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The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters
- July 16, 2025
The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1209
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 33 minutes
Words per Minute
179.15607
Word Count
16,792
Sentence Count
21
Summary
Summaries are generated with
gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ
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Transcript
Transcript is generated with
Whisper
(
turbo
).
00:00:00.000
hi it's lotus eaters uh we're a podcast episode 1209 it's wednesday my dudes and we're joined by
00:00:16.360
beau and nate otherwise known as mr h reviews how do you do today yeah good you come dressed
00:00:23.200
dapper to show us all up haven't you that's because everyone everyone's like you you got
00:00:26.640
a slother on your uh your podcast what steady that's literally one of the comments all right
00:00:31.260
who's been bullying poor nate he will i'll come in with my three-piece all right i'm the only one
00:00:35.940
wearing a waistcoat just yeah yeah right if you do that again he will show up at your house and beat
00:00:40.700
you up that's a promise i guarantee that promise all right uh so so today we're going to be talking
00:00:49.660
about some horrible no good infuriating things that will uh make you want to fed post i certainly want
00:00:55.660
to fed post and i was trying to tear my hair out during my segment this morning when i was preparing
00:00:59.580
it so hopefully you will too does that excite you it should you ready for your slop yum yum yum anyway
00:01:06.180
it's going to be talking about sycamore gap and the atrocity that was that being taken down and the
00:01:12.180
people who did it being sentenced uh how if we stop immigration altogether it will literally improve
00:01:19.000
everything and as such the uk government does not want to stop immigration at all because they don't
00:01:25.280
want to improve anything at all and uh yeah is there anything else i should say samson
00:01:30.940
all right let's get started then all right well i think we should talk a tiny bit about the sycamore
00:01:39.140
gap sentencing just because it's in the news cycle at the moment we did a segment on it originally it
00:01:44.360
was quite a while ago now it doesn't seem that long ago but it was back in 2023 when the incident
00:01:49.120
originally happened a tree got cut down so one of the first angles i want to mention is um a lot of
00:01:57.820
a lot of people have been saying and it's it's on one level it's a fair point and on another level
00:02:02.620
it really annoys me of like uh why do you care about this it's just a tree bro
00:02:07.420
uh well uh you know there's more important things going on in the country it's like yeah i know yeah
00:02:13.140
we talk about that all the time the rest of this podcast will be about that those things
00:02:17.140
yeah so not every single segment we ever do has to be about rape gangs or something yeah so anyway
00:02:24.160
this is in the in the news and seeing as it's finished now and the sentencing has been done
00:02:28.480
it sort of draws a line under it doesn't it so we can actually you can report on it and say with fact
00:02:33.700
what the the what the conclusions the court came to and all that sort of thing so just thought we'd
00:02:39.120
we'd uh discuss it because uh it has touched on a bit of a zeitgeist you might say it was a massive
00:02:46.700
massive sort of scandal at the time everyone was up in arms about it i think quite rightly say
00:02:52.080
because it is more than just a tree obviously it was just a tree sure but some trees are more
00:02:57.980
valuable than others aren't they um this one yes comrade did mean something
00:03:03.580
uh to some people it did have more value uh than a random tree in the middle of a forest
00:03:09.780
no one ever saw it was beautiful and it was iconic right it was it was beautiful yeah so people that
00:03:16.580
say it was just a tree get some perspective so well you could say that about anything england is just a
00:03:22.960
bit of rock and soil a church is just some stone and mortar churches burn down every day bro why are you
00:03:30.400
worried about this one well i i would i would contend that those people saying oh it's just a tree who
00:03:34.760
cares have no soul and no inner life right yeah where's their sense of uh of the picturesque where's
00:03:41.500
their sense of beauty the ideal the sublime this yeah the sense of aesthetic these are things that
00:03:47.980
have occupied the european mind for time immemorial to these people just means absolutely nothing we can
00:03:54.180
throw aside all european tradition of of considering beauty how it transports us anywhere because i just
00:04:01.340
live in the moment i just want to play video games and goon that's gonna get clipped yeah that should
00:04:08.620
have said that in the first person that's but that's what i think of these people yeah no me too
00:04:14.220
there's some sort of essential spark of humanity missing if that's your attitude because that was their
00:04:18.800
attitude it's just a tree who's gonna really care and these are a pair of right gooners yeah i mean
00:04:24.460
look you can you can almost smell them from here yeah also i'd also like to add i think going back to
00:04:29.200
the argument of well it's just a tree and obviously things have an inherent value you know we as a society
00:04:36.020
give things an inherent value so yes a tree can be more valuable than other trees and discussing how
00:04:43.280
beautiful the tree was and you know anyone that looked anyone that could look at that image and go
00:04:50.880
oh it's just a tree i i think those kind of individuals are not necessarily victim i guess
00:05:00.740
would be one way of calling it inside dead inside but victims of of of modern day britain right like you
00:05:08.020
walk around i mean we're in swindon you walk around swindon it's hardly the most picturesque location
00:05:13.040
is it every single building is now like a gray blob everything is square everything is gray
00:05:20.420
everything is drab that's what everything is like in this day and age the beauty of architecture is lost
00:05:26.700
and so i'd say that they're just not people that did it scum obviously right but anyone that you know
00:05:32.920
could look at that and say well it's just a tree yeah well you can you not recognize beauty
00:05:39.760
you do not walk around every day and go well i live in well some people this mess there's there's
00:05:45.220
there is the modern phenomenon of urban bug men who actually get frightened when they're out of the
00:05:51.920
city if they're in like a green area if they're in the trees or in the woods then they're frightened
00:05:56.860
they're terrified and i attribute this to them being like prey animal they're out in the wild and
00:06:02.360
they've not got the defense of being in the hive and so and so they just think to themselves oh i'm
00:06:08.400
gonna get eaten yeah your parents your children that it's just carbon and water bro with a bit of iron
00:06:16.160
and potassium people die every day bro why are you worried about this one yeah like no it's a value
00:06:20.840
it's a living breathing beautiful thing and destroyed needlessly as well completely needlessly i'll leave
00:06:26.460
that to the end the motive why they actually did it but we'll there's a few pictures but i think
00:06:32.800
you're getting a bit wrong there we're just a bit of carbon a bit of water a bit of potassium yes
00:06:38.120
apart from saint floyd oh so he was above all of us you know some some deaths are worth more than
00:06:45.540
others we didn't have much co2 at the end though so yeah um well that's true yeah stephen lawrence
00:06:55.420
was definitely more than just water and carbon yeah emmett till yeah sure yeah yeah yeah much more
00:07:01.580
valuable human than most of us no absolutely uh okay so it's been in it's been in headlines that
00:07:06.560
these guys uh ratty and piggy as i'm going to call them uh their real names are daniel graham
00:07:13.480
and adam caruthers um yeah pig eyes look he's got the eyes of a feral pig just dead behind the eyes
00:07:23.400
to be honest i mean that's he looks like the one on the left was it daniel graham it's like a rat man
00:07:30.120
like scaven or something so do we know why it is that they did it did that come out as part of the
00:07:36.260
sentence i was going to leave that to the end but could you say it talk about now if you like
00:07:39.380
oh well it's your segment i don't know i say it now uh they didn't really have a motive beyond
00:07:45.340
one just the general attitude that it's just a tree bro and two they just thought it would be
00:07:51.580
a bit of a luck a bit of a laugh it seems like in the past they've done other things which weren't
00:07:57.300
revealed in court to mark certain things in their life like one of them had recently had a kid
00:08:03.300
it's weird they haven't really got they never really explained themselves so what they just
00:08:08.200
want to destroy things yeah yeah they just uh they never explained themselves so that's like joker
00:08:13.940
motivation awful human being uh it seems like uh part of the motivation was for the notoriety although
00:08:20.020
they were going to try and get away with it but there was messages between them in the immediate
00:08:24.640
aftermath of it going oh it's on the news have you seen it's all over the news it's even on like
00:08:29.060
american news it's going to be on itv tonight well done bros yeah brilliant
00:08:33.020
well done well done yeah congratulations yeah anyone that wants notoriety or fame for doing
00:08:40.100
bad or evil things just come off the air i mean that's why the guy who killed john lennon did it
00:08:47.080
because he just wanted the notoriety although to be fair that was like morally polar opposite
00:08:51.240
that's why a lot of people a lot of people do disgusting things is for the notoriety of it
00:08:56.000
there's nothing beyond that i mean in their not in their defense during their defense in the trial
00:09:02.040
their lawyers tried to at one point say oh it was a drunken thing they'd had they'd been drinking and
00:09:08.000
it was just a drunken sort of mistake if you like and uh the prosecution ripped that apart and the
00:09:12.660
judge didn't buy it the jury obviously didn't buy it because they're like well you drove there it's
00:09:16.300
like a 40 minute hour drive and and you chopped it down in sort of three five minutes flat uh expertly
00:09:23.480
they're tree surgeons they are tree surgeons um so you weren't that pissed oh yeah
00:09:28.860
and they basically didn't offer i mean the judge in summing up said it seems what did she call it
00:09:35.080
like uh uh sheer uh sheer bravado she said so it was for the sake of it there's there doesn't seem to
00:09:44.960
be anything more to it than that they never offered a proper explanation in fact during the trial they
00:09:49.860
denied they did it are they from the area yeah nearish carlisle it's up on hadrian's wall and
00:09:54.840
they're from carlisle you know what a what a staggering shame this is is it perfectly encapsulates
00:09:59.720
and represents the disconnect that local communities have to their actual geography the complete and
00:10:08.500
utter disconnect no respect no pride nothing at all it's just a tree it's just it's just sad it's
00:10:18.040
super sad it's hard and infuriating yeah on a wider you know philosophical level everyone's pure
00:10:25.040
just lack of regard for their surroundings it's like whatever who cares and their own history and
00:10:31.720
heritage i mean it's a landmark wasn't it yeah i mean this really is cultural vandalism
00:10:37.880
um yeah that that tree was a metaphor for or it was emblematic of something
00:10:45.600
um and they killed it they destroyed it for no for again for no good reason i mean trees always have
00:10:53.120
wonderful metaphorical value because of the rootedness of them literally tied to the soil
00:10:59.500
well there is the concept of the green tree of england i don't want to get too history bro about it all
00:11:04.960
but that that that that metaphor does go back a thousand years i mean to the norman conquest and
00:11:11.080
