The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters - February 11, 2026


The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1352


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 35 minutes

Words per Minute

169.00894

Word Count

16,183

Sentence Count

6

Misogynist Sentences

25

Hate Speech Sentences

48


Summary

Brother Stelios and Brother Harry are joined by Brother Stellios to discuss the horrors of Japanese immigration and the rape scandal surrounding Rupert Lowe's rape trial. Also, we discuss how Japan is literally turning unwanted migrants into sushi.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 hello and welcome to the podcast of lotus eaters episode 1352 i'm your host harry joined today by
00:00:07.240 josh you're right you're right there oh sorry i forgot not that guy he's far too hench to be josh
00:00:15.080 and uh and brother stelios hello brother harry and we've got a right hodgepodge of subjects today
00:00:21.240 some fun some much less so as josh is going to be taking us through how japan is literally
00:00:26.720 turning unwarranted unwanted migrants into sushi i'm going to be talking about the uh horrors of
00:00:34.480 rupert lowe's rape gang inquiry and stelios is going to be telling us about his attractive cousin
00:00:38.920 yep hey that's my shtick as a devonshire man
00:00:42.960 my segment is going to be demented today they always are your segments are not always not always
00:00:51.100 brother harry that's what we that's what we like getting you on the podcast best stelios segments
00:00:55.280 the ones that are deranged and depraved and i i don't want to see anything if samson is alive by
00:01:00.080 the end of them i haven't done my job well that's right he needs he's going to be full med maxing
00:01:06.000 uh for this segment anyway uh let's get into the news okay so i've obviously reported quite a lot
00:01:13.540 about japan facing new problems with immigration of course it has followed the same exact pattern
00:01:20.000 as it has in europe and north america except of course they're not as far along as both of those
00:01:26.100 continents and thankfully um it doesn't seem to be going that way anymore or at least that's what
00:01:33.180 seems to be the case and i'm going to run through some of the more recent problems of and not uh sort
00:01:40.000 of refresh the things i've already talked about but i have shown you all the annoying tourists people
00:01:44.760 like johnny somali and the like going there and basically just abusing the good nature of the
00:01:49.440 japanese for their own twisted reasons i suppose and just the people there um causing problems littering
00:01:57.560 being loud drunk disorderly uh disrespectful to japanese culture and customs the whole suite of
00:02:04.000 things that is a surefire way to offend japanese sensibilities and them not being the same
00:02:10.520 sort of pushovers that are afraid of being called racist that some people in in the west other parts
00:02:18.340 of the west were have pretty much just rejected it so here i've got one of my favorite videos
00:02:23.680 of i think it's an african who was misbehaving and he got the sousification treatment where they wrap
00:02:30.740 him in a blanket and roll him up and eat him i don't think they eat him but um they do imprison him
00:02:38.340 and apparently i looked up why they do why they do this blanket and it's like to contain people who
00:02:43.440 are um being disruptive or publicly intoxicated i suppose and disrespectful yes you get turned into
00:02:50.500 sushi if you're disrespectful that's why japan's surrounded by disrespectful fish um so yes it's
00:02:57.640 safe to say that they've had their problems and there have been lots of um high profile examples of it
00:03:02.360 there are examples of um weird foreigners going up to japanese school girls and harassing people
00:03:08.580 and sexually assaulting them and just being violent and horrible all the things that you expect um at
00:03:15.180 this point if you've been following european and north american politics and it's not just uh things like
00:03:21.400 that as well you see things like this which you wouldn't think this was japan would you
00:03:26.480 very neat and tidy country they've got lots of respect for um other people by keeping their
00:03:32.560 environment clean that's what it's all about ultimately and you can see these people don't
00:03:39.240 look very japanese and then there's all this litter on the floor and what's basically happened is a
00:03:44.720 similar thing to europe whereby um areas have been basically ghettoized and they had like areas with
00:03:52.520 large kurdish populations and they were causing lots of problems why kurds were going to japan of
00:03:57.920 all places what link they have to it i do not know um but people were getting very fed up with it
00:04:04.000 and you also get annoying tourists as well um white westerners who are at least not as violent but they
00:04:12.340 are really annoying and i want to play this without any sound because it's already annoying enough
00:04:16.600 see if i can create it it's all right just people on a crossing dancing around being annoying
00:04:24.720 this would be annoying if you did it at home let alone in a foreign country i hate all of these
00:04:31.000 people and if japan just bans tourism forever i would understand now some may find this to be
00:04:37.440 shocking but yeah everybody in this story should redacted
00:04:45.580 i mean the fact that contribution the fact that they're holding up the six seven sign as well you're
00:04:51.440 going to a foreign country a foreign culture that's the entirety of their culture is based around
00:04:57.300 reciprocal politeness and manners and you're going there and disturbing disturbing everybody for the
00:05:04.440 sake of throwing around possibly the worst meme i've ever seen yes um if you're japanese watching
00:05:11.540 this not all of us europeans are quite like this we do find this annoying ourselves and it is impolite
00:05:18.800 and if people were doing it in our country we would be annoyed as well and uh there's also things like
00:05:24.200 this so a town in japan had to cancel its cherry blossom festival due to badly behaved they say tourists
00:05:30.900 it might not just be tourists um they say visitors were trespassing littering and defecating in private
00:05:38.480 yards makes one wonder what part of the world they're coming from if they're doing that doesn't
00:05:43.980 it probably a third part of the world well now if i remember correctly japan was also facing large
00:05:50.980 scale immigration from india like everywhere else in the world wait a minute is that what you're talking
00:05:56.880 about yeah they were set to import half a million people over the next five years this was last year
00:06:03.480 that they announced this um in a deal with india for some reason india's a bit like um gypsies
00:06:10.240 ironically in that i mean gypsies are indian so in that they throw things in with deals like gypsies
00:06:17.120 will throw a dog in with a deal india throws in half a million of their population just like yeah we
00:06:23.080 we got a trade deal take about half a mil there you go it's sort of like uh they got the people
00:06:27.780 to spare that's true and uh apparently modi's strategy is just like if we get indians all
00:06:33.820 around the world then we'll have a really strong network of support it will give us power yeah they
00:06:39.240 want the reason it's a soft power my head canon what i think would be funny is that modi actually
00:06:44.480 hates other indians and doesn't want to be near them so he's just trying to get as many of them out
00:06:48.520 of india as possible i imagine it's probably more to do with the hindu nationalism thing it's
00:06:54.840 probably more to do with extending soft power through foreign across foreign countries but of
00:06:59.580 course that does mean that if you have large amounts of indian immigration that means that
00:07:04.200 the explicit purpose from the indian government in being there in the first place is to give power
00:07:09.660 to india and not to serve your country just to be clear and um there's also um an even worse figure
00:07:18.200 here in terms of immigration uh announced it would accept 1.23 million immigrants over two years
00:07:23.740 this was um of course not the current government now but um it's just a an unnecessarily large amount
00:07:33.260 of people at the face of it let alone where they're going to be sourced from their compatibility
00:07:38.740 with japanese culture josh question this video was uploaded on december 26 2025 which was when
00:07:47.900 sanae takaichi was pm she assumed the role two months before that so is she talking about the
00:07:55.840 current government no i don't think that this is going to go ahead now i think it was it was
00:08:00.340 plans previously because um when i was doing my prior um coverage of japan they were talking about
00:08:06.360 importing lots and lots of people and of course being elected on a mandate of yes we're going to
00:08:11.480 restrict immigration and do things about that is i think is going to put a stop to things like this
00:08:17.260 and then we uh go to this which was interesting in the lead up to the this snap election people were
00:08:26.640 talking about um we must prevent japan from becoming europe we need tough immigration policy
00:08:32.200 policies and i saw this quite a lot where they're actually looking at the state of europe um and
00:08:38.760 rightfully so and saying we don't want that for japan which is perfectly reasonable i think most
00:08:44.840 countries across the world that want to remain themselves should be able to do such a thing
00:08:49.340 exactly and i think that um you know as a european i'm glad you've not followed in our footsteps
00:08:55.520 because it's not a fate um becoming of a civilized country like japan and appropriately this guy kind
00:09:02.520 of looks like a japanese baz and also one good thing about the previous election is that about the
00:09:08.880 elections that they just had in japan is it shows that the left doesn't have a strong foothold
00:09:14.680 in japanese politics oh we'll be talking about that i'll be showing you some very cringy things that
00:09:19.800 they're trying it seems to me that the rate of decline is the rate you know the rate of acceptance
00:09:26.160 of leftism the more you accept the left and its ridiculous culturally suicidal rhetoric and policies
00:09:34.020 the more your country turns to something you don't want to turn to i think they're also the most prone
00:09:39.980 to adopt sort of western leftist talking points more generally and i don't think you know american
00:09:47.080 left-wing talking points translate particularly well in japan they don't seem to resonate with
00:09:51.620 people in quite the same way although they're all of course nonsense and so there was a snap election
00:09:59.080 called and the results were very impressive to be honest you'll notice here um that there are only
00:10:07.220 five left-wingers one center left and four full-on leftists by the looks of it if i'm getting the
00:10:15.700 colors right there it's difficult to tell from this tv isn't it um but yes there's obviously uh a decent
00:10:22.500 handful well more than a handful a couple of dozen uh centrists yes and some other but it's mostly
00:10:31.200 about 80 or so right wing which is a pretty strong mandate i think to be able to do things and what's
00:10:40.100 funny is that she is the leader of the japanese lip dems who have nothing to do with the lip dems of
00:10:46.680 the uk i know it's it's very confusing because our liberal democrats in britain are like open borders
00:10:54.700 fanatics yes they are and um yes it's it's always refreshing to not see that in japan and it's worth
00:11:04.260 mentioning as well that there's such a large super majority that they can reject the constitution
00:11:09.140 that was imposed on them by um the americans after the war if they so wish and i think that her
00:11:15.300 interest in re-militarizing japan seems to suggest that um that may well happen i don't know to what
00:11:23.200 degree i'm not um you know a scholar of the japanese constitution or anything but at the same time
