The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1133
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 36 minutes
Words per Minute
164.18655
Summary
The Lotus Eaters are joined by Bo to talk about the state of the country and the crimes of our political class. Also, we read out a list of names of traitors to our country and discuss why Pakistan should get an international airport.
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to the podcast of the Lotus Eaters for the 1st of April 2025 and I don't
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have any April Fool's jokes for you. I did consider it saying like oh the podcast is cancelled but it
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just seemed a bit mean so I don't want to do that. Stalios is staring at me in disappointment I think
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out there. He's giving me a thumbs up actually never mind. So I'm joined by Bo and we're going
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to be talking about the awful state of Britain. There's some new stuff that's made it even worse
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if you can believe it. I know it's difficult to believe. You're going to be talking about how
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Douglas Carswell is moving the Overton window which is interesting. He was a former MP wasn't he?
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Yeah. He was in the Conservative Party and then he defected to UKIP didn't he? Yeah. If I remember
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rightly off the top of my head. Yeah. It's interesting you know he's a plugged in man and then I'm going to
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be talking about one of the greatest crimes against the understanding of human history which has gone
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on rather quietly in secret some might say in Australia and it's something that I feel very
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passionate about and I imagine by the end of it you're all going to feel very passionate about it
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as well if I've done my job correctly. I don't think we have any announcements so I may as well get on
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with it. So Britain obviously is not doing very well. I saw a poll recently that suggested that Britain
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was the second most miserable country in the world. In the whole world? Apparently so. You know you've
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got to take these things at face value but I think it's safe to say that most people in Britain know
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that we're not going in a good direction. Whether it be left or right in the centre it doesn't matter
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what your politics are. We can all see the decline. It's undeniable at this point and I wanted to go
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through some of the things that is being basically imposed upon us by our political class that isn't
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going to make it any better. It's going to make it a lot worse and the priorities of our political
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class seem to be Pakistan for whatever reason. Apparently UK taxpayers will spend 108 million on
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a climate investment fund in Pakistan. This is not where I wanted my money to go.
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I don't know what it even is or what it will do. I don't know why this is of any concern to us
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why that level of money is going away because that is a very significant sum of money.
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And this comes at the same time as this. So this is a member of parliament Tahir Ali and he said
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this week I attended a press conference ordained by Mohammed Yassin, another MP, where 20 cross-party
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British parliamentarians requested for an international airport in Mirpur which is of course is Pakistan.
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There has been a long-standing promise for an international airport in Mirpur which has yet
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to be met. This caused significant issues to a number of my constituents who are having to drive
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over three hours to get to the nearest airport in Pakistan. And this is Britain's problem how? I failed
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to see. So I'm going to read out every single person on this list because I think we should be naming
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traitors to our country. Debbie Abrams, Zubair Ahmed, Tahir Ali, Rosanna Allen Khan, you can see a bit of a theme
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here. Stella Creasy, Tan Desi, James Frith, Gil Furness, Adan Hussain, Imran Hussain, Lord
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Qorban Hussain, Afzal Khan, Abitsan Mohammed, Lord Mohammed Tinsley, Andrew Pakes, Yasmin Qureshi,
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Nas Shah, Baggy Shanker. Is that real? That's a name. Baggy Shanker, the honourable Baggy Shanker MP.
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Okay, that's the thing. That's a person. Great gang member's name there if you wear really baggy
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trousers. Zahra Sultana as well, final one. So what you're seeing there is basically a list of
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foreign people and a few leftists. You homegrown garden variety leftists. Completely just trying
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to, and it looks like successfully, stealing money. Yes. From us in order to pay for their sort of,
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well, their tribal interests, their racial, ethnic, real national and tribal interests.
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Because of course, the last thing Britain needs after suffering under the Pakistani child rape
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gangs is an airport that makes it easier for Pakistanis to come here. Heaven forbid the
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Pakistani people in Pakistan should need to drive more than three miles, three hours to
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get to an airport. What nonsense. It's not under the control of the British Raj anymore. It's not
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our responsibility. They wanted independence. It's not our responsibility that we build an
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airport. You know, if you want to come under the dominion of the empire again, maybe there's
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some discussion. Not that I want you. It's a longstanding promise. Oh, was it? Oh, okay.
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By who? Yeah. When? Someone like Brown or Blair or something promised it, just said it years
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ago. And now they're like, no, no, give us the hundred million pounds or whatever it is.
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Pakistan has a population about double that of the UK, doesn't it?
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If not more. And so why are they not able to build their own airports? You know, it's
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not like the notion of an airport is particularly difficult to grasp, but they have them already.
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Why is it our problem? I don't know. But as the spectator has pointed out here, Pakistani
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origin men are up to four times more likely to be reported to the police for child sex screaming
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offences than the general population in England and Wales. That was some new data that came
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out, which, yeah, great. Why are we doing things for these people?
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Yeah, it's awful. And this sort of thing, of course, not drawn to your attention often
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by the mainstream media. And that is why you need to be supporting Lotus Eaters. We make
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no money from YouTube. We had all of our ad revenue cancelled arbitrarily. Well, I think
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we know why they did that. But you can support us either by signing up to our website and getting
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access to all of our premium content, which is an absolute steal. We've got a lot of good
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stuff on there. But you can also, if you're not into that, you don't want to subscribe
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to our website, you can, you know, get a one-off payment, get a mug or a t-shirt. We've
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got lots of the Islander merch in at the minute. And this will only be in for a while while
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we're doing the sort of run of the current edition of the Islander. And so get them while
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you can, because these t-shirts will be gone. They'll be limited edition. There'll be people
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in 50 years' time. There'll be Lotus Eaters artifact collectors. And you'll be selling
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these for many, many thousands of pounds, I'm sure. When, you know, it's obvious that
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that's going to happen. So invest now. Although that's probably not something I should say.
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Buy a t-shirt. Don't invest in it. But anyway, back to what we're talking about. It's also
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worth mentioning that migrants overstaying visas account for over a third of the asylum
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claims. So they had a visa to come here to either work or study. And then all of a sudden
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they're claiming asylum. So they can apply for this visa. And they're like, I'm not an
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asylum seeker now. But all of a sudden I've become one. Which just is another piece of
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evidence on the mountain of evidence to suggest that it's all spurious claims. It's all people
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that are economic chances coming here because they have better financial prospects than their
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home country. And the way things are going, that's not going to last much longer. Because
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we're going on the way to becoming a form of failed state at this rate.
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I do think that this actually bleeds over into something I'm going to speak about in
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my segment. But this idea that if we just ask people to go home, go back to where they
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came from, their country of origin, that they'll do it.
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No. Even if you give them a small financial incentive, they still don't do it because it's
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been tried in Denmark and I think Sweden, a couple of places. No, because even if you promise
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them a few thousand pounds or a few thousand euros. No, it's still better to live in Copenhagen
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or Manchester or London or Birmingham or wherever than in sort of rural Pakistan where you came
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from or rural or not even rural or urban Nairobi or something. So yeah, I feel it's a bit of a
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hope to say, you know, if we just stop people, more people coming in, the general flow will mean
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I have a very controversial opinion around this sort of thing that I think that every single
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foreign national should have a figure calculated to their name as to whether they're a net contributor
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or a net drain to the economy. And if they are a net drain, they should lose their citizenship
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if they had it and be sent home regardless of if they're a passport holder or not. And
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if they are a net drain, also their assets should be taken to pay for the costs that they've
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incurred on the British people. Because if you've come here, run up a debt, either with our government
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or, you know, privately or whatever it might be, you've run up this excessive debt and then
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you're relying on the British people to pay for it, then even if you're deported, you're
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still better off having done that otherwise without that financial aspect. And I think
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that it's something that has to be done. Otherwise, it's basically just been a massive million,
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multi-million person raid on the British taxpayer. And it's brutally unfair. And I haven't really
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heard many people talking about that because obviously it sounds a bit extreme. However, if
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you're looking at it from the perspective of fairness in that it shouldn't be up to the British
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people to then to be ripped off by people and then pay to also send those people back to their
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home. And finally pay for their flight home in the... Exactly. It's a massive form of injustice,
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even if, you know, they do finally get sent home. And so I think how it is done is very important. And I
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think keeping fairness in mind is very, very important. And with that being said, fairness
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apparently doesn't exist in Britain because a doctor has not been struck off by a panel
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over a one-off rape. Apparently you've got a one-strike-in-your-out rule now for sexual assault,
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which for a doctor I don't think should happen. What is this doctor's name, you might imagine?
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So a foreign man comes to our country as a doctor, probably with lower standards than our
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doctors, because of course that's the true of many foreign doctors. But a medical tribunal
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concluded that, and this is the words of the BBC, on the balance of probabilities that he
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did do this thing, which he denied. And then they said, well, they're not going to strike
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him off anyway, because... And there's talk about victim blaming and things like this.
