The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters - November 28, 2024


The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1052


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 29 minutes

Words per Minute

182.21355

Word Count

16,340

Sentence Count

1,368

Misogynist Sentences

55

Hate Speech Sentences

81


Summary

In this episode, we discuss the tragic death of Peter Lynch, who took his own life after being imprisoned for his part in the riots in Rotherham, England in 2011, and the Italian migrant crisis in the wake of the 9/11 attacks.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Good afternoon, folks. Welcome to the podcast of the Lotuses for Thursday, the 28th of November,
00:00:04.740 2024. I'm joined by Josh and Charlie Bentley-Aster. Thanks for joining us, Charlie.
00:00:09.960 It's really good to be here. I've watched the show since the beginning, so this feels
00:00:13.320 like a real character arc moment when I'm finally in the room.
00:00:16.880 I'm glad you're here. We're going to be talking about the sad case of Peter Lynch, who of
00:00:22.580 course took his own life after being, I think, unjustly imprisoned by the oppressive Starmer
00:00:28.060 regime for objecting to atrocities, the ideological gap between men and women and what might
00:00:35.040 be responsible for it, and how Italy's migrant crisis is nothing short of horrifying. Just
00:00:41.640 like everyone else. Anyway, let's begin.
00:00:45.620 Okay, so Peter Lynch's funeral was yesterday, and I wanted to focus on his case and his story,
00:00:52.660 because I think actually it's quite important that it's not just another number or another person
00:00:58.900 contributing to the number of people arrested during the August riots, but he was a man with
00:01:04.840 a family. He was 61 years old. He was married for 36 years before he died. Spoilers. And he had four
00:01:12.580 adult children and three grandchildren. And there'll be a clip I'll play of him in a minute.
00:01:17.640 And clearly, a lot of what he was doing, he was doing for his family, because he brings
00:01:23.580 up, you know, protecting children and things like that, which I think is a very good thing.
00:01:27.980 But to give you an idea of what actually happened on the 4th of August, he attended the protest
00:01:32.360 outside the Holiday Inn in Rotherham. And I imagine both of you can probably remember the one outside
00:01:37.180 of Rotherham got a bit violent, fiery. Yeah, it was mostly peaceful, but fiery. And one can wonder
00:01:46.740 what motivated people in Rotherham to do such a thing. But apparently, he was guilty of shouting
00:01:53.260 at police, you are protecting people who are killing our kids. And I can't say that word on YouTube,
00:01:59.180 but sexually assaulting them. You get the idea. And he referred to the police as scum. He basically
00:02:05.620 shouted these things at the police, which resulted in him being arrested.
00:02:09.980 But the important point was, he didn't attempt to set fire to anything. Nor did he endorse
00:02:14.900 setting fire to things. Nor did he participate in the violence.
00:02:18.860 Yeah. So he stood there and shouted.
00:02:21.320 Nothing different than what you heard in the minor strikes back in Thatcher's time, you
00:02:26.820 know, the yelling scum and all sorts of the police.
00:02:29.220 Well, I mean, the leftists and the pro-Palestinian times shout scum all the time. So, you know,
00:02:34.900 this is not an objectionable, legally objectionable thing to shout at police, you would think.
00:02:42.160 I watched History Debunked, Simon Webb, talk about it. And he said that he could remember
00:02:47.640 the Vietnam War protests. And some of the things that people would say to the police then were
00:02:52.260 much, much stronger than what he was guilty of saying. So, after he was arrested, a video was
00:02:59.800 shown in court of him saying this, that was shown as evidence. And this resulted in him getting a
00:03:05.740 two-year and eight-month sentence.
00:03:08.040 Well, under what law, though? What law is it that you can't shout at the police?
00:03:11.640 Well, supposedly...
00:03:12.680 It's for assault now these days.
00:03:14.400 Yeah, he was guilty of, you know, targeting the police. That was the specific thing that...
00:03:20.200 With mean words.
00:03:21.460 I know. It's silly, isn't it?
00:03:23.280 Unbelievable.
00:03:23.980 So, it's also worth mentioning as well, at the time, he wasn't in the best of health and
00:03:27.640 had recently suffered a heart attack. So, this sort of sentence could well have been the
00:03:32.960 equivalent of a life sentence to him, those two years and eight months. Because, of course,
00:03:38.100 he didn't know how long he had left. And, you know, he wasn't necessarily in the best
00:03:42.600 of health, I imagine. And there's a video that Andrew Bridgen, who we've had on the show
00:03:48.080 before, shared in October, after he was convicted, of him talking about politics and holding a
00:03:55.120 similar sign to the one he was holding that day, where he's basically talking about his
00:04:00.420 view of politics.
00:04:01.420 Right, so tell us why you're here today.
00:04:03.680 Because we did a vote in 2016, a democratic vote. It's not being a bell. Parliament's
00:04:10.340 took it on to unsent. The corrupt MPs have took it on to themselves to deny our vote what
00:04:16.300 we put them in power for. But now they're in power, they're stuck there, defying what
00:04:21.680 we put them in there for. And all these corrupt MPs now are saying they're getting picked on
00:04:26.880 and abused, but why not? They actually went in there to do a job and they've gone and turned
00:04:32.340 against Willock people, which is absolutely ridiculous. I mean, how do we go by our rights
00:04:39.600 and bring our children up? If there's a corrupt system all the way through, police, judicial
00:04:46.000 services, everything, it's all involved. Parliament, MPs, everything, they're all corrupt. We've got
00:04:53.100 Prime Ministers corrupt. So how can we tell our children to bring them up straight and narrow
00:04:58.680 when everybody above them is corrupt, but yet they're expecting the people to do as they're
00:05:03.740 told by people that's not doing as they're told, what would a premier for? So I just can't
00:05:09.580 see round it unless they come out.
00:05:12.260 It's a little bit difficult to hear of all the background noise, but...
00:05:15.200 Not an unreasonable set of points that he's making.
00:05:16.760 No, it was perfectly reasonable. It's the kind of thing that, to be honest, we would talk
00:05:21.080 about, isn't it? That many of the people in prominent positions are corrupt. And I thought
00:05:26.060 it very interesting that he was talking about, well, it's difficult to raise children and put
00:05:29.780 them on the straight and narrow if the institutions around them are corrupt. Which I think is a very
00:05:35.720 good way of framing it as well. It shows that he was approaching politics with his family
00:05:40.700 in mind, which I think is nothing but a good thing. And I think actually that is something
00:05:45.520 that more people could benefit from doing.
00:05:48.120 Sorry, yeah, just a quick thing. It seems to be perfectly fair to call them corrupt if
00:05:52.360 they are following an agenda that isn't the agenda that's set by the demos itself.
00:05:57.060 The purpose of democracy is that people get to vote for what the agenda is going to be.
00:06:01.220 I mean, that's exactly what the referendum was. It's literally to say, we will do this
00:06:05.180 as a nation. And if they're doing everything they can to undermine or avoid doing that,
00:06:09.820 then you can call that corruption. That's a totally fair way of describing it.
00:06:13.560 Especially when it's serving their own interests.
00:06:15.480 Precisely.
00:06:16.100 But I think it's a good point to make, actually, about raising children that way. Because
00:06:20.900 I was raised in a military family. I know you were too, Carl. And I was taught, you know,
00:06:26.480 queen and country as the epitome of dignity and class and service. And as a result of that,
00:06:38.720 the government, the military, the police, everyone who serves under the crown should
00:06:44.240 mirror then the queen's image and now the king's image. Less so the king's image, but
00:06:51.040 mirror the queen's image. And they were guiding lights to me as a child. You know, I didn't,
00:06:59.300 I thought the police were on our side. I thought the politicians were on our side. And I think
00:07:02.900 that's the same for many, many people. And since Brexit and COVID, it's just broken, broken
00:07:09.500 people's faith.
00:07:10.220 But for the better, right? Better for whom?
00:07:16.100 It's a sound state of affairs that we have an elite class that seems to be actively against
00:07:21.040 not just the will of the people, but the good of the country. But anyway.
00:07:25.800 So it's worth mentioning as well, that Sky News in particular explicitly said something
00:07:32.200 that we had talked about, and we'll get onto that. So I'll play this episode briefly.
00:07:37.700 People are being told that if they do appear, whether they're pleading guilty or not guilty,
00:07:43.020 they're very unlikely to get bail. And if they do end up in prison, somebody who told me,
00:07:50.000 somebody who knows about these things told me that, you know, any right wing, far right
00:07:54.360 protester landing up in jail, well, they can expect a pretty cold reception from what he says
00:08:03.080 are Asian gangs inside prison who will be looking out for them.
00:08:09.280 Wow, that's a threat.
00:08:10.540 Isn't it?
00:08:13.240 It's bad enough that you can expect to be prosecuted, compelled into going to prison for something
00:08:20.640 that you otherwise, if you went through the court process, would get exonerated from.
00:08:24.120 But to say that, and once you're in there, you're not going to be safe, it's a whole...
00:08:30.900 But not just you're not going to be safe. Muslim gangs are going to come for you.
00:08:34.980 Yes.
00:08:35.620 Very much a client of the regime.
00:08:36.900 The people you've been protesting against on the streets.
00:08:39.140 Exactly. It shows who the regime's clients are and who are the enemies.
00:08:43.120 But they were well aware that they were sending many of these people to their demise, basically.
00:08:48.240 Or at least into significant danger.
00:08:50.140 Yeah, and that wasn't necessarily voiced by concern. That was voiced as, you need to be
00:08:56.740 careful, otherwise you know what will happen to you, sort of thing. It's more couched as a threat.
00:09:01.020 It's an admission, isn't it? That they haven't actually got control of what goes on in the prisons.
00:09:05.340 Yeah, why do Asian gangs even exist in these prisons?
00:09:08.600 Yeah, surely if the prisons were functioning normally, there wouldn't be gangs in our prisons,
00:09:12.600 but there we go. It is worth mentioning as well that all the way back on the 27th of August,
00:09:18.180 we actually discussed how the state creates conditions in Western democracies that allow
00:09:26.620 it to dispose of dissidents in multiple different ways. They don't necessarily have to kill them,
00:09:32.740 but just render them politically impotent is the main aim, really.
00:09:37.000 Crush their soul.
00:09:37.900 But we did point out that driving them to suicide in jail is one of the tactics that they use,
00:09:43.400 and we were unfortunately very prescient in this discussion.
00:09:47.080 So it's worth mentioning as well that the prison he went to in South Yorkshire,
00:09:52.700 I think it was H&P Moorland, this is from 2010, where they had three days of violence in the prison.
00:10:02.360 So there was a three-day-long riot in the prison itself.
00:10:05.360 And then again, in 2016, there was another case of widespread violence where even some of the cells were damaged
00:10:14.060 in the prison, which I don't even know how you could do.
00:10:17.180 You'd think that a prison cell should be the one thing that's very sturdy.
00:10:21.200 So how that happened, you know, God only knows.
00:10:25.000 But these would have been the things that he would have been hearing, this 61-year-old man,
00:10:30.900 that he's going to be spending his time in this prison, of course, in South Yorkshire,
00:10:35.560 which would have a large Asian contingent in its prison population.
00:10:40.400 And so he knows that there's going to be high potential for violence.
00:10:44.920 There's going to be lots of, you know, people out to get him because of his political beliefs.
00:10:51.820 And then, of course, while he was imprisoned, he would have seen this as well.
00:10:57.260 1,100 inmates set for early release.
00:11:00.140 And then lots of them were freed by mistake.
00:11:05.120 And then also one of them re-offended.
00:11:09.240 Isn't it on the same day?
00:11:10.560 On the same day.
00:11:11.480 Within hours of being released.
00:11:13.040 I'm going to say many of them re-offended, but...
00:11:15.040 Amari Ward.
00:11:17.120 Very English name, that.
00:11:19.100 But, um...
00:11:20.240 Do you know what category prison he was in?
00:11:22.460 I think it was category C.
00:11:23.780 Okay.
00:11:24.420 Because obviously, um, with, uh, Roman Tomlinson,
00:11:28.300 and, uh, his current stint in, in prison is, is category A, high security for...
00:11:35.240 It's Belmarsh, isn't it?
00:11:35.740 Well, he's been moved now, but it was Belmarsh.
00:11:38.380 But he's been moved to another category A.
00:11:40.200 And it's just like, why?
00:11:41.680 Yeah.
00:11:42.140 He's not a violent criminal.
00:11:43.480 But what I wanted to have another look at is how the media portrayed him.
00:11:50.320 Because, remember, he was guilty of shouting.
00:11:53.940 Conspiracy theorist granddad jailed over disorder.
00:11:57.380 Here's the Guardian.
00:11:58.620 Disgraceful example of a grandfather jailed for role in Rotherham Wright.
00:12:02.080 And that is a quote from the judge, who we will be getting on to.
00:12:06.540 How does his daughters and grandchildren, you know, how do you explain that to the grandchildren?
00:12:12.700 You know, granddad's in prison.
00:12:15.300 He hasn't done anything wrong, but he's going to be away for a long time now.
00:12:20.160 How do you explain that?
00:12:21.400 And how do the kids not then grow up with an intense resentment towards the state?
00:12:27.520 I think, um, a lot of young people these days are recognising that essentially the state
00:12:32.920 is adversarial towards them.
00:12:34.820 Absolutely.
00:12:35.180 And that they've got a very domineering set of rules above them that they have to be
00:12:39.780 very careful about.
00:12:40.720 And I've actually encountered this in my own life with my own children.
00:12:44.620 Well, it's the passive ways and then the...
00:12:46.780 Well, yeah, but sometimes they fall afoul of it.
00:12:48.780 And it can be really silly things like messages they send each other on social media and stuff
00:12:52.080 like this.
00:12:52.720 And you have to explain to them that, look, you just can't do these things because the
00:12:55.680 government and the police are watching and they will come for you.
00:12:58.800 So essentially you have to explain to them, we're kind of being oppressed.
00:13:01.840 But this is the thing, kids always need a Y and we can't give them one other than...
00:13:06.940 Oh, I can't.
00:13:09.420 It's not good, but...
00:13:10.620 But not in a language they can truly understand.
00:13:13.780 Yeah, but I think they do understand the severity of it when you do sit down and talk to them.
00:13:19.800 They understand there's something not good going on.
00:13:22.800 So this judge, Jeremy Richardson, who Peter Lloyd here is calling a left-wing judge, although...
00:13:31.500 Which is probably fair.
00:13:32.080 Probably true.
00:13:34.020 He gave him almost three years for shouting at the police, remember?
