The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters - The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1383 Aired: 2026-03-26 Duration: 01:32:39 [00:00:00] Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen. [00:00:01] Welcome to the podcast Lootsies for Thursday the 26th of March 2026. [00:00:05] I'm John McFerris and Connor Thomason. [00:00:08] Surprise! [00:00:08] Welcome back. [00:00:10] It's long overdue. [00:00:11] Yeah and it's and today we're going to be talking about the dissolution of everything about the country. [00:00:16] Just literally everything is being dissolved in front of our very eyes and then we're going to be talking about how even the immigrants who have been here for a long time are like I'm sick of immigration. [00:00:25] Why are you doing this? [00:00:26] I actually quote spot the white man. [00:00:30] And then we're going to be talking about how the state could destroy restore Britain as in the one project that seeks to save and salvage the country could be destroyed by the evil government that occupies us. [00:00:41] He's to be paranoid. [00:00:42] Yeah, well you've got to be aware of these things. [00:00:45] Anyway, right, so let's begin. [00:00:48] All right. [00:00:49] And before beginning, I just want to remind everyone that on the 11th of April, we will be having a live event right here in Swindon at the Mecca, and it will be absolutely great. [00:01:01] Please do come and join us. [00:01:05] And one of the things that we might be talking about when we do that is how everything familiar in Britain is slowly being destroyed. [00:01:12] Speaking of Islamic institutions. [00:01:17] Here is the Church of England advertising the fact that they are going to be, or they did by now, enthrone, quote unquote, a female archbishop. [00:01:30] And I think this clip is worth listening to for a couple of seconds, shall we? [00:01:34] Sure. [00:01:35] A historic moment is coming up. [00:01:38] The 106th Archbishop of Canterbury, Sarah Mullali, is being formally installed on Wednesday, the 25th March at 3pm. [00:01:51] And you can join us too. [00:01:54] Well, David Lamy's transition is going well. [00:01:57] It certainly looks like it. [00:02:00] Of course, the royals have given their full endorsement as, you know, the defenders of the faith and all of that stuff. [00:02:09] And there were a lot of lovely shots of Prince William and Princess Kate in attendance. [00:02:19] And there were scenes like this. [00:02:35] Okay, I think it's actually worth thinking about this bit for a second. [00:02:40] Because in what context would this make sense? [00:02:45] This would make sense in the context of Britain having a world-spanning empire and controlling half of Africa, right? [00:02:51] This would make sense if we had Anglican missionaries currently proselytizing to the sub-Saharan Africans. [00:02:57] Now, you're going to join the Church of England because this is better than your barbarous voodoo ways, whatever it was they did, right? [00:03:03] So actually, if that were the context, this would actually make sense. [00:03:06] Yeah, no, we will have people from each province of the empire and they will come here because we are the legitimate authority over everyone and everyone will be included. [00:03:15] That would actually make sense. [00:03:16] What doesn't make sense is in Britain in 2026, when half the population is atheist and we don't control anything, even our own inner cities, to have this on. [00:03:26] So what this is, is essentially a kind of LARPing tribute act of the British Empire that still limps on in the continuity institutions of our government. [00:03:34] Or it's the red carpet event for Wakanda Forever. [00:03:37] I also must question the former. [00:03:39] I think that's far too interesting. [00:03:42] Do you remember when Nancy Pelosi did the kneeling exercise to George Floyd? [00:03:45] Yes. [00:03:45] And they were all wearing the Kinte cloth, and it turns out that it was a pattern that was a slave-owning tribe. [00:03:50] Do we know which kinte cloth that is? [00:03:52] Because it would be frightfully ironic if this African dance had a history of enslaving their brethren on the continent. [00:03:59] When of course the Anglican Church was instrumental as part of the Empire for abolishing the slave trade, something that is now holding itself over its own head, insisting we pay it reparations, of course. [00:04:08] Yes. [00:04:09] No, I don't know which tribe this pattern comes from. [00:04:13] I didn't want to look into it. [00:04:15] To be fair to the ceremony, most of it was actually quite beautiful and high Anglican and genuinely, you know, good to watch and wholesome, [00:04:26] but you can't get over this stuff and you can't get over of the processions by different women pretending to be priests who have absolutely no position being there, who simply shouldn't be there to begin with. [00:04:39] It's modernity wearing the church's skins. [00:04:42] It really is modernity wearing the church as a skin suit and the church is meant to be in opposition to the world, but really you don't see any of that. [00:04:50] Yeah. [00:04:51] They're strategically ignoring 2 Timothy. [00:04:53] Exactly. [00:04:54] Exactly. [00:04:54] Very, very consciously. [00:04:56] And, you know, you can trace the beginning of this decline and abolition of everything to giving women the vote in 1918. [00:05:05] Initially, it was only given to women above a certain age who owned property. [00:05:11] But then quickly, equal franchise came to be in 1928. [00:05:17] And shortly after that, the Church of England in 1975 somehow came to the conclusion that there was no objection to women being ordained. [00:05:29] I mean, do they even have a copy of the Bible? [00:05:33] I can probably get them one. [00:05:35] You could, but I don't think it'll change it. [00:05:37] You're right. [00:05:38] I don't think it'll change anything. [00:05:39] I don't think it actually makes a difference. [00:05:41] Now, if you look at this from a historic context, it was 1918 that the vote was introduced to, was given to women, and then 1975, the Church of England came to the conclusion that there was no objection to the ordination of women. [00:05:57] 1992, that actual ordinations were approved. [00:06:02] 94 they happened. [00:06:03] Then suddenly you start getting women bishops. [00:06:05] And one generation down the line, you get Sarah Mulely LARPing as the Archbishop of Canterbury. [00:06:12] All you're describing here is the increasing liberalization of Britain. [00:06:15] And the accelerating pace of liberalization. [00:06:18] Well, the extent to which the church has failed its moral obligations is demonstrated by just last week they had the vote in the Lords about whether or not they would support Philippa Stroud's amendment to block the decriminalization of abortion up to buff. [00:06:33] And plenty of the bishops voted against the motion. [00:06:36] Anti-woke darling Claire Fox voted for it and hasn't answered for it. [00:06:40] She's been arguing the case on Twitter non-stop since. [00:06:45] Not well, I'm sorry. [00:06:46] It's conspicuous that the Archbishop chose to take a pilgrimage walk from London to Canterbury at the time and wasn't present for the vote. [00:06:53] Because you think she ended up attending due to public pressure and saying that it's wrong to criminalize women having abortions, but you know, abortions are bad. [00:07:06] How being a Christian would you come to that conclusion? [00:07:09] I don't know. [00:07:10] They're just libtards. [00:07:12] They're just died in the wool liberals. [00:07:14] And that fundamentally goes against the role of the church of being actually in opposition to the world. [00:07:19] They are simply absorbing everything that the world throws at them and saying, yes, can we have a little bit more, please? [00:07:26] And you see that in them voting against investing in any banks that don't fully commit to climate change. [00:07:36] Because instead of Christian eschatology, as expressed in Apocalypse, they have ended up with climate change as their version of eschatology. [00:07:47] But this is just pure liberalism. [00:07:49] This is just liberal dogma that has been substituted in exchange for Christianity. [00:07:54] And to confirm your point, they want to pay reparations for slavery. [00:08:02] Despite their leading role in abolishing it. [00:08:05] And despite the fact that we've done that, and we finished paying them off in 2015. [00:08:08] Exactly. [00:08:09] So, okay. [00:08:11] So they're still adamant that they should pay for slavery because instead of original sin, now we have slavery and opposition to homosexuality as being their original sin. [00:08:23] You probably won't be aware of this, but this person looks very similar to someone from the League of Gentlemen. [00:08:29] I know the League of Gentlemen, yes. [00:08:32] Am I wrong? [00:08:34] 127, I haven't seen it. [00:08:35] Right. [00:08:36] The shop chat. [00:08:38] Yes. [00:08:38] The shopkeeper's wife, right? [00:08:40] Clubs. [00:08:40] Yes. [00:08:42] Okay. [00:08:44] Didn't she say in 2018 that she admitted her own role in the church was to be subversive? [00:08:50] She used the phrase subversive. [00:08:52] Well, that doesn't surprise me one bit. [00:08:53] No. [00:08:54] And if so, she is playing her job excellently well. [00:08:58] Well, I mean, what more would you need? [00:09:01] I don't know. [00:09:02] I don't know. [00:09:03] But you see liberalism acting as a sort of universal solvent across every institution. [00:09:10] It's not just the Church of England. [00:09:12] Because this is, yeah, sure, this is what's happened, you know, in the last day or two, right? [00:09:16] But this is a consistent pattern of the universal acid just destroying every bond, reducing every standard, and abolishing every barrier. [00:09:25] And that was baked into liberalism from the very conception of it. [00:09:28] Yes. [00:09:29] Sorry, just another thing. [00:09:31] I had this argument with people saying, well, I mean, I'm not for modern liberalism. [00:09:35] I'm for classical liberalism because modern liberalism is just revolutionary against everything that came before it. [00:09:39] And it's like, what do you think the argument being made by the classical liberals was? [00:09:44] And what do you think they were opposing? [00:09:46] It's just they were so successful in destroying the traditional society that existed before. [00:09:51] You assume that the classical liberal society that you existed in until the mid-20th century was the natural state of mankind. [00:09:59] It's like, no, sorry. [00:10:00] They have just done a number consistently and they're continuing to do so in precisely the same tradition for exactly the same reasons that they always have. [00:10:08] The blank slate has been baked in since the beginning. [00:10:10] Yes. [00:10:11] 100%. [00:10:12] Exactly. [00:10:12] Exactly. [00:10:14] And I wanted to read to you, and I've... [00:10:17] Everybody watched our video. [00:10:22] David Lamy, honestly. [00:10:24] David Lamy speaking about justice and ending the Magna Carta. [00:10:29] Yeah. [00:10:31] There are three provisions left in the Magna Carta that are still in law. [00:10:34] One of them was your right to a trial by jury. [00:10:37] Was. [00:10:38] And here's his view on this. [00:10:40] After returning from the AI conference in India last week, new paragraph, where I saw firsthand how AI is supporting human judgment, new paragraph, to make better use of limited time and resources, again, [00:10:55] which matters hugely for public service across our country. [00:10:58] Recently I visited the Ontario Court of Justice in Toronto. [00:11:03] It's a large modern building, digital by design, purposefully paperless, with judge-only trials handing down quick and fair justice for summary and some more serious offenses. [00:11:16] It is efficient, orderly, and above all, it works. [00:11:21] And walking through the courthouse, I had an uncomfortable realization I felt less like a visitor from another country and more like one from another time, catching a glimpse of what could be. [00:11:32] That's what's good about Britain. [00:11:34] It's literally the good thing about Britain is that we carry the past with us rather than just abolish everything for the latest modern fad. [00:11:43] Exactly. [00:11:43] That was the one. [00:11:44] It sounds like Kamala Harris wrote that speech, but one of the rare instances where actually running it through Chat GPT would be a good idea. [00:11:52] Yeah. [00:11:52] It would have improved the spelling and cadence. [00:11:54] It reminds me, you and Dan went through an interview he gave with the Times a little while ago where he said, God himself has placed me on this earth. [00:12:02] A bit like you abolished jury trials. [00:12:04] He's speaking like General Butt naked during the Civil War. [00:12:06] Yes. [00:12:07] But in that, he said, the reason I reached this conclusion is because I read Charles Dickens' Bleak House, which I doubt because it's thicker than he is. [00:12:15] And the Jarndyce fortune was squandered by inefficient court procedures. [00:12:20] Someone should point out to Mr. Lammy. [00:12:21] It was a fiction. [00:12:22] Well, it wasn't a jury trial. [00:12:25] Entirely not a jury trial. [00:12:27] It was also made up. [00:12:28] It was the chancery courts depleting the fortune, which means the inefficient bureaucracy that is completely unaccountable wasted all the money that the patrimony that the Jardice family was trying to give to its heirs. [00:12:40] I somehow think there might be an analogy, a lesson we can draw from this for Kier Starmer's labour government. [00:12:46] In this story that Charles Dickens made up, it wasn't even the jury that was the problem. [00:12:51] Yes. [00:12:51] Yes. [00:12:52] Amazing. [00:12:53] Yeah. [00:12:54] And he goes on about how this is going to smash Lou DeLays and this is technology cutting complexity and freeing up people to do what they do best, whatever that is. [00:13:03] Hang on. [00:13:03] So hang on. [00:13:05] He wants to outsource it to AI. [00:13:06] He wants to outsource it to AI. [00:13:08] I don't think David Lammy is going to be delighted at the conclusions that