there was another body found in garbage bag earlier today in New York City, and it was just under an outside where illegal migrants were being housed.
So obviously, you know, it's just not a surprise.
So that was the 6th of July, by the way.
Yeah, there are many.
Okay.
As I said, we're talking about a whole year of developments.
Murders in New York, you know, there probably has been, you know, one going on since we started this podcast.
Yes, and much before that.
But the thing is that there is a political will and there is a political choice to improve things or to let them disintegrate.
And you could definitely talk about gang-ridden New York.
Gangs of New York in the 19th century and stuff.
But the point is, can we make things better or worse?
Yeah.
And it's just, okay, well, if you vote Republican, you get people like Rudy Giuliani, who do smash the gangs.
If you vote Democrat, you get all of this disgusting stuff.
And so you get what you vote for.
Exactly.
And that is the issue because a lot of progressivists are just hoping that other people are going to suffer the consequences of their own policies.
But when they encounter their own creation, they Are particularly unhappy.
I'd love to have asked those people to say, and who did you vote for last time?
They'll say Democrat.
They're finding out.
So residents in democratic stronghold fuming as migrant mega shelter causes explosion of gang related crime.
So, I mean, it's just obvious, yeah.
You can have here more context if you want.
Clinton Hill was once a charming and relatively safe part of Brooklyn.
It's now turning into a chaotic environment filled with migrants due to a mega complex set up by New York City to house- You voted for this?
You voted for exactly that?
Well, there we go.
Yeah.
Exactly.
You literally voted for this.
You came out like, you know what, Trump's a racist.
What I need is a mega migrant complex.
Exactly.
No sympathy.
For those of you who are not watching this and you're on audio, we have a wonderful meme here from Librocrat Media asking who wants to tell them, and as a meme we have... I don't feel safe in my own neighborhood.
You literally voted for this.
Yeah, we have the chat saying you literally voted for this.
And they did, but they were hoping that other people were going to pay the bill.
It's not like the Democrats were even slightly reticent on this point.
They weren't like, okay guys, we'll ignore the migrant issue, we'll build a wall or whatever.
And then they did it behind your back.
No, they came out and said, no, we're going to make every city a sanctuary city.
Migrants welcome, refugees welcome.
They're all just racist and bigots.
It's not like they were quiet about this.
So I have some links from last year, from last October 2023, to show you something that happened due to Greg Abbott's, the governor of Texas, decision to house thousands of migrants that cross from the southern border and take them to New York, and all of them went to Staten Island.
People should get what they vote for.
He bust them all up there, didn't he?
He did.
Yes.
Which was, I thought it was hilarious.
I covered it at the time of him announcing it and I was just like, I respect that.
It's like giving them the consequences of their own actions while they're not helping you on your border when you're holding them back.
Yes.
Like the shield arm of the United States.
Yeah.
And people were saying that Greg Abbott is one of the most efficient politicians.
He actually did something.
So we have here tensions flare over migrants in New York City.
Staten Island protesters are arrested while trying to stop buses carrying asylum seekers to shelter as they yell take them back.
And we have some of the photos here of the police arresting people who were basically protesting against the The events we see right now in New York City and the causes of these events.
Because it's just math.
If you just flood a city with people.
It costs you money.
It costs you money.
And not only it costs you money.
It makes your environment disgusting.
Even if we played along with the economic idea that all of them will, let's say, enter the job market, it's not going to be done just with a snap of your fingers.
It's going to take a lot of time.
Who does that benefit?
That benefits the big business owners.
It doesn't benefit the workers in any way, shape or form.
It's the opposite in fact, sorry.
So by importing lots of people in it suppresses wages and allows large corporations to profit more and the cost of living for your average person to go down.
That is what happens, it's basic supply and demand.
And it's common sense!
It is common sense.
It's just common sense!
Yes.
So we have And let me tell you something, New Yorkers.
Never in my life have I had a problem that I did not see an end to.
I don't see an end to this.
what you're going to hear right now.
That was in September 7th, 2023.
And let me tell you something, New Yorkers.
