In this episode of Rumble Live, we discuss the latest in the war on Iran, and the growing number of people questioning whether or not they should have voted for Donald Trump in the first place. We also hear from Tucker Carlson and Steve Bannon about the Iran situation.
00:01:30.000Remember, we stream every day on Rumble, or at least we will continue to until Armageddon seeps into every corner of our lives.
00:01:39.000And, of course, mostly we're talking about the escalating war of occasional breaches to discuss gold mobile phones through which we may communicate if we're able to survive the next couple of weeks.
00:01:53.000Have you seen those posts on Truth Social that were posted there?
00:01:58.000Massey, Paul, Isaac, if you could get them up now.
00:02:02.000If you look at the Clips Rundown chat on WhatsApp, you will see the two recent posts are Donald Trump has posted unconditional surrender.
00:02:10.000We know exactly where the so-called supreme leader is hiding.
00:02:20.000Civilians or American soldiers, our patience is wearing thin.
00:02:23.000Thanks for your attention to this matter.
00:02:25.000In a way, there's a war between America and Iran, I guess now.
00:02:30.000America are explicitly supporting Israel.
00:02:33.000Let me know in the comments in the chat if you supported that, and let me know where you stand, at least on the conversation that's unfolding online, where, for example, Dave Smith has come out and said he was mistaken to have supported Donald Trump in the first place,
00:02:50.000and where Tucker Carlson is questioning whether or not I mean, like, look, this is how I feel about it.
00:03:19.000You know, like, my support for Trump was generally based upon We've got to break up this globalist, imperialist threat that's in the form of these Democrats that are clearly aligned with figures like Macron, the loathsome and ludicrous Macron, The outrageous Keir Starmer, God love him, and sets of permanent bureaucracies that are edging the world towards war continually and want us to live in a kind of airport of perpetual control.
00:03:49.000Trump, I always saw as an incredible bulwark.
00:04:13.000Is Tucker Carlson, like, I suppose, look, if Donald Trump were to have one potent advocate In the media space, it would be Joe Rogan, wouldn't it?
00:04:25.000But if it were two, it would be Joe Rogan and Tucker Carlson.
00:04:28.000Now, what I think is interesting about this conversation that Tucker's had with Steve Bannon And I suppose anyone who's lived in the public eye, who's seen how Donald Trump has dealt with attacks, anyone who's tried to make money, anyone who's tried to deal with building regulations has got to have some kind of begrudging respect for Trump.
00:04:50.000Anyone who loathes the legacy media and the political class and the intelligentsia and their ongoing deceptiveness and the way that they divide us from one another and pretend that they care when in fact it's control.
00:05:02.000We're going to have a degree of respect for Donald Trump.
00:05:04.000But here is Tucker Carlson managing his disappointment that the pledge that there would be no more forever wars appears to be breached.
00:05:14.000Now, do you think the simple fact is this?
00:05:17.000Anyone talking about campaigning, about how they will govern before they're in a position of power, is going to make certain missteps?
00:05:25.000Or do you feel that there's something darker and deeper at play here?
00:05:30.000Essentially, That it don't matter what people say when they're campaigning.
00:05:35.000When they're in a position of power, true power asserts and war resumes.
00:05:39.000Let's have a look at Tucker saying that involvement in this conflict will end his presidency.
00:05:45.000This is a conversation between Tucker and Bannon.
00:05:49.000I think he's a deeply humane, kind person.
00:05:52.000And I am saying this because I'm really afraid that my country's going to be Other nations would like to see that, and this is a perfect way to scuttle the USS America on the shoals of Iran.
00:06:09.000But it's also going to end, I believe, Trump's presidency and effectively end it.
00:06:25.000Personally, I still see Bush sometimes.
00:06:29.000You know, of course, he hates me, and he does because I criticized him on Iraq, and that war is the sum total from historical perspective of his administration.
00:06:39.000But I knew him, and he had all kinds of plans for the things that he wanted to do.
00:06:56.000He was going to take care of the entitlements issue.
00:06:59.000And he really thought it was going to work.
00:07:00.000And you could laugh at that or whatever, but the point is, the second you get enmeshed in a real war, not a fake, let's go bomb the villagers and declare success, we don't even have a good track record.
