00:37:38.000So we're going to talk a little bit about impeachment.
00:37:41.000Look, I have been following it because I don't really care.
00:37:45.000We have been following this thing more or less, kind of like on and off since it started, which was in fall 2019.
00:37:53.000So, you know, three or four months ago.
00:37:56.000When Nancy Pelosi first announced that they were going to launch this investigation, this impeachment inquiry, right?
00:38:03.000But since they announced the impeachment inquiry, we knew exactly how it was going to go down.
00:38:09.000I called it exactly how it was going to play out months ago when the whole thing started.
00:38:14.000And not like because I'm some super smart genius, although I am, although that's definitely true, but because it's obvious.
00:38:23.000They have the votes in the House because it's a Democrat controlled House.
00:38:27.000It's a simple majority to impeach or to indict.
00:38:30.000So they will impeach him, but then when they conduct a trial in the Senate, they will not remove him from office because they would need a 67 vote majority in the Senate voting on these articles of impeachment to get him out of the presidency.
00:38:45.000And that's not going to happen because there's a Republican controlled Senate.
00:38:50.000They would need almost 20 Republican senators to turn on the president.
00:38:54.000And maybe you're going to get Mike Lee, not Mike Lee, maybe you'll get, I should say, Susan Collins, or maybe you'll get Mitt Romney.
00:39:01.000You know, a sender like that, one, two, maybe three, but you're not going to get like 18.
00:39:07.000You're not going to get the number that you're going to need to remove him from office in the Senate, so it'll die in the Senate.
00:39:14.000And that's what's going to happen next week or the week after that, you know, whenever the trial concludes.
00:39:19.000So I haven't really been paying attention, following it.
00:39:22.000Some people are addicted to this stuff, they're like junkies, tuning in on Fox News every day and watching it go back and forth Ukraine and this guy and this phone call and Giuliani and blah, blah, blah.
00:39:48.000You know, all these pundits, all these like breaking news people on cable news must be so excited because they get to break down all this minutiae about process and legalese and procedure.
00:40:11.000So I'll talk a little bit about impeachment.
00:40:13.000That's why I said I mistitled the show, because the real story, the big story we're going to talk about today is actually what is happening in Manchester in the United Kingdom.
00:40:25.000It was a big report in the United Kingdom, I think.
00:40:28.000I saw a little bit about this in American media this week.
00:40:31.000But there's this huge grooming gang scandal which has come to light in Manchester.
00:40:39.000And if you know what a grooming gang is in the United Kingdom, it's this very.
00:40:44.000Very common phenomenon where you've got these immigrants from, they say, South Asia, to avoid saying like Muslim.
00:40:52.000You've got a lot of Muslim immigrants from places like Pakistan or elsewhere.
00:40:56.000They're basically from the Middle East.
00:40:58.000They come to the United Kingdom and they do these coordinated groomings of young teenage girls where they will lure in girls into their homes and give them alcohol or drugs, get them addicted to drugs, and then they do horrible, brutal, Sexual assaults, rapes, things like that.
00:41:18.000This has been going on in the United Kingdom for years.
00:41:21.000And everybody knows it's almost exclusively a Middle Eastern Muslim male phenomenon.
00:41:27.000Almost invariably, the perpetrators are Middle Eastern Muslim men, and the victims are almost always white English adolescent girls.
00:41:37.000So recently, there was this huge scandal in Manchester where they found that the Greater Manchester Police knew about something like 90 victims, 90 teenage victims.
00:41:49.000Of grooming gangs, of these sexual assaults.
00:41:51.000And they did nothing about it because they had recently done, I guess, a lot of arrests or a lot of investigations in one of these Muslim communities.
00:42:00.000And they did not want to risk more racial tensions.
00:42:04.000They did not want there to be a certain appearance in the media or in the news media, I guess, about a certain problem with these Middle Easterners.
00:42:13.000So they basically sat on all this evidence that they had, all these tips.
00:42:19.000They covered up all these crimes because they did not want to appear racist.
00:42:23.000They did not want to stoke racial tensions.
00:42:25.000And so this just came out in a big report, basically, this watchdog report showing about how the police were not carrying out their official duties.
00:42:34.000They did not handle evidence in the appropriate manner.
00:42:37.000So that'll be our major story tonight going through this report, looking at exactly what's in it, what's happening there.
00:42:44.000It's going to be hard for me not to go wing that mode.
