| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
| What is going on guys? | ||
| This is Tate Brown here holding it down for the great Timpool. | ||
| We are in a new studio. | ||
| I don't know if you what do you think of the digs? | ||
| It's alright. | ||
| We got it set up. | ||
| We're here in the trailer. | ||
| Now if you're a Timcast loyalist, this trailer will mean something to you. | ||
| This is some hidden esoteric knowledge. | ||
| This is where the iconic Joe Rogan Timcast IRL episode was filmed. | ||
| It was in this trailer. | ||
| They rolled up to Austin. | ||
| This is before my time. | ||
| Rolled up to Austin. | ||
| Rogan hopped in. | ||
| They chopped it up. | ||
| Great episode. | ||
| And I think it's back on YouTube. | ||
| It was taken off of YouTube for a while, but that's besides the point. | ||
| So we are in a, you know, a lot of, there's a lot of history. | ||
| It's dripping off of the walls here. | ||
| It's really something. | ||
| But like I said, this is Tate Brown here. | ||
| I'm filling in. | ||
| I probably will be holding it down for the Timcast live show going forward, at least for the time being. | ||
| And so we set up out here just to give us a little more space, make it a little more proprietary. | ||
| But we still got some of the old favorites. | ||
| I mean, we have the Tim Cast Cube. | ||
| We have some pool water. | ||
| So, yeah, we're making it feel like home. | ||
| It is freezing in here. | ||
| It's like, I don't know, it's 30 degrees outside right now. | ||
| And this trailer doesn't have heat. | ||
| So I have a space heater behind me. | ||
| So I don't know if you guys can hear that or not. | ||
| I don't know if that's going to be an issue. | ||
| Just, I don't know, start pinging me if it's like, you can hear it and it's annoying. | ||
| We're still working out, you know, some of these things as we sort of dive into this new studio. | ||
| But huge, huge story. | ||
| I don't know if you saw the Pentagon. | ||
| There's a new cast in town. | ||
| The new media has taken their desks at the Pentagon. | ||
| Obviously, the old media threw a tantrum rather infamously a few months ago. | ||
| And they stormed out. | ||
| They refused to sign an agreement to not leak classified information. | ||
| So the new media has been brought in. | ||
| It is the independent and new media space is now in the Pentagon Press Corps. | ||
| It's really something. | ||
| So I'm a part of that. | ||
| I am a part of the press corps. | ||
| I'm proud to be a part of the press corps. | ||
| It is a really cool and unique experience. | ||
| So we will be getting you guys content from the Pentagon, asking them all sorts of questions. | ||
| I don't know what kind of questions do you guys want to hear? | ||
| Let me know. | ||
| I'll be there. | ||
| I can ask them for you. | ||
| It's going to be really tremendous stuff. | ||
| But before we get started, we need to take a look at today's sponsors. | ||
| Up first, it is Cast Brew Coffee. | ||
| Oh my goodness. | ||
| Goodness gracious. | ||
| This is really some tremendous stuff. | ||
| I've been living off of it. | ||
| Obviously, like I said, it's freezing in here. | ||
| So been pounding the cast brew all day so far. | ||
| And it's kept me warm. | ||
| I'll say that. | ||
| It really is something. | ||
| We have some great blends here. | ||
| Obviously, the Appalachian Knights is really a fan favorite. | ||
| We love the Appalachian Knights. | ||
| And let me go to page two here, really get deep in the weeds here. | ||
| We have Ian's Graphene Dream. | ||
| Oh my gosh, this is really, this is the creme de la creme. | ||
| I don't know what that means, but people say it. | ||
| And so I say it. | ||
| But this is really something. | ||
| This is a Timcast fan favorite. | ||
| I have spoken at length about what these people do for a bag of Ian's graphene dream. | ||
| I mean, it is full. | ||
| You know, we're on the heels now of Black Friday. | ||
| And Black Friday really feels like it's lost a bit of its aura. | ||
| You know, back in the day when I was growing up, Black Fridays were people went when they were ready to punch. | ||
| You know what I mean? | ||
| They would storm into the Walmart for their $50 TV and they would kill someone over it. | ||
| They would literally kill people over it. | ||
| It was really something just stampeding into a best buy. | ||
| Well, that is sort of the same thing that happens when Ian's graphene dream is available for sale at our live events. | ||
| There is full-blown stampedes. | ||
| Last time we had to call the riot police to put a quash to the absolute carnage that was taking place as people were diving over each other, throwing punches, because they needed a bag of Ian's graphene dream. | ||
| Thankfully, for all of you listening or watching, we sell it online. | ||
| So you can just, you can head to casper.com. | ||
| You can buy a bag and we'll just ship it to you. | ||
| You don't have to worry about all the fighting, all the, you know, the diving, these sorts of things. | ||
| Just buy it. | ||
| Just buy a bag. | ||
| It's fantastic stuff. | ||
| And yeah, with that, we will also take a look at Boonies HQ. | ||
| Wow. | ||
| Are you a skater? | ||
| Are you not a skater? | ||
| There's something for everyone, you know? | ||
| I'm not really a skater. | ||
| I could LARP as one, I suppose. | ||
| And that will probably calm eventually. | ||
| But I'm learning to skate. | ||
| I want to make that announcement. | ||
| I am learning to skate. | ||
| I feel like it would be wrong to work here at Timcast and not at least make an effort to learn how to skateboard. | ||
| With that, I am riding on a Boonies board. | ||
| It's fantastic. | ||
| It's a great board. | ||
| I mean, again, I'm a bit of a novice, so I don't know, but a lot of people love it. | ||
| You know, some really terrific people are saying these are some really terrific boards. | ||
| So with that, head on over. | ||
| We have some great boards here. | ||
| Obviously, some of these are sold out. | ||
| We have some of the favorites. | ||
| We have this new Primal collection, which is really some exciting stuff. | ||
| The Uncancelable board. | ||
| You know it. | ||
| You love it. | ||
| But with that, we need to get into our first story. | ||
| It's me. | ||
| Can you believe it? | ||
| Can you believe what you're seeing? | ||
| Do not scratch your eyes. | ||
| That is me in the press briefing room at the Pentagon. | ||
| You may be asking yourself, why? | ||
| I mean, if I'm there, like, what is going on? | ||
| Right? | ||
| Well, as you guys probably saw earlier in the, I was like, like, October, the Pentagon, you know, they put some basic rules in place. | ||
| You can't wander around the Pentagon and source classified material from staffers. | ||
| Really a radical proposal. | ||
| And people, they chimped out. | ||
| They chimped out. | ||
| That's what happened. | ||
| The old media, they are so used to their monopoly on information that they couldn't take it. | ||
| They couldn't handle it. | ||
| So they stormed out en masse. | ||
| They refused to sign it. | ||
| It was this whole big thing. | ||
| But the American people still need information. | ||
| We still need to disseminate information. | ||
| We need to ask questions. | ||
| We need to hold our leaders accountable. | ||
| And that is the press's job. | ||
| And really, it's hard to believe because it's been pretty confrontational. | ||
| It's been very advantageous for Democrats, obviously, over the last few decades. | ||
| So yeah, they brought in some new blood. | ||
| They brought in a lot of us, a lot of us here in the independent and new media space. | ||
| There's some great patriots there. | ||
| And yeah, I was one of them. | ||
| I am now certified Pentagon Press Corps. | ||
| So I got my photo taken. | ||
| You know, they always say, act like you've been there before. | ||
| But that was the problem. | ||
| I'd never been there before, and it was so crazy. | ||
| I had to take a photo. | ||
| So, yeah, there's me at the Pentagon. | ||
| Obviously, I was responding to Idris Ali. | ||
| He's with Reuters, and he was documenting the crash out in October where all these people refused to obey. | ||
