The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1223
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 42 minutes
Words per Minute
179.69443
Summary
In Episode 1223 of The Load Seaters, your host, Luca, is joined by journalist Jack Hadfield to discuss the recent protests outside the Houses of Parliament, and why identity matters when it comes to who is English.
Transcript
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Who are the men that pick for scraps amongst the ruins at the end of history?
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You should know, because you encounter them every day.
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Between the towering buildings of a fallen empire, we find the Thelaheen, the historyless men,
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who know nothing of the turning of the cosmic wheel and find themselves outside of civilization itself.
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Cut loose from the great chain of being, they represent the loan into which our dying culture will return.
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That is, unless we choose to take up the burden once again.
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This Thelaheen condition is the subject we explore in issue 4 of Islander magazine.
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On sale, while stocks last, and available worldwide at shop.loadseaters.com.
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Hello, and welcome to the podcast of The Load Seaters, episode 1223 for Tuesday, the 5th of August, 2025.
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I'm your host, Luca, joined today by Beau, and special guest and independent journalist, Jack Hadfield.
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I'm fantastic. Thank you so much for having me on.
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You've been doing some wonderful work recently covering all the hotels and, you know, the protests,
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and we're going to get into that very, very soon.
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But before we do, let's also just talk about what else we're going to do today.
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So we're going to talk about why English ancestry might actually matter when we think about who is English.
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I know, I know, it's a hot take. I know it's a brother.
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But I just want you to consider it, if you could.
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Then, as I say, we're going to talk about the protests outside the hotels,
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and then we're going to talk about Nancy Pelosi's trading genius.
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About five weeks ago, there was a one-day conference in London called the Now and England Conference,
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and this was set up by the Roger Scruton Legacy Foundation.
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Now, I wasn't able to attend that. I was here at work.
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However, I have seen a lot of videos from people that did go.
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And one of the things that was of the greatest contention you could see from the panelists,
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the older panelists in the audience, and the younger crowd who were chomping at the bit
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to really talk about the demographic question is the fact that the boomer generation
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and all these people that are supposed to be the authorities guiding the younger to a better future
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There's a total misalignment of what the future of England should be when we get this.
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And we'll talk about that a little bit more in a second.
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But of course, I just want to bring you all to the attention that the fourth issue of Islander is now out.
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Fourth article on the Lord of the Rings, so my bread and butter.
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But there's many other wonderful articles in there as well, from Carl, the editor Rory, Ed Dutton,
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Morgoth, the great Morgoth, and many, many other wonderful writers.
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And there's also a wonderful merch store as well for other things associated with Islander issue four.
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So just out of interest before we move on from that, because I genuinely haven't read it.
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What's your article about on Lord of the Rings?
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So this is the first time that I've been able to talk about a baddie in it all.
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So it's been quite a difficult one because he's 50,000 years old.
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And so I've had to write over quite a large period of fictitious history.
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But that's just the sort of thing I enjoy doing.
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So why am I talking about a conference that happened five weeks ago?
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Well, the reason why I'm talking about it now is because Robert Toombs, who was one of the panelists on the final event of the day,
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he was one of the ones that was in hot water for having a very unsatisfactory answer to what an Englishman is, right?
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Because he decided that actually it didn't really have anything to do with ancestry.
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I think generally the whole idea that, you know, English has nothing to do with ancestry and there's nothing to the people, the ethnos about it.
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Seems insane because, I mean, one thing's first.
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If ethnic identity exists for everybody else, but English is not an ethnic identity, then what am I?
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And if other people can also be this, then there's got to be something different than I am.
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You know, there is something that I have to be.
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And if English is not it, then it's got to be something else.
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Of course there's an ethnic element to a national identity.
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But, you know, these people love to debate and, you know, put their words in the Telegraph or wherever else.
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And, you know, they'll write a thousand, two thousand words on how this is not the case.
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But you look into it, well, it's all just waffle.
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There's no actual real decent arguments towards it.
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Anybody who says that there is an ethnic element to it.
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They just have to say it because it's the bedrock of the sort of the globalist view.
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They have to say it, even if it's palpably absurd.
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Well, let's start cutting through the waffle, shall we?
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And he's saying that this brief debate was unfortunately stopped by having to go to the pub.
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But the debate wasn't really stopped there, was it?
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And the fact is that he's had five weeks to come up with a watertight case for why he is right and the younger generation is wrong.
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And as we can see, there just isn't really anything there.
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Reciting Kipling and singing the National Anthem showed that becoming English was possible on the condition that it was encouraged, taught, and indeed required.
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And then, so then we're starting to get into a question now of, but this is not the same thing, right?
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All of a sudden you realize how quickly, this isn't about whether you're English or not.
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This is about whether you're monocultural, right?
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That's not the same thing as an identity grounded in heritage, in birthright, right?
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You can, there are many, many academics, I'm sure, from abroad who very much enjoy a Kipling poem.
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Might have even wrote, you know, scholarly treatises on it, but it doesn't make them English.
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You can be born and bred in India to Indian, ethnically, racially Indian people.
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I mean, wasn't Kipling or someone else like born in India?
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So, like, you know, does that make him Indian as well?
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If my parents, say, were British expats and living in Japan in 1981 and I was born in Japan
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in a Japanese hospital, even raised in Japan throughout my formative years, it doesn't
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It makes me the son of European expats that happen to be in Japan.
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But these people, again, it will be very deliberate that he's choosing to muddy the
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waters and immediately give up on the actual ethnic side of it and just talk about culture.
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Of course, that's all a deliberate gambit because there is no argument.
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But also, what's more, it implies that, well, the prerequisite for becoming English,
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for learning to be English, is simply to have a knowledge of English traditions, of English
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It's kind of based on intelligence of the culture itself.
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And by implication, someone with two English parents, born English, born somewhere in the
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country, who is entirely ignorant of these things, who doesn't know a Kipling, has never
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Because they don't meet the criteria set down by the Indian headmistress in a London school
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full of people who are third generation from the Commonwealth.
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And, you know, that really is the argument that makes all of this break down.
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Because if someone is English in that way, you know, has, you know, a heritage of 1,000,
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2,000 years on this island, just because they don't know about their culture, does that mean
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Again, you know, Anglo-Americans, German-Americans, Dutch-Americans, whatever mix they may be, whatever
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background they've come from, again, does that make them less American if they just don't
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If they don't know, you know, when the Declaration of Independence was signed, does that make them
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And I think, you know, there's absolutely nothing wrong with having a policy of people
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who are here who aren't English, but, you know, could be British and live in this country.
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There's nothing wrong with saying, actually, yes, you know, we want you to be, become part
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We want you to know of the history and, you know, everything that's gone on these islands
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for the past however many centuries, because you will fit in better here.
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But just because you can, that's a good policy to have and respect people who are still being
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here, that doesn't still mean that they become English.
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It's asking you to believe something that's just a liar, like someone that's born a man
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can put on a dress and a bit of lippy and they are a woman now.
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It's like, just don't try and lie to me like that.
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Don't make me repeat your lies because that's what they are.
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It's nonsense that there's no such thing as sort of an ethnically English person.
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Yeah, these people often like to come out with the idea of, oh, well, you know, English,
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That's, well, that's just a mix of the Anglos, of the Celts, of the Jutes, of the Saxons.
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But if you, you know, they say the same thing about any other identity, you know, they say
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that, you know, well, if you then start saying, okay, identify as an Anglo.
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Oh, well, actually, the Anglos are made up of different northwestern German tribes.
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There is all the, you know, and then you go to, okay, identify as one of those tribes.
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Oh, well, actually, that's made up of different people who lived in this town and village.
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They're all, you know, they're all not related to each other.
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And, you know, like, just because something has a fuzzy border to it does not make it any
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You know, you kind of have the border any less real.
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Well, for example, you know, the greatest example of this is literally colors, you know, red,
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blue, green, purple, yellow, you know, red exists, blue exists, these things exist.
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But if you go on the color spectrum, there's points where red fades into blue, blue fades
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And, you know, the actual overlap of these things, you know, like, oh, maybe that's a blue,
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Oh, I can't exactly tell what that specific bit on the border case is.
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But you know exactly what the actual colors, the platonic ideal of those colors are.
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Well, another thing as well, though, is just that obviously you see it more clearly because
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Whereas you can see, and the reason I bring that up is because when you look at the way
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that this paragraph here is framed, it's like, but the question of integration and eventual
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There are now, and in the future will be, many children in England who were born elsewhere
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or who were descended from a foreign-born parent.
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Either we do everything possible to make them and their eventual descendants part of our nation,
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or we treat them as perpetual outsiders, ethnic minorities in a tribalized England.
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He has already determined that the future is more of this.
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That in Tombs' mind, all these millions and millions of people who have arrived here
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since Blair and since the 1960s, right, they're here to stay for all time, right?
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That's why he's taking this position, because he can't even conceive of the future being
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Yeah, and this argument is, it's just nonsense.
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Yeah, I mean, our ancestors would be spinning in their graves.
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And as you say, there is that argument where they say, oh, well, English is just, it's
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just like Angle and Saxon and Jews, they're from Germany or wherever.
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And the original, even if you go back beyond that, the original Britons, they're actually
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like some sort of cordid ware people that actually come from the steppe, the Russian steppe.
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And those people, anyway, come from the Levant.
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And we all come from a single black mother in the East African Rift Valley, anyway.
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So it's just, they know, they must know on some level that what they're trying to argue
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What he's arguing for there, ultimately, is a demographic replacement, a complete irreversible
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And, well, I think it is morally, I say, you'll do a moral coward, it is morally disgusting
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to me that you would capitulate so profoundly, so profoundly.
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It feels, it feels very much the attitude of the conservatives in like the 50s and 60s,
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where they basically decided, oh, it's over, you know, the empire is gone, you know, it's
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after Suez, oh, you know, gun to my head, England's done.
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So, right, I said, like, right, managed decline it is, folks.
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So we're just going to be the stewards who watch England slip into a lovely warm bath after
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You know, that's the same attitude of these people, and then obviously, and then Thatcher
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came along and completely changed and revitalized, you know, basically like, oh, no, actually,
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no, we can just do things, we can just turn around, we can just come back, and all those
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people who were part of that were swept away and a new generation came in.