00:42:47.000It's going to be a little bit hard for me not to go fad mode tonight when we read things like that.
00:42:53.000But that'll probably be our main story.
00:42:55.000We'll talk a little bit about impeachment, and then we'll spend the bulk of the show talking about what's happening in the United Kingdom in Manchester.
00:44:26.000So I'm going to try and be high energy.
00:44:29.000I'm going to try and amp it up, bring the energy again tonight.
00:44:32.000A lot of people have been loving the show on DLive.
00:44:35.000I don't know what it is, but on DLive, the show feels a lot more high energy.
00:44:40.000I don't know if it's the platform, I don't know what it is, but.
00:44:43.000I feel like much more high energy this week.
00:44:45.000Some people remarked on this yesterday.
00:44:47.000They said, Oh, the show's been going so well on DLive and blah, blah, blah.
00:44:52.000Maybe it's like Joker, you know, when people go up to Joker's house and they say, Oh, like we brought you flowers because, you know, we heard what happened to your mom.
00:48:36.000It is hard for me to impress upon you how extremely fake this is.
00:48:41.000And I get so mad, like watching the news, because they're just going back and forth, as I said at the top of the show, about, you know, Zelensky and some other Ukrainian officials in the mix now.
00:48:52.000And John Bolton's going to be the star witness.
00:48:54.000And Rudy Giuliani said, and Mick Mulvaney's going to be subpoenaed.
00:49:03.000We read the transcript of the phone call the day it started, the day that the impeachment inquiry was launched over that whistleblower complaint.
00:49:12.000It might have been the day after or two days after.
00:49:15.000We read the transcript of the phone call in question that this whole thing is about.
00:49:20.000President Trump's phone call with the Ukrainian President Zelensky, where they talk about the investigation for Joe and Hunter Biden, and also foreign military aid is referenced.
00:49:32.000And there's like nothing in the phone call.
00:49:34.000And like new things have come out, like a note that was left in a hotel and like some other clues.
00:49:40.000But it's so thin, and we all know what this is about, and it's been like this from the beginning.
00:49:46.000It's been like this from the beginning of the administration.
00:49:49.000It's about finding any little thing, and particularly since the midterms, to jam up the White House agenda.
00:49:57.000That's all it's been about from the start with the Russia investigation, the Ukraine investigation, particularly since the midterms, since the Democrats got control of the House and therefore got in control of all the committees, like the Judiciary Committee and all that.
00:50:13.000What it's been about is, I guess, first delegitimizing the president, delegitimizing his victory.
00:50:19.000You know, that Trumpism has popular support and so on.
00:50:23.000And then, secondly, and maybe more importantly, jamming up the agenda in the White House, jamming up the news cycle.
00:50:29.000You know, it's hard for the White House to focus on things like trade or on things like foreign policy or North Korea or even immigration for that matter when they have to dedicate so many resources in terms of comms and lawyers and all the rest to defeating impeachment.
00:50:47.000As much as it is crap, they have to be by the book, they have to go through the process.
00:50:52.000They have to put up a sound legal defense and everything.
00:51:03.000It's about, firstly, discrediting, and then, secondly, jamming up, distracting, and slowing down the White House agenda before the 2020 election.
00:51:13.000And we've called it from the beginning, as I said, and we'll dive into the latest development in a moment.
00:51:19.000The way that the process has worked out is the impeachment passes the House, and then it will fail in the trial in the Senate.
00:51:26.000And you could have called that back in August.
00:51:27.000It was almost like it was completely frivolous and pointless to begin with, which it was, because that's how it's going to play out in the coming week or coming two or three weeks.
00:51:38.000But we'll jump in here to the latest development.
00:51:40.000What we have in the past 48 hours is the articles have been transferred from the House to the Senate.
00:51:48.000He was officially impeached on December 18th, 2019, which is actually about a month ago, right?
00:51:54.000That he was officially, formally impeached on the counts of obstruction of justice and abuse of power.
00:52:00.000And it took a month for Nancy Pelosi to allow the articles to go through to the Senate.
00:52:59.000It says, quote, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday formally set in motion the process of sending the articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump to the Senate.
00:53:08.000Triggering an historic trial set to begin on Thursday.
00:53:12.000At an engrossment signing ceremony for the House resolution naming the seven impeachment managers, the lawmakers who will present the House case as prosecutors at the trial, Pelosi said the House was doing its constitutional duty.