Never in my life have I had a problem that I did not see an end into.
I don't see an end into this.
I don't see an end into this.
This issue will destroy New York City.
It's just pretty clear.
Trumpian rhetoric.
Yeah.
Eric Adams joins the far right.
No, no, this is just the reality of it.
This is, yeah, they would say that he had the far right moment or something.
Yeah.
So what happened here is really interesting because he blamed the federal government for basically doing nothing.
He's not wrong for being part of the problem.
Joe Biden was there for the UN Assembly and Mayor Adams said that this was an emergency and he asked to meet with Joe Biden and the President of the US basically ignored him.
What, that racist?
I'm not meeting with him.
Well, he ignored him, and basically that is, on a symbolic level, it just says that I'm just not interested in you saying that there is not an end in this.
Yeah, 100%.
Yeah, I just don't accept criticism from within my own party.
That's exactly what But also, this criticism comes on lines that contradict literally everything about the Democrats' messaging.
He's like, look, in reality, this is making our city disgusting, it's making our city dangerous, and it's making our city bankrupt.
We have to do something about this.
He's essentially saying the Republicans are right about this kind of immigration.
And he's saying here, you will see, New York doesn't deserve this.
And this is really interesting and telling.
Some people didn't.
The majority did.
Okay, so what is interesting here is that he is basically accepting that this is an issue that there is no problem to and the question is why is it an issue?
No solution to.
Why is it an issue and why is there no solution as he said?
So, it is interesting to see that if a Democrat accepts that this is an issue, they have to accept that, for instance, there is a problem with cultural continuities and cultural discontinuities.
And Democrats, especially when it comes to the higher echelons of the federal government, have been talking about multiculturalism in a very abstract sense.
Also in a universally positive sense.
Yes, exactly.
So they're talking about abstract humans and they're stripping away culture and the influence of culture and different cultures upon individuals.
The good thing about talking the abstract is there's never a consequence to it.
Exactly.
So whenever they're saying that we accept immigrants, they are not asking what kind of immigrants, where from, what kind of cultures, Are we going to treat as compatible with our way of life?
And what kind of cultures are we going to treat as incompatible with the way of life?
So all these are questions that Mayor Eric Adams should be asking because they are implicit in him agreeing that this is a problem.
And also, just a quick thing, they never question the quality of the people either.
Sorry, it's not the successful, hard-working, decent, upstanding pillars of the community that choose to just flee their country that isn't at war in order to try and get Gibbs from the United States or from Britain or whatever, right?
Well, it's the victim framing doing a lot of the heavy lifting there, isn't it?
Absolutely is.
If you're a victim, somehow that's a good thing.
I actually think that being a victim is a mindset and you choose to be a victim and that victimhood is for the weak, ultimately, and it's not a good thing.
But also, it's also for those people who seek to take advantage of you.
Exactly.
If someone wants to exploit you, and you're like, oh, can I help you?
They're going to say, yes you can, actually.
You know, you give me all this money, you give me all this free stuff, you give me all this grace, and I'm just going to keep throwing it back in your face.
And it's like, okay, well, let's talk about the character of the people doing this.
Who's taking a crap in the middle of the day in the sidewalk?
Like, that person is there not there because they care about your culture or way of life or have any respect for you or anything like that.
They're there because you are able to be exploited.
That's why.
So here we have a very interesting development because Mayor Adams is trying to do something.
Based on right-wing Mayor Adams, he's joined the Keir Starmer Brigade, which is like, this isn't good actually.
But he is sabotaged by the whole system.
Of course he is.
And you will see what, this is a very interesting development because it says New York City won't offer right to shelter to some immigrants after 30 days in deal with advocates.
Now, this seems to me to be a A really weird thing.
I don't see how he can enforce this.
Because what this means is that someone goes there to New York, stays for 30 days.
And then isn't allowed to go back.
And then isn't allowed to go back.
I see no way he can enforce this.
Not because he personally has no power, but because there are other people who have more power than him who will sabotage him.
You should bust them.