henry ii's uh reconnection with the house of wessex and there's this idea of the green tree of england
00:11:18.380
i mean you can trace it all across europe like in pagan religions pre-christian pagan religions like
00:11:23.400
the idea of the yggdrasil the tree of knowledge it goes into like a nordic pagan religions odin being
00:11:30.660
strung up on yggdrasil where his eye was pecked out and then gains unimaginable knowledge through that
00:11:36.060
it obviously trees occupy a big part of the european psyche yeah definitely there were the saxons
00:11:43.120
uh had literally sacred trees they would have groves or sometimes one particular grove with a sacred
00:11:50.400
tree in it that they thought was the center of the universe you know some people think the temple
00:11:55.040
mount is the center of the universe whatever they thought it was the center of their of the cosmos and
00:11:59.100
stuff so uh yeah i don't want to get too hippy dippy tree hugger about it but you're right you're
00:12:04.860
absolutely right and regardless of anything it was just it was a beautiful thing that didn't need to
00:12:10.920
be destroyed so anyway um um ratty mcnarl and piggy mclumpenface cut it down uh in the middle of the
00:12:23.040
night let's go quickly through what they did it seems like they decided upon this plan not long before
00:12:27.100
they did it possibly even the day or the evening that they did it but whatever there was some
00:12:31.920
there was certainly some planning because they had to drive the like i say 40 odd minutes an hour to
00:12:37.160
get there then you have to walk 10 15 minutes from the car park to the actual spot and they took tools
00:12:41.720
and yeah they took you need a quite a big chainsaw because it was a chunky old tree
00:12:45.560
and if there's a picture of it there you go it's uh well if you see the guy out there for scale
00:12:51.460
you need a big big chainsaw to do it um and a can of spray paint because they did it professionally
00:12:58.280
because again they know what they're doing they're tree surgeons um went up there the guy had his phone
00:13:03.160
uh in fact they're in court they showed the footage of it let's just watch that real quick it's only a
00:13:08.480
few seconds gotta pull your phone out and record it bro yeah it's really grainy because apparently
00:13:13.120
when he actually filmed it it was pitch black at night it's during a storm in fact
00:13:16.460
um can you get the sound on it
00:13:19.800
because apparently when he actually filmed it it was nothing but blackness
00:13:34.120
and that's been massively enhanced by the police so you so that you can see anything at all
00:13:38.600
um apparently that's why that's so grainy um so these these masterminds spur of the moment
00:13:45.880
decided to not only do this in the hopes that they would get massive notoriety from it but then
00:13:52.320
also just film it as well yeah and try and get away with it as well because at the time so they
00:13:58.060
they are about as retarded as they look then yep yep the thing is i've only known i've only known
00:14:04.700
one tree surgeon so this is not a representative sample but the tree surgeon that i did know was a
00:14:11.160
massive cat head i wasn't expected to say that yeah i thought you might say stoner or something
00:14:17.000
so so is this uh so is this just like is this just like a thing that tree surgeons do
00:14:22.800
like tree surgeons psychopathic drug addicts who like to destroy nature for the sake of it is that
00:14:29.020
why they sign up for the job if there are any tree surgeons in the comments like if you're not on
00:14:34.380
cat right now please let me know yeah drop us a drop us a line i'm just saying it's a weird thing
00:14:42.140
to want to do is to like destroy is to cut down trees whilst high on cat yeah that is odd i've never
00:14:49.860
done that myself i must admit neither have i shockingly enough so um so um well one thing you
00:14:58.400
see is that when they you have to cut a wedge out of it first then you cut it down entirely and they
00:15:03.860
took the wedge away as a trophy ah yes um and the thing that's quite annoying is covering their tracks
00:15:10.000
there you very deliberately did it in a way that the tree would fall onto hadrian's wall
00:15:14.940
so they're actually on two charges one the criminal damage for cutting down the tree itself
00:15:20.040
another charge second charge for criminal damage to hadrian's wall although it was minimal there was some
00:15:24.760
he deliberately he could have got it to fall the other way he's a professional but he didn't he
00:15:31.340
did that with it um okay so at the time if you remember there was some completely innocent 16 year
00:15:37.840
old kid and an old man that were arrested i don't i don't think they were ever charged they weren't
00:15:42.640
ever charged but they were arrested and under suspicion of it completely wrongly the police it was just a
00:15:46.380
wrong lead and they were messaging each other about that sort of laughing about it um so these these are
00:15:52.100
they are scumbags they're right scumbags one of them the older one what's his name um ratty daniel
00:15:57.440
graham um he uh because i watched the entire summing up and sentencing of the judge it's about half
00:16:04.840
hour long and she mentioned that he has got four previous convictions for battery or two of them
00:16:11.120
were battery to do with relationships and that's all it was said but you can only really infer he knocks
00:16:18.140
his missus missus about yeah so so total scumbag total scumbag the other one pig pig eyes piggy
00:16:25.300
mclumpenface he had never he had no uh previous convictions but there you go so they were sentenced
00:16:32.100
to four years and three months for the tree and six months for the damage to hadrian's wall
00:16:38.760
uh to be served concurrently but they take off they took for a start they take off the amount
00:16:44.940
you've already served because they were held in custody one for about six months and one for about
00:16:48.480
nine months so that'll be that's time already served plus as long as you're a good boy once when
00:16:54.640
you're actually in the slammer you'll only serve about 40 percent of that yeah so they'll probably be
00:16:59.640
out in about a year 18 months that doesn't seem too that doesn't seem too much to me some people
00:17:07.700
are saying why would you take a man's liberty away just for chopping down a tree again it's just a
00:17:11.860
tree bro it's like no no i would have given them a bit more yeah other people are obviously saying
00:17:16.800
string them up nail them up um that's a little bit strong for me in all seriousness but i would have
00:17:21.900
liked a bit i mean i consider it but no um i think i would have given i would have given them a bit
00:17:28.740
more if it were me but there you go the next thing to say which because i put this on twitter and
00:17:34.540
there's a lot of people uh making the point and it is a fair point that um you know people that do
00:17:41.900
much worse violent crimes get a lot less yeah and that i couldn't agree more with those people uh yeah
00:17:48.320
you get someone that actually does a rape or something and they get less time than this
00:17:51.840
right oh yeah right in this country so but i would just say it's a bit of a
00:17:58.340
a false equivalency or a um a non-secretary or something i mean just because an injustice is
00:18:03.720
happening here it doesn't mean that we should allow another injustice go on had they been
00:18:09.740
brown men would they have got less maybe but yeah that yeah it's a horrible situation we're in
00:18:17.180
we've got a two-tier justice system yeah it's really bad yeah we agree that violent criminals and rapists
00:18:23.000
and such should be getting far worse sentences than what they're getting in this country already
00:18:27.460
absolutely that doesn't diminish what's happened here right now yeah that was going to be my point
00:18:31.200
it's like or just because these people are getting disgustingly light sentences for the worst crimes
00:18:37.020
possible doesn't mean we should let these guys off with a slap on the wrist in fact it's the inverse
00:18:41.660
right it's right they're getting a i still think a relatively light sentence but it means that
00:18:47.100
the abhorrent abuse you know abusers in in society should get significantly more yeah yeah yeah well i
00:18:54.380
don't think rapists should ever see the light of day again like murderers i don't think you should
00:18:59.420
probably ever i don't think they should be allowed to live quite frankly well yeah quite that's another
00:19:03.440
take on never see the light of day again because in america they throw out they throw out life
00:19:07.720
without parole depending what state you're in of course but some states in america they throw out
00:19:12.220
life without parole quite freely we hardly ever do we call it full life uh uh what do we call it
00:19:17.920
a full life sentence a full life order yeah yeah or his majesty's pleasure or only the home secretary
00:19:23.620
could ever let you free we do that very very very very very rarely but i would if it were up to me
00:19:29.080
in bows britain you get life without parole for for a murder or a rape yeah um oh i i'd well i'd bring
00:19:35.900
back the death sentence i've been capital punishment i mean america still has capital punishment in quite
00:19:40.380
a few states so yeah you didn't accidentally do those things so no you you lose your you forfeit
00:19:45.680
your life at that point it speaks of your character like these two fellas right those saying oh it's a
00:19:51.980
bit much for cutting down a tree isn't it it's like no because it speaks to their character it speaks of
00:19:56.720
their character that they're dead inside that they're scumbags that they've anyway we've made i've made
00:20:03.260
that point i've made that point okay so um yeah well just the last thing then just to round off on
00:20:09.600
this is um just again to touch on the idea that um that they didn't really have any motive is remarkable
00:20:18.120
to me that it really is remarkable whether they're whether they just deliberately decided to not say
00:20:23.580
what their motive was because again during the trial they claimed innocence and then after
00:20:29.020
that footage of them actually doing it was shown and a number of other things uh where they took
00:20:34.060
uh the the uh the older guy daniel graham took a picture of his own boot which had the the um the
00:20:41.780
next day on the next morning which had the chainsaw and the wedge they'd cut out in it so it was a
00:20:45.980
complete slam dunk in terms of whether they did it or not 100% bang to rights uh but they still
00:20:51.160
claimed they didn't do it and then anyway after they were found guilty but before their sentencing
00:20:54.860
um they both sort of turned on each other saying he was more responsible he egged me on they both
00:21:01.020
accused each other of doing that uh they apparently they were close friends and worked together and now
00:21:05.880
they don't at all because they fell out over it um and they don't apparently they're not really taking
00:21:10.800
any moral responsibility for it still and not really accepting that they've done anything wrong
00:21:16.620
particularly like power of mastermind like their position was again it's just a tree it's not that
00:21:22.620
much of a big deal um yeah how can you get through to somebody like that again if it was up to me i'd
00:21:30.680
put them in prison for so long that they were old men by the time they came out and they were different
00:21:34.620
men they wouldn't dream of going to do something like that yeah ever again whereas if they're out in
00:21:39.680
like one year or 18 months they're still going to be the same person essentially well the other guy's got
00:21:43.500
a long history of yeah you know abuse right so so it's just mad to me i think for a lot of people
00:21:51.140
he's expecting at some point during the trial to find out why it was someone speculated one of them
00:21:56.380
i think it was daniel graham as well lived in a caravan on a bit of land or one of them lived in
00:22:02.020
caravan on a bit of land he was going to be evicted from it and it was there was this idea that it was
00:22:06.900
