Breakfast With Beau | Monday 27th April 2026
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 25 minutes
Harmful content
Misogyny
21
sentences flagged
Toxicity
113
sentences flagged
Hate speech
127
sentences flagged
Summary
The White House Correspondents Dinner, the attempted assassination of Donald Trump and the roast of the royal family by the American president. Also, a look back at the first episode of the Bo Show, and a look forward to the next one.
Transcript
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lovely cup of tea to start the day to start the week it is monday monday monday the 27th of april
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in the year of our lord 2026 it's just ticked past eight in the a.m british summertime as
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otherwise i am joined by my producer this morning little harry how are you this morning good sir
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My glorious band, The Chosen Few, my band of brothers and sisters.
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Shall we jump straight into it, then, without any further ado?
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Shall we stop faffing about what's the corporate legacy mainstream media
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That cabal of evil editors lying to you by omission, if nothing else.
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What's Fleet Street, the British print media talking about this morning
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It's wall to wall, Trump avoiding being assassinated again
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It's that, every single front page, without fail, is that
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And you weren't on the internet, or you didn't watch any TV
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don't blame me quite often sometimes i see occasionally i watch these back and i see the
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chat i don't really watch the chat in real time i can't really i don't know how people do that
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how people make content make videos conduct a conversation and are watching all the chat at
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the same time i just can't do it i've never been able to play guitar and sing i'm terrible at
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singing can barely play guitar but nonetheless a few times i've tried to do it my brain just goes
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Okay, I've watched the chat back once or twice.
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Sometimes people say, why are you talking about this?
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Stop talking about that thing that the news is talking about.
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So on Saturday night it was the White House Correspondents Dinner
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They'll have a few speakers that will get up there
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sometimes an actual comedian have a few speakers and um they'll just like roast the president
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roast the party roast the government roast america a little bit and um and um the president
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will get up stand up and do a comedy bit like roast themselves a little bit
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so i've got a really bloodshot eye there sorry about that i'm perfectly sober don't know what
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tell you i'm not hung over anything one eye all right the president will stand up and they'll do
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a comedy bit they'll sort of they'll roast themselves and it's usually quite funny sometimes
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some of the jokes actually hit home a bit and people are like a bit annoyed it's funny i think
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so is that you wouldn't get the british establishment the british government doing something like that
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they're too sort of straight-laced and stuffy and serious imagine the kremlin doing something like
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that. You can't imagine it, can you? Imagine like the Saudi royal family putting on a roast
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for themselves, about themselves every year. It just wouldn't happen, would it? I think
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it speaks volumes about America, like the American character, that they are able to
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be lighthearted and joke around a bit, even with the most serious things, even in the
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middle of a war or something. I think it's good. I think it's great. So anyway, that
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was supposed to be happening saturday night in um was it the hilton hotel in washington dc
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a little bit of history repeating that was the hotel that ronald reagan was shot outside
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in like 1980 was it 1981 ronald reagan was shot like in in the stomach wasn't it in the stomach
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uh when he was outside that very same hotel and um it's quite bad he was rushed to hospital but
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of course obviously he lived and he uh he sort of returned to work really really quickly
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incredibly quickly wasn't quite like a teddy roosevelt who finished the speech he was giving
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when he was shot that's remarkable isn't it tr teddy roosevelt someone came up an anarchist i
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i think it was was it came up to him shot him point blank in the chest it went through like
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he had something in his pocket um it's either a cigarette holder or a flask or something and a
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speech he had his own speech rolled up folded up in his pocket he went through that and then into
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his chest but only like into the muscle they went into his pectoral muscle and stopped there
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Obviously it didn't get to his heart or anything
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Trump said he wanted to continue after this incident happened
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A lot of the cabinet and the senior people were all there
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Armed dudes sort of turn up sort of immediately.
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You know, they're there, ready to rock and roll for just such an instant.
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And it turns out the guy, it was one guy, a lone wolf guy.
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Didn't even get into the actual room, the actual auditorium, the ballroom space.
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Because as you can imagine, there's all sorts of layers of security.
