Stand on Guard with David Krayden - August 11, 2025


Carney & Starmer's Massive Deception EXPOSED | Stand on Guard


Episode Stats


Length

54 minutes

Words per minute

166.57364

Word count

9,152

Sentence count

2

Harmful content

Misogyny

5

sentences flagged

Toxicity

1

sentences flagged

Hate speech

10

sentences flagged


Summary

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

The intellectual component goes up about a hundred per cent when Neil Oliver joins the show. The intellectual component of the show goes up a hundred percent when Neil joins, and so it was no surprise that when he joined the show, the intellectual component went up about 100 per cent.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
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 welcome back to another episode of stand on guard this is your host david creighton broadcasting to
00:00:06.640 you live just from the ottawa area and we've got a special guest today he's always welcome on this
00:00:14.720 show the intellectual component goes up about a hundred percent when neil oliver joins the show i
00:00:21.120 can't wait to ask neil some questions and just to talk about the world today we'll be right back
00:00:27.760 after this the prime minister lied and his minions continue to lie
00:00:40.480 we need but it's a change
00:00:45.920 but we also need to resolve to resist
00:00:48.240 yes please like the show subscribe if you haven't already and resubscribe if youtube
00:01:01.200 is taking you off the roster happens all the time so without further ado i want to introduce
00:01:09.840 who really needs no introduction he's he has been on the show a new innumerable times actually probably
00:01:16.320 four or five times and it's always a pleasure to have my my good friend from across the ocean neil
00:01:23.600 oliver archaeologist author pundit and i say philosopher i think you always have incredibly
00:01:32.800 insightful observations to make about current events and i don't think that's something everybody can
00:01:38.960 say but you you certainly can it's always a pleasure to have you on here neil so
00:01:45.280 i know things are crazy in the uk right now and we'll get into some of that but i wanted to share this
00:01:50.640 with you just in case you wonder how crazy things are in canada well this is the mayor of toronto
00:01:57.680 olivia chow announcing a new mental health program for the subway and i'm not making this up yeah so
00:02:06.720 here come and say it here yeah yeah yeah
00:02:11.760 thank you folks just want to let you know we had an incident
00:02:15.280 at diana and queenski due to that phrase was all three car was holding we are bringing in mental health
00:02:24.400 worker into the tuc system so that when people are having our mental health issues we can deal with it
00:02:33.040 very quickly so that's coming in in the end of the year because hey sometimes people have mental health
00:02:42.000 issues right they need to be helped that is life yeah i know oh here it is
00:02:52.560 so i think the first people the mental health team should visit is olivia chow for coming up with this 1.00
00:02:57.760 because you probably won't be able to find a cop anywhere on the subway or the bus system in toronto
00:03:03.840 they're always at churches evicting people from church and blocking the door that's what the cops do
00:03:09.440 in toronto now and of course to do their best to ignore violent protests everywhere in that city
00:03:16.080 so that's where we are in canada here and but before we get into politics of the hour you were
00:03:23.200 recently in crete this really intrigued me because i've always been fascinated by the island because it
00:03:28.720 has such an ancient history and of course played very prominently in the second world war one of the
00:03:35.680 bloodiest airborne invasions in history when the germans took it over from the british moment very 1.00
00:03:42.480 very very for a very short time but what were you doing in crete i'm fascinated to find out well nothing
00:03:51.040 more uh dramatic than uh than a short family holiday uh myself uh my wife uh trudy and our two boys uh just had the
00:04:01.040 opportunity to get away to the sun for a while if you live in uh if you live in scotland uh the opportunity
00:04:07.680 to get some uh to get some sunshine uh is something an opportunity eagerly to be taken um and so we were
00:04:17.120 it's it's that place uh on the island that we've we've now visited three times simply because the
00:04:24.400 facilities the and the location and the climate and the and the available uh restaurants and so on
00:04:30.960 provide us with a perfect brief uh respite from from reality i suppose and we just go and we read books
00:04:39.920 and we we eat some nice food and we we have conversations together and swim in the sea
00:04:45.680 uh it was it was no more uh no more dedicated a project than that
00:04:49.920 uh okay so no no tomb of the minotaur or anything like that we've done a bit of that we we visited
00:04:57.600 on a previous visit to crete we've been uh we've been at knossos uh and we've visited the the
00:05:03.920 archaeological remains there uh if indeed that is the palace of kenosis still up for debate um but uh my
00:05:13.760 my youngest son is particularly fascinated with uh he likes he loves uh greek mythology greek legend he
00:05:22.240 also loves norse legend uh and norse mythology and he's very well aware of the of the of the crossover
00:05:30.320 and the and the relationship between the two uh he's you know so he's well aware of crete being the
00:05:37.120 the origin point for zeus uh and a great deal of other uh greek legend besides so there has been
00:05:44.320 and there is when we're there you know the conversation's peppered with that kind of
00:05:47.760 reference so uh it's uh it's def it's always enriching it's a i i feel like i don't know i
00:05:54.640 feel a real empathy with greece no reason to i've got no family there no blood from there but anytime
00:06:01.120 on there compared i mean i love i love spain i love italy uh you know i love the meds but i do feel
00:06:08.320 i always feel a sense of homecoming when i go to the greek islands but i'm sure it's just something
00:06:12.640 that i've taken as a figment of my own imagination well i i have never been to greece or crete i've been
00:06:20.720 to parts of europe and never gotten there i always wanted to i i'm also fascinated by greek mythology
00:06:26.960 and the the history is just so so incredible wanted to ask you about i just noticed this the
00:06:33.680 other day and the story is probably two days old so i'm sure that's over 500 000 now this is a
00:06:40.400 petition uh going on to have a new general election in in britain how seriously is this being taken and
00:06:49.360 do you think it's it's possible that might actually have a of an outcome of of having a new election
