The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters - July 01, 2026


The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1452


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 30 minutes

Words per minute

187.39

Word count

17,024

Sentence count

97

Harmful content

Misogyny

3

sentences flagged

Toxicity

28

sentences flagged

Hate speech

73

sentences flagged


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 good afternoon welcome to the podcast lotus thesis episode 1452 i'm your host harry joined
00:00:06.100 today by carl hello and returning guest elizabeth heverin very nice to have you back again liz
00:00:11.540 good to have you and today we're going to talk about how uh there's bad news for america it
00:00:17.440 turns out that you are american bad news for them everyone's american in fact literally we'll get to
00:00:23.980 it though i'm gonna be taking everybody through the rather thrilling and exciting subject of
00:00:29.220 bad data collection and how it affects your life and liz is going to be talking to us about how
00:00:34.220 she can't get a job so true yes very true that's why she has to bum around here every so often
00:00:40.720 and anything else we need to talk about before we get started i think that's it all right let's get
00:00:45.460 into the news so you're probably aware that the supreme court recently ruled in favor of birthright
00:00:50.200 citizenship which is not exactly great if you've got somewhere north of 20 million illegal immigrants
00:00:55.060 in your country and they know that if they just have a child in your country that child becomes 0.50
00:01:01.720 an american citizen and therefore they can be sponsored to bring the parents over and you can
00:01:05.940 see how this turns into uh a vast network of people who through quite archaic law at this
00:01:13.820 point get to be citizens in your country without ever having to contribute or do anything and you
00:01:19.060 don't get a say in it basically it's really bad news sounds like a really sensible system of
00:01:23.440 citizenship yeah i mean it actually was a fairly sensible system when it was first implemented
00:01:28.500 in like 1790 but it wasn't then as it is now in fact we'll go through it just so people have got
00:01:35.000 an understanding of how this has all come to pass so you'll well you might not know in the
00:01:40.460 constitution of the united states article 1 section 8 clause 4 imbues congress with the
00:01:45.760 power to establish a uniform rule of naturalization throughout the united states 0.54
00:01:49.620 naturalization is the act of adopting a foreigner and clothing him with the privileges of a native
00:01:54.280 citizen so theoretically congress should have that power then in 1790 and 1795 you get the
00:02:01.900 naturalization acts and these have a pretty specific wording quote any alien being a free
00:02:09.120 white person who shall have resided within the limits and under the jurisdiction of the united
00:02:13.460 states for a term of two years may be admitted to become a citizen thereof on any application
00:02:18.360 to a common law court of record in any one of the states and he wherein he shall have resided for
00:02:24.360 the term of at least one year and making proof the satisfaction of the court that he has done
00:02:28.360 oath of affirmations blah blah blah blah right so a european a european can become an american
00:02:35.800 citizen according to the original naturalization act okay makes sense uh the 1795 act does the
00:02:44.340 same as the 1790 act just extends the time between three and five years of residence because they're
00:02:49.600 like one year that's that's that's not very long is it so yeah okay fair enough uh then you have
00:02:55.440 in 1798 the alien and sedition acts uh these laws raised the residency requirements from five years
00:03:02.320 to 14 years and authorized the president to deport aliens permitting their arrest imprisonment and
00:03:06.920 deportation during wartime because uh a generation after independence where the french helped the
00:03:13.060 americans gained independence the americans are like we're about to go to war with france there 0.98
00:03:16.840 are loads of french here what are we going to do about them um then you have the naturalization 0.97
00:03:21.680 act of 1802 uh which again uses the term um i can't remember there we are any alien being a
00:03:32.780 free white person may become uh may be admitted to become a citizen of the united states on the
00:03:38.920 following conditions pretty woke right if i say so myself well that is literally what james lindsey
00:03:43.400 is saying all over twitter by the way um so james it's pretty explicit there that that's uh the
00:03:50.540 intended stock of the united states now just to be clear at this point this actually makes perfect
00:03:56.320 sense right because what you have is i suppose what we would describe as a libertarian frontier
00:04:02.260 country that has inherited a vast continent that needs populating and so why wouldn't you want
00:04:09.020 free white men of good standing or white people of good standing to populate your continent you
00:04:14.240 know you are people from europe you have england specifically you've descended here you've set up
00:04:19.840 a country for yourself and it needs to be populated because you have a huge amount of land and not
00:04:24.860 enough people to fill it so this actually makes perfect sense in the context because i've seen
00:04:29.320 people like matt waltz going oh this is ridiculous how could you ever have um adopted a position like
00:04:34.680 this and like well because actually in its time and context it made sense similarly mass transport
00:04:41.000 had not yet been uh invented true uh which the the that was a whole technological revolution by
00:04:46.580 itself you couldn't have tens of thousands of people easily show up at your doorstep all within
00:04:52.000 a day that's if people got to america they'd have had to go across a quite lengthy potentially
00:04:57.960 dangerous disease-filled voyage yeah by sailboat by sailboat and show that they are willing to put
00:05:03.560 through to go through hardships to get there in the first place therefore they're probably willing
00:05:07.400 to go through more hardships to secure the the western frontier exactly and also the fact that
00:05:11.720 it was the 13 colonies so much of america hadn't been discovered and conquered yet it was it was
00:05:18.360 just the east coast and so and yeah when you had to travel by horse and cart uh things were a bit
00:05:24.400 different. In 1855, you get the Naturalization Act, and through this act, a child born outside
00:05:31.060 of the United States is a U.S. citizen through the child's father, if they are a U.S. citizen, 0.87
00:05:35.660 so you have now the right of the blood imbued in the American, and it also provided that alien
00:05:41.760 immigrant women can gain citizenship through marriage to an American citizen or the naturalization
00:05:46.060 of the alien husband. Now, this was all overruled in 1868 because, of course, the 14th Amendment
00:05:52.840 came in after the civil war because one of the issues that had been brought to the fore is well
00:06:00.840 upon the emancipation of slaves because only free white people can become citizens of the united
00:06:06.340 states that disinherited the black the now free black slaves or ex-slaves from having citizenship
00:06:12.520 which i agree is unfair uh so they changed the language to all persons born or naturalized in
00:06:20.180 united states and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the united states and
00:06:25.140 the state within wherein they reside and then this is also followed by the 15th amendment
00:06:30.420 which uh gave the rights the right of citizens of the united states to vote shall not be denied or
00:06:35.380 abridged by the united states or by any state on account of race color or previous condition
00:06:39.140 of servitude um so essentially this may it's this point that makes uh the united states the
00:06:45.540 universal country where everyone around the world is actually an undocumented american and all they
00:06:52.660 have to do is just arrive in america and then they become the documented american at least if they
00:06:57.240 have a child there there are a series of other extensions and confirmations and whatnot after
00:07:02.620 this you've got most of them are to give expansions to excluded groups such as black immigrants in
00:07:08.380 1817 native americans in 1924 or territorial populations like puerto rico or guam guamanians
00:07:14.780 or rules for citizenship by descent marriage adoption and naturalization but this is where
00:07:19.780 it's properly like cemented into place it is ridiculous that this is sadly the letter of the
00:07:26.340 law is used to manipulate um uh the current political situation in the way that it is because
00:07:31.320 clearly it was not the spirit of the law that some random person can illegally cross the border
00:07:37.560 spit out a baby and then congratulations the baby's an american and guess what you can anchor
00:07:44.060 yourself to them now so you get to stick around too i mean that is very obviously not what they
00:07:49.260 were intending with this we will in fact get to the very people who proposed the 14th amendment
00:07:53.600 saying precisely that actually uh in a moment if that's oh oh really yeah we'll get to exactly that
00:07:59.620 why do i always jump ahead on these things because i mean because it's it's so obviously
00:08:04.260 because it's so obviously sensible yeah yeah it's quite self-evident that that is not what this is
00:08:09.000 for and yet if you take a very expansive reading of it that's where you end up this is the same
00:08:15.460 thing i think as um what was it it was either the civil rights act or the immigration act of 1965
00:08:20.740 where one of the proponents of the bill said that if this changes either the demographics of the
00:08:27.120 united states or changes the ability of white people to get good employment uh then i will
00:08:32.780 eat the bill and every single page of it i will eat this entire bill and it's like well i hope he
00:08:39.100 was hungry that day anyway so this is something that has been recognized by the trump administration
00:08:44.780 one of the good things they've done is trump signed an executive order to end birthright
00:08:50.380 citizenship because as he points out it devalues american citizenship if it is just simply
00:08:57.760 available to everyone the argument is the 14th amendment has never been interpreted to extend
00:09:02.440 citizenship universally to everyone born within the united states the 14th amendment has always
00:09:07.240 excluded from birthright citizenship persons were born in the united states but not subject to the
00:09:11.440 jurisdiction thereof which i think is an accurate reading of what the 14th amendment says i mean it
00:09:16.780 literally does say um born or naturalized in the united states and subject to the jurisdiction
00:09:22.680 thereof so as in the country that you come from this is not the country that you come from and
00:09:28.420 therefore i think that's a fair reading actually i'm not a lawyer though and i'm not in the supreme
00:09:33.000 court so what does my opinion matter among the categories of individuals born in the united
00:09:37.020 states and not subject to the jurisdiction thereof the privilege of citizenship does not
00:09:41.120 automatically extend to persons born in the united states which is obviously true if you're born in
00:09:45.700 a foreign country that does not make you in most countries automatically a citizen of that country
00:09:51.020 especially when a person's mother was say born was present unlawfully in the united states
00:09:56.440 father was not u.s citizen or lawful resident etc etc etc now i thought that was um perfectly
00:10:03.800 persuasive and obviously in the interests of the average american because of course if you have a
00:10:09.860 6 000 mile long border with mexico and you have a billion ngos funneling people north using george
00:10:17.960 soros money and just dumping them over the border well it's perfectly plausible i mean literally you
00:10:23.580 could get on a plane go on holiday as a pregnant woman and give birth and this is something i mean
00:10:29.460 this is literally how kemi badenock came to be i was the conservative party just i think in a
00:10:34.460 common sense way it's a not not a sensible way to determine citizenship not that many western
00:10:39.560 countries have sensible methods at the moment but still we had birthright citizenship and one of the
00:10:45.640 benefits of parliamentary sovereignty over a written constitution like the united states
00:10:49.740 we don't have to faff about with the supreme court and interpretations of such we just said
00:10:54.760 well we're going to repeal that yeah and we did yeah in 1983 we did that um although we have other
00:11:01.740 provisions but we got as well yeah there's no end to the betrayal no matter where you live harry
