Red Ice TV - December 14, 2023


Germany In Peril & Shakeup Of The Global Order - Sascha Rossmueller


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour

Words per Minute

151.18077

Word Count

9,129

Sentence Count

608

Misogynist Sentences

3

Hate Speech Sentences

28


Summary

In this episode, we discuss the current economic situation in Germany and the impact of de-industrialization and climate change on the country's economy. We also talk about the current political situation in the country and the economic situation overall.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 We'll be right back.
00:00:30.000 We'll be right back.
00:01:00.000 We'll be right back.
00:01:30.000 So we're going to focus on the situation in Germany, at least primarily in the beginning
00:01:34.220 here of the show, and just kind of break down what's happening.
00:01:37.520 It's so much similar things happening in most of European countries now, to be honest.
00:01:42.740 The EU interconnected is what's happening in one country is overlapping to another.
00:01:47.600 In some cases, there's law differences.
00:01:49.040 There's things like this.
00:01:49.820 There's things you can say or not say in certain countries.
00:01:52.360 There's differences like that.
00:01:53.680 But otherwise, it's going in the same direction, which is basically down the toilet.
00:01:58.060 And it's kind of by design as well.
00:01:59.640 That's one of the points.
00:02:00.080 And you sent me a good email to outline that as well, that it's like with this Israeli-Palestine
00:02:04.860 conflict, all these European nations have gotten involved now.
00:02:07.860 And it's kind of like, you know, it's kind of like with Ukraine, I guess, to a certain
00:02:10.720 extent, right?
00:02:11.140 We're expected to give up on everything and just send them all your money, send them our
00:02:15.980 weapons.
00:02:16.980 Let's support Ukraine.
00:02:18.260 Now it's the same, but with Israel, essentially.
00:02:22.060 And meanwhile, of course, our countries are just going completely down the tubes.
00:02:27.060 And same thing with Germany.
00:02:29.220 Debt is out of control in Germany.
00:02:31.620 The energy situation is very poor.
00:02:35.420 And one of the reasons for that is because they have this green policy.
00:02:39.320 We're going to make the green transitions.
00:02:40.900 Let's decommission nuclear power plants.
00:02:44.060 Let's do away with coal, you know, these kinds of things.
00:02:47.080 And then, of course, boom, Nord Stream happens.
00:02:50.540 And miraculously, we're coming into like a period of almost de-industrialization here,
00:02:55.680 Sasha, as well, which is, I think, by design.
00:02:57.940 How would you describe the situation in Germany right now?
00:03:01.960 It's definitely a full force of de-industrialization we face here in Germany.
00:03:10.880 However, I think it's important to mention that that already started before the Ukraine-Russian
00:03:21.360 conflict.
00:03:22.440 It even started before this traffic light coalition took over the government with the
00:03:32.100 Green Party in a coalition.
00:03:34.540 However, it accelerated since then.
00:03:37.720 And if we do a look on the economic datas, then we see a catastrophic picture and the prognosis
00:03:48.160 are even as catastrophic, of course.
00:03:52.060 And we spoke that we will talk a little bit about this economic issue.
00:04:01.060 And, of course, energy is in former times an industrial nation, a very, very crucial point.
00:04:12.380 And I have done some research to give the audience a little bit of data how the reality in Germany
00:04:23.380 is.
00:04:23.820 Because if I do a look to the mainstream media, I feel that the overall view of Germany is
00:04:35.280 that of an enormous, stable and rich and economic strong country, but far away of that.
00:04:47.340 We are, since years, I try to explain the people here in Germany and more than this, the people
00:04:54.500 abroad, that we are a giant on feet of clays and that we are highly adapted and that our economy
00:05:05.280 is in decline since years.
00:05:09.880 And I found one very interesting data because one can always focus on this daily news and
00:05:21.300 then daily statistics are always changing and so you never really know, is this a foundation
00:05:29.820 for a long term prognosis.
00:05:31.360 But what's very interesting, I found whereas in 1960, back in 1960, 61 percent of the economic
00:05:42.800 output was back then still based on industrial activity in Germany.
00:05:49.260 And today, this figure is only around 20 percent.
00:05:55.420 Yeah.
00:05:56.320 And more devastating is that the share of economic output accounted for by productive manufacturing
00:06:08.780 in particular is roughly in Germany where it was, and now listen, where it was in the
00:06:16.000 1880s.
00:06:17.360 You're kidding.
00:06:18.240 Holy smokes.
00:06:18.960 No, yeah, really.
00:06:19.820 That's true.
00:06:21.200 And I think if you hear this data, we could stop, we won't stop the discussion, but if
00:06:28.720 we hear this, you can stop and we should be clear.
00:06:31.200 Yeah.
00:06:31.800 Of where it's going.
00:06:33.080 The macro trends of like where this is going overall.
00:06:36.080 And of course, there's multiple reasons for this.
00:06:38.340 I mean, some of it is by design.
00:06:40.820 It's not the same type of people around as back.
00:06:43.300 You know, there's many different reasons, right?
00:06:44.760 And if it's more, you know, nationalistic than et cetera, these kinds of things as well.
00:06:48.900 Now it's just, you know, there's so many agendas weaved into this, right?
00:06:53.260 From the green transition, this stuff, which is really, in my view, actually is about de-industrialization.
00:06:58.880 And then, of course, yeah.
00:07:00.980 So doing away with the automotive industry, all these other industries that Germany used
00:07:06.400 to have.
00:07:06.840 And as you said, it used to be the, it was like the heart of Europe, right?
00:07:10.260 But manufacturing, production, doing all these things.
00:07:12.680 It was still, you know, one of the countries that still had that.
00:07:16.760 We had the same pattern really in Sweden as well.
00:07:18.940 There were, when things were starting to go bad for Volvo and Saab, the government didn't
00:07:23.120 step in.
00:07:24.500 And it's kind of like, you know, these brands don't mean that much today.
00:07:28.280 It's all transnational corporations.
00:07:29.760 But it's still, it was anchored to a national identity of sorts.
00:07:33.100 Like Volvo was like, it was Swedish steel made by Swedish people.
00:07:36.620 And it was like, you know, a good car.
00:07:38.400 It worked.
00:07:38.960 Same thing in Germany, really good cars and things like that.
00:07:42.140 And when, so when that's eroded, when that's kind of taken away, stripped away, and we
00:07:45.620 become a nation of what they call paper pushers, right?
00:07:48.180 We're sitting behind desks all the time.
00:07:49.640 We don't make anything anymore.
00:07:50.940 Everything is over in China.
00:07:52.440 I think that demoralizes us overall on some level, don't you think?
00:07:57.100 Yes, it was the same in Germany, like you described regarding Volvo.
00:08:01.300 If you look at BMW, VW, if you look at former days at Opel, the employees had some, had this
00:08:14.940 corporate identity.
00:08:16.780 They had some identification with their enterprise they have been working for, or working, not
00:08:24.940 just working for, in those days working with.
