00:01:50.000And if you have Rumble Premium, you'll get additional content from us that means that we will also be financially supported, as will Crowder, as will Tim Paul.
00:02:02.000Let's get straight into my peculiar country.
00:02:04.000Keir Starmer, you've heard us discuss for his brief tenure as leader of the UK, has resigned and is likely to be replaced if he hasn't been already by another member of the Labour Party that we're going to learn about right now.
00:02:24.000He has got a public profile, he's been the mayor of Greater Manchester for a little while.
00:02:31.000If the resignation of Keir Starmer is cause for celebration, and let's see if, whether it's in your country, the United States of America, or mine, the UK, people have reached the point where they recognize that leadership competitions are casting sessions in effect.
00:02:51.000And with Tucker Carlson recently saying that he's leaving the Republican Party, primarily on the basis of the ongoing war with Iran, but if you listed a number of reasons, do you think that even Mainstream political participants and voters, the electorate at large, are disillusioned and disenchanted with the political system.
00:03:16.000Let me know in the comments and chat what you think.
00:03:19.000Do you think that the mainstream political party era is over in the same way that blockchain currency means that fiat currency will be challenged?
00:03:27.000In the same way that independent media means that.
00:03:32.000That mainstream media and centralized media, which we've come to recognize as primarily one propaganda and two.
00:03:39.000Just as amplification for product placement.
00:03:41.000And, you know, we do adverts on this channel, but, you know, it's hardly the same thing, is it?
00:03:46.000A hair tonic here, some Methylene Blue there.
00:03:58.000If you want the audio book, download it for free.
00:04:00.000We've got motivations that go beyond money, but this is the story of how I came to Christ, how Christ came to me, how I went from being new age and a worshiper of self and the system to awakening in Christ.
00:04:13.000I'm still, in some ways, pretty broken.
00:04:16.000But salvation is in Christ and it's available for you, and it's not what you've been told it is.
00:04:21.000It's a mysterious and powerful thing that will help you in the coming years.
00:04:26.000Let me know what you think if you've already got the book.
00:04:28.000And if you're in the UK, you're going to struggle to get it because they're going out of their way to make it difficult to get hold of.
00:04:33.000Maybe because the UK is a kind of peculiar tin pot despot WEF pilot scheme for global imperialism.
00:04:45.000In short, Destabilised the nation with conflict and constant social conflagration.
00:04:52.000In the UK, currently, it's primarily, it seems at least, focused on migration.
00:04:57.000There's a lot of tension around the rape gang scandals.
00:05:00.000Keir Starmer was dreadfully unpopular.
00:05:03.000People seem disenchanted, disillusioned, feel like Brexit didn't deliver.
00:05:07.000I think that the UK has never been in such a desperate situation.
00:05:12.000Will Andy Burnham, for that is the name of the new man being prepped for leadership of the Labour Party, make the difference that's required?
00:05:19.000Or does the system sustain itself and merely change the outer nodes or the outer avatars of its power in order that we can sort of stay somewhat interested in it?
00:05:31.000Let's learn about, first of all, the prime ministers the UK's had in the last seven years.
00:05:41.000There they are, just dancing for your amusement.
00:05:44.000And this is what Babylon B, that's how their take on it.
00:05:49.000And here is a mainstream media outlet discussing the change.
00:05:53.000Andy Burnham, so called King of the North, made an almost regal procession southwards.
00:05:59.000His train tracked from Manchester to Euston, where he dodged waiting crowds and sped off in a cab, arriving in Westminster to be sworn in as Makerfield's latest MP.
00:06:30.000He's probably quite an affable individual.
00:06:33.000I saw the former leader of the Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, talking about him briefly.
00:06:37.000Jeremy Corbyn was at least a man of strong, vivid ideals that you could either agree with or disagree with, but you couldn't really contend with the idea that he had them.
00:06:45.000I also saw Andrew Neil, former editor of the Sunday Times, talking about him.
00:06:49.000These two people from diverse backgrounds, Andrew Neil, fundamentally, I suppose, conservative, and of course, Jeremy Corbyn, a socialist, agreed that Andy Burnham doesn't have an explicit political agenda.