like revenge in some sense for that i mean the tree belonged to the national trust so but but that
00:22:14.440
sort of defense or that excuse fell apart under any sort of cross-examination again the judge and the
00:22:19.620
jury didn't buy any of that it's just it's just nonsense um so just i suppose the last word to say
00:22:27.160
on it other than that it's extremely sad and disappointing is that it sort of um doesn't really
00:22:32.620
make sense i was really expecting something even like a weird thing like they had some sort of
00:22:39.660
weird esoteric hatred for sycamores or something but no there wasn't anything there wasn't anything
00:22:45.040
it was for its own sake so what a shame
00:22:49.420
all right we've got two rumble rants from that the engaged few says you know what would be
00:22:56.520
aesthetically pleasing using that tree as the fuel by which they are burned at the stake
00:23:01.480
is that even a bit too far for bows britain i'll say burned at stake what about an impaling
00:23:07.640
oh my a vlad a vlad style impaling on the oh my goodness i thought sharpened trunk and i thought
00:23:15.860
bows britain was losing its edge for a moment there my goodness and that's a random name we're just
00:23:22.180
carbon bro people die every day i agree now get back on the boat ahmed yeah good good point
00:23:29.140
excellently made all right let's go on to your segment i need stuff you want a mouse you need to
00:23:35.160
help me do you want a box that may or may not work actually to be fair you don't really need the box
00:23:39.620
you've only got one link give me the box oh he's having the box anyway am i supposed to work this
00:23:44.040
thing i was down there anyway all right cool there you go all right so i thought what we would do
00:23:50.220
is talk about how stopping immigration could save the planet yes yes genuinely now i don't mean that
00:24:00.920
from like a like a comical perspective at least from our own brit perspective our british side of
00:24:07.680
things the west in general um so effectively this this whole segment spawned from a conversation i had
00:24:14.940
like two years ago now with the local mp candidates so our local members of parliament candidates as
00:24:24.680
they were sort of polling and trying to uh canvassing trying to get people around uh to vote for them
00:24:31.320
i spoke to the conservatives didn't speak to the reformer at that point in time um and i spoke to
00:24:37.000
the lib dems and we often look out at you know the nation as a whole and we look at our policies
00:24:45.800
and things like that and you go this in isolation cool you can sort of see that sort of makes sense
00:24:52.640
this in isolation yeah i could sort of see that there's an argument for that but those two things
00:24:59.100
combined are pure retardation right on a just demonstrable retardation such as well check this out
00:25:10.340
open borders and net zero they don't seem to marry up very well do they they don't they don't and
00:25:20.800
that's because everyone has an inherent carbon value and that actually exponentially increases
00:25:29.780
when people move obviously from the third world to a developed world and when you have to like for
00:25:38.500
instance cut down forests and pave over fields and such for the sake of housing those people well that's
00:25:45.480
even if we do which we don't oh yeah you've got to remember that we actually don't develop a lot of
00:25:49.780
houses so i think i think we do develop something like a hundred or 150 000 houses each year it's
00:25:55.860
just that it's nowhere near enough to make like to keep yeah i think that isn't that's their aim but
00:26:01.440
they didn't and they fell short of like 80 000 or something the aim is 300 000 i believe or at least
00:26:07.220
it was a few years ago they might have upped it since then yeah to try and make up for the shortfalls
00:26:12.720
over the previous few years but either way they do like there is a lot of um of need because of
00:26:19.820
this to like pave over the country they really do want to make britain like coruscant like one
00:26:24.080
massive city from land's end to john of groats don't they i like um i like comparing it to mega city
00:26:29.860
one yeah oh right yeah that's an ad you know we've got to bring it back to britain at the very least in
00:26:35.540
those kinds of dystopias there's something cool about them right coruscant's got that like techno
00:26:41.920
future aesthetic mega city one there's a chance that you could sign up to become a judge and just
00:26:48.140
be able to like shoot degenerate criminals in the streets so there's there's like some cool stuff
00:26:53.220
about that britain would just be the most boring dystopia what is the most boring dull predictable
00:27:00.860
dystopia out there well when you look at the most densely populated place spots on earth like i'm
00:27:05.940
thinking maybe hong kong or tokyo somewhere like that imagine the whole of britain that they would
00:27:11.120
have the whole of britain that dense wouldn't they yeah well i think tokyo is like three times the size
00:27:17.380
of london if it was transplanted onto britain it would take up the entirety of the southwest
00:27:22.980
and i see people like tom harwood say oh why aren't we doing that why don't we have tokyo in the south
00:27:28.920
why don't we have tokyo in the north why don't we join up liverpool and manchester yeah why don't
00:27:33.320
we just make one yeah one gigantic mega city because that would be i don't want that destroy
00:27:38.720
it all so i found this um we'll just take a look at the abstract because i just think it's interesting
00:27:43.900
so uh publicly available data on co2 emissions with patterns of human movement so to analyze the
00:27:50.600
anticipated effects of human migration on the abilities of nations to attain the 2030 co2 emissions
00:27:57.580
right because that's that's what they that's what they're trying to push for this arbitrary figure
00:28:01.780
that they've thrown out literally arbitrarily which has been admitted as an arbitrary uh target i mean
00:28:07.840
we here i imagine don't even buy the very concept of co2 i don't oh i don't of co2 being the driver
00:28:15.400
of climate change no i i think weather plans just generally happen anyway so this is all in their
00:28:20.540
terms yeah yeah yeah so even in their own terms right so this individual says i do so at both global
00:28:26.400
175 countries and national canada in the usa now we'll get on to the uk in a minute i've got some
00:28:31.420
statistics for them in terms of some figures so this is just canada in the usa for the most part
00:28:35.780
the analysis reveals uh that mean per capita co2 emissions are nearly three times higher in
00:28:40.940
countries with net immigration now that's obviously for a few reasons those countries are where people
00:28:47.060
migrate to obviously right and this is why we'll we'll break it down for the uk in a minute because
00:28:52.360
it shows there's an average per person on the figure that they put out and so you can actually
00:28:57.380
calculate their totals and go against what they've said we're reducing it by and how it's just
00:29:03.300
who said well one step forward two steps back one step forward two steps back constantly so in terms
00:29:10.680
of this one the difference is move over here differences i can't bloody read it uh the differences
00:29:17.340
project a cumulative migration induced annual increase in global emissions of approximately 1.7
00:29:23.100
billion tons all on their own terms this is on you know this is the nih that's their own terms
00:29:31.320
right 1.7 billion tons for canada and the united states the projected total emissions attributable
00:29:36.600
to migration from 2021 to 2030 vary between 0.7 and 0.9 billion tons
00:29:42.460
i mean that's madness that's absolutely insane on their own terms remember we've got to i was about
00:29:48.900
to ask how that how that stacks up relatively if that's a lot or not much but yeah it's uh all
00:29:54.620
all those staggering the next sentence begins with all those staggering so i assume that's bad
00:29:59.500
that's a bad number it is a current global emissions total 36 billion tons per annum so that is quite a
00:30:08.100
lot it is a lot hell of a lot i make this point a fair bit uh and uh but we get the word billion
00:30:15.000
gets thrown out a lot of the times you know elon paid 40 billion for twitter or whatever yeah this
00:30:20.120
or that billion or even trillions get thrown out like the new especially a billion of anything
00:30:25.700
well not anything maybe a billion microns isn't all that big but a billion tons of something a billion
00:30:32.940
a thousand million it's a crazy it's a crazy number yeah we just get used to hearing the word
00:30:40.140
billion thrown out all the time yeah and you become you become desensitized to it but that is a huge
00:30:46.020
amount yeah huge huge oh it's mental it's absolutely mental so that that's just as a quick overview i
00:30:52.600
think it sort of sets the stage a little bit but let's bring it home right let's bring it home to our
00:30:56.700
absolute and then we can converse it back out to the west in general so the average uk citizen
00:31:01.800
is responsible for roughly 12.7 tons of co2 um emissions per year a year yeah per year per year
00:31:11.180
so 12.7 tons of co2 per year so this figure includes both direct emissions like those from
00:31:17.100
heating homes and driving and then indirect emissions right so that would apply to production
00:31:23.580
of goods and services uh consumed in the uk so that's just all encompassing now these are the figures
00:31:29.440
which i could find those are the figures that are out there you can extrapolate from that that it's
00:31:34.020
probably going to be worse anyway because that's on their own terms that's something they believe in
00:31:39.360
so could be worse could be eat could be better depending on where their argument lies and what
00:31:44.200
they're trying to push narrative wise um so let's talk about figures of of of humans that have migrated
00:31:52.860
to the migrated scumbag broken into invade the uk yeah invaded so in 2024 this is just the figure i could find
00:32:00.860
uh net migration to the uk was estimated to be 431 000 right that's the estimation uh that's that's
00:32:10.100
going to be revised up like it always is like it always is the ons comes out and goes sorry bro
00:32:15.600
it was actually higher than that by a significant amount maybe august september november november at
00:32:23.220
the latest but last year i think it was august where there were actually actually we missed a
00:32:28.320
couple hundred thousand yeah it's more in the ballpark of the 700 800 000 no big deal though guys
00:32:33.800
no big deal so but and we've got thousands of afghans coming over even more thousands of afghans which
00:32:39.100
i'll cover in my segment well but this this this goes perfectly to that as well right so 431 000 is is
00:32:45.020
what was quoted um now this will likely be higher as always but let's play devil's advocate with that
00:32:52.300
as a figure and just take them at face value right so that actually means that the uk in 2024 alone
00:32:59.800
uh imported a total yearly output of 5.5 million tons of co2 does ed miller bad know about this
00:33:09.900
does anyone let ed know does he know anything he'll be aghast and i know he'll have a solution
00:33:15.500
for this right so ed miller banned wind turbines his favorite thing is they've taken away all of
00:33:22.380
the protections of putting wind farms all over the countryside when they just wanted them to be
00:33:26.900
offshore you know so they're back on back on the land they're going to be three times the statue of
00:33:31.700
liberty in size right and now they want you to be able to put a wind turbine in your back garden
00:33:36.840
so that you can annoy your neighbors and possibly take out their dog if it jumps for you right
00:33:42.720
i'm sure he's your dogs i've got an even better idea than ed miller band to be able to offset
00:33:48.660
individual per capita emissions right attach turbines to people okay just like like a beanie
00:33:56.920
hat i'm imagining something yes in a cap with a tiny turbine on top like those little caps with
00:34:02.540