00:13:37.580 He previously allowed a paedophile to go free and gave a suspended sentence to a dangerous
00:13:41.560 driver who killed a cyclist.
00:13:43.120 So you can drive dangerously and actually kill someone and get less time in prison than shouting
00:13:50.340 at someone.
00:13:51.220 But the point is, what he's doing is defending the regime.
00:13:54.540 Is a paedophile a threat to the regime?
00:13:56.420 No.
00:13:57.080 Is someone who killed a cyclist dangerously driving a threat to the regime?
00:14:00.480 No.
00:14:01.080 Is a grandfather voicing a political opinion a threat to the regime?
00:14:04.480 Yes.
00:14:05.080 So that's why.
00:14:06.180 Exactly it, yeah.
00:14:07.080 And so the judge said to him, what you did was encourage by your conduct others to behave
00:14:13.560 violently and you were part of this mob.
00:14:17.500 So guilty by association.
00:14:19.860 I was going to say, why can't people just be responsible for their own actions?
00:14:22.840 Are we completely beyond that now?
00:14:24.820 Apparently so, yeah.
00:14:26.140 And he also said to him, what a disgraceful example you are as a grandfather.
00:14:31.020 Hell yeah.
00:14:31.440 Which...
00:14:31.840 Why would you do that?
00:14:33.200 Why would you do that other than to drive the knife in and make sure he went into prison
00:14:38.020 utterly demoralized?
00:14:39.540 And it's to signal to the outside world, isn't it?
00:14:42.500 And I mean, I can't...
00:14:44.180 It's always neglected, but the working class element of this, the working class prosecution,
00:14:49.740 it's people who haven't been lucky enough to have the kind of education that perhaps
00:14:56.220 us around the table have had, who've had to spend their whole lives working, not getting
00:15:00.740 to sit down and read for pleasure and things like this, and not having the kind of outlet
00:15:05.060 that we have.
00:15:07.020 They express themselves in perfectly legitimate ways, but it's not accepted by the establishment
00:15:13.120 as a legitimate way to express oneself.
00:15:15.320 Unless you're publishing an academic paper or a piece in The Guardian, it's neither here
00:15:21.380 nor there.
00:15:21.900 And I just can't...
00:15:26.220 I feel very vindictive towards the middle class as a result of this.
00:15:31.580 We're not all bad.
00:15:32.520 Yes, you are.
00:15:34.020 Thanks, Carl.
00:15:34.980 You're welcome.
00:15:35.300 Anyway, here, Dr. Charles Cornish Dale compares the case of Peter Lynch to this one, a trainee
00:15:45.380 teacher who was 26 years old, shared videos of newborn babies being sexually assaulted,
00:15:50.580 and he avoided jail, just to put that into perspective.
00:15:53.940 So I imagine, having known this, Peter Lynch probably wouldn't have been too chuffed with
00:15:59.880 his stay.
00:16:01.040 That's a headline I just never want to hear ever again.
00:16:02.900 No.
00:16:03.220 It's like the Hugh Edwards stuff happened the same week, didn't it?
00:16:08.680 So, eventually, he was pretty much driven to taking his own life, and this actually didn't
00:16:18.020 get much circulation that that was the manner in which it happened.
00:16:21.400 It was only because, as GB News reports, a Telegraph article got a source, basically, for
00:16:30.600 it from the prison itself, whereas everyone else was basically saying, he just died.
00:16:34.960 Right.
00:16:35.520 And I remember pointing this out.
00:16:37.980 Yeah.
00:16:38.460 Like, he just dies.
00:16:40.300 He just dies.
00:16:40.320 He just dies in prison.
00:16:40.940 It makes it sound like it was a health problem more than anything else.
00:16:43.560 Yeah.
00:16:43.600 Maybe it was his heart again or something like that.
00:16:44.860 Yeah, exactly.
00:16:45.480 No, he committed suicide.
00:16:46.200 And look at the tagline, you know, Hotel Rioter.
00:16:50.440 Yeah.
00:16:50.920 He was stood at the sidelines.
00:16:52.560 That's not how I define a riot.
00:16:54.100 Yeah.
00:16:54.320 That's a protest.
00:16:55.300 So, someone who's engaging in physical activity, like violence, fine, call that person a rioter.
00:16:59.840 Yeah, destruction of property, things like that.
00:17:01.640 But he was standing at the damn sidelines.
00:17:03.300 He wasn't convicted of that, and were he alive, it would be libelous as well, wouldn't it?
00:17:07.900 Yes, yes, exactly.
00:17:09.060 So, here's another one as well.
00:17:11.720 LBC, Rioter dies in prison after being jailed for two years for violent disorder outside Rotherham Hotel.
00:17:17.100 This is just not true.
00:17:19.260 This is a misrepresentation of what happened.
00:17:21.780 Why do they keep getting away with this?
00:17:24.080 Because no one takes it to task about it.
00:17:25.480 No, but loads of people call them out on it.
00:17:28.500 Mm-hmm.
00:17:28.880 But...
00:17:29.400 It would need to be legal.
00:17:30.580 Yeah.
00:17:30.760 Someone would have to sue them.
00:17:31.880 Yeah.
00:17:32.100 What the right needs in Britain is just a very big legal fund to fund lots of court cases.
00:17:37.580 Then, all of a sudden, they'll remember their journalistic integrity.
00:17:40.460 Elon, if you're listening, that's what we need.
00:17:41.400 I was going to say.
00:17:42.060 Yeah.
00:17:42.560 Elon, I know you're watching.
00:17:43.960 I know you're a big fan.
00:17:45.080 Help us out.
00:17:46.240 And then, they did eventually have a slightly better headline there.
00:17:53.080 They did mention...
00:17:54.000 Died from quote-unquote hanging.
00:17:55.860 Mm.
00:17:57.220 I don't know why they're doing a quote-unquote there.
00:17:59.460 Yeah, but, like, what, did he slip over?
00:18:02.860 Like, or did he kill himself?
00:18:04.880 Yeah.
00:18:05.320 Well, it was the latter.
00:18:06.800 Yeah, I know.
00:18:07.480 I know.
00:18:07.720 But the point is that they're leaving a dubious question hanging in the air.
00:18:12.800 I know, yeah.
00:18:13.460 You know, because you could say from hanging, oh, he slipped, fell, caught his throat on
00:18:16.940 something and choked to death on the bedpost or something.
00:18:18.920 I don't know.
00:18:19.680 Like, they think it happened to Epstein or something like that, right?
00:18:22.060 Yeah.
00:18:22.200 Like, you know, or did he deliberately take his own life?
00:18:26.920 It seems...
00:18:27.920 It's another part of the intimidation, isn't it?
00:18:30.500 He died in prison.
00:18:31.660 Mm-hmm.
00:18:32.020 Can't tell you exactly how.
00:18:33.220 I suppose if they keep it relatively secret, it does serve to benefit them in a way that
00:18:40.100 they can hold a threat over people that's slightly empty, but they don't know that.
00:18:43.620 Yeah, it also just shows who's within the grace of the regime and who isn't.
00:18:48.340 If this was a Muslim man who had done something like this, he would be talked very well of
00:18:53.540 because they have a bias in that direction.
00:18:55.400 Probably get asked to join the Greens or the Labour Party, to be honest.
00:18:58.560 Well, yeah, yeah.
00:19:00.060 So I wanted to have a little look at some of the people that attended his funeral and,
00:19:04.560 you know, say, well done.
00:19:05.800 I didn't know what was going on and I'm a little bit disappointed that I missed it because
00:19:08.500 I feel like lots of people should have probably turned out, although I didn't know the
00:19:12.760 wishes of the family.
00:19:13.640 Maybe they didn't want that.
00:19:14.620 But at least express some sort of condolences and solidarity with the family because I do
00:19:21.420 think that he was someone who was a victim rather than a criminal.
00:19:26.320 I feel like what he did by shouting at the police, perhaps people might not approve of
00:19:32.640 it, but I don't think it deserves all of this, does it?
00:19:35.880 It doesn't...
00:19:36.200 I don't think it should be a crime.
00:19:37.460 No.
00:19:37.940 Well, it's a crime in taste, isn't it?
00:19:39.460 It wasn't to the taste of the middle-class judges and the BBC and LBC.
00:19:44.840 But I don't think it should be legally actionable to shout something, shout your disapproval at
00:19:49.660 the police at a protest.
00:19:51.100 Because you're right, really.
00:19:52.040 Yeah, exactly.
00:19:52.320 I would have thought that's right.
00:19:52.660 They're representatives of the state.
00:19:54.000 Yeah, absolutely.
00:19:54.780 Unless you're, you know, you're stealing or you're physically harming people, I don't
00:19:58.760 think you should be in prison.
00:20:00.560 Maybe fraud.
00:20:01.520 That's kind of stealing.
00:20:02.260 There are other things that, yeah, sure.
00:20:03.600 But like, at a protest, you shouted something.
00:20:06.300 That shouldn't be jailable.
00:20:07.200 No, absolutely not.
00:20:08.700 It should be protected speech.
00:20:10.240 So I saw that Active Patriot was there and they recorded the video.
00:20:14.060 I might be misattributing things to some people who shared videos of it, but I think...
00:20:20.200 Active Patriot usually records his own footage.
00:20:22.340 Yeah, he does, yeah.
00:20:24.040 I also saw that Turning Point had turned up as well.
00:20:28.860 UKIP leader Nick Tenconi, who we've had in a few times, turned up.
00:20:32.780 He's been very good doing on-the-ground stuff, things that perhaps Nigel Farage should be
00:20:37.440 doing, perhaps.
00:20:38.560 Yeah, where was reform?
00:20:40.340 That's funny, that, isn't it?
00:20:41.540 Very quiet.
00:20:43.060 And Yorkshire Rose here turned up as well.
00:20:46.560 And then Active Patriot also shared a message from his daughter as well, because I think
00:20:52.060 from what I can read from some of the service, they were very, very upset about it, as you
00:20:57.140 would be.
00:20:57.560 But the point being here, that what happened was a man was jailed for speaking his mind
00:21:03.360 at something that did turn into a riot, was arrested, imprisoned for a disproportionately
00:21:09.880 long time.
00:21:10.620 I don't think he should have been imprisoned at all, but even if he was involved in the
00:21:14.900 riot, it was very tangential, and people have been given less time than that for similar
00:21:20.240 circumstances.
00:21:21.280 Worse things.
00:21:22.140 Yeah, exactly.
00:21:22.740 The photos in this are particularly moving as well, because if you look at the age of
00:21:27.200 the photos, these photos are probably taken in the 1980s, when the government didn't appear
00:21:32.420 to be actively hostile to its own population.
00:21:35.140 And so, if you were to go back to when this photo was taken, like, you know, 85 or whenever.
00:21:40.400 And explain, this is how you die.
00:21:42.100 And explain that, by the way, yeah, exactly, in 40 years' time, you're going to be murdered
00:21:45.040 by the state.
00:21:46.500 They wouldn't believe you.
00:21:47.800 They're like, that's mad.
00:21:48.660 How could you think that?
00:21:49.600 It's like, well, things are going to change a lot, actually, from about 1997 onwards,
00:21:53.740 and you're not going to be ready for it.
00:21:56.320 Yeah.
00:21:56.580 It reminds me of the perhaps potentially distasteful quote in this context of the, I think it was
00:22:05.440 one of the American revolutionaries, wasn't it?
00:22:07.700 That the tree of liberty needs to be watered by the blood of tyrants and patriots.
00:22:11.680 And I think that this should remind us about the costs of allowing this government to remain.
00:22:20.880 And I think that that's certainly something that he would be very passionate about, is
00:22:24.120 that this has been allowed to come to be, where the state can imprison people for what
00:22:31.540 I see as free speech, and create the conditions where they feel the need to take their own life.
00:22:37.260 And it didn't have to happen this way.
00:22:40.560 And I think that people should hold the Labour Party and Keir Starmer and that justice to
00:22:45.720 account for these sorts of things happening, because it is tyranny at the end of the day.
00:22:50.380 And just in case anyone is tempted to misinterpret what we're saying, we are saying, don't vote
00:22:54.980 for these people.
00:22:56.360 Vote for someone else under any circumstances.
00:22:59.120 Anyone else.
00:22:59.820 Yeah, anyone else almost at this point.
00:23:01.420 Anyway, that's a random name, says, to respond to the lady, if people were held responsible
00:23:06.560 for their actions, our rulers would be tried for treason.
00:23:08.800 That is true.
00:23:09.800 And by jailing these innocents, all the regime does is prime their descendants for resentment.
00:23:13.840 The government is directly responsible for creating the extremists they pretend to fight
00:23:17.180 against.
00:23:17.720 They're breeding enemies of the state, aren't they?
00:23:19.660 Yes.
00:23:20.860 And they don't seem to care.
00:23:22.000 Like, the cavalier attitude that Keir Starmer took towards the petition, to have nearly three
00:23:26.960 million people sign a petition against you in, like, less than two days.
00:23:29.680 You should have some serious concerns about the direction of travel of your government.
00:23:34.340 But to literally say, well, these are just irrelevant, far-right whoever's, a bit concerning.
00:23:42.400 Peter says, many see Peter as a martyr now, with the state indirectly murdering him for
00:23:46.420 his views.
00:23:47.320 As that has been said, this will just drive more resentment towards the government, past
00:23:50.520 and present.
00:23:51.260 That is correct.
00:23:51.940 You should be resentful towards the government.
00:23:54.060 Yeah, it's not unjustified at all.
00:23:55.440 Past and present, that's interesting.
00:23:57.660 We're sort of rewriting our own history in our heads, because we look back and the things
00:24:01.460 we thought, we thought we knew where we were back then, and it turns out we didn't.
00:24:05.660 And so our whole attitude, not just of the present and the future, but the past, is changing
00:24:09.280 as a result of what's happening.
00:24:11.280 Well, honestly, that's good.
00:24:12.020 I think the view that we have of the early 2000s is remarkably rosy.
00:24:16.660 And actually, no, this is where the rot begins setting in, and the real foundations of the
00:24:22.640 administrative anti-British state were constructed, and those people should be, at least, not
00:24:29.380 welcome in the average pub.
00:24:34.060 Anyway.
00:24:34.360 You're right.
00:24:37.460 You're rather right.
00:24:38.740 Move it this way, because if you're leaning this way, you talk into it.
00:24:42.440 Yeah.
00:24:43.340 Right.
00:24:44.340 So I thought we'd talk about something a little bit more jolly, which is the ideology gap
00:24:48.760 between men and women, and how women have been radicalised to the point where relationships
00:24:51.920 between men and women are becoming impossible.