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Oh look, well, financial times go with the fact that
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Some Kenyan dude ran the London Marathon in under two hours
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and there's footage you can find it on youtube in two seconds flat if you're so inclined
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he had a shotgun a pistol and multiple knives on him the footage is a bit remarkable actually
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he just sprints towards like an outer cordon outside the the actual ballroom area you know
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Breakdown of exactly how this ended up happening
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and um and they got him there you go and so we didn't actually even get into the actual ballroom
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room okay so that's basically that's like the stripped down bare facts bare events of what
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happened trump trump target is gunman storms gala king's trip oh of course the british print
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made a lot of it's through the lens of the king's trip king charles is going there isn't he very
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imminently it's like well should king charles still go yeah he's still going yeah do we need
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extra security around king charles i mean maybe if you want to yeah probably it's not really the
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important thing here is it whatsoever but there you go we are looking at the british print media
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after all yeah so so this so the next thing the next question is like who is he what was his
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motivation um why is it i think maybe i've got hay fever touch of hay fever or something
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anyway it's a me problem isn't it okay so who is this gentleman here
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lives in california la i believe near santa monica near santa barbara they're two very
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different places aren't they anyway in la he lives in la he like he went to caltech
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universe he's got a master's degree in something he's like 30 31 um got a master's degree in
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somewhere i think he was like a part-time teacher i read and he's into computer game programming
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other bits and bobs like that so not a complete loser because sometimes assassins
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are like real like real real bad losers of people aren't they sometimes they're complete losers
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This guy doesn't seem to particularly have been a loser
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It's not like he set the world alight, is it?
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One of my first thoughts when some of the details of this emerged
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like the likelihood of you going down in a hail of bullets
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right they are they are completely sort of bonkers bonkers
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you know sometimes often i mean like they'll write a manifesto or something
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they will have a little manifesto they've put on 4chan or something
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and it's a babbling incoherent nonsense like literally like stream of consciousness insanity
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I don't really know what they're doing or talking about
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I watched a video where someone was breaking it down and talking about it
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And he seems pretty compass-mentous in that to me
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He's calling Trump a rapist, a paedophile, a traitor
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That's the problem with saying stuff in the first person
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So you could just clip that, of me saying that.
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No one's stepping up to the plate, so I'll do it.
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Yeah, he said things like, in this little manifesto,
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Who was the one who lived out in the wilderness?
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i can't remember often often the um the uh manifestos can be sometimes can be long and in
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depth well this one wasn't he just said he's a leftist though he is a leftist so that was one
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of the first things that emerged he's like does he belong to either of the two parties
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no he didn't but he was if there wasn't like a full-blown card-carrying member of the democrat
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party oh ted kaczynski yeah like ted kaczynski the uni bomber the uni bomber he um he wrote a
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manifesto and he was like actually really really clever again mad but he was actually a really
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really really clever dude and his manifesto is like again coherent again i don't but i don't
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agree with everything you're saying you're saying stuff like science and progress is all terrible
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and evil we need to go back in time sort of thing almost not exactly that's my resolution but the
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point is his manifesto read a bit like a manifesto and then you got that one like uh what's the guy
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there's a guy called cho or chew and it was like a virginia tech massacre and he wrote one and it's
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sort of very much like very much not like ted kaczynski it was just like this rambling
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almost rambling nonsense type thing right there's a shooting that not that long ago one of the
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transgender ones they wrote something and it was just like their mind is mush it's like an
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an idiot psychopath child no more than that there's nothing to it well at least this one
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he did have his reasons they're his reasons again i don't agree with them but he had his reasons
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that obviously made sense to him and all that sort of thing
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But he was obviously completely anti-Trump, anti-Republican
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An organisation that was adjacent to the Democrat Party
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He gave $25 to help out Kamala Harris' campaign
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He seems to be just like a Californian libtard
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It's just like, you know, political violence in America
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Becoming more and more common, particularly against Trump himself
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On Epochs, and on my own history channel, History Bro
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I feel like it's more the case that the 1990s and perhaps the early 2000s
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That that was just a low ebb for political violence in the United States
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And the amount of political violence we've got now is actually more returning to the norm
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I feel like the 1990s and the early 2000s were sort of just a very very low ebb
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Because if you look back at like the, certainly the 60s and 70s
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There was quite a lot of political violence in the United States
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People getting shot and assassinated all over the place
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And now it seems like we're just returning to much more sort of that level
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Everything used to be perfectly, perfectly peaceful
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And no one ever got shot, there was no political violence in the United States
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We've had hundreds of years more of Prime Ministers as well
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I mean, I talked about TR getting shot, didn't I?