00:06:55.120 uh well my instinct is i very much doubt that um it's such a that's such a uh uh a conundrum for me
00:07:06.480 because i have long since abandoned any faith in democracy as it manifests in the uk in the west
00:07:17.120 i have no faith whatever and there being any meaningful distinction between so-called political
00:07:22.640 parties i subscribe to the concept of the uniparty uh i do not accept for a moment that the figures
00:07:30.000 were invited to entertain as leaders as prime ministers as foreign secretaries as chancellors
00:07:36.080 of the exchequer and so they're mere factotums they're just they're just actors uh mouthing words
00:07:42.480 penned and and written for them by others they the the hold no power they they perform no meaningful
00:07:47.680 function it's all part of a pantomime of distraction that we're invited to watch uh i i i see no point
00:07:55.280 whatever in engaging with that uh corrupted uh process oh so even whether to be uh uh a call and
00:08:06.240 for a general election like you know let's say whatever i don't know the king stepped in in some
00:08:10.880 hypothetical situation and and and dissolved parliament or whatever it would mean nothing
00:08:18.800 i believe it would mean absolutely nothing whoever whoever was brought in whoever we ended up with
00:08:24.960 if if starmer was to exit stage left pursued by a bear uh but whoever came from the other side would
00:08:32.960 be more of the same uh it's a completely it's a completely uh pointless process to me i i don't
00:08:41.120 know actually now i'm so i'm so imbued with cynicism now that i don't know if or when general elections
00:08:48.320 and suffrage and the vote ever really mattered i don't know if there was ever real choice i don't
00:08:53.120 know if you were ever actually i i suspect in the same way that you know that it would appear that in
00:08:59.200 the great conflicts of the last few hundred years uh the same the same people have financed and
00:09:06.320 supported both sides or all sides in the conflict uh i think the same thing applies to the so-called
00:09:13.920 political process in the countries of the west i think it's it's an illusion if you think that you
00:09:20.320 can make a difference by selecting a different party selecting a different leader that said there is
00:09:27.840 absolutely no doubt i think that that uh that keir starmer is is widely reviled
00:09:34.960 as prime minister uh you know there's a there's probably a a short leap of contenders for for most
00:09:41.600 unpopular british prime minister uh he'll certainly be up there uh in living memory he's probably the most
00:09:49.120 unpopular uh prime minister by a by a margin but whether he's the most unpopular ever i couldn't
00:09:56.560 actually say but there's definitely there it's all part of of what is actually i would say a choreographed
00:10:03.840 uh atmosphere at the moment in britain which is being driven by propaganda and and bad actors and
00:10:10.800 and malice aforethought to create division uh to split people and fracture society every which way
00:10:17.840 uh this is a this is yet another manifestation of that broader project to create uh unhappiness
00:10:24.640 discontent anxiety calls for revolution calls for civil unrest call for civil war it's all just it's
00:10:32.400 all just parts in the mix but you know it comes as no surprise to me to learn that you can put a petition
00:10:38.880 in play and get figures like that back saying we want no more of him we want something else but
00:10:44.400 there's something else that would ever be offered is more of the same so are you are you disappointed
00:10:51.680 in the reform party and nigel farage because i haven't seen farage get angry about much
00:11:00.960 he was furious about not being allowed to smoke anymore in london pubs and he was on the air
00:11:06.480 constantly about that for about a week but he really was upset when when when one of the labor ministers
00:11:13.360 associated him with the infamous jimmy savile and you know a lot of canadians don't even know who
00:11:20.720 jimmy savile is but and i've been following uh uk television for years and i know he was a fixture
00:11:28.080 that was protected by the royal family the labor party and the conservative party of successive
00:11:33.680 governments protected this guy's behind and perhaps i shouldn't it's that working but they they
00:11:40.560 intervened to make sure he was safe from prosecution from arrest from any charges and he died peacefully
00:11:48.880 without ever having to answer for his crimes or for that matter the things he had he had done to abuse
00:11:56.320 children throughout his entire career but i found this interesting that nigel farage really got upset
00:12:01.920 about this and seemed to put him back in the news for a while but i'm a proponent of the uniparty too
00:12:08.560 uh neil and i see it not only in the uk increasingly in canada where it's hard to differentiate between
00:12:14.960 the conservatives and the liberals and unfortunately i'm i am worried that it's also occurring in the
00:12:22.320 united states there's incredible lack of distinction now between republics and democrats on some key issues
00:12:28.880 and donald trump has disappointed me uh frequently over the last six months but would you say farage has
00:12:40.800 provided any sort of opportunity for off for real opposition in in britain and has is he really an
00:12:49.920 alternative or is this going to be more of the same if in fact and i don't imagine he's going to win the
00:12:55.760 next election but if he did what would it be a real change or or is he part of the uniparty as well
00:13:03.280 i think um it's i think it's more helpful in a way well i i i it doesn't matter to me who it is i
00:13:13.120 mean you've put you've bracketed together there inadvertently or deliberately nigel farage and and
00:13:18.880 donald trump you know two very different entities however i would say that they are beset by the same
00:13:25.280 fundamental problem it doesn't matter it doesn't matter for a person stands up at a podium and says
00:13:31.840 they're going to do if or when elected because the system within which they choose to operate is
00:13:40.080 corrupted at the subatomic level making it it doesn't matter who they are it doesn't matter if
00:13:45.760 you're donald trump you know a billionaire you know a reality tv star you know a businessman
00:13:54.000 looking after massive construction projects in the united in new york and other places in the united
00:13:58.880 states of america or if you're nigel farage you know from the from the financial world from the money 0.98
00:14:04.320 markets uh you know he waged uh he waged a very successful absolutely an incredibly successful decades
