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Aug. 15, 2025 - Rebel News
38:05
EZRA LEVANT | UK police crack down on catcalling while rape crisis rages on

Ezra Levant examines the UK’s systemic failures in tackling rape, spotlighting Rotherham’s 1,400 alleged child victims and "grooming gangs" linked to Pakistani Muslim communities, citing 2014 Toronto Star reports on Pakistan’s rape culture. Surrey’s undercover "jogger" policing is framed as a distraction from deeper issues like two-tier justice, where undocumented men evade consequences while women protesting face restrictions. The episode draws parallels between sports gender policies—like Nova Scotia’s volleyball scandal—and Darvo tactics silencing victims, contrasting Trump’s U.S. crackdowns with Canada’s inaction. Letters demand an "ethnic homeland" for British people amid claims Starmer enabled migrant crossings, arguing cultural clashes over rape aren’t racism but clashing values. [Automatically generated summary]

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Joggers and Rapists 00:02:07
Hello, my friends.
The United Kingdom has a massive rape problem.
But to distract from the real source of the problem, the UK police are sending out women, attractive women, in tight-fitting jogging outfits and then capturing anyone who cat calls them.
I've got the video to prove it.
But first, let me invite you to become a subscriber to what we call Rebel News Plus.
It's the video version of this podcast.
And I'd like you to see these joggers.
They're going out jogging.
They're sort of not quite supermodels or anything, but they're very pretty police women who are going out jogging to trap men into whistling or complimenting them or even honking their horns.
And then the police jump in.
It's a crazy non-crime exercise to distract from the actual rape crimes in that country.
To see it, though, you need to become a subscriber.
Go to RebelNewsPlus.com.
It's eight bucks a month, which might not sound like a lot to you, but boy, it adds up for us.
Go to RebelNewsPlus.com.
Oh, yeah, one more thing.
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Tonight, Britain has become Europe's rape capital, but police have bigger crimes to investigate, including honking at pretty women?
It's August 14th, and this is the Ezra Levant show.
Shame on you.
You censorious bug.
Two-Tier Policing Play 00:05:47
I keep watching those migrant hotels in the UK that I visited a few weeks ago.
There is one in a small town called Epping that now has another alleged rape committed by a migrant resident in the hotel there.
This craziness isn't stopping.
And in London, you might remember I went to Canary Wharf, which is really a fancy financial sector neighborhood.
They've taken over a four-star hotel.
There's protesters there, and one man who I have to say looked demonic.
He broke into the country a couple of weeks ago.
And then yesterday he broke into someone's house.
Take a look.
This is the guy.
This is him.
He's trying to walk into a girl's house on the IOD.
We watched her chase him.
Now he's trying to cover his face.
Look.
Please, please.
We caught you, mate.
We caught you.
We caught you.
This man in this vehicle, this man in this vehicle, has just entered a lady's property without her consent.
And these officers have said it's not an offense.
They're letting him go.
No, no.
They're letting him go.
Officer, how is that not an offense?
How is it not an offense entering someone's house?
Regardless, she didn't want him in the house.
He's an armpit distress.
He's an armpit distress.
You're letting him go.
I hope you'll love your system and I get fucking raped and I hope you fucking like it, bro.
I hope your mum gets raped.
He does it again.
Regardless, he's done it once.
He doesn't need to do it again.
He doesn't need to do it again.
So he was chased out before he could harm the children.
Walked into the house, walked into the bathroom.
He was chased out before he could do anything.
Police said, oh, well, since he didn't do anything, it's not an arrestable offence.
They actually said that.
Take a look.
She just says, I'm trying to get murder.
Whatever, they just think she's going to stay there.
Here's a couple of lads who were there on the scene.
Upon leaving Tiller Road, we turn right into Bing Street to where we see a lady leaving her property and an illegal immigrant who we recently see just before that leaving the hotel.
We pull over.
He's trying to gain entrance into the lady's house to where we say to the man, like, what are you doing?
He decides to run, nearly getting hit by the car that we're in.
We follow him up the road to where we jump out and say, Mate, what are you doing?
You can't be doing this sort of stuff.