00:53:25.000Then, marking the somber nature of the occasion, the managers silently walked the articles in two blue folders across the Capitol from the House to the Senate, where the House clerk announced their arrival.
00:53:38.000The Senate will formally accept them on Thursday.
00:53:41.000Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announced that the Senate would convene at noon, after which the managers will read the articles aloud.
00:53:48.000Chief Justice John Roberts will be sworn in, and he in turn will swear in senators to serve as jurors in the case.
00:53:56.000Earlier Wednesday, the House voted 228 to 193 to formally send the impeachment charges against President Trump to the Senate to begin the third presidential impeachment trial in American history.
00:54:08.000And then the update from today, just an hour after senators were sworn in.
00:54:13.000Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said he will likely force votes on witnesses on Tuesday, setting up a contentious fight when the Senate returns from the three day weekend.
00:54:23.000Senate Democrats have called for subpoenaing four witnesses, including former Trump National Security Advisor John Bolton and acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney.
00:54:33.000The Senate trial officially began Thursday when the seven Democratic House managers will argue the case for removing Trump from office, presented the articles of impeachment to the Senate.
00:54:42.000So the impeachment has officially begun.
00:54:45.000The trial won't really begin until Tuesday.
00:54:49.000I believe that's when we'll start hearing arguments from the managers.
00:54:52.000So everything is being set in motion, and it's going to be a big and extremely serious deal.
00:55:03.000You know, the way they write about it about the two blue folders that were transferred across the building, the Capitol building, and it's sworn in, and it's a somber occasion, and all this.
00:56:06.000Because you look at things like the omnibus spending bill and everything that was in it and everything that was not in it.
00:56:13.000You look at all the bills we have to begin for all the foreign governments, starting with perhaps the greatest beneficiary, Israel, but also Saudi Arabia and also Pakistan.
00:56:27.000These people work for foreign interests, they work for multinational corporations, for lobbies, for interest groups.
00:56:36.000You know, and so that's maybe to me what bothers me the most, why I hate talking about it, is because the way that we in this country have artificially swapped out all the pomp that is traditionally associated with a monarchy, with a king that has the divine right of kings or with the church, and we swapped it out with this very gay, like legal democratic process.
00:57:01.000Whereas previously you would have had a coronation or previously you would have a communion or a mass or something like that.
00:57:09.000And the pomp and the ceremony is deserved.
00:57:11.000It's for an institution like a monarchy that has lasted thousands of years and is the protector and the vanguard of the nation and the culture.
00:57:28.000And now you have all of that, but surrounding these bureaucrats, but surrounding managers, democratically elected representatives, you know, these busybody legislators that write laws in like, Share it in conference rooms with lobbyists and bureaucrats, people in these iron triangles, right?
00:57:48.000So to me, that is why it is so offensive.
00:57:51.000You know, you tune into Fox News or MSNBC or any of these stations any day of the week, and all these reporters, you know, and they're so stone faced and serious, but deep down they're giddy about all this.
00:58:02.000It's sort of similar to me when I see war going on.
00:58:06.000You know, when I see war, I'm thinking to myself, oh boy, you know, content for the show.
00:58:11.000But at least I'm honest with you about it.
00:58:13.000In the same way, you know, these people on Fox News, they eat this stuff up.
00:58:18.000They love this stuff because they get to research all the procedural minutiae and the process and everything.
00:58:25.000And oh, it means that we get hour long segments with analysts and breakdown and charts and graphics.
00:58:32.000And we're going to have all these people glued to their screens watching every little tit for tat thing that happens in the trial.
00:58:39.000And it's this like symbiotic relationship then between the government and the news media, you know, each feeding each other.
00:58:46.000In this just sick, disgusting game of money, of puppet shows, fake political theater.
00:58:55.000And that's why I just hate talking about it because, you know, and that's like my gut reaction.
00:59:01.000But from an analytical perspective, we all know how this is going to play out.
00:59:06.000We've known how this is going to play out forever.
00:59:09.000The impeachment happens in the House, the trial will happen in the Senate, Trump will not be removed from office, and then things will resume as they were before.
00:59:19.000And that'll be the end of the third impeachment, which is such a big deal and going down in the history books.
00:59:26.000And it's the founding fathers, the framers, the Constitution, life and death matters here, people.
00:59:33.000Your third impeachment is going to come and go without any major issue.
00:59:37.000And then things will resume and it'll be business as usual.
01:01:02.000The island, you know, this island north of Europe.
