The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters - February 13, 2026


The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1354


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 31 minutes

Words per Minute

182.85991

Word Count

16,660

Sentence Count

14

Misogynist Sentences

26

Hate Speech Sentences

73


Summary

In this episode of the lotus eaters podcast, the lads discuss diversity fatigue, when the normies begin to hate, the Martian constitution and why it's time to wake up. Plus, a bit of politics.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 hello everyone welcome to the podcast of the lotus eaters today is friday the 13th of february
00:00:05.660 and i'm pleased to be joined today by brother josh and brother nick word what's up my brother
00:00:12.080 oh good i'm i'm i'm happy you like the title now i was never against it i was just yeah but you
00:00:19.140 were a bit you were a bit unnerved i think it was because you said it in such a a flat way that it
00:00:25.520 seemed almost like a cult initiation yeah that's what i liked about it i thought it was a cult
00:00:29.380 exactly hello and welcome to the today we're gonna have a really fun one we're gonna talk
00:00:34.940 about how it's time to wake up it is diversity fatigue which is a favorite topic of yours
00:00:41.880 and also when the elephant began to hate i'm going to address the elephant in the room and before we
00:00:48.640 talk about how it's time to wake up three o'clock we have lads hour about the martian constitution
00:00:54.220 we have a very pensive elon there a very um
00:00:58.340 very nice yes very nice sweeney but i have said before that when she's insufficiently revealing
00:01:07.660 this isn't exactly the best marketing pitch it's the most mediterranean thing i've ever
00:01:12.160 heard you say yeah so be with us at 3 p.m what is the martian constitution i spoke to dan about this
00:01:19.080 and he's basically saying how would we design our mars space colony we were in charge of it
00:01:25.840 okay good should we move to the first segment yeah happy to so um so today my i'm asking
00:01:34.320 when will the normies wake up so i thought about calling this when the normie begins to hate
00:01:38.560 but you already had when the elephant begins to hate so i was like right we can't use that
00:01:41.540 yeah i've gone one step into yeah greater obscurity there haven't i yeah so that is my working
00:01:46.560 title but someone's called it time to wake up and what it is dominic cummings did a load of
00:01:51.120 research and focus groups and he found the overall takeaway i'm not gonna which kind of ruins the
00:01:56.280 whole piece but i'll just give you anyway the overall takeaway is that voters are furious with
00:02:01.500 westminster they hate the politicians but they vastly underestimate how bad things actually are
00:02:07.020 in terms of things like immigration numbers or the debt etc so although they hate politicians
00:02:12.800 there is scope for them to hate them way more when they realize how bad it really is
00:02:17.340 i can certainly believe it because the people who know me in life who don't really follow politics
00:02:22.160 either think like you know i i get where you're coming from but yeah but it's a bit much mate yeah
00:02:27.640 they think it's a bit strong like does it really warrant that but then they live in areas where
00:02:31.940 they're insulated from the the worst excesses of it and they don't see it on uh social media and
00:02:36.880 the likes and so there's lots of scope and people forget this particularly people who follow
00:02:41.040 politics particularly people who follow lotus eaters but not everyone is necessarily like us
00:02:46.000 and keeping an eye on the goings-on in the world and in fact most people um will sit down and watch
00:02:51.980 the tv and not question anything almost no one's like us to be fair but i know you exactly we follow
00:02:57.900 it all day so we forget and so what he's done he's tried to get away from his prejudices and just say
00:03:03.220 okay what do people actually think he's calling it regime change 26 to 29 results from a market
00:03:09.280 research project at the start he gives a kind of uh sort of uh gonzo sampling i don't really call
00:03:14.340 this a kind of um poetic sampling of just different things people have said like they've said yeah it's
00:03:19.800 harder to get a gp appointment than tickets for one direction or i don't think farage is far right i'm
00:03:25.260 branded far right but i'm not this kind of thing people are saying um uh like uh is farage a team
00:03:31.920 player he'll find it very hard to be pm it's like mps haters they're not on our side or this is a really
00:03:37.680 good one i live in a village called x in 10 years it's been overrun we now call it halal x it's a
00:03:42.640 small english village but it's now got mosques there's rose and an edge there's white flight
00:03:46.700 and it basically says i'm selling my house i'm leaving the people who've arrived don't want to
00:03:50.240 live by our rules and are not working it's a real sample of the kind of things people are saying he
00:03:55.100 also gives this great quote from t.s elliot the culture of europe has deteriorated visibly within the
00:03:59.400 memory of many who are by no means the oldest among us there's no doubt that in our heading headlong
00:04:03.620 rush to educate everybody we're lowering our standards and more and more abandoning the
00:04:07.580 study of those subjects by which the essentials of our culture are transmitted destroying our
00:04:11.900 ancient edifices to make ready the ground upon which the barbarian nomads of the future will
00:04:16.580 encamp in their mechanized caravans that may as well have been written yesterday yeah that's very
00:04:22.620 prophetic isn't it elliot i'm very impressed yeah that was on notes on education and culture funny
00:04:27.760 thing about that is elliot was considered decadent and modernist of course by the likes of c.s lewis
00:04:33.480 who hated elliot's work and you know it was like 30s disillusionment now it seems like he was of
00:04:40.140 course super based and relatively and pre-decadent but um yeah i'm of the opinion that we've been on
00:04:46.560 a sort of cultural decline since the 19th century really in many aspects like it's not been some sort
00:04:52.360 of linear progression and then soon as we lose world war ii you know all of a sudden the bad stuff
00:04:57.320 starts happening right oh did i say lose i mean win yeah yeah whoops i'm too tired i missed that
00:05:03.600 but yeah lose yeah win um i mean all of europe lost world war ii is my point there yeah you find
00:05:09.220 that 1930s so much disillusionment post world war one and just people losing confidence in the west
00:05:13.440 but as you say it goes back even even further um so yeah so that's a sample of what he found and of
00:05:18.460 course he quotes well welbeck as well and michelle wilbeck um and it's the second and third generation
00:05:23.360 immigrants that are making trouble we're witnessing de-assimilation it's a catastrophe so what come
00:05:28.940 he said he took a deep market research here and he's giving you that and some sketches uh from
00:05:34.860 westminster and his usual views on the on the elite it's nice to see him writing in language that is
00:05:40.960 actually readable unlike his tweets i know i know he has that kind of a shorthand that's quite hard to
00:05:46.720 understand sometimes i'm just trying to get to here we go here so here's the first key bit
00:05:51.280 british politics is in a doom loop similar to many western countries a the deafening verdict of voters
00:05:56.660 in election after election brexit trump one and two etc and the drop in support for old parties
00:06:01.360 everywhere is that insiders have failed and voters want change a failure of ideas institutions and
00:06:05.940 operational competence a failure to take or impose responsibility for failure cf iraq afghanistan
00:06:11.180 financial crisis covid ukraine etc old parties old state bureaucracies old institutions of all kinds
00:06:16.640 from the eu and nato to the media and universities have seen an epic collapse of trust so that's the
00:06:22.120 failure of the elites and b insiders response to this repeated verdict it's a doubling down on more
00:06:27.240 of the things voters keep rejecting especially importing men from the worst places on earth
00:06:31.160 be an increasingly deranged discussion among themselves that the real problem is actually
00:06:36.000 the voters because fooled by disinformation russian interference tech oligarchs etc they have embraced
00:06:41.600 populism racism fascism and see the solution is to restore trust in insiders ideas and institutions
00:06:47.260 and give them more power and money and then see those outsiders who want to replace this doom loop
00:06:52.980 between voters and insiders can't coordinate to build a political entity to do it so that's him
00:06:58.260 laying out the terrain basically i think he's being charitable particularly in part a there and saying
00:07:03.800 that it's a failure rather than a deliberate strategy to basically open up the country into a
00:07:10.580 great big cattle farm where we're milked for all we're worth financially by a select few elites
00:07:16.900 yeah what's really interesting about that was larry fink gave that speech at the world economic forum
00:07:21.240 where he said oh the countries with xenophobic immigration policies exact quote will fare better
00:07:26.140 when ai and robotics come along more and more because they'll have declining native populations and they
00:07:31.700 won't have this large effectively surplus immigrant population who will become surplus when ai and
00:07:36.900 robotics develop so he says they'll cope with it better makes me wonder combined with jim ratcliffe's
00:07:41.240 comments the other day which seemed a bit more rogue but on the same note we're being colonized he said
00:07:46.440 so you go are billionaires starting to go oh actually we've got to now back out of this immigration
00:07:51.840 experiment and he also added that they will face less social tensions yeah which is a tacit admission
00:07:58.920 that this is something that creates social tensions yeah well it's not even a revelation that with the
00:08:05.000 dawn of ai and automation you don't need as many workers i could have told you this when i was about
00:08:09.500 12 years old yeah so the the idea that they didn't know that this was the thing is absurd and yeah so
00:08:16.860 you know they might not be the the sharpest tool in the shed but they're smart enough to know that at the
00:08:22.240 very least they are yeah definitely and but the issue is why are they saying it now that's a that's
00:08:28.020 something interesting they also knew there's a pivot in agenda i think what actually happens is the
00:08:32.560 the pressure is kept for as long as possible and it's only relented when it absolutely has to be to
00:08:39.760 keep things sustained like if if you think of everything as sustaining a resource extraction
00:08:45.180 operation then the entire politics and economy make perfect sense right so they went for it because
00:08:51.200 it was low wages but then when it becomes too much social pressure the whole thing is going to
00:08:55.540 collapse so they have to back out and change exactly yeah yeah that seems plausible um so
00:09:01.200 cummings goes on to voters insiders are the villains and insider failure is the cause of the collapse of
00:09:07.680 their trust to insiders they are the traduced victims and the cause of the collapse of trust is the
00:09:13.240 evil treachery of other elites the interference of evil foreigners putin did brexit and the ignorance
00:09:18.520 and stupidity of voters insiders destroyed their own ooda loops he's obsessed with the phrase ooda loops
00:09:24.440 meaning this decision making you know ooda it's a four-part decision making process actually coined
00:09:29.300 by a colonel in the 70s i can't remember which each o stands for but it's like decide act but it's like
00:09:35.040 a four-part decision making strategy it's the kind of thing that is this sort of weird um acronym is
00:09:41.540 this sort of corporate news speak almost it reminds me of 1984 and i feel it doesn't get nearly enough
00:09:48.060 hate like i see it as like see it say it's sorted on the trains like i it fills me full of
00:09:53.520 abject hatred right well cummings likes a shorthand doesn't he so it's it means by the way observe
