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Aug. 14, 2024 - The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters
01:31:58
The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #978
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- Hello and welcome to the podcast of "The Lotus Seas", episode 978 for today, Wednesday, the 14th of August, 2024.
I am joined by Harry.
Hello.
Roaring Nationalist.
Hello.
And Lauren Chen.
Hi.
We decided to queue up all our guests at once.
So it's going to be a hell of a show today.
And we are discussing why would men do this?
Just Men.
Disaggregated men committing all these crimes.
How the McPherson Report rendered Britain a two-tier police system and Labour's migrant battery farms.
Before we begin we have two brief announcements.
Number one, Rumble has defecated in the bed like Amber Heard and so we cannot get our Rumble rants up during the show.
We will answer them at the end because we usually speak about them as they come in so don't feel ignored if you're watching live.
Number two, half an hour after the show I'll be doing my show as per usual running through all the reasons why the riots kicked off including Crime statistics, which are now hate facts in the UK.
If you want to check out our guest socials and that, they will be in the description, probably at the end of the podcast.
Actually, for those who are not familiar, do you mind giving a little introduction again?
Yeah, of course I'm the Raw Egg Nationalist.
I am, uh, formerly an anonymous Twitter poster, now a face fag.
I'm BabyGravy9 on, uh, Twitter.
Really taking advantage that we're not on YouTube right now.
Yeah.
Oh, sorry.
Sorry.
No, yeah.
This part doesn't go on YouTube, so that's fine.
Oh, good.
No, good.
No, I'm, uh, I'm, uh, I'm a known commodity now.
Uh, yeah, BabyGravy9 on Twitter, mansworldmag.online and raweggstack.com for my sub stack.
My name is Lauren.
I am a Blaze TV host of Pseudo Intellectual and Mediaholic.
Both of those shows are on YouTube.
My YouTube channel is Lauren Chen and Mediaholic, and I'm at the Lauren Chen on Twitter, or XNOW, and I'm also a TPUSA contributor.
Also, by the way, guys, you didn't have a teleprompter for the intro.
I'm so impressed.
I would have messed that up nine out of ten times.
I just talk rubbish for a living, so I'm used to it by now.
He's from London.
It's genetic.
Yeah, quite.
And Harry's our token northerner, so without further ado...
Into today's story.
So, we've had a crime wave recently in the UK, the epicentre of this being the Southport stabbings, and it has risen to public salience that lots of men are committing crimes.
Just men.
Men.
Nondescript men of no fixed abode, often.
And I think we should probably be honest about the perpetrators of said violent crime because if we want to keep our sons and daughters and wives safe we need to know who is committing it and from where and the media and the government don't like to talk about this to an absurd degree which we'll be getting round to towards the end because there is a particular meme that you are famous for that notes that the likes of the New York Post has a Euphemism treadmill to avoid discussing this.
Whoever comes up with those, he needs a raise.
Quite, yes.
Rise.
Let's begin with one crime from earlier this week, of which demographic I'm not sure.
This was on Monday, this was in Leicester Square, which is right near one of my local train stations in London.
There was a stabbing.
There was an 11-year-old girl that was put in a headlock and stabbed repeatedly.
A 34-year-old woman, later identified as her mother, was smothered in her blood.
They were both rushed to hospital.
It was believed that she had been injured, but she was just shielding her daughter.
A security guard tackled the man in question, the man who has been arrested and is now in custody.
And we have some information on this man.
So, we have him down here.
Ah.
Right.
Oh, he's a white chap.
There we go.
It's completely nothing to see here, boys.
With a typical Anglo phenotype.
Yeah, he's like mine.
Clearly a Welshman, his name is Ioan Pintaru, 32, of no fixed address, that wonderful country that lots of these people seem to be coming from, was charged with attempted murder and possession of bladed article.
So, very rapidly processed, I believe he's in court hearings at the moment, which means that lots of the other ones that have happened, the information being released, they could have done that quite quickly, but They didn't before, right?
I wonder why they chose him.
So he's been charged and he's going through the courts right now.
Yes.
So we shall get a conviction with him very soon.
Probably at the end of this week, yes.
Wow, that's the speed you usually only see for Twitter posters.
Quite!
Yes, yeah.
Yeah, I wonder if... White working class men.
So why can't we do this for Axel Rudekibana?
I think it's because he's going through the crown courts, I was told, which means the process takes longer, but that was again a choice to do.
I was going to say, why put him through that one if we can put other people who have been going around stabbing people?
Great question.
Don't ask questions, he's just a man.
So, interesting, I find... Well, he was a Welshman until he came to England and then he became an Englishman.
Yes.
That's how it works.
Yeah, second generation Rwandan doesn't factor in at all.
I find this interesting because I was drawing parallels both from Ruka Gabana's stabbing and this chap to the Parnell Square stabbings last November that kicked off the riots in Dublin, where a 50-year-old Algerian man, also of no fixed abode, just spreading the GDP out on the streets wherever he decides to sleep, decided to stab three children in the school worker.
What is it about these men, just men, that compels them to stab random children that they don't know?
I suppose we'll never get answers on that one.
There's also one in Manchester, Harry, so this should be close to home.
Well, there's no surprise really.
This'll be in Castlefield.
So this is a man charged in connection with an alleged double stabbing.
Do you want to guess his Anglo name?
Viet Tran, 21, also of no fixed address.
Viet what, sorry?
Viet Tran.
Okay.
Classic English name.
Yep, yep.
Just your Smith and your Robinson.
Of no fixed address, so international jet setter, I'm sure.
Has been charged with two counts of Section 18 assault, also known as GBH.
Now this is a symptom of a broader trend, and I want to bring this down specifically to London, because this is where I know, and also we've all visited, and you recently had the displeasure of being a tourist in, particularly as a woman.
What was your experience of moving through London?
So I used to live in the UK when I was a teen.
So this was around 15 years ago.
Nobody do math on how old that makes me now.
We can just ignore that.
And it's funny because it was even back then, London was multicultural.
It was diverse, but it wasn't literally a third world country, which is I fear.
And unfortunately, very sadly, where it is now.
And a lot of people might hear, well, that's just, you know, it's racism.
You just don't like X, Y, or Z people.
But it's not just that it looks different.
It's actually measurably worse.
It's dirtier.
It's more dangerous.
I mean, we try to go to a park with my toddler and it's actually like a third world park.
Worse, because some third world countries are actually quite safe and not that dirty.
There are feces, you know, in the park.
Again, it's just decrepit.
And it actually, it pains me as someone who used to live here, who I grew up in Commonwealth country, so I can only imagine how much it must hurt the English people to see what's happened to their capital.
Yeah, well, one of my other jobs is working at the New Culture Forum, and our headquarters is in the infamous 55 Tufton Street in central Westminster.
And so I walk down the stretch from Trafalgar Square straight through past the Houses of Parliament all the time, and it's like clambering over the rubble of the Tower of Babel.
You just hear every language except English Amalgamated together to form some sort of assorted simlish.
There are stains all over the pavement, there's refuse and rubbish and vomit and chewing gum everywhere, and the crowds process like a zombie horde, so you're constantly dodging and weaving to get to your destination.
It's just unpleasant.
And we were just in Hungary, and we said it was a total culture shock to have it be homogenous, a smaller population, nothing threatening at all, families able to walk around in broad daylight and not feel stressed.
I almost didn't want to get back on the plane home.
Right.
And I will add, we had Indian food when we were in London.
It wasn't even good.
So, you know, I'm pretty sure that was the deal.
They bring the food and they get to stay.
Well, it wasn't good.
They have to go back.
I'm sorry.
I don't make the rules.
Funny that didn't work that way with, like, pizza and Italians, for instance.
Right, strange.
Yeah, that is strange.
It's almost like you can just keep the recipes and not the pizza.
Yeah, it's almost like we have the books.
That'd be interesting.
But the symptom of a broader trend is something that Alex Phillips and Charlotte Gill, two journalists that live in London, have noticed.
So I want to zoom in on this conversation because there was a Twitter exchange that illustrates just how disconnected the cab-getting Westminster bubble class are from the people who actually have to live with the realities of navigating through London, as a woman specifically, on public transport.
So Charlotte tweeted out, back to the UK tomorrow, Never had such a dread about Britain.
Coming back to London and knowing how unpleasant it'll be.
The demographic changes and feeling that Britain is mostly against Brits.
The lack of a functional media.
The feeling that something big has to happen to restore order.
And this was late July, well before the disturbances.
About a week and a half before the tragic Southport stabbing and the ensuing riot.
So the comments that happened afterwards also coincided with this.
So Charlotte decided to put out this video of her tube commute and a man in Non-ethnic regalia.
Decides to walk around the tube, shouting.
And then decides to shove a pregnant woman out the way, and with her baby in the carriage there.
Just decides to harass her, because that's how he wants to spend his journey.
And this is just something commonplace in London now.
Something else that's commonplace in London as well, similar to in New York, just random crazy homeless people shoving people in front of trains.
Man, Bra Shawsh, has pleaded not guilty to attempted murder after he decided to shove a postman, Tediz Putashek, off the southbound Victoria Line platform at Oxford Circus on February 3rd in a shocking act of random violence.
Also, Mr Shawsh, of no fixed address, who had to listen to the hearing through a Kurdish interpreter.
London, very, very, very safe place.
So, what's the response from the establishment here?
Shetland Gavin Barwell.
He used to work as a Number 10 Chief of Staff under the Conservative government.
And he says, London's one of the greatest cities in the world.
One of the few downsides is the cost of housing.
Why is housing so expensive, Gavin?
Which is in part because so many people want to live here.
Because it's so popular.
Yes, yes.
It's just so popular.
It's the stabbing capital of the world.
If you hate it and its diversity, then leave.
Views like yours won't be missed.
Encouraging the flight of the indigenous population from their own country because of a direct consequence of government policies, making it increasingly unsafe.
Conservatives.
I wonder why they lost the election.
But as you lads know, I mean, you don't live in central London.
Has the diversity spread to your area and made it any better?
Oh, well, this is something I've spoken about quite a lot recently, which is that the government is trying to sneak in diversity often through the back door in smaller places like my town, which is a relatively small town filled with
Old English people, all of a sudden all of the old men and women who have not been looked after by their own children, whereas three or four years ago they'd have been being walked around town by young girls, young English girls who've joined the care system, as is often a good job for young girls to go into.
are suddenly being walked around by pairs of 30-something-year-old African men.