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There's absolutely no reason why this can't happen again, you know, it literally is that
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meme of the up and down sine wave of, it's over, we're back, it's over, we're back, it's
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You know, people feel when times are tough that times will always be tough, but they
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As he goes on to say here, for centuries, Englishness revolved around institutions, the
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kingdom, the church, the common law, and the inherited rights of freeborn Englishmen,
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Since the age of Romanticism, many have cherished a rural vision of eternal England, shaped by
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Wordsworth, Constable, Turner, inspired by Italy, and Elgar, influenced by Wagner.
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For others, Englishness means their hometown, their football, dinner, fish and chips, pints
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The one thing I just want to say about this particular paragraph is, when he talks about
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Englishness revolved around the institutions, this is not a chicken and egg situation, right,
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No, obviously the people created the institutions, right?
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And so therefore, logically, there must have been a people before the institutions, and
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therefore we should not be defining ourselves by the institutions, because you are English,
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whether, unfortunately, one of the other things he goes on to say in this piece is the fact
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that, well, we can't forget that, you know, David Cameron, Tony Blair, you know, all these
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Because being English isn't defined by whether you're progressive or reactionary or anything
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It's defined by your birth, but they are English.
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You can see Toomes' angle here, the type of person, the type of argument he is, that
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you can't mention Turner without the fact that he was inspired by Italian things.
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You can't mention Elgar without mentioning he was inspired by a German, all that sort
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Oh, there's evidence that people had fish and chips in ancient Jordan or something.
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Well, it's like, you know, tomatoes are from the Americas.
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The other interesting thing where the way, you know, they talk about the institutions,
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I think it is true that, you know, especially for the last 1,000 years, sort of Englishness
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has had a more, has a quieter ethnic identity compared to those on the continent.
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Because since the Norman invasion, we haven't really had, you know, any sort of, you know,
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direct wars outside, you know, people coming in to Britain.
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Whereas when you're on the continent, you know, you sort of have been, you know, French,
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German, Italian, you know, Spanish, whatever, because people will be trying to, you know,
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And, you know, you, you, there are, there is, there was more sort of conflict on the continent.
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Whereas for English, it was like, oh, we've, we've, well, hey, we've just been here for
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There was not even a need or an idea to sort of, you know, express this.
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It was very sort of, you know, everybody sort of knew it, but there was no reason to think
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of them in the way, you know, in that specific ethnic way.
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And what's more, there's, there's two things on that point, which is just one, obviously,
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England of the nations of the British Isles has just always had more cultural might, right,
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to assert itself against the Welsh identity, against the Scottish identity, against the
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So they've always had a very strong sense of themselves because we've always had the dominant
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But another point to make as well, when it comes to something like the British Empire is
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that, of course, all empires are by their nature of being, you know, whether it's a British
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Empire or the Spanish Empire or the Ottoman Empire, right, it's your people on top and
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But the advantage that Britain has always had is the fact that we have been an island.
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So we could have the empire abroad, but we never really had to, beyond the people who
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went abroad to administrate it, we never had to live amongst some in Britain.
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And that's not the same thing as a land empire, like the Ottoman Empire, that constantly
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had Greeks and Jews and all the different people in Constantinople itself, right, constantly
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needing to figure out and question its identity.
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And so we've been very much shielded for that for many, many centuries.
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And now that all these different people have finally been brought into our island, we're
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having this whole existential crisis about how do we, how do we rediscover ourselves?
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It does reveal itself as just gaslighting nonsense.
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When you would ask about other places in the world, would tombs argue that there's no such
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thing as being an ethnically Japanese person or an ethnically Zulu person or something?
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I wonder if he would, I wonder if he'd have the temerity to try and argue that.
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And also when you look at when you can get your DNA checked out by things like Ancestry.com
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or LivingDNA or something, well, it clearly shows that you are from somewhere and not somewhere
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So most people in our office have done that, LivingDNA or Ancestry.com, showing that most
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of us are nearly entirely from either these islands or at least Northwest Europe.
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How would, what would tombs reply to something like that?
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And you sequence the DNA of Rishi Sunak or Suella Breverman or someone.
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And I think just sort of, you know, bringing up, for example, like Rishi and Suella there,
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there seems to be some sort of, you know, implication in either the consciousness of tombs and people
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who put these arguments forward is that, you know, if you say, you know, English is an ethnic
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identity, that must mean you want literally everyone who is not there out of your country
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But, you know, like, I don't, you know, want to deport Rishi Sunak or Suella Breverman immediately.
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I want to, I want to, I want to, I want to go over it first.
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There's, you know, there's, there's, there's lots of people who can come from other countries,
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can also be born here and have different ethnic identities, but who can fit in and still
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exist in this society while there still is an English identity as well.
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You know, but it's, it's almost as if that they're panicking, that if, like, if you do
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admit this, suddenly there's immediate deportations of literally everybody and ethnic cleansing.
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Well, there's no mention of deportations in this entire article.
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Yeah, but, yeah, but I mean, yeah, that's, that's sort of, I guess, what would be in their
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head of like, oh, if we do admit this, then it will inevitably, everyone will definitely
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Of course, yeah, there has to be, I think some deportations and some re-migration, but,
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Well, but this is really the question, isn't it?
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It's not a question of whether anyone should go, right?
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The question is now just how many, right, need to go, right?
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That is actually where the conversation is at now.
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And as my good friend here, Laurie Wastel wrote for The Spectator, demographics is a new
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He wrote this shortly after that actual one-day conference itself, and he just lays out in
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clear detail the, as I say, the gulf of difference between people like Toombs and people who are
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more of our age and who are actually going to live for decades and decades to come, right,
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with whatever future England holds, and not just for us, but for our children as well.
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And as Laurie points out here in a poll very kindly given by Hope Not Hate, it's been suggested
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that the white British people could be a minority in the UK by the 2060s due to current immigration
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If this does happen, which one or two of the following words best describes how it makes
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Now, as you can tell there, the pleased and happy people are very, very much in the minority.
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The people who say unhappy, uneasy, disappointed are starkly higher, right?
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It's something that most people don't even really articulate, but they feel it.
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They feel that there is a sense of injustice here, especially as, you know, we constantly
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bring up, this has always been against a consented public will.
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And yet, not only is it continued, it's accelerated, right?
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And so, there's, but as I say, does it, is it really inevitable that we're going to just
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have to live with ghettos and violence in Brixton and the, the, the colonization of Barking
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and Birmingham and Sheffield and all these places that have just set themselves up in
00:25:37.140
And ultimately a demographic replacement in the end.
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No, I wouldn't, I would argue the exact opposite.
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Well, as Rupert said here just this morning, just ending mass immigration is not good enough.
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Something that we're all on board with at this point.
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But otherwise, this is, this is where the winds are.
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Well, actually, actually, in the words of Ash Sarkar, yes, lads, we're winning.
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Because as you said, Bo, many, many years ago, it is inevitable.
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So, we've got, Opunk says, a trout born in a birdcage is still a trout.
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That's true, and would most likely get eaten by the, uh...
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Wasn't it a Duke of, wasn't it a Wellesley quote, Arthur said?
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If you're born in a stable, it doesn't make you a thoroughbred or something.
00:27:01.980
That would be a very aristocratic way of explaining it.
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Uh, Alex Adamson says, in the modern day, everyone follows the American system.
00:27:10.280
The people are named after the land they're born on.
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Uh, throughout history, it's been the opposite.
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Land is named after the people who lived on it.
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It's, um, there's a schism in thought between the old world and the new world, uh, on this.
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Habsification says, the Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Frisians, uh, came and intermixed with
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the Brutonic people, which created the English people, formed a culture, and shaped this land
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Uh, we've got, uh, Wimpelzeek says, it's simple gaslighting.
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They don't believe that, uh, what they say, and don't apply it when the roles are reversed.
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They want to use a sense of fairness that they don't have, uh, against Western cultures.
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Um, and Habsification says, to maintain the cultural dominance, the indigenous people of
00:28:01.920
Britain need to maintain, uh, an ethnic majority of basically what it was in 1951, right?
00:28:10.740
Or, or, or even of that, I think that's still about the case of when I was born in 1996.
00:28:18.380
I mean, I've really noticed a change in my own hometown over these decades as well.
00:28:35.320
Um, so let's talk about all these protests that are going on, Jack.
00:28:41.180
So I've, I have been, um, covering the protests, uh, down in Epping is obviously where it kicked
00:28:46.580
off where he had the, um, this, uh, Ethiopian asylum seeker who was then, I believe he was,
00:28:52.160
he was charged with the, uh, sexual assault of a 14 year old school girl in the middle
00:28:57.960
Um, and then after that, it started spiraling across to the Britannia hotel in Canary Wharf.
00:29:03.740
Uh, I've been to Norwich as well, Waterlooville, just north of Portsmouth.
00:29:10.220
I was at Stanwell, um, on last Thursday, which is, you know, near Heathrow, Staines, West
00:29:16.800
Um, and of course, even further afield across the country, places I haven't been to, Wilmslow,
00:29:21.000
um, in, in, in Manchester, uh, Ashfield, in Nottinghamshire, Southampton, uh, as well.
00:29:27.400
Uh, and there's even more protests planned for just this Friday.
00:29:30.420
There's a national, um, protest day, um, on, uh, Friday, August the 8th.
00:29:36.020
Um, there's Aldershot as well, back to, and then some of the other, some of these other
00:29:40.300
And they're all pretty much focused on the, um, uh, on the asylum hotels.
00:29:44.040
And a lot of them have then been triggered because of, you know, basically just of,
00:29:48.440
of, uh, of sexual assaults, uh, done by the migrants.
00:29:51.220
As we just saw on, uh, what's today, Tuesday, I think it was either Saturday or Sunday when
00:29:57.460
it came out in Nuneaton that two Afghan men had been charged with the rape of just, uh,
00:30:07.700
Uh, so I believe there's going to be a protest there on Saturday, uh, and I'm going to be
00:30:12.380
Uh, and I think we just heard about another one in, yeah, it was Wilmsow in Manchester,
00:30:15.840
I think just yesterday, uh, where there had been somebody charged and asylum seeker charged
00:30:29.400
And it seems like we've just seen one literally, I mean, over the past few weeks for sure.
