The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters - September 04, 2024


The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #993


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 35 minutes

Words per Minute

211.39915

Word Count

20,213

Sentence Count

8

Misogynist Sentences

64

Hate Speech Sentences

86


Summary

In this episode of the lotus caesars, Professor Ed Darton joins Dr. Dan to discuss his unpopular opinion, why boomers are now friends, why the german zoomers are incredibly based, and why Dr. Ed thinks physiognomy is a legitimate science.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 hello and welcome to the podcast of the lotus caesars for today wednesday the 4th of september
00:00:12.980 2024 i'm your host connor joined by dan hello and professor ed darton hello well thank you very
00:00:18.160 much for joining us ed appreciate it today we're going to be discussing uh dan's unpopular opinion
00:00:22.160 why boomers are now friends how the german zoomers are incredibly based and how ed thinks
00:00:28.020 physiognomy is a legitimate science that's going to be a very fun one um final reminder as samson has
00:00:34.180 just put up on screen at the moment the islander merch for the first issue is going to be not sold
00:00:41.660 anymore when's the date that you can get it by samson end of this week so you've still got to the
00:00:48.200 end of the week got about three four days to go and pick up these wonderful t-shirts that rory has
00:00:52.600 designed himself and then well you have to see what comes in stock with issue two won't you but
00:00:57.360 they are limited edition and you can go and enjoy them if you are so inclined to wear graphic tees but
00:01:02.800 without further ado dan why don't you take it away with today yes well i i wanted to tell everybody
00:01:06.800 that the boomers they are they are friends now i i want to sort of clearly you know get that message
00:01:13.180 across because there has been a little bit of there was a little bit of boomer bashing not unwarranted in
00:01:18.480 some places yeah over the zero seats campaign but but i wanted to make that point via a sort of a bit
00:01:24.260 of a weird weird swerve uh rod liddle does this a lot in his articles he started talking about one
00:01:29.340 thing and then he sort of swerved into the thing that he actually wants to talk about and it's a
00:01:32.580 bit irritating but i've always wanted to do it so i'm going to do it in this one and i'm going to
00:01:37.120 start off by pointing out uh the unpopular opinions um hopefully most of you know what it is
00:01:43.060 um but lots of you won't but that is that was sort of the premiere tuesday night sort of pub hangout
00:01:50.320 for people in our sort of sphere you say premiere because you were on it yes yes a fair bit um i was
00:01:56.460 on the last one as well and then that's the thing is the last one um so so it stopped and um you know
00:02:01.580 dr parvin i mean he's not a professor like you but he but he but he was he was he's a proper academic
00:02:06.280 he was uh you know a shakespearean scholar a highly regarded one you know quite you know clever
00:02:13.320 and um you know he turned his mind to sort of doing political theory type stuff and it ended up
00:02:18.440 as a sort of you know chat amongst friends on on the right i think it was carl who who sort of first
00:02:23.540 gave it a bit of a big boost um and he's sort of been a sort of incubator for for right-wing
00:02:30.960 personalities who have emerged and it it set the tone on quite a number of things so i just think
00:02:38.220 it's it's worth noting that it's ended end of an era very sad but it was the the essential sort of
00:02:43.740 tuesday night viewing um there have been rumors that um academic agent um is is going to join the
00:02:50.940 tony blair institute i don't know i think they might just be rumors yes well given tony blair's
00:02:56.800 recent interview where he said he doesn't want to bring over any more families from asia
00:03:00.860 and uh africa i think the good doctor parvini might be excluded from tony blair's favor at this
00:03:06.160 point well they have got a job posting up for what is it ahead ahead of emergent phenomena and
00:03:10.980 populist support and something like that so so that that could be him also the other reason it's
00:03:16.160 notable and and this hasn't been officially confirmed but he's got this very sort of erudite
00:03:21.140 witty sort of co-host who joins him on this and a lot of people have been saying that it's douglas
00:03:26.460 murray his his uh anon account what john d yes i i don't know if that is true but i mean there are
00:03:33.460 clues like several times an episode he will just blurt out i love the nation of israel so i mean
00:03:38.300 there are there are things that you can pick up but didn't we meet john d no we never met him
00:03:42.800 the uh no no who are you thinking of i'm sure i met somebody that unless i've dreamt he's never
00:03:49.720 been seen it's like being in a nursing home isn't it people i well look you'll get there
00:03:54.280 i'm sure i met someone that said i'm john d i'm i'm him is it no oh well oh no more goth i met
00:04:02.580 that's it no yeah sorry no no very different very different all right okay so but but the reason i
00:04:08.280 mention this is because he's quite good at sort of coining phrases that have cut through on the
00:04:13.420 right and then end up being sort of picked up and he was the originator of many terms on the online
00:04:17.440 right so for example instead of before uh we used to have to say things like post-war liberal
00:04:23.240 consensus paradigm which i mean it doesn't trip off the tongue he sort of nailed that down to boomer
00:04:28.780 truth um which which which you know you can you can use that you can you can sort of use it in a
00:04:34.720 sentence you can you you know what sort of goes along with it um and it has influenced all sorts of
00:04:40.620 um writers such as this on european conservative um which um you know they play boomer politics
00:04:47.420 get zero seats and i'll just read you a a segment from it that cuts through this quite well
00:04:52.940 let's appropriate the pejorative label for the paradigm boomer truth under boomer truth a country
00:04:58.860 a culture of people cannot act on their own particular interests only on behalf of those
00:05:04.300 not yet basking in the light of liberal imperialism this mindset as a paralyzing agent isn't confined to
00:05:10.600 boomers alone but it passes permeable barriers between generations of diminishing returns
00:05:15.620 the european union has said as much in their attempt to establish a shared european history
00:05:20.300 they insisted on the importance of acknowledging crimes committed by nazis fascists communist totalitarian
00:05:28.040 regimes as well as under colonialism so basically they're wrapping everything from the third right
00:05:34.660 to britain into one sort of package under this so i mean who wrote this um let's have a look
00:05:41.620 that was you yeah in my defense i didn't choose the title but yes he also originated the term zero
00:05:49.140 seats which set the tone for the last election and are very successful i'm coming to that quite but
00:05:53.920 yeah so so you can easily but give it give us the reason why you you've picked it because you picked
00:05:58.120 up a whole bunch of his terms there and you've oh because the conservatives are going to lose their
00:06:04.660 voting bloc from the boomers that they essentially bought off by saying we're going to quadruple lock
00:06:10.900 your pension and send all those woke snowflakes off to die for ukraine but all the subsequent generations
00:06:16.060 upon whose conscience the second world war doesn't rest like a dead hand they don't buy into the post-war
00:06:22.240 narrative which is that every single country has to act to prove their anti-racist bona fides to ensure
00:06:27.480 they don't become adolf hitler and so for them they're like no i'd rather act in my own interest
00:06:33.120 actually if i'm going to be right wing so if the conservatives keep leaning on boomer truth
00:06:37.180 they're going to keep losing elections exactly what do you want to come in on that or no okay
00:06:42.700 the the the uh he came up with other good terms such as um the gay uh global american empire which
00:06:49.360 which is quite fun using because people will always assume that you're talking about something else and
00:06:52.920 get upset and then you can correct them and say no it's actually this very clever term just like
00:06:57.100 global homo yes global homogeneity yes but perhaps his crowning achievement
00:07:01.700 was uh can we play this
00:07:04.480 this is the one that really had cut through and was being talked about
00:07:14.780 uh by everyone uh mainstream media
00:07:18.120 zero seats all right we can cut the sound on that but you know that that was sort of the big cut
00:07:29.100 through for him so the the only other thing i'll say about this is is he did have the occasional
00:07:34.220 grumble about well that's i think is his main achievement is the way that he combines he combines
00:07:39.240 this um slightly lyrical welsh accent with an irredeemable level of peter hitchens-esque grumpiness
00:07:46.000 um and he uses this welsh grumpiness to present based ideas to people yes that's that's more of an
00:07:52.920 achievement than zero seats or whatever it's that unique yes grumpy welsh half iranian-ness
00:07:57.760 which is only embodied but i mean the zero seats really do have cut through i really like the
00:08:03.580 the fake uh commercial the way whether he just the ai or something to do rishi sunak's voice
00:08:08.640 and oh yeah that was torn and foul but yeah and that was inspired by zero seats yes we do hate you
00:08:14.660 we do hate you and that was just perfectly encapsulated the okay and on his sort of general
00:08:20.120 theme of grumpiness he did have the occasional grumble about his his takes being pinched and used in
00:08:25.880 places like like lotus eaters so as the ultimate tribute to the man now that it is all ended um
00:08:32.220 i'm going to do exactly that i'm going to steal one of his takes so here we go um he's talking there
00:08:37.180 about how you know uh when it was zero seats the boomers were an enemy client group who could do no
00:08:42.940 right and now we're zero seats for labors so they are a friend client group and i i just wanted to sort
00:08:49.240 of you know really reinforce that point this is where we are the the boomers are now friends and
00:08:56.800 i want i want to try and get into this because it is an important distinction because we have
00:09:01.940 we have bashed on them a bit over the last couple of years but but i mean first of all i mean
00:09:06.600 anyone want to have a go at defining a client group well it's a group it's a group that is used uh
00:09:14.100 extra parliamentary group that is used to reinforce the regime to prop up the regime yes so um our
00:09:20.520 boomers there to prop up the current regime and if they are they are a client group and they have
00:09:25.400 special privileges well well they were with the last one anyway under the tories but yeah you can
00:09:30.520 think you can think of a client group as any group where there's that sort of um connection between the
00:09:35.280 regime and the group they kind of feed energy off each other you know the the regime you know gives
00:09:41.180 them benefits and the the group kind of keeps the regime in place so so you can think of for
00:09:45.940 example the orcs in in in lord of the rings they are they are sauron's client group um and under
00:09:52.100 rishi sunak it was it were under the toys it was boomers i think there's a reason for this and the
00:09:56.240 reason they've been lost by labor is because they both buy into boomer truth but what is the exoteric
00:10:03.920 messaging of each group so what why did the tories want mass immigration well the reason was always
00:10:09.560 we want to keep increasing the gdp exponentially or to pay the boomers pension quite exactly right
00:10:15.400 and the we're not racist we have a brown prime minister was always the defense but the advanced
00:10:21.220 position by labor is we want to establish britain as a multi-ethnic multi-racial multicultural
00:10:26.460 combine our nation yes and they aren't even pretending that they're trying to like pay the
00:10:31.940 boomers pensions because they're saying we're going to scrap your winter fuel allowance oh yeah while
00:10:35.860 not cutting foreign aid you can see the shift the shift is very very clear yeah they they are no
00:10:39.880 longer clients of the state they vote they vote which is a problem and they vote conservative
00:10:44.760 disproportionately because people become more conscientious and less mentally ill with age
00:10:48.500 and that's more likely vote conservative um and uh and so immediately but it's so strange though i
00:10:54.360 just think tony blair satan bless him would have been would have been far more subtle about this attack
00:11:01.400 on the boomers than than just immediately getting the people who are very likely to vote and taking
00:11:07.620 money away from them well yeah yes let me let me follow this thought through about the client groups
00:11:12.480 a little bit because of course the the client group for the labor party used to be the white working
00:11:18.500 class and and they have very uh visibly jettisoned that over the past few weeks with the sort of
00:11:25.780 riots and the killing of the children and so on to to their client group is now expressly um immigrants
00:11:31.620 to this country well ash sarkar after the 2019 election when jeremy corbyn actually won more votes
00:11:36.520 than starmer but lost redefined working class as ethnic minorities students and people that basically
00:11:43.840 have no capital well it was john john was it uh john prescott who asserted that we're all working class
00:11:50.340 now uh so all middle class now and there was this case uh in the 2000 in the 2000s of this guy and
00:11:56.080 his his land had been left to the city council as long as it was used to house the working class
00:12:01.900 and then they then they started saying they started wanting to sell these houses to middle class people
00:12:06.720 and he took them to court and won and it was the argument was oh we're all middle class now what does
00:12:12.020 middle class mean you know and he counted no this is what this is what middle class means this is what
00:12:15.980 working class means and you you either give me the land back or you put houses for the working class
00:12:22.120 on it so i i think you've actually covered this topic haven't you you've tried to explain why
00:12:27.460 labor went from a position of their client group being the working class to being immigrant because
00:12:32.760 it seems like a weird i'm not 100 sure what happened um but i think the the most reasonable argument
