Hi folks, welcome to the podcast of the Lotus Eaters.
for Monday, the 5th of August, 2024.
I'm joined by Bo and Josh, and today we're going to be talking about the riots that happened from Friday night that are still ongoing, and explain what's happened to the best of our knowledge, what the response has been, and why we think this is happening.
Uh, this is a really huge subject.
And so directly after the podcast at three o'clock, we'll be doing a premium round table discussion with all of the hosts talking about, uh, things that are more difficult to say, uh, that we're not going to cover on the podcast.
And of course the potential, what we think consequences of this going to be.
So do come and join us for that because that will be where the real meat is found, uh, after picking through these bones.
Um, Before we begin, though, I just want to make this crystal clear to any people watching who might not actually be very sympathetic to what's happening.
We do not support the riots.
We do not think people should riot.
We have said this consistently before the riots happened.
Do not go out and protest.
Do not go out and riot.
We do not endorse or support in any way what is happening.
And with that said, let's begin having a look at what has happened, shall we?
So there's been a long list of protests announced at the start of last weekend.
I think these were all announced leading up to the Friday of last weekend.
Here's Tommy sharing a bunch of the actual protests going on all across the UK here, and that's not even all of them.
So GB News reported that there are a total of 35 demonstrations, many of them peaceful protests in an actual sense, not the CNN sense, but many of them did become riots, did become violent.
And because of a militant left-wing counter reaction to this, There were lots of clashes that need not have happened I think.
So the Guardian was saying anti-racist mobilized to counter protests at unprecedented far-right rallies as well as lots of people trying to basically drum up Muslims to get on the street and here's one of the examples and we're going to look at some more real-world examples of where they were in great numbers on the streets counter-protesting and attacking the British people.
So the first one I wanted to mention and the one that started things off really was Sunderland which began on Friday night and they were one of the first.
Here's a video of some people in the street.
There are lots of videos by the way.
I think that there was an overturned car, there was lots of other things, there was some riot police.
I obviously can't cover everything because if it's going on in 35 different places, there's so many videos, there's so much to cover, I'm going to have to inevitably miss some stuff out, but I've been following it all weekend.
There they are hitting a man on the floor with a truncheon in the legs, even though he's not really resisting arrest there.
So I'm trying to pick out some of the more egregious things that I've seen, the things that I feel are of most public interest.
I may have missed some stuff, I'm sorry if I have.
So here is a man in Sunderland using a fire extinguisher against the riot shields and the reason people do this is that it blocks the police from viewing through the riot shields and basically makes them useless.
I think it's worth pointing out in a chronological order, Sunderland was rioting on Friday.
Yes, that's right.
So before the weekend had even began, because we knew the protests were probably coming on Saturday, but Sunderland was already rioting.
They were.
They were the sort of first to do it and they were some of the more dramatic, I suppose.
It just occurs to me that mirrors election night.
It's always Sunderland that is first in with the vote, isn't it?
Very politically engaged.
So one of the things that went on in Sunderland that got a lot of attention was both a police station and a community centre got torched and there were also attempts to do the same to a mosque and I think the police particularly focused on protecting the mosque which is unsurprising really.
But yes, here's a video, I think this is the community centre there that they've got as the thumbnail where firefighters put it out, but it pretty much burnt to the ground.
And another place that kicked off quite early was Liverpool.
Before there had been any protests or any rioting, there was this.
Basically a man called Mohammed was stabbed on a train.
So I'm going to read exactly what it says in this article, because there's been a lot of misinformation about this.
You know, not the kind that is normally levelled towards the right.
A Muslim man named Mohammed was treated, this is a direct quote, by paramedics at the scene for a minor hand injury.
The British Transport Police made no reference to the suspect's ethnicity and did not say if they were treating the incident as racially motivated, but nevertheless people picked up this story and said the far right and this white man heard attacked this Muslim Because of a racist attack.
I don't know exactly how they framed it but that's more or less what they were going for.
They're trying to say this man attacked him and that this is going to be the sort of first stone cast of the native British attacking Muslims.
And we're going to see the echoes of this throughout lots of the events whereby this seemingly is false.
We don't know any of the information around it yet.
They haven't released any information so they can't know the motivation of the attack.
But I think if they're coming out and saying it wasn't racially motivated in the way the police tend to handle When white people do crime versus not, I think they would have said immediately if it was.
So in the daytime, I think they attacked a stand that was... A Dawa stand.
Yeah, handing out Qurans and talking to people.
You see these a lot actually in the UK nowadays, don't you?
I remember seeing one in Reading and being quite surprised that it was just out in the open.
It's basically like a recruiting ground, isn't it?
I imagine there's some sort of Saudi funded thing.
So also a library.
They love it when they find some credulous gullible kid who's prepared to literally convert to Islam in the street on the spot.
I've seen videos.
They video it and put it up and like celebrate this how brilliant it is.
So this library as well, this is something that the left have been drawing a lot of attention to, that they trashed a library and they're like, oh these far-right thugs.
But I think the justification that I've seen going around for why it was targeted, not saying it should have been targeted by the way, the reason that they targeted, yes, was that they It was supposedly connected to handing out Qurans or giving lessons on Islam or something along those lines.
So that's what has been going around.
And there were also looting of shops.
The justification that they provided for this was that they were looting foreigners.
I think we should use the word reason rather than justification.
The reason Sorry to be pedantic.
That's all right.
The reason that they gave was that these shops were owned by foreign people and it's mainly sort of vape shops and phone repair shops and things like that.
The things that you see on the high street in Britain.
So eventually there were clashes with police that got quite fiery I suppose.
They were letting off fireworks at the police over there.
It does seem like there's quite a high demand for phone accessories and phone repair.
I know, yeah.
You know, the amount of shops that are opened reflect demand.
I mean, to be fair, everyone does have a phone.
I'd be more concerned about the hair salons.
Yeah, it's just one of the things.
In Swindon, nine barber shops on one street.
There's a lot of hair in minority communities to be cut for some reason.
I mean, there's half a dozen or more phone repair shops and phone accessory shows.
So another thing that happened was people's houses were targeted specifically.
So yes, you can see things like this graffiti showing certain sentiment.
And one thing that I thought was quite heartening was in Northern Ireland, in Belfast, The Republicans and the Unionists were actually protesting in solidarity together, which is amazing to see.
I couldn't believe my eyes.
Again, I've said this before, but I grew up on military bases that were constantly being targeted by the IRA, and you would have a warning system saying, how dangerous is it today?
How likely is it the IRA are going to commit a terrorist attack?
And so to get to this point is just Amazing to see, frankly.
And I also like the Palestinian flag, rainbow flag, trade union flag.
You can see what they're opposed to.
Versus the Union Jack and the Irish flag.
It's cut and dry, isn't it?
Yeah, the international nationalists against the globalists.
And we are seeing a sort of unity of the European right in a way, aren't we?
I even saw people in France sharing solidarity.
And I think that's going to happen more and more.
There's also this video as well, if I can get it playing.
There we go.
You see, Northern Irish flag and an Irish flag, arm in arm.
I don't mean to laugh, but like, again, it's just so preposterous that in any other time or place this would never have happened.
It wouldn't.
And it's just a testament to how much people of the British Isles are being tested by what they're being put through, isn't it?
So it's also worth mentioning just how militarized the police in Belfast are.
Yeah this isn't new necessarily, but this looks very different than some of the cases in England, right?
They were saying that they were going to use impact rounds, I don't entirely know what they were, and I've tried to look it up.
I think it's non-lethal ammunition.
I would imagine so.
Rubber bullets.
Which can still be lethal, in a sense.
Yeah, they do kill people, don't they?
So, moving back to England again.
Aldershot, a migrant hotel, had a large protest outside of it.
So we're seeing that this is peaceful.
They stood outside with signs.
Because a lot of these were peaceful, and it is a minority of them that turned into riots.
Whether that makes a difference to Keir Starlin.
And less can be said about what happened in Rotherham.
Of course this is known for one of the main places that the grooming gangs operated so amongst the native British you can imagine there's a lot of anger and I think that's been directed here towards these hotels which they tried to set on fire.
I don't think it went particularly far but they certainly did a decent amount of damage.
But this is one of the worst things, we can go back to that in a second, because apparently there were people still in the hotels, so whoever set fire to these are going to be arrested and charged with attempted murder.
I think there are a couple of links, Samson, here.
Oh no, no, this is right, sorry, I'm just forgetting what I've got here.
So there's a migrant in one of the windows here that has been smashed up from Can I just make a comment though?
He's not wrong.
Look at the state of the country.
this is an S country whilst he's in the hotel being put up for free and I think that this video coming out is only going to stoke people's frustrations and I can certainly understand why.
Can I just make a comment though?
He's not wrong.
Look at the state of the country.
It is a shit country.
It's because of people like the guy saying it that it's this way.
It never used to be like this.
Yeah, the government has allowed these people to come in and take advantage, and this is what the rights are in response to.
The England I know and love was, you know, predominantly English, predominantly civilised, and predominantly worked.
It doesn't operate like that anymore, does it?
So there's also been something circulating that I've not been able to confirm, but I'm showing it anyway, that some people were suggesting that the migrants in the hotel had guns.
It's difficult to tell from there, but I just wanted to talk about it because what he's got on his hands there looks more like a camera to me.