00:08:04.000Iran had good sky trackers and other defensive equipment and plenty of it, but it doesn't compare to American-made, conceived and manufactured stuff.
00:08:12.000Nobody does it better than the good old USA.
00:08:15.000Now Trump is creating an incredible empire, whether it's his commercial enterprises or a sort of new standard of vernacular
00:08:30.000I don't know how aware you lot were during the campaign period of secondary voices in peripheral spaces saying that even someone who seems like as much as an outlier as Trump does will ultimately end up being controlled by the permanent sets of power that exist in Washington.
00:08:49.000Now, look, I've been involved in this game not that long, but long enough to know that everything that I think I know is true.
00:08:59.000But how do you feel, for example, when you see Dan Bongino and Kash Patel prior to entering their positions of authority in the FBI, saying, you know, this Epstein matter is something that's going to be deeply revelatory, and then once they're in power saying, "Look, we've seen the files, this is as much as we can tell you." I'm not claiming who would to be in a position of authority or on any kind of podium from which to judge people that deal with levels of power and authority
00:09:25.000It's sort of almost inconceivable, dazzling and baffling.
00:10:00.000forces than any individual or even sets of individuals can counter, particularly because those individuals have their own flaws, their own failings, their own fallibility, whether you're talking about an extraordinary and unique man like Donald Trump, well-intentioned and brilliant people like Bobby Kennedy or you and I. Indeed, much of my personal ideology is forged from the folk traditions of the 12 steps where we're fond of saying things like
00:10:34.000And what's implicit in that is the idea that no one can carry the burden of leadership alone.
00:10:41.000All of us have to recognise that we're on our knees, shoulder to shoulder, before God, saved by the supreme sacrifice of the Son of the Living God.
00:10:52.000Now, if you're not able to reference something like that when you're setting up systems of government, when you're standing on the edge of a wall, then I don't know what you're going to rely on.
00:11:04.000Economics, geopolitical agenda, historical imperatives, all of those things I think will fail you.
00:11:11.000Let me know what you think in the comments and the chat.
00:11:14.000Whatever this is, this ain't what MAGA campaigned on.
00:11:18.000Whatever this is, it's not what MAGA campaigned on.
00:11:20.000They didn't say, we'll be back in Israel in a likely war with Iran, did they?
00:11:58.000And from the perspective of the eternal, nations rise, nations fall, governments come and go, leaders with great legacies lost on the wind of history.
00:12:08.000If your inheritors and your legacy will be as numerous as the sand on the beach, then what does that suggest across the scope of time?
00:12:50.000Keir Starmer said it would be racist to have an inquiry.
00:12:51.000we're going to have an inquiry though and what you'll notice in a more um in a more parochial story like that something that's contained to one island the uk you'll notice you're two islands i suppose because it's part of the uk's northern island although you're going to Is that political figures are much more interested in the preservation of their personal control than even the issue they're claiming to talk about.
00:13:14.000I.e., when you see political figures talking about the grooming gang inquiry, you can tell they're not thinking about rape gangs and victims of gang rape.
00:13:22.000They're thinking about how can we maintain our control and not look hypocritical?
00:14:55.000Trump attacking Tucker Carlson for not supporting a new world war is not something any sane person would support.
00:15:02.000And here's Marjorie Taylor Greene backing Tucker Carlson as well.
00:15:06.000Tucker Carlson's one of my favourite people.
00:15:07.000He fiercely loves his wife, children, and our country.
00:15:10.000Since being fired by the neocon network Fox News, he has more popularity and views than ever before.
00:15:14.000He unapologetically believes the same things I do.
00:15:18.000That if we don't fight for our own country and our own people, then we will no longer have a country for our children and our grandchildren.
00:15:23.000And foreign wars, intervention, regime change put America last, kill innocent people and are making us broke and will ultimately lead to our destruction.
00:15:56.000I know Tucker Carlson and I really love him.
00:15:58.000And he's one of the first people I met, I suppose, that made me realise people on the right are more open and honest.
00:16:10.000This is a lesson I've been learning over a long time, primarily in UK media.
00:16:14.000When I aspired as a little blue-collar Essex boy to be part of the intelligentsia, to make a living out of performing, when I was first in newspapers like The Guardian, I thought, oh look, I've made it.
00:16:26.000When I first sort of wrote about football in my country and had a column in The Guardian, I felt really approved of.