00:09:58.600 orient decide act and it was coined by a that's much more like see it say and it won't be sorted
00:10:04.500 that's true anyway the point is insiders destroyed their own ooda loops they radicalized left but can't
00:10:11.040 see it so their entire orientation is off kilter ironically it wouldn't be hard to be a popular
00:10:15.700 government but the changes needed are fiercely resisted in a pathological self-defeating pattern
00:10:20.200 by political bureaucratic elites because of the stories they believe the powerful forces of
00:10:24.820 mimesis which surround them and the disintegration of feedback mechanisms e.g stopping the boat is
00:10:30.220 operational child's play doable in days according to uk forces asked to plan to stop them not even in
00:10:35.980 the hundred most complex difficult government problems and the entire problem is insiders
00:10:39.840 determination to prioritize keeping the legal barriers to solving the problem particularly the
00:10:44.140 echr and the human rights act he's often making that claim that it's quite simple operationally
00:10:49.040 gone and that's not even the echr it's entirely an issue of people because if you focus on article
00:10:54.980 eight of the echr the right to have a family and private life it doesn't say that there is there are
00:11:01.200 no conditions under which someone can be deported it's that that they are conditional upon the common
00:11:07.400 good and economic stability economic well-being so echr article eight isn't the kind of naive
00:11:15.220 humanitarian article that lots of these people are appealing to that's why also that's why it's
00:11:20.740 fundamentally an issue of people right but that's also why i add to human rights act because we are
00:11:25.020 tied to echr in a weird way that even like denmark and not because of our human rights act so there's
00:11:31.340 also that as well which makes our it's not just article eight it's the interplay tony blair in
00:11:35.860 1998 wasn't it that's tony yeah um so to go on but of course you're right ultimately but to go on
00:11:42.660 um voters is that a bit worth reading out let's just have a look voters think we keep voting for
00:11:46.940 change but they won't change when politicians try to change even modestly they find it almost
00:11:51.320 impossible to make the state bureaucracies evolve since 1945 follow orders what are you laughing at
00:11:55.340 i'm laughing at you know the formulation lots of people think this way but it's just so childish
00:12:00.180 what what's childish just so non-specific we won't change when things don't oh yeah well
00:12:05.960 you're talking about lots of uh you know quote unquote normies yeah some of them do think this
00:12:11.840 way yeah oh yeah yeah yeah i know that's the thing gone change as a slogan obviously it was very
00:12:17.520 associated with obama but it's just such an if you hear that in any political context just like i'm
00:12:24.280 here to change and you don't specify what that change is and how you're going to do it it's just
00:12:28.880 meaningless there's no no point taking you're leaving seeing what can be unburdened by what
00:12:33.940 has been yeah true starmer even talks about change and he's the least changed canada ever
00:12:39.240 it doesn't make any sense and um yeah i mean and you had kamala running on change when yeah she was
00:12:45.140 a democrat and then they were in power it's like what you're talking about so it's nonsense yeah i mean
00:12:49.360 and he's always saying how it's part of this long-term cycle of regime change similar to the 1840s to
00:12:54.540 70s so he's talking about we're in this long pattern of collapse we're in a holding pattern
00:12:58.120 the long-term entropic forces of westminster's pathological vandalism demonstrate themselves
00:13:02.660 weakly in a torrent of humiliation westminster has made us a tragic comic global internet meme
00:13:08.200 westminster watches itself to see how it will react to the uselessness of two more duds in charge of
00:13:13.000 the two old rotten parties yeah i mean we have become a joke because of because of this um
00:13:19.120 funny thing is if you re-watch something like the thick of it the government seems more competent
00:13:23.660 there in uh comedic satire than the actual reality these days yes certainly the starmer's last week
00:13:30.920 and this was it this was before starmer's last week that this was written so think about it now
00:13:34.320 with mcsweeney gone and wormhold and just the catastrophe of starmer at the moment um so he goes
00:13:41.220 on about farage as well here this is important for all these uh reform cultists who always tweet me
00:13:45.380 farage tells people after may reform will start showing a transformation yet he's spent his time
00:13:49.680 recruiting some of the worst tory dregs to help him persuade voters to vote for change the voters
00:13:54.380 are more angry and desperate than ever but westminster can't cope with the feedback that's exactly it
00:13:58.820 farage this is what he said in point c is like we need a new elite to be serious and so far they've
00:14:05.340 hired james or who's good but he he alone can't build an entire team and farage just wants to get a
00:14:10.800 load of ex-tories and not even the best ex-tories some of them are good like soella
00:14:14.620 brabman relatively good but then he'll get nazeem zahari and you're like what are you doing
00:14:18.880 what is the plan yeah i mean people that in my opinion should be on trial for their crimes in
00:14:25.760 office are being welcomed with open arms and also what kind of strategy is it to say listen we know
00:14:32.000 we're bad now but in may we're going to get better yeah i know he's not framing it like that
00:14:37.080 normally try and get better good before elections come up yeah it's a really weird thing to say
00:14:41.840 atonement yeah so beyond that now he goes on elites have fragmented and many now also want
00:14:48.680 something radically different but this process is different in different countries in america it's
00:14:51.980 been accelerated by elon and the mag of silicon valley network in britain there's a lot of private
00:14:55.900 whining at dinner parties but very little public action most people with money and or talent have
00:15:00.760 kept hoping vainly that the old system might fix itself and don't want to make enemies starmer has
00:15:05.660 scuppered that hope but there remains no clear solution so again the jim rackliff thing interesting here
00:15:10.500 because is that an example finally of a you know a billionaire definitely part of the elite
00:15:14.860 at least financially to go hang on this is ridiculous we're being con lies so maybe a little
00:15:19.920 a little bit of a seeping out from the private dinner parties maybe i think but notice he's been
00:15:24.200 attacked brutally by absolutely everyone the vanguard is going to be people who've got nothing
00:15:28.520 to lose which is young people right people maybe mid-30s younger people of my sort of age
00:15:34.500 where we just don't care anymore we what if we got to lose no house no prospects so who cares if
00:15:40.800 people judge us for our political opinions it doesn't have any tangible effect on our life unless
00:15:46.240 we get arrested and so i think that that's going to be where the frontiers are going to be pushed
00:15:53.400 as well as you know some of the sort of distant activists and then slowly the elites will follow
00:15:59.900 because i think that's the way in britain things work is that um things have to be acceptable and
00:16:06.180 then all of a sudden lots of people are okay to support it and it's got to be uh dare i say
00:16:13.260 a more organic movement even though you know my i have some cynicism about these sorts of things
00:16:19.660 interesting i mean the danger is of course young people just leave or vote green those are a couple
00:16:25.140 of the dangers but you're right some of them will go based and say we've got nothing to lose
00:16:28.800 let's just get on lower seaters um um so yeah so this let's just read this bit as well the gap
00:16:36.720 between what's a what's really needed to solve our problems and b what's acceptable in instance
00:16:41.320 inside of dinner parties is relentlessly growing it's much bigger than in 2020 so yeah that's pretty
00:16:47.180 much the same point his that's an interesting uh place to draw it as well because i've long said
00:16:52.300 that 2020 was a good year for for the right and you might be saying what is wrong with you we were
00:16:59.080 locked down there was black lives matter but of course pandora's box was opened and now it can't
00:17:04.440 be closed right and people hate the government more than they ever did um for the pandemic and black
00:17:12.580 black lives matter is now dead and it's opened the the the you know the door for basically white
00:17:20.920 identity in that you're allowed now to say listen i'm english i'm i'm proud of it and there's nothing
00:17:27.500 to be ashamed of like that's not enough to get you you cancelled and things like that people have
00:17:32.960 been forced into it by just a relentless attack on white people from all possible quarters or english
00:17:37.460 people the way most people view it i think is that we did honestly try to get along with everyone
00:17:43.040 and then we realized oh it's not reciprocal and now it's our turn to to play their games and when
00:17:49.580 they're saying white people need to get out of the countryside there's too many white people in the
00:17:52.580 country like it's very aggressively not reciprocal and that's not even from different races that's
00:17:56.560 from central planning organizations that just say we want to cleanse you out of your homeland you're
00:18:01.100 like oh okay i think that's and everyone's noticing that's terrible it makes me want to go the
00:18:05.500 way of my ancestors and cover myself in woad and march on westminster you can do that if you want
00:18:10.780 um as long as we film it um so another key bit uh here is i think it'll be resolved this year
00:18:17.640 cummings says whether a starmer and kemi have been as i said what happened last year and the two
00:18:21.460 old parties are irreversibly splintering b farage's promises are true or the cynics are right and it's
00:18:26.200 clear that a reformed government would just be another sw1 clown show see whether elite fragmentation
00:18:31.140 generates a serious alternative or d if not then the rush to the exits of talent and money
00:18:35.480 will accelerate as people realize that the next election is heading for either a farage clown
00:18:39.660 show or a red green yellow hamas troon scott and that rainbow coalition raising the probability
00:18:44.560 of financial crisis and street violence which may arrive anyway before then given sw1's disintegration
00:18:50.460 a lot to look forward to there i mean that's a long run on sentence isn't it um a lot in there
00:18:55.480 i mean lots to unpack when it comes to the probability of street violence i don't think that it's going to
00:19:01.580 be the red green yellow hamas troon now maybe the hamas is going to be it's red green yellow
00:19:08.140 troon scott natt rainbow if you say that three times in a mirror a red green yellow hamas troon scott
00:19:13.980 natt rainbow coalition i don't know what appears behind you but you just need to run he's not saying
00:19:19.660 that i mean he's not necessarily linking those we saying there'll be financial crisis and then
00:19:22.860 there'll be street because people are even more unhappy and all the same things are happening but
00:19:26.340 they've got no money um yes i mean by the way if we have time i'll just look at why actually
00:19:32.620 kemi weirdly is polling well in the head to heads but starmer since he wrote this has gone as i said
00:19:37.160 gone even worse and totally collapsed and bizarrely is hanging on um so let me get on to the key part
00:19:45.120 uh which is um about how the voters here we go so let's just get to this bit those who consider
00:19:52.060 themselves the serious sensible people of sw1 i those who radicalized sharply left post 2015
00:19:57.660 towards greta gaza trans but think the problem is voters radicalizing right have continued their
00:20:02.700 post-referendum doubling down and persuaded themselves of new fictions regarding immigration
00:20:06.820 including the idea that the polls showing voter concern over immigration reflects media coverage
00:20:11.240 which makes them greatly overestimate the scale of immigration if you believe this and you naturally
