The Golden One - March 21, 2026


Sweden's Political Parties – Election 2026. The Golden One Livestream


Episode Stats

Length

58 minutes

Words per Minute

157.73166

Word Count

9,163

Sentence Count

209

Misogynist Sentences

4

Hate Speech Sentences

14


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 Confirm immediately that I look suitably massive, despite Nurgle's attempt at mogging me.
00:00:18.420 I'm awaiting the confirmation.
00:00:21.640 Once I have the confirmation that I look suitably juicy, despite Nurgle, I will start the stream.
00:00:30.000 all right i will start the stream even though the confirmation has not yet come in but anyway
00:00:50.340 we're gonna talk a bit about party politics okay joan carlson confirmed thank you very much
00:00:57.580 I appreciate it I appreciate to hear it so yes I will say the following I probably said it last
00:01:04.820 time as well that if you hear my voice is not quite quite normal then it's because I have
00:01:13.000 indeed been mogmaxed by Nurgle he said to me I wanted to have a cortisol streak so a streak of
00:01:21.060 a whole month. So like 30 days of making content, some sort of video every day. But yeah, it got
00:01:27.820 broken. Nurgle, he did not want me to do this at all. So I had to break my streak there to recover
00:01:34.800 my voice. I thought it was all good, but it was not to be. So anyway, if I am not as eloquent,
00:01:43.100 maybe if I sound a bit raspy or, you know, sound a bit sick, if I look a bit sick,
00:01:49.400 If I don't look as radiant as usual, then that's why. It's because I have been, indeed, been mugged.
00:01:57.480 But yeah, anyway, thank you for confirming that I look quite juicy indeed.
00:02:01.900 I did actually go to the gym today, despite everything.
00:02:05.160 I thought I needed some extra energy to get back at it, so I'm not sick, as in sick.
00:02:11.360 I wouldn't go to the gym if I'm that sick, but I'm still a bit sluggish since the sickness.
00:02:16.680 So anyway, welcome everyone. Very good to see everyone here. Always a pleasure.
00:02:24.480 And yeah, good stuff, good stuff.
00:02:26.820 So we're going to talk a bit about the Swedish political parties and party politics in general.
00:02:33.900 And yeah, then we'll see. We'll look at some, hopefully, hopefully some super chats if they come in and I will respond to those.
00:02:41.920 But first and foremost, what I want to say is that related to my Nurgle mogging and my video streak, my cultural streak, making many videos,
00:02:53.120 I will say that I do believe I made a mistake.
00:02:55.960 I will freely admit as much in trying to make a video every day because I did a video.
00:03:01.620 I made a video which is titled, so if you look at my channel, it's titled Is It Over for Sweden?
00:03:10.020 Something like that.
00:03:10.860 And I think it's such an important video about the Swedish election.
00:03:17.100 I should have been crystal clear in my communication and I don't know if that was actually done.
00:03:23.940 But anyway, sometimes you can't really await perfection.
00:03:27.700 So it is what it is.
00:03:28.720 Sometimes you have to take your shot even though it doesn't land as crisp and clean as you would like it.
00:03:38.620 So anyway, the point I wanted to make there is that, and the point I wanted to make in a recent stream, so perhaps I'm repeating myself here, but you know, so if you watch all of my content, you will see that I'm repeating a few things, but here's some advice for fellow content creators that when you make a lot of content, some guys, they might see one video, some other guys, they might see another.
00:04:02.820 So repeating yourself can often be necessary, especially if it's something important.
00:04:08.100 But then again, if you have been watching all of my videos and podcasts and posts and stuff like that, then I will repeat myself.
00:04:15.500 But anyway, what do I want to say?
00:04:16.920 Yes, I want to say that a political party is an organization, an institution almost, a party.
00:04:27.180 And that is not something that has an agency of its own.
00:04:31.000 Now, of course, you have a party like the Christ Democrats, so Kristdemokraterna in Sweden, which I will introduce soon.
00:04:40.580 I'm just giving my overall take first.
00:04:44.580 So you have such a party, and they, of course, have Christ in their name.
00:04:48.540 Then you have to go in there, and you can't be a Satanist, quite clearly.
00:04:57.920 But then you still have quite a lot of room within that framework, so the framework of the Christ-Democrats to push in your direction.
00:05:08.140 So you can interpret Christianity as being, you know, conservative.
00:05:12.280 You want to, you know, still have school celebrations in church.
00:05:17.920 This has been a somewhat contested topic in Sweden that should school events, like, you know, when you go on a break, should those celebrations be in a church?
00:05:29.300 I, of course, I like it. I'm not a Christian myself, but I like it because you get to be in a nice place and it has some tradition to it and stuff like that.
00:05:38.880 So that's something you can approach that part in or you can approach it from a completely different direction.
00:05:45.040 You can be, you know, you can go to the roots of Christianity and say that the Christ Democrats, they are the most tolerant of human equality or something like that.
00:05:56.020 So that is one way you can interpret the framework of a party.
00:06:01.460 But the actual realpolitik, so the actual policy of the party, that can be determined by the members of the party.
00:06:08.680 Very important stuff.
00:06:10.320 Same thing if we take something like the liberals in Sweden.
00:06:13.460 Now, liberal in America, in the US, means a lot more left than it does in Sweden.
00:06:18.540 So liberal is more someone who's an enjoyer of free market capitalism.
00:06:25.920 That is more.
00:06:26.680 And, you know, liberty and freedom, that is usually the vibe, so to speak, of the liberals in Europe.
00:06:34.000 So it's a bit different, but in the grand scheme of things, similar enough anyway.
00:06:39.560 so anyway point here is that you can approach you can approach a political party in many different
00:06:49.240 ways so you could be a liberal and you can still be for re-migration for example or you can be a
00:06:54.240 liberal and all you care about is to have pride parades as the main religious festivity of the
00:07:00.980 year which has been the case for many years in sweden so anyway what i also want to say
00:07:07.080 so i'm i will introduce the parties in but a moment bear with me i want to say a few things
00:07:13.720 first now when you have um a party and this by the way this is true for all political parties
00:07:20.300 all throughout the world this is not only in sweden i'm talking very generally here you can
00:07:25.080 apply this to any any place in the world if you have a long-standing party with an institution
00:07:32.880 with an infrastructure with an organization in place with a lot of money in place very very
