01:00 Kamala Harris’s trajectory, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uORV3iWiLu4
08:00 Whoever was running Youtube in 2018 would have been forced to censor as Susan Wojcicki did, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susan_Wojcicki
09:45 Do you support order or radical riots?
11:00 Expanding Rights For One Group Usually Comes At The Expense Of Other Groups, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=156852
20:00 David Starkey: Mass migration has destroyed the Britain I knew, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwD3zn5nA5I
27:45 Two-Tier Keir Starmer
53:30 Colin Liddell joins the show to discuss UK rioting
55:00 Colin Liddell analyzes GBNews, Spiked, TalkTV
1:00:00 Elite media vs tabloid media
1:05:00 Why did the MSM miss Joe Biden’s obvious senility?
1:13:30 The soft approach vs over-statement
1:19:00 Refugees vs the white working class
1:27:20 Tommy Robinson
1:37:00 The feminization of the UK
1:45:30 Stephen J. James on the UK riots
2:01:00 Sargon of Akkad
2:17:00 Kip joins to talk about the world going to hell once countries left the gold standard
2:56:00 The Conservative Human Rights Revolution: European Identity, Transnational Politics, and the Origins of the European Convention, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=156870
3:06:00 Middle East analysis
3:16:00 Melanie Phillips: Britain chooses Labour – will the West Choose SURVIVAL?, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6Lh56l03Lw
3:18:00 The Left Is Horrified By Revenge, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=156903
3:26:00 Most academics are not interested in public writings, https://www.patreon.com/DecodingTheGurus/
3:32:00 Self-help books
3:34:30 Atomic habits
3:37:00 Dr K aka Healthy Gamer, Andrew Huberman
3:39:00 WP: A pastor said his pro-Trump prophecies came from God. His brother called him a fake., https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/interactive/2024/trump-prophecy-josiah-jeremiah-johnson-alabama/
Podnotes AI transcript: Speaker 1
00:00:14 – 00:00:32
Good day., Mate 40 here., So if you’re republican partisan., You’re just quite knocking it these days because Kamala Harris has had nothing, but great news for the past 3 weeks., She’s had a steady rise in the polls, so much so that some political observers on both sides of the spectrum, a Right?
Speaker 1
00:00:32 – 00:01:23
Some elites on the sides of the spectrum, think that Kamala harris is unstoppable., And it’s amazing there were at this point, given that a month ago, democratic elites had briefed doubts about a kamala harris that they they wanted to replace her As vice president of the United States, they didn’t want her representing the democratic party in this election because of fears that her insecurity will come through if she ever a to go off script., Well, so far, she’s been running a tightly scripted campaign, and the the media courses to behind her, but she’s just having success., It’s undeniable success undeniable, rising in the polls., He’s now in the latest poll, 4 points ahead of Donald Trump in 3 kings 3 swing states, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan.
Speaker 1
00:01:24 – 00:01:24
So
Speaker 2
00:01:24 – 00:01:25
if you’re
Speaker 1
00:01:25 – 00:01:38
on the right, you’re just hanging on looking for some, rays of light that Kamala harris might be stopped., This is Eli lake., Alright., Centrist pun here talking with the commentary magazine…
Speaker 3
00:01:38 – 00:02:00
Realize really brilliant latest., Podcast contribution to the free press on their feed, honestly, which ask questions about how the media memory hole are literally using techniques laid out by Georgia Willow 19 8 4 by Joshua.
Speaker 1
00:02:01 – 00:02:26
But whatever techniques the media you’re using, whatever techniques Kamala Harris is using, and she has the best political operatives running her team., Alright?, This is the All star team that that’s running her operation., And so they know what they’re doing, and she is following their lead., She is willing to take direction, unlike Donald Trump, who is not nearly as willing to take direction constantly goes off script off message.
Speaker 1
00:02:27 – 00:02:34
Alright., So much so the Republicans doubting that Trump now has the cognitive capacity at age 78 to stay on message.
Speaker 3
00:02:34 – 00:02:52
And his great book of cap mind by Milan K and his great novel the book of laughter and forgetting., To held Kamala Harassment went win the election., Matt, where where…, How…, Do you think that these lines of attack are gonna bite or is the are the distractions from the republican attacks by the media, gonna work?
Speaker 4
00:02:52 – 00:03:06
Well, I I don’t think we’ll know, for a while., , The other day on the podcast we were discussing with Mark Hal., About what’s my interrupt this virtuous cycle of enthusiasm., For Harris leading to positive nay…, A media coverage for Harris leading to more enthusiasm for harris and so on.
Speaker 4
00:03:07 – 00:03:23
And I listed a potential war in Middle east, potential economic downturn And then finally, some type of scandal or controversy surrounding the biographies of either Harris or Walls., And Hal said, that the most likely the 3 in his view was, potential scandal., And so what we have with the story over Walls in service in the national guard., I…
Speaker 1
00:03:24 – 00:03:36
So potential scandal in that neither Tim Watts., Nor Kamala harris have been thoroughly vetted., And so you would expect a lot more stories come out about them., The a damaging.
Speaker 4
00:03:36 – 00:04:03
I think could become a big problem for the Harris campaign., Loss has been silent as these criticisms of his portrayal of his national guard service., Have mounted., And we had the news just before we began recording this podcast this morning, August 8 that Donald Trump would be holding a press conference at Mar lag later this afternoon and I expect Trump to amplify the criticisms, the attacks that Jd Vance has already been making on walls., So that could occupy some more, media attention distracting from the Harris swing state tour and could become a problem for her.
Speaker 4
00:04:04 – 00:04:30
I do think though that we won’t really get a sense of where this is headed until after the coronation in Chicago next week, and something happened last night John at Harris Rally in Michigan that I think could be a major problem for her and from Democrats., As Harris was talking to the crowd protesters began shopping at her pro, protesters saying that, they will not vote for Genocide., And Harris responded to them., And I think what she said was really revealing., She said, If you want, Donald Trump to win, keep saying that.
Speaker 4
00:04:31 – 00:04:50
Otherwise, I’m talking., She didn’t say, you’re wrong, she didn’t say I won’t support terrorism., She didn’t say Israel has the right to defend itself, which she has said in the past., She said, shut up because you might cost me the election., And then we learned that prior to the rally, she met with the pro house organizers of the un committed campaign in Michigan.
Speaker 4
00:04:50 – 00:05:07
And if the reporting is accurate, suggested that the organizers talked to her staff about a potential arms embargo against israel Next year if she takes office., By the way, the labor government, the new labor government in the United Kingdom is moving toward an arms embargo., Of Israel., It’s not out of the question of Harris Walls wins., So I I think that Israel, what’s happening in the Middle East.
Speaker 4
00:05:08 – 00:05:12
Harris is the decision not to go with Josh Shapiro for Tim Walls it will remain
Speaker 3
00:05:12 – 00:05:22
a big issue, especially for the pro real community in this country, which is large., Okay., So the the video of Harris taking on protesters in the crowd., Looks good., It looks good surf on the surface.
Speaker 3
00:05:22 – 00:05:23
You look at it and she’s like,
Speaker 5
00:05:24 – 00:05:25
do you wanna talk about that?, ,
Speaker 3
00:05:25 – 00:05:30
keep talking about that., Right now, I’m speaking., And I thought, hey., That…, That’s pretty good She.
Speaker 3
00:05:30 – 00:05:33
She’s been showing command at these rallies., And then somebody reminded me pay…
Speaker 5
00:05:33 – 00:05:34
I pay for this microphone, sir.
Speaker 3
00:05:34 – 00:05:52
Somebody reminded me that the I’m speaking thing she did in 20 20 during her debate with my pence?, She said, I’m speaking., Why is that significant?, Because the question at Kamala Harris is, not to sound like, , a a 50 year old in 19 67 Saying groovy., But, whether she has any gain?
Speaker 3
00:05:53 – 00:05:54
And, Yeah.
Speaker 1
00:05:54 – 00:06:05
We don’t know yet, whether she has game., We don’t know yet how effective She might be when she goes off topic when she no longer has a script to read.
Speaker 5
00:06:06 – 00:06:21
Pre…, , it seems like a million years ago, but was only like a few weeks ago, was that all the people when everything was talking about Joe Biden being too firm to run for reelection., The squad lined up behind him because they want that party to go down in flames., They want the party of Obama and Clinton Gone, and they wanna be able to take it over., And that’s where they’re coming from.
Speaker 5
00:06:21 – 00:06:30
So I don’t think the racket left., And the people who talk about genocide are the radical., Let’s get that out of the way., I don’t think that they they care if trump went., I think it’s simple
Speaker 1
00:06:30 – 00:06:48
Okay., I don’t think that people who talk about genocide in Gaza necessarily on the radical left., You’ve had approximately 40000 dead gaza., This is is a number., This is a an amount of suffering that any normal person without a particularly partisan view in any direction.
Speaker 1
00:06:49 – 00:06:50
Gonna find disturbing.
Speaker 5
00:06:50 – 00:06:55
Not good for them., So that’s., Yeah., My take is that like, that that argument is not gonna work.
Speaker 1
00:06:55 – 00:07:02
Yeah., I I don’t think she’s going to lose because she’s insufficient pro Israel., I think that’s incredibly naive.
Speaker 3
00:07:02 – 00:07:27
The current is israeli government., I mean the number of people like the current israeli government., Who are friends of hers or allies of hers or something who are who are who are Zion in orientation is probably 0 or 2 out of 5000 or something like that., And so, but the American people, to the extent that this is an issue how much the American people will judge her or judge their politicians., Are very supportive of Israel in its existential condition and the fight.
Speaker 1
00:07:28 – 00:07:51
So Susan W, the longtime head of Youtube has died of lung cancer., And I remember the changes of 20 18., Right?, When there became there’s substantial reduction in the things that you could say on Youtube, And my sense is that Youtube is more free now than it was in in 20 18., And this is my point about…
Speaker 1
00:07:51 – 00:08:34
Susan W, whoever was in charge of Youtube in 20 18 would have been forced to make similar changes to the ones that she made., Due to pressure from advertisers that the the free and wide open Youtube of early 20 18 was not sustainable., As a business model, but eventually, the forces of the left and the forces of advertisers would gather together and put unbelievable pressure on Youtube to reduce the spectrum of things that you could say on the platform., So I I don’t think Susan W was some wicked witch who destroyed Youtube, Right, whoever was in charge of Youtube would have acted very assembly., So often in life.
Speaker 1
00:08:34 – 00:08:38
Right?, The situation is gonna be far more powerful than the personalities.
Speaker 3
00:08:39 – 00:08:59
That it is in, and this has been consistent from October seventh until now., It’s not true redemption., Party as a whole., But it just true republicans are overwhelmingly it’s true independence, and it’s more true that you might think given where the democrat party is on a lot of other issues., And so right She doesn’t know in my view, she does not have a an internal mechanism that will tell her how to calibrate this.
Speaker 3
00:08:59 – 00:09:16
Well., To say the things that you need to today to keep, to keep her left flank from screaming and throwing bonds at her, but satisfying people who want, in general would like the United States to be broadly supportive Israeli it’s war against Islamist terror., Eli?
Speaker 5
00:09:16 – 00:09:35
So I think that’s right., But I also think a deeper problem here for the Harris campaign is that they are looking this at an Israel Palestinian issue., And all of the policy baggage that comes with it from Bb, giving the speech against the Iran nuclear deal to the long support, , under Clinton for the tuesday solution., And all that., And that was totally the wrong 1 way to look at it in this election.
Speaker 5
00:09:36 – 00:10:09
The israeli issue was a proxy for a basic question about do you support Riots or do you support public order?, Because the people who are activated about the question are very similar to the people who are activated by George Floyd murder and 2020 and similar to the people who were activated by the eighth crisis during the act, very similar to the people who were activated by the Vietnam who took the side of Continental and Vietnamese Army this is a problem that democrats have and that you cannot look at this through the lens of simply, like, what our policy has been on a 2 state solution, and bd and settlements and all these things., It has everything to do with., Will these dirt are these dirt bags part of your coalition?, Because most Americans hate them.
Speaker 5
00:10:09 – 00:10:27
Even if they have some sympathy for the idea that will be nice to have a, , to see war in Da, and, , certainly Have upset for Palestinians And it’s the the idea that 1 that Israel in this particular case., It’s like, it’s kinda nothing to do with this., Has to do with the fact that the people who bought who protested Netanyahu for Earned American plan, I h., , Palestinian flags at human station., And that alone is the big question.
Speaker 5
00:10:27 – 00:10:45
It’s the radical, and that is both a proxy…, That’s a proxy for more than foreign policy It’s about, gender issues., It’s about all kinds of things that Kamala harris has to do a lot more of a persuasive kind of switcher and explaining why she isn’t the candidate she wasn’t in 20 19, and it doesn’t help when you have meetings and listening sessions with such people., And that’s and I think they’re just addressing the whole thing all wrong.
Speaker 4
00:10:45 – 00:10:58
I guess, …, I’m struggling in my head to figure out whether that This is a totally new race or not., And right now, the margin between Harris and trump is close enough that…, I’m not really sure., I mean, in all 3 of the major, polling averages, the poles of poles, New york Times 05:38 real nuclear politics.
Speaker 4
00:10:59 – 00:11:05
Harris is leading Trump today by about 1 point., She’s actually leaving by a little bit more in the, polling we’ll see in the 05:38.
Speaker 1
00:11:07 – 00:11:31
Okay., And I think that’s that’s a good point that sometimes Israel becomes a proxy for other issues, not just law order versus writing, but here’s another issue that Israel and Jews are off a proxy for it And that’s excellence., Alright?, Do you value excellence?, You want to create and protect the society that values excellence or do you want a society that favors equality of outcome?
Speaker 1
00:11:32 – 00:12:03
Meaning you’re gonna need strict government regulation to try to equal outcomes because different groups have different gifts., So a lot of an enemies at Jews, and at the achievements of Europeans, alright, is due to jealousy and loa of European and Jewish excellence., Alright?, That Europeans have created a certain type of society that other peoples around the world emulate and loa of this European excellence is behind lenin., Right?
Speaker 1
00:12:03 – 00:12:53
Which developed the narrative of imperial the capitalism inevitably leads to imperial and colonialism and anything is listed., Anything is moral in the fight against imperial and colonialism and most nation states in the world have experienced colonialism or imperial as articulated by Vladimir Lie Lenin and so you get an awful number, high number of votes in the United Nations condemning any form of imperial., Or colonialism and on a non partisan lens, colonialism., And imperial simply recognize that people who are more excellent and more proficient and more powerful than other peoples will tend to expand, and the strong will take what they want or and the week will endure what they must., Right?
Speaker 1
00:12:54 – 00:13:50
This is an iron law of nature in the communist anti colonial anti imperialist rhetoric, right, is a war with reality., But it’s a narrative that’s been taken up by the Palestinians, it has great deal sympathy among western intellectual and most nation states in the United Nations that anything done in the name of anti imperial and anti colonialism, any terror is justified by the righteousness, the of the cause., And on the other hand, any rep ref against this kind of anti imperialist terror has to be severely restricted., So occasionally, you hear a sentence that makes you think and and stimulates your perspective in all sorts of different areas outside of the original argument., So here is a sentence that I heard from chat high, about 10 years ago.
Speaker 1
00:13:51 – 00:14:33
The feminist goal is removing all constraints on female sexuality, while maximally restricting male sexuality., And the anti imperialist anti colonial narrative is analogous to that., In that it wants to remove all constraints on fighting imperial and colonialism., Right?, There are no moral constraints in whatever you do to fight colonialism and imperial, while at the same time, maximally restricting counter terrorism measures, on the part of, usually European powers who kept expanding as long as they were stronger or excellent and faced incentives to expand over weaker, less efficient, less excellent people.
Speaker 1
00:14:33 – 00:15:11
So this is a great thought not so much in the inherent truth of it, but in allowing the thought to just expand to other areas of life where it may have varying degrees of validity., The feminist goal is removing all constraints of female sexuality while maximally restricting male sexuality., So you’ll often see it among women in particular, a great deal of scorn directed at men who date younger women, and at the younger women themselves for taking high status, , older men., Right?, This is an evolutionary argument that older women again to use?
Speaker 1
00:15:11 – 00:15:47
Hey, , why are you taking away from men that we could be dating with., On the other hand, younger women are sufficiently incentivized as our powerful men to go for, that high status male or that high status young female who is most evolution of a benefit to them., So A lot of sharp 1 liners on shadow that didn’t just apply to the war of the sexes, but also too po., Women in Hr discriminated against beautiful women, not handsome men., No matter how conservative the goal is the social justice warrior is always waiting to leap out.
Speaker 1
00:15:47 – 00:16:13
If deemed advantageous., Right?, If you get the right situation, many a conservative go will release or in a social justice warrior Every woman has an crisis actress waiting for this slim pretext to surface., And then talks about the switch between the all strong independent woman and the helpless victim., And here’s a theory, as campuses have scored more female at the past 30 years rape culture at Myth served as a nifty bogey man.
Speaker 1
00:16:13 – 00:16:44
To explain lousy dating dynamics for women., Well the comment women is such strange creatures willing to abandon their race in their religion when they fail to find a good boyfriend in the 1 group that they were born into., The only relationship that works is where the man dates downwards., If the woman thinks that she is on even footing with the guy even in her mind, she will grow to resent him and look for something better., Once a society becomes gemini, it cannot react to threats to it from patriarch societies, the gemini society, allows itself to be conquered instead of putting up a fight.
Speaker 1
00:16:45 – 00:17:15
There’s is no record of a society becoming feminists and then returning to patriarchy without being conquered first, feminism is 1 way ticket to destruction by an outside patriarch force., Feminism wanted to returned to primitive times where they could share the 10 percent of Alpha males while the rest get nothing., Third wave feminism, marriage religion and tradition are all under attack because they all regulate female activity, That’s a good thing., Society’s built on mono, poly political societies are unproductive., Men would do nothing but fight over women under mono.
Speaker 1
00:17:15 – 00:17:53
Every man gets a woman thus everyone has an incentive to work hard to innovate and to excel., So We we probably have a reflex to think that more choice more freedom is better, but I know from my own life., How much benefit I get from discipline from setting certain protocols for myself such as the way I stop my day, the way I go about certain tasks, because if I allow myself to choose, I’m very easy easy to give in to less productive impulses., And so I have to discipline myself, so there’s not even a choice., Right?
Speaker 1
00:17:53 – 00:18:32
Too much choice can become be wielding., Pe have a yearning desire to submit to dominant men, why they ag agitated for importing aggressive less civilized foreigners, them, many women are literally anti western civilizations., It’s In the comment, women naturally slide down the cock of the conquering tribe its basic evolutionary biology., Peter Dr, and his famous essay managing oneself., Advice strongly about the need to understand your strengths and weaknesses, you observe that you can never win by improving your weaknesses only by improving your strengths and brought it, soc terms, you’ve have given women the opportunity to build on their weaknesses, their ability to compete against men and discourage them from capitalizing on their strengths, youth and fertility.
Speaker 1
00:18:33 – 00:19:01
Soc So instead, they compete through art of fairness and inclusion that are born on the backs of an ever dwindling pool of male supporters., We have weakened societies as a whole., By building on female weaknesses in attempts to make them the equal of men, rather than encouraging them in their natural strengths., And while this Char goes on Men are encouraged to adopt feminine attitudes of lifestyles of the expense of their own natural strengths, now deemed unnecessary in the new gender neutral economy., Most states, the potential child support profits from a short term marriage.
Speaker 1
00:19:02 – 00:19:19
Right?, Will be incredibly tempting to sell women., Right?, Women who wanna make money from the system aren’t getting married anymore., The key is recognizing that is a lot easier to rent rich guy for 1 night, especially if he has had a few drinks, and it is to get a rich guy to a agree to marriage.
Speaker 1
00:19:19 – 00:19:49
Now we can all be mercenary given enough incentives, including women, Luckily, for most men, most women still want to have children within a marriage, single motherhood is not a desired life outcome for psychologically healthy women., But this means is that for the typical man, the odds of getting fleece by a woman pulling the old Gotcha pregnancy maneuver, are quite low., Over the past 10 years, we’ve also had a steady of the choices that you can make for humor., Right?, The topics.
Speaker 1
00:19:49 – 00:20:11
That we are allowed to joke about have da, men are about the safest choice left., Mother and lord jokes were huge up into the 19 seventies but all sorts of jokes that were going strong into the nineties have now become socially unacceptable., But I love historian David Stock and his Hierarchy critique of modern britain.
Speaker 6
00:20:11 – 00:20:20
Has to be confronted., Tom., Back in the old days., And you put it simply constitutional., It was soon known as the West Lu that question.
Speaker 6
00:20:21 – 00:20:56
Why is it that Scottish Mps convert on English laws and English Mps can’t vote on Scottish 1 sooner it., But suddenly, it’s much, much bigger are the English to be allowed in this extraordinary torment of of ethnicities are the English to be allowed to have their own., Which then raises the whole question of what’s the relationship between British and all of these other things between British Pack, in always words all these hyphen identities., What is the relationship above all between British and English., We are overwhelmingly the largest group?
Speaker 6
00:20:57 – 00:21:33
And the we are the 1 that’s least represented and what’s happened instead, of course, is that labor, and this is the moment again, at which…, I predicted this in all my recent videos have been have been saying, the labour party ceased to be the party of the working class., And it’s become the party of the rampant powerful and titled public sector, the sort of person who is represented by the overnight over paid over indulge, whatever you call Mark Ro., That’s what the neighbor party represents, and it’s a…, It is the potential of a police state.
Speaker 7
00:21:34 – 00:21:41
I just want to come back., I’m…, Took to this tweet from Elon Musk., I think it’s really important about civil war., And there’s a few things I want to ask about the tweet.
Speaker 7
00:21:41 – 00:22:23
First of all, Elon Musk isn’t British and many American Know all American either South Africa., But many American comment and non British people have been using extraordinarily hyper language around what’s going on the Uk at the moment., And some may accuse them of even egg it on with this kind of language, and we don’t wanna we don’t wanna condone the violence or the riots, and we don’t want to encourage people to do these things., So are you concerned in any way about foreign interference in the Uk right now where you’ve kind of got these bad actions perhaps in America and elsewhere, who are almost encouraging these people to go out and riot and to protest in this violent way.
Speaker 6
00:22:23 – 00:22:47
Yes., And there is an element of of proper concern about that, look, I share your concern., I have been talking, pathetic as an old man about the world that I remember., The world of growing up on a nonviolent council estate, in which it was a competition to keep your pivot hedge, neatly cut in which the women., And again, this is something else that’s not been talked about.
Speaker 6
00:22:47 – 00:22:55
Women have been present in these demonstrations This is not the usual group of football laps that once what
Speaker 1
00:22:55 – 00:23:27
Okay., Here’s a video women., Alright., These are Dutch women welcoming Muslim refugees., Thank you.
Speaker 1
00:23:27 – 00:23:27
Hold on.
Speaker 8
00:23:29 – 00:23:35
To save The new shore from the first half of our All dimensions in And…
Speaker 1
00:23:37 – 00:23:48
Okay., I found this on chat hot test a few few years ago., Right., Looking back at my notes, some distant thoughts on feminine., Women can be shamed into behaving and looking more feminine, which is a good thing too bad.
Speaker 1
00:23:48 – 00:24:16
We’ve lost that lesson., We do the opposite now we shame women for being feminine, looking thin and pretty, and we glorify women who act masculine and look like dump trucks., On the comment, more useless pets like indoor cats are child substitutes., There’s no fl away that obvious conclusion under a fog of tri hard white knight rhetoric, The cat provides the single in the city car cara, the outlet for a maternal nurturing instinct, however week that a real child of hers can’t., Because she hasn’t got pregnant in the 15 years.
Speaker 1
00:24:17 – 00:24:44
She’s been on the pill., There’s a shadow her t’s commenting on this video., There’s a video of Dutch Women at airport singing a song welcoming wasn’t refugees to their homeland., Most of the women are middle Aged and depressed looking hippie re richards, The 1 young girl in the video glance around wondering what’s going on., 1 outcome of the modern sexual market was the growth of the demographic of unmarried un loved childless aging, bitter, white spins who sacrificed their prime fertility years riding the car cara.
Speaker 1
00:24:45 – 00:25:38
4, writing is closest, cousin the social media attention horror carousel., The French author We back has tackled this theme of a fractured and fracturing sexual market, Most notably in his book the elementary particles., When women reach a certain age and the lust leaders of men have abandoned them for you younger Lure, and this will almost always happen by age 25 for women., They realize the best is not yet to be in a nagging sorrow settles on their hearts, raging women who don’t have the comfort of a husband or children or supportive family network, the sorrow is grief., Some women will respond to this insult to their femininity by turning inwards, finally release through self help gardening or arts and crafts, Others will vent their rage at the world, des spoiling the political sphere with their nonsensical feminist boiler plate, Then there are those spins who react to their disposition and displacement from the sexual market by exacting revenge on their outer world, where a summon sa goodbye from their inner world.
Speaker 1
00:25:38 – 00:26:21
These are the women in the video above, be damned, love rejects throwing open their her hearts to migrants expressing through their chanting a dual longing for sexual and maternal satisfaction., Childless greatly exacerbate this state of despair, a societal decline Fertility means fewer, children to care for to watch after and to guide through life, either one’s own children or the children or relatives and close friends., After an un unconscious dismissal from the sexual market rubs women of their instinct to ar Ir men, a kindergarten society rubs women again of their other awesome love and yearning fulfillment, their maternal instinct., And more comments here from the chat heart., Masculinity is invasive femininity is invitation.
Speaker 1
00:26:22 – 00:26:37
Right?, When men make a mistake, they invade somewhere they should not have due to male desire blinding their reason When women make a mistake, they invite someone they should not have due to female desire, locking their reason.
Speaker 6
00:26:38 – 00:26:53
Once I know I was brought up in this world., It’s really run by the women., The men can do the big barrel chest stuff, the people who really control it to the women., When they join in, something serious happened., The seriousness is real.
Speaker 6
00:26:53 – 00:27:15
Language like civil war is absurd., To fight a civil war you need weapons., We do not have weapons., We are a design society and civil wars in the past have always involved since the the nineteenth century, they’d actually involve elements of the army., Us divided armies as happened as has happened in in Ireland.
Speaker 6
00:27:15 – 00:27:39
And in the course of the first world war when Ireland is divided, a government terrified of what’s going on, allows both the union and the, and the, whatever wants gone, the irish should republicans, actually to arm the Catholics to arm., So you have 2 arm camps, we’ve nothing like that in Britain., That is not going to happen., What what is going to have this disease increasing.