00:16:31.000And then when I met the people that actually worked at those organisations, it was kind of harrowing and awful.
00:16:40.000Probably like you, I'm not capable of holding a global conflict in my arms and analysing it.
00:18:14.000The record industry collapsed and had to reorganise itself radically.
00:18:18.000Then we saw it in the rise of the Occupy movement, a political movement that was neither left or right in the traditional sense, but was opposed to financial corruption and financial power in the wake of 2008 rose up.
00:18:30.000Now, since then, as Dave Smith correctly observed in that instance, if you ask me, there's been the advent of identity politics, which means that people are so busy bickering about racial distinctions and gender distinctions, they can't...
00:18:52.000You don't want to die, sometimes, you know, maybe that's a high fucking standard some days.
00:18:58.000In general, you don't want to die and you want to be able to take care of the people that are close to you.
00:19:44.000I'm struggling to get out of fucking bed and move around.
00:19:47.000I'm spending a lot of time just lying on my side doing a rosary like I'm in a fucking term, in a leukemia ward just to sort of cope with it.
00:19:58.000Maybe checking out to some degree is what we need to do because in truth and in fact you are not designed or evolved to cope with this amount of stimuli.
00:20:08.000There is an aspect of your nature that can cope with eternity but what you can't cope with is an infernal and internal deluge of cyclical information continually stimulating you to the point of hysteria and madness.
00:20:28.000Without a radical revision of the institutional relationships at a geopolitical level, we're going to be trapped in a perpetual and perennial cycle of constant crisis.
00:20:37.000We will lurch from 2008 into COVID, 9-11 into Tehran, into Israel.
00:20:43.000This whole thing's too much for all of us.
00:20:46.000Start focusing on localised interconnectivity, on localised independence, on collective tribal organisation, On the slow, tedious business of running a community, running your own life, running your family, being able to source food, being able to survive, not being so inept that if your phone breaks down, you break down.
00:21:07.000If your car breaks down, you break down.
00:21:10.000If you can't continually gain access to Wi-Fi and stream perpetually an endless line of bronzed cleavage and back-lefts, your world fails.
00:21:24.000Because I'm telling you, the temporary is not going to provide you with a solution.
00:21:29.000If you're watching us on YouTube or X, join us on Rumble.
00:21:32.000They've been kind enough to offer us a permanent home here.
00:21:37.000We're going to leave you on YouTube shortly.
00:21:40.000Here's a quick word from one of our sponsors.
00:21:41.000We're obviously talking about Iran and Israel, but we're trying as best we can to find a broader context even than that.
00:21:47.000Here's a message from one of our partners.
00:21:48.000Free speech is under attack, Jack, but Rumble refuses to take it lying down.
00:21:54.000Rumble is farting out the fierce cock of authoritarianism and clamping shut the buttcheeks of free speech, baby.
00:22:02.000We've always believed in empowering voices, no matter how unpopular, and now we're taking that fight to the next level.
00:22:08.000When major advertisers conspired to pull their dollary-dos, even brands like Dunkin' Donuts turned their back, claiming Rumble had a right-wing culture.
00:26:41.000If you can have a uni-party in power, surely you can have a uni-party as opposition.
00:26:45.000Surely this is the time for us to reach out and say, look.
00:26:48.000Guys, maybe these institutions of war, these permanent bureaucracies, are going to take a little more opposing than just a few people online with consternation and furrowed brows and a bit of fist pumping and a bit of fist bumping.
00:27:43.000Now listen, that doesn't even hurt my feelings, I ain't bothered, I was called that at school.
00:27:48.000Listen, if you're watching us on YouTube, click the link in the description, get on over and join us on Rumble.
00:27:53.000We've got a lot to talk about, you know, global holy war and how we're going to manage that as little individuals, poor little souls, little darling ants lost in eternity that we are.
00:28:03.000We'll be talking about the Brit rape gang inquiry.
00:28:06.000We'll be talking about sort of, is this the breakup of MAGA?
00:28:27.000I didn't think he could do it, but at this pace, Donald Trump is going to lose Elon Musk on economics, This is something that's got to be acknowledged, isn't it?
00:28:40.000And I suppose this might be a good time for me to reiterate my position.
