Ezra Levant contrasts Canada’s persecution of Christian activist Sean Foyt—banned from a national park tour for alleged extremism tied to Trump associations—with its embrace of Irish band Kneecap, whose Hamas endorsements and IRA-linked imagery go unchecked despite Mark Carney’s past terrorist advocacy. Meanwhile, UK protests against migrant hotels highlight 20-40x higher sexual assault conviction rates among Afghan/Pakistani/Bangladeshi migrants versus locals, exposing what Levant calls "two-tier justice," where deportation risks escalate amid fears of societal collapse. The episode frames cultural integration as a lost battle under mass migration, warning that unchecked policies may erode Western heritage like Rome’s fall. [Automatically generated summary]
Tonight, a Christian worship band from the United States is canceled from playing in a Canadian national park, but a terrorist supporting band from Ireland is being given the red carpet treatment.
It's July 25th, and this is the Esper Levant show.
Shame on you, you sensorious bug.
I hadn't heard of Sean Feucht until last week.
He's a high-energy U.S.-based pastor who incorporates music into his church.
And in terms of his church, he takes it outside, something he put to important use during the COVID lockdowns.
Here, watch this video trailer.
You start to get a flavor for him.
America's bedrock principle of religious freedom is being severely tested by the pandemic.
Singing has been banned at all church services in California.
We need to bend the curve.
I can feel something inside of me like, we've got to take a stand.
Christian singer and activist Sean Foyt leading what's called Let Us Worship.
This guy is probably responsible for hundreds of deaths.
We thank you, Lord, that there is another story that the media is telling.
It is one of hope.
There's a pandemic.
There's a plague.
Here's a move of God.
It's going to change America.
The whole thing is fear, man.
It's fear.
It's intimidation.
Courage is taught when you see it.
You can't teach it as principles.
You have to see it modeled.
Christians are rising up.
I'm telling you guys.
Light will become stopped every day.
This is not political.
This is biblical.
Super Spreader rated PG-13 in theater September 29th.
He's charismatic.
He says he's biblical, not political.
But of course, what is more political than the Bible, especially in America's culture wars.
But he's got some political friends.
Here's a clip of that.
Hi, my name is Sean Foyt, and welcome to my YouTube channel.
Any further, make sure that you click the button above, subscribe so you can stay in touch with the latest videos and all the amazing events that we have going on.
I am standing here in northern Iraq in a 6,000-year-old citadel.
And I want to tell you, God is still on the throne and he's still in control.
And this year, we are taking the message of the gospel to nations.
We're going to 50 state capitals with the Kingdom to the Capital tour.
We're doing missions with Light a Candle.
We got podcasts.
We got albums.
We got a lot of stuff going on.
So we welcome you to our pace to check it out, search through the videos, get resourced, get encouraged.
And I pray that you leave better off than you can.
God bless.
Well, of course, he's based in the U.S.
And 90% of Canada's population is within an hour's drive of the U.S.
So it makes sense for a man who goes on tour outdoors to put Canada on his road trip.
He's been here before.
I think he actually really likes Canada.
Trouble is, as you can tell, he's got traditional values.
He would be, I don't know, called far right by the far left.
Take us back to that moment when you decided the straw has broken the camel's back.
Something has to happen.
We're going to do this let us worship thing.
Yeah, it was actually kind of an accidental movement.
It's funny.
You know, I really felt like being in California, we were one of we were the most locked down state.
And we actually had a governor that told us, you know, bars are open, strip clubs can be open, casinos can be open, marijuana dispensaries can be open, but the church has to shut and the church can't sing.
So that was kind of the moment to me where I was like, hold on one sec.
We're the church.
We've been worshiping for 2,000 years.
Like this is what we do.
And we do it through pandemics.
We do it through plagues.
We do it through political strife.
We do it through wars.
This is what we do.
So, you know, that was the moment for me where I just began to say, okay, we got to do something.
We got to rise up.
We got to remind people who they are.
And remember, in Canada, simply believing in traditional values, according to our RCMP, is a sign you're probably a criminal.
Take a look.
Well, radicalization in general quite often will show by people isolating themselves and changing their behavior, like changing what they're saying on a subject, like becoming more extremist.
Like, and if someone you know was very believed in equal gender rights, but all of a sudden are leaning towards like traditional values, and that might be a sign that they're becoming more extremists.
