The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1104
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 30 minutes
Words per Minute
176.84422
Summary
In this episode of the lotus eaters, I am joined by journalist Lewis Brackpool to discuss knife crime in the UK, the cursed gin knives and whether Rishi Sunak is actually retarded. Also, we discuss whether or not Rishi sunak is retarded.
Transcript
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hello and welcome to the podcast of the lotus eaters episode 1104 i'm harry joined today by
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special guest lewis brackpool say hello lewis hello hello how are you doing today i'm not too bad is
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there anything you'd like to let the audience know about yourself well uh that i'm here and
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thank you very much congratulations i'm glad to see that i'd be worried if you weren't then i'd be
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doing this all by myself nobody would want to see that would they and today we're going to be talking
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about uh the cursed gin knives because all of knife crime is caused by the gins that curse them that
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force you to go out and stab people right thankfully not slash though so we've got some solutions for
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that uh bill gates influencing uk policy i'm interested to learn about that one and finally
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we're going to discuss whether rishi sunak is english that may sound like a very very simple
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question and it is but some people are retarded so i'm going to cover it anyway and uh yeah i think
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with that uh before we start just let people know where you where they can find you and what you get
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up to lewis yeah so uh obviously i'm an independent journalist uh i've been doing this for several
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years now four years um i usually post on substack x instagram unfortunately um and yeah i'm trying to
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be as sensible as i can be on uh on x so yeah as as well as i can i'm not i know i know i know we've uh
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yes we we've shared the stage here a few times now it's been good fun and every single time career
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opportunities have closed themselves to you narrow of the podcast like oh god another time every time
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he's finished on the podcast with me he is sweating buckets don't you worry folks but that's what i'm
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here for i'm here to be honest not polite and uh respect that thank you very much and uh with that
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let's get into the news so everybody knows that knives in the uk are cursed in britain as it is i don't
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know if it was a genie in a bottle that did it or if it was some kind of a voodoo ritual happened
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the second anybody gets a hold of a knife in britain you get the irresistible urge to stab people i know
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that when i'm preparing dinner at home uh then i really have to hold myself back because who knows
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what could happen it takes an incredible amount of self-restraint to avoid murdering people with a
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knife in the uk according to the way that our leaders see it at least because that's how they're
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treating the new legislation that will be putting that is being put forward on how to restrict the
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sale of knives now we've already heard some of this over the past few months since the axel ruder
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cabana case and the conviction of him for murdering three young girls and assaulting a number of others
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with a knife and they've said that they're going to be putting in new security checks for the the sale
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of knives on online retailers mainly amazon places like that where you're going to have to do
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two id checks now just in time for tony blair's digital ids to be coming in force later on this
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year before i get into the rest of it though and give you the rest of the news first reminder to
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everybody who knows when the sale is going to stop we're still selling merch we keep being told it might
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be the last week but it isn't it's going on forever it's like a sports direct sale it will never end
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are we closing down maybe best buy just to be sure get yourself an islander metal t-shirt or an
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islander forestry company t-shirt or one of calvin robinson not throwing a roman salute that's a rare
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shirt i'm sorry calvin i love you uh you could also get a mug you can get many things on the website
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what else might be on there i don't know you best look yourself and buy something or else anyway
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so the news that's good radio voice when i was like i used to do radio i used to do radio i used
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to do call centers and they always thought that i was a recording message um anyway so uh the there
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are new life laws coming in that will make a difference according to some of the uh some of
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the people who've been affected by knife crime as you can see this uh pair of british people uh who's
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been affected by knife crime this is uh ronan let me double check his name uh ronan candor who was
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murdered back in 2023 uh due to knife crime uh because of him and a number of other incidents
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including the rudicabana murders we are going to be getting these new knife laws and what do they
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entail perchance so they say in this article here that we're getting stricter rules for retailers who
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are selling knives online and they are going to be introduced in the spring and we're going to be
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getting tougher penalties for those who break them retailers across the uk will be required to report
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any bulk or suspicious knife purchases to police so restaurants are screwed and the jail term for
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selling weapons to under 18s will increase from six months to two years a new policing unit backed with
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one million pounds i think let me just double check it oh they've updated the article since i was
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taking some of this information down so some of the information has shifted yeah we're getting a new
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policing unit with one million pounds of funding to monitor for weapons being sold illegally on social
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media they're getting created so we know that always in the in the british state that throwing money at
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the problem and creating new police units always works right that's worked consistently uh it's being
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introduced as part of the government's crime and policing bill in the spring the rules are response
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in response to a review by the national police chief's council into the online sale of knives the
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changes we will also see is it is it still in this okay here we go there we are we'll get increased
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prison sentences for selling weapons to under 18 and that will apply to either individuals who have
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processed a sale or a company ceo and what do you reckon that's in response to a they're coming for jeff
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bezos guys literally immediately after the ruda cabana conviction one of the big things that they
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wanted to do to take it off of the fact that he was a foreign murderer who had racial motivations for
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the attacks that he committed remember we had many quotes of him saying things from when he was in
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secondary school like britain needs some kind of genocide like rwanda had which is fantastic and
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then targeted a load of white children um that was brushed aside so we could pay attention to the
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much more important factor that he managed to buy a knife on amazon yeah therefore james jeff bezos was
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to blame i mean one of the one of the most awful responses to all of that was the media and it
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always you it usually is we had two responses to it we had the initial response where they blacked
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out all of the information people went on the street and protested and then were arrested for it
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some of whom are many of whom are still in prison at the moment because they were advised by their
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lawyers not to try and take it to trial instead just to take an immediate plea deal and then we had
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the immediate media response after the conviction of ruda cabana both of which were very clearly
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coordinated when you could go to any newspaper stand in the country see all of these
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different newspapers left wing right wing whatever you wanted to call them had the same front page
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and i tried to put through a freedom of information request about that and it was interesting the
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response i collaborated with connor tomlinson the uh your colleague um to try and figure out whether
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this was coordinated and it's interesting how the home office actually pivoted to when you tried to
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figure out whether it was uh coordinated but what i was going to say as well if it wasn't
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coordinated by the government then it was coordinated by the editors yeah either way it was
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either way coordinated action exactly uh but seeing amazon killer and this this reframe of of what was
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happening was just it was it was unbelievably the real problem because the real problem of course as
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with many of the problems in this country relates directly to government immigration policies but western
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liberal democratic governments in europe their only goal seems to be to pack in as many immigrants
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into every country like sardines that is their one overriding goal oh and also censor everybody who
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disagrees with them by introducing draconian laws and digital ids and other kinds of online safety