00:12:39.580 that i've found is that there is if you are um machiavellian in that way if you are basically
00:12:46.120 a born traitor then you you collaborate with a group that is genetically further from you in order
00:12:51.400 to gain power over the group of which you are part i.e the upper class um so that that group in a
00:12:57.060 mono-ethnic society that group that you collaborate with is the working class that's the group you can
00:13:01.380 virtue signal with that's the marginalized so early labor was upper class people who basically did it
00:13:06.820 was two it was three key groups of people it was basically upper class traitors to their own class
00:13:11.300 like tony bed and people like that it was quakers who were basically sort of lower middle class and
00:13:15.820 it was the trade unionist working class so the trade unionist working class and the and the
00:13:20.020 particularly they were just working class people that were militant that were acting in their own
00:13:24.140 interest in their interest genetically their class so someone like jim callaghan his father was a
00:13:28.540 sailor um he's reasonably intelligent he goes to grammar school whatever he ends up working as a civil
00:13:32.800 servant that's someone like that then you have someone like harold wilson
00:13:35.600 i don't know for sure if his background was was quaker but it was more lower middle class parents
00:13:40.160 were teachers similar thing he's he's operating in the interests of basically his own sort of class
00:13:45.080 and then you get the very different kind of person like clement attley um and this or hugh gateskill
00:13:50.660 and these people are upper class or michael michael foot um and they are they identify with a class
00:13:57.140 that is a group of anything a group that is a step away from them um and thus you virtue signal with that
00:14:02.120 and you get into power now once you have a multi-ethnic society and the same things happened
00:14:06.600 in america exactly the same thing once um this occurred uh then of course there's a new group
00:14:11.400 that's even more marginal than the working class in a sense because they're new to the society
00:14:16.280 and that group and you've you then move on and you virtue signal with them and that group is the
00:14:21.000 immigrant and then of course then you you start to feel in general you would expect upper class
00:14:24.880 people to hate the working class they'd be gently distant from them to see them as as sort of as
00:14:29.820 almost disgusting as almost bad genetics almost and so they would then their revulsion of them
00:14:35.060 could no longer be suppressed as they use the ethnic minorities to virtue signal with so you see that
00:14:39.720 shift so is there something inherent in left-wing people that they kind of have to be betrayers to
00:14:44.440 their own group well let's distinguish between two yeah but let's distinguish between two kinds of
00:14:48.120 left-wing people there's the left-wing people that are left-wing because it is in their actual
00:14:52.100 interests to be left-wing because they're poor or their own welfare right well that kind of people
00:14:56.160 or or muslims in the uk or whatever and then there's the general and there was a study on this i think
00:15:00.980 it was dwight set out w-a-y-t-z and he finds that um the moral circle of conservatives is a series of
00:15:08.440 concentric so we looked at this in my in the video on woke eugenics is a series of concentric circles
00:15:13.140 around self with you you you like your family more than you like your kin you like your kin more than you
00:15:18.200 like your class you like your class when you like your ethnic group your ethnic more than race
00:15:21.440 race more than species and so on um and with left-wing people the moral circle is different
00:15:26.880 it's a few steps removed so you identify with you a different class over your own a different ethnic
00:15:32.460 group over your own a different race over your own and this allows you to gain status in a different
00:15:37.620 way it allows you to collaborate with outsiders um in in order to gain power over your own group
00:15:44.840 and leftists tend to be individually oriented they tend to be focused on they tend to be mentally
00:15:49.800 unstable they tend to be neurotic they tend to world is swirling chaos they're machiavellian they
00:15:53.720 want to take control of it um um and they're often if they're low down in the group or see themselves
00:15:58.820 as low down in the group they're not group oriented they they hate the group they hate the symbols of
00:16:03.240 power they hate all this because they feel they should have power and they are resentful and they
00:16:06.500 feel they feel disempowered and so in that sense you play for status how do you play for status if
00:16:11.680 you're tough and you're powerful you've made a fair fight that's how you play for status but you can't do
00:16:16.020 that if you're a bit masculine right wing right so you you virtue signal you purity signal um and
00:16:21.080 what you virtue signal about quality and harm avoidance you collaborate with an outsider group
00:16:24.380 a different class different race whatever and get power that way so when i saw an extract from a paper
00:16:29.100 that looked at this and i think it was doing brain scans of some type same paper weights it up oh right
00:16:33.660 okay and and it literally showed uh the heat map of a brain as to which bit lights up and you can see
00:16:39.460 when they're asking about self and family and stuff like that people very close to you
00:16:44.100 the right wingers that part of the brain was hot it was it was glowing red and then when you're
00:16:50.280 asking about you know like the bantu or something you know that part of the brain was cold they
00:16:54.220 literally empathized with their own genetic people yes but left wingers it was startling it was the
00:17:01.860 direct opposite the heat map for their own family and the people around them was was basically blue cold
00:17:08.120 and then the people that as far removed as possible you know like the aliens in starship troopers or
00:17:12.900 you know basically whatever was the fur is removed from themselves that bit of the brain was glowing
00:17:17.880 red hot exactly because you're in a situation where there is room for different strategies in
00:17:23.740 order to survive in an ecology and the main strategy of course is is the ethnocentric strategy that you
00:17:28.960 look after your space yourself first and then your children first and then and then other people
00:17:33.720 in a series of concentric circles that's basically the norm that we've been selected for a very long
00:17:38.400 time obviously as selection breaks down as it has done from 50 percent child mortality to 800 to less
00:17:43.480 than one percent today you're going to you're going to get a movement away from that to all kinds of
00:17:47.320 other weird strategies and this is this is the selfish strategy this is the person who is mentally
00:17:51.600 unstable how do i want to gain power because in prehistory you have to have power to get women and so
00:17:56.320 forth how can i gain power i can't do it in a fair fight i will because only right wing people can do
00:18:00.760 that in a fair fight because right people are bigger physically bigger physically tougher mentally
00:18:04.620 more stable and whatever if you're the opposite of that you're a short ugly mentally unstable man
00:18:10.760 a spiteful mutant a mutant anyway um you you see you see the world as this swirling chaos you want
00:18:15.920 to control it you want to gain power how do you do so well one method you can use is to covertly play
00:18:20.980 for status how do you do that you are the purity signal about how morally pure or religious you are
00:18:25.280 or um you you collaborate with outsiders you're like a quizzling you collaborate with outsiders to gain
00:18:31.200 power over your own group so the way i'm understanding this is labor started off as
00:18:34.380 sort of upper class chaps who uh who cooperated with an outside group the working class to gain
00:18:40.500 power over other upper class people but now labor party is basically working class people like
00:18:46.420 angela rayner and just phillips and so on and and because of course they can't cooperate with
00:18:50.700 their own group they can't cooperate with the working class anymore they have to then reach out
00:18:53.740 to the to the immigrants i think a slightly better way of understanding it because if you distinguish
00:18:57.320 angela rayner yvette cooper all that from the aristocrats who lent a cap to the working
00:19:04.320 class in the past is how we say masculine and feminine coded the same place for the republicans
00:19:08.240 and democrats and it's the if you have compassion for those concentric circles that's a russian
00:19:12.820 nesting doll of your evolved in group you are masculine coded because you're rationing your
00:19:18.480 compassion according to resources whereas the present situation of material abundance and
00:19:24.500 technological advancements that keep people alive well beyond when they would have otherwise expired
00:19:28.660 from illness or the like um it's very feminine coded so they treat every single out group like they
00:19:34.200 are infants even if it's completely inappropriate yeah they do the treating my children yes yes i
00:19:38.080 mean i i will move on from this point about sort of client groups but you know that's an
00:19:42.020 interesting point though you make there carl because i i did a video a while ago cheers well
00:19:45.660 occasionally it can happen um but but but so that there were the the way that they these women seem
00:19:51.920 to talk about these there's a case in italy of this that they talk about these uh these male you know
00:19:57.440 refugees that are going around doing all kinds of unspeakable things is as though they are children
00:20:01.540 it's extremely maternal the language and i think i wonder i wonder if part of that is that they
00:20:06.020 is precisely because they are different precisely because they are genetically so different it messes
00:20:11.640 up with the brain's wiring um somehow and therefore they see them in these in these childlike terms
00:20:17.120 there was a study which found that um we are less able to assess a person's physical fitness from
00:20:25.540 their face um if they are a different race from us yes and that's because we're not used to
00:20:31.280 coetze as al it was that we're not used to the subtle signals and so you can see that there might
00:20:36.460 be something in that with regards to foreigners that is good but i must i must quickly bring this
00:20:40.700 back on track because you were just just to finish off the point on client group so obviously the
00:20:44.460 for the tories the boomers were the client group i mean they were the only people who were sort
00:20:48.740 of voting tory at the end um labor used to have the white working class whereas now they've just got
00:20:54.000 welfare recipients and immigrants and obviously those venn diagrams sort of overlap quite a bit
00:20:59.240 reform are moving to the position of having uh the white working class as their client group
00:21:04.640 although all those zoomers might come into that in quite a big way and lib dem client group
00:21:09.940 a middle class sandal wearing salad spreadsheets yeah people who block roads kind of stuff like
00:21:16.900 that yes so anyway so um look we don't want um high taxes infinity africans and woke nonsense
00:21:23.060 um but the tories did want those things and the boomers wanted the tories so they had to come
00:21:29.360 under fire that's why we've had to be mean to the boomers in the past and and it got to absurd levels
00:21:34.720 i mean you mentioned this where where the tories were advocating um conscription for young people
00:21:41.060 to basically wipe old people's bums and die in ukraine it just got absurd in the end um but anyway
00:21:47.600 but now we've got labor and they want everything the tories wanted plus crushing our will and and
00:21:52.880 they have to go now you know they they need to gone but they want it on behalf of foreigners not boomers
00:21:57.480 yes yes well they've shrunk their client base to um insufferable metropolitans and colonists
00:22:03.320 effectively so so now they have to go so you know what what we need to do is we need to expand our
00:22:08.780 circle of friends from you know it's got to be the you know white working class that have been abandoned
00:22:13.620 and then if we can get the insufferable millennials who are currently going through their 20 phase of
00:22:18.960 oh well look at me i'm in london i'm earning lots of money and i have fashionable opinions if we can
00:22:23.860 get them in a pincer movement between boomers and zoomers with the white working class coming up the
00:22:29.140 middle like the cavalry then then we can we can take 2029 probably in favor of reform if they can
00:22:35.820 actually sort their act out i don't know if they can but um they see my recent interview with ben
00:22:41.320 even why they've got to build a lot of infrastructure and actually recruit some
00:22:44.540 half decent candidates next time around as well we know what we want we don't want infinity
00:22:48.440 africans we don't want the woke stuff we don't want high taxes and we don't want you know the
00:22:51.580 state stamping on our face all the time so if we can build some sort of coalition and the and the
00:22:55.020 boomers are in it they are our friends now so this was expressed nicely by by morgoff yes so so that
00:23:00.900 so uh for those of you who are listening on the left we have um a a sort of insufferable
00:23:07.560 laughing boomer because he's you know busy um you know voting for infinity africans has a holiday
00:23:14.020 home in cornwall that he turns into an airbnb yes um blowing blowing the inheritance as fast as you
00:23:18.400 can on cruises um telling you to pull yourself up by the bootstraps that that was the old image
00:23:22.820 of the boom the new one oh isn't she sweet it's very soviet even oh lovely lovely little old lady who
00:23:30.360 had a had a you know her fuel turned off in the winter in order to fund more migrant hotels yes no
00:23:36.240 that's no these these people are our friends now so as morgoff said how we frame the boomers under
00:23:40.240 the tories and how we frame the boomers under star uh starmer so so this is good because i
00:23:44.940 whenever i've mentioned boomers in the past and obviously we're not talking about all boomers we're
00:23:50.280 talking about client groups the majority of boomers wanted the tories and therefore with regard to
00:23:55.400 zero seats though it's very interesting that peter peter hitchens on the one hand okay it's perfectly
00:23:59.280 acceptable just dismiss him as a perpetually grumpy contrarian um and to go goon just whatever
00:24:04.820 but he they were they were no he actually did he actually did you you check out his tweets