00:20:15.860 believe other things about what's happening and what political entities should do so that's insane by the
00:20:21.100 way because everyone who asks members of the public who don't know any better how much immigration do
00:20:26.940 you think we're getting a year it's like 70 000 or like some people are like 10 15 000 which is like
00:20:32.640 out of your mind no it's near the millions that is exactly what he says so he says i suspected this is
00:20:38.240 delusional so i decided to see what voters think about this hypothesis i was surprised how deluded
00:20:43.960 uh i think what uh you said josh reminds me of the it isn't happening it's happening but not to a large
00:20:51.240 extent and then it's happening and it's a good thing lots of people are really susceptible to the
00:20:56.740 propaganda of it is happening but not to a bad degree i think kind of messaging at the moment i think
00:21:03.740 and this will at some point go to it is happening and it's a good thing just like we saw in spain and in
00:21:11.460 in france and not many other places i think people are very bad at knowing numbers generally speaking
00:21:19.240 and i'm saying this as a as a psychologist people can't estimate probability very well
00:21:23.720 people don't know really you know back of notepad measures of scale and so most people struggle to
00:21:31.080 comprehend the nature of these things just by it being an aspect of human nature that people don't
00:21:37.300 know how to figure these things out and i think by merit of we know the statistics we're in this sphere
00:21:43.460 um we know the scale we know the demographics but if you actually think about it we're looking at
00:21:50.380 things like percentage of the population population growth and how the minority populations are growing
00:21:56.160 how we're not having you know um white british not having children and so they're going to be
00:22:03.420 outbred eventually most people don't even conceive of those things happening in the first place
00:22:08.480 we also understand what per capita means that's true that is one handicap the left seems to really
00:22:14.140 struggle with i don't know what it is but it's like a precursor to being left wing is you just don't
00:22:19.060 understand per capita i actually say people just don't know i mean numbers i mean during covid people
00:22:23.360 were saying oh yeah i think how many people are is it 10 percent of dying or is it people like
00:22:27.500 50 percent people are like crazy figures when you saw how many people they thought were dying
00:22:30.700 i remember seeing some mad figures i was like no it's like point you know they were just way way
00:22:34.900 off i remember explaining it to my parents and the bbc had that big death figure didn't it it's like a
00:22:40.520 hundred thousand people have died and i and then i explained to them what that is as a percentage of
00:22:45.080 the population and they're like oh okay and i said do you know how many people die of flu at this time
00:22:50.520 every year about an equivalent number uh and then all of a sudden they realized oh wait this number
00:22:57.500 is just meant to scare us and of course the people at bbc news and like understand that and
00:23:02.520 they admitted through the behavioral insights team that they used fear tactics and it's because it's
00:23:07.560 unmoored because people don't have a basis uh to understand the figure whereas actually um were you
00:23:14.640 to contextualize it like what they should have done if they were to have this big scary number would be
00:23:19.940 here is the equivalent flu figures for last year or um here's another thing that we've measured in the
00:23:26.500 past the contextualize and then people like oh okay so it's i don't know marginally worse than the flu
00:23:32.760 yeah but they wanted to do the exact opposite as you say so and very much on this theme this is the
00:23:37.240 key bit i suspected this is delusional meaning westman's idea so i decided to see what voters
00:23:41.460 think about this hypothesis i was surprised by how deluded it turns out that the mainstream voters i
00:23:45.980 explored actually greatly underestimate the scale of immigration and not by 10 or 30 but by a factor
00:23:51.680 between 5x and 30x so over and over normal voters estimate the scale of immigration since january 21
00:23:58.320 at 200 000 50 000 300 000 100 000 700 000 250 000 i roughly five times and 30 times lower than it is
00:24:07.240 and when they are shown the real numbers and graphs since 1997 and 2021 million after million after
00:24:14.120 million they are almost all shocked they aren't buying diversity as our strength they are much more
00:24:19.040 hostile to labor and toys and much more supportive of much stronger measures than most toy mps so
00:24:23.820 that's the key part and the uh oh sorry to interrupt um i was just going to point out that there was a
00:24:30.320 very interesting psychology study um looking at depressive realists and actually they found that
00:24:35.480 people who were clinically depressed were much better at estimating um the likelihood of bad things
00:24:42.060 happening and so things like natural disasters that you know five to thirty times uh underguessing was
00:24:50.400 adjusted for by the fact that they were miserable so actually listen to cynical people because they
00:24:55.960 understand numbers better apparently this is why i know i'm totally pessimistic and just get it right
00:24:59.940 every time um um i mean i said to my parents like you know how woke was so crazy i was in the comedy
00:25:06.380 industry and they didn't believe me then a few years later they believe me but you're ahead of the
00:25:09.320 curve if you're pessimistic um yeah so the lack of voter knowledge combined with what voters do
00:25:14.240 think and know is an indictment of sw1 but he here he suggests having a a version of the 350 million
00:25:21.400 on the side of the bus that he did for brexit but for immigration rather than the nhs but the key bit
00:25:26.400 i want to get onto i know it's going a bit long so let's just get onto the key the key bit well it's
00:25:31.800 that bit plus this voters are angrier and more fearful and more hateful of westminster than ever before
00:25:36.400 on the other hand they greatly underestimate the real scale of immigration they're almost totally
00:25:39.940 unaware of the insane immigration cases regarding sex criminals and murderers and terrorists they do
00:25:44.700 not understand the scale of the debt they're mad about the scale of benefits cheating but greatly
00:25:48.320 underestimate its scale they don't understand the depths of vandalism of the armed forces they
00:25:52.620 understand problems with the police better than mps but still underestimate them they become more
00:25:56.800 realistic about the nhs and the implications of immigration and aging for it but don't trust any
00:26:01.200 mainstream political force to make significant changes they become much more hostile to sw1's
00:26:05.620 consensus on net zero but don't realize the scale of mad costs sw1 locked us into and how hard it
00:26:11.060 will be to change to sensible policies on energy and environment so here's the key although voters
00:26:16.120 are more pessimistic than ever and more realistic than insiders they're not realistic enough about the
00:26:20.560 extent of the rot so there is scope for hatred of both old parties sorry both old parties to grow a lot
00:26:25.800 and desire for something new to grow a lot and this dynamic is demonstrated in groups when one talks
00:26:30.720 them through various things so in other words the good news from this piece is there's still a lot
00:26:35.540 of room for the normie to hate far more than they already are when they realize the full scale of it
00:26:40.840 your homework your lotus eaters homework for the weekend is go out and make a normie hateful
00:26:46.460 yeah and this as he says this was before the resurrection of the epstein scandal in the last week
00:26:51.300 this was a feb 7 this article so it's before even this latest week of
00:26:54.860 pdf protectors as the people are now calling the labor uh mps on the doorstep now they're calling
00:27:01.500 them the pdf protector party adobe enthusiasts yeah and all i was gonna we don't have time for
00:27:07.280 it now but in case we in case that bit ran short i was just gonna say he was actually weirdly
00:27:10.900 slightly wrong on kemi because she's suddenly had a huge boost and he's beating uh farage and
00:27:15.460 starmer in polls and if you look at the graph she ends up beating them weirdly head to head in all
00:27:20.700 them although if you go down you find that overall farage is still just ahead but what you really
00:27:26.140 sort of take away is that kemi's like the second choice of everyone like the lib dems greens labor
00:27:30.740 whereas farage is just farage cult for reform voters but no one else likes him that's what you
00:27:35.540 end up coming away with well farage should be steamrollering everyone here really yeah he should
00:27:40.940 be doing better and of course he's still leading so it's not nothing but with kemi badenoch's leadership
00:27:47.760 it's been pretty lackluster keir starmer is the most unpopular person ever conceived of um and ed
00:27:53.920 davie is a buffoon he's like a court jester polanski is insane you know wanting to just ban being a
00:28:01.560 landlord and things like that like just just extremely radical policies that would get you
00:28:07.840 locked up in a padded room yeah only five years ago and so who are his competition yeah why why is he
00:28:14.720 doing so poorly well kemi's managed to bounce back a bit just by being super sensible saying
00:28:18.820 we're the sensible ones we're not doing drama and like starmer's falling apart no one really
00:28:22.880 trusts farage is going to be going to deliver the goods so she's just saying we're sensible and she's
00:28:26.900 almost more popular than the tories now as an individual but greens are so radical that even
00:28:30.700 polanski polanski gets 29 but none of them gets 44 they still want someone else hypothetical
00:28:36.880 uh which is which is extraordinary so um anyway that's coming was as a yeah reform vote 73 farage
00:28:42.840 very sort of you know inter farage cult of personality isn't it to a certain extent yeah
00:28:47.540 and you just don't see that same level of enthusiasm in the other parties you see none of them but
00:28:50.900 none of them still wins overall by the way amongst all britains quite comprehensively so um anyway
00:28:56.340 some predictions from cummings there and uh normie normies get hating more find out the facts
00:29:00.780 like you say red pill your normie friend with immigration stats at the dinner party
00:29:04.380 all right that's my bit do you want to read your comments oh yeah i mean there aren't
00:29:09.840 maybe that many because i think it was quite a dense and weird bit but um a drunk changeling says
00:29:16.080 theoretical utopian constitutions are just i don't even understand that fursonas for poli-sci
00:29:22.860 majors i don't know what any of those words mean i i unfortunately do a fursona is like a persona
00:29:29.600 of a furry i sort of guess that might be what it was yeah the fact i know this just makes me
00:29:35.140 i've had to learn about jester gooning this week and now i have to learn this i've been too exposed
00:29:39.400 to the internet now i've been totally frame-mogged by that comment um so that's a random name says
00:29:44.980 even if reform wins they are containment and if we get another southpaw on top of a subversive
00:29:48.580 reform government i fail to see how another election will take place without violence erupting
00:29:52.260 thoughts question mark probably can't say our thoughts without going to jail but yeah
00:29:55.680 the hapsification says i suspect every year we get closer to the centennial of world war ii the
00:30:01.060 consensus is dying out unless people care will or will care about the old post-war nonsense
00:30:06.660 yeah stephanie you need to check your cortisol levels they were totally spiked by some of those
00:30:12.180 comments ignore the moids ignore the moids i need to start mogging moids stairwell frame mogging no just
00:30:19.300 no i i find i i find this insistent on mogging moids while ignoring foids to be very gay
00:30:26.360 yes just focus on foids focus on yeah ignore moids sorry i don't speak french what is this
00:30:32.960 focus on holding you have to you have to keep up focus on jester gooning with foids he's saying