Grok reaches about racial disparities in the criminal justice system. [00:13:15] Might be a bit of a disaster. [00:13:17] Honestly, right? [00:13:19] Judging from some of the judges that we have now, honestly, maybe it would be better for Grok to be overseeing the jury system. [00:13:26] Well, but yes, you could get Claude instead. [00:13:28] So, you know, because you could have Tay. [00:13:32] But the point is, it's the historical continuity of our 800-year-old right to a jury trial as English. [00:13:38] What do you think you are doing, Mr. Tureg tribesman, who for some reason is here? [00:13:43] You don't have this connection, do you? [00:13:45] You don't feel it in your heart. [00:13:46] He doesn't understand it. [00:13:47] He fundamentally doesn't understand the role of England's spiritual legacy in modern England. [00:13:55] He doesn't get it. [00:13:56] He thinks it's a question of efficiency, and the examples that he uses have nothing to do with justice. [00:14:02] It's just about transcribing. [00:14:05] Like, we're testing transcription in the courts and tribunals based on the same technology. [00:14:10] Like, it doesn't really matter. [00:14:12] I don't care if you use AI to transcribe court tribunals. [00:14:15] It's fine. [00:14:16] I just want a jury of my peers. [00:14:17] And by that, I mean Englishmen. [00:14:18] Thank you. [00:14:20] It is completely alien to him. [00:14:23] But this wrecking ball is continuing pretty much across every institution. [00:14:29] And you see it. [00:14:30] They finally the language of the BBC is incredible here. [00:14:36] The majority of hereditary peers who inherited their titles through their families were abolished in 1999 under the last Labour government. [00:14:44] This bill gets rid of the last remaining 92. [00:14:48] Brilliant. [00:14:49] The language itself is incredible. [00:14:51] Exactly. [00:14:52] Finally, despite all of the obstacles, we have finally brought about the end result of the French Revolution. [00:14:58] Exactly. [00:14:58] And that's what they've been trying to do this whole goddamn time. [00:15:01] Exactly. [00:15:01] That's what all of this is about. [00:15:02] That's what all of liberalism wants. [00:15:04] And I'm so tired of it. [00:15:05] And what I find so frustrating is, okay, what does that mean for the laws? [00:15:09] That means it's just going to be partisan political hackery in the law. [00:15:12] It's going to be another cronyistic patronage. [00:15:14] It's going to be a donors' club. [00:15:15] Exactly. [00:15:16] Paid money into these political parties. [00:15:18] They gave you a peer. [00:15:20] And the reason they'll be saying this is the argument will be, well, it's anti-democratic to have hereditary peers. [00:15:25] Okay, but it's no more democratic to have a rich donors' club of entitlements and nobilities. [00:15:31] Like, sorry, that doesn't, you know, all you're doing is reducing the prestige and the glory of Britain and its own history. [00:15:38] But also, okay, well, let's just go the whole hog then. [00:15:40] Have a Senate. [00:15:42] Like, just have a Senate then. [00:15:43] You know, if this is how you've got to do it, that would at least be more democratic from your own argument. [00:15:47] I don't want a Senate, but we may as well. [00:15:50] How else would we reward failure otherwise and get into two more Michael Goves, Lord Falconers, and Danny Finkelsteins? [00:15:56] Yeah, that's a great question. [00:15:57] Connor clear to us. [00:15:59] How else could we reward failure if people got to decide who got to sit there? [00:16:03] Great point. [00:16:04] And you can't separate the attack on hereditary peers from the attack on farmers. [00:16:10] You cannot separate the two because they represent the same thing, which is continuity and attachment to place and land. [00:16:18] That's what they fundamentally represent. [00:16:20] All of these hereditary peers have massive estates. [00:16:23] They come from somewhere. [00:16:25] They're proud of where they come from, just like the heirs of the peasants who used to take care of them and who used to stabilize their armies. [00:16:34] They have skin in the game. [00:16:35] Literally a bad thing. [00:16:36] They have ancestral skin in the game. [00:16:38] And the attacks come from the same exact principle. [00:16:42] So on the one side, you have the kulaks, on the other side, you have the nobility. [00:16:47] They're both being attacked by the heirs of the French Revolution. [00:16:50] You can't separate these two attacks. [00:16:52] And what's more is I've seen people arguing, well, what good do they do? [00:16:55] It's like, well, I don't know, man. [00:16:56] It's a 700-year-old institution. [00:16:58] And in that time, we became the world's largest empire and we made the modern world what it is. [00:17:03] Everyone speaks English because of these institutions. [00:17:07] Exactly. [00:17:07] You might not be able to literally enunciate what that institution does, but it clearly did something because you can't accidentally end up with this level of success. [00:17:15] In Chesterton, sorry, Chesterton did enunciate it and clarify it when he said the tradition is the democracy of the dead. [00:17:23] Your ancestors understood certain things. [00:17:26] They coded them into your mind under the name of prejudice and under the name of tradition. [00:17:32] You are wired to learn their lessons without fully understanding them through tradition, through ancestry. [00:17:40] And this is why the attack on farmers and the attack on hereditary peers are one and the same thing. [00:17:46] They're part of liberalism acting as a universal solvent. [00:17:49] And it's part of the continuity of the nation that has existed going back to the Magna Carta and beyond to now that's being cut. [00:17:58] And you can't just repair these things. [00:18:00] Once they're gone, they're gone. [00:18:01] It's also important to say that even on the argument of technical proficiency, it's going to fail. [00:18:05] So when I was haunting this parish, we would talk a lot about Oakshot's distinction between practical and technical knowledge, knowledge that you learn from a textbook versus knowledge that you learn from experience. [00:18:16] And most of the farmers have been raised on farms. [00:18:19] They will have inculticated themselves over a series of decades to work the family business and know things that you can't just learn if you're starting afresh with a guide handed to you by DEFRA. [00:18:29] But Will Hutton, Arch S-Lib, who writes for The Guardian, articulated this last year in saying it is fundamentally unfair to have small family farms inherited along a line of succession. [00:18:40] And actually, why is it unfair? [00:18:42] Because of the principle of meritocracy, this allows people that might otherwise hypothetically be better farmers that just haven't got farmland in their possession yet to make better use of the land. [00:18:51] So we actually need to pry it away from the families who have been raised to take care of the farm and have this practical knowledge to give it to whoever benefits from even his cousins. [00:19:00] Exactly, yeah. [00:19:01] Yeah. [00:19:01] Who we can give the textbook from Danny Finkelstein's sister running DEFRA, who can just, you know, learn how to grow all this stuff and do rewilding without fertilizer and all this sort of stuff. [00:19:09] And that's the point, isn't it? [00:19:11] There's just no possible way someone who has never run a farm could be a better farmer than an ancestral lineage of farmers. [00:19:17] It's just not possible. [00:19:18] And that argument itself obviously fails on its own merits, but isn't really about that anyway. [00:19:23] It's really about making sure that you're disconnected from your own country without history, brand new in year zero, and you have to now become a self-made man in their little system. [00:19:31] I hate it. [00:19:32] It is always year zero. [00:19:33] Yes. [00:19:34] It is meant to be always year zero. [00:19:36] Everybody gets a fresh start every day. [00:19:37] Yes. [00:19:38] Religiously, this is true, but in terms of farming or government, it isn't. [00:19:43] Religiously, that may well be true. [00:19:45] In the next life, where you get your rewards, this is why Christianity actually works and makes sense, right? [00:19:50] Because it's not trying to create the utopia in the world. [00:19:53] The Garden of Eden is guarded by the flaming sword of the angel or whatever. [00:19:57] You can't go back. [00:19:57] You have to make the best of it. [00:19:58] But in the next life, you get your reward. [00:20:00] Makes perfect sense. [00:20:01] Means we can get on with the world as things are. [00:20:04] You know, exactly. [00:20:05] Liberalism is desperate to bring about the Garden of Eden right now, and it can't happen and it's destroying everything. [00:20:10] I hate it. [00:20:11] Exactly. [00:20:12] And as this erosion of values and tradition continues, you see things like decriminalizing abortion until birth. [00:20:20] The desacralization of people. [00:20:22] Exactly. [00:20:22] People become numbers, they become material. [00:20:26] Exactly. [00:20:26] It just, okay, well, what's convenient? [00:20:27] What's inconvenient? [00:20:29] Well, if the baby is inconvenient, you kill it. [00:20:31] If grandmother is inconvenient, you kill her. [00:20:34] It's the same thing. [00:20:35] You devalue life because you've devalued everything else because the actual respect for life comes from Christianity. [00:20:43] And when you have this clown show LARPing as Christianity with Dame Sarah Malali, well, this is what you're going to get. [00:20:51] The two are not separable from each other. [00:20:54] The two are not different things. [00:20:56] They are part of the same battle, which is a spiritual battle, which is being fought against everything good, be it jury trials, hereditary peers, small landowners, farmers, tradition. [00:21:10] It's just one war. [00:21:12] And this has no breaking mechanism. [00:21:16] Because even the countryside is really problematic because minorities don't feel comfortable in it. [00:21:22] Yeah, well, the English people live there and minorities don't live there. [00:21:24] Therefore, that's a problem. [00:21:26] I mean, but if I don't like the British countryside, that's my problem. [00:21:30] That's not your problem. [00:21:32] I would have thought so too. [00:21:33] But I'm like an insane limptard who thinks I should be comfortable literally anywhere on earth. [00:21:38] For the record, I love the English countryside. [00:21:40] I find it gorgeous. [00:21:41] I find it deeply spiritually pacifying. [00:21:45] But that's not your problem either way. [00:21:48] Exactly. [00:21:48] And this is the thing about it. [00:21:50] Again, like this will literally is the dissolution of everything. [00:21:54] Things that you didn't think could ever be dissolved. [00:21:57] Like, what's they seem so permanent? [00:21:58] The thing is, what's the English countryside support supposed to look like? [00:22:02] A suburb of Nairobi. [00:22:05] Say again? [00:22:05] Uttar Pradesh? [00:22:07] Apparently. [00:22:08] Somalia, maybe? [00:22:09] Like, I don't understand. [00:22:10] Have you considered that this might be improved by about a billion Bamalians shouting into their speakerphone? [00:22:18] Getting the train to Swindom. [00:22:18] You just hadn't thought about that, had you? [00:22:23] Getting the train to Swindom is literally like being in a scene from Heart of Darkness. [00:22:27] It's unbelievable. [00:22:28] It is an assault on the senses. [00:22:30] It is an assault on the senses. [00:22:32] But it's an assault way of describing it. [00:22:33] It's an assault on England itself. [00:22:34] That's the thing. [00:22:35] To attack the shires is to attack the notion of English. [00:22:38] Yes. [00:22:38] I hate it. [00:22:39] It is the last retreat. [00:22:42] It's where we thought we were going to go to get away from the cities. [00:22:45] Because we're not natural city folk. [00:22:46] That's fine. [00:22:47] You know, they're an idea from the Industrial Revolution, a bad one. [00:22:49] I agree. [00:22:50] You know, fine. [00:22:51] But at least we'd always have the shires. [00:22:53] Not anymore. [00:22:54] Nope. [00:22:54] Nope. [00:22:55] Nope. [00:22:55] They need to be diversified. [00:22:57] And Will makes an excellent point here that basically this is asymmetrical multiculturalism. [00:23:02] 100%. [00:23:03] Like, it doesn't matter what you think. [00:23:05] It matters what I think, implying that I have a bigger claim on your country than you do. [00:23:09] It's always been asymmetrical. [00:23:11] Which is an insane concept. [00:23:12] Eric Kaufman describes it in White Shift as being the host of the world fair and not getting your own booth and just being told to be content that you're hosting everybody else. [00:23:21] And the idea that this won't generate resentment is just. [00:23:25] It's contrary to human nature. [00:23:26] And it requires a constant attack on English identity because their reaction is so natural. [00:23:36] And then you get this nonsense. [00:23:39] The very nature of the English language's dominion over England. [00:23:43] Like Polkard enclosed some don't want that person voting. [00:23:49] They obviously shouldn't be voting here. [00:23:51] Literally that simple. [00:23:53] So I've met Nick Timothy, good guy. [00:23:56] I think he's really come around and been radicalized by his time in the Home Office. [00:23:59] Again, he attended Rupert's rape gang trial, which is best I think could be said for most of his compatriots. [00:24:03] Yeah, absolutely. [00:24:04] However, unfortunately, he is still a member of the Conservatives. [00:24:06] And so it's likely the person being the recipient of this letter was brought in by his party and his government. [00:24:13] And this is why a lot of the, and I'm sure you agree, Firaz, the sort of counter-jihad faction has failed, because they're still one arm of liberalism. [00:24:21] They still say, much like the. [00:24:24] Their opposition to Islam is on liberal grounds. [00:24:26] Oh, what about our women? [00:24:27] What about our gays? [00:24:28] Well, not just that. [00:24:29] It's the same