00:08:28.380 And today it's not the same employees due to the demographic exchange.
00:08:34.920 And, and mostly that's no longer employees at all.
00:08:39.800 And so there is no identity with the corporates, corporations with the enterprises.
00:08:44.680 It's more the, the, the, the, the, the newcomers, their identity with the welfare system, but
00:08:51.780 not with any enterprise.
00:08:53.620 Exactly.
00:08:54.200 No, that's true.
00:08:54.880 Everything is robotics.
00:08:56.020 Excuse me, robotics and automation, right?
00:08:58.160 They're going in this direction type of thing.
00:09:00.280 But migration doesn't stop because of that.
00:09:02.100 It's not interesting.
00:09:03.500 And multiple times we've shown these headlines, but it bears repeating because there's newcomers,
00:09:09.840 there's people that, you know, just are waking up to some of these topics, right?
00:09:12.660 But I can't tell you how many headlines we've shown specific out of Germany too, of how few
00:09:17.620 of these refugees and migrants have come in that actually have jobs.
00:09:21.080 They just come in and they become welfare dependents.
00:09:23.620 They're living off of the state.
00:09:24.760 And yet we're being told that these are the people that somehow going to raise our GDP,
00:09:29.840 right?
00:09:30.020 They're going to take care of us later when we're old and stuff.
00:09:32.920 It's all lies.
00:09:33.820 It's just a bunch of lies.
00:09:35.220 They propagize abortion and then tell, tell us that we need the migrants for our pension
00:09:41.120 system.
00:09:42.160 But the reality, the reality is that I'm glad that you mentioned this topic because just
00:09:51.000 a few days ago, a huge German newspaper called Die Welt was writing, was headlining even that
00:09:59.360 in the recent few years that more than 2 million immigrated into Germany, but still the economy
00:10:10.240 is lacking a qualified workforce.
00:10:12.540 So those who are immigrating into the welfare system won't be helpful for our pension system.
00:10:20.160 And that made me do a look on the statistics.
00:10:22.920 And an interesting data is that we have something that was formerly called Hot Sphere.
00:10:27.580 Now it's called Bürgergeld, citizens' money.
00:10:31.080 It's a label of the transfer system where you describe the money that you receive if you're not in work.
00:10:43.080 And overall in Germany, more than 62% of all welfare recipients are migrants.
00:10:51.440 And on the top of it, within the age cohort, 15 years to 25 years, this number goes up to more than 71%.
00:11:04.540 And the one who is between age 15 and 25 here in Germany is not working.
00:11:11.680 He never ever plans to work.
00:11:14.460 He is a welfare system addicted and for sure will do everything but not serve our pension system.
00:11:23.480 Exactly.
00:11:24.020 And then, of course, you know, idle hands.
00:11:25.820 What's the saying again?
00:11:26.820 It's the devil's, I don't know, something like that.
00:11:29.100 Nothing to do, right?
00:11:30.280 So what do you do?
00:11:31.240 Well, you engage in maybe criminality, even if it's pedicriminality or like we're seeing in Sweden, right?
00:11:36.420 There's a huge now, these gang crime things.
00:11:39.340 You have bombs going off in Sweden.
00:11:40.960 People, you know, being murdered because they live in the wrong house next to some supposed gang member or a family member of a gang member.
00:11:49.340 And we're just, we're losing control.
00:11:52.040 They were talking about bringing in the military recently.
00:11:54.360 This is liberal Sweden.
00:11:55.500 This was never on the agenda, ever.
00:11:57.740 This was like, you know, a big no-no.
00:12:00.380 And now it's like, let's turn to the military, see if we can keep the peace and keep the order.
00:12:04.260 The only way they can keep this together seems to be with some kind of like militaristic police state or something like that.
00:12:09.700 That's the only way they can have a multicultural society, at least temporarily.
00:12:12.880 Even that doesn't seem to work.
00:12:14.820 Yeah, they use this turmoil.
00:12:17.980 And I think it's not by accident.
00:12:20.120 It's a blunt turmoil because they use this turmoil as an argument for creating more totalitarian states, more civilians, more repression, getting with the argument of safety and security, trying to get the acceptance for the Orwellian overkill.
00:12:40.920 Yes, exactly.
00:12:42.600 There was some interesting stats there, too.
00:12:44.080 We can show that since we talk about, you know, criminality.
00:12:46.540 And with some of these, yeah, some of these kids, then they're brought in second generation migrants, maybe third, maybe even fourth at this point, right?
00:12:53.880 You think that that, you know, we heard at least it was like, well, integration, you know, kind of gets better and better, whatever.
00:12:58.500 I think most of that, I think someone broke down that statistically and they talked about some of the major terrorist attacks in European countries.
00:13:04.660 And it was usually like second or even third generation migrants.
00:13:07.560 In other words, they get more, you know, like displaced, essentially, and feel probably out of place in our society as well, which is bizarre.
00:13:16.600 But check this one out.
00:13:17.940 Here's the crime rates of selected nationalities in Western Europe.
00:13:21.540 And Germany, of course, is listed in the first column right there.
00:13:26.100 It says in Germany, Italy and Spain, suspected rates of Algerian immigrants are 10 times to 17 times higher than the suspected rates of German, Italian, Spanish citizens.
00:13:36.000 I'm surprised they got this statistics out, to be honest.
00:13:39.680 I know that Switzerland's still monitoring it or something like that.
00:13:42.480 But, yeah, that's what we're looking at.
00:13:44.840 What are these people doing in our countries?
00:13:46.140 And that figures are clearly the point why I say I'm sorry for the term, not the fuck interested in the circumstances the asylum demander will find after deportation in his country of origin because I'm more interested in the safety of my family in the homeland of our ancestors.
00:14:12.340 Exactly.
00:14:13.040 Yep, that's right.
00:14:13.780 Yeah, and this has been, you know, same thing with the policy in Sweden right there.
00:14:18.040 I brought that up as an example a while ago, but it's a fascinating thing.
00:14:22.240 Sweden is obviously very, you know, obsessed, I guess.
00:14:26.240 And in some cases it's a good way.
00:14:28.120 In some cases it's kind of overkill.
00:14:29.340 But safety, safety, safety, right?
00:14:31.540 Whether there's road safety or, you know, other versions.
00:14:35.320 They have guardrails all over society.
00:14:37.060 But on the roads, right, they have a zero policy for a while.
00:14:40.920 No one should die in traffic.
00:14:42.200 So they rebuilt roads.
00:14:44.520 They had, you know, much more stringent, like, you know, when you get your license, like the rigorous training that you need to go through, the amount of time you need to spend on this and stuff like that.
00:14:55.580 Now, of course, it turns out that a bunch of migrants are failing this and they can't get a driver's license.
00:15:00.280 So what do they do?
00:15:01.540 They lower the bar, right?
00:15:03.660 And essentially say, no, it's okay.
00:15:05.600 Now we should make it easier, right?