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online safety acts and censoring the internet those are their two main goals uh introduce foreign
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populations tyrannize the natives so obviously they have to pivot because by pivoting to the amazon
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uh thing they can say well this gives us even more reason to censor the internet censor people's
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ability to buy well restrict people's ability to buy things that previously was just a normal
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household object let's not forget that back in the day during the early days of england following
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the norman conquest i think in the mid 12th century it was actually an act of law that an englishman
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had a duty to carry a weapon on him at all times there was an act of arms i think maybe henry
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ii introduced this that meant that if you were an adult male up to the age of about 40 you had to
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carry a weapon on you wow i didn't know that so that's what this country used to be and now we are
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going further and further into restricting knives just right normal kitchen knives is is ridiculous but um
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what what else would you uh had you found from the freedom of information oh oh about to the home
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office um did they just deny it they just denied it was more of a pivot the language was very vague
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um it was it was very typical of you know and as you know i ping out so many like every single week
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it's worth doing yeah because even when you get a slither of information it's extremely telling and
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when they do say oh we hold this information but we're gonna we're gonna put it's easy to tell lies
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by omission as well exactly yeah it's always worth doing i encourage people to ping out these requests
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as well as much as you can yeah so some of the other things that we'll see in this law are that
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retailers are required to bring in stronger photo identity checks for buyers both at the points of
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sale and delivery a new offense of possession with violent intent which will come with a prison
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sentence of up to four years this means that even if the weapon is legal if it if there is intent to
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cause violence it will be a crime seems somewhat vague but i'm assuming that they're going to say
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if you're trying to go at somebody or if you if you've got a knife on you and you look sketchy
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will this include butter knives because let's not forget that somebody has been arrested in the
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past in this country for camping equipment yeah for camping equipment and having a butter knife on him
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yeah that's just how ridiculous this country is the land of liberty and freedom the the birthplace
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of the magna carta yeah not allowed to have butter knives on you if you look a bit too sketchy
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uh it will also have a consultation on registration and licensing scheme for online knife sellers
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so a whole load of new restrictions coming in for online retailers uh yvette cooper had something
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to say about all of this uh did she mention anything to do with the actual reason that uh people
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are dying in record numbers in the uk for uh for knife crime no no it's horrifying how easy it is
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for young people to get hold of knives online even though children's lives are being lost and families
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and communities are left devastated as a result do you know what else is illegal for people to buy
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in britain pepper spray well that yeah but i mean well that's obviously just sensible right because
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you wouldn't want young women to be able to defend themselves no guns do you know you still get in
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london guns guns guns gun crime because the criminals have the guns it turns out if you're a criminal
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you won't go through legal means to buy weapons you'll just buy them illegally so as with everything
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that the state does in this country it is criminalizing the behavior and actions of law-abiding citizens
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there was a raid not too long i think a few years ago where police raided this guy's house and found
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an rpg in there and it was kind of like i think they're not for commercial purchase are they no no
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asda no or on amazon so you know it's uh yeah it's insane it's absolutely insane yeah uh but cooper added
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that not enough has been done to tackle the online market over recent years which is why we made it an
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urgent priority the new measures announced by the government will collectively be known as ronan's
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law after 16 year old ronan candor who was murdered close to his wolverhampton home three years ago
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ronan candor was killed in a case of mistaken identity by a fellow school pupil pupil excuse me
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prabjit vidhasa who was also 16 at the time there was another child involved in it who was 18 sorry i
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suppose you'd be an adult at that point uh can you do you reckon he had an anglo name celtic perhaps
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uh i'm not going to speculate uh i mean i i've forgotten the name it specifically but it wasn't
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right it was it was a name like prad jeep something like that right right so there you go but he used
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a 22 inch sword that he ordered online using his mother's id to pass security checks it was one of
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nearly 30 knives and machetes he had bought using the same method over several months so there you go i
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mean he managed to bypass the security checks that were already in place so might it be that people
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will still be able to bypass these security checks if they're just clever enough probably the new
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recommendations also require social media companies to be more accountable for the thousands of knives
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that commander clayman says are being sold on platforms they're being quite clever in the way
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that they don't overtly sell but they show all the knives and encourage people to move to a different
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online platform to make the transaction uh he says that police will be asking tech companies to remove
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selling content within 48 hours which is still plenty of time for people to make make their
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advertisements known the measures are aimed at stopping sellers like stefan petrescu from southampton
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he used instagram to sell hundreds of knives police found receipts which revealed that petrescu
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had bulk bought more than three grand's worth of knives which knives which he then sold online
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i'm noticing a distinct lack of anglo names in all of these incidents which suggests that the
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problem might not be the englishmen have access to knives if you ask me again we used to have a
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duty in this country to basically carry a sword on your hip at all times and these were much more
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peaceful times despite all of the uh all of the interwarring factions in the monarchy which were
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basically just small skirmishes back then compared to the kind of wars that we face today
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uh certainly compared to the war zone that is parts of london i just think it's insane about
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do you say he was selling knives on instagram uh there are let's see if we can find some photos
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because they included some down here oh here we go two ninja swords there was also some pictures
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they had of him with his face out but you could see he was very clearly i mean petrescu he was not
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an englishman um yeah he would just go on instagram host this kind of thing on his instagram story and
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presumably people would know the website to go to or know his contact details so that they could get
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hold of these things so again a lot of this seems to be foreign criminals coming here and saturating
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the market mostly going to be bought by other foreigners in the country so that they can go and
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commit crimes with them one and for this the law-abiding englishman must suffer one of the most
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insulting things as well that i've heard is the argument for uh more the use centers um and that
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we've got some of that in a moment yeah yeah the idea that if um if you just put more activities you put
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ping pong uh in a room then suddenly knife the drill gangs will just evaporate overnight right
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because i mean it's a postcode war so if we put the if we put the ping pong call between the postcodes
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they might join together this is like um you just reminded me did you ever watch the episode of
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south park where um where jimmy and timmy try to fix the bloods versus the crips rival i think i do
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yeah and they just invite them all to a local community center and they all eat chicken and play
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basketball together and that solves all the crime and the crips and the bloods make amends with one
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another oh wait i think by the end of that episode they still end up shooting all of each other
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uh but that's what idris elba thinks may work uh idris elba who has done a recent documentary
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called idris elba our knife crime crisis uh which saw him spend 12 months exploring the reality of
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the uk's stabbing epidemic elba claimed that around 25 percent of stabbings are perpetrated using knives
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commonly found at home and areas of innovation could help reduce this uh he said that um not all