Not even African women a lot of the time.
It literally looks like these men have just picked these people up and are escorting them around for some reason.
It's very, very strange.
Yeah, I've got a wall outside my house where, for some reason, any time one of the new arrivals, be it a Somalian woman in hijab or a rather large African woman, feel the need to talk on speakerphone because they haven't understood you just lift it to your ear.
They sit on said wall for multiple hours in their care worker outfits.
So I know why they're here.
I sent a photo to Kamini Draper a little while ago of this happening and he just said, this is my world and you're just living in it.
Yeah, that's some advanced milling right there.
It's exactly the same where I live, which is southwest, so... I mean, all of the petrol station staff Interestingly enough, Indian or Pakistani, all the care home staff are Sub-Saharan Africans.
And we've seen how well that works out when it comes to emergency situations happening where the people don't know how to speak to the emergency services because they don't speak English properly.
They don't know the definition of bleeding versus breathing in English.
And there was a World Health Organization survey that found that two in three care workers had admitted to abusing their own patients.
Well, my grandmother actually is in a care home.
She has Alzheimer's.
It's a sad situation but anyway, all of the staff there, all of the staff there have gone in the last year.
There's been a total turnover of the staff.
So before it was local women mainly.
They've gone and now it's Indians, Sub-Saharan Africans and like you say they don't really understand what's going on and so my grandmother had a fall and my mum got a phone call.
basically unintelligible you know impossible to work out what had happened impossible to work out whether my grandmother was alive or dead you know uh so yes i mean it's the benefits of diversity are definitely spreading even to the southwest even to the domains of the dark angler Well, see, people will hear that story who are in favor of migration, and they'll say, well, see, that's why we need the migration, because otherwise, who's going to be working these jobs in the health industry, in service industry?
But what they don't understand is, like, you're basically importing Indians at this point to serve other Indians, right?
It's very possible to just have a smaller economy in terms of raw numbers.
And actually, if you vet people, if you only ensure good people are coming, if at all, frankly, you can actually have a higher GDP per capita, which is much more indicative of a higher standard of living than raw GDP.
And people also don't understand.
I've heard, you know, I've been tweeting about this and we have similar problems in Canada.
U.S.
is starting to go this way.
You know, the idea that the health care infrastructure would fall apart without immigrants, people don't understand that a lot of these immigrants, they are much more likely to take from the system than they are to contribute it.
And frankly, if countries like Canada and the U.K.
would just reform their health care system so they actually pay their doctors, the native English doctors would not be leaving to places like America in the first place.
Quite.
I mean, Neil O'Brien MP, who worked on the Immigration and Economics paper with Robert Jemrick earlier this year, has released data on his substack that the ONS and HMRC don't want you to see.
And his latest post, which I'll be going over on my show later, shows that...
In the private sector, jobs for native English people have gone down, jobs for European migrants have gone down, jobs for non-European migrants have gone up exponentially, but their real-terms earnings have gone down because it's just cheap imported foreign labour that is subsidised by taxpayer benefits.
And a great example of this is, I used to get invited to Bangladeshi caterer associations' dinners when I worked with Talk.
Fun!
The food was fine, but again, we have the recipe.
So the reason they invited is because they were the only radio stations campaigning for restaurants not to be shut during lockdown.
They invited Business Minister Paul Scully there and implied him with a lot of alcohol.
And one of the speeches given was, we need laxer immigration because we need more restaurant staff for our Bangladeshi restaurants.
But if you think about it, and there was a piece in the Financial Times that recently said the same thing, specifically Bangladeshi restaurants, it's because they only buy from Bangladeshi restaurants.
So the more Bangladeshis, the more restaurants, the more customers, the more staff needed, the more Bangladeshis, and it's a self-perpetuating cultural cycle which is a kind of colonial way of bringing people over and establishing enclaves that never mix with the native population.
It becomes its own closed-off economy, doesn't it?
Wasn't it?
Because this has happened even with cultures and peoples who you would think would assimilate much better into British culture, that being other Europeans.
This has happened in my town, where there was Polish shops start to open up, and the Polish people who live around them only ever buy things from the Polish shops.
So this is something that happens whenever you get slightly larger populations of migration, they will just recreate their own society.
And I think what we don't talk about enough, and this is a huge problem in the United States especially, is the fact that these people often send remittances home.
So the idea that they're coming, they're contributing to the economy, a lot of times if you're someone from Poland or India, Bangladesh, most of the excess money you have is actually going right back home.
So, I mean, people like Trump have talked about, let's tax the remittances.
Actually, if you're going to send your money back, which I guess you should have the freedom to do to move it.
Well, that's not exactly fair if you're supposed to be brought here to contribute to the local economy.
People had a fit because that's apparently racist.
If you're not actively willing to sacrifice your own economy for the good of the migrants, then you're racist, I guess.
But there's obviously friction built up here between the tribes of the new arrivals of various ethnic different groups who are homogenized as one capital D diverse group and the native population who are Legally and financially disadvantaged.
And when those two groups rub up against each other, there's friction.
And I think women and children specifically, as we've seen the recent stabbings and these encounters where women have been accosted on the tube, are the fault lines upon which these cultural differences make themselves manifest.
Someone who's been great on this has been Alex Phillips, formerly of the Brexit party, now a talk TV host, who's responded to Gavin Barwell saying, Charlotte was the victim of groping twice.
She's suffered intolerable harassment from men from other cultures.
On friend of the show, Andrew Gold's interview, she described how she was followed home by a man in Afghani garb and had to be sheltered by one of her neighbors.
She said, "Both of us want to leave London for our own safety.
Since reading this, I am being inundated with messages from women with their stories and fears, thanking me for putting this deeply important issue out there, We feel voiceless, bullied, thrown under the bus by people like you.
Perhaps rather than gleefully join a pile-on against women voicing her deeply held and valid concerns about her life and safety in the country she should want to call home, shouldn't you listen instead?
And the reason that they need to listen is because the government has decided to tackle this problem in a very strange way.
I'll just play this clip for you and see if you can spot who's doing the harassing and who's being harassed.
Nice!
What?
I was just looking at her.
I was just looking at her arse.
Hey, go on, love.
Just saying.
She might like it.
Just ask her if she needed a daddy.
The man in the grey suit is staring at you.
Would you report it?
It's him again.
You can feel his breath.
Would you report- I'm just gonna let this play without sound.
Do you notice a pattern here?
Yeah, the real face of sexual harassment in Britain.
English men in suits.
Well, I've looked at some of the statistics from international circumstances, and from what I can tell, white man on black woman is basically not a thing that happens ever.
Yeah.
Doesn't happen in the States.
No.
And there's a large population there.
Yeah, just very curious they felt the need to constantly depict white men as the perpetrators here.
Sorry, a nice interracial gang of youths.
Oh no, it's okay, the black men are coming to stop.
Just like in the Gillette advert, he steps in to prevent someone sexually harassing.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's curious.
I find all these adverts on the tube, you must have seen this as you're travelling through, saying, don't stare, stand on this side, they're functionally useless because they're written in English.
Yeah, not great.
Well, it reminds me of that, I think it was a British Army, I guess, PSA against sexual harassment, and it's this literally white woman accosting or harassing this man of Asian descent.
It's like, is that really the usual scenario for sexual harassment these days?
Hmm.
Petite, white, blonde women harassing Pakistanis.
Yeah, quite.
They're a danger, I tell you.
Well, this may be why Gavin decided to say that even if you stopped immigration, it wouldn't stop demographic changes somehow, but also it wouldn't have any impact on crime.
How curious.
Maybe it really is all the white men and women committing rampant sexual harassment.
I don't mean to go too off topic, but this is a deeply untrustworthy face.
Yeah, the physiognomy doesn't tell.
This is a deeply evil face.
Britain started going wrong the second that we let men like this near the levers of power.
Again, the Tory party made manifest, I'm afraid to say.
So, let's just say this, right?
Is it just men?
Is, as Charlotte Proudman suggests, Men are attacking women like Taylor Swift.
Men are going on the tube.
Is it just men that try to slut-shame Taylor Swift?
Well, I mean, to play devil's advocate, I have seen people say, well, actually, if you look at the men who are in prison right now or jail for sexual assault, sexual harassment, it does basically correspond to the number of, like, white people out of the prison population.
It's like, well, if you don't jail the migrants at all, maybe you're right.
They wouldn't be represented in the prison population.
But even then, Disproportionate to the population as we see in countries like Denmark, you have the new arrivals committing more sex crimes than the natives.
No, absolutely.
It's not disputable, but they will try using slanted statistics like using the people who are actually prosecuted and thrown in jail because they know the British system just doesn't bother if they're migrants, frankly.
Well, that happens with the grooming gangs, of course, as well, doesn't it?
So that's a big thing that they do.
So they'll say, look, most perpetrators of sexual assault, paedophilia, etc.
are white.
And that's true.
That's true.
Because, you know, it's a white country.
It's a white country.
Yeah.
The majority of people in this country are still white.
But nevertheless, disproportionate level, then, you know, and organized grooming gangs in particular.
I mean, there's a difference, I think, definitely.
It's very definitely an Asian Muslim phenomenon.
But no, they obfuscate with the statistics, of course, and they rely on the fact that actually people don't understand statistics.
They don't understand basic concepts in statistics.
But also, even if it was a large proportion of the native population committing these crimes, it doesn't necessarily follow that you then need to import more foreign criminals.
Because it's still crimes being committed and they're obfuscating the fact that lots of migrants are committing crimes because it indicts the open borders immigration system.
Perhaps the hope is that, like that episode of The Simpsons where Mr Burns' immune system is blocked up with all of his diseases, that foreign rapists will in a way counteract the native rapists.
There's a delicate ecosystem balance going on.
Yeah.
Well, the reason I mention this Taylor Swift post isn't just to indict my own music taste, it's because we know it's not just men, because she's referencing a terror attack that nearly happened in Austria.
So a 19-year-old suspect... Just Austrian men, I'm sure.
Oh, yeah.
In Lederhosen.
Yeah.
He wanted to kill himself and a large crowd at the concert either today or tomorrow, and this is according to the Director of Intelligence.
The suspect, who is said to have North Macedonian roots, It's exactly like you.