00:07:40.140 important a lot of money in place this is super important when you want to do anything so you know
00:07:46.120 my own financial prowess is my my camera here and my my nice microphone and that's about it
00:07:52.620 compare that to the political parties even small political parties they have they are wealthy they
00:07:59.720 have a lot of financial muscle behind them which means that they can do a lot of things and this
00:08:04.440 is not something you have as a new party unless you already have a big backer on board and this
00:08:10.280 is what i mean with you know if guys ask me do i want to create my own party sure in a dream world
00:08:17.420 absolutely but now we're not living in a dream world now we're living in you know we're playing
00:08:23.220 with the cards we're dealt and the situation is that if you are on the outside of the political
00:08:28.220 game, which I am, you don't have access to all of these things that I just mentioned. The organization,
00:08:35.340 the administration, the infrastructure, and the money. So that's why I want you, my dear audience,
00:08:42.620 and I'm talking about the younger guys, if you haven't yet decided your path in life,
00:08:47.100 then I want you to go in and make the most out of that organization that is already
00:08:51.980 in place so same thing as you you know you would have a car you would prefer to you know drive and
00:08:59.540 already assembled and created and built car you don't want to build a car from the beginning
00:09:04.180 because it will take a lot of time and energy and resources that you don't that we don't have
00:09:10.480 we don't have that much time we do still have time to you know enact change but we don't have
00:09:16.200 that much time. We have a few decades. So it is, in my humble opinion, more effective to go into
00:09:22.400 already established parties and to steer those parties in a healthy direction. And this is not
00:09:28.740 something stupid, you know, this is not something vicious or Machiavellian even. It's just to take
00:09:37.100 these parties and return them to what they were, you know, a few decades ago. So if someone accuses
00:09:45.000 me of wanting to you know subvert these parties uh that's a bad word we're doing what we're doing
00:09:51.160 is to bring them back to being normal so anyway that is my point i will keep emphasizing it so
00:09:58.160 people understand that what we're after is you know um the organization the infrastructure the
00:10:05.140 network the uh the resources the party already has because again many of these parties especially
00:10:11.100 in Sweden old parties they have been active for some cases like a hundred years they've built up
00:10:18.180 a lot of a lot of resources that are that are yours for your disposal and if we don't get these
00:10:27.000 positions then someone else will and they will use it to continue to destroy in in our case in this
00:10:33.420 particular case, Sweden. So anyway, now let's introduce the various political parties. In a
00:10:41.560 coming live stream, maybe I will do a screen share. Now I will just talk. Now I will just talk so you
00:10:47.160 can focus on my nice polo shirt here and you can envision the political parties as I present them.
00:10:54.600 So we have the biggest party and these guys, they have been in charge for on and off for most of
00:11:02.140 the last like 100 years or so. So the Social Democrats. And this is a very long topic. I will
00:11:10.160 make more videos about it because it's a quite interesting topic indeed. The Social Democrats,
00:11:14.740 how they have run Sweden and how they have in many ways destroyed Sweden.
00:11:23.680 This is in Swedish, so I can't recommend it for everyone. But if you are, if you understand
00:11:29.360 Swedish I can definitely recommend you listening
00:11:31.420 to Don Eriksson
00:11:33.260 and Magnus Söderman
00:11:34.280 they made an episode titled
00:11:37.360 some paraphrasing
00:11:39.000 roughly translated the social democratic
00:11:41.500 destruction of the
00:11:42.980 countryside which basically
00:11:45.420 meant that since the social democrats
00:11:47.560 during the last century they want
00:11:49.500 to do make everything very
00:11:51.400 standard they want to standardize everything
00:11:53.420 to a state level so
00:11:55.260 you know similar as
00:11:57.140 any communist or socialist
00:11:58.740 the central planning that was the great endeavor which meant that many places out in the countryside
00:12:05.620 many industries they had closed down because they couldn't meet the demands of um of the the
00:12:12.360 central planning essentially so then we have and this i've said this before i'll say it again i
00:12:16.380 will go and make a video log or two or three showing this abandoned places you have them in
00:12:23.740 good old america as well called the rust belt we have a swedish rust belt as well where you have
00:12:28.260 abandoned towns because the industries they have you know been shipped overseas or the
00:12:34.140 the extreme bureaucracy of the state and the
00:12:38.740 the demands of the state in terms of taxation for example destroyed them so to use an example
00:12:47.200 of taxation so you had like an inheritance tax and if you had a family-run company out in the
00:12:53.980 countryside and they were you know the estimated value of the company was like say 30 million
00:13:00.300 euros or dollars or something like that but the estimation was also included you know it included
00:13:05.860 machines and property and everything like that so the son if he inherited it from his father
00:13:11.660 if he inherited this company worth say 30 million uh us dollars or or euros he would need to pay
00:13:19.880 x amount x percent of that value in in tax which then meant that he had to sell equipment because
00:13:30.120 he didn't have that in cash he had that the total value in equipment so he had to sell it and then
00:13:35.060 big investment firms could buy the the whole enterprise so i hope that makes sense enough
00:13:42.040 at least again i'm a bit i'm a bit sluggish still so maybe i'm not the most eloquent and
00:13:47.580 you know precise in my communication here but due to the tax reforms the social democrats made
00:13:55.040 to make everything you know in accord with state regulation that meant a lot of family businesses
00:14:01.920 out in the countryside they were they needed to shut down and this is something you see here as
00:14:07.060 well especially with the corona many many of these family businesses they couldn't go around
00:14:13.960 they didn't have any support to lean back on whereas these big companies they had all the
00:14:18.640 money in the world and also they had the resources to manage to navigate a bureaucracy and i'm saying
00:14:24.720 this myself as um you know as um as an entrepreneur the the amount of time i've had to spend to just
00:14:31.880 navigate bureaucracy in sweden um it's you know it takes its time and i don't want to do that i
00:14:38.080 have had to do this but i want to focus on you know developing a good product since you know as a