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kitchen knives need to have a point on them that sounds crazy to say but you can still cut your
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food without the point on your knife which is an innovative way to look at it so you're not allowed
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points on the end of your knives now according to idris elba in his ideal world because otherwise
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young children of particular backgrounds may stab each other with it but if you take the points off
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they're not going to figure out how to slash if anything it will just make being murdered by someone
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with a knife more painful because they're just going to have to hack you to death instead of stab you
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i i just i'm almost lost for words or all of this it's just it just ridiculous yeah i like we live in
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an enormous circus yeah yeah to say lightly that's clown world for you indeed in the bbc film because
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of course it was bbc elba said that young people in london gangs are not big and scary no that's why
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they carry knives i've met these people in these london gangs they're about this big and weigh as
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much as my pinky finger and he added that it is sad sad so sad that society turned our back on them
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it's society's fault where are the youth clubs if we had the youth clubs these kids wouldn't be
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stabbing each other and uh it goes on to add that there were more than 50 000 serious knife crime
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offenses recorded in england in the year ending june 2024 london has the highest rate of serious
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knife crimes and if you want to wonder well okay maybe if you take the points off of knives will that
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work some companies have already been doing that uh since 2020 viners decided a uh that they were
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going to sell knives with no tips in response to rising knife cards this is what modernity in great
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britain in the uk brov has reduced us to you can't some are just going to stop putting the points on
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the knife again you can't you can't cut someone to death with that right they're gonna go for you
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they're gonna and it's just gonna bounce off you and nothing will happen and they'll just go oh i guess
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it makes never mind then keep your money it makes it even more insulting just hearing about the
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the people going camping and being arrested for cutlery stories you just hear that like you know
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people getting arrested in the countryside just for getting away from the cities and uh still
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encountering a police search uh for simply cooking a full english breakfast in the middle of nowhere and
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still being um searched and and almost detained for it and arrested it's just i don't know
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it's you know it's one of these subjects right it's so tiresome it's so tight and it's it's anger
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inducing but it's also just really really tiresome because the amount of videos the amount of stories
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news articles everything of so many people kids mainly um killing each other especially in london
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birmingham manchester all of these big cities and i know uh people uh such as adam brooks who does
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really good work on trying to to trying to do charity work and of course uh encourage uh people to put
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the knives down quote unquote um and attempts to actually try and you know do something about it
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where as you just hear all this society's turned our backs blah blah it's like well you get blamed
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for you get blamed for it society gets blamed for it god forbid we blame the murderers yeah for what
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they're doing god forbid we actually police hotspot areas where this kind of thing happens uh because a
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lot of it comes down to in london for instance a lot of the drill gangs yes in brixton and other parts
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of london i've mentioned this ad nauseam but it bears repeating the drill gangs engage in postcode
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wars with one another they murder one another often with knives and then people throw their
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hands up and go well it's not like we can arrest them all when we know that they rap about the
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kinds of crimes that they commit and there is an interactive map that they post themselves
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showing the gang territory i found it it was very easy to found i just googled gang territory
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it's one of the first things that comes up so if the police wanted to they could go okay well
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this gang's here this gang's here this gang's here we'll just make sure to increase our presence
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there yeah but sociologists and uh people that the government listens to would cry about it being
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over policed right and then say that that's the reason for crime right because i know that if police
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show up show up in my neighborhood more often i'm more likely to commit crime because i just can't
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resist there's two things as well to add about drill i read about amnesty international campaigning
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against courts who use drill lyrics and drill uh music as evidence as confessions or evidence and
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amnesty international is um is rallying against that saying it's a free speech issue and i'm kind of
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like if you're inciting like surely that's not even inciting sometimes it's not even just yeah
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here's literally like yeah you're the week yeah or plan to you know and and i i sit there and i go
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i i just saw my head just sort of spins and i just don't even know if i can articulate how annoyed i
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just get at seeing that um i had something about the amnesty that i wanted to get out then uh but the
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other thing it's completely gone but if it comes back that's fair of course in all of this what i'm
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talking about because i have to mention it because it's the obvious factor is that a lot of these
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crimes are being committed by and against foreigners on this in this land and you try and look up the
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information in the ons but the ons say that they get their information from the home office the home
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office specifically uh do not hold police recorded crime figures and overall offenses including a knife
00:23:06.720
by ethnic groups so they don't collect that information but there are other ways of finding this
00:23:12.040
including the london assembly back in 2022 did a report on this because they wanted to find ways to
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stop the knife crime epidemic in london and as part of that they looked at which groups are committing
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these crimes and who are they committing them against well they even did in this this is a mayor
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of london london assembly official article calls for commission on knife crime in the black community
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this is how it starts this is not 4chan writing this this is an official report despite making up
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only 13 of london's total population black londoners account for 45 of london's knife murder victims
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61 of the knife murder perpetrators and 53 of knife crime perpetrators so this sounds a lot like it is a
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for the most part over half of that is being committed by particular groups against that same group
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well this is do you say mayor of london so this is a sadiq khan appropriated report
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um done back in 2022 yeah but for this kind of crime that's being committed by foreign populations you and
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i and other law-abiding people in this country have to be punished in ways that probably will not affect
00:24:25.220
these rates because again these people are criminals the ones committing these crimes criminals are able to
00:24:30.740
get around checks because they involve themselves in crime shockingly enough one of the other things
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that i found that was interesting was this you gov poll uh that was done two years ago talking about
00:24:42.920
white and ethnic minority views and experiences of crime and if i scroll down here you can see the uh
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the fear or knowing of people who have been a victim of knife crime you can see the ethnic minority
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britons say that they uh 19 of them know somebody who's personally been the victim of knife crime
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whereas white britain's is 12 so that's a difference right there so they're more likely to
00:25:06.900
suffer from this kind of crime but then if you go down as well and look at the attitudes that they
00:25:11.300
have what measures do these people think would be effective at tackling knife crime so for me the big
00:25:16.940
one would be put them in prison and police the areas where this is going to happen and you would
00:25:23.040
expect that given they're more likely to be affected by these crimes that they would be in support of
00:25:27.920
that no white britains are far far more in favor of long sentences for people committing these crimes
00:25:35.020
they're also far far more in favor of things like police having stop and search powers so this seems
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to come down to me as a as a preference which is that yeah they know that they're being victimized
00:25:47.200
by these crimes but they still wouldn't like to have the kind of policies that have been shown to
00:25:52.120
actually work which is criminalize murder criminalize put these people in prison i know it sounds like
00:25:59.940
a daring idea but if we make murder illegal and then enforce that law it might actually have an effect
00:26:06.300
what they say what they would prefer is youth centers and educational programs of course i think as
00:26:13.160
well it's it's worth pointing out theresa may uh decommissioned the idea of stop and search as well
00:26:18.480
during her tenure another tory victory thank you yeah and that led to an explosion of of knife crime
00:26:25.720
like an epidemic of knife crime which has since spiraled completely out of control um and i mean
00:26:35.340
if you see statistics like that post repealing a measure um that a lot of people decried as uh horrific
00:26:45.740
yeah and then you you look at the statistics after and you see a completely different result
00:26:53.440