00:30:33.260
But, you know, these stories have been popping up, um, really sort of since the Boris wave
00:30:37.780
happened, and of course now, sorry, excuse me, uh, we bring in the, uh, the Afghans as
00:30:42.980
part of the, uh, part of the Afghan resettlement scheme.
00:30:46.080
Um, they're just being put all across the country, and either in hotels or in, um, private
00:30:51.860
accommodation, which was the case, uh, in the, of the Nuneaton, uh, Nuneaton, uh, charges.
00:30:57.240
Um, and people have just, people are just fed up with it.
00:30:59.460
Um, and as you can see, I've, I've also been, uh, on the ground, so I think we'll be seeing
00:31:05.600
Just let me know when you're going to move on to the next one, and I can keep moving it
00:31:10.880
Yeah, because you've been covering, you've been a lot of these process, haven't you?
00:31:13.900
And you've been, um, responsible for a lot of the original footage that we've had
00:31:26.880
Yeah, I will shout out a few of my other friends who've been on the ground.
00:31:34.000
Um, other loads of, um, Wesley Winter, the independent, uh, YouTuber.
00:31:38.860
Uh, there's been a bunch of people who have been, I've constantly seen at these protests
00:31:41.940
and also getting out, you know, the right footage.
00:31:44.080
And, and Wesley, for example, he was, you know, intimidated last Sunday, uh, at Epping,
00:31:49.380
you know, by one of the, uh, sort of, uh, Antifa stand up to racism, you know, thugs,
00:31:54.440
uh, who, you know, he's been on court on camera.
00:31:57.020
Uh, I think he intimidated, like, Count Dankula and Tim Pool years ago as well, right on the
00:32:02.180
I don't, I don't know if Dankula could ever be intimidated.
00:32:14.280
So, so this was from, uh, Stanwell on Thursday.
00:32:17.540
Uh, and obviously what's funny about this is that this was almost exactly two weeks after
00:32:22.920
We'll pull up the, um, just, uh, yeah, watch some of this.
00:32:25.520
So, uh, this was a little bit late into the evening where, you know, they really got, uh,
00:32:30.480
right up close, uh, to, uh, to the asylum hotel and they started just, you know, chucking
00:32:37.580
And I think one, one of the other clips as well, um, yeah, I believe would be the next
00:32:45.960
Um, yeah, this was, this was, this was just before that, uh, where they went right up the
00:32:49.840
hotel and I'll, I'll, um, leave the audio on for this one actually.
00:33:07.480
So, um, just, uh, shitting their pants, I tell you, it's come to this though.
00:33:29.380
Because before now for a few years before now, if a normal person just wanted to go up and
00:33:34.980
go into one of these hotels and just ask what's going on, what's, you're not, you're
00:33:39.580
often, they just stonewall you or actually they've got bouncers or bodyguards that tell
00:33:45.880
You're not allowed to come in and ask a question.
00:33:48.980
So that, so, so that hard baked into that eventually is something like this.
00:33:53.980
And I said, even, even actually one of those, one of the guys that goes in, you know,
00:33:56.740
one of the sort of auditors, you've got been in hotels, I believe it was last month
00:33:59.740
or a couple of months ago when he went in, you know, one of the security guards is like
00:34:02.340
threw hot coffee on him, um, and the police were there and they literally just did nothing
00:34:07.240
Um, so obviously again, this, something like this, it was inevitable.
00:34:10.440
Um, but you can see here, so this, this obviously they were able to get quite closely sign of
00:34:14.900
hotel because this one, um, you know, popped up, I think it was literally like the night
00:34:20.200
or two nights before, you know, this was announced.
00:34:22.740
Uh, and this was, you know, also two weeks post the, almost the day of the first epping
00:34:28.620
So there was no standups racism, no antifa there.
00:34:34.440
I actually got messaged by a few of them telling me to come down, uh, and, and report on it.
00:34:38.720
And literally just me, uh, and another person, um, uh, uh, AY audits, uh, who was there covering
00:34:44.140
So everyone who had the footage from there, it was basically from like one of us two.
00:34:48.460
And then for mostly me, you know, there were no other reporters there.
00:34:51.400
Um, uh, but yeah, as you can see on this one that they're able to get right up close
00:34:56.180
to the hotel because there was no, you know, unlike in, in the bell hotel in Epping, Britannia
00:35:00.480
hotel, you know, there's no, you know, ring of steel, uh, to protect it.
00:35:03.780
So people could just go right up and start banging and shouting on the windows.
00:35:08.780
Especially when, um, you saw the Epping protests and how just as a, you know, metal fences all
00:35:14.200
the way around it and, uh, vans and vans and vans of policemen.
00:35:21.080
Uh, I, I remember, uh, somebody, somebody said, uh, on Twitter, uh, over this over the
00:35:25.920
past few weeks, um, they said that this is always a, a, a deliberate point for the police
00:35:30.840
because they cannot, they, they, they can't police and control, you know, sexual assaults,
00:35:36.340
uh, robberies, muggings, burglaries, so much, so much crime, uh, they can't do.
00:35:41.980
So what they, what they will do is they'll show up in force to something like this so
00:35:46.240
that they can pretend that they still actually have, you know, a well-funded, you know, easy
00:35:51.040
to respond force, you know, to these sorts of things.
00:35:53.680
So a lot of it, I will say is, is propaganda, uh, and for show, it's like, wow, you know,
00:35:58.800
here's a billion police all with riot shields able to turn up in a heartbeat.
00:36:02.200
And then you find out they've drafted them all the way from all other places in the country.
00:36:06.780
I think there were like Northumbrian police at one of the Epping, uh, protests, uh, that I
00:36:11.080
attended, you know, they've dragged them in from all over the place just to have those
00:36:16.500
So, um, and then this here that there was, um, sorry, uh, day after, uh, day, a couple
00:36:23.440
So you had, uh, that one that you just sort of showed us Stanwell on Thursday and then
00:36:28.200
different place, different protest, different hotel on the Saturday as well.
00:36:38.080
Well, actually, technically there were three protests here.
00:36:40.860
Uh, one, they'd been coordinated to have stand up for racism, uh, which had just done
00:36:45.920
a protest, uh, six days ago in Epping, uh, you know, mobilized, uh, to get people out
00:36:53.640
So there was, they were, they started at, uh, half 12 or meant to be just outside the
00:36:58.100
Thistle city migrant hotel, which is the one that the, um, that the police had cracked
00:37:03.600
down on illegal delivery riders at just the previous month.
00:37:08.520
Um, so the, there was a small, um, uh, anti-asylum hotel protest just around the corner that started
00:37:16.660
The standups racing protest started at half 12.
00:37:18.800
I believe, uh, Diane Abbott was there, Narinda Corr.
00:37:21.860
Loads of people in central London who haven't turned out to other stuff all turned out for
00:37:25.700
Uh, and I think actually they mobilized more people by flyering it at Friday prayers at the
00:37:32.780
So it helps to get some more people out, uh, for that way.
00:37:35.480
Uh, not exactly, uh, you know, an organic crowd.
00:37:39.420
Um, but the other, other people that turned up here were Antifa as well.
00:37:42.220
They did not have, um, the, the, the planning, the police permission to do the protest there.
00:37:47.360
So they were right in the middle of the crossroads and then, you know, it got a little bit tasty.
00:37:50.620
So, uh, this footage here, uh, we have a woman who came in with a union jack, uh, and a
00:37:55.680
masked man wearing an England t-shirt going up to the Antifa.
00:38:00.100
This is the masked Antifa in the middle of the crossroads there.
00:38:05.200
I'll just turn it down because you never know when they're going to throw out something
00:38:13.660
Um, but yeah, so, uh, the police then obviously immediately surrounded, uh, these two.
00:38:18.680
Uh, I don't know if they came from the other protests or they just went straight there.
00:38:23.240
Um, what's, uh, what's interesting, I've, I've just been in touch actually recently with
00:38:26.920
the, with the guy in the England shirt there, uh, who's, you know, then trying to get his
00:38:30.160
story out claiming that the arrest wasn't exactly legal, uh, and so on.
00:38:33.960
Uh, I believe she was, uh, interviewed just by Ben Leo from GB news at the time, which
00:38:38.980
Um, but yeah, so he was, uh, obviously actually, if you skip forward slightly in the footage,
00:38:42.460
uh, you'll be able to see, uh, him getting bundled away.
00:38:46.260
Uh, yeah, pull a few, a little bit further forward.
00:38:49.740
Yeah, so yes, yes, so right, right, uh, right near there basically.
00:38:54.660
Him just getting arrested, um, straight away and, uh, actually taken to, uh, the police
00:39:01.160
He's not doing the classic thing of, you know, arrested for breach of the peace.
00:39:07.240
It's like a dozen cops to arrest that one fella.
00:39:10.340
Well said, it's all completely the, the show of force of the entire thing.
00:39:14.160
Um, and you know, and again, he was, he was actually taken to the police station, um,
00:39:18.920
and, you know, and held now on bail rather than being, uh, arrested and de-arrested and
00:39:23.960
just moved away as you usually do when protests and counter-protesters get, uh, get too close
00:39:29.780
Um, so I'll see here the, um, so yeah, so this is, this is, this is the actual, the state
00:39:33.620
of the stand up to racism, uh, lot, uh, who you can tell are.
00:39:39.760
No, uh, all middle-class, lovey, you know, white liberal type.
00:39:44.640
Uh, this is something that, uh, colleague of mine, freelance, uh, reporter had been covering
00:39:49.580
Um, Jack, I can't remember his, can't remember his surname.
00:39:52.500
Um, but he, he, he noticed, you know, quite rightly so as I have that the stand up racism
00:39:57.000
protests, uh, are very middle-class, whereas the anti-scident protests are very working class.
00:40:03.900
Uh, and these people will not live exactly right around the corner.
00:40:07.160
Whereas those protesting the hotels who are the working class, you know, salt of the
00:40:11.580
earth, English people, they will literally, I've literally met some of the Britannia hotel
00:40:17.720
Um, you know, these people will come from, you know, wherever else in Islington, uh, where
00:40:21.980
you don't have to suffer, uh, from, uh, you know, the, the, you know, the threat of these
00:40:27.860
Stand up to racism may as well be stand up for sex criminals.