way that white English identity is considered the last stubborn stumbling block to John Lennon's imagine. [00:24:38] Yes. [00:24:38] It's the inverse liberal delusion on the ostensible right, which says Islam is the last bit of intolerance that keeps us divided between one another. [00:24:46] Otherwise, we'd all be, you know, hugging Sikhs like Matt Goodwin. [00:24:48] Yeah. [00:24:50] It completely makes zero sense. [00:24:52] And then, you know, just look at the map. [00:24:55] You see this sort of attack in the demographics. [00:24:59] I mean, you get areas that are just 10% English. [00:25:03] Well, look at London. [00:25:03] Yeah. [00:25:04] I mean, if you look at London, 15%, 30%. [00:25:07] We're going to be talking about Newham in a minute because it's just unbelievable. [00:25:10] And like, just anecdotally, one of my areas, my area is upwards of 80%, and it's mainly concentrated in other bits like the Eerith and Thamesmead. [00:25:19] But in the last year, this one's sharp on the census map. [00:25:21] In the last year, my high street, which is overwhelmingly white English, is four or five new vape shops, Turkish cafe, Turkish barbers that I've seen them doing drugs out of, and more HMOs. [00:25:33] So again, as you said, by the time the next one comes out, they don't want to release it. [00:25:36] Yeah, we will have, I mean, like, Lewis is going to have his hands full getting this information out of them. [00:25:42] Not if the BBC has anything to say about that. [00:25:44] Absolutely. [00:25:44] I mean, that's the thing. [00:25:45] Like, when you zoom out, you think, okay, that's not too bad. [00:25:47] 40-odd percent or whatever. [00:25:49] But no, when you zoom in, you realize just how particular this is. [00:25:52] Like, you know, five, four percent. [00:25:54] You know, that must mean one family left in this area from, again, just somewhere where the English have been living for 1,500 years. [00:26:02] And it's the same in London as well. [00:26:04] Like, certain areas. [00:26:05] This was all cockney, wasn't it? [00:26:07] Was back in the day. [00:26:08] Let's get back into where it is now. [00:26:10] Well, Bow is where my grandfather is. [00:26:12] I mean, the only reason the numbers in Hackney look at 23% is because there are a lot of people who work in the city at low-paid jobs and then they end up living in Hackney. [00:26:21] Look at that. [00:26:22] Because you can get the train rather easily into the centre. [00:26:24] Yeah, absolutely. [00:26:25] The tube's actually quite different. [00:26:26] Yeah, exactly. [00:26:27] 7%, 6%. [00:26:29] I mean. [00:26:30] It's mental. [00:26:30] It's just absolutely mental. [00:26:32] If you think this isn't what the rest of the country is, they've told us this is what they want to do with the Shires. [00:26:37] They've told us this. [00:26:39] So take them seriously. [00:26:41] And again, even in questions of national defense, where you'd think that this would matter, after the Russia-Ukraine war, the Royal Air Force was still discriminating against white British people. [00:26:57] So there is no breaking mechanism on this thing. [00:27:00] That's the point. [00:27:02] It is manifested in the Church of England in a rather comical way. [00:27:07] It is manifested in the RAF in a very sinister way. [00:27:11] And in between, all you get is this dissolution of everything, this destruction of everything. [00:27:17] Every erasure of everything. [00:27:18] Every standard that separates good from bad is being destroyed. [00:27:22] Exactly. [00:27:22] And you will be turned into not only a minority in your own land, but a second-class citizen. [00:27:26] Yes. [00:27:27] You think they're going to stop being racist against you when you're the minority? [00:27:31] Of course they're not. [00:27:32] I just can't stand it. [00:27:33] It's absolutely insufferable. [00:27:35] Anyway, let's read some Su Chats. [00:27:40] Carl Ferris, who's this gay guy you have on today? [00:27:42] Oof. [00:27:43] Oof, you guys are just lucky that Taylor Swifton put a new album before I left. [00:27:49] Are you not a Sabrina Carpenter fan now? [00:27:50] Yeah, a little bit. [00:27:51] Oh my god, that okay. [00:27:52] No, I stand by Saginaw. [00:27:54] What is a Sabrina Carpenter? [00:27:55] Like, leave me in my ignorance. [00:27:57] I'm happy girls who give toothy head. [00:28:00] Um, I can fix her. [00:28:04] I'm not Bruce Ranklin, but seeing them do the terrorist yell gives me the urge to be Guy Fawkes maxing. [00:28:09] Uh, urge to Cromwell and Tensifiers. [00:28:11] Yeah, I know. [00:28:11] I honestly just one of the senior fellows at the Adam Smith Institute in Preston, Jay Bayern, on X, he's gonna make a 40-page free speech bill for Britain. [00:28:20] Uh, okay, but it's not gonna pass and no one's gonna do anything about it. [00:28:23] Uh, the new archbishop was my local vicar, nice enough, but clearly fast-tracked to a high position due to her role in the NHS before. [00:28:28] She was not well, she was serving the original national, yeah. [00:28:31] Well, yeah, yeah, absolutely. [00:28:33] Um, anyway, let's let's move on to the next one. [00:28:34] Yeah, I mean, there's just no, like, it's it's just not a religious institution as you understand it. [00:28:40] No, it's a different religion, you just have to accept that it's gone, uh, right. [00:28:45] So, one thing that we talk about, of course, a lot is immigration, but have we considered that even the immigrants are sick of immigration? [00:28:52] Because uh, our boy Stephen Edgington recently went to the uh borough of uh Newham and asked some immigrants, Hey, how are things since the Boris wave? [00:29:03] And they're like, Oh, God, it's the worst thing I've ever seen. [00:29:05] Why are you doing this to us? [00:29:07] Uh, but so we'll go through it because it's honestly just brilliant interviews. [00:29:11] It's the Indian Pakistani side-by-side meme of we don't like your kind around here. [00:29:14] No, no, no, no, it's not even that, it's we don't like any of the other people around here, like they're not even familiar. [00:29:22] But anyway, before we begin, live event on the 11th of April in Swindon. [00:29:25] The link will be in the description. [00:29:26] It's going to be great. [00:29:26] It's good. [00:29:27] We've got three good solid hours as well. [00:29:29] And there's a bar there, so it's just going to be great. [00:29:31] And then afterwards, we'll be hanging out and drinking with you guys. [00:29:33] So, like I said, this was really, really interesting. [00:29:37] And I really appreciate Stephen actually taking the time to go out to the streets and just ask some people some questions. [00:29:42] And I thought we'd go through them. [00:29:44] Just for reference, this is Newham, as you can see, is 14.8% white English in 2021. [00:29:52] Now we are five years on or six years on from the 2020 census. [00:29:55] This could be seven, ten. [00:29:57] It's going to be way worse. [00:29:59] London was 37% white English, white British in 2021. [00:30:04] Well, from the data from 2020, it's probably going to be about 25% from the next one. [00:30:09] If that. [00:30:10] It's also important context to note that reforms to high-profile labor defectors were the former councillor and the former mayor of Newham. [00:30:17] So the people that made Newham as it is now, which you're about to see, have just jumped ship to reform, and this is something to celebrate. [00:30:25] Yeah. [00:30:25] And I mean, in their defense, though, what can a councillor and an MP do about what was the other councillor and what was the other? [00:30:32] Mayor. [00:30:32] The mayor. [00:30:33] They can't do anything about the demographics. [00:30:34] Yeah, but they shouldn't celebrate it. [00:30:36] Sure, I wish he did. [00:30:38] Obviously, but in their defense, there's nothing they can do about the demographics. [00:30:41] But yeah, so I mean, you know, you zoom in and you realize, oh, right, that's not even evenly spread, right? [00:30:47] So you've got some areas where you just literally don't even exist, really. [00:30:51] So anyway, I thought we'd just watch through some of these clips because they're just amazing. [00:30:55] So I clipped a bunch out and we'll go through them. [00:30:58] Here's a gent who's been in the country for 66 years. [00:31:00] So he came to England when it was good. [00:31:03] You can move around, you can see. [00:31:05] It's very difficult to see. [00:31:06] You very hardly see a white man. [00:31:09] So I nicknamed it Spot the White Man. [00:31:12] So you feel that this area is now less English than before? [00:31:15] Of course, definitely, most definitely. [00:31:17] And it's not a bad thing. [00:31:19] Well, I'll tell you something. [00:31:23] In one way, I feel sad. [00:31:26] Because my memory in the old days was that my neighbors, wherever I was, Brady Street, wherever I was, my neighbours always opened. [00:31:34] We went in and out. [00:31:34] They came in and out. [00:31:36] Here, I feel isolated. [00:31:38] I have no more. [00:31:39] I have few friends here, few friends, a solid friend near my house. [00:31:43] We meet out on the street or shopping. [00:31:45] That's what we meet. [00:31:47] And I see slowly they are moving away. [00:31:49] They are not around anymore. [00:31:51] So I will give it to you: 70%, 60% are migrants here, and I'll say 40% only the white people. [00:31:59] And that's optimistic, given what we know about the bloody maps. [00:32:02] But I doubt there is an area in Newham that is for that. [00:32:05] If I can't find one, there isn't a bloody 40%. [00:32:08] Nope. [00:32:09] So the highest is 23%. [00:32:11] Yeah. [00:32:11] So as you can see, this is someone who came decades ago and actually integrated and expected to live in England among the English. [00:32:20] And now he's like, oh, right. [00:32:21] So I don't. [00:32:22] And I feel isolated. [00:32:23] I feel lonely. [00:32:24] Like, this is what we've done to him, let alone what we've done to ourselves. [00:32:29] But we don't seem to care what we've done to ourselves. [00:32:32] So a lot of migrants, there was the intention of just escaping and not wanting to ever be in that position again. [00:32:42] Yeah. [00:32:43] Well, one thing I left Lebanon after working for a couple of years with Lebanese NGOs and the Lebanese military. [00:32:51] And god damn, corruption at levels, I know corruption, but I just didn't understand it at that age. [00:33:00] Well, the reason that there were something like a quarter of a million Indians employed by the British administration is because a lot of people in India respected the fact that Britain had the best administration in all of human history. [00:33:11] Like no one has ever administered anything half as well as we did because we had insane standards. [00:33:16] And that's the thing about immigration that isn't said sometimes. [00:33:20] No. [00:33:21] Which is that it is in a real sense a longing for colonialism and a longing for decent administration. [00:33:28] Lebanon never had it better than it did under the French. [00:33:30] Yeah. [00:33:32] There's a hilarious green text that's recirculated recently about a guy who lives in a Latin American country and he's telling other 4chan users, you don't know the struggle of being someone high IQ in Latin America. [00:33:42] I saw that. [00:33:42] Because everyone is either shaking their ass or talking about football or playing TikToks aloud or just engaging in the most gutter culture imaginable. [00:33:50] And you are socially shamed for not doing that. [00:33:52] But like, you know, like an autistic kid not coming downstairs to join the family gathering, bringing back childhood memories. [00:33:58] And so that guy is clearly one of these exceptional outliers that's that's so exceptional is like a named historical character. [00:34:04] Those people, we should limit the countries they come from, don't get me wrong, but those people may be capable of being incorporated into a broader social texture. [00:34:13] But when you bring over all of their countrymen, you just recreate the conditions of their country that they fled. [00:34:18] Small land, remember, it's about having actually spent the time to provide the service, right? [00:34:25] Like his parents would have been administrators in Uganda or whatever. [00:34:29] So he was brought up. [00:34:30] So his entire life, their money came from the British Empire. [00:34:34] The rules they all followed were from Britain. [00:34:37] And all of the people around them that had authority above them were respectable British administrators, well-trained aristocrats, all these sorts of things. [00:34:44] So yeah, why wouldn't you look at that system and go, oh, wow, these guys are really good. [00:34:48] These are really clever. [00:34:48] I respect this. [00:34:50] Now, do you think anyone comes to this country respecting us? [00:34:53] Of course not. [00:34:54] We're dilapidated. [00:34:54] So the minute you offer benefits, you break that agreement completely. [00:34:58] Absolutely. [00:34:59] Completely destroy that pact. [00:35:01] Yeah, absolutely. [00:35:02] So he laments immigration, but I'll skip this one just for the sake of time. [00:35:06] And then he points out, yeah, it's not getting any safer. [00:35:08] But with the immigration thing, is they need to respect the law of the land. [00:35:13] I walk down the street every day and I get sniffed drugs just that street cross the road. [00:35:18] I was mugged there twice. [00:35:20] It's terrible. [00:35:21] Imagine being mugged twice in the place that you've lived for 60 years. [00:35:25] But I would just, it'd be mad. [00:35:27] Here's another chap, again, an immigrant who just doesn't feel safe because of what's been done. [00:35:31] Are you from Newham? [00:35:32] Yes, the last 15 years to be living here. [00:35:37] And has the area changed much because of immigration recently? [00:35:41] It changed a lot and it's not safe now. [00:35:44] I don't feel safe to be living here. [00:35:49] Yeah, no kidding. [00:35:50] Again, it's like performance art that's outside a dodgy vape shop with all the graffiti. [00:35:56] Where else could you frame it? [00:35:58] But that's all you're going to have on those streets. [00:36:02] Here's another