00:28:46.000How you can participate in politics and community and organisation yourself and recognise that it's likely to involve massive compromise, loads of time and a radical revision of your personal priorities.
00:30:06.000Do you lot really believe that part of the imperial global plan is to increase migration to destabilise populations, to replace indigenous and native workers and create hostility and tension?
00:30:19.000Because that's, I guess, what, say, Matt Walsh believes.
00:30:23.000I guess that's what Tommy Robinson believes.
00:30:25.000And on the left, when people say, we've got to support refugees, we've got to support migrants, of course we have to open our hearts and homes.
00:30:32.000Don't you know that the Amish believe that you should be ready to receive a guest at any time?
00:30:38.000At any time, you should, as an individual, be able to bring a guest into your home and feed them and love them.
00:30:43.000But how do you instantiate that at the level of a nation?
00:30:48.000Whatever you believe on the subject of migration, whether you're a zero migrants, deport everyone, or bring me your huddled masses, like it says on your iconic statue, you would have to acknowledge that Trump campaigned on an anti-migration platform, right?
00:31:03.000So this is apparently him dealing with the consequences in the hospitality and agricultural industries.
00:31:11.000And I suppose my question will be, isn't that what a lot of...
00:31:48.000They're not citizens, but they've turned out to be, you know, great.
00:31:51.000And we're going to have to do something about that.
00:31:53.000We can't take farmers and take all their people and send them back because they don't have maybe what they're supposed to have, maybe not.
00:32:01.000And you know what's going to happen and what is happening?
00:32:04.000They get rid of some of the people because, you know, you go into a farm and you look and people don't they've been They end up hiring the people, the criminals that have come in, the murderers from prisons and everything else.
00:32:23.000So we're going to have an order on that pretty soon, I think.
00:32:26.000We can't do that to our farmers, and leisure too, hotels.
00:32:30.000We're going to have to use a lot of common sense on that.
00:32:39.000When he first come down the old golden escalator ten years ago, you can watch videos on YouTube, I was like, that's ridiculous, Trump can't be president, this is mental, what's he saying?
00:32:47.000Mexican rapist, racist, what is all this stuff he's saying?
00:32:51.000And then what I start to think is, He's, like, you know, in a way, what Chappelle said in his famous SNL monologue, this guy's saying publicly what we kind of all believe.
00:33:01.000Like, when he says to Hillary Clinton, I exploit tax loops that your donors exploit, we think, my God, this guy's not playing by normal rules, or Shane Gillis' stand-up on him.
00:33:10.000Like, stand-up comedians are kind of who I look to for guidance.
00:33:15.000Where are we now, when Dave Smith is clearly someone sort of schooled in anti-establishment left, who, like me, felt like, ah, Trump is a solution to the problem of advancing imperialism.
00:33:29.000These kind of husk politicians, whether they're like literal husks like Joe Biden, or virtual husks, where you think they're hollowed-out individuals who are exploited, puppeted, and controlled by sets of interests that are not easy to understand.
00:33:44.000I want to call it saying relatively simple.
00:33:56.000I guess it's where I'm breaking apart spiritually, where I'm being disintegrated, decomposing down to my most basic essential level, which, let me tell you, is an agonising process.
00:34:05.000Anyway, let's have a look at Dave Smith, because...
00:35:00.000Donald Trump should be impeached and removed for this.
00:35:03.000All of his supporters should turn on him.
00:35:05.000It's the absolute betrayal of everything that he ran and campaigned on and everything that he stood for.
00:35:10.000And I will say, despite the fact that, you know, Donald Trump supporters have been labeled like a cult following, and that certainly is true for a percentage of his supporters, he is going to lose his coalition over this.
00:35:32.000By the way, on top of that, he's also going to lose the deportation fight because of this.
00:35:35.000Because right now he needed all the political capital he could have to turn that, you know, you got a majority support for deportations, but the minority is very mobilized and they're out and they're protesting all around the country.
00:35:47.000He needed all of his political capital for that move.
00:36:25.000They had incredible power, and they never used it to hurt anyone.
00:36:28.000Everyone that ever asked them for help, they tried their best to help them.
00:36:31.000They were willing to die and be silent at their own trial, except to say one or two kind of sort of Gnostic, spooky little things, if you say so.
00:36:41.000That were able to be flayed and flogged and brutalised and nailed to a cross and stay in a state of love and even on the cross find time when someone on the adjacent cross says, do you know what?
