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May 7, 2026 - The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters
01:30:57
The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1413

Harry and Carl dissect Great Yarmouth elections, arguing young women's Green Party votes reflect a reaction to wage compression rather than genuine change. They expose Crewe's Ahmadi cult leader Hashem, who infiltrated the council via Zafir Fakir to evade inspections despite trafficking charges, while politicians like Alan Gage defended him. The discussion shifts to Restore Britain's Rupert Lowe, whose nativist platform gains traction among dissatisfied voters, before concluding with Gabe Newell's preservation of Steam and viewer commentary on corporate culture. Ultimately, the episode highlights systemic failures in local governance and the rise of polarizing political movements. [Automatically generated summary]

Transcriber: CohereLabs/cohere-transcribe-03-2026, WAV2VEC2_ASR_BASE_960H, sat-12l-sm, script v26.04.01, and large-v3-turbo

Time Text
Why Women Vote Green 00:04:33
Good afternoon and welcome to the podcast of Lotus Eaters, episode 1413.
I'm your host, Harry, joined today by Carl.
Hello.
And it's only the two of us today because everybody else is either out at Great Yarmouth having fun or just not here.
So it's just us two.
Dream Team, you're welcome.
And today we're going to be talking about why women vote green.
I'm going to be giving a very personal story of what happens to your local town if it gets enriched in what might be one of the.
Stranger cases that we have encountered.
And then we're going to finish off by looking at the attacks on Restore.
Now, if you're waiting for updates on Great Yarmouth and what's happening with the local council elections, well, it's election day today.
So I'm sure you're all out there listening on your phones as you're waiting in the voting booths.
And the results will be in hopefully sometime tomorrow.
So we'll have more updates as and when they arrive.
Today, we're just going to be focusing on these stories here.
Yeah, it's too early to get any information.
Although, I. I've heard through the grapevine that the energy is incredible.
Oh, I bet.
Yeah, yeah.
I've been seeing all the photos and videos coming out of Great Yarmouth, and everybody looks to be in really good spirits.
And I've seen, I've heard Josh talking about how positive a response he's been getting from speaking to people.
So it's awesome to hear.
Yeah, it's brilliant.
Anyway, so I thought we'd talk about the definition of insanity.
It's a common definition that people always roll out as well.
It's doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.
And this is what I see when I see people like this saying, in response to Kir Starmer saying, Today, choose progress over the politics of anger.
And Dave's like, I did.
I voted for the Green Party.
It's like, yeah, but the thing is, there's something in this, as in you're offering more of the same.
It is just the same that has been on display and has been the only thing that the Labour Party and, frankly, the Conservative Party have offered for decades now.
And so it's brought us to the point where the country's falling apart.
Nobody's happy with the current status quo.
And the Green Party voters are just like, yeah, okay, well, I'm just going to do more of that then, please.
I would just like to do more of that in a sort of distilled manner.
So instead of all the concessions that the Labour Party makes to reality in the.
Well, yeah, with the Starmer regime.
Yeah, but they do.
They're a party of government, so they have to be like, well, we can't do that, even though we'd love to.
We have to do this thing because we have to.
Well, the Greens are like, yeah, but what if we just did the crazy thing that you promised and we'll just get to?
And so this is how I view the Green Party as an extension of the Labour project.
Because they're just pushing at the same door, and the Greens are like, Well, we're just going to push it open even further.
It's like, Okay, great, but that's just going to bring more of what we already have.
And as you tell us, you're actually not very happy with what we already have.
Here's a fantastic article on the Daily Mail, an opinion article from a lady called Rosie Beveridge, who tells us why women like her are voting for the Greens.
And it's genuinely amazing.
To be fair, this should be a useful and interesting insight.
Especially having been accepted and written for the Daily Mail as well.
Not the sort of publication you'd expect to print something like this.
Absolutely.
And I'm hoping it'll give some credence to the discussion that I had with Pete McCormack a few weeks ago where I was trying to defend people as not being insane.
I hope that this isn't completely insane.
Well, it's not insane.
It's why would you choose the greens if you want the things that you're asking for?
So she begins by explaining she has this back and forth with her dad.
Her dad, as she tells us, is a middle aged city businessman who says, Polanski would feel like a disaster.
Well, it's not that you feel like a disaster.
Her dad says he'll crash the economy, taxes will soar, businesses will fold.
Not to mention he's a total fraud.
Yeah, I don't believe he increased the size of anyone's breasts using hypnosis.
Oh, come on, that was a great line.
That was a banger.
Come on.
He turned out not even to be licensed.
I can't believe breast enhancement hypnotherapy wasn't legally licensed by the state.
What's the strongest argument for Zach Polanski, and it wasn't even true?
Total fraud.
I mean, maybe this is why he wants to get into state in the first place.
It's revenge.
Finally, get that license.
Breaking The Status Quo 00:15:34
But she says, well, many young women across the country disagree.
Why wouldn't they want radical change, they argue, when their lives look so restricted and lacking in opportunity compared to those of their parents?
What reason do they have to protect the status quo?
Now, that's an interesting response, isn't it?
Because the dad is giving not feelings, actually, but facts.
He's saying, no, these are predictable and inevitable consequences of the policies that the Greens are pursuing.
So, I don't want those because it'll be bad for me, it'll be bad for you, it'll be bad for the entire country.
And she's like, Yeah, well, I just feel like I don't agree.
I was like, Okay, but it will be the case that this happens.
This is actually reflective of the points that I was putting forward, which is that the status quo is very clearly established to protect a certain kind of person who is not typically found within the younger generations.
And so they're looking for something or anything to break them out of this status quo that they see as hobbling their future or just.
Preventing them from having a future in the first place.
And the consequences don't really matter so much to them, whereas in their mind, well, 30 years down the line, I'm not going to be able to have a life either way.
I might as well take this system that's made that down with me.
Now, they'll be doing it for presumably left wing reasons.
But even from a right wing perspective, there is an argument for this.
And the interesting thing as well is that it's an awfully kind of reactionary position to take, which is.
It gets more reactionary, actually.
Oh, I'm sure it does.
Well,.
Go ahead.
But the thing that these young ladies have got to remember is the status quo is a feminist system.
It is a system that actively privileges women over men.
And we know this because more women than men go to university.
Women now out earn young women out earn young men to the tune of two and a half thousand nearly every year.
So it's not even a small gender pay gap.
And so this is like, okay, well, this system was designed to make you a corporate stooge, to turn you into a girl boss.
You are the ones actually benefiting from this.
Of all of the people in the country who are like, the system isn't working for me, the last people actually should be women generally, because the system was designed for women to get ahead, and they are.
Well, this will all be a function of, yes, university education and salary jobs like that as well.
But looking at the figures that were there, a lot of it's a result of wage compression as well, constantly raising the minimum wage and using taxes and other methods to.
Reduce the take home pay of people who have higher paid salary jobs and 9% higher than men's at 24,300.
I mean, I think that the most recent increase in minimum wage now means that, like, minimum wage, if you're working a 40 hour job, will actually earn you slightly more or around that every year.
So, all like, even the advantages, the equalitarian, egalitarian method, like, that we organize society by, the theory that we organize society by, is going to.
Eliminate all of those benefits as well as everything's just crushed into a grey sludge middle.
Yeah, the system is designed for you to earn somewhere between £30,000 and £50,000 a year, and you're never going to get out.
And through taxes and benefits, even it all out to about £36,000, £37,000.
Something like that.
Anyway, so who would want to protect the status quo?
Well, honestly, actually, you are the ones benefiting from the status quo more than your young male compatriots, right?
The people around you.
But anyway, a bit later on in the article, I'm just going to pull something out from the bottom of the article.
They say women, it seems, are aware of economic inequality in a way that men are not.
In 2024, 40% of women aged 18 to 30 ranked cost of living as their top concern, while only 29% of men said the same.
That's not economic inequality.
The economic inequality goes the other way.
This is just you worrying, not worrying, not being aware, not being confident that in the future you're going to have as much spending money as you do at the moment.
Which, I mean, don't get me wrong, fair concern.
But it's not a question of economic inequality, anyway.
I mean, the funny thing is that the status quo.
Quo being set up in such a way makes women miserable as well.
Yeah, yeah.
What?
Because you're talking.
If you talk about relationships, obviously there are all of these different statistics talking about how women and men are drifting further apart from one another politically.
It even includes that statistic that you brought in there, which is really a function of testosterone.
Testosterone studies have shown that the higher a man's testosterone, if you inject him, he's more willing to accept what he sees as being fair inequality, like justified inequality.
So that's just male female difference, right?
Then.
But they want.
The status quo has put them in a position where they can kind of have the world, have the high powered girl boss job, but they also want all of the benefits that come with going out with a Chad as well.
They want the high powered Chad, who, despite them on average earning more than men, still out earns them, is six foot plus, has all of these attractive hobbies, but doesn't engage in the hobbies too much to take time away from you.
There are all of these little landmines that they set for men who are approaching them.
And then, when nobody hits these markers, they say, well, you know, men just are terrible these days.
And then the men are left in the lurch as well.
And that's not to say that, you know, everything's peachy for women, but this is kind of a little bit of a situation that's been set as a trap for them.
You are right.
And obviously, if women become the dominant earners in society, then they can't marry up, right?
That's the issue.
But these concerns are more systemic, right?
So they say here recent YouGov polling.
Has put the Greens' voting intention among women aged 18 to 24 at 44%, versus 30% of men at the same age.
It's like, can you even imagine being a man and voting for the Greens?
Anyway.
Well, I mean, are you thirsting after a Green voting woman?
Well, maybe you are.
So why are young women turning hard left like this?
Is it all the cult of Zach?
She says, I spoke to a number of female contemporaries from different parts of the UK, but all middle class and well educated.