00:15:07.840 They've offered it in their own language, even in some cases.
00:15:10.580 And even then they fail these tests, right?
00:15:12.660 So now we're at a situation, Sascha, where, like, we are expected to go out and risk our own lives and maybe the lives of our children that's with us in our cars just so that these people can be in our countries, not work, not contribute, but drive on the roads and be a potential hazard to us.
00:15:31.560 This is so absurd.
00:15:32.240 Okay, because if they stumble over their own feet, then it's neocolonialism.
00:15:38.780 Oh, my gosh.
00:15:39.940 It's a paradox.
00:15:40.960 It's absurd when we face fenced-in Christian markets that are not allowed to call it any longer as those, but simultaneously have open borders.
00:15:56.120 Yes.
00:15:56.600 I remember the Christmas market.
00:15:57.980 That's been a...
00:15:58.960 There was one attack.
00:16:01.240 Like, maybe that's like five years ago now or something like that, five, six years ago, something like that.
00:16:05.620 It was a big attack.
00:16:06.380 And now I've seen multiple countries, especially big cities, obviously, right?
00:16:10.220 But still, all over the place.
00:16:12.040 Huge, you know, basically roadblocks in front to try to prevent people from driving in and things like that.
00:16:17.640 I saw one clip out of Germany, too, where some Muslims had set up some Allah Akbar.
00:16:23.840 They were seeing, you know, a mic session basically right in front of the Christmas in the square.
00:16:29.500 I forget what town it was in or something like that, but it's just we're losing our countries, Sasha.
00:16:36.220 It's going down the drain.
00:16:37.720 You know what I mean?
00:16:38.080 It's sad to see this, right?
00:16:40.480 Yeah.
00:16:40.700 So, what a terrible, terrible situation.
00:16:46.740 And it goes on and on.
00:16:48.380 And today I read that in 2000, this year, 2023, there has been 300,000 refugees into Germany.
00:17:00.660 That's the town comparable to Augsburg, for example, or Karlsruhe.
00:17:08.300 That are two German towns with 300,000 inhabitants.
00:17:12.800 And imagine for these people, it's not only about money for food.
00:17:18.820 It's the health care.
00:17:21.100 It's the clothing.
00:17:21.680 It's all the infrastructure they use.
00:17:26.640 As you have to build up every year, year by year, a town for 300,000 people.
00:17:33.680 And I assume that in reality it's large more because I think it was two or three weeks ago
00:17:40.820 when the head of the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees in Germany reported that the state
00:17:47.240 and the federal authorities could no longer withstand the wave of migration
00:17:52.380 and are no longer able to register.
00:17:55.980 What does that mean?
00:17:57.040 If they are no longer able to register, how can we trust the figures?
00:18:01.240 So, for sure, the figures will be much higher than we can read in the newspapers.
00:18:06.700 Exactly.
00:18:07.100 And, of course, now we have the conflict in Gaza, and there's been a number of articles about this,
00:18:14.060 how not only Germany, but Germany has been floated, right, as one of the countries
00:18:17.620 that need to accept these Gaza refugees.
00:18:22.280 Here's a remix that you link to Germany preparing to accept large influx of Gaza refugees
00:18:26.380 leading newspaper reports.
00:18:27.960 And it's like, okay, so they're getting some back-end story on this here.
00:18:31.900 Here was another one.
00:18:32.980 I forget what source this was here.
00:18:34.420 Gaza refugees should go to Germany.
00:18:37.420 Palestinians in Gaza, Germany is preparing to accept refugees from the Gaza Strip.
00:18:41.320 This is back in November 20th.
00:18:43.440 And then you had this op-ed.
00:18:45.300 It was a Wall Street Journal, but Times of Israel reported on this, too.
00:18:48.680 Two Israeli lawmakers call on European countries to take in Gaza refugees.
00:18:53.020 And when you sent me your email, you mentioned this, and you were like, you said this, instead
00:18:58.480 of advocating a two-state solution based on an Israel within the 1967 borders following
00:19:05.420 numerous UN resolutions coupled with a reparation program for the Palestinians, the German government
00:19:10.520 is doing the Zionist business by supporting Israel's depopulation of the Gaza Strip by promising
00:19:15.840 to take in the Palestinians.
00:19:17.280 However, Germany, which is now more than 2.3 trillion euros in debt, and we should talk
00:19:23.600 more about that because that's insane, can no longer afford its bankruptcy policy.
00:19:29.060 Excuse me.
00:19:29.640 This year alone, Germany is allowing itself the dubious luxury of the following expenditures.
00:19:35.180 Let me list these here.
00:19:35.920 50 billion euros for immigration, 33 billion euros for development aid, whatever that is.
00:19:43.880 Is that money going out of the country, I assume, then altogether?
00:19:46.460 Out of the country for the third world countries.
00:19:49.340 Yeah.
00:19:50.640 21, excuse me, 21 billion euros for EU contributions, and then 15 billion euros for NGOs.
00:19:59.580 I'd love to see a full list of that.
00:20:01.100 I'm not sure if there's a breakdown of that, but that is just insane.
00:20:03.800 And this is the same in every country.
00:20:06.200 It's just they're printing money.
00:20:07.940 They're just flinging it away.
00:20:09.140 It's like they know that the party is over, and they're just trying to get as much of it,
00:20:14.180 squeeze as much out of it as they can at the end.
00:20:16.980 What's happening?
00:20:18.000 Is this by design?
00:20:19.300 Who's doing this?
00:20:20.120 And on top of it, just recently, the Supreme Court, the Constitutional Court in Germany ruled that the budgets, the national budget, have been unconstitutional,
00:20:36.640 because they made some special assets that have not been budgeted within the original budget that should be transparent, a kind of shadow households.
00:20:53.800 And those shadow households grew a much higher than the original national budget.
00:21:02.840 That's that's absolutely insane.
00:21:05.320 And but it was one day after the Supreme Court ruled that, hey, guys, that's unconstitutional.
00:21:13.840 You can't work this way.
00:21:17.880 And by the way, they are working with money they don't have.
00:21:21.960 Exactly.
00:21:22.320 But one day after the fiscal committee of the parliament met together and they and they decided on more expenditures one day after this constitution.
00:21:38.560 And they said, OK, we have we have such a thing called a debt break that debt is limited in relation to the GDP in Germany.
00:21:47.680 But there is an exemption if in an emergency case.
00:21:52.520 And so they said, OK, then we we will call out an emergency, presumably the climate emergency.
00:22:00.820 And then we don't have to abide to this to the steps, right, to this limit.
00:22:07.360 Yes, of course, we have an emergency in Germany.
00:22:10.120 But the only and the main emergency is sitting on the benches of the government.
00:22:14.920 Yeah, I know.
00:22:15.680 Not what they hallucinate in environmental things for their fiscal policy.
00:22:20.600 It's like they got they have everyone under control throughout the entire government.
00:22:25.860 You know, I mean, there's is there any vote?