and again it's it's all symbolic purely for the purposes of making sure our elite classes don't feel
00:26:59.400
racist it's liberalism it's it's liberal tyranny yeah and there's also i remember um
00:27:05.320
a few months ago in my hometown they had this horrible horrible knife angel monument which is
00:27:11.760
part of some no nationwide campaign where they have this big angel model that's made up of knives that
00:27:19.460
have been handed in and they take it around the country and have it in town centers of these places
00:27:24.780
so that it will encourage criminals to hand in their knives ridiculous if you believe that that's
00:27:31.860
going to work you live in an absolute fantasy land or you're an idiot or both it's it's it's so
00:27:37.960
symbolic never heard of that before purely for the sake of not actually doing anything effective
00:27:43.180
interestingly when you mention when the uh when this all went to a spite i was sent this by one of
00:27:49.560
our back end guys cameron so thank you very much for that and you can see here a graph charting the
00:27:55.960
explosion of knife crimes or possession of knife offenses in england and wales from 1995 to uh 2025
00:28:03.160
i think this was a 2024 probably this was a very recent report that came out and you can see after
00:28:08.480
about 2006 2007 it explodes so that's about when the um blair wave you could say uh well blair but
00:28:18.960
also i was talking more about the sort of immigration that came in in 97 yeah and then you can also see
00:28:24.780
what that'd be about 2017 around theresa may as well it spikes there again yeah as well that's
00:28:29.920
what i was thinking it's so stark how again these policies these policies have a genuine effect on the
00:28:37.800
world and um not actually doing anything about the crimes not having the information and not being
00:28:43.560
prepared to face the information showing who is committing these crimes and who they're committing
00:28:48.080
them against only makes us all poorer and only means that the government gives themselves more of a pat
00:28:52.880
on the back and more excuse to tyrannize actual law-abiding citizens in this country that's that's
00:28:59.340
what i have to say about that this won't work basically this won't work and people won't stop
00:29:04.100
getting stabbed because the government doesn't want that and it's sad really unlike i told you um
00:29:11.280
i don't even uh the the topic of that is just it's extremely tiring it's not only tiring
00:29:19.140
it's distressing and you just when you look at that graph and see how it just continues and continues
00:29:26.780
and then you see drops of where a policy would be introduced and you start to see results and then
00:29:33.680
it gets repealed and then it goes back up and you you start to pull your hair out and you go
00:29:38.540
how are we gonna how is this going to be sought it becomes reactive and you can say that yeah most
00:29:43.920
most criminal legislation is going to be reactive because you need somebody to have committed a crime
00:29:48.580
obviously we don't want minority report but if we have data showing that crimes are being committed
00:29:54.100
in these areas by particular populations against particular populations then we can at least have
00:30:00.620
some kind of preventative measures in place if we know that these are going to be criminal hotspots
00:30:04.840
again just as something as simple as going hold up these gangs have a map yeah yeah these gangs are
00:30:10.560
interactive map interactive map that show you where they operate why don't we go and arrest some
00:30:15.200
people it's like the whole ms 13 thing yeah in el uh in el salvador where you'd have the liberal
00:30:20.880
chattering classes talking about how well how do you know that he's a rapist and murderer all because
00:30:25.900
he's got i'm a rapist and murderer tattooed on his forehead well yeah that kind of gives it away a
00:30:31.120
little bit that gives it away a little bit yeah bill gates uh one of the most criticized for good
00:30:42.400
reasons in my view this is just my view uh on the internet um as you know um but obviously i'm sure
00:30:50.960
some of your audience might not know i enjoy sending off an annoying government departments
00:30:56.940
with requests to information known as the freedom of information act or the freedom of information
00:31:03.660
request where you can send an email to a government department and request some information because
00:31:11.100
we are by law uh allowed to be told information if you ask for it because it's kept on record um however
00:31:19.900
they're a bit sneaky and they like to uh add exemptions or to prevent people from seeing
00:31:26.960
certain information now if you cast your mind back to earlier well late last year in 2024
00:31:32.820
just before the budget was announced in 2024 bill gates went and met keir starmer and rachel
00:31:40.780
reeves and the labor government just before this was announced and then just before the budget was
00:31:46.060
announced that was explicitly trying to destroy british farming bingo
00:31:49.540
and bill gates is one of the largest farm owners in america right bingo interesting very interesting
00:31:55.220
so what when when a picture emerged online of bill gates standing with bill sorry bill gates
00:32:01.620
with himself standing with keir starmer and rachel reeves uh obviously a lot of people online rightly
00:32:08.820
so started pointing and saying hang on a minute you're now attacking farmers or the agricultural sector
00:32:14.820
you have a lot of foothold within this section in the united states you've even done things over in edinburgh
00:32:22.380
where you've given cows genetically modified whatever that is very into the vaccines
00:32:29.020
something that's also being done at the moment to try to prevent cows from releasing as much methane
00:32:34.140
yes and also just to it again it always was worth repeating the uh inheritance tax changes for the farmers is
00:32:43.060
predicted to raise what is it about 520 million pounds per year i think was the uh was the projections uh that's
00:32:51.880
about a day's worth of nhs funding and also is completely negated by the foreign aid that we send to foreign farmers
00:32:58.820
across the world yes very true so it's just to destroy the agricultural sector so this meeting
00:33:05.740
between keir starmer and bill gates i thought i'd send off a request to ask for some details
00:33:11.660
so i've put here um submitted an foi request to keir starmer's cabinet seeking details on any meetings
00:33:19.140
or correspondence involving bill gates during his october 2024 visit specifically regarding agriculture and farming
00:33:27.800
as the largest private private farmland owner in the u.s gates's visit just before the uk budget
00:33:34.400
announcement and amidst a sudden crackdown on farmers has raised eyebrows on social media it's crucial to
00:33:41.660
address and clarify any potential links because it was a massive uh massive thing at the time there is
00:33:48.860
my email which you can have a little look uh pause the video if you like and just and just read that
00:33:53.840
um then you have to wait 20 working days for a response and when that happened so they can figure
00:34:01.560
out how they're gonna sneak how they're gonna sneak around it essentially i got a response uh this was
00:34:07.000
in december the 20th so just before christmas um they cited section 35 of the foi act which protects
00:34:14.840
the government policy making process that's my favorite part about democracy where you as a citizen
00:34:21.440
don't have to be told anything about how the government comes up with its decisions exactly
00:34:25.960
um so they basically turned around and said we have to conduct a test just to make sure that if we
00:34:34.040
release this information it could affect public policy or could affect the process of making public policy
00:34:41.320
people off yeah massively yeah meaning they've inadvertently said in the first email back
00:34:48.360
yeah uh disclosing what bill gates was talking about with keir starmer is related to public policy
00:34:54.640
somehow and the process of it um so i waited another 20 working days and received another delay okay um
00:35:06.500
so i was informed that obviously they invoked section 35 but in response um obviously i sent a follow-up
00:35:14.780
emphasizing why this is a crucial public interest issue because they planned on conducting a test and
00:35:20.940
i said you know the public you have to do the whole the public deserves transparency and you have to you
00:35:26.860
gotta make the case you have to frame it like that um but they said ah we need some extra time for this
00:35:34.200
one um because we're still considering this in as a public interest i hope to let you have a response by
00:35:42.600
the 20th of february so that's tomorrow that is tomorrow yeah and i still haven't received anything
00:35:48.480
as of yet wait until your next 20 working day delay that's what i'm expecting you'll get tomorrow
00:35:55.160
yes you get anything else uh because if they just keep invoking that part of the act then they can push
00:36:01.620
it back forever nobody gets any information although of course what we can do is we can infer
00:36:06.240
what they're hiding from us exactly and you can do a thing called an internal review uh so when you
00:36:12.460
send off a request and they they always put it in the black and white at the bottom if you're unhappy
00:36:17.940
with this request please send uh please send a complaint or whatever and usually it just goes to
00:36:23.900
some random blokes desk and they have a look and go ah but if you go through a particular channel
00:36:30.140
uh you can you can request it goes through it like a almost like a court system and they can review it
00:36:37.360
and they can make sure that actually yes we are following guidelines and we're not or we can
00:36:41.880
show you this part of information or we can't um what i find interesting is that many people
00:36:48.520
especially on the left of politics were complaining a lot about elon musk and his involvement with
00:36:56.940
reform uk uh whether you like them or not doesn't matter for this argument um and i remember
00:37:03.980
someone like uh stadlin would said whatever your whatever our politics surely surely we can all agree
00:37:10.640
that british democracy should not be for sale uh to foreign billionaires and then i rightly i believe
00:37:17.440
pointed out well where were you about sorrows bill gates larry fink klaus schwab rockefeller
00:37:23.580
foundation xi jinping uh nothing silence and i seem to see this a lot it all depends well i mean those
00:37:32.340
guys yeah they're interfering but they're interfering for the interests of my of what matt stadlin likes
00:37:37.920
yes yes and everything else um but then i wanted to ask why is it that so many people uh online and in
00:37:46.740
communities across i would like to think the political spectrum but it's mostly on like on the
00:37:52.880
right usually that are very very critical of bill gates some on the left might i say but those would have
00:37:59.120
to be properly principled leftists they still exist they still exist somewhere um indeed but why is it that
00:38:06.480
people are very skeptical of bill gates and why is it that bill gates is so hated um well first of all
00:38:13.560
people people don't like the idea um of a foreigner uh coming over and then interfering with policy
00:38:20.720
making for a start uh especially britain is almost like a vassal state of america at this point it is
00:38:27.920
it is yes and seeing bill gates come over with knowing that he has invested in 250 000 acres
00:38:36.960
uh of farms and has pushed out small farm farming businesses within the united states people are
00:38:44.700
saying yeah we don't want that happening over here so that's very annoying but if you roll the clock back
00:38:51.340
um there's other things he's made very he's made lots of obviously investment in
00:38:57.300
quote public health um and there was a particular there was a particular thing in this article that i wanted
00:39:04.740
to go through somewhere down here so he's um he works on following areas such as discovery and
00:39:12.340
and translational sciences um enteric and diarrheal diseases didn't know that hiv malaria
00:39:20.720
neglected tropical diseases pneumonia tuberculosis all of these but basically trying to fix africa
00:39:27.660
pretty much um and he's also he's also into genetically modified crops but his preaching of climate change
00:39:37.480
he also invests invests in fossil fuels at the same time and you find this you find this with people like
00:39:45.000
john kerry who would say i'm i'm all for the climate but then go around in private jets you know the
00:39:50.640
classic argument well it's the same argument that's made against um regulatory capture against
00:39:57.340
uh regulations that should be trying to regulate monopolies sure for instance if you make sure that
00:40:04.020
