The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters - September 19, 2024


The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1004


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 34 minutes

Words per Minute

179.58784

Word Count

16,985

Sentence Count

12

Misogynist Sentences

13

Hate Speech Sentences

52


Summary

In this episode of the Basketweavers Podcast for the 19th of september 2024, I am joined by Dr. Mark Horton, Dr. Charles Cornish and Dr. Harold Hydrada to talk about P.D. Diddler, remigration and the over diagnosis epidemic.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 hello welcome to the podcast of the load seaters for the 19th of september 2024 i am joined by
00:00:17.740 marcus hortovich and uh harold hydrada here and uh i am of course count formula but anyway
00:00:26.440 today we're going to be talking what was the point of that i don't know we were going to do a whole
00:00:32.440 segment about how i was private security and yet now here we are i'm introduced as a russian agent
00:00:37.740 well it's all the all the rage at the minute but no we've got mark horton here of course
00:00:44.000 uh psychologist and basket weavers founding member there we go that's a proper introduction a proper
00:00:51.020 introduction thank you very much for a proper person he's definitely real he's actually a hologram
00:00:55.820 people complained when i was on the podcast on monday that they did no idea who i was because
00:00:59.740 carl did a terrible introduction but i did well so we're talking about p diddy um we're talking about
00:01:06.940 remigration and how it's possible i've got a plan are we talking about remigrating p diddy we could
00:01:13.680 it's possible anything's possible we have the technology it can be done and we're also talking
00:01:19.860 about the over diagnosis epidemic we are indeed and uh first and foremost we are hiring some people
00:01:26.740 this is i only found out about this an hour ago but yes if you like administration uh you like doing
00:01:32.500 behind the scenes stuff we have a production administrator position open i don't know much
00:01:37.920 about it but there is stuff on screen right now uh if you know what this is you might be qualified to
00:01:43.020 do it um there's a lot of information have a look at it if you feel like you're the right person for
00:01:48.780 the job send us email exactly send us email as you said also we have this magazine you might have
00:01:56.420 heard of it called islander it's very good you should have bought it already but if you haven't
00:02:00.900 um there's some great stuff in there i'm actually going to read out who's in it this time instead of
00:02:05.380 guessing yes uh carl benjamin you might have heard of him uh dr neema parvini whoever that is
00:02:11.100 morgoff review um dr charles cornish dale raw egg nationalist to you and me marcus bollin i think
00:02:18.120 that's the golden one isn't it dave green who's the distributist uh stephan molyneux and uh christopher
00:02:24.120 uh i don't know how to pronounce this guy's name christopher jolliff show me tell me how's it
00:02:32.040 pronounced jolliff i think rory said i did ask him before i did this i've no idea but you got that
00:02:39.320 fella and and uh some others which are surprises uh so yes very good good aesthetics as ever i mean
00:02:47.760 look at it it's it's beautiful you want to buy it it's matte it feels nice it smells nice i've not
00:02:53.140 tasted it yet but it looks pretty tasty look at the subtle off-white coloring there you go but anyway
00:02:58.640 let's hear about puff diddler all right yeah i thought i'd cover something that is the interest
00:03:04.140 of our entire audience what all right i am i am starting this first segment now thank you samson
00:03:15.360 um it's uh impression there yeah so um yeah i thought i'd cover something that's in the interest
00:03:21.820 of our entire audience our target demographic of course being um the ghettos and that is p diddy
00:03:27.320 um now possibly going to be changing his uh official title to puff diddler allegedly um make sure to
00:03:35.360 make that very very clear right now it's all alleged thus far okay so let's not get into any libel action
00:03:43.500 here but what isn't alleged he's gonna find it very difficult to sue us from from prison isn't he
00:03:47.900 well he's been denied bail so yes probably i did cover some of what was going on earlier on this
00:03:53.280 year but there have been some development so i thought i'd go over some of what happened and uh
00:03:58.020 give everybody an update but what isn't alleged is that we have a fantastic magazine out
00:04:02.780 islander number two that josh just can't help waggling around there
00:04:06.420 oh it works in 3d as well
00:04:09.340 yeah it's full of excellent articles and is available on the website for a limited time
00:04:15.220 only if you order it you'll be able to thanks did somebody hop you up on too many sweets this
00:04:21.840 morning what's going on dizzy on sugar i knew it uh yes if you order it right now then we'll be
00:04:27.100 ordering to print and you should receive it within about two to three weeks it's got excellent articles
00:04:31.740 from the likes of carl benjamin nima parvini some new contributors including dave green the
00:04:36.700 distributist and uh stephan molyneux among others you should read it you should treasure it you should
00:04:43.320 cuddle it up at night because you're ever so lonely otherwise you should buy it there you go
00:04:48.020 so uh moving on p diddy earlier on this year and at the end of last year was subject to a rolling
00:04:55.620 number of lawsuits that all came one after the other that were all alleging very very serious and
00:05:02.240 similar charges one after the other where a number of his ex-girlfriends and even one ex-producer
00:05:07.880 of his all alleged that he was a serial sexual abuser who was in an in an epstein-like manner
00:05:15.300 hosting parties where some of his ex-girlfriends some of his uh colleagues that he would work with
00:05:21.860 would be forced to have sex with prostitutes many of these prostitutes underage at his home
00:05:28.540 and other locations often rigged up with cameras secret cameras enough in many of these rooms this was
00:05:35.040 alleged by his old producer um lil rodney who worked with him up until i think midway through last
00:05:41.640 year uh all in the aim of uh presumably blackmailing people keeping people within the music industry
00:05:47.920 particularly the hip-hop sector under his thumb um and uh these were called freakouts so one thing that
00:05:56.640 i'll find very interesting about this with this trial going forward is the fact that supposedly jeffrey
00:06:02.720 didn't did the same thing and we heard nothing of the video evidence of the people committing crimes
00:06:07.940 no one's been prosecuted of course uh for any of these things uh in fact it's all been rather hush hush
00:06:14.160 of course and there have been a lot of allegations in the music industry in general for a very very long
00:06:20.780 time that you have um particular ways of getting into the industry getting a career being promoted by
00:06:28.560 producers which i i think uh as difficult as it can be to make a living in the music industry these days
00:06:34.780 given how little money there is in it is at least one thing that the more democratized online music
00:06:42.480 sharing um prevents people from being exposed to which is being exposed to people who are potentially
00:06:47.760 going to sexually exploit you for promises of a career which may not even you may not even get a career
00:06:53.520 out of it you could suck anybody off and you never know if you're actually going to that's what
00:06:58.320 happens but uh allegedly one thing that i would find interesting is if these alleged crimes are of
00:07:03.840 course true um whether these videos that have been allegedly recorded um of the alleged perpetrators
00:07:10.860 i'm going to be saying allegedly a lot here whether those are going to be released in this case as
00:07:16.780 opposed to the epstein one because i see lots of parallels between the two but i get the impression that
00:07:22.300 epstein was much more plugged in with far more elite people than perhaps p diddy was he was more
00:07:28.860 in the sort of arts and entertainment generally speaking they're not the ones that run things
00:07:33.300 they're not the ones that necessarily run the country but they do run a lot of la and hollywood
00:07:37.980 and the media business industry as in general so this will expand out to hollywood as well think
00:07:45.040 harvey weinstein except uh potentially more serious than weinstein because what was alleged against him
00:07:51.580 was that he used his position of power to coerce women into performing sexual acts on him whereas
00:07:56.380 what's being alleged against p diddy is essentially an enormous prostitution ring and human trafficking
00:08:02.440 which is what the federal judgments are coming out against him so the curious thing for me then is
00:08:07.840 really two questions the first is uh is there a list of associates and uh alleged associates i should
00:08:16.540 say uh take a shot every time you hear the word allegedly but um uh alleged associates and people
00:08:23.180 connected you know they've got to be pushers in this market you know there's going to be people like
00:08:27.520 gislaine maxwell was with epstein you know who are sourcing uh you know presume if if it's allegedly
00:08:34.280 children you know underage um girls then it's going to be uh you know they're sourcing these these kids
00:08:40.500 basically to be abused uh and similarly you know you're going to have points of contact for aspiring
00:08:47.120 artists shall we say who want to get in there who then get pointed in p diddy's direction uh at which
00:08:53.240 point he gets dirt on them by inviting them to the party and then he's got leverage so i'm really curious
00:09:00.100 whether or not we would get eyes on that in the event of that and the second question really is why is
00:09:05.280 this coming out now uh what has happened with p diddy you know if he's got powerful friends who've
00:09:10.520 been shielding him for a long time allegedly then why uh why is this the moment at which the story has
00:09:18.460 broken uh to answer your first question there are other names involved in it i i couldn't remember
00:09:24.420 them off of the top of my head but some of the other names involved are other um black hollywood
00:09:29.200 stars who've appeared in television shows and uh films as well i can't remember sadly off the top
00:09:35.140 of my head uh the second question would be that um p diddy has been uh the center of rumors for a
00:09:41.460 very very long time and his girl one of his ex-girlfriends this cassandra ventura was one of
00:09:47.260 the ones who put one of these lawsuits against him at the end of last year as well which seems to have
00:09:52.380 caused this domino effect of all these different lawsuits coming against him and so i think with all
00:09:56.500 of the evidence that's built up against him it might just be time for the hollywood and media elite
00:10:01.960 to throw out a sacrificial lamb which they do every so often fairly high profile lamb so to speak
00:10:08.460 yes but of course as you say we don't know how deep this goes and we don't know if he was high up in
00:10:15.920 the hierarchy or if he was just a fall guy middleman who through his talent talents within the industry
00:10:22.120 was able to still make a hell of a lot of money from it because of course if you're in that position
00:10:26.820 there is a lot of money to be made from it sadly so as i mentioned uh one of the things that came
00:10:32.120 out was this uh lawsuit from his ex-girlfriend uh cassandra ventura who was one of the first people
00:10:38.260 to say that he was doing the hosting these freak outs she said in a lawsuit that he had forced her
00:10:43.580 to do some terrible sexual acts with prostitutes i think they settled that out of court she also said
00:10:50.020 that he physically abused her and we can say almost for certain that that isn't alleged anymore because
00:10:55.140 earlier on this year cnn actually released footage of it because it was caught on ccpv
00:11:02.320 obtained exclusively by cnn brutal so there's her cassandra and here is p diddy drunk high who knows what
00:11:12.340 in a towel going to run up to her and proceeds to just assault her oh my god that's horrible
00:11:20.500 not very nice and there's footage later on as well of him going it back into the hotel corridor and
00:11:27.380 yeah pretty brutal