01:01:06.000The real story that we're going to talk about tonight is these rape gangs, these groom gangs in the United Kingdom.
01:01:12.000So, as I said at the top of the show, this was a big story, I understand, in the United Kingdom, but not so much in America.
01:01:19.000I didn't see too much about this, at least on American social media or in the American news media, but I guess I understand it was a little bit bigger in the United Kingdom that this bombshell report came out about how the Manchester police in the United Kingdom basically covered up this grooming gang scandal that was taking place,
01:01:40.000where I guess they had something like 90 witnesses, something like 50 suspects in this grooming gang scandal where Kurdish and Pakistani grooming gangs were luring in 15, 16 year old British girls, you know, getting them hooked on drugs, giving them cocaine, alcohol, whatever, and then brutally raping them, all kinds of heinous sexual acts.
01:02:04.000And the police knew that this was going on, but they covered it up because they did not want to appear racist, because they did not want to stoke racial tensions between the police and this Middle Eastern community.
01:02:15.000It's a horrifying story, and I'll read you the report.
01:02:18.000This is from The Independent, breaking the story.
01:02:21.000It says, Dozens of teenage girls suspected of being groomed and abused in Manchester by gangs of men from Asian backgrounds were failed because police feared upsetting race relations, according to a new probe.
01:02:36.000Which, by the way, don't you love that?
01:02:39.000And I'm reading directly from this report.
01:02:41.000I didn't make that up, I'm not injecting that.
01:02:44.000It says, Dozens of teenage girls suspected of being groomed and abused in Manchester by gangs of men.
01:03:59.000Hey, spoiler alert, it's Middle Eastern Muslim men.
01:04:02.000Okay, not Asia's a pretty big place in any case.
01:04:06.000It says victims repeatedly alerted officers about sexual assaults, giving names and addresses of those involved, but in almost all cases, no action was taken.
01:04:16.000Now, a bombshell report suggests Greater Manchester Police and the City Council shelved an investigation into what was happening, at least partially, because of the quote, many sensitive community issues they felt faced with.
01:04:30.000So, they had names, addresses of rapists raping little girls.
01:04:35.000Foreigners raping little girls, they had their names and addresses but didn't investigate because they didn't want to upset race relations.
01:04:45.000The 145 page independent review states, Concerns were expressed about the risk of proactive tactics or the incitement of racial hatred.
01:04:55.000The report adds, The authorities knew that many victims were being subjected to the most profound abuse and exploitation.
01:05:02.000But did not protect them from the perpetrators.
01:05:05.000This is a depressingly familiar picture and has been seen in many other towns and cities across the country.
01:05:11.000The verdict forms part of the probe carried out by the child care expert Malcolm Newsom and former Cambridgeshire police detective Gary Ridgeway into how sexual child exploitation was dealt with in the city in the early and mid 2000s.
01:05:26.000It centers on Operation Augusta, which was set up in 2004 after the death of a 15 year old girl who reported being raped.
01:05:33.000But who died from a suspected overdose soon after she alerted authorities to the abuse?
01:05:40.000Augusta subsequently identified at least 57 victims, mainly white girls aged from 12 to 16, and some 97 potential suspects involved in grooming across the region.
01:05:52.000So they had this initial operation formed in response to one of these initial groomings very early on in 2004.
01:06:01.000They had 57 victims, 97 suspects, names, addresses.
01:06:07.000Senior officers at GMP under resourced the investigation before closing it down completely with the backing of Manchester City Council.
01:06:15.000Only three people were convicted of related crimes at court.
01:06:19.000So, out of 97 potential suspects that they had names, addresses, all the proper information, their victims, everything they got three people.
01:06:28.000So, what is that, a 3% conviction rate?
01:06:32.000It says the force had at that time just finished dealing with unrelated cases involving the Kurdish community.
01:06:38.000That it created severe tensions and officers were keen not to be seen targeting another minority group, it is suggested.
01:06:46.000But in closing the investigation, the report states Very few of the relevant perpetrators were brought to justice and neither were their activities disrupted.
01:06:54.000So not only did the police not catch perpetrators who had committed crimes, but they allowed further crimes to go on under their watch.
01:07:03.000So they knew the perpetrators, they knew what the perpetrators had done, and because they did not act on it, perpetrators committed further crimes against minors.
01:07:12.000Sexual crimes, I'm sure more deads were involved.
01:07:17.000It says, it details a quote, sample of case studies from the period in which allegations of rape and sexual assault had been made by teenage girls.