But we also have to remember that having the most extremist views is perfectly legal in Canada and that it's only acting with violence to prove that view that becomes that becomes a criminal offense.
Yeah, there's been no recantation of that.
I think that's exactly what's going on.
So Sean had a tour of Canada that was canceled by the government.
He had one appearance that was going to be at a national park, permitted, all the boxes checked.
Then the National Park, which is a government agency, suddenly said he's not welcome.
Now, they couldn't come right and say that he's not welcome because he's Christian, but they said because of his views, there's a safety issue.
So, of course, whoever was making the threats gets to win, and whoever would be the victim of the threats has to lose.
It's a lie, of course.
Safety is a word that they used during the pandemic to lock us all down.
Safety has been an excuse for a lot of horrendous things.
If you think back, oh, I don't know, a few hundred years ago to the French Revolution, it was the Committee of Public Safety, that's what they call themselves in the French Revolution, that ran the reign of terror.
Safety's Sacrifice00:04:56
I don't know if you know your history.
That's when the guillotine was used to execute thousands of people to keep them safe.
So that's what happens to a peaceful, friendly American Christian pastor who's filling out all the forms, has been to Canada many times, but because he is friends with Donald Trump, they call him a MAGA activist.
By that, I mean the state broadcaster calls him that.
So he must be kept out.
But at the exact same time, there's another singer coming to Canada with the full blessing of our entire government from the top to the bottom.
It's an Irish band called Kneecap.
And you might be wondering, what does kneecap mean?
Well, kneecap was a violent form of torture that the IRA would use, shooting people in the kneecap during the troubles.
Now, I'm taking no position on the battle in Ireland between Ireland and the UK.
I don't understand the whole conflict and I'm interested in other things.
But I'm just telling you that to this band, that is something so amazing.
They name themselves after it.
There's three of them.
There's a couple of young guys and a very old man who covers his face with a balaclava to hide how old he is and to look menacing.
That's a little throwback to the troubles when terrorism was the way.
So NECAP has named themselves after a torture tactic and they actually go much further than that.
They promote terrorism today.
They promote it in many ways, flying terrorist flags, chanting death to MPs.
They actually promote the group Hamas and tweet pictures of their Balaclaba guy reading terrorist manuals from Hamas itself.
It's super gross.
You don't have to be a sensitive soul to see that.
They've been banned, for example, from Hungary.
Here's the president, the prime minister of Hungary, Viktor Orbán, explaining why he's just not allowing that filth into his own country.
Now, in my view, what NICAP is doing may well meet the test for supporting terrorism.
And one of the crimes in Canada is if you give any sort of aid or support to terrorism, that's more than just saying I support them.
If you are promoting them, if you are propagandizing for them, if you are flying their flag, it's a real question on whether or not you are committing terrorism.
Now, they have not been charged with terrorism in the UK, even though they have called for the death of certain people.
But they are coming to Canada, and so far, it's been no problem for them at all.
But why would they be in trouble?
I don't know if you've been following our campaign at Fire Gary, but Canada's new public safety minister himself is affiliated with different terrorist groups.
He's recused himself from all dealings with the Tamil Tigers terrorist group because he used to support them as a lawyer.
And he was just found out that while he was a sitting MP under Justin Trudeau, twice he went to bat to get terrorists into Canada.
This is part and parcel of the work that every member of parliament does.
And in this particular case, I was executing my duties as a member of parliament, one that I believe constituents expect me to do.
He was rejected on national security grounds, though, which is quite extraordinary.
We couldn't find any other case like that.
And now you're minister in charge of national security, border security.
Do you defend that decision now?
Do you regret writing those letters?
Just to be very clear, the Ministry of Relief Regiment does contemplate advocacy by a range of individuals, including members of parliament.
In the context of Minister, that would be inappropriate.
And I have instructed my office not to issue support letters of that nature because ultimately the decision will be coming to me as an individual.
So of course NECAP is allowed.
Now, I'm not saying that NECAP should be punished criminally for their views.
I believe in free speech, even for idiots, but they're not Canadians.
Official Reasons Revealed00:11:32
They're foreigners.
And to bring that terrorism to Canada, we don't have to justify it at all.
Canada can keep out foreigners for any reason or no reason.
Of course, we never do.
And I doubt we'll do it here because if Mark Carney were to keep out those Hamas supporters, well, that's his base he's taking on.
And I think that there's nothing he cares about more than maintaining warm relations with Hamas.