You know, they're going from Texas to New York.
You should bust them to Washington D.C.
Yeah.
You guys doing it.
I'll tell you what, I went to Washington D.C.
recently.
I'll tell you what you didn't see there.
Any of this nonsense.
None of that in Washington D.C.
Where all the politicians are.
Here we see the other perspective within the Democrat Party when it comes to immigration.
We see the AOC who says, in this specific instance, sanctions that were originally authored by Marco Rubio took a large part in the driving of populations to our southern border.
Shortly after those sanctions were enacted, we started seeing dramatic increases.
So we have the entirely different perspective here.
I will spare you.
This is a difficult day.
I won't show you the AOC video.
Thank you for the small mercy, Stella.
You see, she basically says everything is to be blamed to the US.
The entire migration flow from Latin America to the U.S.
is entirely a problem of U.S.
sanctions to particular countries of Latin America.
So what she says is basically, they have no agency.
They have no power to create a society by themselves.
It's all a fault of the U.S.
and the people of the U.S.
have to pay the bill.
What sanctions are there in Guatemala?
No idea, but there have been rumors about a lot of Venezuelan gangs, such as the ones that Eric Adams is now talking about, that are suspected for the murders we talked in the beginning with the bags.
And you could say that, you know, the regime in Venezuela has everything to do with throwing away people.
100%.
More than 7.5 million Venezuelans have left Venezuela because of the atrocious communist policies associated with the Bolivarian Revolution.
But in her mind, it's just a problem of US sanction.
But this is the victim narrative that you were talking about.
They're just the victims of the United States.
The language of this faction of the left seems to be that of a natural disaster almost, like this was an inevitability, obviously we just need to do the best we can and get over it and carry on as normal.
That's basically how they're trying to frame it.
It's very psychologically female as well.
Things happened to me versus the sort of masculine people did things.
That's very true, yes.
And also, the sort of framing of it is that they want it to continue because it's to their political advantage as they see it.
Yeah, because they get more victims who they can mother and continually expand a welfare state over and gain more power themselves.
Versus the masculine, if we solve the problem, then the problem is over and we did the right thing.
Absolutely.
And we end up again with the same cohort within the Democrat Party who is talking about mass migration.
We have here the... Everyone's favorite Chuck Schumer.
Everyone's favorite Chuck Schumer and also the... I think it's everyone's favorite statement from Chuck Schumer because he was saying in 2009 where a lot of Democrats were against illegal migration.
Yeah.
I think even Obama and Biden.
Oh yeah, 100%.
They were probably against gay marriage at that point.
And right now he says basically that mass migration is the only solution to job shortages and And declining birth rates.
Mad.
Absolutely mad.
Yes.
And this shows that the planners, because he is engaged in social engineering, aren't particularly wise.
Because if you want... Let's take for a minute that what he wants to do is the following.
He cares about social cohesion.
If he cares about social cohesion, then he must care about bringing people in To add to the population that are going to be compatible with the culture of the US.
Just saying.
Right.
Baldy Yule says, oh man, look at those racists calling for the deportation of asylum seekers.
How dare they not give everything over and become slaves to the asylum seekers?
What's the point, isn't it?
They're not our dependents.
We don't owe them anything.
They can go away.
And Ramshackleoth says, don't worry lads, our genetic resilience in the face of wind, rain and snow will sort the wheat from the chaff in the countryside.
Looking at that one.
advantage.
But again, the problem is just numbers, the continuing flow of humanity.
But anyway, let's leave that there and go to the video comments.
Okay.
Lance says, imagine telling the parent of a murdered child not to be angry about it.
Yeah, I know, I hate, I HATE this don't look back in anger narrative.
Because the whole point of it is to try and absolve the community of any kind of collective moral burden, right?
It's like, and this is the thing with the grooming gangs, this is the thing with the terror attacks.
It's like, okay, there's a repeated problem with one community.
And it's like, okay, well, you can't have the community bear the blame for any of the moral degenerates that come out of it and do the damage, but they're producing them.