Yep, that checks out.
And it boils down to two things.
One is a sense of being horribly let down by current and previous politicians despite doing everything by the book.
And call us naive.
The other is a desire to build a society where women are safe from rampant misogyny and people look after each other rather than constantly, sometimes viciously competing amongst themselves.
Open borders won't help with either of those.
Open borders will make both of those a hundred times, a thousand times worse.
Come on.
Yes.
But also, isn't that interesting?
So we did everything the system told us to do.
We got educated, we got jobs.
Young women in their 20s have spent their lives doing everything right.
We worked hard, got good grades, went to university.
Then, after four years of strikes and three COVID lockdowns, we were spat out into a rapidly shrinking jobs market with debts of more than £40,000.
And yet, you're still in favor of immigration.
This is literally competition for your job that you were importing.
And so you can see that these young women are like, oh, yeah, these things have been a problem.
It's like, okay, but this is the system that was set up by New Labour, continued by the Conservatives.
And now you're like, you know what?
I want to vote for Green.
So we're going to do it even more.
It's like, but that's not good.
That's not going to get you to the point that you're at.
And also, I mean, if that's what the Greens are, what's all this about then?
If that's what you think.
Thank you for muting that.
Yeah.
What is all this?
Is this the same party?
I mean, what am I looking at?
What is this?
Well, as Patrick Christie says, good luck to everyone settling the Pakistani elections, which are taking place across Britain today.
Why is he on a bicycle?
Just embrace the tradition, have him in some carry thing where he's sat on a throne.
Throwing out leaflets to people.
Like, come on.
Yeah, I know.
It's just, what am I looking at?
Anyway, so yeah, tell me more about the Green Party, which apparently includes both of these constituencies.
She says, I came out of a Russell Group University with the first in my degree, and it took me two years of searching to land a job.
I'm still living at home, age 25, because rent in London would come to well over half my monthly salary.
Yeah, okay.
And how can either of these problems be fixed with the open borders policy that the Green Party have?
Now, this is what the Green Party, don't know why that's overlaying there.
This is what the Green Party currently have on their website, right?
The Greens MPs will push for an end to the hostile environment, an end to the minimum income requirement for spouses' holiday work visas, safe routes to sanctuary, replace the Home Office with the Department of Migration.
Separating this function from the criminal justice system.
Yeah, an end to immigration detention for all migrants unless they are a danger to public safety.
Abolition of the no recourse to public funds condition that exacerbates social, economic, and racial inequalities.
Those seeking asylum and protection will be permitted to work when their application is being decided.
So that's currently what they've got on their website.
Just infinite gibs.
Yeah, just will have a literally a deposit of people into the country.
This woman's complaining about the cost of housing in London.
It's like, do you know how much housing in London goes to social housing for immigrants?
And even if it wasn't social housing, you bring in millions of people, well, they have to live somewhere.
The demand for housing is going to go up.
And especially with the Labour attacks on renting rights.
And sorry, landlord rights is reducing the amount of housing as well.
So, like, this is a shrinking system that is filling up with new people who make demands.
But what's interesting about this is I had to go to the Wayback Machine for this because after Nigel Farage was like, right, I'm going to put refugees in your areas, they decided they were going to delete their refugee and asylum policy off their website.
Strange.
It's no longer there.
Well, I mean, I think it's because the first principle would be they want to work towards a world where no one has to flee their home, blah, blah, blah.
And they.
Want basically to establish.
Where is it?
They've got a thing in here somewhere.
It's quite long.
But they say that, you know, we want to establish a world without borders.
We want a system of open borders.
We don't think that actually anyone should have any resistance to being able to travel.
It's like, oh, okay, well, that's interesting.
So you can go back to this.
You're like, right, okay.
So you just want more of the same, and you're complaining about what you've got from getting this thing.
And so, what's the plan?
I mean, food prices have risen by 40% since 2020.
Okay, but how is voting green going to help that?
What are they going to do?
Increase the amount of oil production that'll reduce the cost that it takes to make food?
No.
I mean, I would assume that they would have to, for all of the people who'd be entering the country, if they want to keep up with housing demand, they would have to pave over all of the agricultural countryside so that they would be able to house them all in the first place.
So that's not going to help domestic food either.
Yeah, but she's not wrong.
I can't afford to save up for anything, like loan a mortgage.
Well, yeah, but you're voting for the policies that have put you in this position.
You're voting for all of the same things that made it this way.
And then, as we carry on.
Past these gargantuan photos.
Well, the other funny thing, right, is as well, like the Greens will put all of this forward as a critique of neoliberalism and complain about neoliberal economic policies which have put the country where it is right now.
We're protecting businesses instead of people.
We want to work for the many, not the few, etc., etc.
The problem with that is, though, when you actually start to dig into it, mass labour migration of the kind that we experience all across the West right now is one of the hallmarks of the neoliberal project.
To allow for a massive, massive increase in low wage labor.
I've been looking into this and it really is quite interesting how in the 80s you have big neoliberal politicians like Margaret Thatcher who smashed the unions and you can say that the unions were causing trouble and they were corrupt.
Which they were, but they basically make it very, very difficult for people to earn a good wage doing labor intensive jobs and then they go, nobody's working these jobs anymore.
And then come the 90s, they're like, well, Nobody wants to work these low paying, dangerous, hard jobs anymore.
Going to have to import foreigners in to do it.
It's interesting how those two things line up right next to one another in the timeline.
And the Green Party are just like, we love infinite immigrants.
It's like, okay, but do you think maybe there's a porky capitalist pulling your strings above this?
Because he also loves infinite immigrants.
And the fact that you guys are married on this policy point makes me think that you're a bit retarded, frankly.
And even the governments that these countries are coming from, From love it as well because they go, Well, we've got no work here anyway.
And if we actually kept all of you here, we might actually have to do something or maybe reform the government or something.
So you can go off there as well as a nice little safety release valve.
Yeah, like the whole thing works to promote corruption on a global scale.
It's insane.
And Zach Polanski, for whatever reason, has just gone, Sounds good to me.
It's so weird, isn't it?
And so I'm just looking at like these.
I mean, I can only suggest that they're brainwashed because you would look at this system and be like, right, okay, I'm against this.
I don't know why these countries are desperate to offload their doctors and engineers onto us, but for some reason they are.
I don't know why our politicians are interested in increasing the wealth inequality between the business owners and the workers through minimizing and compressing worker wages.
And I don't know why they're bringing all of these people here so I can't get a good job, I can't save up to buy a house, the cost of living has gone through the roof.
Why would you support this system?
And be like, yeah, okay, I'm going to vote for the full extremity of this system in the Green Party.
That's just wild, isn't it?
It's just absolutely mad.
Anyway, she carries on, and this I think is quite interesting.
Among many of my friends, there's an anxious air of exhaustion, fuelled by being overworked, broke, single, directionless, and at the risk of sounding like a Jane Austen character, prospectless.
Right, okay, so what you're saying is this feminist neoliberal system is not serving you, but it's made you broke, single, overworked, and directionless.
So, what would be the alternative?
Like some sort of, well, frankly, right wing patriarchal system that didn't expect women to be treated like male labourers.
And, you know, here's your education, get into the workforce, and then we're going to bring in millions of other people to compete with you.
No wonder you feel like you're on your own and you're over, like you're in this insane competitive environment.
Actually, maybe that's not where women ought to be.
Actually, that's maybe not where you've, I mean, you're literally telling us this is not where you want to be.
Floundering Under Equality Act 00:08:59
And so we go back to the, well, who made it this way?
Who made you like this?
And remember the New Statesman story about a third of women just actually hating men?
People are like, oh, why has this happened?
It's because they've been propagandized by the feminist education system for a decade, if not more.
It's just been raw feminism nonstop, which is why you are a girl boss in a corporation that you don't care about, doing a job you hate, feeling like you're, as I say, in a bleak landscape.
Like you have been propagandized by feminism to be this thing.
It's the only ruling system and principle that we have in the system.
There's no sort of right wing counter that we could have pointed to at any point in the education system that would have been like, yeah, well, actually, the British Empire was great and maybe you should get married young and be a housewife or anything.
There's nothing like that, but that's kind of what you're asking for here.
So look at the system, look at what's been done to you.
Well, it's interesting that it's the same kind of position that the former colonies find themselves in.
Well, we decolonize, we leave, and yet they are still absolutely desperate for foreign aid and all of the benefits that.
Came with being administered by a very wealthy Western power.
They just want to have this kind of fake veneer of independence overlaid over the top of it.
They want all of the benefits of living within a patriarchal society where they get cradle to birth benefits and welfare and they want people to look after them and care about their feelings and they want enough freedom that they can feel like that, you know, I'm independent.
But they also want pure independence and they want this kind of veneer of like, I'm a pure girl boss, I can make it on my own.
When really nobody, like a joker quote, we do live in a society.
Everybody requires some form of cooperation.
You can't make it on your own.
And the form of cooperation that society chooses is going to have a massive effect on these outcomes.
And the sort of state governance that we've had for years at this point is what's ruined these people.
Yeah.
And what does she even mean by prospectless?
You've got the job, you've got the education, you're in the corporate environment, you're on the ladder.
Work your way up.
That's what your prospects are.
Well, when she says it sounded like Jane Austen, does she mean like, I can't find a man?
Yes.
That's the point, isn't it?
Because she's like, well, I'm overworked, broke, single, directionless, and prospectless.
It's like, yeah, but you're not.
If you were a man, you'd be thinking, well, my prospects are actually quite good because I'm in the environment, I've got the education, I'm just going to work my way up.
And once I get to a certain level of status, I'll have some money, a woman will want to marry me, and I'll be able to start a family.
But she's on the wrong path for that because, of course, No man has ever been like, well, when you're earning 60k a year, then I'll marry you.