As you know, he's been prime minister only a few months and he's already received a thank you letter from Hamas.
He's not getting along very well with Donald Trump these days.
Trump said it looks like Canada is going to have tariffs maybe perpetually.
Fuck with Canada.
I think Canada could be one where they'll just pay tariffs.
Not really a negotiation.
We're working very diligently with Europe.
Yeah, so he's not so elbows up for Trump, but boy, he'll go to the bat for kneecap.
Stay with us.
More ahead.
Well, I've been traveling to the United Kingdom for years, watching as that country slowly comes to terms with mass immigration, especially mass Muslim immigration, and a phenomenon that can no longer be hushed up.
I'm talking about largely Islamic, largely Pakistani grooming gangs, or another way that we would say that is rape gangs.
Combine that with other rapes at migrant hotels.
And I think the country is starting to rebel.
So many different issues jammed into one, including censorship of the very words I just said.
Joining me now, on location at a migrant hotel where Brits are protesting, and yet there are counter-protesters in support of the migrants is Jack Hatfield, a British journalist.
Jack, it's great to see you.
Thank you for joining us live and on location.
Tell us where you are.
Yes, I'm right outside the Britannia Hotel in Canary Wharf, which you can see just behind me across the road, where we have police fans and a ring of steel in front of this hotel, where we have protesters who are just on the other side of the camera from me, who've been here since Monday night making their views clear.
Obviously, not all migrants are rapists, and not all Pakistani migrants are rapists, but there are statistics collected in the United Kingdom that show Afghan and Pakistani and Bangladeshi migrants do commit rape at 20, sometimes 40 times the normal national average.
This is something that's very difficult to talk about because it sounds on the face of it to be racist.
But as Ben Shapiro would say, facts don't care about your feelings.
Those are the facts, Jack, or am I wrong?
No, you're exactly right.
Those are the facts.
In comparing British nationals to Afghani nationals, Afghan nationals are 22 times more likely to be done for sexual assault in the United Kingdom than British nationals.
Now, I believe it's 59 out of 1,000 Afghans versus 6 out of 1,000 British nationals.
And bear in mind, of course, that figure of the six out of 1,000 British nationals, of course, includes second-generation Pakistani immigrants.
So those who may have been involved or done for the grooming gangs in Rotsdale and in other places in this country, they would be included under that British figure.
So perhaps it's an even greater number, but we don't collect the statistics on that thing.
You know, it's not that hard to figure out why, if you go to some of these countries, women are treated as second-class citizens.
They're covered from head to toe.
In some countries, they're not allowed to go out without their male guardian.
And it's partly because of a chauvinistic society, but partly it's a defensive tactic.
If you let a woman go out uncovered or alone in those countries, she will be attacked.
And so you bring over hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of people from those medieval societies, and you just dump them in the street in the UK where women dress in a modern fashion that would be considered scandalous.
They would be considered as prostitutes back in Pakistan or Afghanistan.
So I don't know if it's a racist comment, but it's a comment on the culture of misogyny.
There really is rape culture in the world.
It's probably not where a lot of feminists say it is.
There really is a handmaid's tale in the world, but it's not in some Christian nation.
It's Islamic nations.
And I think that's why a YouGov poll just out today shows that most Brits think that Islam is a net negative to the country.
I think these things are extremely hard to talk about, Jack.
And anyone who does talk about them is called racist or Islamophobic.
But I get the feeling that the Brits who are finally protesting, they just don't care anymore about being called names.
Yes, you're right.
I was in Epping on Sunday and just last day, yesterday, when there were more protests on this.
And parents who talked to me said, you know, we're not far right.
We're just local.
We're local people, local parents concerned about what's happening to their wives, their sisters, their daughters.
And the far-right label just simply doesn't wash anymore.
There is a very unusual thing that was at first denied by authorities, but then admitted when it was impossible to further deny.
And that was a very strange phenomenon of police escorting in pro-migrant professional protesters.
So there's grassroots British protesters against these migrant hotels.
And a microhotel is when several hundred migrants are placed all in one place.
A hotel is rented out in its totality.
We have some of that here in Canada too, by the way.
And it's almost all men in these hotels.
So you can imagine hundreds of Afghan or other young men sexually frustrated, perhaps in a certain community.
Anyways, Brits were coming out to protest and the police escorted in left-wing counter-protesters.
What's that all about?
Why did police do that?