one who realizes that he... isn't English because he doesn't understand English well enough to understand the question of do you feel English. [00:36:12] A lot of people have moved here from Bangladesh and India and Pakistan. [00:36:17] Do you feel they're integrating into the country? [00:36:19] Do they speak English and so on? [00:36:24] Yes, speak English is okay. [00:36:27] So many people English knows English. [00:36:34] Do you feel English? [00:36:36] My English is not proper. [00:36:39] You have to answer. [00:36:41] And do you feel English yourself? [00:36:45] No, because I need to do more integration than with the English people and I need to more learning the English. [00:36:54] Then I think so is I feel because at the moment my English is not too much good. [00:37:00] The Matt Goodwin position. [00:37:02] I don't want to hear about integration. [00:37:05] It's long since integration. [00:37:06] Integrate numbers. [00:37:07] Yeah. [00:37:08] You can't integrate large numbers. [00:37:10] It's impossible. [00:37:11] By definition, it's impossible. [00:37:12] This chap would probably have been one of a handful of Pakistani men in the area that he lived in like 1960. [00:37:20] So yeah, okay, you've got no choice but to integrate. [00:37:22] You've got no choice but to learn the language. [00:37:23] You've got no choice but to become friends with your neighbors. [00:37:26] But when you have just this constant stream of global nomads coming and going, you can't do that. [00:37:32] But also it's about, of course, civilizational proximity. [00:37:36] And as Connor, good name, from Pete McCormack's show, put to you in your appearance, he said, and this is what lots of people are now feeling, regarding certain nationalities and especially religions, was not starting with one of them how we got here in the first place. [00:37:50] And so even if, let's say, this wonderful Salafi chap here with his bright orange dyed beard looks like a very serious man, even if he was the only Pakistani man on his street, would he ever integrate in such a meaningful fashion? [00:38:04] I think you would have no choice, right? [00:38:05] I don't think so. [00:38:06] I genuinely do think so. [00:38:08] You would have no choice. [00:38:09] But you are right that there's something else missing, and that is, frankly, imperial rule. [00:38:14] Because, for example, when this chap came, when my grandfather came, like the these people were big fans of what the British Empire had done to the world, right? [00:38:22] They thought that the British Empire was Gargantuan, mighty, and a civilizing force. [00:38:27] And so when you come to England, you realize that you have an obligation because you want to uphold what the British Empire is doing. [00:38:35] But these guys down here, this second guy in here, definitely too young to have experienced that. [00:38:43] The world after the imperial rule is something completely different. [00:38:47] As you said, it's full of benefits. [00:38:49] It's full of licentiousness. [00:38:50] It's full of the hands-off permissive state. [00:38:52] It's like, oh no, don't worry about anything. [00:38:54] Really, this is a country for everyone. [00:38:56] We're diverse. [00:38:57] And so you've got nothing to respect. [00:39:00] There's no reason you'd want to integrate, even if you, you know, with the best will in the world. [00:39:05] And then you've got, like you said, the numbers, right? [00:39:08] So even if you had like some random guy who at least thought well of the country and wanted to integrate, like if I moved to like a Greek village or something, I would do my best to integrate and I would learn the language because I would have no choice, right? [00:39:20] And that's just not something that happens now. [00:39:23] But anyway, I wanted to finish on this Englishman from Surrey, who is just so funny, just so absolutely funny. [00:39:32] He gives this segment of the interview like he's got a gun to his head, right? [00:39:37] As if he is terrified because suddenly he knows, oh, I'm a white Englishman talking about immigration and diversity. [00:39:42] What are the approved lines? [00:39:44] Oh, I know the approved lines. [00:39:46] And this is just amazing. [00:39:47] Watch, keep an eye on the background. [00:39:49] Have you noticed a change in sort of demographics, the people who live here and so on? [00:39:53] Not in not particularly. [00:39:55] It's always been a multicultural area. [00:39:58] Live from the set of Star Wars. [00:40:00] It's like that. [00:40:01] Psychological experiment where they're throwing the netball around because you're concentrating on, yeah. [00:40:06] Yeah, you know, literally, have you noticed anything in demographics? [00:40:09] No, I'm not allowed to notice. [00:40:10] If I want to keep my job, if I want my friends to accept me, I can't notice anything. [00:40:15] And it's just absolutely classic. [00:40:16] So, no, I'm totally blind. [00:40:18] I'm an idiot. [00:40:19] I've never seen anything. [00:40:20] And the point is, of course, of course he notices. [00:40:23] He's just a coward, right? [00:40:25] That's what this guy's problem is. [00:40:26] He is an absolute f ⁇ ing coward. [00:40:28] And I've come to despise him just from this clip. [00:40:31] It's what I kind of like about these sort of areas. [00:40:33] I'm from Leafy Surrey, which are predominantly rich white people. [00:40:38] But yeah, no, it's always been a multicultural area. [00:40:42] I don't see it hasn't even changed in any great deal, to be honest with you. [00:40:47] There's another one. [00:40:49] There's another one. [00:40:50] It's like a spawn point. [00:40:54] It's literally like some sort of early 2000s comedy show. [00:40:59] The blue ones tend to be Afghan. [00:41:01] Oh, I have no idea. [00:41:02] Just as I said, you know. [00:41:05] Okay, so there's a Pakistani one and an Afghan one. [00:41:07] The blue ones tend to be Afghan, yes. [00:41:09] Right. [00:41:10] It's true. [00:41:11] It's very diverse. [00:41:13] Yeah, I mean, I guess that is diversity, but it's just... [00:41:15] They probably hate each other. [00:41:17] There's a good chance that the... [00:41:19] Hey, we finally have something in common. [00:41:20] I just can't believe you can get two different ones in the same interview. [00:41:23] This was like a three-minute interview he did. [00:41:25] And it's just constantly. [00:41:26] It's like, no, no, no. [00:41:26] Diversity has always been our strength, essentially, is what he's saying here. [00:41:29] But of course, that's not true. [00:41:30] It's not true that this has always been a diverse area. [00:41:33] It's actually only in the latter half of the 20th century this has happened. [00:41:37] Anyway, so yeah, he's completely in favour of all of this, obviously. [00:41:40] This is integration. [00:41:41] Do you feel people have integrated well speaking English and so on? [00:41:45] As far as I'm aware, I see. [00:41:48] I only see good in people, to be honest with you. [00:41:51] I only see some people that don't. [00:41:55] That don't can't speak English, don't integrate, but what can you do? [00:42:00] It's not for me to say. [00:42:01] When I go on holiday, I don't speak Spanish, I don't speak Portuguese or whatever. [00:42:05] Are you living in Spanish? [00:42:07] Yeah, moronic coward, right? [00:42:10] Do they integrate? [00:42:11] It's like, yeah, I guess. [00:42:12] If I just say yes to everything, then I can't possibly get in trouble. [00:42:15] It's like, well, do you think that they're speaking and do you think they're living? [00:42:19] It's like, well, I don't see it because I'm totally blind. [00:42:21] I'm not allowed to see anything. [00:42:22] But notice how much he's like fidgeting. [00:42:26] He looks really nervous. [00:42:26] He's like, oh, God, if I give the wrong answer to this, I'm getting shot. [00:42:30] This is the body language of the president in the Camp of the Saints when he's giving his final speech. [00:42:34] And you know when he falters, he refuses to give the order for the military to turn the boat back. [00:42:39] He just doesn't have the stomach for it. [00:42:41] And at the last minute, allows the Calcutta star to board into France. [00:42:45] And this is exactly how I expect he would deliver that speech. [00:42:47] Just look how nervous he is and how evasive he is. [00:42:50] I feel sorry for him. [00:42:52] Yeah, I know. [00:42:52] Well, I don't, because he's a coward. [00:42:55] He's got family, he's got an income, he's got a job that he would lose if he said the wrong thing. [00:43:00] Maybe. [00:43:02] It's not easy when you lose your job because of this kind of stuff. [00:43:05] Yeah, but this is only possible because of people not speaking out about it. [00:43:08] Yes. [00:43:08] And it's only possible because compliance. [00:43:10] At the very least, you could have said to Steve, oh, I'd actually prefer not to answer that question. [00:43:13] No, thanks. [00:43:14] You don't have to go along with the light. [00:43:16] Exactly. [00:43:17] Exactly. [00:43:17] He said, I can't talk about it. [00:43:18] This is true. [00:43:19] This is true, but it takes fortitude. [00:43:20] And he's forced himself into believing, oh, no, no, no. [00:43:25] Actually, diversity is our strength. [00:43:26] This has always been this way. [00:43:27] I've not noticed anything. [00:43:28] They all seem fine, even if they don't speak English. [00:43:30] I mean, how when I go on holiday to Spain, I don't speak Spanish. [00:43:33] It's like, do you live in Spain? [00:43:34] Do you think these Burkers behind you were on holiday? [00:43:38] Why would they go on holiday to Newham? [00:43:40] Like, of all the places on earth that don't feel safe, would they choose that one? [00:43:45] Anyway, so he tells us, well, what's your long-term plan, boy? [00:43:50] And are you planning on staying here? [00:43:52] For until I move out of the country, yeah. [00:43:55] Oh, really? [00:43:55] Are you moving? [00:43:56] Not in any hour. [00:43:57] Soon, no, but that would be my long-term gain. [00:44:00] We've only bought in the house three years ago, so I'd rather move out of the UK. [00:44:06] You're right, I have contempt for him. [00:44:07] Right. [00:44:08] You see what I mean? [00:44:09] Total coward. [00:44:11] Sick of it, right? [00:44:12] He knows exactly what the problem is. [00:44:14] He's just too afraid to say it. [00:44:16] And instead of actually trying to get involved and try and solve these problems, he's instead like, yeah, I'm just going to flee the country. [00:44:22] Why? [00:44:22] Because I came from Surrey. [00:44:24] It's leafy. [00:44:25] It's rich white people. [00:44:26] As if they're bad. [00:44:27] As if hardworking white British people are bad. [00:44:30] And yet he's cowardly going along with all of the lies and the humiliation of the regime. [00:44:36] Diversity is our strength. [00:44:37] I love it so much. [00:44:38] I'm getting as far away from it as possible. [00:44:40] I'm fleeing the country when I can. [00:44:42] Buying my house in Newham was a mistake. [00:44:44] Yeah, bloody was. [00:44:46] Anyway, so yeah, this, as I said, this was insufferable. [00:44:50] But I just want to finish off with this little interview with Ibram X. Kendi on the news agents, which popped up on my feed. [00:44:58] That's a name I haven't heard in a while. [00:44:59] Yeah, because apparently he's got a new book out, so he's got to do a tour, right? [00:45:03] And so he's gone to the news agents and he's just like, well, I mean, a white supremacist conspiracy theories infected UK politics and no one noticed. [00:45:11] Guess which conspiracy theory that was, Connor? [00:45:14] Is it the conspiracy theory that we got a week strike for when I raised it on my show before? [00:45:19] Maybe. [00:45:21] I'm going to guess it's the large substitution theory. [00:45:24] That's correct. [00:45:25] You know, how could you possibly believe the substitution theory? [00:45:31] And so I'm not going to obviously. [00:45:33] I don't know, man. [00:45:34] I just read the ONS statistics. [00:45:35] Yeah, yeah. [00:45:36] I don't know, man. [00:45:37] I just watch Man on the Street interviews. [00:45:40] I just keep watching them and they just keep coming up. [00:45:42] And I'm just like, wow. [00:45:44] And then I just listen to the immigrants themselves. [00:45:46] And they're like, spot the white man. [00:45:48] Where have they gone? [00:45:49] And I don't know, Ibram. [00:45:50] I don't know, man. [00:45:51] Don't know what to tell you. [00:45:52] Anyway, we'll leave that there. [00:45:56] Habsification says, yeah, the diversity of different niqabs. [00:45:58] Truly beautiful. [00:46:01] I mean, I guess. [00:46:02] Legitimate question. [00:46:03] If your ancestors could see what becomes of their empire and country, do you think they'd do things differently or not bother with the empire at all? [00:46:09] Yeah, well, they'd definitely do things differently. [00:46:11] The problem is the advance of liberalism through the 19th century and into the 20th had a kind of intellectual momentum that it's really kind of unfair to have expected them to have really understood it and arrested it in their own time. [00:46:26] But we're not in their time. [00:46:28] We have the advantage of at least having seen it play out and being able to fully understand it. [00:46:32] So we've got no excuse. [00:46:33] Anyway, let's move on. [00:46:34] Excellent. [00:46:35] Well, YouTube, it's been a while and I am not exactly known for my optimism. [00:46:39] So I'm back to be a prophet of doom. [00:46:41] How are you doing? [00:46:42] As we've seen recently, there have been a series of dirty tricks being played in politics. [00:46:48] As we'll get into, I myself have been subject to one in just the last week. [00:46:52] Nice of the police to give me something to talk about in this long-planned return. [00:46:56] So I want to prepare us as we embark upon presenting an authentic anti-establishment political offering in Restore Britain for the sort of smears and attacks and state sabotage that we're inevitably going to face. [00:47:10] Doesn't behoove you to be too paranoid. [00:47:14] But before I do so, I've been told to shoot the live event. [00:47:17] You guys are going to be at the Mecca