you are on the board of the regulators or you have people on the inside then you can control your
00:40:09.300
competition because the regulations go against them you can cover the costs same with this you can cover
00:40:15.600
the costs of all of the extra taxes and barriers that get put in the way of fossil fuels it just
00:40:21.620
means that you've got no competition because they can't do it exactly so people um rightly so and even
00:40:27.860
i think i've read the guardian even though and we will get to this in a bit about him and the guardian
00:40:32.840
his involvement with them uh they even said well hang on a minute you're investing in fossil fuels but
00:40:38.280
whilst preaching about the climate very very strange um speaking of that he's obviously invested
00:40:45.880
as well if you can see uh into the uh the bbc oh would this be for the bbc was it the world in
00:40:56.560
the world journalism because i can see this was the us aid where they got about yes two and a half
00:41:02.660
million dollars or pounds sorry where was the uh oh yeah bill and melinda gates our significant
00:41:11.300
donors include uk foreign uh commonwealth and development office several un agencies the bill
00:41:16.840
and melinda gates foundation swedish international development cooperation agency and so on and so
00:41:22.980
forth yeah this is for bbc media action and bbc world services which seems to be a funnel for money to
00:41:29.800
be sent to independent journalists across across the world but the fact of the matter is as with
00:41:36.480
everything else being funded by us aid in the journalistic sphere if you are being funded by
00:41:42.260
a foreign government and the bbc is a government government organ um then you're not independent
00:41:49.420
anymore you agree you are funded by foreign interests yeah indeed um same with the guardian uh this is on
00:41:55.380
his website gates foundation uh dot org to support the guardian and produce regular reporting on global
00:42:01.340
health and development topics in its global development section and i believe the amount there is nearly
00:42:07.360
three and a half million yep it's quite substantial and that was for 36 months in september 2020
00:42:15.380
very interesting very very interesting um he has done some very strange things however um i think do you
00:42:26.080
remember the time i don't i don't think i've heard of this no you drank shit water yes uh this was 10 years
00:42:34.160
ago might i add or well it says 20 yes 10 years ago is 2015 of course it is 10 years that's very weird i know
00:42:42.640
i don't want to think that it was yeah it's very strange five years ago almost yeah it's disturbing
00:42:48.400
so um if we could um if we could play the clip um it's towards sort of halfway i mean it's only a
00:42:55.600
30 seconds so we can watch that spill gates showing the highest level of confidence in a new technology
00:43:01.580
that turns waste human waste into drinking water i am not kidding about this he tweeted
00:43:07.440
from your toilet to my glass i got to taste water made from human waste yeah it's worse than you
00:43:13.780
think check out the highlights from the attached video
00:43:16.240
the omni processor turns sewer sludge which is kind of nasty into clean drinking water electricity
00:43:26.680
yeah i think that was about 10 feet away from the human waste and sludge
00:43:33.720
right into the glass i want to would you drink it would you drink no sludge no no no i i don't like
00:43:41.380
this constant um humiliation that we're supposed to go through to turn into bug men uh i don't want
00:43:47.580
to i will not drink the shit water i will not eat the bugs uh i will not live in the pod
00:43:52.680
you can't make me um obviously it's it's important to add there is a lot that the bill and melinda
00:44:01.220
gates foundation has funded in very wacky project so i'm only condensing it so you know we because
00:44:07.660
we'd be here for several hours to go through everything that bill gates done it's only good
00:44:12.840
to to go through the highlights but this one um is a very very interesting one and it's caused a lot
00:44:19.780
of controversy and it's another subject that i am fascinated by and enjoy i say enjoy i don't enjoy
00:44:27.220
it shouldn't be a thing funding solar geoengineering research is he going to do the mr burns is he
00:44:32.200
going to put up a big sun sun visor to block the sun out shall we roll the clip
00:44:37.040
basically affects the whole planet with one project so that is not necessarily a situation
00:44:47.700
that has a lot of profit opportunity right because there's not going to be a lot of
00:44:53.040
different people that can do it and compete in a marketplace bill gates is among a dozen
00:44:59.040
individual donors and 14 foundations backing the first stratospheric solar geoengineering
00:45:03.720
experiment out of harvard it's called stratospheric controlled perturbation experiment or scopex a high
00:45:10.020
altitude balloon will lift instruments about 20 kilometers into the stratosphere where it will
00:45:14.700
release less than two kilograms of different naturally occurring chemicals like calcium carbonate and sulfates and
00:45:20.900
then measure the change in atmospheric chemistry and light scattering the harvard group that runs scopex and
00:45:26.660
other experiments has raised more than 16 million dollars more than double any other solar geoengineering
00:45:31.780
effort an annual global funding has gone up from 1 million in 2008 to 8 million in 2018 with the
00:45:37.620
majority of that funding coming from the u.s the first phase of scopex will cost around 3 million with much
00:45:43.300
more needed for wider research on solar geoengineering to this point stratosphere injections have only been tested with
00:45:49.300
climate modeling in the uk a government funded solar radiation management test called spice was cancelled in
00:45:55.300
2012 because of issues with um so yes funding solo solar geoengineering projects as well uh there is another
00:46:04.020
part in that um video uh to which i didn't get the time stamp for so i do apologize but it's a it's a very
00:46:11.700
famous clip that a lot of people have posted as well where he talks about sun dimming uh and it's the
00:46:18.180
idea of um is is flying aircraft up into the air and dropping particular chemicals to block out the sun
00:46:27.860
well that's just interesting isn't it indeed i thought i thought chemtrails and stuff like that
00:46:31.860
supposed to i thought it was a conspiracy theory yeah interesting any thoughts so far um
00:46:38.260
um my my main thought is that somebody like bill gates has never done anything to be able to earn
00:46:45.140
the kind of respect or uh power that he holds a man like bill gates has made a lot of money through
00:46:53.060
technology yes but that doesn't mean that he should have uh such control over people he has neither the
00:46:58.260
mandate of the people or the mandate of heaven and frankly he it just seems a bit evil i think one of the
00:47:06.100
the reasons that people dislike him let me just go back to uh not this one this one one of the people
00:47:11.780
the reasons that people don't trust him very much is he just looks weird and look look at that he looks
00:47:17.300
creepy he he looks like what you would expect a lizard person to look like right and so when you
00:47:23.380
hear that this guy is oh this guy what's what's this guy do does he like i don't know um follow people
00:47:28.420
in parks at night or something no he's he's planning to block out the sun oh okay so he can spend more
00:47:34.260
time in the dark following people in parks okay all right now not that i think that he does that
00:47:38.020
just he looks like somebody who would do that right indeed um there's a lot of controversy indeed in
00:47:45.220
terms of projects um it's very interesting as well you mentioned about all things bugs or bug related
00:47:53.300
well he is of course contributed to that too uh despite it being told that it was a kind of
00:47:59.780
conspiracy theory here uh i don't know who these guys are i was reading this article this morning
00:48:05.060
i thought it was very funnily worded calling the bill gates bug eating conspiracy uh and tried to
00:48:12.020
explain it that's obviously vile um i mean if if it is a concentrated effort by people with a lot of
00:48:20.180
money to make sure that we can engineer food that is made out of bugs that people will be basically
00:48:25.060
forced to eat that is a conspiracy that is a conspiracy it's just one that's true yeah well
00:48:30.020
you should listen to how this is worded uh the history of bug eating uh the culinary tradition of
00:48:35.540
eating insects is not new oh okay humans have eaten bugs for millennia tracing back to prehistoric times
00:48:43.220
when insects were a common part of diets worldwide so we should just return to that return to return to
00:48:49.140
prehistoric foods return to monkey okay you're starting to get me on board now early humans
00:48:55.220
foraged for bugs and some indigenous cultures consumed them as a protein source ancient greeks
00:49:00.660
and romans savored locusts whilst asia edible insects became delicacies where they remain so today
00:49:08.020
colonization indeed and industrialization led to a decline in bug consumption in some societies
00:49:16.100
branding it taboo and culturally gross because it is because it is gross it's disgusting just splice in
00:49:21.620
the footage of carl pilkington at the china market watching people eat bugs while he's chowing down
00:49:27.700
on his monster munch that's me i've got my pack of monster munch monster munch i don't want any of
00:49:33.060
the bugs keep that to yourself buddy but uh despite it being a conspiracy theory yes he has done it as
00:49:39.780
far back as may 2012 uh and so on so forth all things bugs llc including you you're the bug
00:49:48.900
bill gates at least indeed and that's on the gates foundation.org uh the other one as well and this
00:49:55.380
is the spicy one so i don't want to get in trouble for talking about this one but his uh well association
00:50:01.860
association with none other than jeffrey epstein and was asked about this as well um there was a video of
00:50:09.220
him being questioned on this by a mainstream reporter um so of course we could uh you know
00:50:16.100
look at that as well uh which is here and see what he has to say about that i'm gonna play this samson
00:50:22.100
thank you was reported at that time uh that you had a number of meetings with jeffrey epstein
00:50:29.540
who when you met him 10 years ago he was convicted of soliciting prostitution from minors
00:50:36.180
what did you know about him when you were meeting with him as you've said yourself in the hopes of
00:50:41.540
raising money uh you know i had dinners with him uh i regret doing that he had relationships with uh
00:50:52.180
people he said you know would give to global health which is a uh interest i have you know not nearly
00:50:58.500
enough philanthropy goes in that direction uh you know those meetings were were a mistake they didn't
00:51:05.140
result in uh what he purported and i cut them off you know that goes back a long time ago now uh there's
00:51:13.700
you know so there's nothing new on that it was reported that you continue to meet with him over
00:51:18.020
several years um and that in other words a number of meetings um what did you do when you found out
00:51:26.660
about his background well you know i've said i regretted having those dinners uh and there's nothing
00:51:36.340
absolutely nothing new on that is there a lesson for you for anyone else looking looking at this
00:51:43.780
well he's dead so uh you know in general you always have to be careful uh
00:51:51.860
and you know the you know i'm i'm very proud of what we've done in philanthropy very proud of the
00:51:58.180
work of the foundation uh you know that's that's what i get up every day and focus on
00:52:05.140
um nice and invasive body language very great wasn't great um but there are a list of reasons to
00:52:14.260
why people are very much skeptical of uh bill gates and criticize him a lot online and this freedom of
00:52:21.940
information request being delayed so far down the line and we will find out tomorrow the 20 the 20th of
00:52:29.300
february whether or not it's delayed again whether i actually will find or how well we can find some
00:52:37.940
information that we can talk about on what they discussed during their meeting and or are they going
00:52:45.700
to kick it down the kick the can down the road again and delay it again and again and again until i'm
00:52:53.140
there pulling my hair out trying to figure out a way to get around it
00:52:56.900
my predictions are not are not sunny they're not no neither all right then shall we move on to the
00:53:05.940
last segment fellows so uh let's ask a question can anybody anybody in the world under any circumstance
00:53:15.700
you think of be english no correct that's where i would like to stop this segment but sadly