00:22:27.340 Is there any like critical voice?
00:22:28.880 I'm not sure if you if you watch any of the like the day to day activities as such by some of these politicians or whatnot.
00:22:34.460 But like what, maybe there's some like AFD wasn't that one of the reasons, by the way, why some of the AFD were actually doing very well.
00:22:40.860 They were sensible on the energy question, I believe, which is like why some so many Germans were like, OK, well, that's at least reasonable.
00:22:47.880 We have to get, you know, heat our homes somehow.
00:22:50.640 And then, of course, it's the migration issue over overall that they addressed there.
00:22:53.980 But is there any anyone calling this out like in the German parliament or any of these politicians?
00:22:58.300 As far as you know, yeah, the problem is that the center party, the CDU, the center party tries to convince the Chancellor Scholz to to break with the Greens, to break with this coalition.
00:23:16.700 And they want back in the great coalition, the center with the Social Democrats.
00:23:20.780 And so the the CDU was did before the Supreme Court to put the pressure high, launched this legal infringement, this this legal proceeding in that regard.
00:23:34.040 But, however, if due to the fact that they want also into the government so that they're not really won't make this paradigm shift in fiscal policy,
00:23:50.780 that that would be required now.
00:23:54.120 Yeah, exactly.
00:23:55.540 And then there's still reparations, obviously, that Germany pays to Israel.
00:23:59.380 I was trying to find a number for that, too.
00:24:01.800 And apparently that's going to end in like 2045.
00:24:04.540 We'll see what happens.
00:24:05.420 But let me see.
00:24:06.300 Is this just well, this is just this is one screenshot.
00:24:09.620 This is not current.
00:24:10.600 Right.
00:24:10.760 But this says here, West Germany paid to Israel some of three billion marks around 714 million United States dollars,
00:24:18.280 according to a 1953-1955 convention rate over the next 14 years, 450 million marks were paid to the World Jewish Congress.
00:24:26.380 And that's just one screenshot.
00:24:27.840 I think I had others somewhere of like them showing just kind of the year after year, you know, expenditures on this issue as well.
00:24:34.760 I just I don't know how these systems just continue to go on like, oh, here it is.
00:24:39.000 Let me let me show you this real quick.
00:24:40.080 Just that it could be interesting for the audience to see that, too.
00:24:41.940 So here we go from 1945 to 2018, it says down there, the German government paid approximately 86.8 billion.
00:24:51.580 That's the United States dollar there in restitution and compensation to Holocaust victims and their heirs.
00:24:56.600 And I'm not sure if that's maybe also on the side of like in addition to maybe what Germany gives to Israel.
00:25:03.380 You know, overall, there's there's aid, as you said, in the other included, right, the 33 billion euros for development aid.
00:25:10.420 I'm sure some of that might go to Israel as well.
00:25:12.460 But it's just as most European nations are like this.
00:25:15.020 You look at it, right.
00:25:16.800 The EU overall just gives Africa like 20 billion euros every year or something like crazy like that.
00:25:23.240 I just how long can this go on, do you think, to be honest?
00:25:25.740 A record number, because you mentioned development aid, a record number was in 2020 when Germany, alone Germany, not the EU, just Germany, gave more than 41 billion euros for an aid to Africa.
00:25:41.700 And again, we don't have this.
00:25:44.120 We don't have this money.
00:25:48.220 We are indebted with 2.3 trillion euros.
00:25:51.740 It's absolutely crazy.
00:25:56.140 And I'm sure that's for design.
00:25:59.360 And it would be a topic for itself to discuss with this Africa and foreign aid.
00:26:05.480 And then also in regard of this migration, because it's very interesting.
00:26:10.660 And I don't think that a lot of people are not aware that how the population explosion is going on on the African continent and how the relation of those figures is to the overall inhabitants in the European Union.
00:26:32.800 And by 2050, it's not very long, for example, Niger alone could be home to as many people as the entire EU inhabits.
00:26:47.680 But what most people don't know is because the proportions, if you're looking on the map, the proportions, if you're looking on the globe or are looking on a map, are not mirrored how they are in reality.
00:27:03.840 Because Africa will, even if they have this population growth, which you never can solve with asylum politics, every lunatic thinks this should go back to the school benches for mathematics.
00:27:20.820 He hasn't grasped what's an exponential function.
00:27:24.060 But Africa will by no means be too cramped, as the continent is around 10 times larger than India, which is currently home to a population of roughly the same as Africa is.
00:27:38.980 Yeah, that's true.
00:27:40.580 And then, of course, the continent is so large that they could accommodate the USA and China.
00:27:46.740 And if you do a look to the population density in Africa, it's less than 50.
00:27:54.060 I don't know a per square kilometer.
00:27:56.800 I don't know how the population density per square kilometer is in the USA.
00:28:00.320 But in Europe, it is 117.
00:28:03.980 In Asia, it's 150.
00:28:06.340 But in Africa, it's 50.
00:28:09.340 Why should we Europeans, we occidental kind of mankind, we white people,
00:28:16.740 why should we save one who is witnessing a population explosion while we are in decline?
00:28:25.660 Only 6% or 7% of the whole global population.
00:28:30.240 In the children, only 3%.
00:28:33.080 That's absolutely absurd.
00:28:36.140 And also in economic terms, it's not necessary because 60% of the world's arable land are in Africa.
00:28:42.460 A third of all unused agricultural land is in Africa.
00:28:47.080 And that's according to UN figures, around 30% of the world's mineral deposits.
00:28:52.560 Guess where?
00:28:53.260 In Africa.
00:28:53.880 12% of the world's oil reserves.
00:28:56.460 Africa.
00:28:57.100 8% of the world's natural gas reserves.
00:28:59.720 In Africa located.
00:29:00.880 So, there is no need that we transport Africa to Europe because it won't help Africa.
00:29:09.700 However, in Europe, nothing will be left that deserves this name any longer.
00:29:16.620 Yeah, there was someone like you.
00:29:17.680 Sorry for that impression now, but it broke out of me.
00:29:20.520 No, no, that's good.
00:29:21.480 It's very interesting.
00:29:22.400 And it's true because I focus on that too.
00:29:24.900 And you have this thing, well, you know, you came and stole all this and blah, blah, blah.
00:29:29.000 But it's like, look at the amount of money that we're helping and trying to get.
00:29:32.560 Look, I get that there's corruption down there.
00:29:35.340 There's some warlords that, you know, arise.
00:29:37.940 And then there's some, you know, civil war.
00:29:39.600 There's conflict, blah, blah, blah.
00:29:40.900 I'm not saying there's no, you know, maybe meddling or whatever.
00:29:44.100 You have corrupt interests and they sell weapons to the right side, you know, this side.
00:29:48.780 And then they go to war.
00:29:49.620 I get all that stuff, right?
00:29:51.280 But we've had that kind of stuff in Europe too.
00:29:53.360 That's part of our history too.
00:29:54.620 We had those things happening.