tiny turbines exactly that but yes you have to wear a solar powered battery at all times
00:34:08.700
that collects the energy that will be mandated by ed miller band by the end of next year yes
00:34:15.640
that's what's gonna that's what's gonna happen on a windy day you might take off
00:34:19.920
but that's the sacrifice that ed miller band is willing to make
00:34:23.320
so yeah brilliant i don't think that guy's that's what we'll have to do when these afghans get off the
00:34:29.220
boat they'll immediately be fitted with little turbines on the top of their head
00:34:32.740
well they're used to strapping stuff to their chest so um in 2023 right the uk reduces carbon
00:34:41.040
emissions and again this is just the only figures i could find is it likely to be worse better who
00:34:46.680
knows right just take it on face value but in 2023 the uk reduces carbon emissions by 22.3 million
00:34:54.560
tons of carbon dioxide uh equivalent so that's a 5.4 percent decrease from the previous year
00:35:00.980
and a reduction excludes emissions from international aviation shipping which are not included in the uk's
00:35:06.460
2030 climate target um so i mean if you've taken that figure into account 22.3 million tons but
00:35:12.500
you've imported in 2024 alone five point basically 5.5 million tons you can see how this is this is
00:35:20.640
never going to work like ever it's never going to work because you also have to take into account
00:35:27.620
as as we sort of said are you know from the off we have not built cities which are required to house
00:35:35.560
these people we have not we have imported cities the size of birmingham worth of population and yet
00:35:43.500
we've not built them so we're running on a mass deficit of output versus what the requirements are
00:35:50.580
and yet we're still importing you know an insane amount uh of co2 output and and you're not so
00:35:58.900
moving one person from one location that process alone i i don't care about the emissions just as
00:36:06.640
i want to keep saying that i don't care i'm just trying to play people at their own game
00:36:10.840
um because this is something which you could take to your local mp right because it is genuinely and
00:36:17.920
also you can have fun like i did which i'll reveal my story in a minute of why this is so fun um but you
00:36:24.820
can just dismantle their arguments and play them at their own game so you can see that obviously
00:36:31.160
you know if you're gonna without any cap on migration remotely and you're gonna keep importing
00:36:39.260
millions of millions of people millions and millions of millions of people with our net zero targets
00:36:45.700
which were just plucked out of thin air it's you they cancel one another round and so all that you
00:36:54.340
can get from this is one your mps are incredibly stupid right now i call these uh popr so these are
00:37:03.640
policies of pure retardation so they're popr's and the mp they are right yeah gotta give them
00:37:12.760
official official names okay you go to your mp and you say look you are you are pursuing popr's
00:37:18.700
all right and they'll go what's that and you'll go well that's a policy
00:37:22.040
of pure retardation and let me tell you why and you can you can quote all of this stuff um at the
00:37:29.440
end of the day look it's a scam you can't do both yeah obviously you can't do both now i don't buy
00:37:34.120
into any of this stuff anyway i don't i simply don't care but some of these people you need to
00:37:38.840
play at their own game and the people that do believe it they lack the critical thinking skills
00:37:44.180
to dissect this kind of information and so that's why you know i'm weaponizing you with information
00:37:49.140
ladies and gents take this to your local mps and take this to any of the radical lunatics that
00:37:53.720
promote any of this stuff because there is clearly an intersection between um you know zero emissions
00:38:01.560
and migration people love it they want to promote both because it's a virtue um and maybe you can get
00:38:08.720
hung up on like i was so this all stems from a conversation i had with my my now unfortunate local
00:38:15.280
mp where i called her up liberal democrat and uh and i said well tell me about your politics
00:38:21.520
firstly she was like how did you get my number and i said it's on your leaflet you imbecile
00:38:26.260
legit part of the conversation it's quite literally on your flyer you moron
00:38:33.700
couldn't believe that tell me about your politics told me about politics i was like we're not really
00:38:40.640
liberal and democrat because you know you don't promote democracy the liberal democrats we know
00:38:45.500
they don't promote democracy you know they don't they want to reverse brexit and things like this
00:38:49.260
that's not democratic i don't want to flood the country of immigrants that's not democratic either
00:38:53.020
so anyway then i had a conversation about houses funnily enough this this woman uh is an architect
00:38:59.880
and i had a conversation about well do you not see that there's a there's a sort of a
00:39:05.760
contradiction on terms here by wanting to allow infinity migrants into the country
00:39:11.020
whilst trying to reach 2030 targets obviously usual spin of well you know we um i don't know we
00:39:19.140
britain was built on immigration i was like it's not shut up imbecile um and then just subsequently
00:39:26.100
continued on from there to saying that well we can just build more houses and i said what
00:39:30.620
tower blocks she said yeah people people absolutely want to live in flats i was like no they don't
00:39:35.760
it's a netherdame you offer someone a cottage versus a flat if they have the choice they will
00:39:41.840
live in a cottage they won't live in a flat they live in a flat because it's a necessity you don't
00:39:46.720
have visions of the glorious great global favela that we're building oh yeah and that is that is one
00:39:53.140
useful thing about these people that they're coming that they want to bring into the country
00:39:57.220
is that where they're from they're used to like stacking up on top of one another
00:40:01.140
and living in a corner of a room somewhere with no amenities they don't they don't expect the kind
00:40:08.820
of luxuries that the west has come to expect they're used to their walls just being some breeze
00:40:13.260
blocks and their roof a bit of corrugated iron yeah i was gonna say if if not just like bits of cardboard
00:40:19.300
i mean you're completely right in their own paradigm it doesn't make sense many times over
00:40:26.980
that co2 drives climate change at all doesn't actually make sense it doesn't it doesn't it
00:40:33.140
doesn't make sense uh and then the idea that you'll you'll care about the carbon footprint but
00:40:38.540
import people into the west where their carbon footprint is increased brilliant that doesn't make
00:40:44.280
any sense like the idea that britain its whole history is a racist and systemically racist but it was
00:40:54.340
also built by yeah blacks and immigrants and whatever back from the roman days which it was
00:41:00.980
yeah it's both of those things is it okay you're talking absolute nonsense makes perfect sense to me
00:41:08.560
but then again i am retarded well you said it yeah right no but yeah in their in their own terms it's
00:41:18.280
just it's just complete nonsense and surely well i was about to say surely most people see this
00:41:23.660
unfortunately a lot of people watching this will of course preaching we'll preach to the choir a bit
00:41:28.000
i would have thought but a lot of people don't they genuinely believe it a lot of a lot of boomers a lot of
00:41:33.320
like young socialist commie pinkos straight out of uni they they buy it all how do they how are they
00:41:41.080
not feeling a cognitive dissonance i don't know how could you not there is there is some dissent but a lot
00:41:46.880
of it as ever is always pushed by social pressure i've got quite a few friends who if they speak to
00:41:53.800
me without anybody listening in they don't immediately jump to oh thank god i can finally
00:42:00.160
be honest about how i feel but sometimes i get the feeling from some of them that they start to like
00:42:05.140
really probe about what i think about things and ask me my beliefs and it's not in like an
00:42:10.540
antagonistic way it's almost like in a can you give me permission give give me permission to do
00:42:16.660
wrong think please harry give give me a logical argument so that i can do wrong think without
00:42:22.200
feeling bad and i'm sure plenty of people have experienced that with people in their own lives
00:42:26.660
as well in your personal lives the way i've always done it pretty much is that whenever i even get the
00:42:32.660
smallest pang of cognitive dissonance now wait a minute how does that make sense i'm sorry that
00:42:39.380
doesn't quite make sense that's quite a profound thing for me again even if i get a small pang of
00:42:44.840
it i have to rethink what i think rejig my my my version of reality that rolls around in my head
00:42:52.720
because i can't have it i don't like it if there's anything really big really big where i realize oh
00:42:58.780
what i thought before must be incorrect if i accept this new thing but i feel like just lots of people
00:43:06.420
walk around and they don't ever do that well they don't have so critical thinking skills are hugely
00:43:11.900
on the decline at the end of the day so it just all comes down to that like people like to think
00:43:16.600
that they're intelligent you you can be knowledgeable but i think intelligence there's there's definitely a
00:43:22.460
difference between intelligence and knowledge you can be knowledgeable on something but that doesn't
00:43:26.700
necessarily mean you're intelligent i think intelligence knowledge is just the the act of learning
00:43:32.720
information retaining it intelligence is the dissemination of that information on a critical
00:43:37.420
level yeah you could have a hindu physicist who understands new things about the nature of the
00:43:44.320
universe and yet still believes in ganesh so uh yeah intelligence and knowledge are two different
00:43:52.260
things and can be almost entirely divorced i think you're right yeah um but what a strange thing to
00:43:57.280
just will just endlessly bring in more people increasing the carbon but we insist on carbon
00:44:02.820
coming down even though that doesn't drive climate change yeah mad world a mad world actually
00:44:09.260
demonstrably increase the carbon as well so now you know the figures all right we must stop
00:44:14.040
immigration to save the planet yes write a letter to mr milliband which he can ignore yeah which
00:44:22.480
yeah his people will promptly throw in the bin the second they realize sadly yes give you the
00:44:27.200
box i'll go through some of these rumble rants uh logan pine says yesterday i forgot to say
00:44:32.220
long live death for spain what injury i i don't have much context for that i didn't watch yesterday's
00:44:41.060
podcast i will assume that it makes sense that's a random name was at the gym at 3 a.m this morning
00:44:47.200
two to three people in pure quiet bliss until the one arab worker doing the night shift starts yelling
00:44:52.820
in arabic to himself must have been a gin i hate gins gin in a gym yeah that's
00:44:59.160
hey i used to do the old 3 a.m workout at university and it wasn't because i had gotten up
00:45:08.960
really really early or anything like that and uh there is there is some kind of peace and bliss
00:45:14.660
to having the entire place to yourself for one the dumbbells are normally free i do feel like though
00:45:20.680
if you're all about gains you need your sleep don't you oh i was getting vitally important
00:45:25.780
it just wasn't in the night okay yeah there you go as a student yeah you got it i got it i said
00:45:30.800
when i was at university yeah you've been to uni come on i get it i get it yeah logan pine the free
00:45:36.500
and fair old england will stay a pleasant garden nelson wants every man to do his duty and that's a
00:45:42.520
random name the npc friends harry talks about is the reason i said last week that a lot of people
00:45:46.160
won't care about the epstein list shredding itself most are npcs which is why universal suffrage
00:45:51.400