00:14:43.380 clothing designer i don't want to have to go through all of these bureaucratic loops but
00:14:47.700 that's something you need to do and they're a big company has a big advantage because they can hire
00:14:53.560 a lawyer or some something like that working full time to just navigate this bureaucracy
00:14:58.820 so the social democrats and the big capital same team and then you have the the people
00:15:04.780 including like the business owners in the countryside including old school capitalists
00:15:11.020 they're also on one side and when I say old school capitalists we're talking about industrialists
00:15:16.220 people who actually created something so the unholy alliance between like the social democrats
00:15:22.120 and the new capital and that is like investment firms and stuff like that same side and then on
00:15:29.060 the other side you have industrialists so businessmen and yeah capitalists to use that term
00:15:34.760 who actually produced something who produced steel iron cars what have you heavy manufacturing
00:15:41.640 so two sides two different sides and of course when i see these abandoned places out in sweden
00:15:48.780 and i know that here we had a thriving society where men and women they went around they married
00:15:55.400 had children they could live there because there was work there was things to do there was a
00:16:00.680 thriving industry and then due to these regulations it had to be shut down so anyway and such a thing
00:16:08.340 as say homeschooling um the social democrats and you know if we want to be kind here we want to be
00:16:16.440 compassionate as always we want to view things from their perspective the social democrats they
00:16:21.140 wanted to to enable that all children had access to a good school and they didn't trust families
00:16:29.340 to do that they wanted every they wanted the state to take care of everyone so if we want to
00:16:34.380 interpret it from a pro-social democratic perspective they would say and i do believe
00:16:38.940 many of these people they are good decent individuals back in the day they were many of
00:16:43.260 these old old women hardcore social democrats i'm sure they wanted well i'm sure they meant well but
00:16:49.820 it was quite um catastrophic as well um so that is something called folkhemet by the way so the
00:16:57.660 the people's home the the notion that sweden should be a big a big thriving community which
00:17:06.700 is sort of nice but when they meddled too much in the affairs of normal people in small businesses
00:17:12.620 in families it yeah it had a bad outcome and then of course fast forward to the 1970s one moment a
00:17:22.540 a sip of water they expanded this to you know the the compassion it went outside of sweden and
00:17:33.060 this is something i've talked about many many times when they switched from you know taking
00:17:38.120 care of the swedish working class ensuring that the the sort of downtrodden in um in sweden were
00:17:45.820 taken care of they looked abroad they looked to the third world and this is not by the way this
00:17:51.540 not only in sweden happened in many places that europeans looked elsewhere to to sort of find
00:17:58.820 their compassion and then of course this was the the groundwork for the mass immigration project
00:18:05.860 so brought about in my i mean in my humble opinion at least brought about from a perspective
00:18:11.860 of wanting to help people that's what the social democrats um um did so anyway they are
00:18:20.500 So we're talking about the Social Democrats. If you are just tuning in, they have been the largest party for much of the last hundred years.
00:18:31.560 They are still the largest party. They are not in power, though, because a coalition of others, which we will introduce in but a moment,
00:18:38.760 they have managed to form a bigger coalition than the left-wing one.
00:18:42.960 so still social democrats biggest party most influential party during the 1900s very
00:18:51.460 influential in swedish politics well i say politics but everything about sweden really
00:18:57.880 you can't understand sweden unless you understand the social democrats um so everything about sweden
00:19:04.220 heavily heavily influenced by um by the social democrats and also i will say the following
00:19:10.560 i said this in the podcast as well which i encourage you all to subscribe to it's the
00:19:15.940 greatest podcast i'm a lot sharper there than i am here in during an evening such as this
00:19:21.700 they've always been very pro-palestine which can be interesting because this differs a bit so in
00:19:28.420 the u.s you have both parties they're very much for israel and then you have in germany you have
00:19:34.600 sort of a conflict between leftists whether to support the palestinians or the israelis in
00:19:39.660 Sweden, the left, the mainstream, has always been staunchly for Palestine, because they view the
00:19:46.420 Palestinians as oppressed third-worlders, basically, and they view the Israelis as, you know,
00:19:53.580 European colonizers. So they've always been very for that, which has been, you know,
00:19:58.200 a main staple of Swedish foreign policy, so to speak. Same thing, and this is something I,
00:20:08.680 You know, I'm ashamed that they were very much against South Africa for the same reason, that they didn't like apartheid, they didn't like the white rule in South Africa.
00:20:21.100 So yeah, the Swedish state, I will be honest, they supported the ANC in South Africa.
00:20:27.020 So the Swedes, back then, they helped to abolish South Africa, and for the same reason.
00:20:33.100 Same reason they support Palestine, same reason they wanted mass immigration into Sweden.
00:20:38.200 because they viewed the moral good as supporting the oppressed non-whites.
00:20:44.420 So anyway, you can look at domestic Swedish policy, foreign Swedish policy,
00:20:49.640 and you need to take into consideration the social Democrats.
00:20:53.920 So if you see today also, there's a big discussion ever since the war,
00:21:00.280 ever since 2023 in Palestine.
00:21:03.380 That's something to keep in mind.
00:21:06.500 So anyway, that is the introduction for the Social Democrats.
00:21:11.220 Now moving on to the second biggest party.
00:21:15.100 And let us see here if they will remain the second biggest party after this year's election.
00:21:22.820 And I will straight up say that, so the Social Democrats, they have like 30, say 33% of the votes.
00:21:29.000 And the Sweden Democrats, they might get like 20, 22, 23.
00:21:33.680 luck if we're fortunate they get like 24 so there's a big gap between the social democrats
00:21:39.940 and the sweden democrats big gap but the difference is that the sweden democrats can
00:21:46.280 cooperate with other parties so they can still get into a dominant position this is super important
00:21:52.820 to realize so i repeat myself now i repeat that the sweden democrats in order for them to get into