00:30:37.840 rather than mogging moids and chad fishing your smb oh thanks for clearing it up
00:30:42.280 right so please don't jester max do you remember that's all i've got you're saying that to a comedian
00:30:55.060 is this working again technology fatigue technology mog it's all working just a boomer it's all it's
00:31:04.960 all working well boomer fatigue i'm i'm very tired i find it all so tiresome
00:31:10.540 and i'm feeling dei fatigued diversity equity and inclusivity it's tiresome i don't want everyone
00:31:17.820 to be the same but i just resent the forceful nature of it just absolutely resent it everything
00:31:24.640 that the woke touch the eternity they have the reverse midas touch they completely destroy it
00:31:31.180 and i'm gonna show you today a wealth of things that they have destroyed but we'll end with a positive
00:31:38.240 note because i'm fundamentally an optimist and i want to i want to white want to end with a white
00:31:44.660 pill guys how do you feel about dei fans i love it it's great um wait what podcast am i on again oh no
00:31:53.520 um i hate it and if anything i feel like what it truly is about it's like if i put my my they live
00:32:00.860 glasses on they're actually aviators what i actually see when i got the glasses on is um accept minorities
00:32:09.360 that's what it's all about really isn't it it's just like yeah minorities are secretly like you
00:32:15.580 except when in reality we've written them to be like you but they're not actually in real life
00:32:21.140 um just accept them um don't think critically but of course the the philosophy there is that
00:32:27.400 exposing people to different cultures makes them like them and it's actually the opposite if you
00:32:32.920 look at any point in human history exposure to a foreign culture usually leads to conflict
00:32:39.900 one might even suspect it's a part of human nature what do you think nick well i was just looking for
00:32:44.980 a couple of tweets i can't find them but what i've seen recently is you know those sort of advert
00:32:49.120 like stock pictures where it's like oh it's a Aryan blonde woman and and a black guy you know it's
00:32:53.720 always that combination is they're getting more and more ridiculous i saw like and it's like
00:32:57.300 attractive blonde woman with a guy who looked it wasn't that he was black he just looked like he'd
00:33:01.420 come off a boat you know i mean he didn't even look sort of uh well groomed you see they're getting
00:33:07.000 more ridiculous they're getting more ridiculous they're like oh here's an obvious here's just this
00:33:10.720 typical family and it's like oh it's the it's a Heidi Klum or something you know it's like a blonde
00:33:15.600 model uh it's you know it's 80s Pam Anderson with like a boat migrant i'm like they're getting more
00:33:21.360 more ridiculous it'll be like this this you know Scandinavian tall model with a Papua New Guinean
00:33:26.680 tribesman and they're just like yeah that's normal you're you're a bigot for pointing out that that
00:33:32.180 doesn't happen in real life have you watched the new star trek starfleet academy i have not i've seen
00:33:38.800 the clips it's so bad have you seen it right so here on imdb it has 4.3 out of 10 rating and it was
00:33:47.260 just aired and normally on imdb there are lots of people who like something and they instantly go
00:33:53.340 they put it eight nine best series best movie ever made and then it drops down a bit but this took 4.3
00:34:01.040 out of 10 and let us see what it is about it says young cadets trained to become starfleet officers
00:34:07.280 as they deal with friendships rivalries and romance all while facing a mysterious threat to both the
00:34:14.240 academy and the federation is the mysterious threat dei policy
00:34:17.740 starfleet academy look the critics gave it an 88 percent on the average tomatometer but the people
00:34:26.720 gave it a 43 percent on the average popcorn meter so you you see again the divergence the disparity
00:34:34.140 between what the critics and those who are doing top down top down top down policy propaganda think
00:34:41.940 and what the people think i've heard they even rig the people and sometimes you can't even trust that
00:34:45.420 anymore that's true yeah um also i'd like to point out how elegantly you said tomato meter there
00:34:50.640 it's just wonderful what should i have said you made it sound elegant and intellectual
00:34:55.500 of course i'm a euro maxer don't correct elegance is part of me it's who i am
00:35:00.760 right and look at this elegant young gen this sensitive young man here the vomiting glitter
00:35:06.900 it's just this is part of the new star trek that's how i react when i walk over one of those rainbow
00:35:13.860 zebra crossings right this is actually star trek i'm not making ai memes right um you know the
00:35:23.080 klingons the klingons were a warlike race yes and they were very violent and um that's not they had
00:35:29.640 to keep that that's that's the klingon cadet allow me to defend this if they were very violent
00:35:35.880 perhaps him being in a dress isn't such a far out idea given what happened recently yeah but he is
00:35:42.080 a polyamorous refugee here that's not real isn't good i've seen clips i still don't believe that's
00:35:47.180 real it is it is real it is real look also in a skirt that is beyond parody i know that phrase is
00:35:53.880 used too much but that is look at also this uh this face here are they gonna spike my drinks
00:35:59.680 i don't want to wake up in a stranger's bed the beta klingon here right okay so let's move forward
00:36:06.780 you see here that they made also this klingon a pacifist who is sticking it up to the to the
00:36:14.360 privileged white guy of the the academy sticking it up i think that's basically a deeply hierarchical
00:36:20.260 patriarchal i meant that metaphorically but i haven't watched it so there could be some
00:36:25.020 some parts of it maybe maybe he put glitter inside him and that's why he started this guy
00:36:31.060 started vomiting it here this guy would have not lasted he'd have been the klingons would have like
00:36:35.320 thrown him on the scrap heap like it's a brutally patriarchal war like hierarchical culture isn't it
00:36:40.880 in the klingons yeah but that's the issue with woke it's they constantly want to say let's destroy
00:36:46.260 stereotype nick you're operating with stereotypes you need to crush them stereotypes even fictional
00:36:53.120 stereotypes yeah absolutely because josh you come here you you expect a klingon to be warrior-like
00:37:00.200 and violent but behind the facade of violence and and toughness could lie a sensitive young man
00:37:06.840 so i remember when wharf came on to the old um the debt he was considered that was considered quite
00:37:12.980 progressive because he wasn't just killing everyone he was actually one of the goodies
00:37:16.300 then remember wharf he integrated his union shadow or something like here we have the downgrade
00:37:24.240 you look at this back in the day klingons were fearless honor-seeking warriors now the way dresses
00:37:30.760 i hate what the entertainment industry has become they don't make these klingons no more
00:37:37.640 apparently writing sort of aspirational male characters has gone out the window really
00:37:42.900 it's all an issue of destroying stereotypes to be fair um one thing i have found refreshing is that
00:37:49.880 new game of thrones spin-off series is really good and the the men aren't oh yeah i've heard with the
00:37:56.500 normal bloke as the as the star he's just like a normal man who tries to do the right thing yeah and
00:38:02.640 he's a real life rugby player or something yeah that's right and and it just all of a sudden i'm just
00:38:07.560 like wow a likable male protagonist that is actually magic formula it's kind of like cummings said about if
00:38:12.760 any party just does any normal stuff it would it would smash it but they can't if anyone just makes
00:38:17.240 a normal series with a normal bloke i think the high peak of cinema was lord of the rings then it
00:38:22.780 went downhill and then with the wokeness went very yeah i think i think what's happened is a similar
00:38:28.740 thing that has happened with music for me in the if it's mainstream it's terrible i'm gonna sound like
00:38:34.520 such a hipster shut up um use a hipster if it's mainstream it's probably going to be rubbish but if
00:38:40.360 it's you know the upper end of niche you know popular but niche then that's the sort of sweet spot
00:38:47.000 i'm thinking like in terms of film directors like robert eggers like he's not top billing but he makes
00:38:51.980 great films that are actually you know faithful mainstream ended about 2011 2011 you get margin call
00:38:57.880 warrior and money ball and these are still really good films and then after that it gets very edgy
00:39:04.420 dodgy it gets worse so look at the klingon here right now he represents the polyamorous refugee so
00:39:10.920 he's a love migrant probably the og klingons weren't happy with his orientation and his
00:39:17.700 whatever love migrant yeah it says here he's a polyamorous refugee
00:39:23.140 he has too much love to give it's gonna move around um right weird let's move forward we
00:39:33.200 have news about snow white now that's not a part of it isn't exactly news because snow white completely
00:39:41.180 bombed but i'm gonna also contextualize before i give you the the the new news right so you know
00:39:48.220 rachel ziegler i do yeah yes yes i'm right so she has made several comments and she destroyed snow white
00:39:56.900 look at this here imdb 2.2 out of 10 394 000 reviews rates these executives need to realize that by
00:40:07.320 using a named entity there's no guarantee anymore that you're going to be able to cash in on that name
00:40:12.780 and actually people see it as just a oh right they're just trying to do this for money like you can
00:40:17.640 just ask a normal person on the street say why are they doing a live action remake of snow white
00:40:22.240 money oh right yeah well that was easy it possibly didn't help that she on her the whole publicity tour
00:40:28.200 trashed the original film the whole concept and just said it was awful exactly yeah and was incredibly
00:40:33.340 obnoxious she said prince charming didn't uh help uh he was a stalker yeah that uh snow white didn't need
00:40:40.700 to be saved by men yeah she didn't need to be held by the huntsman the seven dwarves and also
00:40:47.040 she also said that she watched the 1937 original once yeah and she wanted to completely i mean
00:40:55.040 why don't you just wear a dress and go and kill zombies or something
00:40:58.780 i mean the original snow white was an aspirational story for indian men because prince charming comes
00:41:04.700 long and kisses a sleeping woman but am i allowed to say that almost certainly not
00:41:10.680 modi will i mean you're lucky starma's distracted otherwise you'd go directly to jail you'll have
00:41:15.460 nightmares of modi straight to the starma okay so 2.2 out of 10 is just atrocious and she also said
00:41:23.220 something else she said that trump and trump supporters should know no peace oh yeah yeah that
00:41:30.060 wasn't exactly good uh marketing so look at here alienate half of america that would go down well
00:41:35.960 so even got attacked for that because things had turned a little bit more than she realized
00:41:38.820 according to initial estimations this created a 130 million dollar loss it says here 336 million gross
00:41:51.560 dollars and here box office 205.7 million now we don't exactly know what amount they spent
00:41:59.880 in marketing that's the production normally the rule of thumb is you double the production budget
00:42:04.360 for marketing and so they probably made a pretty substantial loss there and here we have people
00:42:10.500 who are saying something like you look at her here she tries she thinks she's mogging og snow white
00:42:17.040 but she isn't um and they're saying that they estimated between 115 to 140 some people say it's
00:42:25.760 somewhere like 170 we we won't know exactly but the point is it's the woke reverse midas touch
00:42:32.800 everything they touch turns to the gutter i think it's i think it's fair to say she should know no peace
00:42:39.180 right let's go to cars uh you remember what happened with jaguar of course they made their cars gay
00:42:49.760 right so jaguar isn't it's supposed to be elegant speed um you know just design kind of old english
