00:29:23.760so no one died just to reiterate all again no one died as awful as it is no one should die
00:29:32.160no one should get stabbed but sorry daily every single day i mean it's tiresome it's absolutely
00:29:40.100tiresome the fatigue the the it's your sheer apathy from the establishment towards the natives
00:29:46.220every single day someone is a victim a native is a victim of a sex crime or a murder
00:29:51.680and they can't say it right this is the thing they will never do what they've done this is
00:29:59.600the overall take right i've got a banger here they will never say anything reminiscent of what
00:30:05.540they've just said they can't they physically can't because of the sheer magnitude i've said
00:30:10.360it's every day and it is every day it's multiple times every single day so if they did this
00:30:14.640it's a floodgate establishing a british ice it's a floodgate that opens
00:30:19.400yeah so never expect them to ever address this because they physically can't so this hypocrisy
00:30:25.580will continue because it has to yeah i wonder if it's even too generous to say it's that almost
00:30:31.240suggests it's a pragmatic problem well no this is just to save them yeah but also it's ideological
00:30:36.100isn't it it's ideological and practical because yes it's like they can't police they can't police
00:30:42.420it yes they can't police the sheer numbers anyway i don't want to go on because it's your section
00:30:47.100but it's we're just the low where the bottom of the caste system we're the most despised we don't
00:30:51.780count and they cover it up not only is it there's a not an outcry it's a cover-up it's don't go back
00:30:57.200in anger it's this didn't happen it's swept on the carpet you have to go to specific media outlets
00:31:01.480to see the daily occurrences yes it's not covered on the mainstream but anyway um sigil stone 17
00:31:08.840says so i'm guessing the jewish muslim and alliance has been called off it seems so
00:31:15.320uh to be fair they don't really care about muslims either they do things to each other
00:31:20.960all the time without all this hubbub um it's only one group that gets this kind of reaction
00:31:27.180and archidor says since the somali used his right hand it is therefore a far-right crime
00:31:33.520fair i guess that's how we that's the logic anyway moving on uh i wanted to cover the
00:31:40.620takeover of organized crime of Britain's high streets. And this is on the back of a story by
00:31:46.720the BBC discussing how a council officer who works for a trading standards, trading standards is a
00:31:54.820body in the United Kingdom that makes sure that shops, farms, all kinds of businesses, even online
00:32:01.140shops are operating within the law and they have some limited enforcement capability. They mostly
00:32:07.320have an inspection capability, they go around shops and make sure that they are in compliance
00:32:12.780with the law. That's their job. But problems arise when they try to check a lot of the shops that are
00:32:20.380owned by various immigrant groups. And the BBC was covering the story of this particular lady
00:32:27.340who had threats from a Kurdish gang that they would kill her and that they would burn down her0.99
00:32:36.740house to the extent that she actually had to move house so it's barbarians being barbarians this is
00:32:43.860a bit of barbarians being barbarians news at nine and um the police couldn't really protect her she
00:32:52.260ended up having to move at the end of the day well what good are the police uh good question sorry0.95
00:32:56.780you expect them to do something yeah come on i'm sorry forgive me i'm stupid her name's mandy0.99
00:33:02.440Forgive me, I'm stupid. And the BBC spoke to 24 trading standards officers and the trading standards themselves had a survey done to see what was going on.0.99
00:33:15.680And in their conclusions, they say a bunch of really fascinating things.
00:33:21.680They say that 97% of trading standard officers were aware of suspected organized crime groups operating out of retail premises in the local high street.
00:33:36.720Oh, that thing that everyone's been suggesting for like a decade now.
00:33:40.240Exactly. So just to explain to you how this works, different councils have their own trading standards officers.
00:33:47.640And for 97% of them to say that they were aware of organized crime means that there is probably 100% presence across all British councils of various kinds of organized crime.0.92
00:34:02.880It also implies that trading standards offices are one of the last councils, even across, say, places like Birmingham and Bradford and places like that, that are still operated by natives.0.92
00:34:23.300And they're saying that there was a 99% recognition that there was an increase in cash-intensive businesses operating on the local high streets since 2020.
00:34:34.860What happened in 2020? The Boris wave.
00:34:37.660So since the Boris wave, the scale of organized crime and money laundering on the high streets has increased significantly.