He runs up the road to Marshmallow where we follow him.
We then detain him.
We don't touch him.
We phone the police and we say to the police, like, come down, this is what's happened.
They turn up.
Once they turn up, this is where the two-tier policing comes into play.
They turn up and when they turn up, they tell us that they can't arrest a man because of it's only trespassing.
He didn't say anything.
He didn't want to touch anything in their property, which they don't know because of the girl managed to get him out of her property.
They put the man in their vehicle and drive him to return him to the Britannia Hotel on the Isle of Dogs Canary Wolf.
We then get down there, and then when we get down there, that's where all the two-tier policing starts.
They say they can't arrest a man through trespassing not being a criminal offence, a civil matter.
What was he doing in there?
What's he doing in the property in the first place?
What's his intentions of going into their house?
And then once we get down there, they then started issuing section 45 at once.
Today I'll be able to say you've got a legal property and you can't come back till two o'clock in the morning.
You might find this hard to believe, but the migrant was not charged, but the homeowner was because she wouldn't disperse.
Just absolute two-tier policing.
And we're starting to get that way in Canada too, aren't we?
Imagine saying trespass is not an arrestable offence.
I really worry for the United Kingdom.
By the way, I'm very excited about this news.
We have a new contributor from the UK.
That way I don't have to fly over there all the time, even though I love it.
Emma Dunwell did this demo video for us, which I love so much.
We published it.
Here, we won't run the whole thing.
You can watch it on our channel, but I think she's doing a great job.
Take a look at this.
This is Emma Dunwa reporting for Rebel News, and today I am in Waterlooville near Portsmouth.
I'm just outside a boots on London Street, the flats above which were proposed by the Home Office to be used to house 35 asylum seekers.
This then faced massive local backlash that turned national with figures like Suella Bravman calling it an inappropriate decision.
And a protest was held about two weeks ago where about 2,000 people turned up calling the decision undemocratic.
The Home Office, since the protest, has reversed their decision to house the asylum seekers here.
I don't agree with anything at all with illegal immigration.
Illegal immigration is what it says.
It is illegal and nothing is done about it.
These people aren't vetted.
Beware of Stranger Danger 00:15:40
We don't know what they've done, where they've come from, whether they're criminals or not.
But these are illegal migrants and they are not refugees.
I won't walk through a park in the daytime.
And I think the priorities are wrong.
I think we should be housing our own homeless first because they're the ones that pay the taxes.
I think they should start putting Britain first.
British people first.
And then not.
That's Emma Dunwell.
And I hope to have a lot more videos from her.
She's a young woman who's doing citizen journalism.
I think she's got a really good style.
And hopefully she can be our feet on the ground.
I'll still go over there from time to time, of course, but I think she's doing a great job.
The United Kingdom has something unusual in the West.
And I'm sorry to talk about it.
Whenever I talk about it, I feel like it's a little bit gross.
It's an adult conversation.
It's about something called a rape gang.
In North America, we have rape.
Typically, it's a smash and grab situation or someone trapped in a situation and it's a one-off.
It could be random.
It's terrible.
It's horrific.
In North America, you hear help, rape, and men go to help the woman victim.
In the United Kingdom, they have a different phenomenon that I hope we are unfamiliar with in Canada.
I hope it never comes here.
It is the rape game.
Tens, 20, 30 men raping together or consecutively the same girls night after night.
So it's not a random mugging style smash and grab.
It is young children, as young as 11, 12 years old girls, who are tricked and groomed and extorted.
And then they're forced to have sex with a gang of men every night, sometimes for years.
You may have seen this image that I've shown before.
It's the front page of a newspaper when 1,400 girls in the small city of Rotherham, UK, about 100,000 people, were raped for years by overwhelmingly Pakistani Muslim men.
How does it happen?
How does it happen that men would rape together as a dark team?
Well, part of it comes from the rape culture in Pakistan.
The fact that there's a high level of trust and secrecy amongst the men because of clan ties, because of cousin marriage, believe it or not.
I mean, who could you possibly just engage in a dark thought experiment?