00:11:30.340 i think it's probably a good idea from what i saw arial arc part two from what i saw she can't
00:11:37.580 uh over she in order to for her to amend the constitution she needs a super majority in both
00:11:44.100 the lower house which she has she doesn't and on the upper house and then if it passes there
00:11:49.760 they need to have a national referendum where more than 50 percent of of the japanese people will vote
00:11:56.920 vote whether they want the the amendment but the interesting thing and she does have a point is
00:12:02.860 that according to the current constitution it seems that the japan shouldn't even have war potential
00:12:10.340 and they have one of the strongest armies it's routinely among the top 10 armies so de facto
00:12:16.680 it doesn't matter it's much more of a legal issue for her to not be facing a legal nightmare if
00:12:23.860 something happens in the future because the fact that they do have war potential well this is the
00:12:29.780 thing isn't it that if if enough people in your country want to ignore a law it may as well not
00:12:34.560 exist even if it is a part of your constitution given the realities of things if america's pulling
00:12:39.640 out of larger geopolitical interests uh japan is right i mean obviously they want to focus on china
00:12:47.200 but if america's going to start getting belligerent china and japan is the next door neighbor of china and
00:12:52.460 also russia to huge superpowers as well it's in their interests to be able to defend themselves
00:12:57.300 yeah and i don't think the americans are going to object to japan remilitarizing or expanding its
00:13:02.300 military fervor because uh they're very against china if you're a student of history and so is the
00:13:10.060 united states so some might say they went a little bit far in being against china in the past bit of a
00:13:16.280 sore topic in japan but um yes um she's particularly hawkish about taiwan and so i think it's going to
00:13:23.540 be music to the americans ears to know that japan is going to be very much supporting them if there is
00:13:29.420 any action to be taken out of there also i think she was helped electorally unintentionally obviously
00:13:37.100 by the by the chinese who who framed her as an enemy and they threatened her and the japanese didn't
00:13:45.520 take that well i know and the communists were saying that we shouldn't even have an army so
00:13:50.980 you can see i think even five positions there there are five too many i would say so but i think it's
00:13:57.900 funny that the chinese actually thought that you know if we insult uh you know a politician from one
00:14:04.180 of our historic enemies that's that's going to harm their chances like what what were they thinking
00:14:08.680 no if if china's saying you're an enemy and you're japanese that's probably going to make japanese people
00:14:15.620 like you just just the thought but um it did work out for her um so another thing that's worth mentioning
00:14:23.540 as well that is interesting about it is her party won all 30 districts in tokyo and of course in
00:14:31.780 europe and north america normally the inner city is a hive of left-wing villainy and this is clearly
00:14:41.000 not inevitable it doesn't have to be the case if you have for example a homogenous population like
00:14:46.800 japan the cities don't necessarily have to be left-wing at all and so that is just some food for thought
00:14:53.600 that actually you can win if you're right-wing especially if you're not as sensitive about being
00:14:58.840 called racist um in japan and it's also worth pointing out as well that the movement is quite
00:15:06.380 a young one it's skewed mostly towards you know people under 40 here it's a decent portion of
00:15:14.280 support there and so this seems to suggest that this landslide has longevity to it as well because
00:15:21.460 if if if it's old people supporting it which um the least likely it's sort of uh a similar thing i
00:15:28.220 think in uh britain whereby um some of the the baby boomers are less likely to support more radical
00:15:36.340 policies i think um but this should be a source of um great optimism for the japanese right because
00:15:46.220 this is the the sort of demographics of growth and and of future success and i think that that's
00:15:54.760 always a very important thing to look at if you want to have a political party that has
00:15:59.180 sustained success over a long period of time so josh may i i want to add that japan faces a cost of
00:16:08.620 living crises and she sort of neutralized the opposition by saying that she's going to revoke
00:16:16.420 an eight percent consumption tax on food i don't know why there's a tax on food to begin with that
00:16:23.040 seems like a strange thing to tax if you want to uh you know have a livable country yes and i mean
00:16:28.520 she proposed a massive stimulus package which you know it's always a question of how she's going to
00:16:35.080 finance it and how well she's going to finance it but the revoke of the consumption tax really worked
00:16:41.460 in her favor i've seen people saying i've not looked into it as much as i could have that she's
00:16:47.300 sort of continuing abe nomics as in shinzo abe um and it's sort of that philosophy where you you
00:16:53.260 don't necessarily associate high spending with right-wing politicians but it doesn't necessarily
00:16:58.860 have to be the case japan's always quite happy to spend on on its infrastructure and things like
00:17:06.820 that and more so than perhaps in the west where we have a bit more of a culture of not wanting to
00:17:13.420 give our money to the government which is very much the case for me and here we have the market
00:17:21.220 reaction to this election and the stocks surge to record highs in reaction to her landslide which is
00:17:28.760 always a promising thing so when the market is reacting positively of course that's a good sign
00:17:33.300 that people have confidence in her ability to help the economy recover and maybe there's going to be
00:17:41.500 more investment in japan although word of warning with that with with foreign money comes foreign
00:17:48.180 leverage over your politics and i would advise caution with this because there will be people who will be
00:17:55.500 investing in japan to impose their political will on the japanese people that's not in the japanese
00:18:01.100 people's interest and this is something that we have all the time in europe and north america
00:18:06.580 and i'm not quite sure that this aspect of our politics translates quite as easily as the videos
00:18:13.140 that are sort of undeniable of immigration degrading the quality of our life but this is something to
00:18:19.040 keep in mind um and of course i'm not necessarily suggesting that you should shut yourself off like
00:18:24.800 japan did in the past entirely but at the same time not all money is created equal when it comes
00:18:31.440 to investments in your country so here is uh what the left had to offer and and i think part of the
00:18:40.560 reason that the right did so well is that the left in japan seems to be uh how do i put it very
00:18:48.220 cringeworthy yes was this a kamala harris effect where part of the reason for the landslide is that
00:18:53.760 the opposing choice was just so bad i think it could be yes so this is the the leader of the social
00:19:01.380 democratic party and i'm going to subject you to this um just because i want to be cruel
00:19:06.520 i hope this isn't the only dancing video you have there i've got more good um there's also um this
00:19:33.520 harry's going to be impressed because there's actually some good uh rock musicianship going on
00:19:38.140 all right okay even though they're like the japanese produce a lot of great rock music you've got some
00:19:42.960 good guitarists over there as well yeah um however the messaging could uh you know leave a little bit
00:19:49.540 more to be desired because it's i don't see this resonating with voters to be honest
00:19:55.900 because their signs are like stop fascism don't be racist i was really hoping it would be like
00:20:03.640 japanese power now or something it's not a bad riff it's a bog standard blues riff i know but
00:20:13.520 at least they're trying but um yeah you see the bag that says against racism it's just um american
00:20:22.280 european style leftism there like it's not really native to japan it seems to be imported and you
00:20:30.140 know this sort of thing i don't think resonates with people as much as you know seeing on the news
00:20:35.620 that there are creepy foreigners going after your young girls yeah now if the chorus to that song was
00:20:41.780 like get them out something like that then maybe you can resonate with it right a little bit more
00:20:49.640 perhaps yes and uh i'm not done uh with the cringe yet um here's another leader of left-wing party
00:20:57.720 um doing something strange i don't know in a hijab
00:21:01.700 i'm gonna mute it though
00:21:06.180 was that acdc i don't know whether it's gonna get copyrighted if we play it so i'm just gonna mute
00:21:15.040 it we can't hear it but i don't know what this serves to do just a man in what looks like a
00:21:21.220 swimming cap and a dressing gown the stone toss meme immediately jumps to mind of how does this
00:21:27.040 help us win elections and the guy is already there in his bathrobe and his hat and he's going elections
00:21:32.320 i will say this i wish our leftists were like that we do no
00:21:38.540 yeah laugh more and second we wouldn't have all the you know uh blue hair screeching this is this
00:21:46.680 is literally like the japanese equivalent of ed davey though ed davey who in the last election his
00:21:50.960 entire campaign was watch me do a bungee jump yep and stuff like that i'm surprised he wasn't just
00:21:57.040 like join me having a bubble bath it's like he thought he was a game show contestant rather than
00:22:02.580 a politician and it's also a bit sad that it's it's mostly like well-off rural people that are
00:22:09.620 voting for him just this buffoon is demeaning to their dignity it's it's the idea of you know like
00:22:14.840 oh we're gonna be kooky unique bonkers politics actually when your country is in a state of
00:22:21.360 existential threat it doesn't come across particularly well yeah i think also japan hasn't got the same
00:22:28.340 degree of tension and and uh partisanship that we have in in europe and north america and so
00:22:35.280 they can be a little bit silly well you can afford to be like that when you've got a more homogenous
00:22:39.440 population that's exactly it i think and um i think there might be one more um oh yes um the communist
00:22:47.640 party leader because yes they do have communists in japan a small number of them i thought they killed
00:22:52.420 them all years ago apparently not um but they talk about the disappearance of japan as a nation state
00:23:00.960 as her ultimate goal so just you know complete open borders no nations you know it's like imagined
00:23:08.620 by john lennon that that's basically what's going on here uh which believe it or not is probably not
00:23:14.620 very popular and uh i wouldn't vote for that just to be clear obviously um but i have noticed an
00:23:23.100 interesting development if i translate this um this is a video of australian police just bashing the head
00:23:30.380 in of a left-wing protester and i think japan has finally got its version of chuds because a that this
00:23:37.640 posted quite well and it's talking about uh how they wish the japanese police would just beat up the left
00:23:44.300 one thing to say about this though is that i i saw the video and it was the video where the
00:23:49.520 protester was biting the hand of the policeman and that's not the typical australian police no
00:23:57.240 usually they are much more relaxed and i think i don't know if uh there were people protesting there
00:24:05.620 because maybe netanyahu was in australia and they were counter-protesting it's a little while ago yeah
00:24:12.600 i think so yeah but um i don't think this is the average day it's australia i really want to tell