Speaker 9
00:27:39 – 00:28:06
And I think that’s clear from the prosecution and sentencing today would you…, Sentencing for online behavior., That’s a reminder to everyone that whether you’re directly involved or whether you’re remotely involved, you’re c, and you will be put before the courts if you’ve broken the law., I do agree that we’re going to have to look, more broadly at social media after, this disorder.
Speaker 8
00:28:07 – 00:28:40
Well, a chilling warning by Uk prime minister, K Star that…, Social media users who post or share footage of the riots that have been taking place across the United Kingdom face arrest and prosecution., Regardless of intent, The civil unrest began after 3 girls, age ages 6 to 9 years old were stabbed to death during a taylor swift themed dance event in Northwestern England., Police charged a 17 year old born in wales with the murders., His parents were originally from Rwanda, but erroneous posts on social media claimed the suspect was an illegal immigrant.
Speaker 8
00:28:40 – 00:28:47
Joining me now in this anyone futures exclusive as the leader of Reform Uk party, Nigel Far., Leader., Thank you so much for being here this morning.
Speaker 10
00:28:48 – 00:28:49
Okay., Thank you.
Speaker 8
00:28:49 – 00:28:59
I wanna get your take on this violent disorder sweeping across several British cities over the weekend, and this new order?, To prosecute anybody who is posting about it., Can you walk us through what’s going on?
Speaker 11
00:29:00 – 00:29:15
Yeah., I mean 2 things Firstly, the violent disorder., We’ve got terrible division., In our cities., We’ve got parts of our inner a city now that have become completely Muslim dominated, and that has led to a lot of british people saying what the hell going on our country is changing fundamentally.
Speaker 11
00:29:15 – 00:29:38
We’ve had successive general elections at which the conservatives, following labor, promised to reduce immigration numbers yet we saw them, double and then quadruple to record numbers., And we have a border crisis like you of these boats coming across the English channel., So underneath all of this underneath all of this., Yes, you’ve got Muslims muslims muslim extremist., You’ve got some far right, , jobs, violent people are look for your excuse.
Speaker 11
00:29:38 – 00:30:04
But behind it is a growing sense of unease in our country that we’re losing our identity., And that is what led to that explosion of violence the other day., Now, This is the most serious violence we’ve had since the Black Lives matter protests in the wake of course of the murder of George Floyd back in 20 20., Funny enough, Armor, Our prime minister., At the time of the Black lives matter riots, when police were being injured when historical monuments are being torn down, he chose to take the knee.
Speaker 11
00:30:04 – 00:30:25
In solidarity with the aims of those who were out doing the protesting and causing the violence., But now now, the boots on the other foot., Now it seemed to be white working class British people that are protesting., And by the way, I’m not defending violence in any aisle way all., Now now, he wants to take control of the narrative.
Speaker 11
00:30:25 – 00:30:43
The look., Nobody should use any social media platform, to genuinely spread, hate or incite to violence., And and and that that free speech rule, I think all of us would support and agree with What we are allowed to do on social media or should be allowed to do is to speculate is to ask questions., Yeah., Is to trump and put facts out.
Speaker 11
00:30:43 – 00:31:02
Transport facts out that wake up the rest of the community., And when you’re engaged in something like that., You can never ever guarantee that what you say a hundred percent true, you may think it’s true at the time, you may ask a question whether it’s true., Now, S, by cracking down on that, poses, I think the biggest threat to free speech we’ve seen in our history., An Elon Musk, Elon Musk has caught wind of this.
Speaker 11
00:31:02 – 00:31:26
Is I think the reason that Musk., The reason musk has been going for Star over the last week is he knows what the reaction is gonna be., And can I just add worse still, there was a proposal?, A proposal today, that from the age of 5 years old, our kids in schools, should be taught to spot extremism to spot fake news and misinformation, and to use their powers as of critical thinking to work out what’s true and what’s not., Never by the way,
Speaker 1
00:31:26 – 00:31:30
Now, the great news is that this type of propaganda, does not work.
Speaker 11
00:31:30 – 00:31:54
I believe in critical thinking., However, if the parameters that are set., I’d a say to every kid, if you read a post, that questions net 0 and global warming, it will be extreme content and a lie., If you read a post, that even dare to question, levels of immigration legal or illegal into Britain that that’s extremist, then you start to set a narrative for a future generation., That is fundamentally un.
Speaker 11
00:31:54 – 00:32:03
So I am very worried that the instincts of a left wing labor party are to use this crisis take away our liberties and our free speech, and this is gonna have to be fought.
Speaker 8
00:32:03 – 00:32:17
Yeah., Exactly., And this is why I think this is incredibly dangerous and it reminds me of what was happening here in America., Right after the 20 20 election where people were speculating and asking questions., If you are afraid that you’re going to get arrested, just because you’re asking questions.
Speaker 8
00:32:17 – 00:32:24
Well, your freedom of speech is gone., Nigel, let me ask you for you personally, are you concerned that any statements you make could get you arrested?
Speaker 11
00:32:26 – 00:32:47
Yes., I mean, after the murder, after a triple murder, of those poor sweet little girls, a few hours went by., And, There was huge speculation online about this man was in a illegal immigrant was the an Islamist, and no 1 knew the truth., And I simply asked on it x., I simply asked, did this man have a record is he somebody that the security services were watching.
Speaker 11
00:32:48 – 00:33:17
Answer there came None x Then after the riots happened, are you’ve got the whole establishment saying that I encourage rioting., Well, I mean, all I did was to say, please tell us the truth funnily enough., If they had told us the truth, the rioting would not have been anything like as bad as it was and the authorities need to wake up to an online world., So, yes, I am currently coming under serious assault, and many of the campaign on the left are publicly saying that I should be arrested., Simply for asking and over the truth about the murderer.
Speaker 11
00:33:17 – 00:33:18
And and that I’m.
Speaker 8
00:33:18 – 00:33:25
Yes., And and that is why Elon Musk tweeted out, you’re b., From x., Yeah., I, I don’t know if it was the the proper handle that he put on.
Speaker 8
00:33:26 – 00:33:43
He said to the Uk Government, you’re blocked because we have our own rules here on x., , in America, we saw this take place after Covid., A lot of people questioned, whether or not they wanted to get the vaccine, and the left comes out with these pre., And, suddenly, you’re canceled or your you ridiculed in in the public square., If, you, you’re you’re an anti.
Speaker 8
00:33:43 – 00:33:51
You’re an election denial., These and and all of a sudden, you are shaped., You on the public script, this is very dangerous., Where is this going in the Uk?
Speaker 11
00:33:52 – 00:34:08
Yeah., I mean Facebook are far worse., I mean, a lot of people, I’ll put I’ll put post out., On Facebook, factual posts about information I’ve discovered about, for example, the numbers crossing the English channel by small boat., And people who like my Facebook posts, get their account suspended.
Speaker 11
00:34:08 – 00:34:25
So it’s quite sinister the way which is happening and and the big 1 for us was lockdown., , 3 times we had a national lockdown Due Ko covid and value you by lockdown 2 and 3, I was absolutely contempt with of the whole thing, and I saying, hey, look, at what Florida doing, Look, at what Sweden are doing., But but literally,
Speaker 1
00:34:25 – 00:35:05
So, unfortunately, on the distant ride, and the populace right, the overwhelming perspective is that the covid lockdown downs., Were clearly a disaster and unnecessary., Unfortunately, there don’t seem to be meta analysis and many academic studies that back up their perspective., So there’s a a dominant populous reaction to the taking away of Freedoms., I still contend that the evidence however points in the opposite direction that by and large, alright Our elite and and government responses to this unprecedented threat of Covid, by and large were better than than we should have expected.
Speaker 11
00:35:06 – 00:35:09
If you question lockdown downs, if you said that is government taking excessive.
Speaker 1
00:35:09 – 00:35:19
Now, of course, I I think you should be have to question lockdown downs question vaccines, quest and anything., Right, I certainly don’t want people’s social media accounts taken away for questioning government policies.
Speaker 11
00:35:20 – 00:35:25
Freedom from us., You would find your Facebook account., Suspended for a period of time., And that’s the problem here., Yeah.
Speaker 11
00:35:25 – 00:35:31
That we may be talking, we we may be talking in the wake of some pretty ugly violent riots,
Speaker 1
00:35:32 – 00:36:02
So what discourage me about this populist reaction is that it doesn’t seem to be a terribly intellectually curious, It just takes it for granted the…, Covid restrictions were wrong., And and there’s this dominant reaction among populace and dis that Covid was nothing., Covid was no big deal., When according to the most comprehensive academic studies, we have that the Average Covid fatality took away approximately 15 years of life, which is not nothing.
Speaker 11
00:36:03 – 00:36:08
But if you…, If that is used as an excuse., For government and big social media companies.
Speaker 8
00:36:08 – 00:36:08
That’s right.
Speaker 11
00:36:08 – 00:36:12
Closed to close down debates that they find inconvenient, then what price democracy?
Speaker 8
00:36:13 – 00:36:24
Unbelievable., And and and and especially since after months later, we found out that everything that people questioned were actually true., Yes., If you had Covid before, you had antibodies and it was enough of a protection., You didn’t need to get…
Speaker 1
00:36:24 – 00:36:50
Why is it good to have at least some people questioning things because it it forces the…, Socially aware and socially engaged to formulate and reform their answers., So if if there is good evidence, that Covid lockdown were generally more effective than they were destructive, than people are incentivized to produce and analyze and and populate that evidence.
Speaker 8
00:36:52 – 00:36:59
Another vaccine or a booster., And, yes, there were side effects of of of the vaccine., So all of these things we learned later., And yet the people who first.
Speaker 1
00:36:59 – 00:37:07
Look, there are side effects to wearing seat belts., There there are side effects to going to church., Right?, If you get in a car and and drive to church., Right?
Speaker 1
00:37:07 – 00:37:24
Getting in the car and and driving to church, is gonna be 1 of the most dangerous things you do that week., Right?, Getting in a car driving to work., It’s gonna be 1 of the most dangerous things you do that week., There there is a side effect to getting in the car in that this is about the most likely thing that you do during the week.
Speaker 1
00:37:24 – 00:37:30
That will get you killed or seriously injured., Doesn’t mean it’s wrong, but it is a serious side effect., Everything has side effects.
Speaker 8
00:37:31 – 00:37:36
Set it., Were punished., Nigel will be watching your work., We so appreciate your time this morning
Speaker 1
00:37:37 – 00:37:49
Okay., The populist Nigel far., Hey., Not not the the deepest thinker curve, but he has a lot of good instincts., By contrast, we have a deep thinker historian.
Speaker 1
00:37:49 – 00:37:57
David Stock has apparently got some terminal disease, and he is speaking out with incredible courage and clarity and depth.
Speaker 6
00:38:00 – 00:38:06
Ethnic violence., What is going to happen is increasing political dis distressed., Remember, this
Speaker 1
00:38:07 – 00:38:26
So many people are unable to define woken, and here’s the the easiest and most accurate., Definition of won’t, won’t means that synchronizing of certain historically marginalized groups., Right?, Think blacks think Jews, thinks think members the Lgbtq community., Right?
Speaker 1
00:38:26 – 00:38:42
Work this means that these groups are publicly, exempt from criticism., This is what Eric kaufman wrote., Work is about making historically marginalized groups sacred., Alright?, Means the highest aim of society is to equal outcomes.
Speaker 1
00:38:42 – 00:39:21
For disadvantaged identity groups and to protect them from harm, such as hearing that America is a land of opportunity., Now harm reduction is a key part of the dominant center left approach to life, and there are many benefits from that., And I think this approach of Harm duck is why in my view., I know you disagree in my view that the center left and left wing response to Covid was more coherent and effective, then the ocean right wing and more libertarian approaches, the desire for reduction., But this is harm as conceived of from a a center left perspective.
Speaker 1
00:39:21 – 00:39:58
So for example, if you’re traditional, right, not being able to go to church is harm., Seeing the flag of your nation dis spoiled and burned constitutes harm., If you hold to a traditional definition of marriage, then the existence of same sex marriage will cause you pain and therefore harm., You believe in a heterosexual military, and the military has opened up to Lgbtq identities, then you’re gonna feel concrete harm., If you got a hero system, particularly a traditional hero system, anything that undercut that hero system or dis destroys that hero system will feel like harm.
Speaker 1
00:39:59 – 00:40:17
So how did this woken ethos which hides under the inn label such as diversity and inc wind up as the pinnacle of our culture?, And earlier in this David Stark interview., He says about the Uk riots., You heard constantly this word community?, Now, what is this wonderful community whose values we are preserving?
Speaker 1
00:40:18 – 00:40:30
Right, These especially protected muslim groups., Please handle them with kid gloves., They negotiate with them as groups with community leaders unaffected., There’s only 1 group that is not allowed to do that, the white working class., That is why they are rebelling.
Speaker 1
00:40:30 – 00:41:05
They are not allowed to have a community to have their community leaders consulted., And spiked magazine, which also puts out podcast out of the United Kingdom has much excellent content Praise Myers rights on a Friday., 2 tier policing is not a myth., Identity politics is at the heart on British policing., And remember, identity politics under the left and sent left, hero system means certain groups are allowed to have identity politics and other groups are discouraged from having identity politics.
Speaker 1
00:41:05 – 00:41:47
So the Widespread claims that Britain has a problem with 2 tier policing, has clearly touched a nerve with the establishment., Many a Sky news reporter asked, Mark Row, Britain’s most senior police officer if he would end 2 tear police rally grabbed the mic from the journalist hand and dropped it on the ground., He later issued a statement claiming that his complete nonsense that police would treat anyone differently according to their race, religion, or political leaning, ada dare, So mark Death protests too much., The The news media in the United Kingdom have declared in Uni., There is no bias to be found in our police, almost every major media in the United Kingdom has carried an article, reporting to fact check and to debunk the claims around 2 tier policing.
Speaker 1
00:41:47 – 00:42:05
The times of London ran with outlet 2 tier policing, the claims fact checked., How is the 2 tier policing myth become widespread asked the guardian?, What is 2 tier policing?, Nigel Far and Elon Musk’s, claims debunked announces an independent headline., That 2 tier policing is a myth invented and spread by the far right.
Speaker 1
00:42:05 – 00:42:30
Is simply taken as a given., This is a bit strange., Right?, Very same outlets that have been running near weekly articles on how the police or institution or structurally racist, riddled with some ism or pho, now proclaimed that any suggestion of unfair policing his preposterous, He did use the word 2 tier policing or 2 tier care, then you have fallen under the line sway of Tommy Robinson.
Speaker 6
00:42:31 – 00:42:59
Government may have 2 thirds of the seats in the house of commons, it’s elected with the votes of whatever rate was., Just over a third of those are actually voted and only 1 fifth of the actual electorate., It’s the lowest turnout in an election since whenever, and the…, And remember again, the moment new labor comes in in 19 97., Political participation falls off the edge of a cliff.
Speaker 6
00:42:59 – 00:43:22
It had been at consistently high levels right through the twentieth century after the beginning of full democracy at the end of the second at the end of the first world war., In 97, it falls off the edge of a cliff., I’ve been blaming labor a blocked I also want to blame my own party., My own party’s is refusal to contemplate what labour did., My own party’s is refusal to alter.
Speaker 6
00:43:23 – 00:43:38
The the dreadful constitutional changes, which embedded all of these attitudes, all of this kind of superiority., All of this notion that there’s a received higher doctrine., That…, There’s no such thing as borders., Borders a bad thing.
Speaker 6
00:43:38 – 00:44:17
Human rights mean were all really the same., But , rwanda, a second generation Rwanda born in wales it’s as well as any attack., All this is lies lies lies, and it’s because of been lies lies lies from every part of the spectrum that people do a political spectrum that they’re doing what they’re doing now., The protests are awful, they’re is graceful, they’re shocking, but unfortunately, when people are shut up, when they’re not allowed to debate publicly when there aren’t rational means of objection, you get irrational ones., It’s our political class that’s reaping the world that it’s so.
Speaker 6
00:44:18 – 00:44:21
Every brick began in Westminster.
Speaker 7
00:44:21 – 00:44:39
You mentioned earlier the riots in leeds., But there were also race riots in leicester a couple of years ago., It seems…, And, of course, we have to mention as well, the violence from Islamic extremist like…, The murder of David Amos, the Manchester Arena Bombing, the 7 7 attacks the
Speaker 6
00:44:40 – 00:44:40
long to recite.
Speaker 7
00:44:41 – 00:44:44
But I I want to ask whether you think
Speaker 1
00:44:44 – 00:45:00
Okay back to this terrific article in spiked., Right., What the desires of 2 tier policing miss is that differential treatment for different ethnic groups is an unseen, but inevitable outgrow this…, System of multicultural., Alright?
Speaker 1
00:45:00 – 00:45:25
Work means you’ll inevitably get 2 tear policing and 2 tier treatment from the government because certain group identities are held sacred., From the late 19 eighties on with the British state is increasingly related to its ethnic minority subjects., Via self appointed community leaders who Have a great deal of influence over police and local authority decision making., Perhaps the most egregious example of 2 tier policing., Relate to the pro Palestine Marches.
Speaker 1
00:45:26 – 00:45:55
That have been held almost weekly since October 7 of last year., The police usually keen to bundle Londoners into a van using offensive language haven’t just been turning a blind eye to much of the rank anti semitism on the streets., No., They’ve also actively tried to appease and to excuse the most hateful for., Islamist elements of these marches back in October, members of a terrorist organization gathered outside the Turkish Embassy in London Screaming ji ji ji hard calling for Muslim Armies to invade Israel.
Speaker 1
00:45:56 – 00:46:35
In response, the police put out an extraordinary tweet, to reassure the public the Ji hard has multiple meanings, while chi those who associated with terrorism., Please didn’t just turn a blind eye to this call for terror are effectively doing the Islamist P work for them., So in in England, muslims are close to 7 percent of the overall population as opposed to 50 years ago when they would have been about 0.1 percent, and they are prop at a much higher rate than the native English., The police seem to have a 0 tolerance approach towards anything that might cause offense to Muslims., Right?
Speaker 1
00:46:35 – 00:47:18
When Exiled Iranian dis is being arrested on motor occasions, holding up a sign that accurately describes hamas as terrorists, The police are aware that opposing Hamas is a provocation to the many Muslims who attend these peace marches., Last year of volunteers for the campaign against semitism were threat, with a rest for a breach of the peace., Over a mobile, billboard displaying images of the children who’d been kidnapped by Hamas., Police officers have even been photograph tearing down posters of Israeli hostages, the excuse for this evan to calm community tensions, eu for opposing muslims., But let’s get a little bit more here from David Stock, and then Talk to Colin
Speaker 6
00:47:18 – 00:47:46
fell with with with a with a considerable measure of tough cock coming in and wiping the floor with us to begin with., What we’re seeing is something we’ve never had in England since really the earliest middle ages., The key to understanding why these groups are so dangerous., Everybody talks and, of course, there is this this ridiculous word is islam pho., Everybody talks about it essentially in terms of religion.
Speaker 6
00:47:46 – 00:47:51
I think there’s something else which is much more of a key., What we’ve now got in Britain.
Speaker 1
00:47:52 – 00:48:12
So a great deal of ethnic identity uses religious terminology., Because it’s much more socially acceptable to have a religious identity as opposed to a strong ethnic identity., So many people, for example, who are white nationalists or arab., Right?, We’ll we’ll wrap themselves in religion instead of race.
Speaker 6
00:48:13 – 00:48:41
Actual tribes and the tribe isn’t a group of individuals., English law is there to deal with a group of individuals., But it’s not a group of individuals., And in a tribe, The individual in a way that we are completely unfamiliar with in England is the subordinate to the group., That is why are all the accusations, , in the end of London than whatever of of false footing and all all the rest of it because the individual, ballot.
Speaker 6
00:48:41 – 00:49:08
To our eyes is something you do as an individual., There it’s not., It’s something that you do in response to communal instruction., Again, the extraordinary business, of gaza being an issue, not simply an parliamentary election, but but in local counsel elections all of this represents a fundamental subversion of how we’ve done things in England., Not simply, since since since democracy.
Speaker 6
00:49:08 – 00:49:33
But since the very beginning of representative government., Remember, we used to be that world again that L k you was talking about that I was talking about., It goes way way back to Magna carta to It goes way way back to the twelfth the thirteenth and the fourteenth centuries., And it involves this notion of the governed having the right to participate in government.
Speaker 1
00:49:35 – 00:49:39
Okay., Hoping to speak to Colin with dale shot, lee, let’s get a bus
Speaker 12
00:49:39 – 00:50:06
spoke to reporters at length at Great Lanes., While Kamala Harris well, if you ran to the fridge, you missed it., When the vice president stunned the media and political world by picking the largely obscure Minnesota Governor Tim Walls as her running mate there was a striking and unmistakable pattern to the coverage., The journalists and comment who like walls, which is to say most of the mainstream media, talked about his persona, his life story, how he’s the epitome of rural America.
Speaker 8
00:50:07 – 00:50:15
Ben Tim Walls., We have somebody who sort of em, the proud the resilient, the hardworking, patriotic middle of the country.
Speaker 12
00:50:15 – 00:50:24
A happy warrior a good communicator, he’s impressed everybody with his television., , appearances over the last several weeks or so.
Speaker 13
00:50:24 – 00:50:28
This is what they build a mask., He’s got that folks in Midwestern term., I think it’s right to spend time on
Speaker 1
00:50:28 – 00:50:40
He is charming., He is a happy warrior., He does ex zoo joy., He is a formidable communicator., Right, Even, Hey, Pod is in right winger such as me can accept those basic truths.
Speaker 13
00:50:40 – 00:50:42
His biography., It is very impressive.
Speaker 8
00:50:43 – 00:50:46
He screams, mac and cheese and a trip to the hardware store.
Speaker 12
00:50:47 – 00:50:54
But the media people who don’t like walls are focused on policy on his very liberal record in the blue state of Minnesota.
Speaker 14
00:50:55 – 00:51:12
Remember, if the squad is happy and they are ecstatic that waltz is a choice, you should grab your children and watch your wallet., Because if Harrison and he end up in power, you’re gonna need to do a lot more to protect both., Because for governor Walls being a socialist, just means being a good neighbor.
Speaker 15
00:51:13 – 00:51:20
Minnesota is not known for moderation in this democrat party, and Tim Waltz really is not known for being anything other than a pretty hard line progressive leftist.
Speaker 13
00:51:20 – 00:51:28
It’s also a trick pick because this guy not in Minnesota nice., He’s Minnesota nuts., Yeah., They keep saying the schedule., There’s midwest stern white value.
Speaker 13
00:51:29 – 00:51:39
Come on., This guy’s a luna., Sanctuary cities, driver’s license for illegal, sanctuary cities for sex changes for children.
Speaker 16
00:51:39 – 00:51:51
I mean, is it normal to let your biggest city in your state burn while you’re the governor for 4 days, destroying thousands of businesses, hundreds of millions of dollars in property damage while you do nothing.
Speaker 12
00:51:52 – 00:52:03
Meanwhile in contrast to Harris avoidance of the media Trump took questions for an hour, an Ama mar Lag news conference ripping Harris, and he did not last a reporter asking why he wasn’t doing more events.
Speaker 8
00:52:04 – 00:52:09
Some of your allies have expressed concern that you’re not taking this race seriously Particularly…, What
Speaker 16
00:52:09 – 00:52:10
a stupid question?
Speaker 8
00:52:10 – 00:52:15
Where there is enthusiasm on the other side?, Why haven’t you been campaigning this week?
Speaker 16
00:52:15 – 00:52:26
Because I’m leading by a lot, Excuse me., What are we doing right now?, She’s not doing any news conference why she’s not doing because she can’t do a news conference., She doesn’t know how to do a news conference., She’s not smart enough to do a news conference.
Speaker 12
00:52:27 – 00:52:34
The result Kamala Harris for the first time took a handful of questions from the press defending Tim Walsh against attacks on his record.
Speaker 1
00:52:35 – 00:52:41
There’s been a lot of questions about when you’re gonna sit down for your first interview since being that I’m need., I
Speaker 14
00:52:41 – 00:52:44
my team., I want us to get an interview set before the end of the month.
Speaker 12
00:52:45 – 00:52:59
The whole thing lasted 70 seconds., But shouldn’t the mainstream media be insisting that she take more press questions, not because we’re so important, but because the public deserves to get some un scripted answers., I’m Howard Kurt in this is media buzz.
Speaker 1
00:53:00 – 00:53:10
So the main topic, today is what is work, what is 2 tier policing, 2 tier government, 2 tiers of narratives, what makes 1 group sacred., Another grape identity, trash.
Speaker 12
00:53:10 – 00:53:15
The rollout for the Minnesota governor with the very liberal record shows., He knows how to throw a punch.
Speaker 15
00:53:18 – 00:53:21
Let’s he was Dell
Speaker 1
00:53:21 – 00:53:27
into the show, Colin., What are your thoughts on the rioting in the united him over the past 2 weeks.
Speaker 16
00:53:30 – 00:53:48
Well, I my main thought is, it’s kinda interesting., I didn’t really expect it to be his widespread as it became., And I fully expected it to fizz out, especially once the football season got started.
Speaker 1
00:53:51 – 00:54:05
Now do do you think that it it is going to fizz out., You you think the opposition is so strong or that there are competing interest so strong that this is pretty much the end of it.
Speaker 16
00:54:09 – 00:54:32
Well, I think, , with with Riots, they kind of they they come and go there’s a bit of an ups surge, a lot of people riot it., They blow off steam, and then it disappears., The…, Underlying problems are still there though., So we we we should expect to see more and more problems down the line.
Speaker 16
00:54:33 – 00:54:44
But, , we’ve got this new kind of stars you like techno democratic station in the Uk., And I think they seem very results to deal with these issues in their own particular way.
Speaker 1
00:54:46 – 00:55:01
Do you think out of these riot that there were many professionals say doctors, attorneys, dentists, Ceos, or were these overwhelmingly the riots, composed of people with nothing to lose.
Speaker 16
00:55:03 – 00:55:39
I probably a lot of rocket scientist involved obviously, but And, now, these are these are people from kinda like these, main…, Initially, it was mainly northern in towns, but there’s also a lot of other small towns in England in the west part of England in various places in the south, like, , places like, flower and red in in places like that, which could behave in a similar way., 1 of the…, There’s also a dynamic involved in a in a lot of these place., And and that dynamic is the multi racial dynamic.