Swindon on the 11th of April. [00:47:20] Get your tickets. [00:47:21] It's on the website. [00:47:22] And if I can vouch for the live event, actually, you may remember this. [00:47:25] First time I met you in person was 2021 live event. [00:47:28] What was it? [00:47:28] In October. [00:47:29] I didn't know that. [00:47:30] Yeah, yeah, you thought I was a real knob. [00:47:33] So, you know, if you want to come and make a better class impression than I did, go and get your tickets. [00:47:40] Anyway, so I thought I'd start with the supposed Potemkin cancellation of non-crime hate incidents. [00:47:47] Because much like everything our English Home Secretary, Shabana Mahmoud, does, it's to keep the system on rails without provoking too much public outrage. [00:47:57] Much like paying all of her Pakistani countrymen a full year's salary in rupees to go back and also creating new safe and legal routes for refugees. [00:48:07] This headline from the Telegraph is pretty misleading, actually. [00:48:10] So for those that don't know, non-crime hate incidents are scarlet letters against your name for saying offensive things online or in person. [00:48:17] They can be reported anonymously. [00:48:19] They appear on your permanent record. [00:48:20] And despite multiple attempts by a friend of the show, Harry Miller and Suella Braveman, to restrict their recording, it's only gotten worse. [00:48:28] Just to be clear, they're non-crimes. [00:48:30] They're not crimes. [00:48:31] You didn't do anything illegal. [00:48:33] Yes. [00:48:33] But I'll bet that everybody here has one. [00:48:35] Oh, absolutely. [00:48:36] I mean, what they are is political. [00:48:38] These are political crimes that are being recorded as if this was some sort of polyp bureau. [00:48:42] Yeah, well, they're like indulgences, because the reason they were created is after the murder of Stephen Lawrence in 1993, which for our American viewers is basically like Britain's George Floyd, the McPherson report was released investigating why the police were apparently so reluctant to prosecute the killers. [00:48:57] And that's where the term institutional racism comes along. [00:49:00] So in 2014, in the Hate Crimes Operational Guidance, they introduced non-crime hate incidents to police the private faults of the public to prove the Met police themselves were not racist. [00:49:09] So it's to expunge their guilty consciences and prove their anti-racist credentials. [00:49:13] The headline is misleading, though, because as it says here, the reforms have been laid forth by a chap called Lord Hansen, who's a Home Office Minister. [00:49:22] And he told the Lords that actually what they're going to do is they're going to reform the recording process with a more appropriate framework to ensure any incidents recorded by police were proportionate and firmly focused on the most serious. [00:49:36] So they're still going to do it. [00:49:38] Especially with the new definition of anti-Muslim hatred. [00:49:41] So what they're going to do is they're going to be religiously partisan. [00:49:44] It's for offensive statements to Jews and Muslims, basically. [00:49:47] So they're not going away. [00:49:48] They're just being recorded in a way that further targets the indigenous population who complain about mass demographic substitution. [00:49:55] Just a quick thing on that. [00:49:57] Have you ever had an can you think of a single event, occasion, where a non-white British person has been criminalized for a hate crime? [00:50:09] Headlines have been made about their criticism of Jews. [00:50:13] Other than that, they often haven't been prosecuted. [00:50:16] Exactly, but have they been prosecuted as a hate crime? [00:50:18] And as far as I'm aware, I can't think of a single one. [00:50:20] Especially not against white people in particular. [00:50:22] But even then, just generally, is there a single non-white person who has been prosecuted for a hate crime? [00:50:28] I seem to remember a couple of Muslims attacking some lesbians on a bus, but I don't know if that was actually prosecuted as a hate crime at the moment. [00:50:35] And all of these cases, I genuinely don't think they are, but sorry. [00:50:38] No, no, no, no, it's worthwhile point. [00:50:40] I just wanted to point out, though, that it's not just non-crime hate incidents that can be used to try to deter you from speaking out about some contentious topics. [00:50:51] Because two days ago, I got a knock on the door at 10.30 in the morning and two police officers showed up. [00:50:56] And I thought it was going to be a printout of my greatest hits, or at least they were going to have. [00:51:01] Yes, that is most words feed officer. [00:51:03] Yeah. [00:51:04] You know, deliver my hope not hate Oscar in person. [00:51:10] Unfortunately, instead, they turned up and they said, oh, we've had reports of the domestic disturbance and claims of coercive control lodged anonymously. [00:51:20] So that's just a thing that you can do now. [00:51:22] I still have no idea who did this. [00:51:25] Just a quick pause. [00:51:27] Core facet of British justice was being able to face your accuser. [00:51:30] Doesn't matter about that. [00:51:31] Carry on. [00:51:31] Yeah, quite. [00:51:32] So they interviewed myself and my wife in separate rooms. [00:51:34] They asked each of us if we had been shouting at each other, if I had locked her out the house over an argument, if she had tried to kill me. [00:51:42] And I said, Well, you know, some of her stories are pretty boring, but beyond that, no. [00:51:46] And then after about 20 minutes, one of the officers who was very reasonable, but fortunately, I didn't get, you know, remember that really famous photo of the blonde police officer and the Muslim policewoman knocking on the door. [00:51:56] If it had been them, I'd be sitting in a holding cell. [00:51:58] Fortunately, it was two reasonable lads. [00:51:59] And they said, as is in the clip that I posted, they think it's quote malicious and politically motivated. [00:52:04] Oh, really? [00:52:04] So that means that anyone can just weaponize your family against you with an anonymous claim. [00:52:09] They don't even need to know where you live and who your family members are. [00:52:13] They can just make up things about you and send the police to your door. [00:52:15] It's obviously an intimidation tactic. [00:52:17] Yes. [00:52:18] And so what I found out, because I spoke to someone who used to work at Women's Aid who understands these things, much like non-crime hate incidents, there is an anonymous recording incident of domestic abuse list that means I'm probably on this list now. [00:52:33] Oh. [00:52:34] So through disclosure and barring service checks, which you know, where non-crime hate incidents show up that can stop you from getting jobs, even if it's a false accusation, it can also show up. [00:52:43] Amazing. [00:52:44] So the permanent threat of destroying your reputation is used in a political fashion to get you to stop talking about given topics. [00:52:52] I did a live stream the other day saying, look, false allegations are going to come. [00:52:55] The dirty tricks are going to start. [00:52:56] Just be prepared. [00:52:58] And here we are. [00:52:59] Exactly. [00:53:00] And we should have all seen it coming as well because Rupert Lowe had the worst of it. [00:53:02] Yes. [00:53:03] They showed up in the middle of the night, they confiscated his shotguns. [00:53:05] Again, on a false allegation, he's. [00:53:07] Franj admitted it. [00:53:08] Saying, no, it's because he said we should be deporting the families of Muslim rape gangs. [00:53:12] Yes. [00:53:13] He literally said it. [00:53:14] And he said it was brutal. [00:53:16] But that's how it's going to be. [00:53:17] Exactly. [00:53:17] So they admitted it was a political assassination. [00:53:19] They admitted they were going to weaponize the law. [00:53:21] And they want to put the man who called the police three months after the supposed incident that the Crown Prosecution Service, who were always looking for an excuse, didn't find any evidence of, they want to put him in charge of the police. [00:53:32] Zia Youssef, if he would become home secretary, would be in charge of the police officers that are tasked with carrying this out. [00:53:38] So just one thing to remember. [00:53:40] And so it's worthy of keeping in mind, as you said, the dirty tricks will be played to try to stop Restore Britain, any of its surrogates, any of its supporters from achieving any kind of power or traction. [00:53:50] And one of the ways they're going to do this is state propaganda. [00:53:52] I won't play this clip because, of course, the BBC are trigger happy with copyright strikes. [00:53:58] But I am going to sulk about the fact that Lewis Brackpool was depicted as a BBC drama villain before I got my shake. [00:54:05] Same with Lander. [00:54:06] Lander's just walking through the field recording himself on his phone, and this is clearly modelled on him. [00:54:10] I'm very upset. [00:54:11] But what cracked me up is how... [00:54:13] No, I'm not going to say that. [00:54:17] I'm not going to make jokes. [00:54:18] I'm not going to make jokes. [00:54:19] I'm not allowed to make jokes. [00:54:20] Let's carry on. [00:54:21] For those that haven't seen it, this is a guy who's fired off nine Freedom of Information Access requests to the Home Office to find out data on how much they're spending on illegal migrant hotels. [00:54:31] At one point, he aims a rifle at like the one woman and child that has crossed in a dinghy in the last how many years. [00:54:37] Freedom of information requests, assassinating children, basically the same thing. [00:54:41] Yeah, at the same time, that easy continuum that leads them to. [00:54:44] Well, transparency in the government is akin to terrorism. [00:54:47] I mean, pretty clear about this in their new social cohesion strategy. [00:54:50] And it's funny because the show's creator, so this is the capture. [00:54:53] I haven't watched a single second of it beyond this clip because I don't want to waste my time. [00:54:56] But the show's creator says that whatever's going on in the news cycle will work its way into the show eventually. [00:55:03] At least that shows that Lewis Brackpool is affecting the news cycle, right? [00:55:06] Exactly. [00:55:07] Yes. [00:55:07] That shows the power. [00:55:08] There's a level of honesty there that is actually refreshing. [00:55:11] That yes, we are using propaganda against you. [00:55:14] Because we are using. [00:55:15] Yes. [00:55:16] Exactly. [00:55:16] Yeah. [00:55:17] Because you're a threat to the status quo and you haven't been fully replaced and subjugated yet. [00:55:22] And you dare protest. [00:55:23] Yes. [00:55:23] If you're taking fire, you're over the target. [00:55:25] So now the state has created a version of Radio Rwanda to constantly cloud seed the public consciousness with suspicion of people who are doing investigative journalism about the number one issue that matters to the electorate. [00:55:39] This is like when I got put in Coronation Street for beating up migrant children. [00:55:42] Yeah, exactly. [00:55:43] That was what sent you. [00:55:44] Are you not aware of this? [00:55:45] What? [00:55:46] Okay. [00:55:47] Rewind to, I think it was 2022. [00:55:49] Yeah. [00:55:49] So Coronation Street did a story about a online influencer who was hosting town hall meetings, dressed very much like Carl, giving very compelling speeches. [00:56:00] Right. [00:56:00] Really? [00:56:01] Good speeches, actually. [00:56:02] The speeches, they must have literally lifted our rhetoric verbatim. [00:56:06] It was really comparing immigrants to invasive species like grey squirrels. [00:56:12] And then it was using online propaganda to clip his dissenters to basically mog and make fun of them. [00:56:17] And then he would moonlight as a Balaclava gang just beating up random Syrian children. [00:56:24] I don't do that. [00:56:26] I have no conviction for beating anyone up. [00:56:28] No. [00:56:29] I don't. [00:56:29] No. [00:56:30] But it is also very... [00:56:31] That's why they're bad. [00:56:32] You know, these influencers, they might have a good point on one hand, but they also beat up children. [00:56:36] So we've gone from beating up children to pointing rifles at them, and then you could sort of see this progressing gradually as the threat level that is generated by the online right escalates, [00:56:49] so do their fictional crimes on the BBC. [00:56:54] Well, that's fascinating. [00:56:54] They must be getting more and more scared. [00:56:56] What were you? [00:56:57] Especially so, because if you remember, one of Lewis's FOIs revealed that the government were dictating the storylines in soaps to do with climate change, the COVID vaccine, and immigration. [00:57:08] So I wonder whether or not the government had any input on this. [00:57:11] I think that's worthy of an FOI, fellas, don't you? [00:57:14] Yep. [00:57:15] And speaking of organizations that are engaged in sabotage, here's a piece of niche legislation that Boris Johnson's wonderful government gifted to us. [00:57:23] Have you heard of the Covert Human Intelligence Sources Criminal Conduct Act of 2020? [00:57:27] I haven't. [00:57:28] Yeah, most people haven't. [00:57:29] So this is a bill that allows the government to, it's an act to make provision for and in connection with the authorization of criminal conduct in the course of or otherwise in connection with the conduct of covert human intelligence sources if criminal conduct is in the interests of national security for the purpose of preventing or detecting crime or preventing disorder or in the interests of economic well-being of the United Kingdom. [00:57:56] So for any reason that can be economic well-being. [00:58:00] They're trying to spy on the Chinese, but they're too fucking retarded to do it properly. [00:58:03] Go on. [00:58:04] But also, how broad a mandate is that? [00:58:06] Yes. [00:58:07] Say anything is. [00:58:08] If immigration is an unalloyed economic good, then any entity, any individual, any political party that is promising to reverse that settlement would be a target through subterfuge, sabotage, even criminal conduct. [00:58:22] Would you like