| Again, very basic rules that the Pentagon expected to the Department of War now. | ||
| And yeah, so let's get into this article from the AP. | ||
| Outlets that reach millions denied access to rare Pentagon news briefing this week. | ||
| Now, we might need a fact check. | ||
| Maybe combined, they all reach millions. | ||
| But the framing here on this title makes it sound like these people still have these massive audiences, which they don't. | ||
| They really don't. | ||
| I mean, you can compare and contrast live streams such as Timcast IRL, such as Crowder, who, thank you for the raid, by the way, Steven Crowder. | ||
| A lot of these newer, you know, these newer shows are outperforming the legacy media. | ||
| With, I mean, you know, these legacy media places, they have hundreds of employees, thousands of employees. | ||
| Most of these newer media spaces, there's like a couple dozen on the biggest level. | ||
| And they reach the same audience. | ||
| They reach a bigger audience, quite frankly. | ||
| Again, we could dive into the numbers if we need to. | ||
| But I'm sure you guys all know. | ||
| If you're on Rumble, you certainly know this is the case. | ||
| But let's read. | ||
| Let's see what the AP had to say. | ||
| I'm going to try not to shiver to death. | ||
| I'm like, I'm freezing. | ||
| But this is what we do, right? | ||
| If you're a Pentagon correspondent, you know, you can't let a little cold break you. | ||
| You got to have iron, you know, iron resolve. | ||
| With that, let's read from the Associated Press, part of the legacy media. | ||
| But, you know, they had an interesting write-up here. | ||
| Very salty. | ||
| They're very salty. | ||
| They're coping. | ||
| We'll read. | ||
| We'll read. | ||
| Outlets that reach millions of news consumers are being denied access to rare briefings by Pentagon officials this week, sessions that are being held instead for Defense Secretary Pete Hexes, hand-picked media organizations. | ||
| Okay, not hand-picked. | ||
| The waiver, whatever, was sent to everyone in the media. | ||
| These were the organizations that applied, quite frankly. | ||
| They're the ones that applied. | ||
| So again, this is people that simply were willing to comply with the Pentagon's, again, very sensible, common sense restrictions, I guess you would say, or instructions, rather, would be the better word to use. | ||
| If not, it's not as if there's little to talk about with both the Senate and House Armed Services Committees opening investigations into U.S. military strikes against alleged drug couriers in the Caribbean Sea and Eastern Pacific Ocean. | ||
| Hegseth's team says the briefings are part of special orientation events for a newly credentialed Pentagon press corps consisting primarily of conservative outlets that agreed to his new rules for operation. | ||
| Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson is due to meet reporters Tuesday, and Hegseth will do so Wednesday. | ||
| This meeting with Kingsley actually just took place. | ||
| We had a representative down there, Brandon. | ||
| We had a lot of friends that were there as well, which is great to see. | ||
| The questions that were asked were very incisive. | ||
| And the questions that were asked were clearly the style, the information that they're probing for clearly indicates that this independent media, this new press corps, is much more in touch with the viewers. | ||
| I mean, these are very incisive questions. | ||
| And it's clear that they're listening to their audience, which is the media hasn't had to do that in years. | ||
| Because, again, they've had this monopoly on information. | ||
| I mean, Exhibit A is the fact that they dominated the Pentagon. | ||
| I mean, there wasn't space for the new media, the media that is now replacing the old media. | ||
| So it was an adequate system that was limping into 2025. | ||
| And they called quits. | ||
| I mean, the only thing keeping these legacy media organizations competitive is the fact that they do have all of this access, all of this infrastructure that was built by generations that came before them back when the media was actually, you know, somewhat useful, somewhat, they would, you know, perform their jobs. | ||
| That was the only thing keeping a lot of these organizations alive is the fact that they had access to these sorts of places, these sorts of institutions. | ||
| And without that, you have to ask, like, what utility is, what utility are these organizations even going to provide? | ||
| Because if it's opinion pieces, you get better opinion pieces, much more incisive opinion pieces from Anons on X, right? | ||
| Like, we don't need, I don't need to know what some journalism major from Columbia thinks about this. | ||
| I would like to see what the Anons are saying, or even, you know, some of these public figures. | ||
| Again, it's just much more incisive, much more cohesive, much more sensible. | ||
| And then you can go back and forth. | ||
| You'll see a debate take place in the replies. | ||
| People push back and they respond, defend their ideas. | ||
| It's not something that happens with these legacy media organizations. | ||
| They just put the opinion piece out, let it fly. | ||
| That's all they're going to be able to provide, really. | ||
| Because if they're not in the Pentagon, everything's going to be hearsay. | ||
| Everything's going to be whatever's leaked. | ||
| Or what's going to be even funnier is they're going to have to do write-ups based off of what the new media is putting out there. | ||
| So, again, if you want access to information, if you want to be on top of the news cycle, if you are engaging with your favorite new media creators, you're going to have access to that. | ||
| And it's unprecedented because, like I said, the old media has had a monopoly. | ||
| So anyway, I digress. | ||
| Hegseth's team, okay, read this part right here. | ||
| Most mainstream outlets exited the Pentagon this fall rather than agree to the new rules. | ||
| The Defense Department says they are, quote, common sense regulations designed to prevent the spread of classified information. | ||
| News outlets worried they would effectively be agreeing only to report news approved by Hegseth. | ||
| Ridiculous. | ||
| We have Vince Dow here. | ||
| He is now a Department of War correspondent, the great Vince Dow, friend of the show. | ||
| He said, quote, this is simply untrue and misreported. | ||
| He's speaking about the accusations that these things are all pre-scripted or whatever. | ||
| Journalists are not, and we're never required to pre-approve their questions or stories. | ||
| Pentagon employees are to pre-approve info before they give it to the press, which is actually a good policy. | ||
| Agreed. | ||
| Mainstream media journalists are throwing a fit because the government is practicing basic OPSEC and not encouraging their employees to commit treason. | ||
| Exactly. | ||
| That's exactly what's going on. | ||
| I can confirm, because I was there. | ||
| I'm credentialed. | ||
| I am a, you know, I am a part of the Pentagon Press Corps. | ||
| They are not requiring us to pre-approve. | ||
| Believe me. | ||
| Maybe they should. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
| Maybe they should because there's some people in there that are going to really push. | ||
| I mean, they're really going to push. | ||
| But no, they're not. | ||
| That's ridiculous. | ||
| That would be a problem, quite frankly. | ||
| And I think there's quite a few people in that room. | ||
| I think all of them, that would have a lot of concerns. | ||
| They would express this concern publicly if we were being fed questions to ask Hex. | ||
| I mean, like, what's the point at that point? | ||
| You know what I mean? | ||
| So, totally ridiculous. | ||
| It's not true whatsoever. | ||
| Not pre-approved. | ||
| The Pentagon employees, however, are now required to get sign-off when they give statements to the press, which makes total sense. | ||
| That's like a total no-brainer. | ||
| I mean, what you had before, the situation we had before was these mainstream media stooges would just wander around the halls and try to pry information out of Pentagon employees. | ||