01:07:27.000For each one, the report commissioned by Mayor Andy Burnham in 2017 concludes with the same sentence We cannot offer any assurance that this was appropriately addressed by either the Greater Manchester Police or the Manchester City Council.
01:07:42.000This was despite clear evidence police had the names, addresses, And even places of work of men suspected of carrying out the abuse.
01:08:02.000They know all about the activities, the drugs, the alcohol, the grooming, the sexual assaults.
01:08:07.000They know your name, they know your address, they know where you work, and you're allowed to continue all of it working, living in the country, living freely, and the raping as well.
01:08:22.000Uncovered in the initial investigation was linked to a greater Manchester police officer who was later dismissed.
01:08:29.000The report said some suspects even visited council run children's homes bringing alcohol and cannabis with the apparent knowledge of council staff.
01:08:38.000The report finishes by calling on the police and council to consider how, quote, the people who appeared to present a risk to children in 2004 can now be brought to justice and any risk they still present to children mitigated.
01:08:50.000Well, you know, I think it's a little bit late.
01:09:44.000This goes back to exactly what I was talking about on Monday and what I was talking about yesterday in the sense that what we have been led to believe is the worst thing that a person can be is a racist, a Nazi, a hater.
01:10:02.000Everybody either implicitly knows that or consciously knows that.
01:10:06.000They either subconsciously or consciously know that the worst thing you can be, the worst thing you can be called, is a racist.
01:10:12.000You know, people think about the things that people get away with in this day and age things that people get away with doing, things that people get away with saying, and then think of the things that people do not get away with doing or do not get away with saying.
01:10:25.000We look at some of the most famous people in the world Hollywood celebrities, comedians, directors.
01:11:16.000Or even in some cases, people get rehabilitated even if it's known, even like regular criminals.
01:11:21.000Think about the First Step Act, things like that.
01:11:24.000We look at felons and prisoners as victims.
01:11:27.000We look at black people that get put in jail for all kinds of terrible crimes as victims, people that were just trying to get their life back on track and so on.
01:11:35.000So, think about what is permitted, what you can come back from, what you can be rehabilitated for, and what you cannot be.
01:11:41.000Well, if you say the N word, that's beyond the pale.
01:11:43.000You know, Sarah Silverman can, you know, her disgusting whore potty mouth can say the most disgusting things about Jesus Christ.
01:11:50.000You know, this Jewish comedian can say the most repulsive, blasphemous things about our Lord, and that's fine.
01:11:56.000But say the N word and your career is over, right?
01:12:53.000What it looks like in practice is this in Manchester, where the government and the police, their whole job, protect and serve, my ass, right?
01:13:58.000Does that make any sense from a moral perspective that you would abdicate your responsibility as the police to prosecute rapists, child rapists, because you didn't want to look racist?
01:14:10.000I know that sounds very asinine and simple, but apparently it isn't.
01:14:13.000Because this is how everybody conducts themselves on a day to day basis on every other level, on every other issue.
01:15:10.000It's happening across the United States.
01:15:13.000And to me, that's obviously a much worse thing and a much bigger priority.
01:15:16.000Maybe we will get to like racial insensitivity or whatever you want to call it after we fix the pedophile gangs, after we fix the family being obliterated, after we fix.
01:15:28.000Everything else that's happening in the country that is a much more serious and graver threat and a much bigger injustice.
01:15:34.000You know, if this were happening in a normal, sensible town, people would get pitchforks and torches and they would find these fucking people and they would murder them.
01:19:01.000And, you know, we don't have to, this happens on a weekly basis.
01:19:05.000We talked about over the summer that county in Maryland where you had, I think, like a thousand rapes from illegal immigrants in a short span of time, or dozens of rapes, something like that.
01:19:14.000I forget the exact figures, but this is an extremely common phenomenon across the white world, across the Western white world.
01:19:22.000In Europe, in the UK, in Australia, in America, Canada, and we do nothing.
01:19:27.000And the police do nothing, and the government does nothing, and these people come here and they have our way with our children, and they have our way with us, and they have their way with our country.
01:19:38.000Because everybody can look at a story like this and say, obviously that's wrong.
01:19:42.000But is this not what's happening on a bigger level?
01:19:44.000Is this not exactly what is happening on the civilizational level, which is, so to speak, foreigners, the internationalization of the population, raping our country, destroying, pillaging, looting?