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I've got videos and articles written all about that
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And yes. Was he the sole shooter from the book depository? I don't think so. I don't
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think that's possible. The doctors at Parkland Hospital said Kennedy had an exit wound in
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the back of his head. But there's more than that. Like McKinley. William McKinley. That's
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how Teddy Roosevelt became president Teddy Roosevelt was just VP but then the
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someone walks up to him an anarchist again wasn't it pretty sure it's just an
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thought that the United States and the president was just like an oppressive
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thing he wanted anarchy and having like a functioning government was just he
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Back in those days you could quite often just walk up to the president. The president would be
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Doing some sort of function shaking hands somewhere opening something
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They had a secret service, but very very very often
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They weren't it wasn't like a close protection or anything
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So this dude just did walk up to President McKinley with a pistol under hidden under a handkerchief
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Again a guy could just walk into the president's box
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President just getting a train like anyone else
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Of course John Wilkes Booth wasn't an anarchist
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a partisan of the south just after the civil war just after the union and lincoln had won the civil
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war garfield i think that was another oh no garfield it was a guy that just had like a
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personal grudge against garfield some guy that had that had uh campaigned on behalf of garfield
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then expect some random dude then expected a job in government after that and the garfield
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administration were like uh no you're just some random dude you don't get to be in government
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There's one thing, I don't know if anyone remembers this
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It didn't come to anything, it completely failed
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But there was a bunch of people that tried to get into the White House
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Or they took like long range sniper shots at the White House
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under threat than any other president i mean maybe slightly because of tds
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yeah this is my backup water by the way not a second cup of tea
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you know like has trump had more close calls than any other president in recent times yeah totally
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yeah yeah yeah is he particularly more at risk than any other president i would say probably
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only slightly but the tds thing doesn't help does it the way that the left-leaning media and um the
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democrat adjacent media over the last few years 10 15 years whatever it is or more just stoked
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up more and more stoked up the tensions more and more you know some of them explicitly saying
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things like we need to take trump out some of them say explicitly things like that don't they
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have done see um yeah i see people even on twitter sort of retweeting or getting screenshots
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from the past of left-leaning people in the united states just one way or another either
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completely explicitly saying it or sort of dog whistling to
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you know the the concept the idea someone should try and kill trump shouldn't they
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you know that sort of thing heaven forbid i should explicitly encourage anyone to do it but if they
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did scummy isn't it you don't see it from the other side very often do you i don't i i can't
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recall. It must have happened. I can't really recall any big right-leaning or Republican-leaning
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influence of voices or media organs overtly stoking violence towards leftists. I don't
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recall that. I don't really recall it. I mean, it may have happened. It probably has happened
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a bit somewhere. I'm sure it has, but not much. I do remember loads of times, particularly
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couple of years of Trump's first administration
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That someone should go and do something like this
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Washington in shock after Trump press guard a shooting
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like filming it on their phones but filming with so the camera's pointing to them so they're doing
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a bit to camera pretty narcissistic isn't it imagine thinking you were genuinely in the middle
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of a an assassination attempt or a mass shooting event and you're a journalist in some way you're
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at the correspondence dinner i think you should document it for posterity but you do it through
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look at this suspects this is the financial times questions mount over trump security lapses
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after brush with alleged shooter officials targeted investigators say yeah in his little
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manifesto thing he said that i want to take out the president and members of the trump government
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Even anyone that's just sitting in the audience
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People found it immediately, almost immediately
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Alright, the mirror. Most of them going with the same
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Okay, the king. The Express. It's a good paper.
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Zoomers, I imagine, just would not get that reference
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Rather than the shooting incident in the US, the Daily Telegraph leads its front page with the latest part of its investigation into Lord Herma, the UK Attorney General.
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It says that emails it has obtained show the Attorney General telling human rights lawyers that they had done more good for society than the decorated soldiers they had falsely accused of murder and torture.