00:24:55.160 That's more jolly, isn't it?
00:24:56.900 Oh, what a cheerful topic.
00:24:58.320 Cheers, Carl.
00:24:59.220 Really brightens up my day.
00:25:00.220 Thank you.
00:25:00.460 Just men do the washing up sometimes, and we'll be fine.
00:25:04.100 I wish it were that simple.
00:25:06.260 If it were that simple, we would have far fewer problems.
00:25:09.020 It works in our house.
00:25:10.000 I take out the bins.
00:25:12.220 Get a washing machine.
00:25:13.120 You don't need to do it that way.
00:25:14.220 Yeah, but someone's got to load it.
00:25:15.120 Or dishwasher, should I say.
00:25:16.720 But before we begin, tomorrow will be the last day of our US election merch, so go and
00:25:22.960 get it while you still can to mark at least someone's phenomenal success and victory.
00:25:28.040 At least, if we have to live vicariously through the Americans for the future of the Western
00:25:33.400 world, fine, we will.
00:25:35.080 If for some reason in Britain we can't get anything good done, fine.
00:25:38.400 We, of course, support President Trump, and we're looking forward to his administration.
00:25:41.920 Hopefully he does declare total war on the Labour Party and Keir Starmer and manages to
00:25:46.440 do whatever he can to support the patriots in Britain.
00:25:51.560 Anyway, let's begin, because this came out a long time ago now, probably like eight, nine
00:25:56.880 months ago, something like that.
00:25:57.740 I can't remember the exact date.
00:25:59.140 Apparently it was ages ago.
00:26:00.120 January, right.
00:26:01.120 So this was an interesting article about the new global gender divide, because Alice Evans,
00:26:07.540 a visiting fellow at Stanford University and one of the leading researchers on the topic,
00:26:12.160 had done a lot of polling of young men and young women around the world.
00:26:18.980 And what she had found is that in countries on every continent, an ideological gap had opened
00:26:23.980 up between young men and young women. Tens of millions who occupy the same cities, workplaces
00:26:28.800 and classrooms, and even homes no longer see eye to eye. And so this is just examining Gallup data
00:26:34.620 in particular. But it shows after decades where the sexes each were spread roughly across liberal
00:26:40.340 and conservative worldviews, women aged 18 to 30 are now 30 percentage points more liberal than
00:26:45.540 their main contemporaries. And this gap took just six years to open up. Thoughts?
00:26:50.760 Universities. Women are far more likely to go to university than men now. I'd say a majority
00:26:58.840 of women are at least like 60% do now. And they're an absolute cesspit for progressive liberal
00:27:07.580 thought, particularly the strains of feminism, telling them that, you know, motherhood is tyranny,
00:27:13.640 having a husband, a man who cares for you is tyranny. All of all of that kind of kind of stuff. The
00:27:20.760 state should be your, your parent, essentially, and your husband and your child.
00:27:26.360 Any thoughts, Josh?
00:27:27.680 Quite a few. So I think the South Korea example is quite interesting.
00:27:32.420 We'll put that to the side for the minute.
00:27:33.960 Okay, I don't want to spoil that then.
00:27:35.100 South Korea is a bit of an unusual case.
00:27:36.500 I do agree that there is a feminism and perhaps liberalism element to it, because I think it's
00:27:42.220 that thing that Peterson used to talk about quite a lot, whereby if you eliminate all sort
00:27:48.160 of legal gender imbalances, then what you get is a maximization of difference. And my sort
00:27:55.340 of working theory, and this is just a theory, is that men are more happy to go against the grain,
00:28:03.340 because we tend to be more disagreeable in nature, or at least we're far more happy being the one
00:28:09.980 person in the room who says something that people disagree with. And women tend to, this is a
00:28:15.500 generalization, of course, tend to be the people who enforce the current paradigm. And at the minute,
00:28:20.860 current paradigm is left-wing, and that is being forced more and more forcefully as it becomes
00:28:25.840 weaker and weaker.
00:28:26.820 Well, and feminine, I think that's the point. It's not just that it's liberal, it's feminine.
00:28:32.820 Well, yes, absolutely.
00:28:34.300 And I think, I mean, even if you look at the men, you know, whoever's in charge of Scotland
00:28:39.240 now keeps changing so much.
00:28:43.080 It's that bold fella.
00:28:44.420 Yeah, yeah. And Sadiq Khan, even Keir Starmer, all these people, very, very weak, milquetoast.
00:28:52.740 You're not talking about how Keir Starmer throws a punch, are you?
00:28:55.940 Oh, that video is pretty embarrassing.
00:28:58.140 Embarrassing, yeah.
00:28:58.660 But I do think as well that our society, what reason is there for people my sort of age and
00:29:05.600 younger? You know, I'm still only 29, despite, you know, politics aging me. What reason do
00:29:12.520 we have to care about society? We've got nothing. We've got no material possessions, really. We've
00:29:18.000 got no way of getting on the housing ladder. We're legally discriminated against. Why should
00:29:22.660 we have a stake in society? Why should we follow these rules? Because we do all the hard
00:29:27.580 work and get demonised. So what reason is there to agree with this consensus that women
00:29:35.140 go along with, which I think a lot of the time they're beneficiaries of?
00:29:38.960 I think primary schools might be interesting as well because where state education has become
00:29:44.240 much more institutionalised since the 80s and state education tends to be pretty driven
00:29:50.540 by women and there's no boys and girls schools anymore, even under the state system, no grammar
00:29:56.440 schools. Men from very early childhood are basically only having female influences right up to when
00:30:03.980 they go to university. And even at university, the professors are beginning to skew more dominantly
00:30:10.640 towards women. And I think that breeds resentment when they have no role models around them, which
00:30:17.800 they can aspire to. Because everyone around them is a woman and treating the men and the boys
00:30:24.760 as in the same terms as they treat the women and the girls. And they can't. It doesn't work.
00:30:31.020 Well, they're treated like faulty women, really. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
00:30:34.460 That's certainly my experience in school. I got into trouble a fair amount just by being
00:30:37.920 sort of boyish and having innocent fun. Well, all these boys getting now branded as having ADHD.
00:30:44.040 It's like, no, no, they're just proactive. Yeah, they're just boys. Yeah. They just would rather
00:30:48.440 be outside building something than sitting here trying to make the handwriting look nice.
00:30:52.280 One of the revelations from psychology really is that perhaps this panic about ADHD and medicalising
00:31:01.500 children is a moral panic that is actually actively harmful towards them. I think it certainly is.
00:31:07.340 I mean, it puts all sorts of mental constraints upon them. You know, how many people do you know,
00:31:10.820 I mean, it's mainly girls, but how many do you see on social media with their disorders in their bio?
00:31:16.880 You know, people use it to limit themselves because it gives them an excuse not to aspire
00:31:21.100 and to overcome. And they've been told they don't need to, because if you have any one of
00:31:25.540 these labels, the state will look after you. And so you can brush your hands of life. You know,
00:31:31.180 you can sit at home and just watch Netflix and receive your paycheck at the end.
00:31:36.040 Moreover, though, when it comes to the boys in particular, suggesting, oh, this is just he's got
00:31:42.360 ADHD or he's got autism or something like that. It's a way of implying that actually,
00:31:46.220 you don't need to discipline them. You don't need to train them to overcome this behavior.
00:31:50.100 And I'm very much against that because, of course, I've got two boys and they're typical boys.
00:31:54.180 And so I've had people like, oh, we should get him diagnosed for ADHD. No, you know, he's
00:32:01.140 just going to learn not to do it. And it's going to be difficult because that's what it is like.
00:32:04.880 Well, that's why, that's why, I mean, the most well-rounded men that I know in my lives,
00:32:09.760 broadly speaking, are the ones that went to scouts or did air cadets or sea cadets or army cadets.
00:32:15.400 It's like something where there was a male environment, where there was constraints put
00:32:21.320 upon them, expectations of behavior. And those expectations of behavior weren't where you're
00:32:26.260 going to get detention if you don't behave. It's you're just going to look really foolish in front
00:32:30.240 of all your friends. So I hope you enjoy that. And that gets them in line far, far easier.
00:32:34.280 So coming back to this, I think that education is indeed the root of the problem. But I think
00:32:40.880 you are correct that the overall sort of feminization of society is a large part of it as well. But
00:32:46.040 the education system being dominated by women and being presided over by a left-wing ideology,
00:32:54.880 which it is, is the problem. Because of course, if you're being inculcated into feminism your whole
00:33:02.020 life through, from your earliest, earliest years in school, through secondary school and into
00:33:08.480 university, well, if you're a woman, then maybe you will go, yeah, okay, I agree with all this because
00:33:12.040 it basically confirms my biases. But if you're a man, you might say no. And I think what they've got here
00:33:18.660 on the chart is very interesting. Because in Germany and the United States, men are barely
00:33:23.920 going right wing. Like men are actually quite centrist in this regard. And it's actually the
00:33:29.320 women who are radically to the left wing, right? In the UK, men are very weak and leftist themselves.
00:33:39.380 I mean, being 25 points to the left makes you a radical left winger in my view. Being 50 plus points
00:33:45.860 to the left makes you an insane communist. So the UK is incredibly left wing, which is very
00:33:50.560 insufferable. British men are definitely letting down the side. The case in South Korea, where the
00:33:57.700 men have actually become conservative, because in all of these other cases, they're not really
00:34:01.920 conservative. The South Korean case is a bit of a unique case, because the problems there seem to
00:34:09.460 have gone a bit deeper. I know a little bit about it. Yeah, I've only scratched the surface,
00:34:14.520 but it's insane. But there was some feminist conspiracy to some weird cult trying to...
00:34:22.100 Oh, it's doing their birth rate really well. Yeah, but there was some weird feminist cult
00:34:25.180 that took over South Korea that's been trying to turn the men into women. And so the men have
00:34:29.100 become very reactionary. I mean, it sounds similar to what we're doing here, except we're going
00:34:33.680 the surgical way rather than the psychological. No, no, it's very, very overt.
00:34:38.520 It's also worth mentioning as well that South Koreans do compulsory military service.
00:34:42.420 And so that probably does something to you, doesn't it?
00:34:45.280 Well, it seems to be a direct response to feminism. I mean, they, by a narrow margin,
00:34:51.260 elected an open anti-feminist man to be the president or prime minister after the fall of
00:34:59.600 the feminist regime, which is like... There was a hilarious debate in South Korea.
00:35:03.840 Yeah, I know, yeah. Apparently that can happen.
00:35:05.740 But there was this hilarious debate where all the men were being conscripted, and all of these
00:35:10.580 feminists were talking about patriarchy. And they said, well, if this is a patriarchy,
00:35:14.360 you know, come and join us. Join us in the military. And they're like, oh, actually, no.
00:35:17.880 And I think that they realized that when faced with forced conscription, actually feminist
00:35:22.820 principles don't carry that far.
00:35:24.400 And we saw that when the Ukraine war kicked off, didn't we? Suddenly all these women were
00:35:28.160 housewives, you know, mothers rather than boss girls going out there.
00:35:35.140 And so the Financial Times ascribes this, they think, to the Me Too movement. They think
00:35:40.360 that Me Too is the main trigger of this. And I'm not sure I agree. So if you look at the
00:35:44.420 time on their graphs, it's in the early 2010s where it just uniformly rockets straight upwards.
00:35:51.980 And so I think this is when feminism became the dominant cultural paradigm of Western countries,
00:35:59.760 what we call the international community.
00:36:01.520 And I think that that's been reflected in the statistics. I think Me Too is downstream of that.
00:36:08.740 This is a consequence of having a dominant feminist paradigm. But of course, I don't think that's
00:36:13.540 the cause of it. And they say in particular, you know, this was something that happened in South
00:36:19.340 Korea. And I have to suggest that the problems in South Korea possibly run a little bit deeper
00:36:23.700 than simply Me Too. And so they don't have anything else to try and pin this on. They only have Me Too.
00:36:33.500 They don't want to.
00:36:35.100 Yeah, that's the point. It's a disturbing thing to do, isn't it? If you would say, well, I mean,
00:36:41.260 maybe it's the entire approach about our civilization that's been kind of geared against men and for
00:36:45.620 women. Maybe that isn't just. Then everything has to change. The Financial Times is hardly a right-wing
00:36:52.780 paper. And so this, they are worried about the quote-unquote radicalization of men. And to that,
00:37:02.040 I would say, well, where's the evidence of it?
00:37:04.720 They're all watching the Lotus Eaters.
00:37:06.980 We're very centrist. We're not radicals. We're very much middle of the road, like men in the US
00:37:13.240 and Germany who are voting for Trump and the AFD. And that's one of their concerns. In Germany,
00:37:19.200 for instance, half of young men under 30 have shifted towards the far-right AFD. Well, by whose
00:37:27.600 standard is it far-right? Well, by people who are 40% to the left. I don't really agree that that's
00:37:33.180 far-right, actually. I think that might actually be quite normal. Anyway, so we get attempts at
00:37:37.840 explanations. And this is from the London School of Economics, which for some reason is a really
00:37:43.960 left-wing place. It's in London. Yeah. That'd be it. Yeah. And so they took the example of Spain,
00:37:51.860 where the same phenomenon is happening. Young men are not going to the right. Women are going to the
00:37:57.060 right. To the left, even. Young men are not going to the left. Women are going to the left. And so
00:38:01.880 they decided to do an amazing study of what do politicians who are left-wing do? And what do
00:38:08.240 politicians who are right-wing do? And they used mayors, in fact. And they found that mayors from the
00:38:12.920 centre-right party were less likely than mayors to their left to introduce preschool or long-term
00:38:17.900 care services. Ah, well, there we go. That explains why women are going so radically to the left.
00:38:23.240 No, I think there might be a little bit more to it than that, actually. I mean, that's such a
00:38:28.040 pedantic thing. Yeah. No, no, but that really is, like, what they've got here. And also, men just
00:38:34.120 don't care about sending their children to preschool. I don't think so. No. But they are like, well,
00:38:39.000 there are differences in gender-sensitive policies by party. And the centre-right mayors
00:38:45.500 are, of course, less likely to have gender-sensitive policies. Gender-sensitive.
00:38:50.280 Gibbs, basically. The right is left likely to just have state Gibbs. And the left is more
00:38:56.620 inclined to do so. And they're like, well, that's clearly the thing, changing women left-wing.