00:42:57.820 it's kind of old english vibes not yeah like if i were to pick like a car that would be my day-to-day
00:43:02.940 it'd be like an 80s or 90s jag racing green of course it's like you're retired from mi5 you're in
00:43:09.260 the country but isn't aston martin that james you're right it's the jaguars you're retired from the
00:43:14.620 intelligence service yeah yeah you live in the country with a farm on a farmhouse yes yes yes and you've
00:43:18.680 got your jaguar just for going around town and drinking a gin and tonic or something
00:43:22.940 sounds all right to me would you be able to get back to the previous picture stelios because i
00:43:27.500 want to point out something about this design it looks like in a video game when the textures haven't
00:43:32.740 quite loaded in like the car doesn't look finished there's not enough detail on it it looks weird
00:43:37.580 i don't understand how and they named the design type zero zero we're going off of number of sales as
00:43:45.320 world war ii uh japanese machine gun naming conventions are they yeah i'm sure about all
00:43:51.100 five people the advert was so bad the advert was also kind of resembled like a kind of 90s uh advert
00:43:55.860 it almost resembled like you know those old um what's the tire company is it good i'm trying to
00:44:01.700 remember the ones with like velvet underground you're too young but they had these adverts i know
00:44:06.760 the velvet underground yeah they had they put them in like a tire advert back in the day it's like it
00:44:10.200 was that kind of it was like oh it's cool it was like a 90s idea of what was edgy and cool
00:44:14.080 with extra woke so nick hello look at what happened in late 2024 jaguar was selling about 900 950 cars
00:44:23.200 a month in europe they get an indian ceo and a few months later that number went down to 50
00:44:29.480 which was a 97.5 drop and what did the ceo do got another job he did it woke just look at this you're
00:44:39.560 imagining someone you know an old spy retiring with his retiree package from mi5 or something
00:44:45.740 going to the to the costwells or to lake district or something and here you have these people who are
00:44:51.860 like just uh like uh gary oldman followers from the fifth element it's absolutely ridiculous it's
00:44:57.720 retired but pronounced slightly differently it was it was they explicitly basically said we need to
00:45:02.000 change and rejuvenate and get a new they basically said we hate our existing customer we need to try
00:45:06.720 and get a new customer but it didn't work they just alienated their old one and didn't gain a new one
00:45:10.880 right so i i'm not as hostile to this because i'm i'm um it's about lesbians right lesbians in medieval
00:45:20.580 italy you're like hear me out hear me out it's 34 13 48 x photo the quest begins the vow has been
00:45:30.140 made meet bianca swords emoji look at this well this is yet to come out is it yeah
00:45:37.720 that's not fair the world is not fair
00:45:43.280 oh my noble knight erin without aid this fair damsel to rise
00:45:51.820 that bowl cut is criminal yeah that's like um gareth from the office and they're trying to say
00:46:00.860 hear us out this year's best medieval game might be an all-action lesbian night love story
00:46:06.980 and they're talking about jean d'arc or something that you know there have been women but they say
00:46:12.620 we do need a lesbian night game you see this could be done successfully but it would have to be made by
00:46:20.580 men if it's if it's got female influence on it men aren't gonna go for it it's say that's why we
00:46:26.660 prefer to sidestep all the culture war drama right you missed us with that sentence this isn't going
00:46:32.800 to be this in a world where some games feel desperate to ponder to the loudest audience it's
00:46:37.660 refreshing to see a game execute its own visions as it desires it will inevitably get tired criticisms
00:46:43.900 of the eyewokery but the fact is a lesbian night is way more niche than a classic romantic night who
00:46:50.220 saves the damsel not all ideas are good ideas no the positive about this it's the only reason we're all
00:46:55.780 here and that you guys have a job is because although you're part-time it's because of this
00:47:00.080 because this radicalized carl into doing all of this yeah you radicalized the game i saw a great
00:47:05.240 tweet the other day it's like carl just wanted to play games nick just wanted to do comedy but no
00:47:08.700 they couldn't leave us alone they couldn't leave us alone well i wanted to be an academic you wanted
00:47:12.340 to be an academic yeah then he wanted to euromax yeah of course yeah now he's in swift
00:47:16.760 the night scissors or something i don't know how they'll call it horizon handers gathering
00:47:23.580 not a single traditional straight young man at sight you know horizons gathering
00:47:29.400 no oh so is this a spin-off of the horizon series which has that which previously had a young slim
00:47:39.220 red-headed woman fighting machines in a post-apocalypse what happened now she watched the
00:47:45.100 whale and she found her role model yeah well she's fighting the machines by becoming impossible to
00:47:51.800 you know be destroyed by look at this humiliating mass it's like jabba the hut in female foreman with
00:47:59.380 pink hair but also i mean the the first thing that comes to mind when i see this character is an
00:48:05.760 agility but here she is particularly agile so i mean i'll give her credit for that we've already
00:48:13.500 got kung fu panda we don't need this this is pointless also it looks ridiculous just those
00:48:20.240 body proportions does she have like a fake leg as well or something i don't know she's probably
00:48:24.600 disabled in some way right with the people that wrote you know another game now and i'll speed up
00:48:30.800 a bit you know this game re-looted oh was it something that was cancelled um no no it wasn't
00:48:39.300 new video game sees africans fantasize about taking back oh yes that's right look at this here
00:48:45.240 and let me tell you how well it did this is from an article from the bbc three days ago published
00:48:51.420 imagine it is 2019 and the transatlantic returns treaty is falling apart it's in the future yeah okay
00:48:59.500 um 2099 falling apart as western museums find ways to rig lad of promises to return stolen african
00:49:07.460 treasures fed up with a trickery artifacts expect professor grace decides to take matters into her
00:49:14.500 own hands and the south african knows the perfect people to help her grandchildren nomali and trevor
00:49:20.540 and her former student etion right and it's basically a game about black people stealing artifacts right so
00:49:29.840 yeah it's pretty realism and uh here it was announced an african futurist heist game where
00:49:40.100 you can reclaim real african looted artifacts from western museum steam charts reluted launched today
00:49:46.440 february 10 three days ago samson here is very brutal his i'll give him a like here and he also showed me
00:49:55.720 this um three days ago the all-time peak players was 57 that is just an abject failure 24 hour peak
00:50:06.260 41 player players right now playing 18 i could probably make a game it would be terrible because
00:50:14.040 i don't know how to do it and post it on twitter so just whoever sees it and it would get a higher
00:50:18.900 play count than that yeah that's just the makers of the game playing it right now 18 blokes
00:50:22.780 all of their relatives non-binary lesbian all right then i want to end with a white pill so
00:50:29.740 you know um we're going to talk about euromaxing we have talked about mads mickelson he did a movie
00:50:36.780 he starred in a movie called the promised land which i saw it i've watched it i really like it we are
00:50:42.100 going to talk about it okay and someone asked uh him and the producer uh what uh you know
00:50:48.520 it was entirely nordic let's watch this childish video uh this is a cast and a danish production
00:50:56.820 which is entirely nordic it uh therefore has some lack of diversity you would say as also new rules
00:51:03.260 are implied what are you on to yeah sorry but from the get-go from the get-go there is said some
00:51:09.600 okay well first of all the film takes place in denmark in the 1750s
00:51:14.740 i remember that clip yeah i mean i i have to say this because i want to defend the movie it's a
00:51:22.100 very good movie and i think that now that hollywood is completely destroying itself with all the woke
00:51:27.260 thing uh people are a bit more uh partial or a bit more open to watching you know movies from
00:51:35.180 other from other let's say productions right like don't put off watching foreign language films
00:51:41.780 because you don't like reading subtitles you people sicken me you know how don't don't watch
00:51:47.360 dubs yeah watch it in the original with subtitles it's very immersive you will enjoy it there's lots
00:51:52.800 of good um japanese south korean uh continental european films that you might not speak the language
00:51:59.120 but are actually very good i used to watch loads of subtitle films then you get too old you just
00:52:03.700 like can't bother anymore but um you just watch reality tv but um i hope no i'm joking but um
00:52:09.360 you know how the actor just mad they were just like i'm not having this all actors secretly hate
00:52:16.220 woke nearly all of them like a therapist told me this he's like i get loads of actors in here
00:52:20.620 they all hate this woke stuff but they can't say it and i've known so much i've even been out
00:52:24.640 they hate it but they can't admit it because i'll get no work but it's not as if
00:52:28.940 it's not as if some probably actually actually drink the kool-aid loads of them just hate it and
00:52:33.880 just can't say it yeah so the movie is an epic historical drama it's about uh denmark in 1755
00:52:41.120 and what happens is we have a sort of retired military man a captain who tries to cultivate
00:52:48.320 land in utland he tries to plant potatoes right so this is a movie that shows lots of themes there
00:52:56.720 it shows how for instance he was loyal to the king and the king was an absolutist on paper
00:53:04.160 but in practice he had to rely on on the bureaucrats from the rising centralized modern state but also
00:53:12.620 from aristocrats and he is very much forming a rivalry with a degenerate nobleman who thinks
00:53:20.140 his land is all there imagine watching this movie and just thinking that it's about diversity or
00:53:26.500 something it's it's just not this is just stupid also when it comes to when it comes to um entitlement
00:53:34.560 the things that people steal from stores someone has to produce them so this is a movie about someone
00:53:42.440 who tried to produce things it's about wealth creation and initiative against all odds it's
00:53:49.160 it's not about di it's not about representation of this or that group also interesting there are um
00:53:55.940 there is a gypsy in that movie this character here and she's a good character so there is some you could
00:54:02.900 say diversity or something but it's not some reason and also it's well written it doesn't feel like
00:54:09.240 it's there for its own sake and in fact it's an important plot point and at no point did i think
00:54:15.920 oh they're just inserting this for for woke reasons yeah so it's tiresome and i want to end with
00:54:22.860 schrodinger's meme yesterday this is after destroying woke reporters complaining about 18th
00:54:29.560 century denmark's lack of diversity which is this is the meme by mads that people are using
00:54:34.980 they're doing it but it's simultaneously reality and a meme so this is a good thing so i think this
00:54:44.880 is uh important people are fed up with it it's not again an issue of people being different we're all
00:54:50.860 different it's an issue of the forced nature of it just just stop it it's just ridiculous it's fake
00:54:58.660 just say no yeah uh that's a random name says can you believe that female clingers have a higher
00:55:08.520 meta rate than human males did you know that 109 planets have kicked out all vulcans for no reason
00:55:14.600 at all i know well that's a reference to um akrul says were there any polyamorous nazi refugees in the
00:55:21.220 man in the high castle i don't know wasn't there a game i can't remember which one it was either
00:55:28.340 battlefield or call of gc they're basically interchangeable in my mind where they had black