01:19:58.000Defiling our country and we sit by and do nothing out of fear of stoking so called racial tensions, out of fear of appearing prejudiced.
01:20:15.000Because you don't want to be called racist at your work, because you don't want to be called white supremacist, you don't want to be called a Nazi.
01:20:37.000And if you're working behind the scenes, that's another story.
01:20:40.000But at a civilizational level, people are not going to get up, speak out, whatever.
01:20:44.000They won't even entertain certain ideas because they don't want to appear prejudiced.
01:20:49.000But really, when mass rapes of children are happening, do we have the luxury to say that we're not going to stand up because we don't want to appear prejudiced?
01:20:58.000Is it moral to not stand up because you don't want to appear prejudiced?
01:21:04.000You know, to me, the great injustice is being silent in the face of these things out of fear of being called prejudice, not the prejudice itself, right?
01:21:13.000If you are complicit in what's going on, to me, that's far worse than anything they're calling us.
01:21:20.000And we have to adopt the same moral righteousness, the same vigor that they have against us.
01:21:27.000That's what's most fascinating to me is that we've been bullied into this ridiculous moral standard by people that have no moral standard, the people that have no morals.
01:21:38.000People that don't even believe in God.
01:21:39.000How can you have a moral standard if you don't believe in God?
01:21:42.000We've been bullied into silence by people that browse Reddit, you know, by people that have casual sex, that smoke pot, people that believe that because the universe is big, God isn't real and we're insignificant, you know, this blue dot ideology, right?
01:21:58.000We've been bullied into ignoring rape, you know, the rape of our country, the rape of children and so on, out of fear of prejudice by people that are nihilists, by people that are annihilationists.
01:22:44.000In a lot of these countries in Europe, they don't even keep statistics on this stuff anymore because they have no intention of solving it.
01:22:50.000You know, in Sweden and Germany, they don't even keep statistics on the demographics of who's committing the crime because they don't want to appear racist.
01:22:58.000And that's because they have no intention of actually stopping the crime.
01:23:01.000If they want to stop the crime, they'd have a very easy answer stop bringing over the criminals.
01:23:06.000Stop importing the criminals from the country where the criminals come from.
01:23:18.000Somebody's doing the raping, somebody's doing the killing and the terrorist attacks and everything else.
01:23:24.000This is not a sustainable picture for our future.
01:23:28.000And I know maybe I'm beating a dead horse at this point, but time to wake up, people.
01:23:33.000It's like the choice is literally this simple.
01:23:37.000Do you want to live in a clean, clean, orderly, safe, coherent, wealthy country and say no more, no more of these people?
01:23:50.000Or do you want to live in a dirty, crime infested, violent, unsafe, Incoherent, chaotic, insane country, you know, but you just can't say certain things and, you know, you won't be called a racist.
01:24:52.000You're a piece of shit if that's your mentality.
01:24:55.000Now, I'm not, by the way, there's not a call to action that everybody should, you know, kick down their door every morning and say, these people.
01:25:03.000I'm not saying that, but I am saying, This is how we have to start thinking about these things.
01:25:07.000This is how we have to start approaching this.
01:25:10.000Radical solutions are required, right?
01:25:12.000You know, radical changes in thinking are required.
01:25:15.000I'm not calling for any violence or anything like that, but a radical change in thinking, a paradigm shift must take place.
01:25:37.000That's the state of affairs these days.
01:25:38.000That's a country, by the way, that has lost God completely.
01:25:41.000I just saw a friend of mine recently, and he told me a statistic that was mind blowing.
01:25:47.000He said if you look at the younger demographic in the United Kingdom, I forget the exact age range, it's something like 16 to 21 or whatever.
01:25:56.000But he said if you look at the younger demographic in the United Kingdom, I think it's something like 13% of them are Anglican.
01:26:03.000You know, the Church of England is the Anglican Church.
01:26:07.000And something like 13% of young people are Christian.
01:26:10.00013% of young people are part of the Anglican Church.
01:26:13.000It's hard for me to separate out the two, you know, between having a Christian Catholic country and having an atheist country and the different consequences.
01:26:21.000Because in Italy, people freak out about this stuff.
01:26:23.000You know, in Poland, people freak out about this stuff.
01:26:25.000In the United Kingdom and Sweden, not so much.
01:26:27.000I don't think that's a coincidence, right?
01:26:29.000And as I said, in a normal country, people like this would be murdered.