Stelios, at it again.
He wanted to use the weapons at the Ernst Happel Stadium to kill as many people as possible.
He said, and this is the head of security, the suspect was clearly radicalising the direction of Islamic State and its right to kill infidels.
A second suspect, a 17-year-old Austrian citizen with a Turkish and Croatian background... It's just a background.
Yeah.
It's just a background.
On his phone.
Yeah.
Well, funny that.
He started a job at the concert venue days before the Swift concert was cancelled over the terror threat.
Just men, hmm?
Well, what's interesting about this as well, actually, is that this isn't the first time that there's been a suggestion that actually an attack like this might actually be an inside job.
So the Bataclan massacre, which was what, 2016, 2017, I think, the lead singer of the Eagles of Death Metal, Jesse Hughes, maintained that the security were acting in a very strange way when he arrived at the gig and that he said something to the manager about it, said, I don't like these security guys.
And then he learned that a large number of security, I think like six, didn't turn up on the day.
Anyway, when he said this after the attack, he was absolutely slated for it.
And I think they had some kind of charity concert at the Bataclan.
He wasn't invited.
And you know, he really, he got a lot of stick for this, but he maintained it.
The security were in on it.
And why wouldn't they be?
I mean, it's, it's an obvious, it's an obvious weak point, isn't it?
Well, if you're hiring en masse new arrivals to do low wage jobs, and that includes being a security contractor milling about at the entrance, not even bothering checking tickets, that is an avenue ripe for exploitation.
And even if that's not the case, we saw the Manchester Arena bombing, the security guard was too afraid to be called racist to profile the guy who had the bomb in his backpack.
It could have been prevented, if not for this narrative that it's just indiscriminate men causing things.
And you even see a greater hierarchy emerging because it's very safe to just blame men, and I'd say it's even safer to just blame Islam, which is an idea, and of course it's liberal blank slate-ism to assert that we're all the same if not for ideas, than it is to talk about these are specifically people of African origin, it's not just Asian, they're Pakistanis, and so we can see, like, Anything to avoid talking about the actual issue at hand, which is that no, people are not all the same.
There's no such thing as magic soy.
You can't just import them here and expect them to be acting like actual Englishmen.
Yeah, quite.
Well, there was a third chap who is an Iraqi national who's also involved in this.
And he apparently also pledged to ISIS as well.
But on your point, the guy that is born in Austria but of Croatian and Turkish descent, Magicsword didn't work for him.
They didn't work for Ruka Cabana, who's, you know, supposedly a Welshman despite being born to two Rwandan parents.
There is an even deeper conversation to be had here, where second-generation immigrants are bringing to bear a different ethnic and cultural identity.
I think they've actually done studies where second-generation immigrants are even, in some cases, more likely to be radicalised than parents.
In Sweden, definitely.
Yeah, quite.
And it's the same with mixed-race children as well.
They feel a very, very ambiguous sense of identity is often the problem.
So there have been quite a lot of psychological studies of mixed-race children.
Elliot Rogers?
It's like, you know, I'm not white, I'm not, you know, I'm not black, I'm somewhere in between, and that actually is kind of like a profound, causes a profound sense of alienation.
I've noticed it's very rare that you get somebody like a Calvin Robinson, and it's much more common that you get someone like a Meghan Markle.
Uh, and Meghan Markle, when I watched that awful documentary that Netflix did on her and Prince Harry, it was very, very clear to me that she was identifying only with one side of her heritage and only with one side of her background.
Same with Barack Obama.
Yeah, yeah.
And it seems to me when a lot of people of mixed heritage, and if there are people watching the podcast right now of mixed heritage, obviously this isn't a...
For everybody, but a big proportion of them tend to identify more with the historically oppressed side of their heritage.
Certainly encouraged.
Yeah.
And I feel like that's something almost uniquely Western, because growing up Eurasian in Hong Kong, there was not the same sense of alienation that I think a lot of people have here.
Because there's frankly, I mean, it's almost a It's almost kind of a paradox, but even though the West in a lot of ways is a lot more open, a lot more accepting, there is also a lot more right breeding ground for racial grievances.
And somewhere like, you know, in Hong Kong and Singapore, we have tons of Eurasians, but there's no, I mean, Eurasian, like, crying about it.
I mean, they're actually, and some people complain, they're overly fetishized as more attractive than the locals.
But I mean, you even have people like Colin Kaepernick, who I'm not.
I think he looks like he might be biracial, but he was raised entirely by white parents.
But he more so than anyone in the United States currently is harboring that racial grievance against white people.
Quite.
Well, I think I actually think in some sense for somebody like Colin Kaepernick, I think he feels that being raised by a functional white family is an indictment of black families.
I think he deeply feels that.
I think it's like actually a white man stepped up and was my father.
I mean, maybe it is an indictment of black families, but that's not the white people.
It reminds me of that James Baldwin quote that goes around when he's talking about visiting the Swiss village and he talks about how the only thing that he felt there was a kind of indescribable rage at the fact that he was surrounded by a people who were able to build a functional society and live in peace whereas his own people weren't.
And you need to make up Wakanda in order to make yourself feel better.
And even then it still has dirt roads and favelas.
Still, if a true celebrity or somebody actually wants to make Wakanda, you know, more power to it.
Well, the Black Hammer guys tried it and it didn't exactly go so well, did it?
Akon tried it as well, didn't he, I think.
Oh, yeah, he tried in schooling.
And Mr. Beast, though.
Yeah, maybe not that one.
So just to breeze through, someone else who's been getting blamed for this epidemic of violence against women and girls is Andrew Tate.
I'm sure it's influencers doing this.
I know the guy that did the stabbing at First Romanian, maybe he's just an Andrew Tate fan, but the police chiefs in the UK have been branding the violence against women and girls a national emergency after they found that more than a million violent crimes against women and children were recorded in the 12 months of March 2023 to 2024, equivalent to almost 3,000 crimes a day.
The average age of suspects accused of abusing the girls is 15, while the average age of their victims is just 30.
Now Dame Rachel D'Souza has looked into this and said that Online adult explicit material is cited in many of the transcripts.
When it's children, two children.
But then there's also another cohort that's mentioned in this article that's sort of smuggled in.
And they say, a report issued by the National Police Chiefs Council found 1 in 12 women are victims, 1 in 20 adults, or 2.3 million people in England and Wales are perpetrators of violence every year.
So there's the children doing it to children, but then there's women who are being attacked by men.
Men, radicalized by Andrew Tate?
Well, okay, let's look at some of the examples that breeze through.
Tower Hamlets man, jailed for years of sexual abuse here.
I'm surprised they put the name in the headline, frankly.
Yeah, they usually don't even put the photo in.
They put the photo of the crying victims and just bury it.
Investigation into Dulon Muir, English man, began in 2022 after one of his victims came forward reporting she had been abused since she was a child.
Then there's Sheffield Man, assaulted a five-year-old girl, Darren Nelson, 22, Just man?
Yep.
Okay.
Sex offender.
29.
Allowed to walk out of a hospital in London.
Lewis Collins.
Okay.
Must be... Yep.
Yep.
Okay.
Alright.
They say in here he's a pornography addict.
That's definitely the reason.
And that's probably part of it.
Yeah, it's definitely part of it.
Not all young lads that are stuck on that sort of material by those predatory companies go on to become sex offenders.
I mean, I think it's in America at least.
I mean, black populations in America consume a ridiculous amount more pornography than most other demographics.
But again, the argument will be white people are a lot more likely to be convicted for it.
So even, I've gotten into this with black nationals talking about the different crime rates, the different races.
The first thing they'll do will look at all the white pedophiles, look at all the white, you know, child pornography viewers.
With those specific cases, it's usually a case where it actually gets the attention of the authorities.
It's because family members have actually decided to speak up.
I very much don't believe that it's just that black children are getting abused less.
In this regard, I think it's just that it's being reported less, but it's another case where we have a discrepancy in reporting that people are saying, like, oh, well, actually, it's not more crime, like, that's very idealistic.
And also, from the American perspective, I will just say, you know, growing up, you would often hear Europeans kind of look down on American crime rates, like, oh, you guys are so dangerous.
Now that Europe is finally having to deal with the diversity issues that America has had to deal with a lot longer, it seems like those same crime issues are following.
Well what's interesting is there is that the black population of America is about 14% and obviously it's going to be men from the ages of 12 to 40 committing the majority of that violent crime.
In Britain the black population has only ever been about 3%.
Now the first generation migrant population is 14%.
It's creeping up to Ellis Island numbers and we're seeing that spike in crime.
But I'm sure it's just men perpetrating it.
In Paris as well, they're getting the same thing.
There's an Australian woman who's chased into a kebab shop, 25-year-old Australian tourist, right before the Olympics happened.
She claims to have been gang assaulted by five men of African appearance, according to the reporting on this from Remix News that I found.
Foreigners committed 77% of all solved rapes in the Paris area of 2023.
Her first mistake was to run into a kebab shop.
Yeah, quite.
I mean, to be fair, the owners and the patrons also fought those men.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, so they did muck in.
But they themselves, I don't think, could speak English, because French slash foreign, so she had a hard time communicating until the police showed up and she said that five African men had done this to her.
Not just sex crimes, of course.
There was the stabbing of a soldier.
This is Anthony Isan.
Englishman who stabbed Lieutenant Colonel Mark Teton in his 40s.
Ever since then, various people have been told not to walk around in your military uniforms in case you get attacked as well.
That's a good sign in your own country.
You can't walk around in your military uniform without getting attacked.
Yeah.
Well, that was a problem as well in this country during the Troubles, of course, wasn't it?
Yes, and we've continued that on for some reason.
There's the guy who killed this couple here, who was living with them, Yostin Andres Mosquera.
I think he's a Colombian national.
He chopped them up and put them in a suitcase and wheeled it across a bridge in Bristol.
He was caught by a local jogger.
There's a samurai-wielding sword killer.
He's a white chap, but don't be shocked.
It's Marcus Aurelio Arduni Monzo.
I think he's a Brazilian and Spanish national.
So, wonderful.
And then there's obviously the Southport stabber here.
The media decided to use the left photo for some reason in everything, whereas the sketch on the right is far more accurate to him.
And so, I thought I'd finish with the absurdity that this has gotten to, because you're quite famous for the following meme.
But there might be something here.