00:38:04.000And I reckon that the reason that MMA is in ascendancy, in particular the UFC is in ascendancy, is because having this sort of stripped-back combat conflict that we can watch like that's kind of enjoyable, isn't it?
00:38:16.000To sort of watch people, warriors in particular, men and women, one-on-one, mano-on-mano, or woman-o-on-womano, fighting it out with dignity and poise, Check it out.
00:44:16.000What's amazing about this is, confronted by a pretty competent radio journalist in the form of Nick Ferrari, Emma Reynolds is completely unable to describe or explain the point of the bridge, the cost of the bridge.
00:45:01.000Imagine, at scale, how these kind of...
00:45:12.000the members of the government that this woman's a representative of are considering conscription in the UK.
00:45:18.000This is the same government that defaulted, deferred and delayed on the grooming gangs or rape gangs to give them a more apposite and descriptive name in the United Kingdom.
00:45:28.000These are the politicians that will amplify the war between Russia and Ukraine, will spend British tax dollars on it.
00:45:40.000Check out this interview, because, in a sense, you get the truth from this.
00:47:46.000We couldn't discern it so instantaneously.
00:47:48.000You couldn't see the implausibility of the systems that we're living within.
00:47:53.000Wait a minute, do I benefit from being part of a peasant class where I toil in a field all day and get given a petal?
00:48:04.000Or, fast forward a century or so, wait a minute, why am I working in the shipyard welding and hammering only to participate in an economic system that doesn't care about me?
00:48:14.000Or, where we are now, on the steep, steep edge of handing over total power of our reality to a set of interests, whether that's in the form of EU globalist imperialists who tell you that they care about you, or Palantir entrepreneurs who tell you that they care about you.
00:48:35.000We're about to hand over extraordinary and unprecedented power to sets of elites that are...
00:48:42.000are able, it seems, to manage in binary the fact, manage in binary to distract us from the fact that there is one central authority vying for total power.
00:48:54.000It seems it don't matter which way you vote, you end up, You end up being offered just consumer trinkets as the way through your day.
00:49:09.000Is there a real alternative to any of that?
00:49:12.000Look at all the content we're talking about on a daily basis.
00:49:15.000Isn't it really about human frailty and fallibility?
00:49:29.000Trying his best, trudging about at the Lake District, turning up at a G7 conference, doing his best to stand on a world stage against truly historic figures like Trump, who's made a significant impact, but he himself, fallible, flawed.
00:49:45.000We'll be with you for another 10 minutes on Rumble.
00:49:48.000And then, if you're a member of our Rumble Premium community...
00:49:54.000You get additional content from Crowder and Tim Pool and Glenn Greenwald, all of whom, in fact, Glenn Greenwald specifically, we'll be discussing in a minute.
00:50:02.000Let's look at the rest of this interview and just sort of feel the tension and sadness of this poor lady trying to get through this situation.
00:50:09.000is a little again How much is the crossing going to cost, Secretary?
00:50:24.000Well, overall, it's going to cost several billion pounds.
00:51:20.000And within that state, every town, every community.
00:51:23.000Don't you reckon that, in a way, we can reverse engineer the anti-gun gun
00:51:28.000arguments when people say yeah but when they said the right to bear arms they didn't know you'd have semi-automatics well when you've got the right to bear democracy now you have in your hand the means for mass community organization is it not possible that your town your village could be given a budget and that you were able to run through referenda and conversation instantaneously conducted how those resources were spent then you can decide whether or not you want some usa id style endeavor to send money to iranian sesame street that don't seem
00:51:57.000likely now or whether or not you want to spend that money on schools or roads Do you see how limited we're allowing the conversation to be?
00:52:07.000How curtailed and how incursive the media's portrayal of what's possible is.
00:52:14.000We're all just arguing about which of these two groups should be in charge of America or France or the UK.
00:52:21.000And when there is some kind of uprising, as in Romania, the rise of nationalism, then groups that are transcendent of national interests, and I feel like Palantir is one of these groups, will step in.
00:52:33.000In the case of Romania, it was the EU that delegitimised the results of Romanian elections, but many people are concerned that Palantir's power is entering into American political lives in ways that are going to be unfavourable.