| Some of them who had an agenda, thankfully a lot of them are being cleared out, these swamp creatures. | ||
| But a lot of them were just kind of not really knowing what they were saying. | ||
| They were sort of being entrapped in many ways or being, you know, there's some sort of like psychological operation that these journalists could do. | ||
| I mean, you know, they're good at prying information out of people. | ||
| And so it's causing a lot of leaks. | ||
| It was causing a lot of problems for the Department of War. | ||
| They're trying to conduct operations here. | ||
| We're talking about national security. | ||
| And these people, they're just so desperate for clicks. | ||
| They don't care. | ||
| They would totally, you know, capitulate a war plan if it meant getting a few extra clicks on an article. | ||
| So, yeah, that's exactly what's going on here. | ||
| We have another post from Cam Higby. | ||
| This guy coming at him said, Yeah, only real journalists share only what the government approves. | ||
| Again, it's not true. | ||
| I would chimp if they were making us pre-approve everything. | ||
| That's crazy, but that's just not what's happening. | ||
| This is from Cam Igby. | ||
| We do not need authorization from the Department of War to Post. | ||
| We can't just solicit classified information from officials. | ||
| Why did the mainstream media leave? | ||
| They couldn't solicit classified info or go upstairs and harass staff. | ||
| They were also mad because the badges now say, quote, press. | ||
| Well, I'll dive into his first point here with the classified info. | ||
| Yeah, a lot of people that are in the know, I don't want to say too much. | ||
| I'd be a little discreet here. | ||
| They were a little aggravated with the way that the mainstream media press was behaving because they were pushy. | ||
| They were entitled because, again, they had this monopoly on information. | ||
| And they're so used to being able to operate without impunity. | ||
| They're used to being able to just bully and harass and whatnot. | ||
| And they were effectively acting as activists. | ||
| Not all of them, but quite a few of them. | ||
| And it was causing quite a bit of problems. | ||
| Yes, we cannot classify, or sorry, we cannot solicit classified information from officials. | ||
| Yeah, that makes sense. | ||
| That should always be the rule. | ||
| That's how most, if not all, other countries conduct their affairs. | ||
| The final point he makes here, I think, is very salient. | ||
| They were also mad because the badges now say press. | ||
| So I don't know if you saw on the timeline yesterday, if you're an ex-user, a lot of these guys and gals that were there at the press corps or at the Pentagon yesterday were posting pictures inside the cubicles that the mainstream media formerly occupied. | ||
| And I think this specifically really triggered a lot of the mainstream media because they kind of look down on independent media, on the new media. | ||
| They looked down on your Cam Higbies. | ||
| They looked down on your Vince Tyles. | ||
| They looked down on your Tim Pools because they don't have the journalism degrees. | ||
| They don't have the, you know, jam-packed resume showing that they did everything the right way. | ||
| No, these guys collected news. | ||
| That was the priority. | ||
| They just went out and collected news and they used whatever they had. | ||
| They didn't have, you know, again, they didn't have these fancy journalism degrees. | ||
| Not necessarily there's anything wrong with that, but again, that shouldn't be a barrier to entry in the new world in 2025 where we have citizen journalists now who can collect information as it's happening on the ground. | ||
| Who Tim Poole pioneered? | ||
| I mean, Occupy Wall Street. | ||
| Hello. | ||
| There's a lot of insecurity now among the mainstream media that, you know, it doesn't take much to get out there and work. | ||
| You really just have to be brave, right? | ||
| I mean, to go into these places because there's a lot of insanity happening in the United States. | ||
| So it's really prompted a lot of insecurity. | ||
| So, you know, it was a joke. | ||
| It was, people were, you know, joking. | ||
| It was tongue-in-cheek. | ||
| A lot of these guys and gals posting pictures at these desks and tagging the WAPO journalists that, you know, caused a big kerfuffle about his exit. | ||
| And they were saying, oh, we're at your desk now. | ||
| Ha ha ha. | ||
| Like, obviously, like, obviously, they didn't. | ||
| I mean, maybe it was his death. | ||
| I mean, who knows? | ||
| I know they kind of moved around quite a bit in there. | ||
| And all the mainstream media can do, because they're totally neutered right now. | ||
| They refuse to sign the new requirements to enter the Pentagon. | ||
| So all they can do is just go, Erm, actually, that's not his desk. | ||
| His desk was over there. | ||
| That was actually the desk for whatever, like the French news. | ||
| It's like, that's all they got. | ||
| That's all they got because they're totally getting cucked right now by the new media, who quite frankly are better than them at collecting information. | ||
| Day one is already a shining example of that. | ||
| And they can't handle it. | ||
| They're coming apart. | ||
| All they got is, that's not even the right desk. | ||
| Like, idiots, if you had a journalism degree, you would have known that. | ||
| You would have known that that was such and such's desk. | ||
| So it's totally ridiculous. | ||
| It's hilarious. | ||
| Quite frankly, I'm having a lot of fun watching this take place. | ||
| It's fun, but it's very scandalous the way that these people have conducted themselves. | ||
| Cam Higbee also responded to this gentleman who said that you don't have the ethical backbone to refuse the Pentagon's unethical conditions that you're a stenographer rather than a journalist. | ||
| Oh, real punchy line there. | ||
| Look at that guy. | ||
| Wow, really snappy. | ||
| Well, Cam corrects the record here. | ||
| Unethical conditions are that I can't publish information that is classified, CUI, or a national security interest without permission. | ||
| Crazy that the most classified site in America has rules about information disclosure. | ||
| Who would have guessed? | ||
| Who would have guessed? | ||
| So, hilarious mainstream media crash out. | ||
| We love to see it. | ||
| And yeah, we have some great people in the Pentagon, including Tim Cast. | ||
| We are there. | ||
| And I think the information dissemination is actually quite a bit more effective. | ||
| Think to yourself, what have you seen from the Pentagon from the mainstream media? | ||
| Besides leaks and supposed official says this, supposed official says that. | ||
| When's the last time you actually saw a gaggle, right? | ||
| It's great. | ||
| We're seeing it now. | ||
| We're seeing the new media who are excited to be there. | ||
| They're all excited to be here. | ||
| That's the thing. | ||
| They don't feel entitled. | ||
| Everyone is sitting around thinking, wow, this is really tremendous. | ||
| This is really tremendous that an administration is actually kind of fresh, that they're up to date on the way the world conducts itself these days, that the majority of people source their information through social media platforms. | ||
| It's great. | ||
| So everyone's excited to be there, which is great. | ||
| Everyone's happy. | ||
| And we're having a lot of fun trolling these mainstream media ghouls, quite frankly. | ||
| So with that, we'll get into our next story here. | ||
| This was from Black Friday. | ||
| Here is some wild data that is coming in. | ||
| I do not mean to blackpill anyone here, but things are not looking too hot right now for Americans. | ||
| This was from Unusual Wales. | ||
| He just did a quote here writing up on the piece Reuters put out. | ||
| I will read here. | ||
| Buy now pay later usage surged this Black Friday, rising 9% overall, with adoption especially strong among younger consumers. | ||
| 41% of shoppers aged 16 to 24 used buy now pay later. | ||
| And younger millennials increased their usage by an astonishing 87% last year. | ||