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Who cares? The guy should not be here in the first place, especially if he's got these sorts
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of circumstances surrounding him. I would not feel comfortable seeing a doctor like that,
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let alone if I were, say, a young woman. Why should women be forced to see this doctor? Because
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of course a lot of the time you don't choose the doctor you see, do you, on the NHS.
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And so this person I see as a danger to people, and now they're just being kept around. They're
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not really being punished, which is the complete opposite of fairness and morality. And there's
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also this. There was much discussion about the pre-sentence reports, and basically, when
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someone is convicted of a crime, the courts can use a pre-sentence report or a PSR to help
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determine a custodial sentence or a community order. Basically determines what they're sentenced
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with. And this includes things like their personal history, their age, education, family
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background, employment status, living conditions, mental health concerns, and drug and alcohol
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dependencies. So these are things that are relevant. I think many of these things are more likely
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to damn than help them. But a sentencing council is a body that's intended to be independent of
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the government, and they decided to change their guidelines to courts in England and Wales.
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And they recommended that people from these specific groups use a PSR. And they say there's a whole
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number of them. If they're a young adult, 18 to 25 years old, is female, is from an ethnic minority,
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cultural minority, and or faith minority, is pregnant, is a sole or primary carer or dependent
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relatives, has disclosed they are transgender, has addiction issues, has chronic medical
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conditions or physical disabilities. If they're a victim of domestic physical or sexual abuse,
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all sorts of different crimes, basically, which makes a bit more sense. These are sorts of things
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that you might look at and think, okay, that does make sense as to why they might be a criminal,
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because they've experienced crime themselves. Of course, people who are victims of crime are also
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more likely to be perpetrators of crime. But the things that stick out here are, is female, ethnic
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minority, or transgender? Because what you've not noticed here, there's no category for men,
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there's no category for being white. So what this effectively means is that these extra details for
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their case that have an effect of potentially softening their sentence will only be applied,
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or would have only been applied, to people who weren't white men. I imagine probably straight
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white men as well. So it's just a further entrenchment of the discrimination from our
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Hmm. Yeah, when people have said about two-tier policing, two-tier justice, well, this is it in
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Well, the funny thing is that the Justice Secretary, the Labour Justice Secretary, apparently agrees
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I know, that's what I thought. So, here is a BBC article talking about it, and it says,
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it's prompted accusations of two-tier justice, with Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood arguing
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it amounts to differential treatment because pre-sentence reports were encouraged for some
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but not others, which is true. But whether I believe you're authentic about actually believing
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that, and I've got some evidence to believe that you're not in a second. But it carries
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on to say that they were actually looking at surgically removing, these are their words,
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particular sections of the new guidelines, and they're going to be trying to remove them.
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Well, we're in that world because the Sentencing Council suspended these guidelines after there
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was backlash against them. Mainly the government saying that they were going to push back against
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them. And it's worth mentioning as well that when people were talking about this two-tier
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justice and two-tier policing, they were called extreme right-wing people. And now you have
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a government minister saying exactly the same thing. It's funny that, isn't it? And it is
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also worth mentioning as well that this is the same Ministry of Justice here that is talking
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about given priority bail for ethnic minority suspects. So, it's funny, this is, by the
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way, only the 30th of March. So they must presume that the electorate has a very, very short memory.
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They obviously don't mean the ethnic minority on the global scale because that is white people.
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Of course they mean people with more skin pigmentation, of course.
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I do wonder, I do wonder at some point in the 2050s or 2060s, when they're no longer the
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minority. We are truly the minority in our own ancestral homeland.
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Yeah, hopefully. But if it does, whether all this will still apply or whether, or how or
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to what extent they'll do a 180 on it, they'll flip it or just never get mentioned again.
00:17:07.040
Well, it's not coming from a place of principle, is it? It's just coming from a place of...
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Exactly. And I think what all of this is about is this sort of thing, right? This is about
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as signature Tony Blair as Keir Starmer has ever got. He's writing in the Daily Mail here,
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I think. Believe me, I get it. You are right to be angry about illegal migration. And he says
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Of course, it's coming up to local council elections. And at the minute, the Labour Party
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are sort of worried about both the Conservatives and reform taking seats from them. And so these
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two things, what he's basically done here is by talking about illegal migration and talking
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about two-tier justice, it's trying to de-thang the so-called political right. Because, of course,
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these were the sort of two main reform talking points. And now Keir Starmer has sort of absorbed
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them. He can take some of the steam away from some of their groups. Of course, I don't think
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there's any meaningful difference between any of those three parties. But, I mean, there are
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slight differences, but none of it will go to actually resolve the problems this country
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faces. It's just obviously liars, isn't it? Obviously. You remember when David Cameron
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said, oh, multiculturalism has failed? All right, yeah, but you still just lent into it even more,
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if anything. Of course, remember Keir Starmer, when he was a lawyer, worked on many asylum cases.
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If he didn't believe in illegal migration and asylum, he wouldn't have done that, would he?
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And I don't believe people really change once they're an adult. I think they pretty much
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stay the same. I don't believe people turn over a new leaf in this sort of respect very
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It's just complete nonsense. If anything, it's setting himself up to say, I'm really angry
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about illegal migration. Let's make safe and easy routes for them instead.
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These are insane globalists who mean to demographically change the nation forever, destroy us.
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Yeah, no one should be taking this at face value. We all know what they truly believe,
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and it's not about protecting the native British population, is it?
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And we can see that from this sort of thing, right? As the holy month of Ramadan ends,
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I wish Muslims in the UK and across the world a blessed and joyful Eid. And this was, of course,
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And even the British Army got in on this, showing this must be AI-generated, because it's worth
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pointing out that more Muslims in Britain joined ISIS than the army, so I don't know
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what they're celebrating. Thank you for giving us enemies to fight. Thank you for propping
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up the military-industrial complex with foreign wars. Is that what they're doing here? I don't
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know. But it's just shameful. In fact, I think it's a school in Dagenham confirmed at very
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short notice that it's actually closing its doors so that staff may celebrate Eid. So
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I thought you might, because of course, Dagenham, Essex, your neck of the woods, isn't
00:20:56.980
No, when I grew up in the 80s and 90s, you'd never see a hijab. No.
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I'd never seen one until I moved out of Devon. I'd never even seen someone wear one. It was
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a bit surreal. I was like, oh, do people wear that out and about? Do they? Okay. I thought
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maybe she just had a cold head at first. Shows how naive I used to be, I suppose. But
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we never used to have to know, did we? And there's some even more frustrating things.
00:21:25.300
So this is the 2.5 million pound mega mosque being constructed at the edge of the Lake District.
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Let me remind people, or if you're from outside of the UK, let me introduce you to the Lake
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District. Here it is. I don't see, you know, all of those, I forgot what they're called,
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those towers, the Muslim church. Minerates? That's what I was going to say, but I always
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think that that's, is that the little domes you get in Orthodox churches, or is that a
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different name? I always get those two mixed up, which is a bit embarrassing, not a dig at
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Orthodox Christianity. But yeah, the Lake District, very beautiful, quite rural, not a large Muslim
00:22:05.140
population. I see these mosques because they also looked at building a 10,000 strong cemetery
00:22:13.280
cemetery in Cornwall. And Cornwall is still like 95% ethnically British, at the very least.
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I know the Cornish might dispute being English, but they are really. I'm going to get some
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hate. But yeah, they are acting more or less like a vanguard in doing these sorts of things,
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aren't they? They're saying nowhere in this country is safe. We're going to set up a mosque
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and then the Muslims will come. It's not for local demand, not that we should pander to that
00:22:44.900
anyway. I don't think there should be a single mosque in Britain whatsoever, because I don't,
00:22:50.380
I don't see it as compatible with our way of life. You know, we've been enemies for a thousand years
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and I don't think anything's changed about that. I would like to see the same number of mosques in
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Britain as there are cathedrals in Saudi Arabia. Big fat zero. Yeah, that'd be nice. Now, of course,
00:23:08.560
that's an exercise. This is an exercise in dominance in bite and hold. Yeah, they'll create
00:23:12.860
essentially, metaphorically speaking, a castle around which they fortify. And yeah, it's a bite
00:23:22.760
and hold tactic. Yeah, it's an invasion. Yeah, yeah, it's an invasion that's happening here. The only
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sort of upside I can see is those naive sort of liberals that live in their nice white areas
00:23:33.300
might finally realise that, hey, I'm not safe out here and that it's everyone's problem. You know,
00:23:39.400
what we've been saying for years and years now. And this idea, oh, I'll just move. I'll go,
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I'll go and live in Australia. I'll go and live in America or something. Well, it's coming for you
00:23:49.100
there. Well, the point of globalism is that it's across the world, right? And nowhere safe. So you
00:23:54.700
either defeated at home or you're forever, you know, made a nomad, which is no way of living.
