In this episode of Paul English Live, we delve into the historical and contemporary significance of the Magna Carta as we approach its 810th anniversary. The discussion highlights the importance of trial by jury and the power it grants to annul unjust legislation, emphasizing the need for a return to common law to restore justice and sovereignty in the UK. The conversation also touches on the erosion of British culture, the impact of globalization, and the role of usury in modern society. Special guest Nathan joins the show to share insights and engage in a lively discussion about the challenges facing the nation today.
Additionally, the episode features a humorous segment with clips of Keir Starmer, a reflection on the cultural significance of pubs, and a critique of the current political landscape. The hosts also explore the influence of language on thought and behavior, drawing parallels to Orwellian concepts. The episode concludes with a call to action for listeners to become more informed and engaged in the fight for justice and sovereignty, emphasizing the power of collective action and the need for a unified voice in challenging the status quo.
Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
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This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymymytoboost.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function with sluggish mitochondria is kinda like running an engine that's low on oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by PhatPhix, p h a t p h I x, dot com. And also, iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency one by Preif International. That's iTeroPlanet.com. Thank you, and welcome to the program.
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Take a look around you. Hi, everybody. I hope you're all still taking a look around you. It is Thursday, June 2025. This is episode 90 of Paul English Lightwear on WBN Radio Soapbox, Rumble, YouTube, UFO radio. Gosh. We're everywhere, like I keep saying. Welcome to the show. And we're going to be doing a little bit of Magna Carta tonight, just a little bit. We're sort of really near the eight hundred and tenth anniversary, but, but not quite. Hi, everyone, and welcome back. My week is a long time in broadcasting or something like that if it is broadcasting. Lovely grisly weather here today.
Had a fun week. Lots of things going on for me, this week what with, lots of really exciting things like, tidying up my hard disk. Have you ever tidied up your hard disk? I hope you have. Isn't it a delight? Fantastic. All these different files I've got all over the place I thought I really do need to sort this out because, causing me an inordinate amount of time to get the show prepped. Every time I'm trying to find little audio files and stuff they're all over the place. Anyway, they're not as all over the place as they used to be. They're sort of less all over the place. And we've got some new sort of little systems in place here in the back end which, will mean absolutely nothing to you, I don't think, but, it might make me slightly more efficient and productive.
Famous last words. People know that sometimes the technical trousers fall down rapidly around here but generally we're all pretty good. So here we are, Paul English Live, we're here on WBN three two four. Hi everyone. We're here every Thursday, from 3PM to 5PM US Eastern Time, eight PM to 10PM in The UK, and then there is a show that runs on after that over on Rumble and YouTube where we are right now as well. So shout out to everybody in Rumble and YouTube as we get the show up and running, and I'll be popping on in and looking at the chat shortly. And, of course, I am joined, by by one of the crew here this week, Eric von Essex. Eric, hello. Good evening, and welcome to the show.
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Greetings
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on a very wet day. I don't know. Has it has it been, wee weeing with rain where you are? It's been Grizzly. Down here. Yeah. Grizzly. Very Yes. Very English weather. Not like this glorious spring that appears to have just temporarily, we hope, fingers crossed, ended. Because the I think from the March through to, really, about four or five days ago, the weather's just been absolutely stunning. So we we can't moan, but we're going to, aren't we? Aren't we gonna moan? We're gonna moan about it because there's nothing we ever do. But there's an advantage to this rain, you see. Where I park you see, I I've I've got a a strange drive. I've got an l shaped drive.
[00:06:16] Unknown:
And, I park my car with the back of it up against some plants. And from these plants, a load of snails have got onto my number plate of my car. And so after I was driving along, and when I went to the supermarket, I got out, and I thought, hang on a minute. Cameras can't take a picture of my number plate because the snails are part of it. So I thought Snails? That's a good eye good way of getting around sort of, number plate recognition, isn't it? Snails. And if anybody says anything, oh, didn't realize that. It's like the snails. I mean, over my number plate. So I decided to not notice it and just carry on, you know. I just said, well, give them give them a couple of hours. They'll move. They're my pets. You know?
[00:07:03] Unknown:
Just a thought. What's the difference between a nail a a nail? A snail and a slug? Why why are some slugs and some snails? Do you know? I always used to puzzle me as a kid that. I mean, slugs are just repellent. Snails are kind of cute for some reason, aren't they? Yes. Why are snails cute? All they've got is that little shell. Oh, they I mean, cute is probably not the wrong word because they are a bit sort of. Slugs are just sort of like, you're kidding me. Yeah. Slugs, they're just they're sluggy, you know. We got leopard slugs around where I live, and they're bloody horrible. They've they are even more repulsive.
[00:07:33] Unknown:
They're so Leopards slugs. What are you just making this up? No. This this is called leopard slugs. And they're they're sort of horrible gray stripes. Look as if they got pajamas on. And Right. They're all over my compost deep, and they're all they're horrible. But it's the the poo that they do that makes the compost in it. So so I can't complain. Poo that they do. There's a pine on there. The poo that they do.