00:55:32.000 nazis which i thought was funny it told the future it told us of yay's coming you know you know um from
00:55:39.200 the grind house project it's with the fake trailers they did ss women of the s no werewolf women of the
00:55:45.500 ss they have to turn this into a movie they turned machete and also another one but they have to
00:55:52.840 make werewolf women of the ss a movie right and it says that's a random name i wonder if the lesbian
00:56:01.280 game will feature a quick time event where the protagonist has to beat the daylights out of her
00:56:06.400 girlfriend nothing less will be accepted you naughty naughty man well i've already i'm gonna have two
00:56:16.120 mice but thank you one's enough one and done that's what i say i'm going to be talking to you today
00:56:24.020 about when the elephants began to hate um and that is the revelation that even elephants notice patterns
00:56:31.100 even elephants remember who wrongs them and even elephants oh what's going on
00:56:38.700 what happened what's happening
00:56:45.180 i've shifted too far right apparently according to samson
00:56:50.660 the floor police have come in and now i'm gonna have to do my segment intro all over again
00:56:55.560 i'm gonna have to change it just for the sake of variety the next time will be better i hope so
00:57:01.080 so did you know that elephants are racist it is true i'm going to prove it with science
00:57:08.120 and uh yes what we're going to be looking at is elephants ability to recognize human differences
00:57:14.640 differences between ethnicities and elephants treat different ethnicities differently which by
00:57:20.400 definition is racism so it's an interesting point that even non-human animals presumably you know
00:57:28.920 animals absolved of the sin of conscious bigotry in the absence of consciousness there will be people
00:57:35.120 saying elephants are conscious but no consciousness is the domain of mankind thank you very much
00:57:39.260 don't contradict me um you know there's there's a scale but you can't say they're truly conscious
00:57:44.960 in the same way that a human being is but they're close to the most animals and what i want to draw
00:57:50.100 your attention to is this 2021 study which is titled coexistence and culture understanding human
00:57:56.800 diversity and tolerance in human elephant interactions and uh if i scroll down here
00:58:03.540 it's also a new video game sorry go on we find a marked difference between communities with
00:58:09.580 ethnicity being a better predictor of tolerance than the more tangible socio-economic or geographic
00:58:16.240 variables such as income education land holding or cropping patterns so you have to go to the world
00:58:23.280 of elephant science to find people admitting that actually ethnicity is one of the most important
00:58:29.660 factors predicting human behavior which i find interesting and allow me to introduce two different
00:58:37.820 ethnic groups here um you might even recognize one of them and either of you know who they are
00:58:43.520 i mean no not individually but what what people do this is master jack and well done jack and demand
00:58:52.400 that's the only one i know so yeah lucked out i wasn't being cruel there um it's the one that most
00:58:57.380 people know so this is the maasai um remember what they look like um because elephants do they were
00:59:03.400 good on that paul simon album as well good reference um um and and here is another group which is the
00:59:13.340 camber and as you can see they look slightly differently they dress slightly differently
00:59:18.400 and they live in different areas um but both of them encounter elephants and um let's go to
00:59:27.940 how the elephants actually look at these two groups so they were studying these two groups and um i'll
00:59:33.880 try and get it in the right place so it says we show that elephants distinguish at least two kenyan
00:59:40.000 ethnic groups and i and can identify them by olfactory meaning smell and color cues independently um so yes
00:59:48.740 they can they can smell the difference which makes you wonder about the poor indian elephant it's almost
00:59:53.940 like an advert tesco smell the different taste the difference there you go um in the um ambuseli
01:00:02.820 uh ecosystem um in kenya young maasai men demonstrate virility by spearing elephants but camber
01:00:10.640 agriculturists pose a little threat elephants showed greater fear when they detected the scent
01:00:15.340 of garments previously worn by maasai than by camber men and they reacted aggressively to the color
01:00:22.220 associated with the maasai and elephants are therefore able to classify members of a single
01:00:26.800 species into subgroups that pose different degrees of danger so elephants are actually more intelligent
01:00:32.780 than the average left winger because elephants can recognize ethnic differences and treat them
01:00:38.180 accordingly based on how they're treated um themselves you know elephants abide by the golden rule
01:00:44.380 apparently leftists don't um they it just goes to show that people are ignoring something that's so
01:00:51.640 so base in our biology so fundamental that it's present in non-human animals even elephants who
01:00:58.740 you know we're not that related to um as a species they're able to do this they're smart cookies aren't
01:01:05.540 they they can paint who doesn't like elephants there's always there's something there's something
01:01:09.400 about isn't there that man has a link to them and think about lord of the rings our how much wonder
01:01:15.300 there is about the elephant there is something about them they are ultra intelligent and this sort of
01:01:19.400 all suggests they're more intelligent than we even they have a good memory that's that's the sort of
01:01:23.540 phrase isn't it that's like the memory of an elephant but it turns out it's actually literally
01:01:26.760 true as well which i know you've got later in this yeah well it's even to the degree that um young
01:01:32.000 elephants will inherit the prejudices of their parents they must communicate um which ethnic groups
01:01:39.260 yeah which ethnic groups are dangerous and and funnily enough actually um there was an experiment done
01:01:45.720 this is a complete tangent but i want to talk about it so too bad um where corvids like crows um
01:01:53.340 were being scared by scientists because that's what scientists do were weird um and they were
01:01:59.140 deliberately going out of their way to scare these these crows and then the same researcher went back
01:02:04.180 maybe i think it was 25 years later but a long time later to the point where the crows would
01:02:09.720 definitely be past their lifespan and even the offspring of those crows were able to recognize
01:02:15.980 the researcher that tormented them as opposed to others and um reacted accordingly so they must have
01:02:23.260 communicated listen this guy is a right nuisance and uh you know make sure to mob him and and annoy him
01:02:31.540 whereas other people they might be favorable towards incredible so just saying um people claim to be
01:02:39.580 unable to do these things or or pretend that they don't do it when in fact it's so integral to
01:02:45.600 life on earth that most species can't help but do it and then there was an additional study that
01:02:53.280 compounds on this elephants can determine ethnicity gender and age from acoustic cues in human voice
01:02:59.520 and um this is very interesting and i'm going to read from the actual research paper itself so i'm
01:03:06.960 going to skip through it because it's quite long um it says recognizing predators and judging the
01:03:12.520 level of threat that they pose is a crucial skill for many wild animals and human beings
01:03:16.580 human predators present a particularly interesting challenge as different groups of humans can
01:03:21.520 represent dramatically different levels of danger to animals living around them it's annoying really
01:03:27.200 that scientific research has to get to the to the realm of yeah we're studying elephants and how
01:03:32.300 they notice who's more violent you know elephants would point out 1352 statistics yeah you know
01:03:39.280 they're not going to be afraid to point out who's overrepresented and um it says we use playback um
01:03:45.880 of human voice stimuli to show that elephants can make subtle distinctions between language and
01:03:50.540 voice characteristics to correctly identify the most threatening individuals on the basis of their
01:03:55.680 ethnicity gender and age so basically elephants are awoke's worst nightmare because they're
01:04:02.740 ageist sexist and racist i'm worried they're going to get cancelled you know elephants must be cancelled
01:04:08.080 all of these environmentalists who are like oh we've got to protect the elephants as soon as they
01:04:12.640 find this out they're going to be out there shooting them yeah there'll be elephant like a movie about
01:04:16.340 elephants but they'll have to like cast giraffes or something it's a woke casting we're gonna
01:04:21.300 force them watch adolescence yeah um elephants were less likely to flee from the voices of maasai
01:04:28.820 women and boys than they were from maasai men and they bunch together less closely because they
01:04:33.040 bunch together is like a defensive thing when they feel threatened um elephant families led by matriarchs
01:04:38.540 more than uh 42 years old never retreated when they heard the voices of boys but those led by younger
01:04:46.200 matriarchs were treated roughly 40 percent of the time so this is important because it shows that
01:04:51.540 it's a learned behavior and that they're learning who they should be afraid of which ethnicities
01:04:56.920 uh which groups of people are the most danger to them and you know women and boys not so scary
01:05:03.720 whereas adult men isn't that more likely to to be because they're hunters oh yeah of course because
01:05:13.040 i'm trying to understand the well the issue as we addressed before the the maasai men just go
01:05:19.440 out and spear elephants as like to prove their worth as they do with lions and the like and and so
01:05:25.760 that's why they're yeah scared of them and saying they can learn what's dangerous that's all you're
01:05:31.600 saying in that yeah yeah they can recognize based on empirical evidence who is the biggest threat to
01:05:38.480 then the elephant has had enough we'll be getting also tiresome um it's also true of asian elephants
01:05:47.360 as well as african ones which we've only been talking about so far they are different and uh
01:05:51.920 prolonged proximity to humans ensures better performance of semi-captive asian elephants
01:05:56.160 at discriminating between human individuals by voice there's another vocal study here much the same as
01:06:02.240 before that they can tell people apart by their voice and so they can notice differences and uh so
01:06:09.840 let's go to um elephant perception shall we here we are this is an article and it says when it comes
01:06:16.240 to people elephants can be very discriminating very based especially those under human care in southeast
01:06:22.560 asia there is a story of an orphaned elephant who at the age of 10 pulled her drowning mahout out
01:06:28.640 of a lake i presume that's someone who looks after the elephants yeah yeah it's uh someone who tends
01:06:33.600 to elephants okay as i checked it oh really yeah because i didn't know either um out of the lake after
01:06:40.320 hearing his cries for help a kilometer away or the or the dangerous three meter tall bull who would
01:06:46.560 charge anyone who approached except the 160 centimeter wife of the village elder who he would caress
01:06:53.280 with his trunk as she fed him the behavioral connection between elephants and ourselves is not
01:06:58.320 the product of domestication in the sense of artificial genetic selection but born from the
01:07:02.960 individual life histories involving near constant human contact so they're basically saying the
01:07:08.640 elephants learn based on their experiences who to be hostile and who to be friendly towards
01:07:14.720 and it's even to the point where asian elephants can recognize where humans are putting their attention
01:07:23.200 based on our body language and facial orientation so if we you know moved our body so stelios was an
01:07:30.320 elephant i moved my body towards him but didn't look at him with my face they would still be able to
01:07:35.440 recognize that i wasn't paying him attention whereas if i turn my head um stelios the elephant will be able