00:53:26.260
discourse being what it is people are very very stupid and people are very very dishonest
00:53:31.620
and so we have to talk about this because it is a little bit of discourse that's been going on
00:53:35.540
i did talk about this in a daily video that i put that we put up on the daily channel yesterday that
00:53:41.300
you should watch i thought that was a good little video but i thought i'd talk about it a little bit
00:53:44.980
more today uh with lewis i thought it'd be very interesting uh but first we've got the merch store
00:53:51.620
buy the things on the merch store buy the shirts buy the posters buy the mugs and they will make
00:53:56.980
you a very cool person women will look at you differently men will respect you more these are not
00:54:02.980
guarantees this is not a sales guarantee print but but my opinion i think you'd look cool in it
00:54:11.220
so there you go buy the stuff so this has all been started by these kinds of accounts from people who
00:54:16.740
are i mean foreign i mean this is bush rashaik i think that's her name i don't know if that's
00:54:22.980
pronounced it right uh she's obviously of foreign background and she has decided to poke the bear's
00:54:28.660
nest uh sorry uh poke the bees um nest uh put the bear by saying that today i've decided to return to
00:54:35.620
calling myself english because i am born in england makes me english what made us stop
00:54:40.660
possibly because she's not english if you have some kind of different ethnic identity that you
00:54:47.540
can identify with because of the fact that you're not ethnically english that probably means that
00:54:53.540
yeah i mean you're not english okay because to me english is um is it's it's much more narrow and
00:54:59.460
defined than something like british which is a civic nationality for the peoples of england wales and
00:55:04.980
scotland the union yes it's the union right and as part of the british empire yeah we did
00:55:10.340
welcome a lot of people who were in the colonies into that kind of civic identity yeah the commonwealth
00:55:15.700
etc but english as an identity is tied directly to your ancestry and it's defined by being descended
00:55:22.900
from the anglo-saxons and the celts because there was a lot of admixture there because the
00:55:27.780
celts the britons who were originally here in the first place if you have no anglo-saxon ancestry if you
00:55:35.140
are not celtic if you are not anglo-saxon if you are not germanic then you're not english it's a very
00:55:42.660
specific and defined thing and it should just stop there but these people like to do this one as an
00:55:49.540
act of cultural and ethnic erasure as far as i'm concerned and also because of the fact that it is
00:55:54.100
encouraged by the power structures that we live under because they want multicultural multi-ethnic england
00:56:00.660
to be something that everybody can buy into and so they're encouraged to renounce our history
00:56:08.020
ignore our history downplay our history hand it over to foreign peoples and say you did this
00:56:13.700
and not these people who've been here for over a thousand years
00:56:17.140
and again when it comes to the english ethnicity we've been calling ourselves english for over a
00:56:20.980
thousand years we're one of the oldest recognized ethnicities in the entire world it's quite
00:56:27.220
interesting it's interesting to uh read the history but it's an act of demoralization so these
00:56:31.860
people know that they can take advantage of it to piss people off and to tactically adopt this kind
00:56:38.020
of civic nationalism and it goes around quite a lot like this person sangeeta miska you you may
00:56:45.060
recognize sadly from lbc she's one of those race grifters on lbc well i'm jealous i'm very very
00:56:54.180
jealous where she said this brown hindu east african indian british londoner is also english get over it
00:57:02.660
so if you can say that you are all of these things all of these very very different and disparate
00:57:08.500
things all at the same time you're nothing at all you're nothing at all something eventually becomes
00:57:14.820
so inclusive that it goes back around to being completely meaningless if everybody can be something
00:57:21.620
then it doesn't exist because nobody is that thing if it's not specifically defined and again
00:57:27.540
this is just one of those rage bait engagement sort of tactics because they know they can get away with
00:57:33.380
it i don't i don't pay attention to the slop while i try and the slop from yeah you know a lot of accounts
00:57:41.220
that i've watched this debate just emerge i think it's i think we'll be getting onto it of course but it
00:57:48.020
was uh fraser nelson fraser nelson and constantine kissin uh having getting into a bit of an argument
00:57:54.340
about a bit of a tiff about uh about it and i've had my differences with constantine in the past but
00:58:01.460
i will say he was on the right side of this argument no i agree uh clearly and uh you know fair play to
00:58:06.740
him for that i'd also put a qualifier here of uh if you have to demand that people recognize that you're
00:58:12.820
english because they don't recognize you as english immediately probably not english right i mean
00:58:19.940
that's that i mean that's just a telltale sign it's interesting because um my so my my mother's
00:58:28.100
ancestry oh yes stems all the way back at the the surname on her side stems all the way back to the
00:58:35.140
domes day book that's in the british museum yes the normans and you know i think everyone had to
00:58:40.900
there was the enormous census that will william the conqueror conducted which took in uh basically
00:58:46.340
all of the land that he had conquered yes and everyone had to sign a a declaration saying that
00:58:52.100
we own we own this this sort of land and finding out that your ancestry stems all the way back to there
00:59:00.740
uh is quite compelling it makes you feel very it helps you to recognize the history that you have
00:59:07.540
in your bones because you stem back you're rooted all the way back to then you have ancestry going
00:59:13.940
all the way back to then these people i mean a lot of them have just like they're very very recent
00:59:20.340
ancestors one or two generations ago have just got off the boat now they're saying that they've been
00:59:25.700
here as long as us they built this place it's very insulting and it's purposefully demoralizing
00:59:31.860
for a lot of people and also again just maybe this is just me but i'm a stickler for these kinds of
00:59:37.220
definitional arguments and so it really annoys me that when people try and turn english into a civic
00:59:43.940
identity but again if you want to make the argument british because it's very different that's a
00:59:48.820
different that's a different one english is very very specific simply because you were born in england
00:59:53.540
doesn't make you english it can make you a british citizen doesn't make you english same as me being
00:59:58.500
born in india i could maybe get indian citizenship i don't know what their citizenship laws are like
01:00:02.660
over there or japanese or japanese it doesn't make me indian doesn't make jared taylor japanese doesn't
01:00:09.460
make rudyard kipling indian just because that they were born there and this goes hand in hand with the
01:00:15.540
other kind of culture that we're fed these days as been as has been found on the uk aesthetics which is um
01:00:22.180
the new british uk citizen that they hope that we will all become if we all dispense with our
01:00:30.180
identities dispense with our rooted histories dispense with our culture that has developed over a thousand
01:00:36.180
years we can all become this listen this all right so at nando's last night yeah straight in like man
01:00:43.700
needs no menu just about to order when jonesy says doo doo nuggets literally the whole restaurant starts
01:00:50.260
creasing and layla says are you not embarrassed then this guy bolts through screaming man needs water
01:00:56.980
gave us go the serious ick big dance like red flag right there she's like orange flag more like brother
01:01:02.420
only ordered a medium i think that's i think that's enough of that yeah it's um nothing really
01:01:11.860
to say about any of that it's a good feeling when you watch something like this isn't i just i don't
01:01:18.580
i don't really understand uh again you're not supposed to understand you're supposed to watch it
01:01:26.180
and recognize that the country around you this is not england that we're being presented here this is
01:01:32.100
london culture right here right yeah this is uh speaking in the what is it they call it modern
01:01:38.260
london english uh which is kind of a bastardization of the english it's not even mockney because it's also
01:01:46.980
mixed with uh jamaican slang and creole and all of these different things and you're supposed to look
01:01:52.820
at it and recognize that okay this this is what they want us to be and i i do not submit to uh to
01:02:01.860
integrating into british uk culture have you have you been following this uh account at all i do
01:02:09.140
know i do it's um only drug but yes yes i i've seen it i have followed it recently um it is rather
01:02:16.580
amusing it yeah some of the imagery that you can find on there but again this is a nando's advert
01:02:21.540
why why is i mean nando's everything else has to be folded into the cultural it's portuguese isn't it
01:02:28.820
nando's i don't even know okay i don't go there fair enough i don't eat nando's goodness gracious me
01:02:35.060
you're not eating nando's i've eaten at a nando's but i don't all right i don't typically go there
01:02:44.180
it's okay it's okay and it's chicken with spice on it right yeah it's nice and the the funny thing is
01:02:49.620
if they're gonna do in this they're doing that thing where it's like oh white man can't handle his
01:02:54.260
spices all right the thing is i've been to nando's i've had the spice as hot as hot as it goes it's
01:02:59.380
not even that spicy it's not very spicy there's i'm so tempted to go there oh you're hard no there's
01:03:06.500
way no i'm sorry there's way spicier food out there david brent like i'm not i'm not trying to flex
01:03:12.740
because i don't think tolerance to spice is is a great indicator of your value personally but then
01:03:19.540
again i'm not from the uk i'm from england uh two very different places anyway so obviously this was
01:03:26.420
all started by uh the rishi sunak debate where fraser nelson said that rishi sunak is england
01:03:32.500
because he was born here uh yeah sorry yeah english because he was born here i think he was born in
01:03:38.420
what southampton uh constantin kissing disagrees with him francis foster looks on uh as he always does
01:03:45.380
he's always adding a good addition i like i like to think that francis has uh a lot of things going
01:03:52.900
on in his mind he's debating them both in his mind all the time kicking their ass yeah he's like oh i'm
01:03:59.380
doing so well he's having a great time and for some reason again i would have thought this would be
01:04:03.940
obvious because it's not even like rishi sunak has claimed to be english in the past no he's very tied to
01:04:10.740
his indian heritage and he celebrates it he celebrated diwali when he was in yes in uh prime
01:04:16.980
minister yeah and i don't think there's anything wrong with him accepting and celebrating his own
01:04:22.340
heritage i think people should always be able to do that and he's not claiming to be english so why are
01:04:28.340
you saying that he's because fraser nelson is very very uh strange on yeah very very liberal on these
01:04:36.500
kinds of questions then you got this very very as far as i'm concerned very astroturfed reaction
01:04:42.260
coming from a lot of the liberal part of uh twitter uh people just saying oh it's a fact why is it deep
01:04:47.940
i don't understand what's what's worrying about having a i don't understand what's what's worrying
01:04:53.460
about just recognizing that he's not english well it's because of the fact that if people recognize
01:04:57.780
that english is a tied and rooted identity then you will not necessarily be as eager to accept the
01:05:07.300
massive demographic change that's been foisted upon you by your government without your consent
01:05:11.460
and without the any sort of democratic vote on the matter i think that's the worry is is an act of
01:05:17.780
erasure to make sure that people um people accept what's changing quietly and he says that the idea
01:05:25.060
that rishi sunak is english is so widely accepted in english society is not even a discussion point
01:05:31.300
for anyone remotely ordinary the overton window hasn't shifted but some online voices on the
01:05:36.740
right have gone so far off the other end they're now being openly racist how is it how is it racist
01:05:41.700
to just say well he's indian it's not an insult is it well he practices hinduism doesn't he as well