For example, African type individuals or parolees.
Yeah, there might be parolees here.
Twisted teens is a particularly prominent one.
Friends.
I hate friends that could be doing this.
Friends.
What's this one?
Missouri firefighters.
That's pretty powerful.
Irate customers.
To be fair, I've dealt with a few of them in my time.
They can be quite dangerous.
Persistent challenges in our school systems.
Another prominent one.
Tandoori Chefs.
That's the one that's been... Do you just have a template loaded up at all times?
I'm just ready to go.
I mean, I've stopped doing it because I was doing it so much.
I did it five times in one day.
And somebody said, just stop it.
Massive Goons is probably one of my favourite ones.
Another Massive Goons.
Summer Weather.
Swept New York City with with gunfire and a misogynistic maniac.
So I think we should we should say obviously they are men and they're the only ones at fault here.
All right, let's move on to the next segment.
That one went quite a bit over, so I'll see if I can speed through this.
Sorry, my one's quite short at the end.
That's all right then.
So I'm going to be talking about the Macpherson Report and explaining why it is that Britain has a two-tier police system in place at the moment.
So I'm sure that most of the panel will be familiar with this.
Lauren, you've lived in Britain before.
Are you aware of the Macpherson Report and everything that went on with that?
Alright then, so I just thought it would be good for explainer for our audience and anybody who might not be aware that this is why it is that foreign communities and minority communities are policed so differently as they are in the UK from the white native population.
This was an idea that a friend of the show, Binary Surfer, gave me, so I thought...
You know, shout out to him, so thank you very much for that.
And it explains why exactly we have problems like this, where a white police officers lost out on jobs after orders were to pick an Asian candidate coming from the top.
This was a case where it was a superintendent said that you need to pick an Asian detective inspector.
Not Japanese or Australian.
Yeah, I'm sure he talked about Koreans.
That kind, no.
If I scroll down, the name is included somewhere down here.
Sergeant Sidhu.
Sergeant Sidhu, where you've got that situation where three white British officers were passed up, some of whom were already detectives.
This person was a sergeant, hadn't even been an inspector or anything that would qualify her for the position, and got appointed anyway.
So they thankfully won a employment tribunal related to this.
So I'm actually shocked that they did decide that yes, this was something that it was a case of discrimination.
Because this normally, as far as I'm aware, wouldn't happen, because they would go, ah, your white positive discrimination is always a good thing.
So there's DEI in the police services, and then you have issues where Yvette Cooper, our Home Secretary, saying that the UK has lost all respect for its police force in the wake of the riots.
Because they behaved abominably.
Yeah, why would that be?
Why on earth would that be?
So, one way to look at this is you can say that obviously this is a result of the increasing diversity in the country in the very first place, but there needs to be institutional barriers in place and institutional rules set to make it so that they can get away with all of this without getting in trouble.
And where does that all start?
Well, it goes back to the murder of Stephen Lawrence.
For those who aren't aware, Stephen Lawrence was a black British 18-year-old from of Caribbean background who died on the 22nd of April 1993.
He was stabbed to death by a group of five or six men and in the immediate case following it, the police admittedly did an absolutely terrible job of following up on some of the Some of the evidence that they had and didn't do a very good job and ended up not being able to get anybody convicted for it because it went to court and they decided there wasn't enough evidence to determine that the people that they'd brought in had actually done anything.
There wasn't enough evidence to actually identify them properly.
So this became a big thing.
The Stephen Lawrence family decided to make a big campaign of it for a very long time, for a few years, until in 1997, Jack Straw, part of the then-new Blair Labour government, decided to start an inquiry related to it,
which led to the McPherson Report, which concluded which led to the McPherson Report, which concluded that the police were institutionally racist and led to a spate of other changes to the way the policing system in the UK worked, including removing the double jeopardy rule in cases of murders.
Would anybody like to explain what double jeopardy is?
Well, it's basically where you can't be tried twice for the same crime.
Yes, if you've been acquitted already for one crime, they can't bring you in to charge you for it again because that could lead to a situation where you could just bring somebody in to the court again and again and again.
Even if you don't have the evidence to convict them, you're going to waste their time and probably ruin their life and smear their reputation.
That got dropped for murder on cases where there was compelling new evidence found and that was in the wake of You know, advances in DNA technology and things like that.
If I remember correctly as well, there was something to do with one of the boys involved in the group that had stabbed Lawrence, insinuating that something had happened with the group and they said that they'd got him on racially aggravated remarks or something like that.
Because this has always been depicted as Britain's George Floyd, before George Floyd.
This has always been depicted as a racist attack.
I know someone who... So I'm in Bexley, Eltham's neighbouring borough.
I used to go to Warhol Church for a while.
I know someone who was at a school at the same time as Stephen Lawrence and his brother, that went to the recreational youth clubs, the same as the Stabbers.
There was... It was essentially gang violence.
And this has always been depicted as a KKK-style lynching.
Certainly the way that the Wikipedia page describes it makes it sound as though he was just some black guy standing next to a bus stop and six white guys decided they were going to murder him for no reason.
It's horrible that he has been murdered, of course.
Murder bad.
Yes, shock, yeah.
And I'm sure me saying that will stop it forever.
But the oversimplification of this has been to drive the narrative that the police are institutionally racist, that Britain itself is institutionally racist, and given a mandate for the new Labour government and their Oh yeah the very fact that it was something the inquiry was set up under New Labour is definitely a sign that this was a purely politically motivated situation because if they had really had grounds to believe that it was
racially motivated, that being the police not following up on evidence at the time, then the inquiry should have started then.
It was only under New Labour.
They were given a golden opportunity to take advantage of the situation, politicise it, publicise it, and allow them to turn British policing upside down and just fold it into the greater revolution that they affected under their first terms in Downing Street.
So more information on the McPherson report.
Who staffed it?
Who was actually on the inquiry?
Well, it was Sir William McPherson, retired High Court judge and former soldier.
He was the chair.
He was advised by Tom Cook, a retired Deputy Chief Constable.
Dr. John Sentamu, the bishop for Stephanie, and Dr. Richard Stone, the chair of the Jewish Council for Racial Equality.
So quite a motley crew right there.
Some people on there, I'd raise my eyebrow and say, what are they doing?
But either way... Dr. Stone just seems like an activist.
Well, yes.
Right, okay.
Also, according to Peter Hitchens, who describes the situation in his chapter, Institutional Defeat, from Brief History of Crime, which later got rebranded as Abolition of Liberty, the Black Police Association were involved in giving evidence to the McPherson Inquiry.
Again, a politically motivated activist organisation.
So the 350-page report concluded the investigations of the killing had been marred by a combination of professional incompetence, institutional racism, and a failure of leadership.
And the only thing that people paid attention to really was the racism part of it, yes.
And the report's authors stated that the debate about policing and racism had been transformed by the inquiry, which is true, which is true.
And they put forward 70 recommendations, including revoking double jeopardy for murders.
And they said here, the included measures weren't just to transform the attitude of the police towards race relations and improve accountability, but also to get the civil service, NHS, judiciary and other public bodies to respond and change.
So, like much else under New Labour, it was a case of, well, we're going to focus on this one specific thing, but apply all of the lessons we've learned from it to all of society.
It's not just the institutional racism of the police, that's a sign of a greater malaise underneath the British spirit and the British psychology, which is you're all racist, so we need to change all of the institutions so that we can continue to therapise you into being... Anti-racist.
Anti-racist, yes.
Uh, so it says as well, they included the introduction of detailed targets for recruitment, retention and promotion of Black and Asian officers, as well as the creation of Independent Police Complaints Commission, the, what is it, the IOPC now?
Is that how they keep dobbing in their officers for offensive remarks, and then that's how you get promoted?
Right, so the internal snitching infrastructure came from this.
Yeah, it completely changed the atmosphere of policing, because of course now the fear would not be, well, am I doing a good job?
It's, am I doing my job in a way that won't get me reported to the IOPC?
And they made that even worse.
I know they've lifted the requirement now, but for a while you were required to have a university bachelor's degree in order to become a police officer, and so like military service on its own wouldn't count.
So they've just staffed it full of Well they staffed it full of people who would have been already educated in a way that means that they're predisposed to these views and then made it so that the only constituents that you could police in a way that couldn't get you in trouble, potentially, would be white areas.
Preferably white working class areas because they have the least power of anybody to really kick up a fuss about it.
Furthermore, in the institutional defeatism chapter from Peter Hitchens, he quotes a particular line from the McPherson Report which defines racism or a racist incident.
Can you all guess what it's going to be?
Is it going to be Is it going to be fair?
Is it going to be objective?
Is it going to be hearkening back to the days of good old MLK?
Is it like the circular definition of Islamophobia that Labour's adopting?
It's to do with perception, isn't it?
It's a perceived incident.
And specifically against non-white people.
I doubt that it's something that goes both ways.
Well, it's broad enough that you could say that it should go both ways, but it only gets applied one way.
A racist incident is any incident which is perceived to be racist by the victim or any other person.
So it's a gay race communism definition.
Thank you Kehinde Andrews for citing the two words you were meant to define in your own definition.
Yeah, and further on in the report it says that colorblind policing, that would be, you know, in a multi-ethnic society basically the only policing that would actually work and be fair to everybody, must be outlawed.
The police must deliver a service which recognizes the different experiences, perceptions, and needs of a diverse society.
Which basically means black people and Middle Eastern people feel really bad.
They feel really bad when you police them for committing crimes.
They don't They don't like being arrested, shockingly enough.
So don't do that.
I feel like if you don't want to be treated like the English, you should not be in England, period.
Doesn't matter.
I mean, if you don't like the way that the English are treated by the English government, then don't come to England.
Which is why so many English people are leaving now.
I feel like the English are probably one of a very rare breed of people in the world who, if a family member of theirs committed a terrible crime, would actually dob in their own family members because of the fact that we have this feeling and general sentiment.
Canadians would, absolutely.
Absolutely.
That's because Canada and America and the like were English ethnostates.
Yeah, they've got the Anglo culture.
Did you see the reaction to the mother of the girl who was killed by Valdo Calacane?
No.
So Valdo Calacane was this schizophrenic chap who went around This is the Nottingham thing, yeah.
The Nottingham thing, yeah.
He went around Nottingham, black chap, just stabbing people and he killed a girl and a chap and I think maybe another person as well.