They're the ones who are the origin point of them, and you're saying that people are just not in any way responsible for the kind of people this community produces.
So if you ever do something good, how can you ever claim that, oh yeah, our community is a good community?
If anything, they're more of a product of their environment than many other groups, the ones that are causing the problems.
Quite possibly, because of the contact with a foreign culture.
So it makes you more in touch with what you yourself are.
But it's just insufferable, this whole, like, Like, you can deny it all you want, but there is a kind of collective moral guilt that is present.
And we see this when they say, well, Britain needs to apologize for slavery, or Britain needs to apologize for the Empire.
OK, no, you're placing collective moral guilt on us.
OK, so when Rwandan goes and murders a bunch of children, is there collective moral guilt in the Rwandan community?
No, don't look back in anger.
It's like, well, then shut up about the bloody Empire, then.
Shut up about slavery.
Don't look back in anger, bro.
Be unburdened about what has been, bro.
I'm just sick of it.
I'm so sick of it.
Sorry.
Let's have a look at a squirrel, shall we?
Yeah, let's not.
This is a new squirrel that is enjoying the sunflower seeds and peanuts.
We used to get one with a much bushier tail, and we had called him Pikachu, and he used to be fearless.
This one is a little more quiet and scared.
Doesn't take much for him to be startled and take off.
But he's really cute, too.
That's a lovely palate cleanser.
Yeah, it is.
Our video comments are just like our replacement for therapy at this point.
Send us tranquil videos of squirrels and other cute animals doing cute things.
Thank you for that.
Yeah, thanks, Jeremy.
Really appreciate it.
I'm not sure we'll ever find out his real name.
An argument will be made that it is not in the public interest, that we have to shut up for the sake of diversity.
However, if it's a white person murdering someone that the state considers a protected class, no problem.
Heck, a white murderer in general.
I'm sure I can find more examples if I keep looking.
But if you're from Newham, an authority diverse area, your identity will be protected.
And these are just the attacks we hear about.
I am sure most others get a de-notice placed on them.
So I want to be clear as well, the murder of Brianna Gay was awful as well.
28 times she was stabbed.
Well the kids had some sort of obsession with serial killers, didn't they?
And that's actually something that seems to be going on and fuelling a lot of white murders is that there's this infatuation with true crime which seems to be unhealthy.
But you are right that the reporting is trying to manipulate how people view society and that Well, it's about the controlled spontaneity.
Exactly.
That's entirely the point.
You know, an argument I've never seen anyone directly make is that empathy is actually a predicate for tyranny.
If we were to define justice, it'd be something approaching a fixed and objective application of an external set of rules, whereas empathy is inherently subjective and exceptional, which is a perfectly admirable and necessary virtue in interpersonal relationships, but as soon as you apply it to governance, it rapidly develops into cronyism, or clientelism with a specific voting group, or in its most extreme form, a complete moral inversion.
Where weakness and suffering is a virtue, and discipline and strength is a vice.
Heinlein was right, is what I'm saying.
God, that was a great comment.
That was absolutely great.
Superb.
Yeah, that was just superb.
As precise a point as that welding, I think.
Yeah, I love watching videos of things being made as well.
It scratches that very male brain.
It really does.
Facebook knows I love them as well.
I keep popping them up and I'm like, no, not today, Satan.
A Gentleman's Observations of Swindon, Chapter 17.
Swindon's population increased from nearly 69,000 in 1951 to nearly 92,000 in 1961, and so development spread east, incorporating the village of Coppingham and establishing the new residential areas of Norpin, Eldon and Lydon.
The town centre was redeveloped, with houses bought and cleared to make way for shops, closed to cars and pedestrianised, and the canal paved over.
The parade and Fleming Way were constructed and opened towards the end of the 1960s.
While the work stopped manufacturing locomotives in 1962 in favour of repairs, and large parts were sold off, W. H. Smith, Moved its distribution centre to Swindon in 1967 to take advantage of Swindon's central location and many more companies followed suit in the following decade.
Yeah, it's really annoying that Swindon is just decaying at the moment, because we're in such an advantageous spot when it comes to travel and distribution.