00:14:11.680 long campaign to get britain out of the european union and on paper at least he succeeded in that
00:14:20.080 he pushed it all the way to the referendum which returned the the vote the largest plebiscite in
00:14:25.840 british history that britain should leave the the european union the fact is it never happened
00:14:32.960 it you know the horse fell before it crossed the before it crossed the finishing line uh and brexit
00:14:40.400 never happened not in any meaningful sense but we don't need to get into that but i don't think it
00:14:47.680 whether you cannot if you if you get in order to uh get to the point where you can be elected
00:14:55.520 i think metaphorically speaking at least you have to have sold your soul to the system
00:15:02.480 no one gets in donald trump you know he he he swam in that toxic goldfish bowl
00:15:10.080 became part of the toxic goldfish bowl in order to become president of the united states for the second
00:15:15.360 time uh and it nigel farage would not be able to proceed and would not become prime minister of britain
00:15:22.160 under the current system you know without breathing toxic water through his gills it's not you cannot
00:15:29.760 fix the the system in the west cannot be fixed from the inside i mean i keep i keep saying well i've
00:15:38.000 said to people numerous times now over the christmas period there in this house we had a problem with a
00:15:44.080 broken macerator um and people may or may not know that a macerator is a bit of kit that enables you to
00:15:50.960 have a a a toilet somewhere where maybe one wasn't designed to be uh it's it's a it's a it's a an
00:15:58.640 intermediary measure that that does the job for you of preparing of preparing waste for the for the for
00:16:05.280 the plumbing um i was broke and we had in and i'll spare you the detail but it was while i was fixing it
00:16:13.280 with my dad-in-law that occurred to me that you can't fix that from the inside because from on the inside
00:16:20.160 of the macerator you're literally uh submerged in the worst things you can imagine the only way we
00:16:27.360 were able to fix it was simply to disconnect it take it out throw it away and bring in another one
00:16:33.840 you can't it's only from the outside of this dreadful system that we have which is worse than
00:16:40.240 a blocked and broken macerator it's only by throwing it away and bringing in something else
00:16:47.520 abandoning the idea altogether of having of having a toilet and bathroom in that part of your house
00:16:53.360 you know it's that kind of root and branch repair and and uh contemplation of reality that you're up
00:16:59.600 against so does nigel farage uh represent real change no not because of necessarily any failing on
00:17:08.640 his part or any lack of authenticity or any or not having his heart in the right place but as soon as you
00:17:13.920 step into that macerator you are you are submerged in filth and you cannot function so whether you're
00:17:22.720 nigel farage donald trump alexander the great or ronald mcdonald you cannot do anything meaningful
00:17:33.600 inside that hopelessly corrupted system it doesn't matter who it is it's not nigel's fault it's not 1.00
00:17:39.520 donald's fault well that's a that is a fascinating analysis now i know what a macerator is that i didn't
00:17:47.680 know what that you don't want to know david you don't want to know but there you go but we are we
00:17:53.520 our electoral system is a broken macerator no more and more left one big shithouse yeah
00:18:00.320 okay this is a fascinating clip i want and i'm sure you've probably seen this but this to me
00:18:07.280 illustrates how politicians can just blindly lie through their teeth about the state of affairs in
00:18:13.680 their country and this is keir starmer sitting down with a little tete-a-tete news conference with
00:18:18.880 donald trump and donald trump of course asked him about censorship in in the uk and it's not a problem
00:18:25.520 you have a successful social media site there are new powers here to censor your site state's
00:18:33.440 mandated to censor my site to censor your site and twitter and facebook i mean truth is that okay i
00:18:39.200 don't think he's going to censor because i say only good things will you please uncensor my site
00:18:44.880 we're not censoring anyone uh we've got some measures which are there to protect children
00:18:49.520 in particular from sites like um suicide um sites we've had too many uh cases in the united kingdom
00:18:56.480 of um young children taking their own lives and when you look through their social media they've been
00:19:01.920 accessing um uh sites which talk about suicide and um you know encouraging if you like children down
00:19:10.800 that road and that is what we want to stop nothing about censoring but that treats all adults like 0.57
00:19:15.920 this country is the proud uh free speech in this country for a very long time we're very very proud
00:19:21.600 of it well apparently not very proud of it he seems to be aware of the magna carta i think that's what
00:19:28.160 he's referring to when he says free speech has been around for a long time yet but and not uh not much
00:19:34.480 longer with keir starmer in charge what about these thousands of people that were thrown in jail
00:19:39.520 for writing posts about mass migration that they didn't quite agree with but what about they actually
00:19:45.440 had to let real criminals out of jail to make room for for the so-called how did he put it the
00:19:52.480 keyboard warriors that he wanted to jail i this is just absolute prevarication this is just just
00:19:59.760 outrageous modacity and he says it with a straight face and you know i don't know if donald trump's
00:20:06.160 even aware that thousands of people literally thousands of people thrown in jail for posts on
00:20:11.600 social media certainly care starmer's aware of it he was all behind it but you find it amazing that
00:20:18.160 politicians can lie with that kind of ease i just found this incredible it is barefaced lying uh it's 0.53
00:20:26.800 it's very hard it's very hard to watch uh for for for numerous reasons um because a person a normal a
00:20:36.480 reasonable person broadly speaking uh when lying you know that thing about you know if you you know
00:20:46.160 you're well you know to paraphrase it it's very complicated if you start lying because you've
00:20:50.560 constantly got to remember how you lied before in order to keep lying you know it becomes a more and
00:20:56.160 more uh twisted gordian knot of a thing whereas if you if you just tell the truth you don't have to
00:21:00.880 remember anything if you just tell the truth in the moment then it's you know you don't have to you
00:21:05.360 you don't have to run it through your self-preservation filter but it's amazing to watch someone who is in