00:24:19.260 that person that i'm willing to bet money that the japanese police is much better than the australian one
00:24:25.420 in dealing with these issues i think they at least go out of their way to to represent the interests of
00:24:32.780 japan rather than elect you know arresting their patriots and having one of the harshest police states
00:24:38.980 in the western world you don't really hear about that and um it's also worth mentioning that the
00:24:45.520 western media um upon the successful election of a right winger with a significant uh amount of
00:24:53.100 control wanted to present it as some sort of weird coup um here's sky news saying japan's ultra
00:24:58.620 conservative prime minister is set to seize more power which is an interesting turn of phrase for a
00:25:03.900 democratic election seize more power implies that they you you use force or the military or a
00:25:11.000 paramilitary to take power for yourself without an election and so they're trying to present it as if
00:25:16.800 they're dangerous in some way which is obvious and they do this um all the time in our own domestic
00:25:23.620 politics so that the blueprint's already there they already know what they're doing and it is just to
00:25:28.620 undermine um people's perception of them worldwide and it's to try and limit their their reach i think
00:25:35.560 beyond their borders and um i mean the mainstream media don't want success stories from other paradigms
00:25:43.660 and there are many relative to what we have so let's talk a little bit about uh what their new prime
00:25:50.480 minister wants to do um she said immigration and tourism has led to foreigner fatigue which i thought was
00:25:57.380 an interesting choice of words i'm certainly feeling the fatigue at home she's anti-gay marriage she is
00:26:04.900 a avid defender of traditional gender roles um although she has become prime minister so i don't
00:26:10.660 know how that quite meshes uh she supports revising article 9 of the constitution of japan which renounces
00:26:17.120 the use of military force so i think that this might be something that could be on the cards for what
00:26:22.500 we were talking about towards the start of this segment and it's much more legalistic than
00:26:27.620 substantial that's true um she's also criticized people for pointing out japan's war crimes in the
00:26:34.260 second world war or at least misrepresenting or dwelling on them i'm not exactly sure of the nature
00:26:39.400 of it and uh as we have touched on already she's very anti-chinese communist party which uh all good
00:26:45.920 people should be and um another thing that i noticed that has already been announced was that
00:26:53.740 they're moving to require 10 years of residency and proficiency in the japanese language to become
00:26:59.160 a citizen and so anyone who doesn't meet that criteria i imagine will be allowed there temporarily
00:27:04.300 but they'll have to go home eventually on a on a temporary visa or um on a tourist visa so it's not
00:27:12.000 necessarily ending the problem but i think it's trying to reduce it and that's a pretty huge block
00:27:18.380 it is a big block isn't it because 10 years of residency and proficiency in japanese is probably
00:27:24.660 going to put a lot of the the people who are causing problems in the first place off like i don't think
00:27:30.780 the average curd is going to become fluent in japanese and stick it out for 10 years to remain a
00:27:37.460 citizen there they're just going to move on to which other place can give them better economic
00:27:41.440 opportunities if it becomes more difficult for them to actually be able to sustain a good standard
00:27:45.520 of living there and the chances of becoming a citizen are next to none it'll force them into a
00:27:51.180 position of transience let alone care much about japan very much so so i am very pleased to see this
00:27:59.440 from japan and i'm very happy to oh what can i say something before you finish your segment because
00:28:04.620 i really want to say this because i think you um you both of you will agree what is really interesting
00:28:10.720 from a western perspective and uh in comparison is that they have low birth rates but they just
00:28:18.200 don't buy any of the arguments that are given for mass migration be fine as well yeah well i i would
00:28:25.540 expect that those low birth rates had a lot to do with why previous governments were beginning to
00:28:30.700 open up the gates to mass migration it was also um part of conditions for international loans because
00:28:36.200 that you know japan's got a high level of debt to gdp and so people leverage that debt to impose
00:28:42.860 immigration on them particularly um you know non-governmental organizations but one thing when
00:28:48.140 we say that they were open to migration they weren't open in the same way that europe is because i think
00:28:53.860 even now the percentage of foreigners in japan is something like 3.2 percent it's even less than that
00:29:00.080 it's even less yeah and uh i suppose to end um i'm very pleased to see this development in japan
00:29:06.540 you guys didn't deserve to have the same fate that we've had so far and i'm glad to see that
00:29:12.500 you're able to do something about it and i hope it actually turns out for the best
00:29:16.400 all right we've got a few rumble rants if you want to sorry that went on longer i wanted to keep
00:29:22.620 it that was a good segment no that was that was fine um g'day y'all um don't forget japanese prime
00:29:29.520 minister won a majority even with the support of trump like i said about a week ago it's not trump
00:29:34.480 it's the fact that european white conservatives are weak uh they are but they are referring to a
00:29:40.600 conversation we have about greenland and there there are there's some huge there is evidence with
00:29:46.820 respect to what happens when trump speaks and how it tanks right-wing parties in in europe there's
00:29:55.780 evidence about this i mean in europe it's not the obviously it's not the only thing but there is
00:29:59.880 evidence that this is happening well i mean the actual the the differences are that trump was
00:30:04.080 overtly aggressive and belligerent towards european countries he has been consistently friendly towards
00:30:10.140 japan uh that's random name says the leftoids are always kvetching about hate crimes but is it
00:30:15.880 really a crime to hate them um i cannot speak because i will be in big trouble um but i understand
00:30:23.620 what you're saying logan 17 pine uh said i must admit japan is my israel sometimes happens send one
00:30:29.720 billion dollars oh something something happens send one billion dollars to japan i mean send a trillion
00:30:35.800 dollars to japan right now yeah i mean it's an admirable culture isn't it they're clearly civilized
00:30:42.480 they've got high politeness it's very orderly there's a lot to appreciate no matter samson is
00:30:47.740 loving this no matter what war crimes they may have committed in the past you have to admit that
00:30:52.700 it showed a level of great ambition and follow through i mean they came this close to killing
00:30:59.240 my grandfather and i'm willing to overlook that you've got to respect them for it i came that close
00:31:05.080 to not existing because of your country but um no i don't hold it i genuinely don't hold it against
00:31:09.540 them um with australia people have had enough of all the islam speaking hate to us and not being
00:31:14.560 punished and people are um just had enough and they're worried about our reformed party one nation
00:31:20.140 rising in the polls yeah and i think you know you're right to be concerned and also islam
00:31:26.300 is such an alien culture to australia because um at least with europe it's the only it's only the
00:31:33.200 other side of the mediterranean um whereas australia they've got to travel so far to get there that
00:31:38.920 it's obviously just about i'm indonesia you know well i'd expect it yeah but no i understand
00:31:44.080 that migration uh thing i also expect the bondi beaches maybe put a dampener i would imagine so
00:31:51.880 you don't want terrorism going on in your country uh that's random name again japan is what the west
00:31:56.160 would look like had we not import i can't read this uh same aging population same low cryo levels
00:32:03.300 and birth rates would eventually rise naturally yeah and there is also evidence from a number of
00:32:08.540 it's increasing evidence from lots of different studies now that seems that higher diversity of
00:32:14.020 your population actually reduces native birth rates as well it makes perfect sense when you look at it
00:32:19.680 just purely economically like there's there's people stifling your ability to afford raising your
00:32:25.860 own children also just a less cohesive culture less opportunities to actually meet people you say at the
00:32:31.220 same age uh dispersing populations as people move from one area of the country to another
00:32:36.280 under a quote-unquote white flight it's it's it's obvious that that was what would happen and i would
00:32:42.520 argue that's part of the point anyway speaking of the harrowing consequences of mass migration of a
00:32:50.180 foreign population and foreign culture particularly islam into your country rupert lowe's rape gang
00:32:57.900 inquiry is currently ongoing we announced last week that it had begun on the 2nd of february it's
00:33:04.000 taking place over 10 days spread across two weeks so we're in week two day three right now and uh a lot
00:33:11.620 of the information that's coming out is pretty horrifying so i won't dwell on it too much but this is
00:33:16.880 important it's important to get an update on this and to see where the inquiry is heading what rupert's
00:33:22.320 doing off of the back of the information that the inquiry is acquiring because the inquiry itself
00:33:27.180 is independent it has no statutory powers so he is going to try and use the information gathered here
00:33:33.260 to pressure uh local and national authorities into following up on a lot of the crimes that have
00:33:39.760 clearly been committed and it does seem that he's uncovering a lot of extra crimes that spread out
00:33:45.600 internationally at a level that i don't even think a lot of people had even dared to consider up until
00:33:51.460 this point although when you hear it it makes perfect sense so just a quick recap so the actual inquiry
00:33:57.160 had a little bit of a trouble starting to begin with and you would expect so because it is
00:34:03.080 explicitly against the interests of the current ruling class who are all allegedly and assumedly
00:34:10.780 complicit in what has gone on in covering up these these gangs raping young white girls the crimes
00:34:18.860 against our girls uh so one of the first things that happened was that he uh actually wasn't because
00:34:25.660 it's an independent inquiry he had to raise money for it himself and did this crowd for it this
00:34:30.900 crowd funder would i be able to say something ever so quick yeah of course the fact that rupert has to
00:34:35.120 go out of his way to do this in the first place should be a massive point of shame uh for the people
00:34:40.760 that have resisted this sort of thing and they should feel shame i know they don't but they should
00:34:45.720 because this is something that should be unequivocal that you shouldn't have a political opinion on this
00:34:53.600 necessarily it shouldn't be a political issue because it's essentially the mass exploitation
00:35:00.120 of an entire generation of young girls you would hope that all politics is against this but apparently
00:35:07.420 not well people have been divided to such an extent and forced into well brainwashed into hating their
00:35:13.760 own people and hating their own culture so much that they were either immediately dismissive of these
00:35:18.260 claims as we saw for decades leading up to the mid-2010s when this really broke as a news story
00:35:24.740 as something that was real in the mainstream whereas before it had just been dismissed so they either
00:35:29.700 dismissed it or they consciously covered it up because they thought it would be bad for the foreign