01:05:48.100
yeah so it's very very strange and to say that it's not like i mean i can make stuff up as well
01:05:54.500
if i just say everybody in england knows that unicorns exist it's not even a point that anybody
01:05:59.300
talks about i can make stuff up too but it's it's not like it's not like the argument is whether it's
01:06:06.740
not saying it's not disparaging it's not saying um you know x y and z bad it's saying this is the fact
01:06:16.660
um and that's what the video was about it was them to it was fraser nelson disagreeing with a fact
01:06:24.500
well yeah it's it's and it's kind of like but you're not being in you're not being insulting by
01:06:30.180
saying that you're just you're you're talking about it's it's his attempt to shift the definition of
01:06:36.420
something so that it can be more inclusive this is liberalism though and that and therefore completely
01:06:42.420
meaningless yeah yeah that's why i don't i did see the the video i did i did see the the clip
01:06:49.780
of them and i watched it once and i went well that's a waste of time well there's fraser yeah yeah
01:06:56.580
yeah there he is again and i just i see i see some of this discourse and i just i i'm just sitting there
01:07:03.300
going and that's all i do and then carry on that's fair again i'm a spurg so i have to address these
01:07:13.860
things you've got lots of people just saying oh this is you're being racist for pointing out that
01:07:18.980
he's not english again aaron bastani saying well i had friends who were iranian iraqi jamaican russian
01:07:26.420
yada yada yada but if you had an english accent and were born here you were english i mean that's just
01:07:31.940
wrong again if people weren't paying attention to it in your school then that's just what your school
01:07:36.900
was it doesn't change the facts if everybody at your school decided that hydrogen wasn't made of h2o
01:07:43.140
then that doesn't mean that it's true that just means that you were all wrong and uh somebody posted
01:07:49.300
this i don't think i've ever seen a politician looking more english than this to be quite honest
01:07:54.020
i don't i don't understand what's i think in the rain i i think the point is and i pointed this out
01:07:59.940
yesterday he is wet soggy and sad looking so if anything it's a that's that's pretty that's
01:08:06.900
british no it's a bit of an insult if you ask me because uh the english in particular have been and
01:08:13.060
are a very very proud people now if he was in a football shirt with a gut bursting out a footy game
01:08:21.300
hoisting a pint possibly i might agree with him saying that rishi suna looks very english here but just
01:08:28.260
because he's in the rain and looks sad doesn't mean he looks i don't understand he just looks like a
01:08:33.380
sad politician to me i'm very in here going what are you talking about like 2 000 likes and again
01:08:41.540
it's very important to non-english people that he was the first prime minister of indian descent he
01:08:49.220
said by parveen is that was that parveen yeah this was uh parveen actor okay again and if they
01:08:55.860
want to be celebrating that an indian man became prime minister of of uh great britain uh they can
01:09:01.780
celebrate that but it doesn't again it's a counterpoint to the idea that he is english he says uh in self
01:09:08.420
in a 2015 interview british indian is what i tick on the census we have a category for it i'm thoroughly
01:09:13.620
british this is my home in my country but my religious and cultural heritage is indian and my
01:09:18.660
wife is indian and that should surely settle the debate yeah by him yeah he was celebrating diwali
01:09:25.380
a few years ago uh he immediately made a visa deal with india to make sure that lots of indians could
01:09:31.380
get into the country that's very very interesting he's repeatedly said how proud he is of his indian
01:09:36.660
roots right before he went to visit india to make sure that lots of indian visas could be agreed to
01:09:41.620
and uh he also says here for the record let me declare as as a matter of public record i and my
01:09:49.220
family are of indian origin my wife and her family are indian citizens with financial interests in india
01:09:57.380
so he doesn't even agree yeah yeah yeah i don't understand what this it's all been so pointless
01:10:05.540
well again i think it's in in terms of all of their rhetoric it's important to push back on these
01:10:12.020
yes i refuse to admit the erasure of my own identity yes because whether or not you want to uh this is
01:10:19.460
how i used to think which was well it doesn't really matter no but the fact of the matter is it does matter
01:10:24.260
because even if you individually do not put in put uh import on it other people do and will treat you
01:10:30.100
accordingly so you do have to acknowledge your own heritage and your own identity if only because
01:10:35.780
the way that other people will relate it to you uh does affect how you interact with the rest of
01:10:40.660
the world especially when all of a sudden it comes to the question of reparations like we've been seeing
01:10:45.060
recently because surely reparations being that they're making the argument the british empire did
01:10:50.420
terrible things therefore the people behind the british empire have to pay reparations to the
01:10:56.340
people they victimized well if anybody can be english then well i'm sorry to say bushra i'm
01:11:03.140
sorry to say sangeeta i'm sorry to say stella santa kidow uh you all owe reparations as well right
01:11:11.700
because if it's got nothing to do with ancestry if it's got nothing to do with the actions of your
01:11:16.980
own forefathers if anybody can be english if anybody can be british as soon as they get here if they're
01:11:23.060
born here well then you're all guilty too because all of a sudden the identity vanishes when they
01:11:31.300
want to use it for their own advantage that's the tactical part of it but as soon as it comes to
01:11:36.660
demanding my money all of a sudden it's the only thing that matters so i just find that very
01:11:43.060
interesting and just to go back to rishi sunak as well he is i would i would also describe him as a
01:11:47.860
global citizen because he has held a u.s green card before and there is still the worry uh in the
01:11:54.740
tories that he might just move to california at some point which yes i heard about that doing and
01:11:59.780
he's uh him and i believe his wife uh have i think are they part of a company called infosis
01:12:07.860
which i believe is is uh an indian company as well and it's to do with surveillance i think that's what
01:12:13.780
he was addressing one of the discussions where he's talking about why he owned property and
01:12:18.020
investment money in india right as well it was a trying to explain away some of the questions that
01:12:23.620
people had around those kinds of investments and the other thing as well is of course if english means
01:12:28.740
nothing then the english uh as the country becomes more and more diverse cannot organize on the identity
01:12:35.300
because it doesn't mean anything whereas keir starmer is uh just just yesterday meeting uh british
01:12:42.900
muslim leaders from across business and civil society today to discuss his plan for change which
01:12:48.260
will improve the lives of working people across the country so everybody else can organize to
01:12:52.420
petition the government to get benefits from them to get privileges from them we don't exist so
01:12:58.100
therefore you can't unless it's time to get the old wallet book out so we can pay for the evil things
01:13:02.980
our ancestors did the only person i saw responding to this yes rupert lowe was saying uh why not just meet
01:13:09.220
british leaders from across business and civil society maybe the farmers yeah for instance point
01:13:15.380
very very maybe the farmers but oh wait actually it turns out the farmers most of them are english
01:13:20.420
and because we want to punish them we don't want to meet with them on that basis so we'll see what
01:13:26.660
happens but yeah there's my take on the discourse going around here i agree with you that it is stupid
01:13:32.580
yes but the means and the goals that they are aiming for by engaging this kind of discourse
01:13:38.180
are nefarious are very bad anyway so we've got the rumble rants here uh one from glee7775
01:13:45.140
dollars thank you very much saying i have an alarmingly high tolerance to spicy chicken
01:13:49.540
am i cooked bros i i'm afraid that means that you're officially diverse do we have any video comments
01:13:57.860
samson oh we've got no video comments all right then so we'll just go through the written comments
01:14:03.380
on the website someone online says i think the king should enlist the help of a witch doctor
01:14:08.820
to start pulling the gin out of the knives and putting them in chickens
01:14:13.060
why would you want to eat the gin in the chickens though i don't know that would be very very strange
01:14:18.500
would it mean that they killed themselves oh well uh baron von warhawk it doesn't matter what new
01:14:23.700
laws are created or how much funding the police get the axel ruder cabana proves that if the police
01:14:28.420
and intelligence services don't do the bare minimum part of their jobs and investigate the suspect
01:14:33.540
then this will happen again because of course he'd been referred to prevent a number three times yeah
01:14:38.500
a number of times before and then you get people like the man who killed david amos who had also
01:14:43.540
been referred to prevent a number of times before he went out and committed that murder so yeah there is
01:14:49.540
just a case of political and legal will will the police and the institutions do what they're
01:14:54.660
supposed to if they're not going to then you won't get any positive results ever crime will just keep
01:15:01.220
going on but of course you'll still get a knock on the door if you post a spicy tweet so if you live
01:15:05.940
just a reminder there was a time when it was the norm in england for gentlemen to walk around with
01:15:10.180
actual swords on their belts yes that's what i was referring to i think we need to bring that back
01:15:14.580
all the english have some rapiers in those belts again make honor jewels the thing somebody comes
01:15:19.780
on a jewels gosh somebody comes at you with a machete just he just agreed to a jewel so you're
01:15:25.460
allowed to take out your sword and accept it would solve a lot of problems i'm just saying
01:15:29.300
i don't think that we can uh legally advocate specifically for that but i don't necessarily
01:15:34.500
disagree um and i do wish that we could return to the kind of high trust society when yeah you could
01:15:39.540
just have a sword at your hilt because that would be awesome frankly i i didn't know about this all
01:15:46.180
new to me that i didn't realize you could walk around with a it was only a rapier it was only
01:15:50.900
really around the time of the glorious revolution in the late 17th century when we started to
01:15:56.900
introduce laws to restrict the carrying of weapons and even then as you can imagine with the glorious
01:16:02.660
revolution it was just against catholics we just didn't write catholics carrying guns about the place
01:16:06.980
right right um whereas in that period from the mid-12th to the late 17th century we basically
01:16:12.580
had no legal restrictions on weapons at all so for a period of what like 500 years
01:16:20.260
500 years no restrictions and even then after the very minor restrictions for catholics that were put in
01:16:27.460
at the end of the 17th century it took till the late 19th century and then the early 20th century
01:16:33.540
for more and more restrictions to come in and even at the beginning of the 19th century sorry 20th
01:16:37.940
century it was only restrict sales of pistols to people who are alcoholic or mentally insane right
01:16:46.020
it was it was really it was very lax for a long time it's really only in the post-war period that we
01:16:52.660
had anything near the kind of restriction on weapons that we've had um in the country since i've been born
01:16:57.700
and um because i know that um if you if a female or anyone uh uses a uh pepper spray it's i think you
01:17:07.140
carry the same sentence as you would do if you fired a pistol oh that's fantastic pepper spray yeah
01:17:13.700
pepper spray it's yeah it's it's very silly i know a lot of women who um because they do worry when they
01:17:21.540
go out especially if they're going out in cities who are absolutely disgusted by knowing that that law is
01:17:26.340
on the book because you know that i know that basically all of them have looked into how they
01:17:30.740
could get pepper spray they're just you know i'll google uh excuse me buy pepper spray uk and it
01:17:35.460
immediately just comes up we can't that's that's illegal and they're like yes i guess i just won't
01:17:41.380