00:24:01.540
I don't think certainly not for an Englishman. And then there are other silly things going on as
00:24:06.720
well. Like this one, this is something about farming where the land use framework, which states
00:24:13.780
that 9% of England's farmland will need to be taken out of production for climate goals. And this is
00:24:18.420
going under the radar for many farmers. And they're not aware that there is this goal. Of
00:24:23.420
course, Britain still imports a significant portion of its food. And the main pressure point
00:24:28.640
in which the British Empire was destroyed by people in the US government, not holding the
00:24:33.540
US citizens account, of course, it was people in the US government probably dead now, I imagine.
00:24:40.240
They used our importation of food as a way of basically getting one over on us. And the same
00:24:47.160
rules apply here, that if you have to import food, it is a national security concern, because
00:24:52.920
it's a massive vulnerability. If you can be blockaded, then you can be starved. And then
00:24:57.300
it will be like a siege. You know, you can treat the British Isles like a castle. And if you have
00:25:03.420
it surrounded, then you're going to starve eventually, or you're forced to come out of your siege. And
00:25:10.040
this is a massive, massive overlook problem, we should be producing as much food as humanly possible
00:25:14.980
at home. And although I'm averse to subsidising most things, I think that if we have to subsidise
00:25:23.540
agriculture, it would be one of those things that I think you can justify not only from the sense of
00:25:28.500
it's essential to the British way of life, and is important to have locally produced food that is
00:25:33.820
good for you. But also, it makes sense for national security, as I alluded to earlier,
00:25:39.920
for victory. Exactly. Everyone should have an allotment. It started to get like that,
00:25:45.280
isn't it? I did an interview with Rorik Nationalist a while ago, and he talked all about how in Russia,
00:25:51.700
particularly in Russia, there's this culture of obviously, if you live in a flat, it's not on,
00:25:57.100
but most people that have got a garden, any sort of garden, really, they actually use it to grow
00:26:03.240
things, like potatoes, tomatoes, runner beans, whatever you can, whatever you can, really.
00:26:07.820
Most people I know do that as well, yeah. Yeah, well, maybe in Devon. That wasn't a dig,
00:26:13.120
that wasn't a dig, at Devon, or you. No, of course not. But if you live in, like I say,
00:26:17.940
if you live in a block of flats on a concreted over estate, there's, it's not good, it's just not
00:26:23.160
possible. But difficult, maybe at best you could have like a little, one of those things that hangs
00:26:27.840
over your, your balcony. Grow a few herbs. Yeah. Grow those parsley in time there. Grow a tomato
00:26:34.500
plant and you get like six tomatoes out of it every three months. But no, normal, if you've got
00:26:39.180
a garden, apparently it's just, in Russia anyway, loads, loads of people, most people, and they,
00:26:46.360
it's like something that, a heart, it's like, it actually yields a lot, even a small patch,
00:26:50.140
um, like as, as much as a third or a half of all the food you eat, you've actually grown
00:26:55.400
yourself. It's one of the most sensible things I think you can do because not only is it just
00:27:00.100
good from a sort of making sure you have your own food supply sense, but also it'll probably
00:27:05.620
be healthier for you than a lot of the other things you can buy in a supermarket. If you're
00:27:09.420
not spraying it down with pesticides and things, which obviously you wouldn't be. It's also worth
00:27:14.680
mentioning as well that, um, British Steel has announced it will close, um, it's two blast
00:27:20.740
furnaces in Scunthorpe. And this means that, um, all steel production in the UK has now ended for
00:27:26.420
the first time in 150 years. And of course, since the industrial revolution, since the industrial
00:27:31.200
revolution. And of course we are the country of the industrial revolution and now we're no longer
00:27:35.700
producing steel. So it's sort of an end of an era, but in a very sad way. And in fact, we're the
00:27:42.000
only country in the G7 that is unable to make new steel. And, and of course, oh yes, of course
00:27:51.220
the Chinese owned it and they rejected, you know, a half billion government subsidy. You
00:27:58.560
shouldn't have ever let your steel infrastructure be owned by the Chinese. Another case of this is
00:28:03.320
something that is of national security concern, complete joke, complete oversight that they've
00:28:08.180
even allowed this situation to be the case. But yes, we're the only G7 unable to make new
00:28:12.580
steel for ourselves. Don't know how this is in our interest at all. Uh, it's just embarrassing
00:28:19.780
The irony of it. Um, if anyone's interested, I've got an 18 part series on the life of Chairman
00:28:25.380
Mao on my channel, History Bro, which I don't plug enough. Um, and on that I concentrate
00:28:31.960
mainly, it's all of Mao's life, but I concentrate massively on the great leap forward. And anyway,
00:28:36.120
uh, Mao in the, starting in the late forties, um, was obsessed with competing with Britain,
00:28:44.800
specifically Britain in terms of steel manufacturing, because at that time, even at that time, uh,
00:28:50.520
Britain was the number one or actually United States. Well, anyway, when Mao was younger in
00:28:56.520
the twenties and thirties, Britain was the number one steel manufacturer in the whole world.
00:29:00.200
Um, and so he became in later in adulthood when he was master of all China, became, became
00:29:06.960
obsessed with trying to get China to catch up to Britain, let alone overtake them. And now look
00:29:14.040
quite, I mean, talk about the tables turned. Yeah. Mao's had his way apparently. Yeah. They're
00:29:20.520
finally, they're finally completely destroyed our ability to make any steel. Well, we've sort of
00:29:25.880
destroyed it ourselves. Well, yeah. Yeah. If not, we don't want to give them too much credit here.
00:29:30.200
Yeah. So, uh, it's clear as day, isn't it? When I've got like, it's failing and we say to the
00:29:35.960
Chinese company, look, we'll, we'll give you the money to keep it going. They're like, no,
00:29:40.760
no, let it die. It's not even worth it. Just let it die. Obviously they're, they're probably doing
00:29:44.600
it to make us weaker, aren't they? That's what's going on. Of course. Yeah. I would,
00:29:48.120
of course. Yeah. It's a strategic decision. Yeah. Because why else would you turn down a free
00:29:53.400
500 million? I know if the, the government wants to give me 500 million, I'll not let them down.
00:30:00.680
I'll make steel with my bare hands if you want. Um, so there's also the realization that 25% of
00:30:07.160
Britain is now apparently disabled. Um, this is of course, um, to take advantage of the welfare state.
00:30:13.880
Um, that's probably the only reason other than that, there are lots of falling anvils or something
00:30:18.520
that are just causing lots of accidents. I don't think so. Just walking around Swindon,
00:30:23.160
I see a guy in a wheelchair, but he's walking his feet along. Like he's not doing this, the hand things.
00:30:29.080
He's slowly walking his feet along in the wheelchair. It's like, do you need a wheelchair?
00:30:35.320
I saw another guy. You ever see someone using crutches when they're genuinely using the crutch
00:30:41.640
because one foot's off the floor? You ever see people just walking around, but with crutches as
00:30:46.040
well? I have seen that. Yeah. I see a number of people in swimming doing that. It's like,
00:30:50.360
you don't need crutch if you're... Yeah. Then the amount of, uh, abuse and fraud that goes on in this
00:30:57.800
country to do with that you're ill, whether it's physically or mentally, the amount of abuse of it
00:31:03.000
It is really bad. It's astronomical. Also, we don't want to go too far though and sort of go
00:31:08.680
the big Lebowski route where they pick up Mr. Lebowski and he actually... This guy walks.
00:31:13.160
And then he's actually disabled. Yeah, of course, if anyone's genuinely disabled,
00:31:18.200
I don't begrudge them. But that's the whole point. That's what we're talking about. Exactly.
00:31:21.720
The differentiation between those genuine cases. Well, the actual disabled people are missing out
00:31:27.160
because of all of the people that are basically being chancers and trying to make money from this
00:31:33.560
scheme. So, you know, everyone should be annoyed at this. There's no one that shouldn't be. And of
00:31:40.280
course, you shouldn't be tarring actual disabled people for the scammers work either. Also, there was
00:31:46.680
this. Toddler kicked out of nursery for being transphobic. A toddler. Apparently...
00:31:51.320
Is it real? That's not a April Fool's? No, that's real. That was 31st of March. Okay.
00:31:59.640
So, apparently, statistics show that 94 pupils at state primary schools were suspended or permanently
00:32:05.160
excluded for transphobia and homophobia in 2022 to 23. This included 10 pupils from year one and three
00:32:13.800
from year two, where the maximum age is seven. I don't understand that wording. And it says one of
00:32:19.720
these included a child of nursery age, the data show. So, yes, a nursery age child, a toddler, as they
00:32:28.200
say, was suspended for something that they'll obviously not understand. And nor should they.