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He would be one that I would put in the dock
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lord hermer goes on trial oh yeah crimes against the state crimes against the people
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a spokesman for the attorney general tells the paper quote the attorney general has the greatest
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respect for the armed forces does he has the greatest respect for the armed forces and the
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sacrifice they have made for our country these emails simply show the attorney general offering
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support to a junior lawyer who is exonerated of any wrongdoing and who is going through a difficult
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time oh the human rights lawyer trying to falsely prosecute soldiers for torture and murder
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they were going through a difficult time and herma was looking out for their well-being their state
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of mind tells you everything doesn't it there's everything you need to know lord herma what a
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filthy scumbag filth all right they're the front pages should we have a look at our poll
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marginal wind for the nose 38% of you say no he wasn't and a big chunk 26% say maybe
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actually the answer's somewhere between for me somewhere between no and maybe maybe he was I mean
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he sort of was I mean he was he just wasn't in any immediate danger
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but was he in some danger yes okay so actually the votes there don't do reflect that i suppose
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maybe the question we posed was a bit vague wasn't it maybe we should have said was he in
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any real immediate danger or something we just said do you think trump was in any real danger i
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38% for no's and just ticked down to 36% for the yeses.
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Maybe we should have made the question a bit more specific.
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Although it's interesting when it's quite vague and then let you decide what we meant by it.
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or what that means well that question really means in your own mind a bit more ambiguous
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perhaps they're slightly more fun to do polls like that i don't know
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or should we just have a quick look at the uh price of oil no real reason like the oil prices
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are massively in the news today i just we're just doing that in these days aren't we just
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we'd have a look check in on it reasonably high okay so west texas is at 96 a barrel
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and brent is a 107 a barrel so the story again is it's high
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considering everything that's going on in the straits of hormones i'm surprised at this point
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that it's not way higher if you said to me at the end of last year or in january this year before
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this iran war kicked off that would be like something like 50 days in getting close to what
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two months worth of war with iran and the straits of hormuz being closed and blockaded both by the
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iranians and the us what would that do to the price of oil i would have said oh well that would make
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the price of oil go through the roof you probably would imagine you'd see all-time
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hires if not close to all-time highs perhaps all-time highs
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that would have been my my guess at that point but that's not what's happening is it i mean
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again it's not cheap when this war started roughly speaking very very roughly speaking
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on average the price of a barrel of crude is something like 78 dollars 79 dollars 80 dollars
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it's now like about 100 odd you know the average something around
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very very broadly speaking something like 100 dollars a barrel
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again got to point out the uh price of a barrel of crude on the commodities market
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doesn't necessarily translate into how much a normal person actually has to spend on a gallon
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of diesel or petrol at the pump it's not fair is it it's not fair
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all right let's have a look at the websites what we've got most of them of course go with
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the correspondence dinner failed assassination attempt what else have we got here's an interesting
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story i just thought the way the bbc frames it look israeli strikes kill 14 in lebanon
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ongoing so it's not a ceasefire then though is it
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The story talks about how the IDF, the Israeli Defence Force
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Gave evacuation warnings to several villages in southern Lebanon
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Why are you pretending? Why are you trying to say?