You know, like, that's like, no man is interested in that, right?
So, there's two qualifiers for a man are you cute?
Are you nice?
That's literally it.
There it is.
That's literally it.
That's all we want.
Be friendly and not hideously unattractive.
It's really not that difficult.
So, she's sat there following the life course of a man, which is, of course, set for her by the feminist education system, wondering why she's prospectless.
And it's like, well, because of all of the things that the system has done to you.
Up until this point, you're like, well, I guess I'm gonna.
Oh, look, thank God Zach Polanski's here because he's going to make hope normal again by doing exactly the same that we've done until this point.
Such a nonsense platitude.
Make hope normal again.
What does that even mean?
But there is no hope.
She's sat there, like despairing, basically, saying, Oh, this is terrible.
And Zach Polanski's going to be like, Well, I can lie to you about hope.
And she's like, That's good.
That's good enough.
For her, it doesn't feel like hope because she's saying at the top of the article, Well, why would I want to maintain the status quo?
So, it's not hope.
There is a part of her that's like, no, this is to screw over the status quo.
Who cares about the consequences?
They're doing this to me.
Yeah.
And I'm like, yeah, actually, I agree with you.
I'm sympathetic to all of this, but the Greens are not the answer to the question.
No, obviously.
She says, you know, women in particular look around and see their quality of life shrinking.
The failing NHS weighs heavily.
The pressure of financial insecurity and a brief brush with serious illness has left me hyper aware of the importance of accessible, affordable health care.
So, yeah, okay, that's true.
As Elsa here, one of the people that she spoke to, says, we have a healthcare system that's crumbling and women seem to be feeling the effects more than men.
I know I want children, but I'm terrified of having them.
Okay, so now you're in a position where you don't even have a man to reassure you and say, look, no, no, it's fine.
We're going to be fine.
Instead, you're on your own.
You're in this brightly lit corporate environment and you're just like, okay, but this isn't actually where I want to be.
Like, what's the plan?
Do you have a plan?
And the answer is, no, you don't have a plan.
And so you're like, right, great.
I'm going to vote for Zach Polanski.
So, there's a really, really interesting bit down here as well where she says, All of the women I spoke to, I can't remember where it was.
I just caught a bit where she said, I don't actually want the Greens in charge of the country.
Oh, really?
I do?
Oh, yeah.
I don't agree with the Green Policy either.
Yeah.
Anna says, I don't actually want them in charge of the country, but I do want to see the area I live in become greener and more sustainable.
Better recycling would be great.
I can hear my dad's voice at the back of my brain.
Saying he thinks it's a wasted vote.
Yeah, I mean, so there's the kind of.
There's a weird.
Shit test.
Yeah, there is the shit test aspect of it, but there's also the spitefulness part of it, which is, you know, I want a better neighborhood.
I want people to be friendlier, for it to be more green, less mess.
Therefore, because the system that we're in now doesn't do that, I'm going to vote for the people who are going to destroy the country.
Yeah.
I mean, look at this line here.
As for reform, they want to scrap the Equality Act on day one.
Why on earth would a well educated, ambitious young woman vote for that?
Because you're currently floundering under the reign of the Equality Act.
You're currently sat there going, Oh, I feel overworked.
I feel despairing.
I'm prospectless.
Why am I doing this?
Well, why are you doing this?
Why wouldn't you want some kind of radical change?
But yeah, there's this one bit in here where I think it's here where she says, Of all of the women I spoke to, it's not on.
I can't find it here, but.
Anyway, she says, for all the young women I spoke to, immigration was not a concern, nor were they fearful of trans rights.
The political gender divide is not a culture war, it's an economic one.
It's like, no, the culture war is so ingrained, you can't even imagine voting for the opposite side.
Like, you can't even imagine, why would I vote to scrap the Equality Act, the thing that's made me this miserable?
I don't know, why would you?
But the thing is, you're not concerned about immigration.
You're not concerned about immigration.
Are you mad?
Like, as you were saying earlier, the immigration, this, when I get to it, here's the.
Increase in recorded sexual offences by police.
It's horrifying.
It's just insane.
Like, sorry, what has happened in this period of time to make sexual offences go through the roof?
It's like, no, I'm not worried about any of this.
It's like, okay, I'm going to vote for Zach Polanski because I like the pattern.
I like that he makes me feel that there might be some hope.
It's the beautiful, trusting, warm smile.
It is.
But the point that I'm making with all of this is these young women are just voting for exactly the thing that got them into this position.
Because all Zach Polanski is offering is a more distilled version of what you have had to this point.
And you're going to get the same problems.
You're going to find yourself still prospectless.
It's just that I think the chances of this going up are dramatically higher under this.
So, anyway, we'll leave it there.
But just, I just, you get what you vote for, frankly.
Yeah.
Got one rumble rant here from Sigilstone.
Why are women turning far left?
The same reason welfare recipients vote for more welfare and immigrants vote for more immigration.
Honestly, I think it's just because they're not thinking about these things.
Like, she frames her father's rational concerns as feelings, and she frames her feelings as, well, I don't know.
I mean, I don't really want the Greens in charge.
Then why do it?
Well, she doesn't see any alternative, clearly.
But the thing is, at the very least, I mean, we've seen from the turnout from what we've been seeing coming from Great Yarmouth that actually there are quite a few sensible women out there who are starting to recognize, or at least already recognize, the problems and have a better idea of who can solve them.
All right.
Alleged Cult Scandals 00:14:45
So, moving on, I'm doing a follow up to a daily video that I did last week, which was a very interesting little case study in one of the more bizarre examples of local enrichment.
And this local enrichment was actually in my hometown of Crewe in leafy Cheshire.
Some call it the Swindon of the North, which is sadly very true.
If anything, there's less in Crewe these days.
That just means that the town centre has gone to hell, but the area around is still quite nice.
Well, I mean, it's Cheshire.
So, yeah, Cheshire's nice in the same way that Wiltshire is nice.
There's still plenty of lovely stuff outside of the town centre.
But one of the more bizarre things to happen was a strange quasi Islamic cult set up shop in an old grade 2 listed building that used to be used as an orphanage back in the 1950s for children whose fathers died in railway accidents because Crewe was a railway town.
Right?
And so they set up there a few years ago, and it's one of those bizarre things.
Things where you go home one day and you speak around, and they go, Oh, have you seen that the old orphanage has been taken over?
Oh, okay, what's going on there?
Oh, there's a cult there.
Is there really?
Okay, all right.
What do they believe in?
Oh, nobody knows, but they've got armed guards at the gates now, and nobody's allowed in or out, and they're a bit weird and isolated from everywhere.
And what happened last week was that, as I explain in this, how is this possible?
Well, we'll get on to that, won't we?
Because it was raided.
It was raided by the police.
They turned out allegedly to be doing exactly the sort of thing that you expect cults to be doing.
That being, there were human trafficking offences alleged, there were modern slavery offences alleged, sexual assault charges alleged against them.
Ten people have been charged, and we'll see what ends up happening with them.
They've now finished their investigation, the local police force has.
It was a huge operation.
500 police officers.
We were all brought together from the surrounding area as well, because the crew doesn't have that many police officers, and they were all brought out to conduct a full raid.
Supposedly, according to friends that I know who were in the area when it happened, the cult leader, whose name I believe is Hashem, a classic British name, pictured here on the thumbnail in his signature beanie, because yes, they do have a particular style of dress for this cult, which is the Tim Pool black beanie.
They all have to wear black beanies for some reason.
He was spot.
Surely not affiliated.
I would hope not.
Tim, maybe just clear some things up for us.
We've got some questions.
He was spotted jumping over the fence at the back of the building, making a run for it.
Now, the cult's beliefs are quite interesting.
I went over it in this, but I'll just reiterate them now for people who are hearing of this for the first time.
They are called the Ahmedi religion of light and peace.
Oh, yeah.
He claims, Hashem claims to be the Mahdi, who in Islamic theology is the, I think there's 12 Mahdis, and the final one is the one who arrives as the final prophet before Judgment Day.
He claimed to be the final one.
And that Judgment Day was coming, and that to get into heaven, you would have to join him and follow his teachings.
Islamic countries who've previously had the cult in them, like Egypt, have kicked them out.
They say it's because we care about human rights and feminism and women's ability to have liberty, whereas in reality, it's because they are a bunch of weird heretics.
There was a Mahdi cult in Sudan in the 19th century that the British fought, wasn't there?
It was like a huge uprising.
I don't know the exact details of it myself, so I couldn't comment on it.
I remember briefly reading about it and thinking, wow, that's bonkers.
I mean, how they've fallen.
Right, why?
How they've fallen.
Also, one of the interesting twists of this is that the leader of them, Hashem, used to be, in the mid 2000s, a documentary filmmaker.
Oh, really?
Would you like to know what his documentaries were on?
Yeah.
Busting cults.
What were the odds?
I know.
What a shock.
It's like he was developing a skill set.
Yeah, I just learned how to run a cult.
I know.
And there was all of this weird information about.
Actually, I'm the Mardi.
Huh.
What a shock, you know.
Sell your house and worldly possessions to make money for me, please.
Because that's one of the conditions that was supposedly part of this.
You had to sell your house.
People who'd been interviewed by a particular journalist who I'll get to in a moment, who were ex members, and they explained how it actually worked.
And to join it, and he'd written a number of books that you can read, and you can find all of this information independently, where the point is you need to sell all of your worldly possessions and use the funds as part of the cult.
To help fund things like the grade two listed building that they were using as a compound in my hometown, which cost a few million pounds.
I think it was two million pounds it had been listed on prior to them buying it.
Turns out that they had about $4.7 million in assets in America.
They'd previously been kicked out of Sweden.