00:40:32.020
Stand up for rapists, I like to call them, you know, revolting, absolutely revolting.
00:40:41.360
Whether they're brainwashed or they actually are in favour of more sex criminals.
00:40:49.820
Actually, I don't even need to play a while because, you know, you just see from the preview
00:40:55.240
Um, and, uh, you know, probably need to, probably need to do less avocado toast eating.
00:41:00.900
The reinforcements from Islington mosque hadn't quite turned up yet.
00:41:04.600
Um, but on the, uh, on the next clip here, uh, this is, uh, what happens when, uh, the police
00:41:09.480
actually started, uh, they'll go into the Antifa crowd to try and arrest a couple of people.
00:41:15.280
And then, you know, this then is the result, uh, where it, uh, it got quite tasty.
00:41:25.240
Just, uh, and of course, all of the, in the backgrounds.
00:41:31.920
And, uh, all of the, all of the press, uh, trying to get as best, uh, best footage as,
00:41:45.100
You can see there's a one officer there just having been dragged by about the scruff of
00:41:48.700
his neck by his colleague, um, hat knocked off, um, clearly.
00:41:52.240
And what's funny about this is really, you know, especially if they knew the Antifa were
00:41:56.940
going to turn up now, it wasn't permitted, but you know, there had been flyers around.
00:42:00.220
It was pretty obvious that these people were going to be there.
00:42:04.460
Where is the, you know, the guys with the truncheons and the bats and the full gear, you know,
00:42:09.520
ready to completely beat these guys senseless if need, if they need to.
00:42:13.740
Um, and clearly that, that has been the reaction from, from Antifa, extremely, extremely violent
00:42:18.920
ones, you know, literally now locking arms, um, holding the police, holding against the
00:42:23.260
Um, whereas, you know, like I've seen so many riot squads, um, turn up to the, uh, anti-asylum
00:42:31.120
protests and yet nothing's, nothing's visible over this way.
00:42:34.240
Or the mounted police on the big horses with the giant nightsticks stuff.
00:42:40.860
No, they're all just little indicators, aren't they?
00:42:43.280
It's, it's just the little things all mounting together to just visibly show you which side
00:42:49.560
the establishment is there to serve, which side of the law is there to protect.
00:43:03.500
Especially because they were part of, you know, a process that did not have permission to
00:43:08.760
Uh, you know, it obviously all just adds to it.
00:43:14.620
Uh, so what happened here now, the Britannia Hotel had been, um, quite regularly, uh, protested.
00:43:19.880
Obviously one of the clips that I believe was played, uh, on here previously was the,
00:43:24.420
uh, uh, the green councillor, uh, who was, uh, shouted at and called a certain word.
00:43:29.060
Um, yeah, and that's, uh, and that also was behind it when, you know, mega viral.
00:43:33.280
Uh, so the Britannia Hotel has been relatively more constant, you know, that first week there
00:43:38.500
And, um, uh, there have been people watching, which is why actually we got, I believe it was
00:43:42.480
on, on like Thursday night, Friday morning at 1.33 in the morning when they bust in the
00:43:49.920
Yeah, so they have been now confirmed they're there.
00:43:51.660
Uh, so the Britannia guys obviously having, doing quite a regular, you know, protests,
00:43:58.820
Uh, they changed it up a little bit on Sunday and the community organized together a, uh,
00:44:04.780
Um, so what we'll have here footage of now, we will want to hear the first audio for this,
00:44:10.360
Uh, is, is their incredible chants where they're going from the Jubilee, uh, tube station
00:44:15.640
in Canary Wharf, around the corner to the Britannia Hotel.
00:44:18.720
And this is literally just women and kids in the march.
00:44:21.240
They told everyone like there's going to be, there was a second protest, say it all
00:44:24.320
for 3pm, uh, which we'll see more of that, uh, in, in a few clips, uh, later.
00:44:29.580
Um, but this is literally women and children dressed in pink, marching against illegal migration
00:44:38.340
Two, three, four, maybe you're never alone in the heart, and I love them to say.
00:44:52.040
Maybe it's because of the London arm, that I think of the way out of my life.
00:44:56.760
I'd us never see anything inside of me, that's your tip of the tsunamis.
00:45:04.760
When do we want the bus to stop, when do we want it, now?
00:45:27.760
When do we want the bus to stop, when do we want it, now?
00:45:36.040
When do we want the bus to stop, when do we want it, now?
00:45:40.380
And yeah, that has been the sentiment, you know, the boats have to stop.
00:45:44.980
And that chance, as you can just see, so many, like at least two to three hundred maybe,
00:45:52.140
you know, women and kids, all dressed in pink, marching against mass migration,
00:45:55.800
singing traditionally London tunes, you know, the Union Jacks, the England flags flying.
00:46:04.580
Yeah, well, and what's more as well, one of the things that I appreciated was on the banner
00:46:08.080
where they were saying, you know, not far right, but not far wrong.
00:46:11.020
You know, like just mock the label, mock the label, just entirely, you know,
00:46:16.180
we're at the point now where it's wonderful to see that it's filtered down
00:46:19.840
to just wonderful, patriotic normies, that they don't need to be frightened
00:46:29.680
You hold every morally correct card in this argument, right?
00:46:36.040
You can see the confidence, you know, just the boldness on the street.
00:46:41.200
You can only imagine people in government, in the cabinet.
00:46:47.260
Somebody like Emily Thornberry, be aghast by seeing such a thing.
00:46:55.280
This is the sort of thing that does need to be stamped out as far as they're concerned.
00:47:01.360
And so, as we'll just see in some of these next clips,
00:47:05.160
so the women and children, you know, they didn't just march there.
00:47:08.020
They actually, surprisingly, they, you know, resisted the police orders.
00:47:14.420
But they literally got to the Britannia Hotel, started doing the stuff.
00:47:17.700
Now, the police, you know, started telling them,
00:47:20.080
oh, yeah, like, everyone, can you stay on the pavement just behind there,
00:47:24.500
you know, where they would want them stretched out
00:47:26.680
and moved slightly away from the front of the hotel.
00:47:32.840
And they decided, right, in the middle of the road, we're sitting down.
00:47:38.020
Again, I just can't, you know, think of the optics of, you know,
00:47:44.820
police, you know, six-foot guys, you know, bearded moustaches or whatever,
00:47:50.340
you know, then, you know, bundling them away into police fans,
00:47:53.700
you know, handcuffs behind, again, all dressed in pink.
00:47:57.540
The headlines on every single paper, it would be so hard to deny that, you know,
00:48:05.660
you're just shutting down these protests because it's terrible for them to see.
00:48:12.180
You could see the cop there even sort of smiling, really.
00:48:15.160
But, yeah, like, written on their flags to save our kids, save our women.
00:48:26.960
So this is more when the police started going through the crowd,
00:48:32.520
individually talking to them, being like, guys, can you please move?
00:48:38.020
Again, I don't necessarily need the audio for this one where the officers are just
00:48:42.860
gently trying to persuade them that everything's fine.
00:48:47.760
So this officer's, you know, here saying to these two ladies, going,
00:48:50.900
oh, well, you know, it's all about your safety.
00:48:53.320
You know, like, see, like, you guys are in the middle of the road.
00:48:56.980
And she's responding, well, I'm pretty sure that the cars can see us.
00:49:00.740
And also, I can look after my own personal safety.
00:49:05.620
I do appreciate the concern, but I'm going to be staying here for a little bit.
00:49:09.860
And this is that kind of cheeky response to them,
00:49:14.220
where obviously it's kind of hard for them to stop smiling, you know.
00:49:21.080
You could see multiple officers talking to them.
00:49:23.500
They, you know, they were at first threatened with arrest if they didn't move.
00:49:29.760
But, you know, I think the police worked out that there's basically no chance
00:49:38.280
Not only is there no chance, but there's no threat.
00:49:44.220
At one point, they were going to move because an ambulance was coming down the way.
00:49:54.180
So, you know, unlike, you know, Just Up Oil or whoever,
00:49:57.240
you know, if there was actually a legitimate emergency need to clear the road,
00:50:01.380
We'll move out the way and then we're going to sit back down.
00:50:03.400
But there was actually no need for them to finish it off there.
00:50:09.820
Well, I worked in Canary Wolf for a few years and Canary Wolf is a ghost town on weekends.
00:50:19.740
And so, yeah, on a Saturday or a Sunday, there's nothing going on, really.
00:50:31.160
So just after this, I think we'll see in the, oh, yeah.
00:50:35.080
Well, this is one I pulled up because it got quite a bit of attention there.
00:50:47.540
And they just don't want to be sexually assaulted.
00:50:54.080
Can we stop importing, you know, men from countries that are 22 times more likely to be convicted for sexual assault, please?
00:51:04.900
Sorry, the rapist must continue to be in your country.
00:51:07.940
No, says the past, what, three governments now.
00:51:17.560
You must have these unknown illegal foreigners.
00:51:26.760
So, just in the next clip here, this is what happens just before three o'clock,
00:51:33.440
Now, the Telegraph and other people, you know, kind of started to run with, you know,
00:51:40.660
And then they said, oh, that these, that this protest, you know, this protest had been hijacked
00:51:45.680
by, you know, masked men in Balaclavas who came out with England flags and red and white smoke flares.
00:51:54.760
This was just as the crossover between the Women and Children March happened.
00:51:58.080
And as you can, you, you know, in the audio of this, you can hear all the women and children,
00:52:04.340
you know, like shouting, you know, with joy that these guys have now turned up.
00:52:09.300
You know, they were there, you know, turned up in Balaclavas, masked.
00:52:12.520
A lot of them said, you know, because they had like jobs that they didn't want to be,
00:52:17.000
But all that they did, unlike the masked Antifa lot, where they really, you know, fully,
00:52:21.280
you know, grappled with the cops, is that, you know, they basically turned up as a show
00:52:25.060
of force and saying, you know, like, look, the women and children of here are peacefully
00:52:29.380
And we, the men of this community are also not going to stand for this.
00:52:33.320
So, you know, there was no punches thrown, you know, towards the police.
00:52:39.220
They made a scene and they said, you know, look, this is, you know, we are not going to stand
00:52:43.860
for the rape and sexual assault of our wives, our sisters, our daughters, you know.