I mean, we were booming in the early 2000s, and now we're just dying because of diversity.
Well, I think that there is at least possibility of turning things around in Swindon, to the point where the location is good, Wiltshire's a lovely place to live, and so it's just a matter of running it well.
Yes, it is, and that doesn't happen so easily.
It's finally arrived and I'm so glad to be able to read it.
And I'm going to come to the UK and I'm going to get all you guys to sign it, including Callum.
I'm going to track him down and make him sign a two because he's always going to be a load of senior to me.
I'm a little bit scared I'm going to get kidnapped now, but I'm glad you are enjoying your copy of Islander.
I don't know what Stelios was talking about, perhaps because he's Greek.
He couldn't possibly understand the satisfaction that I, a true and moral, natural-born Englishman, felt when watching the Olympics opening ceremony.
It confirmed all my prejudices against the Wilder-based, dirty French, and their immoral practices, and that we were right to burn their virgins.
However, I would say that the Instagram channel, Very British Problems, had the best response.
Nope.
Also correct.
Yep.
I mean, fellow Devonshireman has the same reaction that I did.
You know, it was true.
I said it in the segment, didn't I?
That it's wonderful to see France embarrassing itself internationally.
Especially as the French think they're so cool.
It's like, no, you're cringe.
Now what?
I also love the weird absurdity of that Smurf man in the middle of the table, just starting to sing and everyone being like, what the hell?
The chaos of it.
It's wonderful.
Hey y'all, just dropping by to remind you, don't get too blackpilled.
Like Samwise says, there's a lot of good in this world, and it's worth fighting for.
What a nice scene.
That looks lovely.
It's worth also mentioning that the good in the world is why we're doing this in the first place.
If there wasn't something worth fighting for, we wouldn't shoulder the burden of what we have to talk about all the time.
I just wanted to quickly hop in and say that I really appreciated Stelios' genuine philosophical analysis of the Humiliation Ritual that was the Olympic Opening Ceremony.
And I wonder if it wouldn't be a decent idea to maybe make a regular segment or a Symposium Part 2, if you will, of just the general Clowned World analysis through a philosophical lens, just to see what we're actually being put through and why.
Okay, thank you very much, and yeah, expect more philosophical analysis of degeneracy in the West.
So Stelios, why were they weeing in those cups?
Because they're degenerate.
The philosophical explanation, you know.
Very concise, very laconic.
Is that all the comments, Jack?
Okay, go on.
Okay, Dirty Bill says, Southport was bought with tolerances in the events.
This coin that we can trade in no longer.
Base Tape says, I can't stand this mental health argument that gets brought up every time something like this happens.
Yeah, no shit, Sherlock, compared to what?
All the mentally well-adjusted people who run around the streets randomly stabbing people in an incredibly verbose way that add absolutely nothing to the conversation.
Yeah, I totally agree.
Kevin says, I think in the UK it's high time we followed China's example and declare Islam a mental health condition.
They will never do that!
Yeah, I'm really over the guns argument completely.
People will find ways to kill each other.
the US we'd have less violence and murder but sad to say the mass stabbings in the UK are an example of people continuing to be violent even though there are no guns yeah I'm really over the um the guns argument completely uh people will find ways to kill each other I mean they've been killing each other since they've only had sticks and stones in fact I want guns because people are stabbing each other Yeah.
Because I want to be able to defend myself properly.
Yeah.
I'd like a sidearm.
Martin says, after yesterday's horror, I've now had it with the enablers who refuse to accept there's a problem with the incompatible cultures in our country.
Yeah, I mean, one thing I've noticed is there were so many shitlibs on Twitter who were just like, oh, my timeline is just full of racists and far right complaining that diversity is stabbing people in the streets.
And it's just like, It's like the Norm Macdonald joke, if ISIS detonated a dirty bomb over New York and millions of people died, the biggest tragedy would be the blowback against all of those innocent Muslims.
It's like, no, the tragedy is the dead children, you idiots.
Yeah.