is gay yeah uh and on the epstein stuff on the epstein stuff right why are you talking about
00:45:57.220
the epstein list i forgot i still talk about it what epstein is what he's a good he's a creep
00:46:02.380
stop talking about who is that who is this epstein yeah i mean trump was friends with him for 15 years
00:46:07.580
epstein and maxwell introduced him to melania but i'm sure there's nothing there sure there's no
00:46:12.960
where's the evidence bro where's the evidence like i'm sorry i just can't like after how this
00:46:17.660
first six months of his admin has gone i wasn't intending to get onto this but you brought it up
00:46:22.020
can you guys wait for when trump does his farm work program mass amnesty mass amnesty of farm
00:46:30.060
workers agricultural 40 of that industry in america is estimated to be illegal workers when he
00:46:36.960
amnesty is all of them and then like maga cultists the real loyalists turn around and say yeah well
00:46:45.340
if he didn't do that american farming would have collapsed so it's america first bro do you want do
00:46:52.020
you not want american farmers to succeed they need the cheap labor bro that's the same thing you wait
00:46:56.560
for that the same thing they're doing with the ukraine stuff now and would have collapsed anyway can't
00:47:01.000
you just buy a few more combine harvesters i'm sorry whoever sells copium right now is in rolling
00:47:07.780
in because the amount of copium that i see on a daily basis this these days is infuriating you can
00:47:15.260
just like you can jump off the bandwagon you can get off the train at any time yeah like like beau said
00:47:23.280
cognitive dissonance is not a good thing you vote for this yeah i don't think he did vote for it
00:47:30.320
and as far as i'm aware deportation numbers are not up to obama standards yet so if you're not even
00:47:36.520
making up for obama deportation levels it's not worth it i know everybody keeps saying like oh well
00:47:42.860
we're getting deportations though we're getting no you're getting a lot of rhetoric about deportations
00:47:47.940
you're getting a lot of newspapers showing oh look at trump's evenly taking these families away and
00:47:52.880
sending them back to mexico yeah but if the numbers don't add up they don't add up though do they
00:47:58.060
it's just an intelligence services compromat machine bro i'm talking about it bro they implode
00:48:04.660
themselves all the time bro yeah isn't it funny how epstein killed himself during trump's first admin
00:48:11.740
as well when bill barr was the attorney general and it was bill barr's dad that gave epstein his
00:48:18.260
first job as a maths teacher which he had no qualifications for and bill barr's name does appear
00:48:24.060
on the lolita express funny all that we should get on to the actual subject of the segment but yeah
00:48:31.820
that's just something this is the lots of like where's the hard evidence bro okay explain all of
00:48:37.160
these uh coinkydinks then what about the the eyewitness testimony of the dozens or hundreds of
00:48:43.820
women that said what went down on that island unbelievable is that not evidence liars and
00:48:49.340
virginia guffrey killed herself yeah completely out of nowhere you know just like it just happens
00:48:55.220
just asking questions anyway uh another one that's a random name for the record i did not give myself a
00:49:01.320
heart attack to the back of my head uh yeah well you're gonna get the clinton treatment are you
00:49:06.580
he tragically mysteriously blew the back of his own head out
00:49:11.000
funny how that happens anyway so uh to end on a positive note um we're getting more afghans
00:49:20.720
yay yay because the government is retarded and i hate everything uh and this statistically speaking
00:49:28.780
per capita afghans are some of the worst sex criminals in the world oh i've got that don't worry
00:49:33.680
okay okay i've got all of that don't worry per capita in the uk specifically we have those
00:49:42.020
figures so this is uh one of the biggest f-ups i've ever seen is that we're having to take up to
00:49:50.320
potentially potentially estimated an extra hundred thousand people because the 24 000 who are being
00:49:58.000
offered asylum in this country after a data breach also you know have families and dependents
00:50:03.660
that they need to bring along with them because they're not safe either despite the fact that
00:50:08.360
as we'll find out they are actually pretty safe staying where they already are the uk government
00:50:13.380
has just got to cargo cult more foreigners into the country more foreigners equals more good
00:50:19.640
no matter what the actual real consequences on the ground are so if we just pray to the cargo cult
00:50:25.900
of more foreigners good things will eventually happen is the logic behind all of this except dan has
00:50:32.520
pointed out that um you know there's normally like an economic reason which we're given for these
00:50:39.280
kinds of things there's always some kind of explanation given as to why it will improve our lives
00:50:44.460
in some way or at least improve the lives of the people that we're bringing in but due to court
00:50:49.280
injunctions on all of this this has only just been revealed now despite the fact this process has been
00:50:53.620
in play since at least 2023 and the information the data breach was in 2022 so they've been trying to
00:51:02.040
keep it secret from us the telegraph and other publications haven't been able to report on this
00:51:08.200
because they know it would piss you all off there's also they would make the excuse of oh well if the
00:51:14.560
taliban government knew that we were doing this and they might leap into action and get all of these guys
00:51:21.960
before we can save their lives taliban has had this information for three years yeah they literally
00:51:28.160
come out and said yeah we knew about that guys yeah we knew about the data we we had the data we we
00:51:33.720
knew it and and of course it's going to cost potentially seven billion pounds wait can i just
00:51:39.180
clarify a few things yes yes i was going to clarify what's happened as well oh well so at the heart of it
00:51:45.740
then is that where uh the coalition of the willing invaded what what's funny oh yeah yeah against the
00:51:53.120
axis of evil invaded afghanistan in what oh one was it uh straight after straight after 9-11 iraq was
00:52:01.140
oh three yeah and um and it's mainly the uk and britain um and so where loads of people worked with us
00:52:08.920
for us during the next 20 odd years as either what troops policemen interpreters whatever yeah
00:52:17.480
it's those people these and the argument is that if the taliban ever found out who they were
00:52:22.700
they would certainly torture them or murder them or at least arrest them put them in prison
00:52:27.240
for being collaborators with us is that what this is that's that's that's that's the logic the people
00:52:34.540
involved in this data breach specifically were involved in two large units i believe that had
00:52:42.120
each of them had triple digits at the end of the name of the unit which was like four four four or
00:52:46.860
three three three something like that as such they were known colloquially by the forces as the triples
00:52:52.340
so it's the members of these triples units who have had their data breach because what happened
00:52:59.280
was in early 2022 february 2022 some some random royal marine sent an email to a group of afghans
00:53:10.780
and accidentally included in that email a spreadsheet containing the identity identities of 25 000 afghans
00:53:17.920
who were applying for asylum in the uk accidentally yes it was and he did it twice that's a big spreadsheet
00:53:25.540
as well yeah and these were soldiers spreadsheet not only was it the soldiers names who'd work with
00:53:31.580
their families but in here as well it also included details of their contact details the personal
00:53:39.840
information and the names of their families just like everything like so so to be fair
00:53:47.300
to be fair from the perspective yeah yeah from the perspective of one of those guys well it sucks to
00:53:53.000
be you yeah from the perspective of one of those guys who's worried trying to get his family out or
00:53:57.300
make sure that they're still safe i would be pissed off to be fair that some random royal marine
00:54:02.520
accidentally fat fingers when he's doing it when he's when he's adding a link or an attachment to
00:54:08.520
his email and accidentally sends the wrong spreadsheet you say that i don't care and i don't care
00:54:15.040
because there are countless documentaries from british and u.s special forces that are sat there going
00:54:20.420
one of the worst things i had to do in afghanistan was turn a blind eye to these pedos yeah dan
00:54:28.980
mentioned right so no i don't care stay there yeah i don't care yeah i could not care less i woe is you
00:54:37.540
i'm not interested yeah i remember at the time uh calum was showing a lot of the documentary footage of
00:54:43.600
it's awful of of the soldiers confronting these afghan collaborations and their higher-ups going and
00:54:49.300
and they're just and they're just like well you know i was sodomized as a child so it's my turn now
00:54:54.160
yes like the fagging system in public schools yeah it happened to me now it's my turn yeah and as a
00:55:03.340
result so far according to patrick christie's we've got 18 500 secretly flown to the uk after this data
00:55:11.600
breach revealed their identity to the taliban some had previously been denied entry due to sexual or
00:55:17.700
violent crimes so this is something else that happens this is something i think there was a channel 4
00:55:22.560
documentary that i referenced a while back where it's like sometimes they will just commit sexual and
00:55:29.120
violent crimes when they're over here and the hmrc uh sorry not hmrc the echr will refuse to allow us
00:55:39.840
to deport them because they'll get executed in their home countries for being a sex criminal if it's a
00:55:46.220
hell with your personal safety it's a hell with your human rights and you know your safety and and the
00:55:52.220
fact that you need to be protected to hell with the tell with that doesn't matter does it and it costs
00:55:56.460
seven billion pounds so one of the big things oh yeah little thing i'm not buying this marine
00:56:02.400
accidentally did that certainly if you did it twice that's why you don't you kind of don't
00:56:07.340
accidentally attach a spreadsheet to an email certainly not twice certainly not a massive
00:56:13.040
spreadsheet where actually has to think about it for a moment before it's finished uploading to the
00:56:17.660
email as an attachment yeah that would take quite a long time probably yeah yeah i don't really buy
00:56:22.640
that you i don't it doesn't really add up to me i mean it's possible okay it's possible but i don't
00:56:29.320
i feel like once again from our from our globalist the cabal of globalist criminals that run us
00:56:36.040
that are intent on um flooding us with as many foreign psychos and monsters and sex criminals as
00:56:43.320
possible at all times they were behind that they were like well if you accidentally send this then we
00:56:49.080
can make the argument that we have to import them that makes more sense than that he accidentally went
00:56:54.700
oh i'll just attach this giant spreadsheet to this email watch it upload yeah and it's finished send
00:57:01.020
what's that i'll do it again oh soz whoops i can't possibly i'll just cc the taliban into this one
00:57:08.400
yeah yeah it is it is fishy i i could believe that given the general incompetence of everybody these
00:57:17.300
days perhaps i suppose it is possible but but also because because we don't have any evidence that it
00:57:23.120
was anything other than an accident i think best case most moral scenario is that the royal marine was
00:57:29.180
tired of having to uh turn a blind eye to all of these people being pederasts and decided i'll get them
00:57:36.780
killed i'll just get them killed that's possibly the most moral unfortunately that didn't happen
00:57:44.260
solution uh yeah unfortunately i i knew about it no matter remember no matter what the catastrophe is
00:57:50.740