It's difficult to tell, but I don't think people should necessarily jump to conclusions from one grainy photo.
Yeah, I very much doubt they have guns.
Like that would be, if that was supposed to be a gun, that'd be like an automatic rifle of some sort.
Very, very doubtful.
Why didn't they shoot anyone if they had one?
Also, why would they be walking around in a hotel with it?
Very doubtful to me.
So in Tamworth another Holiday Inn was targeted.
This one again was set fire to.
Can't really get the video playing but I suppose it's out there if you want to see it.
And then to Stoke which also saw quite a bit of violence and the section here that I'm going to be talking about is largely focusing on the counter protests from Muslims which were significant and violent.
So the framing from the Labour Party that this is all far-right thugs and you know that in and of itself is a silly claim because a lot of the people may not even be politically aligned at all.
But I mean let's let's give them their due.
There are going to be a lot of people in the riots themselves, not necessarily the protests, who are what they will characterize as far-right thugs.
Okay, I agree.
There probably are quite a few of those.
But there are also a lot of, I mean, do we call these guys far-right thugs as well?
They're definitely thugs of some kind, you know, from the Muslim community.
And again, these are not representative necessarily of the entire Muslim community or anything like that, but there are lots of them on the streets and they are waving weapons.
So, what do we call them?
Well... The MDL, the Muslim Defence League.
I would call them domestic terrorists personally, because they're, you know... They'll call the far-right thugs that too.
And they may well do that, yeah.
But they've got knives, they've got machetes, and they're defending people who have essentially attacked our way of life.
But are they defending people or attacking people in the street, I guess?
Well, we will see that very shortly.
So, here, hopefully I can play this without the audio.
But they're shouting Allahu Akbar and running across the street counter-protest.
By the way, these are the same men that are armed.
We'll be right back. .
It sort of runs out of steam a little bit here and they sort of just congregate.
But nevertheless, there were two protests either side of this street.
They were the ones running across, not the other way around.
And here is a man.
You'll see it there.
That is what looks like a machete outside of a mosque there.
Funny how no one's commenting about this.
There's no comment from the Labour Party.
There's no politicians coming out denouncing the fact that a bunch of armed Muslim men are parading around our streets.
Did you see that the police had asked them to give them weapons to the mosque?
I did see that.
It was ridiculous.
Just like, can you please hand in your weapons to the mosque?
By the way, I'm a police officer, but I'm not going to do anything.
I'm going to ask you politely.
Why weren't they confiscating the weapons?
Why weren't they arresting them en masse?
You would think, but like, okay, so now, okay, they give their weapons to the mosque, so the mosque has turned into an armory?
I find it interesting as well that in a lot of the British protests, they set the dogs on them.
When it's Muslims, All of a sudden they don't do that, do they?
It's funny, it's almost like they're respecting their culture.
Cultural sensitivities, yeah.
Yeah, well, I don't think their culture should be respected when they're brandishing weapons.
I think, you know, if they don't like dogs, all the better.
So, here's Hartley Poole as well.
It's worth mentioning that They tried to target a mosque, they targeted houses, individual people's houses, and there's also a video of protesters just punching a random passerby, which I do not support whatsoever.
We don't support any of this.
Any of this violence.
Yes.
And they also set fire to a police car here.
There we go.
Again, you could take this out of context and say, OK, Black Lives Matter, Palestine protest, which one is it?
Oh, it's the English working class riot.
Mm-hmm.
And then we have Middlesbrough here, and this is a Sky News reporter.
Can we save this?
I'm going to cover this in my segment.
Okay, you want me to save it for later?
Well, you'll have to watch Carl's segment later.
So, here is a mob attacking a lone Englishman here.
These are Asian men, as they are described, and they're just all targeting one person.
Yeah, it's absurd, isn't it?
It's just Middlesbrough men.
They're men from Middlesbrough.
That's right, yeah.
I hope whoever they're targeting is okay.
But the point is, this is not the only gang, right?
Yeah, there's another one here.
They've got planks of wood and they're beating just English men in the street.
Yeah, well they're hitting them with these planks of wood.
You can hear them shouting Allahu Akbar whilst hitting British people with wood.
There they are, look, see?
Keir Starmer has totally emboldened this.
There's roaming gangs of Muslims targeting English people because they're English on the streets of Middlesbrough.
It's insufferable to watch.
But yeah, it seems like a lot of the northern towns in particular have basically been taken over by these Muslim gangs because I've not seen much from them other than the Muslim violence.
So, moving on to Bolton as well, similar story.
Here you can see a bunch of Islamic men.
Yeah, here we are, them just going through en masse.
Black clad masks.
Yeah, they're obviously not there for a civil discussion, are they?
this is being allowed to happen look how there's very little police presence really and they're not really discouraging them they're just sort of walking alongside almost for their protection and then here they are they're saying they're arguing with the police saying we don't need you we've got this ourselves I'll cover this in my bit if that's alright mm-hmm sorry just because these are nothing left Alright, well, there's some more stuff here.
There's them clashing with the counter-protest here.
And then the Muslims actually go up to the police.
Yeah, because the Muslims are frustrated that police are keeping them away from the protesters.
And we're going to see more of this I think.
And yes, here's Hull as well to end on.
Obviously there were looters.
Yes, there was looting going on.
Interestingly enough for some reason in Hull it was Lush and a Greggs.
I don't know what Greggs has to do with this.
It's just Steak Bakes, isn't it?
Yeah, I do like the Steak Bakes.
Do you remember when the Black Lives Matter rioters were looting Louis Vuitton?
High class things were looting Greggs.
So it is worth mentioning in a sort of sense of irony that Lush did do an anti-police campaign where they came out supporting Black Lives Matter and defund the police and It turns out that actually maybe they could have done with a bit of police protection there.
I don't know why people were doing this and I obviously don't support looting things.
This is not how British people should behave and it certainly doesn't make any cause look good if you're stealing.
So don't do that.
That's a sort of quickfire summary.
What are our general thoughts about the events over this weekend?
Well, we'll cover that in the premium hangout we do, really, because there's so much to go through still.
But I don't want to spend that much time on it.
Okay, well, that is my summary.
That's what I've tried to pick out as particularly interesting.
Obviously, there's a lot more out there.
It's a very quickly moving story.
You need a whole team of people really to follow it all.
Hopefully that's given you a reasonable overview and stay safe.
Freddie says, praying for the UK.
Thanks, man.
We're going to need it.
Mason says, man, I really feel for the UK.
What's interesting is Australia has the highest percentage of foreign born residents, but nowhere near this level of social unrest.
Who you let in matters and how you let them settle also matters because you'll notice that it's very concentrated.
We've allowed colonies to spring up in England.
Axis the Eternal says, there is fault on both sides here.
Police government won't listen to valid concerns and they won't equally enforce the law.
The protesters feel they have no recourse.
Save riots.
Representation matters.
Yeah, I mean, I heard that they're the language of the unheard.
So I guess we're finding out who's not being listened to at the moment.
John says, I really think the press statement is going to come back to bike here if he had to get the white working class out to fight in Iran.
Yeah, we'll discuss it.
Instead of sending the dogs on the Muslims, they should send goats on the... Okay, go on.
No Long Pork says, please stock up on non-perishables and water.
At least a month's worth.
Cash is going to get much worse before it gets better.
Have a bag for each family member to bug out if your house is on fire.
Probably wise advice.
You should have a bug out bag anyway.
I always keep mine supplied.
And to let people know if they're going to send in rumble rents.
Yeah, be sensible.
You want them read out.
Yes.
Be sensible.
Obviously, as you can imagine, the tensions are very high here at the moment.
Lots of people pointing fingers, which in fact we'll get to now.
And that means that we don't want to do anything silly.
So let's get on to the reaction to the riots over the weekend, which has been honestly in many ways predictable and in many ways totally inflammatory and designed to make people hate the ruling class even more than they do.
For example, we've got our own fiery but mostly peaceful moment.
This was just honestly comical, absolutely comical.
Sky News, obviously a well-known left-wing broadcaster, ...that supports everything that the globalist regime do and hate everything that is parochial and local to England and to Britain, tries to run cover for them.
...and look very pleased about it whilst they do it, did it.
Then there was this, as I say, clash between protesters and the police and that is when they then ran off across the park here, a big group ran off.
I mean literally a gang of Muslim men carrying machetes while they're pouring scorn on the English protesters and rioters.
Well, this is to be expected, right?
It's not like we've been silent on this.
No.
You know, people have known this has been going on for at least 10 years.
Yeah.
This is just what the British media is like.
And the media that isn't like this, and when I say that I mean basically GB News, they want them shut down and investigated by Ofcom and banished from public discourse.
And so this is just the kind of, again, it's just an emblematic case.
There has been violence and rioting from both kinds of communities, both the English community and the Muslim community, and only one side gets covered, only one side gets demonized.
The other side get a free pass, even when it's happening behind the journalist reporting on it.
And then, so let's go to the elite class.
How have the elite class been handling this?
Well, the Home Secretary Yvette Cooper was interviewed by her husband on Good Morning Britain about how bad this is and what they're going to do, and that shows you everything you need to know about the incestuous and, again, globalist nature of the Westminster environment.
Ed Balls did do my favourite tweet of all time, though.
Go on.