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Why are you trying to frame it like there's an ongoing ceasefire
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is factual evidence that there isn't the double think involved in that
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murderous strikes that kill loads of people including women and children
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including babies in that one some women amid ongoing ceasefire i mean just
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just stop claiming it's a ceasefire that's the if the israelis are doing strikes and
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that hezbollah are attacking back okay just just say that why are you trying to pretend there's a
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ceasefire though okay all right should we have a look what else we got oh harry what's happened
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with my links here if i clicked on something can you sort that out for me so i've got all my links
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back cheers oh there we go thank you very much i must have clicked on ever so slightly the wrong
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thing or something thank you sir all right did we have something in the um on the TV news
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rarely comes up with something interesting or good um but today there's just a little bit there
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I think it's worth mentioning there's a little story there what are the Henry VIII powers and
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why might Keir Starmer use them it's interesting because Keir Starmer wants to bring us closer
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back to the eu have better at least better trade ability to trade with the eu
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just trying to undermine and undo brexit essentially um but wants to be able to
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do these things through parliament because it will take acts of parliament or you just amend existing
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get voted through the House of Commons, voted through
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I haven't got time to go through it all here in detail
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400 years old right and there's a little bit in it just one line in it which is so antiquated and
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out of date and that it's like it doesn't make sense anymore and it's a problem for some reason
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it's like a little loophole that's left over from ages ago or it was just it was just slightly
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wrong and now it's a problem instead of going through the entire rigmarole of passing an entire
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new act of parliament which might take ages and use loads and loads of energy and political capital
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yes or no so the vast majority of the time for secondary legislation it just goes through
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de rigueur it just goes through of course because of course it does
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it's a complete no-brainer anyone that's being normal and reasonable will just say yeah of
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course do that yeah some tiny thing from like uh some fisheries act from like 1920 that's now a
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problem and doesn't make any sense it's stupid and of course it's in our interest to just amend
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if you wanted to and you had a good enough majority in the commons you could pass big
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and important things through that way imagine that like our entire relationship with trading
00:45:07.140
with the european union it's like a bill you know we've already got the like the leave leave europe
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bill various ones actually what if you wanted to just basically scrub out most of what it says
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wanted to amend amend it so that you just most of it becomes annulled
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then you do that process through secondary legislation it's a yes or no today
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guess what we've got the numbers to make it a yes
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They hate the idea that Westminster might be sovereign
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Or that Britain might be in control of its own destiny
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Queue up a little bit at an airport or something
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Because a court in Europe has told you you can't
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what have we got here oh here's one remember i don't know if you anyone saw a week or two ago
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it was all over the news and twitter that kathy newman was leaving bb uh leaving channel 4 news
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maybe kathy newman this revolting shill remember her interview with uh jordan peterson
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she she just kept saying so what you're saying is and they're misrepresenting what you're saying
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So you're saying we should live like lobsters
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Bye bye love, don't let the door hit you on the arse on the way out
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They think, oh, it's not as bad as Channel 4 News
00:49:02.060
jump up on stage, save the prez, alright, what else did we have, Jennifer Lopez has still got
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abs, well, a midriff, there you go, that's news, someone won a million quid on who wants
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to be a millionaire, you know, big stuff, big stuff, alright, was there one particular
00:49:25.340
a thing uh did i see one interesting thing no all right sorry the express certainly had something
00:49:33.700
of interest yeah um that new green mp hannah spencer a mad mad child hannah spencer
00:49:52.300
A problem with home ownership and landlords
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There's a restaurant in Port Cullis House and stuff
00:50:48.700
It's not just this House of Commons Chamber and House of Lords Chamber
00:50:51.720
It's a really massive building with all sorts of stuff
00:50:57.340
And yeah, there's a really heavy drinking culture
00:51:01.140
And business quite often goes on late into the night in Parliament
00:51:11.200
Sometimes votes happen in the middle of the night
00:52:10.680
anti-semitic things on record how'd you square that circle dave
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jug-eared freak weirdo weirdo freak you've seen running you've seen that clip where he's running
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up to the stage at some live event it's like this really really uncoordinated
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Yeah, just loads of people in the Green Party
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Because the Green Party has been co-opted by Islamists largely
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It's not really about environmentalism, is it?
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And if you're out there considering voting Green
00:53:26.660
And things like Zionists killed 20 million Christians
1.00
00:53:47.720
England has a government overrepresented with Zionists
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I wonder what his rabbi thinks about all of this
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He's in a little bit of a pickle really, isn't he?