00:29:56.540 But now it's like this, you know, we're expected to have this kind of hands-off approach
00:30:00.600 while we've been giving them billions, right?
00:30:02.920 Let me do a couple of screenshots here.
00:30:04.420 Here's from the African-EU partnership website on the EU, right?
00:30:09.240 And let me zoom in on that portion up there.
00:30:10.960 It says the EU and its member states are the biggest donors of the African continent.
00:30:14.200 Approximately 20, as I said before, 20 billion euros a year in development that is directed to Africa.
00:30:20.000 What's happening with this money?
00:30:21.440 Where is it going?
00:30:22.000 Like, there was a YouTuber, what's his name, MrBeast, that went down recently and like building wells, drilling for water, you know, wells and stuff like that.
00:30:30.320 It's like, why does an American white kid have to show up and drill wells in Africa when like this amount of money is, it's sad, right?
00:30:39.340 And here's another one, by the way, a game of give and take, a classic screenshot.
00:30:43.340 They talk about the rise of the global south and all that stuff.
00:30:46.100 Well, guess who's been paying for this?
00:30:47.720 It's western, you know, countries.
00:30:50.260 The northern parts of it with the addition of like New Zealand and Australia down in the south, essentially.
00:30:55.600 Japan, you know, is one of the countries part of that too, I guess.
00:30:57.960 And in the U.S., one of the tweets here from BattleBee said the total aid to Africa from 1960 to 2013 comes up to over $5 trillion, or the equivalent of about 50 Marshall plans.
00:31:13.780 Germany was given, and I'm not debating whether it was good or not, whatever.
00:31:18.120 America, you know, has occupied Germany since then.
00:31:20.980 It is official on the books even, right?
00:31:22.620 But they got, I believe, one Marshall plan and then the extension, the German Marshall Fund, a follow-up were called or something like that, right?
00:31:31.720 But it's not even comparable.
00:31:34.220 And so, obviously, this amount of money is helping also to grow the populations, not fix many things maybe with the corruption.
00:31:42.980 And then instead, Sasha, they're pouring into Europe and America and some of the other countries as well,
00:31:48.360 while their population at home, as I said, continues to grow, and with the low density, they will be able to presumably continue to grow as well.
00:31:57.420 Unsustainable.
00:31:57.980 This just doesn't work, right?
00:32:00.120 Yeah, never, ever.
00:32:01.920 I'm not sure what to do about it, but I think it's a hands-off approach or something.
00:32:06.280 They've got to solve their own issue.
00:32:07.360 We have our own problems now.
00:32:08.880 You know what I mean?
00:32:09.200 The point is we can't carry the rest of the world on our backs, right?
00:32:12.900 There are a lot of African economists who are very critical to this kind of foreign aid because they say that the result of this pouring money
00:32:30.880 is that you learn the people just waiting to receiving the mail, to never become productive in their own way, in their own culture,
00:32:44.060 and in their own traditional way, in their own traditions they had made with their kettles or with their agriculture or whatever.
00:32:54.440 But there are a lot of economists from Africa who say it would be better for the continent and they would be more successful if we would at least not help this way as we do now.
00:33:09.600 Yeah, now it's like, what is it called, the UN World Food Programme or something?
00:33:13.080 They drop bags of rice and milk powders, you know what I mean?
00:33:17.420 Like, you just end-to-end, stuff like that has been happening.
00:33:19.860 And as you say, I mean, you've got to, what's the old saying, right?
00:33:23.160 You've got to teach a man to fish, not just give him the fish, right?
00:33:26.280 You've got to, and I mean, anyway, it's a huge issue just that's compounding on top of what's already happening.
00:33:34.240 The question is, though, as things change, presumably, financially, I mean, unless they whip out an ace card, what do you call it?
00:33:44.120 An ace through their sleeve, as the saying goes, and let's say overhaul the economic system or they make a digital, you know, euro, they go for some kind of central bank digital currency or something like this.
00:33:56.900 And they kind of decide to write off the debt or like scrap the old system and then just kind of keep going.
00:34:02.060 Maybe they will do something like that to keep, you know, everything going, which I guess would be, that would be very bad, actually.
00:34:10.660 It's probably better to just have a heavy recession, have a crash, have a fall, have a collapse, and so, you know, build it back up again or something like that.
00:34:18.280 But if the welfare stops coming, right, if we can't even take care of ourselves, obviously, we're not going to be able to take care of all these other people as well.
00:34:27.080 Could that help us? A bad economic situation? Could that help us in terms of, like, restoring some of the different demographics to our countries? What do you think?
00:34:36.580 I think it will help in an ethical and morally sense, because in hard times, you have to concentrate more on the really essential things.
00:34:50.120 In hard times, you're not interested in entertainment or in hard times, it's the top point on the agenda will not be the transgender toilet or anything else.
00:35:08.020 And if there, I think they will do this over-expansion and this digitalization and everything, but this over-expansion will be more and more harder to control.
00:35:22.100 And if it will collapse, then it will be a fragmentation of systems, of institutions.
00:35:33.720 But out of these fragmented institutions, maybe there will be a rise from fragmentation to regionalization.
00:35:45.500 And that could be maybe a healthy development, but the problem is that I fear that mankind will learn it the hard way and not by reason.
00:36:00.300 Yeah, that's true. And it's always when we get too comfortable, right?
00:36:06.560 We get super complacent in that, and at some point we have to kind of be pushed back into reality a little bit, in touch with nature and how things used to be.
00:36:16.700 It seems to be a natural cycle, and we're just kind of at the top of that right now.
00:36:19.800 We're about to find out just how much we've been living above our means.
00:36:26.460 And, you know, again, unless they wheel something out, because I am worried about that.
00:36:31.780 I mean, I think one of the things, you're probably aware of that too, right?
00:36:35.020 The central bank digital currency plans, they're floating this in the EU right now.
00:36:39.880 Christine Lagarde recently of the European Central Bank mentioned that they're trying to take the euro digital.
00:36:44.540 And then on top of that, the IMF are working on kind of like a global central bank digital currency.
00:36:49.980 Individual nations are doing that as well.
00:36:52.400 But this money would be what they call programmable, essentially, right?
00:36:55.820 So think of dissidents or those on the outside.
00:36:59.440 Just as an example, look at how the German government have treated the AFT, Alternative for Deutschland, and some of the politicians there.
00:37:07.540 I think it was specifically, I forget which region, was it in Bavaria, Bayern, right?
00:37:11.680 One area where they were doing very, very well, and the government is like, oh, basically, they're terrorists.
00:37:17.960 They labeled, was that what they did?
00:37:19.240 They labeled them right-wing extremists or something, and they're under surveillance, some of the politicians now, right?
00:37:24.800 In the eastern part of Germany, or in the part of the former German Democratic Republic,
00:37:31.200 they're leading the polls, be it in Saxonia, be it in Thuringia, be it in Brandenburg, they are leading the polls.