00:24:11.120 he said do goon okay um but but um he they were they he and other people that commented on this like
00:24:21.540 david starkey uh did turn out to be correct that what has happened so quickly is that the labour
00:24:26.660 government are so much worse than the conservatives okay yes the conservatives didn't make any change
00:24:31.020 didn't make any change in terms of immigration or whatever but they are so obviously authoritarian
00:24:35.840 nasty hateful wicked people and so manifest and all it took was one mini crisis to to cause this
00:24:43.160 soulless robot um to start stamping to just to start stamping on our faces forever yes yes and that's
00:24:49.220 all it took so they were right about that we in uh in campaigning for zero seats uh we have helped
00:24:55.840 to bring about something much much worse yeah but what what they didn't understand is yes they're
00:25:00.320 right about that and that was kind of the point of zero seats acceleration well it's not just
00:25:03.860 acceleration it's just being honest because the conservative party were doing this under riku i
00:25:06.920 mean remember the conservative government in 2011 put the home office gaslighting uh body on
00:25:12.120 steroids and developed don't look back in anger as a targeted strategy to obfuscate from their
00:25:15.840 immigration policies had to be destroyed so a proper right-wing party can emerge but no i'm i'm very
00:25:21.240 happy about this change because in the past i would mention boomers the client group um and then and
00:25:27.380 then boomers in our audience would think that i was talking about all of them including them
00:25:30.620 personally and they would do that thing where they activate their caps locks and then sort of
00:25:34.780 angrily sort of rant out uh you know a whole block paragraph no grammar which i don't think is
00:25:38.740 acceptable because you went to school at a time when you actually taught grammar so don't do the
00:25:42.520 bloody caps lock block paragraph when they when they did english language at school it was actually
00:25:46.940 it wasn't writing stories and stuff like we did english language at school it was actually
00:25:50.200 linguistics yes so there really is no there's no excuse for turning the caps locks on and just
00:25:55.140 angrily ranting at me because i was talking about the client group not the individuals but
00:25:59.120 anyway it doesn't matter now because you're all friends so if you're boomer i'm giving you a
00:26:03.100 virtual hug because you're one of us now you're in our you are now a a friend client group as we
00:26:08.980 as we go after uh we go after labor so so you know you're all excellent thank you very much and
00:26:13.940 everyone else remember to be kind to the old people because they're lovely and look at them and
00:26:17.120 they're freezing in the cold because they've got any heating excellent right we've got some rumble
00:26:22.160 rants um i have been informed by our producer ed that you've got your jacket tag on the oh yeah
00:26:27.100 very stylish uh so we've got ten dollars from the shadow band always good to see it on the show
00:26:32.020 excellent five dollars from the last russian was great to meet you at skildings professor dutton even
00:26:36.420 if you disapproved of my russian genetic some mutant status hello herman and he says says the left
00:26:41.460 hander great speech very entertaining and memorable thank you i presume that's going to be up on jolly
00:26:45.280 heretic soon the speech um if they send it to i think they're doing the 2023 ones first they
00:26:50.280 haven't even put those out yet right okay and then you know i'm sure and then uh oh fph uk that
00:26:56.620 study about different parts of the brain lighting up has to be a lie of lessists don't have brains
00:26:59.880 um well that's just not true is it leftist more intelligent and rightist on average so this is
00:27:04.460 yeah because obviously if you intelligence associated with conformity and social conformity you look
00:27:09.600 around the world you notice the way of the world and you imbibe it and force yourself to believe it
00:27:13.980 and then competitively signal it and so a number of studies and so therefore intelligent people will
00:27:18.120 be more leftist in a leftist society and more right-wing in a more right-wing curve meme
00:27:22.240 uh no that's that's different thing that's the idea that working class people like the the low
00:27:27.300 iq people and the very high iq people are based which is probably true right uh but then but that
00:27:34.080 doesn't that's that doesn't militate against the general sort of weak line oh i see whereby the the
00:27:38.500 i always thought lefties were a bit thick but i see what you're saying they're using their
00:27:41.560 intelligence majority the midwit the midwit you've got to remember the midwit as opposed to the very
00:27:45.480 very clever autistic person who anyway tell us about zoomers excellent well germany's had some
00:27:49.980 problems in the last well nearly hundred years or so but let's narrow it down to the last 10
00:27:54.320 ever since mona merkel said fish off and dust and opened the world up to the benefits of diversity
00:27:58.720 like gang rapes and stabbing so now the german zoomers who have basically grown up with this and
00:28:04.240 that's all they ever know are sick to death of it and decided as we found out on monday to vote
00:28:09.020 en masse for the afd and the establishment right-wing media or at least nominally right-wing in this country
00:28:15.220 i'm talking about the times the telegraph the spectator who really want to contain the existing
00:28:19.880 order that the likes of the tory party have put in place are throwing a fit so i'm going to take you
00:28:24.320 through some of the reasons why the zoomers are engaging in a rebellion it kind of connects to
00:28:28.000 your previous segment on boomer truth dan why they don't essentially feel the insistence on proving
00:28:33.280 your anti-racist credentials that that spell doesn't work on them it's waned over time yes yes so
00:28:38.980 cast your minds back about two weeks now there was a diversity festival great irony and the syrian
00:28:46.740 chap showed up from the local asylum center and got a bit stabby and so he decided to stab i think he
00:28:53.700 killed three people and stabbed about eight more um 26 year old syrian man identified as issa al h german
00:29:01.240 police decided to storm the asylum center and he decided to confess to the crime so diversity at a
00:29:07.640 diversity festival doing very diverse things islamic state did claim literally i mean it was just
00:29:12.780 you couldn't meme it yeah you didn't need to cut the throats of eight people i believe eight people
00:29:18.720 and four of them died yes yeah islamic state claimed credit for this but at this point i mean they don't
00:29:24.600 need a sort of centrally organized nexus to do so they've got so many of their ideologically aligned
00:29:29.740 low impulse control allies dispersed across europe it doesn't even matter they don't even need
00:29:34.880 centrally plan it you just got when you say low impulse control hang on i think i think doing
00:29:38.980 something like that involves high impulse control it involves biding your time waiting until it's
00:29:43.180 the right time and then going for it and kind of people's throats involves planning it involves
00:29:46.880 basically being a psychopath that but also there are so many stabbings happening just random ones
00:29:52.100 exactly yeah so that it just becomes white noise like they don't even need to centrally plan this
00:29:55.880 anymore they can just let diversity play out essentially which is a sad state of affairs but
00:29:59.960 that's something that's been inflicted on germany so the german government the greens under olaf schultz
00:30:04.500 decided to do afghan deportations so this is this was last friday there was a flight from leipzig
00:30:11.440 and it was carrying 28 afghan men just 28 on board a boeing 787 to kabul what the bbc didn't report is
00:30:18.480 that each of these men were paid a thousand pounds to sweeten the deal to stop them from actually
00:30:22.980 protesting their own deportation so the flights were paid for by the german taxpayer all of their benefits
00:30:27.920 while they were here was paid for by the german taxpayer and they got a thousand pounds spending
00:30:31.200 money at duty free to be fair it's still probably a good deal but yeah but the thing is they're just
00:30:35.460 going to come straight back well yes because they always blooming do because they can't keep them out
00:30:39.080 the country permanently and bear in mind some of these people had committed heinous crimes as detailed
00:30:43.740 in here so most of them were sexual offenders including a man who had raped an 11 year old girl
00:30:47.900 at a park and another man who took part in a gang rape of a 14 year old girl in 2019 he's been there for
00:30:55.260 five years why why did you pay him in a more civilized age where you just used to hang these
00:31:01.500 people yeah quite yeah agreed anyway can't do that anymore apparently um also another thing that
00:31:07.720 annoyed everyone in germany which is why they might vote afd it turns out all of these so-called
00:31:10.800 refugees were taking holidays back in afghanistan so they were going on their jollies now thousands
00:31:16.060 of them apparently this is according to a german television station uh the afghans mentioned in
00:31:20.420 their report have been able to return to afghanistan with the help of blue passports handed
00:31:24.400 up by german authorities to refugees who don't hold any form of identification from their home
00:31:28.540 country because they destroyed it from away well yeah quite i've joked before that obviously
00:31:32.060 underneath the channel there's like a coral reef of discarded documents uh i think that's the
00:31:36.200 reason why people's loods get blocked sometimes it's just so many passports yes either greek plumbing
00:31:40.780 or or faulty passports about 60 000 afghans in germany have received such passports already
00:31:45.540 um and also of the 250 000 people eligible for deportation only 16 000 were sent back last year
00:31:52.000 why are they just stockpiling afghan rapists for a rainy day i'd love to know i'd love for the
00:31:59.320 germans to be able to tell me for a sunny day where there's a long a long night and women will walk
00:32:03.740 home alone as happens you know in northern finland where i live there's a festival something like
00:32:08.640 that and then they can be stockpiled or for a new year's celebration um and then they could in
00:32:13.880 perhaps cologne and then they can be sent out on that occasion to frighten the ladies yes um sort of a
00:32:19.320 new patriarchy really we we patriarchy the traditional german or english patriarchy is
00:32:24.620 broken down and therefore women are able to be sexually free and and so forth and so it's as if
00:32:29.760 we've decided to institute or certain kinds of women like angela merkel some peculiar women that
00:32:34.340 don't have children have to have decided to institute a new system of control well in certain areas of
00:32:39.240 paris women i've been seeing articles women have been coming to the realization if i want to go out
00:32:43.600 alone i'm going to have to put a headscarf on is that or stay home well tom holland's dominion is
00:32:49.820 quite good on this it's the predating the christian patriarchy where service was mutual and you had
00:32:57.100 marriage to protect women the interests of children and the most vulnerable in society you had roman
00:33:01.680 patriarchy where the most victorious soldier just decided to um rape the daughters of noblemen in
00:33:06.320 middle of the street and so i think you're going to get male domination whether you like it or not
00:33:09.640 whether or not the man himself is considerate of women and children or if he at his power and
00:33:14.900 pleasure just takes what he likes and i think that's what's being imported well that's it there's
00:33:18.480 there's two there's there's two kinds of there's the patriarchy that's developed in the west
00:33:22.400 which is which is yeah uh women will say uh the man will say i want sex the woman will say
00:33:28.380 i want investment uh and you have then this quid pro quo but that also patriarchy also involves
00:33:34.080 chivalry that involves deference involves things like going down on one knee to propose or
00:33:39.540 holding the door open or holding the door open or all of the it it involves women being
00:33:44.080 looked after seen as weaker a kind of a kindly chauvinism if you will and um that's not really
00:33:51.460 what you have with the earlier kinds of patriarchy with the islamic kind of patriarchy i think that
00:33:55.920 that it lacks the going down on one knee uh deference element i'm sure there's variations
00:34:00.220 isn't it yeah yeah yeah more more more so what the right hand owns um it's it's very much uh
00:34:06.600 immigration becoming a women's safety issue as as one would say anyway um please don't move
00:34:11.520 things with the i've i've lost my script wait um similar things happening in britain uh over here
00:34:18.020 so we got these stats in britain the other day um record numbers of migrants are actually living
00:34:23.320 in britain uh jobless uh more than 1.6 million are unemployed or economically inactive and it's
00:34:27.980 costing us about eight billion quid so that's one million six hundred and eighty nine thousand
00:34:32.240 non-uk nationals either unemployed or classed as economically inactive and currently aren't looking
00:34:37.080 for jobs uh the figure is only for the second quarter of 2024 surpasses the previous highs of
00:34:41.520 one million six hundred and seventy six thousand at the start of last year and the one million six
00:34:46.320 hundred and twenty eight thousand from early 2012 according to the ons so infinity africans
00:34:50.520 doesn't actually make gdp go up it just makes unemployment benefits well considering the gdp of african
00:34:56.440 countries where these people came from turns out they just import the same work ethic it's
00:35:02.220 not just economic and educational circumstances that makes human beings it's human beings that
00:35:06.960 make those and also even when they argue that oh we need these people to help run the national
00:35:12.140 health service or whatever even if that's true uh one of the things that is noticed is that these
00:35:16.620 immigrants are highly overrepresented in terms of um uh nhs investigations for malpractice
00:35:23.860 2.5 times and such like okay um and that also we know that the the standards of a medical school
00:35:30.580 in the university of the congo is is i'm afraid or whatever it's called is not going to be the same
00:35:36.200 as even the standards that are dreadful medical school here so you're importing basically bad
00:35:41.480 doctors and bad nurses who are more likely to be investigated for malpractice so even your