| Higher income households are leaning in as well with 38% of those earning over 100K using BNPL services. | ||
| Notably, the trend is expanding beyond discretionary items. | ||
| 25% of BNPL users are now relying on it to finance groceries. | ||
| This is just really unacceptable for a first world country for America, by all accounts, is the wealthiest nation on planet Earth. | ||
| I mean, you know, the per capita, there's a few other countries that are higher than us. | ||
| For a country of, you know, what, 350 million people, yeah, we're very wealthy. | ||
| We're exorbitantly wealthy, especially by comparing to the standards of the world currently and throughout history. | ||
| Very wealthy country. | ||
| This is astonishing data. | ||
| 41% of shoppers aged 16 to 24 are using buy now paylater. | ||
| Things are really grim. | ||
| Again, you could attribute this, you know, Dave Ramsey's pulling his hair out over this, the people that people are financing consumer goods. | ||
| It's a very, very bad indicator. | ||
| This was also from Unusual Wales, who's writing up from a report from Business Insider. | ||
| Expectations of job loss among 18 to 34-year-olds are near record highs. | ||
| And let's see here if I have the article in here. | ||
| No, I don't. | ||
| I have the article in the stack. | ||
| But again, at this point, like I know it's cool to dunk on young people. | ||
| It's cool to dunk on Zoomers. | ||
| This, to me, isn't necessarily a mindset problem. | ||
| If you're employed and you're afraid of losing your job, that's a little different than high unemployment. | ||
| You could maybe dig in and see, like, okay, well, why are these people unemployed? | ||
| Are jobs available if jobs are available? | ||
| Then, okay, perhaps these people, there is a mindset issue. | ||
| Perhaps there's a cultural issue. | ||
| But again, between, when you're looking at Zoomers, in between the data where effectively half of them are financing consumer goods and a third of them are, again, the record highs, I think it was about a third, are expecting a job loss in the next year. | ||
| Again, that's more of an indicator of the economic state of the country. | ||
| It's an indicator of how broken things are. | ||
| And so I want to hit on this. | ||
| I want to touch on this. | ||
| Here's a big thing that's driving this. | ||
| So this is from Eric Daughtry. | ||
| He was citing poll data from the People's Pundit. | ||
| Americans support President Trump's third world immigration ban by a stunning 21 points, 55% to 34%. | ||
| Again, there's a few polls with varying information, but by all accounts, a ban on third world immigration is popular. | ||
| It's very popular. | ||
| 21 points is a big spread. | ||
| You have to ask yourself, why is that? | ||
| Because it's rare in the current media environment with an issue that is as big of a wedge issue as this, that people are crossing the aisle and they're supporting a policy that President Trump is supporting. | ||
| You have to ask yourself, why is that? | ||
| Well, again, when you look at data like this, the picture becomes a little clearer. | ||
| Is this driven by prejudice? | ||
| Is this driven by hatred? | ||
| The reason people want to ban on third world migration? | ||
| Or is it primarily driven by pragmatism? | ||
| Now, again, not downplaying the valid concerns that people would have with immigration sort of altering the culture of the country. | ||
| Matter of fact, that's a big concern of mine, and it's not discussed enough that it's actually a very valid reason. | ||
| Even if these immigrants were like totally, you know, we have the rock star economy because of them. | ||
| If you're losing your culture, you're losing your, if the demographics of your country are just totally going out of whack, kind of valid, kind of a valid concern to have. | ||
| But from a pure pragmatic level, what people can see on their day-to-day is that housing and jobs, good jobs, are difficult to come by. | ||
| It's difficult to find a good wage in the United States, quite frankly, in 2025. | ||
| Inflation has gone through the roof, and income, you know, starting incomes have stayed around the same. | ||
| So people are feeling the pinch. | ||
| Housing is obviously ridiculous. | ||
| Housing is a total disaster, impossible. | ||
| And the places with the worst housing prices are cities with high rates of foreign, foreign-born people. | ||
| Those are people that have been imported to the country. | ||
| These are people that have been added to the country. | ||
| And you have to ask yourself, if the population is declining, we all know this. | ||
| We all know the birth rate is obviously negative. | ||
| It flipped negative in the 70s. | ||
| I don't think people realize that, by the way, that the birth rate in the United States flipped negative in like the late 70s. | ||
| So if that's the case, we should have seen housing prices drop. | ||
| Supply would be increasing. | ||
| If there's less people, that's less people that need home. | ||
| So supply should be increasing, and that would mean that prices should drop. | ||
| In addition to that, supply jobs. | ||
| There should be more jobs. | ||
| Like wages should go up. | ||
| People's income should go up. | ||
| Because again, supply. | ||
| I mean, I don't have to explain this at nauseum. | ||
| You can kind of understand what's going on here. | ||
| But when you pile in all these people, it causes a pinch. | ||
| You add people into the labor pool. | ||
| You add people that need housing. | ||
| Right? | ||
| It's very common sense. | ||
| The thing is, as well, is the people that are being brought into the country are not seamlessly assimilating. | ||
| They're not fitting in properly. | ||
| So it becomes increasingly obvious that the people that have been brought in are different, that they're not American. | ||
| It's not like the olden days. | ||
| You know, people always go back and say, well, the country's always had immigration. | ||
| It's a little different when it's coming from Ireland, right? | ||
| It's a little different when it's coming from Germany or Britain. | ||
| These are cultures that are quite similar to the United States. | ||
| I know people hate to admit that, but it's true. | ||
| On the whole, these are fairly similar to the United States. | ||
| These people assimilated fairly quickly. | ||
| Like one generation, their kids are Americans. | ||
| Compare that to people coming from Somalia. | ||
| They shoot National Guard members. | ||
| Compare this to people from Afghanistan. | ||
| Or sorry, from Afghanistan, they shoot National Guard members. | ||
| Somalia, they take over Minneapolis and elect jihadists. | ||
| People from Uganda, they come to New York City and advocate for socialism. | ||
| This is a different, this isn't your mama's Ellis Island. | ||
| All right, this is an entirely new stock of people. | ||
| And again, Americans can see it because you can see it. | ||
| When you go to Costco, it's filled with a third world. | ||
| It's not hard. | ||
| It's not rocket science. | ||
| So with that, we are going to get into our interview portion with the great Tommy Robinson. | ||
| This is going to be fun. | ||
| So before we get into it, I'm going to play this video here from Wajahat Ali. | ||
| Well, it's kind of a long video, so I'll just use the quote that was taken out of it. | ||
| You've probably seen the video already. | ||
| Here was the quote from Wajahat Ali, prominent pundit. | ||
| Whites. | ||
| Yes, we're listening. | ||
| Your mistake is you let us in. | ||
| We are breeding people. | ||
| Your culture suck. | ||
| You already lost. | ||
| So very on the nose from Mr. Ali here. | ||
| Your mistake was letting us in. | ||
| Yeah, so true. | ||
| So I want to bring Tommy Robinson in to discuss this and to discuss also the third world migration ban and issues relating to Islamic migration. | ||
| So we're going to bring him in. | ||
| Before that, we are going to play a quick message from a sponsor. | ||
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| All right, well, we are back here, and we have the great Tommy Robinson. | ||
| Tommy, how's it going? | ||