00:11:07.240 i know you're starting to get a bit optimistic no no no like like i was saying like like i was
00:11:12.580 saying that we still don't have sensible citizenship and we still uh are subject to
00:11:18.560 traitors oh yeah absolutely just there's a lot of loopholes to this which is sort of unfair for
00:11:23.720 native like um native born um americans for example if um two americans um the woman gives
00:11:31.600 birth to a child in germany then that child can't run to be president or anything like that in
00:11:38.100 america even though he is a part of that kin he's still like an american he's still a part of that
00:11:43.140 community and i think one thing that american citizens should uh citizenship should embrace
00:11:49.740 is this idea of kin um which which it doesn't well it does if if i mean as you saw in the other
00:11:56.100 ones there were um extensions to it so the children of american citizens are automatically
00:12:00.460 american citizens now where they're born although i think you are right you have to be born in the
00:12:04.960 united states to be able to run for president which i mean that's a great innovation i wish
00:12:09.600 we had something similar for britain uh as it stands there's literally nothing that prevents
00:12:14.560 anyone from running to be a poli standing to be a politician in britain uh in any office in any
00:12:19.340 capacity which is just mad but anyway so the supreme court decided to shoot this down they
00:12:25.760 decided to uphold birthright citizenship um it says like by five to four but it's actually more
00:12:32.240 like six to three and i'll explain why in a minute um but no it's they've decided they're going to
00:12:37.960 reaffirm the long-settled understanding
00:12:40.080 that the 14th Amendment automatically
00:12:41.760 confers citizenship on any child born in the
00:12:43.840 United States, with limited
00:12:45.700 exceptions for children of diplomats and other
00:12:47.800 rare cases. Well, what's the point in
00:12:49.880 putting an exception for the children of diplomats?
00:12:52.400 What's the point? Why would
00:12:53.940 you bother? If you're letting literally just
00:12:55.940 anyone arrive, pop out a baby. 1.00
00:12:57.880 If you're letting illegals come in 1.00
00:12:59.540 and pop out babies that they can then 1.00
00:13:01.760 anchor into the country with, like, why
00:13:03.640 That diplomat who's been here for 20 years.
00:13:05.760 What's the point of random exceptions?
00:13:07.280 Exactly.
00:13:07.960 exactly um so just chief justice john g roberts jr wrote the majority opinion
00:13:14.580 for the ideologically mixed group of justices
00:13:17.400 that included the court's three liberals as well as conservative 0.99
00:13:21.460 amy coney barrett i've seen a lot of people complaining about her
00:13:26.320 appointment now oh yes but john roberts is just as bad
00:13:29.960 he is a conservative in the same way she is a conservative
00:13:33.340 which means yesterday's liberal that's all it means and that's why
00:13:37.720 actually it's not an ideologically mixed group it's five liberals who are all on the same team
00:13:43.080 who all agree that actually nobody owns a country and anyone from anywhere can just come here and
00:13:47.500 that's fine right he says this citizenship then and now was to have the rights to freely participate 0.80
00:13:53.060 in our political community why the hell do we want illegals freely participating in our 0.76
00:13:57.160 political community why would you want that why would you want it so that someone can come over 0.92
00:14:02.620 give birth to a child and then then being oh yeah well you're part of our political that's bizarre
00:14:07.260 the framers of the 14th amendment extended that promise to every freeborn person in this land
00:14:11.960 we keep that promise today well i mean that's literally the opposite of what they were saying
00:14:17.240 as you said right so initially this the 14th amendment was proposed uh framed by a guy called
00:14:22.240 john bingham who was what they called at the time radical republican uh which is basically like a wig
00:14:27.520 right and the man who introduced it um was a guy called john uh jacob howard i mean you can see his
00:14:33.700 explicit words here this will not of course include persons born in the united states who
00:14:37.960 are foreigners aliens who belong to the families of ambassadors or foreign ministers accredited to
00:14:42.140 the government of the united states but will include every other class of persons so i love
00:14:47.280 that they're keeping the families of ambassadors bit of of this they're keeping the bits that are
00:14:52.600 convenient whenever i read something like this i just think to myself well you could have been a
00:14:57.640 bit more specific in the actual amendment then yes the way that you wrote the amendment you could
00:15:02.640 have been way more specific but at the same time the second amendment is pretty specific
00:15:07.160 and people still try and play word games with it yeah this is the problem is that treating modern
00:15:12.480 america as if it's still the 1700s and that's sort of what plagues american for when i lived
00:15:19.140 in america i lived in memphis tennessee for a year um i traveled to minnesota minnesota has like um
00:15:25.460 a lot of somalian asylum seekers there who if they give birth to a child and that means that
00:15:31.820 somalian is as as american as someone whose family has been there 200 years it's it's a ridiculous
00:15:38.280 sort of concept i mean if you line up a photo uh comparison between the founding fathers and
00:15:43.200 your average somalian you can barely tell the difference yeah they look the exact same
00:15:47.260 george washington was really a somalian you imagine showing george washington the united
00:15:52.280 states of today i think he'd be begging to be let back into the empire we made a mistake
00:15:58.620 yeah yeah so anyway uh people have been saying it's 5-4 but kind of in reality it's 6-3 so
00:16:04.100 uh in the majority concurrence you've got roberts uh sotomayor kagan barrett and jackson
00:16:10.180 uh you have kavanaugh who uh concurs but includes a dissent with it as in he concurs that yes that's
00:16:18.140 what the constitution says um but he disagrees with it on procedural grounds saying uh something
00:16:24.200 like uh the executive order does it does violate the constitution it doesn't violate the constitution
00:16:29.500 or it does violate federal law or one or the other but the point is wimpy conservative can't
00:16:34.640 just toe the hard line and then of course in dissent you have gauche alito and the king clarence
00:16:40.460 thomas uh this there i've included a blog uh by amy howell from scot's blog uh in the reading list
00:16:47.520 so if you want um a more detailed examination than what i'm going to be able to give you in
00:16:51.560 like 25 minutes we're talking about it uh you can go and read that and the funny thing is with
00:16:56.140 kavanaugh being so mealy-mouthed about the whole thing it's like everybody knows that the supreme
00:17:01.100 court is a political body that comes up with the conclusion first and then works backwards oh that's
00:17:07.660 very that's that's works backwards from that and really yes yeah yes you're exactly right and
00:17:13.960 frankly it has been ever since at least the brown v board of education case it's just always been
00:17:20.080 the case yeah it has always been the case i mean look at abraham lincoln going like oh the supreme
00:17:24.580 court doesn't like what i'm doing well i'm just going to throw one of the justices in prison
00:17:27.760 then yeah like obviously it's a political body pretending it's some like neutral uh some neutral
00:17:32.840 thing is um it's just a lie which one was it who was just like well that's the court's decision
00:17:37.000 let them enforce it andrew jackson that's it love andrew jackson anyway everyone's blaming these
00:17:45.000 ladies and you can understand why looking at them yeah let's see exactly the kind of faces from which
00:17:51.500 i expect the opinion to come i do like amy cory bennett though i will say oh yeah go on why well
00:17:56.760 um she went to my my college in america rose college but i like what she's tried to do in
00:18:01.820 relation to the pro-life cause but uh i will say i've not been sort of clued up on american
00:18:06.920 politics well recently she's decided i mean she's decided to hang up with the three boglins on the 0.91
00:18:13.080 other side and be like yes actually i agree with these obvious dysgenic freaks um everyone's blame 0.90
00:18:20.380 i mean they're certainly all dysgenic if she's on if she's on about pro-life and the rights of 0.80
00:18:25.260 unborn children and such like surely that should be her guiding star and knowing that you're 0.64
00:18:31.060 aligning with these three people who i assume are all very very pro-choice on this subject
00:18:36.280 should at least make her think twice make her think like is this am i on the bad side yeah i
00:18:42.260 mean she's literally standing with three abortionists but no no no on this issue i agree with
00:18:47.640 them okay ask yourself why on that issue do you agree with them then you know what is it about
00:18:51.860 your personal philosophy that has led you to stand shoulder to shoulder with these maniacs
00:18:55.440 but everyone is blaming these four ladies and i have to say i actually don't i mean i is look at
00:19:01.820 them it's kind of what you'd expect the kind of yeah of course we're going to sell out the country
00:19:06.280 for various ethnic or moral failings right of course we're going to do that no the real problem
00:19:11.540 is that guy in the middle right the straight white boomer he sided with them he is the problem he
00:19:18.380 is justice john roberts he's like the platonic form of a cuckservative it's like look man oh 0.80
00:19:24.380 i'm a conservative then why you sat with these three treacherous liberals and amy cody barrett 0.99
00:19:28.740 who is also an idiot letting anyone in your country become an american as well what what 0.99
00:19:34.000 does conservative mean if you're siding with them like what what does it mean like conservatives 1.00
00:19:39.520 are just intransigent traitors, are they? Is that what you're saying, Mr. Roberts? Because it seems
00:19:44.140 to be the actual case. I mean, and the thing is, it's been complete amateur hour from the liberal
00:19:50.860 judges, right? This is Ketanji Jackson, the best and brightest, which is clearly why she's on the
00:19:57.580 Supreme Court. This is amazing. Listen to this. I was thinking about this, and I think there are
00:20:04.020 various sources that say this, that you can have, you obviously have permanent allegiance
00:20:09.140 based on being born in whatever country you're from. That's what everybody recognizes. But you
00:20:15.580 also have local allegiance when you are on the soil of this other sovereign. And I was thinking,
00:20:23.440 you know, I'm a U.S. citizen and visiting Japan. And what it means is that, you know, if I steal
00:20:30.480 someone's wallet in Japan. The Japanese authorities can arrest me and prosecute me. It's allegiance
00:20:40.460 meaning can they control you as a matter of law. I can also rely on them if my wallet
00:20:46.680 is stolen to, you know, under Japanese law, go and prosecute the person who has stolen
00:20:53.140 it. So there's this relationship based on, even though I'm a temporary traveler, I'm
00:20:58.300 just on vacation in japan i'm still locally owing allegiance in that that's not what allegiance
00:21:07.040 means oh that was a strain to listen to it's ridiculous do you remember the checklists 0.78
00:21:12.680 the little little black tick woman tick low iq tick i mean good god that was oh my goodness i 0.98
00:21:22.500 mean that that is just not what an allegiance is if i go on holiday to a different country i don't 0.97
00:21:26.980 have allegiance to that country even though i'm subject to its laws what she's describing there
00:21:31.920 is a function of sovereignty as in the government of japan is sovereign over japan and therefore
00:21:36.240 enforce their laws it's not that you pledge allegiance to their laws it's that you are
00:21:40.760 literally compelled to follow them or else you will be arrested that isn't a question of allegiance
00:21:46.360 and even her beginning premise well everyone knows you have allegiance to the country that
00:21:50.480 you're born in uh no no they don't actually and we've we've discovered this with immigration in
00:21:55.480 britain i mean i covered yesterday on the podcast stormzy being like yeah well i kind of hope ghana
00:22:00.040 win because we need the points it's like you're born and raised in england mate you know but his
00:22:05.800 loyalty is actually to ghana because he's gone in and blah blah blah right so it's it none of this
00:22:12.080 is correct and this is just this is the level of thinking that is deciding the demographic future