00:52:48.240
So it's like, hey, you know, migrants at this hotel, you know, have it.
00:52:52.040
It's kind of the, kind of the attitude that you can just see, kind of just see in the clip
00:53:13.860
So, as you can see, so while, while they are all messed up, um, like they, they, they,
00:53:41.740
um like they they were just there to come and do that you know they weren't there to start fights
00:53:47.620
with the police unlike when i oh they weren't here to start fights with anybody unlike in in
00:53:51.960
norwich for example where i was a couple of weeks ago uh where three mass antifa literally went
00:53:56.760
straight into the anti-asylum crowd and you know to cause trouble and they were peacefully ejected
00:54:02.180
you know they were sort of pushed out again no punches thrown uh from the anti-asylum side just
00:54:07.520
they were forced out you know they're obviously they were shouted at and called you know nonce
00:54:10.640
protectors etc um but you know they were they were moved back um out of the police lines and now
00:54:16.380
we'll see the the police response uh to these guys turning up with masks and flares okay
00:54:21.620
volume's gone on that one anyway yeah what uh not sure if they can hear it on there
00:54:34.200
have you got a license for that saint george's flare yeah exactly um so what caused them to run
00:54:45.500
where did all this come from uh like the police just started going for them oh right right the lines
00:54:51.780
uh i heard somebody say you know like um mentioned like you know like you've got pyrotechnics on you
00:54:57.160
um so what happened there is i believe they were just kind of being stopped and searched
00:55:01.160
sort of a lot of them then got de-balaclathered and then were just allowed to join the protest
00:55:05.800
right so some were arrested i think one of them maybe was taken away but a lot of the guys that
00:55:10.440
you can see there uh were then had their masks for something removed by police and then put back
00:55:15.400
into protest right and then some of them put their masks on back on after that um but i think i think
00:55:20.200
the point of this was for the police to know who these guys were primarily i believe that was a
00:55:25.560
um primary primary point um i agree with the point that morgoth made though a few weeks ago actually
00:55:31.560
that really i don't think the flares are good optics just ever generally they give off a sort of
00:55:37.720
paramilitary-esque look to them and when you see that the way that women the women are handling things
00:55:43.080
are i i can understand the concern from the chaps to obviously want to to cover your face uh given that
00:55:48.920
you know that the law is against you um i mean to some extent i'm kind of splitting hairs you know
00:55:55.080
i'm trying to aim for perfection but and it's just me i'm not in the thick of it but um but i'm glad
00:56:01.800
that they were you know released yeah but yeah so just after this this is where it started to get a
00:56:07.160
little bit worse so actually uh this was actually we'll play the um actually skip one all right maybe
00:56:12.680
what yeah so this is my footage of this uh so i'll give you a very quick rundown of what i was told
00:56:17.400
by eyewitnesses uh this happened uh so this this is what i heard from eyewitnesses uh the man who's
00:56:23.480
being arrested here uh allegedly uh asked a police officer for his uh for his badge number from about
00:56:29.960
the same distance we me and you are are away bo and the police then approached him and then something
00:56:36.120
happened um when they when they got up close i don't know if he threw a punch or the officer threw a
00:56:43.320
punch but yeah the eyewitnesses claimed that you know he didn't do nothing but i didn't see it myself
00:56:48.360
i can't say exactly what happened all i can see here is the aftermath um and now one of the eyewitnesses
00:56:54.600
did say as i said there that uh that he was kneed in the face during the arrest and as we're going
00:56:59.160
to see uh actually just um actually yeah maybe maybe quickly back to the back to the last clip
00:57:05.160
um just as a quick that's four seconds you'll just see in the kind of bottom left middle of the
00:57:09.480
screen here uh there you go punches straight on him that officer right in the middle of the down
00:57:18.920
fully laying into him and i'm like how is that not police brutality you know yeah yeah you know um
00:57:26.920
and weirdly that one did not got as much attention as some of our other clips here i don't know if
00:57:31.800
it's being if it's the online got online safety acted in some way or just you know taking them down
00:57:36.760
from the algorithm because of you know obvious violence um but yeah so so so this is the footage
00:57:41.320
i then got of this uh where again during this arrest in midway there was this uh there was this little
00:57:46.840
girl um who who ended up getting um basically hit in the face uh by officers i obviously accidentally
00:57:54.120
uh when i moved away and um at the other side of the road uh so just basically back behind me
00:58:01.320
a bunch of the guys who were obviously who were in balaclavas you know tried to rush towards the
00:58:06.360
police because obviously like hey you know our friends getting um arrested and seemingly seemingly
00:58:11.800
uh assaulted uh by the police so during that when one of the guys was being held back uh by the
00:58:17.080
officers uh his arm got broken uh it was like i saw it it was uh there there is there is i believe
00:58:22.600
there are some images of it online but it was pretty like it was not a nice um right it was it was
00:58:29.640
obviously broken i saw the blood coming down from it and he was bundled away um in an ambulance after
00:58:34.280
this as well uh if you just skip a little bit forward here one thing i would say moved away
00:58:38.920
there's a general there's a general uh debate around whether some people say i think i've seen
00:58:44.040
morgoth say in the past don't ever turn up to any of these things ever because you're just simply giving
00:58:49.320
the state what it wants i don't agree with that take i think peaceful protest is good and valuable
00:58:56.600
but one thing i would say is never attempt to rest if the police have decided they want to arrest you
00:59:02.440
and there's you do nothing there's you versus four or five cops and they're trying to get your
00:59:06.920
arm behind your back to put just let them do it at that point yeah never ever resist arrest when
00:59:12.040
they've decided they want to terrible idea yeah yeah that is sort of stupid that is really stupid
00:59:18.200
uh that that will never ever work out well for you yeah anyway that's my little bit of advice um
00:59:25.080
so you can see you know they were just again you know obviously forcefully dragged him down uh to the
00:59:29.480
vans and all to get arrested moving away and you can see a lot of you know people who are you know
00:59:33.480
press getting up close yeah i saw other press get shoved away uh by uh by the police uh this woman
00:59:39.080
here is just about to be uh uh just about to be shoved back again uh they were very you know forceful
00:59:44.680
with anyone who even got too close even if you identified as you know identified yourself as press
00:59:49.080
clearly you know pretty clearly uh pretty clearly as i did with my eyes you know bat you know bat uh badger
00:59:53.880
around my neck as i do because uh you know i will say having that that and the suits going to these
00:59:58.680
things yeah it um it basically is a big red signals officers going hey you know cops you know please
01:00:03.720
don't please don't you know touch me or whatever i i you know hey i may agree with these things but i'm
01:00:08.920
here to uh i'm here straight to report on it so always turn up to a protest in the suit yes um a big
01:00:15.960
blue uh body armor that says press in massive white letters on it um but yeah so actually i think with the
01:00:22.440
last clips here so this is um just after that um now obviously there's allegations now now we saw
01:00:28.440
we saw with the city hotel as we saw earlier uh that was when as i mentioned the start of july
01:00:33.640
there had been a specific crackdown on illegal workers there uh you know delivering for delivery
01:00:38.680
and we'd seen you know delivery new reeds guys come in and out and i think in these cases it's more
01:00:44.040
that they have been delivering to the resident the residents that are guests uh of the hotel um
01:00:49.960
um so what happened here is an uber eats guy i think we just played this play this one in the
01:00:54.760
background without the audio because it goes on just uh just goes on for a few minutes um and we
01:00:59.880
just have that on on as we mentioned this uh he you know he's now trying to get away from the hotel
01:01:04.920
after having done his delivery and everybody else is kind of not happy uh that he's um you know been
01:01:11.160
feeding uh the guys that are inside yeah and has become complicit in you know in in uh in that system
01:01:17.080
um so the footage here basically shows him getting uh chased off by the mob but also
01:01:23.160
chased off and also stopped from leaving at the same time just surrounded you know people are
01:01:28.040
calling him you know pedo apologists um all sorts of uh all sorts of words but again no violence uh
01:01:35.080
and that is the main theme of what i've seen here there has been there's been harassment there's been
01:01:39.960
intimidation there is as we saw in in the samuel clips earlier you know beer bottles thrown at the
01:01:45.000
hotel yes there has not been uh in these protests from the anti-asylum side uh it risen to the level
01:01:52.040
of you know decking people in the face smashing glass bottles around them you know really going
01:01:57.160
for the police officers you know going for the kill you know there has been none of that which is the
01:02:01.320
difference between what happened this year what happened at southport and what happened after that
01:02:06.200
you know they were trying to burn down migrant hotels you know there was police vans set on fire i saw
01:02:11.720
myself you know there was that was fully you know just pure unadulterated anger you know this has been
01:02:19.400
you know peaceful anger just simmering the lid like like like the uh the lid of the pot is about to blow
01:02:26.440
off but it's not it's still just simmering still just boiling um but it's not exploded and at that
01:02:33.880
level uh i believe you know these guys are going to be able to keep the protests going because i i think
01:02:39.560
the thing was with with with anger you know as i wrote in my critic article you know it's it's it's
01:02:45.960
hot it burns it burns bright but it burns fast and that's why southport and after that was only really
01:02:52.920
six days and then a couple sort of days after that we're already over like two and a half weeks into
01:02:58.680
this so far and there's no signs of stopping as i said friday there's going to be more protests across
01:03:03.320
the country i think there's 12 locations simultaneously at 6 p.m going so far then
01:03:08.840
uneaton is gonna you know there's gonna be a protest there on saturday and there's more that
01:03:12.760
just keeps constantly popping up you know like if one if one community you know tires a little bit
01:03:18.200
and you know goes down like two more are gonna pop up to replace it like this is the protest hydra
01:03:23.800
um that we're seeing honestly um and and i i and as i as i mentioned if they if they keep it to
01:03:30.200
once or twice a week maybe once in a week day after work and maybe once on a saturday or sunday
01:03:35.400
um this can keep going on indefinitely and it becomes a rallying point for the communities as
01:03:39.960
well yeah we're like hey yeah once a week once or twice a week we all go out with our neighbors we
01:03:45.240