00:21:59.700 a position of power they need to play ball they need to politics max they need to cooperate with
00:22:08.340 other parties who are not as good as them so if you say that you're disappointed in the sweden
00:22:15.540 democrats something to keep in mind is that they need to negotiate they need to you know try to
00:22:23.300 barter and play ball with this other parties and that can be hard. You know, I have my critique of
00:22:31.040 the Sweden Democrats. I wish they would work harder but I'm sure many of them do. I know for a fact
00:22:36.340 many of them do and I also know that their allies, their supposed allies, are often quite hard to deal
00:22:42.980 with. So anyway, the Sweden Democrats, they have, you know, as any party, they have different factions
00:22:49.620 in the party, some are more concerned with Islam, some are very pro-Israel, some don't
00:23:00.920 care, some are mainly interested in law and order, some are interested in re-migration.
00:23:06.580 Rikad Yomsov, which is one of the, I would say, most upstanding politicians in that party,
00:23:12.140 He has, you know, supported, he has voiced his wish for deporting 800,000 people who don't contribute to Sweden.
00:23:25.820 He's very much pro-Israel, and my perspective here is that he came of age, politically speaking, during the counter-Jihadist movement,
00:23:33.320 which was very much, you know, worldview based on being against Islam, which, you know, he's a good man.
00:23:42.140 i usually comment on his post you know saying rickard please focus on sweden not about israel
00:23:48.140 and palestine um but anyway that's something to keep in mind as well so sweden democrats
00:23:53.820 it's a good party many good men and women in the party i will definitely say that
00:23:58.540 some individuals who maybe they don't live up to the standard i would like to see in a party they
00:24:04.460 have many individuals who should maybe work harder i don't know i'm not gonna say too much because
00:24:11.660 Because it's hard to see what goes on behind the scenes as well.
00:24:15.820 Behind the walls.
00:24:17.500 But what I want to say here is that they do have 20% of the votes per the last election.
00:24:23.500 But they still need to, in order for them to get through with their policy, with their wishes, they need to play ball with these other guys.
00:24:32.960 So anyway, that is the Sweden Democrats.
00:24:36.520 Now moving on to their biggest partner, Ally.
00:24:41.660 whatever we shall call them the moderates so the moderates they have been ruling sweden a few times
00:24:47.880 also during the 1900s and earlier this century as well uh and i will say the following that
00:24:54.500 one of the worst prime ministers we've ever had frederick reinfeldt he he had um i'm not gonna
00:25:04.860 to say too much now uh would be interesting to have a conversation with him but he had uh
00:25:12.040 again take this with a pinch of salt i don't know but i do believe he was driven by a very strong
00:25:17.680 hatred for the social democratic project and maybe to a certain extent the swedish people
00:25:24.060 who knows i know at least that he was very much against the welfare system of sweden so he was
00:25:30.900 someone who more so liked um an open market that type of liberal capitalism um so anyway he was
00:25:40.740 very pro mass immigration because he again i'm speculating i hope i'm not saying too much now
00:25:46.580 but he wanted to use that as a sort of way to break open the the social democratic welfare
00:25:52.700 system but anyway it was a complete disaster now he didn't initiate the mass immigration but he
00:25:59.680 intensified it so even though now you have moderates they're talking about even deporting
00:26:04.360 people and i will say the following that you have good individuals in the moderates i will be
00:26:08.620 completely honest then you have a lot of just not particularly active people some lazy people and
00:26:13.740 then still some bad people 10 years ago it was a lot more bad people but these individuals also
00:26:18.880 you have to think that politicians they're humans like anyone and they respond to social pressure
00:26:24.560 they respond to the zeitgeist they respond to metapolitics when they notice a shift in the
00:26:32.520 zeitgeist how people how people think they will start to alter their views because their politicians
00:26:40.040 like businessmen you know supply and demand they go how can we get votes so that is how
00:26:46.080 metapolitics can influence directly then of course there are some who are ideologically
00:26:52.240 fanatic but you don't really find those in a party like the moderates. You find the fanatics
00:26:58.220 more in left-wing parties when their animating myth is something that goes beyond just a nice
00:27:04.900 paycheck but for the moderates it's more the case like they are normal people working as politicians
00:27:11.660 and they know okay how can we drive things in a somewhat better direction. That's a generous
00:27:17.620 interpretation and they're also more like this um right-wing in the sense that they like
00:27:24.360 entrepreneurship and business and stuff like that so which i like by the way i like that they have
00:27:30.160 that um thing going for them but still they have the the specter of frederick reinfeld it's haunting
00:27:36.440 the party and that's something they should probably apologize for because of the of the
00:27:41.500 mass immigration that he stood for he he wanted to yeah he wanted to continue that and he admitted
00:27:48.300 in a speech he said that you know he admitted that mass immigration from certain countries
00:27:57.080 that's a net loss there's no benefit because back in the day also like 15 20 years ago they
00:28:03.060 wanted to sell in mass immigration as something that was financially beneficial we need mass
00:28:09.040 immigration from the third world to
00:28:10.820 save the
00:28:13.000 welfare. You've probably heard all of these stories
00:28:14.980 but then he said, I don't remember the year now
00:28:17.040 but he said in a speech that
00:28:18.280 open your hearts
00:28:19.760 open your hearts
00:28:22.760 that was his plea to the Swedish people
00:28:24.820 so anyway
00:28:28.940 that was 10 years ago
00:28:31.200 or more. Since then
00:28:33.100 the moderates they've gone in a different
00:28:34.980 direction and now they are cooperating with
00:28:37.260 the sweden democrats and that is something that is a support that they absolutely need because
00:28:43.300 again the social democrats single biggest no yeah no number one ranked political party so the so
00:28:51.700 so the sweden democrats and the moderates they need to cooperate to be able to you know get over
00:28:56.840 to get bigger than them so then we move on to the aforementioned christ democrats
00:29:03.860 and they are a small party so not particularly influential at all but again here we have what
00:29:18.080 i talked about in the beginning of this episode since they are a political party that has been
00:29:23.980 around for a long time they have an infrastructure and administration organization and capital that