He was just tweeting his own name.
He just tweeted Ed Balls into the void.
It's not a Google search, Mr Balls.
Anyway, this is just unbelievable and they complain.
Ofcom will do nothing about this.
This wasn't disclosed.
A lot of people don't realize that they're Coopers married to Ed Balls.
It's just normal for this to be the case, this kind of incestuous relationship, and you can imagine how powerfully he interrogated his wife on the subject that's going on, and how well he represented those people who don't feel represented in every other place.
The media ecosphere in this country is just demented, frankly, and they don't represent It's amazing that the same people who will say, you know, we need to shut down the right-wing media will say there's nothing wrong with a husband interviewing his wife, who also happens to be the Home Secretary.
Yeah, and Ofcom won't do or say anything about it.
Nothing will happen.
No.
This is completely normal for these people to propagandise the British nation with this sort of web of connections.
Anyway, speaking of propagandizing people and misinformation, let's go to then Hope Not Hate's Nick Lowles, who decided what he was going to do.
He had seen a clip.
that have been going around WhatsApp of a Muslim chap, you can tell by the accent, claiming that white British lads have been throwing acid at Muslim women and so we need to get out into the streets to protect our Muslim women.
And Nick Lowles for some reason tweets this saying reports coming in of acid being thrown at a car window of a Muslim woman in Middlesbrough, which is exactly what was claimed in the WhatsApp message.
And of course it got community noted there because the police had to come out and go, No one has been acid attacked, remarkably, on this day.
Nick is just a big supporter of hashtag believable muslims.
Yeah, it didn't happen, Nick.
Didn't happen.
And so the police were like, nope, that's not the case.
But before this could get community noted, the misinformation that the communist organization Hope Not Hate had been spreading had of course got to a Labour MP.
This chap is the Labour MP for Colder Valley, I don't even know what that is, but he had tweeted this out and as you can see this is his retraction saying, actually I've removed the post about acid attackers because the police said it wasn't true.
I'm guilty of spreading misinformation.
It's like, yes you are Josh, and who did you spread it to?
You spread it to the Muslim community, who themselves believe it happened.
Our fathers have come from a different country to here.
We were born here.
We are British, Pakistanis.
We are Muslims.
We will stand here.
We will fight against the EDL.
We will fight our ground.
Our innocent Muslim sisters are getting acid attacks.
Mosques are getting broken.
But everyone should be here.
Fuck the EDL!
He's got his wish because the EDL doesn't exist.
I'm glad that person's in the country.
I'm glad he lives here.
Anyway, speaking of the EDL, they've decided to go after Tommy Robinson for some reason.
Tommy Robinson is on holiday in Cyprus.
Okay, he was not in the country before the riot started.
He didn't tell people to go and riot.
In fact, he's put on many videos saying, don't be violent.
Why are we talking about Tommy Robinson?
But this doesn't appear to be connected to it.
They're throwing mud until it sticks, aren't they?
They're using this as an opportunity to target their political opponents.
Exactly.
Again.
I assume it's the Greek side of Cyprus.
Well, yeah, let's assume so.
It might be on the Texas side, who knows?
But the point is, he's not actually involved in these riots and all he said on social media is, don't go and do it.
Did that last guy mention Indians as well?
The Indian.
We'll fight the Indians.
I can't remember.
But he seemed like a very, very aggressive chap emboldened by Kirstein's government.
So let's go to what I'm going to generously class as the shit libs.
Liberal, globalist, Westminster types who are just insufferable.
Oh, thank you secret smug barrister.
You don't have to attend a riot to be prosecuted for conspiracy to riot.
You don't have to be present at a terrorist incident to be guilty of encouraging it.
A lot of Twitter warriors were getting unpleasant knocks on the door over the coming weeks.
Right.
So what he's hoping is that the people who disagree with his incredibly left-wing views politically are arrested by Starmer.
That is a signal to the Starmer government, go and arrest Nigel Farage, go and arrest Toby Robertson, go and arrest whoever.
That's what he's hoping for.
What a worm-tongue thing.
You could tweet anything you want, and that's his take, what he goes with.
People are less and less scared of these sort of threats, indirect threats.
Take, for example, Sam Melia.
People aren't scared by the example of Sam Mellier, they're just enraged by it.
Yeah.
Right?
Unacceptable.
Well it's so obvious injustice.
If you're putting up stickers with facts and you get arrested for it, then... Have you considered the hate facts, Josh?
Yes, unfortunately.
Lots of people aren't necessarily scared by the police.
Well, clearly, evidently.
They're not scared.
It's not scary.
No, but what this is, is a message in the network that he's in.
Say, you know what, here, all of your leakers, he's a lawyer, Keir Starmer's a lawyer, so they're going to have some sort of, you know, shared, overlapping network of people where they're like, look, You should just go after the political opponents who have been quote-unquote encouraging this and they've all been saying that Nigel Farage and all the rest of reform are totally responsible for this and okay okay we're at that point where it's just like no open demonization and the desire to shut down any political opposition because of that.
I'm not sure if I'm going to foreshadow something that you're going to say, but did you see how Keir mobilised for the potential riots before Friday in that he got a team of lawyers ready?
Oh yeah, what a shock.
What a shock.
I didn't know that though, I didn't know this was coming.
A secret barrister not using his real name or a real picture or anything.
Yeah, very brave.
Anyway, moving on, they're all just racists, says noted shitlib commentator Ian Dunt.
They're not really anti-immigration, they're just racists.
They're racists, they're just racists.
Okay, great.
Okay, Ian, we've established that you think they're racists, so what?
They still have claims to the country because they still have rights that you can't just dehumanize them by saying they're racist and therefore just do whatever you want to them.
Rights?
Oh, sorry.
Did you see Ian Dunn tweet that they're outside of the equation, if you like, they've got no legitimate concerns?
Yes.
This is it.
Well, that's why when he says they're racist, that's what he's saying.
Yeah, he's pretty much setting up to say the only legitimate citizens are the people who agree with my politics.
Anyone else is illegitimate and it's okay to take their rights away.
And everyone kept reposting a screenshot of him saying to simply, riots work, when he was talking about the other side.
Yeah, when he was talking about left-wing riots.
Yeah, stunning endorsement.
But we'll talk more about that in the Hangout we'll do after this.
So you had a government advisor calling for COVID-style controls against the right, so he wants lockdowns.
Presumably lockdowns for the English, not for the minority communities.
I mean, I don't know, man.
I don't like Keir Starmer being in charge.
Maybe he should try it.
If they were to do one thing that would make the situation more explosive, that would be it.
They've done a lot of things that make the situation more explosive.
And so the Muslim community, as you said, have been out on the streets.
You've got hundreds of them, again, armed.
I'm not going to play the video because we've seen it all.
And then you've got the Muslim Defence League attacking police and protesters.
So this is from the BBC.
And I'm going to play it, because it's a remarkable and refreshing small point of honesty from the BBC, one of the few things I thought we'd showcase.
Yes, in the past hour or so, the protest here has dispersed, but as you can see, there's still a very heavy police presence here in Bolton.
This was billed as a peaceful pro-British march at one o'clock this afternoon, and to be fair, both sides, the counter-protest and that protest, were kept apart.
It was fairly small, it was fairly peaceful, but it was around about half past one When there was around about 250 to 300 members of the Asian community that came charging up one of the side streets here, up towards the counter-protest site, charged at a police line, and that became a real flashpoint.
There were chants of Allah Akbar, which people weren't happy about here.
And that's where tensions really did start to grow.
That's where the police then had to kit up in all their riot gear.
They were having to get the police horses in to create a line.
They were throwing eggs at one point at the police.
And that's when things then deteriorated to the point that there was disorder in nearby streets because both sides of this protest then ran round into nearby town centre streets.
And there was a real flashpoint at one point where the There were smoke bombs, there were fireworks, there were bits of broken tile.
So, you get the point.
The Muslim community was attacking the police.
Attacking the police.
The police who have sided with the Muslim community.
This is just unbelievable.
As you've seen, Muslims just patrolling around attacking English people.
But the police themselves, totally on side.
I just need you to understand that we're not against you guys.
Yeah, yeah, so when it's nice and calm, we've got to stay around.
Yeah, okay, thank you so much.
And when things escalate, come on.
Yeah, we understand, yeah, that's fine.
I just need you to understand we're not against you guys.
No, no, no, we all understand, we all understand.
We're not against you guys, we're here to help and protect you.
Okay?
Is there any kind of empathy, any kind of signaling to the working class rioters, the far-right rioters, that the police are not against you guys, but we're here to protect you and work with you?
No.
It's entirely one-sided.
And the thing is, the Muslims don't want it.
They don't care.
They're like, no, we're not interested.
We don't need you, we got ourselves made.
We're not sheep.
They don't like the police.
we don't need you we got ourselves made we're not sheep they don't like the police they don't want to be a protected client class of the police
and so sorry it seems like um over the past few weeks even before these riots had taken place and the southport attack happened um that there have been pushes particularly in leeds for autonomy from 100 from muslim communities right They're pushing to become their own autonomous regions in the UK because they have Muslim-majority areas, they want their own community policed by themselves.
Sharia.
Yeah, exactly.
It's part of the religion that you should live under sharia, and so the police represent English law, or at least nominally.
Even if they're completely on board with their law, it's not enough.