00:37:45.520 But in the next year, there will be federal elections, but we will see that in several of the federal states of Germany,
00:37:56.420 the AFT will win the election, but there's no hope that they will be in the government coalition.
00:38:05.720 And I hope that then people will realize that democracy has said his goodbye.
00:38:17.280 Yeah, come to its conclusion.
00:38:19.100 That's that, right?
00:38:20.080 Because if this is what people are voting for and the government steps in, whoa, whoa, whoa, easy there now.
00:38:25.220 You can't vote for whatever party you want.
00:38:28.300 Yeah, but maybe that's an eye-opener also, again, for people.
00:38:33.780 Maybe that will accelerate some developments, and maybe that will also bring some AFT politicians
00:38:44.520 to a more realistic mindset, not only this coalition pipe dreams.
00:38:53.580 And maybe in some of that states, there are also interesting developments,
00:38:59.860 not only the party I belong, Die Heimat, but also there are some regional developments.
00:39:06.120 For example, in Saxonia, there are also the so-called the Free Saxonians, translated,
00:39:15.400 and they are on the local level.
00:39:20.820 They are also in some municipalities, and they are really successful,
00:39:25.840 and they are the leading force on the protests on the street.
00:39:29.800 And I can imagine, and I will run the election next year in Saxonia,
00:39:36.040 I can imagine that we will see next year in Saxonia, next to the AFT,
00:39:41.880 another right-wing group in the parliament with those Free Saxonians.
00:39:46.200 And that can be a pretty interesting development.
00:39:52.880 And I'm glad about this development, because we also need forces that the voters can see,
00:40:04.080 can take as a kind of a litmus test, if the just conservative rights will deliver what the voter has ordered.
00:40:12.540 Yeah, in Sweden you've had that too, right, as kind of, obviously the population overall
00:40:17.820 is drifting more towards nationalistic policies, and they want their country back.
00:40:23.000 Essentially, progressively, parties that used to be, like they said, the moderate party,
00:40:28.760 which used to be our conservatives or whatever, they pick up talking points,
00:40:34.140 be that from the Sweden Democrats, and then you have an alternative for Sweden,
00:40:37.340 pushing a little bit on the Sweden Democrats, and nudging everybody a little bit in that direction.
00:40:41.760 But the dangers, of course, is, oh, they pick up the talking points, the rhetoric is there,
00:40:46.660 and they say, oh, we've got to do this, blah, blah, blah, but nothing happens.
00:40:50.480 You know what I mean?
00:40:50.760 They're not implementing anything yet.
00:40:52.400 Yeah, and it just delays the entire process, and then people are like,
00:40:56.200 even Sweden Democrats, like, I'd love to give them a chance, same thing with AFD,
00:41:00.380 like, if they could, sure, go ahead, you know, do it.
00:41:03.240 But look at, like, Maloney, right, in Italy, phony Maloney, Baloney, as we call her now.
00:41:08.220 Huge disappointment.
00:41:09.040 Huge disappointment, right?
00:41:10.420 All these talking points initially, and do this and do that,
00:41:13.420 and then she comes in, and then it's worse under her.
00:41:15.820 And I think a lot of Italians are like, finally, great, okay, we didn't get Salvini,
00:41:19.400 but we have her at least, right?
00:41:21.160 She's, you know, she's going to fix things for us now, and then nothing happens,
00:41:24.260 and you have this long delay of, like, however long they're in there.
00:41:27.000 Italy's a little bit different.
00:41:27.860 It's kind of more chaotic, their political system.
00:41:29.960 But, like, say she's in there for four years or whatever.
00:41:32.000 Now you have a four-year delay where migration continues, it just gets progressively worse,
00:41:37.160 and more damage is inflicted until, and I'm not saying that the solution to all of our problems here is political,
00:41:43.600 but it's part of it, obviously.
00:41:44.900 We have to operate and work on that level as well.
00:41:47.380 But it just delays it, and it just makes it worse, right?
00:41:50.420 Yes, the conservative right formations, that's not only in Germany.
00:41:56.600 I think that's overall in Europe, be it in Germany, be it in Sweden or wherever.
00:42:01.580 The conservative right formations are often relatively young organizations without a long tradition.
00:42:09.640 Moreover, with often a composition of dissatisfied people looking for a new direction
00:42:17.020 who often came from very political camps previous.
00:42:23.040 And so they often lack guanatura, they lack the unity and needed rigor.
00:42:29.860 And also a lack of resilience to repression leads to some always demarcations
00:42:39.300 at the behest of their actual political opponents,
00:42:42.660 not cooperate with one who is labelled more for right,
00:42:49.160 but the one who does the labelling is the political enemy.
00:42:54.100 And I think history never rewarded one who did an ideological retreat on behalf of the enemy.
00:43:01.560 However, on the other side, by being widely recognized in the public due to the successes,
00:43:11.760 there's a possibility to make a valuable contribution to preventing the area of what can be set
00:43:19.140 from being further restricted or even contribute to expand that.
00:43:24.300 And their successes are valuable for initiating a change in political awareness
00:43:30.600 and politicizing new circles who previously have not been with political awareness and consciousness.
00:43:40.660 However, as I've said, voters' expectations must not be disappointed.
00:43:45.200 And so far, protest voters, the name it says, have mostly not been delivered what they ordered.
00:43:53.240 Solid, audible protest.
00:43:57.500 And this is why traditional, genuinely admonationalist formations are important
00:44:03.620 as a kind of litmus test for voters to visibly ensure the extent to which populist organizations deliver.
00:44:10.620 However, and moreover, the right-wing conservatives mostly do little work on the meta and the pre-political field.
00:44:18.420 Exactly.
00:44:18.960 No, they're there to trim the branches a little bit and they don't strike at the roots of these problems, right?
00:44:25.200 And you do have something I want to ask you more about that in part two.
00:44:28.080 We're going to take a break in a little bit.
00:44:29.660 But just there's another, at least what I'm seeing, level of maybe not activism.
00:44:36.060 There is that, too.
00:44:37.100 There's plenty of groups out there, a lot of protests and things like that, too.
00:44:39.720 And that's good as well.
00:44:41.240 But just a lot of younger guys in many European countries.
00:44:45.100 It's happening in the U.S.
00:44:46.240 It's happening in Australia, things like that.
00:44:48.700 They're just getting together.
00:44:50.780 They're forming groups.
00:44:52.220 They're training together.
00:44:53.460 They're just getting together, forming their little tribe, essentially, right?
00:44:56.680 And that's something that's very good as well.
00:44:59.140 That's something we have to turn to.
00:45:00.220 And I want to ask you more about that later on.
00:45:01.920 I also want to talk about kind of the media environment a little bit.
00:45:04.900 Because you mentioned that, like just that continuous pressure of just like, let's just call them, you know, far right and bigots and, you know, whatever it is.
00:45:12.320 And that will keep them in line.
00:45:14.100 And for some, that works.
00:45:15.420 You know, it's just about delaying, how do I put it?