Speaker 16
00:55:39 – 00:56:00
So the…, When white people ride in this in this manner, it sort of sparks off fears in the ethnic community., And then each town we’ll have a different ethnic makeup and and an a a different ethnic balance of power, and that will determine how, people kick off or don’t kick off for the manner in which they kick off.
Speaker 1
00:56:03 – 00:56:24
Now what significance if any you think are in these new outlets like Gb news?, There seems to be from from my eyes, an entry of visceral right wing American style talk radio., Now, into the United Kingdom market with outlets such as Gb b news
Speaker 16
00:56:29 – 00:56:58
Yeah., Well, g Gb news is almost a kind of second comment of Russia today, I think., The money for Gb news comes out of a, somebody in Dubai, who made their money in Russia in C with Putin., So that’s basically where the money comes from., There’s another source of money, which is this guy who has a lot of interest in various hedge funds connected to car carbon fuels.
Speaker 16
00:56:59 – 00:57:14
And so, , you can…, You you always have to think about where it does the money come from., And then, Gb news is not actually making any money itself., In fact., It seems to be losing about 30000000 pounds a year.
Speaker 16
00:57:14 – 00:57:39
Since it’s been established., So it’s not exactly a money spinner., It’s not making a a great deal of ad revenue And so it must be there for a purpose., And that the purpose must be, that the purpose it is…, The the purpose of Gb news must be the purpose that, certain people are prepared to pay for to the tune of 30000000 pounds a year.
Speaker 16
00:57:40 – 00:58:04
And what would that be?, I mean, why would anybody want to put Nigel ferrari on the on the Tv on a regular basis for 30000000 pounds a year., It just doesn’t really make sense., If you look at it out those terms., So I think I’m a much more sensible analysis of the available data is that, Gb news is a Russian polarization operation.
Speaker 16
00:58:04 – 00:58:33
It’s there to kind of play up the divisions tensions within British society, which, , are genuinely there., And so on the 1 hand, you have Gb news., You have other various outlets in media operations, , you you could point to Twitter as well., Elon musk, you could point to, spiked, which used to be an outlet called Marxism today., You could point it all sorts of things like that.
Speaker 16
00:58:34 – 00:59:03
Their are interest is to ray up divisions and to intensify polarization in British society., And now you could see that either has…, That’s their business model, by doing that., They get more clicks, more hits and they find some way to monetize that or you could you could say that this is a a more of a political or a geopolitical project., And there’s evidence that points in both directions.
Speaker 16
00:59:04 – 00:59:28
And then on the other side of society, you have, the British government and institutions like the Bbc., We are trying to kinda calm things down and why can’t we all just get along together and there’s good in all of us and, , try and get on with your neighbors even if they come from a different culture., So this is the sort of situation that we have in the Uk., You have to have 2 wins blowing from different directions.
Speaker 1
00:59:30 – 00:59:59
But almost everything you said about, these outlets playing up tensions within society you could also say for the mainstream media, including the Bbc, it’s just that it is different approaches with different riots., That the Bbc wasn’t trying to calm things down with its coverage of the black lives matter., Right?, There, you see them playing up, the importance of some kind of racial reckoning same with the elite media in the United States., Right?
Speaker 1
00:59:59 – 01:00:02
So there all sorts of tensions let the…, Go ahead.
Speaker 16
01:00:02 – 01:00:19
Yeah., Just…, Let’s just stick with the Bbc., The Bbc there their main concern is not really what’s going on in the America., It’s more about how, A caribbean and other black people in Britain feel about what’s going on in America.
Speaker 16
01:00:20 – 01:01:02
So they’re trying to kind of in a sense validate that and inch and make those people feel that that they are not also alienate by British society., So they’re trying to and express a kind of generalized sympathy for that particular group., So most of what the Bbc does is kind of like that., It’s just trying to pac and emo all these various groups so that they don’t feel alienate energy., They don’t feel set upon trying And, , like I kinda tapped into the chat earlier, , this kind of, 1 is is the gl shelton of the low fertility society.
Speaker 16
01:01:03 – 01:01:52
The the, , the British society, most Western societies., They have a lot of individual for freedom, people are free to, , make their own mistakes and to do what they want., And basically, this all works towards societies that have approximately 1.5 fertility rate, which means roughly 25 percent, generation on generation d population, which means these societies have to constantly import people., Even if demographics were stable., I still think that, Western societies would be important people because In Western societies, most people don’t want to do a certain segment of work, and they would find some way of avoiding that.
Speaker 16
01:01:52 – 01:02:20
So, , like, things like, various forms of medical care., There’s lots of people who don’t want to be looking after old people there’s there’s all sorts of dirty jobs that normal people just don’t want to do., And in a a modern western society, , there’s everybody’s they’re quite affluent., They have a a sense of rights., So there’s a kind of authoritarian deficit, so to speak, it’s very hard to force people to do certain things that they don’t want to do.
Speaker 16
01:02:20 – 01:02:44
And so we’re almost forced to import people from other countries to do these jobs., Now in addition to that, we also have this constant drag off a of deep population, which is running at about 25 percent per generation., So we are forced to become multicultural societies now Personally, I’m against that., I don’t like it., A lot of other people don’t like it.
Speaker 16
01:02:45 – 01:03:22
But I try to understand it in a more, of, , in a much more knowledgeable way from most people., Most people seem to respond to these facts on the ground in a in a kinda of hysterical emotional way, and they don’t actually try to think about the patches that that are under under pin all this., And so, , I I tried to understand what’s really going on., Now you can feel what you like about it, some people welcome commit, and a lot of people don’t., But the the the first thing you should at least try to do is to understand it.
Speaker 16
01:03:22 – 01:03:35
And This is something the the the the old alternative right tried to do back in the day before it became coop opted by all these bad actors and hysterical people.
Speaker 1
01:03:37 – 01:04:00
Now on news media, including the Bbc are competing for subscribers, and for viewers and for readers., And to do that, they…, To to varying degrees, they all sensational., So even elite media and don’t don’t think it’s a sin to exaggerate the importance of of their news because they…, They’re competing for your…
Speaker 1
01:04:01 – 01:04:25
Attention., It’s just that the more elite the media, the more they have competing aims, not just for eyeballs, but they don’t wanna lose advertisers or they don’t wanna lose political support., So so there are other things that mil against the…, The pure competition for eyeballs, the more elite you go in in the news media., Is that fair?
Speaker 16
01:04:29 – 01:04:43
You’re so you’re basically saying there’s that that it’s an inherent quality of media that it tries…, To grab attention and sometimes it sort of overs steps the mark or over gil Lilly or whatever., Is that is that kind of what you’re saying
Speaker 1
01:04:43 – 01:04:44
Yes.
Speaker 16
01:04:45 – 01:05:02
Yeah., I think there is an inherent tendency in media to do that at., What I noticed so from…, My study of the Bbc c’s output is they they are aware of that, and they do constantly try to, offset for it and sometimes quite ludicrous weighs.
Speaker 1
01:05:04 – 01:05:17
Right., Because they also…, They do have incentives to grab eyeballs., Alright., They they do have incentives to to get attention, it’s just that they have competing at incentives that are sometimes more important.
Speaker 1
01:05:17 – 01:05:41
So for example, they need widespread political support., And more more elite forms of news media that use advertising, right?, They don’t wanna lose., Advertising from, , highest status brands., And so they will they will They will weigh that need to maintain a certain level of status against their desire for eyeballs.
Speaker 1
01:05:41 – 01:06:07
So everyone’s competing for attention is just that the more elite you go, there are they’re are more competing., Interest aside from attention., You you want to maintain a certain standing among a certain class., So for example, the the New York Times has realized that it primarily gets subscribers from running our ipads against Republicans., And so people who who wanna hear their worldview view, reinforce.
Speaker 1
01:06:07 – 01:06:48
Right, come to the New York Times and subscribe to New York Times because they get the the best and the brightest repeating their their worldview back to them with, , ever new and intriguing arguments., So that desire for subscribers is going to, at times, out compete the desire for just raw eyeballs., Alright?, Because they they wanna pitch themselves to a certain audience., And so high status shows particularly with with the Bbc, I think, again, want to to have considerable standing with a certain subset of the population, and so they are willing to give up a gross number of eyeballs for a high percentage of eyeballs within a certain demographic.
Speaker 1
01:06:48 – 01:06:48
Saf fair?
Speaker 16
01:06:50 – 01:07:37
Well, I think all these media organizations., There’s a whole kind of back pages to them where you have all sorts of meetings taking place and codes being hammered out and, agendas and priorities being set., Where they they they they discuss all these things and they discuss what kind of message or how they should, , the tone of the coverage that they put out., And so there’s there’s there’s all this stuff going on in the background, which, most people are not aware of., They’re just aware of what comes out the this the talk and head mouth, But that’s being filtered through all sorts of, meetings and documents and all sorts of agreements that have got been entered into long before and often have a very, very long history,
Speaker 1
01:07:38 – 01:08:17
how do you understand the Joe Biden sun civility news coverage., So for example, it was clear to conservatives even, 100 iq plumbers that Joe Biden was at times demonstrating signs of civility back in 20 21 yet the dominant news media only discovered this after his disastrous debate June 20 seventh of this year with Donald Trump., Why do you think that conservatives saw that Joe Biden was at times displaying signs of snl back in 20 20 and it was a recurring theme among conservative news media, but the mainstream media only discovered this June 27.
Speaker 16
01:08:19 – 01:08:38
Well, I think, , the, essentially, this is all about aged demographics., Both in, you, Britain and America, the the boomers are this massive group of people., They have enormous financial power., They have enormous plus…, Called Power.
Speaker 16
01:08:39 – 01:09:02
And, , candidates like Joe Biden and Donald Trump basically play into that., And so you can’t really go around dis the boomers I mean, if you’re, a major news or media organization or something like the Bbc., You can’t just go around dis the boomers, They have a lot of power., So They’ll bring you down., And so they the, , a certain amounts of, everybody knew that Joe Biden was sort of Sea aisle.
Speaker 16
01:09:03 – 01:10:00
And but the, , nobody was really allowed to ram this home, and it wasn’t really an issue because everybody was pretty much convinced that, Donald Trump was also seen aisle., So Donald Trump’s civility kind of sorta canceled out Joe Biden, and then why mention it because, , most of our viewers and audience are also there or there thereabouts., , So I think that’s that was the the sort of balance of this particular equation And I think, in know, in a sense, Donald Donald Trump was pretty senior oil because, , the most sort of seen thing he did was to agree to that debate., Because, , thanks to that debate, , he, he lost his perfect opponent, because, , going into this election., Donald Trump was in a good position because he was the slightly less senior member Sorry.
Speaker 16
01:10:00 – 01:10:18
He was the he was the slightly less seen candidate off the 2, and that was a a massive advantage, ?, And by going into this debate early, given the Democrats plenty of time to, , Yank Joe biden out, he’s he’s in a much less en position now.
Speaker 1
01:10:20 – 01:11:12
Well when you live and work in Knee elite status, there’s a type of language that you’re expected to use a a careful, Okay., Critical language that doesn’t use words like S Aisle., Doesn’t use words like retarded., And so the the more elite you go, and the more elite you go in media outlets The more difference is given to civility as opposed to telling the truth because the truth is often raw and and rude., And so this fear of saying a word like Sen or anything like it or or pointing out someone’s obvious, physical declining abilities it is going to have much more power, the more elite you go, while people who are plumbers or work in construction.
Speaker 1
01:11:13 – 01:11:33
Right, They are much more likely to use words like Sen aisle, or retarded that there are no polite terms for sen and retarded that are nearly as effective., So by by tipping so much into civility, the elite blinded themselves from obvious truths such as Joe Biden Civility., What do you think?
Speaker 16
01:11:35 – 01:11:59
I don’t think so I think they actually were aware that he was sort sort of and seen or cia Enough anyway., But like I said, they they kinda of balance that against Trump’s apparent, , well, he he has a…, A different form of mental illness., They they they probably thought., But it was a effectively a form of fair…
Speaker 16
01:11:59 – 01:12:39
A more flo form of he could speak better, but he was saying some crazy things., , that kind of., So I think they kind of looked at it in that way, and they thought we don’t really have to go into, , the this thing about somebody being old and no longer able to function at the top level because , the essential…, I mean, I think the essential choice that American voters are being offered is not between, formally, 2 old senior men and now between 1 semi man and this, new candidate Ke kamala Harris, which…, , someone I don’t really think very highly off.
Speaker 16
01:12:40 – 01:13:33
I I don’t think that’s the real choice., The real choice is is that you…, That American voters have being offered is is between somebody who’s going to take, someone who’s gonna take advice and maybe even orders from various kinds of x spurt and, , deep state actors, and somebody who is gonna make their own choices., Now, Ka kamala Harris, obviously, if she becomes president, she’s not gonna be, bright enough to deal with all the stuff that will then come matter her very, very quickly., And so she’s gonna just be, , rubber stamp in whatever, various government experts tell her to rubber stamp, with Donald Trump, he’s much more likely to make some of his own decisions and try to do things his own way.
Speaker 16
01:13:34 – 01:13:55
So that’s the real choice., That American voters are being offered., And I I would say, , in general terms it’s probably better to have a president who’s going to take advice smoothly from experts, than somebody who’s going to be kind of steer in their own course when it comes to make major policy decisions.
Speaker 1
01:13:58 – 01:14:07
So Do do you think that, the how you go in social class, the more emphasis there is on civility as opposed to just telling raw rude truths.
Speaker 16
01:14:10 – 01:14:32
Well, I just think the higher up you go in society you get lots, a lot more dog wi., People think I don’t really need to spell this out because the person I’m talking to will understand enough of what I’m saying., Without without going to the…, Those lens., So I think that’s what it’s really about.
Speaker 16
01:14:32 – 01:14:54
I mean, if you overstate things later, they can come back to to bite you in the box., And also they can be…, If they’re…, If if you overstate things, they can be taken out of context and then used against you, , things like that., So it’s best to get your effective message across with his softer touch as possible.
Speaker 16
01:14:54 – 01:15:04
That’s what people at the top of society obviously, have learned and are taught and which they practice on a day to day basis.
Speaker 1
01:15:05 – 01:15:15
What do you…, That was excellent., What do you think of the term 2 tier care referring to the British prime minister, Kia s?
Speaker 16
01:15:16 – 01:15:28
Yeah., I mean, I think it’s actually shocking because if you look at policing in the Uk, British police, they arrest…, Men in completely different ways from the ways in which they arrest women is shocking.
Speaker 1
01:15:31 – 01:15:35
And do they treat Muslim communities the same way they treat not Muslim communities?
Speaker 16
01:15:37 – 01:15:55
Yeah., I think they do., Yeah., I mean, we’ve we’ve we have some quite recent examples of that., I think it was hare Hills in leeds was a month or 2 before the latest batch of riots and the police, obviously pleased to hair hills very, very differently.
Speaker 16
01:15:55 – 01:16:32
This was think this was people from the…, What was used…, What used to be known has the G community, and Social services were in there trying to, remove children from a situation and, the locals…, Took sim exception to that, and Rose revolt., And the police kind of backed off there pretty quickly they allowed a lot of, yeah, demons behavior by that community, and then they came in the next morning and, , politely cleaned up the mess.
Speaker 16
01:16:34 – 01:16:59
And they are definitely placed in the more recent rise in a much more heavy handed way that’s obvious., And when Muslim communities or africa caribbean communities riot, the first thing the police do, when it’s…, First, first of all, they try and nip it in the bud., If that doesn’t work, they sc ads out there., And then they commit…
Speaker 16
01:16:59 – 01:18:08
They contact community leaders, and they try and get community leaders to, kinda, cool things down, Now you could see that as , poor lit a w white people kind of 2 tier, police in., But, essentially, what the police are doing are employing the most effective methods that are available to them at any 1 time, I think that’s much more likely., Now with these kind of recent riots, I’ve kind of characterized if has cha riots., The police don’t have the option of appeal to the community leaders of the cha because the cha don’t have any community leaders., The cha are a kind of centered and kind of ne group of people, and there’s all sorts of elements within the the cha, But the police can’t go over to Cyprus and knock on Tommy Robinson door and say, pay, Tommy.
Speaker 16
01:18:08 – 01:19:05
Can you just pop over to the Uk and try and cool down the chats for us, , So they don’t have the same options that they have with these various ethnic communities And 1 of the reasons for that is because, the the the British state has effectively d politicized work, working class whites in these towns., And the way they did that essentially, , to look at it in a, easy to understand historical way was to smash the British National party because the British National party was a kind of community leader for a lot a lot of these , deprived white working class communities., But the British state was not happy to have the British National Party served that role., And so they went about smashing it to Pcs., And so you, , when whites do riot it, In these poor deprived, working class areas.
Speaker 16
01:19:05 – 01:19:13
The the police have less options on the table than when, blacks or Muslims or G he’s due.
Speaker 1
01:19:14 – 01:19:48
So after the 19 92 La Wright, you had a lot of mainstream news coverage to the effect of understanding the rage of the riot, and you also had similar coverage., Understanding the rage of the right is during various eruptions of black lives matter., There doesn’t seem to be much desire in the mainstream media in the United Kingdom to understand the rage of these white working class writers., Colin?
Speaker 16
01:19:48 – 01:19:50
Oh, sorry., Could you repeat that question?
Speaker 1
01:19:51 – 01:20:15
Yeah., So when you have eruptions of rioting among certain privileged group?, Such as blacks and muslims, you get a lot of elite news media coverage around understanding the rage of the riot., But when it comes to white working class riots, such as we recently saw in Great Britain, there’s very little interest in the mainstream media for understanding the rage., So the understanding seems do any go in certain directions?
Speaker 16
01:20:18 – 01:20:33
Well, I think it’s not really about standing., I think we do understand the the rage of these groups of people., I mean, they’re pissed off about immigrants., , I mean, so it’s not like it’s any secrets., It’s like, , Joe Biden inc.
Speaker 16
01:20:33 – 01:21:11
Everybody knows about it., It’s just that, , they do things that, I mean, basically, the the problem is, like I say, the the British and the British state is committed to a policy of multi multicultural., And, yeah, , we do have a lot of fair immigrants in the United Kingdom., There are a lot of refugees coming across the channel., And all these I mean, I think in this case, the problem stems from refugees.
Speaker 16
01:21:11 – 01:21:57
The South port stab, he was the child of refugees., The communities that kicked off and riot., A lot of them have pre issues with their refugees., So these refugees are being kind of fair spread out across the country., Now what’s happened is that these refugees arrive on the South Coast or lot of them or they fly into London, and they probably expect to be put up in a a nice flat or, hotel in London and to live the high life And, unfortunately, the the British government doesn’t have the funds available to accommodate them.
Speaker 16
01:21:57 – 01:22:37
And so it’s in its wisdom., It’s decided to to to sort of roll them out across the nation and put them into these much., Poorer and more deprived towns where the their property prices are a lot cheaper, and where rents are a lot cheaper., Unfortunately, this has a a little bit of a a local knock on effect, by putting these migrants into these areas, It actually pushes up prices in those areas, there’s less social house and for locals., And a lot of the accommodation is contracted out to private landlords, When you contract out to private landlords, you’re artificially increasing the amount of demand.
Speaker 16
01:22:37 – 01:22:58
Therefore, you’re pushing up private rents for it., For everybody in that area., So there’s also sorts of fair knock on effects., But the the British government has decided that for it can carry this migrant load if easier, if it spreads it wider This is what they’ve been doing., And they’ve been doing this for a long time.
Speaker 16
01:22:58 – 01:23:35
This is not just a a new thing., This has been going on in dr and traps for a while., And initially, it was it was probably working at at a some level and by work, and I meant, and by, , work, and I mean it was it cutting costs, and it was also…, Doing something else which which the British government regards is very, very important., The British government doesn’t want the same group of migrants to cluster together and form their own separate alienate community.
Speaker 16
01:23:36 – 01:24:32
So in order to counteract that, they think the best thing is to send migrants out in smaller groups to other communities where they can’t, exist has a has single isolated community where they’re forced to interact with other people outside their own group, And the the thing behind this is that this will then speed up a simulation., So this is this is the other motive for it., So there’s a a direct economic financial motive to cut costs, but there’s also the other idea that, by sending , Ab abdul and his friends to to small towns in the north of England, this will speed up their simulation into British culture., And I I’d personally think that sort of rather Naive ideas., It’s quite difficult to assimilate into some of these northern towns.
Speaker 16
01:24:32 – 01:24:55
It’s probably a lot easier to assimilate into nice middle class southern towns, in fact, because their people are kind of much more interested in the, , things that are different and exotic and those people are a lot more at kind of tolerant and easy go than, rough northern nurse.
Speaker 1
01:24:56 – 01:25:14
Okay., I got a question out of left field, just something that happened to me the other day, I was standing at a street., It was a busy boulevard., Right?, There are 3 lanes of traffic in each direction, and there’s a young father who’s white, and he’s got 2 kids in a prem, and he is standing right on the curb.
Speaker 1
01:25:14 – 01:25:25
So that if a truck or a a bus or Suv comes by with with the side mirror., Right?, Could very well swipe him and hit him., He is…, Right on the curb next to a busy street.
Speaker 1
01:25:26 – 01:25:48
And This is a big city, I don’t know him., But after a minute or so, I say, you’re you’re an inch or 2 away from getting hit by a vehicle., And he said, oh, don’t worry about it., I’m just curious., How would you relate to a complete stranger in that kind of situation who seems to be putting himself at risk and his to…
Speaker 1
01:25:48 – 01:25:50
, infant children at risk.
Speaker 16
01:25:55 – 01:26:00
I don’t know., Really, yeah, we depend more mood on here in it the the look of the person,
Speaker 1
01:26:01 – 01:26:05
And we look at all threatening., So I just wanna make that clear.
Speaker 16
01:26:05 – 01:26:16
And Well, no I meant whether I like the look at it or not., So., Yeah., So, or, , when you see people, you get a sense of that…, How they might respond if you talk to the…
Speaker 16
01:26:16 – 01:26:28
, you , you’re not really conscious of this., This is all going on at very, very rapid speed in your, , in in the less conscious part of your brain., But, yeah., I don’t know., It’d be hard to…
Speaker 16
01:26:28 – 01:26:36
Hard to really…, IIIII would probably react in yeah, completely different ways on different days of the week.
Speaker 1
01:26:38 – 01:27:07
Yeah., And that that rings true for me., I I do know that the more comfort is, I feel the person the more likely I am to speak up that there’s a lot of reckless jay walking in., In La that frighten me when as he people stepping out it into into traffic it in a dangerous way, if if I I know them or if they’re jewish or if I feel safe, I’ll say, hey, watch out., But on on the other hand, you don’t wanna be…
Speaker 1
01:27:07 – 01:27:17
Putting yourself into situations and unnecessarily put yourself in end danger and don’t do any good., So not quite unsure how to handle these?, What do you think of Tommy Robinson?
Speaker 16
01:27:21 – 01:27:27
Don’t know., I think he’s he’s obviously they’re very troubled young Irishman.
Speaker 1
01:27:31 – 01:27:35
Are are you generally sympathetic or generally…, Un to his antics.
Speaker 16
01:27:36 – 01:28:06
Well, I think he’s just a shit magnet, , because his whole career., It’s always about about Tommy getting into trouble, getting arrested having problems, people giving them death threats, getting into silly 5 which might be fake or might be real., It’s all about getting attention from a certain, , low Iq segment of the population and then fundraising off it., So, I mean, it’s harder it’s hard to think of a more lower low life than Tommy Robinson., He just seems like the most shitty person.
Speaker 16
01:28:07 – 01:28:25
And , because the the British state went about destroying, with semi legitimate, organs if, , white working class identity and organization., He’s sort of filled that particular vacuum in the worst possible way.
Speaker 1
01:28:27 – 01:28:29
What do you think of historian David Stock?
Speaker 16
01:28:34 – 01:28:46
I think he’s a tad hysterical., And mean sounds clever., He sounds like he’s…, He knows what he’s talking about., And but he sounds a little bit, , hysterical about things.
Speaker 16
01:28:47 – 01:28:52
So I don’t really buy his sc so to speak., I think he’s overdo it.
Speaker 1
01:28:56 – 01:29:04
And are are there any comment?, Yeah or reporters in the United Kingdom who you particularly respect,
Speaker 16
01:29:08 – 01:29:15
respect., Well, yeah., I mean, I don’t know., Respect is probably the wrong word, , because what is respect in this case.
Speaker 1
01:29:17 – 01:29:18
Trust., I mean, revere.
Speaker 16
01:29:19 – 01:29:23
Revere., Trust just., No., No., No worry.
Speaker 16
01:29:23 – 01:29:46
No., It’s very It actually, it’s very, very hard to be a respected comment because, I mean, if you’re a comment, you’re comment because you’re commenting all the time., And if you’re commenting all the time, you’re you’re continually going outside your area of expertise., So there’s something inherent in the nature of being, perpetual comment that makes you kind of un of respect.
Speaker 1
01:29:47 – 01:29:49
But aren’t you a comment?
Speaker 16
01:29:51 – 01:29:58
No., We’re not really nice., I do the occasional podcast., They’re pretty spaced out., They’re pretty short.
Speaker 16
01:29:59 – 01:30:15
They’re pretty much to the point., And I do write a lot, but with writing, , again, there’s time to think about what you’re say in., This time there’s time to rephrase it., There’s time to take out the the stupid stuff., ?
Speaker 16
01:30:15 – 01:30:45
So it’s you’re less likely to to say something completely moron and idiotic, although, of course, that that, of course, there does happen from time to time to So if you’re a comment, , you…, You’ve…, You’ve got to be on your on your feet and talking all the time, coming up with stuff, , off the cuff., You , dead ear is your worst enemy, so you’re gonna keep saying stuff., You’re gonna have an opinion for everything, even if you have knowledge of nothing.
Speaker 16
01:30:45 – 01:30:59
, this is this is inherent in the in the role of a comment., So you’ve got to be careful with their, , this particular medium of expression., It does it does lower your Iq as I’ve mentioned in the past,
Speaker 1
01:31:02 – 01:31:05
And what’s going on in Japanese politics?
Speaker 16
01:31:07 – 01:31:07
Nothing.
Speaker 1
01:31:12 – 01:31:13
Surely, that’s not true.