They say, for no good reason, the Swedish authorities, if I remember correctly, said it was because they were handing out fake passports to people.
And one of their members previously went to a trip in India.
With the right hand man of this leader and never came back.
Oh.
Which I believe the German authorities are still looking into.
Which is very interesting.
But for some further updates on what's happened since this raid, well, they've charged and named 25 people arrested for public order offences following three warrants.
This is all from the local news website, Crew Nub News.
That's why we're getting so many pop ups.
Yes, and you can read these names, and it's interesting how the nationality is listed versus the names themselves.
So, first of all, you've got Mamadaga Abdulaya.
35 of Timbrel Avenue, nationality Azerbaijan.
Raima Battle of Webhouse Crew, that's the name of the building, nationality British.
Ah, typical.
If you say so, Laura Delone, nationality Belgium, maybe with a name like that, yeah.
Tani A. Hashem, 27 of Webhouse Crew, nationality British.
Obviously.
Mariam Marfog, nationality Moroccan.
And you've got lots of these other kind of British.
You've got a German here known as Aydin Oner, typical German.
Gustavio Ruiz Quinteros, nationality American.
Quite possibly.
Ahmad El House, nationality French.
Yep.
So it's interesting.
Next up.
Clearly, this quasi Islamic, definitely Islamic cult, appealed to a very particular kind of person who is already predisposed because it's part of their religion and they just go along with it.
I did mention in the daily video that, you know, I do feel bad for people who get roped into cults because typically these are either people who are already not well or they've been through really difficult lives.
They're isolated, they're vulnerable, they're in need of hope and something to fill a gap in their lives, and so they can get dragged into it.
And clearly, with the charges that are coming to this cult, you can find that, I mean, they would have been exploited even more, allegedly, when they joined because of the human slavery, the modern slavery, and the sexual assault.
So they're taken advantage of, they're brought in, and then they continue a cycle of abuse.
It's horrible.
But also, again, let's not pretend that this doesn't have a religious and Racial aspect to it because clearly it was this was a foreign cult that was just allowed to come into my hometown and set up shop, and nobody could do or say anything about it because my local council engages in down with racism, stop racism protests.
And a friend of mine who I will not name spoke last year to a member of the council in an interview capacity for a project that he was working on.
Afterwards, he came to me and told me that the council member that he had spoken to.
Had one, first of all, checked, oh, you're not right wing, are you?
Before they started.
We don't want to speak to right wingers.
And then followed it up with how one of the reasons they don't want to is because one of the council's biggest goals is to support the local Pakistani communities and raise them up.
So that's great.
Because really, if there's actual.
What are local councils for, Harry?
Yeah, exactly.
Local affairs?
No.
Bringing in foreigners to enact weird little cults in your neighbourhood and You know, people around this area were really nervous about them being here.
No kidding.
I mean, this seems, I mean, these are the people who are like orchestrating the cult.
Like, how many people were in it in total?
Like, 25 people seems to be a lot.
I think in Webhouse, where the compound that they were on, it was about 100 people.
In the local area outside of the compound, I think it went to 200, 250 people.
Globally, supposedly, they have around 7,000 people associated.
With them because obviously they also have places in people in Egypt and across the Middle East and then in America and other parts of continental Europe as well.
So they are actually, and they had a lot of money behind them as well.
So they've managed to grift their way into quite a position of prominence as far as weird Islamic cults go.
And since the investigation has concluded, well, people, the police made sure to let you know that this is just about these particular offences.
We're not investigating the religion or shutting the religion down.
So the people who, the rest of the people who weren't arrested.
It's sex slavery, mate.
Why aren't we doing something about that?
Well, because that would be racist.
And so the compound has been released for the members to move back in.
And since then, every single day there have been protests outside of it.
Because the locals, as you can see here, made up entirely of Englishmen, are not happy at the fact that now their suspicions have been confirmed that there is a weird sex cult living next door to them, right opposite the local Queen's Park, where children go every single day.
Not really up for it, mate.
Yeah.
Don't really want that.
And the thing is, you've got to ask how was all of this allowed to happen?
Because it was allowed to happen.
How many years have it been operating for?
Three or four.
Right, okay, so that's quite a significant period of time.
Three or four.
And they have had the support of the local council as well.
And people have been looking into them for a while.
There are a number of articles on this website, The Guru, by Bee Schofield, who is a journalist who's been quoted by other larger platforms like the Daily Mail and also Vice magazine, because midway through last year, her work was being highlighted by a lot of these people as showing what was going on with this strange cult.
She had been researching them for a while, publishing articles.
And showing that, yeah, this weird cult that you think that they're doing certain things that all cults tend to do are doing exactly what you think they are.
And there's a number of stuff where she's talking about the weird doomsday.
Just look at this line England's doomsday cult.
It's not, I don't think it is.
No.
It just happens to be here.
I don't think it belongs to us.
So, one of the members, Alia, described the group as the divine just state, which is their Eden or paradise on earth.
Told followers that real patriotism means being ready to give their lives for God and for one another.
Sort of people you want living next door to you, right?
Sort of thing that Keir Starmer would say.
Let me tell you what real patriotism is.
The group, quasi-Islamic, apocalyptic movement headquartered in a former orphanage in Crewe.
Previous investigations documented allegations of sexual abuse, poison tests of faith, where supposedly this leader, Hashem, would present members with a cup of what he said was poison and you had to drink it to prove your faith to him.
I assume it wasn't poison.
I would hope so.
Blood oaths, plans for private communes with their own police and guns, Jonestown-style loyalty drills.
I've seen those.
People in the local houses right next door could occasionally see over the fences into the back garden of the compound and they would see them doing like weird drills in the background for discipline, I would assume.
And it says loyalty.
Very strange.
And an ideology that divides humanity into godlike Adamites and expendable Cainites.
God, I hope I get to be an Adamite.
I would hope so.
Bridges, one of the members or former members, explained that Hashem is building a one world religion with himself at the head.
To join, she says.
You must pledge allegiance to him, not to God, not to Allah, to him as the God appointed messenger of our time.
Those who refuse are cast as non believers.
Very interesting how this guy just happened to have researched loads of cults in the mid 2000s and the lead up to realizing that he was the one true Mahdi.
A former member, and this Schofield woman, some of her work has been criticized for relying too much on ex members who people say, oh, they're going to have a bone to pick and they're going to want to paint them in the worst light possible.
They're also going to be the people who know most about it.
Yes.
How is she supposed to get information about this weird insular cult that showed up, right?
Supposedly, one of the former members, Ibrahim, admitted to her that he had been hired to attack or kill Yasir, another member of the cult, saying that if you slap Yasir, we'll pay you 50,000 dirhams.
He was told by his friend Omar.
I don't know which currency it is, but this Omar was supposedly one of this Hashem man's right hand men.
He was recruited by an Ahmadi religion member.
If you break his legs, we'll pay you 150,000 dirhams.
If you kill him, he will pay you 300,000 dirhams, which is roughly about 82,000 US dollars.
Supposedly, when he left the.
Sorry, it's the Emirati currency, which I didn't know.
Oh, okay.
They do have people stationed all around the Gulf as well.
Yeah, well, I can imagine.
Unsurprisingly.
Yeah, that 150,000 dirhams is nearly 30 grand, which is a fair amount of money, but.
Yeah.
You're going to jail, bro.
And it says here elsewhere in this article when Yasir lived with the Ahmadi religion group, he claims that Sajid, another member, Was selling heroin, hash, and other drugs.
Again, your next door neighbours brought to you by your local council.
He said Abdullah Hashem, the leader, was involved.
Sajid would ask me to send money to Pakistan.
Death Penalty Bounties 00:13:56
What a surprise.
Local council approves.
It turned out that it was his main drug supplier.
When I refused, Abdullah would contact me and order that I do it.
It's worth saying as well, of course, all of this is alleged from ex members.
We'll see what comes out as the truth once the people who have been charged have been fully investigated and it goes to Court or see if they settle out of court.
Other reports that this B. Schofield woman has done has just been a full investigation through these people into what it's like living in the cult, where a lot of the information comes from with the sexual abuse allegations, penalties of $100,000 to members for disloyalty and disobedience, immigration fraud, what a surprise, cash smuggling, constant surveillance, and rooms where Hashem carries out most private rituals, which are supposedly like cucking rituals.
Which, what a shock.
Yeah.
What a shock.
And again, how does all of this happen when all of this information seems to be obvious out in the open?
There are multiple reports from people talking about this.
There are ex members all over the place who are willing to talk to you about this.
Would it shock you if I said that they tried to infiltrate the local town council?
No, no, I would not be surprised.
How is this sort of thing allowed to happen?
Well, it's because, you know, we've got DEI policies.
We're open and inviting.
We are.
We are inclusive to everybody.
So, this guy, who was part of the local planning commission for the local council, which gave him inside access to when the local council would be doing inspections on the compound, tip them off, make sure the place looks normal and there's no weird stuff going on when they get there, has been photographed here and in other photographs as part of the cult and is a known member of the organization.
He was tasked by the leader with going into the local council.
So that they would be able to have all of this information ahead of time.
Another former member independently confirmed these claims.
The sect has an infiltrator, this man, Zafir Fakir, inside the Kru Town Council.
He has privileged access to sensitive information.
He describes it as a clear case of institutional corruption.
So, you literally allow a bunch of foreigners to come in, and one of them happens to be a part of this weird doomsday cult.
Yeah.
And what does the local community have to say about this?
Well, we know what the local community has to say about this, they're not happy with it at all.
But the people in charge of the local community, what do they have to say about this?
Well, this news publication itself, Crew Nub News, did an interview with him last year where they just gave him a bunch of softball questions and accepted all of his answers at face value.
Why are the Mardi?