00:21:12.320 a very public position saying things when instantaneously people can remember because
00:21:21.360 they've seen it and and the receipts so to speak are there the clips are there of the same person
00:21:27.920 having diametrically opposed opinions that they do not refer to when stating their late when when
00:21:33.520 spouting their latest lie you watch and you think how can you possibly be operating as though we don't
00:21:39.760 remember what you said before and i think occam's razor suggests that the the only conclusion to be
00:21:47.120 drawn is that they know it doesn't matter that they can just keep on lying because there are no
00:21:52.400 consequences they're never going to be brought to book for any of it and they don't live in any kind
00:21:58.480 of ordered reality in which the past matters they just they just see the next thing that gets them
00:22:05.440 through the next five minutes of interview i thought it was i think it's worth pointing out actually to
00:22:12.080 the viewers that the voice that you had asking the question that initiated that a little back and forth
00:22:18.560 between uh donald trump and kirsten was uh uh one of my gb news colleagues a good friend of mine by now
00:22:25.920 uh beverly turner uh who was out in in uh who was in that who's in that situation as part of that press
00:22:32.480 pack and it was it was conspicuous the way her her voice cut through you know like like lemon juice
00:22:39.360 through through fat in a dish that her voice in more than one instance cut through and she was asking
00:22:45.760 questions that that were then that went viral because she was going right to the heart of the
00:22:50.640 matter in a way that the rest of the jaded and you'll you know largely corrupted and irrelevant press
00:22:56.160 pack they couldn't even hope to but you know that she was cutting through with with some of that but 0.99
00:23:01.600 you know that's you know that's another story for another day but they lie because there are no
00:23:06.720 consequences it doesn't matter you know gone are the days when uh you know a a serving politician or
00:23:14.480 far less a prime minister would be caught lying and would have to fall on his or her sword those
00:23:21.520 days are gone it doesn't matter they lie with impunity because there are no and will be no
00:23:27.120 consequences if and when keir starmer goes as we were discussing previously it won't be because well
00:23:35.920 it won't be because of any decision made by him it will be it will be dictated by by forces above his pay
00:23:42.000 grade who will say right that's you know that's it that's you know you're being written out of the
00:23:46.560 soap opera tonight uh here's your uh you know here are your departing lines and this is what you're
00:23:51.520 going to say and then and then you go away but and but once he's gone consequences will there be none
00:23:57.520 you know he'll go off and do something else equally meaningless but probably lucrative
00:24:03.200 and they're they're secure in that knowledge that what they say doesn't matter because at the end of
00:24:09.680 the day each of them doesn't matter you're watching a soap opera it doesn't matter what
00:24:15.440 keir starmer says whether or not he tells the truth because truth or lies he's just an actor he's
00:24:21.840 just a factotum he's of no relevance to the to the to the unfolding reality in which the rest of us live
00:24:29.440 he's just part of the soap opera pantomime that's that some are invited to watch and take seriously
00:24:36.880 the online safety act continues to unfold of course and my prediction is that mark kearney
00:24:46.240 our current prime minister will introduce similar legislation we already had the online harms act
00:24:53.520 it failed because we had an election so it died with the last parliament but i predict mark kearney will
00:25:01.440 change the name of this legislation to exactly what they have in the uk the online safety act because
00:25:06.560 that sounds a little less dangerous than the online harms act and i think that was fairly discredited
00:25:13.760 while it was alive that bill was alive so i think he'll change the name of it and but it will be the
00:25:19.840 same bill that justin trudeau introduced and it will have a hate hate thought or thought crimes component
00:25:25.760 in it which makes it even worse than what you guys have but what is this latest wrinkle here with the
00:25:32.960 age of verification i mean there are millions of people trying to get vpn sites now to avoid this
00:25:39.440 so how is this going to facilitate more government surveillance in in the uk well it's you know it's
00:25:45.440 all part of the it's all part of the relentless march towards ultimately digital identification
00:25:49.760 you know where you won't be you won't be able to do anything you won't be able to shop travel do
00:25:53.120 anything without without the involvement of your digital identification which will be tied to your
00:25:58.880 your um your your report card which decides moment by moment whether or not you're the right kind of
00:26:04.240 person to be doing whatever it is you propose to do and and you can be stopped from from so doing
00:26:09.360 and this this uh it's just as it's just another step along the way this idea that you have to um
00:26:16.480 reveal yourself that's not an unfortunate term to use in the context of uh what they're talking about
00:26:22.640 but you you just have to you have to have a a verified uh online identity it demonstrates that
00:26:30.960 you're old enough to view the whatever the content is that people have got in mind but it's just an
00:26:36.720 intermediary step on the way towards uh pinning everyone but one of the things that we all learned
00:26:42.080 to see you and i david and many other people besides one of the one of the concepts that we all
00:26:47.920 internalized was it's never about what they say it's about you know the agenda 2030 is not about
00:26:55.920 saving the planet you know and the ukraine war has got nothing to do with preserving democracy in ukraine
00:27:04.240 or or or in or in the west um you know and the the the debacle of of the of the so-called pandemic
00:27:11.280 was nothing to do with public health it's never about what they say it's about and so they've got the
00:27:16.480 temerity you keir starmer was spouting the same nonsense there they've got the temerity to suggest
00:27:22.320 that what they're doing is to protect children it's no more than using children as human shields
00:27:28.160 metaphorically speaking they're hiding behind they're hiding behind the idea that it's over
00:27:34.080 we've got to do this to you know because otherwise little johnny's gonna look at a suicide site and take
00:27:39.760 his own life absolute nonsense it's got nothing whatsoever to do with that it's they're just using