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And where of course he's a degenerate himself, isn't he, personally
00:54:20.880
What the Islamists in their party think about that
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the Americans waiting, are you going to send anyone
00:56:23.960
the ayatollah still hasn't been seen still in hiding they're saying he's had like his face
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and his lips really badly burnt to the point where he can't really talk properly and needs
00:56:33.320
plastic surgery and almost certainly has lost a bit of one of his legs he's waiting for a
00:56:38.760
prosthetic for one of his legs so he was badly blown up in that original strike it must have
00:56:47.960
been must have been very very very close to losing his own life i mean he may well be dead
00:56:54.740
well if you haven't seen him at all he may well be dead we still don't know do we for sure
00:57:01.120
apparently they're saying the iranians whether you can believe them or not
00:57:05.600
they're saying he's not dead but he is terribly terribly wounded yeah like his face and lips are
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burnt and um i don't know if it's burnt off but he needs plastic surgery why they decided to make
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him the new ayatollah don't you want someone who isn't half blown up to be the ayatollah
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okay there look angela the fridge rainer big bird hoping to be the next prime minister
00:57:40.940
hopefully all her woes with the hmrc and her tax issues are going to be sorted out soon according
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to some reports and then that sets her free to try and be the prime minister oh she's so gross
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she's so unbelievably gross all right it's very near the top of the hour should we do a little
00:57:59.380
bit of on this day in history i like doing that segment you guys seem to like it on this day the
00:58:04.380
27th of april down through the centuries what happened of note just to finish the show quick
00:58:09.400
a few minutes of that, yeah, okay, on this day in 1565, first Spanish settlement in the
00:58:18.080
Philippines is founded in Cebu City, I believe that's how you pronounce it, Cebu, Magellan
00:58:23.200
went there, Cebu, and the Spanish weren't actually booted out of the Philippines until
00:58:29.600
the American Spanish War in like the year 1900, was it, no, 1899, 1899, so the Spanish
00:58:38.580
in there from 1565 or had connection with the philippines before that of course but from 1565
00:58:47.140
to 1899 the philippines the reason why the philippines to this day is very very heavily
00:58:52.660
catholic isn't it the philippines never been there myself some of the islands do look lovely
00:58:59.620
would like to visit it all right on this day in 1865 so right at the end of the civil war that
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that would be. Very, very end. The steamboat SS Sultana explodes in the Mississippi River,
00:59:15.020
killing up to 1,800 people of the 2,427 passengers in the greatest maritime disaster in United
00:59:23.600
States history. Most are paroled Union prisoners of war on their way home. Imagine that. You
00:59:29.980
survive the battlefield one of the battlefields of the civil war very very close to being as
00:59:36.500
horrific as world war one battlefield some of them you survive that they survive being a
00:59:41.660
prisoner of war in the confederacy again you're not it's not good the whole confederacy is being
00:59:50.940
blockaded and starved out so you as a prisoner of war is going to be with the best will in the world
00:59:56.640
you're not going to get all that much it's going to be bad andersonville
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one of the pow camps in south ansonville looked like belson terrible terrible unbelievable
01:00:09.440
you survive all that finally you're on your way home packed in like sardines but you're
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on your way home and an accident it seems like it was a genuine accident the boiler blew up or
01:00:51.520
just overshadowed by that but yeah big thing it says sultana must have been terrible imagine the
01:00:59.440
scene of it in fact don't it's horrific the horror okay on this day 1904 the australian labor party
01:01:07.200
under prime minister chris watson becomes the first labor government in the world
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there you go so australia has got a little bit of a history with progressivism
01:01:21.520
Not that they're actual, like, Marxists, not exactly, or full-blown socialists, although they will have been basically socialists.
01:01:33.420
But at 1904, that is early, isn't it? Long before the Russian experiment, the Bolshevik-Russian experiment, isn't it?
01:01:39.880
Okay, on this day in 1945, Italian partisans capture Benito Mussolini in Dongo, near Lake Como.