00:35:47.060 justification for it putting aside the fact that it's clearly costing a lot of money and pushing up
00:35:51.840 house prices it's unaffordable for generations there people that want to have a reasonable lifestyle of
00:35:56.280 their parents or whatever they're not even very good on average so i was sat next to somebody at
00:36:01.660 dinner at the witton who who does hr for a very large organization so they've got thousands and
00:36:06.400 thousands of employees and and they got sold on this sort of big data process and they decided to
00:36:11.200 take it into hr and what they wanted to do is look for patterns in the people who give them problems
00:36:16.720 at work you know people who cause sexual harassment claims and don't work particularly well and all that
00:36:21.980 kind of stuff so anyway they ran the numbers and they got some very clear signals on basically who
00:36:27.240 was causing the problem in this organization and it got buried so fast under such a ton of concrete
00:36:33.180 because well basically it said what you think it's going to say well even the guardian found that 700
00:36:38.980 nigerian nurses have committed qualifications fraud this year this is a drop in the bucket bear in mind
00:36:43.500 only three percent of migrants in the last year came even on a health and social care visa and they
00:36:47.820 were dwarfed by the number of dependents they brought as well so no not particularly beneficial i think i read
00:36:51.760 that is it something like 40 or 30 percent of indian doctors are not actually qualified doctors
00:36:57.200 and that and that goes up to even doctors that are working in quite prestigious private hospitals india
00:37:01.860 significant portions of them are medical school dropouts uh or people that are qualified nurses
00:37:06.880 that tend to be doctors and and things like this well another depressing thing about these stats by the
00:37:11.180 way is that these stats only cover 16 to 64 year olds who were born overseas who have the right to live
00:37:17.800 in the uk so it doesn't count students obviously come over on the student visa and disappear into the
00:37:23.060 delivery economy or asylum seekers so we've got an extra 130 000 of those costing us upwards of 14
00:37:28.020 billion a year as well and this delivery economy as a person doesn't live in this country and i don't
00:37:32.040 see it as much where i live i mean how lazy are you people that you can't be bothered to go to the
00:37:37.820 indian takeaway pick up your food and take it home don't buy from them anyway don't don't at this point
00:37:42.960 don't buy from any businesses from the subcontinent because you don't know who they're hiring you just don't just
00:37:47.020 abstain from it don't don't use uber don't use deliveroo don't use any foreign why do you just
00:37:50.920 cook your own food yes quite exactly um i did a sort of summary on this in a recent article i did
00:37:57.680 um that's a useful compendium um for example did you know the 74 percent of all the jobs that have
00:38:02.620 been created in this country since 2011 have gone to foreign workers things like that so you can look
00:38:06.460 at the sort of economics of immigration over in the uk um as a test case for what's happening in
00:38:11.460 germany as well but anyway back to germany so the zoomers have clocked on to this and the spectator
00:38:16.160 which confusing at this point literally douglas's columns anything worth reading in there
00:38:21.240 um are complaining about the far right winning in germany they've got some stats here on how the
00:38:26.840 the zoomers particularly voted yes we'll see some headlines shortly but this is this is the breakdown
00:38:32.060 for the actual zoomers right so the afd got 33 percent in thuringia and up 10 for the last five
00:38:37.300 years and 30 in saxony i think they came second place in saxony only up three percent but still good
00:38:41.860 gains according to the data published by pollsters 38 percent of those between 18 to 24 voted for the
00:38:47.980 afd in thuringia in neighboring saxony 31 percent did the same in both states the party was able to
00:38:53.260 increase its vote share among this age group by at least 11 percent to become the most popular party
00:38:57.500 with young germans now this vibes with how reform uk was the most popular party among young men in the
00:39:03.220 last election labor still being the most popular party i mean 30 is a big number if you would i i know
00:39:08.340 is a different system over here but if you were to get 30 percent of the population in this country
00:39:11.500 you you'd win by a landslide starmer only had 34 percent of the total yeah yes so you'd easily win
00:39:16.980 the problem in this country is so for voters i mean the majority of people just you'd certainly come
00:39:20.340 you'd certainly be able to come second so i mean it's like it's an interesting thing though that these
00:39:25.020 young people uh who are your kind of age whatever um they they've never really known their own society
00:39:31.000 as a relatively homogenous society i mean when i when we were kids there were basically no non-english
00:39:35.580 people on tv it was occasionally lenny henry or frank bruno but that was about it and your life
00:39:40.340 has been just constantly being bombarded with this unreality of the the world is england is
00:39:45.880 multicultural what what is it that makes these generations said people have never known england
00:39:50.060 want to bring it about because we look at something like love actually and it looks almost nostalgic
00:39:55.440 basically right and we feel that we've been deprived of the opportunity to have the same living
00:40:02.040 standards of our parents despite doing everything right despite getting married having wanting to
00:40:06.520 have families wanting to save up for deposits and the like um we've had that taken away from us
00:40:11.260 and we also because we grew up in very multicultural schools we can recognize cultural differences
00:40:16.560 so as soon as we're demanded to say that oh all people are equal and everyone's exactly the same
00:40:21.540 it's just racism causing crime we're like no like i went to the school with the african kids
00:40:25.640 who didn't like other african kids and the like so you can't tell me and i'm looking at tiktok
00:40:29.600 all the time and seeing the exact same perpetrator every time i scroll so you can't tell me
00:40:34.340 yeah i suppose you're less controlled in the information that you imbibe as well because
00:40:39.260 we used to have the telly and the radio and that's it you know and you've you've a very young age you're
00:40:43.880 computer literate and you're able to look at this stuff and just it must must be weird though to
00:40:47.060 sit at school where i would trust my teachers to a certain extent and trust authorities and even
00:40:51.100 trust the telly you used to think that they knew what they were talking about yeah yeah auntie b you
00:40:55.040 but there's no counter narrative at all but he's brought up to very quickly think my teachers are
00:41:00.980 lying to me well loads of them as well like fresh out of uni graduates who aren't particularly smart
00:41:04.780 so if you're a young disagreeable slightly autistic male then you're just going to say well that's
00:41:09.280 bollocks isn't it and then you get sent out to class a lot sorry everyone who ever taught me i
00:41:12.880 suppose but anyway so we have a visual representation of this how the how the afd are doing i mean that's
00:41:17.620 just quite nice isn't it that's pretty thundering well done german zoomers it's the light blue
00:41:23.780 girls the light blue is afd for no no there's two there's two look oh uh i lost you that last
00:41:31.220 it must be that's been the last five years okay so the five years the important thing is you say
00:41:36.120 girls this is also a winning strategy why has this happened among zoomers well it's because um there
00:41:41.620 are two trends going on among the german youth the first is this song that everyone has heard this was
00:41:47.040 a very recent one after the election we got a talking to uh on the opening speech of of the
00:42:07.680 do not sing auslander raus because we're on a university campus well one it's 100 going to
00:42:12.700 happen at the conservative party conference this year and i'm calling it now and every
00:42:16.340 tory party leadership candidate other than maybe general will fall over themselves to condemn it
00:42:19.840 but that's going to happen at a fringe event yeah without doubt and the interesting thing about that
00:42:23.800 you know which one i'll go to it i'm banned uh if you notice gents that wasn't loads of boisterous
00:42:29.960 blokes singing that as it usually is lots of female voices uh even angela rayner's getting in on the
00:42:35.400 getting in on the fun oh yeah there she is
00:42:36.960 that's a mash-up surely it's obviously an edit don't worry don't worry don't don't throw me in
00:42:47.000 prison for misinformation keir starmer it is a fantastic edit though i love it
00:42:49.900 there are lots of other women that are actually in on this and the reason is there's a tiktok
00:42:54.920 trend going around um my favorite independent journalist coming drug put has enlightened me to
00:42:59.720 this basically the same guy that did auslander rouse the original song for that has done a song
00:43:04.180 called blah blah blah in the 90s this guy called gigi digostino he's italian but it's sort of taken
00:43:09.680 off in germany because it's all europop isn't it and there are a bunch of women on tiktok
00:43:13.220 changing the lyrics to afd deutschland party afd right
00:43:18.000 i won't pretend to understand the sort of female attention economy but i think she is very fetching
00:43:29.460 she's also she's young she's coordinated her um her fingernails with her bra oh lovely again
00:43:36.980 female attention economy won't understand it but she's thought it through but the fact that this is
00:43:41.840 now high status signaling for women to essentially get attention online means that the cultural currents
00:43:48.080 are going towards the right in germany oh yeah who is it you kept on saying that culture is
00:43:52.260 downstream of whatever hot chicks want mary harrington right okay there we go she was right
00:43:56.720 it's also look not all the critical theories are right off standpoint that's fascinating because
00:44:01.180 with the church ladies and whatever in victorian england yes a culture became really christian and
00:44:06.540 right-wing and conservative and anti-sex and all the hot chicks in their in their bodices and
00:44:11.500 whatever they were wearing yes wanted that frumpy hat yeah yeah they wanted they wanted that because
00:44:15.340 of course there was a problem of syphilis and god knows what and that's what they wanted that's
00:44:19.180 what they got oh so if we can just get the hot young chicks with their
00:44:22.800 brah coordinated fingernails yes to um to save western civilization which would mean promoting
00:44:28.180 immigration painting at a time immigration as a feminist issue to do with women's safety
00:44:32.820 that's what's happening in france this is why there's a 13 point swing among young women for
00:44:36.300 bardella and le pen it's because all the french feminists are going yeah there is a rape culture
00:44:41.460 it's among imported afghans and africans it's like yeah that's kind of true and there's there's
00:44:46.160 like multiple examples of this i'm not going to go through all of them because again i'm not
00:44:49.400 pigeons don't goon but there's just endless there's there's she's got a tattoo she's mental
00:44:54.460 yeah i don't like the tattoo no no no no and there's too much eye line and her lips might be
00:44:58.300 fake yeah yes i mean i think she could be pretty if she if she made different lifestyle choices but
00:45:03.820 number one all girls do appeal to a certain subset of men number two they also as an aesthetic appeal
00:45:09.880 to a certain subset of women she's got a septum ring i think she does yeah for god's sake again not my
00:45:14.760 not my thing but it does show the cultural currents are going in a particular way and i think that's
00:45:20.220 encouraging at least we get to hear her sing uh you know she doesn't sing it's all lip-syncing
00:45:25.380 oh it's it's tiktok dan it used to be what was it musically where it was just a lip-syncing app
00:45:30.560 again i don't understand any of this i've got a tiktok i only follow one account though who is it
00:45:35.100 it's this lovely spanish girl and she tries to say english words but she can't quite do it so she says
00:45:41.940 things like hippopotamus and it's like i'll show you it like it's brilliant dirty old man
00:45:47.880 no no no she's just she's just trying no she's just trying to learn english in our mid-40s i mean
00:45:54.140 you know this is no no it's no she's anyway before dan's half of the desk raises up we should look at
00:45:59.940 all the other media that really hates this stuff because this is a sort of organic groundswell of
00:46:04.100 particularly young gen z women noticing that their life is under threat or young gen z men looking at
00:46:09.160 i don't know the economy and their ability to own a house and realizing oh i'm getting taxed to high
00:46:14.020 heaven to pay for tom dick and abdul's dependents no thank you very much well the spectator and the
00:46:18.060 like don't really like that people are noticing that and the same author that wrote about gen z's
00:46:22.420 recent election results had written a article ahead of the election saying is germany's far right about
00:46:29.540 to go mainstream now if any let's say ostensibly right-wing publication uses the term far right
00:46:35.180 um they're enemies because they can't actually define it because the afd are not even remotely
00:46:40.420 far right mass deportations is not a nazi policy um also the afd are remarkably market liberals
00:46:48.300 so they're just sort of i don't know bill clinton from the 90s really they're rather tepid but she's
00:46:54.640 she's writing in here in berlin alone right and she scratches her head as to why the afd are being
00:46:59.500 voted for in berlin alone burglaries are up a third in a year serious bodily harm is at an all-time high
00:47:04.660 and police say 40 of all crime suspects are foreign nationals police are calling for extra tools to
00:47:09.320 handle a new wave of knife crime from a new type of criminal there is plenty to point to for those
00:47:14.100 arguing that germany's economic and political models are broken where could this new type of
00:47:17.640 criminal have come from i what i wonder if if far right conspiracy outlet politico might be able to
00:47:23.600 help us um number of criminal acts in germany rose six percent last year compared to 2022
00:47:28.020 the authorities attribute this increase to high levels of migration while foreigners make up 15