Literally the shit libs have really been unable to purchase the ground they usually can, right?
It's really been difficult for them to hold on.
Plot twist, Stelios created Freddy says, I've lived in that region of the country for 20 years and I've been to Southport at least a dozen times.
It's very much a poor white working class town with a lot of deprivation, but it still has wholesome shops and attractions.
So it's kind of like Clacton of the North, right?
It is certainly one of the last places I'd have expected this sort of thing to happen.
Well, I looked it up and it's now becoming diversified, if you can believe it.
The centre of Clacton is about 60% English.
Now, similarly yesterday in the famous beauty spot in the Peak District, yeah we covered it, Thane Scotty of Swindon says, Apart from the inexcusable child murder, as we'll soon hear about the predictable gloats from the left.
You care about this but not Palestinian kids?
This is justice for colonialism?
I did see one person write that but it got their account suspended very quickly.
But they will, I don't know, I haven't seen them saying that actually.
I haven't seen them saying yeah but you think murdering Palestinian children is good or something like that.
I haven't seen much of that.
Jimbo says, let's not forget the Christian hospital bomber a few years ago, or the Liverpool bomber, yeah, who was a Muslim, claimed to convert to Christianity because he thought it would help his asylum bid.
Eventually he was so useless.
And then blew himself up.
Terrorism, yeah, he blew himself up and harmed no one but himself.
Baron Von Warhawk says, mentally unwell people get help and treatment for their problems.
Mad dogs like this stabber should be put down.
Well, this is the thing.
I'm not prepared to concede he's mad.
I'm prepared to concede that he is evil and he had a plan in mind.
A mad person does irrational things.
They don't form a complex plan that they then carry out.
I want to say something about the documentaries about serial killers.
For a lot of them they were saying the judge's verdict was that they obviously have mental health issues, but that didn't prevent them from executing carefully prepared plans.
Yeah, exactly.
It's not an excuse.
This is the problem with the therapeutic liberal state.
It doesn't understand that some people are just evil.
Some people have perspectives that are rational.
They're not irrational.
They're not like foaming at the mouth, smashing the walls and just attacking anything in range.
They're not mad.
It's not that they've got mental health problems.
They're just what we would consider to be evil from our perspective.
One of the most insidious parts of it as well is that the implication is that if you've got a mental health problem, it's framed as if you can get better, you can be rehabilitated, and I think that that framing is disgusting.
Like, no you can't, nor do you deserve to.
You've forfeited your right to life from that point onwards if you do something like that.
Bring back the death penalty.
Someone online says, knives and mental health issues strikes again.
Jimbo says, I live close to where the stabbing occurred and it was surreal when the news broke of how my colleagues had to go make calls just to make sure their family and friends were okay.
It was a very dark day.
Makes my blood boil seeing them don't look back in anger trash on Twitter playing language games.
Let's just justify this.
Yeah, I know, it's insufferable.
Chris says, I find it incredibly indicative of the media and the police come out and tell us who the lad was and where he was from, and efforts quell the growing anger against particularly illegal immigrants, no doubt.
He may have been born here, but he certainly wasn't British.
Yeah, it was a tough one.
Oh, he's born in Cardiff, therefore he's Welsh, boy-o!
It's like, yeah, I'm sure he is.
There aren't many native Welshmen going out stabbing children, are there?
George says, when the cowardly police won't protect you, you have to have the means to protect yourself.
Knives are not the problem, people wielding them are.
Well, the problem is, the police would have protected them were they there, but why would you think that this child's, like, ballerina class or whatever it was, Taylor Swift ballet class or whatever it was, would need protection?
You wouldn't think that, because you live, prior to this moment, in a high-trust society where obviously things like this just are inconceivable, but now you don't, and you realise you don't.
We've come down to earth with a very big bang.
So actually being armed would be a good thing.
I don't want to read your name out, spastic terrorist.
Um...
Christ's sake, man.
As a Welshman, presumably from Rwanda, I can confirm Labour will only make everything worse.