00:29:30.040 can be used for those who are willing to go into that party. And it can be the Christian
00:29:36.880 Democrats. It can be used as a tool to push things in our direction. So my advice is that
00:29:44.160 instead of looking at it for what it is today, just a regular so-called supposedly conservative
00:29:51.340 party that is mainly interested in Israel, that is how it is right now. It doesn't need to be
00:29:56.560 this way it could just be the case that you're a young christian man in sweden i do have a good
00:30:01.360 few christian supporters which i am um which i appreciate i do uh even though i'm not christian
00:30:08.340 myself but i do appreciate your support and i know that you're good guys that is something i
00:30:12.400 always say that even though i don't agree with the theological points of it all uh you are good
00:30:17.860 individuals i can say that i'm i'm being very honest when i say that you can go into the christ
00:30:23.740 the christian democrats you can push them in a direction that you see fit you can push them in
00:30:31.400 a direction that puts the traditions of sweden you know first you can say that this is what we
00:30:38.360 stand for we're for the um yeah again traditions of sweden we're against islamification of sweden
00:30:45.360 we're against uh there's other things we're against globalization i'm not against globalization
00:30:51.880 myself uh but you can definitely say that well i'm in certain globalization and certain globalization
00:30:58.180 it's um can be good such as streaming to the world online it's good for example uh but having a
00:31:05.180 mcdonald's in every every little town maybe not so good maybe not so cool so they could definitely
00:31:10.100 you know approach the situation there so if you have like so you know sweden is not a super big
00:31:16.440 country so if i say like 10 young guys if i have 10 young christian guys who are supporters of
00:31:22.120 mine if you go into the christian democrats like tomorrow work your way up it's not a big party
00:31:29.920 but you still have that those resources at your disposal and i would rather that you have them
00:31:35.780 so you can push things in a better direction and something we could be in mind here also is that
00:31:41.740 the swedish church which i am absolutely certain that the christian democrats they could influence
00:31:48.300 the swedish church in a better direction because right now the swedish church is
00:31:52.720 very anti-white very anti-swedish they they do not care about the well-being of sweds
00:31:58.760 now of course they interpret christianity as they see fit and that is to accept as many refugees as
00:32:05.880 possible so anyway the christian democrats they are in a coalition with the sweden democrats and
00:32:14.840 the moderates so they make up a small part of the coalition and they are necessary and needed still
00:32:21.100 so i don't have anything against them at all if you are from the christian democrats and you're
00:32:25.480 watching this i appreciate that you work with the sweden democrats and i can only hope that you start
00:32:31.140 being a bit more work a bit harder and that you look out for the traditions of
00:32:36.440 Sweden and that you start working for a re-migration because otherwise we
00:32:41.100 won't have a Sweden anymore now moving on to the liberals so liberal now I'm
00:32:53.820 sweating as always I am I have a dry throat and I'm sweating at the same time
00:32:58.860 the blessings of Nurgle be upon me so anyway the liberals they are a small
00:33:06.700 party and here you have a party that is you know you can be anything really in
00:33:13.100 the liberals was actually a big scandal in in the liberals now because the
00:33:21.900 their party leader, she came to an agreement with Jimmy Ã…kesson, so the
00:33:29.500 leader of the Sweden Democrats, because before they have been very much against
00:33:32.900 the Sweden Democrats, they have been all, you know, all open borders, love for
00:33:40.480 everyone, pro-refugees, everything like that, very much anti-racism, and the
00:33:46.280 Sweden Democrats have been labeled racist then. So racist basically means when you
00:33:50.840 put your own people first so if you put if you're swedish and you put the swedish people first
00:33:55.660 then you're a racist super intelligent arguments from the from the left as usual very insincere
00:34:02.980 very very mean even they're mean individuals there's leftists when they call people racists
00:34:08.860 anyway the liberals they have been very anti-nationalism for a long time because they're
00:34:15.180 more you know citizens of the world and everything like that i'm sure you know the type
00:34:21.140 Now, anyway, they have, I suppose, still ongoing conflict in the party
00:34:26.160 because the party leader came to an agreement with Jymi Ã…kesson
00:34:31.760 saying that, yes, we will support you in getting your positions in the parliament
00:34:38.740 upon a good election result later this year, in this autumn's election.
00:34:47.280 And then, you know, many individuals within the Liberals, they were very angry at her for doing this because they said, oh, you can't work with this horrible racist and fascist and right-wing extremist.
00:35:02.140 But they have come to their senses.
00:35:03.920 They have understood that, you know, the Swedish people, they have to listen to democracy because this is also something that you have in the Liberals.
00:35:11.040 you have some people who are true believers there as well and they do believe in such things as
00:35:15.400 freedom of speech and democracy so you know classic liberal values and some i will say this
00:35:21.740 actually they do believe in it many of them they're just standard npcs but some of them they
00:35:27.740 are um they are for these things and that you know good for them good for them that they are and they
00:35:32.600 you know in that case they respect democracy and say that um um the the swedish people they want
00:35:39.920 to have the sweden democrats in in a position of power so anyway there you have the four
00:35:46.480 coalition parties the right-wing conservative bloc and they will hopefully then continue to
00:35:54.240 rule the next four years as well in my opinion have they done enough no not nearly not nearly
00:36:00.080 enough sweden is still in a very bad situation absolutely but we're going in you know forgive
00:36:07.040 me for being too optimistic
00:36:09.160 maybe. I'm usually quite
00:36:10.900 white-pilled, but things
00:36:13.040 have gone in a slightly better direction.
00:36:15.980 However, should they
00:36:17.040 lose next election,
00:36:19.320 things will be quite bad. I will be
00:36:20.940 very honest with that as well.
00:36:23.020 So if things continue as they do at the moment,
00:36:25.280 things can actually become a bit better
00:36:26.940 for every year. So they've been
00:36:29.120 a lot tougher on crime.
00:36:31.560 Well, perhaps not a lot, a bit
00:36:33.000 tougher on crime. I would