01:07:41.840 to recognize that i'm paying him attention and act accordingly so they can address the elephant in the room
01:07:46.720 nice oh yes they can yes um but the point being here that they can even read body language and understand
01:07:56.480 human behavior and therefore the elephant's empirical judgments about ethnic differences and how to treat
01:08:03.280 them uh can be taken as a little bit more sophisticated than your average animal and they can even hold
01:08:09.760 grudges and i think that nick alluded to this before we went uh on air about how an elephant killed the
01:08:18.560 woman and then returned to a funeral to attack her corpse wild which um yeah elephants never forget
01:08:25.120 apparently one has to wonder what she did the article doesn't say but she must have wronged the elephants
01:08:30.720 and they attacked her house as well i think that's right yeah so um maya miramu that's her name uh was
01:08:38.960 collecting water in rapey village that's what it's actually called um very doubtful that's the
01:08:46.320 pronunciation um located in somewhere i'm not even gonna try and pronounce india where a herd of
01:08:52.800 elephants came her way that's when she tried to flee but one of the elephants rushed towards her and
01:08:58.080 trampled her the times of india reported she's rushed to hospital but died from her injuries as the
01:09:03.680 funeral ceremony was taking place the times of india reported that a herd of elephants appeared from
01:09:08.160 the forest sending villagers running and obviously they left her body behind and so one of the
01:09:14.080 elephants then reportedly attacked the woman's corpse by picking up the body and throwing it in
01:09:18.080 the air the herd then destroyed her home as well as three other houses being damaged but not destroyed
01:09:24.400 um and no one else in the village was reported to be harmed so that was a targeted attack yeah nothing
01:09:31.280 else i say you must what the heck did she do did she make them watch the new star trek or something
01:09:36.480 and then um even the mafia give it a break at funerals i know elephants like no she was bad no mercy
01:09:44.800 and they're going to burn down your entire house as well yeah that's incredible
01:09:48.240 and so what one can presume is when one hears of elephant attacks perhaps you know sometimes they're
01:09:55.920 unprovoked but sometimes they could be in response to some sort of injustice and one has to wonder
01:10:02.160 if elephants then develop a hostile attitude to people around them and they charge down any human
01:10:09.120 how have they been treated by those people and the fact that they can save a guy a kilometer
01:10:13.520 away who's drowning just shows the range yeah the incredible range you know to go from that to
01:10:18.960 stampeding someone at a funeral the range of behavior is incredible based on as you say how they've been
01:10:24.240 treated mm-hmm but it's an important lesson for human beings i think one that we're forgetting is
01:10:29.600 that we have this ability as well and if it's present in elephants it must be very much a deep
01:10:35.680 and biological thing by merit of us being a very different organism like you're tricking me into
01:10:40.480 agreeing with something right-wing there i just want to say i'm just here for the elephants to me
01:10:43.760 it's purely a question of wildlife studies or whatever it's called that's what this is all about
01:10:48.480 definitely definitely no other agenda here um but you know you can contextualize this in in this case
01:10:57.840 this was in january there was a killer elephant who is uh at large if you pardon the pun left a total
01:11:03.920 of 22 people dead over a 10-day period in india so i wonder what it is about um india and the indian
01:11:12.000 people that has got this elephant so angry that it's gone on a 10-day rampage of just squashing
01:11:18.000 indian people um apparently it was the h1b visas it's a big trump supporter they were taking elephant
01:11:25.040 jobs yeah undercutting that man true crime documentary killer elephant tapes it was the
01:11:30.480 importation of african elephants taking indian elephants jobs that's what it was um and then
01:11:38.320 it's worth pointing out why they actually hate these people and uh there's a very good explanation
01:11:43.920 here that i was able to find online um he's talking about uh you see elephants have ancient
01:11:49.040 corridors in southeast asia that they've used for thousands of years for migration and general travel
01:11:54.400 these conflicts arise when indians decide it's a good idea to plant a field in their way
01:11:58.560 the issues arise when indians seek out retribution for crop losses and damage in this case a bull elephant
01:12:05.680 was killed with a poisonous jackfruit the elephants understood what happened and so they all came back
01:12:11.760 and the revenge campaign on indian villages are extremely common and so we hear see the example
01:12:18.720 here of the elephant that was poisoned and they got revenge wild elephants kill five destroy 50 homes in
01:12:24.800 india i understand the elephant saying resenting that their corridor has been taken by the field but
01:12:30.080 who are the indians getting retribution on with the poison jackfruit the elephants the elephants yeah
01:12:34.880 like the elephants you know go into their fields and cause problems and so the indians go
01:12:40.400 try and get retribution on them and so the elephants then get revenge on them in a sort of uh
01:12:46.640 blood feud really i mean that's insane but unless we're saying the elephants are so intelligent
01:12:51.760 that actually it is reasonable to get revenge on them i mean that's obviously what these indians have
01:12:55.760 decided because not ostensibly that's an insane thing to do you know it's like deer wandering
01:12:59.760 into the garden or whatever in england and they eat your flowers my mom's always complaining about
01:13:03.920 it but you don't then say right i'm gonna kill every one of this deer and its whole family like
01:13:08.080 you you think oh that's annoying that's what they programmed to do so an elephant wandering in
01:13:13.120 to get revenge on it is that not insane it is insane yeah like it wouldn't even occur to me to do that
01:13:19.680 um and also surely india must know by now that if you attack an elephant it will remember and it will
01:13:27.040 find you and it will trample you it's like the elephant liam neeson skills yeah or in trampling
01:13:32.640 mainly i can't remember whether there was another part here oh yeah um in this case 44 elephants found
01:13:39.680 the man responsible for killing their calf and murdered the man um and there are videos of these
01:13:47.040 things happening i'm not going to show them because they are horrible i've seen videos of
01:13:50.640 um an abusive uh zookeeper the elephant just sort of has enough and just starts torturing him by
01:13:58.160 using its foot to apply pressure to crush his body but then relents and then does it again
01:14:03.680 well did he want it to be slow elephants can talk did he want it also to look like an accident or or not
01:14:10.960 well if you if you see a squashed man next to an elephant i don't think it takes a genius to figure
01:14:16.320 out what happened even an elephant would know that so yes um my point is this that if elephants can
01:14:25.120 recognize different ethnicities uh recognize their own unique behavior
01:14:30.320 and adjust their behavior accordingly why can't you
01:14:36.320 have you ever ridden an elephant i haven't i've actually never been outside of europe or north america
01:14:43.760 because i only like to go to civilized countries no i read i read australia i wrote an elephant like
01:14:48.800 i'd go in a civilized country i think it was in america they're quite bristly they're like a
01:14:53.360 sort of toothbrush or something more bristly than you think but now i don't think i would ride one
01:14:57.600 now knowing all that this i was a child at the time well you've just got to be nice to it yes but i'm not
01:15:02.800 sure they should i think they're now too intelligent even for you to ride them having watched all that
01:15:06.720 well they're basically people they're more sophisticated than some people i know
01:15:09.440 yeah certainly leftists yeah but i imagine an elephant's association with the white man is
01:15:15.760 they give us food and don't kill us who's worth more an elephant or matthew stadlin you know it's
01:15:20.720 it's clear cut of any other example you want to use well even if you're going by sheer numbers
01:15:25.200 there are fewer elephants than people like him so you want to read the comments but before you read
01:15:32.320 them out loud read it okay that's random names fed posting again you're going to get me in trouble
01:15:39.680 um i'm still going to read it but i'm not going to read it aloud um
01:15:47.600 none of these are readable they were all written by elephants um
01:15:52.080 ochido says the woman threw rocks to distract the elephants from the
01:15:55.840 young the poachers were going after oh okay thank you for the background there
01:16:02.640 okay let's go to the video comments i suppose
01:16:08.320 and now here she is again and sakura just wants to say how happy she is to see that the
01:16:15.200 iron lady of japan has done what she did in the last election she is so glad to see that her homeland
01:16:23.360 is going in the right direction that is the direction away from mass migration and cultural
01:16:29.600 destruction have a nice day sakiichi or whatever she's hi michael nice dog based iron lady of japan
01:16:37.360 also i'm glad to hear your dog has the correct political opinions like a nice dog like an elephant
01:16:42.720 yeah a stock space elephants and now another cute dog video yes there she is sakura and she is here to
01:16:53.200 remind you that there are four type of communists one the ones that think they'll be in charge of
01:17:00.000 something two the ones that actually support a workers revolution three the idiots and four
01:17:08.240 the ones who will kill the first two and rule over the third have a nice day
01:17:13.040 i love how in michael all of your video comments your dog is just lying there peacefully whereas
01:17:20.560 every dog i've ever owned will sit still for about five seconds the dog is aura farming
01:17:25.680 mm-hmm like it was just a maxing to me in light of yet another rent boy trying to kill keir starmer
01:17:32.880 i feel like there might be something to you know the movie zoolander saying that you know male modeling
01:17:39.440 is just a front for assassination networks what with the whole idea is like think about it like a lot
01:17:44.800 of the people that have done recent assassinations like luigi manigioni and other such people all were
01:17:50.320 kind of modeling adjacent often on like instagram but still kind of modeling right
01:17:55.680 well so to get get the perception of being dangerous now you have to be a male model this is
01:18:05.280 a real disaster for masculinity here
01:18:10.400 it's me the rise of work from home jobs is a covid thing but it's one of the few good things that's
01:18:14.880 come out of it really but also the tech just enables it in truth the only people who work more
01:18:19.920 effectively from home are either hyper supervised and cannot be inventive or the self-employed everyone
01:18:25.520 else amounts to a parasite replaceable by ai rex malik dealt with the prospect of working from
01:18:30.640 home in the 1982 bbc computer literacy project that i think that's an illusion the truth is that we need
01:18:37.360 the office or something similar we need somewhere to fight to argue to discuss to compete yeah but
01:18:44.000 we also need somewhere to work and if people fight and constantly discuss things sometimes we don't get
01:18:49.840 the concentration that war requires i have no idea what we're in about stelios you absolutely have
01:18:55.680 idea what i'm on being sarcastic it's true about the self-employed though most of my income comes from
01:19:00.720 my substat subscribers and so yeah you're forced you're at home going i don't want to do anything
01:19:04.800 but you're forced to be just self-employed or quasi-self-employed because i come here as well but
01:19:09.920 yeah if i wasn't you just i have done a work from home job once when i wasn't self-employed of course you're
01:19:14.080 gaming the system and doing it as quickly as possible and pretending you're working long and all that kind of thing