If you were to commit such a horrific crime, really a crime tantamount to murder, could you name one other person, let alone five or ten or twenty or thirty, that would commit this most diabolical crime with you night after night and keep the secret with you?
It's unthinkable in Western society.
And by the way, in Rotherham, policemen got in on it.
Politicians got in on it.
It's something specific to Pakistani Muslim culture.
And I know that sounds very racist.
I don't think it's racist.
It's not the race that's the issue.
It's the cultural practices.
Here's a story.
I wrote about this back in 2014 for the Toronto Stun.
Let me read the first couple of paragraphs.
Pakistan's Troubling Rape Problem was my headline.
This was published in September 2014.
There are 1.5 million street kids in Pakistan.
An estimated 90% of them have been sexually abused at some point in their lives.
Rape in Pakistan is so common, it's barely taboo.
Last week, the Daily Mail interviewed a bus driver from Peshawar who says after his shift is over, he likes to go into the slums and rape street kids.
It was a shocking story in the Daily Mail.
Sometimes he pays them a dollar, but often he doesn't.
He just joins in a big gang rape.
Quote, once there was a boy on the bus and everyone had sex with him, he told the Daily Mail.
I did it too, but what else could I do?
They invited me, and he was that kind of boy, anyways.
He says he's raped 12 different children.
This wasn't a solitary rapist hiding in the shadows, afraid of being seen or being caught.
This was men joining together, unworried about social norms, unworried about someone stopping them.
A poll of 1,800 Pakistani men found that a third don't think raping street kids is a crime.
And they don't even think it's a bad thing to do.
It's a story I wrote 11 years ago when I barely had heard about Rotherham.
But do you understand the phenomenon I'm talking about?
Rape is so shocking, so taboo, such a heinous crime.
It's a capital crime in various parts of the West.
But the idea that you would commit it just with other people and you wouldn't tell on them and they wouldn't tell on you and you would join together to commit the crime, it's so unthinkable in the West.
But these grooming gangs, as they're misleadingly called, exist en masse in the UK.
And that is why the UK has amongst the highest rape rate in the world.
It's not Welshmen or Englishmen or Scots.
It's the mass migration from rape culture countries.
And finally, in the UK, women are leading the counter-protest.
Women are standing up as women.
Here's a sample of that.
Just outside of a tiny hotel.
Now, you've kicked off what's been called, you know, the pink ladies movement.
You've seen it.
Obviously, it started here last Sunday.
I know it's spread to Epping.
I think other places are picking up as well.
But obviously we've seen women and children, the mothers and grandmothers who've come out to protest against migrants who are committing sexual assault and stuff.
Are you glad to see the movement's growing?
Yeah, it's great that it's took up momentum and other groups, you know, other areas are hooking on.
Basically, it's, we don't hate these people.
I don't know these people.
I can't hate someone I don't know.
What I hate, what I hate is the system that they could go walk freely and they're all undocumented men, yeah, in their 20s and 30s.
They haven't been with a woman for donkeys, well, months and months and months and months.
And you're letting them out with our girls who they don't respect, you see?
And that's our worry.
So that's the UK, but you know all of that.
That's what we've been reporting about.
But look at this.
Here's some news from Surrey, not Surrey BC, the original Surrey in the UK.
These women aren't friends out for a run.
They're actually undercover police officers taking to the streets in Surrey as part of a new operation trying to stop people cat calling and harassing female runners.
We get hulked at the staring, they're hanging out the window just to look at us and it just, it's so, so, so prevalent.
And police teams are ready to intervene the moment the officers are beeped at, followed or shouted at, pulling people over.
Those kind of behaviors may not be criminal offenses in themselves, but they still need to be addressed.
And of course, the people that are likely to commit those kind of behaviors.
Oh, really?
Here's another video from the Surrey Police.
Take a look.
Hi, I'm Abby.
I'm going out on my evening run, afternoon run.
I enjoy running.
I'm trying to get fitter and trying to get a bit more cardio done.
What happens if I do get cat called?
I feel diminished.
I feel it's just, I just feel uncomfortable.
It just makes me feel a little bit like, what are they getting out of it?
Makes me feel uneasy.
And then instantly, it's just ruined my run.