Why have you been banned, slash faced legal action and persecution in multiple countries, in particular Germany and Sweden?
Answer We've faced persecution in many countries across the Middle East and North Africa, as well as certain countries within Asia.
Our doors are open to members of the LGBTQ community.
And we do not spread hate.
We do not condemn people of other faces.
We teach tolerance.
We teach love.
Local journalist says, sounds good to me.
Amazing.
This is genuinely a woke Islamic cult.
Yeah.
They know that, oh, well, these are the buzzwords, right?
These are the shibboleths.
You say these and you get a pass.
You get to go in.
The door's open for you if you just say, we are for inclusivity, diversity, and LGBT.
And they say, oh, okay, well, there's nothing wrong with this Islamic cult then.
And he asks again, why is there the need?
For such high scale security at your headquarters, including the handcuffs and walking guard dogs.
Because everybody could see it, they've got a private security that they've paid for always around the area.
Why is that?
His answer Oh, because it's legal.
And we are a persecuted minority.
So we feel it's a necessary protective measure.
Oh, well, yeah.
We're so oppressed.
We desperately need them.
What is happening with the homeschooled children inside?
How many do you have?
And do they call you dad and God?
Because that was another one of the allegations.
To which he just responds Nah.
No, I like that.
And the local journalist goes, all right, all checks out to me.
No further questions.
No further questions, sir.
Good luck.
Are you accepting members right now?
I mean, what a softball interview by these people.
And as a result of the obvious corruption and obvious abuse of systems and exploitation that's been going on, now some of the councillors, who seem to be much more sensible than others, are calling for the mayor and other colleagues involved in this.
To resign over it because Councillor Alan Gage of Williston Rope spoke exclusively to Nub News, criticising the Mayor of Crewe and Crewe West Councillors for straying from their core responsibilities, becoming involved in what he described in public disarming engagement.
So the whole thing was basically we've got these people here, people don't like them here, so now our job as Mayor and Town Councillors is to stop people from being angry that they're here.
This is the national politic writ small.
That's all it is.
It's perception management.
All the way up from the national government when it comes to stuff like Southport to local government with your local council and mayors.
When some weird freaks move into your neighbourhood and you get enriched by a bunch of freaks living next door to you, abusing and exploiting people, allegedly, you're not allowed to be angry about it and you need to get a local lesson on how to be tolerant and inclusive.
And the local elected representative claimed that crew councillors who took part in a say no to racism counter protest on February the 28th.
Have deleted Facebook posts after religious group members were arrested on the 29th of April because they're all starting to get a little bit hot under the collar and realising, oh, we've been protecting these guys for a little bit.
We've been protecting these guys, and now it turns out that they're exactly what you thought they were.
Harry, they're so inclusive.
This is true.
And it's just sad here because he talks that this councillor says that this facility, web house, the old orphanage, was one of the first items of planning I ever dealt with on the Southern Planning Committee when I became a councillor in 2019.
It was supposed to be a retirement home for the elderly with an on site GP facility.
The grounds and location adjacent to Queen's Park were ideal for residents able to get out and about.
Sounds lovely.
The current usage of this building gives no discernible benefit to the people of Crewe whatsoever.
Well, it helps to raise up the local Pakistani and foreign communities, doesn't it?
And that's a reward in and of itself.
And he concludes by saying that, in my opinion, it saddens me every time I see or read about it.
So, yeah, if you're involved in something like this, and specifically the people in.
My hometown's local council, who were involved in it, who defended it, who engaged in counter protests to local constituents and local people who were concerned about what was going on there, who turned out to allegedly be right, you should all hang your heads in shame and you should all quit.
You should resign over this controversy.
And if these people are found to be guilty, you should probably also face further consequences for having enabled and defended it.
In the first place, and this is one of the more bizarre cases.
But this is what happens when local governments and national governments take it in mind to enrich your local area.
There is no end to the absurdities that will emerge, and it's ridiculous and disgusting to me that this happened in my hometown in a building that I used to walk past almost every single day.
Yeah, I got a rumble rant from that, lads.
It's official, says Sigilstone.
I'm starting a cult for fun and profit.
Oh, thank god, because most cults are like, oh, it's the end of the world.
And everything's going to go horribly wrong.
And it's like, oh, can't we just have a nice cult for once?
Yeah, I mean, this one sounds nice.
Starting at $4.99 a month, I think what you're actually starting here is a Patreon, mate, but let's carry on.
You can have salvation and help fund Jesus' holy gaming PC and the blessed RuneScape subscription.
Honestly, that's the kind of cult I'd want to join.
Yeah, yours would be more like Warhammer, 40k kind of stuff, but you know.
Yeah, but more like signing up to Lotus Caesars for £5 a month.
Anyway.
Worship the holy Benjamin.
So.
Restore are doing fairly well.
The local elections are currently going on.
Today is election day, but you're probably watching this after the election day, so I don't have any results for you.
But it looks like things are going quite well.
Here's just the latest voting intention from YouGov. Restore Britain still being unprompted at 4%.
So organically, people are clicking other and going, I want Rupert Lowe.
Obviously, they're higher when they are prompted, but that's just the nature of the beast.
But anyway, not bad, right?
Not bad at all.
And this has been persistent.
So, for the past month or so, Restore Britain have persistently come in above the SNP there, and this has begun to make people notice, especially as young Bob here wandering around in Great Yarmouth.
How did everyone?
You see, there's a lot of people on the ground in Great Yarmouth to canvass for Rupert Lowe and Great Yarmouth First, which is a subsidiary party of Restore Britain, today.
So, yeah, this sort of thing doesn't go unnoticed.
They try to ignore it for as long as they can, and then.
As it goes, they begin, you know, they've tried laughing at you.
Now they're beginning to fight you.
This is really great.
There are some brilliant articles coming out about this at the moment.
So I thought we'd just read some.
The Week tells us well, is this new far right party a threat to Farage?
Maybe it is.
This is what they say It plans to reverse mass immigration by deporting all illegal immigrants and introducing a red list of countries that face far stricter security checks, limited visa categories, and higher barrier to entry.
Restore would use tents, not hotels, to house so called asylum seekers.
Before abolishing the asylum system altogether, it would end benefits for those on indefinite leave to remain, deport rape gang collaborators and foreign criminals, and end election campaigning in foreign languages.
This all sounds perfectly sensible to me.
It sounds great, doesn't it?
What's not to like?
Exactly.
What's not to like?
On taxes and benefits, it promises to reward the nation's grafters by scrapping IR 35 freelancers, abolishing inheritance tax, and establishing the lowest corporation tax in Europe, and getting able bodied Britons on benefits back to work.
Good.
Because at the moment, a quarter of people in this country are claiming disability.
Did we just have a massive war or something?
Do you see when you're walking around people missing limbs on crutches?
No.
It's obviously being taken advantage of.
So fantastic.
It proposes a Britain first energy security strategy.
Oh, that sounds great.
Which means repealing net zero goals, requiring developers to fund local infrastructure before building houses, ending hose pipe bans for good, and automating the London Tube.
Brilliant.
Why is this bad?
This new far right party sounds like it's got some good ideas.
Restore wants to scrap foreign aid.
Rearm Britain by spending more on defence and end diversity and inclusivity programmes within the armed forces.
I'm not really getting anything like a negative from this.
I mean, this is the kind of advert I would have paid to have published.
Well, yeah, I want you to tell everyone exactly what we're going to do.
One of the criticisms of Restore is that some of their advertising of their policies has been a little bit diffuse.
You have to go to lots of different random social media posts to be able to collect all of it.
This is actually brilliant because it puts it all just down.
In one place in a nice big list.
And I listen to it all in a row and go, hold up, this is great, actually.
This is exactly what I want.
It would defund the rotten BBC, strengthen teaching our Christian heritage within the national curriculum history modules, ban the burqa, restrict halal and kosher slaughter, and repeal the Online Safety Act.
Great.
I mean, the only thing I disagree with is defunding the BBC, mainly because the institution itself, the infrastructure, just fill it with your own guys and it would be.
It would be great.
Maybe.
There is a much longer conversation to be had because the BBC spends a lot of money on nonsense.
Well, it needs reform.
I agree.
I personally am not 100% on scrap the BBC.
Although, again, a bit of a side tangent, but the point is there's a lot of good stuff there.
Perhaps most controversially, Restore would hold a binding referendum on restoring the death penalty.
Well, they've got my vote.
Like, Jesus Christ.
And the way that the British public already thinks of the death penalty, as in 55% of them want it back.
When you just ask them flat out in any poll, 50 55% are like, yeah.
And they feel like, do you want the death penalty for terrorists?
It goes up to 60%.
Like, we're going to win this referendum.
The British public have a very simple stance on things, which is hang nonces, hang terrorists, fund the NHS.
That's literally.
Fund the NHS.
I mean, because you always get those things where it's like, oh, we had to.
It's the Dominic Cummings line.
We had to constantly, you know, hand out all these suspended sentences to these nonces.
And it's like, no, If we've got all of this limited capacity for a prison space.
Hmm.
I've got an even simpler solution.
I know.
There are so many people we can have a really permanent solution to.
Anyway, so that's this article.
It's like, okay, that's a great list of all of the things that Restore Britain wants to do.
And I love them.
These are exactly the sort of things that I would do if I were the one in charge.
Restore Britain Campaigns 00:16:22
And so here's one from the iNews, the iPaper, where the battleground is being held now in Great Yarmouth.
This is, again, it makes them sound absolutely brilliant.
A 350 strong crowd, driven from all over the UK, to hear this unlikely radical about his new movement, Restore Britain, talking about Rupert Lowe.
In a double breasted blue blazer, blue chinos, and a pair of reading glasses around his neck, Lowe gives every appearance of the off duty Gloucestershire farmer that he is.
Great.
