Greg Wycliffe - June 01, 2026


Keith Woods calls Remigration Summit 2026 "Very Impressive" in Porto Portugal


Episode Stats


Length

9 minutes

Words per minute

203.08775

Word count

1,846

Sentence count

77

Harmful content

Toxicity

4

sentences flagged

Hate speech

18

sentences flagged


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 That was it. That was the Remigration Summit programming.
00:00:02.940 There's a VIB dinner still, and I'm really hoping I can catch up with Martin Selner
00:00:06.420 because a lot of people are saying Martin Selner might be the most canceled man in Europe.
00:00:11.000 But needless to say, I'm feeling inspired.
00:00:14.400 I want to bring this back to Canada, and I want to earn a badge of honor myself to be the most canceled.
00:00:18.540 Oh, my God, it's Keith Woods. Keith Woods, how are you doing?
00:00:22.720 Hey, how are you doing, man?
00:00:23.860 I'm doing great. What did you think of the Remigration Summit coming from Ireland?
00:00:27.040 I enjoyed it. It was very impressive.
00:00:28.400 I was here last year.
00:00:30.320 They had to do a third backup venue because of cancellations due to Antifa.
00:00:35.960 Thankfully, there was nothing like this this year.
00:00:38.500 Huge venue.
00:00:39.340 I don't know if you showed it on the camera.
00:00:41.560 600-ish attendees.
00:00:43.760 Huge people like Gregory Bovino.
00:00:46.480 Great speeches.
00:00:47.580 It was really good.
00:00:48.100 I liked it more than last year because we obviously had a lot more networking this year.
00:00:52.900 Obviously, you go on the beat with these conferences.
00:00:55.040 you know you see a lot of the same speeches same topics covered but the value of something like
00:01:00.960 this is in the networking and there's a lot of this this year with all of the you know the stands
00:01:04.780 from different businesses and organizations and just the chat that happened in between the speeches
00:01:08.880 so it's good met some really great people yeah when i came here i kind of wanted to find like
00:01:13.420 the most canceled man in europe who do you who do you think uh hits the top charts there
00:01:18.000 i don't know well i came to the right place though i think you know i think i think it's
00:01:22.220 got to be sellner to be honest i mean i'm think i'm banned on like nine or ten platforms but
00:01:26.620 sellner is banned from like 50 or 60 banks or something so i don't think anyone can touch him
00:01:32.300 in that regard you know up there top most banned guys in the world i would say i'm asking all the
00:01:37.980 nationalists this because it's a fun question how do you respond when someone calls you racist
00:01:42.760 well i guess i don't really ask them what they think that word means um you know because you
00:01:49.960 you know, they'll either have some definition,
00:01:52.020 like, you know, you just hate all non-wise 1.00
00:01:54.080 because the color of your skin is obviously ridiculous. 1.00
00:01:56.580 Or, you know, if they're actually using how it's actually used, 0.98
00:01:58.680 they realize how kind of ridiculous it is.
00:02:01.240 It's this kind of double standard 0.73
00:02:02.440 that just any kind of in-group preference
00:02:04.960 or even recognition of group differences is racist,
00:02:08.100 and then kind of push them on.
00:02:09.860 Well, does that make sense?
00:02:10.720 Just strip away the word, you know.
00:02:11.760 Is there something inherently evil
00:02:14.240 about recognizing group differences?
00:02:15.960 You know, let's ask that question.
00:02:17.220 The takeaway from some of the speakers was let's gain power.
00:02:21.860 That was kind of Sellner's speech.
00:02:23.580 And he talked about kind of different pillars of that,
00:02:25.400 one of which is kind of building the sort of intellectual foundations more.
00:02:30.020 And I know that you're kind of in the intellectual realm, I would say,
00:02:33.340 in terms of what you do. 0.98
00:02:34.340 What do you think is missing the most in terms of like making remigration
00:02:37.880 more powerful and viable to actually be like actionable in politics? 0.92
00:02:43.540 Yeah, well, obviously, as it's going to go into mass politics,