00:35:36.100 populations of course country credit to rupert for actually going ahead you know yeah he's he's just
00:35:41.460 one mp and he's managed to do far more than i can think any single mp outside of government has done
00:35:48.360 at least in my lifetime and this does seem to have acted as a pressure push for the national
00:35:54.140 government as well because now keir starmer's government is saying that they are doing a national
00:35:58.600 inquiry obviously we've reported before a lot of the problems that are related to that rupert's was
00:36:05.060 announced first and then the government decided that they needed to do one as well that would actually
00:36:10.340 have statutory powers and is being overseen by um the home secretary shabana mahoud amongst other
00:36:16.700 authorities uh but there are a lot of problems with how that has been organized you can check our
00:36:21.120 previous reporting for that either way one of the things that happened was he raised over 600 000 pounds
00:36:26.620 to begin with to get this inquiry started and there were complaints put in to the commission standards
00:36:33.840 that he had not properly um announced or given the information regarding some larger donations past
00:36:43.520 1500 pounds to the commission to the government commission and therefore a complaint was put through
00:36:49.680 to him despite the fact that he said and it was proven and confirmed by the standards themselves
00:36:55.660 that he had only received these larger donations on the 23rd of june last year which gave him until the
00:37:01.160 21st of july to register them and that he had demonstrated to the commissioner that all rules
00:37:05.900 had been followed and the commissioner ended up dismissing it but it's very clear as rupert said at
00:37:10.620 the time that the complaint was a malicious attempt to shut him down and undermine the inquiry people
00:37:16.200 were immediately very afraid of such a thing going ahead who knows what they might uncover who knows
00:37:21.880 might who might get caught in the crosshairs of something like this so try and get it shut down right now
00:37:27.240 especially if it forces us the actual government to try and do something we're labor we're insane
00:37:33.020 leftists we don't want to actually do anything to help this country shut it down right now but it
00:37:37.180 didn't get shut down there's there's a strong political incentive here for labor because of
00:37:41.080 course they've relied on the muslim vote and if they're seen to be targeting the muslim community
00:37:46.300 then that's terrible for um sustaining it and they're already losing it to the green party already
00:37:52.020 and so i think that there's not only an ideological incentive in their insane left-wingers who think
00:37:59.900 that non-british people can do no wrong but also a very pragmatic one that if they are to ever see
00:38:08.340 power again they need that muslim vote and they're losing it quite badly yes um yeah definitely all of
00:38:17.140 that is to be taken into consideration uh with this but if you look through the actual page that
00:38:22.020 they put posted here on the crowdfunder this has been this way for a long time you can see that
00:38:26.060 they're going about in a very comprehensive way and the key questions that they wanted to answer
00:38:29.940 answer were what happened how did it happen why was it allowed to happen these are the very very
00:38:35.440 important things that we the british public deserve to know and they made it all very transparent it's
00:38:41.540 all very clear on the page and they have been posting updates ever since and throughout the
00:38:47.120 entire process the most recent one being from the 10th of february just yesterday saying about how uh
00:38:55.600 you know you can help and you can uh sign this petition here make all court transcripts available
00:39:00.840 fully free of charge because of course in britain if you want access to public court transcripts you need
00:39:06.620 to pay for them which is obviously a barrier to being able to see what was what was written down
00:39:11.680 in them what was said in these court cases and so they want to remove that barrier of track and make
00:39:17.020 it far more transparent for the public and we'll get back onto this in particular at the end of this
00:39:23.900 segment but uh first here's just some of the other stuff that he's been speaking about saying about
00:39:29.720 how the amount of preparation that they've been going into it uh was astonishing team across the
00:39:34.640 country over and over speaking to survivors collecting evidence spreading the word providing
00:39:38.280 support every step of the way for those brave enough to come forward because of course there
00:39:41.820 are a lot of safeguarding issues with these girls with the stories that they're going to tell with
00:39:47.100 the kind of emotional trauma that they've been through so there's every precaution been put in
00:39:50.920 place to make sure that these people are comfortable and able to properly say what happened to them
00:39:55.980 in an environment that isn't going to just re-traumatize them again although you know living through what
00:40:01.720 they've been through i can imagine that any sort of reminder of this is kind of re-traumatizing
00:40:05.800 which is a horrifying thing to think about they announced the start of it when it opened on the
00:40:11.140 2nd of february last week and one of the things that they're going to do off the back of it is they
00:40:17.720 are going to do a a produce a comprehensive and detailed report off the back of it which will be the
00:40:26.040 basis for private prosecutions and given the horror horrifying information that's been coming
00:40:32.200 out as a result of all of this hopefully we will see actual prosecutions see people being put in
00:40:38.060 prison off of the back of this they are planning to take real action and this is where we get into
00:40:44.400 some of the actual stories and some of the things that have been coming out so rupert lowe's been
00:40:49.180 posting about this on his own twitter account there is also just the account called the rape gang
00:40:55.120 inquiry which has been producing these info graphics with some of the excerpts of what has been said as
00:41:03.820 part of these inquiries so far like this one the mother of a rape gang survivor saying i heard the
00:41:08.660 police officers radio go and i heard them say they was taking my daughter to muhammad's brother's address
00:41:14.660 i begged them not to take her there i was like they're the people that are doing this to her
00:41:19.180 you cannot take her there they're gonna kill her because i did believe they was going to and you
00:41:25.100 can hear in the language being used here as well of course a lot of these girls are from working
00:41:29.920 class and poorer backgrounds a lot of them came from we've discussed this before in other discussions
00:41:35.160 of this a lot of them came from care homes they were vulnerable girls not in positions to help
00:41:40.260 themselves and in positions where the police didn't feel like helping them or the family because
00:41:44.660 frankly a lot of the police a lot of the authorities would have seen these families as being scum in
00:41:49.260 the first place which is a pretty horrifying thing to consider that that kind of level of of class
00:41:55.520 dynamic influenced the behavior of our authorities in leaving these girls to be abused and no matter
00:42:01.960 what social class you're from no one deserves this not even close it's obviously just an excuse for
00:42:09.100 that inactivity yeah i mean just this as well they just finish it off they didn't listen to me
00:42:13.660 they did take it there and like i said she was abused there by them by muhammad so this is
00:42:19.440 police complicity and also when this crime occurred and arguably still occurs on an industrial scale
00:42:29.160 it can't be just a matter of particular individual criminals no and this we're talking about structures
00:42:35.820 and we're talking about a culture of looking the other way well we know they also infiltrated the
00:42:43.380 police there were pakistani policemen who covered for these child rapists i mean there was a pakistani
00:42:50.740 lord that was involved in this yeah it involved the entire pakistani community and i think
00:42:56.680 were push come to shove you'd be able to find out that pretty much everyone knew about it within that
00:43:02.700 community and they all covered for them because you know their perception is that their ethnic
00:43:09.860 interests are far more important than actually being just and moral and many of the wives of the men who
00:43:16.020 were doing those things justified it in much the same way that they did which is just disgusting and
00:43:21.520 i think that um it's not only the men but also the women that are complicit in this as well it's the
00:43:26.940 well there's the racial animus behind a lot of this as well uh there were many testimonies there's
00:43:33.480 one that's been reported on through the rape gang inquiry twitter account but there's also testimonies
00:43:38.480 going back all the way to the old transcripts that some of them you can now get access to
00:43:43.020 as i did and looked into them as part of this round table where we looked at the grooming gang
00:43:48.800 trial transcripts back in the beginning of december uh where there is it there's a huge racial animus
00:43:54.780 for this a lot of these people see these white girls as easy meat and victim and easy victims of
00:44:02.640 abuse purely because they're white and therefore not as valuable as their own girls they have a
00:44:06.920 particular word for it i believe that word is gora which roughly translates to something like white trash
00:44:13.520 so these people see it as they're placing the racial hierarchy to be able to do this to white girls
00:44:20.700 and that's a that's another aspect of this which has been addressed as part of this inquiry but
00:44:26.520 really as part of the broader authoritarian authority structures that we have in this country
00:44:31.460 has not really been addressed by them uh they want to ignore that whole aspect to it you know there's
00:44:37.500 there's other there's there's just loads of horrifying stuff come from this so uh there's this gentleman
00:44:43.520 marlon west who uh spoke to the inquiry there has been there's been the infographics there's also
00:44:48.920 been the some of these videos released as well uh where this man marlon west tells the inquiry about
00:44:54.200 his experience he is a father of one of the rape gang survivors let's just hear a minute or two of
00:44:59.160 this because um it'll give you a good idea of what it would be like to be in the shoes of a parent
00:45:04.500 of one of these girls as you know that they are being victimized when the police don't care and don't
00:45:10.640 want to help at this point this is where she should go missing for two three weeks at a time
00:45:17.680 i had my fears of what was going on them fears were were confirmed a couple of years ago
00:45:26.100 so she was living in this property um she was on the child in need she was well known to the missing
00:45:35.220 persons team at tameside police great manchester police um i would be driving around constantly
00:45:45.060 every single night knocking on people's doors you know friends of hers trying to find where she is
00:45:53.060 eventually i found this property and i try again try and get into this property but also what's important
00:46:02.180 with this four doors down from this terrace house is police station um i found the property
00:46:11.860 seen her in the property try again into the property then i went to her police station
00:46:19.220 which is darbush of police and said my daughter 14 year old is in there i believe she's being prostitute
00:46:26.340 um sorry prostituted out yes yeah um can you get her out of the property for me where do you live
00:46:36.660 sir i live in tameside sorry we can't get involved she's not she's not a darbush or a resident
00:46:45.620 it goes on from there but that just immediately you can tell if you were in this position like this poor