So he's not like some grifter then?
He's like, no, no, I've got a farm, I'm a farmer, and I'm really concerned about things, so I've come out to do this.
But his far right policy offering is far from mainstream.
In this deprived corner of East, Of East of England, his supporters in shorts and baseball caps were a willing audience.
Rather than fading into obscurity like other casualties of Farage's purges, Lowe boasts 753,000 followers on X, 83,000 on TikTok, 1.2 million on Facebook.
Farage has similar numbers, respectively.
Where once Lowe's views would be consigned to a small and ignorable corner of the internet, his growing influence is a challenge to mainstream politics.
In a fracturing political landscape where small percentages can make big differences in electoral outcomes, the question is whether Lowe can take any significant vote share away from reform.
It's like, yeah, it is for now.
But this is a great start.
Now, the plan in Great Yarmouth, of course, is just to win it all.
The last poll that was done was in December, and Great Yarmouth First were on 44%.
That'll do it.
That'll do it.
Yeah, exactly.
And the mood on the ground is very, very high.
Very, very optimistic.
Apparently, I mean, we've got loads of our friends who have gone down there to help campaign for it.
I mean, like, 350 people going down for a local campaign.
If this was the national elections, that'd still be a massive number.
Well, this is the test case, isn't it?
It is.
This is the initial test case.
Can this work?
And so, yeah, like I was saying, if this was a national election, that would still be a massive number of activists to go to one area for a national campaign.
But this is for the local elections where you get a turnout of about 30% normally.
So, to get 350 people done, something genuinely is happening here.
So, there's a lot of poo pooing of this.
But a Tory MP said and told the iPaper that they've been seeing evidence of Lowe's appeal when campaigning during the local elections in another part of East of England.
In some places, maybe they could reach 8% if they stood here, said the MP.
Maybe 10% even in some places.
There's a lot of dissatisfaction.
Well, I mean, that's the.
If their enemies are like, yeah, I'm worried about them getting, you know, 8%, 10% of the vote.
And that's where they're not even campaigning.
Because they're only campaigning in Great Yarmouth, because, of course, the party's two months old.
Locally, Lowe's very popular in Great Yarmouth.
He's given his MP salary to charities, a move that has gone down badly in Westminster.
But more importantly, perhaps his constituents say that he has given them a voice.
As in, he is actually.
Vocalizing the problems with the country.
He has a manifesto to fix it.
And so they're not happy.
About Great Yarmouth.
Exclusive.
The England flag war town where pensioners are radicalized by the far right and Facebook.
What else is Facebook for?
Yeah, I know.
Why else would you use Facebook?
Radicalizing the boomers.
Get in.
This is hilarious, right?
Because they begin with this Iranian Kurdish barber, right?
I'm just going to read this because it's genuinely funny.
Driving in from Great Yarmouth, a series of dark blue signs line the grass verge by the Tesco Soup Store promoting a new political party, Great Yarmouth First.
On one side of the road is the Gate Public House, as decked with England flags as the home end at Wembley.
On the other is Caister Barbers, where Bahaiz Abbas and Sirwan Slihan are hard at work with their clippers, executing perfect fades.
From the pavement, the Iranian owned Barbers appears to be surrounded.
But inside, 29 year old Bahaiz is smiling.
Take a look at our gowns, he says.
We've had them for years, not long before the flags.
Baha'i's clients are robed in Union Jack hairdressing gowns.
He says, Why not?
I'm born in Kurdish Iran, but I'm British now.
I love England.
I love Britain.
I love that they've managed to find the one barber that isn't involved in drugs.
They're actually cutting hair.
Of course, it's fades, but we can't expect hair loss.
Sure, sure.
I'm not going to judge.
But the point is, the barbers are like, Yeah, Britain's great.
That's why I came here.
No, I'm not doing drugs.
I'm actually cutting hair.
And this is where it gets really good, right?
He pulls out his mobile phone.
This is Flagman, he says, showing us an Instagram account of Flagman UK, a figure who conceals his identity but is believed to come from nearby Lowestoft.
Flagman has claimed the case the flags on Facebook.
Flagman puts the flags up, and then a few days or weeks later, another man in a balaclava, also English, takes them all down.
Flagman puts them up again.
They come and take them down again.
This has happened three or four times.
Sometimes Union Jacks, sometimes England flags.
When the man came to take them down the first time, I said to him, You're English, this is your flag, you're crazy.
Yeah, he's got a point.
Yeah.
Anyway, so they go through talking about how.
The old people in Great Yarmouth have been radicalised.
And then they begin talking about Rupert Lowe's party, and they've got this absolute killer line that honestly I would put in my Twitter bio, right?
Quote, Lowe's party makes Nigel Farage look like Zach Polanski.
That's a great line.
I would be proud of that.
And it's true.
I've pointed out the similarities of the two of them before.
Yeah, absolutely.
And especially in the sort of like globalist view of what is an English person or a British person.
For Farage, it's well, living in Wales for five or ten years.
And having children there.
Then the children are just automatically Welsh.
So these are just Welsh choirboys, right?
Okay.
Zach Polanski believes the same thing, but also that actually, no, it doesn't need to be five years.
You just get there and you're Welsh now.
Yeah, exactly.
The question is just the amount of time.
And it's like, right, okay, so they do actually agree on this.
They are still a globalist party.
And so obviously, people are like, well, I'm not for that.
Anyway, they carry on.
The campaigning seems to be going well.
In Yarmouth last week, many people told us how impressed they've been by the leaflets on local issues.
Doctors' surgeries, traffic calming measures, and inevitably, potholes.
Eating 99 flakes in the sunshine were Maggie and Steve.
Steve, 66, a retired submariner, I think that's actually pronounced, said that they were still deciding on who to vote for in the local elections, but were both very interested in this new party, Great Yarmouth.
First, we've seen the posters and signs around today, and we've said that when we get home, we'll look them up and see what they're all about.
We like the sound of them.
Because what are they doing?
Well, they're saying, look, we're going to actually fix this place.
We have an MP with a track record of actually doing what he says he's going to do.
He donates his salary every month to a local charity and he's actually got things done.
And people are like, hmm, a party that actually does things and doesn't, I don't know, nurture woke cults and crew or something like that.
Like, weird.
The people who do the things that I vote for them to do in the first place, that's just how degraded the system has become now.
It's like a guy starts a party called I Like This Town.
And says things about how he likes the town and will do good things for the town and does good things about them.
And you're like, I've not seen this in years.
This seems like far right.
Oh, God.
The Financial Times, the sort of neoliberal heart of the media in this country.
The ones that Boris let the Boris wave in for, remember?
Yeah, just so they would write nice things about him.
And so they are like, hmm, the far right party trying to outflank Nigel Farage.
Well, that seems to be easy to do.
They say, Restore is seeking to outdo Farage in anti immigrant rhetoric.
In doing so, it is embracing a form of hardline nativism which has rarely been seen in British politics since the de facto disappearance of the British National Party.
It's like, yeah, but.
Got to throw them in there, sprinkle some of that in there.
Sorry, can we go back to the doctor surgeries, traffic calming measures, and potholes, please?
Because that's actually what's being promised here.
Fixing the country, making the country better.
And yes, getting rid of a bunch of people.
I mean, it was revealed today that the Home Office.
Through the Center for Migration Control Studies, or whatever it's called, had put in a bunch of Freedom of Information requests, and eventually they got one back.
The Home Office said, Yes, there are 1.5 million foreigners living here on benefits.
1.5 million people.
We are paying to live here rather than them living in their own countries.
Wow, 1.5 million more than I'd want.
Yeah, it's weird, isn't it?
Like, it's almost exactly one to one.
Like, it's really coincidental how that Venn diagram overlaps.
And Rupert Lowe has obviously come out and just said, well, look, we're going to get rid of illegals.
We're going to get rid of criminal aliens.
Then we're going to get rid of benefits scrounging foreigners because why would we want any of these people here?
And that's millions of people who we know that this can be sending home.
I mean, there's estimated one to two million illegals.
There's Definitely more than once.
I mean, the FT, they support these kinds of mass immigration policies for the idea where they say, oh, it's about bringing in people who are going to work the jobs that people don't want to do.
It's going to boost GDP, blah, blah, blah.
And that figure alone, 1.5 million people on benefits who shouldn't be here in the first place, how much is that costing the state?
How much is that costing us in tax every year?
And then we have reports going back to almost 10 years ago now, the Dutch and.
Was it Dutch or Danish?
Yeah, it was the Dutch and the Danish.
Yeah, yeah, from The Economist, where it's like, no, if you're getting.
Like, the only ones who ever really contribute to the nation's finances are other European immigrants.
If you're getting in foreigners from the third world, the men apts, they never once contribute anything.
So that argument just, like, fell apart very easily and very, very quickly.
So, like, what is the financial time doing it for?
Really, it's probably just doing it now for the BS moral argument of, like, oh, it would be mean not to.
I mean, go back.
You've got to disintegrate your nation because otherwise people have hurt feelings.
Go back to the woman who's like, yeah, I'm going to vote Zach Polanski because I want more of the same.
What do you think 1.5 million people just being here on benefits does to your rent?
They all live in places paid for by the government.
They get social housing benefits, and this goes to a landlord rather than you paying him rent.
And so this is increasing your rent love.
Why are these people here?
And you'd be like, well, I'm not a racist, obviously.
Anyway, they carry on.
The Financial Times carry on.
Lowe, labelled as Britain's most extreme MP by campaign group Hope Not Hate, again, another banger, like absolute banger.
Hope Not Hate, representing reform.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
But Financial Times are like, what does Hope Not Hate think about them?
Well, I don't care, but I would put that in my Twitter bio.
Britain's most extreme MP said that he aims to create a national party that stands hundreds of candidates at the next general election.