I just don't want to.
I just, yeah.
My name is TC Abby Hayward.
I work out of North Division, so I'm on Runny Need Safer Neighborhood Team.
So the change I'd like to see is for people to recognize that it's not right.
It's not just a small act.
It's a thing that can make someone feel really quite uncomfortable.
So I think it's important that Sorry Police are taking it so seriously.
It's one of our force priorities.
And for me, that makes me feel proud to work for Sorry Police because for me, it's such a personal experience.
And I know for a lot of other, if not all other women who experience it.
You know, being grabbed off the streets and raped in a dark corner, that is a problem, but it's not as widespread as the grooming gangs who go after vulnerable children again and again.
This idea that joggers, though, should be able to jog in skin-tight Lululemon cloning without anyone winking at them or saying, what's up, baby, or other cat calling, that is not threats, not, you know, crimes, just hooting and hollering or whistling.
The idea that that should be a police priority in an age of gang rapes is a luxury belief.
The police should stop cat calling as opposed to fighting real crime, especially rapes.
It's not actually policing at all, is it?
It's so obviously a misdirection.
Look over there.
Stop talking about rapes from rape gangs.
Stop talking about migrant rapes.
Look over there.
Some pretty girls are jogging and some white guy whistled at her.
Cops go after that.
What a crazy story the United Kingdom has become.
Stay with us for more.
It is human nature to be aware of dangerous things.
We teach this to children.
Beware of strangers, stranger danger.
It's a natural instinct.
Fear is an important emotion over the generations.
It is an evolutionary strategy to stay safe.
And there's nothing more innate than parents protecting children from other predators, including other adults who would have their way with them.
And one of the tactics that is necessary by people who take advantage of young children is to defeat that natural reflex, that defensiveness, that revulsion or fear when an adult presents himself in an inappropriate way to a child.
There's a psychological term called Darvo.
It's an acronym.
Deny, accuse, reverse victim and offender.
What I mean by that is if there's a sexual offender who is challenged on that, one of the manipulative techniques, a form of gaslighting, is to flip things around and say, no, no, you are the offender.
I'm the victim.
I didn't do anything wrong.
You did.
And it's a strategy that is implicit in the fight against transphobia.
Let me be more specific what I'm saying because I'm speaking perhaps too abstractly.
How do you get mama bears, how do you get mothers to back away and let men, including grown men, have access to their girls in a change room?
How do you defeat that maternal protective instinct?
How do you defeat that instinct in teenage girls to stay away from men in a change room?
If you go into a bathroom or a change room and there is a man there, let alone a naked man, the instinct is to withdraw, to call for help, to sound the alarm.
But transphobia, a made-up word, means that if you do so, Darvo, deny, accuse, reverse victim and offender.
If you make a fuss about it, if you rely on your instincts that this is a dangerous situation, you are now called the offender and the man in the change room is called the victim.
And these are very difficult stories to report on for obvious reasons because anyone who talks about them is Darvoed.
Anyone who reports about them is called an offender, a transphobe.
And in so many of these sports environments, children have been practicing their sport for years since they were very little.
And perhaps they're trying to make a national team.
And it would rack it if they got into a political fight.
It's very hard to report on.
Our friend David Menzies is one of only a handful of reporters in Canada who dares to do so.
And so I am delighted to see a second reporter covering this beat.
Let me read to you a recent headline in True North, our friends in an independent media outlet.
Exclusive girl athletes silenced over concerns about male teammate in dorms.
Members of Team Nova Scotia's girls volleyball roster returned from the Canada Cup in Toronto under threat of sanctions after raising private concerns against competing against a male teammate.
The author is Melanie Bennett, and she joins me now from a secret location in Ontario.
Melanie, great to see you again.
Hi, Ezra.
Thank you for asking me to join your show again.
Well, you know, if you keep writing stories like this, I'm going to keep asking you to join the show because I want to hear about it.
It is difficult to report because people do not want to pop their head up to warn, to blow the whistle about men in women's change rooms because they'll be denounced as transphobic.
Right, but in this case, it's not a man.
We're talking about a minor.
So it's a boy.