no matter where it happens in the world our involvement or responsibility obviously we were
00:57:56.340
deployed in afghanistan we were part of the occupation etc etc but even in situations where that isn't the
00:58:02.340
case where we're not involved at all we're nowhere none of our national interests are involved the
00:58:07.440
solution is always more immigrants into britain or europe as a whole that's always the consequence of
00:58:14.820
anything that goes wrong in particularly the third world sins of the father happen to be a reasonably
00:58:22.100
just occupation in my in my opinion anyway i don't buy the lord miles callum angle that the taliban
00:58:28.440
were hard done by in any way or they're they're actually all right on in any way
00:58:32.420
complete scumbags backward scumbags i don't care about any of them over there i don't i don't think
00:58:39.020
it was wise to try and force them to respect women's rights but that's also because i don't really care
00:58:43.960
that much about the women's rights in the desert somewhere over there okay they they treat each other
00:58:51.700
horribly over there it's not my business uh i i either way so it came to light after this whole data breach
00:59:00.180
it came to light a year later 2023 when an anonymous an anonymous facebook user just some random facebook
00:59:08.100
user posts extracts of the data just posted them on facebook the posts were deleted within three days
00:59:16.140
after mod officials contacted meta but the government decided it had no choice as a result
00:59:22.080
to offer asylum to the afghans affected because they're at risk of reprisal attacks from the taliban
00:59:27.220
i don't care i don't care i just don't care yeah i don't care stay where you are we don't want you
00:59:34.240
we don't need you so they give context here that a number of former afghan special forces personnel
00:59:39.420
had been murdered by the taliban since it regained power in 2021 some of those who will come to britain
00:59:46.500
now as they mentioned in the tweet had previous asylum applications rejected and now they've had
00:59:53.000
to reverse all of that however also the number expected to be brought to britain as a result of
00:59:59.300
the breach was initially stated in court documents to be nearly 43 000 people however john healy the
01:00:04.680
defense secretary told parliament that it was just about 6 900 afghans will be brought to britain as a
01:00:11.520
direct result of the breach but also according to the mod 4 500 are already in the country or are in
01:00:18.560
transit and 2 400 more are yet to travel we have the information from patrick christie's that we've
01:00:25.300
already had 18 500 in here and later in the article they say in total it's believed that between
01:00:31.500
between 800 000 and 100 000 people were affected by the data breach so we've got conflicting figures
01:00:40.220
over how exactly how many the headline is given 24 000 though it's gonna be way worse than that it's
01:00:47.020
gonna be way worse than that my words the amount that's revealed it's gonna be so much and again the
01:00:52.940
government fought a two-year legal battle to keep it a secret the super injunction was in junk lifted on
01:00:59.240
midday on tuesday by the high court so that i would imagine they would say oh there was national state
01:01:05.240
secrets uh needed to be covered up and we needed to make sure that we could get them over before the
01:01:11.440
taliban knows there'll be some kind of national security reason why they wanted to keep this a
01:01:16.460
secret but also it helps that they managed to delay the blowback on this for two years
01:01:23.060
well they're now what now the the headlines are like the government's incredibly worried that
01:01:27.580
there's going to be riots due to this so why did you do it then yeah like you act like that's that's
01:01:34.660
one of the reasons why they did the super injunction as well to stop everyone talking about it and now
01:01:39.100
you're like well people are gonna be really annoyed about this right so maybe just maybe that should be
01:01:46.700
the indication at which you go shouldn't be doing this actually should we because those people that
01:01:52.460
we serve you know that we're in this position to do to serve they're going to be really annoyed about
01:01:59.940
this you probably probably shouldn't be doing that a fair point whether it's a super injunction or d
01:02:05.540
notice or whatever you want to call it that should be a massive massive scandal we live in a world where
01:02:09.640
we're we're used to being screwed over by our government so badly so egregiously something like
01:02:15.580
this is like i'll just throw it on top of the pile of all the other trees and a betrayal we've
01:02:19.480
experienced but it should be uh an absolute scandal a couple of quick questions of course when it
01:02:25.540
originally happened or when the original at least when the original super injunction was put in place
01:02:30.080
who was the sort of the minister in charge of immigration at that time um i imagine i don't know
01:02:39.500
it would have been either 2022 when this originally happened or 2023 when the information was posted
01:02:46.360
on facebook and the ministry of defense decided to start handing out asylum to the people affected
01:02:51.320
i believe it was one it was the right honorable robert jenrich mp if i'm not mistaking
01:02:57.040
apparently someone else looked into this and said that the timelines
01:03:00.080
don't massively line up that he would have basically left around the same time
01:03:06.760
sounds like he probably was like oh i'm done with this don't try to stop here i don't know i can't
01:03:14.060
i i'm just yeah the other thing is what's the conversion rate or the ratio of 100 000
01:03:22.100
or 43 000 afghans what's that convert into number of british women raped um it's going to be a minimum
01:03:31.280
of a few hundred isn't it uh i think no way it won't be yeah i think fear i figured this out about
01:03:37.660
250 and we're spending about seven billion pounds on it i replied to this and said no it's way worse
01:03:44.540
well because they will have kids yeah of course at my expense again so so the cut the cost is estimated
01:03:52.300
about seven billion and also this comes alongside speaking of things to pile on top on on top of
01:03:58.840
each other um so the rachel reese rachel from accounts has tried to make us a 9.9 almost 10
01:04:06.920
billion pound headroom in the budget in the government budget and economy and such to balance
01:04:13.520
the books uh yeah this takes out most of that and also we found out that the cost of housing asylum
01:04:19.480
seekers you remember when it was about i think a few years ago it was 2.2 million per day and how
01:04:25.220
labor were campaigning on things like they'd reduce the cost of such things we'd get a stronger border
01:04:29.780
well now it's four million pounds per day so it's gone up from 4.5 billion per year
01:04:35.680
to roughly about 15.3 right wasn't wasn't the point of removing them or at least that's the
01:04:43.900
estimate for 2029 for cheapen the bill well i remember why has it gone up what they try if you
01:04:49.980
remember what they tried to do was they tried to shove them on a load of boats on the coastline
01:04:54.740
they tried to get them in big cargo ships well there was that stock there was that one yeah that
01:05:00.100
one prison hulk they made which was a complete failure yeah which is a failure didn't they burn
01:05:04.240
it down anyway quite quickly i think they tried they they definitely vandalized the whole place
01:05:09.860
they were causing a nuisance that that's that was on portland so actually where i grew up in
01:05:14.640
portland and they were causing a nuisance down there sorry oh no no so something to point out
01:05:18.900
here is that people who are in the know uh like laws miles lord miles for instance said that he knew
01:05:25.720
that the head of the foreign intelligence of the taliban had the list for years and they don't care
01:05:32.060
they did a blanket amnesty for anybody who was like a low-level collaborator they already had a
01:05:37.520
blanket amnesty on those on those people and they're not in any danger and firas also commented
01:05:44.320
on this saying that the american withdrawal happened in august 2021 the data of 19 000 applicants who
01:05:51.140
had applied to relocate were inadvertently leaked tory government blah blah blah blah so they they
01:05:57.380
already knew there's no evidence that these people were going to be killed by the taliban because the
01:06:05.060
taliban already had this information if it could get leaked on facebook then the taliban already had access
01:06:13.180
to it i think that's a pretty clear thing especially seeing as the spreadsheets were leaked
01:06:18.180
in emails to afghans so so so again this is just an excuse to bring in more foreigners that's that's
01:06:28.220
what this is the people who are affected by that they're thinking to themselves well i'm not getting
01:06:33.120
killed but i am a disgrace to my country because i collaborated with an occupational foreign government
01:06:40.060
and there's not much opportunity here this is still afghanistan still not a nice place to be i'm in
01:06:45.520
the desert people kill each other every single day or or i could move to england with its wonderful
01:06:53.080
welfare system an ample opportunity for illegal work for people who shouldn't be yeah i could go and live
01:06:59.740
in uh telford or oldham or satellite town of birmingham and uh you know sign on and be an uber eats guy
01:07:08.620
yeah or or just do nothing at all as as uh rupert lowe shared out foreign nationals claiming universal credit
01:07:17.740
it's just a straight line up line go up line go up job done guys the line's gonna the line has gone up for salvation be
01:07:25.260
praise the line of unemployment has gone up the line of adult adult illiteracy has gone up line
01:07:31.120
gone up oh jobs are good and lads and rupert lowe also shared out uh this which was information from
01:07:36.460
the center for migration control uh from 2021 to 2023 uh the nationality of people who commit sexual
01:07:44.820
assault in numbers so right at the bottom here you can see united kingdom people of uk nationality
01:07:50.580
probably be boosted by people who just have the passports per 10 000 is 2.66 afghans almost 60
01:07:58.260
they're literally top of the table top of the leaderboard literally the most dangerous sex
01:08:03.000
criminals in the world when they're in england yes statistically whilst they're in england per capita
01:08:08.800
so we're getting more of these guys great we've got some of them and again not not only those guys but
01:08:15.240
we're getting the collaborators who we already knew were it is yeah sodomizing children great
01:08:22.140
fantastic brilliant when will when will the trial start happening yeah and when when when can we put
01:08:28.340
our and as a result of this sort of stuff i double checked i double checked this information as a
01:08:33.500
result uh when it comes to europe with rape capital of europe it's gonna be higher than that now as well
01:08:38.880
probably great job because that was 2022 great job guys this is this is the extent this is what the
01:08:44.620
benefits of being the second most powerful soft power in the world gets you by a long way as well
01:08:51.140
yeah oh sweden's pretty high sorry about that sweden if you think like actually that how close we are
01:09:00.920
to the united states and how big their population is by comparison to us i mean that's mental yeah
01:09:04.780
we've got slightly more than half the number of rape cases in 2022 that's insane except we have
01:09:09.740
some except we have a population of what is it like 60 million now 60 or 70 million and they've
01:09:17.280
got a population of 330 plus million great fantastic and everyone involved in this not just this i mean
01:09:27.620
the general string them up string them up string them up yeah what a crime what a terrible crime to have
01:09:34.880
done is under boris johnson as well wasn't it or no well i'm talking about everyone from blair onwards
01:09:40.620
oh right yeah now who who had been the prime minister for rishi i think johnson would have still
01:09:45.540