Speaker 16
01:31:14 – 01:31:23
Well, I no nothing that I’m particularly interested in., And Yeah., We had a make a quake warning, but we’re still okay., So…, Oh, And
Speaker 1
01:31:25 – 01:31:45
Sorry., Let let me let let me just ask you how how do you feel…, As a marginalized minority in Japan, do you feel other?, Do you feel the victim of of racism or what’s it like being so obviously different compared to what, 98 percent of the population around you?
Speaker 16
01:31:47 – 01:31:54
Yeah., People talk about the, , 2 tier care, but , I’m a constant victim of of 2 tier police in here in Japan., That’s for sure.
Speaker 1
01:31:58 – 01:32:11
No., But seriously, what’s it like being a tiny minority in in Japan?, Yeah., The this word the the the the the problem here
Speaker 16
01:32:11 – 01:32:35
is the word minority because…, , it can refer to all sorts of different, possibilities and situations., Generally speaking, , the Japanese are favor favorably disposed to and British people despite our our, , Cha Riots and our poor showing in the Olympic medal table,
Speaker 1
01:32:37 – 01:32:53
Well, yeah., The the English because both the English and the Japanese, as you would expect from Ireland people have elaborate codes of civility., And so I I can understand way in many ways, the British and the Japanese would be a good fit for each other., But
Speaker 16
01:32:57 – 01:32:58
That’s the question, Luke.
Speaker 1
01:33:00 – 01:33:09
Is is that not true?, That both the British and, the Japanese are Island people who have elaborate codes of civility that are be to people who are not island people.
Speaker 16
01:33:10 – 01:33:28
Yeah., It’s a bit like that., Science fiction film, where there’s an alternative earth, orbit in the sun, But because it’s on the other side of the sun, the people on Earth can’t see it, but it’s there., So it’s a bit like that., , these 2 islands can orbit in the Land mass.
Speaker 1
01:33:31 – 01:33:41
Kia s has got very low approval ratings., Do you think that there is some significance here is his position as prime minister under threat.
Speaker 16
01:33:43 – 01:34:19
Yeah., Yeah., This is very interesting in the political dynamic in the Uk because, , has everybody knows labor I’ve got this ridiculous majority, and , I I believe that, only 20 percent of the electorate voted labor in this election., They got 34 percent of the, actual vote, but that’s that was only 20 percent of the actual electorate., And then most people voted labor or not because they wanted labor because they…
Speaker 16
01:34:19 – 01:34:43
We’re sick of the tori and they wanted to get rid of the tori or they wanted a change or something like that., Some sort of stupid reason., People who are actually voted labor because they like labor policies was about 5 percent of the labor vote., So 5 percent of 20 percent is 1 percent., So basically 1 percent of the British electric voted labor because they like labor policies.
Speaker 16
01:34:45 – 01:35:31
So despite this, , ridiculously huge majority, kia star and the labor party are not very popular., And then Kia star is not actually that popular in the labor party , because the the person who was popular in the labor party with the grassroots and so on was Jeremy Corbyn., Kia, and a few other people managed to find a way to sideline Jeremy Corbyn and then to push him out., And then to take over the party., So I think your star had kind of staged an a coup in the labor party, And a lot of people were not happy about that.
Speaker 16
01:35:31 – 01:35:52
And when K was successful in., Being in the recipient of all this anti conservative sense sentiment in the country., Also people thought, oh, maybe this guy will be okay after., All., But, , I think he stands on a very shaky foundation.
Speaker 16
01:35:52 – 01:36:26
And, the other the the main problem that he has well is that he’s not considered to be pro gaza enough., Most people in the labor party are very, very as sympathetic to the hero heroic struggle of the poor oppressed Palestinian people., And Kia star take over the labor labour party was kind of based upon an inversion of that., So all that could come un stock at, , rapid speed at some point in the not so distant future,
Speaker 1
01:36:27 – 01:36:37
Is there anyone in in and around the labor party who displays sympathy and Empathy with the white working class and possibly even has a a program to help them.
Speaker 16
01:36:45 – 01:36:59
Well, they…, There’s…, This…, They don’t have the money to to have that kind of empathy., I think we’ll find out later in the year, I think in October, there will be a budget.
Speaker 16
01:37:01 – 01:37:23
And then we’ll see probably more signs of whether the labour party., Has sympathy for the, poor down in British working class or not., There’s a lot of talk about, , various kinds of tax rises in the pipeline., So we’ll see them.
Speaker 1
01:37:25 – 01:37:31
Would you say that the Japanese or the English more optimistic about their future?
Speaker 16
01:37:36 – 01:37:52
I would say the Japanese are probably a bit more optimistic., British people seem to be a bit doom pills, but maybe that’s just the the ones I’m familiar with on the internet., So it’s not exactly an objective sample.
Speaker 1
01:37:54 – 01:38:05
Right., I I can’t imagine that that many young English, filled with optimism for their country because it it’s hard to think of of positive trends in England right now,
Speaker 16
01:38:11 – 01:38:33
yeah., People say that, but In a way, life has never really been easier than it than it is today for British people, I think., People don’t have to work too hard., There’s all these migrants coming in to do the dirty jobs., There’s endless entertainment possibilities through computer games, pornography and the Internet.
Speaker 16
01:38:34 – 01:39:15
There’s about 50 or more Tv channels to choose from, food is cheap, thanks to, , German supermarket companies like Little and Aldi, I think people are, , British people they have a kind of like last man syndrome., They need more challenge, more excitement, more danger., And that’s that’s been taken away from them, and I think that’s probably what’s that the the…, That’s probably what’s that the roofs of it., And, also, I think that’s Yeah.
Speaker 16
01:39:15 – 01:39:38
My impression of British people today, Younger people is they’re very feminine., They’re much more., Estrogen., When I was growing up back in the eighties, people were a lot tougher and harder and more violent, And probably, the the people before my generation were harder and tougher in violent., So…
Speaker 16
01:39:38 – 01:40:07
I think there’s an ongoing process of fe…, Of society of est., There’s a kind of, , people just like look like kind of p and weak or, , I’m just not very impressed by by the, sort of presence situation of of Britain, but it’s been…, It’s kinda too cozy and uncomfortable So I think they’re suffering from that in some weird way.
Speaker 1
01:40:09 – 01:40:26
I so when you go back to the United Kingdom from Japan., You miss the cleanliness of Japan., You miss the efficiency of Japan I would assume that you miss the the higher quality of food in Japan, the the safety of Japan., Is that right?
Speaker 16
01:40:29 – 01:40:47
Yeah., Yeah., I mean, there’s there’s good points and bad things about both countries., But, yeah, basically, Britain tends to look a bit sc, a bit dirty, both a bit inefficient graffiti everywhere., , it just…
Speaker 16
01:40:48 – 01:41:15
It’s it looks like people aren’t really doing their jobs properly., Whereas in Japan, people are much more conscientious, much more hard work, much greater sense of shame, and you kinda see this in the Olympics, I think as well., I mean, the Japanese, they’re not satisfied with Bronze medals., British athletes, when they win a bronze medal, they kinda parade around, like, they’re…, The the kings and fucking queens of Paris.
Speaker 16
01:41:15 – 01:41:21
?, It’s ridiculous., So I think there’s a noticeable difference in standards.
Speaker 1
01:41:24 – 01:41:32
Yeah., Yeah., And when when you go back to Japan?, Alright., I noticed that when I go back to Australia, certain things that jump out at me.
Speaker 1
01:41:33 – 01:41:41
As opposed to once I become habit obituary to where I am., Are are there any things that jump out at you when you return to Japan after a few weeks abroad,
Speaker 16
01:41:46 – 01:41:56
Probably how dense everything is., Urban density., There’s always people everywhere., , you’re never alone for a minute,
Speaker 1
01:42:01 – 01:42:04
Okay., Any any good books you’ve been reading lately, Colin?
Speaker 16
01:42:06 – 01:42:12
Good books., Yeah., Yeah., Which 1 did I read last?, Anyway, I picked up a new 1.
Speaker 16
01:42:12 – 01:42:28
I’m I’m reading that, techno feudal by Jan Var, this Greek left wing economist., And it’s sort of semi interesting, but I haven’t really finished it, So I’m not gonna comment on it very much.
Speaker 1
01:42:29 – 01:42:32
Okay, Colin., Anything that you wanna talk about before we wrap up?
Speaker 16
01:42:33 – 01:42:36
No., No., Let’s let’s wrap up blue., It’d been fine, beat on the show.
Speaker 1
01:42:37 – 01:42:37
Okay., Cheers.
Speaker 16
01:42:39 – 01:42:39
Right., Good night.
Speaker 1
01:42:40 – 01:42:42
Good night., Take care., Okay., Thanks.
Speaker 15
01:42:44 – 01:42:49
And to his former high school football play., As he was coach
Speaker 17
01:42:51 – 01:43:00
and make no mistake., Violent crime was up., As under Donald Trump., That’s not even counting the crimes he committed., I just have to say it.
Speaker 17
01:43:00 – 01:43:04
it you feel it., These guys are creepy and yet, just weird
Speaker 11
01:43:04 – 01:43:07
it as hell., That’s what you see., That’s what you see.
Speaker 12
01:43:08 – 01:43:16
Jd Vance has gotten far rough for treatment in the press his new opponents tim walls., It’s also cha the democratic nominee.
Speaker 4
01:43:17 – 01:43:29
I think that you guys have got to do a better job at actually forcing incumbent., Harris to answer questions., This is a person who’s been the presumptive democrat nominee for 16 days., She hasn’t taken a single real question from a reporter
Speaker 12
01:43:31 – 01:43:37
Joining us now to analyze the coverage Mary Catherine Ham., A Fox New., He’s a hunter., He’s an ice fisher., He was a teacher.
Speaker 12
01:43:37 – 01:43:40
His top football team won to state championship., Let’s call him coach.
Speaker 18
01:43:40 – 01:44:03
Look, credit words it’s due, I think he is a confident and a speaker and presents that way, and that can be a really powerful thing for voters., However, A guy in a cam hat who hunts every now and then who wants to take your guns away, a state school socialist is still a socialist., Right?, But it is incumbent on Republicans to send that message, which I think we saw in those clips that they are doing by reviewing some of his his policies., And the fact is look, there’s a tactical argument and then there’s truth.
Speaker 18
01:44:04 – 01:44:29
And I think the press needs to be on the truth side., Tactically, it’s fine for kamala and Kamala Harris and wall to take the saturation and run with it and answer 0 questions., Right?, That’s a great gig for them., But the truth is that the American people are better served when you push people to ask question, and there should be column after column and Sunday news segment after Sunday news segment, urging both of them to do the job interview for the job they would like.
Speaker 12
01:44:30 – 01:44:34
Yeah., I’ve certainly talked about it a lot, and we used to talk about it a lot., Window joe Biden was…
Speaker 1
01:44:35 – 01:44:39
Okay., I hope to get Steven James on the show short., Lee, his 1 from David Stark.
Speaker 6
01:44:40 – 01:44:51
But that depends on a series of individual transactions, a respect for history, a respect for tradition., All of that has been thrown through the window.
Speaker 7
01:44:51 – 01:45:11
You mentioned Magna carta was recently in Salisbury, where they’ve got 1 of them copies of the original Magna carta., And surrounding that document is all sorts of, why I would call the Quasi propaganda around migrant rights., Okay., Let’s look to Stevens James
Speaker 1
01:45:11 – 01:45:18
James Steven now., What do you see going on with the Uk Riots?, They seem to have quiet a down since we spoke last.
Speaker 10
01:45:20 – 01:45:27
Hi, Luke., Good., Hey., To be back., I am reporting to you from behind the iron Curtain here in the United Kingdom.
Speaker 10
01:45:29 – 01:45:39
Yes., You’re correct., So I spoke to you last Sunday., It’s becoming a habit., So last Sunday, and we were in the middle of the riots there.
Speaker 10
01:45:40 – 01:46:05
By the way, it it’s great to colin back on the show., So good to hear some like sobering analysis, I I consider you and calling kind of like my grounding rods., So it’s good good to have that that kind of a thing going on., I was here last Sunday., We were in the middle of, like, the the weekend where the riots were happening, I believe organically.
Speaker 10
01:46:05 – 01:46:28
I don’t buy into any of the conspiracy theories., Now, what happened after that was, some information was passed around, by the mainstream media here in the Uk., A number of riots were going to take place on Wednesday., Particularly, this number 100 was put out., And this turned out to be a hoax.
Speaker 10
01:46:30 – 01:47:10
Now, it seems to be a hoax that was like per per perpetrator possibly directly by hope not hate this Ng ngos, this anti racist ng over, or or their subsidiaries., And this was on Wednesday., And what happened racist it it was very suspicious by the way, because this set of riots, these protests that were planned in 100 places across the country, even a map was put out about where they were going to happen., They’re suspiciously in like, left deep deep left wing areas around the country where some some of the areas., Well, I can air areas which had, like, 20 percent white working class.
Speaker 10
01:47:10 – 01:47:44
And so it it all seemed very fishy, very suspicious., And what happened that afternoon is the government gave people in these areas, the afternoon off work., So public, government workers got the afternoon off work and effectively got told to go and counter protest in these in in these areas., I know abs definitely that this happened., I’ve spoken to a couple of them So I’ll I’ll try…
Speaker 10
01:47:44 – 01:48:25
While I’m talking, and I’ll try and send you an image of like all the newspapers the following day wait., Because because when you look at these counter protests that erupted in the country., What you see is everybody is carrying like prem made signs by 1 of these groups, end end racism now, stop fascism, end the hate, all this kind of stuff., And so effectively what this did, Luke is this…, This was like a coup, of of the organic, up uprising the protest that happened by creating this false group of people.
Speaker 10
01:48:25 – 01:48:54
They basically, anti riots, anti protest counter protest of government workers, students, Hr ladies, and, like middle class, middle class love and love and Y in the area., Who all came out onto the streets with old pre arranged pla cards and things like this And I think they’ve defeated it., I think they’ve defeated it., Yeah., They’ve defeated it through this counter narrative.
Speaker 1
01:48:57 – 01:49:01
Yeah., And it’s been a been very effective.
Speaker 10
01:49:02 – 01:49:02
I was successful.
Speaker 1
01:49:04 – 01:49:13
Yeah., I mean, because all it it feels like all the powerful parts of the elite in Britain have teamed up to crush these riots.
Speaker 10
01:49:15 – 01:49:41
Yes., They have., I mean, some of the scenes in the place I’ve been I’ve been closely following them., I mean, they’re incredibly cringe, but many of these left wing type rallies often are., They’re, they’re headed by, say 1 or 2 women with mega phones and a group of like student can’t kind of mixed in with migrants.
Speaker 10
01:49:42 – 01:50:14
So you have, like, your students who our antifa types with, like, face coverings and then migrants, who Are kind of immune to criticism., Surrounding these s women at the front, yelling various slogan who, fascist sc, Nazi sc off our streets, some of some of the chanting, was it so incredibly cringe, Identify I dare repeat it., Look, I’ll just do it., 1 of them was, Oh, what was it?, We are?
Speaker 10
01:50:14 – 01:50:48
We are black, white, Muslims and we’re jews and we’re gay., We are black., White Muslims and jews and wear gay., And So this is the force that has been herald., Now here in the Uk as a as a natural rising up of all the, , all the acceptable members of a society have come out, to defeat racism.
Speaker 10
01:50:49 – 01:51:14
It’s like a righteous cause loop, and there’s people out there banging drums and blowing whistles, it’s so…, I tell you what the British state if they organized it, or if it was hope not hate and it was so however, it was organized it was…, It was check mate., It’s check mate that they they’ve played a blind., That’s all I can say.
Speaker 1
01:51:16 – 01:51:26
Where do you think of Gb news, talk Tv?, Do you pay any attention to these outlets?, Because they seem to be the only big Uk outlets that shows some empathy for the riot.
Speaker 10
01:51:29 – 01:51:54
So I think they’ve done some good reporting., I’m not gonna knock them completely., I I definitely agree with Colin Lid take., I’m much more…, I’m I’m kind of, like, 3 quarters on board with, like, calling the Dell analysis of, , Russian interference and the that other…
Speaker 10
01:51:54 – 01:52:21
Even even if it’s not Russia, the outside states would like like to seed disruption into our politics., Whatever it might be and After I was speaking to Elliot last night actually talking about this very thing., And so and so just not to get off topic., III see that Gb b news., Is suspiciously funded, But I talking to Elliot about this very thing where I look at outlets like Gb news that are spout my talking point So they’re like it.
Speaker 10
01:52:22 – 01:52:38
They’re like a voice for me that’s broken through on actual, like Sky, Sky Tv., They’re are like on the main., They were 1 of the main channels now on Sky Tv., Which is the first and they’re like talk between some of my talking points., And I think, well, colin the analysis is right?
Speaker 10
01:52:39 – 01:52:52
So they are suspiciously funded., There’s obviously like some kind of agenda., If it’s a foreign agenda, and there’s…, I’m they’re giving me my talking points., Does that mean that like I am the problem in some way.
Speaker 10
01:52:53 – 01:53:08
It…, I don’t how to explain it that I asked myself, well, if a if a foreign state does 1 like, is encouraging, kind of my…, Political cause., What does that mean?, For the nature Am I making any sense?
Speaker 10
01:53:08 – 01:53:14
I ask myself if if being a dis if I am of the problem luke?, Sometimes.
Speaker 1
01:53:15 – 01:53:36
Well, I’m thinking about the African National Congress in South Africa they were happy to receive help and funding from the Soviet Union, and I don’t blame them because they needed to get funding and help from somewhere, so why why would Ak cause refuse help from foreigners if if they needed the help?
Speaker 10
01:53:39 – 01:53:48
Yeah., So I agree., I, I mean, I mean, I have to…, Have to accept because I have to think…, Well, I think that I’m right.
Speaker 10
01:53:49 – 01:54:18
I think that I’m not on the on the cause of good., Well, , I’m looking at society and, III see that these are the set of problems and I’m aligned politically on these issues and I’m not doing it light out of spite for my country., I, I truly would love Britain to become a better country So…, But I I asked myself all the time, if a foreign state such a as Russia is sponsoring these kind of stuff., If if it was sponsoring like the distant right.
Speaker 10
01:54:20 – 01:54:33
Does that mean that , that I’m in the wrong?, Am I the problem because ultimately, like the foreign country would want to destabilize my country., Extra Having at the moment.
Speaker 1
01:54:34 – 01:54:48
So people have being arrested in the United Kingdom for even going outside to observe these riots?, Does that does that affect your own inclination to go outside to observe these riots?
Speaker 10
01:54:51 – 01:55:02
Yeah., What what Else I’ll say about the clamp down that’s happened is…, I mean, we know that K is a prosecutor., That’s his background., He was head of the Crown prosecutor prosecution.
Speaker 10
01:55:02 – 01:55:33
So so My analysis is that he went straight into prosecute mode., It’s like reverting to type., Even though they became probably said back into prosecute mode., He activated the civil service to get the courts and the police on side to, impose maximum sentences on on on these people and to deal with people harshly not give anybody bail, keep them in in jail on respondents and then straight to prison within a week This has been an incredible deter factor., Absolutely.
Speaker 10
01:55:33 – 01:56:04
There’s lots of people who are caught up in the initial., Phases of this ex exuberance who are are now in jail already., Are now in prison already., They’re they’re doing their their long stint already in in prison for, like, 2 and 3 years for…, There’s 1 famous photo going round of a young lad, a young blonde pad lad in a blue pair of shorts, shirtless running out of a Greg’s, which is Let’s just call it fast food shop if you don’t know.
Speaker 10
01:56:04 – 01:56:14
They sell pastries and things., With with a tray of steak bake, Yeah., Now doing 2…, Yeah., He’s now doing 2 years in prison.
Speaker 10
01:56:14 – 01:56:31
He’s the stake bake kid., But you to ask address your question specifically., I’m not personally aware anybody who has just been observing., Has got caught up., So we have to be careful not to over exaggerate it.
Speaker 10
01:56:31 – 01:57:01
Yes., They are definitely over reaching But I think observers so far, have been okay., I mean, if any specifically, you can correct me., I think everybody at least, has been guilty or charged with at least and publicly plead the guilty for a lower sentence to, like, racially aggravated abuse or or august saying something at least to a person of color that’s offensive.
Speaker 1
01:57:03 – 01:57:05
What do you think of Tommy Robinson?
Speaker 10
01:57:08 – 01:57:27
Yeah., Collins analysis was spot on, I think I don’t necessarily buy…, There’s 2 lines of thought., I don’t necessarily buy into the conspiracy theory that he’s c opted by government., Or or some kind foreign state to r up riots.
Speaker 10
01:57:28 – 01:57:53
I think that I don’t necessarily believe that., I think., I think He…, Yeah., What Colin said he’s an organic guy who rose up to express, like these organic feelings, and he capitalize on himself and he’s great at…
Speaker 10
01:57:53 – 01:58:30
He’s great at stirring people., He got involved with something known as the football lads alliance, which is effectively football fans in the country, travel up and down the country to like, away games., So he was able to get that crowd on board., But he’s also been able to effectively deploy this victim card status by., Deliberately provoking, like the law to arrest him, and then and then , playlist card as a victim.
Speaker 10
01:58:30 – 01:58:49
It’s the rebel rebel news, like Mod opera brand thing They they they provoke an over reaction to themselves, get themselves like lightly, lightly in trouble and and then use it to raise money., Look at I’m a victim card., He’s he’s really the master playing that that.
Speaker 1
01:58:51 – 01:58:53
And what about Nigel far?, What do you think of him?
Speaker 10
01:58:58 – 01:59:55
I think Nigel, Nigel fraud, really?, He’s the he’s the only guy with the with the prompt with the personality and and public profile, equivalent to Donald Trump here in the Uk who could do anything politically and but it’s probably limited to what he is able to do., I think he genuinely cares about the change in demographics, And he’s attempted to play this game in in a political sense, , within the Overt window throughout his political career., Now he’s he’s probably the most like effective politician in the last, like, run a few decades in and in Uk politics., So I mean, his effect on Brexit was incredible on this country.
Speaker 10
01:59:56 – 02:00:11
Now whether that was right or wrong for the country, I tend to think , that it was well meaning., And, yeah., He…, He’s probably our last hope Luke, but probably can’t even achieve anything., Himself.
Speaker 1
02:00:13 – 02:00:17
Is there anyone on the labor side who you would like to see replace Kia
Speaker 10
02:00:23 – 02:00:35
no., No., I’ve don’t not Don’t know., I don’t know much about the labour party to be honest., I mean, I would, like, rid of the labour party back in.
Speaker 10
02:00:35 – 02:00:52
I would I’m I have k…, I have a nostalgia for, like, about 6 6 it or 8 weeks ago whenever the election was, I I’d quite I’d quite like to roll back the clock just to then, I’d I’d be able to carry on with that to be honest.
Speaker 1
02:00:54 – 02:01:02
So how how do you figure out the truth of what’s going on with with the riots?, Are they’re any reporters or outlets or comment who you trust?
Speaker 10
02:01:09 – 02:01:33
Yeah., Colin is gonna be squaring in his chair, but I quite like Karl Benjamin, takes on everything at the moment., I think Carl who is Saga Mccabe is actually covering chair These events since they’ve happened exceptionally well., Obviously, it’s a partisan take., And I’m fully aware of that, but we need some parties and takes.
Speaker 10
02:01:34 – 02:01:46
People willing to speak out at this time, Other than that, who else there’s a guy called?, Is it Nick Dixon here in the Uk., There’s a couple of…, Couple of, like the Gb news., Associated guys.
Speaker 10
02:01:47 – 02:02:02
Are okay., I like a guy on twitter Colin Rug, not many others probably just watching ex luke for my news at the moment.
Speaker 1
02:02:02 – 02:02:06
Right., So you’re not looking to the Bbc or the times of London?
Speaker 10
02:02:08 – 02:02:28
No., Absolutely not., How media is in locks over this., So there is abs absolutely no way that you can give any kind of sympathy for., For what’s happened for for, like, these people’s, genuine concerns, Again.
Speaker 10
02:02:29 – 02:02:58
And I’m not condo down it what they’ve done., But there are deeply concerns amongst these people, the the white working class of the Uk, who people, and the British media will give them no time., , we’ll, accept that there’s any just cause for them, And these are the type of people who., This really…, You can see it’s like really a class warfare that’s going on here.
Speaker 10
02:02:58 – 02:03:34
It’s like, the British establishment as really looks down on these people when they deliberately are just it just is what it is., But these people who ended up causing bubble., These are people who lot largely, like, they probably go to work and nobody speaks English at work., They’re working warehouses, working factories and nobody speaks English., They come home to into their neighborhoods and nobody speaks English.
Speaker 10
02:03:35 – 02:04:16
They tried to make a doctor’s appointment, and there’s, like, 30 pakistan is in front of them, and they they they tell them they’re there are no doctor’s appointments and it you go go to the hospital, and there’s…, Like, 20 hour waiting time., If there anything wrong, they can’t buy a house because There’s no houses and the…, These are the type of people who are incredibly deprived and and they’ve identified that their., And their low status in society and the what way that they feel about society is through the mass influx of people shouldn’t into their communities.
Speaker 10
02:04:17 – 02:04:23
And you can’t…, There is no common cause with that in the media.
Speaker 1
02:04:27 – 02:04:30
Who do you think of the funniest people in Great Britain?
Speaker 10
02:04:34 – 02:04:36
Funniest people.
Speaker 1
02:04:36 – 02:04:40
Because often you get more truths from stand up comics than any other group.
Speaker 10
02:04:43 – 02:04:51
Yeah., You…, I don’t think you’re allowed to do much comedy here in the Uk anymore that’s funny., Yeah., I can tell you.
Speaker 10
02:04:51 – 02:04:52
Come tell you.
Speaker 1
02:04:54 – 02:05:04
How much is how popular is feminism among people , in real life, not not online in real life.
Speaker 10
02:05:07 – 02:05:26
So in real life, everybody that I know, Luke is ap political., So if you mean, like, people’s, revealed preferences., Then nobody questions, egalitarian, or, so just like on the face of it?, What, what what what would we call this?, Like…
Speaker 10
02:05:26 – 02:05:43
Would that just like be second wave or third wave feminism?, , people don’t question that kind of stuff that men and women are equal., Nobody even questions it., So you have their political people., They don’t…
Speaker 10
02:05:43 – 02:05:46
They wouldn’t even know what I’m…, What feminism meant.
Speaker 1
02:05:48 – 02:05:55
Well, how do the people in real life, regard political correctness and you have a growing number of speech restrictions.