have any way to defend myself then fantastic thank you government then scotty of swindon the romans tried
01:17:48.020
to ban price gouging by mandating prices for bread bakers went out of business and people couldn't
01:17:52.820
afford to eat the us tried to ban alcohol gang violence and organized crimes skyrocketed and
01:17:58.100
people were still getting drunk the us tried to ban guns gun violence in blue states and cities
01:18:02.820
skyrocketed the uk tried to ban guns knife violence skyrocketed and rivaled the murder rate of new york
01:18:08.420
city the uk tries to ban knives this will definitely work this time guys it's common sense well it's as i
01:18:15.540
said the reason i said it's basically gin brained is that it's the same logic as the banning guns
01:18:19.780
argument well obviously it's the gun that causes the crime and the violence right
01:18:25.380
not the person using it okay nicholas palia baggis says there's no better example of a government's
01:18:32.820
disregard for their own citizens uh do not have the right uh to defend themselves i agree with you
01:18:40.100
uh furious dan england appears to have a plague of cursed swords that spring to life and attack people
01:18:45.220
it needs some paladins clearly michael trey belbis says sounds like the british police are a bunch of
01:18:51.460
pansies they won't go after certain factions when they carry weapons but they will go after your gran
01:18:56.740
for posting memes sounds legit yeah that's just that's just britain now uh lars peter simonson just
01:19:03.700
restrict the non-english from owning weapons and reintroduce the death penalty to include non-english
01:19:08.580
who carry any sort of weapon i think i think that wouldn't really be able to be possible in the
01:19:13.300
political climate climate the english should have all their rights to keep and bear arms restored
01:19:18.740
i do agree that yeah uh law-abiding citizens should have access to weapons to defend themselves with
01:19:24.820
because just at the moment we don't have like a 2a yeah yeah we don't we just do not have any means
01:19:29.860
to defend ourselves legitimately and there have been cases in the past where people have tried to defend
01:19:34.100
themselves as their own homes have been broken into yes the famous case of farmers being burgled and i
01:19:40.180
i think there was a massive case where someone used a shotgun to defend himself and his wife and
01:19:45.460
kids and he was put in prison um for a long long time yeah for simply defending himself speaking of
01:19:53.140
knives as well i think there was a case of an older man having his flat broken into i think it was
01:19:58.100
probably in london and he managed to get his kitchen knife and and stab the person who was robbing
01:20:03.460
him as he was being attacked and he got arrested for it fantastic would you like to read through your
01:20:10.660
comments yes um michael uh dribelbus i'm sorry if i uh i think that's right i think that's right uh
01:20:19.460
hate to sound like an effing communist uh but some billionaires really uh can i say that i mean can i say
01:20:29.780
that was that yeah it's a bit yes yeah let's move on um uh lewis brackpool going to blackpool
01:20:41.700
very creative i've heard that one before uh the left doesn't care about what i know does such a dunk
01:20:48.420
um the left doesn't care about billionaires interfering in politics so long as the um as they're the right
01:20:54.340
billionaires uh people like george sorrows bill gates and organizations like uh black rock can
01:21:00.980
influence politics as much as they like without criticism uh but as soon as uh as soon as one of
01:21:07.300
them mentions the mass rape of english girls all of a sudden their outsized influence becomes a problem
01:21:14.020
uh matthew hammond why does bill gates get to make policy in the uk when elon musk makes a
01:21:19.620
statement about the uk it is the end of democracy it's the question that a lot of us are trying to
01:21:26.020
figure out what where is the consistency i think a lot of people just want to know where and the
01:21:30.420
consistency is are they on my side or not that's that's the it's the act like i believe in this
01:21:37.780
certain faction of acts activism if you fund me then you're off the hook i won't i won't browbeat you
01:21:45.380
i won't do whatever um yeah yeah you're completely right um matthew hammond why does bill gate oh no
01:21:52.420
i've already read that out uh liver puddling queer um thank you for your support thank you um so it
01:21:58.740
might not just be blackrock behind starmer's push to uh ethnically cleanse the countryside it sounds
01:22:05.380
like gates has a strong motive to push for the new inheritance tax policy as well um that certainly
01:22:11.860
does sound like it to me i i don't know if i'd actually heard about him having met up with the
01:22:17.780
uh cabinet before they announced the uh the budget that included the inheritance tax who's this what
01:22:24.180
black bill gates oh bill you didn't know that they were met before i i don't think i remember i don't
01:22:28.500
remember knowing that oh wow yeah it's insane i i know that uh starmer like last month or the month
01:22:35.380
before explicitly just met up with black rock and larry yeah and then posted it online and everyone was like
01:22:41.860
um you can make it a bit less obvious i have put a request in for that meeting that particular
01:22:49.220
meeting with black rock and they've also pushed it back what a surprise so i'm still waiting for
01:22:54.180
that response which should be i want to say end of the month but it could be next month who knows
01:23:00.260
uh furious dan what a sell um from the toilet to the glass enjoy tonight the taste of arse
01:23:07.540
it's a catchy slogan i don't know if you can sell much of it though um az desert rat uh massive eye
01:23:17.300
roll uh the process of purifying water for drinking already exists uh it's called the water cycle uh
01:23:24.500
omar awad or awad um i miss the days when blocking out the sun used to be a comic book supervillain
01:23:30.900
villain storyline absolutely um uh az desert rat uh uh did these idiots learn nothing from dubai's
01:23:40.660
cloud seeding experiment quit messing with the weather i don't actually know about that i think
01:23:45.540
i've heard of it but i don't know what happened do you yes so dubai have their own cloud seeding
01:23:49.940
program that they've pumped billions and billions of uh i assume it never rains there because it never
01:23:55.780
rains so they artificially uh put i believe it's silver iodide it's it's almost like the science
01:24:03.540
behind it quote unquote is to is is to recreate a volcanic eruption so the after effects of that
01:24:12.180
because when a volcanic eruption happens it it glistens with sulfate or sulfur and creates this kind
01:24:19.060
of mist over the atmosphere um incredibly bad for you incredibly bad for your health never stand
01:24:25.540
near a volcano after it's erupted or i just don't go near volcanoes for full stop anywhere probably
01:24:31.620
fair probably um but it's but when that happens um it creates a coat that uh not only um can dim out
01:24:42.580
the sun in that respect but with regards to cloud seeding and solo geoengineering you can create
01:24:48.340
artificial rain the raf conducted in 1952 uh various tests over lynmouth uh which the bbc and lots of
01:24:58.660
others when they used to actually be okay at their journalism um found out that the art there was links
01:25:04.180
between the raf conducting these rain modification experiments and the flash flood in lynmouth which
01:25:10.500
killed 50 35 people in 1952 um and in dubai there was i believe it was last year there were huge floods
01:25:21.540
that were happening in dubai and it was very very very unheard of but it they found out that this cloud
01:25:27.460
seeding program that the the country had invested or put a lot of investment in had had been conducting
01:25:36.420
these experiments not too long before uh and were warned by other countries it even happened in
01:25:42.420
spain very recently uh just before the election of trump i'm going to assume that a city like dubai
01:25:49.380
doesn't have the best infrastructure for dealing with lots of rain lots of rain yeah so a lot of people
01:25:54.980
were stuck i think i i don't quote me on this but i believe people lost their lives because of it
01:26:01.060
even saudi arabia um was i believe conducting similar experiments and they had massive floodings as well
01:26:08.580
it happened in spain uh last year as well before the trump um the trump uh election and uh there was
01:26:18.260
lots of conducts with with artificial rain making just beforehand and you point that out and people go
01:26:26.020
you're a crackpot you're a conspiracy theorist it's the same thing over and over again
01:26:31.060
they actively report it here's what we're doing and if you if you if you repeat the article you're
01:26:37.220
a conspiracy theorist it's just so frustrating yeah i know i know brainwashed people have been to
01:26:42.420
take any sort of report like that if it's not coming from a trusted source and assume that you're
01:26:47.380
a crackpot conspiracy theorist indeed um justin b if i remember correctly bill gates believes in the
01:26:54.420
500 000 person limit on the planet and he fully and well uh i 500 i don't i don't i'm not sure about
01:27:03.300
that i know that he has talked there was a famous ted talk with him that's very controversial where he
01:27:09.940
spoke about uh if we do very i think his quote was and it's this is streamlined um if we do very
01:27:16.900
well on public health and vaccines specifically uh we could lower the population by x amount
01:27:24.020
and i was kind of and sort of people were like uh and then the media ran rings and said no no no he
01:27:30.100
didn't mean that he didn't mean this he meant why is he doing all of that while at the same time
01:27:34.500
basically trying to like maximize africa's population because it seems very contradictory
01:27:40.180
there because he's doing all of this stuff to make sure he can save as many lives uh in africa as
01:27:44.660
possible through all of these hiv uh malaria and malaria all of this well at the same time on the
01:27:50.340
other end he's trying to actively decrease the population of the earth that's very it's very
01:27:54.980
it's bizarre it's bizarre i and obviously alex jones and people like that talk about you know his
01:28:02.980
potential motives and you know what he's talked about and excuse me it's it's worrying and i understand
01:28:11.380
why people are like this guy needs to be scrutinized criticized um and we don't want him dictating
01:28:18.020
any policy so finding out about this foi request was a big sort of moment where it was kind of like
01:28:24.260
okay where do we go from here um because if we have um a foreigner dictating public policy making
01:28:33.540
essentially for things such as like the agricultural sector and it seems potentially and it seems purely for
01:28:38.740
for the sake of uh improving the chances that he can invest in huge amounts of our farmland and
01:28:44.100
blackrock ready to go with buying up investment and things like that and you just see it and you go
01:28:51.460
this is another one within the playbook again and again and again and if you point it out
01:28:56.580
oh you're a you're a crackpot you're this you're that and i'm just i'm it sounds like it bothers me it
01:29:02.660
it really doesn't i'm just i'm i'm we all hear it all the time now and it's so numb it's tiring it's
01:29:09.700
it's just tiring yeah it's tiring you hear that sort of thing from somebody you go okay i'm dealing
01:29:13.220
with an npc this person doesn't have an internal monologue can't rotate an apple in his mind i'm
01:29:17.780
very disappointed indeed uh and michael once again um yeah gates seems oddly nervous uh when the subject of
01:29:26.580
epstein uh comes up uh as a reminder epstein indeed uh did not did not kill himself indeed and on that
01:29:37.140
point i think that's a great point to end on thank you again for joining thank you and uh just remind
01:29:42.820
everybody where they can find you before we finish so you can find me on x uh at lewis underscore
01:29:48.500
brackpool not blackpool um you can find me on substack uh the state of it dot substack dot com
01:29:56.420
you can also find me on instagram shoot me a message and i always try and get back to people
01:30:03.620
there you go so give lewis some support and thank you again for joining us we'll be back again tomorrow
01:30:08.660
at the pod for the podcast samson did you have something to say oh i just saw you bring the
01:30:14.820
microphone down i thought you were going to remind me to say something i is tomlinson talks on after
01:30:19.140
this yes we've got a pre-recorded tomlinson talks on after this so if you're subscribed to the website
01:30:26.740
please make sure to watch that and uh with all that said thank you for watching goodbye thank you