00:07:00.000I saw a lot of people posting that he's another one of those speakers that has appeared at the WF.
00:07:05.000That doesn't automatically mean that he's not a good person.
00:07:08.000It just means, in all likelihood, he's safely curtailed within the kind of purview and mindset that the establishment can easily accommodate.
00:07:19.000Not for a second suggesting that he isn't a nice human being.
00:07:22.000Keir Starmer's a nice person, I'm sure.
00:07:25.000I don't know that in their post Epstein file era, we have to assume that every single one of these people is a rampant Satanist and paedophile.
00:07:35.000Maybe some of them are, maybe some of them ain't.
00:07:38.000I actually don't feel in the case of UK politics that we're dealing with a nexus of real power.
00:07:44.000More a superficial glaze over an atrophying empire that's only significant contribution to current global events is that the City of London itself can house a set of financial powers and interests.
00:07:57.000I feel that also, in all likelihood, there's a kind of genealogy of power that was transferred from the United Kingdom to the United States at some point around, I don't know, the First and Second World War.
00:08:07.000That real power is not the power that you can access with the levers of the Makerfield by election or the UK elections, probably both of which have similar connections to voting technology that may or may not be malleable.
00:08:22.000I'm not suggesting that the elections are rigged, I'm saying there's no point in rigging elections.
00:08:26.000in the United Kingdom because whoever you vote for, you're going to get someone in power that's ultimately controlled by the same set of interests.
00:08:32.000The UK is not the United States of America.
00:08:35.000The United States of America is a unique nation.
00:08:39.000There are some significant power plays unfolding in your country right now that may yet be pivotal.
00:08:47.000Who knows whether Teal and the oligarchical class will be able to entirely lacquer the systems of American government with AI technology that will make it utterly malleable, completely observable.
00:09:01.000Whether your country will become a contributor to the ongoing trend of centralization, globalism, and a new form of imperialism.
00:09:43.000You know that in your heart and in your own life, you are most affected by your local sensory neighborly experiences.
00:09:51.000How much of your time and your life is truly spent reflecting on even something significant, pivotal, and potentially apocal, like events in the Middle East?
00:10:00.000Is that what you do first thing you get up?
00:10:43.000How's he going to change a system that many people are?
00:10:46.000Disturbed by, disappointed in, angered by, to the point of near rioting.
00:10:51.000The United Kingdom at the moment is a tinderbox, and it's going to take more than a relatively pleasant person, I would suggest, to redirect what seems like a pretty peculiar trajectory.
00:11:03.000So, the main points again whether it's Jeremy Corbyn on the left or Andrew Neil on the right, both people say of Andy Burnham, nice guy, what about the policies?
00:11:12.000Hear me, my little contribution, what I've learned about the systems of Westminster politics.
00:11:16.000Politics and how they interface with extra national bureaucracies, whether that's the EU that we're not meant to be in anymore, or the WEF, or the World Bank, or NATO, ultimately the relationships are so subordinate to the UK that the stuff you believe and vote for is ultimately, ultimately, and in a really significant way, irrelevant.
00:11:36.000Nevertheless, though, here is the mainstream media studying a train that contains Andy Burnham as it makes its predictable way down tracks, like his career as Prime Minister will.
00:11:49.000Like politics will continue, as predictable and as rudimentary and as monotonous as a train on preordained tracks, will this story run?
00:12:21.000The first time I went to those House of Commons, what I observed was that the leather seats and the wooden panels that adorn and decorate those chambers is to some people reminiscent of courtrooms where they face trial, and to others, the place where they went to school.
00:12:39.000I think Andy Burnham might be a pretty normal guy.
00:12:42.000I'm guessing I don't know anything about him yet.
00:13:13.000Should we really investigate what went on in COVID?
00:13:15.000Shall we have a good look at what's going on in this country?
00:13:17.000Because I've been looking around, people are furious.
00:13:20.000They're foaming at the mouth with near blind rage.
00:13:24.000We're going to have to do something or there are going to be riots on the street.
00:13:27.000You can't just keep banning people from drinking, banning people from thinking, banning people from watching and then saying, God save the king.