00:47:32.620 percent of germany's population they accounted for a record 41 of all crimes in 2023 that's only
00:47:38.480 born abroad people that's born abroad not even second generation migrants which commit crimes at
00:47:43.180 comparable levels to their forebears if you look at studies from denmark and the netherlands and the
00:47:48.120 like a crime that authorities attributed to foreign suspects rose by 23 in 2022 and 18 in 2023
00:47:53.680 according to government statistics that's obviously the only things that get recorded as well and we know
00:47:57.380 with a lot of the time as with that recent gang rape article um gang rape case where an article
00:48:01.620 said that the lawyer had gotten multiple of the perpetrators off because she argued they were poor
00:48:07.160 and therefore just had to gang rape some young girl um so they didn't receive prison time so that's
00:48:11.960 wonderful also the number of violent incidents involving a knife like the one in syria or the one
00:48:15.500 in uh what was the one in may where an afghan went and stabbed a policeman there's hundreds of them
00:48:20.780 now isn't there yeah it was horrific and on video um the number of violent incidents involving a knife
00:48:24.640 rose 40 from 2021 to 2023 hitting 14 000 so line go up i suppose but anyway back to the spectator to
00:48:32.500 solve this complete mystery of why the young people would vote for the afd um the success the afd is
00:48:38.120 having in germany with youth is striking it was the second most popular party with under 25s in june's
00:48:43.080 european parliamentary election its parliamentary party has 456 000 followers on tiktok the saxony branch
00:48:49.260 has 220 220 220 000 the afd's main competition in the state the christian democratic union has
00:48:56.300 1530 followers on their regional account and the greens nearly very well didn't make it for past the
00:49:03.200 five percent threshold in multiple areas that actually got them back into parliament despite
00:49:06.380 being the governing party so you see that that overweight woman that was their leader of the
00:49:11.500 lip quivering it was trying the lip quiver was edited in but the actual crying was real oh was it yeah
00:49:16.840 in either way it's hilarious i mean i i yeah i just it really does validate your theory of these fat
00:49:23.820 ugly insecure people all voting left wing doesn't it i mean considering the sort of women we were seeing
00:49:28.180 promoting the afd there you go um they're they're also very upset about the fact that social media has
00:49:33.920 been ablaze with the hashtag hocker odor solingen quote either hocker or solingen um this is the
00:49:40.940 solingen what's that again that was the diversity festival uh yes some kind of vitamin that you have
00:49:46.720 when you're a child that's sonatogen yes that could be that uh this is the chap that that was uh
00:49:52.800 elected in thuringia that he's his his slogan is deport deport deport and then they're complaining
00:49:59.200 this runs the argument and he's saying it's the only way of preventing more islamist attacks oh how
00:50:04.220 horrible the far right wants to deport foreign criminals who commit sex offenses and stab people
00:50:08.900 at festivals yes oh dear how could this be allowed children can be safe when they go outside
00:50:13.860 yeah how how dare you protect women from foreign criminals the times was really upset as well
00:50:18.500 um here was their front page on monday germany's far right has first big win since the nazis yeah
00:50:24.420 that's annoying are we what a disgraceful headline yeah well they obviously can't call them nazis
00:50:31.020 because they'd be sued for defamation so they're just making the insinuation they're hoping that you
00:50:35.060 smuggle it in if they make the sort of semantic it's not much of an insinuation it's not much of
00:50:39.940 it's a direct statement that the far right are the same as the nazi party yeah quite um also the
00:50:46.040 telegraph wrote this uh the far right's victory may tear germany apart again right okay it's the
00:50:50.720 far right response to the migrant theft the hell does that mean the far right victory will cause the
00:50:57.460 undoing of germany the undoing of bismarck what what what what the pre-1870 32 states they'll
00:51:04.160 reorganize them is that what it means or does it mean post-war east and west is that what it means it
00:51:08.340 means that basically all the other parties like in france against the national rally are going to
00:51:12.820 team up against the afd to stop them from getting in so the afd still existing will prevent that
00:51:18.380 overarching agreed upon consensus who want infinity immigrants from remaining in power the left's
00:51:23.400 desperation to destroy their own nation yeah but tear germany apart again implies it's previously
00:51:27.880 been torn apart oh so we went to poland at the end of world war one didn't it well with that
00:51:33.780 corridor yes yeah i think they're probably referring to a period in the late 30s maybe the 1940s
00:51:40.980 no they want the journey wasn't torn apart no he's been torn apart in the sense of post-war
00:51:45.360 east and west germany or as you say post-world war one that prussian bit that was i think we need to
00:51:50.960 get the green pen out and mark his article because he's made a lot of errors he's made a lot of errors
00:51:55.180 here this uh michael bosbacher yes yeah not not not exactly the best piece again remember telegraph
00:52:02.260 usually completely okay with this stuff in the uk completely beyond the pale in germany weird
00:52:08.420 if you have a beard like that you should probably dye those white boots anyway um because the media
00:52:14.300 behave like this the afd just banned them from their election party so they can sing
00:52:18.340 auslander raus in peace and and i don't blame them as as my good friend harrison pitt recently said
00:52:23.380 um why is there no quote-unquote far-right figure like tommy robinson in hungary why isn't there one
00:52:29.680 isn't that funny there is there's a prime minister yeah but it's not exactly okay let's put it this
00:52:34.900 way victor orban is not a luton fan right there's no need for like not a luton fan wolves there's no
00:52:40.620 need for like street level football activism and the reason is in that country they don't import
00:52:46.260 stabby rapey tax-fieving foreigners so they don't actually have a quote-unquote far-right so if you
00:52:52.440 would have dealt with these problems the afd you wouldn't even be necessary hungary knows what
00:52:56.080 happens if you have a left-wing government so there was this guy in just after world war one
00:53:00.600 or whatever i can't remember hayley something or other and and he just basically declared okay
00:53:04.920 um i'm a pacifist i'm going to abolish the army and he abolished the army so then he was invaded in
00:53:09.900 all directions from czechoslovakia from romania god knows what so then the then so then the then
00:53:14.700 the communists uh it was overthrown and the communists came in to try to try to fight this
00:53:19.220 off and then they were overthrown and then you had a fascist dictatorship so hungary knows what happens
00:53:23.720 if you have insane left-wing people in charge um which is that you get invaded yeah and the two
00:53:28.180 areas that voted afd turns out they were under east germany so almost like they are definitely being
00:53:33.900 invaded yeah so um good luck to the german zoomers for reclaiming your country um you know might not
00:53:40.320 necessarily have another five years to completely right the ship but hopefully you can exert enough
00:53:43.920 pressure on the governments to actually deport people rather than just paying them to go back to
00:53:47.340 afghanistan for a holiday well and common british zoomers get with the program but um afghanistan
00:53:53.720 i'm given the impression by a certain person that used to be on this um one of the lotus leaders is
00:53:58.180 reasonably safe place where you can just go on holiday and that being the case is there really no
00:54:03.620 afghanistan oh so is it really do they really need to be in the uk i mean that the basically it's now
00:54:10.480 safer though i was in fact i was talking to an uber driver the other night who is from afghanistan
00:54:14.000 and he came here in 1979 and now and only now he's saying yeah i'm gonna go back there i'm gonna
00:54:20.020 go it's safe talibad made it safe it's fine right before we move on to the next one we've got a couple
00:54:24.780 of uh rumble rants uh keith kaiser for five dollars according to politico reform uk were polled on the
00:54:29.560 29th of august at 21 percent conservatives are polled at 20 percent reform uk and our polling is the actual
00:54:34.440 opposition party not the tories yes unfortunately because of ofcom rules they don't get as much media
00:54:40.480 coverage uh and also they're not going to get as many questions in the commons what they need
00:54:44.320 really is effective spokesmen from outside the parliamentary party like ben habib has served as
00:54:50.640 a good role doing so even though he's not sort of endorsed by the party anymore and to form a kind of
00:54:54.960 shadow cabinet of king's courtly advisors to nigel to make sure they've got all their bases covered and
00:55:00.080 they aren't just i mean it's fine to be a single issue party on migration but to actually table
00:55:03.680 legislation nigel can't do it all himself uh and the last russian and says professor dutton i have a very
00:55:08.880 funny indian doctor headline compilation video uh with a fun soundtrack he said he'll tweet it at you
00:55:13.760 or something so thank you very much on the lookout for that looking at that anyway onward with
00:55:18.500 physiognomy ed dutton you're going to give us a 20 minute lesson on why you can judge people
00:55:24.240 by what they look like am i yes i wish i'd been told it'd be 20 minutes i mean feel free to ask
00:55:29.180 questions why don't you ask me a stimulating question why don't we get a you know very short
00:55:34.240 because you wrote a book about it didn't you i did i mean i i just this whole idea seemed this
00:55:39.260 idea that you shouldn't judge people by what they look like you can't judge a book by its cover
00:55:42.300 no you can judge people by what they look like because what people um people's personalities
00:55:48.020 and intelligence are like the brain is about 80 it's about 84 of the genome people's personalities
00:55:54.240 are affected by things like uh various hormones and and and uh mutational load and all kinds of
00:56:00.100 different factors and this will obviously be reflected then in what they look like uh and it
00:56:05.340 indeed is and also even with something as simple as intelligence you can say well um what is an
00:56:10.980 example of someone that's not particularly intelligent well that would be let's say somebody
00:56:14.400 who has down syndrome they look a particular way why because the normal developmental pathways have
00:56:19.660 been interfered with and so you can see then this relationship or alcohol uh whatever fetal alcohol
00:56:26.280 same thing the developmental pathways have been interfered with at a certain point leading to
00:56:30.640 a lost intelligence and certain physical manifestations now similarly intelligence is
00:56:36.280 weakly associated with basically looking more similar to let's say a person that has down syndrome
00:56:42.100 i.e small eye uh small eyes a sort of wide face small nose um than a person that is more
00:56:50.400 intelligent but um in the normal range it's just in a more subtle kind of a way so it makes of course
00:56:55.540 the the ancients tend to be right about these things the ancients if chaucer canterbury tales
00:57:00.280 looks into physiognomy uh physiognomy and and and you know they are correct you can't you can't
00:57:05.260 obviously it's difficult to go up to someone and just totally judge them by appearance but what you
00:57:08.480 but if they are an extreme case of lots of different markers then you can probably um be within a
00:57:14.000 reasonable chance and that makes evolutionary sense because of course we had to be able to do that
00:57:17.680 so women for example it is more easy to judge a man's intelligence from what he looks like than a
00:57:23.460 woman's why because women had to be able to judge a man's intelligence for what he looked like
00:57:27.360 because they have to be able to assess whether this person is a suitable mate i particularly like
00:57:32.000 that the reading age on this book is 12 to 18 so you can i didn't put that in that's a new stupid
00:57:36.780 thing that amazon because i self-published this because it's a short book um that's a new thing
00:57:41.180 they've put in this weird reading i did not put that in i published this like years ago 2018 or
00:57:45.420 something just to make the point that it isn't just uh this isn't just ed things this is widely
00:57:49.360 accepted science so here's a new scientist article basically going into physiognomy and about how it's
00:57:54.100 really a thing but we don't want their takes you can you can you can certainly judge these things
00:57:58.700 with with greater greater accuracy that would be predicted by chance so if you want to look at
00:58:03.120 something like masculinization um then being uh high in uh testosterone is associated with a number
00:58:10.300 of markers it's associated with a darker pigment darker within race i mean darker pigment darker skin
00:58:16.380 uh because that's reflective of high testosterone it's associated with narrow eyes so those women
00:58:21.600 tend to have big eyes wide eyes that's estrogen that is um they tend to have narrow eyes um they
00:58:26.960 they will tend to have sort of uh uh some small noses wider face um and so someone like donald trump
00:58:33.660 and also i mean testosterone is associated with losing your hair so men men that go bald young
00:58:39.160 uh will probably be higher in testosterone i'll tell you what i'm gonna i'm gonna give you a quiz
00:58:43.560 so so watch the screen right what what is that telling us well i mean all of these things are
00:58:50.180 comparative and you found that earlier because we wanted a comparison but this would be a relatively
00:58:55.120 low t man for those who are listening this is david tennant right and you can see that he has
00:59:00.800 so he has a relatively long face he doesn't have a wide face he has a long face interestingly a long
00:59:06.200 face has been found to be weakly associated with intelligence as has a long nose but he has a he has a
00:59:11.200 long face look um he has uh quite large eyes which is a marker of of um of low testosterone i don't
00:59:18.980 know how old he is but he's got a full head of hair that's a marker controlling for age of low
00:59:24.560 testosterone his face shape is not particularly if your hair starts to recede a bit that that means