Do you think they were looking for some sort of a conflagration so they could use that as an excuse to crack down on the protesters?
Sort of like an agent provocateur.
They wanted a quarrel so they could clamp down on the anti-migrant protests.
Yes, obviously, we can't say this for certain, but it really didn't look that way, you know, to the untrained eye.
We had the stand-up to racism counter-protesters, which is one of the biggest anti-fascist groups here in Britain that is funded by the trade union Congress, receives government money as well.
And these people are professional protesters in many ways.
So, yeah, so the police walked these people from the Epping tube station towards the protest at the Bell Hotel there in Epping at some point earlier last week.
And then they were ferried unbanned back to the tube station afterwards.
Of course, the reasoning here is baffling because there is no reason why there's no God-given right to have your counter-protests at the exact same place as the main protest that's taking place.
Why on earth they couldn't have let these stand-up to racism protesters who just have as much right to free speech as the rest of us, you know, exist in the middle of the town rather than at the Bell Hotel where there would have been no conflict to take place at all.
Yeah, I've never heard of police acting as sort of Uber drivers for left-wing protesters before.
Let's talk for a moment about where you are.
I've been to Canary Wharf, it's a very modern part of London.
It was totally rebuilt actually by the Canadian entrepreneurs, the Reichmann family, in the era of Margaret Thatcher.
So I guess this is going back more than 40 years ago.
It really brought a modern, sleek, new financial center to London.
It really marked the revival of the financial sector in that city.
It's gorgeous.
It's metal and glass and chrome.
And it's not cheap.
I checked online, and the hotel that has been taken over in totality for these migrants was about 400 plus pounds a night, which in Canadian money is that's about 700 bucks a night.
Now, London's an expensive city, but like that is a luxury hotel.
Are there really, did they really, like, it's not a rumor, it's a fact.
They really did give this four-star hotel to migrants who just hopped on a boat.
Is that, have you confirmed that with your own eyes?
Yes, it is entirely true that this has now been taken over by the office forum riding hotel.
However, it is unclear whether there are any migrants in there currently.
Nobody has seen anything.
Nobody has seen the bucklers to bring them in.
Perhaps the fact that the protest here is still ongoing.
It's putting off the government from moving people into the hotel to begin with.
I believe the official reason for this hotel being taken over now is that it's been used as an overflow for when they expect more migrants to come in boats over the summer months.
So this hotel, which as you can see behind me, is absolutely just massive.
It goes all the way up.
It is huge and it could fit just so many people in there.
So when they actually pack this place full of migrants, there will just be too many around the local area.
People, I had one person say to me, the school holidays are coming up, and parents are now concerned to let their kids even walk past the hotel.
Yeah, I mean, these are people who their very first act was to break the law, to come illegally, in most cases, to destroy their documents, their passports, throw them in the sea, or rip them up.
They often don't know the language.
They come from places, like I say, that have an inherent hostility to women.
And I think many of them have an inherent hostility to the UK itself.
I think these are just shoppers.
They're shopping around.
Most of them came from France, but they get a better deal in the UK.
They like the UK.
Maybe they like its welfare.
Maybe they like the fact that there's a huge pre-existing population of fellow expats from their countries.
I don't know why.
But I actually don't think any real people believe that these are genuinely endangered refugees.
I think everyone knows they're coming to France, which is a safe and lovely country.
I just think that this is a real case of the emperor has no clothes.
Riots And Reform00:12:22
I don't think anyone still, I think people put up with it for a bit, just out of good humor and good nature, but it's so overwhelming now.
And the rapes, maybe they're only being reported more now.
They were covered up before.
But I think that's the spark that lit the fire.
Would you say so, Jack?
Yes, definitely.
The actual protest in Epping happened because an Ethiopian migrant who was allegedly sexually assaulted a school girl in the center of town.
Now, as you've heard before me, we've been having this a lot today.
There are people who drive past Anafon to show their support.
A lot of black cabs and van drivers, the traditional, the black cat traditional London taxis have been supporting people out here at this protest.
But yes, it was a migrant who sexually assaulted, allegedly sexually assaulted a young girl who was center of Epping, who was then arrested for that earlier this month.
And that's what kicked off, that's what kicked it off there.
And that's certainly what's been kicking off more of these things in the rest of the country.
We're just seeing now in the last few hours more protests break out in Ashfield in Nottinghamshire, down on the coast of Southampton.