00:36:34.740 be I would be tough on crime I assure you there wouldn't be any if I took power tomorrow they
00:36:40.140 would they would be okay maybe one rape more but then I would set an example and then you would
00:36:46.580 have absolutely no rapes anymore because of the example I would set so um yeah if the um
00:36:52.840 when the time comes there will be no more crime in Sweden because I will set a good example
00:36:57.800 to do not misbehave in my country but anyway that's many decades until I will be in a position
00:37:04.380 of power unfortunately so until then we have to make do with what we have um anyway so that is
00:37:11.940 the introduction of those particular parties then we move on to the rest of the left-wing bloc which
00:37:18.940 also have in addition to the big the biggest party social democrats they are allied with
00:37:24.100 the communist party or the left-wing party literally venster partiet venster means left
00:37:31.340 in swedish and partiet means the party so the left-wing party and they are you know a bit more
00:37:38.580 extreme version of the social democrats so a bit more extreme a bit more pro-palestine a bit more
00:37:45.680 pro-mass immigration a bit more pro many different things so not super interesting just a standard
00:37:52.240 left-wing party very anti-white very anti-european then we have the milieu partiet which basically
00:37:59.080 It means the environmentalism party.
00:38:03.740 And they are, yeah, just leftists, but they are dressed in green, so to speak.
00:38:08.840 They're like a watermelon.
00:38:09.940 Green on the outside, but red on the inside.
00:38:12.240 So not super interesting to talk about either.
00:38:15.080 So, you know, left-wing hippies, not much difference between them and other leftists, to be honest.
00:38:22.400 So that is the other block.
00:38:24.220 and they also have the center party
00:38:27.060 which was an old
00:38:29.400 farmer's party actually
00:38:31.040 and they were quite
00:38:32.020 right wing back in the day actually
00:38:34.960 they had
00:38:35.920 propositions about racial
00:38:39.320 purity and everything like that so they were
00:38:41.300 very much on the other side
00:38:43.620 like 70-80 years ago
00:38:45.340 but now they've gone along with the
00:38:47.280 zeitgeist, they've gone to the left so now
00:38:49.240 they are with the
00:38:50.820 left wing
00:38:52.960 coalition not super interesting as well they've had a lot of pedophiles in their party as well
00:38:57.760 so many many scandals about pedophiles in the center party so um yeah that is the coalition
00:39:09.540 and then we have some parties outside of the the parliamentary system we have alternative for
00:39:17.460 sweden which you know i thought i hoped they would get into the parliament back in 2018 but alas they
00:39:25.200 didn't do a good election at all you know it's hard to start a new party um i can't really pinpoint
00:39:31.920 to anything they really did that was wrong but it was just people knew about the sweden democrats
00:39:37.860 you know brand recognition and everything like that they um so people simply went with them
00:39:43.760 And also if you have a situation where it's so tight between the different blocks, then it's understandable that people, they don't want to jeopardize their vote by voting for another party.
00:40:01.300 and this is something i heard a lot back in 2018 when i talked to people that
00:40:05.940 you know the um they don't want to give away their vote to a party that may or may not
00:40:12.460 even get in to um to the parliament so they vote for the sweden democrats instead
00:40:18.000 now back in 2022 alternative sweden they didn't do a good election either to be honest and then
00:40:25.620 there's been some internal drama as well that you know i don't need to talk about it's not super
00:40:31.200 interesting or important the point is that why i don't support the alternative for sweden now
00:40:38.000 well i don't don't support him either i wish them all i wish gustav all all happiness and success in
00:40:44.180 in all of his endeavors i have nothing against him uh you know he's bled for for a good cause
00:40:49.580 as well for a long time the difference though is that he's still on the outside he doesn't have a
00:40:54.680 big party behind him he doesn't have a big infrastructure so if i see a young guy and
00:40:59.900 this is by the way something i think many guys they um they misunderstand what i mean i'm not
00:41:06.840 talking about it's being super important that all of our guys they go to vote for the sweden
00:41:13.060 democrats voting is like get the norm is to vote for the sweden democrats that's a victory what i
00:41:19.200 want to say is that for our guys for the younger guys that i can influence i want you to go into
00:41:24.900 parties to go into the inside so you can enjoy the infrastructure administration finances i'm
00:41:31.640 repeating myself but you know you have a you have a thing you can take for yourself instead of
00:41:36.660 standing on the outside building everything from scratch because it's it's a hard it's a hard job
00:41:41.980 and as shown by alternative for sweden it's hard to get anywhere it's hard to get anywhere we don't
00:41:49.500 really have that brand recognition you don't have access to these networks so a society like
00:41:54.700 anything it's about a network it's about having the connections and if you go into say the
00:42:00.280 christian democrats you will get access to a lot of channels that you can reach out to um you can
00:42:09.520 you know you hmm i'm i'm too mugged by nurgle to think of a good analogy here but anyway suffice
00:42:19.520 to say that when you join uh an already established party a party that's been there for 100 years
00:42:25.360 many doors they open for you these doors they're firmly shut as long as you're outside of the
00:42:33.160 political system such as a party like alternative sweden is such as a party if i were to start a
00:42:38.400 party tomorrow all of these doors they would be shut they would just say oh this is a right-wing
00:42:45.180 extremist guy because the media they still decide the media is still more powerful than i am
00:42:49.980 maybe in 20 years the the site guys has shifted so much so i can actually be the normal and they
00:42:57.020 are the extreme but yeah we have a lot of work to do metapolitically before that can happen
00:43:01.340 so my point is that if you look at a party like alternative for sweden you might look at all of
00:43:08.660 their points and say oh shouldn't i join this party but i'm just saying that if you can choose
00:43:13.820 between a party that has all of this you know infrastructure organization in place it's better
00:43:21.160 to go in there than to build something yourself so um yeah then you have also another party called
00:43:28.260 mid-borderly sampling which is sort of like a i suppose a right-wing party but not super
00:43:34.080 interesting uh to be honest but also you know i i wish them all the success uh they're sort of like