00:32:36.680
And, yeah, it's just child cruelty, really, I think. There's no reason to do this to very young
00:32:45.080
kids that don't know better, even if it were the right thing to do. And, I mean, as far as I'm
00:32:49.560
concerned, what they define as transphobia would be any old thing. Probably a lot of the things we
00:32:55.080
say could be defined as that. But... I feel like the adults, probably the Karens, that got these
00:33:02.280
kids in, quote unquote, trouble for whatever nonsense. They're the ones that should be held
00:33:06.680
to account. They're the ones that should face some sort of tribunal.
00:33:10.280
Basically bullying kids for their own insecurities, aren't they? Yes. Who cares? Who cares what a
00:33:15.400
toddler says about you? Trying to indoctrinate the child as young as possible before they can
00:33:20.200
possibly understand. When you're a toddler, when you're in primary school, you've got no
00:33:24.680
concept of sexuality or any sort of carnal desire or anything, let alone the subversion of that with
00:33:32.920
homosexuality or transgenderism or cross-dressing or anything. It's just impossible for them to
00:33:36.680
comprehend it. Yeah. So what? It's awful. You live in a mad, mad time. Truly mad. Yeah,
00:33:43.080
it's worse than that. Apparently a parent was arrested for complaining about the daughter's
00:33:47.400
school in a WhatsApp group. And it was a perfectly legitimate complaint just about how it was being
00:33:53.480
run. It wasn't like he was doing anything particularly bad. He was arrested on suspicion of
00:34:00.520
harassment, malicious communications and causing a nuisance on school property. But I thought it
00:34:05.000
was in a WhatsApp group. Apparently he was held in a jail cell at the police station for 11 hours.
00:34:11.720
They apparently took their fingerprints and searched them as well for complaining about the
00:34:17.080
school. Maybe there's more to this. Apparently they said they had previously been banned from
00:34:22.600
entering the school. So I don't know whether there's some sort of continued feud here that's
00:34:27.000
causing it. But this is what's being discussed and I don't think people complaining over WhatsApp
00:34:32.120
should ever lead them into trouble no matter the circumstances because it's just written words
00:34:38.840
I would be so sarcastic in the interview room if that were me. I'd just take the piss as much as
00:34:47.800
possible out of the interviewing officers about the whole situation.
00:34:55.240
Yeah, let's go before a magistrate. Let's go before a magistrate. Yeah, I'm under arrest. Yeah,
00:34:59.560
sure. Yeah, I'm really worried. Yeah. Yeah. No, let's go to court. Yeah. Yeah,
00:35:05.400
I don't know what's happening. It's Karen cops, isn't it? It's Karens all the way down.
00:35:14.920
Karens all the way down. There you go. Or little hitlers. They don't have to be women.
00:35:18.920
That's true. Little hitlers. People have got a tiny amount of influence or power
00:35:23.480
and just instantly abuse it as much as they possibly can. Scumbags.
00:35:28.120
So much of it though, isn't there? Here's Keir Starmer talking about banning ninja swords. I know
00:35:31.960
we've already talked about this. He's also going to host a round table with the creators of
00:35:38.040
Adolescence, that Netflix show that is being forced down our throats and a group of charities and young
00:35:43.320
people because, you know, this show is going to solve all problems for young people, apparently.
00:35:49.640
And yes, clear, clear. Oh, yeah, of course it is.
00:35:54.520
Most obvious psyop since Greta. So the final thing I wanted to mention is that
00:36:02.360
at least America is putting pressure on us here because they're basically saying you can't have
00:36:07.640
trade unless you have free speech, which is at least something. There's a glimmer of hope
00:36:13.560
for some sort of improvement from pressure from the US. But that's about it. But yes,
00:36:18.760
it's a pretty grim situation. I just wanted to give everyone an update and it's not good.
00:36:24.280
Sorry, that went on for a long time, didn't it? 35 minutes, blimey. I'm sorry, everyone.
00:36:28.840
I'm ashamed. I'm going to get a samurai sword and stab it into my guts later.
00:36:32.920
I've got some comments to read. Sorry, I nicked the mouse there from you, didn't I?
00:36:38.360
Why hasn't the one-off doctor been arrested and jailed? Never mind, not being fired. I know,
00:36:44.200
I agree. Did he not then? I guess not. But they said it was likely he did it and he's not been
00:36:52.760
dismissed. Who knows? To answer your question, Bo says, that's a random name. The fate of the West
00:36:58.760
is that of Rhodesians and South Africa. A lot of immigrants come to the West to steal your wealth.
00:37:03.320
Source, I'm an immigrant. One of the good ones, lol. Yep, I wholeheartedly agree though. The engaged few,
00:37:09.880
you're okay over there on the mother island? Or do you need some boxes of cannon and grapes
00:37:15.080
shot to sort, uh, fall off a cargo ship from the old American colonies? Uh, that would be terrible.
00:37:21.960
That would be a really bad thing to happen. And, um, I for one would like to see the authorities sweep
00:37:28.280
up that sort of thing. Those dangerous ordinances, were they to fall off a ship? Absolutely. Uh,
00:37:33.560
Hewitt76 says, the last minute change to the bill is slight of hand. The real purpose is to keep
00:37:38.200
women out of prison, which is still going forward. I wouldn't be surprised. Not that they're going to
00:37:43.640
prison very often anyway. The holy month of Ramadan, holy month of June, lots of holy months in the UK
00:37:48.520
these days. It seems like it, doesn't it? Hmm. Uh, WSE lack, uh, hey, thanks for the content.
00:37:56.360
Oh, thank you. $20 as well. That's very nice of you. You're generous. The engaged few, Josh,
00:38:00.920
I agree. All things being equal, free trade is best for consumers. But since all things aren't equal,
00:38:05.400
subsidizing sectors that are important to national security is acceptable. I'm about as free trade as
00:38:10.440
it can get. So the fact I'm saying that sort of suggests how far things have gone into absurdity.
00:38:16.040
Sigilstone17 says, they knew the toddler was transphobic when the drag queen dressed as a
00:38:21.080
demon clown walked in for story hour and the child started crying. I think I'd start crying if I saw
00:38:25.880
one of those things. Bo, if the police aren't confident enough to arrest a parent for complaining
00:38:30.600
about the school, you shouldn't be so cocksure the courts won't back them up.
00:38:33.800
I don't think you're being entirely serious, were you? No. No. Nope. Okay. Take it away, Bo. Got some more
00:38:47.400
positive news now. Okay. Yeah. So the, uh, the never ending battle to move the Overton window to the right.
00:38:57.160
I feel like over the last year or two, perhaps you could say, uh, we've had some success. Even here,
00:39:04.280
I did, uh, I talked about re-migration fairly early on and wrote an article about that and
00:39:10.520
uh, wrote other pieces about, I wrote the, my roadmap, my policy roadmap, which, uh, Hope Not Hate picked
00:39:18.200
up on and, uh, that's what got me deselected. In fact, there's a link to it there. I'm completely proud
00:39:22.280
of it. Um, can you click on the link? Is it? Yeah, there you go. The Mallard very, very briefly
00:39:30.920
published it. Literally just a few minutes, uh, before they got word from Hope Not Hate and decided
00:39:36.600
to take it down. But Hope Not Hate had already archived it. Anyway. Oh, it got archived on my
00:39:40.440
birthday. That's nice. Um, in that, I, I just, I just used very, very broad strokes of the brush in that.
00:39:46.200
Very, very broad strokes of the brush. Just say, uh, you know, just saying,
00:39:49.000
just saying we should do this. And, and, uh, one of the things that a lot of the mainstream,
00:39:53.400
uh, media got their knickers in a twist about is that, uh, what did I say called, uh, uh,
00:39:59.640
what did I say is a plague or an infestation? The invasion of something like that. They thought
00:40:06.920
that was beyond the power. I think even Toby Young thought that was too, too much, but anyway,
00:40:11.080
whatever. Uh, well, now this sort of thing is becoming much, much more mainstream. Um,
00:40:17.560
you know, I saw even Lee Anderson, um, the wet Lee Anderson in parliament just the other day,
00:40:25.720
just open, just saying it's an invasion, these invaders, and there wasn't even gasps from around
00:40:30.840
the chamber. You know, the Overton window has moved to the point where you can just say a few
00:40:35.000
different reform, a few different people in parliament just talk about when are you going to deport
00:40:39.480
people? Um, well, when is, when are you going to do it? So, um, and just in, in the general,
00:40:46.520
more discourse, not just on Twitter, but in mainstream media, you, every now and again,
00:40:51.080
you get someone breaking through someone like Charlie Downs or, uh, who got published the other
00:40:56.360
day in something reasonable, like the, was it the mail? Um, it's been published in the mail. Yeah.