been the prime minister johnson was still the prime minister at the time of the afghan collapse yeah
01:09:49.720
um it was 2022 late 2022 if i remember correctly that liz truss became pm for a day and then rishi was
01:10:01.320
installed straight after so the majority of these mess ups would have been done under boris
01:10:06.680
who is kind of like job he's kind of like a shadowy figure at this point in british politics where
01:10:11.620
there's always the threat that he's going to re-emerge and retards with no object permanence
01:10:18.220
and who can't remember past five days ago will go i remember boris he was from when times were better
01:10:24.940
he got us brexit he got brexit done he kept us safe during lockdowns we'll get him back on charge
01:10:32.500
and we'll see what go what happens then and they they'll forget there are still tory boy boris simps
01:10:38.620
on twitter yeah yeah yeah definitely definitely uh bad right and and also our inflation's dead high
01:10:47.380
it's back shockingly enough when you're spending billions of pounds cargo cult importing these
01:10:56.220
people into the country and then they immediately jump on benefits and start committing crimes
01:10:59.820
and then you're whilst using the nhs whilst using the nhs and you have no budget with which to cover
01:11:06.280
any of this stuff and also your socialists and also you lied about your qualifications for being
01:11:12.780
chancellor in the first place um it turns out this is not a recipe for economic success that's another
01:11:18.900
popr policy of pure retardation yeah open borders and socialist policies with respect to health care
01:11:25.260
and things like that yeah the welfare state and no borders the welfare state and no borders
01:11:29.080
yeah completely which are pure popr yeah so yeah i hope you didn't have any sharp objects during
01:11:37.040
near you during that segment so let's go on to the rumble rants
01:11:41.400
woo there you go um thank you for sending us money in it will dull the pain is that a rick flair
01:11:50.220
woo i'm not gonna do a rick flair okay no all right i want to but i won't uh logan it would be one
01:11:57.960
thing if the people they bring in were just slaves i can understand that they are making they make it
01:12:03.800
worse though well there's the thing they kind of are they kind of are without saying they are they want
01:12:09.200
them in as slave labor basically but they just can't be up front about it just eat do oh well
01:12:15.240
yeah yeah yeah uh that's a random name that soldier tried real hard to call their numbers before they
01:12:21.840
got to the uk absolute patriot yeah maybe that's what again in my mind that's like best case scenario
01:12:28.940
what he was trying to do is like i'm going to get the nonces to kill the other nonces because i
01:12:34.360
believe the big difference between the people we were collaborating with and the taliban was the
01:12:39.640
guys we were collaborating with were gay nonces whereas the taliban were straight nonces so that's
01:12:48.300
why it's like it doesn't matter to me what brand of nonce is in charge of the of afghanistan
01:12:54.300
like and we shouldn't be trying to teach them western values or how to respect women or anything like
01:13:01.940
that we should hem them in to stop them from hurting us and just let them get on with it
01:13:10.020
nonce on nonce violence is always a net win is it is it not yeah or as i've said before the big
01:13:18.800
problems with the west with with the middle east is a lack of sensible european colonialism if we just
01:13:25.260
went in with no pretenses and said we are in charge now we're not going to put up some big fake
01:13:30.820
occupational government that are actually collaborating with us or anything like that
01:13:34.440
no we just went no no we run you now yeah you stick to our laws and we extract profits from you
01:13:42.380
that would be better and i'm sure a lot of people in the middle east would actually be grateful as
01:13:46.460
well that's a random name also speaking of afghanis there's one in my parents building who
01:13:51.360
keeps stealing people's lockers and parking spots that they paid for they're in the process of legally
01:13:55.640
forcing him out and he follows up in retaliation he keeps pissing in front of someone's door
01:14:01.160
taking big wet turds on the carpet and smearing it on the door handle disgusting
01:14:07.000
what a creature gross scott scy guy as a database analyst programmer what i'm most triggered about is
01:14:13.900
the government keeping and sharing the data on spreadsheets excel is the bane of my existence
01:14:17.880
fair i used to work with excel for many a year and yeah i hate it i grew to absolutely hate it
01:14:25.900
the fact that i very rarely if ever have to use excel in this job is brilliant brilliant love it
01:14:32.460
true i hate google sheets i hate excel yeah i last time i used it was regularly was like secondary
01:14:38.920
school and i'm not eager to go back tom rat two things harry one this is the cover of the cover-up
01:14:45.340
i.e why do iraqis have massive numbers of british passports always a good question why are any of
01:14:50.960
the people of these nationalities in this country this excludes kemi from being pm she knew and could
01:14:56.660
have and could have resigned there are a number of things that should exclude her from being pm
01:15:01.040
they don't sadly the habsification uh every day this stuff makes me want to fed post i know how you
01:15:07.640
feel and again come on guys these afghan men had to touch those women you brits just don't allow them
01:15:13.320
to express their true love little that's gross that's gross anyway video comments
01:15:19.420
i'm a professional triple a game developer and these people are lying about the liabilities there
01:15:27.420
are numerous software licenses that absolve the company releasing a product of any and all
01:15:30.940
liabilities a lawyer wrote this and a lawyer will know that likewise they're actually misrepresenting
01:15:35.220
what stop killing games is actually asking for claiming that it means maintaining a game
01:15:38.300
indefinitely it doesn't the only stipulation is the game means playable in some form at end of life
01:15:42.980
for instance in the crew all you need to do is disable the always online check and it's fully
01:15:46.380
playable offline and finally stop killing games itself is the project of ross scott or accursed
01:15:50.860
farms on youtube who's a good boy he's been doing freeman's mind since like 2007 is my absolute
01:15:55.280
favorite youtube channel i insist everyone checks him out and that is a threat
01:15:58.900
all right interesting thank you very much what was it accused what what
01:16:06.200
accursed farm i think is what it was oh check it out
01:16:12.100
okay we're gay but we're in barnes and nobles and there's a kids book section a gay kids book section
01:16:18.400
and this shit is crazy look at this okay there's the gay vcs right bye bye binary
01:16:23.780
bye bye binary with a mohawk on a baby gaby sees you're not ready hold this okay what
01:16:32.100
a is for arrow and ace b is for bye this is crazy we're gay but this is crazy what for a baby
01:16:40.100
yeah that's that's disgusting who's buying this stuff who's published it who wrote it
01:16:47.520
this should be like a honey this should be like a honey pot for parents buying this for their kids
01:16:54.000
is you should take it to the counter and then security guards come and arrest you
01:16:57.680
yeah straight away it's like oh you want these books for your children no you're coming with us
01:17:02.320
like there's there's always stuff like that in w8 not w8 smiths in waterstones you go in and like
01:17:08.700
around the kids sections there'll be books uh like the what was it that heart stopper
01:17:14.240
uh which is some gay graphic novel which um which i was looking online and all of a sudden
01:17:20.200
they're making like a netflix show of it despite the fact that i've never seen anybody buy them i've
01:17:25.420
never seen anybody read them it's pushed on the stands in these bookshops because they're just
01:17:30.140
pushing it for the sake of an agenda and then they just get given a tv program because of immense
01:17:34.500
demand which has popped up out of nowhere it's all completely artificial i imagine the places that
01:17:40.080
most buy those kinds of stuff are school libraries any sexualization of small children
01:17:47.540
in the bin uh even really small kids like that's aimed at toddlers or whatever first beginning to
01:17:52.860
read let alone homosexual sexualization of small children i mean it's absolutely demonic
01:18:00.900
do you remember that channel queer kids stuff i think it was called do you remember that
01:18:04.740
no good good what are you watching no it was a thing in the news i think we did bits on it
01:18:10.600
early days and stuff like that it was just some channel some weird freak woman oh shit i think i
01:18:17.720
do i remember watching a segment like speaking to kids yeah yeah yeah and um just talk about how it's
01:18:24.500
okay to be gay like she's meant to be addressing little kids and stuff it's like there's enough
01:18:29.460
evidence it's the most of these people getting a hold of kids and what they do so most depraved thing
01:18:35.240
you could do short of violence right is something like that yeah depraved yeah yeah that's them we
01:18:43.900
got another rumble rant in from that's a random name one of you must move to india one of you must
01:18:49.860
move to afghanistan and one of you must move to sub-saharan africa who goes where and why all right
01:18:56.200
i'm picking dibs on on africa because because frankly uh in terms of the general environment
01:19:04.520
that place is like a paradise you think so like i mean all the jungles the nature all of that sort
01:19:12.260
of stuff and we did build we did build wonderful civilizations there temporarily missing one factor
01:19:19.680
i'm though trying to ignore that one factor because i'll take india please oh no i was gonna take
01:19:25.900
india because i don't want to go to india but out of those three i was gonna rebuild the raj so
01:19:31.480
that's why i wanted india if i'm left with afghanistan i'm i'm i'll just i'll just end it
01:19:36.860
if i have to go to afghanistan yeah no no i'll go to my early grade stuck with afghanistan i'll rule it
01:19:42.700
i'll build a new raj new raj i'm the king of afghanistan well yeah you know you know like i mean
01:19:49.640
in in africa itself you know people i mean you want to avoid the marauding bands of of war criminals
01:19:58.140
and rapists and murderers but the environment is really hot it'd be a it'd be a tropical paradise
01:20:07.500
you might be able to find a nice little enclave of white somewhere in in kenya i'll move to irania
01:20:14.180
in south africa i'll move to irania and we'll build a great civilization which people will be
01:20:20.700
very jealous of and try and break into maybe somewhere i'll have a gatling gun maybe somewhere
01:20:25.140
in west africa again there's a tiny enclave of like german expats and and it's like everything's
01:20:31.360
nice and squared away and clean maybe if you can find a village like that okay
01:20:36.520
did botswana get taken over by socialists recently oh i don't know yeah botswana is supposed to be
01:20:46.960
like the the sub-saharan african country that still works yeah right yeah that was uh you know like
01:20:52.420
top gear went there it looked pretty nice uh it's it had a decent economy i think a lot of it was run
01:20:58.760
by european expats and the botswanans themselves were perfectly happy with the the whole situation
01:21:05.020
but then i think earlier this year a bunch of socialists took over so lovely yeah great
01:21:12.140
still though still though i'll move to irania there you go there you go let's uh do some of
01:21:19.720
the written comments from the website bo oh okay uh do you want the mouse or have you got yours in
01:21:25.040
front here okay so uh mr h reviews stolen car the name of the poster there he's calling back to you
01:21:33.040
stabbed right in the heart um the sycamore tree was just a tree in the same way that stonehenge is
01:21:38.140
just some rocks right yeah the meaning comes from what it represents to us and how it makes us feel