00:27:45.360 children as human shields so that they can bring in censorship and what it's about you know it's
00:27:50.400 never about what they say it's about what it's actually about is the fact that the the the official
00:27:55.200 narrative the the the entity for which keir starmer and his ilk are meaningless uh two-dimensional fact
00:28:04.480 totems what it's about what it's about is that the the narrative has completely failed
00:28:10.560 too many people now we've passed the tipping point where too many people are looking on at events and
00:28:16.880 seeing them for what they are and and the internet and social media and the rest have hitherto provided
00:28:23.840 millions billions of people with the opportunity to say i can see what's going on there i can see the
00:28:30.640 little the little man behind the curtain pretending to be the wizard of oz i know that this isn't how it's
00:28:36.640 the truth of this is altogether different from the way it's being pushed and that's the truth
00:28:41.760 that is the truth and because the official narrative as professed by the likes of keir starmer has utterly
00:28:48.240 failed they have no debate they can't engage meaningfully and challenge far less overcome the
00:28:53.520 arguments that are being arranged against their policies they simply have to shut it down they're
00:28:57.920 just playing whack-a-mole all the time with the truth and they've got to censor they've got to stop
00:29:03.920 people talking because they don't want to hear the truth that's all it is and so the online safety
00:29:11.040 bill is not about what they say it's about the online safety bill is simply a sledgehammer to crack
00:29:17.840 a walnut they're just using they're just censoring people because they've lost the argument and they
00:29:23.440 no longer what they have nothing truthful to say and so they don't want to hear the truth in return
00:29:30.240 they've got to shut it all down that's all it's about you don't need to read the fine print of
00:29:35.440 what they say it's about because it's never about what they say it's about yeah that's that that is so
00:29:42.880 true this it's it's it's like they're speaking a different language and we're supposed to we have to
00:29:50.000 interpret what they're what they're really saying and you mentioned ukraine i wanted to touch on that
00:29:55.200 because of course there's a summit coming up apparently between president donald trump and
00:30:02.480 i have a president russian president vladimir putin and zelinski might be watching from the
00:30:07.600 hallway someplace but i don't think he's going to be sitting with the two of them however
00:30:14.160 donald trump is again this whiplash foreign policy of his one month he's he's giving arms to ukraine the
00:30:21.600 next month he's talking peace uh one month it's it's it's his war the the next month it's biden's
00:30:28.080 war he's been flip-flopping on ukraine ever since he came into office looks right now it seems like he
00:30:36.000 wants this thing to go away and if vladimir putin essentially gets what he's asking for right now which
00:30:44.560 is ukraine should not be a member of nato obviously should never have even asked nato should never have
00:30:50.960 offered and i think russia will probably end up with the donbass region at the very least after
00:30:56.400 this war they they have they're not going to walk away and leave all of that land with ukraine and so 1.00
00:31:04.000 i think probably donald trump as far as i can glean anyway is going to agree to that but the european
00:31:12.000 union is already saying we're going to stand steadfast with ukraine on this and of course we've heard
00:31:17.120 keir starmer and emmanuel macron talk about going to war with russia over over ukraine i don't think
00:31:24.000 i don't think there's any stomach for war with the european people do you think there's a remote
00:31:30.480 possibility of the european union or pieces thereof such as the uk or france or both actually moving
00:31:38.960 against russia if if they disagree with the results of this summit absolutely not absolutely
00:31:45.440 not the remotest possibility there are many reasons why not you know not you know
00:31:52.960 if you listen to sage commentators you know of you know the likes of colonel douglas mcgregor
00:31:59.120 scott ritter and people and you i know all manner of all manner of people john meersheimer
00:32:05.040 uh jeffrey sacks your analysts who have looked at this who have been watching the situation
00:32:09.600 commenting upon it since it began you know america can't is no it cannot uh take on any more kinetic
00:32:17.520 war it doesn't it's it's it's shot all its bullets and fired all its missiles it's going to take it
00:32:22.640 years to catch up with with just the basics i mean they're practically at the point where they don't
00:32:26.480 have enough shoelaces for people's boots then you get to the europeans you get france and britain
00:32:31.920 absolutely britain's got more horses than it's got tanks it's got no aircraft for its aircraft
00:32:36.480 carriers it's it's army its standing army would fit inside a you know a mid-table football stadium
00:32:44.080 in the united kingdom there's hardly anybody there so the very idea is nonsensical and then of course
00:32:48.800 they have they have the temerity to to use the c word which in this context is conscription you know
00:32:54.160 where they talk about you know the youngsters of of britain and other european countries having to face
00:32:58.400 the the prospect of you know standing two without with a rifle bayonet fixed to go in and get
00:33:03.520 vaporized on the whatever wherever the russians decided to vaporize them it's up it's never going
00:33:09.200 to happen but i suppose more fundamental the bigger problem that the that the baddies have is that
00:33:15.760 the the you know the globalist project for decades has been predicated on persuading people
00:33:21.120 that there's no such thing as countries no such thing as nation states that it's an outmoded idea that
00:33:25.920 that everybody belongs anywhere you know that no one has a place to call home why should they
00:33:31.760 here in britain we've been bombarded with the idea that our history is shameful and imperial colonialist
00:33:38.400 racist xenophobic all of the rest of it you've got second third fourth generations coming through 0.77
00:33:44.000 growing up now into adulthood who have internalized that and and then late in the day your people like
00:33:50.160 keir starmer and others suggest that that teenagers should fight for their country you know when
00:33:56.240 they're when they're when they're being told and their parents were told and their grandparents were
00:34:00.080 that their country was a shameful place stand up for what defend what you would those those people