There's more protests expected in other places this weekend, for example, Norwich.
This is going to continue, especially where asylum hotels are.
Now, there was a stabbing of three young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed party.
This was last year by a man who himself was born in the UK to refugees from Rwanda.
He was a convert to Islam and he took a knife and he stabbed, stabbed, stabbed this party, murdered three girls.
And that kicked off riots and counter like it was a whole meltdown because it was such a shocking and brutal crime.
And the government immediately lied about who the perpetrator was.
And the government immediately blamed, quote, right-wing influences for the riots.
And your Prime Minister, Kier Starmer, set up a 24-hour a day court just to bang through prosecutions of people who had talked about this on social media.
It was a shocking response to a natural reaction to a shocking crime.
Do you think that the regime will try to do that again?
Do you think they will come in and try and arrest and try and charge for hate crimes and non-crime hate incidents?
Do you think they're going to, like, it looks like it's spreading?
I mean, Portsmouth.
You listen.
Like, I think by the time the weekend comes, there's going to be protests at 10 migrant hotels across the UK.
What's the government going to do?
Because they want to contain this.
Yes, I think really, I don't know.
I feel that there's a different air and there's something slightly different than what happened at Southport.
I was there on the ground on the first day of the riots there.
Now, that was an it still is a very instinctual, violent reaction to a horrific crime that happens there.
Whereas this, where I've been around here at these protests over the last few weeks, well, the last week or so, it's been so much more peaceful.
There have been a lot of angry people, of course, but the level of violence has been very, very minimal.
It feels like people have a specific targeted goal, which is get these asylum hotels out of our community.
And there have been, as I said, it's just completely local people and a lot of just concerned parents who were not really the types to kick off in the way that Southport and some of these other incidents happened.
But it all remains to be seen.
There could be something else.
There could be another incident which means tempers flare once again, and we could be in for another summer of riots.
You know, I do think there seems to be, you know, the third year now in a row where we've had riots and protests over asylum hotels.
There was one in Knowsley and outside Liverpool in 2023.
Obviously, Southport last year, which spread.
And now here we have Epping, you know, Canary Wharf, Asfield, Southampton already.
Is there something that may be in the British psyche that means we're far more likely to protest in this way, perhaps?
Yeah.
I think it was you who filmed a mother in Epping saying, I'm not right-wing, I'm just a mum.
Was that your video, Jack?
Yes, it was.
That was Karen Macyber, who was the mother of reform councillor Jamie MacIver in Epping.
And I believe she herself was a reform parliamentary candidate.
But, you know, just because she stands for reform, which is now really the biggest normal right-wing party in Britain, does not make her far right at all.
There's nothing far-right about supporting Nigel Farage or other people as well in this movement.
And she got a lot of criticism for being a member of reform.
But she was representative, just as representative of many of the local parents as anybody else.
You know, just because she had a party affiliation does not mean immediately she was far right or not speaking for everybody else.
Here's a clip of her.
I thought this was a very interesting interview.
Take a look.
My children went to Epping St. John's School and I was parent governor for four years.
Epping is a wonderful place.
The families of the children that attend Epping School are wonderful.
And we're here to support the family and we're here to support our town.
What's happening, how we're being portrayed is not correct.
And we're here to make a difference.
A strong message from strong women.
So what's the placard that you have here?
We felt a lot of the press were incorrectly reporting us on Friday morning after our protests on Thursday.
And so we just wanted to make it really clear that we're strong women.
We're mums, we're sisters, we're aunties, we're parents of the area.
So we're just here to support.
Yeah, the people here who've been walking at the front have been mostly women and girls doing the march.
Do you think that's because the people feel that a lot of the people in the hotel are a threat to women and girls?
Everybody is really concerned about who is in that hotel.
Crime in the area is shocking and this is a beautiful place to live and we are all very concerned, as are other people in other towns around the country.
We need to sit together, peaceful protest, and the government needs to listen to us.
They need to listen to real people on the ground, people that work hard and love their country.
And we're here to protect them.
Our values are very important and we must protect them.
You know, you mentioned Reform UK.
I was up in the district of Runcorn in Hellsby, which was a deep Labour riding that flipped to reform.
And I was up there and I saw the reform literature and it was very simple.
Freeze immigration, stop the boats.
Like it couldn't be clearer.
Now I think the front line in the UK is do you just want to freeze it or do you want to have a net remigration?
That's a word that President Donald Trump is normalizing.