00:13:32.000Although I will say, he's got the face of a nice, Guy, like a daytime TV presenter that's perfectly affable, although you usually find out they're paedophiles if you look into it with any depth.
00:13:58.000One hurdle passed, a second also fell when his biggest rival for leader, Wes Streeting, announced he would not be standing, writing.
00:14:06.000We could spend the summer exaggerating small differences, or we can roll up our sleeves and help him to deliver the change our party and our country need.
00:14:15.000Exaggerating small differences is precisely the point, raison d'etre, excuse me, and function of contemporary politics.
00:14:24.000Small differences, even in a nation like yours, where temporarily and briefly it seems like you're being confronted by extreme sociological and political differences, like with one party saying there's no such thing as gender and people can be whatever they want, and other people saying America first.
00:14:44.000The sort of serpent itself continues to move in a pretty predictable way.
00:14:51.000Even, like, take two pretty charismatic and exciting political figures in your country in the last 20 years Barack Obama, erudite, excellent public speaker, charming as all heck, could have been a movie star.
00:15:05.0002008 comes around, an actual political crisis.
00:15:09.000Precisely what any president would have done bows out the bank.
00:15:12.000Preserves the system, participates in a massive foreclosure of millions of people's homes across your nation, doesn't govern on behalf of the people, governs on behalf of the banks.
00:15:22.000And of course, there are loads of ways that he could say to you why he had to do that.
00:15:25.000But ultimately, the reason he had to do that is because the person in the office of president don't have a great deal of power.
00:15:29.000Or, when it comes to it, or Donald Trump, the megalomaniacal, super charismatic, anomalous, and peculiar figure, when it comes to are we going to have a war with Iran?
00:15:44.000So, in a sense, do you think that we need to be slightly more blinkered, focused on what a nation might be, what a country might be, what life could be, what God is, what it is to be alive in the world, to broaden out our horizons?
00:16:00.000Like, do you think sometimes that you might be better off if you lived a life where you ate good food that was grown near where you live, where you had meaningful relationships with the people around you, that you sort of decoupled yourself from the idea that you might be some sort of rock?
00:16:16.000Star or superstar or tech billionaire, and just focused on actual life of the people that are around you because we are here very, very briefly, too briefly indeed, to pretend to be infatuated by what the potential contender for Andy Burnham's presumed ascendancy called the vanity of small differences,
00:16:37.000pointless quibbling over meaningless tripe, all the while the true agenda of centralization and authoritarianism.
00:17:31.000That's the choice I'm making, and I hope that everyone else will back Andy too.
00:17:36.000We've now had seven prime ministers in just over 10 years.
00:17:42.000That is really bad for Britain because those who invest in the country don't have stability when it comes to knowing what the economic outlook is, because every time you get a new prime minister, you get a new approach to managing the economy.
00:17:57.000Our partners overseas build up relationships with foreign secretaries and prime ministers, and then there's a new one, and that You know, makes actually much harder to get the things we want to do internationally.
00:18:09.000I mean, there was a time when we boasted to the world that we had possibly the most stable, strongest political system.
00:18:17.000That sort of looks like a bad, you know, our system now looks like a bit of a bad joke.
00:18:30.000And also, though, that rather exasperated and breathless.
00:18:35.000Pundit could contribute to the conversation by adding, like, if we were starting now, is this what you would insist upon?
00:18:44.000If this was ground zero, if this was day one, would you say, Right, what we need are like just two parties that are more or less the same, that are ultimately controlled by sets of financial interests that are able to bypass this sham that we call democracy?
00:19:23.000Whatever it is the pornography, the infatuation with technology, the fashion, the chasing around after sort of bargains or deals or booze or whatever false idolatry you're engaged with it doesn't work.
00:19:36.000I'm only able to say that because of the dismal failings of my own life, sort of attempting to.
00:19:42.000Immolate an inner yearning with just increasingly enticing but never fulfilling external stimulants.
00:19:53.000Well, yeah, for a while it'll be exciting, it'll be a new person, and then it'll be disappointing because Andy Burnham doesn't stand a chance because he's operating in a system that's going to fail him.
00:20:02.000Surely, as it fails every other inhabitant of the United Kingdom, it's disconnected from them, it's connected to a counterfeit circuitry that exists in order to sustain itself and to transfer power.