But anyway, the mother of the beautiful young woman who was killed by Valerie Callaghan went on LBC with With that chap, I forget his name, Nick, whatever his name is.
Yes, Ferrari.
Nick Ferrari, the man with the Ferrari.
And she said that she didn't feel any sympathy for the family of Valdo Calacan, the family of this schizophrenic chap, because people have been saying, you know, they're victims too.
They deserve sympathy because they tried to do as much as they could, you know, to get him treatment.
But they raised him.
Right.
Well, she said that.
She said, look, she His parents raised him and they brought him to this country, she said that as well.
And so, I mean, there was an enormous backlash against her on Twitter.
So there were all these, I mean, abysmal, abysmal comments about... From abysmal people.
From abysmal people.
But what it does show, I think, is the degree to which actually people, certainly in this country, appear to have been turned against their better instincts, you know?
They can't even empathize with a mother whose child has been brutally murdered in the street by a knife-wielding maniac.
They actually think that...
You know, they can't understand that someone like that would feel deep, deep anger about the murder of a child.
We just saw this with the Southport stabbings, right?
You actually had children dying, being killed in the streets, but a lot of the, you know, Twitterati elitists, they were more upset about the buildings that were being burned as a result of it and the fact that migrants might not feel as warm and cozy.
But also just mean tweets that should not have misidentified the stabber, but The mean tweets themselves were the problem because they were going to incite violence, as the old Norm Macdonald joke.
And heaven forbid there be any violence against non-white people, that would be truly the worst thing imaginable.
Except that committed by non-white people.
Right, then we just ignore that.
They believe just the dagger floats through the air like it's a scene from Macbeth or something.
And also, a quick thing on that, that's the same mother who, alongside the other grieving families, were trotted out in sunglasses to hide their tears at a giant festival in Nottingham with hashtag love wins because the Home Office has a unit called RICU which manages public perception after a terror attack and so they invented things like don't look back in anger for Manchester Arena bombing.
If you need an actual department dedicated to that, I would say that would be much more better spent those resources on limiting migration and actually policing the communities that we know are more likely to commit these problems.
Have you guys seen that meme?
And this, you know, this often happens, we saw it with Mollie Tibbetts, you know, stateside when women especially are killed by, you know, illegal immigrants, like the idea that, oh, we don't want to make it about race.
There's this one meme, like, me after being killed by an illegal immigrant, my friend, like, oh, I know him, he would never want to make it about race, and then you see, like, the meme, like, the dead body coming from the grave.
Undertaker sitting up from the casket.
That's exactly what happened after the London Bridge attacks.
They brought along this guy, who they were using as an example of how rehabilitation from terror offences works, to a Cambridge PhD seminar.
He showed up, he killed the two people that were presenting him as the example, and the dad came out and said, my son wouldn't have wanted you to spread racist hate.
It's like, yeah, sorry, your son's...
But I feel like it's because of this idea that we have that racism is the worst thing possibly imaginable that you could ever do especially any sort of ethnic sense of identity if you're European and that this is really born from a post-world war to liberalism and we see that I'm not for racism but also I'm not an idiot and I can read statistics so where does that leave us then?
Well on that point I think one of the worst things to consider from what Rorag Nationalist was saying about the people who were commenting on Twitter saying, with this backlash over this woman, I think it's probably likely that those people, after seeing that, oh my goodness, this woman made some racially insensitive remarks, They probably feel that, on some level, she deserved to have that tragedy happen to her.
Because these people that we're talking about are malformed, disgusting cretins with no morals who... I say this quite often recently, I've quite dutton-pilled in this way.
Realistically, if the Industrial Revolution and paracetamol and... What's it called?
Not paracetamol.
You know the one.
Antibiotics.
Antibiotics.
Amoxicillin.
Whatever.
Penicillin.
That's the one that I've been looking for.
If these things hadn't been invented, wouldn't have made it past one years old.
And I think, on a certain level, it would have been better for us all.
But, that'll go on.
Moving on.
I'll move on.
I'll move on.
I'll carry on and just point out that Hitchens points out that If the police were truly institutionally racist at the time when the Stephen Lawrence murder happened, well, they were also arresting white people in London who had killed black people for no reason other than racism, supposedly.
Hate crimes as they would be defined right now.
They had been arresting and convicting them in 1991.
1992, 1993, the year that it happened.
So it was very strange that this was the one case that they decided that they were going to be racist about and not look into.
That would be a very strange conclusion to draw.
And if I go on as well, there is this report that was released after The initial Macpherson report that was done by these three people, Norman Dennis, George Erdos and Ahmed Al-Shahi.
Now you can tell Ahmed is not an English name and Norman Dennis and George Erdos are actually socialists.
They call themselves ethical socialists but this is a I know it sounds like an oxymoron but still let's carry on.
This report was done criticizing the McPherson report and absolutely tears it to shreds from top to bottom going over all of the evidence that was provided going over everything that was said and looked into but I think the summary sums it up appropriately quite nicely where they point out all of the problems where they say rules of evidence were modified and witnesses were harassed both by the members of the inquiry team And by the crowd in the public gallery.
Representatives of the Metropolitan Police were asked to confess to charges of racism, even if only in their private thoughts.
Literal thought policing going on.
They were even asked to testify to the existence of the racist thoughts of other people.
However, This is common law now.
I'm just imagining Charles Xavier just conjuring slurs.
As we all do.
However, no evidence of racist on the part of the police was ever produced.
There was no attempt to show that the Metropolitan Police Service was racist in the sense of being formally structured to put members of ethnic minorities at a disadvantage, nor was any evidence produced that individual officers dealing with the murder of Stephen Lawrence had displayed racism, unless one includes the use of words like colored, which are currently out of favor with the professional race relations lobbyist.
No evidence was produced to indicate that the police would have handled the investigation any differently had the victim been white.
But again, when the whole idea of racism is if it's perceived to be racist, which in the report, if you read it, even Stephen Lawrence's parents didn't think it was racist.
They just didn't think it had been handled well.
So his Caribbean parents were saying, no, we just want justice for our son because he was murdered brutally.
And the report and everything else in the inquiry goes on to turn it into a gigantic racial issue.
To question whether the murder of Stephen Lawrence was purely a racist crime was, in itself, adduced as evidence of racism.
We're all familiar with that these days.
The Macpherson report, they conclude, has had a detrimental impact on policing and crime, particularly in London.
Police morale has been undermined.
So that's from a leftist perspective.
Perspectives that you would expect to not be on our side.
But even they can accept the objective reality that this has made the police service far worse because it was an overtly political maneuver by New Labour to destroy British policing.
And let's see how it still affects us today.
Well, What's the IOPC up to?
Well, on the 22nd of April this year, it was Stephen Lawrence Day.
Right, so that would explain why they have a much softer touch when policing the Leeds and Hare Hills riots, or regarding the Manchester Airport incident, or any of the Palestine protests.
Well, they actually did.
They're currently looking into the Manchester Airport incident, the IOPC is, and I'm sure... They haven't still been charged.
I'm sure they're going to conclude that it was a racist incident.
And the fact that I can predict that, and I'm 99% sure that it will be correct, says everything you need to know about the objectivity of such an organisation.
They say in this article, our close history with Stephen Lawrence and his legacy is one that we should never forget.
His racist murder led to our formation as a result led by Sir William McPherson.
There have been quite a few reports, reviews and plans which have followed all in agreement that if you are black, Asian and minority ethnic, your experience of the police and your interaction with them may not well be a pleasant one.
Well, stop committing crimes then.
We have seen evidence of race discrimination and the disproportionate use of police powers like stop and search and use of force.
Everything that the previous link was criticizing for scaling back because it actually disproportionately affects the quality of policing.
And also, I know it's a tired point, but it's the policing that goes on to protect people mostly within their own communities.
So the people who will be disproportionately negatively impacted by this are going to be people within, say, Brixton, within these areas that have disproportionately high rates of crime.
Who is it all of the postcode gangs in Brixton and elsewhere in London are stabbing?
Well, it's all the black people in these gangs.
So, you know, if the police actually did some policing over there, maybe less of them would die.
But no, that could be racist.
This is a uniquely, I've got to say, a European problem.
You don't see countries like Japan, like China, like South Korea asking, well, are we treating the foreigners good enough?
Like, do we need to do more for them?
Absolutely not.
And there's that.
I've been loving it because Japan, unfortunately, population collapse.
They are starting to import people.
The government is very much against the wishes of the people.
There are now these viral videos of officials at airports literally just sending them right back, like right back, turn around.
Absolutely not.
Sometimes these migrants are crying, but it's like, you could do that.
I've seen a few of those.
You could just do that.
It's possible.
We act like, oh no, we could never.
We could actually quite easily do it.
It's always a choice.
We just don't have the will to do it.
Well, the Japanese don't seem to be as susceptible to, uh, look at picture of brown crying man, throw away your civilization.
Therefore, no laws or borders.
Brown person cried.
Yeah, exactly.
For some reason our elite class are very, very sympathetic to that cause.
They carry on and say this issue remains a persistent concern, especially within black communities because of the ongoing inequalities that can influence policing and ultimately continue to erode trust and confidence in policing, so throw away all law and order.
We are at the final stage of our work on race discrimination which will come out in a report shortly.
So there's going to be another report coming out.
I searched through their records, I can't see that it's been published yet.
I know, we're still paying for them to write that.
Yeah, so that will be coming out later on this year.
It shines a spotlight on this long-standing area of concern to help maintain focus on policing and work towards an effective resolution.
The work involved independently investigating cases where race discrimination is a potential factor to be considered and has helped us build a body of evidence to identify patterns or trends to improve police practice.
So this will probably come with its own enormous space of recommendations for how to shape up the police force in the UK, which will inevitably, as the Macpherson report did, make everything far worse.
So that's something we've all got to look forward to, and expect the two-tier policing system to only get worse as time goes on.
Well, on the topic of Labour's failures, they want to build giant migrant battery farms all across the country.
They're not just content with having them in hotels in the major cities.
No, no, no.
They want to spread the benefits of diversity far and wide across the hitherto-so-far-untouched corners of England.
And for everyone who expected that Labour might be a bit more moderate, they might, as Dr Parvini says, put the woke away.
No, it's very much on MacIntyre's rails.
They cannot course correct.