00:59:29.880 you've got high testosterone it doesn't well it on average it is associated with it so men will men
00:59:35.260 like our friend bow yes you know butch bow yes um high t bow chad yeah chad bow yeah lost his hair
00:59:42.580 of every young age yeah based right so so um um but then on the other hand he's got dark hair so dark
00:59:49.020 hair is weakly associated with higher t and dark eyes uh but but you can see that the fate the shape of
00:59:55.840 the chin it's slightly masculinizes that square bit at the bottom it's like a completely feminine chin but
01:00:00.720 it's quite small unpronounced sort of chin but circular it's it's a it's a low t that is a low t
01:00:07.560 um um face um and also he's got his button showing under his tie which is particularly ridiculous
01:00:14.240 um but but um yeah that's that's that whereas you're now going to show me the opposite challenge
01:00:18.820 two right now this is exactly the opposite so you can see that he this is a very for those who are
01:00:24.160 listening this is wayne rooney on the screen he's right so what have you got with this guy so he's got
01:00:28.500 a wide face right high testosterone he's got narrow eyes narrow lips as well now women tend to have
01:00:36.100 bigger lips than than than men narrow narrow lips he's got this small little nose it's also like a
01:00:42.560 like a not particularly high iq face as well um and he's very that's a high iq face it's not it's
01:00:47.700 opposite oh right okay he's got he's got a small uh little sort of the button nose whatever you call
01:00:53.240 um and and he's got this very and it's very very manly chin and you can see he's got a receding
01:00:59.940 hairline and as my my understanding was that he had a hair transplant that guy um because he was
01:01:05.140 going to go bald why because he was high t so that that is a stereotypical i think also he's quite short
01:01:10.240 and um there's some evidence that uh people that are high t tend to be shorter because if you are in
01:01:17.040 high t you you grow up in a fast ecology like live fast die young so then you you you grow up quickly
01:01:23.420 you reach your peak quickly and you stop growing you you put more energy um uh into sex than growth
01:01:29.980 in in in evolutionary terms in among animals and plants it's sex or growth which one this would
01:01:35.560 explain his very our selective mating habits then with um people other than his wife so why why do
01:01:40.980 women respond so well to tall men then if if it's a because because because um the other thing that
01:01:47.620 height is an indicator of is genetic health it's a bit like a peacock's tail if you have it's saying
01:01:53.700 my genes are so good that even all of the uh all of the diseases and whatever that life is throwing
01:01:59.840 at me i have bioenergetic resources left over to grow tall so it's a it's an honesty signal of genetic
01:02:05.600 health to be tall i see okay right now now i'm now going to throw up and you can tell us what you
01:02:11.160 see here this is for those who are listening mike philpot the um lifelong criminal who actually
01:02:16.960 burnt some of his kids to try and get a bigger house he um well he had 17 kids and he burnt six
01:02:21.440 of them so he's still still got 11 left he's still going to pass on uh a lot of his genes um so again
01:02:28.080 you see there are evidence of a high t and therefore impulsive and aggressive and so on male um he's
01:02:34.660 bald obviously um i think he's in his mid 50s there um but it's still pretty bald um he's got
01:02:41.300 again you see the narrow eyes right um his face is quite wide it's not like as wide as rooney's but
01:02:47.900 it is it is a very it's it's not a particularly horsey type long face um the nose is in congress
01:02:53.940 so he's got quite a long nose so you you're not always going to get a uh a template example he's got
01:03:00.820 quite a long nose there but but so that would indicate aspects of some higher intelligence
01:03:05.400 yeah and and on average i mean these are only small correlations but what you but what you
01:03:09.420 but what you can get in some people and i think rooney is an example that it's all of these markers
01:03:13.560 kind of coming together and then you can just say in the same way why is it adaptive well imagine
01:03:17.460 you're walking home at night or you're walking in the forest you see some person you've got to react
01:03:21.960 what do you do you've got to make a split second judgment what do i do do i cross the road
01:03:25.620 and we've got to be evolved to do that and we are evolved to do that okay it's like a like a like a
01:03:31.020 like a hypersensitive smoke alarm maybe maybe a lot of the time you'll get it wrong but if you get
01:03:35.940 it right more than 50 percent of the time then it's adaptive to survive and these studies indicate
01:03:40.740 that that we people people can look at faces and they can judge things like personality and
01:03:45.480 intelligence and they can get it right more than 50 percent of the time and ai gets it right a lot
01:03:50.700 more than 50 percent of the time oh yes i'm coming to that are you seeing any markers for
01:03:54.180 criminality in that i i the well there was a chinese study that i saw which is it was it was
01:03:59.900 very subtle so it made a composite of the criminals versus the non-criminals and it found
01:04:04.580 basically the criminal face was more genetically diverse which makes sense because you'd expect
01:04:09.460 the genetically healthy person who is not a criminal to be closely like the pre-industrial norm
01:04:14.480 closely evolved environment small gene pool and then any deviation from that would be associated
01:04:18.980 with criminality so you'd have more diversity among the faces they found things like markers of
01:04:23.340 reputational load like eyes being closer together um little little little things that indicated a
01:04:29.180 dysmorphic face because when i was great i mean i can't do it anymore because politics has gone so
01:04:33.660 weird and so all over the place but when i was growing up and there was a very clear left right
01:04:37.300 distinction i could always tell how somebody voted just by looking at them like almost without fail
01:04:42.580 you could get that distinction it seems to me fairly i mean i remember people commenting on at the time
01:04:47.880 that the the labor the new labor government that replaced the conservative government a lot of
01:04:52.300 those men were like less manly yes they looked less manly there was something effeminate about tony
01:04:57.640 blair yes in a way that there wasn't about john major i also wanted to throw up a picture of somebody
01:05:02.180 who i think is quite smart so i picked um freeman dyson i think i think he's a very smart man what
01:05:07.840 is does he again this is he fits absolutely fits the stereotypes so what you're seeing he looks
01:05:14.100 like he's relatively low t um and there's and he you can see he has a very long face and that long
01:05:21.200 narrow face that is associated with intelligence weekly weekly but it is the long nose again
01:05:28.580 associated the opposite i mean he's basically the opposite of a person with down syndrome
01:05:32.560 right oh yes yeah yeah um um um the large eyes allowing him uh large pupils probably permitting
01:05:41.080 him to take in more information and thus solve problems better um uh so everything about that is
01:05:47.000 saying uh an intelligent uh a person and not particularly high t person either but but certainly
01:05:52.800 an intelligent so then i try to find a counter example because this this one is a little bit
01:05:56.640 confusing so this is alan turi yeah that's again as i display people want to say this is this is um
01:06:02.020 pseudoscience or whatever but i all i've ever said and all the studies ever say is that you will be
01:06:07.100 right if you give people a large number of pictures they will be right more times than chance would
01:06:11.240 predict okay um and of course in many cases you're going to get people that therefore you'll be wrong
01:06:15.860 about um and also you're going to get people that are mixtures of different traits that's
01:06:19.860 much less stereotypical because he's sort of halfway between freeman dyson
01:06:23.580 and wayne rooney but considerably smarter yeah exactly so he doesn't he doesn't fit with it
01:06:29.140 that has to but as i said these are only weak correlations and it's just in some people you
01:06:33.600 will obviously get all of the markers together and in some people you just won't that is but i mean
01:06:38.200 these are things that you know i've noticed throughout my life you you can literally sort
01:06:43.260 of make these judgments and so i mean your your book is interesting because literally you can judge
01:06:48.120 people by what they look like it is a remarkable thing um this is an old guardian article this is six
01:06:54.720 years old before ai got really good um but this is saying ai can guess whether you're gay or not
01:07:00.120 from a photograph and it's got 91 accuracy like i said that's six years ago before ai you know went
01:07:05.780 up a level because because if you are there's a number of things involved here um first of all if you
01:07:11.560 um homosexuality um has a clear birth order effect so the more older brothers you have the more likely
01:07:20.100 you are to be gay um and if you are a male and the reason for this is that uh we have the first child
01:07:27.100 and the the male releases masculinizing hormones into the female's immune system and the female
01:07:32.300 then counters this with these feminizing hormones and some of these can get through the amniotic
01:07:36.700 sack um into the child and this will happen like any reaction like that it will happen in a more
01:07:43.020 extreme way on the part of the woman with each child so eventually the the more older brothers you
01:07:47.560 have the more likely you are to be feminized and the even more older brothers you have the more
01:07:51.000 likely you are to be a homosexual pedophile um and so and so then what this is going to do is it's
01:07:57.440 going to feminize your brain so it's going to mean that you have higher linguistic intelligence higher
01:08:01.400 female profile um but it's also going to feminize your face um um and so you're going to have and the
01:08:06.900 other thing is that there is an association between uh homosexuality and elevated mutational load
01:08:12.020 um so like the more likely like let's say your mother is just has a mutational load and she just
01:08:16.960 releases far too much feminizing hormones but you you will also inherit high mutational load so you'll
01:08:22.940 have this slightly um um asymmetrical or whatever face that deviates from the normal you can see that
01:08:29.440 they've noted that exactly in the in the in the in the ratios that you've got there and so it would
01:08:34.280 make sense that if you were given enough samples then ai hundreds and hundreds of samples then ai would
01:08:39.240 eventually be able to work out the very subtle yes differences because i mean we we were a bit
01:08:44.080 thrown by alan turing but ai is sophisticated enough to notice the tiny the tiniest thing which we can't
01:08:50.260 notice you know what this made me think of have you ever seen predator yes right and and you know he
01:08:55.160 can filter through his visions he's like the heat map and then the you know whatever all the
01:08:59.440 different visions the predator can use gay vision well that's one thing so if you've got google glasses
01:09:04.060 right and with with ai on it you could like click through it and you could go to gay vision to
01:09:09.040 you know chicks who are likely to put out or you know smart people a tory party conference is just
01:09:13.060 going to be completely glowing artists yeah yeah but but but you know that's the point if you've got
01:09:17.740 a pair of google glasses you could do the predator vision and cycle through you know that you could
01:09:22.040 put it on criminal vision if you're in a rough area you could put it on those who are likely to put
01:09:25.940 out if you're a nightclub you know gay if you're at tory conference or you know whatever it is or if
01:09:30.340 you're the ayatollah of iran yeah yes yes but you you but you know we we could be only a few years
01:09:35.920 away from being able to walk down the street and just assess with like 90 plus probability
01:09:41.000 whether somebody's a good or no a bad one um yes this is correct and other subtle things as well
01:09:48.180 for example people that are autistic there's this studies that have indicated that basically people
01:09:52.000 that are autistic are like normal people are like um domesticated animals and autistics are like wild
01:09:59.640 animals and there are certain there are certain um look certain features of a domestic animal as
01:10:06.480 against a non-domestic animal like the ears of a domestic of a domesticated animal are different
01:10:11.700 subtly different from a non-domesticated animal um and and and um and the um various other things in
01:10:19.240 the parts of the face or whatever are that are slightly different uh and you can see this difference
01:10:23.800 between autistics and controls they are more wild which makes sense because they're less socially
01:10:28.560 skilled they're less involved living groups they're they they they're they're more on edge yes
01:10:33.700 so moving swiftly on from the guardian article about telling if you're gay let's let's go back to
01:10:37.940 another physiognomy example i've gone with jeffrey darmer no hang on that's no is that yeah that is
01:10:44.320 yeah that doesn't i mean that doesn't i mean he's he's a psychopath yes um and as and you would
01:10:50.740 expect a psychopath to be elevated in in testosterone markers and and things like that and that was what
01:10:56.980 would make him impulsive he he's got this he's got very masculinized chin um and um you know he he was
01:11:04.600 gay but was was he gay because of the birth order effect or whatever or was he gay because he just
01:11:10.360 liked dominating men for peculiar psychological reasons yeah i suppose we don't remember a big
01:11:16.140 data sample with people like no you know that's a small data sample so there's not much you can say
01:11:20.360 but i mean certainly i would say he's peculiar looking which would be consistent with his nose a bit
01:11:25.200 like sort of a dyson vacuum cleaner head um which i suppose would be probably consistent with him
01:11:30.240 being a psychopathic but there's not much you can say about that you also made the interesting point
01:11:34.040 about um sort of 1940s film stars yes i wish i could find it there was some sort of anthropology
01:11:40.620 evolutionary psychology blog about 10 or 15 years ago i just can't find it and and they they got a
01:11:47.200 a composite of the like the 10 most famous women who were actresses in about 1940 and then a composite