00:20:17.000To centralized, inaccessible, bureaucratic, and commercial institutions.
00:20:22.000Yes, that's an explanation I'm happy with.
00:20:24.000Let's have a look at how Dear Keir Starmer is handling the transition.
00:20:31.000Isn't it interesting that something like the Makerfield by election, a place no one's ever heard of except for the people there?
00:20:38.000No disrespect to you, the folks of Makerfield, has become a pivotal place for just a moment.
00:20:45.000But in five years, you won't care about any of this.
00:20:47.000The hour long meeting, which was first reported in the Times, comes as a secure Starmer authorized access talks with civil servants.
00:20:56.000That's like, not necessarily the deep state, but state representatives for prospective Labour leadership candidates to prepare them for government.
00:21:04.000Burnham is the only candidate to have emerged so far.
00:21:06.000If he does not face a challenger, he could be Prime Minister.
00:21:31.000Kissed Armour, though, one of the few things about him that was accessible and humanising, and I don't recognize he's human, but humanising, was that he had good working class credentials.
00:22:05.000I did talk about the need to change Labour in this campaign, and we've got to now take this moment to answer the challenges that have been laid down.
00:22:18.000I did describe it last night as a last chance to change, and I think that's how people here kind of saw it when I was talking to them on the doorsteps.
00:22:28.000He does seem like a normal bloke, at least he's so normal seeming, like, you know.
00:22:32.000I kissed Sabah for a little while, just, oh, what's that?
00:22:36.000You know, but actually, being the leader of an entire nation, an extraordinary concept in itself, requires more than just affability.
00:22:44.000It requires, first and foremost, the insight to recognize that the system you're participating in is completely corrupt and incapable of delivering the change that you're talking about.
00:22:54.000In fact, it requires, like, principles, and principles like self sacrifice.
00:22:58.000I suppose you've got to be kind of rampantly ambitious in one way or another to even want those kind of roles, haven't you?
00:23:06.000As Billy Connolly famously observed, the desire to be a politician should bar you for life from being one because there are so few people that have that spirit of public service these days because we're not incubating that spirit.
00:23:21.000We're incubating a spirit of selfishness.
00:23:24.000That's the kind of primary drive of our culture.
00:24:03.000We can give you our support this time, but you know it's not a blank check, it's not ongoing.
00:24:09.000You have to respond to what people here are saying.
00:24:13.000You have to do something to make life more affordable.
00:24:17.000And yet, a change too from the Home Office.
00:24:19.000I heard on so many doorsteps people's concerns about the unfairness of the immigration system.
00:24:26.000That cut price approach to procurement that means areas like this can end up like HMO Britain.
00:24:33.000It's not fair that they think that they can just operate like that and not hear the call of people here, the decent people here, who always will do the right thing, the compassionate thing, but not when it's unfair.
00:24:46.000In terms of the way places like this are treated, these are the calls that we've got to hear, and this is the change that we've got to bring.
00:24:54.000And I say it again, it is our last chance to change, but we're going to take it, aren't we?
00:24:59.000We are going to take that opportunity and we are going to lay out a new path for Britain.
00:25:08.000I think he seems like a really nice man, and that's something, isn't it?
00:25:11.000Okay, this is some additional content.
00:25:14.000Andy Burnham said to scrap Shabana Mahmood's immigration reforms and will give millions of Boris Wave migrants indefinite leave to remain, allowing them access to welfare and public service.
00:25:25.000So that's sort of an indication of some.
00:25:48.000What you need actually is radical decentralization.
00:25:51.000Radical decentralization is the only thing that might work because you see, what centralization affords is the ability to control resources, attention, information.
00:26:01.000Finance en masse and direct it, therefore, in a concord and concerted way with decentralization.
00:26:10.000You might initially think it will be chaos, it would be mob rule, but you have mob rule now, in the sense that mob is a kind of synonym for mafia and rule by the popular, by the vulgate, by the masses, by the people.
00:26:40.000So many people are desperately unhappy, and even I am a person with really no skin in the game.