Speaker 10
02:05:59 – 02:06:52
So again, most people just this is something that they just vibe., Most people aren’t, like real realizing, like the extent of the clamp down until something happens, So they’re not usually speaking about these things on the internet politically, in terms of on, Like, on the street, Yeah., Everybody…, Everybody’s aware of the problems, and there is a fear to speak about it, but not in person, in person, and I know, like, a a vast swath of, like, low low working class people in in person people aren’t una afraid to say exactly what they think, but Yeah., There’s definitely been a massive reduction of it online.
Speaker 10
02:06:52 – 02:07:03
Absolutely., It’s difficult to tell Luke because you don’t know how much like online., Is just being censored like, by the autumn automatic tools and things like that., So…
Speaker 1
02:07:03 – 02:07:13
Right., But I’m asking back in real life, not online., In in in your real life do people complain about the ever growing restrictions on things you’re allowed to joke about.
Speaker 10
02:07:18 – 02:07:21
Sometimes tight sometimes, but not as much as you might expect, no.
Speaker 1
02:07:23 – 02:07:32
I mean, I expect you’d know quite quite a number of fighters, and I I can’t expect that they would be particularly friendly towards feminism.
Speaker 10
02:07:36 – 02:07:49
I do know if few incidents., Yeah, actually, of of I thought about that., So I was just thinking about the race race racial stuff., Yeah., People know people know that you…
Speaker 10
02:07:49 – 02:08:14
What what you kinda can’t say., There have been a few incidents that I know where people have got in trouble., It’s mainly mainly due to overs step in the grounds of what women believe is appropriate, so sexual language, this kind of stuff., When you when you breach that, about it but just in terms of speaking speaking with each other., No.
Speaker 10
02:08:14 – 02:08:26
There there’s, , no holds barred., I mean, it funny., 1 of the things I tell people is that, like Zoom in private are in…, There there are no boundaries left., Okay, in terms of speech.
Speaker 10
02:08:27 – 02:09:00
Like, , I won’t that…, Obviously, I’ll probably not admit to to doing any of it myself and just send a casual observer., But like in in zoo in amongst Zoom, like, the game of awards have no, value anymore, the jokes are god forbid all about, like, raping it, each other and all all…, Like, all the boundaries are gone., So Yeah.
Speaker 10
02:09:00 – 02:09:01
It’s quite…, Is there is there massive…
Speaker 1
02:09:02 – 02:09:18
Is there a massive sexual divide between young men and young women in the United Kingdom?, Because in…, In America, young men are increasingly right wing and young women are overwhelmingly left wing., It there’s there’s never been such a dramatic sexual divide in political attitudes.
Speaker 10
02:09:22 – 02:10:24
Yeah, I mean, I see that I think this is this really is a class based thing as what though Luke., I think among middle class people, I think this is definitely true, but not among like the the the white working class that you haven’t been to university, probably., I think the 1 of the features of these riots right was that there were zoom involved., Mainly in causing the trouble and lots of these guys were out there on the front lines with girlfriends in tow, So this might be a surprise, but if you look at any of the footage, you will see lots of these like mask, mass, up zoom, and they all have girlfriends, and they’re all there., Notice it whenever you see any of the footage you’ll see there are lots of women involved.
Speaker 10
02:10:24 – 02:10:48
So this might be a surprise to everybody out there that these fit…, So my analysis is that this is a real class thing., And amongst the working classes, none of these adaptations of political correctness or anything like that really have done anything to beat them down loma., I’d say., Okay making sense.
Speaker 1
02:10:48 – 02:10:54
Yeah., Yeah., And so in in real life, When was the last time that you remember someone used the word?
Speaker 10
02:10:58 – 02:11:02
In real life., Yeah, this week.
Speaker 1
02:11:03 – 02:11:10
And so is that is that fairly common?, In certain circles that you’re aware of as a concerned citizen
Speaker 10
02:11:15 – 02:11:30
There are…, There are I’m I’m trying to explain something that probably isn’t explain, but like amongst Zuma groups., These words don’t have the meaning anymore., So yeah.
Speaker 1
02:11:30 – 02:11:33
So it’s all casually because it is part of gaming terminology.
Speaker 10
02:11:35 – 02:11:48
Yeah., Yeah., And it doesn’t…, It’s not because it’s used because it’s the shock value., It’s used just just casually, and you’d would expect right?
Speaker 10
02:11:48 – 02:12:09
I would have even though I don’t really have, like, diverse friend groups., I would not be surprised if, like amongst working class people that are diverse, friends groups that our zoom., Right?, That these words were used interchangeably, believe it or not between black and and white with no consequences whatsoever., Okay.
Speaker 10
02:12:09 – 02:12:13
I know that this goes on, for instance, in Zuma groups that I that I’m in on Telegram.
Speaker 1
02:12:14 – 02:12:19
Wait wait., I’m talk about real life., You keep going online., I about real life, not not telegraph., Yeah.
Speaker 10
02:12:20 – 02:12:32
I know., Yeah., I know, but I’m saying, I don’t have any…, Real diverse friend groups in real life., But what I’m telling you is that, like, online, there are groups that I’m in whether are deep it…
Speaker 10
02:12:33 – 02:12:52
They’re they’re multi racial, and these words are used all the time between each other and nobody’s taking fence from it., So I can fully imagine that in other Zuma groups or, , around the country that this also happens in real life., It’s a real change, in help…, In how Zoom actually relate to each other., It’s hard to explain.
Speaker 1
02:12:53 – 02:12:59
So in real life, do do women use the n word?, I would expect women are much more conform.
Speaker 10
02:13:04 – 02:13:16
It depends on their age, but, yes, women in in general are much more conform., But, yeah, you you’d be surprised., You’d be surprised.
Speaker 1
02:13:17 – 02:13:19
I’d be surprised by what.
Speaker 10
02:13:21 – 02:13:24
Of the language of some of these girls, Like
Speaker 1
02:13:24 – 02:13:33
In real life, like at the pub, better life., At a gym, you’re you’re hearing you’re hearing women using these forbidden words.
Speaker 10
02:13:35 – 02:13:51
Yeah., Much less?, Mean, we’re fixed fixated today because you mentioned the end word., So it’s not like everybody’s just going around using the n all the time., I’m thinking about other lingo that used for phrase physiology like, A girl like 3 days ago, told me to stop riding her dick.
Speaker 10
02:13:52 – 02:14:01
Okay., It’s sorry for the language, but you you like trying to get out of me., And then like that’s like a really weird phrase., Why what you think, wow., What Why would a girl say something like that.
Speaker 10
02:14:02 – 02:14:18
But these are just like it’s just like weird?, I like these technologies have just been taken up., It’s just like it’s gamer language, and they’re just used as like, cheeky idioms now., They’ve lost oil power.
Speaker 1
02:14:19 – 02:14:28
In in the United States, has being a substantial reduction…, In the amount of sex that young people are having, What your sense to., The United Kingdom are you guys s like bad,
Speaker 10
02:14:31 – 02:15:17
So my sense is that up until I think…, I think the statistics are right where you see that, like, probably the top 30 percent of, men have most of the sex, and then there’s like a large group from the bottom, say up to, like, 50 percent who are having very very little, but this only applies, I think beyond probably, like, 25 or something., I’m…, I think that young people are probably still having as much sex or are just slightly less than that than they used to do.
Speaker 2
02:15:21 – 02:15:21
Actually it’s
Speaker 10
02:15:21 – 02:15:22
not productive sex.
Speaker 1
02:15:23 – 02:15:26
No?, Right., Right., Okay., Yeah.
Speaker 1
02:15:26 – 02:15:28
Any any final words, Steven?
Speaker 10
02:15:30 – 02:15:42
No., Thank you for me., I have to run anyway., Was good to hear colin on again, and be good some other English people., Hopped on Since you talking about this topic of the Uk.
Speaker 10
02:15:42 – 02:16:11
I think it’s really, really important., At the moment, Let’s just mention, final mention to Elon Musk., Right, who currently., I mean, he really is putting in the stocks actually subscribe to Twitter., Premium today, just because he’s really like attacking the British state, and he’s like the most high profile of most significant man probably in the world who who could like, have the potential.
Speaker 10
02:16:11 – 02:16:42
To push back on this kind of stuff Like expose it in what’s like a comedic way or So I mean, not…, It’s not all community, but he’s pushing back in in an expose type of way and really, like, red ke the British states lu., Towards totalitarian., And yeah, we need to…, We need more of it, because we risk really losing our our right to speak about all the stuff that’s happening entirely.
Speaker 10
02:16:42 – 02:16:43
Okay, Luke., Thank you.
Speaker 1
02:16:43 – 02:16:47
Take care., Okay., Thanks., And let’s welcome into the show., Kip.
Speaker 1
02:16:47 – 02:16:49
Kip, what’s going on, man.
Speaker 19
02:16:50 – 02:17:03
Hey, Luke., You you having a good show this sunday., I’m sorry that I…, Tuned in a little bit late., So I just wanted to kinda pick up a little bit, and I appreciate you kinda going into, like, the soc aspect of what’s going on in the Uk.
Speaker 19
02:17:04 – 02:17:11
But I I wouldn’t mind talking if you’d let me indulge me, let me talk a little bit about the finance end of it, Britain.
Speaker 10
02:17:13 – 02:17:13
Is it’s
Speaker 19
02:17:13 – 02:17:21
sort of a…, They’re like a company town., You remember, like, when places in West Virginia., The whole town would be owned by a coal mining company or something?, ?
Speaker 1
02:17:21 – 02:17:22
Yes., Yes.
Speaker 19
02:17:22 – 02:17:54
They are they are…, Their country is that way., , they took…, They took their gold away so that they couldn’t have any anything with the real value in the third, and then they even took the silver out of their money in the forties, and I believe in the early seventies, like 73 or 75 they needed cash from the Imf to to make payroll for the government., I mean, so they are kia, is someone who just…
Speaker 19
02:17:54 – 02:18:07
In my opinion probably just takes dictates., , I’m not over there., So I don’t know exactly, but and , when you when you’re, in a company town, they give you the company script., So ?, Yeah.
Speaker 19
02:18:08 – 02:18:40
And so it’s just it’s just dead on dead., There’s not enough, money in the system to ever pay, , all the bills., So it’s it’s just a game of musical chairs., , when they took the gold, let’s say all the banks, and Britain, they take the gold from them, but they give them the power of fractional reserve banking So that means if a loop got a million dollars, at first, he could loan maybe 10000000 out if he had a million in deposits., And then they made it like 15 to 1.
Speaker 19
02:18:40 – 02:18:51
And then they made it like 20 to 1., And now look forward, it is game on., There is no…, They don’t have to hold you any benchmarks., They can land a hundred to 1.
Speaker 19
02:18:51 – 02:19:08
So you see they gave the banks., Basically, the power to print infinite money., But all that money comes into existence with a coupon to it., , it costs somebody money., So, the fact that it’s loaned to existence bringing in interest from day 1.
Speaker 19
02:19:09 – 02:19:36
There’s no there there., And there’s no legitimacy to the money, the same central baker’s they keep…, They care about keeping all those central banks, basically, parallel and aligned the same so that 1., So never anyone is more sex than the other., So Janet Yell If need be, last week, she probably got on up the plane and went to the bank of Japan and gave them 2000000000000 dollars.
Speaker 19
02:19:36 – 02:20:14
And she probably got back 2000000000000 dollars worth of yen., Oh, and maybe got a sweetener because Japan was probably in a bind, But that’s the way it works., These sensible the bankers, they are what makes the world go around, and we’re kinda living in there., Preferred form of ser dude., Now somebody like, Luke, if you don’t need an iphone, and you don’t need a house or you don’t need a car payment or whatever, they don’t have you in in that kind of ser attitude, but you’re still gonna need groceries every week or whatever, and the nature of the way, everything’s been financial now.
Speaker 19
02:20:14 – 02:20:54
Good way to visualize it., I heard guy named Mark Far last week say that you can visualize what the output of the world is as a pack of cigarettes., And you can just oppose that would say, a race car driver’s helmet., Or a motorcycle driver’s helmet, and that would be the financial centralization that has been whipped into existence , and there’s really no way that that pack of cigarettes, year by year by year is gonna ever tackle that motorcycle helmet because there’s interest on that debt every year., Now some people might tell me Yeah.
Speaker 19
02:20:54 – 02:21:26
Yeah., Yeah., You paint a glue picture, but, back in 2007, when they had just…, When they were basically a decade end to go crazy on this financial commercialization, We owned, like, I guess, 9000000000000 dollars, when in federal debt., But at that time, I believe 3.9, they could they could sell they could sell bonds at 3.9 percent, and the rest of the world would buy, they would…
Speaker 19
02:21:26 – 02:21:48
The rest of the would would give us money so that we could live beyond our means., Now you look now, it’s not 9000000000000 like it was in 2007., It’s like 35000000000000., And another 250000000000000 and un funded liabilities., But, that is a…
Speaker 19
02:21:48 – 02:22:16
I just…, I I just lost my point, but the point is that 35000000000000., It it’s now adding a trillion about every 90 to a hundred days, and the best way I can explain to you how not only is England screwed, but the rest of us are long term, is because you never get a 1 to 1 bump., , everybody enjoys the fact that their houses worked double what it was, but they’re starting to realize who the hell is gonna be able to pay these prices?, ?
Speaker 19
02:22:17 – 02:22:54
So you’re running into the ceiling where, everything starting to get some crazy ass distortion, Coca cola has been around., Coca cola was Ace aca cam, I think he started…, He was a…, He was a pharmacist there and Atlanta, but he couldn’t find anybody to bound the idea that Coca Coca Cola could be bottled up and sold So, people in Chattanooga took him up on that and bought up all the bottling rights for Coca Cola, and they got real rich off of it., But Coca Cola was a nickel, a hundred and 38 years ago, and Coca Cola has been a nickel.
Speaker 19
02:22:55 – 02:23:06
For over for the first 73 years of his existence., I don’t know what a coca cola cost., Now I imagine it’s probably about a dollar and a half but it was a nickel., Yeah., 5 7.
Speaker 1
02:23:07 – 02:23:20
Okay., Hang on., So compared to a hundred years ago, you have to do less work too buy a coca cola., Then you did a hundred years ago., So whatever the relative prices in absolute terms as far as how much work you have to do, it…
Speaker 1
02:23:21 – 02:23:23
Coca Cola is cheaper now than it was a hundred years ago.
Speaker 19
02:23:24 – 02:23:43
I I get what you’re saying, but It should it you should think you…, That should give you pause that from 18 86 to 19 59., It it was always a nickel., And then from 19 59 to 19 73, it was a dime., And, like, now, , it’s probably a dollar 50.
Speaker 19
02:23:44 – 02:24:20
But in fact, a a little side note, Coca Cola, I guess, tried to petition them mint to come up with a 7 and a half cent coin because they didn’t wanna go up to a dime., I guess they just wanted to go up to 7 and a half cents, but they couldn’t get them to come up with the coin., But, basically, I’m trying to point out that the west went broke somewhere between , maybe 19 65 and 19 70., And, , the Uk, or do you…, I told you about the Uk, but the Us, they made us turn in gold and, like the thirties, and then they took silver out of the money in 19 64.
Speaker 19
02:24:20 – 02:24:53
It went from 90 percent silver to 40 percent silver and a couple years later, it went to no silver whatsoever., So how how can how the young person retire to how can they even, like, fathom?, I’m talking about anybody in Europe, you England?, How could they even fathom them as a young person like, seeing themselves going forward to retirement age or whatever., When inflation, whatever they may be getting in bumped, from the government or what our inflation is probably 2 times 3 times as much.
Speaker 19
02:24:53 – 02:24:56
What do what do you say to this loop
Speaker 1
02:24:56 – 02:25:21
Oh, I’d say that overall, people in England are are heading for an easier life than 99.9 percent of humanity is ever experienced., So England certainly has its problems., But in comparison to the reality of what most people through most of history, Have faced the English still are pretty well off., Yeah., I mean, that it’s hard to be optimistic about England.
Speaker 1
02:25:22 – 02:25:36
But still they have a functional government that affords them a higher quality of life than the warming majority of people in history or in the world today have So England has its problems, but in comparison to whom, like, where are things so much better off than in the West?
Speaker 19
02:25:39 – 02:25:48
I don’t know., I mean, England apparently is doesn’t compare well to other countries like right there near it, like Luxembourg, So
Speaker 1
02:25:49 – 02:25:52
Luxembourg is a country of what is it 2000000 people?
Speaker 19
02:25:53 – 02:26:00
Probably less than that., Yeah., You’re not supposed to know those nuances when I give you an example like that, Luke, damn you.
Speaker 1
02:26:02 – 02:26:26
But here’s my theory cap., But the…, We we don’t see the world as it is we see the world as we are., So when I follow the news, I am biased towards news that validates my my happy optimistic perspective on life., And my thesis is that when you see the news, you are biased towards stories that show we’re doomed.
Speaker 19
02:26:27 – 02:26:46
No., I tried to give you a glass half full., I tried to tell in 2007., I may not have finished that 200.0 7 that 9000000000000 dollar debt., By 20 20 forward, now, they have to offer a coupon of 4.1 percent versus, , now that it’s 35 tree, and it’s 4.1 percent.
Speaker 19
02:26:46 – 02:26:53
And it was 3.9 something back when it was only 9000000000000., So I’m telling I’m giving you that side of the coin, which you…
Speaker 1
02:26:54 – 02:27:07
But you’re you’re gonna tell me you’re know biased asked towards news that you’re we’re doomed., I mean, come on., You you…, Resonate with news that we’re doomed?, Is that false or 50 percent false…
Speaker 19
02:27:07 – 02:27:25
I don’t know I without resonated., I’ve just noticed that It’s in my lifetime., It’s it’s I used to see this Staples commercial where they talked about the easy button in my lifetime., I have seen people pounding the fucking easy button at a rate., Never…
Speaker 19
02:27:25 – 02:28:13
Never before seen humanity, and it has created created a loss of grit., I’ve also seen that the dirt bags have out outgrown the normal people, , and and and the d eugenics effects are we’re starting to pay the price for that., I’ve also seen that, who talked about this 1 before how I feel like the feminine has been, , unleashed in society and the hand rails and safety nets and all this shit has caused this Hr g that we’re living in now., The cancer effects of, like, people like, marx have led like I told you they’ll lost faust and spirit because nobody can actually believe it anymore., That the the that…
Speaker 19
02:28:13 – 02:28:34
I’ve told you that the the death of the real money and the inflationary death of what you might call the American dream., If you can remember when a hundred thousand dollar a home was massive., You don’t when a millionaire was actually well off., Millionaires need probably 15 20000000 and to feel well off now., I mean, legally and technically, I’m a millionaire.
Speaker 19
02:28:35 – 02:29:02
If you would’ve have told my 18 year old self that when you’re in your fifties, you’d be a millionaire, and you’d be…, A little bit worried about things., You wouldn’t be really spending the way you thought you would as a millionaire., I would have laughed at myself., But but I guess, , what to me what what passes for, like, modern community, modern culture, It’s like, it’s not only is it.
Speaker 19
02:29:03 – 02:29:15
It’s it’s downright mend audacious., ?, So I don’t know the the the thesis of my bitch and when I call you is really the insanity of it all., what I mean?, Right.
Speaker 1
02:29:15 – 02:29:32
So the 95 percent of the things that you observe about the world are horrible., As far as use, you…, Talk talk about on the show., I mean, it’s overwhelmingly a world that’s gone mad that is spiraling down., That’s your presentation of reality.
Speaker 1
02:29:32 – 02:29:33
Is that fair?
Speaker 19
02:29:34 – 02:29:50
Well, my friend…, Yeah., My presentation in reality might be that when you’re when you’re doing those news feeds for us and get…, Giving us the download., They are just as full as shit on those channels as they are on the financial channels, the forbes and all that.
Speaker 19
02:29:50 – 02:29:53
They are all selling propaganda., Yes.
Speaker 1
02:29:54 – 02:29:59
And how about you?, Are you are you equally less or more full of shit than those channels?
Speaker 19
02:30:00 – 02:30:12
I don’t know., I could be shit too., I told you., I think we’re all a little bit delusional., The best thing to do is just try to , try to find those spots and and stomp it out.
Speaker 19
02:30:12 – 02:30:23
But you…, I mean, you tell me, I was watching the spelling b that scripts Howard spelling be., I think it was last year, maybe it was this year., If it was about a year ago., And there was, like, 14 final contestants up there.
Speaker 19
02:30:24 – 02:30:55
And every damn 1 of them was malaysian, and and god bless him, , God bless him but what does that tell me?, About American excellence for the homegrown kids., What does that tell me about the future?, When I see that they’re ain’t a white kid up there, they ain’t even a D black kid up there, they’re all started off somewhere and they came here and they brought that drive, that grit, that gum with them., And they just mow right through the competition.
Speaker 19
02:30:55 – 02:30:58
And there they are, and in the car all but Know.
Speaker 1
02:30:58 – 02:31:19
It’s not., Let let me ask you a question., So if I was to tell you there is a kid in in a class at at school, and he does all sorts of work in the subject area of of the class simply because he loves it., He’s not he’s not concerned about the score., He’s not concerned about what’s on the test.
Speaker 1
02:31:20 – 02:31:34
It’s just that he has been filled with passion and excitement to engage in an intellectual journey due to something that’s being brought up in the class, You do you think that that kid is white, latino, Asian or black?
Speaker 19
02:31:39 – 02:32:04
There was the time where he could’ve have been any., But but in my in the sixth grade where I was at Booker T Washington., There was a place called Kim video that showed up across the street from the hard., And they had 2 kids, Angela and David., And Angela showed up and could barely speak English in the fifth grade and by the sixth grades you want our damn spelling d.
Speaker 19
02:32:05 – 02:32:21
?, So, hats off to them., But III think there was a time when that stuff was homegrown too., I just hate the fact that it seems to come from…, Right first generation from somewhere else, , second generation from somewhere else.
Speaker 19
02:32:22 – 02:32:25
What the what the hell?, What why are we selling this?
Speaker 1
02:32:25 – 02:32:56
You , , take time., You’re you’re getting unnecessarily worked up about something that doesn’t matter that much, agents are really good at certain things like spelling bees., But if you talk to teachers, the kid who is gonna go off and do all sorts of study on their own is overwhelmingly likely going to be a white kid., The most common question that they Asian students ask is is this going to be on the test., Agents have an incredibly pragmatic approach by and large, To education when you talk to teachers.
Speaker 1
02:32:56 – 02:33:22
But if if you got a kid who wants to go out and explore on his own and have his own intellectual adventures it’s gonna to overwhelmingly be a white kid., If you’re gonna have cutting edge innovations, they’re not gonna usually come from asians, They’re overwhelmingly going to come from people of European ancestry, Japan and China, and and Korea have invented very little., They’re really good at copying., They’re really good at rote., Alright?
Speaker 1
02:33:22 – 02:33:28
But they’re they’re not very good at inventing anything., So I don’t think you need to be nearly as distressed as you are.
Speaker 19
02:33:30 – 02:33:56
Right., Well, that’s a that’s just a Pet, Peeve., I’m not really distressed about anything, But I have kids, and, , I have nieces and nephews., And I just know that that’s trend of there is never when all these new programs and all these goodies that Hollywood and the Democrats tell everybody just gonna be great., There’s never really a 1 for 1 benefit for this stuff.
Speaker 19
02:33:56 – 02:34:25
So, , sick 3 months ago, when I saw that house with references down in Palm Beach County and around that area, we’re making a hundred and 50000 dollars a year, It worries me because I know I know I fast forwarded., My dad when he was in the army made 60 a month., I made…, 650 a month when I started the marines., My son makes slight, 3500 a month.
Speaker 19
02:34:26 – 02:34:49
, so the future, people are terrible at Math in America., But all I’m saying, Luke, is everybody better learn the words?, Quad drill real fucking soon., And the whole thing about England and Uk., I’m just saying Kia and all people that they may be mad at, I may get pissed off, and I hit see excerpts from some of their broadcast, don’t come…
Speaker 19
02:34:50 – 02:35:03
On stations like L., But the truth is, It’s the central bankers., And even even the bank of England, hell, they’re they’re not even their own person., You get what I’m saying, even that bank is taking dictates.
Speaker 1
02:35:04 – 02:35:09
Okay., So so who who is setting the agenda who’s got the power.
Speaker 19
02:35:13 – 02:35:34
Whoever’s whoever’s , run those central banks., That’s that’s where that’s where the power is generated., And this stuff right here, it’s like a…, As soon as they catch me…, Picking up the palm pom and and waving them for Trump or waving them for some governor that I’d like to be governor or whatever.
Speaker 19
02:35:35 – 02:35:40
They got me., They got me about the short hairs right there., Because I bought into the illusion., I
Speaker 1
02:35:40 – 02:35:43
bought in., If they tell you to go suck off a dog where you do it?
Speaker 19
02:35:45 – 02:35:46
No., They won’t.
Speaker 1
02:35:47 – 02:35:48
Okay., So they they don’t control you.
Speaker 19
02:35:50 – 02:36:08
They don’t control me, but if I…, But if I broke by god they would, and that’s and that’s the future luke., It’s like a funnel and each year., Well, I don’t know if it’s the air conditioner that breaks down for somebody or the car repairs, they get them, but something, How…, How to how do they say people get broke.
Speaker 19
02:36:09 – 02:36:27
It was slowly, and then it was all of a sudden., And what I’m telling you is each year, 234 million and people are gonna be drifting over to the dark side., They wanted to be their own person., They wanted to play by the hook, by the social standards that we used to have., They wanted to keep up their insurance.
Speaker 19
02:36:27 – 02:36:43
They wanted to do all this stuff, but they couldn’t., The homeowners when…, Insurance went up 5 x over the fat past., , 10 years or whatever, and they just couldn’t keep up with it., So, each year, so many people are falling off.
Speaker 19
02:36:43 – 02:37:07
Over into that side where they’re gonna be dependent upon the government., And , there’ll be less you and me or whoever that wants to stand up against it., So I applaud the people in the Uk that wanna stand out there and raise hell out in the streets., I just hope that they throw a few rocks at the central bankers, go over to the to the bank of England because that is who creates their pain.
Speaker 1
02:37:08 – 02:37:16
Okay., So what which bankers it doing a better job., You don’t like the…, Central bank is in the West too., I think you’re doing a better than average job.
Speaker 1
02:37:17 – 02:37:23
Which which countries do you think it are doing a Whiz bank job with their central bank, Nigeria., North Korea, Russia.