| Can you hear me? | ||
| Oh, hang on. | ||
| We have a technical issue. | ||
| One second, everyone. | ||
| Let me see what's going on here. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Test, test, test. | |
| All right, can you... | ||
| Can you hear me, Tommy? | ||
| Maybe. | ||
| one second everyone hey tommy can you hear me Can you hear me? | ||
| I knew you. | ||
| Okay, perfect. | ||
| I think we'll jump in here now. | ||
| All right. | ||
| So, Tommy Robinson, how's it going? | ||
| How are you doing today? | ||
| I'm all right, Beck. | ||
| I'm doing all right. | ||
| Well, I'm sure everyone in the audience knows who you are, but maybe for those who don't, you could give a quick intro who you are, what you do. | ||
| My name is Tommy Robinson. | ||
| I am a citizen journalist. | ||
| I make documentaries. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I started out my activism in 2009 on the streets. | |
| We were a street protest movement in the English defensive. | ||
| We took to the streets in towns and cities across the UK, and we raised issues that were hidden from the public, such as the rape jihad, known as grooming, prostitution, rape, torture, murder of young English, British girls in the hands of Muslim gangs. | ||
| I am known as an opponent of opposition to the Islamization of Great Britain, the biggest danger to our future, and the biggest danger to yours, quickly America. | ||
| It's there. | ||
| It's coming. | ||
| So, yeah, that's who I am. | ||
| I now work with a journalist. | ||
| I've been sent to new platforms, spent time in 10 different prisons. | ||
| My last sentence was 18 months, just two years ago, for making a documentary. | ||
| So I faced the full weight of the British state for embarrassing them, humiliating them, and for bringing awareness of the reality of mass open-border immigration. | ||
| Something I want to bring to you guys, the American audience, because so many of your road-winged commentators are currently chatting bullshit to you and lying to you about Muslims and Christians being brothers and the problem being someone else. | ||
| There's a problem, and it's in your country. | ||
| So, yeah, that's my introduction, everyone. | ||
| Gotcha. | ||
| Well, I appreciate it. | ||
| Sorry, Tommy. | ||
| We're having one tech issue. | ||
| I'm going to drop off for one second here, and then let me see if I can solve it. | ||
| I'm really sorry. | ||
| One moment. | ||
|
unidentified
|
All right, | |
| Tommy, I'm back here. | ||
| Hey, sorry. | ||
| I'm so sorry about that. | ||
| Yeah, well, I wanted to bring you in here. | ||
| Obviously, in the United States, we recently had an attack in Washington, D.C. Obviously, it was at the hands of a Afghan migrant who was brought in under Biden's sort of resettlement program. | ||
| Sorry, I'm so sorry about that. | ||
| Yeah, well, I wanted to see what's going on. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| Sorry about that. | ||
| We'll cut it up and post and make it good. | ||
| Tommy, I wanted to hear your thoughts specifically on the attack in Washington, D.C. recently at the hands of an Afghan migrant. | ||
| Probably you can give some perspective. | ||
| Obviously, in the UK, you've been dealing with some similar issues relating to migrant crime and specifically coming from Islamic countries. | ||
| What's the situation in the UK? | ||
| What were your thoughts on the attack in Washington? | ||
| And sort of, what does this picture as a whole for the Anglosphere look like? | ||
| Get used to it, lads. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Get used to it. | |
| It's just a start. | ||
| You're going to face more and more jihad, more and more murder, more and more rapes. | ||
| In fact, the warning signs were there. | ||
| I went back this week and found six cases in America of Afghan nationals that have been brought in in your scheme, who have raped young children, raped women, murdered, killed police officers. | ||
| So the warning signs were there. | ||
| Afghans in the UK are 22 times more likely, 22 times more likely to be convicted of rape than other nationalities. | ||
| Why are any Afghans being allowed into our countries? | ||
| Why? | ||
| Joe Boyd Biden bought 30,000. | ||
| We now know he didn't care, didn't want background checks. | ||
| Bring them in, bring them in, bring them in. | ||
| Now, is he going to sit down and deal with the families who have just lost their loved ones, to the mother, to the father, to the children? | ||
| Because again, America, it's just a start. | ||
| Now, America, you've had for many years, you had Hispanic immigration. | ||
| I used to sit and listen to you talking about it. | ||
| And I used to just think, you have no idea. | ||
| You have no idea. | ||
| Now, after the last eight years, with 8 million or 10 million, how many millions have come through, unchecked, organised, we now know, purposely bought in by the Democrats to come in as voters. | ||
| We know it was a plan. | ||
| We know they've flooded your nation with Somalians, Pakistanis, Iraqis, Afghanis. | ||
| You are not prepared for what's coming. | ||
| You know what you've seen recently in the videos coming out from what's Nick's name, the young lad, when he went to the Somali town? | ||
| Nick Shirley. | ||
| Nick Shirley, brilliant work, fabulous work, fabulous young citizen journalist. | ||
| But you listen to what they're saying. | ||
| I listen to them saying if there was a war between America and Iraq, we'd fight with our brothers. | ||
| You're going to realize all the problems. | ||
| And do you know what's not going to age very well? | ||
| Do you know all those commentators, whether it be Nick Florentis or whether it be Tucker Colson, all of those who are trying to, I don't know, make Islam seem okay, make it seem like there's another enemy, yeah? | ||
| Make it seem like it's all blown out of proportion. | ||
| Well, their videos are going to age terribly because you're going to face more and more jihad, you're going to face more and more murder, more and more bombs. | ||
| You've just had an attack prevented just like a few months ago with machine guns, right? | ||
| Another ISIS, ISIS-style attack. | ||
| So remember, if they weren't prevented, you'd realize already. | ||
| You have millions and millions now of armed Muslims who's, if they follow the ideology that they're under under Islam, it's to enforce Islam and enforce Sharia on the rest of society. | ||
| They're not there to integrate or assimilate. | ||
| They're there to dominate. | ||
| And you're going to realize that. | ||
| So all the warning times, I have been trying to warn the United States of America, just to make it clear, that doesn't mean they're all bad Muslims. | ||
| What it means is that per se, you are mixing oil and water. | ||
| The European Court of Human Rights in 2007 done an in-depth study into Sharia law. | ||
| It found that Sharia law is incompatible with Western democracy and freedom due to their views on women, their views on homosexuals, and their views on free speech. | ||
| Three key points. | ||
| Equality, democracy, liberty. | ||
| Three key points of American, of your civilization, of our civilization, of Western civilization, and Islam confronts and opposes all of them. | ||
| So yeah, it's just the start. | ||
| We have had a rape epidemic across our country. | ||
| Afghanis should not be allowed into our country. | ||
| Donald Trump should be revoking and looking through everyone who was welcomed and deciding: are they good for America? | ||
| What are Somalians bringing to the United States of America with an average IQ of 69? | ||
| Yeah, just in a simple question. | ||
| What are they agreeing with? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Right. | |
| Absolutely. | ||
| I mean, because that's what we've seen. | ||
| I mean, we've seen in the United States, you're talking about it. | ||
| I mean, for decades, it was, you know, before that, it was from Southern and Central Europe. | ||
| And then it moved into Hispanic migration. | ||
| And then now the sources of immigration are changing entirely from Latin America to the third world broadly. | ||
| And a lot of those are Muslim. | ||
| I mean, it's a big issue. | ||