00:41:00.760
Yeah. Yeah. So, um, the idea of remigration, mass remigration, mass deportations of peoples,
00:41:08.040
beginning with illegals. So it's the easiest thing to make the argument for. So we've moved
00:41:15.160
even two years ago, three years ago, that wasn't really on the menu. You wouldn't be getting the
00:41:18.920
mainstream really allowing that. Um, and now we have, it seems not just we, but it's the
00:41:27.080
Overton window has been shifted a bit. Um, so I want to talk about how, um, to keep going,
00:41:33.720
to keep pushing it further because one of the main adversaries, coincidentally, the man on screen,
00:41:40.840
uh, people that are self-described right wingers, but a sort of right wing in name only,
00:41:45.640
and will police the right relentlessly and say, no, no, no, that's not acceptable. Only my brand of
00:41:51.960
right wing politics is acceptable. These, these, these policy proposals are uncouth and then they pay lip
00:41:58.920
service to them to try and get them to vote for them. And it's very frustrating. Actually,
00:42:04.040
the left probably has less of an influence over the Overton window than these right wingers
00:42:09.080
at the minute in Britain, at least, because it's not going leftward. That's for sure,
00:42:13.640
because none of the problems are being addressed and people are sort of a little bit, um, jaded with
00:42:19.320
the left wing explanations because we've heard them for such a long time and nothing's changed.
00:42:23.960
And these are, these are fresh ideas supposedly on the scene for British politics. And so
00:42:29.640
I, I, I see it as an inevitability that it's going to happen. It's just a matter of who and when
00:42:37.160
Yeah, hopefully, hopefully. Um, so I had noticed that Douglas Carswell was on New Culture Forum a few
00:42:45.480
days ago now, a week or so ago, um, combined with, uh, uh, combined with an article he wrote that was
00:42:53.000
published in The Telegraph, uh, Milestones, uh, where he actually lays out a decent plan. And I just
00:42:59.000
wanted to, uh, highlight this because, um, this alone is, is, is moving the Overton window. This
00:43:07.400
is even stronger than what I put in my roadmap. So I'm a couple of things, couple of things anyway. Um,
00:43:12.760
and it's great. It's that he's actually on the cutting edge. I would say Douglas Carswell is, is at the
00:43:17.240
moment on the cutting edge of moving the Overton window that he is, um, pushing it the furthest,
00:43:24.360
the hardest, just with this one, just with this one Telegraph and, uh, article and, uh, New Culture
00:43:30.440
Forum appearance. It's worth mentioning as well that he's a former conservative member of parliament
00:43:35.160
that defected to UKIP, didn't he? Uh, and he for a while was one of UKIP's only MPs. Yeah. And so
00:43:44.360
it's not like he's just nobody. He's a former member of parliament, right? And he was quite
00:43:48.760
a prominent one, like, uh, to people who follow politics, they'll know who he is. Oh yeah. He's,
00:43:54.120
he's, he's a named entity. Yeah. Exactly. He's been an MP for, I think, four or five times in one
00:43:58.520
election. Yeah. So it's, it's worth mentioning to people who aren't necessarily in Britain or outside
00:44:04.280
of Britain that this isn't a nobody, even if you might not have heard of him before. To make clear,
00:44:09.880
he's not an MP at the moment. That's true. Uh, he actually is living in America at the moment,
00:44:15.160
running his own, uh, think tank policy outfit as I understand it. Uh, but yeah, the sort of person
00:44:21.560
that can get himself published in the Telegraph, get himself absolutely a spot on New Culture Forum,
00:44:26.840
could be on sort of question time if you wanted that sort of level. So yeah, more mainstream,
00:44:31.640
much more mainstream than just like me or Steve Lord, right? So, um, so it's good. It's good to
00:44:38.680
see. It's good to see. I did a tweet saying, um, looks like, uh, half joking, tongue in cheek,
00:44:44.280
looks like Carlswell's, uh, read my roadmap, but, uh, and genuinely meaning it, but good,
00:44:50.200
good. Talk about it. Take it, run with it. And that's actually what he says in the interview at one
00:44:54.120
point. Um, where he says, I've had criticisms, technical criticisms of what I'm saying.
00:44:59.480
Good. Run with it. People that know more about the process, because it is really,
00:45:04.280
he does really drill down into sort of the granular strategy of what you'd actually have to do if he
00:45:09.640
was in government to get things done. So just for that, I want to actually contrast, uh,
00:45:17.880
policies that Douglas Carlswell was talking about and contrast them to Nigel Farage. So if you can go
00:45:25.720
back to that link on Twitter and, uh, and play this, it's just a little clip of
00:45:31.320
Niaj at the very, very recent reform conference.
00:45:34.360
What's the great thing about a party that believes in meritocracy?
00:45:41.160
We are not in the least bit interested how old you are. We couldn't give a damn what religion you
00:45:48.760
are. We couldn't give a damn what your skin tone or color is. We don't care about any of these things.
00:45:56.600
We don't care about your gender. We don't care about your demographic. We don't care about your
00:46:02.440
sexual preference. In fact, we'd rather not know, to be frank with you. We want to live in a country
00:46:08.360
that treats everybody exactly the same, provided they, in return, respect us, our values, our laws, and our way of life.
00:46:26.200
We've played that game and it, it resulted in us getting invaded and loads of our women
00:46:32.040
folk raped, loads of murders and bombings. We've done that. We've played that game.
00:46:41.240
That's so weak. That's weak sauce. It's not good enough. It's the most boomer-tastic 90s liberal failure.
00:46:48.680
I mean, in my tweet, I just call it moral and political cowardice.
00:46:53.320
It is, yeah. Well, the cat's out the bag now. We know multiculturalism has failed.
00:46:57.800
We know lots of these sort of neutral, blind, 90s liberal policies don't work.
00:47:05.880
They create a dystopia. They create the world that we live in today.
00:47:10.280
A multicultural hellhole. And it will lead to sectarianism, endless sectarianism and violence and discord.
00:47:20.920
Yeah. I don't care about your religion. Oh, really?
00:47:28.120
I care about their religion because I want to know, if I go to a Christmas market,
00:47:33.160
whether I'm going to get blown up or, you know, driven over by a van or a car.
00:47:38.520
I mean, Nigel might as well be saying, I don't care if you're demographically replaced.
00:47:49.320
I don't care if what it means to be British is entirely diluted to the point of it meaning nothing.
00:48:01.080
So that's what reform are still doing at the moment.
00:48:05.400
Now, Carlswell, a whole different kettle of fish.
00:48:12.280
If we go to the actual video, and I put in a timestamp.
00:48:16.840
First of all, he says, he first starts talking about,
00:48:22.920
when you become the government, you want to make sure that the civil service, essentially,
00:48:29.640
you know, the actual machinery of government, of bureaucracy doesn't just thwart you, doesn't
00:48:35.160
just stop you from doing what needs to be done.
00:48:38.040
You can see how easily they thwarted this trust, for example, or how you can get someone
00:48:44.120
in like Boris or Rishi Sunak, sort of LARPing as a prime minister, basically LARPing as a prime
00:48:56.200
Someone like, like hamstringing someone like Dominic Cummings from being able to actually
00:49:05.080
So he goes into a fair amount of detail about that, sorry, you was going to say?
00:49:08.840
I only think that there should be like three or four different government departments,
00:49:11.960
and if you shrunk government down to that size, it's entirely feasible that you don't actually
00:49:16.120
need civil servants, a political party could just bring in their own staff or hire their own
00:49:23.560
I can understand the arguments for having people in a permanent position.
00:49:30.520
Because at least they're in a position where they can develop expertise, right?
00:49:36.280
However, I think that what they're doing is basically circumventing democracy
00:49:41.400
and enacting their own will and imposing, using their privileged position as a civil servant
00:49:46.600
government to do what they want to do, rather than what the party that's been elected wants
00:49:55.640
Douglas talks about how there's this, an odd triumvirate in government where there's the
00:50:00.200
civil servants of number 10 itself, the permanent ones.
00:50:04.200
So it doesn't matter what party is actually the leading party in parliament, that the permanent
00:50:09.800
civil servants in number 10, and the permanent civil servants in the cabinet office, and at
00:50:14.680
the treasury, between those three cabals, they're actually just the permanent immovable government.
00:50:21.160
And if they work together to sort of thwart the elected MPs, then you won't get through
00:50:37.960
That's what Trump did when he got into office in America, isn't it?
00:50:40.840
He just got in and started getting shot of loads of people, and rightfully so.
00:50:45.000
Because that was one of the things that you could attribute as a mistake in his first term,
00:50:49.560
is that he assumed that people would just do what they were told.
00:50:53.880
And that's not how it works, unfortunately, in government.
00:50:56.920
Well, we can, the Prime Minister can remove permanent civil servants, but just very, very
00:51:04.280
rarely, hardly ever, certainly in recent times, has ever chosen to do so.
00:51:08.680
Because it's just considered not really the done thing.
00:51:14.120
It's also very expensive, because they've got a very cushy redundancy.