00:22:17.440 of the united states and utterly embarrassing it makes you think how on earth did someone with this 0.87
00:22:23.400 this silly take um get into such a high position of power the answer is affirmative action 1.00
00:22:28.440 seriously like if you come into my house and i tell you uh don't shit and smear it on the walls 0.99
00:22:36.580 please if you follow the rule that i just set out for you it doesn't make you part of my family all 0.97
00:22:41.140 well it's allegiance yeah you know what what's interesting uh she's like just generally an
00:22:46.280 embarrassment in her um statement she wrote that uh the those who champion the 14th amendment
00:22:52.200 understood the assignment as in she's using like tiktok language in her write-ups there was a
00:22:57.560 previous one where she had literally written it like she was a student being like here's the
00:23:03.040 result wait for it it's like what do you mean wait for it say what you mean to say uh embarrassing
00:23:07.120 complete embarrassing total amateur hour and of course there's a charlie kirk tweet for everything
00:23:11.420 um you know birthright citizenship was for freed slaves not the anchor babies of illegals pass it
00:23:16.120 on totally true totally completely true could not have been more accurate um and then uh that that
00:23:24.240 really stirred up the the one really good person on the supreme court which is of course based
00:23:30.180 clarence thomas and i've come to the conclusion that in every generation there is one person who
00:23:35.080 deserves the title of reasonable black man now in the 17th century that was a trumpeteer in
00:23:39.880 henry the eighth court that's a real thing that yeah it's a real thing you can only imagine
00:23:45.240 how reasonable he must have been to earn the name i don't think i need to imagine right because i
00:23:50.100 think clarence thomas is leading the way um he he is currently the um star of white nationalist
00:23:56.640 twitter uh he's their favorite person every year or so that just like pops up for where it's like
00:24:03.300 you're an honorary clarence oh yeah absolutely uh but lee pederson if he wasn't yeah yeah but
00:24:10.600 what's what's really funny about this is that for anyone who uh has followed the supreme court's
00:24:15.920 rulings for any period of time will know that they go in a in a certain sort of um direction
00:24:21.120 so you'll get a huge stack of words from the liberal justices with their arcane leftist memes
00:24:27.180 explaining why they're selling you out and betraying you and then it'll go down slowly by
00:24:30.960 how conservative that person is until it gets to about five pages with clarence thomas being like
00:24:36.260 no this is the right thing to do because this this this and this end get out of my face right
00:24:40.000 and so clarence thomas is very terse he's known for famously being very terse but he decided to
00:24:45.560 write a 91 page descent at the supreme court's ruling which um i haven't had time to read because
00:24:52.020 it was 91 pages uh but other people have read read it and basically he comes down to look this
00:24:59.040 is terrible it's going to age poorly this is not going to go down well in future and this completely
00:25:04.020 devalues the concept of american citizenship it's actually completely damning from the excerpts
00:25:09.200 that people like matt here were pulling out it's like right okay mad uh gorsh decided to write
00:25:14.960 quite a baffling essay it was only two pages long uh but he argued that it was fine to withhold
00:25:19.800 birthright citizenship to temporary visitors but not to illegal aliens an answer that pleases
00:25:24.560 is exactly no one and possibly the worst one that could be had uh quite true uh alito uh was
00:25:30.600 apparently fuming over this and said that in my judgment the court has made a mistake that will
00:25:34.620 seriously affect the country's future i think he also called it a grave mistake which is true 1.00
00:25:39.320 uh the country is going to be affected by this and the libtards you can imagine are thrilled by this 0.96
00:25:45.740 because i mean logan here has got a good little meme right i'm proud to be an american what's 0.98
00:25:50.140 american a person no particular ethnicity or religion or culture all human beings on earth
00:25:54.280 are undocumented americans which is essentially where the extrapolated logic of this goes and
00:25:58.800 that was posted in 2018 as you can see there's not like this people haven't been aware of this
00:26:02.700 the case but as you can see this uh sky um blue sky poster has posted all human beings on earth
00:26:10.300 are undocumented americans goes so hard it should legitimately be the political aspiration of
00:26:14.740 progressive forces in the u.s in a nutshell it is that is what they're trying to do they where do
00:26:21.060 you think this result came from yeah exactly what do you think they're trying to achieve that's
00:26:26.220 exactly what it is and the thing is this is the exact end result the predictable end result of
00:26:31.240 liberal ideology this is what they want a universal human that is under a universal state that has a
00:26:37.760 universal set of rights that is inherent in them or at least enforced for them in all places in
00:26:44.640 all times irrespective of who they are where they come from or what group they belong to
00:26:49.420 and that's the the telos of liberalism is just carrying on which is why they're all so thrilled
00:26:54.960 with it um just to be clear though this is not normal right birthright citizenship for any
00:26:59.660 americans watching it's not normal uh this is a map of the world that has birthright citizenship
00:27:04.440 and you'll notice that the blue is the birthright citizenship and the red is uh inherited lineal
00:27:11.980 citizenship and you'll notice that the new world mostly has birthright citizenship because of
00:27:18.960 course that was an unpopulated land by the old world and the old world mostly doesn't because
00:27:27.060 of course we are settled nations and we have a strong connection between our past our present
00:27:34.000 and our future although even australia and new zealand are missing they are right citizenship
00:27:39.960 although they do just give it out like it's worth nothing anyway so even without birthright
00:27:44.920 gotta keep raining on the parade today don't i i do i i don't want us to like be like haha
00:27:49.720 americans because it's terrible for us too right it's terrible for everyone but they fail to
00:27:54.080 realize that if you import all the world into america what makes american society will be no
00:27:59.700 more well the reason for it is not because they have any great love for american society and
00:28:05.600 think that the people coming in will be improved by american society it's because they hate american
00:28:12.500 society they know that the people coming in will ruin american society and that makes them happy
00:28:18.940 but they're also sort of americans are so alienated to the rest of the world i think most
00:28:23.580 americans don't have passports so they're sort of advocating for the world to enter their borders
00:28:28.900 without realizing what that world is they think it's sort of akin to what american society is 0.93
00:28:34.440 they don't realize that their traditions and values and culture comes from them being a wasp
00:28:41.440 society yes but that's that's a time that's passing i'm afraid um the i think your point
00:28:47.660 about kinship was important because as you can see the rest of the world operates on the notion
00:28:54.040 of kinship as just sanguineous the rule of the blood as in you inherit your citizenship from
00:29:00.740 your parents so for example when i was living out in germany in on military bases i had had
00:29:06.020 friends who were born in germany but of course were not german citizens they were british citizens
00:29:10.260 because even though they were born in germany on a british military camp it doesn't matter where
00:29:15.740 you're born your blood determines the ancestry and therefore the country to which you belong
00:29:20.760 and in the new world like i said at the beginning it makes sense if you've got like a libertarian 0.55
00:29:25.800 republic that accepts white europeans to be able to to be able to give their children an investment
00:29:31.600 in the frontier so you expand your country westwards right that makes sense but that time
00:29:36.120 ended around 1898 like around the time when california was founded and like the the frontier
00:29:43.100 reached the pacific right but that that's over that time is long gone that needs to change then
00:29:49.100 right because now you're acting as if your country is an open frontier when actually it's a settled
00:29:53.000 country and you're giving anyone in the world access to it but especially people from places
00:29:58.740 like say the horn of africa which are way more deeply embedded kinship societies than even ours
00:30:04.900 is you know we we don't even realize that like as well india bangladesh wherever you don't realize
00:30:11.500 the depth of their concept of kinship in their society this is why um ilhan omar when she says
00:30:17.620 our president she means the somali president well yeah the somalians arrive in minnesota and 0.85
00:30:23.280 immediately just clan up and start to run scams amongst themselves to defraud the state of billions 0.90
00:30:29.920 of dollars yeah and so and so americans with their concept of birthright system but if anyone comes
00:30:34.880 here they become an american that's not what they think these people do not think of themselves as
00:30:39.420 americans they think of themselves as people who have found a gold mine and are exploiting it for
00:30:43.920 as much as they can send back to somalia right that's what they think um as you said uh i mean
00:30:49.520 britain is technically on the rule of the blood uh because that is true but um we also have uh
00:30:56.480 For people who are, say, on indefinite leave to remain, settled status, or otherwise free from immigration time restrictions, their children also become citizens.
00:31:04.860 So the betrayal is everywhere and all the time.
00:31:09.200 Hopefully Burnham's changes to the reforms to ILR aren't going to get anywhere.
00:31:14.620 I guess we'll see. 0.91
00:31:16.400 So we'll just completely collapse the already teetering welfare state over here.
00:31:20.680 Yeah, I mean, there's a part of me that's leaning into accelerationism at this point.
00:31:24.060 Yeah, just let it collapse. I'm sick of it.
00:31:26.480 just sick of it if they're not going to listen to reason and we're like oh well this will collapse
00:31:30.160 if you don't do these things well if they're not going to listen to reason then let them 1.00
00:31:32.880 make the mistake well he is going to listen to iosis well yeah but anyway uh non-hispanic whites 0.75
00:31:37.920 at this point only account for 56.3 percent of the american population which is mad actually when 0.67
00:31:44.560 you think about it and that's among the legal population and and that's that's only what they
00:31:49.920 have documented exactly uh there are going to be tens of millions of illegals uh of illegals they're
00:31:55.120 They're going to have children that are going to become legitimate American citizens and the Americans will find themselves dispossessed of the homeland on the continent their forefathers conquered.
00:32:04.520 Having been to America recently, the difference in areas between where the populations have settled was absolutely stark.
00:32:12.060 When I was in Tennessee, it was beautiful.
00:32:14.980 It was absolutely gorgeous.
00:32:15.980 I didn't actually take a look in Nashville, but I was near there and all of the rural areas were beautiful, expansive.
00:32:24.300 it felt like what america should be right you go uh you go and you drink beer and you shoot guns
00:32:28.940 blah blah when i had to stay overnight in new york and then get a uber from jfk to lagartia
00:32:35.380 and go through queens which as far as i'm aware is now a very diversified part of america and part
00:32:41.280 of new york you know in my mind it was a it's a little town just outside of new york from sam
00:32:46.600 ramey's spider-man movies and other spider-man comics and media and stuff no that place was a
00:32:52.100 slum you should have saw memphis where i lived um before i got there i didn't realize it was the
00:32:56.680 third homicide capital of the united states i thought it was you know the land of elvis presley
00:33:01.740 and you know american sweet iced tea and i got there and after segregation all of the white
00:33:09.000 americans had moved out to the outskirts to what's called germantown and the center was populated by
00:33:14.620 african-americans and um it was it turned into um a ghetto there was drive-by shooters there was a
00:33:22.080 guy um from my campus who lived off campus who was shot dead in a home invasion and knew people
00:33:27.680 who were robbed outside of walmarts and brought daylight which if you compare to britain it's