01:26:42.000If you've got people that are sexually assaulting, like if that was your daughter, if your 12 year old daughter was being serially abused by gangs of Middle Eastern, and that's what's happening.
01:26:52.000It sounds like it's, you would think the way the media talks about this stuff that you read that in Daily Stormer.
01:26:59.000If that was your 12 year old daughter being serially raped and given drugs and alcohol and, you know, gang raped by gangs of Muslim Middle Eastern foreigners, Wouldn't you want to go to these people's houses and murder them?
01:27:14.000I mean, isn't that, if the police won't do anything, if they won't investigate, isn't that what you would want?
01:29:12.000All these communists, all these left wing globalists, all these types, they say that we should be killed and we're dying Nazi scum, and they want to show up to our houses and so on.
01:32:44.000You know, on Christmas Mass, our priest, when they were doing the Lord Hear Our Prayer, they said something about refugees and asylum seekers and nothing about abortion.
01:35:42.000You know, going up to somebody and telling them your political views is a lot different than like going to Charlottesville and being in the news and being like a professional podcaster, you know, professional.
01:36:07.000It's really just not really your place.
01:36:09.000Everybody's entitled to their opinion, everybody's entitled to have their own thought process, and they're entitled to get there over time and to push people really hard, often alienates them.
01:36:23.000You know, the off chance that they're going to become a fasci, whatever, you know, you're going to become a red pilled noticer, the off chance that that happens versus them just not talking to you, like, that's a value judgment that you have to make.
01:36:45.000So, talk to them about school, work, ask them how they're doing, ask them, you know, what's going on, eat lunch with them, do things with them.
01:37:37.000I don't want to name any names, but there's a lot of people that talk the talk, and Michelle Malkin walks the walk.
01:37:43.000A lot of people like to have this facade as a badass, anti establishment, you know, and they have this urgency about immigration, whatever, and then, you know, they don't really put up.
01:39:53.000Frankly, I don't know how you wagee's do it.
01:39:55.000Because normally I have a very nocturnal schedule where I'm up all night, sleep most of the day, or sleep some of the day.
01:40:04.000But whenever I'm on a normal sleep schedule and I go to bed at night and wake up in the morning, I'll wake up at like seven sometimes or earlier, a little bit later.
01:40:15.000And I'm like, it's still seven hours before my show starts.
01:40:18.000What am I even going to do for seven hours?
01:40:20.000I don't even know what to do with myself.
01:40:22.000I literally don't even know what to do with the time.
01:40:25.000I'll wake up at like 7, I'll fuck around for 5 hours, I'll play games, I'll do a little work, I'll respond to some emails, whatever, eat breakfast, lunch, and then it'll be like 11 or noon, and I'm like, it's only 11, it's only noon, I still have like 10 hours of the day left.
01:40:41.000What am I even going to do with myself?
01:44:13.000But as long as we salute, you know, based Yankee blacks are not having it.
01:44:23.000Yankee blacks in New York City, New Jersey, they're not having it, you know?
01:44:29.000Say what you will about the Yankees, but, you know, if you've been seeing what's been happening with the black Israelites, no, that's a joke, that's a joke.
01:48:01.000My kids, if I have kids in the next, like, you know, if they're in school in like 20 years or whatever, 15, 10, 20 years, whatever the timetable is, they're going to be reading in the history books about Trump's election and impeachment and everything.
01:50:56.000It took a couple of years for that to change.
01:50:59.000So, Laura Ingraham conventionally does not talk about legal immigration like this, or at least I haven't heard it.
01:51:06.000So, when I heard her say that, she did this segment about how legal immigration might be a problem and demographic change is radically transforming the country.
01:51:15.000It might as well have been lifted directly from this show or any of our guys on Twitter.
02:02:07.000I'm not really an actor, so I can't really do the accents.
02:02:10.000I was doing sort of an, I don't want to spoil anything, but I was doing sort of like an acting type thing recently, and I wasn't really confident in it.
02:02:17.000You'll see it soon, but, uh, I'm not, I'm really just more.
02:11:39.000I told my parents, I'm like, I do not want a dog because then you become a dog household where guests come to the house and it smells like dog.
02:11:50.000People knock on the door and they hear the dog scratching at the door and barking.
02:13:49.000It's the most unpleasant dog freaking out while you're just trying to walk the door, trying to like sidestep the dog a little bit, you know, as opposed to like knocking on the door.
02:13:59.000Somebody opens the door and, you know, people walk through.