00:43:40.740 anti-corruption as well and stuff like that but and then of course we have and this was the
00:43:46.080 my next video it will be my next video which i'll make it's about örebro partiet so i will
00:43:54.280 definitely say this in a common video as well that if they get 12 percent in örebro kommun
00:44:02.660 so kommun is like a county they can get into the parliament and their party leader marcus
00:44:08.480 a lot. He is a bit of a firebrand, I like him, very assertive and aggressive in a
00:44:15.200 good way. He confronts his political opponents, very much anti-corruption,
00:44:23.120 very much anti-big state, anti the big bloated welfare state as well, so it would
00:44:30.980 be really fun to see him in the parliament, actually. So, anyway, that is my
00:44:41.600 introduction. I've been at it for 45 minutes now and I sense my voice is it
00:44:48.020 can only take so much more. So, had I been completely well I could probably
00:44:52.280 have I could probably have elaborated a bit more here so yeah I'm sorry for a
00:45:01.540 bit shorter live stream here but we're gonna look at the the super chats I don't
00:45:06.080 think I've missed any any party of note we did have by the way the feminist
00:45:13.160 disc initiative so the feminist initiative which was basically ah yeah
00:45:19.700 another left-wing party so not super interesting or inspiring uh because everyone was sort of
00:45:24.600 feminist back in you know back 15 years ago so um okay what do we have here um maybe i'm missing
00:45:35.220 something there otherwise we have from bruce lee fan 8888 since five euros thank you very much
00:45:43.040 sorry i missed the last few live streams did you listen to buttery now i will catch up the
00:45:48.560 Missed live streams later.
00:45:50.280 No, unfortunately, I did not.
00:45:52.900 I have not.
00:45:53.880 I've only been to the gym once, actually.
00:45:56.520 So I forgot about it.
00:45:58.380 But I will do it.
00:45:59.540 Next gym session on the way to the gym in the car.
00:46:01.940 I will endeavor to listen to some Bathory.
00:46:06.900 So thank you for the contribution.
00:46:10.280 And then we have also from Bruce Lee Fan.
00:46:13.660 Five more US...
00:46:14.940 No, not US dollars.
00:46:16.440 Euros.
00:46:16.780 I heard in Denmark the Social Democrats are based now.
00:46:21.060 Yeah, so I'm not going to say too much because I need to look into it.
00:46:25.600 I need to talk to a Danish person who can fill me in on the details.
00:46:32.460 But essentially what happened was that in Denmark they had an anti-immigration party.
00:46:40.440 And the Social Democrats there, they simply co-opted their program.
00:46:44.460 So they said, look at me, I am the anti-immigration party now.
00:46:48.620 So they simply took their platform and they gained a lot of votes from it.
00:46:52.620 So quite a good way.
00:46:54.420 And this is also, by the way, how politics can change one political party.
00:47:00.140 It can change the stance of another political party.
00:47:03.420 Because politicians, they are, you know, as a businessman, you look at the market, you see a supply and demand.
00:47:08.600 A politician sees also supply and demand.
00:47:11.160 there is a demand for immigration restriction we want to get as many votes as possible in the next
00:47:17.480 election so therefore we moderate our message to you know hit the you know where the supply and
00:47:22.620 demand where they meet so therefore they started to talk about um even re-migration so i think
00:47:29.280 they have an election upcoming as well and i posted on it i will go to my x account here i
00:47:36.120 scroll down a bit so bear with me so here Denmark to ignore Denmark to ignore the EU regulations
00:47:52.520 criminals will be automatically deported from May 2026 and that's a statement by the prime minister
00:48:01.080 of Denmark, Mette Fredriksson.
00:48:03.740 And I was, of course,
00:48:05.120 white-pilled about this. I thought, yeah,
00:48:07.020 let's go Denmark. Great stuff, great stuff.
00:48:09.260 But then some Danes in the comments
00:48:11.100 said that, you know, she's full of
00:48:12.820 she's just talking
00:48:15.080 to get the
00:48:17.080 attention and votes.
00:48:18.880 But yeah, we'll see. Can't say too much now.
00:48:20.960 We will see how they implement it
00:48:23.120 come May this year. But, you know,
00:48:24.940 knowing the Danes, I wouldn't
00:48:27.020 put it past them, because they've been quite
00:48:29.040 quite good in terms of immigration policy so don't get me wrong they're still in a bad situation
00:48:37.600 and something definitely needs to needs to change but the the climate the metapolitical climate in
00:48:45.600 Denmark has been a lot better than in Sweden for a very long time which also explains that they can
00:48:51.360 say stuff like that and people appreciate it so we will see I can't say too much right now
00:48:56.580 if they will actually go through with it
00:48:58.760 but I do believe I'm quite optimistic
00:49:00.780 at least and also something
00:49:02.760 to say about the Danes
00:49:04.360 they're quite you know
00:49:06.460 tough guys and girls
00:49:08.200 so when Trump talked about invading
00:49:10.520 Greenland they actually had orders to fight
00:49:12.460 the Americans to protect Greenland
00:49:14.560 so which is you know
00:49:16.540 quite based
00:49:18.840 quite strong to
00:49:20.420 to put up military resistance
00:49:22.360 against powerful nations
00:49:24.760 such as the US
00:49:25.760 so yeah I wouldn't put it past them to to start to actually deport criminals
00:49:30.560 and mass come come May and then we have Neon Panda sends 50 US dollars thank you
00:49:39.860 very much that's very generous and much appreciated thank you very much indeed
00:49:44.600 so yeah then we don't have any more super chats not sure the last few streams
00:49:51.920 we've had many many super chats on both platforms so maybe i did something wrong here i don't know
00:49:59.980 i will meditate upon it and yeah comment on x or something if i if i forgot to to do something
00:50:06.940 nothing came in on power chat either or it's just the case that saturday is not a good day to stream
00:50:12.520 maybe people are doing other things and sunday is a better day so i'm having uh i'm giving a
00:50:19.160 a lecture tomorrow evening so that's why I can't do a stream but I will try to
00:50:24.540 stream next Sunday instead Sunday after this so anyway I hope this evening
00:50:31.160 lecture evening stream evening performance whatever you want to call it
00:50:34.940 I hope it was somewhat informative and you have a better understanding of
00:50:39.140 Swedish politics and the main point is not about you know which political party
00:50:45.620 based or which political party has that amount of votes what matters is that i want to reshape
00:50:53.620 how people think about political parties i don't want anyone to look at a party and see this is
00:50:58.820 what this party is and accept it view it instead and think to yourself that this is what a political