00:11:29.940 and it lines up almost exactly with what was alleged as it shows here in the indictment that was brought
00:11:38.580 against him mr combs became extremely intoxicated and punched miss ventura in the face giving her a
00:11:43.800 black eye and you can see that that's what happened later on as well he picks up some vases from the hotel
00:11:49.800 corridor and just starts throwing them at her so it's not very nice we don't really need to dwell
00:11:54.520 on that but it seems that yeah he's an abuser that much is clear um but one of some of the more bizarre
00:12:01.000 lawsuits that have come out since all of this happened include this one which he's go away
00:12:05.960 post-millennial i don't care um which he's actually being ordered to pay 100 million dollars
00:12:11.200 in a michigan sexual assault lawsuit because he failed to attend the hearing this was put forward by
00:12:16.960 a man called um derrick lee cardello smith who it's worth noting is currently a prisoner in michigan
00:12:24.820 for uh he's a convicted felon and sexual predator who had been sentenced on 14 counts of sexual assault
00:12:31.680 and kidnapping over the last 26 years so nobody in this story is coming out well no but he's being
00:12:37.400 paid 100 million dollars whilst he is in prison because the lawsuit alleged that he met combs at a detroit
00:12:45.140 restaurant in 1997 and they were getting drunk and smoking pot cardello smith says that while combs was
00:12:51.560 having his way with a woman at the party he put one hand on his rear end he also claims that combs
00:12:56.920 then gave him a drugged drink that made him fall unconscious that's something that's often alleged
00:13:01.200 at these freak out parties as well that all the drinks are drugged and you would often drink
00:13:06.400 something and then wake up the next day no clue what happened and of course lil rodney alleges that the
00:13:13.220 entire house was filled with cameras so who knows what was caught on camera being done to you when
00:13:18.360 he regained consciousness cordello smith says he saw combs engaged in sex with another woman and the
00:13:23.640 rapper informed him i did this to you too oh god that's not very nice is it no no no uh but really
00:13:34.220 what do we expect any better from the rap music industry and the music industry as a whole the
00:13:43.560 people who occupy these positions of power especially in the sorts of music industry that actively goes
00:13:49.740 out of its way to promote degenerate gangster behavior of course they're going to be scumbags
00:13:55.420 of course they're going to be scumbags and when they become high up scumbags prominent and rich
00:14:01.860 scumbags they're going to help even richer scumbags do scummy things are we really shocked sad to say
00:14:08.660 this is this is how the media entertainment industry in america has worked for a long long time and in
00:14:14.040 the uk as well we had our own jimmy savile after all let's not forget that there was the footage that
00:14:20.880 came out of his mansion one of his many mansions i think he had two or three being raided earlier on
00:14:26.880 this year one thing that was interesting from this was that supposedly the feds found
00:14:31.260 1 000 bottles of lotion and lube which um 50 cent has been making fun of him over
00:14:39.340 when when when 50 cent can hold the moral high ground over you yes 50 cent is on a redemption arc
00:14:46.540 here he's endorsed trump he's yeah i was gonna say king p diddy among all of them to be fair i don't
00:14:52.580 actually know if 50 cent has done anything wrong in his life he might have done he might not have
00:14:58.300 done i don't know so he certainly seems to be taking the moral high ground over p diddy but of
00:15:04.180 course he has been arrested by the feds as well now he's been arrested in new york and he has been
00:15:09.500 denied bail the criminal charges against him are that he's been charged with sex trafficking and
00:15:15.800 transportation to engage in prostitution after a federal grand jury in new york chose to bring an
00:15:20.420 indictment against him he's accused of running a criminal enterprise that consisted of his associates
00:15:24.860 employees and the influence of his business empire to coerce control and abuse female victims this
00:15:30.540 includes sex trafficking forced labor kidnapping arson bribery and obstruction of justice according
00:15:36.220 to the indictment now of course within the rap industry there are a lot of other um claims against
00:15:42.720 him including him potentially having murdered people at clubs at the very least shot and assaulted people
00:15:48.060 at clubs and potentially having been involved in the murder of tupac shakur there is a rumor for a
00:15:55.300 long time that he was the one who ordered it in the first place as some kind of west coast east coast
00:15:59.860 beef that was going on between well everyone's been implicated in that at some point haven't they
00:16:04.680 yeah i probably have and i wasn't even born when it happened uh so carrying on uh the indictment was
00:16:11.080 unsealed on tuesday morning and federal prosecutors alleged that he and his associates threatened abuse and
00:16:16.280 coerced women and others around him to fulfill his sexual desires the indictment also includes um
00:16:22.440 forcing victims to engage in recorded sexual activity which he referred to as the freak-offs
00:16:26.880 so it's all included in this indictment so all of these different lawsuits which all seem to be
00:16:31.620 pointing in the same direction and now also being pursued by the feds i wish i had more to say on
00:16:37.420 this i'm just getting a picture of someone who's allegedly very psychologically deranged and has been
00:16:43.940 enabled by power and money in order to do things which are unconscionable really and so i hope that
00:16:50.920 he feels the full force of the law as he goes to trial and that the uh the right verdict is found
00:16:56.020 of course if he does turn out to be innocent then i hope he gets a well either way i hope he gets a
00:17:01.260 fair trial uh but i would not be shocked combs was arrested at a manhattan hotel and his lawyer
00:17:07.440 mark agnifilio called his client an innocent man with nothing to hide he said we are disappointed
00:17:14.160 thousand bottles of baby lotion i'm just getting a thousand bottles of baby lotion and that image of
00:17:18.560 him beating a woman in a hotel like yep just those would be things to hide i would say yep we are
00:17:25.480 disappointed with the decision to pursue what we believe is an unjust prosecution of mr combs combs
00:17:31.100 excuse me by the u.s attorney's office he also said that you know he's a loving and caring family
00:17:35.820 man but no one is perfect which no one no one is perfect is doing a lot of heavy lifting there i
00:17:41.760 was gonna say have you ever accidentally purchased a thousand bottles of lube josh you know your hand
00:17:48.160 slips when you're on amazon it can happen you buy a thousand bottles of lube then you accidentally
00:17:52.880 beat your girlfriend drag her down a corridor how do you know what i did last weekend that was
00:17:58.940 actually footage of josh he blacked up for the occasion just to throw people off the scent
00:18:03.600 no one would guess allegedly yeah allegedly oh god we shouldn't be laughing also i'm not going
00:18:09.440 to play the audio of this because it's pretty horrible but uh one of diddy's former bodyguards
00:18:14.240 has released what he claims to be audio of p diddy um at one of these parties and then says that he
00:18:23.860 recorded it specifically because he heard what was happening and thought i'm going to make some money
00:18:29.020 out of this so doing it for only the most pure of reasons uh we've got the court sketches i think
00:18:37.160 this is being a little bit flattering to him because we also have a photograph of him after the arrest
00:18:42.260 did picasso do the eyebrows what's going on there well it doesn't seem entirely accurate to me because
00:18:47.720 here's his arrest photo and i'm glad to see that yakub is back boys finally he returns
00:18:55.420 and uh i mentioned that he's also been um rumored for a long time to have you know called the hit on
00:19:03.860 tupac well the feds are now collaborating with one another and secretly liaising with a tupac
00:19:10.680 shakur murder prosecutor to exchange information which may turn up something on that is it really
00:19:17.240 that secret if it's been reported in the sun yeah that's always a good question when you hear these
00:19:24.080 things that's uh just a very bad report on the sun's readership these days he can keep a secret
00:19:30.960 so for some reason the murder of tupac shakur has been something that people have been questioning
00:19:36.860 for years who did it who really did it i mean he was a gangster so i mean gang activity does that
00:19:43.040 but imagine if as well as did he potentially going down for his alleged criminal activities it then turns
00:19:49.060 out that the rumors that he killed well he got um tupac killed as well turn out to be true so yeah
00:19:55.080 we'll see what how it develops but that's a little update for everybody i'm sorry that you all had to
00:19:59.580 sit through that because it's pretty horrible reading pretty grim there's a very interesting case
00:20:06.300 though isn't it in that i reckon comparing this to the epstein case and how it goes forward and the
00:20:12.120 differences between the two it's going to be very revealing about well because of course the music
00:20:16.880 industry and the the sort of elites that epstein was involved in a sort of very different tiers of
00:20:23.100 the sort of elite hierarchy well within the media sphere i wouldn't be shocked if there's a little
00:20:28.540 bit more crossover well there may well be yeah overall because you know that all of the hollywood
00:20:33.920 elites all support the democratic regime and the democrat they basically act as an extension of the
00:20:41.040 democrat party apparatus so i wouldn't be shocked i wonder who p diddy was vote uh voting for and
00:20:45.920 donating to just throwing that one out there i think we can guess what does what does p diddy
00:20:51.280 think of haitians in ohio maybe he was donating to the libertarian party oh no now you've got to
00:20:58.800 support him josh i do not support the libertarian party how dare you yeah they chose they chose the
00:21:04.360 the rubbish one didn't they chase oliver yeah but um recently nigel farage did an interview
00:21:11.640 with stephen edgington who is uh very good and he appeared on our um election coverage he did indeed
00:21:18.360 lovely chap and uh he asked him about mass deportations and let's listen to what farage
00:21:24.060 has to say about this and then i'll be going on about how it's possible how it can be done
00:21:30.000 my plan of how to do it uh and also uh giving you a case study um particularly a profile on somalians
00:21:37.780 in britain for um why there's a good case for it in the first place because there are certain uh
00:21:44.340 people from certain places that clearly do not contribute to the the host nation we're talking
00:21:49.380 about the bemali and social housing yes yeah good so here we are with farage no no no yeah i i'm not
00:21:57.540 going to get dragged down the route of mass deportations or anything like that do you support mass deportations
00:22:03.460 well if people come illegally they should not be allowed to stay simple as simple as and the only
00:22:09.760 way you're ever going to solve the channel and boy have a look at the last three days you know 500 odd
00:22:15.700 um on friday 800 on saturday nearly 300 yesterday i mean the numbers are the numbers are just exploding
00:22:24.360 you know these young these young men that are coming um and unless they know that number one
00:22:33.300 they'll never be granted refugee status by coming via this route that number two they're not going
00:22:39.380 to stay they'll keep coming it's dead simple no matter what you do to the gangs i mean you could
00:22:45.240 give it you know you could give these gang members life imprisonment but the more people are going to
00:22:49.700 step in to the gap because of the money involved i mean look think about drugs however big a sentences
00:22:55.320 we give to drug dealers there's always somebody else all the while there's a little bit so a lot of
00:23:00.420 this was talked about yesterday with major fault line in british politics to the house of commons
00:23:04.560 can you just pause it for a moment of course um that argument that he used well somebody's always