00:45:18.600 But it's to get us to bow down to them for as long as possible so that they can inflict as much damage as possible on our countries.
00:45:25.700 That's what it feels like, right?
00:45:27.700 And I also want to ask you about the Nord Stream attack because we didn't really get into that.
00:45:31.160 But just like, you know, what's the view on that in Germany and stuff?
00:45:34.360 Because that's one of the hardest hit countries regarding that, right?
00:45:37.440 But let's do a couple of plugs here.
00:45:39.680 We're going to wrap up the first segment in a little bit.
00:45:41.200 But I want to do a couple of plugs.
00:45:42.540 I know you have two books in the works that you're – I'm not sure if you've written them now or are they just being translated now, Sascha, the two books you mentioned?
00:45:51.200 I have written already two books.
00:45:53.820 One of the two books is also available in English language, one only available in the German language.
00:46:00.600 One book is – the one which is in English language available is Europe contra EU, Let's Break Away from Brussels.
00:46:10.300 That's available in German and English language.
00:46:13.760 And the other is a book about geopolitics.
00:46:16.720 It's unfortunately only in German language available.
00:46:20.320 It's translated.
00:46:21.380 The title would be geopolitical sea change, multipolarity instead of imperialism.
00:46:29.660 But you're right.
00:46:30.640 I'm currently working on two different books.
00:46:35.040 I hope to finish in 2024.
00:46:39.860 One book should be a more extensive volume, not only focused on this daily politics, but more on this – on the cultural, political, philosophical, ideological roots, the book.
00:46:54.820 And another one, it will be a little bit – a shorter volume that maybe I can finish within the next three months or so, I hope.
00:47:04.840 That will be a book about culture.
00:47:07.160 And it will be a little bit also a book, a very personal book, because I will try to explain – I will introduce my favorites in culture on the different fields and why that are my favorites.
00:47:27.760 And I try to do it in a kind of way that young nationalists maybe can take this as a first step to get acquainted with our occidental traditional culture, be it in literature, be it in philosophy, be it in painting, be it in music.
00:47:47.940 And the reader will there become introduced, my personal favorites, with a description why they are my favorites, why I love them, and why I think they're important also for our European political work.
00:48:09.100 Yeah, something we need to be reminded of all the time, to be honest.
00:48:13.980 Why do we do what we do? What are we trying to preserve? All those things. We've got to remember all that.
00:48:18.020 We've got to talk about our culture, our heritage, our traditions, those kinds of things. Very, very important.
00:48:24.160 Now, at the moment, I actually have some issue to load some of the websites for some reason, but let's see if I can add them in post.
00:48:29.100 Deutsche – in English, stimme.de. That's, of course, in German language.
00:48:35.020 And then Die Heimat, as formerly the NPD. Do you want to say anything about the party that you're involved in there?
00:48:41.500 Yes, Die Heimat, it made a reform process, this party.
00:48:46.420 It was known in the right-wing circles as National Democratic Party of Germany, the NPD.
00:48:52.160 And the leadership of NPD was working three or four years to adapt to new situations.
00:49:00.120 Because of populist, new, successful formations, we have been a little bit marginalised in the parliamentarian and party political way,
00:49:09.240 despite we had some on the local level, some parliamentarians, but not on the federal and the nationwide level anymore.
00:49:17.980 And so we thought we have to go to adapt to a new situation, and we wanted to combine this with a new nomenklatura.
00:49:30.840 And we saw that we had some resources in our party.
00:49:34.820 We have been marginalised, but on the other hand, we had some houses.
00:49:39.980 We have a good circle of skilled lawyers with experience on this particular field.
00:49:47.400 We have a very high-quality magazine.
00:49:50.700 I also had an interview years ago with Lana, an excellent interview, in that it's also called Deutsche Stimme, that magazine.
00:49:59.400 And we have a publishing company with this, and a lot of such resources, but we couldn't use this and optimise this potential anymore.
00:50:14.760 And so we thought we have to change our bylaws, our statutes, not the ideology, not the programme,
00:50:21.820 but our bylaws to be more an anti-party, or more than a party, and not any longer work in organisational egoism, in competition,
00:50:35.280 but to offer more, to use also our resources in cooperation.
00:50:43.320 And that we had also on the top made this reform with this new nomenklatura,
00:50:49.640 and so this party no longer is named NPD, but it's die Heimat.
00:50:54.920 I don't know how to translate it, the homeland, the homestead, the homeland, or anything like that.
00:51:01.600 And I'll be running next year for the European election for this party.
00:51:06.420 All right, there you go.
00:51:07.540 Okay, very, very good.
00:51:09.080 Interesting.
00:51:09.820 Yeah, and then you mentioned, of course, Deutsche Stimme as well, the magazine, right?
00:51:13.920 Tell us about that.
00:51:14.860 Yes, it was a newspaper for many, many years.
00:51:18.200 And then in 2020, or yeah, I think it was back in 2020, we started to make it more in a high-profile magazine
00:51:27.340 and with more professional quality.
00:51:32.860 And unfortunately, it's only in German language.
00:51:36.760 But if one do a look in the homepage, you can see how professionally this is made.
00:51:46.900 It has the same quality as the Focus or Spiegel or the mainstream magazines have in kind of the makeshift, the professionality.
00:51:58.860 Definitely. We'll add some links to this down below as well.
00:52:01.640 We got that.
00:52:02.400 And then, yeah, a couple of, I guess, some of the personal places where people can follow you.
00:52:06.080 Do you have a Telegram channel, Rossmuller's Dissident Channel?
00:52:09.240 Yes, this is the one in English language.
00:52:13.920 I also, of course, have one in German language.
00:52:18.800 That is fine for the German-speaking audience of Red Eyes.
00:52:23.600 They find me under my name, Sascha Rossmuller, also a German channel with more followers
00:52:28.880 and where I more often, of course, post in the German.
00:52:32.460 But I regularly inform also in this English channel, Rossmuller's Dissident Channel,
00:52:39.020 nearly on a daily basis or several times a week at least.
00:52:42.600 And I'm also on Gap, which I post mostly.
00:52:49.260 There are some, you see, it's pinned there in German.
00:52:52.780 But mostly in Gap is posted in English language by me.
00:52:57.020 And I've also on Getter, where I post bilingual, German and English.
00:53:04.120 And not so much followers, because after Elon Musk took over,
00:53:10.240 I made my Twitter, now X, account.
00:53:14.220 And there I also post sometimes German, sometimes in English language.
00:53:19.000 So if someone want to find me, it's easy to find me.
00:53:23.540 And I'm thankful for everyone who follows me and most of all,
00:53:30.800 not just follows me, but distributes the information, the data.
00:53:35.380 Exactly.
00:53:36.240 Yep, that's it.
00:53:37.820 Yeah, awesome.
00:53:38.900 Yes, we'll add some of these links down below, of course, as well.
00:53:41.100 See if I can get the, for some reason, the Heimat and Deutsche Stimme,
00:53:45.580 it doesn't load on my end.