00:33:31.880 just completely unthinkable sorry for the sake of time i want to just wrap this up quickly um
00:33:35.940 trump uh is going to continue trying to pursue this through the congress but i think desantis
00:33:40.280 is right um this is not going to happen basically a constitutional amendment or a future court need
00:33:45.380 to overrule it anyway you slice it this decision is a major defeat so sorry bros
00:33:49.700 got a few rumble yeah yeah for the sake of time we'll have to miss a bunch of them sorry um
00:33:56.760 uh oaksville says the diplomat exemption was there for countries like india that don't allow
00:34:02.320 dual citizenship let's consider it uh look on the bright side this ruling settles the question of
00:34:07.140 whether or not the supranational ruling elite control the supreme court well yeah they do
00:34:11.280 the strategy of packing supreme court comes from fdr based on his radical transformation of the
00:34:15.980 executive branch needing friendly judges and justices and speaking of jesse lee peaton happy
00:34:19.920 white history month amazing all right so um now i'm going to take us through if you could get the
00:34:29.900 segment up please samson thank you very much i'm going to take us through the exciting action-packed
00:34:36.800 subject of national statistic collection through the uk and why it is important please do not click
00:34:43.640 off the video because this actually is very important to how the government is run and to
00:34:49.280 the kind of information they're basing their decisions off and gives you just a look into
00:34:53.840 why it is that nothing works and how broken everything is so the ons is the office for
00:35:00.120 national statistics you may be very familiar with them by this point whenever you see new
00:35:05.680 immigration data coming out and those graphs that everybody likes to point towards those are
00:35:10.540 statistics that have come from the office the office for national statistics the ons and this
00:35:17.220 information along with all of the other information that they collect is very important because it is
00:35:22.360 used directly by the government and parliament for decision making in policy so if they see for
00:35:30.300 instance that a particular sector of the labor market is requiring an influx of new of new labor
00:35:37.760 they will open the taps on immigration and try and target skilled immigration or whatever
00:35:42.400 so that they can get people in or if there is too much inflation they'll the bank of england uses
00:35:48.920 their statistics as well to raise and lower interest rates which obviously has a big effect on
00:35:54.220 borrowing and spending and immigration in general has an effect on how people are going to affect
00:36:00.500 policy going forwards so it is very important that these things are done right i think we can
00:36:06.920 all agree that if you're going to use statistics particularly if you are the country that in the
00:36:11.560 victorian era was quite lauded for its ability to collect accurate statistics with limited resources
00:36:17.400 then you want to get this sort of stuff right just for some background the ons functions as
00:36:22.520 the executive office of the national statistician which is also the uk statistics authority's chief
00:36:28.540 executive and principal statistical advisor to the uk national statistics institute and the head
00:36:34.280 office of the government statistical service they produce and publish a wide range of information
00:36:39.300 about the united kingdom that is used for social and economic policy the reliance on some of these
00:36:44.560 data by government both local and national makes the ons material central to debates about the
00:36:49.640 determination of priorities the allocation of resource resources and for decisions on interest
00:36:55.140 rates or borrowing and of course for the sorts of subjects that we cover today the migration
00:37:00.460 statistics are some of the most important ones but certainly not the only important ones that
00:37:05.360 the ons collects which makes some of its methods for collecting this data a little bit worrying
00:37:13.320 particularly the fact that if you look at their page that they have on here the stir the data
00:37:19.160 that they produce is no longer considered national as a national statistic which is basically the
00:37:26.420 gold standard but is instead classified as experimental statistics and has done ever since
00:37:32.820 2019 they are currently trying to increase confidence in admin-based international migration
00:37:38.980 estimates their methodology they say is beginning to stabilize but it is not yet stable and the
00:37:45.580 reason for this is that in 2019 actually no following 2020 and covid they changed their
00:37:52.440 methods for collecting this data now the way that they did it before was very very simple
00:37:58.740 they did a survey at airports and ports in the country and got you to voluntarily fill in a
00:38:07.720 survey saying whether you were coming or going from the country so i've always been baffled by
00:38:13.520 this it's like okay we've got biometric passports and you have to to get into the airport you have
00:38:20.620 to scan the passport have it registered and then the thing opens why doesn't it just add to a
00:38:26.380 database some information about that person so we know i mean we've got the technology to know
00:38:31.360 precisely who comes in and out they explain the reasons for this but obviously when you've got
00:38:37.240 the biometric aspect as well you should be more able to really accurately collect this information
00:38:42.700 uh but the way the way that they did it before it was the international passenger survey and of
00:38:47.280 course there are problems with that because people might not stay as long as that they're saying that
00:38:51.500 they are people may stay far longer than they say that they are because sometimes people just don't
00:38:56.120 know um but um yeah sometimes uh people don't know and also it's also based off of the idea that the
00:39:06.420 migration that they count in their statistics is long-term migration which means that they'll be
00:39:11.380 staying for over a period of 12 months and so that's why a lot of the data keeps getting revised
00:39:17.120 because they get updates to the information every five or six months or so and turns out turns out
00:39:22.700 everyone who we thought were going to go after six months stayed for a year turns out everybody that
00:39:27.580 we thought were going to leave last year didn't leave and then turns out that the people we were
00:39:32.420 keeping track of well they entered on one visa but then while they were here like they came in
00:39:37.540 a student visa but now since they've been here they've switched over to a work visa and we're
00:39:42.140 not really keeping track of them so we've kind of lost track of them or maybe they came in on
00:39:46.600 one passport and they left on another passport so there's a lot of gray area so they they did
00:39:51.440 update the uh the data so that instead of just going to the borders and asking hey can you tell
00:39:57.620 us how long you're sticking around for maybe and with that i think the respondents were about
00:40:02.280 one million uh in total and the actual survey results that they would use would average out
00:40:08.660 about 250 000 right which is a fair enough sample set but obviously it's off of inherently
00:40:14.740 unreliable information in the first place now they take borders and immigration data from the home
00:40:19.160 office benefits and earning data from the department for work and pensions university
00:40:24.520 data from the education sector and asylum and humanitarian data from the home office but the
00:40:30.180 example that they use for how they estimate this where they say these provisional estimates provide
00:40:34.900 an early indication of migration until we've seen whether people really did stay in the uk
00:40:38.680 or leave the uk for a full 12 months initial adjustments are made to the data based on
00:40:43.840 averages from previous years for example the example they give we see 100 people arriving
00:40:49.060 holding a long-term study visa previous years data show that 10 of the those arriving on a
00:40:54.460 long-term study visa do not stay for 12 months or more so we would initially include 90 of these
00:41:00.160 people in the immigration element of our long-term international migration estimates but once we have
00:41:04.680 the full data set from this period we may see that 15 of these people left the country before 12
00:41:09.180 months and we will revise our estimate to 85 this is such cloudy data yes this is like it's so
00:41:17.540 uncertain it's like yeah but we're going to base it on a previous uncertain slate of data which is
00:41:22.700 also based on the previously uncertain so like the the noise and the data must be tremendous
00:41:27.520 and obviously with statistics like this you do have to do a little bit of estimation
00:41:32.880 inherently because people's people's plans change but when you are talking about determining
00:41:38.900 government policy off of this information when the actual status that they provide to their own
00:41:44.680 statistics is not even the gold standard they admit themselves listen this is all a bit shaky
00:41:49.560 we don't really know what's going on that's why you end up with situations like notoriously in
00:41:55.120 2022 and 2023 we got a particular level of migration 606,000 in 2022 which was then revised
00:42:03.760 up every year to 745,000 and then it was actually revised up again to 764,000 and then in June 2023
00:42:13.080 we had 740,000 except no actually we had 906,000 and I think actually this figure that they give
00:42:21.340 in here of 906,000 was again revised up to something like 940,000 almost 1 million people
00:42:30.100 net entering the country and if you are a government minister a civil servant a member
00:42:37.620 of parliament who's trying to figure out what you do with immigration where you need to go with it
00:42:43.120 and you have no idea what the actual figures are and how angry people are going to be when the ONS
00:42:49.840 says whoopsie we missed we missed 200 000 people whoops we'll try not to next time give us another
00:42:57.580 chance um it's basically useless information all you know ultimately is that a lot of people showed
00:43:05.520 up just you know that scene from shawn of the dead where he goes up on the on the stepladder
00:43:10.460 and they go how many zombies are there and he just goes lots that's that's the ons that's the
00:43:15.500 every single year whenever they track how many migrants come in how many migrants showed up this
00:43:21.240 year lots and we can expect while while they reduced the numbers this year to 171 000 that's
00:43:27.800 gonna go up we can expect given how shaky this is although they have been improving it they say
00:43:33.960 for some time we can expect that that will eventually get revised up as well because
00:43:38.580 whoopsie daisy it turns out 200 000 students we thought were gonna leave didn't and they're still
00:43:44.240 here yeah i mean with this data you have to read between the lines i mean the the number they've
00:43:49.120 under predicted is high enough as well when you compare it to commonwealth migration in the 1950s
00:43:55.460 and 60s which people were which had which people had an extreme reaction to and but a lot of their
00:44:01.560 reports as well when they're talking about sort of the connection with migration and universities
00:44:07.180 or migration and unemployment unemployment they often say oh well our findings sort of indicate
00:44:12.960 this we can't really find any evidence and then you read their report and they're sort of admitting
00:44:18.540 they have actually come to these conclusions but they're not willing to to outwardly say it
00:44:22.960 publicly in their findings and again when you're talking about the the labor pool that's accessible
00:44:27.920 to the country whether or not they're under or over overestimating the level of unemployment
00:44:33.420 and economic activity is used as a big push factor by corporate lobbyists to say well we've got all
00:44:41.460 of these jobs that need filling but according to your own government data we're missing this many
00:44:47.100 people we literally don't have the unemployment to be able to fill these job positions so we're
00:44:51.980 going to need you to add an extra like 400 000 people into the country to fill all of these job
00:44:58.220 vacancies it not only affects the government policy but it affects all of these other corporate
00:45:03.240 interests as well so the fact that the whole thing is just kind of like whoops don't know but that's
00:45:09.040 the point isn't it the government literally has no idea how many people are in this country
00:45:12.560 no and they and and at this point frankly there's no way of knowing it's it's too far gone people
00:45:18.620 can see it though when they go out into their towns and cities they see the change people see