I pray that one day the population will wake up to the disgusting hatred Labour has for the working class and all-native British.
Yeah, I know, I mean, it's just fingers crossed.
It's difficult to conceive of how that's going to happen though.
Arizona Desert Rat says, in the US, country folks don't care what you look like as long as you behave yourself.
If you behave like a hoodlum, you'll get ostracized.
I hope people in the UK have the same capability.
Yeah, and we really need to start exercising it.
It still goes on in the countryside to a certain extent.
There's no urban culture of doing that because people find it difficult to keep track of all of the people there are.
Steve says, I have a theory that I call the still life of the dead flower.
Most politicians and middle class mitwits view the United Kingdom and the rest of the West through the snapshot of late 20th century ideals, the still life of when we had a relatively stable society.
Meanwhile, the working class and services are experiencing the rotten corpse that is the current West.
This is a result of the two party state and if the only language, the barbarians, I'm not going to finish that, but I think that's a fair point.
There's definitely a sort of hypostatized view of what britain is which is like you know early 2000s love actually britain but the liberal democrats and sort of labor party and middle class types think we exist in and then there is the reality on the ground which is everything's falling apart we're flooded with foreigners and the world is a much more dangerous place than it used to be in the run-up to the election did you go through any constituencies that had lots of lib dem signs up
Because I went through quite a few in the run-up to the election, particularly through the South West because I sided with the Lib Dems quite a lot.
All of the nice rural areas had at least one Liberal Democrat sign where everyone's English, everything works, you're living a sort of... Idyllic life, in love actually.
You're sort of living the UKIPPERS dream, aren't you?
Yeah, you are living the UKIPPERS dream.
But this is the thing, the Lib Dem voters are not people who actually hate Britain, and it's because they're living the UKIPPERS dream that they can feel like, oh well, I can have the luxury beliefs of being an international globalist, because I live in a homogenous ethnostate that is, as you say, completely functional.
And I'm certain that the first time these people see the diversity running down their town, their high street, wielding machetes and hacking each other up in the middle of the road.
I saw the other day on Twitter, I couldn't put this into the bloody segment that I did, because there's literally two guys with machetes hacking each other, one of them falling to the floor, and they're just hacking at each other, like the guys on the floor hacking upwards, the guys on the floor.
And I'm like, The second one, the Lib Dem voting places like Totnes or Salisbury or wherever it is, when that's happening outside their door, they're going to be like, BNP, BNP, BNP.
They're just going to flip to it.
Because they're not Britain-hating people, they're just living in an idyllic bubble.
They're naive, not malicious.
Yes.
The Lib Dem voter is just ignorant, basically.
And they're going to flip the MP as soon as that happens in their area, I promise.
Garlic Goblin says, Asylum Seeker engages in violence while their application is being processed.
Easiest application denial decision ever.
Immediately eject from country, end of.
Yeah, but so few of them actually get ejected as well.
It's insufferable.
It's so insufferable.
Colin says, did anyone ever ask if we want to be enriched?
Yeah, they did actually.
This is a conversation we've had over and over and over.
And every single time, the British public overwhelmingly said, no immigrants, please.
And the British government said, sorry, you have more immigrants, more immigrants, more immigrants.
We were never given a vote on it though, were we?
No, but if you look at like manifestos, every manifesto is, well, we're going to reduce immigration.
It's never happened.
Honestly, I literally feel like it's like upgrading Windows.
I've never accepted an upgrade of Windows.
I remember having Windows 3.1.
I was like, yeah, I don't want 95.
And then suddenly, years later, I'm like, I've got Windows 95.
How's this?
I've got Windows 98.
I've got Windows 2000.
Now I'm on, like, Windows 10.
And they say, do you want Windows 11?
I'm like, no, I don't really want Windows 11.
But I know I'm going to get it.
Even though every time I keep clicking no, I'm still going to end up with Windows bloody 11.
I don't know how it's happening, but that's what migration is like.
I know I shouldn't bang the table, but it's so insufferable.
I was like, I was happy with what I had.