00:46:51.460 man was and you tried to do something about it the police would go out of their way to nitpick with
00:46:58.100 rules so they didn't have to do anything so they didn't have to help you because as well it wasn't
00:47:03.700 just the political particularity of like oh well it's not technically our constituency you're not a
00:47:08.180 resident of our constituency so we can't do anything about it everybody knows that one of the other
00:47:12.260 reasons is they would have known four doors down there's a pakistani living there do we want to be
00:47:17.060 seen as the police to go down harassing the pakistanis and causing racial harassment that
00:47:22.500 would have been their primary concern no no they don't so they just leave you to it and this man as
00:47:30.020 well uh said explicitly that he went to uh he asked jess phillips to look into it and according to him
00:47:37.060 she completely agreed and said oh yeah we can do that we can do that in a couple of months and that
00:47:42.100 was 18 months ago nothing has changed again pretty high up levels of authority here being asked
00:47:49.140 directly to intervene in something that we all knew was going on we all know is still going on
00:47:53.860 in parts of the country hold at least at some point the women and safeguarding uh position in the
00:48:00.340 government yep doesn't care though doesn't doesn't actually care and then there are the broader
00:48:06.100 community involvement of all of this when we're talking about the fact that they were primarily pakistani
00:48:11.780 rape gangs it's not just incidental that a few pakistanis here and there decided to form these
00:48:18.020 it does seem to be widespread community involvement across the entire pakistani community in britain
00:48:25.460 yeah well it's at least taken place in around what 20 or more cities across england and of course
00:48:33.140 they're now finding it in scotland as well wherever they go wherever they go wherever they go and
00:48:39.300 that's another part of this which is again a lot of us already knew a lot of this but the rape gang
00:48:44.820 inquiry is making it clearer and clearer and finding more evidence to support this so for one there's
00:48:50.660 family involvement here from this survivor saying that they called it the party house so there were
00:48:55.700 constantly men coming anywhere between 10 and 20 men at any one time in the house but one time on
00:49:01.700 eid they i remember i remember him shouting at me telling me i had to get friends out because his
00:49:07.220 relatives were coming from birmingham to celebrate eid and they were expecting girls to be waiting
00:49:12.500 there for him that's that's just relatives your own family members such a weird thing could you imagine
00:49:20.580 we've got a big religious ceremony for our big religious holiday coming on families coming down
00:49:25.780 make sure we've got some girls there to abuse you can trust your own family to be able to
00:49:29.860 sort that out for you imagine that on christmas day or something it's about as far from you know
00:49:37.140 the british sensibilities as humanly possible the alien completely alien and uh because of that you
00:49:44.500 know you get stuff like the um trafficking around the entire country because there is uh just a huge
00:49:50.260 amount of evidence to support human trafficking being heavily involved in all of this as well another
00:49:54.820 survivor there's a very big network it's in derby birmingham there's sheffield there's newcastle there's
00:49:59.780 leeds there's barnsley so you'd get taken to say burton and then he'd take you to a house and
00:50:04.260 they'd send men in like a conveyor belt so again as discussed in a lot of the transcripts that you can
00:50:10.180 find on here that we went through which again were very very difficult to get through just like
00:50:15.460 everything here um it's just a community pastime for a lot of these people they present as being
00:50:22.980 normal family men business owners shopkeepers hairdressers during the week and then friday night
00:50:31.140 the weekend this is what they get up to above the kebab above your local kebab this is what
00:50:36.980 the locals will be getting up to it's just it's just normal this if this is what constitutes a fun
00:50:44.340 pastime for them of no consequence they can go about being a normal family man in the day
00:50:49.380 and do this by night they have no right to be in our country no right to be anywhere near our
00:50:54.180 communities no right to be nestled within our communities and certainly no right to be within
00:50:59.300 a thousand miles of any white girl if this is what they want to do to them again and this is what this
00:51:07.940 is what rupert lowe is speaking about here when he's saying that there's a sophisticated level of
00:51:12.180 coordination between these rape gangs it's not just independent rape gangs acting independent of one
00:51:18.260 another this isn't just a one-off thing that happens here and there with no knowledge or
00:51:22.900 interaction between each other it does seem that they have networks where they're probably in
00:51:26.820 whatsapp groups they're probably on signal chats where they talk to one another and say oh we've got
00:51:31.780 these girls here do you want to come over here to us or do we bring them to you and vice versa
00:51:36.900 that's likely what is going on here he's calling it a national crime network of the most depraved
00:51:42.740 kind this is not simply dispersed groups of savages this is coordinated right across the country and as
00:51:50.660 a result of that you get situations like this girl saying that it started when she was 13 saying that
00:51:57.860 she was raped by probably about six or seven hundred different men over three years and people on the
00:52:05.220 left people within the mainstream will say well why don't you care about white grooming gangs in
00:52:12.420 response to us talking about these things they'll say why don't you care when it's white people why
00:52:18.580 do you only care when it's foreigners and one i do care about any situation like this and it's
00:52:24.020 incredibly dishonest to try and accuse anybody of not caring but there is a qualitative and quantitative
00:52:30.180 difference in all of this is that typically and you can again go back to the premium roundtable that
00:52:36.500 we did on the transcripts that came out in december there is a case in that of white grooming gangs okay
00:52:43.620 and what you find qualitatively is the way that they operate is that they are independent they are
00:52:49.780 dispersed and they are very secluded they have to remain inside their own group well it's because
00:52:58.020 white british people don't tolerate this sort of thing going on in their community and so they
00:53:04.660 have to keep it insulated otherwise they'll all get exposed whereas in the pakistani community
00:53:10.980 it was so accepted that it was an open secret by everyone it's not just a community pastime for
00:53:16.100 white people when the white people do it it's not like they can just call up a local town council
00:53:21.060 and say like hey we've got some girls above the chippy you want to come around and have some fun
00:53:25.380 but these guys can do that with the local kebab house that's one of the huge qualitative differences
00:53:31.140 between these two things i want to say two things here um this is an entirely hypocritical complaint
00:53:38.660 coming from leftists because it is leftists who are traditionally sympathetic to criminals
00:53:45.300 right-wingers are generally very anti-crime and very tough on law and order it's leftists who are
00:53:52.020 constantly getting out of the way to say that the criminal was let down by society right i don't
00:53:59.140 care i'm tough on law and order full stop and the other bit is that there is a very crucial element
00:54:06.180 that is a very crucial fallacy that is strategic when it comes by leftists on talk of this issue
00:54:12.740 it's the conflation between possibility and probability possibility possibility is not
00:54:18.740 as important as probability you could say that every group has the potential to perform crimes and to
00:54:25.700 a degree they exercise that potential but what is very much important is probability if a particular
00:54:33.460 group is over represented in crime then that it means that there is a sort of culture that drives
00:54:43.300 that over representation so it's not just an issue of possibility yeah the leftists will say
00:54:49.060 well it's pakistani here why are you focusing on the pakistani and not focusing on the on the let's say
00:54:55.220 white british crime first of all that's false because we have done segments talking about uh native
00:55:01.860 crime we have done it several times we are tough on on law and order and the question at the end of the day
00:55:08.980 is whether there is a high probability of event of crime of uh particular violent nature being committed
00:55:19.700 by members of a particular group and if there is which is documented that there is such a very high
00:55:26.900 probability coming from particular groups especially from the middle east and north africa all across europe
00:55:33.140 then there is the question why does this happen what sort of things push it what sort of things drive it
00:55:41.780 why is the establishment try to be completely silent about it to preserve the image of multiculturalism
00:55:47.780 as being a panacea IQ for all that's a very crucial thing that they are that they are trying to obfuscate
00:55:56.660 and it reduces to the concept of per capita when we're talking about it doesn't understand scale or
00:56:03.460 probability really we see this with them constantly struggling to understand what per capita actually
00:56:09.140 means and so i think even if they are honest about it which many have an incentive not to be
00:56:16.980 then there is a just a comprehension inability there of understanding that the scale of this you know
00:56:24.660 six or seven hundred different men is very different than the scale of the white grooming
00:56:29.540 gangs and it doesn't mean that the white grooming gangs you know are off the hook they're still
00:56:33.140 deplorable people but the scale is not necessarily comparable and just the the casual involvement of
00:56:40.660 normal people i mean on what you're talking about there about the probability i i would just simplify it
00:56:44.980 down to uh a thought experiment you've got a like let's say 15 year old teenage daughter needs to get
00:56:52.580 home and she's on the phone to you and she's saying oh there's two roads i can take which one do i use
00:56:57.460 to get home now they both take you home and one's a white british neighborhood the other one's a
00:57:03.140 pakistani neighborhood and the pakistani one's going to take five minutes less to get home which
00:57:08.980 one are you going to send them down which one are you going to say go down this road you know like
00:57:14.260 if you want your daughter to be safe if it's late at night you know which one you're going to tell her to
00:57:18.980 go down even if if you're watching this for whatever reason and you're a dedicated liberal
00:57:23.700 or dedicated leftist or whatever you wouldn't maybe say out loud to us right now but if you
00:57:29.460 want to keep your daughter safe you know which one you're sending her down yeah you know it yeah
00:57:35.060 exactly and again the community involvement goes to the religious side of it as well
00:57:39.700 rupert lowe asking one of the survivors uh the imams who run the mosque do you think they were aware
00:57:44.740 the survivor says they know 100 because my friend was when she was 15 she was sleeping with the guy
00:57:49.620 who was older she had a baby by him and his dad was an imam and his dad knew there you go they don't
00:57:56.580 they don't care you know like people can make jokes about the catholic church all they want it was
00:58:01.140 nowhere near as widespread as this and if you went to your local church of england priest and he knew
00:58:07.540 that something like this was going on in his community by people who are part of his congregation