00:45:23.140 it with their own eyes and then they're sort of gaslit by this these statistics saying well it's
00:45:27.120 not as high as you perceive it to be but it's white in front of us yeah and the the thing is 0.77
00:45:32.520 as well the government knows the government knows that it's basically a useless body at this point
00:45:38.140 Last year, they had an independent investigation by a former top civil servant, Sir Robert Devereaux, to look into the agency after a series of issues.
00:45:49.280 He concluded that most of the well-publicized problems with core economic statistics are the consequence of the ONS's own performance.
00:45:56.400 In particular, choices made at the top of the ONS over several years, repeated upward revisions to its migration figures led to questions about the population data it produces.
00:46:04.640 the bank of england repeatedly criticized the statistics agency for the reliability of its job
00:46:09.700 market data because of course they need to be able to produce economic forecasts
00:46:13.700 and midway through the review the head of the ons the national statistician sir ian diamond
00:46:20.560 stepped down with immediate effect for health reasons he was having some presumably mental
00:46:27.260 elf problems and it was causing a bit too much stress the fact that his agency had no idea what
00:46:34.240 they were doing or the kind of statistics that they were producing and he said i've just got to
00:46:38.100 take a lie down mate and then scarpered i i honestly don't understand why it's not just
00:46:42.380 digitally connect collected when someone walks through a portal into the country i just don't
00:46:49.440 understand why it's not like right okay passport number x and then from the passport we can just
00:46:54.060 derive all of this information about like are they you know male 27 years old comes from albania
00:46:59.380 whatever it is well what i expect why don't we just collect all that into a giant database and
00:47:03.620 then just extract data out of that database what i expect was the development of all of this
00:47:08.380 biometric stuff that we're talking about is that this will be how they sell digital ids to people
00:47:13.960 sure they will say we have no way of accurately tracking all of this information which is
00:47:18.740 necessary to keep the government running properly and keep the country from collapsing
00:47:22.280 but if we had digital ids we would be able to bundle it all into one quick app and we can keep
00:47:29.120 track of the app and it will allow us to simplify and streamline all of these processes i thought
00:47:33.460 that's what the biometric passports were like i just don't see well you might have yeah but you
00:47:38.740 forgot the government still had to sell digital ids to you that's a great point but the point is
00:47:42.860 like technologically all of this is completely plausible why aren't we doing it i think it's
00:47:46.520 because the well the government knows like the portion of people coming into this country it's
00:47:51.940 extremely high and they're scared of like the public reaction against that data so they have
00:47:57.160 like this they have to under report um in order to maintain that people to well to maintain the
00:48:04.780 peace essentially well i think it's incompetence i i agree that there is a fear but i i do think
00:48:09.700 it's incompetence i yeah i i think it's massive incompetence because well i mean for one that's
00:48:15.640 mentioned in one of the other articles in here that the ons was originally headed in london
00:48:20.780 where it actually did have until 2016 it was headed in London where it had a reasonable base
00:48:27.200 of actual statisticians and experts who were able to properly collect the information or pass the
00:48:32.560 data and then in 2016 for some reason they decided to move to South Wales and with that lost 90% of
00:48:39.700 their staff and apparently the the agencies just never recovered since then right so that that was
00:48:44.800 a massive blow to their ability to do the job that we pay them for and every time you hear about
00:48:52.760 the ONS recently outside of just new catastrophic immigration data has been released it's over the
00:49:00.080 fact that their information they're providing on any particular subject is just wrong and unfit for
00:49:06.100 purpose. ONS delays release of sales data over quality concerns that was in August of last year
00:49:12.000 In June, the ONS said that the inflation rate for April was too high after it was discovered that it had been given incorrect road tax data by the Department for Transport.
00:49:21.760 Again, inflation data is going to be used by the Bank of England to determine interest rates, so it's kind of important.
00:49:28.000 And this is a multi-departmental failure right here because the ONS gets the wrong information, but the Department for Transport sends them the wrong information in the first place.
00:49:37.740 Last month, sir, this was last year, so that would be July last year.
00:49:41.460 sorry just a quick thing there's an official term for this and it's called an omni shambles 0.88
00:49:45.380 oh yes yes everyone in every direction is crap at everything they're doing yeah and that is 0.57
00:49:49.800 basically how the uk government has been running since at least the past 10 15 years last month 0.91
00:49:56.900 sir robert shoat resigned as chair of the uk statistics authority the body responsible for
00:50:01.440 overseeing the ons saying new leadership was critical to restore confidence in the statistic
00:50:06.740 produced by the body so everybody who's in charge of it is either saying i'm too stressed my mental
00:50:11.720 health has gone crazy i need a lie down or just saying none of you know how to do their jobs
00:50:17.160 thick of its style swearing at them for a bit and then leaving okay yep yeah uh here's some more
00:50:23.660 information another one that i found in january of last year in terms of the labor market a big
00:50:28.160 part of the issue uh with the statistics was failing falling response rates for the ons's
00:50:33.120 labor force survey vital survey involves a letter sent to households and followed up with a phone
00:50:37.920 or in-person interview again there has to be more streamlined and easier ways for people to do this
00:50:44.200 especially now that everybody's got the internet in their pocket 24 7 whereas 10 years ago response
00:50:49.320 rates were about 50 they were falling even before the pandemic and then plunged during the various
00:50:53.780 lockdowns since then they've remained low at just 17.3 literally if you just collected the data on
00:51:00.180 Who connected to the airport Wi-Fi's?
00:51:02.920 You would have a more accurate number of the estimation of the number of people 0.99
00:51:06.680 who passed through that goddamn airport. 0.99
00:51:09.000 Yeah, and this is labor statistics. 0.99
00:51:10.940 So Resolution Think Tank estimates the LFS may have lost up to 930,000 workers.
00:51:17.980 Now, that's a substantial amount in any sample size.
00:51:21.620 But when you drop from 50% response rate to 17.3%,
00:51:26.560 you've got to question if these statistics are even usable anymore comparatively i believe that
00:51:31.460 they also uh changed yes the ons itself has downgraded the status of employment data because
00:51:36.600 they actually skipped the year of 2023 because no one was responding to this from national statistic
00:51:42.540 to experimental again so they've no idea they've just no clue another recent article what drew my
00:51:49.820 attention to all of this is just people saying like this should this body even be around anymore
00:51:54.600 if they can't do what we pay them to do uh that guy the national statistician the head of the
00:51:59.580 department sir ian diamond who resigned last year um still has no replacement all right there's still
00:52:05.940 basically no one in charge of the whole thing i'll do it put me in charge chief yeah tag me in i'm
00:52:11.500 ready i'm not gonna i'm not gonna like give anyone any statistics i'm going to install an actual
00:52:16.540 system that will collect statistics though that's what i'll do using my it experience i will install
00:52:22.000 them a bloody database that collects data automatically sorry that's a great that's a
00:52:26.920 great idea but the budget for the ons i think is about uh 200 million pounds a year something
00:52:32.920 no no no 20 million pounds a year i think so it's 200 million yes yes to you you're right 200
00:52:38.280 million pounds a year so i don't know that seems a little bit slim for anything like that you've
00:52:42.820 got to understand carl the british system is a policy scheme to extract taxes from people good
00:52:51.060 point what was i thinking yeah don't you understand you could increase the budget you could find some
00:52:55.680 budget cuts here and there but there's a lot of tax money and a lot of borrowing that needs to go
00:53:00.580 to pakistani families i mean i would literally just fire everyone in the ons and just hire
00:53:06.420 like 50 it technicians programmers and we could just make a system that tracks just every single
00:53:12.400 interaction with a portal coming in or out of the united kingdom that's the problem with bureaucrats
00:53:17.240 they can't think outside of the box
00:53:18.860 whatsoever
00:53:19.660 they're just told what to do
00:53:21.960 I can just tell you exactly who comes in
00:53:25.600 and who comes out
00:53:26.840 from a technological point of view
00:53:29.920 this is eminently feasible
00:53:31.360 eminently feasible
00:53:33.160 but again you're not a bureaucrat
00:53:35.820 that's true I run a private business
00:53:37.440 that wants to know
00:53:38.240 you don't have a block in your school
00:53:41.320 where a brain should be like your average bureaucrat does
00:53:43.900 and the most recent controversy
00:53:45.800 regarding them outside of the fact that no one runs them apparently uh is that uh there was a
00:53:50.980 new fresh error reported on last week over jobs data just a quick thing as well you could literally
00:53:56.560 have it so you had a like five point questionnaire that popped up before the gates even opened so no
00:54:03.620 you just have to answer five questions you know where are you from why are you here how long are
00:54:07.960 you staying blah blah blah so to get into the country 20 seconds of someone's time you have to
00:54:12.860 do that in america yeah yeah exactly yeah it's it's so it's such an easy problem to solve
00:54:19.640 well apparently it's not actually because the ons the ons can't even send the surveys out right
00:54:26.860 because the most recent problem was that the uh ons said that it had accidentally allocated
00:54:32.380 interviewers for the job survey to the wrong survey and failed to spot the mistake for several
00:54:39.860 weeks resulting in it failing to conduct roughly 1200 telephone interviews that would otherwise
00:54:46.240 have informed next month's labor market report you know i'm starting to come around to digital
00:54:50.780 id at this point just digital id under a base that was not the intention of this i know but
00:54:56.400 i can understand when you see levels of incompetency this bad from again you you are right in a private
00:55:03.660 business this kind of incompetency would never be tolerated you would never be able to just go
00:55:09.760 to your boss and say uh yeah listen i ticked the wrong box and we sent all of our interviewers
00:55:14.940 uh to the wrong people so we do have we do have interviews done but just the wrong ones do you
00:55:21.280 want to use them anyway like you get fired for that yeah you get fired for that but the civil
00:55:25.640 service is very entrenched once you're in the civil service you can't get fired whatsoever as
00:55:30.920 well so you have completely incompetent people um carrying out these statistics you can't get
00:55:37.080 removed from their position their current director general james benford who i assume is the closest
00:55:42.660 thing to a head of the uh head of the business that they sorry head of the agency that they have
00:55:47.500 he's director general for economic statistics has said that it would mean a reduced level of quality
00:55:52.840 because we'll be replacing missing data points with estimated values so again everything that
00:56:00.580 the government does has to be informed by data in one form or another it has been for a long time
00:56:05.820 when you're talking about the british state since the victorian era we became obsessed with
00:56:10.220 empirical data and being able to collect this data and and and put it all together into
00:56:16.800 forecasts so that we can predict the future with them uh the economist and other sort of platform
00:56:22.500 publications have all been saying that basically the government's been flying blind for about 10
00:56:27.160 years at this point which explains a lot and the system is completely broken
00:56:33.480 sigil stone says according to the statistical model of covering a wall with random numbers