stand together against men who are you know as trump would say bringing crime you know they're bringing
01:03:50.440
drugs they're rapists they're horrible people you know standing against these guys um every week and
01:03:56.040
you know with the community it does bring the community together i imagine i don't know how many
01:03:59.960
of these people would have known their neighbors as well as they do now after regularly attending
01:04:04.360
these protests it does seem to be ironically you know like when when when everything's when
01:04:09.000
everything does look dark it does you know create the gel that now binds binds communities together
01:04:15.400
it's been um it's been genuinely remarkable uh over these past few weeks to witness this spreading
01:04:21.560
to genuinely just see it and and the thing is as well to just see it spreading so organically
01:04:27.000
you know grassroots level organization from just concerned moms and dads well members of the
01:04:32.680
community so on that there's been there's been a couple different um ways it's been organized in
01:04:37.000
terms of either you've had um more regularly um you know well-known you know sort of organized people
01:04:43.720
have an experience in politics so norwich you've got um james harvey and sydney jones who regularly
01:04:49.720
organized protests organized like anti-transgender protests previously in the town uh obviously in epping
01:04:54.200
you know you have people like you have the homeland guys who are over there who are you know involved
01:04:58.680
in in bringing some stuff together but uh again in in stanwell and at the britannia hotel uh these
01:05:04.680
were just you know facebook whatsapp groups that were created you know at the britannia people there
01:05:09.400
just people just saw that this happened they went down as a live streamer and then that's how i found
01:05:13.880
about it i went down other people went down and then they just started you know literally locals who've
01:05:18.760
never done anything like this before in their life will just start a facebook group which is like
01:05:22.360
x place says no to y hotel and then you know it'll blow up to like 2 000 you know community members
01:05:29.160
and then and then everyone will just start chipping in like the women's and children's march that was
01:05:33.000
just something that somebody suggested in the whatsapp chat like you know a week ago or so um and and
01:05:38.440
then it just everyone thought oh that's a great idea yeah let's do that let's bring in it's a very you
01:05:41.960
know flat top uh on you know on some of these yeah so some of them have you know you know community
01:05:47.160
organizers helping to run things and grab stuff together who have experience of it but a lot of it is a lot
01:05:51.800
of it is just you know you know flat top hierarchy of locals in facebook groups and whatsapp chats yeah
01:05:57.640
well thank you very much for for covering it all as well for for giving us all that great work
01:06:02.920
really really invaluable thank you uh let's go through some of the rumble rants for that segment then
01:06:08.360
uh you've got uh win pill seek says a humble contribution to the chainmail fund for the cameraman i wish
01:06:16.360
they'd um let us uh film in plate armor uh i saw someone tried to sneak attack on the cop in ireland
01:06:24.280
uh yeah yeah yeah yeah plate armor and suits chainmail at least a chainmail vest yeah
01:06:30.680
for all costs i could i you know i i could do with one of those if uh if i go to antivore again
01:06:35.560
um we've got um and then we've got uh alex adamson 55 again says resisting arrest only ever gets you
01:06:45.080
more charges uh just let them do it improve your innocence in court otherwise you'll uh get put in
01:06:52.200
jail for actual crimes exactly and you'll get yourself hurt yeah yeah and that and that if they
01:06:57.880
decide if they've decided they're gonna pick you out of the crowd and five or six of them uh there's no
01:07:04.520
point there's really no point trying uh trying to resist at that point was that all this needs
01:07:09.880
to remain peaceful and uh you know peaceful protest involves you know peacefully uh letting yourself get
01:07:15.240
arrested yeah peacefully but try not to get arrested in the first place right yeah yeah yeah don't do
01:07:20.440
anything like that uh to get yourself arrested in the first instance that's right um pardon me
01:07:28.840
all right gentlemen shall we talk a little bit about mrs pelosi
01:07:32.680
i'm a huge fan of her work yeah she's been great hasn't she she's been so good fantastic
01:07:52.600
um so um yeah she's in the news cycle a bit today for her sort of fairly obvious corruption
01:07:58.520
right oh no wait that's what she was oh yeah right yeah that's why she's in the news cycle
01:08:04.760
at the moment so i thought i'd cover it because i've had a bit of a bee in my bonnet about
01:08:08.280
mrs paul pelosi for a while i wrote an article about i'll get onto that in a minute but first to
01:08:11.960
mention now the now the actual segment has started that irelander part four is available
01:08:17.480
yes now so think about buying that 15 quid off the website it's got loads of loads of good people
01:08:25.960
in it right uh bargain we've got morgoth ed dutton ed dutton carl the boss yeah yeah so um yeah do
01:08:33.080
consider buying that um okay so back to back to mrs pelosi um it has been alleged for years now
01:08:42.040
um that she may well uh be involved in well insider trading i mean technically insider trading has got
01:08:49.560
a quite specific meaning but we all know what we mean by anyway right so the question is is she above
01:08:55.160
the law or her and paul rather there there she is a great woman she's been a congresswoman for
01:09:02.120
california or the san francisco area since like 1987. i mean she's old as she she's 85 now
01:09:12.040
i mean honestly look here's a picture of her with jfk oh wow that's how old she is shouldn't
01:09:18.200
it even look evil um yeah yeah yeah the corruption hasn't actually spread to her visage by that point
01:09:24.360
um so uh uh yeah uh but everyone knows that for quite a while she has been basically must have been
01:09:33.560
giving information insider information to her husband paul who is a trader
01:09:40.520
right he's an investment uh bod uh because his trading record is absolutely remarkable
01:09:50.600
oh really he uh well her both of them together yeah um are one of the all-time greatest investors
01:09:59.880
in all in all of wall street history i mean trump said exactly that well it's because they're lucky
01:10:03.880
right yes right he's just he's just a genius just knows the markets he just buys the dip knows the
01:10:10.280
grind that's all it is um but it's quite remarkable i mean i wrote i wrote an article uh a while ago
01:10:17.240
what like three years ago um and i'm saying things like um they've definitely done nothing wrong
01:10:24.200
obviously being sarcastic they've definitely definitely done anything wrong if you think
01:10:29.800
they've done anything wrong that's on you that's because you're mad um yeah uh if you think they should
01:10:36.680
be investigated by the ftc or the or the doj or anything like that that's just because you're
01:10:43.160
crazy you're some sort of crazy mega loving what do i say a white supremacist mega loving slack-jawed
01:10:49.640
middle american hillbilly there's no other explanation for it because the pelosi's have not done anything
01:10:56.200
wrong they are beyond reproach there's no question that they could have done anything wrong according to the
01:11:02.680
pelosi's right yeah right there's just nothing to see here ever um i'll talk about various other uh
01:11:10.600
various other things she's done because she's so obnoxious right apart from being obviously fairly
01:11:15.880
obviously corrupt um just on top of that really really obnoxious obviously um like the the classic
01:11:23.480
evil lefty karen my i think my favorite pelosi moment was it her who was saying thank you george floyd
01:11:29.960
for dying yeah yeah that was her oh yeah there's there's chuck schumer in the background of course
01:11:35.480
right yeah all this sort of all this sort of um it's like it's all like a pan-african-y flag yeah it
01:11:40.440
is yeah it was yeah and taking an instantly she couldn't even stand up from that people had to help
01:11:44.840
her up i mean it's always it's always funny whether she's too old to be in oh don't ask her about term
01:11:51.000
limits because she'll literally say don't ask me about that that's a waste of my time to even ask me that
01:11:57.720
question i won't even address it she feels that way for trump as well does she well unlimited term
01:12:04.040
limits oh wow that's a great idea but the question is i mean is she above the law or not because there
01:12:12.120
are already certain laws there's one from 2012 um so you're not supposed to do that you're not supposed
01:12:18.680
to give information right to either trade for yourself or to you know close people the people
01:12:24.680
that are close to you certainly your spouse even because the amount of power that they hold she
01:12:30.600
holds particularly being um very very senior congressman she was head or she's uh the majority
01:12:36.280
leader in the house a couple of times yeah well she i think she still is the minority leader in the
01:12:41.640
house right so the most senior democratic person in congress okay someone like that their power is
01:12:47.480
extreme they can just say that they're thinking of introducing emotion there's no law there will
01:12:55.800
not be a law for years even if it all goes perfectly but they're just thinking about doing this one thing
01:13:00.840
that will move can move the market the markets will react to something like that
01:13:06.520
um and they may not even have any intention of actually doing it so it's so obvious isn't it it's so
01:13:12.280
easy yeah she can say to her husband we're thinking of saying this doing a press conference tomorrow
01:13:17.400
or next week about this that will move the market it will make this company either go up or down in
01:13:23.320
share price if it's going to go down short sell it if it's likely to go up buy a bit of it it's just so
01:13:30.360
straightforward it's so obvious and they don't even hide it all that much it's not like there's some
01:13:33.720
sort of complicated shell companies that paul pelosi's doing he's hiding he's hiding it in swiss
01:13:39.720
because he's doing it through the cayman islands through many different into no it's just him
01:13:43.480
trading yeah in his own name i i think i think one of them wasn't it wasn't it um nvidia that she
01:13:49.480
or he invested in and obviously that was because at the time you know it shut up um because there
01:13:54.680
was all all the microchip and stuff going on re-taiwan and then the us government says oh we're
01:13:59.480
gonna onshore we know we're gonna do stuff around this and that i believe happened at around the same
01:14:04.280
time that she invested or he invested in nvidia i'm not entirely sure on the timeline but
01:14:09.560
i'm pretty sure that's sounds about right there are loads of examples so it's not this isn't just
01:14:14.760
sort of a right-wing talking point there's nothing to back it up there's loads of receipts there's
01:14:18.520
not just a receipt or two billion there's loads of receipts people follow what they do or what paul
01:14:25.000
trades in quite closely uh we'll talk about that in a moment oh look there's paul do you remember when
01:14:29.640
he was assaulted a few years ago that we no one ever talks about anymore no i've never seen that
01:14:33.800
before in my life whatever came of that right i didn't really follow it or the guy i went to prison for
01:14:38.120
life right okay um so one day when nancy wasn't home the police were called to their san francisco
01:14:46.120
home where there was some intruder with a hammer pulled in his boxer shorts for some reason he was