00:38:59.980 So, no, I don't think that's the grand sum of it. And so people were, like people,
00:39:06.980 the left, was groping around, going, okay, well, look, if it's not just the fact that,
00:39:11.500 you know, the politicians are giving women free stuff, surely it's TikTok. I don't think
00:39:19.660 it is. I don't think, actually, social media is the thing responsible for this.
00:39:24.800 I think it's a downstream thing, isn't it? It's showing the symptoms rather than actually
00:39:28.940 being the cause. Very much.
00:39:30.920 We all know that this is downstream from Gamergate.
00:39:33.120 Oh, absolutely. But the issue is that power, wealth, and status is being accrued by the
00:39:41.100 left. And therefore, these things, as you say, are all downstream of that flow. And so when
00:39:47.520 they say, well, I mean, look at the social media platforms, again, very much captured
00:39:51.140 by left-wing ideology. But the thing is, a lot of social media platforms didn't begin
00:39:54.700 captured by left-wing ideology. Twitter, back in 2009, described itself as the free speech
00:40:00.760 wing of the free speech party, as in the Democrats, who are supposed to be pro-free
00:40:04.260 speech. Mark Zuckerberg is basically a libertarian and started Facebook just to be able to perv
00:40:11.780 on women. He didn't...
00:40:13.640 I reject that. That's not part of the non-aggression principle, sir.
00:40:19.020 I'm not saying that he did that because he's a libertarian. He did that because he's a man.
00:40:23.240 There'll be plenty of people filling in the gaps there.
00:40:25.220 Maybe. At least there's adult women. I mean, come down.
00:40:28.740 It's not Blue Sky.
00:40:29.900 That's making it worse.
00:40:31.340 But the point is, he's not like a doctrinaire leftist who is like, right, I'm going to left-wing
00:40:35.860 everything. These are people who are captured by a kind of cultural movement.
00:40:40.660 And so they've decided that it must be, of course, social media. And there we go. Here's
00:40:47.480 the arch-villain on the left, one Mr. Tate, who I believe has recently exonerated from
00:40:54.120 the accusations against him as well, which is interesting. But anyway, the point being,
00:40:59.720 they are very afraid of people like Andrew Tate and Nigel Farage as they see them embodying
00:41:04.920 a kind of masculine revolution against the feminist orthodoxy.
00:41:10.260 I've got to say, Nigel Farage is looking very different than I remember him.
00:41:13.020 Well, that isn't Nigel Farage, but they do...
00:41:15.760 There we go. They do point him out.
00:41:21.840 Oh, there he is.
00:41:22.380 The point they're making is, in this, is they are worried about the insurgent right-wing
00:41:33.200 men, quote-unquote. But they do interview a few people who give their thoughts. And one
00:41:40.120 woman says her younger brother is an Andrew Tate fan. And what's interesting about this
00:41:46.020 is it's become a kind of symbol of revolution against the feminist order.
00:41:49.520 No, I like Andrew Tate, actually. To hell with you. I like Nigel Farage. To hell with you.
00:41:53.200 I like Donald Trump. To hell with you. And this is being... I mean, this is one of the reasons
00:41:58.420 why people like Andrew Tate have been so roundly de-platformed and demonetized and kicked out
00:42:03.100 of polite society and investigated by the state. She said that she was dismayed by her brother's
00:42:07.360 approval of Tate, but had some sympathy for those who were attracted to online spaces where
00:42:11.020 his views are espoused. There has been a hyper-focus on correcting inequalities of the past,
00:42:15.960 she said. I like the way this just kind of... Well, it just happened that there was a hyper-focus
00:42:19.880 on correcting inequalities of the past.
00:42:21.500 It's amazing how this just appears out of the ether, isn't it?
00:42:24.360 Yeah, it just happened.
00:42:25.120 Whenever the left talks about things that the right does, it's like it sort of emerges out
00:42:29.600 of the ground. They have no notion that it could...
00:42:31.900 The far right have sprung up for some reason. Yeah, and she says, but I think on net that's
00:42:36.540 probably a good thing. So she benefits from the feminist order. Her brother, feeling dispossessed
00:42:41.760 and resentful, goes, no, I'm a big fan of Andrew Tate now. And she's like, well, you know,
00:42:45.540 it's a good thing that I won and I got everything I wanted and it's a good thing you didn't get
00:42:48.400 what you wanted.
00:42:49.480 So this is a very obvious point, but I'm going to have to point it out, that any ideology
00:42:54.020 that makes you turn against your family is probably not good for you.
00:42:57.460 Yeah. She carries on though and says, but some progressive views, especially the habit
00:43:02.300 of categorizing people as either oppressor or oppressed, lacked nuance. The left can be
00:43:07.700 really dismissive of male pain or male struggle. Citing the often quoted
00:43:11.720 line, men are trash. Ah, interesting. So we do agree that it's the left-wing hegemony
00:43:18.220 that renders the world into these two categories and has done for decades now and has been
00:43:23.680 in the schools, been in the media, been in the governments and has ascribed resources
00:43:28.860 and prestige based on these categories to women against men. And we accept that Andrew
00:43:36.660 Tate and people like him have become totemic of the masculine struggle against this kind
00:43:42.380 of spiritual domination.
00:43:43.160 So even they admit this, that is definitely why women have become radicalized, but men have
00:43:50.600 not as we saw. Again, this is not a graph that demonstrates men being radicalized, even
00:43:58.180 though that's how it's being reported.
00:43:59.360 Connor Smug Mug says, Carl, read Creature Girls, a hands-on field journal in another
00:44:10.380 world. While they aren't maybe pretty bad, I think you'll like the way the relations are
00:44:13.800 portrayed amongst other races, quote unquote. I have no idea what that is, sorry. The left
00:44:18.720 wants soy men for their docile and compliant nature, and that's why the left cried about
00:44:21.540 removing fluoride from the water. Definitely true.
00:44:24.140 They're better consumers, don't they?
00:44:25.440 Well, women are much better consumers than men, which 83% of domestic spending is by women.
00:44:31.720 Well, I think that what there has been is a war on stoic sort of asceticism almost, because
00:44:39.560 that comes a bit more naturally to men. We keep to ourselves and we don't buy much.
00:44:44.640 That's not great if you want to harvest us for money.
00:44:47.300 You'll never see a scatter cushion in a single man's house.
00:44:50.340 I don't know what that is.
00:44:51.200 Isn't I supposed to know what that is?
00:44:54.920 You know, like, cushions that are superfluous to purpose.
00:45:00.660 Decorative cushions.
00:45:01.600 Yes.
00:45:02.660 Right, okay, yeah.
00:45:04.160 It's an old Lee Evans joke from way back in like 2011. He'd say how, you know, he'd come
00:45:09.980 home and his wife would have scatter cushions everywhere, and they'd have to remove them
00:45:13.680 all before they could get into bed. And it's an example of this female materialism that's
00:45:18.480 completely alien to men.
00:45:20.360 That is definitely true. That's a random name says, all of these explanations to the political
00:45:24.500 divide between men and women are BS. Generally, women enforce the current paradigm, as you
00:45:28.040 said. Therefore, the moment it becomes normal call to be right, they'll flip. And I think
00:45:32.120 we're seeing that now, actually, in America, with women on TikTok doing the little Trump
00:45:36.820 dance. I think Trump's victory has made being right and cool, which is great.
00:45:42.660 It's not a tough sell to say the left wing are uncool. I mean, just look at them.
00:45:45.760 Yeah, look at them. They're gross and crazy. And they want bad things. Why would you want
00:45:51.200 bad things?
00:45:51.880 If you want good things, you know, like our politics.
00:45:54.680 The thing is, though, I am actually always concerned, like, always fascinated how the
00:45:58.260 fact that the left managed to get over the fact that surely being a leftist gives women
00:46:02.800 the ick, right? Like, it's gross.
00:46:05.700 Not if you're on birth control, as you guys have come in many times.
00:46:09.120 Yeah, good point. So yeah, the women not on birth control, I'm going to vote Trump. And
00:46:15.220 the women on birth control are just probably unsalvageable. Anyway, let's move on to another
00:46:21.160 cheery subject. So you think the migrant crisis is bad in, say, the US or other European countries?
00:46:30.020 Well, I took a look at Italy, and my goodness, is it horrifying? I wanted to talk about the
00:46:35.600 actual nature of what they're having to put up with, because I don't think we focused on
00:46:39.120 Italy that much recently, as well as what they've been trying to do, because they're
00:46:42.300 one of the countries that is actually trying to do something about it, because they have
00:46:46.500 Georgia Maloney at the front, who is still letting in lots of migrants, but is at least
00:46:51.180 trying to appear to be doing something. And I'm going to horrify you. And some of these
00:46:55.500 stories are quite horrible. So if you do have young children around, I would advise perhaps
00:47:00.000 turning this off and coming back to it another time, or getting them out of the room or whatever.
00:47:03.580 I'm going to try and keep it as sanitary as possible, though. But here's something from
00:47:10.340 Remix. I've cited them quite a lot in this article, because they do some great stuff.
00:47:14.880 So 11,141 Italian women have been, and I can't say that word on YouTube, sexually assaulted
00:47:21.600 by foreigners since 2018. And that means that between 2018 and 2023, when the figures were
00:47:27.920 gathered, that is five cases a day.
00:47:30.760 Jesus. All right.
00:47:33.200 Which, when you put it like that, just like, well, we're going to let these people in.
00:47:38.620 Don't you think of, you know, think of their poor humanitarian needs.
00:47:42.400 Yeah, think of their human rights, bro.
00:47:44.420 But then when you counter it with five women a day, actually, no, I care more about those
00:47:49.480 five women in my country than some person that's broke into my country trying to get...
00:47:53.300 Some chancer.
00:47:54.120 Yeah, exactly.
00:47:54.940 That's what they are.
00:47:55.620 Mm-hmm.
00:47:57.040 And then Georgia Maloney came out and shared some of these statistics, which I do support.
00:48:03.460 She said, last year in Italy, there were 5,832 sexual assaults on women. Of these, 2,524
00:48:10.800 were committed by foreign nationals. So that's...
00:48:13.200 That's crazy. Isn't that more than 10 a day?
00:48:15.340 Yes. It's over half. So the problem is getting even worse than five a day.
00:48:20.560 It's like nearly 20 a day.
00:48:22.020 Mm-hmm. It's ridiculous, isn't it?
00:48:24.440 And then a total 43.3% of the crimes were committed by a representative 8% of the population.
00:48:31.440 Oh, yeah.
00:48:32.280 No, Josh, that is a right-wing talking point.
00:48:35.920 Yeah, it's a right-wing conspiracy that disproportionately, per capita...
00:48:40.920 Yes, everyone commits crimes equally. You know, everyone has their time to murder.
00:48:45.800 They just don't know it yet.
00:48:46.820 Yes.
00:48:47.780 It's not that morality exists or anything.
00:48:49.640 And then there was this as well. A Pakistani migrant sexually assaulted a 14-year-old girl at a bus stop.
00:48:59.560 And thankfully, she managed to eventually get away and call for help.
00:49:04.820 And he did get caught. So I suppose that's a good thing.
00:49:08.180 But she was just waiting at a bus stop. And this 40-year-old man attacked her, basically.
00:49:14.740 It's becoming harder and harder to let your kids out of the house.
00:49:17.020 It is, yeah. Well, it's one of those things that's massively changed over the past 50, 60 years, in Britain at least, is that people's willingness to let their children go and play outside or, you know, a trust in the local community.
00:49:30.160 You used to be able to leave the front door open.
00:49:30.960 Yeah, well, I grew up doing that. And I know I lived in South Devon, so it's basically, you know, utopia. But still.
00:49:36.920 But it was like that all over the country. You know, it's just Britain was a safe place. England was a safe place. Everyone knew it. And no one thought about it. And then something changed in 1997.
00:49:46.960 Well, I think the population thing is important in sheer numbers because part of the security you had was that everyone knew each other in the local area.
00:49:56.860 And so if you saw someone going into someone's house and you're like, you don't normally go there.
00:50:00.520 You don't visit them or you're not a familiar face around here. You can almost guarantee that something's going on.
00:50:06.020 And so you call the local Bobby. He's only two streets away.
00:50:08.640 Yeah.
00:50:08.740 Well, that worked, didn't it?
00:50:11.420 Yeah.
00:50:11.640 And it is worth pointing out as well.
00:50:12.860 It depends what you mean by worked. It created a nice, wholesome, pleasant, safe, productive society.
00:50:17.780 That works for me.
00:50:18.580 Yeah, but that might not be the goal.
00:50:21.000 That's true.
00:50:22.100 It doesn't work for the Pakistani grooming gangs.
00:50:23.980 It is worth mentioning as well. I've been looking at historic population growth throughout history and actually large, sudden population growth presages conflict in many cases.
00:50:36.800 Glad we've finally got a study to prove that.
00:50:38.740 I know. The data has proved what a reading of history can do.
00:50:43.180 Isn't it interesting that a war will then break out and cull off much of the population?
00:50:48.220 It's like a weird autoimmune reaction built into our psyches.
00:50:52.980 There are lots of different behaviours that when population density gets too high, human behaviour changes and becomes less pro-social.
00:51:01.540 If you become anonymous within your own community, within your own street, it feels like a cloak.
00:51:08.740 You know, you can go around and do whatever you want and no one's going to pay second attention.
00:51:12.380 You can get away with stuff in broad daylight.
00:51:14.020 Well, there are lots of aspects of just urban density that lead to more crime.
00:51:20.280 And I don't think it's desirable to live in a city, really.
00:51:23.160 It's just an economic zone that you go to, raid the income and leave to a nicer place.
00:51:27.260 And I don't think that's healthy or good for anyone in the long run.
00:51:30.300 Well, cities used to be cheap, right?
00:51:31.680 Because they were the areas of prosperity.
00:51:33.340 You'd go there with barely any money, be able to get a really cheap room and just work until you could earn enough money to start a family, have a home, all of that kind of stuff.
00:51:42.660 Before to retire in the countryside.
00:51:44.040 Yeah, yeah, exactly.
00:51:45.080 But now you have to sell your soldiers to live in the cities now.
00:51:48.600 So, there was also this.
00:51:51.260 This was a tourist from South America, which I imagine she probably presumed, okay, I'm going to Europe.
00:51:56.280 I'll finally be safe now.
00:51:57.900 And what happened was she was asking for directions or something like that, I think.
00:52:03.700 And then a man of Arab appearance, apparently, approached her and offered assistance.
00:52:09.580 She was looking for an ATM.
00:52:11.420 And then there was a young boy around 18, if there's anything she needed.
00:52:15.180 And then he led her, supposedly, to an ATM, actually.
00:52:19.380 It was an abandoned building where she got ambushed by a bunch of North Africans.