He is unabashed about his nativist views, a highly unusual stance for a sitting parliamentarian in Britain.
It's just that line.
Yeah, exactly.
Can you imagine?
He is unabashed about his nativist views, a highly unusual stance for a sitting parliamentarian.
Yes, we are not being represented by our own MPs.
And suddenly, when an MP comes along and goes, Yeah, actually, I'd like to do good for my constituency, they're like, Oh my God.
Well, this is like the BMP or something.
It's like, Sorry, but we've had enough.
We've had enough of all this.
Countless foreign men from cultures and religions, which treat women like shit, are now roaming our streets, whether they arrived legally or illegally, he said on X last week in a characteristic post.
I can see why people like him.
Lois linked the scandal of the increased number of rapes.
Explicitly to the importation of foreign men from specific cultures.
Well, also, the data and facts do that.
Oh, yeah, that's true.
It's not like he made this up out of thin air.
We've gone through a number of the court transcripts, which was a pretty horrifying thing.
So, the data is out there and it's easily accessible at this point.
There's no reason to deny it, there's no excuse for denying it.
And if you do deny it, there is a hole in you where a soul should have been.
But what's interesting is the FT don't even try and deny it.
They just say, well, look at what he's done.
It's not politically correct, is it?
No, but it is factually correct.
What is it?
It's the point and spotter style of argument.
Can you believe it?
Can you believe he's saying it?
That's literally no counter argument.
He explicitly linked the importation of foreign men to the current rape wave that's going on and praised Tommy Robinson, the controversial fire activist who has endorsed Lowe earlier this year.
So, again, it's the pointing and spluttering.
Like, can you believe?
It's like, yeah, yeah, this is all correct.
Restore proposes pushing armed forces to recruit from the native majority rather than fishing for minorities, which makes perfect sense.
What do we want to be ruled by a foreign mercenary army?
I mean, they don't, just to be clear.
Like, they don't join the army, because why would they?
But weird, isn't it?
Just really, really weird.
But I love this at the bottom.
They've got a quote from Sundar Katwala.
You know who he is, right?
He's a squirrel, isn't he?
He's the grey squirrel, yeah.
The director of think tank British Future.
Ah, yes, Sundar Katwala, talking about British Future.
Wants the significance of Restore Gyo's beyond political tactics and its potential impact on reform.
He wrote in The New World in March, the real threat of this new political racism is to the social norms of our society.
This is what must be resisted.
And in a way, he's kind of right.
It's like, well, if the British are like, I could just vote for a party that's like entirely nativist, which we're for the British people, and we're just going to get on the ground and fix things for the British people.
We're going to get rid of the millions of immigrants.
I mean, Sunday's like, the rape crisis, not my problem.
The crisis of housing caused by millions of foreigners being paid by the British taxpayers per year.
Not my problem.
My problem is people fixing these things.
And it's like, well, sorry, we're just going to do that.
It turns out that actually we don't have to have politicians who don't represent us.
We could have a politician that does represent us.
And so you can see the fear.
It's like, well, this is a threat to the social norms of our society.
It's like, have you considered that the social norms are demented if we're in this position?
Have you considered that actually this would be good for Britain, even if it would be bad for, I guess, the foreigners who have come here to exploit us?
So, all I'm saying is aim high, vote low, because it seems that everything is going quite well on the ground.
It seems that everything is going quite well in the air, as it were, and they are actually getting worried.
Like, all of these articles, and I mean, there are more, but I didn't want to go through every single one.
All of these articles are basically saying the same things.
Like, look, this is what they believe, and they are standing by it.
They don't care if they're being called names, and we're going to call them far right, but.
I don't think that's actually going to matter to people.
We're a bit worried about how things are going.
And there's definitely a future in this.
Yeah.
If the test case works, when people get the option, they will go for the option.
As Dan has said, they won't go for the soy option.
They'll go for the real thing.
And the point being, why would you want the other option?
Why would you want something.
You want the half measure.
Yeah, exactly.
Why would you want the almond milk?
You could have whole milk.
Yeah.
Or raw milk.
Or raw milk, yeah.
Yeah, why do you want almond milk to taste?
I know it sounds weird, but I just happen to like almond milk.
I do.
What kind of man has a steak with a cup of almond milk?
I don't drink almond milk with the steak.
I just have it in my tea.
All right.
No, no, with the steak.
I've perfected this cream mushroom sauce, and it's amazing.
So, anyway.
Todd Howard Saves PC Gaming 00:05:46
I can't wait to hear more controversial takes about your steak in the comments below.
My steaks are delicious.
You posting that one picture of a steak that one time on Twitter caused such a firestorm.
I know.
My mentors were just insane.
I was just like, okay.
We've got a few, though.
Yeah, yeah, we've got some rumble rants.
Yeah.
Bowtime.
In February, the Manchester branch of Stand Up to Racism stood with the cult against the locals.
Strangely, Stand Up to Racism have now scrubbed their social media posts from the day, but the cult haven't.
Amazing.
That's great.
Amazing.
Of course they did.
And again, a local branch like that, everybody knows what goes on in these cults.
The only reason they've deleted it all now is because it looks bad.
They were basically already in support of all of these things that were going on, because that's what these people are.
They are demented, hateful creatures.
Sigilstone in my gamer cult.
We worship St. Gaben.
The holy water is Mountain Dew.
Dr. Pepper is reserved for the most loyal.
Sex is banned.
And liking Fortnite gets you the Kool Aid.
I hope with that Mountain Dew you'll be doing the Movie Bob special of marinating chicken in it.
Hapsification, great yarn.
Wait, just before we go on, honestly, I am thinking like, how do we build a golden throne for Gaben?
Seriously, Gabe Neal.
Because, like, he seems to be the one pillar keeping PC gaming upright at this point.
And I'm genuinely quite worried about it because I don't play on consoles or anything.
So it's like, okay, he is a gargantuan old fat man.
Just take advantage of Steam while you still can.
Yeah, I know.
You are right.
He is the one consumer friendly business executive and business owner in all of gaming at this point.
And he provides a platform for loads of indies.
And yet, indie games can vary in quality, but goddamn, he's given them an option.
He's given them an opportunity to do it.
He doesn't censor.
Oh, yeah.
There are all sorts of games that you can find off the top.
Sure, sure.
And, you know, whatever.
You know, horses, of course.
But, like, he's not, like, politically censoring people either.
And as I understand it, Steam is not floated on the market.
So you can't get outside investments for it and stuff like this.
So they have complete control of the market.
Yeah, there's no outside influence.
Right.
There's no outside influence that might want to take Sex with Hitler off of young Harry's Steam library.
It's on there.
I've never even heard of that.
He's got every achievement.
I'd never heard of it before I saw it there as well.
But the fact that you could get a ridiculous game like that on Steam, you know what?
It's funny.
But that's the point, right?
And it's basically, it seems to be him that's the single blockage for the entire industry going completely down the toilet.
Yeah, and Sony's implementing the new DRM features like I was talking about last week, where it's like, oh, if you've bought a game off of our store, but you've not logged on for a little bit, We're just going to prevent you from accessing it.
Yeah, basically turning all of the games into rentals and things like this.
And it's like, okay, but at the moment, it's brilliant.
Everything's great.
Steam works like a dream.
And when he dies, it could be that that will change us.
Samson, how old is Gabe Newell?
How long?
He's in his 60s, I think.
Is he in his 60s?
Let me just quickly look it up.
So, yeah, I'm genuinely.
I mean, George R.R. Martin is showing that.
63.
George R.R. Martin's almost 80 and he's still fat.
So, you know, you can.
Who is he still alive?
You can last that wait.
It's okay.
He's still.
And to be fair, Gabe's also got his unfinished project.
We've still not got Half Life 3, so this is gaming's George R.R. Martin situation.
But Gabe Newell is genuinely someone we need to preserve and keep alive, so we're going to need a golden throne and sacrifice a thousand whatevers a day.
No, we're just going to need to future armor, you know, like preserve his living head in a jar.
There you go.
Or he can be like Mr. House in Fallout New Vegas.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
We can AI him.
You know, because I'm honestly, I'm genuinely worried about it.
Mandine says, Carl, you're looking extra dapper today.
Please post that creamy mushroom sauce recipe on your ex.
It's literally just the first one on the Google results that I've modified.
There you go.
Sigilstone says, I feel like choosing violence today.
When Gaben dies, he's replaced by Todd Howard.
No.
Did you see AA?
Can you imagine steam on the Todd's?
No.
It's so funny.
AA discovered Todd Howard the other day.
No, he already knew Todd Howard.
It's that he was willing and.
Thinking about putting him on his gaming mountain rush.
Yeah, I know.
He didn't really know who Todd Howard was, though, clearly.
I don't think he'd played a Todd Howard game since Skyrim, at least.
He's not a Bethesda guy.
And I was watching his replies.
People were like, What are you doing?
And he's just like, I was not prepared for the response.
The depth of feeling to Todd Howard.
It's like, Yeah, look, man, it's a lot of broken hearts.
And then by the end of the day, he was like, I no longer think Todd Howard is deserving.
It's just like, Yeah, you stepped on a landmine there, bro.
Although his initial idea of gaming's Mount Rushmore, that's a good idea.
Yeah, but I mean, it'd be quite controversial.
I mean, I think there were nowhere near enough Japanese game developers.
Obviously, he put the Super Mario guys on there and Miyazaki from Soft.
You know, he floated those two, but I think some of the classic Resident Evil guys like Shinji Mikami and Hideki Kamiya, they've made some amazing games between them.
Yeah, I wouldn't put many of the sort of modern game developers on there at all.
It'd be old game developers.
Patriarchy And Modern Games 00:05:13
I'm trying to.
Trying to think which modern game, like Miyazaki, right?