Speaker 19
02:37:25 – 02:37:34
I mean, you tell me anybody that’s doing a good job., We’re gonna start a war against them., , somebody like a, Ka want 1 he was doing.
Speaker 1
02:37:34 – 02:37:36
A great job with his Central bank.
Speaker 19
02:37:37 – 02:38:05
He he was getting African Den together, and that was gonna be, backed by Gold, and and you…, If anything about West Africa, the France Controls all the currency out there., And so France, I guess with little help from Hillary Clinton ran the cool on him., But if there’s a good option out there, you can rest assured that your banking institutions and your government ain’t gonna let you participate., I promise you.
Speaker 19
02:38:06 – 02:38:28
That’s that’s why I told you earlier that they keep it all., They try to keep those guys all level because The whole damn things Upon scheme., And if if if it’s ever found out if there was 1 place where Luke or Kid Kip could participate, where they was you…, Were using real money and not basically company script., We…
Speaker 19
02:38:28 – 02:38:31
Everybody who put their money in there, the following week, that’s
Speaker 1
02:38:31 – 02:38:50
people right now can buy gold., Why is money that is backed by a country such as United States?, Or the United Kingdom., Why is that less real the money that’s backed by gold?, Why why is gold somehow a more real store of value then currency this backed by the might of the United States of America.
Speaker 19
02:38:51 – 02:38:54
It has to beat its t to reality., Okay.
Speaker 1
02:38:54 – 02:39:07
And the United States is in reality., It’s the strongest military an economy in the world., How is the reality of the United States government, somehow less real., Then the reality of particular type of minerals such as go.
Speaker 19
02:39:09 – 02:39:26
Oh, the the the the the it’s it’s not…, I mean, the the Us government, I think I think the Us military now., This rope military we have?, I doubt they could go do a hot work., You think they could just go take Moscow, fuck the proxies.
Speaker 19
02:39:26 – 02:39:30
So they pissed us off., We’re going to Moscow., You think that go with go take Moscow?
Speaker 1
02:39:32 – 02:40:01
Well, that would…, That would lead to a nuclear exchange that would then life life on earth., But I think the Us military is the strongest military in the world because the United States spends more on its military than every other nation in the the world., And people similar to you were were calling me 5 years ago and talking about how much more effective the Russian military is than ours because they’re not infected by the work mind virus than we look at the war in Ukraine, and we see, , how in inevitably the Russian military is., So I don’t know who…
Speaker 1
02:40:01 – 02:40:09
Who do you think has an incredibly effective military far better than us., I don’t see any nation out there., For the more effective powerful military than we have?
Speaker 19
02:40:11 – 02:40:15
No, I don’t know., I just…, I…, You should’ve have…, You should have noticed though when Trump got…
Speaker 19
02:40:16 – 02:40:28
Shot or on 09:11, how hub this United States is imp to any kind of attacks or whatever?, That no
Speaker 1
02:40:28 – 02:40:33
should would claim the Us is imp., No., 1 would say out?, No so
Speaker 19
02:40:33 – 02:40:56
saw you saw 09:11., We talked about this before boom, 1 trade center hit., Bloom, another trade center head., And for another hour, they couldn’t get their eyeballs on a plane that went all the way from Ohio to the Pentagon and blew went right into the side of it., So if you would’ve told me before 09:11, that if I wanted to file apply a playing full of…
Speaker 19
02:40:57 – 02:41:14
Explosives and just take it from Ohio to the Pentagon or they shoot that thing out of the sky in a in a nano second., Hell no we watch 2 airline., Go right in right into buildings, and that third 1 just flying where could…, It could’ve went to the…, Capital, it could’ve went wherever it wanted.
Speaker 19
02:41:15 – 02:41:15
So
Speaker 1
02:41:16 – 02:41:34
So compared to an idea of perfection, the United States fall short., But compared to any other nation state that we know of in the world., United States is still the most powerful., You have these ideals of perfection and you can always find a nation that falls short of the ideals., But when you compare the United States to other nations, it it does pretty well.
Speaker 19
02:41:35 – 02:41:53
I I get what you’re saying., Luke but but Those other nations got ahead of themselves And had those 2 wars within a couple of decades, and they all went broke., They all went grow., We were the only 1 standing, so it looked like we were still kicking ass, but really, our output., Sort of peter out.
Speaker 19
02:41:54 – 02:42:17
Basically 20 years after world war 2 and I think we went broke., Vietnam, we went broke sometime around Vietnam., So there’s been no there there to the currency., And then if you and I have some little island, and we decide we’re gonna come up with some gold or oil or comp shell based currency that’s got any kind of real to it., There’s gonna be a coup.
Speaker 19
02:42:17 – 02:42:28
They’re gonna take us out., ?, So I don’t know., I I know it’s gonna come across all Alex Jones or whatever, but I’m really not that way., Because what
Speaker 1
02:42:28 – 02:42:51
what does this narrative do for you?, Because I think it’s completely disconnected from reality, the Us dollar, for example, is near all time highs., So in the real world, alright, The people with trillions of dollars aren’t looking at things anywhere close to you., So you obviously must have some overwhelming emotional commitment to this narrative that that we’re doomed?, I just wonder, like, what does that do for you?
Speaker 1
02:42:52 – 02:42:56
Does that release you to be passive in the real world and to just smoke dope.
Speaker 19
02:42:57 – 02:43:03
No., I don’t not necessarily., I mean, the…, As long as…, We can sell…
Speaker 19
02:43:03 – 02:43:44
As long as we can get somebody to borrow our money for 4 percent loop., That just means as long as they’re as AAA dirtier or shirt, in the hamper, Venezuela will buy our money for 4 percent because their money, loses its purchasing purchasing power faster than that., So, that’s…, As long as there’s an outlet, and even now, even now, I think gains are played what get…, What happens now is what what’s been happened when long term capital management went bust to 98, and then they’re in the G and in 2007.
Speaker 19
02:43:45 – 02:44:22
If you’re in the club, to And you got a bunch of bad assets at first, it was millions, and then it became billions and now it could be trillions., If if you got the right connections, if your name basically isn’t Le and Brothers, they’re gonna buy…, They’re gonna buy all your bad debt up and put it on their balance sheet, If take you back to 0 and let you fly out of it…, Right out of the nest., And some gotta be done like, for example, right now with all regional banks because anybody that was smaller went out and got at 2 or 3 percent mortgage, , the 5 years ago or whatever, and everybody that’s got those.
Speaker 19
02:44:22 – 02:45:08
They’re not gonna get rid of them, every every payment that they make on the mortgage, the regional bank that they got the loan from, is actually losing money., ?, So any of those that aren’t backed by the government., They’re screwed., So, expect expect in the near future as the regional banks, , are getting ready to go bust expect expect their own government to just bow those 2, 3 percent mortgages or or As the government, they’ll back a second mortgage that maybe they’ll give you at 8 percent to pay off the loans or whatever that everybody’s gotten themselves into without, being backed by the government, , otherwise, if you do a second mortgage being in second position There might not be anything if things go south.
Speaker 19
02:45:08 – 02:45:30
There might know anything be anything left for you., So the government has a hundred different ways from Sunday., Of how they can backstop everybody with programs., And that’s why this pack of cigarettes has been financial in the size of a motorcycle helmet And god bless them., They’ve done a great job, , as far as, keeping the wheels on the bus.
Speaker 1
02:45:31 – 02:45:39
So where is it better?, Where is it better?, In in Congo, do they really have it going on?, In North Korea?, Is that is that the model that we should be looking for?
Speaker 1
02:45:39 – 02:46:14
Like, who who actually knows what they’re doing?, You said, Us went broke in the 19 sixties, and yet the United States dollar is pretty much near all time highs because foreigners want to invest trillions of dollars here, because On Planet Earth, this is the safest most secure, most prosperous and strongest nation that the world has ever seen., So on planet Earth United States absolutely dominates the globe., On planet Earth, the United States is set to dominate the 20 first century, more than it even dominated the twentieth century., But perhaps there is some obscure country in in Africa or in South Asia that you think has really got it going on.
Speaker 1
02:46:14 – 02:46:21
And is is it Thailand?, That’s gonna dominate the 20 first century?, Who do you think is gonna dominate the 20 first century if not the United States.
Speaker 19
02:46:23 – 02:46:41
And I don’t know for sure, But I will say that the situation that America was in., We pinned it with what was called the Pet dollar starting in the early seventies., And we made countries buy and sell all their oil using Us dollars., So that meant that cut…, Countries had to carry Us dollars on their balance sheet.
Speaker 19
02:46:42 – 02:46:42
But then has how
Speaker 1
02:46:43 – 02:46:46
Did we make them do that?, Right?, Did we…, How do we make them do that?
Speaker 19
02:46:48 – 02:46:52
By playing , by playing policeman of the world for them.
Speaker 1
02:46:52 – 02:47:01
But Because they have the ability to do that., Right?, The strong check what they want and the week can do it what they must., We’re strong., But their weak, they had to endure it because we’re strong.
Speaker 19
02:47:02 – 02:47:29
That has changed., I’m gonna let me try to keep my my point is my point is even our old buddies like Saudi Arabia., Kept that that contract going and they’ve decided after 50 years, they don’t wanna renew it., Now if you don’t remember, it looks like I’m changing gears, but if you remember when New York staged screwed over Trump and hall his ass in the court, a year ago, Everybody in the business world said, New York you shouldn’t do that., We don’t wanna play…
Speaker 19
02:47:29 – 02:47:56
We don’t wanna play in your sandbox anymore., Well, America as a country, did the exact same thing?, As what New York state did the Trump when America screwed over at first Iran, and then screwed over Russia with that swift system., Everybody sit around and they watched that., And and they said, that could be us unless we’re unless we’re best of friends with America.
Speaker 19
02:47:56 – 02:48:17
So I’m just telling you the…, There are situations the way things were, the way things are, and the way things are gonna be., And, the trend is that, I mean, right now, over a third of the world, America has sanctions against over a third of the world., ?, So I don’t know.
Speaker 19
02:48:17 – 02:48:55
I think I think everybody might be getting sick of it., , so bricks or whatever this other thing is, I just think of it as as the…, There’s people who wanna…, Play in the in the big sandbox and America’s in, and then then every year, I think there’s more and more countries that say, I don’t think I wanna don’t think I wanna play on that sandbox., And 1 thing that we talked about gold earlier 1 thing you should keep in mind is that, the Gold, over the last 10 years, the someone had asked all the the B distributors in America, , we’re…
Speaker 19
02:48:56 – 02:49:31
Who…, How much net buying or selling have you head of gold in America., And over the past decade, we’ve been selling gold., The people event that have been buying gold have been the the the governments in Asia, and then specific countries like China and India, people within those countries in Asia, So if you just think about, like, things with intrinsic value, like gold, you can see the trend., If the Boo dealers in America are net sellers over the past 10 years and our central bank hadn’t been buying any gold.
Speaker 19
02:49:31 – 02:49:54
But that means slowly is surely gold is traveling over to Asia., ?, And, , these things run, they run cycles or whatever in America up there for longest., We had, , twin pillars., We had our our financial hammer, and then we had our, , I our tanks and our guns or whatever.
Speaker 19
02:49:54 – 02:50:02
And I’m just telling you the financial hammer., I don’t know how many tricks they’re gonna have up their sleeve because It’s such it’s…
Speaker 1
02:50:02 – 02:50:12
They don’t have any tricks…, Simply the strongest country in the world and the strong demand what they…, 1., And the week have to endure it., So it doesn’t really matter how they feel about it.
Speaker 1
02:50:12 – 02:50:17
They have to endure it because America is stronger than all these other nations, they’re stronger than bricks.
Speaker 19
02:50:18 – 02:50:38
Well well, let’s pick another., If not Moscow., You think America could do you think our woke military could could take over Tehran for a couple years and and get their oil., I mean, because the way I describe it to you, Luke the way I see it, let’s just say Ukraine., That…
Speaker 19
02:50:38 – 02:50:59
What what do they give us shit about in Ukraine?, It ain’t of the liberty of those people., It’s the 12 to 14000000000000 dollars worth of of assets that are under the ground in Crimea., They don’t like that what is that start to the pee that that gas company in Russia?, The They don’t like that prom gas or whatever a prom gas or whatever.
Speaker 19
02:50:59 – 02:51:15
They don’t like the fact that they’re not…, They’re able to make that money., So so what if it cost., 203 hundred billion dollars of American taxpayer payer of money., They want that 12000000000000 dollars natural sources under the ground in Crimea.
Speaker 19
02:51:15 – 02:51:34
So I don’t know, man., I think everybody’s owned with the fact that it’s kinda like a…, It’s kinda like international gangster, , we can, like, put lips., Stick on a pig or do whatever wanna do, but I don’t know, Luke., I may have I may have run out of steam here, but if you guys any questions.
Speaker 1
02:51:35 – 02:51:39
I’m I’m good., I’m good., Yeah., I think you are referring to Ga pro., So…
Speaker 19
02:51:39 – 02:51:41
Yeah., You you got me., You got me., Thanks, Bro.
Speaker 1
02:51:42 – 02:51:44
But if Okay, Bro., Talk to talk to you later., Yeah Okay.
Speaker 20
02:51:45 – 02:51:45
Bye bye.
Speaker 1
02:51:45 – 02:51:48
Bye., Let’s spend a little bit more here from David Stock.
Speaker 7
02:51:48 – 02:51:52
A very progressive human rights., And what would you make of that?
Speaker 6
02:51:53 – 02:52:22
It just deserves laughing at if it weren’t so terrible, but just you made exactly the point that I’m saying., Our notion of a sovereign parliament of of of of, a system of parliamentary democracy has been comp…, Completely per converted into the idea that what it’s about is not the protection of the rights of the majority, but the protection of the rights have increasingly alienate minorities., Again, the the…, Can you imagine a norman baron.
Speaker 6
02:52:22 – 02:52:42
Worrying about the rights of refugees., And the idea is simply d., And the fact that the church again, can we be very serious the fact that the church of England is engaged in this., Naked and foolish propaganda., Again, They bear a very, very large measure of responsibility.
Speaker 6
02:52:42 – 02:52:54
The church of England used to be central., Are you called it English., And what the…, The yuri it always used to be called the Tory Party prayer., Now, of course, it’s the extreme left ranting.
Speaker 6
02:52:54 – 02:53:29
But the the, in the days on, it was the tory party at prayer, it was the English doing something very important, Stephen., They were worshiping themselves., And they weren’t actually worthy of it., And it’s this deliberate destruction of our self respect the regard to that history, England remember invent modern., These enormous changes, that lead to increased life expectancy, increase prosperity, better health, better dress with the first country to a abolish endemic famine and so on but that leads to mass literacy.
Speaker 6
02:53:29 – 02:53:36
They all begin here., And it looks perhaps a observable end here.
Speaker 7
02:53:37 – 02:53:45
Mass migration to the Uk has been occurring at least since the days of blair., And after the second world war, we started to see the beginnings of this.
Speaker 6
02:53:46 – 02:53:53
Tiny., It was tiny., In comparison., And with what’s happened, it’s really important to steve., We get the the the proportion of figures right.
Speaker 6
02:53:54 – 02:54:22
The the scale of millions since 19 97., It’s not simply unique in modern times., It’s unique throughout our history, even the great population movements of the Roman period and the post roman period and the so called barbarian invasions, the numbers even as a percentage of the population were on nothing of this scale., This is a unique develop developments the wrong word., This is a unique happening, and therefore it’s got unique consequences.
Speaker 6
02:54:23 – 02:55:00
And the fact again that it’s been done without, that it’s been done with a deliberate suppression of debate about it, or as it were exacerbate., The problems would have happened anywhere but the way we’ve gone about doing it with that sense of sub of content contempt for the majority., Do you remember an awful woman who even Star couldn’t give a cabinet position to Emily Thorn., Her absolute contempt that a man who works drives a van couldn’t dare to have the s George’s flag that sn contempt?, Why is the welsh dragon better?
Speaker 6
02:55:00 – 02:55:04
Why why is this and Andrew’s cross better., It is this true.
Speaker 1
02:55:05 – 02:55:19
Okay., So I I thought that human rights…, Well, currently, it’s overwhelming the a concern on the left., Right?, It seems like or all the elites in the human rights field are, on the on the left.
Speaker 1
02:55:20 – 02:55:48
And that there was a time., However, I discovered by reading a new book that used to be that human wrote was much more fix fiction by various intellectual on the right., So this book came out in 20 16., This called the conservative human rights revolution., European identity, trans transnational politics and the origins of the European convention, So this book is by an academic at university of Sydney in Australia.
Speaker 1
02:55:49 – 02:56:11
Conservative, European invoked international human rights, norms, for different purposes than the left., Right?, They were united in their beliefs that a democracy in which Tyranny of the majority health way it’s a little better than a dictatorship., So currently The side of the political spectrum most concerned about the tyranny of the majority is the left, but it used to be the right., That was most concerned about the tyranny and the majority.
Speaker 1
02:56:11 – 02:56:46
So the rights of the minority like the autonomy of the individual of the civil society, but not to be sacrificed at the altar of the unitary nation state, So currently, this is a concern primarily of the political left., After World war 2, this was primarily a concern of the political right., So plural not popular sovereignty was the watch word of conservatives after second world war in Europe., Now, plural rather than popular sovereignty is a primarily a focus of the left., So after world war 2, Right?
Speaker 1
02:56:47 – 02:57:12
Conservatives were sailed by socialist as anti democratic., Right conservatives saw their human rights., Crusade is protecting democracy from itself., To totalitarian, they thought was a contagion whose carriers were not limited to communists of fascist, that it could grow from within democratic movements within socialism., So socialism was thought to be the breeding ground for totalitarian.
Speaker 1
02:57:12 – 02:57:41
That was the post war war 2 conservative perspective., And they blamed large parts of liberal and republican for this inclination towards authoritarianism, So it used to be after World war 2, in Europe., Right?, It was the right side of the political spectrum that was most concerned., About the dangers of authoritarianism of, currently, it’s the left side of the political spectrum in the United States and Europe that is most concerned about authoritarianism.
Speaker 1
02:57:43 – 02:58:23
So it used to be that the left was primarily upset about the rulings of courts., Right?, But for conservatives, after World war 2, they wanted the judicial branch to have more power., So they wanted to return to tradition and order forms of community and that this would form the bedrock of a free and United Europe, not a techno., So there were there were left wing activists in the history of human rights, right, for a hundred years prior to the end of World war 2, the left a championed so the liberties, ending discrimination against women of minorities, expanding expanding the voting, suffrage and securing economic and social rights.
Speaker 1
02:58:24 – 02:58:52
But why is it that in the aftermath the second world war, the main forces driving the creation of a European human rights court, Were conservatives., And why was it at that time that this focus on human rights primarily proceed the opposition of socialists., Right?, After world war 2, socialists were less enthusiastic about European integration than conservatives., Right?
Speaker 1
02:58:52 – 02:59:31
What polarized Western Europe has a question of which rights such a charter would guarantee., And whether there would be some kind of super national version of the Us Supreme Court that is European High court and empowered to overrule the decisions of national, parliament, and executives as well as deal with the claims of human rights abuses submitted by private parties., So the judiciary at lange being viewed with more hostility on the left., Right?, So in in Europe and United States over the past 30 years, judiciary generally receive more hostility from the right.
Speaker 1
02:59:31 – 03:00:03
So in Britain and in France, memories were fresh of the role that courts had played as bastion of conservative assaults on trade unions and on economic planning as restraints against the rise of socialism., So in France, judicial power was associated with ari privileges of the ancient regime., So the French left we’re constantly criticizing the reactionary government of judges., Right?, Being under this sway of judges.
Speaker 1
03:00:03 – 03:00:34
Now it’s the right., Who are more likely to complain about government by judges., So The idea of a European Supreme Court was pushed primarily by conservatives after world war 2, socialist thought that this was a way that conservatives could enact their agenda that was too unpopular to be enacted through democratic means., Now, this is a right wing., Critique that the left leg legislature through judges that witches too unpopular to be enacted through democratic means.
Speaker 1
03:00:35 – 03:01:31
So for example, you had, save of California, I think voting for proposition 1 87 in 19 96., To deny a lot of social welfare benefits to illegal aliens that was overturned by the California Supreme Court and this has happened so often, that the conservative see judges is getting in the way of what the people want., So the most avid, most passionate advocates of a European Supreme Court were precisely those conservatives who before the second world War had championed the independence and constitutional prerogative of national courts., Right?, That they saw the ever expanding state bureau that occurred during the war, and the dispositions of socialist governments they saw that as posing a threat to human rights, particularly fundamental freedoms of private property, private schools and political opposition.
Speaker 1
03:01:32 – 03:01:57
So if human rights are a secular religion, many of the original framers of European human rights law took this analogy literally., Right?, Their conception of a supreme court, mirrored that of the medieval church., Right?, For many catholic conservatives a spiritual reunification of Europe after to the second world war require the sub nation of parliamentary democracy to what it called supernatural justice.
Speaker 1
03:01:57 – 03:02:30
And this primarily came from the right, from the left., To Right?, So conservatives saw this European supreme Court., As a successor to the medieval charters of old, a a new human rights treaty, it would strengthen the autonomy of Catholic Churches towns, region schools, and Catholic Associations of peasants and workers., So conservatives wanted greater len c and often outright amnesty for those who had actively cooperated with the Nazis during World war 2.
Speaker 1
03:02:30 – 03:03:14
It was the left that most wanted to punish and purge., Often to dis and silence their political rivals who had assisted the Nazis., It was the left who pushed the seizure of assets of land industrial and Rid Armies, bureau and Judiciary of conservatives who had cooperated with the Nazis., So conservative saw this human rights system after World war 2, a way to hold off authoritarianism and to reduce the dangers of left wing revolution and democratic dysfunction., So conservatives saw the propensity of post World war 2 socialist to reject checks some majority rule.
Speaker 1
03:03:14 – 03:03:30
Right?, So after World war 2 was a socialist., We most wanted majority rule that then had the power to change or all the rules of life., Right., Conservatives wanted at a European human rights system that would replace majority rule with the rule of law.
Speaker 1
03:03:31 – 03:04:05
Right now it’s left to who primarily want to check majority rule with their own rule of human rights law., Right?, It was conservatives who were primarily concerned about the dominance of the unitary state, and it was conservatives who fought for a more plural system., Right?, It was conservatives who were concerned about the absolute sovereignty of nations and parliament, and they wanted to institute European human rights systems to allow for greater autonomy for individuals, families, towns, minorities and civil civil society.
Speaker 1
03:04:07 – 03:04:38
So after World war 2, it was conservatives who placed themselves at the vanguard of the human rights revolution at Western Europe., And this was not a abbreviation of their long standing political beliefs, it was applying their long standing beliefs to a new situation., Right?, They they recognize that their objectives would be better realize on the trans transnational plane than on the national 1 because they had less confidence in their ability to win elections., So they shifted emphasis on the various component parts of conservative ideology.
Speaker 1
03:04:40 – 03:05:02
Right., So they change the application of cons conservative principles rather than changing cons conserve principles themselves., So they use the language of human rights who advanced economic and social policies that conservatives have ad advocated since the nineteenth century., And much of this was overlaid by a certain romantic., So romantic means to see more in in life than is really there.
Speaker 1
03:05:02 – 03:05:26
So conservatives by enlarged off for World war 2, they remain skeptical of the liberal faith in recent and progress., Right?, They remain skeptical about the modern world., They were not convinced that the Bond world was a more just more free, more peaceful 1 than the old world., They were concerned about the destruction of social hi in the name of egalitarian, thought this led to widespread material and spiritual and punishment.
Speaker 1
03:05:27 – 03:05:55
They thought it over politicized society setting peoples against 1 another in perpetual conflict., They Right?, So they they did not believe that rights and obligation should be the same for all., Because cons conservatives more than people on the left recognize that different peoples, different sexes had different gifts., Because So conservatives don’t d liberties from philosophical first principles on the basis of called logic alone.
Speaker 1
03:05:56 – 03:06:34
Rather they see human rights emerging organically from the development of human habits and personalities within particular civilization or, communal and national frameworks., Right?, Cons conservatives take it for granted that people are not naturally good, The perspective of the left, generally speaking is that people do naturally incline towards goodness., Conservatives regard people as naturally selfish and sinful, and People will only learn to respect 1 another’s liberties through the recovery of traditions that once united them, not on the basis of issuing abstract declarations of principles., So conservatives differ to the extent which they rejected the Modern world.
Speaker 1
03:06:35 – 03:07:02
Right?, Conservatives disagreed amongst themselves on the virtue of capitalism., Industry and parliamentary democracy., Protestant conservatives in Britain were generally avert, to timeless universal prescriptions for the organization of human societies, they preferred instead to defer to the practices and values of a people, a particular historical community., Though their view of human nature remained quite skeptical.
Speaker 1
03:07:04 – 03:07:06
So let’s see what’s going on in Middle East.
Speaker 21
03:07:06 – 03:07:11
The administration changes their Iran policy., They won’t stop the chaos in the war in the middle East.
Speaker 17
03:07:11 – 03:07:23
At the time of significant tension in the middle East, the United States Navy has a significant…, Presence there, is there any strong enough to deterrent has Iran can considers attacking Israel?
Speaker 21
03:07:24 – 03:08:11
While the Us Navy is certainly the strongest navy, the most powerful navy in the world., Unfortunately, the Chinese communist party, had built a navy that rivals us that is larger than ours, but we’re still an an an incredibly important deterrent force it’s not just our navy ships., It’s other navy assets, that these regimes know full well, what that we have on the region as well., It’s 1 piece of deter, but 1 thing that it hasn’t stopped is the war with the H, and we have on a weekly basis, the H these shooting sophisticated drones and ballistic missiles at Us navy ships, we’re…, Empty our tea lamps from our from our facilities from our storage facilities in order to hit back at the H fees to protect Us navy ships, Mike.
Speaker 21
03:08:11 – 03:08:28
The Us navy is seeing in the Cent sitcom theater from More action, Our ships are saying more action today in the Middle East than the Us Navy has seen since world war 2., Mh., We have to understand the scale and the precedence of what’s happening to our Us navy in the Middle east right now.
Speaker 17
03:08:28 – 03:09:03
As we try to figure out what vice president Harris policy these would be if elected, vice president Harris National security adviser tweeted about the Middle East, quote, Vp has been clear., These She will always ensure Israel’s is able to defend itself against Iran and Iran backed terrorist groups., She does not support an arms embargo in Israel., She will continue to work to protect civilians in Gaza and uphold international humanitarian law., Should something like that, have been done in a major sit down interview by her or at a news conference where all the outlets were broadcasting it.