They will careen off a cliff at this point.
An example of where they need to deal with this problem is that on Monday, more than 700 migrants arrived into Britain.
703 broke in.
to the country on 11 boats.
This was on Sunday, so the data came on Monday.
The total number of arrivals to the UK in 2024 is at 18,342 and that's obviously the low estimate.
13% higher than at the same point last year when only 16,000 had crossed, so line go up.
You can just feel the GDP.
But I thought based Keir Starman was going to prevent this.
No.
No.
It's almost like Carl's prediction was entirely bloody wrong.
And we kept telling him.
Carl's prediction?
Carl kept saying that Keir will get immigration.
Wait, Carl didn't get in with that as well, did he?
Carl kept saying it.
I swear you were on the panel sometimes when he said it.
He is talking with Georgia Maloney though, isn't he, about...
But even Georgia Maloney has been a total disappointment.
I'm always promised far-right politicians, but they never deliver.
Well, the reason for Italy is because the mob is in control of human trafficking, so it'll never be lowered.
Like, my Italian friend spends a lot of time there and understands this, and he just said, look, even if Maloney wants to make good on her promises, she couldn't because the mafia will just withdraw all their money and then there'll be a financial collapse.
Oh, you need some sort of Bukele-like figure to come in.
It would be fantastic in Britain.
I'm sure Caesar is out there, but we haven't spotted him yet, I'm afraid.
Two people also died during the crossing.
Something to do with the fuel leaking from the boat and something?
Makes a difference for them having actual machete fights in inflatable dinghies, which has happened before!
So there you go.
What could go wrong?
Yeah, brilliant.
Okay, and also the asylum costs have reached record highs, and this is Martin Daubney sharing this information.
He claims that it's 6.6 billion a year, and he contrasts it to the winter fuel payments that were just cut for pensioners, which were only 2 billion per year, to which my boomer grandparents who, despite everything that happened, including the Holder's Trust and Jess Phillips kerfuffle involving me still voted Labour and even they're saying, "This isn't what we voted for." Well...
It kind of literally is though.
It was.
They were promising it.
It was entirely predictable.
But actually, I think Martin might be underestimating here because I spoke to Dame Andrea Jenkins and she costed it at $14.4 billion a year.
And even Labour at the tail end of the Rishi Sunak days when they were in their interest to publish damning statistics said that it cost not £6 million a day, but actually £10 million a day to house all these people in hotels.
Yeah, the economic benefits of migration are actually quite costly, it turns out.
Yeah, but have you considered that state spending is factored into GDP and therefore GDP will go up?
Oh right, line go up.
Exactly, yeah, line must always go up.
Line on GDP, line on stabbings, line on fraud, all goes up.
Right, so, solution.
Angela Rayner, who's the Deputy Prime Minister now, and is also the Housing and Leveling Up Minister.
So, again, more lines going up.
She says that every part of Britain will take its fair share of migrants.
Now, this was right before the general election, published in The Telegraph.
And she said they would take their fair share of asylum seekers and the reason she's saying that is because the Conservatives had a scheme where deprived towns, like Swindon, said to their local councils, if you take a fair share of asylum seekers we will give you lots of money for new developments.
Now obviously all that money got spaffed away on hotels and the local economy did not flourish because... And pensions for councillors, I bet.
Yeah, yeah, very true.
They were mainly concentrated in Labour districts.
The Tory districts didn't take that many.
So now she's saying, well, now that Labour are in charge, we'll move them across the country to get an equitable share of all of this.
So how are they going to do it, is the question?
Because, sure, there's lots of hotels that are quite full now.
Is the framing of this, if this is something akin to what she said, take your fair share of migrants, not implicitly accepting that, yes, they are a burden, Well, yes.
Because the fair share is like taking the fair share of... Taxes.
Yeah, taxes, or, you know, if you're carrying luggage to and from a place, then you all just have to carry some.
Fair share of housework.
I was going to say, it's like complaining that your sibling isn't picking up their share of the dog excrement in the garden, and you're having to do it all the time, so little Timmy has to go out and pick up his fair...
Either way, it doesn't matter.
Eventually, we will come to a government who will just actively say, yes, you deserve this and we're doing this to hurt you.
Well, they already do imply that, at least their acolytes do on Twitter, whenever they have the contradictory position of, this is diverse, it's enriching, it's positive, we actually built Britain, and also, immigration is revenge for colonialism, therefore it's a net detriment and you have to pay for it.
Yeah, if something can be used as revenge, it's not a good thing.
Yes, quite.
But I was going to say the Conservatives were talking about this though as well.
They were talking about replenishing, ageing.
They actually used the term, I think, well I don't know if they used the term the Great Replenishment but I wrote about it for National Pulse like a year ago.
I think November 2023, maybe even earlier than that.
And there was a conservative scheme that was being that was going to be trialed of sending migrants to rural communities to replenish them.
And replenish was the term that was used based on pilot schemes that have been carried out in Canada.
So I think there's something called the It's the Atlantic Initiative, I think it's called, something like that, where they were sending migrants to rural provinces in order to boost the local economy, basically.
Right, to go work at Tim Hortons.
Yeah, they've done it in France as well, they've done it in Spain, and the Conservatives were talking about it, you know, it was going to be trialled, but then...
Which is obviously a great idea because if you look at these rural communities, these are places where probably low-skilled people have the hardest time finding work and employment, so obviously you want to send people over who are going to undercut those wages even further.
Yeah, exactly.
If they hated the Tories already because Margaret Thatcher desolated the mining towns and didn't build up their infrastructure and their sense of Long-held community identity around a particular vocation, then they're gonna hate them even more when they put lots more people into their deprived communities without an expansion of infrastructure, GP appointments, schools, and also when those people have cultures that are actively prejudicial against the host population.
Right, and the way that they're doing it.
So if I had my ideal immigration system, it'd be very, very limited, if at all.
Zero.
But yeah, we- I've actually talked about my husband for this.
It is unfair, historically, how the urban centers always get the immigrants, right?
Very few people move to America and they think of- they dream of going to Montana, right?
It just doesn't happen.
If I were the government, I would say, okay, if you- if you have the, like, the investment or you're a doctor, you can come, but for five to ten years, because you're an immigrant, you don't have right of free movement with the country, you have to live Where we tell you specifically, you're going there specifically to provide jobs or this community needs a doctor they've accepted, they want you, that's how it has to be.
But because we have this influx of low-skilled migrants, it's almost like you're instead of potentially maybe helping these communities if they wanted investment from, you know, some venture capitalist who just wanted to be in America that badly, he would live in South Dakota, no offense.
You're actually harming these people even worse, and what hurts me is that these are not people who are voting for these policies, right?
These are not very liberal populations by and large, so it's like, really, these are people whose voices are not heard, their wills are not being listened to, and this is why you have things like riots happening, because these people feel totally disenfranchised, like they have no power.
Specifically in the Labour heartland northern towns that have made first contact with these people.
A great statistic on that, the sort of free movement within the economy, I think it was 2022, they had 70,000 health and social care worker visas issued in the UK, only 11,000 vacancies filled.
Right.
So they came on the social care visa and disappeared straight into the delivery economy.
Again, feel the GDP.
All I'm reminded of is that one meme where it's World War II was planes dropping bombs and World War III planes dropping Africans.
Well, speaking of which, that's actually the solution of how they're going to solve it, because now we have Operation Dispersal.
That's what it's being called.
This has been published in the Times, with actually, ironically, yes, an image of our potential Britons.
Our Britons in waiting, invading.
Again, reminder, there have been more Channel Crossers than there were lads that stormed the beaches of Normandy on D-Day.
A lot of women and children in there.
Yeah, of course.
I think it's about maybe 5%.
There have been more Indians arrive over the past year than Huguenots arrived over the course of 10 years.
And a reminder, there is no Huguenot rights movement.
They melded naturally through intermarriage and assimilation.
The Indians, they're pledging Hindu manifestos now for the Conservative Party.
But anyway, here's this piece in the Times.
So they're preparing to end the use of large military sites like RAF Scampton.
...to house asylum seekers and instead will scatter migrants around the country to cut pressure on local services.
The government has struck agreements with councils on the number of asylum seekers who will be settled in their area as it moves away from the use of sites such as RAF Wethersfield and Scampton.
It is preparing to quote massively increase the procurement of quote dispersed accommodation such as empty homes or former student blocks that have self-catering facilities.
So they are going to spend taxpayer money on buying up scarce housing stock at the expense of the native population to stick these guys in there.
You could just send them back.
You could just send them all back.
Yeah, we could.
Even better, you could just invest in boats to patrol so they never come in the first place.
You send them right back before they get here.
Well, funny that.
You know the one where they died?
Two of them died with a boat caught light?
France towed them back.
Could just do that.
Yeah.
But they don't.
Why?
It's choice.
They want to flood your country with the petrol.
Well, this is Southport coming to your local community.
Quite, sadly, yes.
Even though the chap that did that wasn't an illegal migrant.
Yeah, these people do have a disproportionate pretentiousness.
I still want to know what Axel Rudikabaner's parents were doing in the mid-90s.
We can't speculate because that would actually be illegal.
Okay, moving on.
That wasn't speculation, it was a question.
I know, I'm just saying we cannot speculate because, um... Grunge band, maybe?
Yes, sure, yeah.
Kurt Cobain.
The government said that continuing the use of Bibby's Stockholm would cost more than £20 million next year, and scrapping it forms part of the £7.7 billion savings of in-asylum seekers over the next 10 years.
The problem that you have with the OBR modelling is they think that's going to be a constant number.
As we see, it keeps ticking up because if you incentivise them to come here because you're giving them a house, That means it's going to cost more.
Fantastic.
RAF Scanton in Lincolnshire has been earmarked by the previous government, so that's the Conservative government, RIP, to house up to 800 migrants scaled down from 2,000, often because if you put too many men in one place they started stabbing each other.
That actually happened.
It is understood that conditions set by officials, which must be met before it can be used, have not been reached and it's unlikely to go ahead.
The former RAF Wethersfield in North Essex was described as prison-like.
Good, because they're criminals.
They literally broke into the country.
And the residents are now taking legal action against the Home Office.
Funded by who?
Sorry, how are a bunch of new illegal migrant arrivals taking legal action against the Home Office?
With what money are they hiring lawyers?
Oh, it's ours!