But we saw this resistance in Leeds and Manchester, where the police were basically driven out.
So, never mind.
But of course, like I said, there have been lots of attacks on English people.
None of these people are going, like literally armed mobs attacking English people in the street.
None of those people, as far as I'm aware, have been arrested.
However, there have been arrests of, of course, the quote-unquote far-right, which means English working class.
The police have been going, just going forensically through the footage and whatnot, identifying people and arresting them.
They could have been this active against burglaries, or against any other crimes, rapes, who knows?
No, they're really, really interested in getting these people for some reason.
Over 100 people have been arrested, apparently, since the original Southport riots.
So, great.
And, of course, Keir Starmer has decided we're going to have 24-hour courts running non-stop.
So, armies of extra lawyers and courts running non-stop in order to prosecute these people.
Again, they could have done this for any crime.
Any crime, they could have done this for grooming gangs, they could have done this for terrorism, they could have done this for just the low level, like the smash and grab raids on shops, the machete fights in the street.
Illegal immigration.
They could have done it for illegal immigration.
I think in like 2011 when there was those rights then and they did it then for a while.
But we know for a fact that there's something in the order, what is it, 40 or 50 thousand Proper jihadis, literally, by definition jihadis in Britain.
Yeah.
Don't, you know, don't round them up with 24-hour courts.
No, that's all fine.
You know, the fact that 95% of burglaries go uninvestigated, don't worry about it, but as soon as the English are out on the street protesting, well, now you've got 24-hour courts and we're going to stamp this out.
Well, even Tony Blair in 2004 had a coordinated raid across the entirety of the UK, a dawn raid, all at the same time, and arrested all of the organising members of Antifa.
Now they're not a problem in the UK ever since.
And that was Tony Blair as well, the Dark Lord himself.
Keir Starmer originally, after the riots in Southport, came out and gave an extremely inflammatory speech, basically saying how he was the protector of the Muslim community, he was against the far right, and he was going to stamp down on them.
And then he came out and gave another speech, on the 4th, where he just openly threatens, threatens everyone, and just says, look, this is organised violent thuggery and you will regret it.
So it's essentially a declaration of war on the working class communities of England.
And then in the Q&A of this, he says, if you target people because of their skin color or faith, then that's far right and I'm prepared to say so.
So the Muslims who are targeting people because of their skin color and their faith, as we saw here, They're far right.
However, as Keir Starmer pointed out, he is the protector of the Muslim community, so these people are under his watch and his auspices.
This has, I think, undoubtedly emboldened them, and none of these people will be prosecuted.
They won't be going through the 24-hour courts, the police won't be dawn raiding them like they are the other people.
No, Keir Starmer only cares about the English rioters.
That's his point.
In the Q&A after that second one, someone didn't ask him directly, but they sort of asked, you know, what about the concerns or what about the motivations of these people?
And he just said, it doesn't matter.
He said it a number of times.
It doesn't matter.
It's essentially saying, but what about those three girls that were murdered?
And people keep forgetting there was like another eight and a teacher that I think were terribly wounded.
Their lives changed forever.
and completely traumatized forever.
Even the ones that weren't wounded were still traumatized.
They're still young girls, aren't they?
And he basically says, it doesn't matter.
Well, I mean, I've got the exact quote.
He says, it doesn't matter what the motivation is.
The motivation for the vast majority of people in the country is to see their streets safe.
So, I mean, Dan was like, wow.
He actually said that about the murder of three girls.
It doesn't matter that that's your motivation.
It doesn't matter that a second generation immigrant from Rwanda decided to target a dance school full of girls doing like a little Taylor Swift dance, whatever.
Like, you'd have to go out of your way specifically to find this.
This wasn't just a random, spontaneous attack.
This was planned.
It doesn't matter that you feel unsafe in your country, right?
That's what Keir Starmer thinks.
For Keir Starmer, what matters is that the globalist liberal order is protected at all costs.
That the clients of this are made safe and the people who threaten them are suppressed.
That's what matters to Keir Starmer.
The frustrating thing about what he's saying there is that many of the concerns about illegal immigration are centered around protecting our women and children.
And just legal immigration.
Yeah, and any kind of immigration.
That's why people are angry about this in the first place, is because it's making the people who live here less safe.
Yeah, 100%.
And so, naturally, the two-tier Kia meme has been going around because, again, you can see the difference.
By no doubt, those that have participated in this violence will face the full force of the law.
The police will be making arrests.
Right, so you can see the difference in tone.
This is obviously Black Lives Matter riots, and he's like, well, we need to listen to the black community, you know, we need to take a gentle hand.
On the right, of course, when the English community is rioting, it's like, no, you're going to get stamped on.
I'm going to be using the full force of the state to stamp on you.
You're going to regret it.
You are going, I mean, he literally said, we will make sure you regret this.
Yeah, I believe it.
I absolutely believe it.
Now, I called all of this.
I told everyone, look, he's going to govern the country like he governed his party.
He's an absolute dictator in his party.
Notice how none of the Labour Party are coming out and countersing him or anything like that, but we'll talk about this on the Premium Hangout afterwards, as we'll talk about Yvette Cooper's response to this as well, which was just bonkers, frankly, absolutely bonkers.
I'm somewhat optimistic actually about the nature of Keir cracking down on the sort of legitimate criticisms of this sort of thing, the actual speech side of it that should be free and legal, because I don't think he's nearly as competent as he needs to be to be the sort of Keir Stalin that he is referred to as.
Yeah, quite possibly not.
But the point being is the ethos and motivation that we're seeing from them is just, we are against you.
We don't care.
You have no legitimate grievances.
You have nothing good or bad, good about you, and nothing to say in your own defense.
And that's the official government line, is we are for the minorities, we are against the majority.
That's Keir Starmer's line.
And that's Vets Cooper's line.
After two nights of protests fueled by rumours spread online, the Prime Minister announced a crackdown on far-right thugs.
I mean, literally, she says at the beginning of this, a harsh reckoning will come for racist thugs on British streets.
OK, that's good.
A reckoning is coming, not because of thuggery.
We've seen thuggery on both sides, but we've only seen racism on one side, according to the UK government.
So the issue isn't the thuggery, it's the racism part of the thuggery that is the issue.
And we know this because, oh, well, look at this.
30 million is going to be Pulled out of the government coffers for protection for mosques.
Oh, great.
Great.
That's right.
Taylor Swift dance classes.
No, no, no.
There won't be any protection for.
In fact, in fact, no protection for synagogues and churches.
I mean, synagogues have been attacked.
Because of the pro-Palestine marches and stuff like that.
Churches regularly set on fire, actually.
They just spontaneously combust.
Yeah, no protection for them, but we will have... They cannot be saved, churches.
Exactly.
You know, the Jewish community, sorry, you know, nothing we can do, no money.
20 billion pound black hole in the finances.
Oh, but we are going to cut the wind fuel allowance for pensioners.
So Granny might want to wrap up, put a second layer on.
But we are going to be pouring out money to protect the mosques.
Again, the dividing line is just stark on this and it's totally inappropriate.
Totally.
To be fair, by the winter, if Labour carries on governing the way it is, there'll be plenty of fires to warm Granny on the streets.
Anyway, so we got a statement from the leader of the opposition, Rishi Sunak, In shocking scenes, these have no place in our society.
The police have our full support to deal with these criminals swiftly.
What do you mean, opposition?
That's Keir Starmer's line!
It's exactly the same line.
There's absolutely nothing to speak about the reason for this happening.
And so, of course, Nigel Farage is the only actual opposition who put out himself a rather tepid statement initially saying, well, look here, you know, there's an underlying reason for this and you're not dealing with it.
Of course, after this weekend, he said, well, look, Parliament needs to be recalled so we can have a proper debate about these rights.
Of course, he disavows all the violence, which, of course, we do as well.
Everyone should.
But there is an issue here, as he says, with two-tier policing, and this is not being dealt with.
And because this is getting really bad, again, just country-wide riots, internationally, Muslim countries, like, don't go there, actually.
There's a travel warning for England at this point.
Both them and the... Okay, for some reason that didn't work.
But them and Malaysia have issued travel warnings.
For the UK, it was like, OK, fine.
You know?
Yeah, good.
OK, fine.
Whatever.
But the point is, we'll cover this in more detail in the premium podcast we're going to do after this, about the actual depth and the problems of the state response, and what it means, what's going to happen coming after it.
But for now, we'll leave that there.
Just to read out some of the rumble rants.
There are quite a few, so we'll have to skip over a few, I'm afraid.
Graham says, two-tier society, Muslims don't pay stamp duty.
Is that true?
I've not heard that before.
Yeah, there's specific Islamic financing in Britain that allows them to have different sets of financial laws that are in keeping with... Hang on, sorry.
Samson, can we pull up that link that they've sent, please?
Just so we can have a quick look at it.
Stamp duty, though.
Yeah.
Like, unbelievable.
I insist on halal slaughter and not paying stamp duty.
I, too, have a religion that doesn't have to pay stamp duty.
Yeah, my religion doesn't recognise income tax.
How about that?
Yeah, they don't pay interest on loans and stuff like that.
Anyway, two-tier civilisation, man.
The English are going to love being mass-arrested for what Labour MPs encourage Muslims to do.
Yeah, I mean, that's exactly it.