01:21:42.980
as opposed to the physical classification of what it is uh never mind the historical age of both uh yeah
01:21:50.580
because that tree it was mentioned in the summing up the judges summing up the tree itself
01:21:55.580
was worth about five grand they said but the actual like lumber or whatever yeah worth about five
01:22:02.580
grand the little bit of work that the national trust had to do to move it and get rid of it and fix the
01:22:08.660
wall and uh that ran into actually quite a lot of money i think 20 or 30 grand something that ballpark
01:22:14.640
incredibly i don't know quite how how it came to that much but anyway that's what they said but the value
01:22:21.180
of the thing value of the thing beyond its monetary value is just was that it was it was astronomical it
01:22:30.640
meant a lot to some people okay that texas girl says uh some will never understand the loss of natural
01:22:36.840
beauty i mentioned that here in the hill country and the tragic destruction of the ancient bald cypress
01:22:42.780
trees from the floods it's nearly akin to the loss of life and i got berated for it yeah some people
01:22:49.020
uh sort of dead inside robot morons yeah why would you be berated for that horrible yeah unable to
01:22:57.420
understand that's not good if the people that you're with are berating you for pin them off yeah for
01:23:06.300
mourning uh destruction of of ancient beauty roman roman observer says uh i hope they plant a new tree
01:23:13.860
there apparently uh there are shoots growing up from the same spot and apparently i might be wrong
01:23:20.580
about this but i did read somewhere that sycamores are particularly good for that sort of thing
01:23:25.720
it they probably will a tree will regrow there but it will take a long time it'll take decades and
01:23:30.880
decades before it's the image you showed had it all squared off and it says this tree is still alive
01:23:35.560
right okay yeah right so but still we'll all be old if not gone before there's like a nice big
01:23:42.220
tree there again well hopefully our ancestors can enjoy it then yeah they don't need to just cry for
01:23:47.740
what they lost sorry nate they have lol no there'll be a flat there all right yeah yeah just let me have
01:23:54.140
something nate please it'll be hadrian hadrian wall hadrian's wall estate yeah would have been built on it
01:24:02.000
yeah um roman observer continues say uh we don't need to just cry for what we lost we can build and
01:24:08.500
grow again while remembering and maybe one day the new story will be richer because of the loss
01:24:12.920
yeah that's a nice bit of optimism actually yeah yeah yeah i do like a bit of optimism me um okay
01:24:21.240
let's read one more uh zombie philip the undead chief of edinburgh says from my experience most tree
01:24:28.200
surgeons are of the traveler community right yeah and judging by their faces i'm more inclined to
01:24:33.480
think they are yeah i mean one of them was living in a in a caravan yeah yeah yeah i don't know if
01:24:38.440
they were full blown i don't think they were full blown you know like roman-y gypsy types but yeah
01:24:44.680
they were like the traveler type yeah yeah they were i mean lord inquisitor hector rex did also point
01:24:51.820
out that he's a tree surgeon but he is also on cat right now so he'll hold fire from commenting
01:24:56.820
oh yeah daniel butchers most tree surgeons i know uh i've known and met through going to timber
01:25:03.120
yards are not like that this is important as it shows the decay of interest and respect for our
01:25:08.740
culture well i can only hope that most of the people who are being trusted to cut down trees with
01:25:14.060
heavy machinery and chainsaws aren't on ketamine one or two people i've known that have been tree
01:25:20.280
surgeons or had roles that are tree surgeon like let's say uh yeah they've been the furthest thing from
01:25:26.660
uh druggies or um or heartless scumbags they've been much more like uh hippie tree hugger types
01:25:36.300
does that make sense well of the couple i've ever met they've been really nice really nice um
01:25:43.240
kind warm-hearted people so i don't mean to cast dispersion on the tree surgeon community
01:25:51.460
i'm sure most of them are extremely good people i'm sure we're all for the inclusivity of tree
01:25:58.860
surgeons yeah uh nate do you want to go through your comments scroll down
01:26:05.800
oh i've got some oh i've got some comments excellent there you go omar award awad
01:26:12.900
soz says mathematical difference between one million one billion is only three zeros it's only
01:26:19.220
three zeros bro it's only three zeros bro but a really good way to visualize it is by representing
01:26:24.500
each unit as one second to count one million is slightly over 11 and a half days to count one
01:26:30.240
billion would be under 32 years just under 32 years either way i wouldn't trust these politicians
01:26:35.980
and experts to count past their fingers and they'd probably lie about it even if they did oh yeah
01:26:41.480
we're run by like actual low iq reprobates like unequivocally you know stupid and evil um at first i
01:26:51.120
thought he was uh making a bad point but he completely redeemed himself yeah okay good uh justin b said
01:26:59.380
a billion an output can be nothing how much co2 does the planet process in a year if there are
01:27:05.040
enough plants to process a billion tons of co2 then outputting the same is not a problem
01:27:08.700
i i don't subscribe to the co2 issue that that that wasn't the point of the segment the segment was
01:27:14.980
dismantle their arguments using their own rhetoric that was the point and i think it's fair and
01:27:19.640
justified because you you can make your mps look like total idiots and they will just have like a big
01:27:25.160
spurg out it's so funny the guy got hung up on by doing just that so that was the point you know
01:27:32.660
allow someone to highlight their stupidity was the was the the whole the whole point of the segment
01:27:38.300
yeah the sun and volcanoes and glaciers drive climate change much more than man-made co2
01:27:43.360
yeah uh and then we've got white rider says i don't believe even that narrative emissions are
01:27:49.680
three times higher in countries of net immigration bullshit india and china disprove that alone
01:27:54.380
china china i think is number one yeah maybe yeah yeah these places like india and china have got
01:28:01.440
like dozens maybe it's hundreds of coal-fired i just constantly churning out again don't don't buy
01:28:09.080
the co2 thing but if you did if you did why not why is that not your first target yeah yeah exactly
01:28:17.520
exactly uh and then lastly jethro says wind is arguably the worst renewable in the uk it only
01:28:24.320
works one third of the time wrecks the grid with volatility needs full gas backup kills wildlife
01:28:30.620
eats up copper and rare earths uh still gets paid not to generate during curtailment the only reason
01:28:38.200
it's scaled is due to subsidies and greenwashed accounting not only that is that we actually
01:28:45.340
have enough windmills to there's a calculation done that there's enough windmills currently
01:28:51.080
uh to to actually power the country if they were going at all times something along those lines
01:28:56.920
don't don't quote me but effectively that the whole point of wind uh as a as a renewable is
01:29:02.880
completely worthless because we can't store any of the energy we don't store wind power like it's only
01:29:08.280
functional whilst it's actually whilst a wind turbine is spinning great we've got some power
01:29:12.640
if we turn the tap on and use it but we can't store that power there's no storage facilities for
01:29:19.300
any of the renewables that we've got going on it's pathetic it's complete waste of everyone's time
01:29:23.220
genius yeah plus i feel like ed milliband is bought and paid for by some other interests
01:29:30.720
not just ed milliband but that whole lobby that we must have more more and more wind turbines
01:29:37.360
yeah why why who's paying you to say that a dysgenic dale vince or vance whatever his name is
01:29:46.240
probably yeah yeah someone like that perhaps yeah incorrigible frog for my segment says accidentally
01:29:53.740
leaking twice yeah yeah yeah it's a pretty bad one uh justin b bow i work in tech
01:30:00.700
never underestimate the idiocy of end users especially since everybody works in the cloud
01:30:05.620
now as your even has a governance uh government instance specifically for this so sharing a
01:30:10.720
document can be as quick as adding a link to the email it probably was a false flag but believe me
01:30:15.020
if you want to see the depths of human idiocy work on first line tech support for a year is that an
01:30:20.440
offer you're going to take up bow that's no uh you know i'm happy being employed by mr colvin
01:30:27.160
thank you very much uh no i can imagine i can well imagine um i can i could feel like the
01:30:33.140
almost feel from that comment the uh frustration um because yeah i have in the past worked um
01:30:40.120
where you have to speak to the public in any sort of way and it's annoying when i was not fresh out
01:30:46.800
of uni but not long after i was at uni i worked for jp morgan where i was essentially in a phone
01:30:52.280
center call center effectively um it was an asset management thing so he's only speaking to people
01:30:57.760
that were had invested a fair amount of money with jp morgan nonetheless it was talking to the public
01:31:03.480
to all these intents and purposes and they were yeah the depths of their rudeness and
01:31:09.840
idiocy idiocy and rudeness dialed up to 10 or 11 80 percent of the time
01:31:18.180
it's horrible it's horrible yeah it's really horrible i'll never do that again i'd hate working
01:31:23.320
sales or any sort of public facing role ever again try customer service phones having to transfer the
01:31:30.400
call over to offshore indian call centers you worked in a call center didn't you yes yes i did i was
01:31:37.040
working i was working phone claims and if they was if it wasn't a phone claim issue then you needed to
01:31:44.020
transfer the call over to our offshore indian call center where the people were presumably being paid
01:31:50.480
like slave wages probably less than that to be perfectly honest all bundled into a factory with
01:31:57.400
no air air con and they were some of the rudest people i've ever spoken to in my life anyway lord
01:32:06.600
hector uh nate you look exceptional don't let those bullies get to you yeah uh lord hector again
01:32:14.920
beau can we have a beau's britain segment where you lay out all of your policies as lord protector general
01:32:19.360
of the realm yes they they're allowed that are just on those bro look forward to that
01:32:26.160
naomi roberts harry's given up on chasing josh's most viewed video instead trying to be the most
01:32:31.280
featured on lotus eaters out of context i don't try it just naturally comes to me and uh we two
01:32:37.160
more rumble rants and then we'll get uh call it quits the engaged uh few beau can't go anywhere
01:32:42.660
because he must descend to the throne you all really want those britain don't you and uh that's
01:32:47.680
a random name one of you must be reborn as afghani one of you must be reborn as indian and one of you
01:32:54.200
must be reborn as sub-saharan african who gets reborn as what and why we're not answering that question
01:32:58.640
frankly frankly you can take that question and shove it all right and with that thank you very
01:33:07.260
much for joining us on this uh oh so joyous podcast uh we'll be back again tomorrow with i'm sure
01:33:14.160
more good news thank you for joining us today nate thank you and for raising the standards of dress
01:33:19.860
on this podcast oh and check out mr h reviews and the state of politics the state of politics
01:33:25.320
there's a new channel oh yeah i forgot i'm sat between a separate nestled podcast oh yeah right
01:33:30.960
now if you want more of me and beau we have our own channel called the state of politics
01:33:35.420
check it out we'll check it out anyway we'll see you again tomorrow take care buh-bye
01:33:41.700
you
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