00:23:10.060 going to fill in the gap aren't they well there's a man who runs a country in central america named
00:23:16.440 bukele who has an amazing idea that turns out if you do just lock all of them up and then if anybody
00:23:23.440 else pops up to fill the place you lock them up as well eventually you run out of people willing to
00:23:29.620 get locked up for no profit yeah it turns out if you make the incentive to commit crime
00:23:34.680 uh much much weaker by making the punishment outweigh the the profitability of it you know
00:23:41.180 perhaps if you're a a sort of criminal gang where you're using lethal force and ferrying across class
00:23:48.900 a drugs like heroin and things like that i think there's a case for the death penalty there isn't there
00:23:54.060 i would say and and so the notion that being alive or not is not an incentive to to not do these
00:24:02.360 things is strange like they're standing at the gallows and they'll go haha jokes on you someone
00:24:06.220 will just take my place aside from the human trafficking element there's also the persistent
00:24:14.900 myth that the people coming across on the boats are refugees um or at least attempting to claim
00:24:22.080 refugee status a number a large number of them if they're caught once they're in the uk try to claim
00:24:28.600 asylum but most of the people who are trying to claim asylum or refugee status can do so from france
00:24:36.460 already and if you wanted to make the journey across and turn yourself in so to speak in order to claim
00:24:43.800 asylum or refugee status the ferry from calate dover is 30 pounds as opposed to what these people are
00:24:51.620 doing which is paying many thousands of pounds in order to enter the uk legally they're actually not
00:24:56.360 hoping to claim asylum they're hoping you'll never catch them they're hoping that they'll get away
00:25:00.580 be able to travel across country they'll either be met by family who've already made it across here
00:25:06.300 whether legally or otherwise uh they will be parachuted into uh an ethnic enclave where they'll be
00:25:13.000 able to find work because they're amongst their own people uh without coming to the attention of the
00:25:18.220 authorities and this is also why uh this is big business within the uk as well because the people
00:25:25.520 who are hiring these foreign migrant workers are not going to pay them the uk living wage because
00:25:31.140 they're not going to have any paperwork they're not going to have any documentation and you'll find that
00:25:35.000 uh actually uh businesses such as these uh these dark kitchens you know delivery kitchens
00:25:40.820 uh or in fact delivery and uh barbershops and barbershops we we covered one that actually
00:25:46.540 happened in swindon a few months yeah that's right they're making fake ids for them to work in a
00:25:52.180 barbershop when they yeah and you're absolutely right they were being housed in the floor above
00:25:55.840 the barbershop and they were being forced to pay through the nose to rent out the chair that they
00:26:00.980 were using as well so it's a circular economy within that one shot people have sorry people have less of a
00:26:08.100 sense of disgust over this because it's not say um chinese sex workers being trafficked across and
00:26:15.340 then being told in order to pay us back you have to work in whatever dodgy massage parlor or whatever
00:26:19.500 sorry the politically correct term is whore sure but um yeah the illegal side of it i don't necessarily
00:26:26.040 want to focus on because of course of course the the illegals have got to go i mean i i feel like
00:26:33.440 most of the british right is on board with this right even some of some of the wets on on the right
00:26:38.840 uh going along with this but more generally speaking i want to set up a blueprint for
00:26:43.260 all countries to do mass migration because i think that there is a good case for it we don't need to get
00:26:50.080 bogged down in the weeds of who's doing what and why it's our country we can do what we want with it
00:26:55.000 in my opinion and to to sort of explain faraj in the interest of time he says it's impossible to
00:27:04.320 to have mass deportations but then he says we've got to stop the illegal migration and he says it's
00:27:09.820 polit then qualifies saying it's politically impossible so what i think he's doing and he
00:27:13.940 also says about how if he agreed to it it would follow him around for 20 years i think what he's
00:27:19.780 potentially doing here is one of two things he's either saying one um i don't want to alienate my
00:27:26.900 voter base who do want this and so i don't want to be seen as not saying it but i'll say here's why
00:27:32.640 i'm not saying it or two um he's trying to be uh trying not to invite controversy so he can move
00:27:40.860 he exists within the parliamentary system now he's an he's an mp and so i do understand that he's got
00:27:47.460 to exist within the acceptable range of conversation no there in his own mind no well perhaps but the
00:27:55.720 fact that he's an mp gives him way more protection than he had as the leader of a party with no seats
00:28:00.920 uh in fact you know he can't be fired by kia starmer unless he calls another general election and and he's
00:28:08.140 not going to do that at period where he's at his lowest ever popularity um and so really faraj should
00:28:14.840 be leaning into this you know you look at the wave of support for similar policy across europe
00:28:20.020 you know i'm thinking of uh of poland of italy uh germany etc and what you're seeing is is that
00:28:28.480 it's becoming popular and then it comes into the collective consciousness of the public you know when
00:28:33.780 you have teenage girls dancing along and smiling to auslander raus in uh you know on tiktok or whatever
00:28:40.640 it shows that it's become something where there's this kind of status associated with it and so
00:28:46.080 really all it's waiting for is for him to embrace this moment and go yes mass remigration and suddenly
00:28:54.260 the surge of support will actually be huge this is absolutely true but faraj has always always been
00:29:01.980 afraid and tried to evade the accusations of racism and he probably sees race uh sees um mass deportation
00:29:10.480 as a potentially race is not the point of discussion this was just a jumping off point sure yes and and
00:29:17.300 so yes he he's alluded to um these things but i think that there's some debate about whether um he's
00:29:24.760 he's silently in support of it or not who knows i don't know what's going on in his head i'm sure
00:29:29.400 lots of people will have an opinion but we've been talking about mass migration for a long time here's
00:29:33.160 an article from beau of june of 2022 uh mass remigration is inevitable which i wholeheartedly agree with
00:29:39.700 very much so and also it's worth mentioning we do have a magazine if you want to support
00:29:44.180 uh what we're doing um please buy this magazine it helps us keep going because we're of course funded
00:29:50.660 entirely by our audience and so if you buy this wonderful magazine which has lots of good writers
00:29:55.780 in uh like carl benjamin you might have heard of that guy dr nima parvini um academic agent more
00:30:01.780 goff's review dr charles cornish dale that's raw egg nationalist marcus fallin uh dave green the
00:30:06.640 distributor stefan molyneux um to name a few so there's some great stuff in there there's some
00:30:11.880 other people in there as well as a bit of a surprise and uh it's only available to buy for
00:30:17.300 a limited time along with some of the merch as well we've got associated islander merch that's only
00:30:22.180 available for a couple of weeks so get it while you still can uh because it will be gone and we'll
00:30:27.000 be moving on to the next issue but anyway with that out the way i wanted to have a quick look at
00:30:32.060 uh one ethnicity in britain specifically to use as an example of why these sorts of things are
00:30:37.940 inevitable and uh it's worth mentioning the somalis um you know pretty uh unfortunate group of people
00:30:46.240 because you know one of the most dangerous countries in the world somalia and uh yes i'm
00:30:52.880 sure carl will want to make me emphasize the point that not all somalis are the same you know judge
00:30:57.640 everyone individually you know connor's working with uh ian hersey ali who is somalian and she's
00:31:03.300 supposedly on side politically according to connor and so you know lots of people are different i'm not
00:31:09.900 talking in generalities however if you look at social housing uh look at all the different ethnicities
00:31:17.140 and who is taking up social housing for those unaware this is sort of um housing owned by local
00:31:24.160 councils you know the local governments and then rented at a lower price to people you look at
00:31:31.420 somalis and there you go 72 percent in social housing in britain which is ridiculous you know
00:31:39.160 we're importing people over supposedly to help the economy which doesn't make sense and yes they're
00:31:45.060 not helping whatsoever this is ridiculous massively overrepresented compared to other people you've
00:31:51.360 also got jamaicans and garnanes and people like that who are who are overrepresented as well but
00:31:56.520 even compared to jamaican somalians are over 30 percent more exactly and look at the aussies noble
00:32:03.400 aussies keeping this country upright on their backs exactly and so things like this obviously this is
00:32:09.620 costing taxpayers a lot because this is subsidized by taxpayers and then you look at things like
00:32:14.740 qualifications so the black line in these graphs um is the the sort of rest of england and wales
00:32:22.580 and the blue bars are the somalis so um no qualifications massively overrepresented here for
00:32:32.080 no qualifications and then you get to the higher level qualifications uh some of the younger people
00:32:37.180 tend to to you know keep to the average a lot of students i think um but you can see here
00:32:43.580 they're not filling these high level positions because the native population far exceeds that of
00:32:49.480 the somalis so the notion that they're occupying important jobs is not the case actually it seems
00:32:54.980 like they've got on average very low level qualifications sort of entry level at the very
00:33:01.140 least it's serving pret it's also notable that uh a student who manages to come over here and get a
00:33:06.820 student visa once they've qualified assuming that they managed to find employment uh can bring across
00:33:12.800 multiple dependents uh who are going to be in those upper age character uh upper age categories
00:33:19.140 and will not have the qualifications may not speak any english and are not contributing to society
00:33:25.140 it's also worth mentioning as well a lot of these low skill jobs in the future are going to be occupied
00:33:29.880 by ai and machines everything's going to be mechanized eventually and so why do we need somalis doing
00:33:36.660 these things when in a few years time it could potentially be you know i would a robot pouring your
00:33:41.600 coffee and prep i wouldn't even go that far i would still say that we have an unemployment epidemic
00:33:47.400 that's happened over here for native children uh native young people i should say who uh deserve
00:33:54.880 the opportunity to take a summer job who should be able to find work and uh to progress by getting a
00:34:01.820 little bit of savings and then perhaps uh going to the career that they desire and absorbing and not to
00:34:08.300 mention that uh pensioners as well who want a bit of extra cash on top of their pension uh should be
00:34:13.800 able to have the opportunity to work in sort of low skilled environments where it's part-time affair
00:34:19.240 well what they're doing effectively is just taking the jobs of our teenagers but and it's making it harder
00:34:24.300 for people to get on you know into the job market which is silly and also if there are job vacancies
00:34:30.300 actually that's a sign of a healthy economy because that pushes wages up it's not actually something that
00:34:35.620 needs to be filled and the whole paradigm is just wrong so here is their economic activity so if you
00:34:40.440 could zoom out a little bit there samson um so they are less likely to be employed 34.1 percent
00:34:47.940 compared to 59.6 percent of england and wales's population or self-employed um eight uh 8.5 percent
00:34:55.480 compared to 11.3 percent and uh more likely to be economically inactive 47.1 percent compared to 24.7
00:35:03.820 percent of england and wales and it's also worth mentioning the rest of england and wales also