As far as I understand, he's 17 years old.
And the adults around him are the ones I think that require a little bit of scrutiny because this whole story upset me an awful lot when the whistleblower, I guess whistleblower leak, the person came to me.
I can't really disclose any of their information.
But the whole premise is that this kid, this young male, was included on a team and his team kept winning and winning and winning.
And he ended up winning most valuable player, ended up doing the cup in Toronto.
And some girls complained.
Some young girls complain.
They're all underage, that they're away from their parents, out halfway across the country, unaware of what's going on, and raise some private concerns, like you pointed out, private concerns on a private app amongst themselves.
I'm sure that young girls knew that they weren't allowed to complain about these sorts of things, given the education that we give them now.
But that wasn't enough.
They're not even allowed to complain in private messages.
That was leaked to the coaches, and the girls returned home, like you said, under sanctions.
Let me read one of the most infuriating lines from your report.
The male's inclusion on the girls' provincial team required him to travel to Ontario and share accommodations with female athletes.
Trans Athletes and Travel Policies 00:12:05
I remember when I was young and I would go on tours with other high school kids.
Of course, you would share hotel rooms with, you know, a couple of beds in the room.
Were saving money and it was same sex, girls were with girls and boys were with boys.
What you're reporting to me is that this 17 year old and yeah, it's a minor, but a 17 year old boy is tantamount to being a man.
Certainly physically, a 17 year old is a man.
And to have this man to be clear, i'll correct you on this.
Just to be clear, I i'm from what I was told.
They didn't actually share rooms.
They did have a shared bathroom okay, but the rooms themselves were private, so the girls weren't sharing rooms, uh at all.
Thank you for clarifying that.
I'm glad you did.
Um, sharing a bathroom.
Could you know?
I don't know the actual physical setup, was there a lock on the door, etc.
So that makes it less acute.
I should tell you that the case of Leah Thomas in Pennsylvania that kicked off so many of these protests, he would travel with the girls and and, and they're terrified to speak up.
And that's what I mean by having your stranger danger instincts dulled, because if you dare instinctively say this isn't right, you're the one called a transphobe.
Listen these, these girls are terrified too because if you think about it, they're at an age where next year uh, like they're elite.
Okay, so these are elite youths who are competing at a high level, perhaps for scholarships for uh, maybe to to be professional.
And so right now there's a male coming in at the um at the elite level at 17 years old.
They have another year of high school left and these girls complaining about somebody being in their spaces, possibly taking their, their trophies and their scholarships and and whatever else um, they're being threatened with being expulsed from the team in their last year.
Uh, that would effectively remove them from any possibility in the future.
So there's a really heavy hand here by the adults in the situation to keep this quiet.
And also, i'll point out, um, I saw many communications that I couldn't share because that would identify the people who spoke to me.
But it seems to me they were talking with the coaches in volleyball candidate, were talking about an lgbtq plus I think he called it athlete, but they never specified that this person was a trans identified male in the girls sport.
They didn't say that.
They said lgbtq plus athlete.
So it seems to me there's a lot of effort to hide what's going on and make it look like it's this, this kid who happens to be gay who's being bullied, which is not the case at all.
He's, he is the bully, even if he's not uh expressing himself verbally as the bully.
His presence is bullying and the fact that everyone is terrified to talk about it proves it.
Um, I see that the coach in your story, coach John Elliott um, summoned players and, at a meeting, condemned the chat as disgusting.
Uh, laced with transphobia, rude and disrespectful.
This is pure Darvo.
This is how you extort a youth.
You know what?
It's funny because one of the things I cover Melanie, is I look at how these girls in the United Kingdom and I mean girls, they're as young as 11 um, Are they used the word groomed over there?
They're exploited.
They're not just raped once, they're raped every night for years by scores of men.
It is a mass industrial rape.
How?
How do they get these girls to do it?
And through extortion and fear, and if you talk about it, we'll expose you to your mom.
And if you talk about it, we'll punish you.
Like, it's such a psychological extortion of these girls.
I see that happening on a grave scale.
In the UK, obviously, this is not rape.
So there's that important distinction.