01:14:53.720
just having a chill evening so nothing to see i don't know nothing to see him move along that
01:15:01.160
oh do you remember the time when he was uh drunk driving called drunk driving no i don't know no i
01:15:06.360
know i don't remember that yeah he was driving i don't think that happened truly there's no evidence of
01:15:13.400
this anywhere anywhere at all untouchable so various people josh hawley a senator um i really like josh
01:15:20.360
he seems he actually seems to be one of the good guys right yeah she seems to be clean and got a
01:15:25.720
conscience it seems to me one of the good guys so he's uh they want to introduce a bill it won't get
01:15:32.040
through until if it goes through until the next presidential term so it's a few years down the
01:15:36.440
line before it's full-blown law but colloquially colloquially they're calling it the pelosi act
01:15:42.360
yeah um because her insider trading is so egregious and so obvious so let's just let um the white house
01:15:51.880
press secretary say a few words here where someone ask her a question about it this idea to put a ban
01:15:57.240
on stock trading for members of congress is even a thing is because of nancy pelosi i mean she is is
01:16:03.320
is rightfully criticized because she makes think 174 000 a year yet she has a net worth of approximately
01:16:10.840
413 million in 2024 nancy pelosi just to say that again because we missed it her salary is
01:16:17.560
something in the order of 175 odd 170 180 000 right especially if you're like the speaker of the
01:16:22.840
speaker of the house yeah it seems a reasonable salary to be one of the most important people
01:16:26.920
in america politically but it's not a fantastic amount of money i mean converted to uk it's like
01:16:32.360
a hundred grand a hundred yeah so it's like a hundred it's a decent salary but it's not it's not crazy
01:16:37.480
but it's like six figures yeah they're worth something in the order probably of 400 million
01:16:43.320
hmm hmm how does that add up how does that make any kind of sense it's just a representation
01:16:52.920
they've just made use of that okay yeah um i don't think they have isis in america but anyway
01:16:57.480
gambling you know let's let her uh let's let her continue here
01:17:01.720
it's nearly 413 million in 2024 nancy pelosi's stock portfolio this was a fascinating statistic
01:17:09.960
to me grew 70 percent in one year in 2024 and her portfolio outperformed every single large hedge
01:17:17.880
fund in that same year and even more than doubled the returns of warren buffett's berkshire
01:17:23.080
hathaway so i think the president stands with the american people on this he doesn't want to see
01:17:26.680
people like nancy pelosi enriching themselves off of public service and ripping off their
01:17:31.080
constituents in the process as for the mechanics of the legislation how it will move forward
01:17:35.320
the white house continues to be in discussions okay so um 70 is crazy it's unbelievable it's like
01:17:45.160
i'm quite literally i'm using the word in the literal sense it's unbelievable literally um i worked
01:17:49.400
in asset management and fund management for quite a few years i worked for jp morgan asset management i was
01:17:53.800
never a fund manager or a trader i want to make that clear i never got anywhere near that but i worked
01:17:59.480
around fund management to the point where we were looking up prices every single day and all that
01:18:04.280
sort of thing so i know what is reasonable okay some funds professionally managed funds a fund managed
01:18:11.320
by a team of jp morgan economists might lose money it might well lose money when i was there they had a
01:18:17.640
japan fund and it would lose two percent a year or something it was crap right um if you invested in a
01:18:23.480
fund that got 10 or 15 that's good that's quite healthy if you get more than just what a normal
01:18:29.240
bank would give you an interest you're winning right so if you get if you invest in a fund or any sort
01:18:34.760
of fund and it does 15 20 that's really good that's really good there was one i think for a while for
01:18:40.920
a small window of time they had an india fund which was higher than that it was like 30 35 so that was
01:18:46.920
really good yes like so double that you're whistling all the way to the bank if you've got that one
01:18:51.400
right so and but even the very very very best investors the very best hedge funds won't get
01:18:58.840
anywhere near 65 70 percent is again as i say quite literally not credible to do that well i mean you
01:19:07.560
you know you know what my conclusion is from this um is that obviously jp morgan should hire paul
01:19:13.080
pelosi right now and he'll he'll he'll double triple their investment funds with his incredible
01:19:17.960
genius brain now like his strategy it's gone jp morgan you know give him you know and and he'll do
01:19:23.240
the salary for you know 170 000 a year um you know quite a quite a quite a cheap bargain what is paul
01:19:30.440
pelosi's strategy the pelosi strategy what is it i mean i guess he can just see the future i guess
01:19:36.600
he's got some sort of scrying chamber all right yeah he's an auger he can read in the entrails
01:19:43.560
of a sacrificed animal um but so he's like his precog abilities are incredible he uh you know
01:19:50.600
outperforming they said he outperformed barkshire hathaway uh warren buffett one of the greatest
01:19:55.720
investors of all time somebody like um um peter lynch or benjamin graham benjamin graham an old time
01:20:03.000
oldie worldie one of the greatest value investors of all times will get nowhere near that those sort of
01:20:07.640
returns but uh joel soros famously very astute investor he might not agree with him in everything
01:20:14.600
else he does but he was an astute good investor wouldn't get those numbers so it doesn't make sense
01:20:21.000
it doesn't add up so uh and we all know why we all know why it's because she can just say to him
01:20:28.440
we're going to do xyz and it's going to mean google or whatever is going to is going to go
01:20:34.120
high and stay high for at least a year or two buy a bit of it or we're going to do this which is
01:20:39.320
going to cripple this company get ready to short it right yeah but as i said like as you mentioned
01:20:45.400
earlier like it doesn't even need to be you know a fully enacted law or even yeah or even like a daily
01:20:51.640
motion you know like in the house it just has to be a leak even even just like a leak of the
01:20:58.600
the democrats are going to introduce a resolution on this to maybe look towards doing a law in five
01:21:05.720
years time it could just be a leak to say you know politico or somebody like this that motion
01:21:10.840
doesn't even have to be even introduced or even debated in the first place yeah and that then that
01:21:15.960
will still move the markets in whatever direction they you know they desire and obviously with
01:21:20.120
something like that something so little it's so easy to deny as well you know like your levels of
01:21:24.760
culpability are going to be you know pretty hard to pin down on well she just says it's not me i'm
01:21:29.720
not investing anything we know that now that's not what we're yeah it's it's paul sure but um
01:21:37.880
come on like what do you think we are i mean um and she's been asked about it a number of times
01:21:43.000
over the years i mean let's just see this is from a handful of years ago not probably when she was
01:21:47.720
speaker then right i think so yeah and someone asked her about it so over the course of your career
01:21:51.800
has your husband ever made a stock purchase or sale based on information you've received from
01:21:55.480
you no absolutely not okay absolutely not okay i mean it's the class press conference over yeah
01:22:08.760
yeah end of story that's it that was one of the reasons why i wrote my article i say if you think
01:22:13.400
there's there's just nothing to see here there's just nothing to see here and uh end of discussion
01:22:17.800
end of story and next thing don't dare ask me again almost right and you clearly in the segment
01:22:23.320
you're a white supremacist white nationalist that's margie not marga hillbilly yeah yeah absolutely yeah
01:22:29.080
happily with an s6 twang proudly um no yeah you're just a rube if you even ask her because of course not
01:22:37.960
of course she's squeaky clean she's nancy plosie come on um and um yeah like the the classic sort of
01:22:45.720
nurse ratchet sort of obnoxious like uber karen way of dealing with it okay okay okay
01:22:54.360
she's like ratchet you're you're right um uh i mean i'll talk about the various things she's
01:22:59.960
done that's obnoxious i mean does anyone remember america thank you very much
01:23:03.240
yeah okay all right just ceiling molding coping um god it's good i i i really want to know what
01:23:27.880
her reaction was on november 2024 when he was back in office oh yeah well imagine you know being
01:23:34.040
around at her house the camera she's watching the results come in on the screen i want to know a
01:23:38.600
reaction to that press conference uh just gave right yeah oh well we've got a bit of a reaction
01:23:44.600
to that in a moment all right uh but here's a more historic uh example of someone asking her about
01:23:50.760
it was a guy from 60 minutes i'll show that and this is quite old i think this is like in the order of
01:23:54.600
10 years old or something but it's a classic example of how she deals with um i wanted to ask
01:24:01.320
you why you and your husband back in march of 2008 um accepted and participated in a very large ipo deal
01:24:08.920
from visa in a time there was major uh legislation affecting their credit card companies making its way
01:24:15.640
through the um through the um through the caps and did you consider that to be a conflict of interest
01:24:23.320
i don't know what your point is of your question is there some point that you want to make with that
01:24:28.520
well that's the classic thing if you ask if you even if you dare to bring it up it's just like the the
01:24:35.400
stone attempt at stonewalling first and foremost attempt to just try and change the subject attempt to
01:24:40.280
imply that you're crazy you must be crazy to be asking this i guess what i'm asking is do you think
01:24:46.440
it's all right for a speaker uh to accept uh a very preferential favorable stock deal well we didn't
01:24:54.840
time but that isn't the case major legislation affecting that company in the house well first of
01:25:00.920
all let me say this uh what we're talking about is an industry what we're talking about is a congress
01:25:07.080
that passed more uh protections for credit card holders the stock bill you know carolyn malone
01:25:15.960
okay the point is she just doesn't answer the question just immediately moves on to talking
01:25:20.360
about other things just won't answer the question and like an innocent person yeah and again just
01:25:26.200
refusing to address it in any way um and again once again it's just so obvious nobody's fooled by it
01:25:36.040
nobody's thinking oh maybe maybe like actually nancy and paul haven't done anything wrong and they
01:25:44.120
have just legitimately made like 70 returns in a single year yeah and increase their fortune from
01:25:50.600
what a mil or two to 400 million maybe that is just legit no one no one thinks even even hillary
01:25:57.080
clinton's looking at them like that's a bit isn't it yeah yeah yeah yeah well i i think there's there's
01:26:02.840
the i think it's the like the nancy pelosi stock tracker on twitter as well which like goes through
01:26:07.800
like all of the and you can see you know like okay like when they've invested in it and you're like
01:26:12.040
huh maybe uh let me let me uh whack my whack a few cash points over there as well and then you know if
01:26:18.760
you do you know hey yeah not investment advice but the nancy pelosi stock tracker is on is is on x i believe