00:35:08.480 includes um other immigrant populations that are less productive than the native population
00:35:15.120 so if we're comparing that against the native population that disparity is going to be even
00:35:20.980 greater but look at this so less than half of them are even employed because economically inactive
00:35:27.160 is always one of the fun ways that the government tries to hide the unemployment rate so a lot of them
00:35:32.440 are students a disproportionate number about i don't know 22 23 something like that there which is just
00:35:40.400 a drain really because you know we as a state put a lot of money into education and a lot of the time
00:35:49.520 it doesn't actually pay off the statewide investment i'm curious whether or not you know how are they
00:35:54.640 funding this right because if they're qualifying for uk student loans then that's insane and you
00:36:01.100 wouldn't expect that somalia being very poor nation would have a huge population of people
00:36:05.760 with the funds to pay our foreign student fees well it's obviously money that's been coerced from the
00:36:11.180 native population to pay for these people to go to university or just printed yeah all that but either way
00:36:17.620 it's pretty obvious to me that they're not contributing their fair share economically and in fact
00:36:24.740 you can see that pretty starkly here's obr data here so low wage migrant workers in their life span
00:36:33.580 never contribute to the economy whatsoever there's no point them being here i mean even sort of you
00:36:41.260 know your average uk resident they sort of drain for a little bit and then they contribute in their
00:36:48.180 working life and then they're a pensioner again that's bad enough as is we don't need people who are
00:36:53.620 just dependents the whole time you know even your sort of average wage migrant worker they you know
00:37:01.360 they they work this is of course not including their education years so we're assuming they come
00:37:06.580 over educated which isn't always the case so there might actually be another dip here but you know
00:37:12.840 they contribute and then in retirement for some reason that then they stop contributing at 92 for
00:37:18.120 whatever reason that seems a bit strange yeah i'm very curious about why the statistic on this graph
00:37:22.540 actually starts at 25 for the migrant workers i know you know why but it's it's obviously going
00:37:30.280 to be well below isn't it there's going to be much lower than than simply the line here so the only
00:37:37.200 and the only case where it's economically beneficial is the high wage migrant worker which somalis
00:37:43.040 obviously don't occupy because we've looked at their level of qualification we've looked at their
00:37:46.840 economic contribution i've also looked at the areas in which they're working in um i think half of them
00:37:53.680 are in low skilled employment which is this one where they never contribute yeah this is the other
00:37:58.580 thing which isn't really represented on this graph you've got the three variants of migrant worker but
00:38:03.380 the actual population densities within each of those isn't represented yeah i think a lot of them
00:38:08.820 are weighted towards the lower and and and the difference between eea and non-eea migrants is
00:38:16.240 that's european union and also starting them all out at zero when they're at 25 years old is also
00:38:22.520 not very accurate yes but even with this data we can make a pretty uh resounding um conclusion about
00:38:31.080 well hang on a minute if they're not highly qualified they're not bringing anything to the country
00:38:35.860 it is obvious that this is the case and let's go to denmark if you're a high wage migrant worker
00:38:43.020 how even at a hundred are you still putting into the system more than you're yes it's a bit silly
00:38:48.780 ridiculous anyway going to denmark because they collect very good data um this is a quote from this
00:38:55.180 article um male somali descendants um even when the figures are adjusted for age and family income
00:39:01.500 are convicted of violence 3.6 times as often as the average man in denmark of the same age and family
00:39:07.120 income so you know how the left loves to say oh well it's not it's not about culture or ethnicity
00:39:12.500 it's about poverty well when even when it's adjusted they're 3.6 times more likely to be violent
00:39:18.600 you don't adjust it for poverty then it's probably going to be even more and i don't think it matters
00:39:23.580 if you're being assaulted whether that person is rich or poor you know the punches still hurt the same
00:39:28.540 right the stab wounds still hurt it doesn't matter i don't care i don't want any criminals in the
00:39:33.960 country in any way of solving it is good for me so this has finally um oh actually i've got this as
00:39:42.500 well um so the danish data sorry josh is taking the whole well pinochet was technically a libertarian
00:39:49.020 tract is that how you're justifying it to yourself something like that but anyway here's some more danish
00:39:54.760 data um so look at that somalia right at the top of violent crime conviction there after kuwait tunisia
00:40:02.220 and lebanon then somalia and if we if we scroll down a little bit here are the european countries
00:40:09.460 so look at how much less prone to violent crime europeans are compared to somalis so it's basically
00:40:17.960 the middle east and africa are overrepresented there are some other countries as well asiatic countries
00:40:23.160 are also countries like yugoslavia here which obviously don't exist anymore they don't understand
00:40:28.740 us they don't want to understand us they won't integrate and they commit crime yes so they cost
00:40:36.000 us lots of money they don't really contribute to our society they don't integrate and they're being
00:40:40.800 violent towards us i think that's good enough reason to send them home and uh i think that lots
00:40:47.540 of people are now starting to realize this is a yugov poll a recent one this was from the 9th of
00:40:52.620 september 2024 do immigrants from somalia make a positive or negative contribution to life in
00:40:57.960 britain today and now 37 point um 37 sorry think they make a negative contribution which is um pretty
00:41:08.680 high relative to the other ones i think the next best one is i don't know which you know fair enough
00:41:14.860 not everyone is you know trawling through ethnic crime data or watching this podcast but they should
00:41:20.580 they should be but uh positive contribution is only at 18 percent and that that's got to be what
00:41:26.860 your average labor voter you know sort of diehard left winger right but the rest is you know i don't
00:41:33.580 know or obviously it's negative which is true and i have some solutions to this and i wanted to talk
00:41:40.580 about how to do it because we talk about all the problems we don't talk about how to solve it
00:41:44.280 and i have a five stage policy proposal solution here that any government doesn't have to be britain
00:41:51.740 uh can implement and i think will solve the problems with mass immigration that we're getting all across
00:41:57.780 the western world and uh do please let me know what you think of it both people on the panel and in the
00:42:02.840 audience so stage one except no asylum applications because the whole thing is being gamed by people
00:42:08.940 trying to take advantage of our goodwill i think that that's fair enough we can pull the rug up say
00:42:13.540 no actually people are taking advantage of us we're not accepting any new asylum applications at all
00:42:19.200 uh i'm afraid it's been spoiled there are too many people um mocking us get legal migration figures to
00:42:25.940 gross remigration so you know sending more people home than we're getting in by a relatively significant
00:42:33.780 margin um no welfare for foreigners i think a lot of people are coming here for our generous welfare
00:42:39.380 it really disincentivizes people moving here if they can't then get free money from you know the
00:42:46.020 subjugated anglos uh mass remigration of all foreigners with criminal uh convictions either domestically
00:42:53.460 as in in britain or abroad so there's no point having criminals from abroad here i think that's
00:42:59.560 justifiable the united states um allegedly um doesn't let people in with criminal convictions
00:43:05.220 at least you know if you're going the legal route yeah thank you palpatine um so i think that this
00:43:12.620 already has precedent and uh first of all what do you think of stage one perfectly reasonable okay
00:43:19.540 so stage two this is where i differ with a lot of other people i i'm concerned now with the
00:43:25.620 the subsequent stages potentially getting some backlash so i want to make sure that there are
00:43:31.380 sufficient things in place um for people to not be endangered when the criminal elements of society
00:43:39.120 uh get angry that we're cracking down on them because whenever you see these crackdowns there is an
00:43:44.400 initial spike where potentially people are in sort of in danger your average person right so i want to
00:43:50.680 introduce capital punishment for murderers uh sex criminals um that's you know ones that actually
00:43:56.240 go out and and and do horrible things i can't name what that thing is beginning with r because it gets
00:44:01.960 flagged on lots of social media platforms and uh nonces you know practicing nonces i think that those
00:44:07.660 three i think it's fair um for all of society to give them the death penalty and we also need to rethink
00:44:14.520 the severity of punishments i think that this is something that needs to happen because the punishments for
00:44:20.320 certain crimes just seem far too low to my mind as we've seen with uh the hugh edwards case there's
00:44:26.280 been massive outrage over the fact that he only received a six month uh suspended sentence and
00:44:32.100 indeed another i'm going to not use the p words because that also gets flagged uh but another nonce
00:44:38.340 uh who had over a million i believe it was images uh and videos and things uh also did not receive
00:44:46.460 any jail time recently it's ridiculous so this is the point at which we go what we define as cruel
00:44:53.020 and unusual punishment perhaps needs a reassessment for this particular caseload well it seems to me
00:44:59.040 that people are more concerned about the rights of the prisoners than the population that you're meant to
00:45:03.060 be uh using the justice system to protect well first and foremost the prison system itself is a defense
00:45:10.140 of the public against the re-offending criminal and the use of capital punishment is just an extension
00:45:18.700 of that exactly there are some people who cannot be rehabilitated ever and i think nor should they be
00:45:24.540 given the option because they have violated our social contract to such an extent that capital
00:45:29.380 punishment is the appropriate response and another thing that i think is really important with crime as
00:45:34.040 it is um give people the legal right to defend themselves so in britain um here is west yorkshire
00:45:41.520 police saying the only fully legal self-defense product at the moment is a rape alarm so i accidentally
00:45:48.220 said the word but never mind um you can be like i'm i'm having this bad thing happen to me here's an
00:45:54.240 alarm that's not a defense you can't because this is our cctv nation equivalent of we're watching whilst you
00:46:01.740 get assaulted uh you know but we might chase them up afterwards but it does nothing to actually deter
00:46:07.120 so americans i think are much better positioned in this sort of thing this is why i think actually
00:46:12.880 america um is much better off with in recovering from lots of these problems as well as their much
00:46:21.620 healthier economy than a lot of europe but i think that lots of european countries have laws like this
00:46:26.820 that view pepper spray use pepper spray being carried by women to defend themselves against
00:46:31.400 uh these people um that is seen as just as equally punishable as carrying a firearm that is
00:46:40.760 ridiculous i think that it's perfectly legitimate to to carry these things for your own safety and i think
00:46:46.680 actually i would like to see people be able to carry weapons for their own uh personal defense
00:46:52.140 you know obviously following the us's um lead on that one because i think it's important and in fact
00:46:59.100 there have been petitions here's one uh make it legal to carry non-lethal self-defense weapons