He's used that word at least half a dozen times that I've observed.
And that's what they're doing.
They have a massive deportation project.
I see that West Germany is building a special deportation wing terminal at an airport that will specialize in handling deportations.
I think it's catching on in different jurisdictions.
What will happen in the UK?
I mean, Nigel Farage still seems a little reluctant to call for mass deportations.
I think he thinks it sounds radical, but surely not as radical as abiding a thousand migrants a day coming across in dinghies.
Well, no, exactly.
I completely agree.
I think the only way for this to stop happening, to stop having protests constantly, is demigration, mass deportations.
You know, we can't just turn off the cap.
There's so many of them who are here already.
You know, we have so many here admitting rapes, sexual assaults, murders, all sorts of bad.
You know, just closing the door on more people coming in won't fix the problem that's already here.
And you're right, I think Nigel has been a little bit reticent to call this.
I believe he's still perhaps a little bit nervous trying to play the crowd that mainstream media little or control the narrative will become quite moderate, which is, of course, a fair play, you know, from a politician.
But, you know, if reform do win in 2029 and they don't seize the opportunity to create a radical policy platform, I'm concerned for the future of this country.
Yeah, Naja Farage himself said a few weeks ago: if we fail, what comes after us will be quite dangerous.
So here's a clip of that.
On Epping, I don't think anybody in London even understands just how close we are to civil disobedience on a vast scale in this country.
And I regret saying that.
Do I understand how people in Epping feel?
You bet your life I do.
You bet your life I do.
And I'll bet you that most of the people outside that hotel in Epping weren't far right or far left or anything like that.
I'm just genuinely concerned.
Here's a question for you.
Be very generous with your time, Jack.
Thank you for that.
A few months ago, there were some Pakistani British men in Manchester Airport who just beat the living daylights out of some cops, women cops.
And recently, footage of an absolutely bloodied female cop was finally released.
In the first instance, those men were released because a large Pakistani Muslim community said, Let the boys go or you're going to have a riot on your hands.
And the police absolutely stood down.
And I've heard several examples of that.
Whereas we've seen extreme policing.
I mean, you just posted an image of someone who was thrown in jail for 16 hours because he swore at a cop.
Now, I don't recommend swearing at police.
Nothing good will come from that.
But it really seems like there's two-tier justice.
There was the case of Lucy Connolly, the mum, who tweeted something a little bit stupid, frankly, but she was thrown in the clink for 31 months, which is longer than some of the actual rapists are.
How much longer can this two-tier justice continue and still have the support of the British people?
I mean, in a democracy, you need the consent of the governed.
That's the same with policing, Robert Peel's laws of policing.
You need the consent of the community.
Unless you're a police state, you cannot manage a government of a country unless the people are with you.
At what point do people say the heck with it?
The entire establishment is untrustworthy.
And we are going to take things into our hands like they did in Ballymina, Northern Ireland, a few weeks ago, when they actually walked onto the property of some alleged rapists and burned their house down.
Yeah, as you said, you're exactly right.
It's concerning.
I don't think that the government wants to act and want to do the things that need to be done.
And if they don't, and they continue to fear policing, then it is very concerning.
Barrage might be right.
What comes after him could be worse if he doesn't fix the problems.
This country feels a little bit like a police state right now.
We still have some freedom of speech.
Obviously, people are out here protesting.
I do worry.
I do worry.
It can't last much longer.
Something has got to break, whether that's reform coming into power or something else.
I can't predict the future.
I do think that in the end, in the end, at some point, things will get better, but I have no idea how long it's going to take.
Yeah.
End of an Era?00:06:35
Jack, whenever I talk about these things, I think of my friends who are Muslim or black or whatever, and I try and make sure that I don't say anything in a burst of emotion that I wouldn't say in conversation with them.
And so I acknowledge that not all migrants are rapists.
And I acknowledge that, frankly, if I was in some refugee camp in Calais, of course I'd want to come to London.
I mean, you actually can't blame someone for taking free stuff.
I mean, you absolutely can crack down on someone for the sexual violence, which I think is what's sparking the rage.
But I think precisely the tolerance of the intolerable is what has turned people in your country and my country against, quote, normal immigration.
I think if we had small numbers of culturally and economically fit immigration that was assimilated and was patriotic, I think there's a warm spirit in both of our countries that would welcome people.