01:19:18.400 it's actually a depressing feeling though you don't actually enjoy it you enjoy like a week and then
01:19:22.080 you realize this is kind of a weird prison i'm in my own house it's like being on probation with an
01:19:26.160 ankle tag which i know has happened to you and um i've never committed or never been caught committing
01:19:32.480 any crimes oh yeah um anyway sorry for that rant but yeah generally i think what faraj said was wrong
01:19:38.000 because it's like why he didn't give anyone incentives to work and he just basically shouted and
01:19:41.680 the trains don't work and what zoom has got to work for but work from home yeah only works a very
01:19:46.480 insightful point if you're self-employed i find that also you've got to habituate it like i spent
01:19:52.320 four years at university you know doing a master's degree and if i didn't work from home regularly and
01:19:56.480 habituate myself into that i wouldn't have been able to do it and so you carry those skills forward
01:20:02.640 and uh i find that i work much longer hours working from home like i'll be forcing myself to do something
01:20:09.280 that i would really not want to do but i i get it out of the way because it's i'm holding myself
01:20:16.240 accountable yeah and you only feel good after you do it you feel you sort of hate yourself if you're
01:20:20.960 procrastinating anyway sorry to next one i understand we're discussing a civil war
01:20:29.200 no you stupid we tried that already here kaiser do you mean caesar no you stupid also the mask
01:20:39.280 of mars was forged specifically for legate lenius not for the legates in general this is the same
01:20:44.560 treatment they gave to the source material of uh watchmen but it's okay because your
01:20:48.560 retarded fans will still defend you in the comments you stupid
01:20:52.000 yeah the um the fallout series is one of those things that i wish it didn't exist the first
01:21:00.160 season was okay but you could tell that they had contempt for the source material which is enough to
01:21:06.080 dismiss it out of hand 32nd history so the egyptians arrived in england in the 16th 17th centuries
01:21:13.840 they dispersed themselves through most parts of the kingdom and they weren't very well liked because
01:21:17.520 they were cozening or scamming the people particularly poor country girls thing is though
01:21:22.320 they weren't actually egyptians we would call them gypsies and they originated in the northwest of india
01:21:26.960 along the pakistani border and eventually made their way up into england so what did the government
01:21:32.640 do well king henry viii gave them 16 days to leave the country bloody mary then had to tell them to
01:21:37.760 integrate leave or be executed we were looking yesterday the policy was revoked in 1856 do you
01:21:48.880 know that there was also um under a quick i think it was queen elizabeth the first there was an order to
01:21:56.400 capture all of the rogue freed african slaves and to get rid of them from the country because they were
01:22:03.200 being released by pirates in london and just spreading out into the country and forming
01:22:07.440 bandit groups and so they they called them dark moors i think originally even though they weren't
01:22:14.480 moors i wanna i wonder why they uh they exiled them from india or i or did they leave out their own
01:22:24.560 volition they were fastidious and tidy i'm sure that was the reason okay let's go to the comments
01:22:32.240 um do you want to read yours yeah i'll read them i don't have many which is how you can tell my
01:22:36.240 segments sucked but um henry says an awful lot is being done now to block changes to the system
01:22:42.800 behind the scenes or openly in a way normies won't understand labor exploring setting up development
01:22:47.600 organized corporations would act as a supreme planning authority in cambridgeshire which would
01:22:53.200 have that authority for 25 years it's going to be yet another quango that will be completely
01:22:57.520 unaccountable to the public in any way the government seem obsessed with the oxford cambridge corridor of
01:23:02.320 the uk as something that will drive growth so naturally they want to grab power and hold on
01:23:06.640 to it wherever they can interesting it's the corridors like like we talked about with the
01:23:10.400 elephants um you know quango last thing we need is more quangos um sorry i didn't read it while my
01:23:16.960 screen is blurred so lord uh hector x says the left can only contain things for so long to the point
01:23:23.440 where reality conquers their messaging the normal containment breaks true jeff kin says the team
01:23:29.280 should look at the conservative victory in costa rica's recent election decisive
01:23:33.520 hmm has anyone followed that one i hadn't even heard of it right lord inquisitor hector rex you know
01:23:40.240 what they haven't destroyed islander five the best islander today yeah they haven't destroyed that
01:23:46.400 is that still on sale is that off sale
01:23:50.320 it's off sale okay don't even mention don't talk about it lord again lord inquisitor hector rex don't
01:23:55.760 forget the marketing guy for jaguar was called rodon glover
01:24:01.760 omar awad i think on top of the diversity representation skewing people's perception of
01:24:06.640 demographics people have a strong psychological resistance to considering themselves a minority
01:24:12.640 in their own country that's very true zester king returning next week i have a friend who works for
01:24:19.360 jaguar and according to him jaguar intentionally hired a woke guy for their advertising knowing
01:24:25.920 he would tank the brand so they could blame their already dropping sales on him rather than other
01:24:31.280 factors like a reduction in the number of cars they produced well i don't know i mean
01:24:38.640 i mean there's all sorts of corporate chicanery that goes on to be honest like if if you get burnt by
01:24:46.800 an advertising guy it's like well i didn't know i'm not an advertising specialist i didn't know it
01:24:52.080 wouldn't work you got plausible deniability whereas if you've just failed you know by your own merits
01:24:59.600 but then you know what jaguar should be doing is producing cars that look like the classic jaguars that
01:25:04.560 were very sought after and make me want to buy one again zesty king a lesbian knight who is she fighting
01:25:11.440 her girlfriend no i think she's protecting her girlfriend's honor the patriarchy jimbo g
01:25:18.480 jimbo g guys it's time for me to come clean it's me mads mickelson i watch the podcast every day
01:25:24.320 which is why i'm uber based michael brooks we all drive jags around here i have one basically it's like
01:25:30.400 driving a fast sofa there are two types of people that drive jags old men who waft and men that want to
01:25:37.360 fly literally under the radar gangsters and politicians or maybe they are no difference
01:25:43.200 henry ashman says it's getting to the point in media where the most subversive thing to do is
01:25:47.680 make a faithful adaptation of something absolutely arizona desert rat so basically it's a show about
01:25:54.640 high school students at a private school space school sounds fun yeah arizona desert rat disney needs
01:26:01.920 to get off the nostalgia train so on the elephants omar awad says leftists are all being gay is natural
01:26:09.360 because animals do it but as soon as i start talking about elephants they don't want to hear it
01:26:13.360 typical paul newbauer says a new game with you as an elephant your goal is to secure food and beer
01:26:21.760 elephants love it and kill as many villagers as possible i mean they made goat simulator didn't
01:26:27.120 they that was quite good they made free games out of it so make elephant simulator that's a goat simulator
01:26:32.960 well you play as a goat um it's a tool of integration well i'm saying yeah future wife to
01:26:41.120 someone i'm sure um derek power master of chippies says i think i'll name my new pet elephant stampy
01:26:50.080 um az desert rat says elephants have metacognition understand a bay permanence i'm not surprised they
01:26:56.000 notice and understand patterns yes and again they say if an elephant makes the wrong decision when
01:27:02.160 analyzing a threat their life gets cancelled of course they're going to be highly prejudiced that's
01:27:08.000 true uh baron von warhawk the elephant began pumping gas into his car at family express when smoking a
01:27:14.000 cigarette teens could be here he thought i hate teens an animal immy says they're working on translating
01:27:21.600 animal sounds how much do you want to bet that the project will be cancelled when it's proven animals are
01:27:25.760 racist yeah i want to hear elephant racial slurs i want to know how to say them i want to be able to
01:27:32.480 you know shoot the with some elephants and you know talk about stereotypes henry ashman now i'm wondering
01:27:40.480 if the ukrainian rent boys attack oh that's um are secretly elephants now i don't know i'm sure stahama
01:27:48.720 was doing something with their trunks right we still have two minutes to go which is what i want to talk
01:27:53.920 about what nick said before the zoom the the looks maxing lingo the slogans the jargon have you have
01:28:02.880 you understood them oh yeah unfortunately i've understood all of it which is kind of worrying
01:28:08.400 because i had this moment of clarity where i was just like i've spent so much time on the internet
01:28:13.360 that this is gibberish to 90 of people who are on the internet and i understand it 99 yeah you think that
01:28:20.800 many yeah i think that it's uh not many people which makes me very uh which makes me very happy
01:28:27.680 that i'm one of the one percent that understands it you see my uh tweet about it so simon jordan was
01:28:33.520 dealing with that woman who so the ultra entitled black woman who thinks she should be given everything
01:28:37.920 in sports punditry and she was moaning to him and he just completely shut her down i said jordan
01:28:42.640 absolutely frame mox this void who was dei gooning and overestimating her mv until she got her cortisol
01:28:48.560 brutally spiked by jordan so yeah she was overestimating her market value i took off the s
01:28:53.840 from sexual market value and just made it mv i've invented that myself but yeah i got most of even
01:28:58.800 i know most of them but even i struggled with that initial sentence because i knew jester maxing i knew
01:29:03.120 smv i knew mogging and i could work out moid but i and i could work out just again but even in that
01:29:08.960 there was some things i wasn't that familiar with chad fishing that's there's a couple things is that where
01:29:15.040 in uh dating apps they put a more chadish yeah i actually was fine with it i just didn't piece
01:29:20.240 it all basically i knew most of the words like learning a foreign language i knew most of the
01:29:23.280 words i couldn't piece absolutely all of it together it's like me speaking french like i i know a decent
01:29:28.240 portion of it but you know i can't be fluent in it i actually like it i find it hilarious it's innocuous
01:29:34.080 i don't get the people who started uh trashing me and unfollowing me saying why are you doing this
01:29:40.000 you're giving it oxygen come on it's silly and it's fun is why and i think that it's funny as
01:29:47.840 well to see the people who take it really seriously just like oh you know the zoom has created something
01:29:52.640 and the millennials are ruining it oh yeah i've seen puenta saying that he's mad that millennials are
01:29:57.600 ruining it it's funny we're mocking it by the way you you remember last weekend we we did the segment
01:30:03.920 where he said that uh he's planning to sabotage maga and now he goes out and says his goal was all
01:30:10.320 along to sabotage maga i know you're taking that as a victory but i thought that you already always
01:30:14.960 said that ah now i don't get the credit he set you up there didn't he okay so i'm really looking forward
01:30:24.000 to not talking about that ever again why it's just i'm bored of all this all elephant segments i just
01:30:29.760 one aura maxing and elephant segments and uh euro maxing and just fun stuff right okay so three
01:30:37.760 o'clock lads hour martian constitution yeah that's it bye goodbye see you also for the next podcast
01:30:48.800 gonna be monday at 1 p.m isn't it usually 5 p.m no no 1 p.m josh is trying to confuse you so see you
01:30:58.480 on the martian constitution discussion in lads hour in 29 minutes goodbye