00:58:11.780 he's probably not going to be quite so forgiving on it as these or just encouraging of it as some
00:58:16.980 of these imams may have been you know the the children of unbelievers therefore it's permitted in
00:58:22.020 the quran there's no um religious contention there at all yeah and then just the last thing just to
00:58:29.540 show the unimaginable level of genuine cruelty which is being alleged as part of these inquiries
00:58:34.980 this just this one's very simple a survivor saying he put a cigarette out on the baby's face
00:58:40.740 like i don't know worst people i don't know the context of this but there's no context to make
00:58:46.740 something like that acceptable is there really that's category that's just evil disgusting that's
00:58:51.860 that's just evil so that's the that's the horror being found in this now there's the broader implications
00:58:58.180 of such things and some of the evidence that rupert and the inquiry are saying that they are unearthing
00:59:03.940 as part of this which is international human trafficking being involved because rupert has
00:59:11.300 said here i've tabled a parliamentary motion based on multiple witness statements we have heard our
00:59:15.940 inquiry on abused british girls being trafficked to pakistan and elsewhere by their rapists i believe
00:59:23.300 that there are currently countless british women being used as sex slaves overseas this may sound insane
00:59:30.740 it's not look at these gangs nobody would have believed the extent of the evil before it was
00:59:34.740 uncovered this is very real because yeah given everything that we know i've know for a fact
00:59:42.500 and everything that we have already heard alleged given that we already know that they do traffic
00:59:47.380 girls around this nation why wouldn't they if they have connections overseas also expand it out
00:59:55.460 internationally as well well it's actually lower risk if they take them to pakistan because in pakistan
01:00:01.300 there's not going to be anyone that's going to try and stop them exactly and if they're making good
01:00:06.340 money from it because the evidence shows that they are pimping these girls out there's an even bigger
01:00:12.500 customer base over there there's an even bigger market for it very highly popular country yeah so that's
01:00:19.780 pretty horrifying we'll see what comes of that i mean so far the uh response given by shibana mamood was
01:00:26.660 um less than encouraging let's say uh when rupert brought it up in parliament let's hear what she had
01:00:33.780 to say in response to him mentioning the trafficking to pakistan as the minister to such trafficking yeah
01:00:41.780 justice secretary mr speaker the testimony of the victims that the honorable gentleman has heard from is
01:00:46.980 absolutely horrifying and the grooming gang scandal was one of the darkest moments in this country's
01:00:53.300 history victims and survivors of these hideous crimes deserve justice and we will make sure they
01:00:59.460 get it our inquiry is a full statutory independent inquiry with all of the powers under the inquiries
01:01:05.540 act 2005 to deliver justice and i would urge him and anybody else with any allegations of criminality
01:01:11.060 or evidence of criminality to share that with the police immediately not really much of an answer
01:01:17.620 just share it with the police so they can bat so they can push it off also we're doing our own
01:01:22.340 statutory inquiry anyway so we'll sort it out sometime in the future when it starts which date it starts
01:01:29.300 we haven't decided yet it's already been kind of preparing for over half a year but there's already
01:01:35.300 been troubles and it'll take three years to do anyway it's not really um even close to being
01:01:41.940 enough i want fire and brimstone i want we're gonna lock people up we're gonna um you know end pakistani
01:01:50.340 immigration and mass deport them you know the the way to solve the problem is you remove them from the
01:01:55.860 country and you find every single person that's responsible and punish them accordingly um currently i
01:02:01.860 think the suitable punishment is not uh in the statute books but i think that that sort of thing is
01:02:08.180 the appetite of the country isn't it that that these people get punishment beyond prison i don't
01:02:13.220 know anybody who would disagree with that but of course in the spirit of this whole thing which has
01:02:17.860 been a massive and monumental cover-up from the beginning and we talk about transparency and how the
01:02:23.380 government hates transparency as i mentioned at the beginning of this segment rupert low wants to try
01:02:28.500 and make access to court transcripts way easier and more transparent for the public and as well for
01:02:34.420 journalists so that we can actually be properly informed on these things and know what's going on
01:02:40.180 well at the same time that he tries to put that forward as a petition online to get a bill passed
01:02:45.540 through parliament what does the ministry of justice do they've ordered the deletion of the uk's
01:02:51.060 largest court reporting archive how much anyone's interest to make it harder to get information from
01:02:58.900 the from the justice system now this was a data analysis company called court desk that support
01:03:04.500 media and campaigners in monitoring court records it was open to uh investigation by journalists and had
01:03:11.220 already uncovered a number of things showing just how oblique the court system in this country is for
01:03:19.780 having people being able to understand and see what's going on inside of it so journalists uh
01:03:25.300 were given no advance of 1.6 million criminal hearings the number of court cases listed was
01:03:32.660 accurate on just 4.2 percent of sitting days and half a million weekend cases were heard with no
01:03:38.980 notification of the press two-thirds of all courts routinely heard cases that the media was not told
01:03:44.820 about in advance 17 courts that sent outcome records had not once published an advance listing
01:03:50.820 in the entire period according to this company's research so along with all of this this company is
01:03:57.540 finding out that hey they're just not telling us about stuff they're not they're hiding all of this
01:04:03.540 process from us and they're making it so that you at home have no idea of the kind of criminal uh cases that
01:04:09.780 are going on no no idea of the kind of criminality that's going on in your local neighborhood so they
01:04:15.780 decide do we fix this no we hide it more and that has been the government's only only decision that
01:04:25.860 they've been making for decades up to this point so i can only hope that um once this inquiry is done
01:04:33.060 which it will be in a few days that some real action can be taken off the back of this and that we can
01:04:38.180 see that we can see the appropriate actors prosecuted um and put in prison for a very very long time
01:04:46.820 there we go so uh got through that one and i'll go through the rumble rants uh random name although
01:04:52.580 i fully support re-migration i think some exceptions should be made every single person even remotely in
01:04:56.740 this should not be deported based ape why can i hear the doom soundtrack in my head random name again
01:05:03.700 for me it's very simple anyone who isn't against child abuse of any kind is automatically in favor
01:05:07.860 of it those types of people should be completely expelled expelled from our civilization no exceptions
01:05:13.940 and he mentioned exceptions before the previous well i mean there are different ways to spell
01:05:19.940 someone there are different kinds of expulsions uh fictages said uh she said was no it is and still is
01:05:27.940 she's intentionally playing it down as something from the past when it's still going on yeah that's in
01:05:31.620 regards to shibana mahoud and what she said i agree i picked up on the same thing so now we've gone
01:05:36.500 through that hopefully stelios can cheer us up i'm not gonna cheer you up who told you i'm gonna
01:05:44.100 tell us why it's happening in the first place before before i don't cheer you up could i please
01:05:49.300 have the mouse and the and the thing can you at least get me to crack a smile come on harry he's doing
01:05:59.300 his bully tactics again isn't he just yank his ponytail there you go i'll yank his chest hair
01:06:06.420 see who comes off worse that's a hate crime against and i also have the other thing
01:06:10.340 oh well this is well yeah sure i suppose yeah thank you very uncooperative there yeah right
01:06:16.740 i'm gonna act like a moody teen now some people find their cousins too hot to handle and there are
01:06:25.940 really bad consequences to this desire they have and that's why we have laws in greece we ban first
01:06:33.060 cousin marriages but in the uk they're not banned and in greece right now we have the pakistani community
01:06:41.220 who is trying to push for uh these first cousin marriages to be allowed and personally i think
01:06:48.020 that this is a disastrous thing everyone who is supporting this should be deported from greece
01:06:53.780 yesterday um before we talk about the statistics and the data of how the allow allowing cousin marriage
01:07:04.260 in the uk has altered the uk and and has affected it do you think it's a good idea am i being too harsh
01:07:13.220 what cousin marriage yeah no okay so you don't think i'm too harsh on this depends how sexy your
01:07:20.580 cousins are no i'm joking um you are deaf and that was that was his only response no obviously inbreeding is
01:07:28.340 bad we have known this uh since before we even understood what genetics were this is what josh has
01:07:34.580 to repeat to himself in the mirror every time he goes to a family gathering inbreeding is bad josh
01:07:39.220 inbreeding is bad however hot your cousin is don't resist her just say no just say no if you're if you
01:07:46.820 feel temptation don't go to a family gathering hashtag no to your cousin that's why people hate christmas
01:07:52.420 maybe they don't like family gatherings okay so we have here uh by my friend paul adonopoulos holy sh
01:08:00.740 it it's arrived in greece javed aslam a pakistani community leader in athens has called for thousands
01:08:07.540 of pakistanis to raise their voices so that cousin marriage permitted under islam can be legalized in
01:08:13.220 greece um atrocious this shouldn't happen as i said before this has zero place in greece or in the
01:08:20.900 western world at large why is pakistan so obsessed with marrying their cousins i know that because
01:08:30.340 like even other parts of the islamic world uh look at them like what on earth is wrong with you
01:08:37.620 so there are reports that this is very widespread in pakistan but also in the pakistani community in
01:08:43.780 uh in the uk there are reports according to which you know it's up to 65 percent and also have here the um the
01:08:53.220 um the essential josh firm post first first cousin marriage pakistan 65 percent saudi arabia close to 50 percent
01:09:01.780 afghanistan 40 percent iran 30 percent egypt and turkey around 20 percent and as josh says here in particular rural areas of pakistan it's up to 80 percent
01:09:11.780 and in the west it's less than one percent i think that this is terrible and atrocious and it just shouldn't be allowed
01:09:21.220 and there is a threshold that shouldn't be crossed in the name of multiculturalism and this is way beyond that threshold
01:09:30.900 threshold i um don't know whether you're going to get onto it about um the the consequences in terms of
01:09:37.940 oh you've got the research paper never mind this is the one that i um quoted and it did the rounds even
01:09:44.420 got shown on fox news so if you're into the mood of reading a scientific paper about the issue about
01:09:52.340 why it's a bad thing to have sex with your cousins and actually have children with your cousins definitely
01:09:58.580 check the european journal of obstetrics and gynecology and reproductive biology a review of
01:10:05.300 the reproductive consequences of consanguinity but this sounds a bit scientific so i'm gonna