I remember my friend Raheem Jaffer, who came as a baby from Uganda when Edi Amin kicked out all the Muslims.
He came when he was one year old and he became an upstanding citizen in Edmonton.
He ran for parliament.
He loved Canada.
I think that what's happened with the mass migration is it has destroyed the social license for, frankly, all immigration.
And if I was a minority, if I was an immigrant, I would be furious that I was being tarred, not by the cops or by the critics, but by the outrageous misconduct of these fake asylum seekers.
Anyway, that's what I would say, is that the government is what's turned the people against immigration.
Not that either of our countries is a mass immigration country, but it's been off the hook lately.
Yes, exactly.
The thing is, obviously, with mass migration, it makes it completely impossible for anyone to integrate.
Integration can only happen in very small numbers where you have a cohesive community and cohesive culture for people to immigrate into.
But when you have mass migration and when your culture becomes a mix of malignant running completely different, completely alien, you know, the culture in London, you know, people speak M-L-E, multicultural London English, it's the accent around here.
When you have that and there seems to be a no-culture, what can people integrate into?
Yeah.
Well, I don't know if you know this, Jack, but I'm coming to the UK tonight.
I'm hopping on a plane.
I'm going to fly overnight and I'm going to try and see these things with my own eyes.
Hopefully I'll bump into you and you can show me around and keep me out of trouble, Jack, or maybe we'll get in trouble together.
But I love the UK.
I've become a real Anglophile and I see the mother country, the source of so much of our law and culture and language and history.
I see it.
I don't want it to fall into ruin.
I feel like sometimes we're living in the ruins of a superior civilization that came before us.
And that's deeply heartbreaking, like how it must have been in Rome after it was sacked or in Constantinople after it was sacked.
The thing is, in both cases, they tried to defend those cities.
In the case of London, they're just opening up the gate.
I mean, no Trojan horse needed.
They're just letting everyone in.
And that's what scares me.
I'm so glad I've had a chance to visit the UK while there was still some Britishness left to it.
Hopefully we'll be able to keep that.
It's a wonderful country and I love it.
Yeah, it is.
It is a fantastic country.
I do love living here.
I'm now in London, Neo, and despite it all, it is still a fantastic city.
I have so many friends here.
It's great.
You know, I do love the country that I was born in and the culture and my people and everything that goes with it.
And I do think that, yeah, eventually, you know, there will be no more of this, you know, multiculturalism, mass migration.
I think that will come to an end.
It's unsustainable and there is a bright dawn.
But as we all know, the darkest hour comes before us.
I hope you're right.
I'm also sober enough to realize that Egypt was once a Christian country.
Syria was once a Christian country.
The whole of the Crusades were to stop the empire of Islam.
Istanbul was once the largest, richest, most Christian city in the world called Constantinople.
It is no more.
And the Haji of Sophia was once a mighty church.
So I hope you're right.
But sometimes the pendulum does not swing back.
I don't know if there's any hope for Sweden.
I was in Malmo, a city that's, I was in Marseille.
I don't know if there's any hope for that city.
It'll become an Algerian and Moroccan city.
I don't know.
I hope that the UK and Canada too can be saved.
Thanks for giving us so much time today.
Yeah, thank you for having me on.
All right, we'll see you there.
I'll see you on Sunday.
Yeah, that's right.
I'll see you there.
There he is, Jack Hadfield commenting on the ground outside a migrant hotel in Canary Wharf.
And I got to tell you, if you don't know Canary Wharf, it is a, I mean, fancy is the wrong word.
It is a glistening, modern skyscraper financial center.
And they took a four-star hotel and are turning into a migrant hotel.
Just absolutely incredible.
Stay with us.
more ahead.
Hey, welcome back.
It is Friday, late afternoon, as I record this.
I'm going to rush home and pack my bag and head to the airport.
I'm going to go to the United Kingdom over the weekend.
I'll be back Monday afternoon, but I'm going to spend all day tomorrow and Sunday traveling around.
I'm going to try and connect with Jack Hadfield.
I want to see these protests for myself.
Are they severely normal mom and dads who are finally waking up?
What are the pro-migrant people saying?
Are there any real pro-migrant people or are they all paid professional protesters like some of the groups that Jack was referring to and groups that I myself have seen?
Anyways, wish me well.
I'll be back on Monday and hopefully I'll have some reports for you over the weekend.
Until next time, on behalf of all of us here at Rubber World Headquarters, see you at home.