00:56:38.780 throwing a dildo at the wall and using the number it sticks to there is no migration so import more
00:56:43.320 migrants from a gdp yeah that makes a lot of sense replace it with ai seriously yeah like there's
00:56:48.700 there's no excuse for bad data collection in this day and age anyway um how do i get my 0.97
00:56:56.280 samson did you get the there we go here we go oh here we go i lost my job well actually i didn't
00:57:02.000 lose it. It lost me. I'm over-educated, under-skilled. Maybe it's the other way around. I forget,
00:57:08.480 I forget, but I'm obsolete. I'm not economically valuable. This is the quote from the 1993 movie
00:57:15.780 Falling Down on a guy who felt betrayed by the modern society he belonged to. He followed all
00:57:21.440 the rules and still ended up an unemployed loser. This movie is about frustration, how an average
00:57:27.140 man realizes the deal he was promised was never real no matter how hard he worked the fact he
00:57:32.900 followed everything he was told to he still ended up the bad guy that that he was nothing but
00:57:39.860 economically infallible in the end it's one of my favorite films and it touches on this topic that
00:57:46.520 so many people my age and feel who nowadays are called neat i first came across the word neat
00:57:53.960 through like internet culture i thought it was just a meme of some unemployed loser that wants
00:57:58.620 to spend all this time in this bedroom but actually it's the new sort of political reality
00:58:04.360 of so many people who are aged 16 to 24 you can't find employment whatsoever and i've got we were
00:58:12.880 talking about the office of national statistics before and uh i have got a graph from them i was
00:58:19.100 i was sabotaging your segment in advance they must take with a pinch of salt because i think
00:58:23.760 i think these statistics are much higher than they are and this is unemployment amongst youths
00:58:29.860 um with an unemployment you also have to always remember that they will try and hide the extra
00:58:36.380 economic inactivity within a separate statistic called economic inactivity wherein people who
00:58:43.860 are deemed quote-unquote unfit for work due to health reasons so these will be people who are
00:58:48.720 on pip for instance or other form of benefits are taken out of the workplace and taken out of these
00:58:54.980 statistics i think it's something like after a month you are taken out of the unemployment
00:59:00.280 statistics something something to that level so there is extra on top of this which is hidden
00:59:06.880 and the economic inactivity is ridiculously high in this country so to need stands for people who
00:59:13.780 are not in education employment or training so basically the unemployed or people who don't want
00:59:20.960 watching this right now it's exactly on a wednesday afternoon in your bedroom or your
00:59:25.140 basement the the chances are up are people watching are at work or on the lunch breaks
00:59:29.560 or just sat in front of a computer with the uh headphone yeah yeah i doubt i doubt our audience
00:59:34.280 are neat seriously i'm not i'm just poking for it they're all gonna be slaving away for the 0.68
00:59:40.780 neats at home and the immigrants yes this year alone unemployment reached 16.2 percent and i've
00:59:49.020 got a graph here i find this graph really interesting i've clicked on the last five years
00:59:52.920 because here you have unemployment spikes in 2020 to 14 to 15.2 percent when everyone was under
01:00:04.560 lockdown nobody was really working yeah um you couldn't you couldn't get a job because everything
01:00:09.480 was closed yeah you would you would assume that unemployment would go back to the levels it was
01:00:14.700 pre-2020 but as we're seeing now um sort of after 2022 it's rising and rising to levels which are
01:00:23.140 above 2020 which is completely unbelievable really um and there's one million um young
01:00:32.060 people who are classified as needs and if they formed a city it would be the third
01:00:37.140 the third largest city in the united kingdom it would be larger than glasgow manchester leeds
01:00:42.740 cardiff sounds great get it done boys yeah they could sort of start their their own commune in in
01:00:48.360 a way of unemployed youths who have had enough we can play vijia and eat nuggies all day yeah
01:00:54.420 that's literally but that's like the nhs is like a million man employer
01:00:59.440 and let me sorry you carol i mean exactly and you would assume because of internet culture
01:01:06.320 a neat is somebody who just wants to watch youtube play video games eat drinkers chalky
01:01:11.840 milk no a lot of nuggies wagey wagey works heavy cagey slaves all day precisely but half of needs 0.94
01:01:18.460 are looking for work um with 40 percent of needs having qualifications which are higher which are 0.99
01:01:25.140 a levels and higher um and half of and half of needs don't claim benefits either so these are
01:01:31.220 not people who are on the welfare system they're people who are actively looking for work who live
01:01:36.580 with their mom and dad and but can't find anything people who've gone to university are sort of
01:01:42.100 over educated and very well qualified and they specialize in certain fields which are very useful
01:01:49.460 four which can't find work um and it makes you think why is this why are we reaching unemployment
01:01:56.500 levels um above that of 2020 when everybody was out of work um and even though all these youths
01:02:05.380 are unemployed um there's like 1.6 jobs for every unemployed young person so there's jobs out there
01:02:12.260 but the economy isn't consuming these people it isn't allowing for these people to work um
01:02:18.580 Dare I guess why that is?
01:02:21.320 Yeah, I...
01:02:21.820 We'll get to that.
01:02:22.780 I wonder why it is.
01:02:24.140 I noticed that there would be overlap
01:02:26.620 between a particularly ferocious wave
01:02:28.800 that hit us around 2021, 22, 23.
01:02:32.140 I wonder what that was,
01:02:33.080 what type of wave under what prime minister.
01:02:36.860 Was it the Alex wave?
01:02:38.380 Alex wave, I've not heard of that one.
01:02:39.900 I couldn't possibly know.
01:02:40.660 But what's interesting is a lot of media outlets
01:02:43.980 And a lot of sort of these statistics from the government will say, oh, unemployment amongst youths is the fact, you know, there's no businesses offering jobs because the economy sucks right now.
01:02:59.280 And it's because of youth mental health because consumers, you know, they're just not willing to work. 0.91
01:03:04.320 They're all mentally ill and terminally online.
01:03:06.380 They're too busy eating their avocado toast. 0.99
01:03:08.100 exactly so so they come up with all these conclusions without stating the obvious which
01:03:13.860 which we'll get to and there's this report that just got released um recently um young people in
01:03:21.340 work yeah by by the labor government there's a graph here if i if i can find it it's a bit it's
01:03:26.180 quite a long report um is this no one second i think it was chapter three all right the youth
01:03:33.780 economy it can be difficult to uh to find the information in these enormous documents yeah
01:03:40.800 sometimes we'll get that it's definitely down here here a portion of neat of neat young people
01:03:46.360 who have never had a job whatsoever who've lived their whole lives without building up their
01:03:52.140 experience of having a part-time job as a teenager or working at university and i don't believe it's
01:03:58.080 actually down to sumers um i believe it's because just like um the main character in falling down
01:04:05.480 they are unable to integrate into a system which doesn't offer them any opportunities anymore the
01:04:11.480 system has created their lives to be this way um for example employers are less likely to take a
01:04:17.940 chance on someone young and inexperienced and resulting in entry-level opportunities narrowing
01:04:23.540 um older people are more likely to find work at higher rates than young people because they have
01:04:29.580 more experience and that's what employers are looking for even for um sort of entry-level
01:04:35.820 jobs like factories bars um which should be the first job of youth when they're teenagers
01:04:42.200 serving our coffee in pret well it should be young people yeah well i also remember the complaints
01:04:47.600 from when i was younger i know that i'm getting pretty old now i'm not quite as ancient as creaking
01:04:52.720 as carl is but you know i'm i'm i'm getting on in years now gonna be 30 soon what's your first job
01:04:59.160 uh my my first job oh god uh working in a call center uh but was it easy to get um
01:05:06.860 took one or two attempts i remember i tried to apply for uh the local pound land once but i
01:05:14.040 think i failed the interview because i went in a full suit and tie and i don't think that's the
01:05:19.160 kind of um vibe they were going for with pound land somehow um yeah no the the complaint was
01:05:26.180 and i imagine it's much the same now i want to get a job can't get any jobs unless i have work
01:05:31.660 experience can't get work experience unless i've already had a job exactly but how many jobs did
01:05:38.340 you have to apply for before you got that court center job uh oh no quite a few less than 10
01:05:45.140 quite a few uh less than 20 maybe less less than 20 i'd i'd been i'd been applying for jobs for
01:05:52.380 like a couple of years on and off uh all during college it was after i got out of college that i
01:05:57.300 got my first job because um so many people i know who've graduated university or trying to find work
01:06:04.180 they've had to apply for over 300 jobs before they can even find something part-time they're
01:06:09.340 just spamming sort of application after application on indeed they they're like qualifications are
01:06:15.240 great their cv is great you know they're highly continent um they're highly sort of um great
01:06:20.540 people to to um to employ um but they have to apply for 300 jobs every single day and this is
01:06:27.360 why you sort of get um needs people have sort of given up they've given up and like trying to find
01:06:32.380 work um they're exhausted this is what leads to mental health with needs just to be clear right
01:06:38.060 so in the early 2000s late 90s early 2000s early 2000s when i left university um i would probably
01:06:43.900 have to apply for maybe two or three jobs before i got an interview for something that looked half
01:06:49.100 decent and it didn't take very long to get a job no no just to be clear like i i can't even imagine
01:06:54.940 applying for 300 jobs to get a job and exactly and this is why those um youths that are employed
01:07:03.500 like people have graduated university i've got a statistic here that graduate hiring
01:07:07.420 has fallen eight eight percent year on year and with graduates competing for walls that would
01:07:12.300 have previously gone to non-grads um compressing opportunity further down the ladder and most of
01:07:17.900 these grads they have to go into like retail into like bars into part-time work that should have
01:07:23.180 been for like university students yeah but and he gets stuck in it because they think well if i leave
01:07:28.460 this job that's it i'm gonna be i'm gonna have to be looking for months and months for a new one
01:07:33.660 and so you have you have these youths who are stuck in a job that's not well paying that that
01:07:38.620 doesn't cover their rent so they have to live with their parents because they have no other
01:07:42.380 opportunities which they can grasp after um going to university it doesn't matter what university
01:07:48.620 you go to it doesn't matter if it's cambridge it doesn't matter if it's oxford aberdeen like
01:07:52.460 whatever um everybody's on the same boat i know people who've graduated cambridge and have had to
01:07:57.580 go back to university to do a masters because no one would hire them the local libraries wouldn't
01:08:02.140 hire them um local shops wouldn't hire them by itself is so oversaturated now you need to go
01:08:08.300 back for the masters to stand out mcdonald's is like what's your phd in this person's more
01:08:13.340 academically inclined so they're like you know i'm sick of being unemployed i'd rather just do
01:08:17.980 my research again at university but that is the situation um and and it is really bad i mean
01:08:25.180 teenage student employment has dropped from 35 in 2006 to 19 now uh there isn't um because because
01:08:33.660 employers are more likely to hire people with experience rather than giving a teenager their
01:08:38.700 first job or cheap foreigners who are going to stick around forever yeah instead of a teenager
01:08:43.420 who's going to get to 18 and go i'm going to university we should have teenage deliveroo
01:08:47.980 drivers right yeah that's what it should be that's what we had with yeah delivery guys when i was 16