00:51:17.800
Yeah, you probably have to pay them off with a very big pension.
00:51:24.600
Liz Truss removed one guy, I think, from the Treasury.
00:51:28.600
And, like, she almost sort of used up all her political capital to do that, almost.
00:51:38.040
Not only that, it should be able to be done en masse.
00:51:41.800
Well, the government should be able to just clear out whole sections of the civil service,
00:51:50.280
That's one of the things Douglas Carswell was talking about, as well.
00:51:55.000
You know, saying things that aren't necessarily new to us, or probably to our audience.
00:51:59.480
The very idea that, since 1997, all the governments have been Blair Wright.
00:52:03.960
You know, not always Blair himself, but Blair Wright.
00:52:06.520
People that, you know, do just completely believe in government by expert.
00:52:15.960
Yeah, universal human rights globalists, basically.
00:52:22.280
The idea of human interchangeability and cultural relativism.
00:52:35.080
Maybe, if you're even asked, which you won't be.
00:52:41.240
And this is the thing Douglas Carswell also talks about in this interview.
00:52:45.480
How many Manchester bombings do we need before we start talking about this seriously?
00:52:52.840
How many rape gangs do there have to be before we start talking about this seriously?
00:52:59.160
That's the stuff that I'm very keen to hear, because I haven't actually watched this yet.
00:53:08.440
What you would do to give yourself the powers in order to hire and fire your own civil servants.
00:53:18.120
And really drilling down into the minutiae of how that would be done.
00:53:21.320
And he talks about creating a whole new department.
00:53:26.600
Which would supersede, I imagine, the cabinet office.
00:53:30.280
And you just, you staff with your own people and you just get things done.
00:53:40.760
We don't have the same political system as the US.
00:53:43.800
So our political system has been described by multiple different people of many different
00:53:49.000
political persuasions as an elected dictatorship.
00:53:51.880
And I think that's part of the strength of the British system is that,
00:53:55.640
although you've got the sort of back and forth of democracy,
00:53:58.680
which is a potential weakness in that, you know,
00:54:01.000
you've got that five-year term and then you might completely U-turn on your approach.
00:54:06.920
At least when you've got that window of time and you've got a parliamentary majority,
00:54:11.560
you can pretty much do what you want, in theory at least.
00:54:17.720
Yeah, on paper, a prime minister, he's got a majority in the House,
00:54:23.240
can be extremely powerful if he's just got the balls and the political will to do it.
00:54:29.480
So there's this thing of orders in council where you can just sort of bypass parliament in various ways.
00:54:36.040
Not exactly, but the way that an executive order in the United States is sort of bypassing Congress in the Senate,
00:54:44.360
Well, we have something that's not really similar at all, but another mechanism, orders in council.
00:54:51.320
And it's just very, very rarely used because it's just considered, you know,
00:54:56.120
it's not considered cricket, old boy, but it is still sometimes used.
00:54:59.960
Or there's all sorts of tricks you can do, like, you know, like proroguing parliament to make sure the House can't vote something down, for example.
00:55:07.080
It used to be used a lot, a lot more than it is now, but there's all sorts of tricks.
00:55:11.960
There's all sorts of, well, it's not. It's perfectly legal.
00:55:15.800
It's just perfectly legal. It's part of the process. It's just not being used.
00:55:25.080
One of the things he talks about in the article is packing the lords.
00:55:28.120
So, I mean, both, when it was Labour, when it was Brown and Blair, they made loads and loads of Labour peers.
00:55:37.240
And then when it was all the Cameron and Boris years, they made loads and loads of Tory peers.
00:55:41.800
Because I was talking about how, if you came into parliament, just create hundreds more if you need to,
00:55:47.240
to make sure you've got a massive majority in the lords, and make sure they're just not of an issue.
00:55:55.320
Weaken the power of a single lord by inflating the number of lords there are.
00:56:01.320
One of the things is to get serious about fighting back against what's been done to us in the last 30 years.
00:56:09.240
Well, I think one of the biggest problems of the British right, or at least the electoral parties that are involved in the British right,
00:56:17.160
is that they're trying to play by the establishment's rules, which are set up to be rigged against them.
00:56:23.320
And people like Farage, I think, should realise that they're never going to let him be a member of their club, no matter how much he tries.
00:56:30.040
And he should just accept that and lean into it, rather than playing their games and conceding to their rhetoric and alienating a decent portion of the British public in the process.
00:56:39.880
Yes, fair point. I just, I think it was just time to completely step over and start ignoring Nigel, really.
00:56:45.700
I only even brought him up here just to juxtapose him to a real patriot, Douglas Carlswell.
00:56:55.960
You need to be smart about this, though. You need to understand, as Dominic does, quite how dysfunctional the system is.
00:57:02.820
But you need a plan and a strategy to go in there preemptively and to take them out preemptively.
00:57:09.460
Liz Truss took out, I think, Tom Scholar at the Treasury. It's not just a Tom Scholar at the Treasury you need to take out.
00:57:14.980
You need to be prepared and willing to sack en masse a large number of permanent civil servants.
00:57:20.900
Bring in new ones. Create a fundamentally new system in Whitehall to drive forward change.
00:57:27.100
If you don't do that, you will be constantly undermined and you will, you know, you'll be in office, as I said, but not in power.
00:57:33.040
Does this bear any resemblance, therefore, to the American...
00:57:39.240
Yeah, based. Yeah, that's the sort of thing I was talking about in my roadmap.
00:57:46.940
If they're stopping a government from doing what needs to be done, then that's the first battle, then, is in Whitehall.
00:57:55.780
And if they need to sweep them aside, Reagan-style, clear them out.
00:58:02.940
Yeah, be politically fearless. Don't apologise for it, as well.
00:58:06.140
And just, this idea, if a minister is strong enough, then he can...
00:58:14.020
Either the senior civil servants in the department control the minister, or the minister controls them.
00:58:19.680
There should be no doubt. There should be zero doubt.
00:58:23.400
The minister should control the department with nine fists.
00:58:26.200
They should be, they should literally, like, as a civil servant, they should be a servant of the government.
00:58:30.080
They shouldn't, they shouldn't have any say over policy. None.
00:58:39.740
But, I just do like that Carswell here is just not putting any punches.
00:58:54.780
Okay, so the next clip, he talks about immigration. Can you play that?
00:59:02.420
I've changed my mind more fundamentally, Peter.
00:59:04.260
I used to believe that people were essentially all the same.
00:59:09.820
And what was different about them was software, was the sort of cultural programming, if you like.
00:59:14.700
And I used to think that because of this, essentially, if someone, first, second,
00:59:20.620
and certainly third generation was exposed to the same influences, they would be the same as anyone else.
00:59:25.880
And I'm afraid I just know this isn't true anymore.
00:59:32.220
And if you are going to allow, as has happened,
00:59:35.680
one in 27 people living in Britain today to be a recent arrival who's arrived in the past 24 months,
00:59:41.740
you're going to fundamentally change what it means to be British.
00:59:45.220
You're not just going to have growth in the British population.
00:59:48.160
You're actually going to dilute and diminish what it means to be British.
00:59:53.460
And I think once you can see this, it's something you can't unsee.
00:59:58.900
And I think once you realise this, you need to stop, isn't it?
01:00:18.400
You know, and again, juxtapose it to what Nigel was talking about on that platform.
01:00:24.300
I don't care about who you are really or what you think or your skills or anything.
01:00:29.720
If you just say you like tea and cricket or something,
01:00:46.080
How many outrages, how many rapes and murders does it take before we start being serious about it?
01:00:53.500
Well, the next clip, I think, is probably why I think it's really moving...
01:00:59.320
This here is moving the Overton window, because it even goes a little further than even I did in my roadmap.
01:01:06.360
Peter, all my life I've been told that multiculturalism is inevitable.
01:01:11.360
Well, I'm sorry, I just don't believe that is the case.
01:01:16.780
and I think we need policies in place that begin to undo the damage.
01:01:21.800
And this means you must begin to remove people living in the country who've arrived illegally, step one,
01:01:30.600
And people who have come into the country, even lawfully, who are a net burden over a prolonged period of time,
01:01:36.280
I'm not talking about someone who's ill through and over to their own,
01:01:39.180
but people who are habitually living at public expense and are foreigners should be removed.
01:01:44.520
People who have come into the country and committed a serious offence,
01:01:48.160
which I define as three months in prison, I think need to be automatically removed.
01:01:53.300
But I think you also need to recognise that there's nothing deemed inviolate about naturalisation.
01:02:03.460
It is possible for the British state to take passports and citizenship off people,
01:02:09.720
Just because someone is born in a stable, it doesn't make them a horse.
01:02:12.900
And just because someone is born in Britain, it doesn't make them British.
01:02:15.640
Certainly not if they support Hamas, cheer for Sharia law,
01:02:19.300
and articulate views that are incompatible with Western culture.