00:26:46.000I've got no part of me believes that Westminster politics or DC politics can do anything other than what they've already done unless they make significant change to devolve into subsidiarity, to empower communities, to use available technology, to create the democracies that are plainly available.
00:27:03.000It doesn't seem like there's any absolute To do that for the obvious reason that they would be diminishing their own power.
00:27:09.000Even I still think, well, he seems nice, just on a human level, he seems nice.
00:27:20.000Let me know what you think in the comments and the chat.
00:27:24.000Is it a time for real change, for radical change, for meaningful change, change that you can understand, that you can participate in, so that you, a human being, can have some purchase and purpose in your own life?
00:27:34.000Perspective and opinion isn't meaningless, isn't nothing.
00:27:37.000You're not just part of some hopeless morass, you know, here like a gas, nebulous and meaningless, waiting to die.
00:27:52.000Let me know what you think in the comments and the chat.
00:27:56.000We will be back in a moment talking about one, the reckoning for Anthony Fauci and the feel good World Cup taking place across North America and Mexico right now.
00:28:06.000But first is a message from one of our partners.
00:28:08.000How much control have you got over your money right now in this second?
00:30:20.000Because at a cellular level, it provides mitochondria support.
00:30:26.000I can't even begin to comprehend that within every cell in the body, there's a kind of battery.
00:30:31.000And that you can introduce, it sounds to me that people, from people who understand it better than I do, that somehow it sheathes, that's right, sheathes the mitochondria.
00:30:41.000And then if you use it in conjunction with red light therapy, it's all bouncing around in there, making you feel better.
00:30:45.000But I'll tell you, though, I can tell you as a recovering drug addict, there's a little, it gives you a, I mean, I'm already, I don't know if it's, I'm feeling a little bit better.
00:30:58.000I'm feeling like maybe Andy Burnham's going to work out.
00:31:18.000England drew with Ghana, and there are too many teams in it.
00:31:22.000But one thing that is surprising is that fans have come from all around the world to support their nation, and most of them are saying that they love America.
00:31:34.000Let's have a look at these Europeans coming to your country and falling in love with it.
00:31:39.000We owe America a huge apology, says one European.
00:31:43.000America's nothing like the media tells us.
00:31:45.000Everyone's so friendly, everyone's accommodating, and I've honestly had the best time.
00:31:48.000One British World Cup fan says to a camera in another video.
00:31:52.000Americans, meanwhile, are delighted to see how much fun Europeans are having in the US.
00:31:55.000Can the US just host the World Cup every year?
00:31:58.000One ex user asks, sharing video footage of a Japanese World Cup fan learning about splitting the G.
00:32:03.000A viral bar challenge that involves drinking a Guinness.
00:32:06.000Lefties in Seattle didn't want to host the World Cup because of Trump, Red State columnist Buzz Patterson wrote in an ex post sharing footage of a packed stadium.
00:32:19.000Of course, sport's meant to be apolitical, but it's difficult to extract political essence from sport, or not actually political essence, the opportunism of exploiting sport for political gain.
00:32:31.000But it seems like Europeans are having a From what I've seen online, as always, the Scottish are living it up, and people in general seem to be having a good time.
00:32:39.000You don't care about the World Cup, do you, Jake?
00:32:53.000Well, the thing is, Jake, as you know, I'm in this sort of transformative process where I'm struggling to remain engaged by any cultural artifact.
00:33:04.000Now, football, if you watch it, it will lure you in, like heroin or pornography.
00:33:09.000But at the moment, I'm not super invested.
00:33:11.000I've been checking England's results, I've been looking at highlights, I've downloaded an app so that I've got access to the World Cup.
00:33:22.000In the culture for a while, and because the process of being sort of expelled from it and attacked by it while the culture itself is sort of splitting apart in a million different directions has led me to being kind of, I don't know, bruised by and cynical about almost every aspect of it, like a kind of a woundedness.
00:33:40.000And so it's much easier from the distance that I've been granted to see that, you know, it's kind of sort of bullshit.
00:34:37.000I mean, like, since I moved to the old panhandle, that's when I realized the redneck, there's nothing more friendly than a fully armed truck driving redneck.
00:35:30.000What it makes you feel is that people are beautiful and it's kind of heartening in that way.