00:47:04.380 like i think it was pepper spray and tasers and the government response to this was the government
00:47:08.400 is taking determined action to make our streets safer but sprays containing noxious substances
00:47:12.920 are dangerous and we have no plans to allow people to carry them for self-defense there so
00:47:17.400 hosts to be dangerous yes the government here is saying we're going to continue to import thousands
00:47:24.460 upon thousands if not millions of foreigners who are more likely to commit this on the native population
00:47:29.440 and we're more worried about their health than yours that's what is effectively being said here
00:47:35.760 and i find it infuriating so moving on to stage three this is a very important one disassociate with
00:47:41.520 any supranational organization that would interfere with lawfare so things like the united nations have
00:47:47.080 the 1951 refugee convention which prevents countries from deporting or returning refugees to places where
00:47:53.180 many uh of them might face danger which is ill-defined um you know they talk about oh we're worried they
00:48:00.220 might be tortured for their crimes and the pakistanis pull this one out like i've been convicted of sex
00:48:05.100 crime and i'm worried that i might be tortured if i get sent back to pakistan boo hoo you shouldn't
00:48:09.560 have done it oh this was one of the arguments they were making against the rwanda plan as well not
00:48:13.340 the rwanda plan was ever meant to work but the whole point was that well rwanda might be dangerous
00:48:17.720 for them but um there are lots and lots of these supranational organizations ngos things like that
00:48:23.140 that will try and interfere and of course the uk as well as a specific example remains a member of
00:48:28.660 the council of europe even though we left the eu um because it's a separate thing and that has the
00:48:33.760 european convention on human rights and article 8 has the right to a family life and so lots of people
00:48:39.560 can say but i have a family member in this country and i don't want to be separated from them
00:48:44.400 uh and this can be basically used against us and there are lots of these um articles in the these
00:48:51.680 supranational organizations that are basically used to subjugate the native populations also
00:48:56.920 domestically we have the dubs amendment which allows refugees who have been granted asylum to bring
00:49:02.720 their entire families which is ridiculous which just means that they act as anchors yes so we need to
00:49:08.780 leave all of those to make it possible stage four allocate funding to hire staff to enact mass
00:49:13.680 remigration find the illegals already here every single one of them and deport them all um mass
00:49:19.660 remigration of all foreign uh financial net negatives which is the vast majority um from my reading of
00:49:26.900 the the data um send back all who have claimed refuge here if their country is not currently at war
00:49:33.180 um and this is specifically women children and the elderly who are not problem cases young men even
00:49:40.780 if their country is at war should be sent back why do we want people who fled their country in its time
00:49:46.020 of need we don't want cowards thank you that's what those men are they're not refugees they're cowards
00:49:52.020 they didn't fight for their country they didn't make it a better place they fled and uh women children
00:49:57.920 elderly can stay until their country is safe and then we can send them back they're not the ones
00:50:01.900 causing problems and then stage five we carry out trials of those who imposed this on us in the
00:50:07.680 first place we were never asked we voted against it at every given opportunity this is a crime against
00:50:13.580 the people of europe and north america and people should have to pay for it i think that that is
00:50:20.400 perfectly reasonable in my opinion what do you think yes i also think that uh at the end of this process
00:50:29.920 uh abolishing the concept of dual citizenship um and thus incurring a much larger cost essentially uh
00:50:38.460 both spiritually and uh as well as physically essentially to become part of us is there um and
00:50:47.460 that's possibly the only way to become a citizen from a foreign nation is through marriage that
00:50:53.000 would also be an option that's there um with of course uh a new set of laws about uh how people
00:51:00.440 get married you know to avoid the green card situation in america but other than that uh what
00:51:05.160 you said sounds pretty reasonable uh as far as i'm concerned and uh i'd be happy with that yes well
00:51:11.220 thank you what do you think harry will you be standing at the next election uh no however i think
00:51:17.200 that if we if we refine this blueprint we figure out all the kinks we just say this is what we want
00:51:22.980 and we won't be happy till we get it and keep on hammering at home it's at least something tangible
00:51:27.960 to say this is what x amount of people want realistically any party that claims to be for the
00:51:36.800 protection of britain and the um and regenerating the country into something that can call itself great
00:51:43.560 again should be taking those kinds of policies and using them absolutely but thankfully there are
00:51:48.640 lots of parties across europe and potentially north america as well that may well be able to push this
00:51:55.880 sort of thing right you know america at least has the the capital punishment the self-defense side of
00:52:00.420 things the other stuff not so much but you see trump assume office perhaps these sorts of things might
00:52:05.500 start happening so there is potential i don't see it necessarily coming anytime soon in britain
00:52:10.380 but elsewhere i can see it catching on more but i think talking about the concrete ways we can do it
00:52:15.940 makes it seem a lot more possible because people saying this is impossible this is an insurmountable
00:52:20.420 task no it's not there are things that can be done to solve this there's also precedent you know
00:52:25.900 india did remigrate over 100 000 of the british when they raj well iran is about to remigrate two
00:52:33.600 million afghans sorry eisenhower with what less than a thousand people with operation slur which i can't say
00:52:40.260 uh managed to get two million people out of america in the 50s and there we go that's that and that's
00:52:45.760 when the technology was much more primitive we have much better technology for clearing them out
00:52:50.360 these days it is possible there we go fabulous right i shall give you some technology here
00:52:57.600 and a clicky button i do have a bunch of chats to read actually indeed whilst you do that samson can you
00:53:07.820 scroll down to my notes on yeah i think so statistically nine out of ten oh i can't read that out that's
00:53:15.000 rude um they're just like four out of five people uh enjoy uh democracy i've seen that one going around
00:53:23.980 where it's it's this the decimation where the romans are beating one person um but uh sorry listen to
00:53:30.740 this 750 immigration and border patrol officers and investigators got over a million people out of
00:53:37.620 america in the 50s just using a bunch of jeeps cars and buses there we go how easy it is frednaught
00:53:44.820 says uh josh just call it forcey fun time that gets around the census yeah but it makes it sound
00:53:50.640 so juvenile um does anyone have the seven to eight process for uh remigration that eric zemore
00:53:57.200 created uh one of the points was 90 tax on western union transfers of money to african asian nations
00:54:03.840 great incentives that's a good idea actually yeah the chinese actually have that on taking money out
00:54:09.040 of the country which does the same sort of thing speaking of which i would also uh prevent foreign
00:54:14.700 ownership of any of our property that's also a good one as well um i'm afraid i can't read that
00:54:23.320 one dog breath um boba bad says uh soundcloud rapper lil suck was taped with p diddy saying i rap with
00:54:31.040 women and have sex with men to which diddler informed him i got news for you um that makes you gay
00:54:37.480 and under contract okay that's that's a reference to the law and order clip okay
00:54:44.480 uh so what's the story with this guy did carl go for warhammer 40k and get himself
00:54:49.840 uh juvenile treatment i believe they're referring to me there because every single time i'm on this
00:54:55.900 podcast someone says is that carl's clone has carl gone some sort of radical surgery um we personally
00:55:04.000 me and carl don't see the resemblance you see man in beard and you assume same guy that's where i can
00:55:10.200 say that yeah i don't really see it to be honest i don't see it either no
00:55:13.760 so um the last russian says i can confirm mark does not work for the fsb so there you go your
00:55:20.760 name is cleared excellent and then another one uh i think this p diddy fellow has a way way of
00:55:25.840 convincing these immigrants to leave i hear he can do one simple trick involving drinks and a camera
00:55:31.880 we're not going we're not going to put him in charge of the task force no thanks there are some
00:55:36.820 lines that even we won't cross um right uh we're going to talk now about what i'm calling the
00:55:43.820 over diagnosis epidemic uh it's this concept that uh the current state of the country has led to
00:55:51.180 an overreach of the therapeutic state it's also about the general sense of our people from the people
00:55:58.620 and it's also about uh actual people with actual real life disabilities uh who are often marginalized
00:56:04.900 as a case of this but before we get into that the lotus eaters is hiring we have a career opportunity
00:56:10.940 for a production administrator that's looking for a tech savvy person to work full-time so if you think
00:56:16.800 that will interest you please do check us out beautiful swindon in glorious glorious swindon
00:56:22.460 so uh you know you'll have interactions every day with all of the staff and you'll be responsible
00:56:27.760 for a number of behind the scenes processes so please do get in contact with us what are you laughing
00:56:34.140 about nothing nothing marvelous i like that you basically promised that the main compensation was
00:56:39.780 you'll get to be friends with us oh you know it is a paid position there is money involved there we go
00:56:45.080 um but just to let you know uh that uh i have spoken about the mental health epidemic and uh
00:56:52.440 really what we've been dealing with over the course of the last 50 plus years really with a society
00:56:59.800 that's becoming more and more abstracted i gave this talk at the witan uh around four years ago but
00:57:06.180 it's still very relevant today and uh has a link to what is called in the video basket weavers but it's
00:57:12.080 now rebranded to club weave a decentralized network for the promotion of traditional thought individual
00:57:18.320 values skills building and making friends uh mostly getting very drunk it's mostly making friends
00:57:24.100 and going out and having fun together and building your local network so that god forbid if anything
00:57:29.300 happened to you as a result of the left's overreach that you would have people you could reach out to
00:57:34.220 uh in your local community who can offer help and support um and you can you can watch that video
00:57:41.320 on the website all right so we have this idea of a general mental health epidemic in the uk it's
00:57:52.160 something which is pretty uncontroversial uh it happens uh that a lot of people are talking about it
00:57:58.120 uh almost every single uh influencer has got their own mental health story that they've got going on
00:58:05.360 uh businesses are talking about how people are taking mental health days uh some people are saying
00:58:11.280 it's really hard to hire people actually because they want sort of fridays off because it's a
00:58:16.160 difficult time for them um and then uh and and really the number of conditions that uh people have
00:58:23.720 uh has ballooned over the course of particularly the last couple of decades uh but the amount that we take
00:58:30.980 this seriously is the problem really um a lot of these things of sort of general anxiety uh or
00:58:38.740 depression which are really a disservice to people who have very serious conditions um unfortunately uh
00:58:45.960 the government itself has come under fire for not allocating enough resources into mental health
00:58:51.440 which i think is a bit of a silly statement i feel like it's already allocating quite a considerable