01:11:54.220 of the 10 most famous actresses um the women actresses in uh 2005 or something like that
01:11:59.600 um including this this hegel what was the name that was in knocked up oh yes her right and and what
01:12:05.660 you notice is that the the females of 1940 the composite that's like that's she she's like a
01:12:11.980 mother she's like wife material right she looks more feminine uh and more innocent and it's a different
01:12:18.500 kind of beauty to the the the the the composite actress in oh five and she's like you know she's
01:12:25.080 she's the mistress she's the lover she's the she's very different and she she's more masculinized in
01:12:30.120 some ways she's got narrower eyes she's got smaller nose she's she's she's um but but she's she's got a
01:12:37.760 but a sort of more masculinized jaw things like this hollywood is actively selected for the more
01:12:42.940 sort of sexually available look we've moved from it implies perhaps that we've moved from finding
01:12:48.300 women who are um the mothering type the most sexually attractive which is what you'd expect
01:12:54.200 of a slow life history ecology to finding women who are the the mistress type um as it were um the
01:13:00.600 socio-sexual type which appeals more into the fast life strategy right right and so there's the
01:13:04.360 certain socio-sexual markers in the face and and these these are um what you see in the o5 and what
01:13:09.880 about the chaps i mean we've got bogart same thing they they noted the same thing which is that the
01:13:14.260 the um the male actor in 1940 composite was was less masculinized um than okay than the case now so
01:13:23.760 it's we're going for chads and whatever the final the female of them that is uh so there's there's this
01:13:30.140 change so both of them have become more more faster more fast life history strategist yeah okay
01:13:35.780 which means more masculine uh high t in the men and more sort of you know well yeah basically
01:13:41.700 to a degree more masculine in the women right okay okay um and i wanted to try and find a an example
01:13:49.620 of of a spiteful mutant and i did a quick poll remember i call them altruistic mutants these
01:13:54.340 days because of yes you do yeah because of because in fact yeah i i did a um uh an episode with ed
01:13:59.940 which went up yesterday on brokonomics so we go and check out woke uh eugenics which is also a book
01:14:05.880 anyway it's on brokonomics so uh yes spiteful mutants i did a quick poll in the office we could
01:14:10.620 not think of anyone better than than trotsky um there are certain things that complicate that but if
01:14:18.100 you if um um because that's a very odd looking man it isn't it is an odd looking man for uh reasons i
01:14:26.140 uh are difficult perhaps to articulate but that i think a better example would be someone like uh
01:14:31.420 andrea dwarkin um that that would be make it easier because this is he's at a funny angle
01:14:37.580 and uh whatever but he certainly doesn't look particularly symmetrical that's that's uh that's
01:14:42.460 for sure uh his eyes are closed together you can see that for a start that's obvious yes but
01:14:47.820 very mutant-ish um let's go going back to boomer truth i mean what are we getting out of this this
01:14:54.580 is winston churchill winston churchill is a bit odd looking but yes um i think part of that he's
01:15:00.760 he's something like is it one eighth native american was he yeah and so and so he looks a bit a bit
01:15:07.380 sort of a bit peculiar so does his father um and i think that's probably just a product of that
01:15:11.940 so um it's difficult but you could it's it's it's definitely i would think a high t
01:15:17.380 face lost his hair even though he's fat right taking even taking that away if you look at him when
01:15:22.760 he's younger he's got a wide face look he's got this small pug sort of nose and he looks like a
01:15:28.500 bulldog um and that and and and that is a implying that he's a relatively high testosterone man which
01:15:35.200 would be consistent with his aggressiveness his poor impulse control his alcoholism his
01:15:39.280 uh he's also short very short guy about five six um uh and whatever so yeah you can see how
01:15:46.180 different he looks from someone like neville chamberlain or stanley baldwin he's much more
01:15:50.200 masculine looking well either of those was it was chamberlain quite tall was he i don't i don't
01:15:54.520 know how tall chamberlain was but churchill was like known for being short he was notably short
01:15:58.020 five six one one quick one ted bundy because he's a good looking man he is a good looking man he's
01:16:02.820 quite a high t man i didn't look at the chin yes the nose is a bit feminine but look at the look at the
01:16:07.820 the the the chin the shape of the eyes the you can see why that would appeal to women which obviously
01:16:12.540 didn't work out for them no no no it didn't it didn't work out for them very well the other thing i
01:16:16.620 wanted to highlight um and and you made an excellent point is i was is i was talking to
01:16:21.520 you about examples oh how do i mean to go here we go examples of uh u.s presidents because i thought
01:16:26.620 we've got to throw something in there for the americans who watch this uh but you said no don't
01:16:30.440 look at the um uh the presidential winners well look at both look at who wins and who loses well yes
01:16:36.020 well this is i couldn't find them side by side but this is a list of of presidential losers right so i
01:16:41.860 mean dewey for example the guy who prosecuted el capone i mean that is look at stevenson go down
01:16:47.700 at least stevenson okay and compare him to eisenhower who's more masculine it's obviously
01:16:52.400 eisenhower yes okay and then and then um so that would be you're not always it's not always
01:16:58.260 going to work like this but i mean when nixon came back i think the carcass they look at goldwater
01:17:02.760 and compare him to lg lbj right yes right hugely clearly um hubert humphrey and compare him to
01:17:10.120 nixon he's clearly less matt look he's look he's less good they're on the same page though aren't i
01:17:14.440 so you can see them there right look at dick nixon compared to compared to humphrey and then
01:17:18.640 mcgovern that would be nixon again i don't know about that maybe that doesn't work he was never
01:17:22.300 really elected so he doesn't count i would think surely reagan is more masculine than carter
01:17:27.240 oh yes right and then walter mondale i would again less than reagan and then but de carcass is
01:17:32.980 look at this guy i mean he was tiny that's the thing the other thing to take into account is height
01:17:36.640 so people will vote for taller men and de carcass was basically far too short to be president of
01:17:41.840 america i mean there was no way he was gonna he was tiny right so it doesn't so rubio shouldn't
01:17:46.440 have made an effort well he wasn't that short though he was probably about five nine or five ten
01:17:50.440 well that's a bit short someone like well not really it's the average height isn't it but but
01:17:53.740 but someone like de carcass is clearly it's just too short i mean then they put up what was his
01:17:59.800 name against the book against obama that was really short oh was it mccain mccain there's no way
01:18:04.760 and also you notice as well they all most of the candidates that win or lose are full heads of
01:18:09.320 hair it's it's very rare that they are bald and if they are then like then like joe they they have
01:18:15.900 uh they have operations it seems to me that they don't really people bald men don't seem to get
01:18:21.360 uh get elected no no that's fascinating it's not considered attractive well that's fascinating so look
01:18:27.380 if you can't wait for your predator vision google glasses that you know gives you a gay darwin you
01:18:31.940 whatever whatever dar um then read ed's book right at the beginning there on on um how to judge people
01:18:39.080 what they look like because that was fascinating wonderful right let's go let's go to some comments
01:18:42.800 right do we have any video comments or is it just website okay it's just website and rumble rants then
01:18:48.760 um uh someone for one dollars connor smug mug nice name says the tennessee christian school shooters
01:18:55.120 manifesto was released look into it 27 year old girl reads like a teenager with a fetish for brown girls
01:19:00.240 um i saw steven crowder's stream on it yesterday but i haven't looked into it yet i from the leaked
01:19:05.800 pages that were already there it seemed like the schizo posting of uh the exact kind of progressive
01:19:11.620 activists that would go and shoot a bunch of children so no wonder the authorities didn't want
01:19:15.700 it out um threadnaught says trotsky looks like his head is a cube with a bad wig on it or one of those
01:19:22.120 disguise kits for from cartoons for a face yeah you know the um the glasses with the nose and the
01:19:27.780 moustache oh yeah get from a joke shop yeah that's how trotsky looks definitely um
01:19:32.000 that's a random name says growing up teachers told me never to judge a book by its cover
01:19:37.440 yet without fail all the worst interactions i've ever had with weird dysgenic freaks
01:19:41.380 that's that's one thing i would ask how much of this is driven by genetic factors and how much of
01:19:46.460 it is driven by lifestyle habits because obviously you know you see big fat women that vote left
01:19:51.300 um they're not all genetically predisposed to be big fat women are they well i mean all else being
01:19:58.040 equal there are people that are big fat women are going to be genetically are going to be fat
01:20:02.040 because of genetic factors relating to i mean what is it predicts being fat uh high extroversion
01:20:07.480 predicts being fat that's about 50 genetic uh low conscientious predicts being fat low agreeability
01:20:12.720 predicts being fat and then there are certain kinds of neuroticism predicts oscillating between
01:20:17.680 different extremes of weight um and then people who are um there's a certain kind of a woman that
01:20:25.060 we're getting more and more of because it used to be that if you had a propensity to be genetically fat
01:20:28.740 then you were also more likely to die in childbirth and with the rise of so you'd only have one child
01:20:34.320 with that and then the rise of obstetric since the 1930s we've seen this massive rise in obesity
01:20:39.740 and it's been argued that a big part of that is just genetic it's just these people that have a
01:20:43.140 produce to obesity not dying in childbirth anymore and so then we just have more fat people
01:20:46.980 so um a big part of the of being fat is um is genetic um probably at least half right
01:20:55.440 interesting there we go uh comments ollie always great to see professor ed dutton on the show his
01:21:00.440 appearance on the live stream talking about the tin legs was hilarious in regards to his analysis of
01:21:04.500 explaining the difference between right-wing and left-wing people it starts to make sense why
01:21:08.220 these people are the way they are subverting themselves to an ideology that essentially promises
01:21:13.220 everything is proof in the pudding they're failed individuals head hence why they're obsessed with
01:21:17.780 envious primates like marks could show chaps that about right um they're certainly one of the
01:21:23.800 motivations of being left-wing has been sound has been found to be resentment uh anti-hierarchical
01:21:28.380 aggression and uh basically that they feel even if it's not the case they feel that they are
01:21:34.180 failures and they feel inadequate and this makes them want to get power and want to tear down what's
01:21:38.600 there and bring about a vacuum and a center power in that context and that's interesting that's the
01:21:42.860 problem with conservatives conservatives tend to have a positive worldview like they feel that
01:21:47.300 they're reasonably successful even if they're not whereas people they don't they just want to grill
01:21:51.020 and stuff whereas people that are left-wing will feel always feel that they are failures always feel
01:21:55.900 that they are persecuted always feel that the big bad yeah the czar could come back and take over
01:21:59.920 and in many ways that's adaptive because it means they never ever rest on their laurels are these
01:22:03.980 politics heritable politics is yeah depends on what aspect of it but that's the point so i'm not
01:22:08.720 advocating this about 60 percent genetic if there was a massive purge then it would take a long time
01:22:13.780 for the left-wingers to come back with it well yeah because we've been select as i look at in woke
01:22:17.480 eugenics we were selecting for a very long we know this because these things are associated
01:22:20.400 genetically with health and genetically with mental and physical health we were selecting for a long time
01:22:24.740 to be essentially conservative uh and religious and ethnocentric and therefore these things are being
01:22:30.100 are bundled together with being on average with being genetically mentally and physically healthy
01:22:35.460 and then with the collapse of half-to-win in selection you get to build a mutation and that's
01:22:39.100 going to be in the direction of away from what we were selecting for and therefore it's associated
01:22:42.960 with with with uh with leftism so if there was when they are purging themselves that's what they're
01:22:47.840 doing that's woke eugenics they are bringing about a culture which induces which the only people
01:22:53.000 that are going to be resistant to being drawn into this death cult are those that are genetically
01:22:57.540 right-wing conservative and civil see see brokernomics for more detail on that with ed
01:23:01.580 um mathurin says uh thank you dan for that definition of boomer truth i think that was a that was connor's
01:23:07.040 um but um uh that was that was not one for one with what i thought it meant contextually on the show
01:23:11.820 it always seemed a bit more generationally focused well i mean yeah i mean the the the boomers are the
01:23:16.960 strongest adherence to boomer truth but it's not it's not directly them it's just it resonates more
01:23:22.600 there uh justin b um someone e uh if someone is cold on people that are close to them and hot for
01:23:29.740 people that are far away it sounds extreme self-loathing the closer something is to themselves
01:23:35.700 the less they like it it suggests that fixing the self-loathing would deprogram them can these
01:23:40.800 people be deprogrammed or is it hardwired into their brain um so you're going to get some people
01:23:45.560 that are like they are for strongly genetic reasons so you're going to imagine a society that's very
01:23:49.920 different from society now you're going to get some people that are christian religious whatever
01:23:54.020 the society is is throwing at them so those are the people now that even though uh we have this