01:08:53.420 applying and being getting interviews for mcdonald's and getting rejected for them
01:08:57.980 i i think like i probably wasn't very good in the interview i was just an awkward 16 year old
01:09:03.520 but i noticed that one the jobs went to all the girls and uh two the jobs were going to people
01:09:10.540 who weren't at college planning on going on into further education afterwards because that was
01:09:15.620 something that came up a few times in the interviews oh what are you thinking of you'll
01:09:18.820 do in five years and i'm like well i'll probably go to university or something it's like no you're
01:09:23.020 not getting the job so i imagine that a lot of it was like well we want people see we at mcdonald's
01:09:28.200 we value the family we value loyal employees who are going to stick around uh not throw themselves
01:09:35.500 off of a bridge and just be wage slaves for us for the rest of their lives that's what they want
01:09:40.200 they want a society essentially full of slaves and over the past 20 years the number of mid and
01:09:44.980 lower skilled jobs in the economy has fallen around 1.6 million while higher skilled jobs
01:09:50.800 have grown um around 6.3 million but people are still aren't getting those walls and i think
01:09:56.080 one factor to it as well is the fact that when you go to i mean unemployment is extremely high
01:10:01.780 in the midlands and the north and in areas where there's just just nothing and i think it's because
01:10:07.140 um there's there's there's no independent businesses opening up it's just corporations
01:10:12.100 or fape shops or money money laundering fronts and it's sort of the death of these towns and
01:10:16.640 communities it's their like economic ghost towns essentially and this is why you get floods of young
01:10:22.220 people having to go to the cities because that's that that's the only form of how they can get work
01:10:29.260 and although all these sort of publishers will never admit this and they haven't admitted this
01:10:37.040 for years we know having witnessed it in our towns exactly what's causing this we know it's
01:10:42.720 mass migration um you go into a weatherspoons or a pub or a cafe or a shop you're you're getting
01:10:50.300 like served by the boris wave if it helps weatherspoons is one of those places where
01:10:54.120 actually i tend not to be served by the boris wave i got served by the boris wave today which
01:10:58.360 is why oh i'm sorry to hear it yeah that's why it's in my head generally whenever i go to a
01:11:02.000 weatherspoons generally it's an english person well that's the funny thing i know what you're
01:11:06.640 talking about because it's the weatherspoons that i went to recently where all of a sudden it's
01:11:10.520 like oh a boris waver at weatherspoons what is going on here and it was alarm boris waver at
01:11:16.120 weatherspoons what's going on it was the first time they messed up our orders as well
01:11:21.440 of course it was yep every single time the thing is this this is just so self-evidently bad for
01:11:27.500 young people as well because like the the the whole problem i mean this is the reason the left
01:11:32.020 was traditionally against immigration right they understood that actually if you turn the labor
01:11:35.960 market into a buyer's market rather than a seller's market, then that really hurts the average working
01:11:40.860 person. Because what you want is for the corporations to say, okay, well, you know, we've got a limited
01:11:46.180 pool of people that we're drawing from, we're all trying to draw, therefore we have to make our jobs
01:11:49.940 competitive, our wages competitive, we have to make the working environment worth living in, and this
01:11:54.100 will bring people to our corporation rather than others, and that's good for the average working
01:11:57.360 person. But of course, if you flood the zone with millions of foreigners who literally come from the 1.00
01:12:04.120 worst conditions on earth the corporation's like oh thank god this is exactly what we're looking 1.00
01:12:08.400 for it's it's it's infecting like smaller businesses as well i a few months ago i covered
01:12:13.480 um an article talking about um seasonal workers in like the channel islands and guernsey picking
01:12:20.800 fruit over the summer they were they were importing kenyans in really to do that job
01:12:26.060 the channel islands now have a small kenyan community who are of course i would assume
01:12:30.920 backed by human rights lawyers and ngos trying to push for having a greater right to stay
01:12:37.000 in the channel islands after their seasonal seasonal work provisions uh are done uh the 0.74
01:12:42.760 seasonal workers you say summer employment i can get rid of them when i want you say
01:12:48.360 are you getting replaced by ranjeet tomorrow oh god i i knew it but but but like the question is
01:12:54.640 like why is there no youth work program to go to the channel islands for young british kids to do
01:13:00.100 that you get to you get to get some work experience you get to spend your time on the
01:13:05.100 channel islands for the summer some money yeah you get to earn some money and these people have
01:13:09.900 their farming needs tended for yeah i mean i mean exactly and why is there not initiatives
01:13:14.640 um by the government to encourage businesses to hire unemployed people um you shouldn't even need
01:13:21.920 it you should be like okay where else are you gonna hire from you know third world and that's
01:13:26.360 exactly exactly what this report ties into and i know this report's been brought up in previous
01:13:31.540 segments it is important ties in perfectly with what we're discussing because it's one of the
01:13:36.600 really only reports that's come out recently that hits the nail on the head of why there's
01:13:41.180 youth unemployment and that's because 27 young non-eu migrants meaning third world
01:13:46.160 migrants are hired for every young brit since 2020 and you can see it like you said you can
01:13:53.020 see it just walking through the streets and going into a shop you can tell yeah look at look at that
01:13:57.420 but 290 000 since january 2020 which is 355 increase compared to in five six years 11 000
01:14:08.220 uk nationals which makes up 0.3 that is insane you see this as well because the thing that
01:14:15.180 we were talking about kinship before when migrants come over and they form their own 0.84
01:14:18.860 own communities they only ever hire their own so once they get into let's say a court um a 0.96
01:14:23.880 corporation it could be costa and they get into a level of management they will only hire their 0.60
01:14:29.640 own they'll make sure not to hire anyone who who is english unless they're a pretty woman because 0.65
01:14:35.620 that's well that's the way sort of these communities um wall um but but it is it's
01:14:42.440 extremely bad um it's also this this report also like points out that 50 55.9 percent of those born
01:14:49.620 in uk were in employment compared with 70 percent of those born in eu and 58 among those born in
01:14:56.080 non-eu countries and in retail and hospitality sectors non-eu workers such as meaning third
01:15:02.780 world migrants of all ages rose by almost half a million between 2020 to 2025 um while uk nationals
01:15:11.440 employed in the same sectors fell by over a quarter of a million so exactly what I'm saying
01:15:16.500 as soon as they get a job it's only their own which will which will get higher than half a
01:15:21.900 perfect antidote from near where I live in Chester and next to the Riverdale there used to be all
01:15:27.680 these nice ice cream shops you remember remember those with little stalls that used to sell ice 1.00
01:15:32.000 cream I go back down there and it's just it's all it's all Indians working there now they've 1.00
01:15:37.700 monopolized on all these like ice cream stores that used to be won by english people at my house 1.00
01:15:43.080 down my road the other week we heard the ice cream van coming along and i was like oh my god i see
01:15:48.100 my daughter i'm like let's go and get some ice cream we go outside to the ice cream van and it's
01:15:54.020 indians in the ice cream van i was like even the ice cream man now luckily the ice cream fans
01:16:00.280 still run by stealthers one and one of ours eastern european well just like okay i mean you
01:16:06.800 fair play i find this yeah wow you're bragging at this point i know i know this quote here is
01:16:13.700 actually from the report i just showed you before where in that report they actually um admit that
01:16:19.140 we must not duck the role of immigration they admit that a factor to this neat crisis is the
01:16:24.920 role of immigration and the fact that employers will make sure to hire um migrants because they
01:16:31.360 they will work um longer hours um you don't have you can pay them below minimum wage behind the
01:16:37.160 books um and also you don't have to pay national insurance for them it's it's for businesses it's 1.00
01:16:42.320 more beneficial to employ foreigners than it is natives they're willing to put up with worse 1.00
01:16:46.920 working conditions as well stop getting ideas carl oh hey really fortnight twitch doesn't need 1.00
01:16:53.300 a new streamer okay i wonder i wonder if you can trace this with like the increase in uh twitch
01:16:58.840 streaming and fortnite usage if this is some kind of stonks program for them this is really
01:17:05.100 interesting here this is from um the government site as well and it's um all the these businesses
01:17:12.420 that have granted visas to foreign nationals and and it's it's really long there's skilled
01:17:17.500 there's specifics i'm trying to find in here to show you that i won't be able to show you because
01:17:21.540 it just goes on and on and on but a lot of these places employing migrants are councils why on earth
01:17:28.180 do do councils need to employ people who are not from here whatsoever it's the purpose of a council
01:17:34.020 to represent um the area in which they have been elected to represent why would they need to employ
01:17:39.780 fed what why does sb cricket club need to do it yeah i mean ashtead cricket what are we doing i
01:17:46.260 mean some of these you can understand like asia money transfer you know who's running that or
01:17:50.660 asia house you know who's running that business asian halal well it's it's not just that's like
01:17:55.180 things aberdeen council is on here um all the all the councils across the country on on here it's
01:18:00.660 it's extremely strange it's like you have an unemployment crisis of native young people
01:18:05.620 but you're not employing them and instead you're choosing to take a further step and then employ
01:18:12.560 people who are not from here which is complicated and you have to file loads of sort of documents 0.99
01:18:16.900 and files and again it's probably because once once an immigrant that's born here gets into a 0.99
01:18:24.000 position they will only prioritize their own yeah and they will go at that further length
01:18:28.680 to prioritize i mean i i've got a perfect restaurant limited no can't get someone to
01:18:33.360 work in a lounge restaurant what that is atlantis as well yeah but this must be one of those
01:18:38.260 atlanteans that are importing all of the ones that like restaurants and food services that's
01:18:43.660 getting our cousin from the motherland a job to come over here so he can work in our restaurant
01:18:49.440 yeah carl you're not going to be happy when you get rajeesh in to replace me tomorrow and all of
01:18:53.700 a sudden every one of your staff members he's going to be like i've got this great cousin carl 0.98
01:18:57.500 he'll do a good job for half price i mean yeah so see this is the i'm sat next to a filthy pig 0.95
01:19:03.620 capitalist so what does the government have to say about this problem i mean any sort of government 0.83
01:19:10.980 would prioritize its own to get into employment we often we often hear this myth as well that
01:19:15.940 our native people don't want to work we have to hire foreigners into the nhs and to be lorry
01:19:20.500 drivers because native people won't do it but if you pay native people enough and you give them 1.00
01:19:24.420 better working conditions and better hours they will do it um but when you have a whole supply of 1.00
01:19:31.620 immigrants who are willing to work worse conditions and then it's like no wonder this 1.00
01:19:38.820 myth comes about well yeah native people are much less willing to split rent 12 ways in a small 0.97
01:19:45.100 dirty room to make ends meet they kind of want you know a good quality of life we are running a 1.00
01:19:51.100 bit short yes so this here is the government defends national insurance exemption in uk india 0.98
01:19:56.600 trade deal to encourage more more indians come over and this is wait so does that mean that they
01:20:01.100 don't have to pay national insurance yeah so like um one part of the government wants me to hire
01:20:06.760 indians harry yeah i'm sorry and who are you to question all the incentives and andy burnham