But psychologically terrifying the victims, don't you say a word?
If you do, you're the bad one.
We will condemn you.
We will ruin your life.
It is the same gaslighting tactics.
Thank God on a smaller scale, but it's the same species as what I see in the UK.
Well, I would agree.
I think the adults here are bullying.
However, I went and looked at the policies because I wanted to see if this is actually within their code of ethics.
And it absolutely is.
In the code of ethics and their policies, they do.
There's some research, some scientific research apparently, that they've based it on.
And they do recognize that males jump higher, hit harder, serve faster, or serve harder, all these things.
But that wasn't enough really to stop the males within the female sports.
And so they create all these policies to include trans people and obviously keep it quiet from everybody else.
And in this case, I think absolutely these girls are being bullied.
And that bullying by adults and threatening, frankly, is being supported by policies.
So unless those policies change, unless the ethics and sports committees actually do anything about this, which at this point I'm not sure they will without a significant amount of pressure, this is just going to continue because it's all about protecting the male who happens to be in female sport from any kind of outing,
I guess you could say, and exclusion from the sport, regardless of the fact that we consistently see males who play on female sports, even with estrogen, are winning best player.
They're winning cups, they're winning trophies.
And obviously, the team that has the male on the team, they like that because their team is consistently winning.
They have the best player on there.
So I think we need to start putting pressure on the organizations and the policies that allow this to happen.
Yeah.
Another way to describe what you're talking about is cheating.
There's a reason why sports have different gradations, different ages.
You wouldn't have 12-year-old hockey players skating against 18-year-old hockey players.
That's not sport anymore.
You wouldn't have a 250-pound super heavyweight boxer fighting against a featherweight.
That's not sport anymore.
And to get around that is cheating.
And when you have someone who's biologically male, I don't know the 17-year-old biological male to which you refer, but I'm guessing that he was a mediocre athlete on the men's team.
And then he decided he wanted to win, like so many of these gross U.S. cases.
That's called cheating.
The thing is, it's not just cheating, it's putting these girls in a terrible position, violating their physical integrity, safety, security, peace of mind, and, like you say, stealing the awards from them.
I got one last question for you.
The United States is going gangbusters in the other direction.
The University of Pennsylvania has stripped Leah Thomas of his medals and has reawarded them to the girls who should have won it.
Donald Trump passed an executive order within hours of becoming president banning this sort of thing and enforcing it through civil rights laws.
Universities across the U.S. are complying.
So are different sports leagues.
It really is a complete pendulum swing back towards women and girls and away from trans extremists.
It's actually incredible to behold.
Has that U.S. state of affairs or will it cause things to change in Canada?
And one of the ways it could is if Canadian teams travel to the U.S. to compete, I presume they wouldn't be allowed to bring their trans player along.
Is there any sign that that U.S. reaction is coming to Canada?
I mean, I would be speculating.
What I can say is that within the documents that I saw, there was some recognition that when the athletes play abroad, that there might be different rules.
Like, for example, in Canada, the males or females who participate on the other side, but really we're talking about males and female sports here, that there's no requirement for them to take any tests like estrogen tests or not estrogen tests, sorry, hormone tests or anything like that.
But they recognize that that might be the case when they go abroad.
So there's already sort of provision, like they understand that the rules might be different in different countries.
Whether or not that actually translates, what they're doing in America actually translates in Canada.
I don't see any evidence of that happening within our country right now because it seems to me these policies are not changing.
There's no conversation around changing gender identity and expression policies, whether it's in sport or education or anything that I've looked at so far.
Now, I think that could change, but it will require a little bit of pressure for that to happen.
Yeah.
Well, Melanie, I sure am glad you reported on this story.
It's very rare to do so, and I'm sure you've received flack from trans extremists for it.
You're smiling.
That doesn't, no, not yet.
They haven't noticed.
However, I will just say this as we close.
I reach out, obviously, reach out to people when I write stories because I want their side of the story.
A few people do actually respond to me.
And I reached out to the athlete in question because they put their email on their public social media.
And I presume that if you're putting an email on your public social media that's advertising you as a fantastic athlete, then you want to be contacted by the media.