00:34:07.200 who've internalized all that shame and self-loathing about britain why why would i defend it for the
00:34:13.600 same reason that people don't assimilate with britain why would you assimilate with a with a place that's been that's
00:34:18.640 so ashamed of itself why would you go and join a country where the thing to do in order to assimilate 0.97
00:34:23.120 is to think that you've joined a you know a country that's had its day and ought to be replaced by
00:34:27.440 by something better more modern and more dei you know so the the the fundamental impossibilities
00:34:34.960 of getting a a european british population mobilized against russia it's a complete non-starter
00:34:44.320 and you mentioned the fact that there's this much vaunted conversation going to take place between
00:34:51.200 president donald trump of the united states of america and and uh and vladimir putin of russia
00:34:56.880 you know to you know to to establish a peace for the longest time the likes of us were talking about
00:35:03.280 how whatever was happening whatever else was happening in in ukraine it was a proxy war
00:35:07.280 you know it was it was nato open brackets the united states of america close brackets
00:35:13.840 you know prosecuting an intention to whatever take down regime change balkanize the russian federation
00:35:21.040 whatever and but if you said it was a proxy war you were you were ridiculed and and or shut down
00:35:27.120 and yet look what's happening who's going to sit down to discuss peace it's not vladimir zelensky of
00:35:32.960 ukraine and vladimir putin it's his dad you know it's his boss which you know it might i suppose it
00:35:42.960 might have been biden but you know the the musical chairs moved and the you know that and the music
00:35:47.360 stopped again and the person that sat down and that's that in that seat or took that parcel in
00:35:52.080 the past the parcel game was donald trump he's going to go and discuss the peace with putin because it was
00:35:56.640 a war between america slash nato whatever and russia ukraine was just a proxy just another fact
00:36:02.640 totem everything everything about it it's very i find it increasingly difficult to to watch it the
00:36:10.720 nonsensical lying nature of everything we're being told makes it very hard to watch you know you can
00:36:21.280 only hang on to the plot of a movie if it if it continues to make sense yes when you get to the
00:36:28.560 point where it's just gobbledygook and you can see the sets and you can see the director with his
00:36:34.480 clipboard and his megaphone on the edge of the shot saying what's supposed to happen next talk about
00:36:40.800 suspension of disbelief you just can't and it's so important that then i think is that a tactic
00:36:47.040 are they just making it so ridiculous that people drift away from it because it's unwatchable so you
00:36:52.560 think no i've got to concentrate i have to remain focused on on at least the fundamental importance 0.82
00:36:58.880 of this situation because it's absolutely nonsense it makes no sense somebody somewhere make it make
00:37:08.320 sense everything you factor into the epstein files the diddy tapes that you know the the you know the
00:37:14.480 the invasion of the purple spiders from mars you know that's that's that's next on the scheduler part
00:37:19.120 is to have everybody look at everything about it let's go and do a live broadcast from fort knox and
00:37:25.200 see where all the gold is never happens it's all it's all such an omni shambles that it's abs it's
00:37:35.920 as i say it's becoming increasingly difficult to watch if you're looking for sense in it you're not going
00:37:40.800 to find any because it doesn't make any sense beyond the fact that what you've got out there is a clique of
00:37:45.440 very very wealthy and powerful people moving heaven and earth to try and remain wealthy and in control
00:37:51.200 and increasingly they're sliding about on the oil slick of their own creation yeah and that's i think
00:37:58.720 that's what makes us so not only comical at times but infuriating because ukraine is literally
00:38:06.000 annihilating its impo its population with this we're the down to 16 year olds and people with down
00:38:11.760 syndrome now yeah i mean yeah that's important let me let me do let me say i mean i've been being
00:38:17.120 deliberately flippant there but the dread reality is that there are a million you're a million down
00:38:23.760 we as a species are a million down in ukraine you know and we came out of the the first world war
00:38:32.000 you know the millions the tens of millions that were that were that were pushed through the meat grinder
00:38:37.280 then and then another hundred million were pushed through the meat grinder in world war ii
00:38:42.720 you know and and on and on and on korean war vietnam war war on terror all of it
00:38:49.360 ukraine just being the latest hellish iteration of that and what you're being made to confront 1.00
00:38:54.560 their situation in gaza included is just that the the people that are intent on retaining wealth and
00:39:00.800 control will stop at nothing and the death toll is irrelevant to them and yes in the specific
00:39:09.360 context of whatever happens next in ukraine it's an obscenity that's a you know another another the
00:39:16.960 much the much repeated almost cliched expression about the flower of a generation that was that was
00:39:22.480 crushed in the 20th century well we we were told that we were learning lessons as a species about all of
00:39:29.920 that it turns out no the lesson is it happened before and it'll keep on happening because the
00:39:36.160 meat grinder delivers for these people yeah and i i wasn't for a minute suggesting you were you were
00:39:42.240 dismissing the the losses here but people are making hundreds of billions of dollars off of this war
00:39:49.200 and and they really don't give a damn how many people are getting killed these are first world war
00:39:55.040 numbers these the losses are something out of the first world war and it's incredible to me
00:40:00.880 that nobody seems to think this really matters just keep it going because the object of course isn't
00:40:05.360 isn't to win just to keep just to keep the war going but i before i before i run out of time i wanted to
00:40:11.520 show you this because this is so bizarre and it shows you how people you thought were relatively normal
00:40:18.960 can say the craziest things in this atmosphere and it's of course mike huckabee who i used to have a
00:40:25.200 lot of time for uh i used to think mike was a common sense guy and of course now he's the u.s
00:40:31.920 ambassador to israel and get this huckabee cites the dresden bombing to defend israel's gaza offensive
00:40:41.040 bad enough that you're defending the occupation of gaza and the annihilation of an entire group of people 0.56