00:58:56.540 amount it also seems strange that if there's an epidemic going on the notion of putting more
00:59:03.360 money towards a problem that seems to be very much entrenched and societal if if the numbers are to be
00:59:11.240 believed that wouldn't necessarily fix it would it no i mean throwing money at a problem is not an issue
00:59:17.420 but really our society is sitting in a state of diagnostic decay at the moment we're very much inward
00:59:24.440 focused rather than outward focused and uh the places in which we place our money uh as a nation
00:59:31.100 so to speak uh speaks to kind of the societal rot that we're dealing with uh because we've got a lot
00:59:37.960 of fixation on either problems which are much larger than us um you know whatever anyone individually
00:59:44.280 thinks about the concept of the climate crisis uh our country as a whole contributes so little to um you
00:59:51.760 know what's considered the big bad they're the carbon emissions that uh our attempts to change
00:59:59.380 that environment are actually very little impact on the world whereas we have people who have no jobs
01:00:06.140 we have a mass migration epidemic that's uh causing overpopulation we have a general housing crisis
01:00:12.240 where no one can afford anything we have a wage stagnation where we are in a position where uh you know
01:00:18.360 wages haven't increased for over a decade so uh in real terms that is uh inflation obviously accounted
01:00:25.580 for so we having a focus on mental health feels like it's an aside where people are trying to come
01:00:33.240 up with a justification for why everything's so bad you know why am i miserable well this person
01:00:40.040 you know from better help uh don't use better help by the way they are a very dodgy site which
01:00:45.860 don't ratify their therapists um you know my therapist from better help is saying oh actually
01:00:51.760 i've got generalized anxiety uh or i have something like adhd which means that i can't concentrate at
01:00:58.520 work here's one of my favorites i have a chemical imbalance in my brain that's a that's a nice nebulous
01:01:04.600 one isn't it or or just uh nt uh nnt so non-neurotypical so that that comes up a lot as well uh the concept
01:01:13.440 of neurotypicality which is like is anyone truly normal that that word came in when i was at
01:01:19.660 university oh right people started using it and sort of they they said oh yeah by the way some people
01:01:25.360 use this word neurotypical and they sort of weaseled it in but it seems strange because it's
01:01:33.480 basically trying to suggest that on the one hand you know saying that someone's not normal is offensive
01:01:40.040 but also saying that actually there's a very obvious neural way that you're meant to be
01:01:44.520 which is a it's sort of contradictory inherently so contradictory statement to to agree with you
01:01:52.040 mark i would say that if you were to track on a graph accurately the moment in which society as a
01:01:58.080 whole post-war began to be governed worse and people's uh people's material um rewards for the
01:02:06.460 work that they put into their lives began to decrease and decrease and decrease and the quality
01:02:11.140 of life began to degrade as it has and then the explosion of mental health diagnoses i would imagine
01:02:17.540 they start at roughly the same point well interesting that you say that there's a there's a phrase uh the
01:02:23.840 therapeutic state is a phrase which was coined in back in uh 1963 um and it's basically says that
01:02:31.420 psychiatry and psychology as a as connected with that and government merged together leads to
01:02:39.880 uh the therapeutic state in which disapproved actions thoughts and feelings uh are repressed
01:02:45.900 through psychomedical interventions and we see the fact that we have a very i would say dysgenic
01:02:52.860 approach to dealing with people's dissatisfaction where a huge number of particularly young women are
01:02:59.080 medicated um certainly we have huge issues where a lot of women are put on uh birth control in
01:03:06.600 particular and there are hormone imbalances which come along with that for a lot of women you know
01:03:12.180 they say some of them are fine but almost every woman that i've spoken to uh who has taken it has
01:03:17.720 had some sort of adverse reaction anecdotally on that as well i'm i've spoken to a lot of women who say
01:03:23.220 that the kind of men that they're attracted to on and off birth control are polar opposites when
01:03:28.780 they're off that's not anecdotal there's actual research for that that indicates that yeah when
01:03:33.780 they're off birth control they're into manly men when they're in on birth control they're into soy
01:03:38.460 twinks i see um and then you you also get this with um young boys as well uh sort of uh mass over
01:03:46.960 diagnosis of adhd because traditionally masculine traits are now considered by the state to be a
01:03:54.560 negative expression of humanity well the funny thing is that masculinity more generally is being
01:04:01.660 medicalized in that we see it in autism diagnosis i'm going to steal your thunder a little bit here
01:04:07.640 but also with adhd whereby the education system largely run you know run by women um sort of medicalizes men
01:04:17.140 as faulty women both in terms of the autism diagnosis and also in terms of attention span
01:04:24.680 it men and women are interested in different things that's okay we have complementary roles
01:04:29.880 right but oh sorry no sorry it's not it's not just that we're interested in different things you know
01:04:34.860 fundamentally the ways in which we cope with different things traumas if you want to use the
01:04:40.600 overused term uh are also fundamentally different there was a post by uh raw egg nationalist uh the
01:04:47.900 other day which was commenting on a woman who had said you know if men really wanted to be better
01:04:53.580 members of society they would form therapy groups with one another and they would do all these different
01:04:58.600 things and he just sounds bloody awful and he just pointed out that yeah you're saying that men would
01:05:04.860 be have better mental health if they acted more like women and less like men which is the
01:05:09.720 complete opposite of what they should well it's a failure to understand how men are isn't it as
01:05:14.600 well and men are also sort of responsible for this we we also can be prone to to sort of make
01:05:22.840 generalizations about women whereby we view them as faulty men and vice versa and i think that yeah
01:05:29.120 we're right though vindicated but i think that the whole conversation a lot of things are getting lost
01:05:37.700 in translation and a lot of normal behavior is being medicalized and i think that there's also
01:05:43.620 an incentive for the pharmaceutical companies to do so because they're pushing drugs on people that
01:05:47.920 don't need them i've made this point as well when i've said to people that you're not i know everybody
01:05:53.420 constantly goes on about how autistic they are how autistic we are how autistic men in general are
01:05:58.440 you're not autistic you're an english man that's what you're supposed to be like that's what we've
01:06:03.940 always been like we used to have a word for this and it was called eccentricity you know you can be
01:06:09.020 a little bit weird you can have a little bit of quirkiness to you that's fine everyone's a little
01:06:13.700 bit different um but really um what i want to get at with the reason that i brought the state into this
01:06:19.480 is that uh the state is setting the desired outcomes and everything and every system in our
01:06:26.960 society then reacts to what those desired outcomes are so we've already mentioned that education
01:06:31.240 uh the over medicalization of boys we've already looked at women needing to go into the workforce
01:06:36.680 and so the over medicalization of women to deal with their monthly cycles and things like that
01:06:42.020 and uh there's also sort of now moving on into the criteria for even getting a job so we we know that
01:06:51.440 there are government guidance for programs which increase uh you know representation from people of
01:06:57.680 different sexes sexual preference ethnicity but also mental health conditions under this kind of guise
01:07:03.700 of being an equal uh opportunity employer um whereas realistically this is all getting away from
01:07:11.600 uh the real reason that you should be doing a job which is that you are aligned with the goals of the
01:07:17.920 company and doing the your career essentially um when i was in the air force the uh there was a great
01:07:25.940 sense of camaraderie certainly uh in the training phase because everyone was there even though they
01:07:31.080 were going on to do different uh jobs in the air force but we all had kind of the same aspirations
01:07:35.860 right and we and if you're in training you're all trying to get through that to become an officer
01:07:39.980 right so uh you know if you're then suddenly hiring people and instead of thinking about how best they're
01:07:47.400 going to fit the job they're thinking like can i either game the system by pretend i know several
01:07:52.080 people who claim to be homosexual or bisexual in order to get bumped up the list uh on the on the
01:07:58.200 when they were being hired were they expected to prove this exactly they're not expected to prove
01:08:03.360 this you know or similarly people who claimed uh you know uh generalized anxiety disorder for instance
01:08:09.420 um because they thought it would bolster their application it feels like a level of abstraction
01:08:14.820 that kind of obfuscates you know the real reason that you're making decisions in life and in society
01:08:19.920 what positions were they going for that supposedly having anxiety would make it the more employable
01:08:25.680 more bizarrely enough this is a prison officer position an anxious prison guard they're gonna be
01:08:31.940 very studious you know don't get near me don't get near me i'll beat you exactly um right josh
01:08:38.320 she's no problem with this not making this a pure sort of men versus women thing um mental health as
01:08:44.700 a as a general concept you know it's it's going downhill well it's of concern to everyone isn't
01:08:49.480 it it's it's clearly of concern to everyone um but we have this chap here so calvin robinson um
01:08:55.720 obviously a friend of the show uh has uh retweeted this that the mood of the united kingdom is that
01:09:02.440 it's contagiously miserable this guy's just come back from traveling he's talking about how
01:09:06.300 everyone is sort of dour and dire i think he got back from australia and i we mutually know an
01:09:12.780 australian a mad australian bard certainly do who was explicitly told us that he never wants to come
01:09:18.740 back to britain because he hated it and it was miserable very true and the reason that it's
01:09:24.880 miserable is that all of our per capita outcomes have basically got worse and the people are searching
01:09:30.500 for rationales and justifications because our sense of control you know there's a lot of research on
01:09:36.180 control and how human uh humans basically need to feel a sense of control and a sense of progression
01:09:42.320 and so when your wages haven't been going up you can't find a girlfriend because everything's been
01:09:46.780 abstracted through dating apps and uh and your actual chances to date have become much worse because
01:09:53.280 every woman can see everyone for 50 miles uh and vice versa uh and then you've also got you know the
01:10:00.900 the decreasing quality of life in general and people are saying i'm never going to own my own home
01:10:05.640 never have my own space all of these things are like i've got less control over my life and i've got
01:10:10.900 less control over where it goes and at the end of my life i won't have any control at all so ever so
01:10:16.220 quickly there's a really um quite worrying study that had a rat in a bucket and they're i know it
01:10:23.560 yes i know it well go on so basically if the rat um was left to to drown drown basically um it would
01:10:32.880 swim for x amount of time if a person would then come along eventually and help it out of the bucket
01:10:39.460 it would stay swimming for longer before it gave up so just a again context on that the the rat would
01:10:45.420 last about 15 to 20 minutes if you just let it swim if you rescued the rat once it lasted eight hours
01:10:51.360 which is a massive difference but to my mind that that shows just how essential to the mammalian brain