00:52:24.440 Why are these people here?
00:52:26.200 Yes.
00:52:27.840 You ask that every week, but there is no answer yet.
00:52:31.400 I know.
00:52:31.700 And then even in the asylum centres themselves, this was a Bangladeshi migrant, sexually assaulted and got pregnant.
00:52:40.120 A 10-year-old child in the asylum centre in Italy.
00:52:44.980 I just can't believe the kind of horrors we are presiding over.
00:52:49.460 This just didn't happen.
00:52:51.580 Yeah.
00:52:52.100 When I was young, I'd never heard of anything like this.
00:52:56.300 Well, I think that you look at the case of, say, Joseph Fritzel.
00:53:00.200 Everyone in all of Europe knows who he is, roughly.
00:53:03.400 And that's a regular Tuesday afternoon in Pakistan.
00:53:05.980 So the cultural divide is absolutely massive.
00:53:10.220 But this is the thing.
00:53:11.420 It's not that these things never happened in Europe.
00:53:14.320 It's that they very rarely happened.
00:53:16.140 And when they did, because they were so rare, the news spread everywhere.
00:53:19.620 And these people became infamous.
00:53:21.300 And so even if they managed to get out of prison after 30 years, they basically couldn't live here.
00:53:27.980 Because everyone would know who they are.
00:53:30.480 Everyone would continue to punish them until they died.
00:53:33.660 I think for many of these crimes, they shouldn't be able to live full stop.
00:53:37.460 I mean, I think that...
00:53:38.620 Or anyone who murders someone.
00:53:39.540 Mm-hmm.
00:53:40.140 Definitely.
00:53:40.800 Mm-hmm.
00:53:41.140 I would say sexual assault as well.
00:53:43.900 When it's cases like this.
00:53:45.100 In these sort of contexts.
00:53:45.960 So this one is horrific.
00:53:50.960 So an Iraqi man who was an asylum seeker watched his wife and child die.
00:53:59.940 And to take out his frustration, he sexually assaulted and murdered a teen whilst the ship was sinking.
00:54:08.560 So it was like the final thing he did before coming to Italy.
00:54:12.000 That's just such a remarkable commitment to the crime.
00:54:17.120 It's like the most evil you could condense into a short period of time.
00:54:21.360 Yeah.
00:54:21.700 I mean, if I...
00:54:22.200 I'm dying.
00:54:22.640 Let's do this.
00:54:23.520 If I was on a sinking ship, I think I'd have much different priorities.
00:54:27.860 Like trying to preserve your wife and child?
00:54:30.760 Yeah.
00:54:31.100 Also, you know, watching your child and wife die.
00:54:36.840 And choked her to death in front of her mother to vent his frustration.
00:54:39.820 Okay, so man, we don't understand these people.
00:54:43.880 That's all I'm saying.
00:54:44.740 We certainly don't need them in Europe, that's for sure.
00:54:47.020 Oh, yeah.
00:54:47.340 But that's the thing.
00:54:47.820 We don't need to understand them.
00:54:48.900 We spent too long trying to understand them and rationalize the things that they do.
00:54:52.120 Yeah.
00:54:52.380 And we can't.
00:54:52.980 We actually can't.
00:54:53.900 It's too...
00:54:54.340 You do not understand this person's worldview at all.
00:54:56.760 No, it's the whole psychology of it, the philosophy of it, is too foreign to us.
00:55:01.360 And so we should stop trying to understand and just support them.
00:55:05.660 And there was another case here where unions actually called a strike because a train conductor
00:55:11.940 was stabbed by a North African migrant.
00:55:14.560 I'm not going to scroll down and show the picture.
00:55:16.220 But it's got to the point whereby you can't actually do your profession and you have to
00:55:21.660 go to the unions and the Italians and the unions, you know, if you know your history.
00:55:26.720 There's some interesting things going on there.
00:55:28.340 But the fact that it gets to this point, right, is...
00:55:34.160 I'm surprised it hasn't happened in the UK already, given that we've seen so many train
00:55:38.340 stabbings or station stabbings, you know, people jump in the gate.
00:55:42.360 If one decide, you know, if one person on the gate actually says, no, you need to buy
00:55:46.820 a ticket, well, they could just whip out a zombie knife and stab them in the neck.
00:55:51.760 You don't know.
00:55:52.320 So, almost for it all now, there's another video here, I'm not going to play this video
00:55:58.920 because it's horrible, so don't play it, Samson, of a migrant beating an elderly man
00:56:04.800 and a disabled woman in a wheelchair, seemingly for no reason, just because he felt like it
00:56:11.180 in Italy.
00:56:12.440 And this is what is going on there.
00:56:15.600 But, um...
00:56:16.440 Man, Italy really has some problems.
00:56:18.640 It does, but it does seem like there are people in Italy that have their head screwed
00:56:24.360 on properly and are talking about these things, like their deputy prime minister, Matteo Salvini,
00:56:30.880 accused Keir Starmer of persecuting citizens who oppose legal immigration and defend family
00:56:35.900 values.
00:56:36.420 And he says, will blocking illegal immigration, defending the family, and fighting Islamic
00:56:41.180 fanaticism be considered illegal for us to be punished, he asked.
00:56:44.160 The answer to that would be yes.
00:56:45.520 Yes, he's right.
00:56:46.820 But it is good to hear as well that he's trying to...
00:56:50.320 Yeah, good for Salvini.
00:56:51.380 Yeah.
00:56:51.720 Good for him, being in government, having those opinions, and thank you for putting pressure
00:56:56.260 on Keir Starmer as well.
00:56:57.840 So, it does seem like there are people.
00:56:59.620 There's another one here that I saw recently.
00:57:01.140 This is a sociologist, which I had to pinch myself, one of the most left-wing of the so-called
00:57:06.100 sciences.
00:57:07.360 He issued a warning of civil unrest in Italian suburbs linked to illegal immigration.
00:57:12.460 And he basically said, if you want to solve this without violence, you need to re-migrate
00:57:16.900 people.
00:57:17.580 Yeah.
00:57:18.140 En masse.
00:57:18.520 Why are there, like, millions of North Africans milling around Italy, assaulting the population?
00:57:23.960 Mm-hmm.
00:57:24.460 It's not something that the native Italians should have to put up with.
00:57:26.920 No, obviously it is.
00:57:28.020 Mm-hmm.
00:57:28.320 I mean, I know it's been said on this channel a thousand times, but they need to stop conceding
00:57:32.500 ground with illegal immigration.
00:57:34.240 Yeah, it just needs to be immigration.
00:57:35.660 Yep.
00:57:36.160 Immigration more generally.
00:57:37.100 So, I think...
00:57:38.740 Particularly when all these people just get given free passes.
00:57:41.740 Well, the difference between an illegal immigrant and a legal migrant with the standards in much
00:57:47.080 of Europe isn't that much, to be honest.
00:57:49.840 And so, I wanted to talk about Albanians now.
00:57:53.100 Oh, good.
00:57:53.900 Because if anyone is the...
00:57:56.240 Has anybody got a problem with Albanians as well?
00:57:58.060 Yes.
00:57:58.460 Who hasn't got a problem?
00:57:59.580 Albania is the only place without Albanian problems.
00:58:02.200 That's true.
00:58:02.760 I was saying before the podcast, actually, that if you look at a map of crimes committed
00:58:08.680 by foreign nationals, most of Europe lights up red, except Albania.
00:58:14.760 That's very interesting.
00:58:16.040 It's a massive condemnation.
00:58:17.620 I'm just like, why is Albania like this?
00:58:19.240 They just must have really good police.
00:58:21.720 All their criminals have left.
00:58:22.880 Albania is the safest place in Europe because all the Albanian criminals are elsewhere.
00:58:26.020 But I did a bit of number crunching myself using a bunch of government sources here.
00:58:31.460 And they are 0.05% of the UK population.
00:58:36.940 They make up 1.6% of all prisoners, which makes them 32 times overrepresented.
00:58:42.000 They're the largest foreign prison population at 14%.
00:58:45.240 The average prisoner, by the way, costs the taxpayer £51,724.
00:58:50.560 And the most frustrating thing is, as of March 2023, prisoners who agreed to deportation had
00:58:59.000 their jail term reduced and received a payment of £1,500.
00:59:03.600 I don't really understand.
00:59:04.440 Agree to deportation?
00:59:06.260 No, deportation is against their will, whether they like it or not.
00:59:09.340 Why do they have to agree with it?
00:59:10.420 We shouldn't have to pay them.
00:59:12.020 We will physically remove them, should be the thought.
00:59:14.800 Also, if they go back to Albania and say, oh, did you have a nice time?
00:59:18.500 Yeah, well, I got paid £1,500 after being caught committing crime.
00:59:23.280 They must think, we've got money to throw away.
00:59:25.680 Oh, good.
00:59:26.060 It's the Dengel there.
00:59:27.700 And then in 2022, there were 28% of illegal immigrants with 27% of their asylum applications
00:59:33.640 being granted.
00:59:34.600 Asylum from what?
00:59:35.600 Well, I'm from Albania.
00:59:36.960 Well, there are no criminals there, are there?
00:59:38.560 Because they've all left.
00:59:39.180 It's the safest place in the world, but there's no war.
00:59:41.220 It shouldn't be possible to be an asylum seeker from Albania.
00:59:45.800 But I think that they have quite a strong hand in the illegal immigration trade in Europe.
00:59:53.460 And actually, a lot of the people arrested and caught are Albanians.
00:59:56.520 No kidding.
00:59:57.220 The Wehrgeld analogy was good.
00:59:59.040 That's exactly what's going on, is we're just trying to pay the problem to go away,
01:00:03.060 and it's not going to.
01:00:04.000 No, it didn't work for Ethelro the Unready.
01:00:05.560 It's not going to work for us.
01:00:06.380 So, let's have a look at how the Italians have been dealing with these dingy enthusiasts.
01:00:10.780 So, in February of 2024, Italy finalised a deal with Albania to transfer 36,000 asylum seekers
01:00:19.700 to detention centres in Albania.
01:00:21.840 Many of these, of course, being Albanians themselves.
01:00:24.920 And they estimated the cost to be €650 million for the first five years of the agreement,
01:00:31.860 which would continue, which is a lot of money to be paying.
01:00:35.240 Much as we're spending on illegals, but whatever.
01:00:38.160 I know, but the Italians have less money to play with as well.
01:00:40.720 Sure.
01:00:41.240 But we're spending €3 billion every year.
01:00:42.740 That's true.
01:00:43.520 Just look at the IRC ruling that to send Albanians and others back to Albania is both costly,
01:00:53.980 cruel, and counterproductive.
01:00:56.060 Cruel?
01:00:56.640 Yeah, cruel.
01:00:58.040 Right.
01:00:58.560 It's cruel to keep Albanians in Albania.
01:01:03.480 Okay.
01:01:04.680 And so, what so then to inflict them upon the population of Europe is nice, but counterproductive
01:01:13.220 to what?
01:01:14.220 Wow, that's the question, isn't it?
01:01:15.740 Their ideology is obviously very left-wing, right?
01:01:19.660 It's like, oh, their human rights are terrible.
01:01:21.220 But the thing is, is that they won't be preserved forever.
01:01:24.960 Eventually, it will come to their streets.
01:01:27.620 It will come to their doors.
01:01:29.080 Because, you know, we've seen it with a couple of MPs that have been attacked or sexually
01:01:33.740 assaulted, and suddenly they become, you know, we've seen it with some celebrities in Hollywood,
01:01:37.500 suddenly they become really conservative because the effect of their policies finally actually
01:01:45.140 reaches them.
01:01:46.000 So, I don't, sure, it serves their ideology, but for how long it's going to catch up to
01:01:51.960 them?
01:01:52.220 And is it just that they don't believe that it will or think that they'll be gone by then?
01:01:56.640 I just can't understand the...
01:01:59.040 Oh, I think we should just leave the chat to guess at what the aim of this is and why
01:02:04.360 it's counterproductive and cruel.
01:02:06.300 Send them back to Albania.
01:02:08.380 They can fill in the blanks, I'm sure.
01:02:10.700 It's nothing to do with a migration that is very big.
01:02:14.480 So, here is Politico reporting that 12 migrants sent to Albania for processing are returned to
01:02:20.540 Italy.
01:02:21.380 So, what was happening was that lots of them were being returned again.
01:02:25.420 12 Albanians got sent to Albania and the Albanians are like, no, thank you.
01:02:29.620 No, that's not how it works.
01:02:31.780 So, the immigration unit of Rome's court, which I can't believe they have an immigration
01:02:38.340 unit at all, decided on Friday that migrants sent to Albania by Italy cannot be detained.
01:02:46.960 However, they cannot be released in Albania either.
01:02:49.220 Therefore, they will be vetted for asylum eligibility in Italy or potentially sent back to their
01:02:54.820 countries of origin.
01:02:56.480 So, it's, again, the justice system sticking their nose in against the democratic will.
01:03:00.580 So, is it not just Albanians being sent to Albania?
01:03:03.000 No.
01:03:03.540 To be honest with you, I'm for it.
01:03:04.880 This is what you get.
01:03:05.920 Mm-hmm.
01:03:06.180 I think we should send...
01:03:07.900 It's North Africans.
01:03:08.560 We should send all sorts of people to Albania.
01:03:11.280 It doesn't matter if they're Albanian.
01:03:12.580 You're doing it to us.
01:03:13.440 I might do it to the French, too.
01:03:15.060 Yeah, why not?
01:03:15.620 You're letting them cross?
01:03:16.200 No.
01:03:16.880 Not our problem, though.
01:03:18.740 I mean...
01:03:19.280 The thing is, if all peoples and cultures and civilizations are equal, why is Albania
01:03:25.160 a bad place?
01:03:26.220 Mm-hmm.
01:03:27.500 You know, obviously, it's going to be a...
01:03:29.120 No, it's crime-free.
01:03:29.640 Yeah, well, and obviously, it's going to be an ethnic enclave.
01:03:35.360 So, surely, the more indigenous people, the more wholesome and rich it is.
01:03:40.700 So, what's wrong with Albania?
01:03:43.260 They don't sell bacon.
01:03:45.120 That's one thing.
01:03:46.400 That is against my human rights.
01:03:47.640 Yeah, yeah.
01:03:48.260 I got up a bacon sarnie in the morning.
01:03:50.820 But it's also worth mentioning as well, Elon Musk picked up on this much later because
01:03:55.940 Ian Miles-Chiung, again, reheating old news.
01:03:57.860 But he said, this is unacceptable.