| And like you're saying, we played a video beforehand of Wajahad Ali, you know, prominent pundit here in the United States, talking about, you know, we're outbreeding. | ||
| We're a breeding people. | ||
| And so that's a big difference is people assimilate to the United States. | ||
| When you assimilate into the United States into the Western world, your birth rate does drop down. | ||
| I mean, it's an unfortunate thing. | ||
| We're working on it. | ||
| Obviously, we're working on it. | ||
| But Muslims, their birth rate stays pretty consistent. | ||
| So it doesn't take very many of them coming to the United States to really cause a lot of problems, as we've seen in Somalia. | ||
| And I know in the UK, the source of migration has been primarily Islamic nations. | ||
| And yeah. | ||
| In 2000, if a baby born today, an English white baby born today, by the time 2025 comes, they will be a minority in their peers in this country. | ||
| So forget that small, low number. | ||
| Just go to the lower schools and the junior schools. | ||
| So for example, I grew up in Luton Town in 2013, 2013 when I was leading English fence league, I looked at the projected growth forecast for the communities on the government website. | ||
| By 2030, which was a 17-year period, the Pakistani and Bangladeshi community were going to increase by 70 to 76%. | ||
| The white and black by 1.2 to 1.4%. | ||
| So, quite simply, they know, my council know, the future is Islamic, which is why they pandered to them, why they surrendered to them. | ||
| You're going to witness exactly the same. | ||
| Your Democrat Party are going to absolutely surrender to Islam. | ||
| They're not going to confront any of the Islamic radicalization, the extremism. | ||
| They're going to do what my main political parties did, which was hide it. | ||
| Why will they hide it and cover up for it? | ||
| Because they want the loyal vote bank from that community. | ||
| It's who's voting them in back in in the Somali district. | ||
| It's why Illian Omar was voted in. | ||
| It's how they'll continue to be voted in. | ||
| It's what you've now seen in New York. | ||
| You've lost New York. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| You've lost New York. | ||
| Don't lose any other cities. | ||
| Don't lose Texas. | ||
| 48 mosques in the last two years in Texas. | ||
| Wake up, America. | ||
| Wake up. | ||
| You're not dealing with normal immigration here. | ||
| This is something totally different. | ||
| It's not like Sikhism. | ||
| It's not like Sikh and Indian. | ||
| Indian migrants are the best earners in the United States of America. | ||
| They will come, assimilate, integrate, work hard. | ||
| Their values aren't that different to us. | ||
| Islam will come. | ||
| They won't pre-48%. | ||
| 48% of 16, 70-year-olds in the UK do not work. | ||
| They want benefits. | ||
| 48%. | ||
| 40,000 British Muslims are on a terror watch list. | ||
| 40,000 of them. | ||
| We don't have firearms. | ||
| Yeah? | ||
| But if we did have firearms, we'd have bombs going off and shots going off because jihad would be launched instantly. | ||
| So they will play the victim in their low, small numbers. | ||
| Once you get to a demographic similar to France, Germany, Britain, Sweden, you're in trouble, America. | ||
| You're in trouble. | ||
| You need to really address it. | ||
| And a mosque, a mosque is not a house of prayer. | ||
| Just so people understand that. | ||
| It's a command and control center. | ||
| The last thing they do is pray. | ||
| It's a command and control centre. | ||
| It will be used to command and control the community. | ||
| It will be used to spread Islam. | ||
| It will be used to enforce Islam. | ||
| Enforce Sharia. | ||
| Yeah, yeah. | ||
| Well, because that's the thing we're seeing is that they're pretty vocal about their intentions when they arrive. | ||
| They're not hiding the ball. | ||
| And the mainstream media, they just do this false equivocation where they point back against Ellis Island and they're like, oh, this is just wholesome migrants looking for a better life. | ||
| And all you have to do is just listen to them talk. | ||
| I mean, Elon Omar, on the tame end, I would say, literally just says, hey, I am advocating for Somalis first. | ||
| And primarily, I don't even think she's really advocating for Americans. | ||
| So they're making their intentions clear. | ||
| What is the cognitive dissonance from liberals in the United States and the United Kingdom where they just refuse to believe that there's a difference here between these two people? | ||
| Maybe you can elaborate on that. | ||
| Well, it would destroy their worldview. | ||
| It would destroy their worldview. | ||
| And they might have to challenge their worldview. | ||
| But all cultures are equal. | ||
| Everyone's equal. | ||
| No, they're not. | ||
| If all cultures are equal to those liberals, go live under the Taliban. | ||
| Go live in Pakistan. | ||
| Let's see how many rights you've got as a woman. | ||
| Go live there. | ||
| Our culture, our civilization is far superior. | ||
| We need to be honest and open about that and we need to protect it. | ||
| You are lucky in America. | ||
| You still have faith. | ||
| You still have Christianity. | ||
| Now, you haven't had the 30-year attack that we've had. | ||
| We have had a 30-year attack. | ||
| Christianity has been attacked. | ||
| It's been demonized. | ||
| It's been broken. | ||
| The church have betrayed us. | ||
| I believe Marxism has took a role within the church many times. | ||
| They're pushing political agendas, not religious agendas. | ||
| So a void has been left into that void of field, whether it be LGBTQ plus, whether it be Marxism, communism, and Islam. | ||
| And it's filled a void. | ||
| We have faced a relentless attack against our culture and our identity and our history. | ||
| We've been made to feel ashamed of who we are. | ||
| We've sort of lost the family's been broken. | ||
| The church has been broken. | ||
| The home has been broken. | ||
| Community has been broken. | ||
| As mass immigration has been imported into all of our towns and cities, it's broke community. | ||
| We've all split up and spread out. | ||
| Now, if you have a broken community, if you don't have a strong family, you have children who are susceptible to be indoctrinated, whether it be by an education system, by gangs, by whatever it is, when a strong father is not home. | ||
| You break down the community, you then have isolated families, isolated children. | ||
| You are easier to control. | ||
| You're weakened. | ||
| You're feminized. | ||
| And then, as we're seeing in this country, it's took us, I've been an activist now and now a journalist for nearly 15 years. | ||
| It's took us a long time to get the public ready and let them understand what Islam is. | ||
| Let's not pretend. | ||
| People think, oh, Islam's just another religion. | ||
| Jesus said, turn the other cheek, Muhammad cut off 600 heads in one day. | ||
| It's not just another religion. | ||
| Islam is a religion of peace. | ||
| It's nowhere in history. | ||
| It was never said in history until George W. Bush started the great lie. | ||
| Everyone throughout our history, I done it in an investigation when I was writing my book, Muhammad's Quran. | ||
| We looked into it, and your political leaders, religious leaders, and military leaders' job is to warn the public of a danger. | ||
| Now, historically, American leaders, British leaders, Churchill, William Gladstone, Churchill said Islam has the ability to bring Europe back to the dark ages. | ||
| Individual Muslims show great traits, but Islam Muslims believe a woman is possession of a man, that Islam will bring Europe back to the dark ages. | ||
| Islam in the man is like rabies and the dog. | ||
| Sir William Gladstone, one of the best leaders this country ever had, held the Quran above his head in Parliament and said there will never be peace on this earth so long as we have this book. | ||
| This book is a violent cursed book. | ||
| They didn't talk about interpretations. | ||
| They didn't lie to the public. | ||