00:02:47.560 It's going to have to be connected to other issues.
00:02:50.200 Obviously, immigration is a top concern for voters across Europe consistently.
00:02:55.100 But also, you know, things like the economy, things like housing.
00:02:58.520 And as some of the speakers alluded to, on almost all of those major issues, 1.00
00:03:04.360 I mean, you can make an argument that mass immigration is making those things worse,
00:03:07.480 whether it's in Ireland, there's a huge housing crisis.
00:03:10.660 At the same time, we're increasing our population by about 3% a year through immigration.
00:03:14.680 regardless of what plans political parties and parties on the left come up with for public housing and bills
00:03:21.100 you literally cannot meet the demand being created by immigration. 0.59
00:03:24.840 So I think whether it's the funding of the welfare state, housing, any of the top concerns people have
00:03:31.520 there is a way to make a policy argument that connects all of those things to immigration
00:03:34.700 and that's why you even see countries like Denmark that are a bit less ideological on this stuff
00:03:40.060 or just their governments have just come out with reports
00:03:42.620 And it's like, oh, yeah, diversity is actually making everything worse. 0.86
00:03:45.340 And they're actually doing repatriation, which is kind of incredible. 1.00
00:03:49.700 I'm from Canada. 1.00
00:03:50.840 And something that's kind of red-pilling people is just the amount of Indians 1.00
00:03:53.780 and some of just, like, clips of egregious behavior from Indian people. 1.00
00:03:57.760 And from what I've seen in Ireland, there's clips of African people being like, I am Irish. 1.00
00:04:03.820 Is this something that's red-pilling Irish people? 0.99
00:04:06.380 Because it's a relatively small nation, right?
00:04:09.480 How is the public responding to stuff like this? 0.94
00:04:11.840 I think generally people tolerate it until it's very much in their face and I think like a recent example, a Congolese migrant died outside a shop that he shoplifted, he also shoplifted it earlier in the day and he had a criminal record with multiple shoplifting offences and he died and a post-mortem came back and he had no injuries and also the security guard restrained him, a couple of them were non-white so it's like on any level, I don't know what's the narrative here but yeah the African community in Ireland basically blew this up and made him like a 1.00
00:04:41.840 George Floyd type figure and they were protesting and they were outside our national parliament building and saying Ireland is inherently racist, systematically racist.
00:04:50.580 Like, I don't know how any ordinary person can look at that and not see a serious problem there, you know.
00:04:55.780 I even saw liberals were saying like, oh, we don't want like race politics in America to come in and, you know, the black community shouldn't be making this argument.
00:05:02.300 But it's like, well, what are you going to do? They believe that.
00:05:05.260 You know, what, are you just going to give them the better facts and they're going to drop it?
00:05:07.900 I mean, the facts are already out there, right?
00:05:09.500 So I think stuff like that is a very red pillin' for people.
00:05:12.780 Nice.
00:05:14.040 Any final thoughts?
00:05:15.300 Thanks for your time.
00:05:16.500 The future of re-migration, what are you going to take back to Ireland? 1.00
00:05:19.560 Well, I'm looking forward to this event next year, 0.99
00:05:22.860 if they can grow it as much as they did this year.
00:05:26.420 It's optimistic, it's white pillin' that people are starting to professionalize,
00:05:31.400 as you said, that since last year there's been so much progress
00:05:33.640 in terms of organization, in terms of media work,
00:05:37.340 in terms of actually building incredible, long-lasting institutions.
00:05:41.060 So, yeah, I'm optimistic.
00:05:42.660 That's right. I thought of another good one,
00:05:44.040 because you've done a lot of great work with ADL
00:05:45.980 and kind of calling out, we'll say, subversives in the right-wing space.
00:05:51.280 And Sellner had a sentiment of,
00:05:53.080 we need to ensure that these politicians actually do what they say they're going to do.