You know, like John Carmack and things like that.
Yeah.
They definitely deserve it.
I think he's still, is he still part of Id Software?
I don't know.
I'd have to check.
I think, like, Miyazaki is the only, like, really notable modern game developer outside of the indie scene.
Just another soup chat came in.
At Shea Pearl, which I assume is an ex at, so go follow them.
Yesterday, I attended the first Restore Britain Barnett and Camden branch meeting.
There were, like, 60 people there.
Incredible.
Nice.
Yeah.
The energy has just been off the charts.
So go and get involved, obviously, folks.
All right, let's go through some of the videos.
Peter Pearl, words of wisdom.
Never give in to the temptation of despair.
For only despair is our enemy's weapon.
They know that.
For despair is their only weapon against us now.
They are broken, shattered before us.
They must demoralize us.
Only that is their only weapon.
That's an insightful cat.
That cat knows what it's talking about.
I mean, it's completely true.
If the situation was hopeless, their propaganda would be unnecessary.
True.
I wasn't actually listening.
I was just looking at the cat.
Let's move on.
Going across the Atlantic Ocean to England, where I came from.
You came from England, huh?
I did, dear.
It's a wonderful country.
Do you know about England?
I just know that it's an island.
It's an island, dear, and a glorious one because they have a queen and they have a royal family.
Oh, just like a poker game.
It's a full house.
A couple of the cards aren't living at home anymore.
Not anymore, dear, thanks to mobile phones.
No, no.
Do you know what language they speak in England?
Pakistani.
That's right, Kovacs.
In many stores, they do.
Well, it's just howling.
I mean, true.
Let's move to the next one.
Good morning, gentlemen.
Now, as Telio says, more Euromaxing.
Here I am at Malmaison.
The home of Napoleon.
Looks like a beautiful day.
Have a better one.
Very nice.
Have you considered putting a cult in it?
The local council will protect you.
Final video, I think.
Well, there it is, gentlemen, the Chateau Gilliard, where Richard the Lionhearted set up his kingdom for a time.
Yes, I did make the climb all the way to the top.
And a brief note to Brother Stelios.
Yes, I did indeed visit Notre Dame de Paris.
I also visited Notre Dame de la Rouen.
Turns out that Notre Dame is a very common name for many of the Catholic churches throughout France.
Schwartz Tulip has just asked, When's your Star Wars debate dropping on the website?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I'm not in control of that.
We're not in charge of that whole part.
That's the editors.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Justin says, I do hate that pay framing.
The entire narrative about women being paid less was creative accounting at best or completely made up.
Yeah, and now it's completely inverted.
And they still try to, oh, well, women are feeling the inequality because they're more worried about money.
It's like, well, maybe they're just spending more.
Pete says, I've been saying it for years women can't be equal and independent of men and remain hypergamous.
Well, obviously true.
But then they're like, I don't have any prospects.
Okay, get back in your Jane Austen knoll.
What they kind of want to live in is a weird kind of like matrix for women where they can act out all of the like independent fantasies and such and they can have, you know, like an extramarital affair with a man bull thing on the side.
But they also still want an actual patriarchy looking after them.
It's like Barclay on the holodeck or something, right?
Yeah.
Kevin says, get it right, Harry.
He's not on a bicycle, it's a tricycle.
Which, if he fails to get elected, he'll fit a bench seat on the back of a hood and get a tucked up, tuck tuck job around the streets.
Good point, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Sophie says, I just watched The Devil Wears Prada 2.
The message of the original was corporate life is horrible, actually.
It will eat you up and make you miserable.
Get out.
The message of the new one is literally no, you live to work.
Climbing the corporate ladder is everything.
Going on pension is worse than death.
You don't need family.
You have work for a fashion block.
This explains everything about modern life.
Inspiring.
Yeah, this is the thing.
I just don't understand what these young women actually think they are going to get out of life, really.
Enoch Powell harnessing the hamster wheel and Ed Miliband's skull says they can vote.
Oh, no.
So, yeah, unfortunately, they can.
Hector says you're not even a licensed fake breast enhancer.
You won't be getting my vote.
Yeah.
So true.
I was on the fence, but.
It was the deception that really, really disappointed me.
Corporate Ladder Obsession 00:04:39
Yeah.
Jimbo says I feel like the radioactive women have enticed normal women into believing that continuing our civilization is merely a remnant of the patriarchy.
Well, yeah, that's literally what they've been saying.
So, where's all the future workers and socialism come from?
Evidently the exotic patriarchy, with lesser women walking around in their black handmade costumes, which they demand more of.
Yeah, and they're not allowed to criticize either because that's racist.
Yeah.
They always have the handmade costume at the ready.
Yeah, yeah.
It's weird.
Weird.
Um,.
Let's go on to the next one.
Breaking news Bag End, situated at the end of Bagshot Row, has been raided by hobbits who found a cult worshipping Sharky.
The Sackville Bagginses who have supported them have now been asked to resign from the council.
You know what, Dirty Bells are right.
I'm actually, for my next Islander article, I'm going to be talking about the scouring of the Shire.
So it's weird that you happen to bring it up.
And it's because I really think it reflects so many of the problems that we have at the moment.
And there's a solution to all of these things.
Jimbo G, you know it's the final word of God when the prophet gets caught trying to escape over the fence of a compound in Peru.
Inshallah.
Truly.
It's like the prophet Muhammad.
Yeah, truly, it was Judgment Day that day.
Jimbo, again, there's a great Netflix documentary called Wild Wild Country about the OSHA cult, which moved to a small town in Oregon in the 1980s and gradually took over.
The residents were naturally labeled xenophobic until the usual revelations came out.
This was on a much larger scale, so crew have hopefully dodged a bullet.
Well, again, the local police are like, no, this is just about specific charges that came out in March.
We're not actually doing anything about the cult themselves.
This isn't about their religion, which is why people are now protesting outside.
Because all of this has all come out, it has got way more attention on it.
People are calling for the councillors to resign and the mayor to resign for enabling all of it.
So if they don't and they try and weather the storm, I can only hope a reckoning is coming to them, but if they do manage to weather the storm, yeah, they're just going to try and get more infiltrators into the local town council and organize the entire town around them, which is a horrifying thing to talk about.
Arizona Desert Rat, this wasn't a Waco type situation, was it?
No, the place did not burn down.
But also, the government's on the side of the cult.
Yeah.
Unlike with Waco, right?
It's a bunch of people shot there, right?
Well, the place got burned down.
That's a random name.
The most ethnic man on earth.
I'm glad to see that you've embraced it.
If Lotus Eaters is a cult, does that mean that only gold members go to heaven?
What do us poor bronzies get, Limbo?
I mean, I didn't want to say it.
I mean, Limbo's a bit good, really, for them, isn't it?
Silver gets it.
Better than Hell, which non subscribers are getting.
Zesty says Remember, Boris unleashed the highest level of immigration with all experience to impress the Financial Times.
If that publisher is against you, that can only be a good thing.
Yeah, I know, that's why, as Dirty Bell says, the greatest compliments one can receive are the wailing curses of one's enemies.
Yeah, and the only person who's actually guessing those is Rupert Lowe.
I mean, like Alistair Campbell being like, he was the most right wing man I'd ever met 20 years ago.
That's a great endorsement.
I couldn't ask for a better endorsement of a candidate than that.
Omar says, vibes based politics is incredibly effective and virulent in spreading.
You do tend to look a bit of a div on the second someone questions on how you arrived at your conclusions and can't show your work.
Yeah, there have been two great examples of the Greens for this now.
That was the deputy leader or whatever her name is.
It was like, where does all the hate come from?
And she was like, rising grocery prices?
Oh, yeah, this was that guy on Question Time who was asking about the attacks on synagogues and such, wasn't he?
He was like, who's attacking them?
And she's like, where does the hate come from?
It's like, well, the prices of things.
And then Hannah, the plumber, being like, Matt Goodwin's responsible for the Manchester Arena bombing.
Which is just mind blowing.
That's a take.
Yeah, it's a great take.
I'm pretty sure it's her ideology that meant the guy went unsearched.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's the fault, really.
I mean, it was literally that the guard was afraid to search him in case it would have been racist.
Yeah.
That's literally what happened at the Manchester Arena bombing.
How could Matt Goodwin do this?
Yeah, I know, yeah, Matt, how could you?
Isaac says, Wow, I can't wait to turn on the TV tomorrow and see all the local election results from everywhere except Great Yarmouth.
Yeah, I mean, like I said, I've been really reluctant to like hype it up, but it looks like they're going to do really well.
I hope so.
Yeah, obviously, I hope so.
We will be covering it tomorrow, so we'll find out.
Great Yarmouth Election Results 00:01:04
So you'll be able to actually find out what happens there and doing whatever breakdown is available and possible to do from all of our lads on the ground.
So we should have some good information for you because we did specifically send some people.
Bo is currently there with Thomas and various others.
As a Norfolk lad, I wish our battle brothers and sisters a glorious victory to pave the way for the rest of us.
Yeah, I know, right?
Like, we're going to have to put up a statue to the Patriots.
Great Yarmouth when we win.
Because they're the ones who made this possible.
Alpha the Beta says, if you live in Wales for 10 years, you're Welsh.
If you live in Nigel's house for 10 years, you're Nigel Farage.
So all I need to do is squat.
He doesn't even have to know.
Yeah, exactly.
There's some rumblings in the attics where nobody goes to check.
And all of a sudden, you come downstairs and you're like, well, where's my GB News salary, Nigel?
Yeah, exactly.
Come on.
Hand it over.
But I think we're out of time.
Yeah, on that, we're out of time.
Time, so thank you very much for tuning in.
We'll see you again tomorrow, where hopefully we will have some very good news for you.
Till then, take care.
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