01:10:58.140 a sense of agency and hope yeah um sorry samson can i just uh have control of my notes again so i can
01:11:07.480 that's a horrible experiment it's an awful i've got to say awful awful experiment yes um but uh yeah
01:11:15.040 so if we look at um sorry go back to my notes so having a distinct focus on mental health
01:11:22.680 interventions as a state abstracts the priorities of government away from lubricating the wheels of
01:11:28.620 industry and innovation and instead funnels money into diagnostic endeavors um although that is skewed in
01:11:35.780 favor of net zero and climate stuff as well um and really you can see uh government oh we we don't have
01:11:44.540 the factoid there but there's a a an image that i had of government grants where there's a lot of
01:11:51.060 mental health uh funding essentially that's in there oh thank you different one that's fine
01:11:58.840 government grants so yeah so you can find and see you know there's stuff uh career fellowships and
01:12:05.460 research innovation uh notable that we're also coming to a period of uh the new autumn budget coming
01:12:11.100 out so some of these have been deprecated um and there's fewer grants overall at the moment but
01:12:16.860 there's a decent amount of stuff for research into mental health but really and a lot of money that's
01:12:23.200 available whereas the money that's going into small businesses the money that's going into uh you know
01:12:29.420 community building money for local councils so that they can provide services and events and things
01:12:33.940 like that all of those things which improve people's general standard of living uh and thus would
01:12:39.660 bring up the morale of the nation and make people feel a bit better that's not there um so i thought
01:12:45.160 that was that was interesting um if we look at uh the difference in mental health statistics if we scroll
01:12:54.780 down just a little bit here samson you can see one in four people will experience a mental health
01:12:59.540 problem of some kind each year in england uh this is a really broad statistic basically yeah i was
01:13:08.120 gonna say i imagine there'll be plenty of people out there that will not over the course of four
01:13:12.640 years where it's you know going to be statistically probable they won't experience a mental health
01:13:17.260 problem well it's not just that it's the concept of the mental health problem as a whole is the
01:13:22.240 problem because it's uh it's problematic as was famous to be said uh because this is all subclinical
01:13:28.400 essentially you know this is people saying at some point in your life you'll feel depressed
01:13:33.160 depressed um and it's not just that people do feel depressed or whatever but people have lost
01:13:38.240 lose the sense of scale and so they focus on the fact that they will feel depressed and they have
01:13:43.020 anxiety about the fact they may feel depressed in the future if they get out of their depression
01:13:47.120 and uh whereas the reality is is that life happens yeah well one of the things that i found the most
01:13:54.460 useful to tell people because you know being a psychologist and you know you're qualified in
01:13:58.980 psychology as well indeed you must get this people come up to you and ask you about things wrong
01:14:04.140 with them and i say that um the main thing the thing that should give you hope is you're in control
01:14:09.920 of your own mind you choose whether these things weigh you down you choose how to approach it you
01:14:14.600 choose whether to feel these emotions and sure it's difficult to to get to the point where you have
01:14:19.540 good control over these things but it's possible and i think that it's actually within the grasp of lots
01:14:24.560 of people and telling people those sorts of things sort of puts the ball in their court it gives them
01:14:29.340 a bit of agency of well sure things might not be good but it's up to me how to approach it and all
01:14:34.820 of a sudden i would i would even expand that outside of the concept of personal incentives you know it's
01:14:41.900 it's about the people that you're dependent on and the people who depend on you and the fewer of
01:14:46.860 those that we have in society the worse essentially it gets because we are social animals to our core
01:14:53.000 and the rise of social media and the rise of the therapeutic state etc have basically damaged
01:14:59.800 our you know one of the key mechanisms from which we derive value and meaning and purpose and
01:15:05.520 happiness at the end of the day um but uh what i want to say with this one in four statistic and the
01:15:12.720 one in six common mental health problems in any given week anxiety and depression is that um it takes
01:15:19.780 the focus away from people who have genuine uh mental illness and deep disabilities so here's a
01:15:27.180 breakdown of complex needs in the country uh there are approximately 1.6 million people with a complex
01:15:33.560 disability in the uk so these are people who have dementia these are people who have serious physical
01:15:39.220 ailments these are people um you vote green vote green people who have uh you know uh perhaps uh
01:15:47.180 low functioning autism and things like that and there's a basically the prevalence uh of disability
01:15:56.640 that is basically invisible because those people are the people who are asking for you know uh say
01:16:03.940 the disability ramp up to the local shop or whatever but they get lumped in with all the people who are
01:16:08.380 going i'm too anxious to go into work today and uh so their needs aren't taken as seriously and i think
01:16:14.760 uh even on the right this is something where we you know um we fail these people in a way because we
01:16:22.140 uh tend to lump them in with essentially the epidemic of fad mental healthism um as we go
01:16:29.060 but uh disabilities in the uk complex disabilities in the uk are actually increasing so if we look at
01:16:37.580 uh prevalence here there should be a scroll down um we should be able to scroll down and see a
01:16:44.220 graph there so the number of people has increased from over the last 20 years from around 10 million
01:16:53.460 up to over 15 million people and you can see the breakdown there you know a quarter of those people
01:16:59.320 at working age um which makes sense uh a small percentage of those are children again they haven't
01:17:05.460 had uh the time necessarily to have a deep injury or something like that but an awful lot of these people
01:17:12.000 are of state pension age and uh and really this is something we have to contend with as a society
01:17:19.780 uh is we have an increasing prevalence of people in real raw numbers uh who are infirm and incapable
01:17:28.600 and it comes down to two things one is child mortality uh which has been decreasing very very
01:17:36.500 steadily over the course of the last hundred years hooray a nice thing which is a nice thing this
01:17:41.520 is a nice graph to see but of course in in real terms from a genetic standpoint as well uh and with
01:17:48.040 the the adoption of the welfare state this also means that uh you know more people are surviving
01:17:55.060 with conditions that they then are heritable and and will pass on um i'm not trying to deny these
01:18:00.960 people any kind of life at all i'm not a eugenicist in that kind of way right i'm it's more to do with
01:18:07.760 the fact that these are very real cases of people that we're going to have to deal with and the
01:18:12.380 question i suppose for the panel is sort of you know how we deal with uh you know an increasingly
01:18:19.180 dysgenic population as as things go and i think the answer to that is probably uh that we need to
01:18:25.900 breed more i think we need to get above replacement rate and high quality people need to be having lots
01:18:31.680 of children so that's the kind of eugenicist you are that's the kind of eugenicist on your point
01:18:37.200 regarding the child mortality rate and the complex needs i do know uh and have known quite a few people
01:18:42.820 over my life that have had uh complex needs like siblings of friends of mine and the thing is
01:18:48.900 generally they've had um issues that i look at and think that would be awful to have to live that way
01:18:55.620 it must be so difficult and i feel deep sympathy for them but on a personal level most of them
01:19:00.360 outside of those who've had deep deep personality problems where they are quick to anger some some
01:19:07.060 really bad cases of low functioning autism most of them have been very kind and good spirited people
01:19:12.740 because unlike the epidemic of the low level anxiety that some people feel they don't feel entitled
01:19:19.720 to anything because they understand that where what they have in life is essentially a gift to them
01:19:26.620 what they do have is something that they need to treasure and they tend to be very kind and good
01:19:32.380 spirited because of that and i and i really respect them yeah absolutely uh i would also tie in though
01:19:38.680 to josh's mass remigration uh uh segment and say that a large number of uh children being born with
01:19:48.100 heritable difficult diseases are coming from inbreeding which is a massive issue within our
01:19:54.220 migrant populations because in-group preference is not something which goes away and uh in fact in
01:20:00.940 some cultures particularly pakistani culture is something which is considered to be you know the the best
01:20:06.440 possible thing first first cousins so uh that has led to a 15 point iq drop in uh british indians for
01:20:14.980 instance and it's something which has led to uh you know a massive i think it's six times more likely
01:20:21.600 uh that a pakistani child will be um considered mentally retarded um off the back of the fact that it's an
01:20:29.880 inbreeding issue so 36 times overrepresented to the rest of the population by the way yeah
01:20:35.740 so important to consider that with there's extra benefits to mastery migration um the other thing
01:20:43.480 is is pensioners of course so the life expectancy in the uk has gone up quite dramatically um again if
01:20:49.800 we scroll down here a little bit there should be a table uh which shows yes that life expectancy at
01:20:56.780 birth has gone up by almost uh five or six years over the course of the last three decades so we're
01:21:05.900 also in a position where that massively increases people's risk of cancer and increases people's risk
01:21:11.100 of uh dementia which is where the mental health element comes in because uh risk factors for dementia
01:21:17.380 is aging uh and again if we scroll down here samson uh we should be able to see on page five
01:21:24.280 uh that aging is a risk um a little bit up there i'm afraid uh yes so for people aged between 65 and
01:21:34.760 69 around two in every 100 people have dementia uh however it doubles every five years which means if
01:21:41.040 you reach 90 a third of people have dementia which is uh obviously a huge uh huge issue it's uh
01:21:49.520 i keep wanting to use the word drain on the people around them but obviously these are people that
01:21:55.060 people love uh they're people who've lived for a very long time um and uh hopefully have have given a
01:22:01.480 contribution really horrible society as well but grandparents had it and it was awful seeing them
01:22:06.260 yeah degenerate but it's a problem that we have to contend with um as a as a people really and to
01:22:13.360 to truly understand it i now can't scroll down through my notes again uh apologies yeah i know
01:22:21.860 i know um so really uh i will in the interest of time because i know we've only got a few minutes left
01:22:28.060 uh i'll skip ahead and i will say you know how are we as a society going to deal with the aging
01:22:33.660 population and the lack of natural selection in it at the moment if you have any thoughts
01:22:39.280 so i i do think that there are elements of natural selection already going on because
01:22:44.540 you know generally speaking more successful people these days have more kids but there's
01:22:49.320 this weird incentive whereby the welfare state also allows less successful people to have lots
01:22:54.160 of children and the middle class sort of miss out by being responsible yeah i think that actually
01:22:59.880 you've just got to to make the the situation optimal for responsible people to have as many
01:23:07.120 children as they would like and lots of things will sort themselves out i think actually in many
01:23:12.340 ways lots of these problems will be fixed by fixing the economy first and foremost because