01:02:07.780
And the king of Italy dismisses him from government
01:03:39.640
invade Sicily and then they invade Italy itself
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on this day in 2005 the super jumbo jet aircraft airbus a380 makes his first flight from toulouse
01:04:19.300
france that's interesting to me when i read that's when i didn't realize it was as early as 2005
01:04:23.020
anyone doesn't know because i love aviation don't i civil and military aviation love it
01:04:27.920
got loads of content about the history of civil and military aviation
01:04:31.000
often in conversation but not always with raf fast jet pilot tim davies all sorts of content
01:04:40.000
about military and civil aviation the history of it i didn't realize the a380 which is a
01:04:44.880
incredible craft giant giant giant thing um didn't realize i was as old as 2005
01:04:53.120
over 20 years old didn't know that all right should we look at the rumble rents and super chats
01:05:01.440
let's do that let me do this with my mic so i can see the section of the screen that's got
01:05:06.400
got the Rumble Rents on it. This really needs a bit of WD-40 on it. Somebody needs to sort
01:05:13.160
that out. I won't do it, I'm just a talent. Let someone else do it. Alright. Who do you
01:05:24.820
reckons in at number one on the Rumble Rents? Only global church history, isn't it? Reigning,
01:05:32.100
defending still champion of breakfast we bow rumble rents global church history says on this
01:05:40.520
day in 711 at least the year 711 ad general tarik ibn zayad landed at mount kelp now named gibraltar
01:05:51.020
after him beginning the berber conquest of the visigothic kingdom in iberia yeah 711 so that's
01:05:59.420
only what sort of what is that that's 50 40 50 60 years after the life of the prophet muhammad
01:06:07.060
himself so it's remarkable just think about that in the space of what like two generations
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the the muslim armies the muslim hordes have gone from nothing to from not existing
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01:06:18.960
obviously before muhammad didn't exist in a couple of generations they've conquered all of
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01:06:36.980
And then they're pushing up into Spain, Iberia
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01:06:45.960
Many historians have noted that the world of the 8th century
01:06:53.620
wave of conquest because it was so exhausted the world the mediterranean world anyway was
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was exhausted from antiquity from from late antiquity there was some great new badass
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hold like a mongol hold or an islamic hold the most of the world was just there ready to
1.00
01:08:16.860
In fact, you don't need to sign up for one month listen to them all
01:08:20.160
Cancel it if you want in fact, I think we've got a thing where you can buy individual videos and be like
01:08:25.440
$1 or $2 or something. I don't even know I don't deal with any of that stuff
01:08:31.100
Yeah, Magellan died at MacTest. They died. He's cut to bits
01:08:39.180
Killed in a skirmish very very small battle and then quite literally cut into bits
01:08:46.860
all right 14 barber says morning bow good weekend morning sir yeah it was a good weekend thanks
01:08:56.900
yeah cheers yeah it was nice i got to relax on the sunday well sunday day in the evening i was
01:09:03.400
doing a live stream with nate for the state of politics the state of politics you go to the
01:10:07.660
you have to be in the right mood the right mind space to do writing fictional writing you can't
01:10:12.920
just force it like an essay or an article just sit down just force yourself to do it doesn't
01:10:17.320
really work like that you have to be for me anyway i have to be in exactly the right sort of place
01:10:22.120
in my own head and everything and if it's not if you're not feeling it it doesn't flow it sounds
01:10:29.440
really artsy fartsy doesn't it but i don't know how fictional writers novel writers do it i don't
01:10:36.680
And how they sit down and force themselves to do a bit of writing
01:10:39.320
Because that's what a lot of writers say they do
01:10:41.620
It's never worked for me, I've never been able to do it
01:10:47.340
Did I manage to get any writing done, question mark
01:11:03.820
oh that's cringe um he said it feels weird yeah it does yeah i've always said that it feels
01:11:11.700
doesn't yeah i'm not comfortable did you see jos verstappen's horror crash in
01:11:17.880
in the belgian rally no i didn't see that jos verstappen max verstappen's dad
01:11:24.260
he had a horror crash it looks dreadful luckily he was all right okay
01:11:31.680
Well, that really will be the first thing I Google when I get off of this
01:11:47.000
Because I know most people on the boat show don't care about it
01:11:56.600
He almost certainly seemed to have bullied Max Verstappen growing up
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01:12:10.840
But you go across that line into bullying them, though.
01:12:20.080
Seems like Jos Verstappen was a horrible dad to Max.
01:12:28.520
And Max Verstappen does seem quite well-balanced.