01:20:14.600 they're such personable likable just think how much money i could save so one part of the deal
01:20:20.360 extends an exemption of national insurance contributions from one to three years meaning
01:20:25.480 people in short-term visas will only make social security payments in their home country right
01:20:30.520 when working abroad and the opposition to this claims that that would mean indian workers are
01:20:35.240 cheaper to employ than British workers. I mean, it's literally a privilege for a foreign worker 1.00
01:20:38.960 if you're a business. Like, why would I want to hire a native if it's literally like 17% 1.00
01:20:43.400 cheaper or whatever the NIA is? Yeah. I mean, this was a big problem in America. I remember reading
01:20:47.140 statistics about this, that 10% increase of foreign workers led to wages being lowered
01:20:52.500 by 3% for low-skilled American native workers. It's this, you know, bringing people over 0.99
01:20:58.760 that has a negative effect, not just on the unemployed, but also those who are underskilled
01:21:05.000 and have to compete for um low paying positions i mean someone told me before that they know a
01:21:11.140 person who did a phd at university and is now a bin man because no one will hire him in this
01:21:17.020 specialty and he's like over just like the falling down quote he's over educate overly educated and
01:21:23.080 the only thing he can do in society is be a bin man because of this system and when you compare
01:21:28.820 it to the older generation who they get out of university they go into great jobs where 0.82
01:21:33.320 they like travel the world if it helps the jobs weren't necessarily great yeah but they were there
01:21:38.380 but they were there and you could choose um you could um go to the local um community board and
01:21:44.480 put your name down on the job you wanted you didn't have to file uh 300 300 applications
01:21:49.700 i mean i i just went to the job center and you'd find like let's show you pull out three or four
01:21:54.140 particularly boomers who have who have this life that was promised to us and you um as as youngsters
01:21:59.820 of they have the mortgage, they have the family, they have the well-paying job to fund that family
01:22:04.640 and the consequence of unemployment means that these youths aren't able to save, they're not
01:22:10.760 able to move to the next stage of life, they are literally sort of chained to their parents' house
01:22:15.640 not because of their own fault but because a society that promised them everything
01:22:19.540 let them down and gave that all away to people who are not from here
01:22:24.220 because businesses want to prioritise their own interests.
01:22:31.580 And councils as well.
01:22:34.180 All right, so I will go through a couple of these rumble rants.
01:22:38.740 Bay State Public Sector is a safety net that employs specifically only people
01:22:42.180 who lack competency and can't make money on their own.
01:22:45.260 The bottom 40% of your school classroom gets to tediously run your life.
01:22:50.480 And this is so true with local government as well.
01:22:53.300 i didn't mention it during the segment but i told you my perfect example of this um yesterday when
01:22:58.260 we were talking and uh i said you know one of my friends went to went to the local council
01:23:03.000 and uh did an interview with the local council and the first question the local counselor he
01:23:07.620 was speaking to asked him this was for a youtube video he said oh sorry i just want to make sure
01:23:11.720 before we begin you're not right wing are you and then told him that a load of the developments in
01:23:16.460 the local area are for buildings that they want to use to encourage diversity and support diversity
01:23:22.820 in the local area which i can only assume means housing for migrants and then i went on earlier 0.52
01:23:29.280 this year about the big raid that took place in crew where i'm from about the cult the islamic
01:23:35.040 heretical cult that had set up there well fun thing an investigative report that had been done
01:23:40.420 by an american nobody in the local area the local newspaper had thought to look into this
01:23:44.780 found out that one of the local members of the council who was working for the plannings
01:23:48.700 department uh was a member of this cult oh and had infiltrated the council specifically so he
01:23:54.560 could tip the cult off if there was ever an inspection is this the cult you covered the
01:23:58.080 other day is it right yeah because they uh because they lived in a listed building so they needed to
01:24:02.600 go and make sure the place was being well tended to so he just tipped them off amazing and the
01:24:06.240 local council is just sort of like yeah i see no problem with this yeah uh occam's was an
01:24:12.080 interesting one so i'll read this former employer rhymes with goober where i was a safety inspector
01:24:16.820 the amount of reports misallocated to Birmingham
01:24:18.860 Alabama that instead belong to Birmingham
01:24:20.780 UK, Birmingham is the most 0.98
01:24:22.780 unsafe UK city, I can believe it
01:24:24.900 sigil stone, wajee wajee 1.00
01:24:26.740 get in cagey, all day long you
01:24:28.840 sweat and ragey, neat is comfy
01:24:30.540 neat is cool, neat is free from work
01:24:32.900 and school, wajee trapped and wajee
01:24:35.020 died, neat eats tendies, sauce
01:24:36.900 and fries, what a beautiful poem
01:24:38.560 it is truly, uh 1.00
01:24:40.280 ok chik dor, harry don't trust the Indian street 1.00
01:24:42.780 food, even the ice cream 1.00
01:24:44.320 and scotsy guy, you can't replace
01:24:46.780 harry with an indian there are no ginger indians but i am the most aryan lotus eater and i have
01:24:52.260 been informed reliably that indians are the true aryans so it only makes sense i think dan might
01:24:57.000 be the most aryan i doubt it oh he did the dna test he's the most irish that's true um the land
01:25:03.780 of hyperboid all right should we go through some of the written comments because it looks like we've 0.75
01:25:07.080 not got any video comments for today justin says washington might beg to be let back into the
01:25:11.440 empire after seeing what the states have become in the intervening years but just wait until he
01:25:14.720 what's happened to the empire well yeah yeah i mean honestly like he would be like what is going
01:25:20.260 on and i'd be like well this is your fault actually washington's like i don't mind the
01:25:25.200 look of china right now though uh and says john mccain ran for president and he was not born in
01:25:30.280 the u.s his dad was in the navy and deployed overseas so actually you do not have to be born
01:25:33.800 in u.s soil you just have to be born from an american city all right i didn't realize michael 0.83
01:25:39.220 says what's truly retarded is three english podcasters understand the 14th better than five 0.84
01:25:43.680 scotus judges well the thing is michael right and the trick to it is is actually just analyze the 0.87
01:25:49.920 context in which it was written and read the words that are written there and suddenly it
01:25:55.200 actually becomes very self-explanatory it's not that your five scotus judges technically six i
01:25:59.620 think uh don't understand it's that they don't want to understand they want to make sure that
01:26:05.880 eventually the united states becomes minority white uh european because they want to take your
01:26:12.400 country away from you it's literally that simple zesty says any civilization that cannot justify
01:26:17.500 its own existence doesn't deserve to exist at all the thing is why should anyone have to justify
01:26:21.280 their own existence it's our civilization it's not a proposition we don't have to justify it
01:26:25.680 we don't have to explain to anyone and we don't have to explain why we're not giving it up who's
01:26:29.660 the kind of like objective god-like arbiter that we're explaining ourselves to exactly exactly and
01:26:35.240 people only sort of become interested in ideas of kinship and ethnicity when they're introduced to
01:26:41.560 the alien um because then it gets it only matters who they are yeah uh jimbo says good to see the 0.98
01:26:48.580 supreme court women literally dressing in black robes like the sith well i think they all have
01:26:52.380 to dress in black robes um josh says uh the issue of wearing american for american parents born
01:26:58.200 and eligible eligibility to be president has never been fully contested george romney
01:27:03.420 romney's father was born in a mormon community in america in mexico uh parents are american
01:27:08.320 citizens and john mccain was born in panama right okay interesting interesting um angel brain says
01:27:13.660 it's important to realize that indigenous people have a right to land but not to a nation
01:27:16.940 oh all right okay good to know um omar says you know you you just know that even if we could force 1.00
01:27:24.080 the will of the government into implementing data collection they'd end up budgeting billions of
01:27:27.960 pounds and years of man hours for an app that could have been vibe coded inside of an hour for
01:27:32.440 a fiver even so i don't buy the government doesn't have the means of tracking the decline
01:27:37.060 at the very least legacy systems probably have some check boxes somewhere because we weren't
01:27:41.960 always government by kakistocratic traitors i've never heard that word before i need to look that 0.88
01:27:47.920 up it means shitocracy oh fat yeah that makes sense see this is the beauty of carl's plan 0.96
01:27:53.860 though which is that all he needs is 20 good men yeah 20 20 autists 20 good autists and you'll fix 0.97
01:28:00.760 the system overnight and ironically at least we can fix the data collection you just make it
01:28:05.120 actually collect data i mean i can't believe they don't collect the data i assume they collected 0.83
01:28:10.060 data on everything well what's gchq fucking doing it's not tracking what watching us right now 0.67
01:28:16.380 presumably hi there gch uh i've on let's see um but like i assume they were tracking all of this 0.92
01:28:23.340 all the time anyway it's just jimbo says the ons makes me yearn for the ministry of truth
01:28:28.560 at least they knew what the actual truth was before they gaslit you yeah exactly so true our
01:28:33.740 ministry of truth doesn't even know what's actually happening so they don't know if they're
01:28:37.060 even gaslighting us just it's so insufferable um there was a poll done in the chat are you
01:28:46.820 unemployed uh 57 say no i'm a wage slave or self-employed uh 31 said yes i'm a neat and
01:28:53.880 10 said other student retirees are the statistics we actually need to know yeah yeah and get all
01:28:58.920 the statistics we collected that really quickly what we need to know and to be fair to see this
01:29:04.360 audience it's neats or not you know we've got a sample size of 38 so it seems pretty reliable to
01:29:10.400 me be reliable for the office of statistics and says government statistics on unemployment follow
01:29:18.000 exactly what harry's segment was about the government is not counting it correctly they
01:29:21.840 don't count unemployment in the way they did in the 1930s they did the numbers would be in the
01:29:26.400 20 range yeah i mean it'd be staggering again it's it it would be high they hide a lot of this stuff
01:29:31.940 i would i would go out on a limb and say it would probably be above uh 20 it would probably be like
01:29:37.780 if you were to take national unemployment and include economic inactivity in that as well
01:29:43.160 you'd probably be looking at like great depression levels of unemployment in this country yeah i
01:29:48.520 think so i think that's the reality we're heading towards lots of employers use ai just to bin cvs
01:29:54.340 they come in that's one reason applications often go nowhere others will list jobs on hidden pages
01:29:58.400 on the website when no one applies these are the excuse to hire cheap workers from abroad
01:30:02.960 there's also ghost jobs yeah jobs jobs that are put up that don't actually go anywhere because
01:30:09.920 no job is actually there they're just doing it so they can show to some corporate management
01:30:14.000 look we're hiring and then people waste their time applying for it yeah and that's about all
01:30:20.420 we've got time for i'd say that was a um sunny and uh fun podcast there but we hope that it's been
01:30:26.720 it's always bad news bros i'm sorry it's just the world's just getting worse you just have to come
01:30:31.300 to we used to do white pill wednesdays but none of you clicked on it none of you watched it so
01:30:36.420 this is your fault but uh at the very least i hope that you found it uh interesting and informative
01:30:41.760 i thank you very much for watching and i thank you again liz for coming on it's always a pleasure
01:30:46.720 always a pleasure too
01:30:47.700 and we'll see you again tomorrow
01:30:49.560 until then
01:30:50.240 take care