to know the organizations that are listed in this bill, which is currently law, that are allowed to break the law pursuant to those goals? [00:58:29] There's a big, long list down here somewhere. [00:58:33] It is, ah, here it is. [00:58:34] Any police force, the National Crime Agency, the Serious Fraud Office, any of the intelligence services, the armed forces, HM Revenue in Customs. [00:58:42] The worst of them. [00:58:43] Government departments, so the Department of Health and Social Care, the Home Office, remember Reich, the back and anger department, the Ministry of Justice, David Lammy, will be very happy. [00:58:53] The Competition and Markets Authority, the Environment Agency, the Financial Conduct Authority, the Food Standards Agency, and the Gambling Commission. [00:59:00] The Gambling Commission. [00:59:01] The entire government is allowed to break the law, do anything, mind you, as long as it's in the national interest. [00:59:09] And the national interest is determined as you can't threaten Britain's economic boom that is Infinity Wimalians. [00:59:17] That's mad. [00:59:17] Yeah. [00:59:18] I didn't know about that. [00:59:18] This is currently law. [00:59:19] I wonder if there are any organizations that have been a beneficiary of this. [00:59:24] Reminder. [00:59:25] Good question, Toby Young. [00:59:26] Lord Young, sorry. [00:59:28] Quite. [00:59:28] So Lord Young, Toby Young, writes that in 2019 to 2020, Hope Not Hate received £141,380 of taxpayers' money handed to them by the Conservative government. [00:59:40] Thanks, Michael Goh, specifically. [00:59:41] It was the Department of Communities, Housing and Leveling Up that did that. [00:59:46] The money was given to Hope Not Hate Charitable Trust, which has now been rebranded to Hope Unlimited because of their battle with the Charity Commission. [00:59:54] Lowells was a member of the Home Office's Commission for Countering Extremism, that same body that is happy to break the law. [01:00:00] Curious how Nick Lowells has spread disinformation about violence against Muslim women and hundreds specifically. [01:00:07] Exactly. [01:00:08] And hundreds of far-right rallies that would materialise that would otherwise get someone investigated. [01:00:12] But mysteriously, he's evaded prosecution for that. [01:00:15] And of course, as we've covered before, Leron Vellaman, a mainstay of the Jewish labor movement, was on the board of a North London synagogue as well. [01:00:23] Hope not hate writer. [01:00:24] Yeah, exactly. [01:00:25] He represented Hope Not Hate at the hearings for the formation of the Online Safety Act to talk about how he can keep children safe online. [01:00:33] Turns out he's convicted Pedophile. [01:00:35] Brilliant. [01:00:35] Specifically, grooming children online. [01:00:37] Yes. [01:00:38] That was specifically his crime. [01:00:39] Quite, quite. [01:00:40] And it's interesting because this isn't the only, of course, criminal allegation that has happened with Hope Not Hate, and it's not the only person convicted of a crime over at Hope Not Hate. [01:00:48] We've got who is the guy in 2013, the former member of the National Front, who said, Hope not hate, you are a Red Army. [01:00:56] Matthew Collins. [01:00:57] Right. [01:00:57] He admitted to attacking Asian women with a hammer. [01:01:00] Very strange. [01:01:01] Mental. [01:01:01] Yeah. [01:01:02] And of course, there was Jerry Gable, who used to run Searchlight that employed Nick Lowells, who burglarized, I think it was David Irving's flat or something like that. [01:01:09] Was it? [01:01:09] Yeah, it was. [01:01:10] Yeah, yeah. [01:01:10] So yet again, communist criminal rest in peace, I suppose. [01:01:14] So all of this criminal conduct, but being a beneficiary of the state, enjoying a parliamentary working group, having access to Downing Street via Morgan McSweeney, Baroness Ruth Anderson, formerly Smeath, [01:01:26] being on their board and now being a senior member of the House of Lords and now holding a senior position in the cabinet office. [01:01:32] One must wonder if the likes of Hope Not Hate are the beneficiaries of protections under the Covert Human Intelligence Act. [01:01:38] And so one must wonder if said protections extend to Harry Shutman's fake passport. [01:01:42] Well, that's a great question, isn't it? [01:01:44] Where did this come from? [01:01:46] Yes. [01:01:46] So they have provided the excuse, and the spectator have given an apology for printing an article saying it seems to be a fake passport. [01:01:57] And Hope Not Hate were provided the opportunity to respond and clarify, and they didn't respond, so they printed the article anyway. [01:02:02] It was a passport with his face on, but a different name. [01:02:05] Yes. [01:02:05] And as it turns out, he was writing under his own name for various outlets publicly at the time and using his personal email address. [01:02:12] It hadn't yet changed his name. [01:02:14] Hope not hate have presented a plausible excuse for this. [01:02:16] A parallel construction, one might say. [01:02:18] He changed his name via deed poll and changed it back. [01:02:21] How'd you do? [01:02:22] I mean, change your name by deed poll, get a password to a different name, change it back, password's still valid. [01:02:29] Yes, but also... [01:02:30] Technically in date and whatnot, so. [01:02:32] Yeah, but also, wouldn't it be fraudulent, as some of this article has suggested, if he's still going by his old name at the same time publicly? [01:02:39] But also, what's the incentive to do this? [01:02:41] Exactly. [01:02:42] Why would someone need to do this? [01:02:43] Exactly. [01:02:44] It's sabotage. [01:02:45] It's hard thing to do, isn't it? [01:02:46] It's refuge. [01:02:46] It's reputational destruction of law-abiding people engaging in talking about topics they don't like. [01:02:53] And so one must wonder, did they have any state assistance with procuring said passport? [01:03:00] Well, of course, you know. [01:03:01] I mean, again, it's stupid to say if we did it, but if we did it, oh, it'd be the end. [01:03:06] Exactly. [01:03:07] It's kind of quite. [01:03:09] And so I must, again, raise my eyebrow here. [01:03:11] And again, it doesn't pay to be too conspiratorial. [01:03:14] When Harry Schuckman, as I listed in my original reporting about his fake passport on Substack, he has long-standing familial connections to MI6. [01:03:23] It's really quite weird that actually. [01:03:24] So he did an undergraduate degree from the Department of Middle Eastern Studies at Cambridge and then an MA in terrorism, security and society from King's College London. [01:03:32] Firaz, given that you're a sort of Middle Eastern foreign policy expert, does that glow like a worm to you? [01:03:38] Yes. [01:03:39] Yes. [01:03:40] One might have thought. [01:03:41] Yes. [01:03:42] His father, David Shuckman, was employed at the BBC for 38 years from 1983 to 2021. [01:03:48] And in 2002, he was the diplomatic correspondent. [01:03:53] He got them in a bit of hot water because he said that a company called Oryx Natural Resources was the same company that an individual associated with al-Qaeda was jailed for his involvement in the 1998 bombing of US embassies in Africa. [01:04:07] Turns out it just had the same name and he got it mixed up. [01:04:09] So the BBC had to pay them 500 grand. [01:04:13] Jesus. [01:04:13] Yeah, of license fee payer money. [01:04:15] Brilliant. [01:04:16] The Guardian followed up and they found out that he procured this information from MI6. [01:04:21] So, I mean, okay, yeah, you got this information from MI6 and it was wrong. [01:04:25] Yeah. [01:04:26] And then it turns out... [01:04:27] Klein, man, there's just a Klein everywhere. [01:04:29] Then it turns out that his grandfather was an MI6 spy. [01:04:32] Oh, okay. [01:04:33] Yeah. [01:04:33] So his uncle wrote a book called One Blade of Grass that told his biography. [01:04:38] His grandfather was Harold Chuckman, whom after Harry was named. [01:04:43] He was born in London to Jewish immigrants who fled Tsarist Russia. [01:04:47] He had a lifelong fixation with communism and then he joined the Jewish labor bond. [01:04:51] And from the book, the extract follows. [01:04:55] It says he was a quiet Oxford man, like many Russianists at the time. [01:04:58] He also did occasional work for the circus, named the MI6. [01:05:00] He was a part-time spy. [01:05:01] Mum and dad went together. [01:05:02] They disappeared across the water into the Soviet waste, leaving the kids in the care of a Finnish opa. [01:05:08] So, again, don't want to be too schizo-conspiratorial, but we're seeing a sort of network of NGOs, government-aligned institutions, actual government bodies that are allowed to break the law if it is in the national interest. [01:05:21] As they define it. [01:05:22] Exactly, as they define it. [01:05:23] And if you are an anti-establishment party on many grounds, you may fall afoul of this. [01:05:29] I mean, the Green Party, for example, they hold the same opinion of what an Englishman is as Nigel Farage and the same view on trans rights as Goldman Sachs. [01:05:36] They're hardly actually anti-establishment. [01:05:38] The one thing they disagree on, though, is Israel. [01:05:40] So could they also be the targets of this? [01:05:44] Who knows? [01:05:45] So it's pretty weird then that after all this came out, Harry Shuckman won an award for his book about his time pretending to be Christopher Charles Morton with a fake passport from the Times, which is thanks Sunday Times. [01:05:57] Well, it's basically the establishment mouthpiece, isn't it? [01:06:00] So very strange how there's some sort of coordination to and again, the Times, Fraser Nelson, columnist, Neil Ferguson, columnist, Danny Finkelstein, columnist. [01:06:10] So it really is the establishment all converging on the acceptable line from hope, not hate, to but it's very interesting. [01:06:17] Just like when Ash Sarkar went on the was it, the Telegraph podcast, the spectrum. [01:06:22] Tim Stanley. [01:06:23] And they're just such chums. [01:06:24] And it's like, sorry, you know, we're dealing with communist radicals here and you guys are just buddy-buddy. [01:06:29] And as soon as it comes to someone who is actually a right-winger, you're like, quick, give the person who exposes them an award. [01:06:36] Well, not just that. [01:06:37] It's Tim Stanley wrote the piece that said, Restore Britain is staffed by young men with very short hair and brown shirts. [01:06:44] Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. [01:06:45] And I sent it to him over DM, actually, because I've met Tim and spoken to before, and I said, oh, this is a trifle unfair. [01:06:49] Do you fancy having someone on daily tea to talk about it? [01:06:52] Left me on red. [01:06:53] Of course, it did. [01:06:54] So Ash Sarkar, literally a communist, who wants to expropriate land from white people and gloats in our demographic. [01:06:59] She literally explicitly said this. [01:07:01] Yes. [01:07:02] In your video back in the day. [01:07:04] She's a-okay, approved by the Telegraph. [01:07:05] Rupert Lowe, a monster. [01:07:07] Okay, all right then. [01:07:09] So sometimes MI5 will just infiltrate political parties themselves. [01:07:14] Like they won't even outsource it to an allied NGO or something. [01:07:18] And I'm not comparing Restore Britain to this organization, but we should just be watchful because it has happened in the past to organizations, let's say, less reputable than Restore Britain. [01:07:27] The National Front got infiltrated by MI5 back in the day. [01:07:31] So Andy Carmichael, he was a former Tory activist working as a special branch agent for MI5 to help monitor the National Front in the West Midlands. [01:07:41] He was actually instrumental in the name change that then led the group to split apart. [01:07:46] And he was also, as a branch organizer, helping waste resources in by-elections that they were never going to win. [01:07:53] So when you, you know, for example, when you hear Matt Goodwin go on Peter McCormack's podcast and say, well, the National Front, you know, they thought they were going to win and they ended up wasting all these resources and splitting the vote. [01:08:03] It turns out that it wasn't just that the public rejected what they were offering. [01:08:07] It's that the intelligence services were actively engaged in sabotaging their chances. [01:08:11] And senior MI5 officers have since said, we think that this was an overreach. [01:08:16] We interfered too much in the course of democracy. [01:08:18] Maybe we shouldn't do this again. [01:08:20] Oh, you think? [01:08:21] I'm sure they learned their lesson. [01:08:23] Yeah, they didn't because they did it with UKIP. [01:08:26] And the referendum party, which, of course, Rupert Lowe actually stood for under Jimmy Goldsmith in the 90s. [01:08:32] This is reprinted by Douglas Murray, but it was originally an article by Norman Tebbit in the early 2000s. [01:08:37] And he explains how he met a source from UKIP that he kept pseudonymous, who was alleging that UKIP had been infiltrated by MI5. [01:08:44] And he thought it was a bit outlandish. [01:08:45] But he had said that they were wasting crucial resources in by-elections in this area of the country, running against pro-Brexit Tories rather than pro-EU Lib Demers. [01:08:58] And so when Tebbit investigated it, Tebbit was being followed around by ex-Special Services Protection because his life was under risk from the jihadists. [01:09:07] So he visited UKIP headquarters, had a chat to them. [01:09:09] And on the way out, his security detail went, I recognize her. [01:09:12] She used to work at MI5. [01:09:14] And it turns out there were two. [01:09:15] One was working in candidate selection and the other had been hired by the MI5 agent. [01:09:20] So Tebbit calls up, he has a cordial chat, and he goes, oh, by the way, just final question. [01:09:24] Have you or are you still working for MI5? [01:09:27] We shouted at and the phone was put down. [01:09:29] Because of course the agents can't actively deny that they are. [01:09:33] Cover blown. [01:09:34] Yes. [01:09:34] So it seems that MI5 had infiltrated and were actively trying to sabotage UKIP. [01:09:39] But in the most