01:02:22.580
And I think you need to have a legal framework by amending the 1981 Nationality Act
01:02:29.240
to begin to remove citizenship from people who believe in certain things that are incompatible
01:02:39.480
And you need to, having stripped them of citizenship, remove them from the country.
01:02:43.220
Now, people will, you know, clutch their pearls and tell us that this is outrageous.
01:02:48.020
Well, how many more Manchester arenas do you need before you're willing to do something about it?
01:02:52.120
Because I'm willing to do something about it now.
01:02:54.240
I think most people in Britain are willing to do something about it now.
01:02:57.200
I've gone into some pretty complex, granular detail saying what legal...
01:03:06.660
Talking about stripping citizenship of people, even if they were born here, for the right reasons.
01:03:13.580
It's nice to hear other people talking about it.
01:03:15.960
Yeah, and the piece that he wrote in the actual Telegraph goes into all sorts of detail about it,
01:03:24.860
So, you start with a voluntary repatriation programme.
01:03:30.520
And then if that doesn't work, or most people probably won't take you up on that,
01:03:34.480
because as we said, it's still better to live in Birmingham or Manchester,
01:03:38.460
crappy as it is to live there, it's still better to live there than in rural Kashmir, or whatever, or Bangladesh.
01:03:47.500
So then, after you give that a go, you can say, well, we've tried that.
01:03:55.140
It was always going to come to that anyway, wasn't it, really?
01:04:00.040
It's inevitable because if we don't do it, then we end up in some sort of South African hellscape,
01:04:09.640
where there's some small enclaves of white people besieged.
01:04:14.360
Small little pockets of white people in their own ancestral homeland.
01:04:18.060
And our own political system is going to be weaponised against us by these now ethnic majorities.
01:04:25.660
And they're not going to be nearly as benevolent as we are, or not even going to be close.
01:04:31.340
They won't even understand the society we've created,
01:04:34.880
and they're going to try and use it to dispossess us of all of the wealth we have.
01:04:41.160
No, it'll be like the balkanisation process in the 90s.
01:04:45.620
And again, as I said earlier, sort of an endless sectarianist nightmare.
01:04:57.380
So there was one more clip, and then we'll move on from it, if you could move it to there.
01:05:06.220
The Swedes have pioneered this voluntary remigration programme, and it's pretty generous.
01:05:15.020
It won't surprise people to discover that actually there's pretty low take-up.
01:05:19.340
I mean, I think you'll get a higher take-up once you automatically remove benefits from people who are immigrants in the country.
01:05:25.980
Once you are prepared to say, no, you cannot continue to live in council housing, no, you cannot continue to live at public expense.
01:05:33.220
Once you do that and offer people the Swedish equivalent of, I think, £26,000 to leave the country, you will see some take-up.
01:05:42.540
But it's still going to be significantly small, given the scale of the problem.
01:05:49.740
I mean, let's face it, even for £26,000, a lot of people are not going to be willing to leave their existence in Croydon or Manchester or Birmingham
01:06:02.400
and to go back to living in Kashmir or Kinshasa.
01:06:05.720
So you're going to have to bring in involuntary repatriation.
01:06:12.360
But voluntary repatriation, voluntary migration is a key step morally towards that,
01:06:19.280
because once you have made it voluntary, it's an enabler.
01:06:23.640
It allows you to then say, well, I'm afraid we're going to have to do this involuntarily.
01:06:29.740
You know, it's either that or the future of your own country is to be unrecognisable.
01:06:40.440
And it's incumbent for us to realise that, you know, we've got a finite period of time in which to act.
01:06:48.660
And if we act now, determinedly, we can resolve it.
01:06:51.800
I think I'm right in saying that in Denmark, the proportion of people who are Danish...
01:07:00.860
So, yeah, just the idea that involuntary repatriation is going to be necessary.
01:07:09.880
Or just there won't be as effectively a country anymore.
01:07:17.980
And it's about time people started saying it, because we've been saying this for quite some time now, haven't we?
01:07:22.940
And the writing's been on the wall for anyone who's been paying attention,
01:07:26.000
that these people need to go or we're going to be gone forever from the face of the earth, basically.
01:07:31.540
And I just hope that this does move the Overton window a tiny bit more.
01:07:36.040
And it does become sort of more mainstream discourse that, yeah, a government, a strong government needs to clear out Whitehall, if it needs to,
01:07:46.580
and use a policy of mass remigration, because there's nothing else for it.
01:07:58.360
And the last thing I'll mention is that the guys talk about, Peter and Douglas, talk about something that I've heard also David Starkey talk about fairly recently,
01:08:12.720
If orders in council aren't enough, which they probably wouldn't be, you would have to pass some sort of legislation to at least repeal a bunch of stuff,
01:08:22.040
if not bring in whole new laws to do what you want to do.
01:08:28.020
All sorts of times there's been sort of great reform acts or great repeal acts or statutes of repeal.
01:08:35.940
There are just far too many laws, aren't there?
01:08:37.400
So yeah, you bring in some sort of, it wouldn't be day one that you'd put it in Parliament,
01:08:43.080
but as soon as possible, some sort of great repeal act of some type to get rid of loads of the nonsense that is stopping us from saving our nation.
01:08:55.700
So what all I'd like to say is people that really, really know what they're talking about.
01:08:59.700
Ex-MPs and people that are true constitutional experts, people that know their history inside out.
01:09:08.060
Someone like Starkey or Coles or whoever, put together more and more detailed plans of exactly what is required.
01:09:16.940
Because that is sometimes the smart-ass comment you get on Twitter, isn't it?
01:09:20.500
When you say something like, remigration now or something.
01:09:26.660
So you've got no plan, it's all nonsense, it's all pie in the sky, hot air, good luck with all that.
01:09:31.640
It can easily be done if you have power, right?
01:09:36.700
All it takes is the political will, a government with the political will.
01:09:44.840
Anyway, my segment's gone on a bit long there as well, so we'll leave it there.
01:09:51.000
Is it still legal for Parliament to issue bills of attainder?
01:09:57.080
That's where you're put on trial and already judged.
01:10:02.680
It's where Parliament says you're guilty of something.
01:10:09.240
And quite often, you're going to have your head chopped off.
01:10:14.020
They're terrifying things of bill of attainder.
01:10:15.940
I'm a little bit worried because I've spent a lot of time on this segment.
01:10:18.600
I'm worried that I'm not going to have the time to do it.
01:10:29.500
I want to do it a good job because I've done a lot of research outside of work on this one.
01:10:57.160
And so, this place is a national heritage site.
01:11:00.600
This is recognised by UNESCO, as is many sites around the world.
01:11:06.720
And it's a very significant site because it is a site to a series of dried-up lakes that were prehistoric.
01:11:21.960
And these are the sites of, if we go here, you can see a little map of them here.
01:11:32.060
These are the sites of some very important human fossils.
01:11:35.440
So, they've got names like WLH3 or WLH50, which just indicates which find it is really, like, Wollandra Lake Hominid 3.
01:11:51.100
But around 100-plus human fossils have been discovered around this sort of area.
01:11:55.500
Most of them dated between 20,000 to 40,000 years old.
01:11:59.100
And if we go over to the painting, if I can click that little circle.
01:12:08.760
Very difficult to do it when you're off at an angle.
01:12:11.240
What we're seeing here is an artist's interpretation of the burial of one of these fossils.
01:12:18.100
Perhaps the most famous one, known as Mungo Man, after the Lake Mungo.
01:12:29.100
I was just waiting for you to pause to do a Mungo Jerry joke.
01:12:32.260
He really likes the summertime for some reason.
01:12:35.540
Yeah, he wasn't found with really big mutton chops either.
01:12:39.640
So, I'm stealing all your Mungo Jerry jokes here.
01:12:42.980
But, yes, he was found covered in red pigmentation all over his skin,
01:12:48.880
which suggests he was deliberately covered in this red ochre as a form of burial, right?
01:12:54.120
And that's one of the earliest examples we've found of that in the world.
01:13:00.240
You know, beforehand we thought burial rites were a relatively recent phenomena,
01:13:04.860
but actually they could go back as far as, I believe, he's dated to around 42,000 years ago,
01:13:26.560
Yeah, so anatomically modern humans came on the scene around 300,000 years ago
01:13:35.520
That's with the Jebel Air Hood skull in Morocco that they found.
01:13:46.720
40,000 years ago, there were still other hominids.
01:13:49.760
So, a safe boundary would be 250,000 years ago.
01:13:54.660
It would be safe to say, okay, that's when modern humans,
01:14:00.220
Obviously, they lived a very different life to we do now.
01:14:02.740
Like the earliest napped hand axes or whatever,
01:14:08.480
So, yeah, there are those sort of chopper tools.