00:51:05.880 party could be if a few good guys go into it and start to you know stare it in a better direction
00:51:12.000 And this can also be completely in line with, you know, the party's overall framework.
00:51:22.500 So, for example, to use that example again with the Christian Democrats,
00:51:28.620 if you are a Christian and you would like to, you know, retain Swedish traditions,
00:51:35.460 yeah, go into the party, start pushing them in that direction.
00:51:37.880 If you are liberal, but you're right-wing, go into the liberal party and start to push for freedom of speech.
00:51:46.920 Start to push for classical liberal things that can actually be useful for us.
00:51:52.900 Such as, yeah, again, freedom of speech.
00:51:55.380 If you are someone who likes entrepreneurship, yeah, go into the moderates and push them in a good direction.
00:52:02.680 And say that we can only have good business, we can only have good entrepreneurship in a high-trust society.
00:52:07.880 because this also believe me if you have a business trust is everything high trust site
00:52:13.160 is everything if you do business high trust which i do by the way because i have such good reputation
00:52:19.180 after many years in business and i always keep my business super clean so i have a good reputation
00:52:23.240 everything gets so much easier when you have high trust between the the different parties the
00:52:30.660 different parts of um so business parties not the political parties so everything goes smoother
00:52:36.600 when you have a high trust society so if you are indeed you know interested in these things on a
00:52:41.300 political level go into the moderates or the equivalent in in your particular country and say
00:52:47.620 you know we are for entrepreneurship and free market if you want you don't need to be for a
00:52:54.160 free market but you know what i mean and then you say okay we need to also have a remigration so we
00:52:59.200 can have a good functioning high trust society again if you are um you know um i suppose many
00:53:08.660 of you if you're checking in from sweden you're closer to the sweden democrats same thing there
00:53:13.000 just go in push them in a better direction and make sure to work hard to push them in a direction
00:53:18.560 which is good for us now i will say also the following that i don't think it is super easy
00:53:24.760 or doable to go into say the social democrats because they are so their their success and
00:53:34.380 future is so dependent upon foreign populations so foreign i mean third world populations because
00:53:40.620 they have this votes for welfare scheme going on so it might be hard to go in as a right-wing guy
00:53:47.440 there because the the entire part is so permeated with anti-white sentiments so it might be hard to
00:53:54.720 just get anywhere because there are so many
00:53:56.600 people in there already who's just going to
00:53:58.660 keep you at bay. Whereas if you go
00:54:00.600 into, say, the Moders, for example, you might have
00:54:02.700 people who are
00:54:04.600 interested in... You can find
00:54:06.480 common ground, but you might not find any
00:54:08.540 common ground if you go into a left-wing party.
00:54:11.160 Same thing, of course, with
00:54:12.400 the Venster
00:54:14.520 Petit, so the left-wing party itself.
00:54:17.560 So, anyway, and also
00:54:18.900 Gabe Cassidy,
00:54:20.040 20 British Pounds, thank you very much.
00:54:22.600 See you tomorrow, big man Vril Club.
00:54:25.860 Yes, indeed.
00:54:26.540 I will hold a lecture for Vril Club.
00:54:28.840 So a good group of guys.
00:54:33.500 Okay, we're getting in another super chat here.
00:54:37.000 The Eternal Magus, five US dollars.
00:54:39.240 Thank you very much.
00:54:42.700 What are your thoughts on billionaire Brian Johnson
00:54:45.200 and his work to extend human lifespan until people live forever?
00:54:50.060 Yeah, I like it.
00:54:51.480 I like it a lot.
00:54:52.600 And so I'm not, you know, I'm not implementing any of his teachings on myself necessarily.
00:55:00.580 And it's not a lifestyle I would like to live.
00:55:03.240 I am perfectly content with knowing that I die one day and that I will age and everything like that.
00:55:09.820 So if someone says to me, you know, being out in the sun will damage your skin and make you look wrinkly,
00:55:15.220 it's, yeah, it will happen anyway.
00:55:19.620 So I'm just going to enjoy the sun and enjoy life.
00:55:21.920 But I still want to live happy and healthy for as long as possible to be productive and stuff.
00:55:26.960 But not to the extent where I sacrifice thumos and power and energy here and now to live five years longer in the future.
00:55:37.560 But I will say also that many billionaires, they don't really do anything fun with their money.
00:55:43.900 If you look at, there was a clip on X I saw of Jeff Bezos.
00:55:50.440 he was at some sort of party at a beach resort where he sat in the bar and then was some girls
00:55:58.140 around him and someone came in with a bottle of champagne and some girls were dancing and i thought
00:56:02.820 like what what a waste of of life what a waste of money he could do something epic instead like
00:56:08.080 i don't know build a cool fortress on an island or something like that um so uh so yeah but yeah he
00:56:15.280 he thought it was a fun thing to party but yeah brian johnson uses money for something interesting
00:56:20.900 at least now of course i would wish he would sponsor someone like me i wish i had a big
00:56:25.380 backer who could bankroll me so i could do many things many things to push things in the right
00:56:31.600 direction but um yeah it is what it is so anyway i i appreciate him at least taking it upon himself
00:56:38.380 to be a human experiment so that you know we can learn something from it so it's always good
00:56:44.440 the more knowledge the better so anyway thank you the eternal magus and yeah to conclude my
00:56:50.440 response about my thoughts on brian johnson i'm i'm all for it i'm all i'm happy that he is um
00:56:56.020 using himself as an experiment to bring enlightenment to us all ah ivory urukai
00:57:03.000 five years dollars thank you for checking in good to see you my esteemed moderator of the chat only
00:57:08.940 logged in just now because the weather is too nice out today hope all is well okay well maybe
00:57:14.200 that explains it. Maybe that explains why not so many are tuning in this fine day. So we have had
00:57:22.080 quite decent weather today as well in Sweden. But now of course it's night and it's dark outside. But
00:57:27.820 I do understand that in the new world it's still day and it's completely fine to be out. You can
00:57:34.120 always watch this stream afterwards as well. So now we're coming up on an hour and yeah you might
00:57:42.460 hear of my voice, it's a bit strained, but yeah, thanks a lot to everyone for checking in, and
00:57:48.200 yeah, I will try to stream next week as well, Sunday again, hope we'll get a good turnout there,
00:57:57.140 so yes, good times, good times, I will say farewell now, and