This is what I mean.
Two-tier society that we live in now.
I might call it an apartheid.
You might call it that.
It's literally what they were complaining about happening in Africa, but especially in Zimbabwe or Rhodesia as well.
It's just perverted and inverted the other way around.
Yeah, it's okay when it's going the other way around.
The problem was the target, not the behaviour, not the system.
It's somewhat worse to think the political class are actually stupid and only have short-term planning rather than evilly intending this chaos.
Well, that's the thing.
Keir Starmer is not the man to solve this problem.
He could have come out and given... Again, we'll talk about it.
We'll talk about it afterwards.
Beau, you're a historian, right?
How does one build a longboat?
Asking for friends?
Notice every photo of the police features at least one woman standing around while the men are talking in the arrests.
Absolute waste of taxpayer funds.
Laborers cornered itself against you like a wild and stupid animal and now feels threatened by you and will lash out.
Plus this looming global recession and possibly World War 3 apparently is on the map.
Stay safe, guys.
We'll do our best.
My heart goes out to Ireland and England, our children, and this is for our children.
Yeah, I agree.
Anyway, we'll leave that there since we're running short on time.
Let's go to the next one.
All right, well, the third segment today, Cole, we thought we could just talk a little bit about why this is happening.
I imagine most of our audience know.
So perhaps if you can forward this to anyone, any ostriches you know, that have had their head in the sand for the last, well, arguably 10, 15 years, or more like 50 years.
Any Lib Dem voters you know.
Yeah, any Radio 4 listening, Channel 4 News watching, Guardian reading.
Boomers.
So, well, two-tier Keir, I mean, this is sort of the last symptom of it all, isn't it, is that we end up with someone like Keir Starlin, two-tier Keir.
It's sort of the end result of a long, many, many years worth of Decline, for want of a better word.
What I find interesting about Starmer is he's essentially formally implementing the informal arrangement of the UK state up until this point.
Yes, those communities are going to get special privilege against you, but it was never explicit.
It was always just an implicit, well, we're not going to look into the grooming gangs.
It's going to take decades for these victims to get justice.
And then when they do, well, the gang members will be out on the streets in five years and they'll bump into their victims at Asda and stuff like that.
Just unacceptable stuff like this.
They certainly won't deport them.
Yeah, exactly.
You know, it's totally normal that they're allowed to continue to remain here and stuff like this.
And like we saw with the Islamic financing.
Yeah, the Muslims don't have to pay interest on their loans and stuff, on the mortgages and stamp duty.
You know, it's just informal.
But Keir Starmer is making this now rarefied.
He's concretizing this.
Well, it's fundamentally a problem which, to paraphrase Tony Blair, is immigration, immigration, immigration, isn't it?
It's true.
He's not talking about it, he's cracking down on the people talking about it.
People aren't going to take it sitting down because it's the safety of their families that is You know, on the chopping block, and that's why this police tyranny is so concerning.
So I won't play this clip because you already played it in the last segment, but instead I have thought I saw another very good clip, a side-by-side clip on Twitter before we came on, I haven't got the link here, but what it was was Christopher Hitchens talking in 2009 Side by side by a clip of Starmer talking to... Sadiq Khan.
Sadiq Khan.
How he's going to end Islamophobia.
The London Mayor Sadiq Khan, not the 7-7 terrorist Sadiq Khan.
Just to be clear.
The London Mayor Sadiq Khan who previously had defended the 9-11 attacks.
Yeah.
Right, yeah.
I mean that was literally... 7-7 ones or 9-11 ones.
Oh, 7-7 was it?
Or both.
I don't know.
No, I don't know.
Previously was a defence lawyer for jihadis.
All right.
And in that, Christopher Hitchens in 2009 says, said, it's a great clip.
I know probably a lot of our audience are sort of Christian and religiously that might not like Chris Hitchens, later being called Chris, incidentally, Christopher, Professor Christopher Hitchens saying in 2009, criticize Islam while you can, because soon enough you will not be able to.
They'll make Islamophobia a codified thing in law.
And you will not be able to criticise it.
And then there's a clip of Keir in 2024 talking to Sadiq Khan saying, yeah, we've got to make sure that any Islamophobia is cracked down upon and tightened up and all that sort of thing.
So Christopher Hitchens calling it exactly, perfectly.
OK, so the next link.
Samson, can you do that for us?
Or whoever's got a mouse?
Yeah, so I was going to talk a bit about that.
Because I retweeted it, I couldn't believe it.
There was someone else, I can't remember who, somebody saying about the legitimate concerns of the English side of the writers, and he just said, there are no legitimate concerns.
I retweeted this image, just saying, really?
No legitimate concerns?
And this, of course, is the tip of the iceberg.
The absolute tip of the iceberg, because we haven't got all the pictures of the thousands and thousands and thousands of rape victims, for example.
The list goes on and on and on.
I'm not even going to read out the list of all the different various attacks.
An almost endless list of murders and sex crimes.
According to Mr. Dunn, there's no legitimate concern.
It's more than that as well, because there are so many videos of, like, just English lads being attacked by gangs of Muslims and driven out of areas.
But there was a BBC thing I watched a while ago about this old couple who were just getting bricks through their window from the Asian community, just trying to drive them out of the area.
Like, this kind of hostility.
When I was doing my MEP campaign, I spoke to a woman in, I think it was Taunton, Who was from Hull, and I was just, oh, you know, what are your concerns?
And she says, well, look, I used to live in Hull, but I was basically driven out because they're just racist towards us.
They just hate us.
So we had to leave.
And so it's this low-level background hatred that comes from one community towards another that has just been a part of their normal lives.
It's cathy, isn't it?
It's beyond even just mere racism.
No, it's hostility.
Yeah.
One community to another.
It's just one layer is the race.
Yeah.
It's also religious and cultural and all sorts of things.
You are the other, you're a Catholic, you're a non-believer, you're a non-Muslim.
And the state backs us, right?
So the state, you know that the state backs them.
Keir Starmer has come out and explicitly said, I'm the protector of the Muslim community, but that's been an informal thing for a long time, like with the grooming gangs.
When Sarah Champion came out in like 2015 and said, look, I think a million English girls might have been raped by these gangs.
She was castigated by the Labour.
How dare you say that?
You know, they covered up.
There were police and counsellors who were involved in covering up the grooming gang scandal.
When Alexis Jay put out a report, they were incensed.
How dare you say this is actually happening?
There's been a desperate cover-up for this for decades.
I think it's epitomised by Naz Shah sharing that fake Owen Jones parody account tweet of, you need to shut up for the sake of diversity, which she promptly deleted and said she did accidentally.
She both liked and retweeted it.
Just accidentally slipped twice.
Really fat fingers.
All these victims here have essentially been sacrificed at the altar of multiculturalism.
And there are more to come.
Well, if the true collage of the English people or the British people who have been sacrificed at that altar, you wouldn't even be able to see their faces because it would be so zoomed out, there'd be so many you'd hardly be able to even notice them and that's sort of epitomizing what statistics coming out about this sort of thing are saying, right?
It's so widespread now, it's almost impossible to put a face to it, which is a real travesty. - Well, that was the thing we were talking about this segment is supposed to be about.
Why?
Why is this happening?
Well, you can only push people so far, even extremely docile, relatively affluent, very, very civilised cultures, civilisations like the English or the British.
It's also happening in Ireland and all over the place.
Well, it's happening in Northern Ireland.
It's not happening in Wales or Scotland.
To a lesser extent.
Also in the Republic of Ireland.
There is lots of stuff in the Republic of Ireland as well.
People can only, historically, people can only be pushed so far.
And usually the line in the sand for people is if they're starving.
There's an old adage saying that every city or every population is three miles away from revolution or something like that.
I'm paraphrasing, that's not the exact wording.
No, it's basically.
Or, if they fear for their very lives in the immediate, or if they fear for the safety of their children.
And we're there.
We're not starving.
Mr Biden's Bidenomics and Janet the Felon Yellen hasn't quite starved us into submission yet.
Although this is part of our lives.
But they fear cheese is very expensive, isn't it?
Everything's very expensive.
I shouldn't make a joke.
But people are scared for their children.
I'm scared for my children.
It's as simple as that.
You could take your kid to a Taylor Swift dance class.
She's going to be butchered.
Or a Miley Cyrus concert.
Right.
And the reason, oh, well, we saw it, but we didn't want to intervene because of racism.
So unbelievable.
And if they refuse to accept that there are any concerns, well, it's not going away then, I wouldn't have thought.
And even if you do put that lid back on the pressure cooker, The pressure's still there.
And also it's going to intensify because you're attacking the people who have a legitimate grievance.
The more you put pressure into that pressure cooker, yeah, you can keep putting more and more weight on the lid so it doesn't blow off.
OK, pressure's not gone anywhere, has it?
Can you contain it forever?
And so, yeah, just historically speaking, you know, sometimes you look back at history and you think, for example, why was it in sort of maybe, let's say, medieval 14th century England or something, how was it that the average person was ready to Rise up and, like, give their life almost at a moment's notice in some sort of street protest.
I'm thinking of the Peasants' Revolt, for example.
It's because they were largely starving and the state would do nothing for them or gaslight them.
Or is part of the problem.
Yeah.
Or your kids were... You're fearful for the future of your kids.