00:40:48.880 but to suggest dresden it justifies it this was one of the most horrific acts of the second world
00:40:55.440 war committed by the allies there was no military value in destroying dresden literally a month and
00:41:01.040 a half before the war ended what 60 70 000 people died in the in the firestorm it the town was just
00:41:09.680 one of the oldest cities in germany it was purely vindictive and just huge huge losses of human life
00:41:17.760 for absolutely no reason but here's mike huckabee an evangelical christian pastor who's suggesting
00:41:26.560 good good for israel because it's just like dresden and i don't know how to what what i could compare
00:41:32.800 that to it's almost like saying good for israel it reminds me about switch and it's incredible how
00:41:39.600 this the lack of coherent thought amongst politicians today is advertised and of course i don't think
00:41:47.680 mike's going to going to uh excuse these remarks i don't think he's going to come out and say you know
00:41:53.920 i really didn't mean he'll double down on it because they don't think like normal people anymore and i i
00:42:02.480 just i just found that to be absolutely absurd but horrifically absurd
00:42:06.640 i i i've all i've said for years completely unconnected to any of this that as a as a reader
00:42:17.360 you know i've you know reading is really what i mostly do uh and my life was changed in my whatever
00:42:25.120 age i was when i read it by slaughterhouse five a novel by kurt vonnegut yes i know and
00:42:32.960 my life i've said that before and i mean it with it's not hyperbole my my my perspective my my the way
00:42:41.200 in which i viewed the very texture of reality was altered by that relatively slim novel slaughterhouse
00:42:49.680 five and the the book it very much orbits around the fire bombing of dresden and kurt vonnegut was was
00:42:59.200 witnessed the aftermath of dresden as a as a young soldier in world war ii and clearly his
00:43:07.440 his reality was permanently altered by it and you know i mean i'm not going to start part of i'm not
00:43:12.000 going to start you know offering a synopsis of the novel but the the the means of hero anti-hero of
00:43:17.920 the book he becomes to quote the book unstuck in time he's jolted out of reality and into sort of a
00:43:24.560 parallel reality because of it all because of world war ii because of dresden because of everything
00:43:30.080 that he experiences and you know as you rightly described dresden is an atrocity you know dresden
00:43:37.040 is a war crime you know that there was nobody there there was nothing there was nothing militarily to be
00:43:43.600 gained from from dropping so much high explosive onto that city populated in large part by women and 1.00
00:43:50.480 children and old people it was only to terrify everyone else by the sheer might that was at the
00:43:57.600 disposal of of of of the allies before before the dropping of of uh of the nuke of the atomic bombs
00:44:04.320 and so on and so on and you know in the in the novel you know he writes about you know everywhere
00:44:09.680 they could see what they thought at first were or what the uh vonnegut thought were just logs blackened logs
00:44:17.280 and then he realized that each one of these blackened logs had been a person you know they're
00:44:23.120 just incinerated by it and and that anyone you know huckabee or anybody would would would find
00:44:31.920 a rationale or a justification for invoking dresden as as as being on the side of right
00:44:41.760 as being on the side of morality and and as you see as an evangelical christian you know to imagine
00:44:48.560 you know you're invited to think that he's someone that thinks that that jesus christ is looking over
00:44:53.760 his shoulder and watching what he does and that in the you know so there with him presumably imagining that
00:45:02.560 the omnipresence of his savior that he would invoke dresden as though in his imagination
00:45:10.800 jesus is standing over his right shoulder nodding in approval that's right my boy you've learned the
00:45:16.640 lesson two year two thousand years ago you know i incarnated on this earth uh to show the righteous path
00:45:24.880 and absolutely dresden was a big landmark along the way to where we need to be
00:45:30.000 it beggars belief it's all i can say i i again you know in you one looks on at world events in the hope
00:45:38.880 of making sense of arriving at an understanding and then you see a little snippet like that and you
00:45:45.600 think i do not understand yeah and i want to say to uh kurt vonnegut slaughterhouse fight that was
00:45:55.920 very influential in my life as well i used to defend every american war as being absolutely necessary
00:46:03.520 until i realized the objective was never to win any of these wars it was sell armaments to make money
00:46:10.320 for the military industrial establishment and also an excellent book by david irving on dresden which i
00:46:17.200 read quite some time ago that was decades before he sort of lost his way but he was one of the first
00:46:22.240 british historians to objectively look at dresden as as you said as a war crime and a completely
00:46:28.080 and a completely unnecessary act of hostility and it's certainly uh it's still worth worth reading if
00:46:35.440 you can find it anywhere i know most of his books have been banished can't even get them on the internet
00:46:40.320 anymore but excellent book on dresden and i think that's probably uh all all i wanted to ask you today i
00:46:49.680 maybe one one parting question um do you think king charles will destroy the monarchy by
00:46:58.640 being this globalist emissary and it's amazing to me the comments i get now from people in canada who
00:47:08.560 tell me they're a lifelong monarchist of course i was in the military i had a queen's commission when i was
00:47:14.400 in i was very proud of that and i and i and i was always a monarchist i i don't know if i can call
00:47:21.760 myself that anymore because of the outrageous comments from the from king charles i don't know
00:47:28.080 how long he's going to be there but i think he's done tremendous damage to the monarchy since he
00:47:32.960 he has been there and a lot of people who were very supportive can no longer find themselves in that
00:47:40.880 position because of that they're seeing the royal family literally just fall apart before their eyes
00:47:48.640 i think i think he may just have exposed the reality of it but by accident or by design i don't know
00:47:55.200 uh but i i i don't think i don't think he's doing anything i think it's it's just that whatever
00:48:03.040 there's the the guile or or the intent to to distract from its realities is no longer apparent
00:48:10.480 um you know you you talked about you you mentioned magna carta um we but we live in a it seems to me