Warlord Wututai says, It absolutely does not occur to the Green Party types that the British state exists to serve Britain and not the wider world.
It is unthinkable to them.
Yeah, but they're communists.
They're literally communists, so.
Kinga, I can't pronounce that, says, The Rwandan genocide sounds horrible.
An appalling thing to happen.
Many natives must still have PTSD from this, with dysregulated anger and heightened levels of aggression appearing.
But Josh is right.
This isn't our burden to bear.
We can't help those people.
We simply can't.
It's not our problem.
It's just not our problem.
You want a decolonisation, this is what it looks like.
Us saying not our... Why would we care?
You know?
Jordy Salzman says there's a big spike in refugee rate from El Salvador since Bukele.
I wonder who might be wanting to get out from there?
Yeah, that's a great question, isn't it?
Who's fleeing as a refugee?
I didn't even think about it.
I was like, why would we be fleeing from El Salvador?
I made a joke about that, yeah.
Yeah, it's like, well, not the good people, obviously.
People with lots of tattoos.
It's like, send them back to Bukele and see what he does with them, you know?
Roman Observer says, New York women find out what happens when you pick the bear option in reality.
That's true, actually, isn't it?
Derek says, one would think that the more industrious and freedom-minded would flee from Venezuela and know that the US gets all the moochers, will then be encouraged to vote for the same things that made Venezuela into the mess it is now.
Yeah, unlike with Cuba, where all the Cubans, you meet loads of Cubans in Miami, right?
They're all, like, hardcore capitalists.
Really, because they're the people that had to flee.
And when I was getting taxed around, I was just talking to them.
Oh, you're from Cuba?
Oh, my family's from Cuba.
A lot of them were born there.
And they're like, oh, what happened?
And it's like, well, you know, Castro took over, stole my family's farm.
We had like, you know, a nice small farm, three cows, two horses, and we were doing quite well.
And then they just stole it.
So we had to flee.
And now we're in America because we hate socialism.
It's like, yeah.
That'll be that.
Anonymous says, The problem with migrants pooping everywhere can be solved with more management.
Need a bureaucracy of nominated officials.
Use extra funding to discuss poop.
They said they can deal with it.
Good point.
The workers on the field said it can't be solved.
They've overwhelmed the bureaucracy.
Good for them.
Bleach Demon says New York City gets what it deserves.
They just introduced little curbside trash cans.
Acting like the rest of the world hasn't been using trash cans for 100 years.
New York Doesn't reflect America or any civilized peoples.
Probably true.
Michael says, no sympathy for the New York idiots who continually vote for these progressive douche canoes.
Absolute garbage.
They will vote for Kamala, the woman who couldn't do anything about the border and wouldn't do anything about the border, I think is more accurate.
The saddest thing about Biden's bowing out is I can't put out my meme vote for shits and giggles since shits has quit.
That's funny actually, yes.
But yeah, that's the thing.
I'll say, look, you guys all vote Democrat.
Oh, these are the problems.
And who did you vote for last time?
Oh, yeah.
But at least it's forcing Eric Adams to become far right.
But he's allowed to because he's a Democrat, supposedly.
We do have some rumble chats as well.
I know, but I don't want to privilege them over the people on the website.
If they've been sent past the thing, we've got to have some sort of order because, in fact, we're literally out of time.
Indeed, we've pretty much run out of time.
Yeah, but we'll go for this last one from Rick.
Sure.
There's going to be more and more anger in the time coming.
Klaus Schwab didn't so much predict it as lay the groundwork for it to happen.
If people were paying attention, their anger wouldn't be directed at one another, but at these elites who are the root cause and primus motor for our current predicaments.
I actually don't think Klaus Schwab is responsible for this.
Klaus Schwab hosts a forum where like-minded globalists get together and plot globalist things, but the globalists who get together are all the world leaders, so it's them doing it.
You know, Klaus Schwab just is at the nexus of the network.
Facilitates it.
Yeah, he facilitates it.
He opens the champagne or something.
Yeah, but anyway, yeah, before our time So I suppose thank you very much for watching.
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