Well, yeah, because they were... Why was it that the mob of Alexandria, for a lot of its history, was ready to rise up and burn their own city down at the drop of a hat all the time?
Because they were living in absolute fear.
Yeah.
And so if you force people down that route, it becomes inevitable.
Especially as this is a matter of policy.
Nothing about this is necessary.
It was inevitable.
There are politicians that are responsible for the situation on the streets at the minute.
100%.
This was all a choice to do this to us.
That's the thing.
Steve Laws tweeted, you could just close the borders and deport a few million people and all of this goes away.
Yeah.
But we're not going to do that.
We will not do that.
There's going to be somewhere between 2 and 5 million illegal immigrants in this country.
You don't even have to say, oh, people who came in legally, fair enough, we allowed you to leave legally.
Just stop people coming in and deport illegals.
And almost all of this dissipates.
At least there'll be a release valve on that.
Exactly.
At least that.
Yeah, okay.
So, um, there's this, the next link of, uh, if you want to play this actually, because it's such a perfect example of what's going on here, the pressure cooker thing.
Taking their responsibility away because it's my colleagues and my family members who are in the front line dealing with this.
They're taking the brick back.
What I'm saying is you cannot, you have to be very careful now with tempers the way they are.
And people's sense of angst of what had gone on in the preceding couple of days where you'd had an army officer stabbed in the back.
Bye.
the misleading representation in the North West where this occurred.
That's a different case there, Kevin.
So we'll leave it there.
That's Kevin Hurley.
They're not.
You're missing the point.
All of you are missing the point.
People conflate this and they make two and two and they make five.
We're worsening that conflation by mentioning the two cases together here.
So we'll leave it there.
Thank you.
Kevin Hurley, who's the former detective chief superintendent.
Pipe down, Gammon.
Pipe down, will you?
But he's actually exactly the money.
The army officer who got stabbed was by an immigrant.
This is, again, just another example of how these people are making people feel unsafe in their own country because of the violence that they're doing.
You know I don't support people rioting or anything like that but this is the source of it and he's trying to let her know and she says no that's a separate incident as if things happen in isolation.
I'm sure she's got it in her ear it's like no he's noticing he's hitting the nail on the head shut him down shut it down.
It's only going to make people more angry because when these global nomads that present at the BBC shut down native British people and say, oh your concerns about immigration are irrelevant, you know, it's not even related, that's unrelated, you're making things worse, that's only going to make people feel like they're a no legitimate means of solving this politically.
People don't write if they feel they have a way of speaking The truth to the people who are in the positions of power who should be listening.
Absolutely.
There's no reason to riot.
People riot when they feel, like as Martin Luther King told us, it's the language of the unheard.
Sorry, you know.
Yeah, you can't dispute Dr. King, can you?
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, I just hope the Muslim mobs recognise what Dr. King told us.
I hope they don't give in to the politics of hate.
Well, it's a bit too late for that, isn't it?
Yeah, they should not look back in anger, really.
So, yeah, there was this statement From Donna Jones, who's chair of the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners.
So a very senior person.
And she's the Police and Crime Commissioner for Hampshire and the Isle of Wight.
Right, okay.
So she's not a nobody.
Right.
She was a conservative installation, I believe.
And amongst a little bit of pearl-clutching and hand-wringing, she did sort of mention the actual thing.
Yeah.
Right, she did eventually sort of say that, you know, it's immigration.
Well she says, whilst the devastating attacks in Southport on Tuesday were a catalyst, the commonality amongst the protest groups appears to be focused on three key areas.
The desire to protect Britain's sovereignty, the need to uphold British values and in order to do this, stop illegal immigration.
Well it's not just illegal.
But the government must acknowledge what is causing the civil unrest in order to prevent it.
Arresting people or creating violent disorder units is treating the symptom and not the cause.
The questions these people want answering.
What is the government's solution to mass uncontrolled immigration?
How are the new Labour government going to uphold and build on British values?
This is the biggest challenge facing Keir Starmer and it's bitten quickly.
Yeah, we're three weeks in.
We're in the fourth week now of Keir Starmer and there's mass riots across the UK.
Starmer's values, if you can even use that word, are to favour Davos over Westminster.
He said so explicitly, didn't he, in that interview?
And to favour the Muslim community over the native.
It is also worth mentioning, this choice of phrase here, that they're reframing it as a legal migration, and Douglas Murray recently did this, and it was infuriating.
It's legal migration.
No, it's not just a legal migration, that's just, you know, the tip of the iceberg.
It's also the legal migration that's been allowed to happen.
Was it net 700,000 people?
A major city every year?
Yeah.
The inflow is 1.2 to 1.4 million.
The outflow is about 6 to 800,000, so it evens out about 700,000 in, which is just mad.
But yeah, she was forced to delete this, wasn't she?
Right, so that's, yeah, that's another thing about this.
She was forced to sort of delete it, retract it, just again, shut it down, be quiet.
Stop it.
So even though it was milk toast, it was removed.
It's an incredibly tepid response.
There's another link there, which, yeah.
If anyone can see it.
It boils down to this thing, if people are starving and they've got no recourse, they will get violent.
but you dress for war with concerned parents.
Shame on you.
Protest sign.
It's totally fair.
It boils down to this thing.
If people are starving and they've got no recourse, they will get violent.
If people fear for their kids and they're told to just be quiet and stop noticing it, And how dare you say or do anything.
It's not that you can't do that.
It won't work.
It's human nature.
We haven't been deracinated that much.
Right?
Well, I mean, I don't think so, but... Well, no, because it's human nature.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah, I mean, it's totally normal to want safety for your children.
It's demented to not care about it.
You can't take your kids to a dance class or an Ariana Grande concert or something.
When the controlled... What was the name of the unit they've got?
The Controlled Response to Terrorism?
Oh, Cobra.
No, no, no.
That's the committee.
Yeah, they've got to prevent this.
No, no.
It's like a nudge unit.
I know what you mean.
Oh, yeah.
You know, whatever it is.
But they trot out the parents of the victims and say, don't look back in anger.
Don't blame the Muslim community for killing my children.
And it's just disgraceful.
It's a horrible thing to watch these people being forced to essentially say the life of my child didn't matter, actually, more than anti-racism matters.
Well it's also an appalling thing to then manipulate a grieving parent to your will when they're probably most susceptible to suggestion because their mind's obviously elsewhere, right?
You've got to be a particularly abominable person to do that.
It's disgusting.
I'd say feel free to look back in anger.
That's all commies do, is look back in anger.
That's what Islam is largely about, looking back in anger.
Looking back to an 8th century battle and flagellating yourself in sorrow and anger about it.
But we can't look back in anger?
No, no, you can.
You can look back in anger.
Feel free.
It's about the politics of 8th century Arabia.
I don't care what Muhammad's grandson Ali did or did not get.
The Sunni-Shia divide is just purely a political divide from the 8th century.
There's nothing theological about it.
It's crazy.
It's like, sorry, the Prophet's grandson didn't get the inheritance he deserved.
Your brother or son or something is sunning himself on a beach in Tunisia in his mode down for being white.
Don't look back in anger about that.
Don't look back in anger though.
Anyway, last link I thought, what's this link?
This is just callers on LBC, because we're getting like, you know, the genuine attitude of the English here, as you can see from Mike here.
But I'm going to be honest with you, the parents of the murderer shouldn't have been in the country in the first place.
Yeah, because they're Hutus from Rwanda.
But sorry, like, If you know anything about the Rwandan genocide, you realize the entire Hutu community was complicit in this.
And it was something that was genuinely horrible.
And we're just cavaliers taking... It doesn't matter.
They're just people from Rwanda.
They're just people.
There's nothing about them that could be different to anyone else, anywhere else.
Well, I actually recently watched the film Hotel Rwanda, rather topically, and yeah, I've also studied at a university, and that entire country erupted almost in a spontaneous genocide.
Oh, it wasn't spontaneous?
Well, there was political agitation, but people just, without much provocation, I recently read a book on it.
What they would do, the lawyers, the judges, the politicians, would round up all of the Hutu men in the villages and force them to go and just murder them.
Then they'd spend all day in the swamps killing tootsies.
And so everyone was complicit.
That was the thing.
It was to make sure that no one could point the finger and say, you know, oh, I didn't do it.
You're the ones responsible.
No, they were all in.
And they knew that.
And so there were some governors in some of the provinces of Rwanda who didn't want to engage.
And so they were removed and replaced with pro-genocide governors who would then again round up the entire male population whether they wanted to or not.
And a lot of them didn't want to.
And they just made them go out to make them complicit.
And so the fact that we're like, okay, we'll just take people from Rwanda.
It's like, well, are they Hutu or Tutsi?
Like we can take Tutsis, obviously.
Almost a completely, almost the whole generation, that generation of Rwandan men traumatized.
Well, the generation of the attackers, you know, that was his father, which supposedly also beat his son as well, brutally.
May well have done, but it happened in 1994, so anyone of a certain age You can't even really imagine the sort of household discussions, what made the mind of that 17-year-old.
Can you imagine the insanity and brutality?
I have no idea.
So Boris Johnson straightened his hair.
No, that's his sister.
So what was she saying there?
She's not saying a lot actually.
There's a large number of foreign born people in social housing, you shouldn't be here.
Duh!