01:10:12.980 actually help you to understand it a bit better right so i'm gonna give you some statistics here
01:10:21.380 and explain to you why it's a bad thing right so they're saying that when it comes to the risk
01:10:28.100 harry i like the way you're looking at me what is it oh i'm just listening yeah you're immersed to
01:10:33.700 the to the he's thinking of his cousins that's at least oh yeah clearly you're thinking you know the
01:10:38.500 days of old good childhood memories almost certain all my almost all of my cousins are men
01:10:46.980 i don't even even i don't even know my cousin just don't don't that's what they all say harry
01:10:53.620 no i actually i actually don't really it's kind of bad right so there are some objective
01:10:59.140 issues with it they're saying that the chance that there are going to be birth defects in a
01:11:04.660 couple that isn't first cousin a couple are close to two percent two to three percent and they're saying
01:11:14.580 that as an absolute number this the risk is double when it comes to first cousin marriage now this may
01:11:21.860 sound a bit of a low risk if you're really into your cousins because you may say well it's two to
01:11:27.940 three percent well well four to six percent still lives is with a 94 to 96 percent chance that there
01:11:35.140 isn't going to be an issue but in fact this is not this is just the beginning of it these are absolute
01:11:41.860 numbers when we go down to the relative risk it gets much higher especially
01:11:48.500 these i've actually found my original post where i broke down um the data um of course being a
01:11:56.260 great big research scientist nerd i was able to go through all of the existing papers and pick out
01:12:01.540 the most interesting stuff so a 2002 study revealed that while pakistani babies made up four
01:12:07.140 percent of births they accounted for 30 of defects this is in the uk and in 2013 a larger study found that
01:12:14.980 37 percent of babies with birth defects were from pakistani first cousin marriages which is 37 times
01:12:22.740 over at presentation absolutely and that's what we were talking before it's not just an issue of
01:12:28.420 possibility it's also an issue of probability and this may sound as an absolute number a relatively
01:12:35.940 low risk but there are many factors that within particular couples they they make the the risk
01:12:43.300 sky high well four percent of births and 30 percent of birth defects and that was in 2002 yeah it's going
01:12:49.300 to be worse now yes is astronomical and they're saying that there are several factors that are increasing
01:12:58.020 the probability in particular couples and when it has it has to do with the autosomal recessive genes
01:13:04.900 and if both parents have it there is a very high because they're sharing if their first couple
01:13:13.140 marriage they're sharing 12.5 percent of their gd of their not gdp of their dna i'm sure they're
01:13:18.900 sharing their gdp as well yeah gdp yeah actually that's part of part of the reason rationale why the
01:13:24.580 economic arguments for marrying your cousin no stellios has become the nhs oh no it's gonna find it
01:13:30.580 surprising but these arguments are routinely given yeah and we are going to talk about them
01:13:37.140 in this very segment harry in a few minutes we are going to talk about samson's got a look on his
01:13:42.180 face behind the screen of just pure pain no it's actually true so the thing is that when both parents
01:13:49.540 have the autosomal recessive genes there is a very high chance that they're going to that both of them
01:13:57.060 are going to give it to their children and if they give it to their children the children are
01:14:01.620 going to have severe birth defects and the chances there are 25 percent so the probability increases
01:14:11.700 a lot that's uh not good odds no one in four chance of having a child with birth defects
01:14:18.020 you know that's worse than a dice roll yeah and you could say also that if there are extra factors
01:14:27.860 that are raising the chances it's even worse and they're saying the family history but also many many
01:14:34.020 many such cases in the past and in the family line they're increasing the chance so this is something
01:14:40.580 that should it shouldn't happen and it actually contributes it's such a great risk that it can it
01:14:49.300 literally ruins lives it ruins the lives of these children they're suffering you can you can see it
01:14:55.380 you can watch documentaries this isn't something that is humane or something they are they're literally
01:15:00.820 suffering and they have all sorts of issues like blindness deafness and also complex neurological disorders
01:15:08.500 well it's interesting how inbreeding affects your psychology because it makes you obviously more
01:15:14.260 stupid um it also makes you more fanatical and a whole host of unusual things that you wouldn't
01:15:20.420 necessarily expect but it sort of explains the phenomenon of of how pakistanis behave uniquely appallingly
01:15:30.900 in both pakistan and outside of it actually um in the sense that they can just be you know
01:15:37.860 immune to the morally outrageous things that they're doing to other people because they can't even
01:15:43.860 necessarily comprehend it because of this background of their genetics basically well if it is a
01:15:50.980 particular biological challenge it's death it's definitely not helping one person but also you could
01:15:56.580 say that there are there's the deontological argument of don't do it to don't take such a high risk
01:16:02.740 that is going to ruin your your life's child that's the deontological but there are also other arguments
01:16:08.980 that are you know of another sort you could say that for instance it poses a massive strain on society
01:16:17.620 so there are over overwhelming reasons for society to reject it and treatment for these diseases is often
01:16:25.540 lifetime treatment lifelong treatment and also multidisciplinary
01:16:30.820 and one thing i want to say about greece in comparison to the uk my compatriot my greek
01:16:38.420 compatriots you really know that we have a culture of over prescription so if over a culture of over
01:16:46.260 prescription meets with a cultural change of this sort it's gonna create an even more massive strain
01:16:55.860 for greeks than the strain that exists in the uk for the uh uk taxpayer so this is just
01:17:04.820 if if you don't care about children and you and you know you say well it's it's their child i don't
01:17:10.900 care focus on on that argument i'm just being curious here what do you mean by over prescription as in
01:17:17.060 you mean literally people get prescribed when they don't need to like medications and stuff through
01:17:22.420 health services frequently yeah okay yes and there is the there is very free there is a propensity to
01:17:29.940 think frequently that you know i'm i don't feel well let's go and take a take a med take medicine or
01:17:36.980 something is greece a hypochondriac culture we'll talk about it another time there are hypochondriac
01:17:43.220 people there are i mean it's just i just wouldn't expect it but i don't know to i don't know about
01:17:48.980 the how many and the probability of in the germ population but there is a culture of over prescription
01:17:55.140 i know this from the from the inside of the medical industry right okay let's uh look here this is an
01:18:03.060 article you can read from bradford nhs recruits nurse to help cousin marriage family so part of the
01:18:10.980 when we listen constantly to the argument that the nhs is understaffed and underfunded
01:18:17.460 well sometimes you know these uh the the gap of funding is not actually a gap of funding it's
01:18:24.740 actually the nhs asking money for totally preventable diseases and when we hear about lack of
01:18:32.260 personnel that is going to you know join the ranks of the nhs question is are why do these jobs exist
01:18:40.500 in the first place could the need for them not exist if for instance some practices were banned
01:18:49.060 and children weren't paying for the for the for political correctness and also the the average
01:18:56.020 taxpayer wasn't paying for the for the for political correctness well what is in effect happening is that
01:19:03.540 the uk taxpayer is taking part in some sort of genetic experiment to see the lengths in which cousin
01:19:11.380 marriage can be carried on i suppose because it's particularly bad in britain as well one of the
01:19:18.820 reasons that um it happens is that the pakistanis here don't have as many pakistanis as in pakistan
01:19:26.100 and therefore they're more likely to so they have to do it i'm not saying that so they have to i'm
01:19:34.660 just saying that they're more likely to be in contact with their family because there isn't as large a
01:19:41.060 social circle other than obviously the community itself and so that's something that's been put
01:19:47.300 forward as a reason for them being as a health awareness issue we're currently subsidizing an
01:19:53.540 experiment to see how degenerated pakistanis can get but it's also an issue of ghettos sometimes the
01:20:01.140 more ghettoized an area is the more likely that number is to go up and this is also in the in
01:20:08.660 countrywide pakistan as you mentioned before in particular rural areas the number could be up to 80
01:20:15.460 it has to do with uh with ghettos and multicultural ghettos instead of the push to integrate
01:20:22.020 and the push to come to terms with medical consensus although of course um and i'm sure
01:20:27.300 you agree with me here that i think the cause for integration of these people is is long gone
01:20:32.500 and i think that the best thing is that they're not in your society in the first place we have
01:20:36.420 richard holden here who in 2024 tried to pass the marriage bill to ban this and it was voted down by
01:20:45.620 the uk parliament sadly we have here keir starmer blocked the ban the proposed ban on first cousin
01:20:51.940 marriage to avoid offending the uk's large immigrant muslim population more than half of
01:20:58.260 whom marry their first cousins despite their serious health effects of inbreeding which compound over
01:21:04.420 generations so the problem is that keir starmer doesn't want to be labeled as a racist and because he
01:21:12.100 doesn't want to be labeled as a racist he is fine with this practice continuing he's fine with all
01:21:18.660 this pain and suffering felt by the children who are born with these defects and he is fine also with
01:21:29.380 overburdening the uk taxpayer for the nhs that seems to constantly be underfunded and here we have iqbal
01:21:40.340 mohammed who was very emotional in parliament and he was opposing the proposals to ban first
01:21:46.260 cousin marriage he was arguing that such a ban would amount to islamophobia because cousin marriage
01:21:51.940 is part of the culture and let me just uh give you some of the things he says here that i want to
01:21:59.780 i want you to listen to what he says it's all 45 the practice continues of sensitive for many people
01:22:06.900 this is a highly in doing so it is important to recognize for many people this is a highly
01:22:13.780 sensitive issue and in discussing it we should try to step into the shoes of those who perhaps are not
01:22:21.460 from the same culture as ours to better understand why the practice continues to be so widespread
01:22:28.500 an estimated 35 to 50 of all sub-saharan african populations either prefer or accept cousin marriages
01:22:37.380 and it is extremely common in the middle east and in south asia the reason the practice is so common
01:22:44.740 is that ordinary people see family intermarriage overall as something that is very positive something that
01:22:52.660 helps build family bonds and helps put families on a more secure financial foothold however did you
01:23:00.980 hear it yeah the financial foothold here comes the gdp so i don't actually hear an argument against
01:23:06.740 banning it in any of that i just hear special pleading but also notice the the double standards is