00:05:58.260 And I guess, how much of an obstacle do you think these kind of fake patriots are?
00:06:04.580 And what do you think the approach should be?
00:06:07.340 for people who are true nationalists?
00:06:10.240 Yeah, they're obviously a huge obstacle.
00:06:11.740 I mean, you can look at, like, Maloney in Italy 0.97
00:06:13.280 was really elected on the promise of tackling immigration,
00:06:17.000 and it's just completely betrayed that promise.
00:06:19.620 You know, what's to be done?
00:06:20.940 Well, obviously, you need to change the personnel.
00:06:23.320 We need to make the metapolitical change
00:06:25.540 that makes this, you know, the central issue.
00:06:27.960 It's not just, as it often is for conservative parties,
00:06:31.080 one issue among many, you know, we'll deal with immigration,
00:06:33.380 and then it's a little bit unpopular.
00:06:35.120 Okay, we'll just deal with, you know, illegal immigration.
00:06:37.340 we'll do something tokenistic, you obviously need ideologically to make this the, you know,
00:06:42.320 pillar, the front and centerpiece of right-wing movements,
00:06:45.500 and then obviously that will translate downstream to politics.
00:06:48.920 But, like, in the short term, you know, political parties betraying their promises,
00:06:52.340 that's the nature of politics.
00:06:54.140 All we can really do is just attack them from the right
00:06:55.980 and just, you know, continually expose them as much as possible,
00:06:58.560 because obviously a lot of, you know, less informed right-wing people,
00:07:03.540 they just see attacks from the mainstream media,
00:07:05.700 and these people assume they're on their side.
00:07:07.020 So that's why, you know, oftentimes we almost have to attack the fake right more than the left, right?
00:07:12.120 Because our side know the left is a problem.
00:07:14.500 Sometimes we don't recognize the problem on our own side.
00:07:17.440 Could you relate that to your podcast about slop recently?
00:07:21.080 Because I feel like I see so many people who are caught up in sort of like fake patriot slop,
00:07:25.960 but like they don't want to get off the couch and do anything.
00:07:29.700 They just want to.
00:07:30.340 Yeah, well, I mean, the algorithms have obviously created an epidemic of slop.
00:07:35.800 I think everyone has noticed it's got really bad recently and like yeah to me I mean it pushes I
00:07:42.320 mean obviously online activism is really important and getting the message out there but
00:07:45.520 the degree to which slop has kind of taken over the right-wing space I think shows that now it
00:07:50.200 is important okay here are the real institutions here are the real parties here are the real people
00:07:54.640 that you know have a reputation not just for follower count or impressions engagement but
00:08:00.140 actually for things to do in the real world that there's an element of credibility there that you
00:08:05.320 can't get just me being an online poster because i think you know people can watch that show but i
00:08:09.920 think it's evident the last few years you know the algorithms don't select for the highest quality
00:08:13.660 most virtuous people right yeah uh tell me about your new organization that you recently launched
00:08:20.640 tell people where to find it too yes we're running europa.com it's an online news aggregator
00:08:25.980 uh we're in the process actually of building a social network uh with the company and but we
00:08:32.200 We've been covering news on the ground, events, protests,
00:08:36.720 lots of things nationalist-related that aren't covered by mainstream media.
00:08:40.280 We've been putting those out across our socials.
00:08:41.920 We did some interviews today.
00:08:43.540 It's at Europa on Twitter.
00:08:46.340 We're on Instagram, Facebook.
00:08:48.900 And, yeah, the podcast you mentioned, Continuum.
00:08:51.000 People can find that on a good podcast platform.
00:08:54.280 Me and my co-host, Ryan Williams.
00:08:55.820 It's intended to be more kind of in-depth look at things,
00:08:59.060 trying to get outside of the slop cycle a little bit
00:09:01.240 and give people some more long-lasting content and yeah awesome thanks so much