| Right now, political correctness, the interests of other Islamic nations within our countries, the money, the finance, the way they've bought through. | ||
| Qatar have bought my capital city. | ||
| Qatar owned more properties in London than the royal family. | ||
| Qatar are funding your universities. | ||
| The reason why you're at universities uproads for Palestine. | ||
| Look where the money's coming from. | ||
| Qatar are funding. | ||
| I think we've just seen this week, they're funding some conservative influencers to go out there and bullshit everyone about how great Qatar is. | ||
| You've got a gay black conservative telling everyone how great Qatar is, he'd be executed in Qatar. | ||
| It's like, what? | ||
| What are you doing? | ||
| You're lying to the public about Islam. | ||
| The education system in this country is lying about Islam. | ||
| And then they paint everyone who tells the truth about it. | ||
| We're meant to be the bad ones. | ||
| We are just telling the truth. | ||
| It's factual. | ||
| It's all backed up. | ||
| It's Islamic scripture. | ||
| It's the life of Muhammad. | ||
| It's a problem. | ||
| You are mixing oil and water. | ||
| Islam and democracy, it's never worked. | ||
| 45 countries have turned to civil conflict. | ||
| There is no good example of where Islam has come in as a minority and then peacefully coexisted. | ||
| It's never, ever done it. | ||
| You don't need to look to look that far in history. | ||
| And for those who blame everything on Israel since 1948, jihad has been going on for 1,400 years. | ||
| Take it out of the equation. | ||
| Muslims have been killing us and raping us and pillaging our nations for 1,400 years since the time of Muhammad. | ||
| Islam was spread through Turkey, through Afghanistan, through Iraq, through Syria, all Christian nations, spread with the sword. | ||
| Wake up. | ||
| Wake up. | ||
| Yeah, yeah. | ||
| I mean, the crazy. | ||
| I host a weekend show with Connor Tomlinson. | ||
| He's obviously a commentator over on your side of the pond. | ||
| Yeah, he's great. | ||
| And he makes this point where he's like, the supposedly conservative party, right? | ||
| The Tories, they weren't just junior partners in this whole scheme. | ||
| They were the big proponent of pushing in all of these migrants into the United Kingdom. | ||
| And so if you're a British patriot, you have no voice. | ||
| I mean, when you look at these election results in the UK, over and over again, people are voting for less migration, less migration. | ||
| Please just stop killing us. | ||
| And the political class just doubles down. | ||
| It gets higher and higher. | ||
| Like, what is going on? | ||
| Well, we've been betrayed. | ||
| The Conservative Party are the Labour Party. | ||
| They are all globalist UV party. | ||
| And one hands the banner to the other. | ||
| They have the same worldview, the same mass open border immigration, the same breakdown community, the same breakdown the family. | ||
| But just for a bit of optimism, this country is on the verge of political revolution. | ||
| The public, and I know this because I've been in this activism for 15 years. | ||
| The public were asleep. | ||
| The public was scared. | ||
| I'll give you an example. | ||
| So I went to Ireland. | ||
| I made a documentary called Plantation 2, Rise of the Celts. | ||
| And I went there three years ago and I wore a hidden camera. | ||
| And I wore the hidden camera because I knew when I interviewed Americans, when I interviewed Irish women on the streets, I went up to them and I said, in the towns that are now plagued with immigration, so Britain had immigration for 60 years. | ||
| Drip, drip, drip, drip, slowly drip away. | ||
| Before we know it, our towns have changed. | ||
| Our women are being raped. | ||
| Our country's change. | ||
| Ireland had no immigration up until four years ago. | ||
| Now they've flooded the nation so quick, so fast. | ||
| So to the Irish, it's happened quick. | ||
| So I went to Irish cities and I walked down the street and said to Irish women, how do you feel? | ||
| What's happened? | ||
| And all of them on Covote recording, you can watch on documentary, they all said, we're terrified, we can't walk the streets, we're scared. | ||
| My friend was sexually assaulted. | ||
| One woman says, I worked there, I lived there, my husband has to walk down and get me at the end of the night to walk me home because our streets are no longer safe. | ||
| All of them would give this opinion that they are scared of migrants, that they're being abused, they're being harassed. | ||
| The minute I would say, okay, I'm a journalist in England. | ||
| Camera, whilst I shout at my friend, they say, I can't say that. | ||
| I can't say that on camera. | ||
| All of them. | ||
| Yeah? | ||
| So that's the reality. | ||
| You don't need laws that will enforce against freedom of speech when the public self-censor. | ||
| They self-censor out of fear. | ||
| You'll lose your job. | ||
| You'll be ostracized. | ||
| People will look upon you negatively. | ||
| You'll be labeled as a racist. | ||
| These words, racist Islamophone, extremist, far-right, they managed to demoralize and put fear and paralyze. | ||
| They paralyzed an entire nation's men for 30 years. | ||
| Now, what I will tell you, it's the same women three years ago that wouldn't say anything are now standing on camera and screaming in Britain. | ||
| Something huge has happened in 18 months to 24 months. | ||
| Our last event, September 13th, we had millions on the streets. | ||
| Unthinkable. | ||
| Biggest event in British history. | ||
| We're planning our next one now. | ||
| So with some optimism, we're still led by cowards, but that lion that many people spoke about for decades, when that British lion awakens, people are going to hear it roar. | ||
| It's awake. | ||
| I can assure you of that. | ||
| The public are awake. | ||
| Change is coming. | ||
| When you voted for Donald Trump, that wasn't just a vote to save America. | ||
| It was a vote to save Western civilization. | ||
| Hope is courageous from the British public and European public and European politicians are gaining hope from the fact that JD Vance. | ||
| When JD Vance lectured the European leaders in Munich, man, do you know how great that was for us? | ||
| Do you know what Gevosign? | ||
| We have friends. | ||
| We have friends now. | ||
| We have friends who recognize the abuse of our free speech. | ||
| We have friends who recognize the absolute destruction of our state. | ||
| The destruction of our people. | ||
| So even Donald Trump recently and their government putting out to monitor the dangers and the problems coming from mass immigration and what happens to those you speak out against. | ||
| For us, it's great. | ||
| Elon Musk has saved free speech. | ||
| We're very grateful to America. | ||
| We're very grateful to everyone who voted for Donald Trump because we have hope and we have hope and we're ready to fight. | ||
| Yeah, absolutely. | ||
| I mean, because obviously the Anglosphere, really, Western civilization as a whole, feeds off of each other. | ||
| I mean, people always point out that what preceded Donald Trump's election in 2016, well, it was Brexit. | ||
| And these sorts of things, even though it's subliminal, obviously, the United States, we're not known for our, you know, keeping tabs on the rest of the world's affairs. | ||
| But people, there's energy, right? | ||
| There's this energy that happens when there's political change happening. | ||
| Everyone's kind of on the same page. | ||
| They do feed off of each other in a lot of ways. | ||
| And we saw it with Donald Trump after, you know, in this last week, he's come out and he's been bold and he said, like, look, third world migration as a whole is really causing a lot of problems. | ||
| And he highlighted Somalia as a great example. | ||
| And yeah, so there's kind of this thought of like, well, a rising tide lifts all boats. | ||
| And like you're saying, I mean, for British patriots or just Britain, the British people as a whole who are enduring this, they look over and they say, wow, there's an administration that not just are they taking their boot off of the neck, but they're actively, you know, supporting the same causes around the Western Hemisphere and Britain in particular. | ||