01:14:13.720
Yeah, where it's just rounded on one side to fit in the hand
01:14:17.400
So, there was one found in Demonesia in Georgia,
01:14:27.060
That's not a human, you know, that's not a Homo sapiens,
01:14:32.540
It's an entirely different one that we are descended from.
01:14:36.720
Like a half-ape creature that was actually using a hand axe to...
01:14:44.360
They're walking, they're sort of human in form,
01:14:46.720
although different shaped skulls and different brain size,
01:14:56.420
There's also another find around these lakes called Mungo Lady,
01:15:09.720
But she died, apparently, and then the corpse was burnt,
01:15:12.820
then smashed, and then burnt a second time before covered in ochre.
01:15:17.180
And the source of ochre, of course, isn't found locally.
01:15:24.440
And so they'd obviously gone to great lengths to get hold of this
01:15:35.160
because I don't think smashing bones is necessarily sophisticated.
01:15:38.800
But there was obviously some sort of procedure in place,
01:15:41.660
because this would have happened over multiple days, I would imagine.
01:15:49.440
is one of the things that separates us from the beasts.
01:15:52.180
I think that Neanderthals buried their dead as well,
01:15:55.660
and they're a separate species, if you will, from human beings.
01:16:00.280
But this covering the Minoka suggested that they had ritualistic behaviours,
01:16:04.960
and these were probably a product of either cultural or spiritual beliefs.
01:16:13.220
He was discovered in 1974 by a team of archaeologists.
01:16:17.140
He was estimated to be about 5'7 tall, or 170 centimetres.
01:16:27.700
And the carbon dating suggests he lived around 42,000 years ago,
01:16:31.500
which makes him one of the oldest found in all of Australia.
01:16:37.660
it helped understand the first people to live in Australia,
01:16:47.920
that people hopped islands from what is known now as Indonesia and Papua New Guinea
01:16:55.300
And at this time, around 50,000 to 55,000 years ago, they estimate,
01:17:09.260
We talked about them before on the website, haven't we,
01:17:13.800
So they're like tiny people hunting tiny elephants.
01:17:21.180
potentially Denisovans, because they've got it mixed in,
01:17:25.820
sort of the Asian equivalent and the Neanderthal,
01:17:29.540
at risk of sounding very inaccurate for simplicity's sake.
01:17:32.100
But they were a sort of comparable hominid species.
01:17:45.940
I imagine they would have had very sort of primitive conical boats.
01:18:04.740
But his DNA actually provided them with the ability to understand
01:18:20.360
And previous DNA analysis suggested that he was actually
01:18:25.980
before the ancestors of modern day aboriginals were.
01:18:29.320
But new research, DNA research, suggested that the sample had been contaminated
01:18:36.320
by European DNA, which sort of muddled the analysis.
01:18:40.040
And they were able to isolate that European DNA from the researchers who'd handled it
01:18:44.280
and then actually analyze the DNA from the remains themselves.
01:18:50.240
And that suggested that he was related to the aboriginals.
01:18:53.620
And so that gives us a more complete picture of the settlement of places like Australia,
01:19:01.620
which is important for understanding all of human history.
01:19:04.360
Because, of course, how ancient humans settled various landmasses is important for us to understand ourselves.
01:19:11.080
And I think that that's why I'm interested in this sort of thing,
01:19:13.580
is that it's not only a window into human nature and what's always been important to us,
01:19:18.860
but also it tells us a lot about who we are as a people, what our history is.
01:19:24.440
And I think you've always got to have a certain amount of respect for those who came before,
01:19:29.660
because it's important to ground you and situate you in the world that you currently live in.
01:19:34.120
If you sort of are born and see it as a completely fresh start,
01:19:37.660
you're going to be very isolated and alienated from the world because it's such a complicated thing.
01:19:43.400
Is this one more nail in the out of Africa hypothesis?
01:19:52.080
You know, the out of Africa thing, they estimated around 70,000 years ago.
01:19:55.800
So by 50,000 years ago, it was sort of well out either way.
01:20:02.520
It's sort of adjacent, although it does, this theory does allow the existence of that hypothesis, I suppose.
01:20:10.040
But Mungo Man was reburied, even though the analysis wasn't necessarily complete,
01:20:18.960
because there were some Aboriginal groups that wanted him to be reburied.
01:20:23.960
And so rather than keeping the fossil and relying on future techniques to do further analysis,
01:20:29.720
potentially gather greater understanding or displaying the fossil in a museum for other people to see,
01:20:34.720
they buried it in the ground where it will decompose because it's not in the right kind of soil
01:20:42.400
It's just a piece of history gone for no good reason.
01:20:48.580
And now this seems like a bit of a downer note,
01:20:52.040
but if you care about the preservation of your history,
01:20:55.060
maybe you should go to lotuseaters.com and sign up to our website to help support our work
01:21:00.700
And you can also do that by buying a t-shirt or a mug.
01:21:06.760
They're alongside our most recent edition of The Islander, which is sold out.
01:21:11.700
So if you want to get the t-shirts before they sell out, here they are.
01:21:15.440
But Spectator Australia published an article talking about this
01:21:19.980
because 108 Pleistocene, that's an era of history that goes up until the end of the Ice Age,
01:21:26.500
11,500 years ago, all the way to 2.8 million years ago,
01:21:30.220
it's not plasticine, which, you know, you use to make models.
01:21:37.740
But 108 of these fossils were reburied in a secret location
01:21:44.800
Many of these fossils had never even undergone DNA analysis,
01:21:49.840
let alone been subject to potential future techniques that we can use to understand them.
01:21:53.620
So what this represents really is a massive sabotage of human history and our understanding of it.
01:22:02.260
I actually really care about this sort of thing.
01:22:04.100
I think it's very important to preserve history.
01:22:06.680
It's a very underappreciated thing around the world.
01:22:11.420
It's sort of the domain of Western Europeans and North Americans, really.
01:22:21.440
but we were the ones that really got people into it in the first place.
01:22:25.600
And now to see Australia sort of turning its back on it is a real shame
01:22:29.080
because you'd think that they're of the stock that would understand the value of this more than anything else.
01:22:35.100
They've been bullied into it by some Aboriginals.
01:22:39.280
But not all of them even wanted them to be reburied either, all the Aboriginal groups.
01:22:47.060
Some wanted it like a keeping place where it was supervised by the Aboriginals,
01:22:51.780
but they can be made available to researchers when needed
01:22:54.040
and kept in safe conditions so they don't further decompose,
01:23:00.880
but everyone would be able to get what they want there.
01:23:03.520
So I could see no harm in it, even though it's not necessarily ideal in my mind.
01:23:09.000
But the idea was abandoned because of a lack of funding
01:23:12.420
and they're also worried about how UNESCO might react.
01:23:18.160
Jason Kelly, a Mufi Mufi member of the First People's Assembly of Victoria,
01:23:22.660
accused the government of a criminal act against Indigenous groups
01:23:26.520
and he's opposing this reburial, saying that you're destroying our heritage,
01:23:33.440
It should be seen in that light, in that they're ancient Aboriginals.
01:23:40.000
They should be preserved, right, so everyone can have an understanding of them,
01:23:44.120
not thrown back into the soil and decaying into nothingness.
01:23:48.220
That doesn't seem to me to be responsible archaeology either.
01:23:52.600
If that's what happens, they are destroyed by being reburied.
01:23:57.240
It's like putting them in a blender and throwing the dust to the wind.
01:24:03.780
And here's, this is from a major archaeological journal.
01:24:07.800
Whenever possible and where applicable, authors should indicate
01:24:10.040
that they have consulted with descendant groups
01:24:12.940
regarding the presentation of research results based on human remains.
01:24:16.820
While careful descriptions of pathological lesions
01:24:23.580
authors are encouraged to consider whether photographs of human remains
01:24:27.080
are critical to the presentation of the research.
01:24:31.040
If not essential, out of respect for descendant communities,
01:24:34.080
they should be placed with drawings or included as supplementary material.
01:24:38.640
So you can't even show pictures of the remains out of respect for the groups,
01:24:46.920
And as has been pointed out by this gentleman here,
01:24:51.100
Mungo Manik, who has done some great work talking about this sort of stuff
01:24:57.680
If you see photos of crania in anthropological journals, save them.
01:25:11.360
because here's one of the fossils that's been buried.
01:25:14.960
It was put in an undisclosed location and put in a hole and covered with dirt.
01:25:27.360
It's got a very interesting cranial shape here.
01:25:29.580
You can see a little bit of the brow ridges there.
01:25:31.420
It doesn't look that anatomically modern, does it?
01:25:51.400
which is just talking about the fossilization process, I think.
01:25:57.440
I think you were able to see it just a second ago.
01:26:05.240
You can have a rough idea of what it looked like.
01:26:35.380
how much has that been passed on to modern-day aboriginals.
01:26:38.620
There are so many questions you can ask about this
01:27:15.300
Well, it's pandering to these aboriginal groups.