Great!
Really glad to be paying for this.
As you can tell, I'm really cheered up about this one.
Councils have been asked to agree to asylum accommodation plans between local authorities and central government, which would set targets to increase dispersed accommodation.
So I'm assuming they're going to tie money to hitting your annual quotas.
So that means the quotas are going to go up, so in the areas with the least amount of enrichment, you're going to be getting the most.
Quote from one source in the government.
It's about having a more equitable dispersal of asylum seekers.
Otherwise, you have these areas that have concentrated numbers, and that is what we got in areas with hotels and large sites.
That creates a whole host of challenges, meaning services in those areas are stretched, and those asylum seekers can't get basic or crucial support they need.
Ah!
It's because the NHS isn't meeting the needs of the asylum seekers they need to come into your local town.
Never mind the needs and interests of the natives.
That would just be appalling.
We couldn't possibly countenance that.
Yeah, fantastic.
In Dorset, where Bibi Stockholm was moored, council bosses have said that hotels may need to be used.
So, little remote places, probably like Cornwall and the like, where you are, is about to see a lot more enrichment.
I'm looking forward to it.
It's interesting though, isn't it, that they're using air force bases, military bases, at a time when they've committed to defence cuts.
Heavy defence cuts as well.
I mean, it's really a... It's an allegory for the state of the nation as a whole, isn't It has echoes of the Roman Empire where they couldn't staff their military and so instead they decided to populate it with foreign mercenaries who decided to loot the place when the Czechs stopped getting cashed.
And what's really interesting about the financial predictions of how much this is going to cost is because they assume that maybe these people's children, they'll be productive contributors to the economy.
That's not the case.
I don't know why you would, you know, take a bunch of North Africans and move to Britain and expect them to be any more economically productive than they are in North Africa.
Why not?
Are you racist?
We see how North Africa is.
But also in the Netherlands, second generation migrants are never as productive as the native born or European migrants.
Of course not.
But also, I was going to say, look, I mean, look at the picture of the boat.
There are no women and children.
They're not bringing children with them.
They're coming for our women and children, as the story that I broke to GB News showed last year, where North African migrant trafficking gangs are advertising women in states of undress and drunkenness on nights out on TikTok, alongside images of successful migrant crossings on Instagram.
Oh, of course.
I mean, there have been viral TikToks of Jamaican migrants in Dublin saying, come here, we need to get everyone pregnant, we need to get the birth rate up, right?
There are Asian men who go to London and film outside of the nightclub saying, look at all these women, they're ready to go, let's go.
This is why they're coming.
Like you said, there's no women coming.
The Home Office knew about those videos, by the way, and took no action.
So they are happy for it to go on.
The Home Office has also been buying 16,000 homes for asylum seekers last year.
So they offered five-year guaranteed rent deals to landlords, apparently to cut £8 million a day from the cost of housing migrants in hotels.
Why are they here at all?
Well, they're here because natives aren't having enough children, but of course we know natives aren't having enough children in part because of the huge cost of living.
Yeah, I can't get a house.
That's why I've delayed having kids.
I mean, people our age, it's very common to say, oh, I'm probably never going to be able to own a house, therefore I probably shouldn't be having children if I can't afford them.
That's not the way the migrants think, though.
No, because 47% of social housing in London goes to people who were born abroad, even more for second generation migrants.
And so if they're living on a house at my expense, they can afford to have kids.
and much more than native population so that that's that's brilliant yeah um these particular houses are being used to house more than 58 000 asylum seekers across england wales and scotland uh double the number in so-called dispersed accommodation a decade ago so whenever you hear dispersed accommodation that means private houses bought by the government at your expense for migrants i don't think they're buying native english people houses no no notably not um
But in the US we've seen something quite similar happening, you know, dispersing migrants now to places like Maine, which is 94% white, and obviously that has to change.
One of the safest states, at least we'll see how that goes.
Unrelated, of course.
Mostly economic factors.
Mostly economic, totally economic factors.
Many youth clubs.
It's funny because Maine is actually fairly economically depressed.
It's not a wealthy state.
Ah, I don't notice patterns.
But what they're doing, I think, is they're now offering people incentives.
They're not only buying properties and they're not only using hostels, they're offering people incentives to use bedrooms in their houses and outbuildings.
And I'm sure we'll see that in this country, too.
We'll see incentives for ordinary people to use spare space, even maybe pressure on people.
Like the Ukrainian scheme.
The Gary Linekerification of every spare room.
You could just deport them all, but instead, Angela Rayner has decided to build a generation of Milton Keynes-style towns.
One of the worst towns ever.
Yeah, there is a joke going around on English Instagram a couple of years ago that's like, I'm in a bad place right now.
Not mentally, it's just Milton Keynes.
Angela Rayner has pledged, and this was in May 2024, so before the election, to create 1.5 million homes worth of Milton Keynes-style towns.
40% of that is going to be partitioned for social housing.
So not just are they buying up the private stock, but another 40% of the 1.5 million will go to social housing, which will then disproportionately go towards the migrants.
Absolutely fantastic.
All at our expense, again, by the way.
And in preparation for this, they've dropped the prohibition from the last government to prevent terrorists from claiming social housing.
So if you're a terrorist in the UK, you're now allowed to claim social housing at the expense of the taxpayer.
Labour scrapped the proposals just weeks after the election, with Minister Matthew Pennycook confirming the government had no plans to deliver these specific reforms.
Currently... Did they say why?
So they just did it.
Yeah.
You've got to accept it.
Yep.
Yep.
You've got to house terrorists at your expense.
What's about they hate you and want you dead do you not understand by now?
Quite.
Maybe if we give them housing they'll like us.
No, no, the government wants you dead.
That's my- That's- What are the conclusion you're supposed to take from all of this?
Well, the conclusion I'm going to take for it is, uh, we're a joke of a country.
Uh, the cruel joke is being played on us by our elites, who are deliberately deciding to import hostile foreign dependent criminals at our expense, and they want to conquer over the entire countryside with the ugliest towns in Britain, and replicate them until the heat death of the universe to battery farm migrants for the sake of the GDP.
We were riding the train here from Bath and that was just what I was thinking as we were passing by the English countryside.
Imagine how many Pakistanis could be housed here.
The potential.
And with that, Samson, have the video comments been pre-screened today?
Are they guest suitable or should we move on to the written comments?
Okay, if they're guest-suitable, play them up.
We'll run over by a few minutes.
Please cheer me up.
We really chose a cheery one for you, Lauren, for your debut.
Not for any beast that burrows, not for any bird that flies, would I lose his large sound counsel, miss his keen amending eyes.
He is bailiff, woodman, wheelwright, field surveyor, engineer, and if flagrantly a poacher, taint for me to interfere.
This has been my inner monologue whenever I see a field or a river for years now.
People asking where's Wheatley?
No idea.
He's on Substack.
Yes, but he's still doing Substacks.
So, have a look, I suppose, if you want to.
On with the next one!
Where a communication is, as it were, merely offensive, grossly offensive, etc, then principles of free speech and free expression require there to be a high threshold and dictate that a prosecution is unlikely to be in the public interest in many of those cases.
This is clearly signalling that in those cases that are protected by freedom of expression, then there's a double safeguard, a high threshold, and consideration of the public interest before a prosecution will be brought.
Yeah.
He was lying.
It's just deliberate lawyer speak to obfuscate the fact that he hates you and wants you in prison.
And even then he's talking about prosecuting people for speech.
So, I mean, it's not... He's sounding a little bit more holds off about it, but he's still talking about prosecuting people for speech.
Yeah, he's lamenting the high threshold.
Yeah.
He's not saying we should uphold it.
Definitely not.
On to the next one.
I don't think enough mine was paid to the closing of Port Talbot or the Scunthorpe Works, the last of the English steel.
It doesn't just represent the end of centuries of tradition, the end of the livelihood for towns, counties, innumerable men, and their very way of life.
It's also the death of the unique English industrial spirit.
Here are the places where Henry Bessemer and his ilk single-handedly spearheaded the Industrial Revolution, bringing cheap steel to the world.
No other place in the world could have done such a thing.
And it's all being literally extinguished to serve the ideological extremists and their cult of environmentalism.
May those furnaces yet be lit again.
Well not just that, it's not just the net zero cult and this is something that I'm glad that the Conservatives being relegated to the electoral dustbin has done to a large extent.
It's Margaret Thatcher.
Margaret Thatcher was the emissary of globalism ripping the cultural backbone out of many northern towns in Britain and you still have the Tory party and to an extent some people in reform puppeteering her market reforms around like it was the best thing since sliced bread.
It's like, no, it gutted the country and put it on the path to Blairism and mass immigration.
We need to ditch Thatcher as the kind of aspirational politician and the only person that we've had in the 20th century that's worth a damn.
It's mad.
On to the next one.
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.
I've been chatting with the rest of the viewers and an interesting idea was posited as a means of opposing the British government.
Specifically, a general strike.
All able-bodied workers downed tools as a show of force against Starmer and his cronies.
The Americans in the chat are adamant that we cannot give up, but I'm left wondering what can be done to resist the boot that's currently stamping upon our faces.
Do you have thoughts on this?
I think one of the reasons that we've seen the de-industrialisation of the country is partially to prevent such a thing from having any effectiveness in the first place.
When we were a massively industrial country and relied on the working class, then yeah, general strikes could have a huge effect.
Now the only thing that I could see making the governments of this country think twice is if literally all of the NHS affected a general strike.
And you can't coordinate that.
Because they're supposedly who they're already doing it for.
You can't coordinate that because you would have to print the flyers in about a hundred different languages.
Well, stuff like this wouldn't actually take a lot of people, just depending on the targeted industry.
We saw the effectiveness of the Freedom Convoy, the truckers in Canada.
So stuff like that can be effective, but then we also saw how the Canadian government responded by seizing people's bank accounts.
Something that I thought was really interesting, I've seen Tristan Tate tweet about this, we just need several billionaires and millionaires to contribute to a fund to buy a new island and, you know, make it England part two and maybe we can do it right this time.
We had the island that's called the UK.
They will chase us to the ends of the earth.
Well, if it's privately owned, the hope would be that you can actually dictate.
But all the Russian assets are privately owned, too, and the government just seizes them when they want them.
It's just about a willingness of state power to do so.