important positions as well, candidate selection. [01:09:42] I mean, this isn't trivial at all. [01:09:44] Yes. [01:09:44] Yes. [01:09:45] Exactly. [01:09:46] And the reason that he said was because, well, the European Union and our membership was considered vital to our long-term security strategy. [01:09:54] So if you wanted, as a just a... [01:09:57] Too bad for you, I guess. [01:09:58] Well, yeah, as part of your party platform to leave the European Union, you were a threat to national security. [01:10:04] And that was back before the covert human intelligence guidelines were put into law that broadens the scope to basically anything that the state can define as being in your interest. [01:10:15] Now, the Greens want to leave NATO. [01:10:17] So they're absolutely. [01:10:18] Yeah, yeah, that's Target's actually. [01:10:20] Yes. [01:10:21] Rupert wants to ban immigration from India. [01:10:24] Even worse. [01:10:25] Yeah, quite. [01:10:26] Great for us. [01:10:27] But more likely to be targeted by all of the intelligence agencies that think diversity is our strength. [01:10:33] And so it should worry everyone that reform is allowing their candidates to be vetted by MI5. [01:10:37] Yep. [01:10:38] It should especially. [01:10:39] But you can see why Nigel Farage is suddenly so welcome in the Westminster circles, right? [01:10:45] This is what he really is thinking about. [01:10:47] It's how can I essentially sort of grease the wheels to slide me into power. [01:10:51] It's like, okay, that's all well and good, but the public want someone outside of the establishment. [01:10:57] You're going to have to go through the fire. [01:10:58] It's going to be difficult. [01:10:59] But I don't think you're going to get the victory you think you're going to get, Nigel. [01:11:03] Exactly. [01:11:03] And it doesn't matter whether or not they actively station a plant in your organization to lead it astray. [01:11:10] If you're willing to play ball with the establishment, you will be their man whether you intend to or not. [01:11:15] It's like Robert Jenrick, for example. [01:11:17] Robert Jenrick tries to, in the words of an early spectator piece when he was running to be conservative leader, package the politics of Nigel Farrell's with the rhetoric of David Cameron. [01:11:26] Turns out it was the inverse. [01:11:27] Why would you want that? [01:11:29] Well, even then. [01:11:32] Sorry, John. [01:11:33] But it turns out it's the inverse because he was posturing as a right-winger, then gets put in as their shadow chancellor, despite being a lawyer. [01:11:40] And then immediately texts his speech to George Osborne, member of the broader Epstein network, basically, saying, oh, I hope you approve that we're going to keep the independent bodies actually regulating the country in place. [01:11:53] And those independent bodies, by the way, are the same ones that say mass immigration is an unalloyed economic good. [01:11:59] I mean, the OBR was literally set up by Cameron. [01:12:01] But by the definition of economic interest, the OBR can tell some of the other bodies in the government that what is happening here is against the national economic interest. [01:12:15] Therefore, you should authorize someone to commit crimes such as steal data, steal funds, derail the party, et cetera, et cetera. [01:12:25] This carries over into all kinds of other things because arguably it's not in Britain's economic interest to abolish the independence of the Back of England or to abolish the OBR. [01:12:35] Make any argument you want, regardless of whether it's true. [01:12:38] Leave the ECHR, for example. [01:12:40] So all of these things are the pretext for the state to sabotage any party promising this. [01:12:45] And if reform are voluntarily allowing their personnel to be selected by an agency that is set up against their own policies, then even if they aren't infiltrated, they will be sabotaged. [01:12:58] Now, Restore Britain won't be doing that. [01:12:59] So that leaves the risk of infiltration even higher. [01:13:03] The thing I want to emphasize as well is I took the time to sit there and read their annual reports. [01:13:12] And if you look at the personnel that have been staffing MI5 recently, you wouldn't want them running a bath, let alone a political party. [01:13:19] So they recently removed the parental nationality requirements for recruits. [01:13:23] Amazing. [01:13:24] What could possibly go wrong? [01:13:25] Any old foreigner can just get into the intelligence agencies. [01:13:28] How could China end up with all of this information they shouldn't have? [01:13:30] Yeah, or literally any Muslim country. [01:13:33] Yeah. [01:13:34] They also run annual summer diversity internships, recruitment drives. [01:13:38] They have a Muslim leadership scheme. [01:13:40] They also have a neurodivergent mentoring scheme. [01:13:44] We've got one of those. [01:13:45] Yeah, it's very successful. [01:13:47] It has been. [01:13:51] Just send it into that. [01:13:52] Sending Spergs out into the world. [01:13:54] Yeah, exactly. [01:13:54] That's exactly what we're doing. [01:13:55] I think I'm a bit too pale for MI5 and GCHQ. [01:13:58] That's what you're here. [01:14:00] Problem being, if you allow these people, let's say that they aren't even trying to actively sabotage you. [01:14:06] The ideological biases baked into the institution will mean that they will decree anything far right or a risk, even if it's as tepid as leaving the ECHR. [01:14:16] So they will exclude any of your candidates that actually want to execute on your mandate, even if your candidates are not actively replaced by containment agents. [01:14:23] And the last thing I wanted to just to highlight was, speaking of containment agents, and people who have a history with working with intelligence services and Hope Not Hate, which, you know, I bought Matt's Damascene conversion and I still buy it. [01:14:38] I did too. [01:14:38] You know what? [01:14:39] I still buy it because if he was trying to contain things, he'd do it in a much, much better fashion than this. [01:14:45] I don't know. [01:14:46] There's a part of me that thinks that what he's doing is, because you'll notice that, I mean, on this one and the Peter McCormick one, he'll lay out the like actual sort of Restore Britain right-wing opinion on what's happening to the country. [01:14:58] And then he'll say, well, nothing can be done, right? [01:15:00] And now he demolishes his own credibility, trying to take that narrative with him. [01:15:05] So actually, this does kind of seem like a kind of intellectual suicide bomb that he's like, and he said this, you know, I've ruined my career. [01:15:13] It's like, yeah, you don't sound like someone who is. [01:15:15] Sound kind of like someone who is deliberately trying to destroy a certain kind of narrative, actually, by you know, and everyone can say, Oh, that was the Matt Goodwin thing on he's gone, but like, where is he going to get a job next, you know? [01:15:26] So, it's just I think he's trying to essentially steal our narrative and tank it, yeah, frankly. [01:15:32] Uh, call me cynical, that's honestly what it looks like to me. [01:15:36] And uh, I don't buy the conversion these days. [01:15:38] He should have delivered it a little bit less with the cadence of Roddy from Flushed Away talking to himself in the mirror. [01:15:43] Moreover, he should have done a better job on his own book. [01:15:45] Yes, that's the thing, like, but again, I think this is part of the deliberate tanking. [01:15:49] Yes, well, I just want to play this clip to finish off because now that we know these are the stakes, this sort of veiled threat just seems entirely absurd. [01:15:57] And I feel very, very sorry, if I can just lastly say, I feel very sorry about the young activists between the ages of maybe 18 and 30 who have just wrecked their political careers by going down this cul-de-sac. [01:16:12] They could have been really interesting, important people in our country's history, they could have been really significant people, and because they became detached from political reality, they've lost all relevance. [01:16:30] Now, quick side note: Peter Whistle, God Reston wouldn't have been too happy that his platform is being used to insinuate career threats to myself, Harrison Pitt, and Charlie Downs. [01:16:39] Also, you know, I didn't write a book with Chat GPT, so go me, I suppose. [01:16:43] But if Matt thinks that we're in this for Page Space in Unheard or a GB News show that has to take a break every 15 minutes to chill for cruisers and catheters, then he is fundamentally underestimating both the stakes and our motivations. [01:16:57] Like, sorry, Matt, have you had the police shop at your door trying to like intimidate your wife? [01:17:02] I don't know if you have. [01:17:03] I don't know if you're facing the very real threat of MI5 infiltrating your party, given that you want to play ball with them anyway. [01:17:10] So, I just want people to be under no allegiance. [01:17:12] I don't know if you're not afraid of the party ever. [01:17:12] I mean, they don't need to infiltrate. [01:17:13] You're literally saying ego. [01:17:15] Quite what would you infiltrate? [01:17:17] Yeah, you are the establishment now. [01:17:18] And so, I want people to realize the stakes that we are playing with. [01:17:21] If you want to be a truly anti-establishment party, we will receive all sorts of smears and sabotage efforts. [01:17:27] The law may be broken to go after us. [01:17:29] So, just steal yourselves, respond with Rupert's characteristic don't care, and have some courage. [01:17:38] Let's go to the video comments. [01:17:40] Binary Surfer says, It's very, very likely that Goodwin is acting out an unpublished version of the Contain the Right strategy. [01:17:45] Where was his condemnation as a former work and hope not hate colleagues? [01:17:49] Good question. [01:17:50] Matt's detached from political reality, remark, simply means Blairite things I approve of. [01:17:55] Also, he's also telling you what he cares about: career pay and status, exactly as you said. [01:17:59] It's always projection with the left. [01:18:00] And that's exactly the thing. [01:18:02] Why I said, I really think that this is an attempt to essentially pin the far-right narrative to Matt Goodwin and his career, tank it. [01:18:08] And I'm sure he's got a lifeboat somewhere else, right? [01:18:10] So he'll just go into some think tank in the background to lose his social media or whatever. [01:18:14] But he'll get a guarantee. [01:18:16] I'm absolutely certain that's what's going to happen. [01:18:18] Anyway, let's watch the first clip. [01:18:22] Hey, everyone, from the Lolo Seniors. [01:18:24] Quick reminder, everyone else who's else here. [01:18:28] What is Mac? [01:18:30] You can't just take a moment to breathe. [01:18:33] And remember, we all have our differences, but hey, we can all agree on something. [01:18:41] This cat is a cutie. [01:18:43] We're going to win. [01:18:45] And when all this is over and the history books are made, we're going to forget about this mess. [01:18:52] So, what's the deal with the sort of overlay on the video, though? [01:18:59] He's clean his lens, right? [01:19:00] You don't think he noticed? [01:19:02] I don't know. [01:19:02] I don't know. [01:19:04] Let's go to the next one. [01:19:05] Modern art, I say. [01:19:06] I'm more a dog man. [01:19:08] Mennings Games' first production, going viral, is now available to buy on Steam. [01:19:14] So, go to menicsgames.com and check it out. [01:19:17] And we're working on a new project. [01:19:18] It's an RPG. [01:19:20] It's about a little girl who's been cursed, and her family has to journey with her around the world to find a cure to that curse. [01:19:28] I think people are really going to love it when we make it. [01:19:30] So, go and follow us and probably consider buying our game so that we got some fit seed funding for our next RPG project. [01:19:39] Good luck with that. [01:19:41] Let's go to the next one. [01:19:48] I don't think there's any audio with this one, but another adorable cat. [01:19:52] Well, I'm sensing a theme here. [01:19:54] Yeah, no, no, no complaints from me. [01:19:55] I like adorable animals. [01:19:57] Grant says, It was really sad to see that they sent the cops to Connor's house. [01:20:00] The only thing he's guilty of is dreadful taste in music. [01:20:03] People are glad to see you back, so that's good. [01:20:05] Well, I appreciate it. [01:20:07] Baron von Warhawk says, Imagine going back in time and showing videos of a female archbishop and dancing Africans, King Henry VIII and Queen Elizabeth I. [01:20:15] Do you think they would have even bothered breaking away from Rome and creating the Church of England? [01:20:20] I just don't think they would. [01:20:24] I mean, you're going to be wrong about this. [01:20:26] No, no, it's not even that. [01:20:27] I think the nature of what was happening was just like, okay, there's African tribes dancing in England. [01:20:34] Why is this? [01:20:36] That's going to be surely the first thought. [01:20:38] Well, Henry VIII would have been glad that Trumpeter has some friends. [01:20:40] Yeah, yeah. [01:20:41] Reasonable Black Man. [01:20:43] Was that actually his name? [01:20:44] That was someone else's name, right? [01:20:47] Samson, can you Google Reasonable Black Man, please? [01:20:50] I'm not even joking. [01:20:51] There's not going to be many search results. [01:20:53] There might be. [01:20:54] He's become quite the meme. [01:20:58] I'm not even joking. [01:20:59] Yeah, there we go. [01:21:00] His name. [01:21:01] Yeah. [01:21:02] So he was a silk weaver in the late 16th century. [01:21:09] So there was an actual more called Reasonable Black Man living in London as a silk weaver. [01:21:16] There weren't many of them, but as David Bull has reliably informed me, we've always been an island of immigrants, I suppose. [01:21:22] It's just such a great name. [01:21:23] Yes. [01:21:25] He's this reasonable black man. [01:21:27] Well, that's why we let him in. [01:21:30] Carl's Evil Twin says, Lads, get to your nearest church. [01:21:33] I have what you realize is that women within the church have had full reign within, and this aversion sets in until