01:04:00.300 But it's good that he got this to Musk.
01:04:03.320 This is unacceptable.
01:04:04.520 Do the people of Italy live in a democracy or does an unelected autocracy make the decisions?
01:04:09.300 Well, the answer is the second.
01:04:10.500 And the unelected autocracy took exception to this.
01:04:14.920 Italy's president scolds Elon Musk over comments regarding country's court ruling.
01:04:18.880 So, this was Sergio Mattarella, the president of Italy since 2015, who is affiliated with
01:04:25.000 the Democratic Party, and as with the US, they are left-wing.
01:04:29.520 And basically, he said, Italy is a great democratic country, and I must reiterate with the words
01:04:33.980 used on another occasion, that it is known how to take care of itself while respecting
01:04:39.600 its constitution.
01:04:40.640 Anyone, particularly if, as announced, they are about to assume an important government
01:04:44.540 role in a friendly and allied country, must respect its sovereignty and cannot assume
01:04:48.440 the task of giving it prescriptions.
01:04:50.940 Right, so 5,000 rapes a year is the goal?
01:04:55.300 Apparently.
01:04:56.000 A part of the new normal?
01:04:57.460 Mm-hmm.
01:04:57.760 This is Italy, working as intended, is it?
01:05:00.540 Yeah, he's just failing to recognise the nature of the problem and instead criticising
01:05:04.980 Elon Musk's conduct, which is a very good deflection tactic, but is wearing a little
01:05:09.620 bit thin these days, and I don't think it works nearly as well as it used to.
01:05:12.900 I mean, we do need to get Musk on side re-immigration.
01:05:15.400 He just seems to think that all legal migration is bringing in people who are exactly like
01:05:21.100 him, which just is not the case.
01:05:23.320 Mm-hmm.
01:05:24.200 It's one of the foundational myths of America there, isn't it?
01:05:26.660 I think he's quite wedded to the idea that...
01:05:28.300 Yeah, yeah.
01:05:28.960 But I mean, from his perspective, sure, a lot of really high-skilled, competent people
01:05:33.360 move to Silicon Valley or Texas or whatever, and he's surrounded by all these brilliant
01:05:37.360 immigrants.
01:05:37.780 Yeah, okay, great, but that's not the majority story.
01:05:40.320 Well, and the thing is, is like, he knows this because he's born in South Africa and
01:05:45.120 was raised there, so he knows that within that European paradigm of multiculturalism,
01:05:51.260 it doesn't work because everyone began in their own ethnic enclave.
01:05:55.640 America's foundational story is the mixture of people, the melting pot, and so it works there
01:06:02.440 to a degree in a way that it just can't in Europe.
01:06:05.280 But it is also worth pointing out that you look at boroughs in New York, there were ethnic
01:06:10.380 enclaves, like you had.
01:06:11.640 No, exactly.
01:06:12.580 You had lots of different areas that were identified very strongly with certain ethnic
01:06:16.320 problems.
01:06:16.440 Well, I mean, outside the cities, it's still an ethnic enclave, really.
01:06:21.020 But the point is, America has a kind of foundational myth and a proposition behind it that makes sense
01:06:26.740 to a new person who's arrived.
01:06:28.020 There's a set of rules.
01:06:29.080 You have constitutional rights, but everyone else has constitutional rights, so just do as you're
01:06:32.080 do as you're supposed to, and fair enough, okay, you know, you get like New York and ethnic
01:06:36.540 enclaves, but less trouble than you're getting in saying Italy that doesn't have that story.
01:06:41.780 I think my pedantry is basically focused on the fact that the binding mythos was never
01:06:46.600 true to begin with, and it's always been that way.
01:06:49.520 And so they adopted a decree to overrule the court objections and decided to try and deport
01:06:55.460 some more people, except they sent these eight migrants to Albania, and they hadn't processed
01:07:01.540 the first group, and then, well, one of them got sent back again, even though it was only
01:07:08.640 eight.
01:07:09.400 Seven down, guys.
01:07:10.680 So I'm going to read a little bit about this.
01:07:13.500 It says,
01:07:13.740 One of the eight migrants brought for processing in an Albanian centre after being intercepted
01:07:18.360 in international waters has returned to Italy after being deemed vulnerable.
01:07:22.320 A delegation of Italian activists and lawmakers, here are the people responsible, visiting the
01:07:27.680 centre said on Saturday, the Egyptian man was diagnosed with psychiatric problems, which
01:07:31.900 is why he should come to Italy.
01:07:33.320 Which is why we want him here.
01:07:34.480 Which made it impossible for him to remain at the reception centre.
01:07:39.000 That's an interesting name for it.
01:07:40.900 Prison camps better.
01:07:41.980 One of the activists said, currently only seven migrants, five from Bangladesh, two from
01:07:47.280 Egypt, both countries, well, Bangladesh not so much anymore, but both countries that are
01:07:52.620 supposedly safe, depending on what religion you belong to, remain at the centre.
01:07:59.920 And it's got so bad that they've paid all this money to get this deal going, and as of pretty
01:08:07.480 much two days ago, they began withdrawing staff from the offshore detention centre.
01:08:11.980 Because they just weren't doing anything, because they didn't have enough people to process
01:08:16.420 and deal with.
01:08:17.280 Right.
01:08:17.420 That they were just like, well, this is where our illegals would come if we had some.
01:08:21.560 Mm-hmm.
01:08:22.380 Right.
01:08:22.720 And so even with illegal migration, they do have the political means to push it through,
01:08:28.340 but they're just constantly getting these hurdles thrown up by these left-wing activists.
01:08:31.820 Yeah.
01:08:32.000 And it's going to be back and forth until the problem isn't solved.
01:08:37.240 And even though they're trying to do something about it, it does seem like it's going to be
01:08:43.360 a lot of hard work.
01:08:44.760 And I know that's a very depressing note to end on, but I think that we've got to realistically
01:08:51.160 highlight how much of a difficult process this will be, because there will be people putting
01:08:55.780 up roadblocks all along the way.
01:08:58.000 Yeah, lefty lawyers.
01:08:59.120 It is.
01:08:59.600 It's the human rights lawyers, the Keir Starmer's of the world, people like that, NGOs.
01:09:05.560 Well, Keir Starmer's probably like, well, look, have any of them murdered a child yet?
01:09:08.180 Let me know when they have.
01:09:09.060 I'll get involved.
01:09:09.840 Well, this is the thing.
01:09:10.620 He's almost primarily responsible for how the ECHR run immigration, particularly with regards
01:09:19.600 to Africa, because obviously he's been a campaigner free of charge for getting the death penalty
01:09:28.060 overturned in Africa.
01:09:29.620 But also all the things like hotel provisions, food, all of all of that, that the state are
01:09:36.120 paying for is downstream of Keir Starmer's academic legal work.
01:09:41.160 He's he's I mean, that case that everyone was saying, oh, this is him representing Axel
01:09:45.680 Rudokabana's father.
01:09:46.640 And it wasn't.
01:09:48.180 It was a woman from Rwanda who was 42.
01:09:51.620 But that whole six people making claims, the actual case was for conditions.
01:09:57.320 And they were making the case that they were living in destitution in the UK because they'd
01:10:01.540 just turned up and had nowhere to go.
01:10:03.300 And therefore, it's the state's responsibility to cover their human rights.
01:10:06.500 That's what Keir Starmer argued.
01:10:07.900 And that then got turned into the ECHR laws that we currently have.
01:10:11.380 So it's entirely his fault, our current hotel situation.
01:10:14.020 Absolutely.
01:10:16.180 And so, yes, I wanted to give a bit of an update, show people where we're at.
01:10:20.200 And it's not that good, at least for Italy.
01:10:24.500 With that, let's go to the video comments.
01:10:27.660 No video comments.
01:10:28.640 Oh, we've got a bunch of rumble chats, actually.
01:10:32.440 Other comments there.
01:10:33.940 Right.
01:10:34.200 OK, so Binary Surf says, is there a single side to change women have made on society in
01:10:37.940 the last century that's been positive?
01:10:42.980 Yeah.
01:10:44.980 I personally think that society sort of peaked in about 1870.
01:10:50.560 Yeah, I knew you were going to say that.
01:10:51.880 I knew you were going to say that.
01:10:52.820 Well, you know me too well.
01:10:53.700 Yeah, but you're probably right.
01:10:54.560 That's the thing.
01:10:55.800 Matt says, England needs to take back their rights to self-defense.
01:10:58.800 Well, so does Italy, by the sounds of it.
01:11:01.400 I just can't get over it.
01:11:02.420 There's 5,900 women a year getting fucking raped and sexually assaulted.
01:11:06.300 That's insane.
01:11:07.840 Binary again says, I recently moved from one of the large cities in the UK to a rural area
01:11:12.600 to get a long way out.
01:11:14.160 It's like going back to the 90s.
01:11:15.560 Largely safe, no needles, no random fights.
01:11:18.060 That's what it's like when I go back home.
01:11:19.620 It's like anywhere outside of a town center, basically.
01:11:23.560 Devon and Cornwall's like a refugee camp for former England.
01:11:26.380 Actually, don't go there.
01:11:27.800 No, it's not.
01:11:28.920 It's my neck of the woods.
01:11:29.720 We don't like outsiders.
01:11:30.920 That's a random name says, how many lives must be ruined before this is stopped?
01:11:34.300 Well, there doesn't appear to be a limit.
01:11:36.340 That's the thing.
01:11:36.980 The more the merrier, I think, as far as the state is concerned.
01:11:39.660 It's not even on their radar.
01:11:41.300 No, it's, yeah, yeah.
01:11:42.340 They literally don't care.
01:11:43.940 Cass Dwen says, there is no true justice for evil in our managerial hellscape.
01:11:48.640 No settling of rightful feuds, no catharsis for our people.
01:11:51.700 Only the scant mercy of the unfeeling legal machine that hates us.
01:11:55.840 That seems to be correct, actually, yeah.
01:11:58.360 Caleb says, the right utopia trends mentioned have some money.
01:12:01.560 What a mess.
01:12:02.680 Yeah, I mean, probably.
01:12:05.360 Bald Eagle says, if every country took the approach that Hungary is to the EU,
01:12:08.900 then this problem would be solved.
01:12:10.420 The EU is withholding funds to members that don't turn the line,
01:12:12.480 but it seems that the EU is another mafia.
01:12:15.100 Yes.
01:12:15.740 Like most states.
01:12:16.760 I mean, that's going to sort itself out anyway.
01:12:19.260 The actual European Union will collapse,
01:12:21.760 and everyone's going to go back to policing themselves, essentially.
01:12:24.680 There might be a vague sort of coalition with regards to trade
01:12:28.300 and moving people through the continent.
01:12:31.220 I mean, a confederation is fine,
01:12:34.100 so you're politically aligned, but self-governing.
01:12:37.160 Can I unleash a little bit of autism here?
01:12:40.060 Yeah, so I'm a big fan of bilateral agreements over unilateral agreements
01:12:47.720 because it means that you can better negotiate with the host country
01:12:52.600 on individual terms rather than all having to agree to terms
01:12:56.340 that no one is happy with.
01:12:58.940 You're constantly able to negotiate,
01:13:00.640 and you don't have to negotiate the rules for everyone,
01:13:03.360 and you can just negotiate between the country you want to deal with
01:13:06.180 and yourself.
01:13:06.920 That makes sense.
01:13:07.480 And the terms don't have to be equal, right?
01:13:10.360 Because that's the problem, is everyone's trying to get,
01:13:12.820 oh, we need everything to be exactly the same.
01:13:14.960 No, some countries are better than others
01:13:16.480 and have more materials in this department,
01:13:18.060 more powerful, and no, exactly,
01:13:20.140 have more military that they can lend out.
01:13:23.220 Or just have more resources.
01:13:24.100 Well, they're trying to do something that's impossible,
01:13:25.860 fundamentally, is the problem.
01:13:27.480 Well, it's, in a way, manufacturing equity again, isn't it?
01:13:31.460 Oh, yeah.
01:13:31.780 So, yeah, no, I agree.
01:13:33.900 Samson, do we actually have video comments?
01:13:35.660 Yes, sorry.
01:13:36.440 I thought we did.
01:13:37.160 We did, but we do, so I'll follow you on that.
01:13:38.940 All right, let's play.
01:13:39.600 You wouldn't steal a wallet.
01:13:51.200 You wouldn't rob a bank.
01:13:54.820 You wouldn't cut subsidies for the citizens
01:13:57.380 and then steal farmer's land.
01:14:00.420 You wouldn't sell that land to Blackrock
01:14:02.860 and then pledge farming subsidies to foreign nations
01:14:05.760 and then steal the money again.
01:14:09.780 Taxation is stealing.
01:14:12.060 If you do it, you will face the consequences.
01:14:15.940 God, these anti-government ads are getting really mean.
01:14:20.880 That was great.
01:14:22.040 I love that.
01:14:23.960 Let's go to the next one.
01:14:25.260 And steal it again.
01:14:26.660 You guys were talking about how to fix countries like France
01:14:30.220 and I found myself thinking about the movie Under Paris,
01:14:34.300 which is basically about sharks living in the Paris sewers.
01:14:37.760 Ultimately ends with Paris being flooded
01:14:40.280 and it's filled with sharks now.
01:14:42.320 Sharks are on the streets.
01:14:43.640 They are street sharks, you might call them.
01:14:45.820 And I find myself thinking,
01:14:47.860 you know, this probably will fix a lot of France's problems
01:14:51.560 in the long term.
01:14:52.380 Can any of you guys think of any movies
01:14:54.640 that have endings that are bad,
01:14:56.480 but when you think about it are actually good?
01:14:58.780 A great flood that makes Paris better.
01:15:01.320 The problem is it's the migrants that have the dinghies.
01:15:04.280 Yeah, they've all got boats, yeah.
01:15:05.560 Oh, that's a great point, yeah.
01:15:06.760 To be fair, a fair few migrants have been eaten by sharks
01:15:10.320 on the way to Italy in particular.
01:15:13.020 To be fair.
01:15:14.280 To be fair to the sharks, they're pulling away.
01:15:16.020 I like the way that our defences have literally resorted
01:15:18.260 to Neptune, God of the Sea,
01:15:20.500 rise up and save Europe.
01:15:22.380 I'll tell you which film came to mind for me.
01:15:25.540 World's End from the Cornetto trilogy, right?
01:15:28.060 Like the whole of everything gets wiped out,
01:15:30.280 all the electronics.
01:15:31.600 Everyone has to go back to homesteading
01:15:33.380 and living in small communities
01:15:34.800 and having families.