Another problem with that is I'm absolutely sure the UN and the US would immediately effect economic sanctions to completely isolate whatever island that was, to try and prevent it from growing its economy.
Similar idea.
Similar idea, maybe a little bit more plausible.
Turn the tables.
We pick one area in maybe Latin America or developing Asia and just move there.
There are people trying that in a part of Paraguay.
I know that's happening in Mexico to the point that the Mexicans are actually really upset about the lack of integration that's happening.
I do think it's a fundamental misunderstanding of what patriotism is.
I mean, we're all, as Englishmen, we all are attached to this place.
I mean, I don't want to be an Englishman on the moon.
I want to be an Englishman in England.
I do think.
Yeah, I mean, I get the idea.
I mean, it's hard from a Canadian perspective.
My husband had this idea for the longest time.
We need to stay in the fight.
But I mean, COVID really revealed that, you know, after a certain point, you have to ask, are you just fighting the government or do a substantial number of your fellow citizens, fellow Englishmen actually support this?
And that's the problem in Canada, frankly.
You know, we could play along, pretending that it's just a corrupt government that doesn't represent the will of the people, their elitists.
But at the end of the day, with Canada, it's become increasingly clear, no, the Canadians actually want this.
And people who think like me, at least, they're actively hostile against me.
So I don't, I can't say that's the case in the UK.
It was during lockdown.
Not that I would ever support such a thing myself, but there was a recent survey done of attitudes among the British towards migration that a lot of leftists on Twitter were freaking out over.
It's presented in pie charts that were saying that about one third, if not slightly more, were basically saying that violence against migrants to keep them out of your community was justified.
Not that I would ever support such a thing myself, of course we completely disencourage anybody from doing anything against the law, but that does suggest that there is a sizable portion of the community of the British people, especially because most of them, most of those people will have been responding politely as well, that's not necessarily entirely reflected.
A lot of people don't like what's happening in this country.
And that's why I think the overreaction by the state, Starmer picking a fight with the world's second most famous man, Maybe running the government on the exhaust fumes of legitimacy.
And so, look, I'm not encouraging any illegal activity.
I'm not even encouraging a tools down strike, because I don't think it would necessarily work.
But the more the government have this antibody reaction to folks like us, and the higher profile people they go after, the quicker this entire thing is brought to an end.
On with the next one!
The bad news is that ultimately, Nigel Farage is a politician.
He's not working class, and he's never been.
And because he is a politician, he's risk-averse.
True leadership requires you take risks, and he's not willing to do that now.
Now for something completely different.
The U.S.
economy is so bad right now, That even Joe Biden's job has been outsourced to an Indian.
That's gold.
He's still technically in charge.
He doesn't know that.
He may not know, but officially he's still technically in charge of the US.
I haven't even seen him for it.
Does he even do anything anymore?
Since he dropped out, has he made a single public appearance?
He's done one interview.
He did an interview a couple of days ago, yeah.
On the Farage thing as well, Farage doesn't need to be working class to be effective, but Farage is risk-averse.
Did anyone watch his recent Trigonometry interview?
No.
It's worth it just to get a sort of mindset of where he is.
This was recorded before most of the riots had kicked off, and he was going on for most of it about supply-side economic reform of business rates.
It's like, we are not in the late stages of the Cold War.
I am staring down the gun barrel of total demographic and cultural desolation, and I want a house, Nigel.
Please, for the love of God, talk to my concerns.
We're not in 1984.
Have we got many more left, by the way?
Should we go into written comments?
Is this the last one?
Yeah, and it's Scotty.
Yep.
Gentlemen's Observations of Swindon, Chapter 21.
On the 22nd of November 2001, the North Orbital Road was opened by the Mayor of Swindon as Thamesdown Drive, connecting Torhill and St Andrew's Ridge, and on the 26th of November, the Astor at the Orbital Shopping Park opened, marking its beginning as North Swindon's district centre.
The residential estates of Redhouse, Oakhurst and Hayden End were constructed, becoming collectively known as Priory Vale.
with the first residents, Chris and Tracy Barnes, plus their daughters, moving in in 2002.
To the south of Swindon, infrastructure work of the urban development of Wichelstow began in late 2006, with the first sector, East Wichel, beginning development in 2008 and reaching completion in 2014.
I can't wait to reach the modern times where he catalogues the number of migrant hotels that have been built every single year.
And that's all of the video comments, so let's go on to the written ones.
On to website comments.
Uh, Russian Garbage Human, good to see returning guests and new guests.
Should be a great episode.
Well, we hope you enjoyed it.
George Happ, glad to see Lauren on the show.
She's been consistently great since Roaming Millennial and is one of the few right-wing women who didn't go full feminist, is willing to talk to people from the manosphere and even interview Alex Jones.
Respect.
Thank you.
I will say you're a culture war locking horns with Pearl Davis.
Um, both myself and my missus were watching that live and it was a ceaseless source of entertainment.
Yes, that was very, very interesting.
I would talk to Pearl again.
There's a lot more that we didn't really get to cover that I think would be interesting.
Did you ask her why she keeps talking about marriage and isn't married?
No, I mean, that's always one of the things that comes up, but it's interesting because Pearl is one of those people who has, you know, it's like talking to atheists who think the problem with everything is atheism versus religiosity.
She's one of the people who sees things literally two-dimensionally, it's men versus women.
I mean, we kind of touched on this, I'd like to get a little bit deeper, and a lot of the stats that she brings up, this is why marriage is so bad, they especially apply to certain demographics that are not Not necessarily the demographic that she is from, as you know, a Caucasian woman from a well-to-do family.
She has had something to do with that demographic in the past, though, hasn't she?
That is what they say.
There's a great Forbes article I went over with Jeff Younger, who is, of course, a divorce courts reform activist, good friend of mine, who you should definitely talk to on your show at some point.
And if you break it down, it's like, yes, the divorce rate's 50%, but that 50% is driven up by black and Hispanic families, which is close to 50 or 60% for white Americans.
More college educated, especially if you... 25%.
If you attend church regularly, it's borderline zero.
Right, right.
That's your answer to everything, Connor.
It's just, look man, it's just the stats.
Just telling you.
Just telling you.
Matthew Hammond, does Lauren ever see herself moving back to Canada or is it too far gone?
No, actually.
Every time I go back to Canada, you know, we've still got family there, I'm more and more black-pilled about the future.
And again, it's not just the bad government, it's not just the boats of Indian migrants, but it's the Canadian people.
I think there is maybe slowly a bit of an awakening starting to happen, but I thought that in 2016, I thought that in 2020, and I'm always disappointed, I'm always proven wrong.
I would love the Canadian people to Prove me wrong.
And there are, of course, good Canadian patriots there.
But overall, it is a country that has fully drank the Kool-Aid about the neoliberalism, post-national state.
People like me are actively hated, bullied out of public life.
So it turns out you don't have to live where people hate you.
It's very possible to leave.
You know, it hurt my husband especially, who had a much stronger sense of Canadian pride than I ever did as someone who didn't really grow up there.
Grew up mainly in Asia.
But unfortunately, no.
And we've even talked about if we don't stay in the States, does that mean we go back to Canada?
And the answer, I mean, for our children's sake is no.
Yeah, we had this conversation out in Hungary at dinner, and you said to me at one point, when everything was kicking off in the UK, hey, we've got US visas, it might be an idea you never know in future.
I mean, we're both looking at Hungary and thinking, that's pretty peaceful this time of year.
Yeah, and it's, you know, the thing is, like, obviously you have a sense of duty to your country, as you should, but, you know, at what sense are you so pessimistic about the future of your country where the well-being of your own children doesn't start to weigh greater than that?
Yes, quite.
We'll do a couple more.
Hello, Mr. Nationalist.
I recently started having raw milk.
This is from Axis the Eternal on Rumble.
Question about how long does it last?
Can it be frozen?
At what age can my son start drinking it?
That's a base question.
That's a base question.
Yeah, raw milk lasts a long time, you know.
You leave raw milk and it turns into yogurt, so...
Win-win!
I've also started having it recently and it is really nice.
I prefer it's pasteurized milk.
So my husband, we bought some.
They have pet's milk in Tennessee because they're not legally allowed to sell it to humans.
So they call it pet's milk and it's just raw milk you drink it yourself.
But my husband went on this big thing about Louis Pasteur and he psyched me out of it.
But in an ideal world I would get into it.
I just need to mentally overcome that.
It's really nice.
And I was telling him, we have refrigeration now, it's not apples to apples, but he psyched me out.
Keith Kaiser for $10 says, hopefully Two Tier Care imports facial recognition cameras from China, that way that they won't work.
Didn't they do the same thing in Canada recently?
Facial recognition, I'm not sure about that, but they are starting to implement those facial recognition cameras in Hong Kong.
They've been torn down quite a bit, though.
Ah, much like the Blade Runners with EULA cameras, yes.
Ophanimum?
I can't pronounce that name, sorry.
Ophanimum.
Bless you.
Thank you for $20.
Could you get a lawyer or barrister to come on the show to advise patriots on what to do if they're arrested and charged with hate crimes?
Possibly, we can look into it.
Might know some names from GB, etc.
And we'll do one more just because I can see Samson sweating, having to prep.
Caleb Knight, is any of you a Fallout fan?
Do you like post-apocalyptics?
Well, come to London today, the greatest city on earth with cyberpunk levels of inequality, and double think on par with the cost of housing.
Hey, look, at least navigating Fallout's fun.
The ghouls will just steal your North Face jacket and your Rolex if you're walking around the streets of Westminster.
Anyways, ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much for coming in.
Fancy reminding our audience where they can find your stuff.
Yeah, babygravy9 on Twitter, mansobmag.online for Man's World, and roikstat for my substat.
Excellent.
Lauren?
Lauren Chen on YouTube or Mediaholic if you're into pop culture and movie reviews and at the Lauren Chen on Instagram, Telegram, everywhere.
Yeah, speaking of pop culture and movie reviews, Harry and I have recorded two Comics Corners in the last week and you're gonna enjoy them, but... They were really good!
It wasn't mind-numbing and depressing and awful and harrowing and suicidal like this podcast makes me.
Yeah, like the rest of the news.
The Deadpool and Wolverine did suck.
Anyway, I'll be back in half an hour.
If not, we'll be back tomorrow at one o'clock.
Thanks for joining us, everyone.
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