00:52:50.000That's where we offline make content where I've got a little bit more time to concentrate and I have to keep talking the whole time, keep things running.
00:52:57.000Let's have a look at the end of this poor lady.
00:53:00.000And then we're going to be talking about the G7 Summit and how we see human frailty there.
00:53:04.000Witness the moment where Diakir Starmer picks up a bit of paper dropped by Donald Trump and you feel like, oh, it's all too human.
00:53:34.000What does it say about the economic stewardship of this country, that someone in your position of importance, you don't know where a bridge starts, you don't know where it ends, and you don't know how much it costs?
00:53:41.000When will the Hammersmith Bridge problem be resolved?
00:53:44.000I'm not here to talk about the Hammersmith Bridge.
00:55:14.000Oh, it's because I was hit by a truck.
00:55:16.000Oh, it's because a bridge fell down because the people that were paid to build that fucking bridge didn't know how much weight it had to withstand.
00:55:23.000Vehicles, let alone the heaviest of vehicles.
00:55:27.000The money that we are allocating today will go to such bridges to go to repair bridges and to make sure that those bridges can take a load.
00:55:39.000And as you said at the top, there are 3,000 bridges across the country that can't take a load.
00:55:54.000That, there will be, Hammersmith Bridge and others will be, but that will be down to local, I mean, look, I can't come on your programme and give you the dates for every 3,000 bridge that will be...
00:57:38.000Let me know what you think in the comments and chat.
00:57:40.000We're going to be talking about the G7 summit in a minute and the sort of obvious displays of fallibility and flawed human nature, whether it was Trump, Starmer or Macron that was on display there.
00:58:10.000Drinking coffee that looks like it's been fired out of the arse of Grüttenberg?
00:58:15.000I've just had a cup of 1775 and now I'm vibrating on such a high frequency that Terence McKenna's machine elves are telling me how to do this advert.
00:58:23.000Man, it's completely possible that these entities and beings are interfacing with us right now.
00:58:28.000This isn't your nan's free dried sadness in a tin.
00:58:31.000This isn't the dregs of a wrung out sanitary product.
00:58:38.000I had a cup this morning and accidentally started a new religion.
00:58:42.000It doesn't whisper, it breaks into your subconscious like a caffeinated raccoon rifling through the flaming garbage and screams, Rise, you beautiful dumpster wizard!
00:58:49.000History isn't going to rewrite itself.
00:58:51.0001775 coffee is single origin, high attitude, organic, small batch roasted beans.
00:58:56.000What does that mean in normal personal terms?
00:58:58.000It means that Lady Liberty herself is French kissing your taste buds while bald eagles harmonise in the back.
00:59:06.000This coffee makes you feel seen, makes you feel alive, makes you feel like charging into Parliament on horseback with a scroll of forbidden knowledge and a cinnamon stick.
00:59:14.000I declare myself the new leader of these islands.
00:59:18.0001775, the revolution is coming to you, baby.
01:00:38.000Everyone else is really trying to appease him.
01:00:40.000Trump continues to be, at least in this environment, authentic.
01:00:44.000Is the global stage the place where Trump might demonstrate the fact that he is the man and the leader that many people believe they were electing?
01:00:53.000Is it possible for him to resurrect that faith with the changes that are being made in an administration when it comes to the significant subjects of immigration and forever wars?
01:01:02.000Let me know what you think about that in the comment.
01:01:04.000Here's Glenn Greenwald, fellow Rumble host and very, very, I would say, beloved journalist on the subject of legacy media disinformation.
01:01:16.000Okay, so he says, comment in on these various pieces of coverage in the Wall Street Journal.
01:01:22.000Iran rules out negotiations with the US until it completes retaliations against Israel, regional diplomat says.
01:01:27.000A bad Iran signals it wants to de-escalate hostilities with Israel and negotiate.
01:02:16.000He didn't go with that look that often, did he?
01:02:19.000We're more familiar with sort of the brown-shirted version of Dear Adolf.
01:02:24.000And there, Keir Starmer stands reflective, authoritative on the precipice.
01:02:31.000of surely great things in front of a Canadian river and a Canadian mountain range.
01:02:35.000But the G7 was not, it seems, a symposium for revealing the greatness of our leaders, but their all-too-evident and obvious fallibility.