01:15:37.000 I'd just do that anyway.
01:15:38.020 That's a disaster film that actually is a good thing.
01:15:41.300 Let's go to the next one.
01:15:42.140 By making this so difficult for farmers
01:15:46.140 to pass it down to their children, right?
01:15:50.140 Who is going to be the people
01:15:52.340 that can afford to buy the land
01:15:54.880 that the family farms are going to have to sell
01:15:57.020 to get through this inheritance tax thing?
01:16:00.000 And who are going to be the people
01:16:01.620 that can pay the tax?
01:16:04.160 The whole idea behind this
01:16:05.720 is getting rid of the richest people
01:16:07.660 in this industry.
01:16:09.200 They're the only people
01:16:09.960 that are going to be able to afford it.
01:16:12.900 Correct.
01:16:13.940 That's just a completely reasonable point.
01:16:16.120 Yeah.
01:16:16.460 Yeah.
01:16:17.160 And remarkably, you know,
01:16:19.380 BlackRock's like,
01:16:20.020 oh yes, we're working hand in hand
01:16:21.160 with the Labour government.
01:16:22.220 And what a surprise.
01:16:23.000 Look at the market.
01:16:23.840 It's full of small farms
01:16:25.060 that need to be bought.
01:16:25.700 There was no surreptition
01:16:27.120 in trying to hide the link there at all.
01:16:29.340 Literally like a couple of days after
01:16:30.860 that protest,
01:16:31.740 they were like,
01:16:31.980 oh, by the way,
01:16:32.380 we teamed up with BlackRock.
01:16:33.220 And it's like,
01:16:33.560 oh, of course you have.
01:16:34.420 It's also worth mentioning,
01:16:35.300 isn't Bill Gates
01:16:35.940 the largest landowner in America now?
01:16:38.480 And obviously he was seen
01:16:39.540 in Downing Street
01:16:40.360 just a week before
01:16:41.300 the farmers bill came out.
01:16:44.440 You can see why people
01:16:45.300 make conspiracy theories,
01:16:46.800 can't you?
01:16:48.420 Let's go to the next one.
01:16:50.700 Pretty massive summer storm
01:16:52.540 happening at the moment.
01:16:55.700 Oh.
01:17:02.480 And this is for a certain
01:17:03.880 Lotus Eater
01:17:04.520 that I hope is watching right now.
01:17:07.300 Or Lotus Eater Fan, rather.
01:17:12.060 They work beautifully.
01:17:19.340 This is past me, buddy.
01:17:20.440 What are they supposed to do?
01:17:22.000 I don't know.
01:17:23.560 They're not getting destroyed by rain.
01:17:25.320 That's something.
01:17:26.300 I think he's metaphorically giving
01:17:28.260 whoever this person is
01:17:29.540 some flowers.
01:17:30.460 Oh, right.
01:17:31.240 Yeah, yeah, both of them.
01:17:32.840 My male brain was thinking
01:17:34.340 he's fastened them on.
01:17:35.520 That must be it.
01:17:36.140 They recommended
01:17:36.880 how to fasten the baskets.
01:17:38.500 See, my brain was like,
01:17:39.600 okay, this must be
01:17:40.460 some kind of plant
01:17:41.300 that emits a smell
01:17:42.260 or something
01:17:42.560 that keeps spiders out
01:17:43.560 or something like that, right?
01:17:45.200 I don't know.
01:17:46.080 You guys went like,
01:17:47.340 what is the function of this?
01:17:48.720 Yeah.
01:17:48.860 And I went to please a woman.
01:17:51.620 Which it might have been.
01:17:52.740 Let's go to the next one.
01:17:53.660 I'm elated that people
01:17:57.900 are finally no longer in denial
01:17:59.400 that Nigel Farage
01:18:00.340 is a genocidal narcissist.
01:18:02.000 He's just another far leftist
01:18:03.520 who thinks he's better than you.
01:18:05.140 There's no reason
01:18:05.840 to play nice either,
01:18:07.020 as it was Nigel
01:18:07.820 who burned the bridge
01:18:08.840 with Carl long ago now.
01:18:10.540 And he did the same
01:18:11.320 with Richard Tice
01:18:12.180 and Hope Not Hate
01:18:12.960 against Bo and Dan.
01:18:14.320 He hates you plebs
01:18:15.260 and pretends he loves you.
01:18:16.840 His real goal
01:18:17.520 is to just get attention
01:18:18.580 on podcasts and TV,
01:18:20.260 and he will appeal
01:18:21.000 to the invaders
01:18:21.840 and help them genocide you
01:18:23.260 in order to be
01:18:24.200 in front of a camera.
01:18:26.000 If you notice,
01:18:26.540 it said con for...
01:18:27.500 I did.
01:18:29.180 I entirely agree.
01:18:31.160 Yeah, it's hard to find
01:18:32.160 places to disagree with that.
01:18:34.340 Anyway, Amanda says,
01:18:35.900 happy American Thanksgiving.
01:18:38.440 You're welcome.
01:18:39.500 We don't have anything.
01:18:40.960 No, the Americans
01:18:41.760 are like getting angry
01:18:42.580 in the comments
01:18:43.140 underneath a post me
01:18:44.740 and Joshua tagged in.
01:18:46.180 They're like,
01:18:46.400 you're working on Thanksgiving.
01:18:47.520 It's like, we're not American.
01:18:48.420 We don't celebrate it, yeah.
01:18:49.640 Yeah, we're okay to work with that.
01:18:51.200 We do celebrate
01:18:52.000 Independence Day, though,
01:18:52.920 for different reasons.
01:18:53.920 I was going to say,
01:18:54.060 we should have celebrated.
01:18:57.760 Baystate says,
01:18:58.500 welcome to the podcast, Charlie.
01:18:59.660 Remember to make fun
01:19:00.300 of their ties.
01:19:01.000 I think their ties are alright.
01:19:02.180 Their ties are okay today.
01:19:03.800 Thank you.
01:19:04.100 They're okay.
01:19:04.740 Just okay.
01:19:05.640 Checkmate.
01:19:06.180 Very good, aren't they?
01:19:08.120 And Russian says,
01:19:09.040 Charlie's a good guest,
01:19:09.820 liking all your inputs
01:19:10.500 and interactions.
01:19:11.240 Well, good.
01:19:11.640 Well, good.
01:19:12.220 Kevin says,
01:19:12.920 Tommy Robinson's in category
01:19:14.060 a prison because
01:19:15.060 that is where the likes
01:19:15.900 of Lee Rigby murderers
01:19:17.340 and the fanatics
01:19:18.180 of their ilk reside.
01:19:19.320 Yeah, exactly.
01:19:20.020 It's his mental, mental...
01:19:22.320 They're fucking with him,
01:19:24.860 aren't they?
01:19:25.260 Yeah, yeah.
01:19:25.940 I mean, there's just no reason.
01:19:28.360 He's obviously not a violent criminal.
01:19:30.440 Baron von Warhawk says,
01:19:31.720 back when the British country
01:19:32.980 was a serious nation,
01:19:34.160 somebody who shared media
01:19:35.040 of babies getting sexually abused
01:19:36.400 would have been burned
01:19:36.980 at the stake.
01:19:38.080 Yet, in modern Britain,
01:19:39.040 somebody who posted mean tweets
01:19:39.940 is treating worse.
01:19:41.180 You don't even have to post
01:19:42.220 the mean tweets these days.
01:19:43.480 It used to be that, okay,
01:19:45.100 things you said on social media,
01:19:46.680 fine, that's Communications Act,
01:19:47.920 but at least saying something
01:19:48.800 on the street
01:19:49.280 was basically legal.
01:19:50.580 Well, if you pray silently
01:19:52.740 in your head
01:19:53.400 outside of an abortion clinic,
01:19:54.660 you get arrested now.
01:19:55.580 Yeah.
01:19:56.880 Charles says,
01:19:57.680 thank you for talking
01:19:58.740 about the Peter Lynch case,
01:19:59.880 even after the story
01:20:00.580 passed by in the media.
01:20:01.760 I never knew Peter,
01:20:02.440 but the case brings me
01:20:03.120 extra sadness
01:20:03.860 as he looks a little
01:20:04.760 like my own father.
01:20:06.240 Thankfully, my father
01:20:06.940 would never attend
01:20:07.600 anything like this,
01:20:08.240 but he has watched
01:20:08.900 what the country has become
01:20:10.820 over the years,
01:20:12.060 and I know he feels
01:20:12.820 a deep resentment
01:20:13.320 for what is happening.
01:20:14.460 That's why those pictures
01:20:15.360 were quite poignant to me,
01:20:16.620 just like they had no idea
01:20:18.580 what was coming.
01:20:19.660 They had no idea,
01:20:20.900 and there was no reason
01:20:21.580 for them to think
01:20:22.180 that this was coming either.
01:20:23.920 Rory is a pike, he says.
01:20:26.860 It's true.
01:20:28.700 I certainly wouldn't
01:20:29.620 put it past the UK government
01:20:30.600 to be using Asian gangs
01:20:31.700 and prisons
01:20:32.100 as an official disincentive
01:20:35.300 to defy them
01:20:36.540 as well as a secondary punishment
01:20:37.840 on top of it.
01:20:38.800 Yeah, I think there's
01:20:39.980 a consciousness of it.
01:20:41.640 That's the thing.
01:20:42.100 If the podcast ever goes down,
01:20:44.020 by the way,
01:20:44.360 that's Rory getting
01:20:45.020 the copper wires
01:20:45.700 out of the walls.
01:20:46.520 Yeah.
01:20:47.580 Eloise says,
01:20:48.520 I cannot believe how petty
01:20:49.820 the prosecution of Britain
01:20:50.940 has become.
01:20:52.020 The law and regime
01:20:52.820 has become pathological
01:20:53.860 and hatred of its own.
01:20:55.180 Yeah, and it's,
01:20:55.820 I mean, it's a good thing,
01:20:57.060 honestly, to have it so naked
01:20:58.260 and in the open.
01:20:59.380 I was going to say,
01:20:59.780 I wish it was just petty.
01:21:01.600 Yeah, well, yeah.
01:21:02.500 Because there's nothing insidious
01:21:03.940 about pettiness.
01:21:05.080 You know, pettiness
01:21:05.760 is you take the last biscuit
01:21:07.100 and eat it in front
01:21:07.780 of someone's face.
01:21:08.720 You know, this is more than that.
01:21:10.660 I'm feeling personally
01:21:12.500 attacked now.
01:21:14.300 It turns out there is
01:21:15.200 some biscuit beef
01:21:16.080 in this office
01:21:16.740 that I had no idea about.
01:21:18.100 People keep sending in biscuits
01:21:19.120 and some biscuits
01:21:20.540 are better than others.
01:21:21.280 Not all biscuits
01:21:21.780 are made equal.
01:21:25.400 But are the brown biscuits
01:21:26.620 better?
01:21:27.880 Chocolate-covered ones, yes.
01:21:29.080 Biscuits are basically brown.
01:21:30.700 I feel top-tier biscuit.
01:21:33.120 Chocolate-covered
01:21:33.940 hobnob.
01:21:34.600 Digestive.
01:21:35.180 Yeah, the hobnob.
01:21:36.460 Yeah, yeah.
01:21:36.680 Yeah, definitely.
01:21:37.500 Okay, I'm glad we're
01:21:38.240 in here.
01:21:38.840 Oh, yeah, that's the king
01:21:39.080 of the biscuits.
01:21:39.260 No.
01:21:41.700 Really?
01:21:42.360 Not on the hobnob front, no.
01:21:44.140 Well, what's your
01:21:45.260 top-tier biscuit?
01:21:48.940 Shortbread.
01:21:50.460 Very Scottish answer.
01:21:51.740 Particularly when it has
01:21:52.620 chocolate chunks in it.
01:21:53.900 Shortbread is good,
01:21:54.720 but it's not a hobnob.
01:21:55.720 It reminds me of my grandparents.
01:21:56.680 Exactly, which is why
01:21:57.460 it's superior.
01:21:58.200 That's about it.
01:21:59.480 This is going to go on,
01:22:00.720 so let's move on.
01:22:02.540 Thomas says,
01:22:03.380 many cannot express
01:22:04.160 what would count as justice
01:22:05.000 in the case of Mr. Lynch,
01:22:06.040 and I don't blame them.
01:22:06.940 Yeah, I'm feeling
01:22:07.980 very much the same,
01:22:08.920 but we live in a tyranny,
01:22:10.500 so be careful.
01:22:12.140 Lancelot says,
01:22:13.100 he called the politicians
01:22:14.020 and media corrupt.
01:22:14.980 Notice their use of quotes
01:22:16.060 here too.
01:22:17.040 It's to discredit any criticism
01:22:18.540 against sheer nonsense.
01:22:20.320 Smear merchants going to smear.
01:22:21.660 That is true.
01:22:22.720 Alex says,
01:22:23.500 Charlie's point about the scouts
01:22:24.680 made me realise how much
01:22:25.660 of my formation as a man
01:22:27.060 was shaped by the scouts.
01:22:28.540 Mine too.
01:22:29.100 I'd never thought about it
01:22:29.960 until now.
01:22:32.320 It was the only male space
01:22:33.300 with male role models.
01:22:34.840 I actually did have
01:22:35.860 quite a few male teachers
01:22:36.920 in school.
01:22:38.960 Me too, yeah.
01:22:40.140 I didn't think that
01:22:41.440 it was being noteworthy
01:22:42.720 at the time.
01:22:43.900 There was one in my school,
01:22:45.700 and I had quite a big school.
01:22:47.220 There was three classes
01:22:49.440 to a year group,
01:22:50.220 and each class had
01:22:50.780 at least 30 kids in it,
01:22:51.900 so it's about 100 kids
01:22:52.740 to a year group.
01:22:53.060 That's the same size
01:22:53.640 as my school.
01:22:54.420 Yeah, yeah,
01:22:54.660 and I only had one male teacher
01:22:56.840 in that whole time.
01:22:57.740 I think one class
01:22:58.840 had one at a different point,
01:23:00.300 but yeah,
01:23:00.780 in all that seven years,
01:23:02.340 there were two male teachers.
01:23:03.620 Right.
01:23:04.040 I had a bunch.
01:23:04.940 I think also doing
01:23:05.960 things like scouts
01:23:08.580 or playing sports
01:23:10.020 outside of school,
01:23:11.200 I think that's
01:23:11.800 one of the things.
01:23:12.700 Football clubs,
01:23:13.100 I think they're really good
01:23:14.220 for the boys.
01:23:15.280 I played a lot of football.