00:34:45.440and in some areas respondents these are inspectors working for uh trading standards said that half
00:34:55.140of mini marts and vape retailers and a third of candy stores and one in four fast food takeaways
00:35:02.140were linked to organized crime but it's fascinating isn't it because the end result won't be from a
00:35:07.940council perspective well let's not allow these to pop up because they can right like part of like
00:35:13.580how you run a high street is you can license these yes you allow these companies to work
00:35:18.120so it won't be the lesson won't be i'm not i don't want to supersede any of your points here
00:35:22.780but i'm sure it won't be well maybe we just shouldn't allow well they can a lot of these
00:35:27.900to pop up they can shut them down for up to a year but what they do is then they just the same gang
00:35:34.620rents a different premises on the high street and we will discuss now how they get these new
00:35:41.520premises okay i'd like to know if there's a single legitimate vape shop like there's not that many
00:35:45.640people vape you should have like one vape shop per town it should have to be like official you know
00:35:50.560like the apple store or something there's just no there's not that many people vaping that this is
00:35:55.960where they have reasons for suspicion as opposed to you know uh evidence those bongs in the in the
00:36:03.640windows aren't a giveaway yeah apparently not apparently the mini mart's just oh every mini
00:36:08.400is just a front for drug dealing i'm just like yeah it's it seems like it it's depressing and
00:36:14.18072 percent of training standards professionals say that they have been threatened with violence
00:36:22.720or with sexual assault or with attacks on their families by organized crime yeah so if three
00:36:30.940quarters of your enforcement force is operating under physical threats they aren't going to
00:36:38.160operate very well. And that is literally a breakdown in law and order. That's what it is.
00:36:45.940It is a breakdown in law and order and a takeover of high streets by organized crime.
00:36:51.560There is no other interpretation. Not just that, the local trading standards authorities have had
00:36:57.820their budgets cut by up to 50% over the last 10 years, meaning that their ability to detect and
00:37:04.280force has declined dramatically. And they say that, according to trading standards again,
00:37:12.000dodgy shops, shops that might be involved in organized crime, have an impact on the safety
00:37:17.020of the public and the viability of legitimate businesses around them. Their illegal trade
00:37:22.120deprives the extra care of billions of pounds in taxes and duties, puts the health of consumers
00:37:27.400at risk through the sale of illegal products and selling products to children. And they can often
00:37:33.640undercut legitimate businesses by selling cheap illegal and counterfeit goods and avoid paying
00:37:40.020utility bills avoid paying utility bills what does that mean that means that they set up shop for a
00:37:44.940year do their business then disappear yeah and register to a different premises three doors down
00:37:54.680four doors down and because they've got links to afghanistan uh yep and and various places
00:38:00.720the the amount of counterfeit goods that reside in those areas is insane it is mad so they can
00:38:06.820easily get a hold of this stuff and bring it into the country as well as obviously
00:38:10.160illicit substances as well it's just easy for them in case you were wondering it's not that
00:38:15.200the charting training standards institute is is doing a particularly great job they are tweeting
00:38:21.780about neuro-inclusion training they are um obviously controlled by middle-aged awfuls and0.65
00:38:31.180foreign women i ask chunda uh which is a bit of a problem i would argue they insist that they're0.57
00:38:38.740not colorblind they are deeply committed anti-racists uh they will celebrate racial0.84
00:38:45.020this anti-racial discrimination and lgbt and all of that and all of that so they have this nonsense
00:38:52.000associated with them but in terms of their reporting they're doing a pretty decent job
00:38:57.460and they've known that there is a fundamental problem on the high street for at least 10 years
00:39:01.920now for 11 years now because in february of 2015 they were explaining how uh illicit trade in
00:39:10.620especially tobacco, is a low risk, high reward opportunity for organized crime.
00:39:17.360Smuggling thresholds are little and often. What does this mean in practical terms?