01:02:45.000That's one of the themes that we're discussing today, the implausibility of the, in word commas, great man.
01:02:52.000People are flawed and fallible, whether it's that poor, crumbling bureaucrat.
01:02:57.000On a British radio station, or even the Goliaths of the global stage, all of them will fall apart eventually, because, you know, that's the way time works, baby.
01:03:07.000Let's have a look at Keir Starmer's recent piece of PR at the G7 Summit.
01:03:16.000Be normal, be normal, be normal, be normal.
01:03:33.000Be normal, be normal, be normal, be normal.
01:03:39.000Okay, so we've already seen that the PR team might want to check the Nazi catalogue for some of their visual references, although Hitler was the first one that kissed babies, and they all do that to this very day.
01:03:53.000In this moment, a trade deal is finally signed between Starmer and Trump.
01:05:26.000Let us know if you're aware of some of the errors that Emmanuel Macron may have made in his private life when it comes to the nether regions of his alleged misses.
01:05:35.000Here's Mark Carney commending Trump for his leadership.
01:05:40.000Now, what's interesting about this is we know that...
01:06:43.000Is there anyone among us that thinks that that's anything other than a PR exercise, that any of the explicit information that's rendered and conveyed from that little summit will impact your life in ways that are meaningful, that it's anything other than the performance of politics?
01:06:57.000The problem is, of course, that we get the real politics seeping out through the constant exposure and leaks of various institutions now that are unable to control the narrative in the way that they once did.
01:07:08.000This is the post-Assange, post-Wikileaks, post-Snowden world, where all of us know that governments functionally have relationships with surveillance companies that operate on the level of total control, and there's something like the G7.
01:07:27.000Making deals with big corporations and giant entities.
01:07:30.000And then their job is how to tart that stuff up.
01:07:33.000How to put a little bit of lipstick on their corruption to keep us compliant and on board.
01:07:39.000Trump, though, even though this might be the pivotal moment, certainly by Tucker Carlson's reckoning.
01:07:44.000Let me know in the comments and chat what you think about this.
01:07:46.000This might be the moment where Trump loses a significant portion of his popular base.
01:07:52.000Certainly it's going to be divided because, as that post pointed out, If you lose Matt Walsh on immigration, Tucker Carlson on global war, and...
01:08:01.000There was a sort of an, oh, Marjorie Taylor Greene.
01:08:40.000But it used to be the G8, and now it's, I guess, what's that, nine years ago, eight years ago, it switched over.
01:08:47.000They threw Russia out, which I claimed was a very big mistake, even though I wasn't in politics and I was very loud about it.
01:08:54.000It was a mistake in that you spend so much time talking.
01:08:57.000I just have to sort of stand there and put up with him criticising them in a way that's outside of the tacit vernacular of the political class.
01:09:07.000The tacit vernacular is you compliment me, I'll compliment you.
01:09:10.000We'll sit around this table with Ursula von der Leyen and pretend that we're the representatives of democracies that have brought us into leadership via mandates.
01:09:19.000We'll pretend that when elections don't go our way, as in Romania, or when a political figure like Marine Le Pen, who I might disagree with...
01:09:29.000We'll find a way of unweaving her popularity and her power.
01:09:34.000We'll find a way of excluding candidates that represent the politically voiceless.
01:09:40.000We'll find ways of excluding them from the process.
01:09:45.000We're protecting you from the far right.
01:09:47.000Well, when you watch this episode of Unpacked that's coming up on Rumble, you will see how these things operate.
01:09:55.000In particular, when it comes to the rape gangs in the UK, Britain are now being forced to conduct an inquiry they didn't want to have because Tommy Robinson, the activist and journalist who many, many people loathe, was reposted by Elon Musk, who many, many people loathe, and new nexite of power are able to challenge old institutions that are struggling to keep up with the rate of change.
01:10:19.000Are you struggling to keep up with the rate of change?
01:10:21.000Let me know what you think in the comments and chat.
01:10:23.000If you're on Rumble, you can continue to watch for free.
01:10:25.000The quartering are on now, and we're going to, you know, rate them.
01:10:33.000And if you have Rumble Premium, stay with us.
01:10:36.000I'm going to be looking at a video made by a guy called Sam Cedar, who's a left-wing, I suppose you'd say, center-left political commentator, who's attacking some of our content.