| Because that's what we saw with the Biden administration, where the Biden administration was an active sort of collaborator in the Tory and the Labours, Labour Party's, you know, radical change overhaul of the British demographic outlook. | ||
| Yeah, and that gives us excitement, if I'm honest. | ||
| It gives us excitement. | ||
| And we are, especially when I've been back in my head against Bridball in the UK. | ||
| Been trying to warn everyone and no one wanted to listen. | ||
| People are ready to listen. | ||
| There's been a massive change. | ||
| And that change, lots of things play their part. | ||
| Elon Musk, certainly purchasing X has been a massive role in order for us to be able to reach the public. | ||
| In order for the public to be able to hear what we say, not what the media say we say. | ||
| So it's took away the power from the mainstream media and it's given the power back to the people. | ||
| And the people can decide who they want to follow and who they want to support. | ||
| And mainstream media is the cancer and citizen journalism, like this, like Tim Show, like you, Tate. | ||
| We are the answer to it. | ||
| And we are getting far more viewers now than any of the mainstreamers. | ||
| So it's great. | ||
| Sorry, I'm. | ||
| Got a bad chest. | ||
| Things are moving in a positive direction. | ||
| But they're only moving in a positive direction because the problem is that severe and that bad. | ||
| Because the public across the UK are seeing rapes in every town and city. | ||
| They're seeing invaders plonked in their backyard and they're sexually assaulting their children. | ||
| And people can see it. | ||
| These problems used to be confined to towns like mine in Luton. | ||
| Luton is 30 miles north of London, 50% Pakistani. | ||
| No one cares when shit's happening in Luton. | ||
| No one cares when working class people like us have to live with this shit. | ||
| It's no longer just affecting us. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's affecting mainstream Britain. | |
| It's affecting Middle England. | ||
| Their country's yeah, it kind of seems like that was the sense from a lot of the British commentary class was that, you know, this was going to be isolated to London. | ||
| Oh, that's the same thing happened to the United States where people say, oh, well, that's New York City. | ||
| You know, what happens in New York City? | ||
| They're all crazy. | ||
| They're all kooky. | ||
| They're liberals. | ||
| Yeah, that's just because the cities like London and New York are really the indicator of where the country's heading, you know, for better or for worse. | ||
| And in the last 30, 40 years, it's been for the worse. | ||
| And so we see New York City, we see the Zoron. | ||
| Well, that's not isolated New York City. | ||
| That's going to happen nationwide. | ||
| It's a blueprint. | ||
| It's a blueprint for every town and sea. | ||
| The Islamic demographic will change so quick, so fast, you better get ready. | ||
| With the support of Muslim Brotherhood organizations, well done, Donald Trump. | ||
| But care, these sorts of organizations, these sort of commentators that are in your country that are pushing agendas, working on behalf of foreign states, whether it be Qatar, whether it be Iran, whether it be any of these countries, they're working not for the benefit of you, American citizens. | ||
| They're working for the benefit of Islam. | ||
| And then they have many clowns like Dan. | ||
| Is it Dan Plizzajan? | ||
| How do I say his name? | ||
| Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
| I think it's right. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Fucking morons, like excuse my speech. | ||
| Absolute morons sitting taking pictures holding the Quran. | ||
| It's like, Dan, bro, Dan, your family were killed in a genocide. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | ||
| By Muslims. | ||
| And here you are, the next generation down, reading the book that their killers would have read for inspiration to murder and butcher your own family. | ||
| So wake the fuck up. | ||
| He probably got a load of money from Qatar. | ||
| Excuse my French again. | ||
| Sorry, America. | ||
| You're on Rumble. | ||
| We're good. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| So many Americans right now I'm watching are selling their soul to the devil. | ||
| They're selling their soul to an ideology that wishes to conquer the United States of America. | ||
| It wishes to overthrow democracy and replace it with Sharia. | ||
| And it's already will use democracy to end democracy. | ||
| They've already took New York. | ||
| It's gone. | ||
| You're not going to get it back. | ||
| That's the reality. | ||
| You're never getting it back. | ||
| And that's because the vote pattern now in New York, compared to 30 years ago, that was New Yorkers. | ||
| New York's not full of New Yorkers anymore. | ||
| It's full of Islamic immigration that's been imported into your country. | ||
| And that's the future. | ||
| Mix that with the left, the left, the alliance between the left and the Islamists, which we've seen in Lebanon, we've seen in Iran, we've seen them come together many times before in history for common goals. | ||
| They wish to overthrow democracy. | ||
| Marxists want to start the whole system again. | ||
| They want to break everything. | ||
| And their common ally in that is the Islamists. | ||
| What they don't realize is those same Islamists, like for example, the gay black fella, conservative commentator, who's just been out to earn Qatar. | ||
| You'll be off the rooftop, bro. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Stop telling us how good Qatar is when gay people are executed there. | ||
| Stop telling us how good Qatar is when there's no freedom. | ||
| There's no free speech. | ||
| Stop pretending to us that Qatar is a beautiful place. | ||
| It's not. | ||
| It's a Sharia-driven shithole that masquerades behind massive money and tries to push propaganda around the world while spending a billion pounds to Islamize Europe. | ||
| The destruction and the problems in France are due to Qatar. | ||
| Most of the world's problems come from Qatar. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| I mean, look, with mass migration, elections are never about policy. | ||
| It's just a census. | ||
| That's all that's happening. | ||
| But, Tommy, thank you so much for bearing with me through our tech issues. | ||
| I'm glad we got to have this conversation. | ||
| I'm sure the audience loved it. | ||
| For people, I'm sure most people know where to find you, but for those who don't, could you let them know where they can find you for more? | ||
| I'm on X T Robinson New Era. | ||
| Thank you, Elon Musk. | ||
| We're back on the crowd. | ||
| I'm on YouTube again. | ||
| Can't get the channel monetized. | ||
| It's pissing me off. | ||
| But I'm on YouTube again at T Robinson. | ||
| No, Tommy Robinson online. | ||
| So share our content, but support every single citizen journalist and channels like this. | ||
| Absolutely. | ||
| Yeah, thank you so much. | ||
| We'll catch you next time. | ||
| Cheers, my bro. | ||
| Alrighty. | ||
| Well, that was the great Tommy Robinson. | ||
| Yeah, I'm glad we got him. | ||
| I was worried with the tech issue. | ||
| We'll get it sorted going forward, obviously. | ||
| Some issue with the way audio was feeding. | ||
| So sorry about that. | ||
| But for those who bared with us, you got a great interview. | ||
| I hope the audio was okay. | ||
| Wasn't, again, not preferable. | ||
| But look, first show in the trailer. | ||
| You know, these things happen. | ||
| So, with that, thank you very much for watching. | ||
| We will catch you guys next time. | ||
| And yeah, you can follow me on X and Instagram at RealTate Brown. | ||
| Again, we'll catch you tomorrow. | ||
| We might have a big show planned, not here in the trailer, but I can't disclose too much yet, just in case it falls through, because it would be embarrassing. | ||
| So yeah, again, thank you very much for watching. | ||
| We'll be back tonight for Timcast IRL at 8 p.m. |