00:35:34.000Yeah, maybe I'm being a bit too cynical about it.
00:35:37.000It's kind of nice to see people having a bit of a laugh, dancing around in the street, eating consumer products, having a good time at Bucky's, buying a little bit of Bucky's merch.
00:35:45.000It's Bucky's that people are enjoying, not America.
00:39:00.000But my social media algorithm is filled to the brim, day in and day out, with videos just like this.
00:39:15.000And I don't think these tourists are lying.
00:39:17.000I think they're genuinely enjoying the simple things in the United States that many of us take for granted.
00:39:22.000And I think what they're doing ultimately is cutting through decades of mainstream media anti-American propaganda, both in this country, like from the Atlantic and CNN, and media overseas.
00:39:32.000Honestly, who knew that's all it would take?
00:39:34.000I saw someone say on Twitter earlier that it's like we're all finally having a sleepover with our cousins we haven't seen in forever because our parents hate each other.
00:39:41.000There's people in power that benefit from us hating each other and hating the very thing that makes America, America.
00:40:28.000I think he's got some unusual funding, the Atlantic.
00:40:30.000I won't make those claims without backing them up, but I feel like, yeah, Jake, have a look, mate.
00:40:34.000I think it's like it had some really unusual investment in it.
00:40:38.000Take the Swedish soccer fan who swooned over ranch dressing, Elsa Thora, a photogenic 24 year old blonde, how dare she, has been featured in a number of news stories about foreign soccer fans, American exploits, exuding a gee whiz.
00:40:51.000Gust over the country's food and culture.
00:40:53.000I feel like I'm in the movie, she posted, holding bags of hostess Twinkies and cheese stuffed combos outside a convenience store.
00:41:02.000Okay, so Amish people are real, she marveled.
00:41:07.000They'd be so sneering, actually, Atlantic, about ordinary people enjoying snacks and culture.
00:41:14.000What many of the news stories have failed to mention, Hizothora is not new to the social media spotlight.
00:41:20.000She's a star on an On the adult platform OnlyFans, she's a whore.
00:41:29.000Do you see how they've actually got no consistent moral values?
00:41:35.000See, this is a sort of a neoliberal rag or publication where elsewhere in the very same issue, I bet they're saying that women have been treated in this degenerate way.
00:41:45.000And then here is a woman that's on OnlyFans and look at just how easily, effortlessly, and unthinkingly they condemn her.
00:41:52.000For that, she's a fixture in British tabloids where she's made the headlines for expressing her desire to have sex in space.
00:43:11.000When I reached out to her by phone, look at this woman hounding her, or this journalist, excuse me.
00:43:16.000When I reached out to her phone on her way to LA, she told me she works in digital marketing, but that the trip to the States was just for fun and love of soccer.
00:43:23.000Oh, because you wanted to say that she's being paid, huh?
00:43:26.000She acknowledged that her posts have raised their social media profile, but insisted that she isn't trying to monetize them.
00:43:31.000This person, by the way, will be on social media, wants their posts to be followed, wants to get a little bit of the heat out of this situation.
00:43:38.000No one's willing to own their own shadow, no one's willing to own their own darkness.
00:43:41.000That's why I go around condemning people that just A simple woman that wants to have sex with everyone in the Premier League and have a space baby.
00:43:54.000I'd like it if she got so enamored of the Amish that she said, I used to want to have Elon Musk's sex baby, but now I won't even use a zipper.
00:44:31.000Freddy had an unremarkable social media presence, a posting that almost exclusively in support of the legendary Portuguese forward, Cristiano Ronaldo.
00:44:40.000An April post on XBay's upcoming trip to the World Cup in the US got a modest 60 likes.
00:44:45.000Then he landed at Atlanta, his starting point for his trip to Houston, with his unnamed companions.
00:44:49.000Why don't you name your companions, you bastard?
00:45:35.000This journalist begrudges people getting 10 minutes of attention when they're willing to have sex with everyone in the Premier League, have space babies, visit various franchises.
00:45:46.000These people, these are working class heroes, these people, if you ask me.
00:46:31.000Nothing's got any intrinsic value, that we're living in a sort of a peculiar, near holographic reality constructed and controlled by nefarious elites.