00:39:21.560If smuggling thresholds are little and often, that means that a huge number of people are
00:39:27.020traveling to low cost destinations, picking up a big pile of tobacco and sneaking it in for a
00:39:33.100couple of hundred quid. They get to have a nice weekend somewhere and they get to pay for it
00:39:39.360by smuggling in cigarettes and things like that. A lot of gaps in the data, so they don't know how
00:39:47.640much is going on. But the government approach, particularly as criminal penalties, are perceived
00:39:53.860as low by criminals. So they aren't being punished anywhere near enough. And HMRC, the people who
00:40:02.060collect taxes from law-abiding citizens, aren't doing enough to investigate the people who aren't
00:40:07.700paying their taxes instead you hear this endless bleating about billionaires bad etc etc i guess
00:40:14.980i mean the end result was these people shouldn't be here anyway and and the thing is that i don't
00:40:20.080know what the end result is of your your segment but the establishment's use of this to sort of
00:40:26.040well their response to this would by and large more than likely just be a case of well some more
00:40:32.960authoritarianism exactly like just deport them exactly get rid of them exactly now organized
00:40:40.300crime as of a few years ago uh it costs at least 37 billion pounds a year a decent chunk of it0.94
00:40:50.120comes from the albanian mafia because the albanians managed to pretty much take full control
00:44:23.280They've become the kingpins of the drug trade0.89
00:44:25.800and you see this ethnic solidarity.1.00
00:44:29.380A lot of Albania's actual economy just comes from ripping us off0.96
00:44:33.440and the crime rate that is here in this country from them.1.00
00:44:37.420And again, emphasising that this is not a new problem.1.00
00:44:39.960So 20 years ago, the BBC knew that the Vietnamese had cornered the market for cannabis and that they were busy basically not just renting out properties and using them to produce cannabis in their farms.0.92
00:44:59.620They maintained, according to the BBC,
00:45:02.400the cannabis farms were maintained by illegally trafficked young men
00:45:06.780living in tiny cupboards while they repaid their debts to the gangs.
00:46:22.080And you see that the criminality rate in Britain is rising.
00:46:25.140And now the reporting, according to these gentlemen here, is that the United Kingdom is a significant destination country for human trafficking.
00:46:34.040Why? Because you get to employ them as slave labor in small shops, or you get to use them in construction or what have you,
00:46:42.160or you get to use them to deal drugs, or to sponsor the phone theft mafias, to be members of the phone theft mafias, or to work as delivery drivers.0.99
00:46:51.660brilliant so you see this intersection between these ethnic mafias and pretty much every single0.78
00:46:57.840type of crime you could imagine including human trafficking construction agriculture domestic1.00
00:47:05.180service and the care sector there's um there's a weird intersection with all of this and the
00:47:11.680green party's policy isn't there absolutely absolutely the country's evolving legalizing0.54
00:47:16.720drugs well again paying some tax this is it it's like we're all mugs paying tax none of0.75
00:47:21.580these people have real jobs green party won't obviously get the heroin dealers just paying
00:47:25.840their fair share it's actually quite quite good in that sense quite conservative do you think
00:47:29.860they're going to obey tax law absolutely once the heroin trading standards inspecting the heroin
00:47:36.420dealers yeah of course are you trying to tell me heroin dealers won't pay their fair shares
00:47:40.320unscrupulous who who who knows but here's what they say about the boris wave which is beautiful
00:47:46.060the country's evolving immigration policies have contributed to increased vulnerability
00:47:51.340to labor trafficking, with reports indicating that the relaxation of immigration rules to
00:47:57.620address care worker shortages in care homes led to a surge in trafficking cases in the sector.
00:48:06.220Child victims are disproportionately affected, with many being forced into criminal activities
00:48:11.460through county lines drug networks. County lines drug networks is basically where to confuse the
00:48:18.280police drug dealers will take drugs from one police force's jurisdiction to another
00:48:25.920so that the responsibility gets lost in bureaucracy essentially
00:48:32.740and you know this is brilliant human trafficking remains a lucrative criminal enterprise in the
00:48:41.580uk particularly through small boat crossings in the english channel thank you labor thank you
00:48:47.760conservatives that thing that everyone's been saying for ages exactly hang on are you talking
00:48:52.240about the poor asylum seekers i'm talking about the poor asylum seekers and i'm saying that there0.99
00:48:56.920is every chance that they're criminals and they're going to be employed to work as criminals as women0.99
00:49:00.840and children sorry what children oh yeah you are importing criminals and putting them up in hotels
00:49:05.720all i can do is look to fiona bruce in panic my whole ideology goes up in smoke organized crime
00:49:12.820groups in the UK remain active in protection
01:23:15.860uh henry ashman says it's not just the boris wave in 2020 lockdown is also a massive factor in this
01:23:22.760shutting all the shops that weren't massive supermarkets put the high street out of business
01:23:27.160yeah that's a good point if there was a thriving high street with no spaces would there have been
01:23:31.800an inn for the gangs that's another good point i get the feeling some of the councils are happy
01:23:36.540to look the other way as without the criminal fronts there'd be no shops at all in some places
01:23:40.400I mean, there's no doubt, Henry, that you are right in saying that the British government is doing everything it can to kill every last small business in the country and to help only the big businesses.
01:23:53.660They were meeting with the Labour Party before the elections and figuring out ways to self-deal.
01:24:00.980You had BlackRock meeting with Starmer and finding out all kinds of ways to help them.