01:23:58.820 left-wing society are still religious and then you're going to get some people that are like it
01:24:03.440 because they're culturally conformist or or a bit non-conformist or whatever happens to be some
01:24:07.340 people would be more to do with environmental reasons or an interaction between and then some
01:24:10.600 people will be just you know if we were a right-wing conservative society then there'd be lots of
01:24:15.640 people that would just be religious for purely environmental reasons because they conform
01:24:19.000 right it varies so there would be a degree to which you're going to get lots of people when
01:24:23.060 things move back towards being right some of them can be saved yeah okay uh chase ball says the left
01:24:28.840 indeed does have an in-group preference it is just happens to be with fellow parasites yeah do do
01:24:35.860 spiteful mutants like other spiteful yeah they're sort of limo right okay fine uh we have some zoomer
01:24:41.960 comments yes uh suits the red coat what exactly is stopping us i presume he means like the german
01:24:46.960 government and the like from taking dna samples and putting them on database uh simple you cannot
01:24:51.340 acknowledge that group differences exist unless you're trying to actively extract resources from
01:24:55.340 the more productive group like anarcho tyranny is basically the tacit admission the blank slate
01:24:59.520 doesn't exist because if you can acknowledge that one group is more likely to behave in one way and
01:25:03.580 then you inflict them on another part of the population you're admitting there are group differences but
01:25:06.800 they still try and use it to get to the multicultural utopia anyway you mean violinism don't you
01:25:11.180 what do you mean violinism that would show you that you have to over promote certain groups
01:25:16.560 yeah but anarcho tyranny works in the same way because if if you if with anarcho tyranny you
01:25:20.980 acknowledge there is always going to be a criminal underclass oh i see right you have to acknowledge
01:25:24.340 there are certain types of people predisposed yeah even though the exact same people that inflict
01:25:28.140 anarcho tyranny on us insist that the blank slate is real um kevin fox amnesty international were up in
01:25:33.160 arms about germany breaking international law by deporting 28 no such complaint from them when pakistan
01:25:38.340 under supports 500 000 afghans and are about to deport a million more why does international law
01:25:44.060 which amnesty international seems to think overrides national laws apply to white countries
01:25:47.620 simple because they're not signed up to those treaties yes the the echr is only for europe and
01:25:52.280 the europeans bound themselves in that to prevent them from ever becoming the 1930s mustache man ever
01:25:56.940 again the pakistanis just don't care this is this is why race communism doesn't take hold in any
01:26:01.720 non-liberal country it's not gonna happen um michael brooks my slovakian father-in-law once stated to me
01:26:07.680 we were born in communism so we know what it looks like and we see it in the west we were not that
01:26:11.400 that poisoned back here but i feel for your countries you've never had a taste of it so you
01:26:14.820 can't feel the bitterness only the sweet he now fears that is already back in his country because
01:26:19.100 of the american alphabet brigade we're tasting it now yeah quite it's not wrong um do you want to do
01:26:24.920 some for the last one yes but first of all i'm going to pick on dave in the live chat who who was
01:26:29.940 who was complaining about ed's previous point there saying that you know the only way you can be fat
01:26:34.820 is to eat more calories than you burn it's not rocket science i mean yes obviously but i'm pretty
01:26:41.220 sure the point that you're making is people with a genetic disposition for this stuff are more likely
01:26:46.620 to go out and consume those so if you look at the north korean famine then the people that died first
01:26:51.900 were the athletic types because they burn food off quickly they therefore don't get they don't accrue fat
01:26:58.060 very easily so then they died whereas the people that were able to store fat very easily i.e. the
01:27:03.540 endomorph body types they would survive for longer because they have slower metabolisms
01:27:07.820 so right yes okay right anyway so you have been told dave because obviously um yeah dave we do have
01:27:15.700 a super chat by the way do we asking for ed to assess mine and yours physiognomy well it's very no
01:27:22.320 because again no no go for it i was like when i was on i was on deading pole show well obviously you
01:27:27.540 can you can you can see that that uh our friend down here has a quite masculine brow uh face is
01:27:33.580 quite long consistent with intelligence nose is quite long consistent with intelligence he's got
01:27:38.240 one of these silly beards but i'm sure if he shaved off it's a reasonably masculine chin uh connor um
01:27:44.020 similarly very he has clear neanderthal genetics so i bet i bet i bet if you had the the brow is very
01:27:49.940 if you if you did the like the average european has about two percent neanderthal genetics with you
01:27:54.240 maybe it's four uh again that'll be the irishman reasonably up reasonably again reasonably long
01:27:59.340 face so it's it's it's it's a intelligent face neither particularly high t uh but um in in in
01:28:06.740 yeah so that's uh that's it and you're what are you test are you you're sort of what uh
01:28:11.620 horwood stage one both of you horwood hor stage one stage one i'm horwood stage one so so when you
01:28:18.880 go bald oh the least you go bald but it's like then you the least bald level of the horwood stage
01:28:24.100 one so i think it's eight is mine so i went like this about 26 okay um and then stopped and so
01:28:30.620 basically full head of hair and you're about horwood stage one or two okay so but but but
01:28:35.340 basically what you're saying is is is high marks on physiognomy yeah i suppose i'm just not like i'm
01:28:41.000 sitting here with some kind of ugly bastards yes yes very good very good um no let's just go
01:28:46.720 ahead of the comment physiognomy um is that eloise is that i need to read the book i feel i've been
01:28:53.280 going through a transformation and been trying um oh there's a very long bracket there over the last
01:28:59.960 few years uh dead and uh dan and ed's comments re-eyeliner also made me rethink my personal
01:29:05.840 lifestyle choices uh yes very good um all this time i thought being creative i uh with eye makeup um men
01:29:12.700 can interpret you as being crazy what's the physiognomy of crazy eyes you mean like mad
01:29:17.280 staring eyes yeah particularly on women um well the brain is um the eye the eyes are the window to
01:29:23.420 the soul in a very real sense because the eyes are literally made of the same material as the brain i
01:29:27.920 mean they're connected to it's the same material so if something goes wrong with the brain let's say
01:29:32.140 for example a child has flu a very bad flu then it can cause a brain damage and you get a child with a
01:29:37.760 squint or something like that so i would imagine that the eyes being close to connect to the brain
01:29:43.320 um if it was something odd like too much blood being pumped to the eyes or something strange like
01:29:48.800 that and and and that would be itself a marker of something that's wrong with the individual
01:29:53.200 and that you have crazy eyes or another possibility is if they have sort of autistic traits i know they
01:29:57.700 just sort of stare i don't know but there is reason to think that you can assess with above average
01:30:02.960 um above chance accuracy um um for uh information from people's eyes even if you're not conscious
01:30:09.980 of what you're doing an example of this is that intelligence is associated with having larger pupils
01:30:14.580 at rest and that makes sense because intelligence you've got to take in information and assess it so
01:30:21.020 the more information you can take in then the better you can solve a problem so if the interface
01:30:25.860 between the world and the uh the brain is bigger yes you can take more information i just want to come
01:30:32.020 back to eloise on on the makeup comment because you're sort of asking about what what men like
01:30:36.500 there and i don't know what men like but i know what i like right so what i want is is makeup but
01:30:40.400 to the minimum level that you can just about tell that you're wearing some and no more stop sometimes
01:30:46.100 you see women who put makeup on and they've got enough and then they just do it another five six
01:30:49.780 times that's ridiculous and if you're going to go for eye stuff the only thing i do like as a
01:30:54.980 special occasion is that thing where you get the black stuff and you go round that looks very
01:30:58.100 you know i don't like when they put on fake lashes no i don't like that but but the the round and
01:31:02.160 round thing that that's quite good a little flicks okay as well it's all right not sure sometimes
01:31:06.580 anyway we're running up against time well okay let's let's let's quickly do some more then
01:31:10.660 uh north fc says clearly i ought to win bald 27 uh nick taylor says uh poor connor looks like
01:31:17.740 his life is flashing before his eyes while the low t characteristics are listed didn't this
01:31:22.920 yes but he's got neanderthals so that that makes up for it i'm also in very good shape so
01:31:26.860 well i don't care um sam weston's cope
01:31:30.220 so
01:31:34.380 ed that was brutal
01:31:37.820 uh no no he's a lovely man he is he's very masculine um sam weston says professor um dutton
01:31:45.580 uh with being able to judge certain people by certain features and traits but they have
01:31:50.900 uh which are more likely to signify that they have lower testosterone for example
01:31:54.840 can that be compared in any way uh like
01:31:58.400 aposemitism
01:32:00.200 what is that
01:32:02.320 like that you
01:32:02.960 the opposite of camouflage that you tell people stay away stay away
01:32:06.560 you're telling people to stay away so you're conveying that you're dangerous via your
01:32:10.480 body like bright colors bright colors and frogs things like that
01:32:13.640 so hang on so so is is is is good physiognomy that then the opposite of stay away it's it's
01:32:19.680 come in is that is that what it um well yeah it's but yeah it's attractive isn't it it's it's it's
01:32:23.640 it's attractive on the other hand if you are a sort of a fast life history strategist then there
01:32:27.620 can be something attractive as it were about stay away physiognomy because or stay away clothes
01:32:32.220 anyway because it's saying that i'm dangerous and i'm unstable and what that means is that is
01:32:36.480 associated being sociosexual and that means easy sexual opportunity and for a certain kind of
01:32:41.140 person that itself can be attractive so like the big boots most of what we do like a woman like a man
01:32:47.820 growing tall or a woman growing large breasts or big buttocks or something like this is is even a
01:32:53.260 symmetrical face is a way of saying i have good genes it's attractive but then within that there
01:32:58.880 are interesting differences so um men will vary in the kind of breast size there are men who are
01:33:05.640 attracted to large breasts and large buttocks are faster life history strategists the men that are
01:33:11.180 attracted to small butt hurt breasts and buttocks oh why because because if you are a fast life
01:33:17.620 history strategist you live fast die young you have to advertise your sexual equality quickly and
01:33:22.220 conspicuously and if you are a man then you will be attracted to you who is a fast history strategy
01:33:27.320 you will want women that are like that genetically like you that are fast history strategists um who
01:33:32.100 who advertise their quality quickly and conspicuously so people with large but women with large
01:33:36.560 buttocks and large breasts are attracted to these chab men that are fast life history strategy men
01:33:40.540 and vice versa whereas men that are slow at life history strategies tend to be attracted to women
01:33:44.040 that have smaller breasts and smaller bottoms oh that's me i i i like i like the perp breasts and
01:33:49.200 the small bum preferably either nordic or asian and also then we also found that far slow life
01:33:53.660 strategies are more attractive face over body right because face is a very so hang on which way
01:33:59.040 around face over body no no for who fast slow because yes because face is a marker of genetic
01:34:04.680 similarity and if you're a slow life strategist then you have a smaller number of children
01:34:07.900 um with a small number of women and you invest more in them so you will want to have someone
01:34:12.740 that's more genetically similar to you because then you'll have a small number of children if you
01:34:15.680 have something just a distant you've got to have more children to pass on the same number of genes
01:34:18.360 yes so so therefore they the face over body they're not interested in you bob fox okay whereas
01:34:22.600 whereas whereas the the butter body sort of a person yes you know they're they're they're that i don't
01:34:26.580 like that no no you'll say that's what you do face is more important than body
01:34:29.640 for a slow life okay and what's the difference between men who like blondes and men who like asians
01:34:33.740 um i don't know if we've been specific studies into this i mean you would expect people that
01:34:38.440 would that would outbreed to be faster life history strategists because you're breeding with someone
01:34:41.900 that's less similar to you and thus passing on fewer of your genes and thus need to have more
01:34:44.620 children to make up for it so you would think that then perhaps they would be faster life history
01:34:49.180 strategists than men who if they were blonde liked blondes or men who just like people of their
01:34:52.980 own group but but that comes down to the number of partners does it it comes down to the fact
01:34:57.180 that you're breeding with someone that's genetically you're basically you're trading
01:35:01.560 genetic similarity for in the case of asians or east asians uh beauty uh estrogen high femininity
01:35:08.900 a a a a pedomorphic face um and so you're making that trade-off and the trade-off you've chosen is
01:35:16.140 genetic difference to get genetic quality and that would be a fast thing to do well ed thank you for
01:35:21.820 going to dan's sexual proclivities uh we have to have more if we've got time we don't unfortunately
01:35:27.000 i've got to do my show in 20 minutes so thank you very much for joining us ed cheers cheers dan as
01:35:31.720 ever we will be back tomorrow at one o'clock take care and goodbye chaps bye
01:35:34.920 you