01:23:16.460 economic and resource considerations are generally what um well thought out educated people consider
01:23:24.740 when they think about expanding their family it's not the right time is always the uh the put-off
01:23:30.280 until of course then you know you're at the end of your potential life so if you've got a lot of
01:23:35.480 disposable income it's a lot harder to make that argument and therefore it's a lot easier to have
01:23:40.380 a bigger family and i think that actually if if you know people's wealth per capita started going up
01:23:46.260 people who were working who i see is deserving to have children um could do so yeah i think that's
01:23:54.240 much more impactful than say one of hungary's policies which would come under fire for you know
01:24:00.120 just incentivizing children by saying here you just take money if you have children we'll give you
01:24:04.580 money and their birth rate hasn't been i'll still take some money you would still take i'd still take
01:24:10.340 some money i'm sure you would but i think that there's got to be some sort of selection pressure
01:24:14.460 there for people of quality to have children and i think that that's an important thing if you're
01:24:20.680 listening to the podcast of the lotus eaters you're a quality person you should go out there and have
01:24:24.920 lots of children um all right i i think i will end my segment there um with a general view that i hope
01:24:33.140 that this has been informative to people about uh the difference between people in the uh the mental
01:24:39.320 health sort of sphere uh the people who are claiming a mental health disability and why they might be doing
01:24:45.120 that and the people with a real disability um who we actually do need to look after and are an
01:24:51.060 increasing uh burden on society um even though we do have a responsibility to them because um you
01:24:56.960 know they've helped continue and build the society okay well we have some more uh comments that have
01:25:03.280 come in so um concerning dementia risk do uh your part by helping yourself first regular strenuous
01:25:09.900 exercise is the strongest preventative against mental decline it's the only effective prevention as of
01:25:14.540 now there are lots of other things that are linked to preventing it um but you are right that
01:25:19.040 exercise is actually one of the best things um to prevent it and that's very good advice
01:25:23.600 resistance training is always good for you in all circumstances um no group above the 25 income level
01:25:29.720 has positive fertility even the top 10 only have one or two children um yes um i can also point out
01:25:36.440 that i know lots of examples of quite wealthy people who have like eight or ten children and most of the
01:25:42.080 people who do have lots and lots of children have the money to support them doesn't elon musk have like
01:25:47.520 18 kids at this point yes who knows yeah um i think that's the the situation that everyone wants
01:25:53.480 to be in that you can support them with a good lifestyle as well uh mark you're sounding like ed
01:25:58.080 dutton about the child mortality thing i i joke i joke it was great to see you at the skilledings
01:26:02.340 amazing discussion on all of this uh by the way quality segment today um so it's very nice of you
01:26:08.020 mark i checked and the only result that came up is that uh elon musk has at least 12 children
01:26:14.080 at least so it could be more strong men did have those groups and organizations however the blue
01:26:19.480 haired whales and single angry cat ladies demanded they be given access to those groups since no one
01:26:23.900 wanted anything to do with them well basket weavers or club weaves it's now known is pretty much a
01:26:29.640 fraternity uh although we don't technically impose a restriction on the membership and so if you want to
01:26:35.080 have your own male only version of club weave then please feel free i have met one or two female
01:26:41.060 lurkers the over diagnosis of people is intentional drug companies work hand in hand with governments
01:26:46.460 to drug up the local populace to make them compliant while raking in money i mean there's certainly a good
01:26:50.920 argument for that one and fred not finally um i thought carl called him mini me because the cloning
01:26:55.080 process couldn't get ah that's mean he couldn't get marked fat enough because it was before carl went
01:27:01.180 on a diet you didn't have to say it harry being the strong man in the room was able to say it for you
01:27:06.740 a northerner with no filter i prefer but there you go win-win right the the big northern monkey
01:27:11.980 let's get right down to brass tacks i wouldn't insult monkeys like that i'm afraid
01:27:16.080 i'm sorry i'm orangutan they're endearing all right don't they get their arses out what which
01:27:24.960 are the ones with those are baboons baboons that's maybe you are a baboon you as an orangutan
01:27:28.700 might have the simple capability of using simple tools one day oh fantastic anyway we have video
01:27:34.640 going outside and touching grass has now been scientifically proven to reduce inflammation
01:27:46.040 reduce pain significantly improve sleep manage autoimmune disorders
01:27:55.520 and also help repair wounds quicker
01:28:01.240 i think with the reverb you're adding to your voice there i feel very hypnotized almost
01:28:11.440 it's asmr touch grass therapy that's there it's effective though i did feel relaxed and it's
01:28:17.800 also good to know about reducing inflammation and stuff like that that's nice to know
01:28:21.440 hey dan you should read my novel final flight of the reininger because it involves o'neill cylinders
01:28:29.280 and it involves space colonization and even a technology you probably haven't heard of yet
01:28:33.900 called bio plants tokamaks and polywells i really want to know what you got to say about it
01:28:39.320 also i really want to know what you think about my capital gains tax points that i made a couple of
01:28:45.240 weeks ago i think we should probably play that one for dan samson next time he's on we'll pass that
01:28:51.100 on to dan as soon as possible oh i want to know about that v8 but if you're asking this is a big
01:28:56.440 block 383 short deck and my thoughts polaris station wagon i'm restoring it's stock bore 4.255
01:29:01.880 but we got some wear it's going to be off to the machine shop for an overboard i got 440 source heads
01:29:05.540 edibrox 7186 intake manifold tti 2 inch primary long tube headers and a full roller valve train with a
01:29:11.120 comp extreme energizer 230 236 roller cam which is about as big as you want to go in the street
01:29:15.400 i'm going to take this out to 11 and a half to one so we're going to be pushing 500 horsepower and
01:29:18.660 even more in torque which with my 2600 stall factory converter is going to hit like a brick wall i
01:29:23.640 promised grandpa i'd restore his wagon i didn't say it'd be factory oh it's gonna be sick
01:29:27.700 i really enjoyed that that's also one to play for beau i hope you're telling him that you're putting
01:29:34.980 that monstrosity in that car or else he's gonna get a quite a surprise by the way um are we okay
01:29:40.980 to run over a little bit samson uh okay no worries okay well we can't carry on i'm afraid
01:29:49.820 because uh he's got to set up common sense crusade okay samson's given us permission for a couple okay
01:29:55.020 do a couple more video comments sorry for not reading the regular comments
01:29:58.320 okay regular comments okay um so uh saint benny pax says i'd love to apply for production admin
01:30:07.260 position but i doubt you'll hire yanks yes it's a right nightmare to apply uh you know
01:30:12.400 hire someone across the point yeah you wouldn't want to live here anyway if you can live in swindon
01:30:17.360 and are good at the job then we'd hire you sam weston says i have a psychology question for mark
01:30:22.000 and josh what do you think triggers people um having rather strange or even risky addictions
01:30:26.700 as some examples i've seen a man who eats glass from wine glasses and light bulbs a woman who eats rocks
01:30:32.380 another woman who eats rubber tire shavings and a woman who drinks petrol oh this is a very particular
01:30:37.680 condition it is yeah same one where they people eat the insides of cushions sofas as well yeah and
01:30:43.600 fluff and i can't remember the exact name of the condition but it's it's um very specific but in
01:30:50.500 terms of neurology i can't remember whether or not it's it's linked to the same thing as ocd it is
01:30:58.280 there's an element of it it's also like a stress relieving thing for them in that the sensation of
01:31:03.700 whatever it is they're doing sort of alleviate stress and it's like a coping mechanism like not
01:31:09.520 learnt to deal with a negative thing at least that was uh what i i only looked at one specific case so
01:31:16.600 it's difficult to make generalizations but these are normally quite rare and normally psychologists look
01:31:21.900 at these sorts of things at a case-by-case basis because they're so unique to the individual who has
01:31:26.700 them because they tend not to have a consistent uh format do we have time for a few more samson
01:31:31.880 one or two okay all right i'll read some from my segment then so uh poods b says we need to return
01:31:40.280 to a time when rap artists were only involved in drug and gang crime and not kiddie fiddling and human
01:31:45.040 trafficking well sadly they probably were involved in return to tradition anyway allegedly allegedly
01:31:51.160 allegedly yes uh arizona desert rat also says people keep asking me why don't you like rap this
01:31:57.600 is why this type of lifestyle is celebrated also most of the music is terrible yes true i don't enjoy
01:32:04.980 it at all x y and z they've spelt out z otherwise it would be pronounced zed uh schroding is immigrant a
01:32:12.060 haitian moves uh in next door and now your cat goes missing did your neighbor eat it or did it just run
01:32:17.460 away these are the questions that's never been able to answer puzzle i can tell you what happened
01:32:22.840 did it run away into the migrant's mouth a non-zero chance your cat ate the haitian if you've trained
01:32:28.600 it well if it's a defense cat it will eat the haitians does your does your haitian immigrant look
01:32:33.660 strange such as the shape of a cat wearing a haitian skin
01:32:36.960 jokes on them i own a tiger um roman observer nice manifesto josh and now you only have to fight
01:32:45.780 against hundreds of civil service employees who would never implement such a common sense and
01:32:49.240 pro-england program well they wouldn't need to because i'd fire them all well yeah all of josh's
01:32:54.520 suggestions are predicated on the idea that by this point we're already in power and have
01:32:58.760 basically cleared them all out fired the entire civil service yes yes the government would be a
01:33:04.100 skeleton after i'm done with it we got stuff uh here's one for mark is there any correlation between
01:33:09.480 the increase in children being diagnosed with add adhd odd and the government banning smacking and the
01:33:16.000 removal of corporal punishment in schools i could not tell you whether or not there's a correlation
01:33:21.080 between those two although disciplinary methods and the rate of particular diagnosis would be an
01:33:29.120 interesting thing to explore so perhaps i'll write an article on that
01:33:32.440 um also what do we have here um neurotypical is as much a slur as cisgender i agree pretty much i agree
01:33:41.880 with that yeah i think that's that's reasonable to say it is leveraged in that way it's like
01:33:46.480 oh you're just not non-neurotypical you just don't understand me yeah i'm normal like yeah i'm a normal
01:33:52.800 yeah and then when you say that you're normal they go well there's no such thing as normal because
01:33:56.360 they're offended at the concepts and you know that they they created the cisgender flag and it was just a
01:34:00.400 gray square and they were like oh yeah it's definitely definitely not being used as an
01:34:05.640 attack because you think we're just all boring and terrible people and boring we're just carrying
01:34:10.900 on civilization yeah but anyway um it's time to end the show i enjoyed that very much well done mark
01:34:16.740 holding up islander final uh port of call by islander otherwise we'll be very disappointed in you
01:34:22.700 buy it now thank you very much for watching and make sure to tune in to common sense crusade in
01:34:27.660 about 25 minutes and goodbye
01:34:30.040 you