00:48:21.040 that we just live in a world of hypothetical possibilities you know that i often i often think
00:48:27.040 of the you know the the declaration of independence and the and the constitution of the united states
00:48:32.800 of america as being a very very good idea for a country except that it's never been done
00:48:40.480 it was it has not been made real yet but it's that doesn't take away from the fact that it's a
00:48:45.680 very very good idea and you know in britain we've got what you know what was traditionally called a
00:48:50.160 constitutional monarchy and if you look at a constitutional monarchy hypothetically it would work
00:48:58.640 if it was if if everyone acted in good faith within within it uh you know i'm no royalist i'm no
00:49:07.120 monarchist never have been you know i look on at the at the fascination that a lot of british people
00:49:11.680 have with the royal family you know buying birthday presents when there's a when there's a royal birthday
00:49:16.560 or you know and the the massive hysteria and delusional behavior that went on around the time
00:49:23.040 of the death of of of diana princess of wales now that was the that was the tragic death of a young
00:49:27.920 woman and a mother and and so on and so on not to not to uh to downplay that but the the levels that
00:49:35.360 the public grieving got around there i i just looked on at with bewildered awe
00:49:41.360 uh but so i've never been i've never been uh a monarchist but but as i say hypothetically a
00:49:48.320 constitutional monarchy could work it could work if you i'm not we don't have time really to go into it
00:49:53.440 but now now i look on at the way in which what the the the reality that that king charles behavior has
00:50:00.720 revealed i think well yes but they you'll get you you'll get your just desserts for revealing that
00:50:07.680 it it is bizarre it is bizarre that in brit in britain you know for all of that time the sax
00:50:14.880 coberg gotha family that that renamed itself windsor at the time of the second world war on the advice of
00:50:22.720 mount baton because the the thinking was that a germanic name was not going to play well with the british
00:50:28.160 public at war with germany hence windsor but but that that family and the generations you know they're
00:50:35.440 all descended from an individual a european nobility john william friso and they're not alone in that
00:50:43.760 you know john william friso is the is the is the uh the progenitor of of a lot of european nobility
00:50:50.080 the windsor family included and and you think about the fact that the the windsor family and
00:50:57.760 the and the the monarchs from within it operating as constitutional monarchs you know what they were
00:51:04.080 able to do you know that in the 1960s all sorts of legislation was being brought in by the british
00:51:10.400 government uh you know to make it um that you couldn't discriminate in the workplace you know you
00:51:16.160 couldn't not employ a black person because it was a black person you know that that that concept was
00:51:23.040 was taken away by that by that legislation you couldn't you couldn't discriminate in that way
00:51:27.520 but on the way to that going on to the statute books when it went across the desk of of queen
00:51:32.400 elizabeth you know she made an exemption for the for the royal households the the properties and the 0.77
00:51:39.440 and the palaces that that were that were hers and that belonged to that family so that that legislation
00:51:45.040 didn't apply to them and and in many many articles of of lead items of legislation were oh that yeah
00:51:52.800 that can apply to everybody else but it doesn't apply to us why doesn't it apply to you well essentially
00:51:57.280 because we're descended from john william friso who's that oh i can barely remember you know the whole
00:52:03.120 thing when it's it's it's an it's an it's all a complicated illusion that was being spun and it kept
00:52:09.440 people persuaded of the of the of the significance of that family and the royal family and how
00:52:14.640 wonderful how lucky we are to have them but because of the way king charles is behaving which is
00:52:19.360 really only a reflection of the reality of the situation suddenly the house lights go up in the
00:52:23.520 theater and what is revealed is the is the clapboard sets the pants that make up the the trap doors the
00:52:32.480 strings all of the all the artifice is just laid bare and now you know under the kingship under the reign
00:52:39.280 of king charles everyone is just invited to look on and go boy were we had they got us there i mean
00:52:48.160 i'm inclined to agree neil i'm coming to that conclusion myself after decades of not really being
00:52:54.880 there but i think i am now and a lot of other canadians are as well but very very eloquently
00:53:00.240 stated as as always and thank you so much for joining me today and uh anytime you want me to appear on
00:53:07.360 gb i'd be happy to do so it's always a pleasure to talk with you i could talk with you for another
00:53:13.200 hour but uh i think i think there's a handful now there's just a handful of people maybe maybe slightly
00:53:22.000 more than five but you know two handful people with whom i find that um i can have conversations
00:53:28.480 now that effectively function for me as therapy sessions which cue the comments in the comments
00:53:34.000 things saying that you need therapy however um i find that i'm with you i'm able to talk
00:53:40.240 the topics that you that chime with you chime with me and the conversation that we have i find a great
00:53:45.680 relief it's it's like i find it like stepping into what they call now and it's a term i don't like a
00:53:51.040 safe place a safe space where i feel like we can just talk we can just talk like men we can just talk like
00:53:58.080 fellow travelers and i find it so anytime anytime you want to uh set aside an hour to chat with me
00:54:05.120 i'll be there i'll be here okay thank you neil and i look forward to getting over to visit you in
00:54:10.800 scotland because i have not been over to europe in too many years now so want to get back and i'd
00:54:16.320 love to drop in and say hi come and break bread have a glass of wine
00:54:20.080 let's stay in touch we just we love you on the station and we watch you faithfully bye for now
00:54:33.520 and of course there's neil oliver my good friend and always a pleasure to talk to neil hope you all
00:54:38.160 enjoyed that conversation that's what it was a conversation delving with a lot of different
00:54:42.640 things and and i appreciate you watching today and we'll be back again tomorrow 10 o'clock we've got
00:54:48.880 other things lined up for the week i'll let you know about those tomorrow bye for now