01:23:16.820 Anyway,
01:23:17.280 Carl's underground cache
01:23:18.320 of irradiated fray,
01:23:19.240 Bentos,
01:23:19.840 says,
01:23:20.060 look,
01:23:20.580 they're underground
01:23:21.020 to prevent them
01:23:21.620 being irradiated.
01:23:23.820 Says,
01:23:24.460 Josh,
01:23:25.100 on what Josh said
01:23:25.780 about men feeling alienated
01:23:26.860 and having no stake in society,
01:23:28.420 the child who is not
01:23:29.100 embraced by the village
01:23:29.780 will burn it down
01:23:30.400 to feel its warmth.
01:23:31.540 True.
01:23:32.260 Russian says,
01:23:32.840 toxic masculinity
01:23:33.600 is mentioned every week
01:23:34.720 at my brother's school.
01:23:36.060 Nobody ever questions it.
01:23:37.120 It's evil to tell
01:23:38.000 a bunch of men
01:23:38.760 they're toxic
01:23:39.620 for merely existing.
01:23:40.620 Why have women
01:23:41.400 become radicalized
01:23:42.220 and men not?
01:23:42.940 Carmarthen Chris says,
01:23:47.540 wait until there's
01:23:48.400 civil distress
01:23:49.180 and it's not safe
01:23:49.840 to go outside
01:23:50.520 and all of these
01:23:51.440 left-wing women
01:23:52.180 have got
01:23:52.960 overgrown man-baby simps
01:23:54.880 that can't even punch.
01:23:56.640 Let's see how fast
01:23:57.220 they run for a right-wing chud.
01:23:58.600 I reckon a lot of these women
01:23:59.640 are going to punch harder.
01:24:01.160 Quite possibly.
01:24:02.460 Particularly if they have
01:24:03.280 children,
01:24:04.040 so hopefully,
01:24:04.820 you know,
01:24:05.080 some innate thing
01:24:06.380 in them will rear up.
01:24:07.520 The era of the chud
01:24:10.320 is approaching.
01:24:10.980 I can feel it.
01:24:13.580 Teach your sons to box.
01:24:15.480 That's the thing.
01:24:16.500 That is a good sport
01:24:17.220 to do as well.
01:24:18.280 Very good for your cardio.
01:24:19.520 Yeah,
01:24:19.660 I've got my sons doing it.
01:24:20.700 They really love it as well.
01:24:22.480 It's fun.
01:24:23.060 Yeah,
01:24:23.360 it's good fun to punch.
01:24:26.240 George says,
01:24:27.000 women are natural leftists.
01:24:28.400 They will prefer security
01:24:29.120 over freedom,
01:24:29.980 which is how the state
01:24:30.660 has grown rapidly
01:24:31.400 ever since they had
01:24:32.020 the ability to vote.
01:24:33.200 Then there's the in-group bias
01:24:34.360 and collectivism
01:24:34.960 demonstrated by the US election.
01:24:36.260 They pick a moron
01:24:37.000 who just promised them
01:24:37.780 the power to murder their babies
01:24:39.520 or repeal the 19th.
01:24:40.440 Except they didn't, though.
01:24:41.600 Yeah, do remember
01:24:42.020 that white women
01:24:42.680 did go majority for Trump.
01:24:44.000 Yeah.
01:24:44.420 So, you know,
01:24:45.760 just saying.
01:24:48.320 And Roshan says,
01:24:49.140 how can you live like this?
01:24:50.080 Women to men
01:24:50.600 who have a bare living room
01:24:52.700 with just a sofa,
01:24:53.720 a TV and a work desk
01:24:54.540 in the corner
01:24:54.860 and nothing else.
01:24:55.500 Look,
01:24:55.680 it works just fine.
01:24:58.680 The number of times
01:24:59.280 I've had to justify myself.
01:25:00.620 But that's the thing.
01:25:01.260 It works.
01:25:02.100 Again,
01:25:02.460 it's the focus
01:25:03.080 on the utility of the thing.
01:25:04.860 Whereas women are thinking
01:25:06.320 about the spirit of the thing.
01:25:08.200 Yes.
01:25:08.460 I remember justifying my flat.
01:25:10.920 It's just like white walls
01:25:12.920 and some guitars
01:25:14.500 and my PC
01:25:15.480 and then the bedroom
01:25:17.860 and that's it.
01:25:18.980 And I was just like,
01:25:19.520 it's zen.
01:25:20.500 There's not clutter.
01:25:21.480 It keeps my mind at ease.
01:25:22.780 I'm peaceful.
01:25:23.820 It's organized.
01:25:24.400 And everything that does
01:25:24.720 exactly what I want it to do.
01:25:26.040 So what more do you want?
01:25:27.160 For me,
01:25:27.700 that kind of space
01:25:28.420 just gives like
01:25:29.120 gaping abyss vibes
01:25:31.000 and it puts me on edge.
01:25:34.280 Need some doilies in here.
01:25:36.200 I've put up some decorations now.
01:25:38.860 I've met in the middle.
01:25:40.040 I think it takes a man
01:25:40.860 about five years
01:25:41.480 to put one picture
01:25:42.140 on the wall,
01:25:42.560 doesn't it?
01:25:43.020 He's like,
01:25:43.140 I think I'm settled enough now
01:25:44.660 to put one sentimental thing out.
01:25:47.600 Yeah,
01:25:47.840 and then it's a picture
01:25:48.480 of Trump fight.
01:25:49.560 Yeah.
01:25:51.280 Roman Observer says,
01:25:52.380 hi from your Italian bank roller.
01:25:54.220 The amount of horror
01:25:54.700 you poured in 15 minutes
01:25:55.720 of segments
01:25:56.260 is much more than anything
01:25:57.260 we get to see
01:25:57.740 on the mainstream news.
01:25:58.860 I've forced myself
01:25:59.460 to watch them.
01:26:00.360 The stats exist,
01:26:01.020 but they never go
01:26:01.720 under silence
01:26:02.920 or a turnaround
01:26:03.340 to make Italian men
01:26:04.220 look bad,
01:26:04.980 but it's almost never
01:26:05.580 talked about foreign crime.
01:26:06.960 Well,
01:26:07.160 there's surely got to be
01:26:08.080 a point where
01:26:08.620 they just can't
01:26:09.340 keep a lid on it.
01:26:10.600 If you've got 6,000
01:26:11.700 nearly rapes a year,
01:26:14.220 Jesus Christ.
01:26:15.500 Well,
01:26:15.600 it's going to get to the point
01:26:16.320 where everyone knows someone.
01:26:17.860 Yeah.
01:26:18.900 Well,
01:26:19.080 yeah,
01:26:19.240 20 women raped a day.
01:26:20.400 How can you not?
01:26:20.980 Yeah.
01:26:21.880 You know.
01:26:25.480 And again,
01:26:26.320 from Roman Observer,
01:26:27.180 much of what the Italian government
01:26:28.240 is trying to do,
01:26:28.820 at least about illegal immigration,
01:26:30.020 is openly opposed
01:26:30.920 by far-left judges.
01:26:32.580 I'll try and contain
01:26:33.500 my surprise.
01:26:35.180 When has this ever
01:26:36.620 happened before?
01:26:37.980 Don't worry,
01:26:38.300 it's the same everywhere,
01:26:39.100 mate.
01:26:39.280 It's the same everywhere.
01:26:40.400 And our judges
01:26:40.960 are just as bad.
01:26:41.780 Judges in Italy
01:26:42.440 are unaccountable
01:26:43.100 and very political,
01:26:43.860 just like ours,
01:26:44.920 and have been operating
01:26:46.420 against Italian interests
01:26:47.560 for at least 30 years,
01:26:48.400 just like ours.
01:26:49.760 Whether by using
01:26:50.840 international law
01:26:51.480 or EU regulations,
01:26:52.440 which we're still subject to,
01:26:53.440 like the ECHR.
01:26:54.540 The ECHR isn't actually
01:26:55.640 an EU institution.
01:26:57.400 We just agree to it.
01:26:59.020 Yeah,
01:26:59.260 it's separate,
01:26:59.960 isn't it?
01:27:00.220 Yeah.
01:27:00.460 I really want one of these judges
01:27:01.500 to come out and say,
01:27:02.400 please stop criticising me,
01:27:03.620 and then I've got the line prepared
01:27:05.320 of judge not lest ye be judged.
01:27:07.920 And none of them have done it.
01:27:09.900 Well,
01:27:10.120 they probably are like,
01:27:10.780 no,
01:27:11.000 I know what they'll say.
01:27:12.080 I know what they'll say.
01:27:13.380 Charlie says,
01:27:14.140 I think the best thing
01:27:14.740 that Farage can do
01:27:15.340 while he's an MP
01:27:15.880 is make migration
01:27:16.680 a women's safety issue.
01:27:17.940 Love to see how
01:27:18.360 Labour would sound against it.
01:27:19.400 Mary Harrington's
01:27:20.460 talking about that.
01:27:21.640 And it's a fair point.
01:27:22.540 Yeah,
01:27:22.800 I think I'm going to write
01:27:23.620 an essay to that point soon.
01:27:25.320 It's a totally fair point,
01:27:26.320 but I don't really have
01:27:27.940 great hopes for what
01:27:28.840 Farage is doing.
01:27:30.000 I don't think I'm quite
01:27:31.300 as hard-line on Farage
01:27:32.460 as California Refugee,
01:27:34.220 which was probably
01:27:35.660 the hardest line
01:27:36.560 I've ever seen on Farage.
01:27:38.460 I agree with that, though.
01:27:39.780 He definitely raises
01:27:40.540 some points.
01:27:41.200 Even on election night,
01:27:42.180 I was just like,
01:27:42.600 I don't know about reform,
01:27:43.920 to be honest.
01:27:44.960 Well,
01:27:45.160 this is why Ben Habib
01:27:45.860 has just left.
01:27:46.820 That's true, yeah.
01:27:47.460 I'm for re-migration.
01:27:49.280 I'm looking forward to
01:27:49.940 seeing what he says next.
01:27:51.160 Yeah, I know.
01:27:52.140 It's all the dumb leftists
01:27:53.520 in the comments
01:27:54.240 on such articles,
01:27:55.920 you know,
01:27:56.260 with,
01:27:56.580 well, you'll be first to go,
01:27:57.820 and it's like,
01:27:58.320 no idea.
01:27:59.420 No.
01:27:59.980 Ben Habib, incidentally,
01:28:00.900 is coming on Monday's podcast,
01:28:02.180 so tune in there,
01:28:02.860 and that'll be interesting.
01:28:04.280 Lord Nerevar says,
01:28:05.040 I have Italian friends
01:28:06.040 and speak Italian myself,
01:28:07.080 and trying to introduce
01:28:07.740 friends in the UK
01:28:08.580 to the overwhelming
01:28:09.560 disappointment that
01:28:10.420 is Georgie Maloney
01:28:11.180 is a gargantuan task.
01:28:12.580 Just be like,
01:28:12.980 look,
01:28:13.300 she's like Boris.
01:28:15.300 She's just like Boris.
01:28:16.160 That is, yeah.
01:28:17.100 Yeah, well,
01:28:17.460 in fact,
01:28:17.900 he says,
01:28:18.460 I would describe her
01:28:19.220 as Italy's Boris Johnson
01:28:20.360 at this point,
01:28:20.880 but there we go.
01:28:21.960 Right?
01:28:22.320 Great minds.
01:28:22.940 I mean,
01:28:23.200 to be fair to her,
01:28:24.380 they are contending
01:28:25.320 with the same issue
01:28:26.320 that we have,
01:28:27.000 which is the bureaucratic state
01:28:28.200 is so gargantuan.
01:28:29.320 You can go in there
01:28:29.960 with the best intentions
01:28:30.820 in the world,
01:28:31.280 but they will subvert you
01:28:32.160 from every direction.
01:28:33.160 Which is basically
01:28:33.820 what he carries on.
01:28:34.600 You've got to
01:28:34.860 drain the swamp.
01:28:36.120 Yeah,
01:28:36.380 you've got to take
01:28:36.920 the chainsaw to it.
01:28:37.920 A flicker.
01:28:38.760 Yeah,
01:28:39.160 but as I said,
01:28:40.260 she was supposed to be
01:28:40.880 Italy's Trump man.
01:28:41.840 Well,
01:28:42.080 I am sorry to hear it,
01:28:43.160 but again,
01:28:44.780 they deliberately set up
01:28:46.240 the quangocracy
01:28:47.700 to prevent people
01:28:49.360 like Trump
01:28:49.820 from coming in
01:28:50.420 and doing things.
01:28:51.600 So we've got to fight
01:28:53.140 through the sort of
01:28:54.240 gossamer chains of it,
01:28:55.460 I'm afraid,
01:28:55.900 until the very end.
01:28:56.860 I've never heard
01:28:57.760 quangocracy before.
01:28:59.160 That's a really good word.
01:28:59.920 It sounds like an alien race.
01:29:01.540 Yes.
01:29:01.840 Which is perfect.
01:29:02.680 Yes,
01:29:02.940 bureaucrats.
01:29:04.160 Aliens,
01:29:04.780 otherwise.
01:29:05.480 Anyway,
01:29:05.980 thank you so much
01:29:06.540 for joining us.
01:29:07.180 Charlie,
01:29:07.500 where can people go
01:29:08.280 to find more of you?
01:29:09.420 So you can find me
01:29:10.460 on Twitter,
01:29:11.340 being rude to anyone
01:29:12.840 and everyone,
01:29:13.540 which is
01:29:13.840 Aster underscore Charlie,
01:29:16.160 and you can find me
01:29:17.020 on Substack,
01:29:18.280 Charlie Bentley Aster.
01:29:19.640 Well,
01:29:20.100 thank you so much
01:29:20.660 for coming in,
01:29:21.440 and we will be back
01:29:22.520 tomorrow,
01:29:23.020 folks.
01:29:23.740 And it's Calvin's
01:29:25.580 Common Sense Crusade
01:29:26.580 in half an hour as well.
01:29:27.920 It's a very good one
01:29:28.700 as well.
01:29:29.340 Oh,
01:29:29.480 is it?
01:29:29.800 I haven't seen it.
01:29:30.380 The guest is a meme legend.
01:29:33.020 I'm not going to spoil it
01:29:33.780 because I spoiled it.
01:29:34.320 Oh,
01:29:34.580 no,
01:29:34.820 I do know who it is.
01:29:36.620 Right,
01:29:36.880 yes.
01:29:38.100 Anyway,
01:29:38.500 tune in for that
01:29:39.700 and we'll see you tomorrow.