The athlete's mother got very, very upset with me.
How dare I get in touch with a minor and ask such sensitive questions?
Of course, she denied everything.
But that was, I guess, the only pushback that I got.
I didn't hear back from anybody yet.
So what I'm saying is, I don't think it's necessarily as dangerous to address these issues as people would like to think.
I think maybe people are perhaps a little bit too shy and too worried about the impacts on them.
I think we just need to be a little bit braver because at the end of the day, you know, I don't have activists coming up on canoes trying to attack me right now, do I?
Well, it looks like you would be very difficult to spot and you could defend yourself is my guess.
Listen, it's great to chat with you.
Melanie Bennett is the journalist.
True North is the publication.
The headline is exclusive, girl athletes silenced over concerns about male teammate in dorms.
I hope you're right that we can be braver and there's no reason to fear.
I don't want to disagree with you because I learned so much from you, but it may be that by not naming any of the people involved, they have not felt spurred to counterattack you.
And that may be the reason I think of our friend David Menzies, who goes out and films the trans athletes like Ash Davis and et cetera.
And it may be that you've kicked the hornet's nest more gently by not naming names.
I'm not disrespecting your work at all.
I'm just saying.
Oh, we have to be clever about these sorts of things sometimes.
Yeah.
Well, listen, I'm a huge fan.
I am so glad you're covering this beat.
I intend to follow your work, and I look forward to having you on again to talk about these important issues.
What's the best way for people to follow you?
Well, my speaking of activists, I did get attacked by activists on my Twitter, which used to be Fingle Dusty, which that's a whole story we won't get into.
So they managed to ban that account.
So now it's Real Fingle Dusty, which you're welcome to go follow me there to gather my following count again.
Or I'm on Substack, Melanie Dennett on Substack, where all of my articles get published in the post-eck.
All right.
Well, we'll check it out.
There she is, Melanie Bennett, in an undisclosed location, ready to defend against any attack, amphibian or terrestrial.
Stay with us more ahead.
Hey, welcome back.
We put Emma's video online already, and we got some letters.
Let me read them to you.
From In Vino Veritas, you may as well fight because there is nowhere to run to.
Homelands Debate 00:02:23
Well, that's the thing.
I mean, we talk about indigenous homelands and ethnic homelands.
What is the homeland for the British people?
An ethnicity, you know, Anglos, the Welsh, the Scots.
That goes back centuries or even thousands of years.
Why should they not have a homeland the same way Italy should be for Italians and France for the French?
I support that.
And the thing is, the UK, they got nowhere else to go.
Next letter from Hen Sid, who said, Starmer, that's the prime minister over there.
Starmer tells us they are doing something about it, and that is true.
He is paying the French millions to push the boats out to sea, sending them on their way to the UK.
You know, Donald Trump has got the flow of illegal migrants across the southern border down to practically zero.
In fact, I think some months it actually is zero.
There's no technical problem, physical problem, stopping the United States from, you know, letting in what was let in under Joe Biden's term, 13 million people.
There was no technical problem that Joe Biden had.
The border police had the tools.
They were just told not to use them.
The United Kingdom has remained a free country for centuries because of the English Channel, a natural moat.
And the Royal Navy, even to this day, is a mighty force.
The only reason they're allowing these dinghies to cross is because that is a choice made by their government.
John Hunter says Canadians need to be doing the same thing.
It's not racist to disagree with people who have different values than Canadians.
Their skin tone is irrelevant.
That's exactly right.
And when I talked about the rape culture, that's not connected to the hue of skin of people from Pakistan.
It's just a culture in that country.
And I quoted from a 2014 article I wrote about a shocking incident.
By the way, in the rest of that story, the bus driver saw the rape in the back of the bus.
He pulled over and joined in.
That is unthinkable in Canada.
Absolutely unthinkable.
That is a true rape culture.
And how can you bring in hundreds of thousands of men, millions even, from those countries, dump them in the middle of a high-trust society where, yeah, you have women jogging in Lululemon.
The problem is not the cat calling, I can assure you.
It's the rape.
It's our show for today.
Sorry to talk about such heavy things.
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