00:46:43.000And so people are just having a little bit of a laugh.
00:46:45.000I say, make Freddy the King of England.
00:46:48.000Bring him back and see how far he can take this thing.
00:46:51.000He got a personal tour of the Orion capsule from Astronaut and MacLean.
00:46:56.000Freddy did not take a time out from the ride of his life to respond to my request for comment.
00:48:19.000And perhaps what we have to overcome is our own cynicism and skepticism and refusal to believe in how beautiful things can be if you'll just allow them to be.
00:48:31.000Especially, you know, for Elsa Thora, a young woman who has no dream beyond having sex with one representative from every football club, and Freddie, a man who began as a humble fan.
00:48:43.000Like so many people of Cristiano Ronaldo, but ended his trip as Prime Minister of Great Britain.
00:48:51.000Let me know what you think in the comments and chat.
00:48:54.000We'll be back in a moment talking about Anthony Fauci facing the reckoning that he's long overdue.
00:49:00.000Before that, I'd love to tell you that, do you know, every Sunday, me and my wife Laura do Sunday service where we talk about our, I'm going to say Christian faith, but it doesn't sound quite right, our developing understanding of the reality of Christ, the mystery of Christ, and, um, I don't know.
00:49:36.000I mean, I don't necessarily mean all of the Catholic Church, but I mean, like, my mate Joe, who I consider to be the main representative of Catholicism, not Pope Leo.
00:50:43.000But for myself, early in my walk with our Lord, I like to have the access that comes directly, although I can see why people would like tradition.
00:50:53.000Anyway, though, my point about Jesus calling, sorry for this long interjection, was because it, the device it uses, if you're not familiar, is it's Christ talking.
00:51:03.000In the first person, which is a device also used by the famous and fantastic Course in Miracles.
00:51:11.000And some people would say, isn't that a little presumptuous to talk directly in the first person as the Son of God, the living God Jesus Christ?
00:51:20.000And the answer is yes, it is, isn't it?
00:51:22.000But when I read the introduction to Jesus' Call in, the sincerity of Sarah Young is so sort of heartwarming and incredible that I just have no questions about her motives.
00:51:51.000And I suppose it's, I don't feel, because it's pre taped and because it's with Laura, I don't feel encumbered by any need to sort of like keep a ball in the air, kind of.
00:52:03.000I've been doing this for so long now in so many ways and it's been the sort of focus of so much ire and attack.
00:52:41.000Yeah, like he was like a Michelin man, kind of sort of like a tubby thing.
00:52:46.000Oh, no, that would criticise what he looks like.
00:52:48.000I want to criticize everything he stands for, because it was just like a kind of a shallow, entrenched grip on old ideas and old arguments.
00:53:01.000So if you're arguing on two different planes and there's no agreement as far as what are the rules of engagement or even the belief behind anything that you're saying, then you're going to be just arguing oranges and car parts.
00:54:42.000Like, for example, there's a movie about Sam Altman, the AI dude, that's got good people in it, like Andrew Garfield, I think, maybe plays him.
00:54:51.000And because Amazon have got an important relationship with open AI to the tune of.
00:54:56.000Billions they've at the last minute, even though they've funded this 40 million dollar movie, uh, rescinded, uh, reneged, they're not releasing it, so they're going to try and find another distributor.
00:55:07.000So they're not going to think twice about a little thing like this.
00:55:10.000So, um, buy this book if you want, and if you don't want to buy it, download it.
00:55:14.000It's me reading it, the audiobook is really, really good.
00:55:16.000I was, um, my friend, uh, rang the other day and said how good it was.
00:55:21.000That's that's that's a genuine, what a vague review, my friend, right.
00:58:07.000Hey, you know, I came to prominence and I reckon got myself in all sorts of aggravation because during the pandemic period, I was in a unique position as having a successful YouTube channel that grew incredibly in scale and size, exponentially, rapidly, like a firework blazing across the sky.
00:58:44.000Well, it turns out that Joe Biden's preemptive pardon was pretty astute because Anthony Fauci directly, it seems, invested in the laboratory in which The coronavirus was designed, escaped from.