Speaker 21
03:09:04 – 03:09:35
You would think if the media would do its job, listen, she owns the chaos into molt of the past 4 years in the Middle East Mike., This is the Biden Harris administration., She’s arguably, the most powerful woman in the world certainly the second most powerful person in our country., So these policies in the Middle East that led to the disastrous and chaotic withdrawal in Afghanistan, for example, in August or 20 21., She’s brag in previous interviews that she was the last person in the room with president Biden making those decisions.
Speaker 21
03:09:35 – 03:09:38
So this is her administration., She owns the policies.
Speaker 1
03:09:40 – 03:10:11
Okay., Let’s get back to the role of conservatives in developing human rights in Western Europe., After the second world war., So you talk about this as the conservative human rights revolution because currently, almost all human activists of which I’m aware on the left., So for protestant conservatives in Britain after the second world war, Conservatism meant the defensive institutions that have been tested by time, right, liberties that were historically contingent.
Speaker 1
03:10:12 – 03:10:47
Meaning they were not necessarily suitable to our peoples in all places at all times., They rejected popular sovereignty, as a foundational constitutional principle., So they agreed with the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty, which meant that parliament were entitled to their traditional prerogative, he right their chief., Concern was limiting the power of the executive, which they thought needed to be constrained through independent judiciary, and parliamentary oversight, particularly with regard to the rights of private property., Right, conservatives in Britain Were more comfortable ex the virtue of constitutional government that those of democracy.
Speaker 1
03:10:48 – 03:11:39
Catholic, conservatives in france were more hostile to parliamentary government than their protestant counterparts, Right?, They were more given to capitalism and liberal, and they promoted in their place a near medieval form of corp., It would restore the collective rights of workers while fostering harmony between social groups., So ever since the American and French revolutions, British and French conservatives had generally been uncomfortable invoking the rights of man., Instead, they did not hesitate to pro themselves champions of liberty, which would mean anything from protecting private property to protecting the autonomy of the church from the state to the emancipation of human spirit from a false moral, outlook, so the result was a hybrid human rights doctrine.
Speaker 1
03:11:39 – 03:12:14
It was a strange ama of the enlightenment and the counter enlightenment, modern individual liberties and medieval communal liberties, natural rights, and historical rights., And the conservative politicians who championed a European human rights court after world war 2, leave the colonized people were not entitled to the same rights., And protections as Europeans., So the fa popular legitimacy of European institutions today is due to European europeans no longer having much in common with each other?, Right?
Speaker 1
03:12:14 – 03:12:55
How would you articulate a set of qualities now shared by all Europeans., As Europe has become more diverse, it has had naturally less social cohesion social trust and Diversity means we have less in common., So in post war, Second war, Europe democracy in human rights were invoked for contrary purposes., They would assume completely different meanings depending on the context., So appeals to democracy in human rights continue to divide as well as to unite Europeans, whether it’s calling for more national sovereignty or more European supra rule.
Speaker 1
03:12:55 – 03:13:29
Right?, Human rights, rhetoric is mobilized both in defense of and in defiance of European authority., There’s a little agreement among Pro Europe forces, and which markers of Europe, European identity should be the focus of a new vision for a multi multicultural multi ethnic Europe of the 20 first century., So what you do here, are people in Europe, speaking you the need for a charismatic leader to counter the growing tide of anti Europe sentiment., But Charisma is a quality that only emerges if there is an em emphatic bond between leaders and people.
Speaker 1
03:13:29 – 03:13:45
Right?, If you feel heard., If you feel seen, if you feel acknowledged if you feel like your deepest concerns have been articulated by someone Right, You’re likely to as scribe to them charismatic powers., Alright?, Someone makes you feel more alive, more energized.
Speaker 1
03:13:46 – 03:14:00
Alright., That that person you’re going to regard as charismatic., But European europeans no longer have enough in common., To to hope for some charismatic figure to come along., Right?
Speaker 1
03:14:01 – 03:14:42
First things is a conservative religious and and politics oriented publication, and its editor, r are Reno, who is a theology professor wrote in the May 20 16 issue against human rights., So it says as in my years as a theology, professor, I become accustomed to calls for dialogue On this of that issue, in enormous almost every instance, it is a setup for mandatory public cap stipulation., Right?, If you regard abortion as a moral evil, and same sex marriage as an Oxy moron as I do., You cannot say so in a public forum, but that amounts to a sin against dialogue because you were shutting down the conversation That’s what I taught on many occasions.
Speaker 1
03:14:43 – 03:14:51
Right?, What’s?, Homosexuality is affirmed on a catholic University campus., There’s no more dialogue., Can you imagine dialogue and global climate change.
Speaker 1
03:14:51 – 03:15:13
Right, The movement goes from dialogue to center and then to pronunciation., It’s a smooth direction., After World war 2, human rights came to Prominence in Europe as a way to protect the individual from the state, but in the 20 first century human rights., Has changed its role in the west., Today has become a powerful left wing ideology, the promises to relieve us of the burdens of political responsibility.
Speaker 1
03:15:14 – 03:15:36
For the common good., So Europeans today must face the very difficult task you determining how to limit immigration Right, And who should be counted as part of your national community?, This is a political question perhaps the most fundamental 1., That human rights is an ideology that rejects this political responsibility., Human rights says migrants who qualify as refugees must be accepted regardless of circumstances.
Speaker 1
03:15:37 – 03:15:45
So in this way of thinking immigration is a matter of basic human rights and transcend the political., His Melanie
Speaker 22
03:15:46 – 03:15:51
and Nd presided over a very anti Jewish party., Put it more accurately., K got rid of hip…
Speaker 1
03:15:52 – 03:15:54
Right., Talking about Jeremy Corbyn and the labour partner.
Speaker 22
03:15:54 – 03:16:21
And K also set out to purge really rather ruthless, the labour party of the faction of which Jeremy Corbyn was the leader, the hard left faction., And he purchased them very spectacularly and very deliberately because he wanted to show the British people, and particularly the jewish community in Britain that it was again say to vote labor., Now in my view, this was largely cosmetic., Yes, he did purge much of a hard left, yes, he did purge most the most egregious anti might and Israel bash in the party., But the fact is that the…
Speaker 22
03:16:21 – 03:16:43
I would say the majority if not the vast majority of members of the labour party are now hostile to Israel on a scale ranging from disdain and dislike to vicious hostility., And there are lot of Mit in the party still., And there also some hard left people that, quote Star chose to retain., So it was a bit more of a mixed bag than he would like to to to everyone else to imagine., But it might
Speaker 1
03:16:43 – 03:17:36
So there’s a great New Yorker profile of sin sin Sin, the head of Hamas., And he’s just a paragraph, David Rem wrote it, Amos r, military and political analyst for Har, which plays a similar role in Europe., That the New York Times plays in the United States said that 1 of the most distributing aspects of the current nightmare is the way that Sin was able to revoke the Netanyahu government into a state of horrific and ruin us fury., So from a left wing perspective fury and the desire for revenge, are very primitive emotions we should right to trends send them., We should take on the Buffett identity where we allow reason to rule, private where we develop our own morality and meaning and purpose in life with the power of our own reason, and we don’t give into these primitive ata urges for revenge.
Speaker 1
03:17:36 – 03:18:11
Right?, Now given that all punishment contains an element of revenge, great point from Dennis P, Right, 1 of the ways that the right distinguishes itself from the left is the right is more eager to punish criminals, particularly violent criminals., Right, ways, that differentiate the right from the left is the right has a pessimistic and critical view of human nature, the left leaves we’re we’re basically good., The right believes in traditional ways of organizing people, such as the nuclear family that these are better than un tested ways., And the ride has more comfort with Hierarchy and inequality.
Speaker 1
03:18:12 – 03:18:26
Anyway, back to this New Yorker piece on, Sin, the Head of Hamas., The sense in Israeli societies that we are going down the drain and Sin helped Drag us there., Hare else said., When we justify things We have never justified before, we are in the moral gutter., Really?
Speaker 1
03:18:26 – 03:18:42
Are we?, Right?, When the situation changes, I would hope that the things we would justify would change with it., That Words like revenge used to be heard only among extremist., Now military units are mainstream kernels using terms such as revenge as part of the norm now.
Speaker 1
03:18:43 – 03:19:10
And he’s horrified., Right?, The left is horrified by this primitive notion for revenge., If you’re on the right, you take it for granted., That the desire for revenge is normal, natural and if used appropriately, is absolutely healthy But you find among centrist and left wing intellectual, in particular, Just a horror of the desire for revenge and a horror for the human emotion of fury.
Speaker 1
03:19:11 – 03:19:17
This is out of the the left wing ventilation of the un power of reason.
Speaker 22
03:19:17 – 03:19:38
I do the single most important factor about Killer, which is something that most people would not really immediately understand or acknowledge even in Britain., Is this, that he supposedly to be a moderate., He is in fact, in many respects, in most respects, I’m sure a very decent man he’s very kind of solid and grounded., You don’t look at him and think, wild extremist as you do with jeremy Corbyn., However, Kia was for most of his career.
Speaker 22
03:19:38 – 03:20:00
A human rights lawyer from 1 of the most radical barr sets in Britain., He was extremely left wing, and he has not changed his his position., So while that left wing mindset doesn’t take the form with Jeremy Corbyn of supporting the world’s, Marxist as dictators., Of aligning himself as Jeremy Corbyn did with known terrorist groups., Star wouldn’t do that at all.
Speaker 22
03:20:00 – 03:20:19
He certainly wouldn’t align himself with with terrorists on the country, but on the other hand, he subscribe to a mindset which in my view, so you what I would call the human rights culture, which is the mindset that informs all the people in the west., Who are the most vicious hostile to Israel and condo condone or incentivize anti jewish hatred, For example, the United Me
Speaker 1
03:20:20 – 03:20:46
So people on the right now are increasingly skeptical of human rights because they see human rights has being taken over by the left., And here we are in first things an essay I’m increasingly against human rights., It’s become a patron of negative freedom in pushing against demands and obligations arising from a shared culture., So from a conservative perspective, right, the the left wing ex exploitation of human rights tends to break down social cohesion of social trust., Right?
Speaker 1
03:20:46 – 03:21:15
In the west human rights now functions as an enemy of the responsible exercise of freedom., Ex human rights as the epitome social responsibility., Short circuits, collective judgment and S action for the sake of the common good., Both right left in America today, imagine that today’s Problems stem from too little freedom when in fact what currently ag educate our society is the loss of stability, unity and solidarity., Consider the increasingly bizarre liberal fix fiction on transgender rights.
Speaker 1
03:21:16 – 03:21:29
Right?, We now have the dis integration of the once expansive and solid middle class, people feel economically and culturally vulnerable., Right?, And so problem, male and female identity., Right?
Speaker 1
03:21:29 – 03:22:16
Exacerbate the dis trends that make., So much in our lives so liquid., Then that we have authors seth Seth Kaplan writing in the May 20 18 edition of American affairs, The last few decades, the human rights project has become increasingly progressive, advocating a singular way of living the good life., With a demo emotion of traditional conservative values that don’t fit in, such as those associated with the religious belief or with social institutions, such as families, churches, schools, communities, and clubs., Then in 20 12, the Hoover Institute published on human rights that when the American section of Amnesty International, first founded in the 19 seventies, William F Buckle was 1 of its earliest supporters.
Speaker 1
03:22:17 – 03:22:47
So used to be conservatives were quite down with human rights., But then human rights got taken over by the left., And so now human rights are identified as a left wing cause., Human rights standards are established globally without respect to different people’s, different cultures and different historical contingencies., So human rights have come to be associated with opposition to the death penalty, the closure of prisons, assertion of a right to health care, and other left wing causes.
Speaker 1
03:22:50 – 03:23:21
1 issue that, device left and the right is that the right tends to place more emphasis on security and the left tends to place more emphasis on personal liberty., So the the right will often say that national interest Trump human rights., In the left will say human rights should Trump national interests., Put a bit more here from Melanie.
Speaker 22
03:23:21 – 03:24:01
Nations of the United Nations Human and rights council and all the organizations associated with the United Nations, the international or criminal 40 International Court of Justice, The, the big Ngos like a, human rights watch and Amnesty International, and it israel sell him, these are all institutions that march under the banner of human rights on the basis that human rights is an un unreasonable faith to do with, basically bringing about the end of prejudice the end of war and bring you out the brother of Matt., And that’s Kia., And so if you take the views I do, that this culture of ostensibly, moderate left wing is actually responsible for the animals against Israel., The, the
Speaker 1
03:24:02 – 03:24:07
Okay., You’re complaining., You haven’t heard any analysis from decoding the guru., Here
Speaker 20
03:24:07 – 03:24:08
they are., Hope whatever
Speaker 2
03:24:09 – 03:24:11
I don’t might would be…, What the peter.
Speaker 20
03:24:11 – 03:24:12
They’re like, the argument the…
Speaker 1
03:24:13 – 03:24:15
Come on, man., I didn’t queue it up right.
Speaker 20
03:24:16 – 03:24:19
Like, fantasy r, like, , some people are santos
Speaker 1
03:24:20 – 03:24:22
Oh, man 40, get your act together, mate.
Speaker 20
03:24:22 – 03:24:30
So because I…, Some people that listen, were saying like, , sure something on the page like I said., Sure Capitals are are perceived to be dominant slow and they’re right.
Speaker 1
03:24:30 – 03:24:34
They’re making fun here of Doctor K., But there’s a serious point coming up., Believe
Speaker 20
03:24:34 – 03:24:44
Fiesta and big bored that they can’t lose., But when the, , like it., So the everybody reads Like, you wanna be a pop out., Right?, That’s that’s the thing and what he describes That sound good for
Speaker 1
03:24:45 – 03:24:49
Okay., Doctor k., Beta 9 is a psychiatrist who uses the Monica healthy gamer.
Speaker 20
03:24:49 – 03:24:59
Like, the others have their strengths, but, yeah., So this is an interesting 1., So cooper the apparently is actually this first book including a section on relations.
Speaker 1
03:24:59 – 03:25:17
This is Andrew Hub, who’s the number 1 pod Cast in the health and fitness space., He’s also a professor at Stanford University, and he is really a dodgy character, Right., He would take very low level studies and and build them up to be a big deal.
Speaker 20
03:25:17 – 03:25:35
Chips, at an alternative medicine scientist., Section on that brain connection., So the question though is why so any researchers and scientists, put up of him., Rollins Like Andrea Love who wrote a very critical to go away them., And my answer is a very simple map It because they want his, like, popularity and reach.
Speaker 20
03:25:35 – 03:25:47
So there’s plenty the academic types who Better they just, , Whoever remains super famous night., And if you’re go in show, you’ll…, , he’s basically like Rubin for Yep., As researchers focused on self improvement or whatever.
Speaker 2
03:25:47 – 03:25:55
Yeah., But Think well, I think we’re broadly the applies to, like, a lot of these characters right that are popular rises and not very good popular rises., And and you…, In wonder why well, hang on., How come?
Speaker 2
03:25:55 – 03:26:19
How come all of his or her colleagues are not calling them out about this., And, like, , the answer has got to do with the fact that the vast majority of researchers and academics is doing 1 pay attention., And to just have much interest in public writing, , or public communications., And so the…, There’s small percentage to do are usually ambitious, and we’d like to have a audience and go bigger channel and someone and they tend to play the game, and the game is not being rude to the bigger fish.
Speaker 2
03:26:20 – 03:26:23
Right?, If it’s an ecosystem., So fig Yeah., It’s not it’s not a healthy money., We’re joining out.
Speaker 2
03:26:24 – 03:26:25
To try to figure this around.
Speaker 20
03:26:25 – 03:26:34
This is this is also how you can identify, like, just a give an example., Kevin Mitchell., Guy we had on, and we talked about this book and we’ve read this book., Like, he goes hard interpret online., Right?
Speaker 20
03:26:35 – 03:26:44
But he would obviously benefit from being nice the in terms of, like, increasing his profile and going discussing his book and stuff, but he thinks superman is promoting pseudo., So he says it.
Speaker 2
03:26:44 – 03:26:46
Like, and not…, This is very difference., These…
Speaker 1
03:26:47 – 03:27:11
Right., So there are many problems in academia., Don’t but there also problems in live streaming and podcasting in that there are so many incentives to be friendly with people who have…, A bigger viewership than you do so that you can possibly, , boost your your own signal., But, You can’t boost your own signal and get on the good side of people who are more popular than you are, if you ever say anything critical of them.
Speaker 2
03:27:12 – 03:27:18
That’s right., These are the social signals., You can see spot., Like, it’s not just going on this person’s clearly got a good command of the the technicalities and and so on., In judging people.
Speaker 2
03:27:18 – 03:27:26
Yeah, You can tell by the way they conduct Themselves and just little decisions like that, being willing to criticize people where it would not be in their best interest to criticize them., Right?
Speaker 20
03:27:27 – 03:27:32
Yeah., Yeah., And I I also think more considering that, like Stanford., Right?, Stanford the seriously with academic stuff and all that kind of thing.
Speaker 20
03:27:32 – 03:28:01
Stanford promotes government., And they haven’t, like, , removed them., Position even though he’s probably doing absolutely 0 academic worked anymore., And, just like Toronto didn’t remove Peterson even though he hadn’t taught there in, , 7 years or whatever, 8 years, I think at 1 Like, m, and, understand when they did remove him, eventually, he got upset up., But the, like, the the thing is that the universities like all, Academics are drawn to somebody having this big audience and, like, increasing the prestige of the, you, , government is constantly referencing stanford and stuff like that and the can they’re…
Speaker 20
03:28:01 – 03:28:24
There’s going to be lots of, like, venture capitalists, type people and tech people who not interested in supporting, , like, research because of the the we like Cooper and all that stuff., So, like, the unit you would hope that the university universities would be like, he’s telling science, so we should be acknowledging that this is…, There’s something things to be critical off, but they never…, Well, unless there’s some controversy that he, , that…, What they wouldn’t like, is that article of like the women the in mind because that
Speaker 2
03:28:24 – 03:28:24
it’s not good.
Speaker 20
03:28:25 – 03:28:28
Yeah., That’s…, That…, So that would have be much more entertaining than, like,
Speaker 16
03:28:28 – 03:28:28
Yeah.
Speaker 1
03:28:29 – 03:28:46
So decoding the guru, it’s not good on human by., They had a weak segment on Sailor, But can’t expect everything from everyone., Alright?, We all have our vulnerabilities and their biggest fear is their they’re…, You respective academic dean’s receiving complaints about them.
Speaker 1
03:28:46 – 03:28:59
So they have to operate within a certain playing field., Just like, I have to operate within a certain playing field by most important social life occurs within orthodox judaism, I’m not gonna blow that up for the sake of having an exciting livestream stream,
Speaker 20
03:28:59 – 03:29:04
Like, if he was, , just just that he endlessly promotes S Sundays and over interprets them., Like, Yeah., That’s fine.
Speaker 2
03:29:05 – 03:29:15
Universities are run, Like, universities, 1 universities are very much like corporations., They they’re they have little differences., But they are these more things., And in many ways, they’re just a, like, a container., ?
Speaker 2
03:29:16 – 03:29:29
They they’re they tend to be kind of neutral., They have their sources of fund but have their Kpis, but the way they’re funded and the way their Kpis that find differs around the world, But they’re not…, what I mean I…, I mean, what what do you think?, But, like, my my understanding is that they just don’t…
Speaker 2
03:29:29 – 03:29:36
I shouldn’t be overly cynical about them., But, , like, in Australia, they run by managers., Like, they’re run by people who Don’t know., I’m not…, , they’re…
Speaker 20
03:29:36 – 03:29:59
I mean, I’m I had various interactions but nice enough of the Oxford press agency right when they we’re promoting studies or whatever, but they’re…, They fundamentally or a morals in the promotion of your study, like you are at Oxford, You got a study published?, What…, , how do we spend this they make this the most attention grabbing Like, they don’t care, but they call the of the study I, like, so if Study became a huge sensation, and it was a really s study from the university of the Outreach perspective., That doesn’t matter.
Speaker 20
03:29:59 – 03:30:21
Right like you You, you got the name of the University either, from science point of view, you could have done a, like, a very bond drove for science, but they don’t care., So there’s there’s the thing that, like, there’s so much that you can criticize for., So many legitimate…, Issues that you can be used for academia and the Id types and the the prototypes types are just, like, they never know the actual, like, things to criticize academia, because they’re too busy you’re alleging it’s controlled by the communist aliens or whatever the gears might be.
Speaker 2
03:30:22 – 03:30:44
I mean, the real problem with our universes run is not even specific universities., Like, you can identify the same issues government geographies and in private corporations., Like it’s like it’s well learned in any large companies., They they often take decisions that are the best management rather than the best interested of shareholders, which is not what they’re supposed to be about., It’s well known that many governmental departments that takes decisions to avoid political blow back and to avoid rocking the vote and for for for reasons other than what their stated objectives are.
Speaker 2
03:30:44 – 03:30:53
Right?, So the same universities., Like any human institution has a tendency to cooperate operate like that., So, , you it shouldn’t be overly typical is just kind this how the world is., Like, because I think people can…
Speaker 2
03:30:54 – 03:31:01
People seem to struggle I think with either being, like, totally naive about these these these organizations to to flip to being like, insanely cynical things
Speaker 20
03:31:01 – 03:31:09
people are lying all the time., They’re all in every institution is like do all the time and, like, and that’s not that but yeah., Yeah., So isn’t this isn’t this wrong., Night.
Speaker 20
03:31:10 – 03:31:17
It’s kinda., Like, yes., Technically, I grant that we we shouldn’t do that because we added in moral ground standing., But if we’re converting that to a percentage., That’s fine.
Speaker 20
03:31:18 – 03:31:32
It’s not a it’s not a psycho systematically validated the instrument plus, we only added an extra, like, 5.4 points on the scale right., So, like, given the amount of, , that the pin go into., We’ve just added an extra little bit of., But it is.
Speaker 2
03:31:32 – 03:31:36
It’s…, Technically it’s structured., Even normalize it., It’s still technically different measure., But like Said the influences.
Speaker 2
03:31:37 – 03:31:42
It’s kind of not not not that huge, but also, we…, 1 of these days, we’ll go back and we’ll we’ll do a quick…, We…
Speaker 20
03:31:43 – 03:31:47
Said we’ll do., Yeah., Yeah., We’ll get back more grand of all of them., Like?
Speaker 20
03:31:47 – 03:31:47
Because it’s easy doing.
Speaker 2
03:31:48 – 03:31:49
Yeah., It’s not not hard to spot meeting.
Speaker 20
03:31:50 – 03:31:55
That’s right., So we’ll…, It’s not…, We we reject criticism and we accept that and say that we will fix it., So…
Speaker 20
03:31:57 – 03:32:06
Yeah., That that is it., Right to…, I like some of these questions, fine., I know you gonna get home of your day in a little bit, But, the self books that are aware I’m accurately represent research.
Speaker 20
03:32:06 – 03:32:24
I’m sure there are, but I…, They’re I don’t know them., Like, I, even even the 12 throughs for life, a lot of the actual self help content in it was relatively as far as I understood, like, not terrible., Right?, Like, it was it was only additional stuff, the peterson and layers on top, but I I’ve read self help books I thought.
Speaker 20
03:32:24 – 03:32:41
Like, I think after the my little stuff that we talked about and stuff, was reasonable but like, if all of them, I feel, like, they’re all a bit too much into selling whatever particular line is., So you you have like, always find them and it’s like, reading an article where you’re aware that they were trying to say that this is very important groundbreaking briefing., Research, but they’re all saying that., So account all be true., Yeah.
Speaker 2
03:32:42 – 03:32:55
Yeah., Yeah., I think the short answer for me too is that I don’t know because I just I don’t really read self books., Say But I mean, my more controversial of opinion chris is that I I don’t know if if if if it’s well suited, the topic is well suited to., And evidence like a sonic evidence based approach.
Speaker 2
03:32:55 – 03:33:05
It’s bit like, good parenting books., Right?, Like, yes, there’s there’s lots of research I wanna maybe can inform it a bit., But these are very…, Like, I I think I think any value in those kinds of things is kind of in you…
Speaker 2
03:33:05 – 03:33:05
Which 1
Speaker 20
03:33:05 – 03:33:08
you find a?, Yeah., And if you like the.
Speaker 2
03:33:08 – 03:33:18
Yeah., Like whatever the works you do kind of thing and in And yes., I can imagine there are bad ones., Like, if you could stuff that up., But, , maybe it’s not the kind of thing that is well suited to to exchange from evidence.
Speaker 2
03:33:18 – 03:33:23
You can’t do experiments on people to figure out, like, what are the 7 rules of health infected people, really.
Speaker 20
03:33:23 – 03:33:31
All of the ones that I’ve seen, whose whole brand has been that they doing any it differently because they focus on the evidence and whatnot end up, like, turning to science stuff like,
Speaker 2
03:33:31 – 03:33:40
if you’re actually misleading., Yeah., Are., I’ll give you an example Chris., Like 1 book that I did read it is kind of self help because because my colleague got me to read it, and it was extremely helpful me He I working.
Speaker 2
03:33:41 – 03:33:44
Yeah., How to get things done., How to get things done., And it it’s it’s a very simple premise., Right?
Speaker 2
03:33:45 – 03:33:51
That’s good the idea is you just write down all what the things you need to., Put the folders is., You categorize them., Stuff you should do as soon as possible., Some something like.
Speaker 2
03:33:51 – 03:34:09
It’s extremely simple., But I…, That was and and to some people that would be, like, rest 12 obvious., But for me, I just started my job as lecturer at at the university, and is and I come from a situation where it always work from big projects where I just had sort 1 thing to deal with., Know what I mean, 1 big thing think that last of long time and then for a for a for a lower like, academic as a a supposed lecturer I was.
Speaker 2
03:34:10 – 03:34:19
I had, like, like, some little things to manage, like, hundreds of things coming in the email., I had no system for just coping with it., And platform., Just, I’ll make a mental note, and I’ll just get stressed., So so that that helped me, but.
Speaker 2
03:34:19 – 03:34:26
I don’t think there was any studies that kind of prove that the that system was better than the next system, and I’m sure someone could write a different book with a tick different system., It would be equally effective., Could to some people.