That's obviously true.
Why are 72% of Somalians in this UK being paid to live here by the UK taxpayers?
Send them home!
Why are they here at all?
You know?
OK.
And lastly, I thought I'd play this short clip of Enoch Powell, who, although has been massively demonised by the left, in the last few years.
He was actually a very popular politician in his day.
Oh yeah, like 80% approval rating.
Yeah.
No one now can get anywhere near him.
Could have possibly have been a leader and things.
I don't know exactly when this clip's from, but I assume it's from the 70s, so knocking 50 years ago sort of calls it perfectly.
The prescience of it is quite remarkable.
Britain's very own Cassandra.
You see this, wherever there is a divided community with a majority and a minority, for everyone immediately says, oh well, this must be because the minority is being unjustly treated.
In fact, in this country, the immigrant minority is not only not being unjustly treated, but they are being treated with a lavish concern, which no minority would enjoy in any other country in the world.
So much so, as Mr. Hawley said in his report, they can't think what's wrong with our heads.
The way we carry on.
But then people say, there wouldn't have been this violence if we weren't doing something wrong.
So they immediately try to find out what it is that they were doing wrong to make up for it.
The result of that is simply to put more power, more leverage in the hands of those who are operating the violence.
And so it goes on until where it's very natural.
The technical term is a backlash.
You have a backlash, and of course it would be called a white backlash.
And so, on one side and the other, you have what eventually erupts into a form of civil war.
And we are... If we were asked to create the conditions for civil war, we couldn't do better than what we have been achieving and are continuing to accumulate in some of the major cities and industrial areas of this country.
Quite remarkable to have said that something like 50 years ago.
Obviously correct.
People can demonise Enoch Powell as much as they want, but he presaged all of this.
He's describing our society almost exactly.
If I said something and 50 years later it was proven to be exactly right, I would be not smug because there's nothing good about it but I mean just again the prescience of it is remarkable.
Well to be able to predict the future in that way you've got to be able to identify the principles in a pretty crystal clear way as to how society functions really and how human beings operate and human nature and for him to have got it so on the money seems to suggest that everything he was saying there was spot on which I definitely believe.
A very, very deep understanding of both history and the human condition.
Yes.
Both of those things.
And he was a historian.
Yeah, he was one of the youngest professors, wasn't he?
Was he?
Yeah, yeah.
Extremely knowledgeable in history, because history often teaches us the pitfalls we're about to fall into.
I just want to point out that Powell himself, I don't think, was a racist.
He wasn't like someone who hated minorities or anything like that.
And he was just saying, look, from my experience reading about all of this stuff, there's predictable patterns, principles, as you said, from which you can derive logical and inevitable conclusions.
I mean, the point about creating the conditions.
Yeah, the Conservatives and the Labour Party have created the conditions for ethnic strife across the country.
And we're seeing it.
So great.
Sectarianism, yeah.
100%.
Right.
Okay.
Anyway, we'll leave that there.
Let's go to the video comments.
Let's go to the video comments.
Normally I'd say it's good to disengage and enjoy a hobby.
But what happens when it's so bad that your daily life can't be lived normally?
When every moment you fear for your safety.
The pressure is just finally too much for too many people.
Keep it up, Lotus Eaters.
I'd rather you all stay online and reporting truth rather than be in jail and silenced.
I know how you all feel.
No purity test required from me.
Thanks very much.
Thank you.
I just want to address some comments people have made.
You know, don't go out and protest, don't go to rights, wrong, stop cucking.
Shut up.
Just shut up.
Take a risk with your own business, with your own safety, with your own family, with your own state.
We are in dire trouble here.
We could easily We just targeted and arrested and shut down by the authorities at this point.
They're all saying that they want all of their opposition shut down.
Just go take risks with yourself.
We're not going to take risks.
We do not support rioting.
End of story.
I do find it annoying when someone with a fake name and an anonymous picture on Twitter says, all you do is sit there and you're like a version of The View.
You're not doing anything organised.
What are you doing, bro?
What are you doing though?
Just take a risk with your own things.
Let's get the next one.
Think I might start up a nightlife again if there's just random bachata parties in the city on a Tuesday night.
Whereabouts was that?
I think that's Lithuania, isn't it?
It looks like a utopia compared to Britain at the minute, doesn't it?
I was just thinking, wow!
I remember spontaneous nice things happening in the street.
That was lovely, so thank you for sharing.
Castle review.
A medieval Conus castle in this form was finished in early 1400s and for the first time mentioned in Magdeburg Pact in 1408.
Prior to that it's been blown apart by Teutonic Knights a whole bunch of times.
On the other side there's NATO propaganda which I didn't film for aesthetic reasons.
I'd rate it at about 5 as a baseline.
Wow, it looks nice.
Yeah, it looks lovely.
Let's get the next one.
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.
As an individual who has never personally seen integration of foreigners in practice, and is actually even sceptical of its existence, what form does it actually take?
What government policies, when it's actually done properly, are used?
How does it work?
Further, what measures, if any, can be taken to fix the damage that's occurred in Britain as a result of Blairite mass immigration?
That's actually quite an easy one to answer.
Integration has to mean living amongst and within the native communities.
This facilitates intermarriage, and that is the most secure way of integrating foreign peoples.
And this has been done in places like Paraguay, where they banned Spanish people from marrying each other.
There was a Spanish elite and they had to marry native women or men, which of course meant that there wasn't an ethnically Spanish overclass.
There was instead a matizo class.
I'm probably pronouncing that wrong.
That's a daunting prospect, isn't it?
Yeah, I hate that.
I'm not saying that's what I want.
I'm saying that's how it worked.
You get the examples in the ancient world where two tribes would decide to confederate and they would literally be forced to marry from the other tribe in order to create a new tribe out of the two other ones.
It has to be done through intermarriage.
So those people who have come here and married an English person or an English person who has married a foreigner, okay, that's a person who's integrating.
However, those people who form ethnic colonies where they don't even need to speak English, such as in Whitechapel or in wherever else, that's not integration and that's never going to happen.
It's literally that simple.
I think if it's someone like, I don't know, a Frenchman comes over and lives amongst no one but English people, you know, it's entirely uncontroversial because they will be able to coexist perfectly peacefully.
If you pluck someone from Somalia or Pakistan where they have cultures that are so incompatible with the British way of life that The thing is, I don't think that's true.
The problem is density, population density.
Because even someone from the most backward part of the world will be forced to live like the natives in order to be able to exist in the country.
You need to get a job, you need to get, you know, assume we don't just give them state benefits and land for colonies.
But if you want to buy things from shops, if you want to just, you know, have any of the public goods that we have, you have to behave like the natives.
And so you will end up through a long period of exposure, finding yourself unconsciously imbibing these values.
You've got no choice.
So it doesn't really matter where you come from.
What matters is density.
And I mean, don't get me wrong.
You know, there are other things, like you might get some Islamic radicals, like, you know what, I hate England, I'm gonna blow it up or something like that, right?
So there are other threats, obviously.
But it's not something that can't happen, it's just that we've had no state policy to make it happen.
For example, like, we shouldn't have had so many people, but we also shouldn't have just given them carte blanche to live where the hell they like.
It's like, no, you're gonna go to this Scottish village, you're gonna go to this little, you know, place, and you're gonna be the one person there who's foreign.
Now you're going to have to integrate.
You're going to have to marry an English person.
You're going to have to get a job in a local shop.
You're going to have to become like us, or you won't be able to function.
And that's the only way it can happen.
But it's not happening, and it's not going to happen.
And so for those people who have integrated, fine.
But for those who haven't, they should go.
What about a policy more like Japan, where you just don't let very many people in full stop?
Well, that would be lovely.
That horse has bolted a long time ago.
Let's go to the next one.
If you like old Mopars as much as I do, well, you don't.
But watch Uncle Tony's Garage.
He put forward a theory that filled in a lot of holes for me.
Basically, China's positioning itself as the vanguard of electric cars, which of course are reliant on lithium batteries, which are reliant on cobalt, which comes almost exclusively for Africa.
So it seems China is attempting to position itself as the sole gatekeeper of all transportation in all of the world.
That fills in the motivations for actors like BlackRock's Larry Fink in their ESG junk.
The only question is, are they being forced to kowtow by China simply for the allure of doing business in such a huge market?
Or is the entire Wall Street crowd a collective cast of quixotic and capricious quizlings won over by the neo-fascist possibilities in China?
I'd be very surprised if the Chinese actually had the technical skills to be a leader in any industry, really.
They do cheap and low quality very well, but at the minute they can only really copy European engineering, and it's because they don't have the people, and the kind of people that have that sort of expertise are quite unwilling to move to China because it's not a nice place to live.
But it's also not safe.
That's it, yeah.
Was he building his own Tatooine landspeeder?
I don't know, but it looked very cool by the way.
I love watching videos of people building things.
Let's go to the next one.
Nigel Biggar sets out to counter the frankly risible leftist interpretation of empire and colonialism.
Their analysis is fundamentally flawed because it can only explain the world in terms of power, both political and economic.
In fact, as Biggar shows, the British were simply adventurous, likely as a result of what Alan Macfarlane identified as the origins of English individualism, and motivated by hard times.
Yeah, I watched a podcast about this yesterday where they were talking about a book that was written about 100 years ago.
of the Chinese was truly execrable, but it was just and preferred to what existed elsewhere before.
