Andrew Gold argues the UK has passed a point of no return, citing stadium Islamization and church conversions as evidence of an impending Western European civil war. He condemns the BBC for suppressing anti-extremist content, attacks Labour's leadership under Keir Starmer for prioritizing gender definitions over Supreme Court rulings, and praises Hungary's border fences despite EU fines. Gold predicts Britain's economic irrelevance to the US, likening the alliance to a "drunk brother in law," while contrasting this decay with Central Europe's resistance to woke culture. [Automatically generated summary]
When it's in the middle of summer, it's quite hard.
Fine, I get it.
It's becoming worse and worse.
It's becoming harder and harder to talk.
15 years ago, the BBC made documentaries about extremist Islam in the UK.
Channel 4, the second biggest channel, used to make those kind of documentaries exposing the mosques, the imams, and the anti-Semitism, the terrorism, the inordinate number of jihadis we have on our terrorist list.
Now they will not do such a thing.
They will never make a movie, a documentary, anything like that.
So we've gone past the kind of event horizon, the gravity, we can't see the light, we can't go back out again.
And now we can't even talk about what's happening to our country.
That's how bad things are getting.
And I was just saying to you before, I sit there going, well, we'll have to go to Texas at some point, because I always thought of Texas as kind of, these are the cowboys.
Chance of civil war in the UK in the next five years.
But he says the way it will happen is one, it's a domino effect.
So it will start in one country and then it will spread very quickly.
So it might start in France.
Ireland is a, you know, they are gone.
Sweden, gone.
But the big countries France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Spain, England, like Britain.
Yeah, one of them will go and there'll be some sort of civil war.
I don't know what happens next.
The thing is, it sounds conspiratorial to people who haven't been thinking about this for a long time, but the historical precedent is there across the whole Middle East.
I don't know why nobody is listening.
We've got, do you know about the Green Party in the UK?
They say on the right, I'm sorry, on the left, they're saying at the moment, like, oh, how can Muslims be socially conservative if they're voting for a gay Jew to be in charge?
They don't have the same kind of woke culture as we do.
I've been asking around about wokeness.
They do have a small percentage of these guys.
They have a history of flirting with communism or more than flirting with it.
So that's not to say that these people are immune to such ideas.
But at the moment, there doesn't seem to be an appetite for wokeness.
I went down to the border the other day.
So we're in Hungary.
The border with Serbia is the border of the EU, which is what Britain left because we didn't want unfettered immigration coming in through this long trail.
You go there, huge, you know, barbed wire fence.
It's amazing.
It's hundreds of kilometres long.
But Hungary is being fined a million euros a day by the EU for keeping that up there and for pushing immigrants out.
And that's only one port of entry to the EU.
There's the Mediterranean, the whole of France, Italy, that's where they're coming in, and then they get boats in the Channel to the UK, which is my primary concern, but I don't want the whole of Europe to fall either.
So I don't know how long, I don't want to be defeated here.
I don't know how long Hungary can withstand that.
They're getting fined out of their minds.
Day after day after day, just to do that.
No one's helping them, and they're the last bastion of Europe.
But people just come in through Poland or something anyway.
And that's why I think people like us gravitate towards him.
You can't trust someone who's so over the top attached to rules and law.
It has to be a sort of somewhere in the middle.
You know, you respect the law, but sometimes you have to do different things.
So, those are totally different personality types.
We're not going to help with Iran.
It's totally unpopular in the UK, partly because we have to appease that Muslim vote, partly because I don't think, I mean, even in the States, it's not that popular.
People don't know what's going to happen.
And also on an economic world stage, Britain's becoming less relevant.
Our economy's not what it was.
Our army's gone.
I don't know why, I mean, America once sort of considered us as a 51st state.