01:23:13.460 other people have to step into their shoes to understand um cultures that are foreign but you know when
01:23:20.340 are cultures that are foreign in the western world when will they be asked to understand the rules they
01:23:27.060 have to to obey in order to be part of a you know a western a civilized western society also i don't have
01:23:34.020 to step into your shoes i'm paying for it buddy yeah it's also worth mentioning as well that even the
01:23:41.380 economic argument even if you take that at face value it doesn't make sense because surely having a one
01:23:47.300 in four chance of having a child that is disabled and potentially has learning difficulties and a whole
01:23:53.780 host of other different psychological and physical problems outweighs the benefit of keeping the money
01:23:59.540 in the family yeah because then you've got well i suppose the state pays for it but still
01:24:05.380 it you you would rather a productive member of your family than a financial burden but there you go
01:24:11.700 though the state subsidizes it yeah and so we're sort of battery farming disabled pakistanis with the
01:24:19.300 the current incentive structure of our welfare system so here is a documentary called when cousins
01:24:25.460 marry which is a very interesting documentary i don't have time to play it this is from seven years ago
01:24:32.340 definitely check it out sorry just that first comment just go down just that first comment gives me an
01:24:37.220 idea of the kind of excuses that they give in this the mother blaming the doctors for a genetic disease
01:24:42.260 is crazy that's okay yeah that's a completely backwards cause and effect that we're dealing with
01:24:47.300 just to excuse it that's close to the 23rd minute by the way if you want to watch the documentary but
01:24:53.780 what i wanted to say here is that it demonstrates and the documentary shows a community that is in complete
01:25:01.940 denial of the medical consensus and some people say here well it worked in my case
01:25:08.420 so that's it it's okay and my children should do the same if if they wanna if they want to do it it's
01:25:14.180 like you sat at a table of russian roulette and you're just there like well i didn't get shot this
01:25:19.140 is also coming from a culture that in the 1970s a senior military official um wanted to direct people away
01:25:26.020 from uh nuclear research to research whether they could harness the power of jinns or genies
01:25:32.900 um as a perpetual energy machine and whether it was actually possible to move mountains as stated in
01:25:39.380 the quran like that these are not necessarily uh scientifically minded people i want to say i want to
01:25:48.740 show you part of this and i will take some extra time because the the previous segments took took a while
01:25:54.500 of course that's no pun intended no no animosity i enjoyed both segments but i think that this is
01:26:00.900 important to you any health problems is it a good patch oh yes in sheffield we've got about a population
01:26:10.500 of about 25 000 what's your view about cousin marriages for 800 years we are we prefer to marry within our
01:26:22.740 families may not be the first cousin maybe the second cousin or third cousin but we marry i am married
01:26:29.700 for last 25 years successfully with my first cousin and i've got five children and thanks to allah
01:26:37.060 subhanahu wa ta'ala that they're all fine and well i'm married to my first cousin i've seen many benefits
01:26:43.220 of it you're in the same circle of relatives as your partner and they have a real understanding and often
01:26:50.980 probably go that extra mile my wife is my mother's sister's daughter yeah we are cousins
01:26:57.940 yeah it's it's i'm laughing because it's so absurd that they're just candidly saying things that
01:27:04.260 in british society if you said that with a straight face you'd never be able to show your face again i'm
01:27:09.540 sorry one of the primary benefits being given there is that well you know you marry your cousin you don't
01:27:16.340 have to put up with strange new in-laws that's that's literally the one like overriding benefit
01:27:23.060 that you can get from it you don't have to put up with in-laws because they're your uncle they're
01:27:28.340 already your family yeah so there are lots of uh there are lots of dangers and it's all these reasons
01:27:35.540 just because they happen for 800 years doesn't mean it should continue happening and um just because in
01:27:42.260 some cases children were lucky and weren't born with birth defects that doesn't mean that the
01:27:49.060 practice itself doesn't make it very much more likely that something of the sort should happen
01:27:55.540 so anyone that comprehends statistics and probability to a european child's level knows that this is not a
01:28:04.180 good thing yeah yeah they're all just going off survivorship bias to wrap it up i wanted to tell
01:28:09.620 both to the english and to the greeks that they shouldn't put up with it for three reasons number one
01:28:15.620 it's the the pain and suffering of the children who are born with with defects also it's the massive
01:28:23.460 strain on the system and third it's also the cultural um sort of retreat that you have to accept that
01:28:32.900 somehow why should we just accept that somehow we should stop caring about the medical consensus and
01:28:39.140 start taking risks that are proven demonstrably proven to be bad i also have a fourth one which
01:28:46.580 is it's gross and immoral and gross and immoral things should be stopped and here's a fifth one
01:28:52.420 which is we banned it over a thousand years ago at this point i believe or at least the papacy went out
01:28:58.180 against cousin marriage in what the seventh century and there's a decent argument for it being one of
01:29:03.620 the reasons that european culture was able to like grow afterwards to what it became so like cousin
01:29:09.940 marriage literally retards your society and just look at how the argument that the pm was giving in
01:29:16.820 the uk parliament doesn't uh work here it's completely one-sided and uses double standards is they're saying we
01:29:23.780 did it for 800 years yeah but yeah if you want to just check customs we stopped doing it for more
01:29:29.540 than a thousand years just just stop it you know saying my cousin was promised to me 800 years ago is
01:29:39.460 not a good argument like it it's like saying i have a tradition of punching myself in the face
01:29:46.900 um i should be allowed to carry on this tradition it's like well you know just because it is a tradition
01:29:51.940 doesn't mean it's good no no but then you're also having to go to other people and say it's a great
01:29:56.660 tradition you should start doing it start punching me it isn't also a cultural retreat it's it comes
01:30:02.580 also with the political muscle flexing of the community that says well if you criticize us in
01:30:09.140 any way it's islamophobia and that can't that can't be allowed if they carry on with that argument
01:30:15.620 eventually people are going to say well if is islam is synonymous with marrying your cousin isn't that
01:30:21.140 sort of um a really condemning self-report about the nature of the religion
01:30:30.180 and to that their response would presumably be
01:30:34.500 let's go to the comments point harry um based tape i for one support cousin marriage
01:30:41.300 never interrupt your enemy when they're making a mistake speaking maybe based ape
01:30:47.380 yeah maybe an appropriate punishment for these people is turning them into the human equivalent
01:30:54.900 of pugs uh that's a random name black pill we're being invaded and taken over by can i say this
01:31:04.020 we're not on youtube right now so yeah that's about inbred retards white peel our enemies are
01:31:09.300 inbred retards all we have to do is remove the traitors enabling them emoji with sunglasses
01:31:18.820 all right do we have any uh video comments before we call it a day see your segment also have
01:31:24.740 did put a smile on mine we also have uh comments from the website yes but we have
01:31:30.580 gone over at this point yeah but why was it my was i responsible for it i'll take some responsibility
01:31:39.140 i've got some stuff to record after this so we can't go too long man
01:31:43.300 uh but uh it looks like do we do we not have any video comments samson
01:31:47.540 we can have a few comments from from the website because it's our people we'll go a few minutes
01:31:52.740 reading comments it's a mate it's all right it's all right calm down stelios is a man of the people
01:32:02.100 okay um furious dan says one step closer to real gundams i don't understand the reference
01:32:11.620 and george hap says real gundams gundam gundam mobile gundam suit or whatever it's called samson
01:32:18.340 will know it's a mech anime okay so i'm assuming that they're going to uh that they think that the
01:32:23.940 japanese are going to start building giant human controlled mega robots to man the borders of japan
01:32:30.180 is the fate of the japanese people to slowly become machines i think no no no to slowly become
01:32:36.900 bio organisms piloting machines close enough
01:32:41.700 uh uh george hap says i really hope japan makes the right choice but i just don't trust women to do the
01:32:47.940 job remember maloney uh that's true however i think the japanese are uniquely unrestrained except
01:32:55.700 from um international money lenders putting terms of immigration upon them but i think
01:33:03.300 with that kind of mandate in the country you can resist this sort of thing
01:33:09.940 all right uh omar awad i'm sure you've seen kemi's attempt at popularity
01:33:13.300 popularity by imitating trump's mcdonald's stunt i think the cringe comes from the same place of
01:33:18.900 understanding that things are popular but being completely disconnected from why
01:33:22.420 and how that insincerity hinders rather than helps their optics well put i haven't seen this kemi thing
01:33:29.220 i have thank god i haven't i said um in response to the picture of it it's good to see her getting
01:33:35.940 some experience for her next job oof oof oof zing but such a weird thing she did because trump did it
01:33:45.300 just be original go to kfc
01:33:50.500 michael trey belbis is the men it's the women it's the police screw it just deport the lot back to
01:33:55.780 whatever hell hole they came from and send the cops that covered this up there to steve stevens great
01:34:02.340 name as the left has co-opted paddington bear for their pro-immigration cause perhaps we need to take
01:34:07.380 on rupert bear for our native nativist cause born in britain lives in britain helps his neighbors pro
01:34:13.700 law and order just a funny little guy who wants the picnic we need more ruperts in politics not
01:34:19.460 paddington's i'd forgotten about rupert bear thank you and stelios go through a few years uh you and
01:34:24.900 baker thanks stelios that intro got me laughing thank you the intro was fun but i don't understand why
01:34:30.660 you were laughing afterwards uh kevin fox leave them alone josh laughing during the segment because
01:34:36.420 i kept thinking about it it was a great opening line uh leave them alone josh if they want to marry
01:34:41.300 the cousins generation after the generation in pakistan let them i wasn't saying to interfere
01:34:46.660 by the way just to be clear even as a scientist i'm fascinated by arizona desert rat says the hapsburgs
01:34:54.500 are an excellent example of what happens when you marry your cousin michael drybelbus look i get it
01:35:00.740 your cousin's hot and she's got a great rack but jesus christ awesome um
01:35:10.180 daniel butchers all that speech about cousin marges is telling me is that they do not belong in the
01:35:16.260 western world yep that's it yeah and uh on that note that's all we've got time for today thank you
01:35:24.500 all very much for joining us it's been a pretty up and down podcast in terms of tone and how depressing
01:35:30.420 the stories was but i hope you stuck through because there was some good stuff in there we'll be back
01:35:34.900 again tomorrow till then have a great day