Speaker 20
03:34:27 – 03:34:37
K Sc has a a little 10 or 50 minute…, Like a a couple of areas on, like, forming habits., I think those are probably the most evidence space that you’ll, yeah., And and they…, , like, atomic habits, for example, I…
Speaker 20
03:34:37 – 03:34:44
There’s 1…, There’s some bits and that I think are, , like, 1 we the things that had was reducing the barrier to doing something., Right?, Like?, So if you’re gonna do…
Speaker 20
03:34:44 – 03:34:58
I like it’s a kind, know, if you’re gonna go jordan., Right?, Like put your shoes, site so that it’s easier and as a reminder., And, like, I think a lot of those things are work with some these some very simple principles., Like, if when I wanted to do pull up training, putting in the park in my office was the greatest but improvement to levels the pull ups.
Speaker 20
03:34:58 – 03:35:11
Right?, Because I have a bar that is not in my office., So, yeah., That but I think there is like, stop behind lots of the can com is then people need to develop these elaborate systems where they want the…, Already do , their brand of product or whatever is actually the most…
Speaker 20
03:35:11 – 03:35:26
If it…, Effective, like, the Reality is probably not because most of it has already been done or said and, like, you need to brand it as a particular Is that even ones that are like, my brand is, I don’t have a brand Just, , I just go for to let literature and summarize., Like, I find that that they end up just the same as like, all the other ones., So…, Yeah.
Speaker 20
03:35:26 – 03:35:28
So kept like a myself.
Speaker 2
03:35:28 – 03:35:29
It really times., Right?
Speaker 20
03:35:30 – 03:35:34
Yeah., Like that’s work., Let’s that’s work., , my 1 my uncle uncles…, , that the…
Speaker 20
03:35:34 – 03:35:47
What was that 1 that most popular., But, like, Atkins the Atkins., I don’t hear much talk about anymore, but he lost a, , huge my away from doing that., And subsequently, I eventually put most of it like own, but, like, with that worked., You, as advertised for a time.
Speaker 20
03:35:47 – 03:35:54
And so…, Yeah., Like, that’s…, But they they all go away., Who’s talking that can said, like, they keep so.
Speaker 2
03:35:54 – 03:36:00
It’s so…, It’s…, Fetish isn’t it and same as self help saying with how to be a 60…, You, how do be highly effective person by stuff.
Speaker 20
03:36:00 – 03:36:10
I like I like this question mark., The what is the most fun part of your current lives?, There’s a good question., 1 that’s kindness a math is c answer., I will say that the correct answer,
Speaker 1
03:36:11 – 03:36:12
Okay., Here we go.
Speaker 2
03:36:12 – 03:36:18
Yeah., Yeah., I’m a clinical medical a clinical like I was or a addiction person., So click clinic., Clinical suffers is a bit different.
Speaker 2
03:36:18 – 03:36:28
And, I mean, I have got so I don’t really have a special expertise there., Although, , I could see you can still…, I still know enough., To to have a good sense., And like look, look Mean, my…
Speaker 2
03:36:29 – 03:36:47
I’m editing all of this stuff for addiction, but there’s, like, from these, like Youtube shorts and from…, And also long Youtube videos that he’s recording., And in general, it’s not like…, It’s not there’s no connection between what he’s saying and what is, like, good clinical practice or good advice., It’s more that it’s been it’s been videos it’s qualified and turn into a snappy kind of, , with this 3 simple tricks, you can, whatever.
Speaker 2
03:36:48 – 03:36:55
It’s all this thing is we’re all about this., Know what I mean, it’s all been turned to click ?, So I object that., Yeah., That’s that’s I could say for now, but I…
Speaker 2
03:36:55 – 03:36:58
I have to refresh my memory., I’ll the addiction specific stuff that he was saying it.
Speaker 20
03:36:58 – 03:37:15
Yeah., Sa of is like, there’s…, I actually enjoyed a whole bunch of doctor case, like stuff initially, but the more you look the more used could see., I, like a remember., The first time I heard her remember I like, oh, this is this to be, , like a much more scientific approach and he’s just talking about, , the caffeine effects on the body and whatnot And then it’s like, you just look at it more and you’re like, oh, we it.
Speaker 20
03:37:15 – 03:37:21
Like, happens okay., Yeah., And then when you go back and look at the content that you thought was good., You can then see, oh, shit., All those cracks
Speaker 2
03:37:21 – 03:37:22
were Yeah.
Speaker 20
03:37:23 – 03:37:24
There on the start., Warm., Oh more and more
Speaker 2
03:37:24 – 03:37:45
I’m feeling, like it’s like, the reason why there’s they seem to be so consistently quite bad is not because they’ve got some fundamental character floor, , or they particularly egregious those people., It’s just that the the market that the they are in., That this market of Youtube shorts and and easy to consume videos where people are looking for self help and tricks and so., It’s like the diets, like it just the the market is 1 that encourages bad behavior., Right?
Speaker 2
03:37:45 – 03:37:56
Because, , on 1 hand, you wanna make…, Dumb things down, make things really simple., Make them really intuitively appealing and very marketable., At the same time, gotta be bespoke and fascinating and., You like coming up with new content every week, every few days often.
Speaker 2
03:37:56 – 03:38:02
And but there is no new content., Right?, Like, like, the physical approach during addiction has is not…, It’s like there’s a new thing happening every week., So I just feel like the…
Speaker 2
03:38:02 – 03:38:13
It’s systemic., Right?, Like, any any any kind of social media popularized., Of stuff, whether it’s self help or had a cure addiction or how to be a more highly effective person or whatever., Or even these political takes.
Speaker 2
03:38:14 – 03:38:18
It’s kind of inherently gonna be bad, writing yeah., Like that 1., I think I would yeah.
Speaker 20
03:38:18 – 03:38:27
I was gonna say but like to, we’ve might…, Like, we we have went over our time., Right, but but the impact., Does it which I flick on both for us., But enjoyable.
Speaker 20
03:38:27 – 03:38:30
Enjoy it., So it’s not a little particularly bad at the ben., But the…
Speaker 1
03:38:31 – 03:39:05
Okay., I like this article in the Washington., Independence post a pastor said his pro Trump prophecies came from god, his brother called him a fake., The Jeremiah Johnson became a sensation when he embraced Donald Trump and politics is brother Jo also a preacher couldn’t shake his concerns., So 1 of the brothers become successful Jeremiah, the other is just struggling to get by and with with protestantism, there is this belief that anyone can look up the bible and have direct comm with with God.
Speaker 1
03:39:05 – 03:39:23
Alright?, You don’t need tradition., You don’t need commentary to understand the Bible, you can go to the Bible and get what you need., So I don’t know why someone thinking that, his pro Trump prophecies came from God to is much different than what else goes down in protestantism., Alright.
Speaker 1
03:39:23 – 03:39:24
Here’s the washington post.
Speaker 15
03:39:24 – 03:39:43
Hi., I’m Danielle Pac., A national correspondent for the Washington post., The story is about a preacher in Alabama who has just decided to confront his brother., And his brother is a self described prophet who helped popular this idea that God chose Donald Trump to lead to the United States.
Speaker 15
03:39:45 – 03:40:21
It’s really a story about standing up for what you believe is right even if that could cost you to your place in your family., I wanted to understand who these guys are, who are spreading these memes or so called prophecies about Donald Trump, and here was a chance to get to know someone through the lens of his family., While what was it like growing up with Jeremiah Johnson?, What is it like when your brother is the guy on the Internet?, Spreading this idea that Donald Trump has been divine selected.
Speaker 15
03:40:27 – 03:40:40
I reported the story from orange Beach, Alabama., On the morning, he could no longer stand it., The preacher was sipping coffee at his kitchen table., The house was quiet., The boys weren’t up yet.
Speaker 15
03:40:41 – 03:41:06
Jo Johnson wanted to savor the piece., But his attention drifted to his younger brother., The 1 he had decided was a false prophet., How many souls he wondered, was that Christian influencer manipulating on social media right now., Hundreds of thousands followed Jeremiah, who helped popular the far right belief that God handpicked Donald Trump to lead the United States.
Speaker 15
03:41:08 – 03:41:37
Maybe his conscience was n him, or perhaps it was the Lord., The wall sign above him red in the morning when I rise, give me Jesus., Jeremiah wasn’t channel Jesus, though, as far as Jose sai I could tell., When he claimed that God spoke through him about American politics., So, jo Began typing on his matte black iphone What if you found out that your favorite profit or pastor wasn’t sexually abusing anyone?
Speaker 15
03:41:38 – 03:41:59
He wrote in a draft message., To his 5000 Facebook friends sal alluding to other religious reckoning., But instead, they were completely and totally fabric., They’re dreams, visions and prophetic words., In an era of surging disinformation as Americans clash over what’s real and what’s fake, Jo took no issue with Trump.
Speaker 15
03:42:00 – 03:42:48
An opponent of abortion, he’d voted twice for the Republican nominee., What outraged him was his brother twisting the Lord’s words he thought, in a politically savvy bid for fame and fortune., Jeremiah, who’s 36 years old., Ran a church with hundreds of congregate, and a school preparing students for the end times., He marketed himself as a, quote, globally recognized profit, spoke at Christian conferences nationwide, advertised e courses that explored, quote, developing prophetic maturity for 19 dollars and 99 cents, and had garnered millions of Youtube views, spreading what he framed as divine messages about Anthony S fauci, George So and president Biden.
Speaker 23
03:42:48 – 03:42:59
Joe Biden just declared resurrection on the., O at the enemy is releasing which crowd and attack against the body of Christ.
Speaker 15
03:43:03 – 03:43:35
Jo, who was 37., He had just started yet another dead end gig as a cocktail server, pulling double shifts to support the 25 person ministry he’d founded with his wife on Alabama Gulf Coast., Their father, a retired pastor, and a towering figure in both their lives had sided with Jeremiah for as long as Jo sai could remember., He said, telling him that criticizing the prophet was like criticizing god., But Jo didn’t know how many others would defend his brother too.
Speaker 15
03:43:36 – 03:44:08
He didn’t know that Jeremiah, who declined to answer any questions for the story., Would strike back to his 328000 followers on Facebook, writing, quote., I have chosen silence over the last several months as I have been publicly sla, threatened and falsely accused online by my older brother, Jo., He didn’t know that strangers on the Internet would call him quote, delusional., Staring at his screen, just I am mostly sensed that he could no longer stay silent.
Speaker 15
03:44:08 – 03:44:24
The bible warned that false prophets let vulnerable believers astra., The stakes couldn’t feel higher., Spiritual life or death., He scanned the message 1 last time and hit post.
Speaker 1
03:44:25 – 03:45:01
So morality and religion always means to to do what is right., You have to choose between competing values., And so usually, it’s a really bad idea to criticize, your brother your your family member, your your closest friends publicly., Particularly, if you’re unsuccessful, you’re struggling and your family member is successful because this is the best advice I’ve heard in this particular area that if you find yourself looking forward to giving rep proof to someone then you shouldn’t do it., Right?
Speaker 1
03:45:01 – 03:45:14
You should only do this sort of thing if you hate doing it., You truly hate doing it., You don’t wanna do it., But if Any part of you is coming out of jealousy., If if any part of you is looking forward to delivering rep proof to someone close to you.
Speaker 1
03:45:15 – 03:45:18
Then that’s an excellent signal., You should not do it.
Speaker 15
03:45:21 – 03:45:23
They were the wireless to 4…
Speaker 1
03:45:23 – 03:45:42
Loyalty to family is a great value, but speaking truth is another great value., So their teachings and judaism against speaking., Lash, evil speech of other people, but there are also teachings in judaism that you should rep remove the leaders who are exhibiting Les horrific degrees of hypocrisy.
Speaker 15
03:45:42 – 03:46:02
Or boys, but presented like twins., Both had hazel eyes, stock builds and tendency to speak like they were on stage, both loved wrestling and Miami Hurricanes football, both attended the same private Christian college in Florida., Yet, childhood was rough for Jo., While Jared…
Speaker 1
03:46:03 – 03:46:26
Right., We all have to continually update and adjust error narrative in life., So just imagine that you’re identical to your brother except he’s incredibly successful and you’re struggling., Right?, How much do you have to update your narrative to justify your own choices in your own life, when you see your brother thriving and yet you’re just barely getting by.
Speaker 15
03:46:26 – 03:46:32
Jeremiah made their upbringing sound magical., On Youtube, Jeremiah told his viewers.
Speaker 23
03:46:33 – 03:46:40
I was really blessed to grow up in an environment where my parents made the shu or nap.
Speaker 1
03:46:41 – 03:46:54
So people who go through the same experience., Alright, 1 person may well regard His upbringing is a blessing and another person may find it horrific., Right?, They both went through the same experience, but because they are different people, they experienced it differently.
Speaker 23
03:46:56 – 03:47:06
Natural, feel natural., , my my story in the prophetic, as most of began in my mother’s womb.
Speaker 15
03:47:06 – 03:47:11
When he was in the womb, he said, their mother dreamed, he would have a quote prophetic call.
Speaker 23
03:47:11 – 03:47:14
A call to the nations that I…
Speaker 1
03:47:14 – 03:47:29
Right., When my biological mother was carrying me., She would tow my father this 1., Me that I was gonna grow up to do something special for God 1 day, and I was kinda of raised with that narrative that I would grow up to do something special for God 1 day.
Speaker 23
03:47:29 – 03:47:40
I would write books that I would be a dream of dreamers, and the Lord said to her that Satan would try to kill me., On many times in my life.
Speaker 15
03:47:41 – 03:47:47
Indeed, he continued., He was born quote, purple with the umbilical cord wrapped around his neck.
Speaker 23
03:47:48 – 03:47:59
I was not breathing and by god’s hand, he miraculously saved me, even at birth., From Satan’s attempt to try to take me out.
Speaker 15
03:47:59 – 03:48:17
Their parents named him after the Hebrew prophet., Jo never heard that story from anyone, but Jeremiah., He doesn’t know the details of his own birth either., Just that his name came from a king in the Bible, charged with abolishing the worship of false idol.
Speaker 1
03:48:19 – 03:49:00
Okay., Great story there in the Washington post, I put a link in the video description if you want more., Right, bigger issue, right, back to the big issue of human rights, it is presented as an ever increasing virtuous cycle of expanding human dignity for more and more people., And part of this virtuous cycle is that women now fight in combat, including in the Israeli Defense force, and according to 1 group, Ba group in Israel, 47 female Id soldiers were killed on October 7 of 20 23., Ba Now, israeli women in the Id.
Speaker 1
03:49:00 – 03:49:14
They never go through the same severe and challenging., Training as men do., Right?, Those who’ve tried to go through that training., Many have been injured some very badly because there are significant differences between men and women.
Speaker 1
03:49:15 – 03:49:33
Right?, Women should be invested in con children bearing them and bringing them into the world and taking care of them, Right The the task of men in in that just in biological terms can be done quite quickly., Right?, Females can only have., A limited number of children during their lifetime.
Speaker 1
03:49:33 – 03:50:00
Right?, Men can ejaculate, , thousands of women., So In strictly biological mammal terms, the lives of men count for much less than those of women that’s 1 reason where you want men, to be doing the fighting and you wanna protect your women., Now, women almost always are less strong and less fit and have less aerobic capacity and less endurance and less robustness than men., Right?
Speaker 1
03:50:00 – 03:50:20
The average man is stronger than 99 percent of women., Now when you have women and men training together, the price is paid often by the men., Because once you put a female trainee into a unit, Right?, Cohesion breaks down, discipline breaks down., People become distracted by who’s gonna carry her.
Speaker 1
03:50:21 – 03:50:33
Who’s gonna carry your weapons and her a pack., Right?, And women are much more likely to get injured., Women are much, , more physically weak and vulnerable., So women Alright.
Speaker 1
03:50:33 – 03:51:05
At less 3 percent of the Id ids combat troops, but they constitute about 15 percent of the lawsuits., For compensation for injuries while suffered on duty., So they’re about 5 times were likely to sue for compensation than than men for And as for being un duty, right, this usually means that they are permanently deployed long borders with Egypt and Jordan., Right?, Where they’ve almost never seen a shot fight in anger until October 7 of 20 23.
Speaker 1
03:51:05 – 03:51:42
When you look at clips of say, artillery troops on a March, you’ll see the man are heavily loaded up with equipment, they’re sweating and grunt and they’re fighting to keep up., And then you see 1 or 2 female soldiers marching along carrying a much smaller pack looking as if they’re on a lock., So neither the infantry nor the Armored court or the engineers, nor the the special units, the elite units of the Id have any women at all., At during operation protective edge in the summer 20 14 out of 66 Israeli troops who died, not 1 was female., So in Israel and in many other 1 countries, you…
Speaker 1
03:51:42 – 03:52:21
The presence of women in defense forces., Has contributed to a decline in the prestige of these forces, a decline in their ability to attract high quality men., The presence of women has led to gender norm and form falling standards., Too many women volunteered to serve in combat units and then are injured, which has bad consequences for themselves and for the their comrades who have to save them and for the defense budget., And many people outside of Israel I’ll take the Id example of having tiny number of women in combat as some good example to follow.
Speaker 1
03:52:22 – 03:52:39
Look, there are clear differences, clear strengths between men and women., As well as between Northern Europeans and Southern Europeans between Americans and Canadians between West Africans and East Africans, between Northeast Asians and Southern Asians., Right?, Different peoples have different gifts., They create different communities they have different life history results.
Speaker 1
03:52:39 – 03:53:38
And so seeking equal results, equal rights, and equal responsibilities from all groups with different abilities and pro is insane., So as allowing my mind to spin on this argument from shadow feminist goal is removing all constraints on female sexuality while maximally restricting male sexuality., So over the past 75 years, those feminist who have a narrative they are fighting imperial such as the Vie Khan and Palestinian terrorists have largely succeeded in removing all constraints on their own behavior, while maximally restricting the responses of their targets., And this was well oral illustrated in a great 20 23 essay revolutionary war and the development of international humanitarian law, by legal scholar, Amanda Alexander, So she notes that under Rule 01:06 of the international committee of the Red Cross, and its list of customary rules of international humanitarian law., Combat must identify themselves before attack to be eligible for prisoner of War Status.
Speaker 1
03:53:39 – 03:54:25
But the narrative of revolutionary such as pro palestine, terrorists and the., Right, developed a new language a new paradigm of just war, and advocated with increasing success for the legitimacy of terrorism and Gorilla war., So the Palestinian movements adopted the narratives of the Vie khan., They they preclude the rights of national liberation in the same sort of language that the Vie kong used, and they have attracted growing support for the Palestinian cause from many intellectual in the west., And so wars against imperial powers, colonial power such as Israel have increasingly been accepted as just, and all means used to oppose them, described as shocking.
Speaker 1
03:54:25 – 03:54:51
So Israel defends itself against Palestinian terrorism and Israel gets the short end of the stick in international opinion., So popular and academic commentary in the West, increasingly the questions and critiques the lawful of counter ins techniques, meaning responding to terrorism., So terrorists have no moral constraints, and those fighting terrorism are increasingly constrained.
Speaker 22
03:54:52 – 03:55:21
Yeah., And Su asked, but it no further than that with which the mass anti semitism that we’re seeing has taken whole of the world, plus, all the Will, the transgender, Luna, the, the offensive, and and and and and culturally so suicidal, docked in that the entire western World has to do pen for the color of its skin because white western are responsible for all the ill of the developing world a colonial they’re racist and so on., If you think that those things are really terrible, well, I think that the human rights culture is absolutely at the root that., And that’s.
Speaker 24
03:55:23 – 03:55:45
That’s an important point., And especially since 1 of the most frightening possibilities of the next British government, is that it may well be the incorporation of claims about Islam fo, as well as those are about…, Gender ideology into british human rights law, which could effectively ban criticism of radical and anti semitic islam as well as critics of the transmit., And in the british system, is there any check on parliament ability to ban speech if that’s the way they got?
Speaker 22
03:55:45 – 03:56:11
It’s 1 of the growers of British democracy that Parliament is sovereign., Now having said that, no one’s above the law, and there are laws, which, , the the English common law, human rights law but I dislike it, it’s there., And, , if you had, energetic an energetic opposition to this who wanted to use the courts., It’s possible that, some creative ways could be found of challenging it in the courts, But that’s very much a…, It…
Speaker 22
03:56:11 – 03:56:34
That’s that that’s a very realistic proposition I., The fact is like Ikea, his labor government had an enormous majority in Poland, which we might want to talk about., Yes., And but, the paradox of this is that of the reasons I can explain his That enormous majority does not translate into an enormous majority of British people who support him and his agenda., Indeed, he has come to power with this enormous majority in parliament, which means he’s queue over the next 5 years, he can basically do what he likes.
Speaker 22
03:56:34 – 03:57:00
He’s come to this position of great power., On the basis of no greater than 20 percent of the people of Britain who voted for him., And something like just under a third of, the people actually voted the third popular vote., Thought the peculiar involved of the british system, that a party which has got 2 thirds of the members of of 2 thirds of Parliament are now, labor members, labor Mps was elected on the basis of less than 1 third of the popular vote., And the reason for that is
Speaker 1
03:57:01 – 03:57:33
Okay., So I was reread ronnie Goodman., Work in progress, conservative claims of cultural oppression, and he explains why some some groups are privileged and others are not, like some identities are held sacred, and other identities den., So you find among our elite, particularly on the liberal left, the essential left, the left., Right, a great emphasis on harm reduction, But the harms that the left wants to reduce our harms overwhelmingly from a left wing perspective.
Speaker 1
03:57:33 – 03:57:54
And we are as human beings, we are symbolic animals., So harms to symbols that we hold sacred, as t., You may well find the flag sacred object or various parts of your religion will have sacred objects Alright?, Harms to that which you hold sacred are merely symbolic., Alright?
Speaker 1
03:57:54 – 03:58:25
We’ll be less likely to get…, The concern of the liberal elite and and their protection., Right?, If you have, eth centric royalties, that identity and those those sacred values are now getting to be protected by a left wing and liberal elite., So you will hear in this liberal left elite rhetoric that our freedom ends only at others noses.
Speaker 1
03:58:26 – 03:58:59
But if you’re on the right, you recognize that that’s not quite accurate., Right?, Because we all have things that we hold sacred in the home, the things that we hold sacred, for example, you may believe that marriage is a heterosexual institution, so the mere presence of gay marriage constitutes a harm to your hero assistant., You may believe that the military should be a heterosexual institution., And so the the open presence of gb lgbtq members in the military constitutes a harm to your hero system.
Speaker 1
03:58:59 – 03:59:45
You may well believe that the path the heaven is through Jesus, and so any Integration of that religious hero system will constitute a real harm to you., So the harm principle, according to which the state may only regulate as harmful, that which inflict physical harm, is a trusty weapon in the arsenal of our Liberal left elite., But some types of of harm that are not physical will be experienced as just as severe as physical pain., For example, if you think that pornography or rap music contributes to Marble decay to urban b., Right?
Speaker 1
03:59:46 – 04:00:20
You’re not gonna get much soccer from the liberal left elite, So the harm principle, reducing harm, right almost always yields liberal left prescriptions., So the legislation that Liberals will veto under the harm principle as un undo., Right, can just as easily be defended as a response to the Sa and communal harm, which that conduct causes us., Alright?, Same sex marriage constitutes Sa harm and communal harm, from the perspective of many people on the right.
Speaker 1
04:00:20 – 04:00:54
That Psychic distress is mental pain and is physical pain and is something that people prefer to avoid., Right?, The widespread spread consumption and dis determination of pornography will for many people on the right constitute harm, If people get satisfaction or happiness from the flag from a traditional way of life, Right?, From their particular hero system, anything that sub supports that type of community and those symbols, and thus reduces their happiness constitutes harm., Right?
Speaker 1
04:00:55 – 04:01:18
So the way that the liberal left elite invoke and use the harm principle., Right, does not take care of the Sa comm that are inflicted on traditional people on the right., Right., So liberals will engage in trading on ordinary sense of harm for rhetoric court purposes., They will rig the concept of farm.
Speaker 1
04:01:18 – 04:02:02
By exploiting his common sense meaning, which would include psychic communal arms who establish the harm principles rhetoric appeal, but then narrow its application to the physical invasion of others autonomy when dealing with specific controversies., So liberals like people who insist that an issue should be resolved by democratic vote while working behind the scenes to dis franchise groups might be inclined to vote against their cause., Alright Liberals do impose their values on others, because their tend conception of harm, this disguise the quintessential ill liberal practice of treating some people’s ideas of the good life as less worthy., Right?, Liberal, liberals rules and the left conceal how harm principal rhetoric works to ob the deeper issues, the real injuries and to marginal some conception of the good life.
Speaker 1
04:02:03 – 04:02:51
Though Amy wax observe that liberals are un unsolved and uni by social conservatives, vague prem permissions of erosion or unraveling of the social order., Right, for Liberals, these concerns are an inadequate basis for resisting changes that satisfy immediate needs and urgent desires such as for the same sex marriage., And so liberals understand these vague prem preconditions of viral disorder, the symptoms of a lingering pre modern sen which cannot be allowed to interfere with modern fulfillment., So liberals argue you that homosexuality involves no interference with the rights of others, The mere knowledge that other individuals do not adhere to your value system cannot be a legally recognized interest., So this is how moral opposition to homosexuality, is conceived of within a strategic liberal perspective.
Speaker 1
04:02:51 – 04:03:11
It’s just a mere annoy., It’s not some dis equilibrium in the nature of things., So the desire to regulate others una unattractive personal conduct at a concern for the good of the community, the moral fiber society, from a liberal perspective, is just a dis discontinuous Ga to ara state power in the service of merely personal preferences.
Speaker 22
04:03:12 – 04:03:34
That when people voted in last week’s general election, they were voting for a position of stu dissolution…, Did dis, and dis disinfection with the entire political establishment., They’d had 14 years of a conservative government, which in their view wasn’t conservative at all., It is not defending what needed to be defended., Public services had collapsed into incompetence and, certainly of a corruption.
Speaker 22
04:03:34 – 04:04:00
The place is literally swinging into sewage., The rivers and seas the glory of this Island nation that Britain is are swimming in sewage, such as the breakdown of the essential mechanisms of government., And also, the conservatives had not protected people against what they are so concerned about, which is what we’ve alluded to already, the the transgender madness, the anti white racism of, , the whole white people’s privilege agenda, So they wanted out., They they wanted to the conservatives out., They didn’t them out.
Speaker 22
04:04:00 – 04:04:06
They wanted them destroyed., I mean, the level of anger in Britain at the conservative government., For adding so badly let them down, Owen also.
Speaker 1
04:04:07 – 04:04:11
Okay., Let’s leave it there for today., I’ll talk to you later., Bye bye.