00:53:46.840 So I'm thinking, like, some VPN block or something.
00:53:50.200 I'll see if I can figure it out later.
00:53:51.640 But anyway, I'll add links to those below, guys.
00:53:53.580 So definitely check that out.
00:53:54.580 And then follow, you know, Sasha on some of the social media
00:53:57.400 that we mentioned here as well.
00:53:59.000 So we're going to take it.
00:54:00.040 Oh, and we've got to mention, too, by the way,
00:54:01.580 let's mention, where's the website?
00:54:04.140 Here we go.
00:54:05.060 Europa Terra Nostra as well, of course.
00:54:07.180 You're a, what are you, what's your position there again?
00:54:09.260 You're a vice?
00:54:09.660 I'm vice chairman of Dan Eriksson, a friend of you I know
00:54:14.480 since many years from Sweden.
00:54:16.180 Yeah, they're doing great work.
00:54:17.620 I'm vice chairman of Europa Terra Nostra,
00:54:20.460 and there are also to find some articles I've written in,
00:54:24.900 of course, an English language.
00:54:26.720 And I've been also in Sweden on a, I don't know, a few years ago,
00:54:32.360 I've been in Sweden at the Svenskarna,
00:54:35.200 who's in Oscarot at an event of Dan Eriksson,
00:54:40.420 and it was very impressing, really impressing.
00:54:44.800 Yeah, they have a great, you know, facility there
00:54:46.960 and stuff like that.
00:54:47.700 They're building that.
00:54:48.380 It's really, you know, we can talk more about that,
00:54:49.900 of course, in the second, once I get a break in a moment,
00:54:51.620 but yeah, that's part of what the activism is
00:54:54.440 that I'm talking about.
00:54:54.900 People are just, they're just doing it.
00:54:56.320 They're just getting together.
00:54:57.320 They're forming community.
00:54:58.220 They're forming tribes, you know, these kinds of things.
00:54:59.780 That's really what it is all about.
00:55:02.100 All right, more coming up, guys, in the second part,
00:55:04.360 together with Sascha Ross-Muller.
00:55:06.400 Stay with us, everybody.
00:55:07.460 We'll be right back.
00:55:13.340 Journals for part two with Sascha Ross-Muller
00:55:15.520 as we continue to discuss Israel
00:55:17.420 and the future of, you know, their country
00:55:19.880 and where that's going.
00:55:21.580 What happens if Israel loses?
00:55:23.100 What happens if Palestine or Palestinians
00:55:25.360 or at least the Gaza Strip,
00:55:26.640 if they lose in the West Bank?
00:55:29.000 Two different scenarios.
00:55:29.940 What's the optimal one for us as Europeans?
00:55:32.600 We'll talk more about that.
00:55:34.580 We'll talk overall about how the media
00:55:36.200 is losing kind of the narrative
00:55:37.780 and them as regime enforcers
00:55:39.880 is just kind of discrediting them
00:55:41.420 more and more and more.
00:55:42.800 We talk about the polarization, really,
00:55:44.500 that comes in the wake of the media
00:55:46.000 and politicians doing what they have done
00:55:47.880 and continuing to do in our countries.
00:55:50.720 We also talk more about the destruction
00:55:52.180 of the Nord Stream,
00:55:53.120 kind of how that was viewed both in Germany,
00:55:55.500 but also by Sascha himself.
00:55:57.460 Really huge attack.
00:55:58.660 And so you're seeing this massive, you know,
00:56:00.440 shift not only in the energy sector,
00:56:02.340 but in the geopolitical, you know,
00:56:04.820 on the geopolitical chessboard
00:56:06.520 as well as a consequence, right?
00:56:08.180 You have all these different NATO countries now,
00:56:09.860 like there's Turkey being a thorn
00:56:11.440 in the side of other NATO countries.
00:56:13.600 Then at the same time,
00:56:14.540 you have the rise of the BRICS countries
00:56:16.020 and what they call the multipolar world order.
00:56:18.520 What does that mean for us?
00:56:19.260 Is that any good?
00:56:20.900 We'll discuss that.
00:56:21.980 And then also we'll talk towards the end
00:56:24.100 more about kind of generally
00:56:25.740 just that type of activism
00:56:27.220 and community building
00:56:28.220 and the tribe forming
00:56:29.920 and the training that we're seeing
00:56:31.520 all throughout European society.
00:56:34.240 A lot more people are getting together.
00:56:35.700 They're just doing things themselves
00:56:37.320 as things centralize more and more,
00:56:40.140 as power centralizes.
00:56:41.660 And we drift with that planned, of course,
00:56:44.160 towards world government.
00:56:45.900 They're kind of losing that granular control, maybe?
00:56:49.160 I don't know.
00:56:49.840 I mean, they are targeting groups
00:56:51.020 and we'll talk more about that too.
00:56:52.200 In Germany, the Artgemeinschaft was recently banned.
00:56:55.000 What was that about, right?
00:56:56.400 So they target groups and they outlaw groups
00:56:58.260 and they try to shut them down,
00:56:59.520 but they can't shut down all of us.
00:57:01.580 And that is something that's growing
00:57:03.320 and it's a positive direction
00:57:05.720 for where we're going.
00:57:06.640 People are networking more than before.
00:57:08.660 They're looking for solutions among their own
00:57:11.500 as opposed to among politicians,
00:57:14.080 which of course is never ultimately
00:57:15.740 how any of this will be resolved, to be honest.
00:57:18.360 We'll talk more about that.
00:57:19.120 So it's a great part two,
00:57:20.040 coming up together with Sasha Rossmuller.
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00:58:19.480 All right, guys.
00:58:19.860 I also want to say thanks
00:58:20.680 to our executive producers today.
00:58:23.920 T. Lothrop Stoddard,
00:58:25.660 V. Miller,
00:58:27.040 Resin Revolt,
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00:58:31.020 Red Pill Rundown,
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00:58:34.680 No One Jeeps,
00:58:35.760 President Obunga,
00:58:37.140 Mongoose,
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00:58:39.700 Angry White Socket Mom,
00:58:41.260 The Second Wanderer,
00:58:42.260 Operation Werewolf,
00:58:44.120 The Ride Never Ends,
00:58:45.680 Francis Parker Yockey,
00:58:47.460 Dillabob,
00:58:48.380 Last Place Simp,
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00:58:50.880 Purple Haze.
00:58:52.600 We also have Colin Marriott,
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00:59:15.800 and 55ClubBooks.com.
00:59:19.120 Thank you so much, guys.
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00:59:41.260 We'll be right back
00:59:42.140 with part two
00:59:42.820 together with Sasha Rossmuller.
00:59:44.620 We'll see you on the other side.
01:00:01.540 we'll be right back.
01:00:03.820 Bye-bye.
01:00:05.900 Bye-bye.
01:00:18.660 Bye-bye.
01:00:22.500 Bye-bye.
01:00:22.760 Bye-bye.