strong religious men step in and say no or question them. [01:21:43] Well, honestly, this is one of the problems with the Anglican Church. [01:21:46] I used to have to go to an Anglican church and it was just run by women. [01:21:49] And it was like the church as envisaged by Tony Blair, where they're doing like, you know, pop remixes saying Jesus is great in this pop remix. [01:21:58] I was just like, I would rather some old haggard guy thumping the Bible and telling me I was a sinner and I was going to hell. [01:22:05] I love Americans, but I have been subjected to far too many evangelical concerts to ever tolerate it. [01:22:13] I know it is the women's influence on the religion. [01:22:15] It's just, oh no, can't we all just be nice? [01:22:17] No, I need some dude screaming fire and brimstone and how we're all sinners. [01:22:23] If you want me to go to church, that's what I need to hear. [01:22:26] Kevin. [01:22:27] That can be arranged. [01:22:28] Yeah. [01:22:29] Well, I've got to go to an Anglo-Catholic church now. [01:22:32] So, you know, Kevin Fox says, Starmer says he wants a more democratically elected House of Lords. [01:22:38] Democratically elected by who? [01:22:39] Not the public. [01:22:40] If it were filled with democratically elected peers, we'd have people like Sali Evans, Lord Charlie Downs, Lady Truss, not Lord Abdul of Tower Hamlets, and Lady Mbulu of Whitechapel. [01:22:50] Well, that's the point, isn't it? [01:22:51] Like, I think, actually, I'm actually quite up for the idea of an elective second house in the same way that I think that the European Parliament was treated by the British public. [01:23:02] Because you'll notice the British public are like, yeah, no, we're not going to have any UKIP MPs. [01:23:05] We will have loads of UKIP MEPs. [01:23:07] So we will have these guys who are not themselves legislating as our kind of voice, but the MPs we take very, very seriously and we want very serious people. [01:23:15] If we had an elected second house that was essentially just rubber stamping whatever happened, you would find that filled with BMP. [01:23:21] I would prefer, just as a social experiment, government by random lot, almost like a jury farmer. [01:23:27] I've said this before. [01:23:27] Yeah. [01:23:29] Do you remember the famous video of like the Greek game? [01:23:31] The guy that's enjoying a cocktail in his bin? [01:23:34] Yeah. [01:23:34] That's like, every Englishman is entitled to swim in his bin on a hot summer's day. [01:23:38] He would just be bringing back the death penalty and getting rid of everyone. [01:23:41] The average white van man would fix this country. [01:23:45] Jimbo says Canterbury Cathedral is the oldest in England and has to rely on self-funding via tourism and gift shops. [01:23:50] Meanwhile, other places of worship get millions of taxpayer money because of the ethnic unrest we have been besieged with. [01:23:56] St. Augustine wept. [01:23:58] Yeah, but it's one of its literally just the sign of the times. [01:24:02] We are essentially just a new frontier for diversity to colonize. [01:24:08] And that's the way that the establishment thinks about all of this. [01:24:11] One great thing Restore Britain can do is just deprive any non-Christian charity or NGO with state funding. [01:24:18] It's just, we're not going to foster your parallel faith and culture in our country. [01:24:22] Thank you very much. [01:24:23] Alex says, isn't that David Lamy talking about visiting a court in Canada, an extract from 1984? [01:24:28] Apparently a course in Canada, but who could tell the difference? [01:24:31] I mean, you can be convicted for misgendering in Canada quite easily. [01:24:35] Yeah, it has happened. [01:24:37] It does happen. [01:24:37] There was a court case where some guy won because a Korean salon refused to give him a... Jonathan Levine or whatever his name was. [01:24:46] That's his name. [01:24:47] Yeah, refused to wax his balls or something. [01:24:49] Yes. [01:24:49] It was a woman's salon. [01:24:52] Yes. [01:24:52] And he's like, right, okay, wax my balls. [01:24:53] And he was shopping around for the one that wouldn't do it. [01:24:56] Yeah. [01:24:56] It's like the gay cakes, isn't it? [01:24:58] It's like, bake me the cake. [01:24:59] It's like, well, I'm going to find the one that won't bake me the cake so I can sue you. [01:25:03] That's a random name says, as an autism-maxing immigrant, I'm here because I love the West. [01:25:07] I would die for it. [01:25:08] Many immigrants, however, aren't like that. [01:25:10] They came here to leech off the West and hate it. [01:25:11] Afuera. [01:25:12] And that's exactly the problem that we have. [01:25:16] And honestly, it's been taking advantage of that small number of people. [01:25:19] Like, you know, if you go back to like 1990 and we've got like 5% immigrant population, yeah, a lot of them came here because they really liked it. [01:25:27] You know, they wanted Britain to be Britain and just happy to just slot themselves in. [01:25:31] And that's fine. [01:25:32] No one had a problem with it. [01:25:33] No one thought about it. [01:25:34] And if you think about like, you know, the media you'd see in the time, it was all just normal. [01:25:37] It was all just white English people. [01:25:39] You'd have the occasional, you know, representative, but no one cared. [01:25:43] And now people are like in your position where you're just like, no, I just don't think it was ever possible. [01:25:47] It's like, well, I'm old enough to remember that it was, but it's just the circumstances have changed so differently and so radically. [01:25:53] That it's become impossible. [01:25:55] It's become impossible. [01:25:55] Yeah, it also depends about, you know, from where. [01:25:57] Like, I can tell the difference between Stellios and a Somali drill wrapper. [01:26:00] But even, so this is my dispute with Campfriend Burblesing. [01:26:04] Even an institution that's basically British imperial in model has the highest possible standards. [01:26:09] If you put all those kids through their education, how do you not know that they're interpreting it through the cultural baggage and the inherited religion of their own family? [01:26:18] How do you know that institution is going to have a greater impact on how they see the world and act than their own family? [01:26:25] And then let's say you provide them with a great education under the auspices of, well, we can still assimilate some people. [01:26:31] They're going to get into government and then they're going to govern over the natives and you're still going to have inter-ethnic resentment. [01:26:36] So I just think it's doomed to fail. [01:26:37] And moreover, why are you busy reconstructing the British Empire on our soil? [01:26:40] If you want those institutions, do them in Somalia. [01:26:42] And don't get me wrong, I think it'd be a great idea to go and do them in Somalia. [01:26:46] This is the strongest argument for imperialism anyone has ever made, frankly. [01:26:50] But why do we have to do it here? [01:26:52] Dirty Belt says, my mum came here in 93. [01:26:54] She's Brazilian, grew up in a small farm town in the state of Minas Guiras. [01:26:59] The roads were full of potholes. [01:27:00] She told me about how nice the roads were in the 1990s, yet now Brazil's roads are better maintained. [01:27:05] She's also maintained on how many... [01:27:07] She's also commented on how many low-quality immigrants we have. [01:27:10] Every illegal we take brings doubt on the legals. [01:27:14] Every low-quality legal brings doubt on the high-quality ones. [01:27:17] And this is where you are. [01:27:18] If we want trust, then we must be discriminating. [01:27:20] Yes, not all foreigners will be Werner von Braun, but we can't, but why can't we wait until that one comes along? [01:27:27] And the answer is because then England would remain English. [01:27:30] And the purpose of this project is to dispossess you of your homeland. [01:27:34] It's not really about the immigrants. [01:27:36] They are just the tool being used against you. [01:27:39] Omar says, That Jess Gill street interview lives right through my head. [01:27:43] Even after 50 years of living here, they still unhesitatingly state their homeland is somewhere else and better. [01:27:48] Yeah, that was an old interview that Jess Guild did for us. [01:27:52] Where is exactly as he describes? [01:27:55] And what are you going to do? [01:27:58] One that I must read. [01:27:59] Firas and Connor, can you please explain to Carl how liberalism and Protestantism are one and the same? [01:28:05] Well, they're not one and the same. [01:28:06] One's a descendant of the other. [01:28:09] We're going to have that conversation. [01:28:10] It'd be a good one. [01:28:11] Yeah. [01:28:12] And like the conversation we had with Dan, I will be right. [01:28:16] But because I have been more surgical in what I'm defining, and I will judge the metaphysics of the things, and you'll be forced to concede. [01:28:26] Yes, they are technically different, but they do spring from the same root. [01:28:29] That's correct. [01:28:30] Fair enough. [01:28:32] And they lead to the same outcomes. [01:28:33] Yeah, I agree. [01:28:34] And they left to the same outcome. [01:28:35] I agree. [01:28:35] They lead to the same outcomes. [01:28:36] Well, see, I'm already correct. [01:28:39] And it took seconds. [01:28:41] You need to win that argument. [01:28:42] All your criticisms of Kant also apply to Protestantism. [01:28:44] Yeah, absolutely. [01:28:45] Absolutely. [01:28:46] Absolutely. [01:28:47] That is the issue. [01:28:49] Not say that, but the problem that the Catholics have is: well, how do you prevent that from being the case when you have a book that people can read? [01:28:58] You have to default back to the argument against, but that argument has been had, and we're, you know, 300 years, no, 500 years down the line now. [01:29:08] So this is the problem with, you know, you can't just turn back the clock. [01:29:12] So anyway, Jordi Salzman says, even in their propaganda, they can only show one woman and child in the boat. [01:29:19] That's a great point. [01:29:20] Even when they could have had the entire boat filled with kids, but they didn't. [01:29:25] Yep. [01:29:25] That's a great point. [01:29:30] Tuma says, UK is living in a socialist reality. [01:29:33] Most people in denial of it. [01:29:34] It's so-called right-wing. [01:29:36] Yeah, I mean, this is really the problem with the centre-right. [01:29:39] This is just not brave enough to be the thing it needs to be. [01:29:43] It's not right. [01:29:44] It's not even right. [01:29:45] It's sort of center of liberalism. [01:29:47] It's also when they frame it in terms of socialism, as sort of the Charles Moore Thatcherite critiques of the Starmer project, all they're complaining about is the means of economic management for the same fractured demographic cultural settlement. [01:29:59] Basically, if we just engage in free market economics, then the cultural concerns would melt away. [01:30:03] And it's because they share the fundamental anthropology of liberals and their socialist critics. [01:30:09] The only way to step outside of that is to be sort of reactionary and saying, no, this change wasn't inevitable. [01:30:13] We don't need to adapt to it. [01:30:14] We can actually undo it. [01:30:15] And not just that as well. [01:30:16] The sort of abstraction of people into the universal humans is really at the root of the whole thing. [01:30:21] Because if you think about communities of concrete particular people who share an inherited ancestry and lineage and history, then you realize that actually everything that has been done since the arrival of the Windrush Empire Windrush in what's it 1948 or was actually the brutalization of something beautiful and precious. [01:30:43] And actually, like there's no apology big enough that can be made for what's been done, especially when you look at Newham now, right? [01:30:52] The dispossession of the Cockneys from London, the dispossession of Birmingham and Manchester and wherever else, the Swindon High Street. [01:30:59] Like this is where my family used to go, you know. [01:31:01] And now, I mean, literally 20 years ago, I'd walk down Swindon High Street. [01:31:05] I'd bump into friends, colleagues, family members, you know, workmates, and we're just like, yeah, how's it going? [01:31:10] And it's just not now. [01:31:11] Now it's just the global nomads who are just wandering around. [01:31:14] An island of strangers. [01:31:15] An island of strangers. [01:31:16] And then, like, exactly. [01:31:18] As soon as you step out of the liberal metaphysics of the universal human anatomized individual who lives in the state of nature before civilization, you realize this is probably the worst thing that could be done because all of the inevitable crimes, all of the rapes, all of the murders, all of the theft, [01:31:32] all of the bad things that we spent literally a thousand years settling this country and this island for have all just come rushing back. [01:31:43] And you couldn't have done anything worse. [01:31:45] So much misery, so much hardship that just wasn't inevitable has been done for this fiction that they made up. [01:31:54] It's all for a fiction. [01:31:55] And so I'm, like I said, I'm not a liberal anymore for a good reason. [01:32:01] Anyway, Connor, where can people go to find more from you? [01:32:03] Oh, they can go to just the channel that's under my name because I'm lazy and bad at branding. [01:32:08] No, no, no, no. [01:32:09] I wish I'd called my channel my name. [01:32:11] I'm stuck with Sargon of the Canfield. [01:32:12] Yeah, but everyone I talk to when I'm out and about goes, oh, yeah, you still know Sargon. [01:32:18] So, you know, stop. [01:32:19] It's good. [01:32:19] It's good. [01:32:19] It's better branding than I've got. [01:32:21] Yeah, I'm just doing that because it's from my study and I'm lazy. [01:32:25] And hopefully, we'll have some more projects that will be involved in the broader political ecosystem to announce soon. [01:32:31] But after my year in the Westminster wilderness, it's good to be back. [01:32:36] Good. [01:32:36] Thanks for joining us folks and we'll see you tomorrow.