01:26:25.080
yeah there's loads of different people that uh track i think i've got a link about that in a
01:26:29.080
moment but yeah lots of different people like well because that is a legit tactic yeah is that you just
01:26:34.680
see what berkshire hathaway just bought or sold probably bought because they're value investors
01:26:39.240
yeah and you're just like well okay they obviously have got confidence in that so i'll buy a bit yeah
01:26:45.320
that's a legit thing to do um but yeah um so in this recent where it's come up recently with josh
01:26:51.720
hawley and trump talking about it uh she did go on something or other uh was it cnn i think maybe
01:26:57.960
and was asked about it so i think this is oh no sorry this is just another
01:27:05.320
and another one another older clip where she's asked about it and she
01:27:08.680
basically says here that 2021 um there's nothing wrong with it yeah she pivots to that
01:27:13.320
so one thing i could say people might not have been able to hear the question he's saying uh
01:27:33.880
something like 180 odd congress people have been sort of caught out one way or another by this um
01:27:39.720
what do you what do you think about what do you think well just your thoughts yeah no reason yeah
01:27:46.680
no i don't know to the second one we said should it be stopped she goes no um yeah any
01:27:52.120
we have a responsibility to report in the stock on the stock but i don't i'm not familiar with that
01:27:58.600
five month review but if the people aren't reporting they should be
01:28:03.160
yeah because this is a free market and people we are a free market economy they should be able to
01:28:11.960
participate in that it's the free markets yeah and because the democrats love capitalism free
01:28:18.120
market in a good growing economy so they've got to let them all trade stocks it's it's a free market
01:28:24.200
pool should be allowed to buy and sell whatever he wants regardless of any sort of insider knowledge
01:28:30.520
insider knowledge yeah uh that's basically what she's saying uh but that was like three or four
01:28:35.240
years ago and uh in fact let this guy talk uh just an interesting channel uh he knows what he's
01:28:41.480
talking about and this is sort of some of the receipts of what's going on and the people that
01:28:46.360
have noticed paul's incredible ability to pick stocks perhaps they know something that the rest of
01:28:52.520
us don't and that's what brings us to nancy pelosi the new stock picking genius for the last three
01:28:57.800
years her stock picking strategies have consistently beat the s p 500 oh just to mention this video's
01:29:03.320
a couple years old it's three years old so this isn't a new story for a while she's grown her wealth
01:29:10.440
by an estimated 16.7 million dollars in 2020 alone and she reportedly has a net worth of around 100 million
01:29:17.240
both her and her husband recently locked in a 5.3 million dollar profit from alphabet call options
01:29:22.760
they invested in apple during the june 2021 tech dip that also includes a 1 million bet into tesla
01:29:28.760
and bullish bets on disney and to top it all off a five and a half million dollar investment in big
01:29:33.240
tech right before the shutdown in 2020. needless to say now people believe that either her and her
01:29:38.120
husband are stock picking oracles or they have inside knowledge into the stocks and companies that are
01:29:43.160
about to see explosive growth and that has led to the recent controversy their first large foray into
01:29:48.760
the news occurred when her husband made a 5.3 million dollar profit on alphabet call options
01:29:53.560
right before the house voted on an antitrust regulation which was not a threat to big tech
01:29:57.960
when asked for a comment nancy explained that at the time she had no knowledge of the purchases and
01:30:02.920
that she owns no stock herself it's just it's paul it's all paul's genius come on no one's no one's
01:30:11.000
fooled by that isn't stopping the retail trading community from taking on a new stock strategy and
01:30:15.960
that would be copying nancy pelosi i mean just take a look at the latest posts on reddit nancy pelosi
01:30:21.800
latest trades anyone have nancy pelosi's latest stock options nancy pelosi buys roblox 100 january 23
01:30:28.840
calls along with others here's the whole list looking to copy nancy and paul pelosi's trades what tools
01:30:34.200
or website should i use it's really not okay okay it goes it's a joke where which website specific
01:30:40.120
websites can i find there before it's too late those disgusting horrible websites but where are
01:30:46.440
these yeah yeah what's the url it's freedom of speech free free market i need to know um yeah so um
01:30:53.480
there is a thing as well that they don't have to pull as a private investor doesn't have to announce
01:30:58.280
what he's traded for a while a few days like 30 days or 45 days or something but then even if he does
01:31:05.240
leave it beyond then it's like a 200 fine so in other words nothing he's like trading half a million
01:31:11.160
here a million there so two hundred dollars to the place to pull close it's absolutely obviously nothing
01:31:15.800
so um so this is this is what's going on and uh josh hawley and trump even uh do want her to be
01:31:24.440
investigated i mean josh hawley said she should be and i think trump said she should be
01:31:29.560
not just investigated but prosecuted because she and paul aren't
01:31:35.560
investment oracles obviously they're not no um okay so uh yeah this this is where she was asked
01:31:43.160
very recently i think like only a day or two ago oh wow it's recently been in the in the in the news
01:31:48.360
and this is what she did she accused you of insider trading what's your response to that
01:31:54.200
that's ridiculous in fact i uh very much support the stop the the trading of members of congress not
01:32:00.840
that i think anybody's doing anything wrong if they are they are prosecuted and they go to jail
01:32:06.760
but because of the uh confidence it instills in the american people don't worry about this
01:32:13.240
but i have no uh concern about the obvious uh investments that had been made over time i'm not
01:32:21.080
into it my husband is but it isn't anything to do with anything insider but the president has his own
01:32:27.160
exposure so he's always projecting he's always projecting and let's not give him any more time
01:32:33.000
on that please we're going forward here and i'm very proud of my family and while he might make fun
01:32:39.800
of us while somebody inspired by him breaks into our home and hits my head in a deadly fashion hits my
01:32:46.120
husband over the head and he thinks that's a riot i'd rather not go into some of my other complaints
01:32:51.560
about him right now just a complete gish gash of nonsense coming from what a comprehensive answer
01:32:58.200
of course not um but it's only paul anyway and uh and trump's a bad man and he tried to kill my
01:33:03.880
husband he's made a madman trying to kill my husband what's going on and there's just nothing
01:33:07.800
to see here and it's not an insider thing anyway and it's just come on i was the first those first
01:33:13.000
like 20 25 seconds i was like actually what on earth is she actually saying yeah it was just like
01:33:19.160
i really couldn't track it it got a little bit more coherent at the end when she started rambling
01:33:22.680
about drumpf again but like she retreated back onto safe territory didn't she which is just trump
01:33:27.800
bad trump you know trump bad orange bad bad yeah orange bad bad terrible so it's just obvious that
01:33:32.920
nancy pelosi is uh about as corrupt financially speaking as it's possible to get to turn a salary
01:33:41.240
of 175 odd dollar thousand dollars a year into a fortune of well over 400 million
01:33:49.160
stop genius all right that's it that's it i'll uh just quickly go through the uh last rumble rants
01:34:00.120
um from your segment bow yeah i've got uh in both britain uh confiscation of goods will be reinstated
01:34:07.880
as punishment for public corruption yeah yeah yeah it would be yeah uh uh dragging lady chris says nancy
01:34:15.320
and paul the old bat and the old battered um uh wesley 1924 says if you think uh the pelosi home
01:34:24.760
invasion video is strange you should listen to the 9-1-1 call i don't know that no i don't know about
01:34:29.880
that either the pelosi 9-1-1 oh oh yeah sorry i thought i thought that's about 9-11 no actual 9-1-1 okay yeah that
01:34:37.240
is also yeah that's so weird no it's actually normal yeah and it didn't even happen yeah what
01:34:44.440
have we been talking about this last half hour i can't remember uh that's random name says the way
01:34:49.160
she uh moves is akin to an undead ghoul who is only animated by greed and spite there is something
01:34:55.960
ghoulish about her yeah oh yeah definitely and then the engaged few says remember martha stewart got a
01:35:02.520
three years stay at alderson what uh women's prison for a 50 000 trade yeah yeah yeah so if you're not
01:35:10.200
powerful enough i.e if you're not married to nancy pelosi yeah you do have to answer for your
01:35:15.320
financial crime yeah but but apparently paul doesn't then again maybe been married to nancy
01:35:21.080
pelosi is all the punishment one requires in life yeah and doing the maths on that what's that yeah
01:35:25.880
multiple hundreds of years in prison for how much money they've earned yeah if you calculate the
01:35:30.520
three and fifty thousand oh yes yeah yeah not long enough a billion years in dream all right let's go
01:35:37.160
to the video comments samson thank you so recently i was in the production of the musical 1776 and in
01:35:44.760
there there was a line from john dickinson one of the founding fathers who said it best is that all
01:35:52.040
england means to you sir is that all the pride and affection you can muster for the nation that bore you
01:35:58.520
for the noblest most civilized nation on this planet would you have us forsake hastings and magna
01:36:03.960
carta strongbow and lionhearted drake and marlboro tutors stewarts and plantagenets for what sir for what
01:36:12.520
the online safety act crackdown has been swift so i give a warning even if they don't ban vpns many
01:36:28.520
vpn companies are data harvesting you anyway if the government wants to know if you're connecting to
01:36:33.320
vpns they can legally threaten the vpn owners to divulge your information which they will there is
01:36:39.160
only one vpn that you can pay for anonymously with cash or monero a cryptocurrency which is called
01:36:51.560
all right thank you i've never heard of molvets it's funny you can literally go you can anonymously
01:36:55.800
drop cash at their offices in sweden like once a month to pay for the subscription really which is
01:37:00.600
hilarious yeah it's literally the most secure like way of paying ever it's kind of crazy it's literally
01:37:05.880
like dropping a bag of money off and just like write the account number on it's like okay yep cool
01:37:10.120
you're good for another month it is like an intelligent services dead drop yeah literally
01:37:21.880
just climb up your nearest mountain enjoy the nature just put all the crazy societal insanity
01:37:31.160
behind you just take a walk touch some grass some bark pick some mushrooms i'm picking some huckleberries
01:37:42.200
very wholesome stuff sir yeah i advise people to uh get off of twitter get off the internet entirely
01:37:49.880
for a day or two here or there definitely definitely great life advice 100 you've got to really i do it i do
01:37:58.280
a fair bit particularly doing this job yeah i'll just saturate yeah by by the internet but what if
01:38:05.640
i miss out on a meme some content the tl the tl needs me 24 7. you quite quickly do realize that it
01:38:13.480
it will tick along without you just fine and i'm gonna miss it