01:12:30.500
so maybe it's okay but that i don't know be out of horror crash okay but he's all right well good
01:12:39.900
good i don't wish him injury or death of course far from it all right fallen firebird says hello
01:12:47.640
bo i highly recommend you peter wilson's great book on the holy roman empire
01:12:52.800
holy roman empire is always derided but this book convincingly opposes against that
01:13:02.060
plenty plenty of beautifully autistic detail oh okay well that sounds cool um peter wilson
01:13:12.760
maybe i'll have try and find it have a look holy roman empire the history of it i've got a bit
01:13:20.480
Nothing sort of specifically on a grand overview
01:13:48.760
looking all right just to let you know the background is very light color and then the
01:13:53.280
writing itself is in white and my eyeball is struggling to read it a bit so all right it
01:13:59.560
says i need glasses down really i've got to stop kidding myself
01:14:36.580
see I can't read it does that say Violet Death Ray Violet Death Ray I think that's what that says
01:14:48.660
sorry if I'm getting your name wrong thanks for the super chat I can only apologize if I can't
01:14:54.580
read I can't see it right Violet Death Ray I think that says it says he donated to Kamala this will
01:15:00.280
be that cole allen would be assessing he donated to kamala and went to no kings
01:15:09.160
as some who lives i guess as someone who lives in a democratic state everyone is registered
01:15:15.000
independent they let you vote uh they let you vote in both parties okay interesting fair enough
01:15:22.520
does seem to have been obviously much much more left aligned than anything else
01:15:29.680
he donated to Kamali yeah it was like 25 bucks wasn't it not like a great deal but
01:15:34.220
yeah no doubt about it certainly wasn't a died in the wall GOP was he
01:15:52.580
Crazy how five attempts have been made on Trump
0.81
01:17:10.040
like the book i was reading the other day that was the turn of phrase i read in a
01:17:12.840
book i was just reading the other day a bomb throwing red
01:17:23.880
like it's right-wing violence that's the main problem sort of ever
01:17:28.200
not really it's nearly always a reaction to leftist violence nearly always
01:17:43.420
doesn't say anything and just gives 10 Aussie dollars
01:17:57.160
it's a shame that I don't speak to him much anymore
01:19:03.080
to the point where you're told that doing maths or being on time or watching Lord of the Rings
01:19:09.560
is racist. What? What? Yeah. Yeah, I guess you're right. You say, it's not enough just to say I
01:19:20.840
don't care if someone accuses you of racism. You should hit back at them. Yeah. Yeah, fair point,
01:19:31.720
fair point amelia for restore that's the person's name amelia for restore says iran leader says
01:19:55.400
i don't know what that means i'm afraid i'm sorry harry is that a reference to some zuma thing i
01:20:00.760
don't know about some computer game or something okay sorry thanks for the the super chat there
01:20:07.640
amelia i don't know what that means sorry i feel like it's a reference to something isn't it but
01:20:14.380
it's a reference i just don't get okay thanks anyway thomas tyon thomas tyon again says uh
01:20:24.420
teddy roosevelt was a progress a progressive yeah he was but not in the modern sense remotely
01:20:32.580
not in the modern he was a progressive in terms of 19th century concern he was conservatism
01:20:46.180
conservative and within that framing he's on the conservative side of that
01:22:48.620
Do I even need to say about how the Tatars are an actual tribe
01:22:53.420
and that at various points in history people have talked about Tartaria,
01:22:57.180
so there's evidence, but there's this whole subset of people
01:23:13.040
I won't spend another second talking about it, I'm afraid,
01:23:45.900
you can only really get through the system climb the greasy pole largely
01:23:52.300
if you just play their game and become an establishment and globalist shield in various
01:23:57.500
ways hopefully that's starting to change now i mean look at restore britain aim high vote low
01:24:03.260
millions must go from zoomers to boomers aim high vote low um but yeah a lot of it is designed
01:24:13.340
isn't it it's by design to keep nativists out patriots out largely so yeah perhaps starting to
01:24:22.680
drift towards no that's the kind of statement thank you thank you very much for the super chat
01:24:28.380
okay that's the show it's just ticked 24 minutes past nine in the a.m uh british summertime on
01:24:35.160
monday monday monday the 27th of april in the year of our law 2026 you've been the glorious band the
01:24:40.920
chosen few my band of brothers and a few sisters thank you for joining me that use not a thing
01:24:48.040
it isn't try to make the best of the day ahead if you can you've got a whole day ahead of you
01:24:52.500
right if it's possible if your whole day isn't taken up with just working or doing chores or
01:24:58.720
something a bit of free time to choose what you do with it try and make it count up a dm seize
01:25:04.120
the day try and do something of value with your time if it's at all possible because it's finite
01:25:09.300
right you'll never have this day again most valuable thing you've got by a long long long
01:25:16.300
way is your time if you can try and make it count all right then until tomorrow morning