Yeah, I watched a podcast about this yesterday where they were talking about a book that was written about 100 years ago.
Oh, not 100, about 80 years ago.
Explaining, like, the fall of the British Empire.
We had a really small military.
The left will have you believe that this is all done by force and coercion, but you can't do that.
You can't govern India with 50,000 men if they don't consent to being governed.
It was actually far fewer than that at some points, wasn't it?
Yeah, but we had native Oh, of course, yeah.
It's a really small number compared to like the half a billion that were there at the time or whatever.
And it's just like, this can only work with the consent of the natives.
And the consent of the natives is obviously purchased through the just system and right action of the colonial governors.
If they were bad people, they would have just revolted.
Well, one thing that I'm reminded of is that the Taliban described the British as ruling Afghanistan justly.
Which I find quite funny because we had been fighting them for 20 years at that point.
Didn't say that about the Americans, did they?
They didn't, no.
Anyway, let's get to the next one.
Russian Orthodox boxing champion Dmitry Vali was attacked by Islamic immigrants in the city of Theodosia.
The gang of foreign criminals took out his eye and now the 23-year-old's boxing career is over.
Russia does not have a Second Amendment.
Russian community leader, Yevgeny Chisnokov, recorded a video message calling Russians to protect one another.
Arm yourselves.
Do not be victims.
Do not wait for trouble.
We must be ready for self-defense.
The law is on our side.
It all started when Dmitry stood up for a Russian teenager who was being attacked by this pack of barbarians.
Yeah, I think that being able to defend yourself is the least the state can afford you the powers of.
Not only is the policing inadequate, but they will arrest you for defending yourself with what I see as sufficient force to actually make sure you're safe, which is the worst of both worlds and it's evil, basically.
Is there another one?
Yeah, so like, just to mention, the Rittenhouse example.
They tried to do that in America, right?
Tried to make him out to simply be a murderer, when in fact he was just preventing himself from being stumped out and maybe to death.
Yeah, over here, you'd be lucky.
You probably wouldn't get away with that.
In fact, there are examples of people breaking into a farmer's house and he shoots them and he goes to prison for murder.
The only time that's ever overturned.
Do you remember the guy who stabbed someone with a screwdriver?
The old chap, he was like 70 or something.
Some urban youth had broken into his house and he stabbed one to death with a screwdriver.
And there was a big outcry about it because, like, no, he's an Englishman defending his castle.
What the hell has he done wrong?
But anyway, JJ Steadley says the fact that Stalin takes the knee for BLM and is sympathetic to their cause and is upset when the English are annoyed that they're being murdered isn't just hypocrisy, it's evil.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Keegan-Ace says Muslim gangs are the paramilitary force of the Labour Party.
They were trying to say that the EDL, which hasn't existed since 2013, was the military wing of reform, which has done nothing but disavow everything.
Yeah, exactly.
Won't have anything to do with any of those sorts.
And so it's just like, okay, all right.
The EDL.
It's like the National Front or the BNP.
It's like, yeah, you're 10, 20, 30 years out of date.
It's laughable, isn't it?
Starmer literally came out and told the Muslims that he was going to protect them.
Now they're on the streets with weapons.
Mosley's League of Fascists are the militant wing of reform.
Yeah, it's ridiculous.
fabulous.
I'm an American, but this is pretty tame compared to the BLM rights.
If the Liberals there are anything like the Liberals here, they probably didn't only excuse those rights when it happened, but actively paid for it.
Yeah, I mean, as far as I'm aware, so far nobody has died, which is good.
30-odd people died in the BLM rights.
The baby-eating Imam of Stokes says, it seems like for years the hosts of this podcast have been saying that the immigration and crime situations in the UK could not go on and it appears the working class finally agree.
The situation seems to be a rudderless ship colliding with everything, into everything, the waves take it before, is inevitably wrecked, leadership is needed above all else.
Well we'll talk about this in the podcast afterwards just because Labour's response to this has been the worst.
Farage could have also stepped up Yeah, exactly.
Farage hasn't done a brilliant job here either.
Bleak Stephen says, National strike!
Sit silently and block all of Parliament from operating.
Stop shopping at stores not owned by native British.
If you can refuse to take public transport, sing patriotic songs in front of public buildings.
Anything but waiting for a civilised controlled protest or a frenzied Leeds riot.
Yeah, I mean, I would support some sort of national day of non-engagement, right?
Or if it's like, we're just, we the English are just not going to work today.
The thing with that is, yeah, any sort of boycott like that, the way it used to work is that you down your tools and you threaten to not come back until your demands are met.
Nowadays, quite often, there'll be like a scheduled day of walkout by the teachers union or something, or a scheduled day of not coming to work for the rail workers.
That's a nonsense.
It doesn't work.
The powers that be say, OK, well, we'll wait for that day.
We might get a bunch of scabs on that day then.
The whole point, like the Great Strike in the 20s, it was, no, we're not coming back until you listen to us.
But that's harder to do.
Well that's impossible these days because the powers that be have far more power than your ordinary person in the 1920s.
And of course you're starving yourself if you don't go to work.
But also who would organise it?
Who would represent the English community?
I don't know but when I see one day strikes declared, we'll come back on the day after that, it's like what is that?
That's nothing.
Omar says, it's not surprising there are riots everywhere.
If you import French people, you get French culture.
Rioting is part and parcel of living in a French city.
Yes.
Someone online says, remember that the full force of the law and extrajudicial measures we use against the English rioters, these are not going to be tolerated.
Yeah, I know.
There are Muslims beating English kids in the street.
None of those are going to be prosecuted.
Keir Starmer has given them license and emboldened them to act in the way they're acting.
Alex says, I was watching the updates trickling over this side of the Atlantic.
Not the mainstream media, I've long since given up on Canadian media.
Independent outlets gave a grim enough picture.
Yeah, I'd like to give a shout out to Portland Andy, whose streams I was watching over the weekend.
What he would do is get loads of TikTok live streams, and just because they're sort of like slices, he would arrange them all on the screen and put where the city was, so you could watch lots of different ones at the same time.
Good job, Andy.
Really appreciate the work there.
rue the day says please do not allow this to divide us the battle is not physical um okay uh Siren says, I bet you're starting to feel like a broken record, Carl, but thank you for constantly calling people not to protest and riot.
I think Charlie Kirk's message stands true.
When people stop talking, bad stuff happens.
Yeah, I mean, I just don't think we should be rioting.
The tensions are too high.
Trouble is just too close.
Rested Pandy says, in fairness, Ed Balls just wanted his dinner served on the table tonight, not thrown at him.
As if Yvette Cooper is going to be cooking dinner herself.
Yeah, as if they don't have a servant.
Derek says, I know about hierarchy, not hypocrisy, but if there was any justice in this world, the big media would be charged for inciting violence or stoking flames of violence.
Yes, it would.
Josep says, praying for you all, I thought this for sure would happen here in the US before it did in the UK.
Well, I don't know what to tell you.
Hugo Bossman says, I hate to admit it but I feel totally defeated by the way the UK is and honestly feel like leaving.
Well look who you're leaving it to if you do leave.
And where would you go?
You think the creeping rot won't head to wherever you flee.
Yeah.
There's dignity, you know, being the captain on a sinking ship, isn't there?
Yeah.
I think that that's the way I look at it, is that I don't have a future here.
However, I'm not going to bend over and take it.
I'm going to go out like a man and fight for my country rather than flee.
It's not necessarily, like, be the person that patches up the hole, though, in that sinking ship.
We'll talk about this in the podcast afterwards, but it has to be at this point that Labour's career as the rulers of the North has got to be basically over at this point.
What northerner is going to vote for Labour after this?
I'd probably still get a decent number.
They could put a pig in a red rosette and they'd still vote for it.
Maybe not in the Muslim areas.
I don't know, I don't know.
I was quite surprised at Liverpool.
Because Liverpool, if Americans might not know, is known as, thought of as, a bastion of socialism, of leftism, of being Labour.
Yeah, they were out in force.
We'll talk about it in the podcast afterwards, because there's loads of this sort of stuff where I'm just like, there is something happening here.
So anyway, HR Slave says, I understand the frustrations of the rioters, but I'm incredibly black-pilled on where this leads.
Whatever the outcome once the deaths are settled on all this, I'm sure it won't be anything that advances our cause.
I don't agree with that, actually.
I think that actually, Keir Starmer is making the mistakes I would want him to make, right?
Keir Starmer could have come out and finessed this and been like, yeah, no, you're a good point.
Yeah, we'll sort it all out.
And then we'll get another 20 years of Blairism.
But instead Keir Starmer, like the Conservatives, ramped it all up and Keir Starmer's hammering it down.
It's like, that's an instability in the system.
That's the system not working as intended.
So that's, you know, hopefully the spinning top.
It's losing momentum and it's about to fall over, right?
So hopefully the Blairite Order comes to an end.
So actually, I'm mildly optimistic that we might be able to pull something good out of this, so we'll have to see.
But we'll end it there because we'll be back in 30 minutes on ludicrous.com to have our big in-depth discussion where we get all the hosts on a big panel and we will talk through what has been happening and And the interesting things that are under the hood that we haven't covered in this podcast, which is where I think the really good stuff is.