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Yes. Yes. It's strange, isn't it? It is a bit. It is a bit. It is a bit. I better make an announcement here early on. So I've advertised the show with a guest rocking up in about an hour's time, for the beginning of an hour or two. Roger Sales, who some of you may be familiar with, he's over in The States. Actually, that's a lie. He's not over in The States. He's kind of used to be over in The States but he's now in some sort of Central American place where he's very happy, I understand. And we might even hear his happiness later on but we might not because I got a call, about an hour before showtime. Doesn't that sound professional, Eric? Sounds like I know what I'm doing. The, the bat phone here went ee ee on the desk and, he's had a power cut, where he is. I think he's in Ecuador. In fact, I'm jolly sure he's in Ecuador actually and sometimes they have power cuts. Obviously, the hamsters get a bit tired running around in those wheels and powering the generators. They must have all got fagged out this afternoon or something. But it does happen. So at the moment, we don't know. But, we've got other sort of alternative ways of getting messages through to him. However, that won't mean much if he hasn't got any electricity. So fingers crossed, we will, who should we pray to? Thor, the god of thunder and lightning storms and electricity? I don't know. Maybe that's a bit desperate push, but, hopefully, he will be joining us. If not, I'm sure me and Eric will be able to hold the fort solidly for a few days talking about anything that we like really, wouldn't we? Particularly slugs and snails and things like that. Or Thor? Well, because you I I knew Thor, he, on his way no. Better not mention that joke. It's it's it's a family show. No. No. Too foul. I won't mention it.
Maybe after the watershed after nine if if, people want it enough, you know. Well, I've always I've always been quietly partial to Thor. I remember as a child like and even now actually when people said my son said, dad do you want anything for Christmas? I go, can you get me that hammer? I want Thor's hammer. What? Yes. Can you get me that? Where's where's mine? I want one. I want a hammer. I mean, the comic books, of course, kind of, I don't know if in the myth, in the actual Norse mythology, whether his hammer actually comes back to him after he's lobbed it at his enemies. But I just thought it was the coolest it's the coolest thing as a kid. You just thought, what? I get this great big mallet.
I smashed someone's skull in. Of course, it's it sounds great when you're a kid. If you actually saw it, you wouldn't be too happy. No. It'd be really repulsive. You go, oh, what have I done? But the idea that it comes back to you, you just get it's like the it's like the weapon that never stops giving. It just, you know,
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just keeps pinging away, doesn't it? So Well, that's That's right. And so we might have another another guest. Nathan might be coming on. Hang on. I put down, invite. Yeah. Just bear with me a second. I'll just, I'll just send him a link. Here we go. Where are we?
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Sure. There we are. Who's Nathan again? I do know him, of course. I'm actually teasing you a little bit. Nathan,
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he is the author of the book Fake Awake.
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Nathan Oh, we can we can get into that. This we're gonna move around a little bit tonight. I think we are gonna move around a bit. I've got something, that I was it's not that I was looking at Magna Carta this week, actually. I've not been looking at Magna Carta. It's just that I bumped into Magna Carta ish articles yesterday and, I just thought, hey, hang on. We must be near the old anniversary, the anniversary. And we are. And because Roger was coming on and we and and if he's still coming on, we were gonna talk about status and legal status because he knows he's got he's generally got some pretty interesting things to say about being a peasant or a serf or a peasant on the land and feudal societies, which of course all this language and all this kind of all these events spring out of our jolly old England, you know, all this time back. That's right. So, yeah.
A Magna Carta is still, should be, an epic thing in our lives. But, of course, as many people are aware, the, the political establishment have managed to cover it with dust, fog it from memory and it's gone basically for many of us down the memory hole. Yet, it's without doubt the most powerful one of the most powerful documents in our history and it does need to be literally and metaphorically dusted off, brought back to life, I would suggest. Because in it, there lies potentially the seeds of our recovery. It's a tremendous thing. Do you know much about it, Eric? Are are you much of a Magna Carteres?
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Not really much. I know it's a Runnymede, wasn't it? Where they actually, signed it, Magna Carte. Mhmm. But, do you know what p on your passport stands for? Seriously, do you know what it stands for? What does p on my passport? Pauper. Pauper. Yes. Is that right? Yes. That's what I've been told by some bloke who knows all about it. Yeah. P stands for pauper.
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Well, I think I think actually, I have direct experience of pauperism. Do you?
[00:12:56] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. I know all about it. Yeah. I've been there since I got the t shirt.
[00:13:03] Unknown:
Yeah. It's great being a peasant. I've just I think, actually, I I was thinking I did a little thing today, send it out across Telegram. So if you caught it, everyone, you can send in verbal abuse at some point. What I did was to promote the show, I did a little sort of, one minute video. I found out a couple of things over the last few days, because I I still think, you know, the promotion of this show is sadly lacking to be quite honest and there's a lot more work to be done in that area and I've got a bit more time now. It's gonna take a few weeks to build up. But it's really kind of getting the word out, you know, that we're doing these sorts of things because everybody else is getting the word out. So you're kind of competing for people's attention to use modern marketing jargon and you kind of have to to some degree. But I shot a little video which, which was pretty easy to do just with a bit of sort of spontaneous blurb at this end to promote the show.
So I sent that across Telegram. It makes the post look nifty and if people are listening and playing to it then it might be pretty cool. The other thing, is, I do have an x account at x.com. And, I've managed to upload it there as well, which is quite cool. And I'm just mentioning it to you, Eric, and anybody else that's out there that needs to sort of promote their thing. Yeah. X x is quite interesting. I'm not sort of overwhelmed by it. I don't necessarily think it's massively the great free speech platform that everybody's banging on about because there's a there's a parrot sitting on my shoulder, not literally, which is sad actually. I've always wanted one to sit on my shoulder, basically whispering in my ear and saying, this is a big surveillance operation to find out who spills their guts online and then in a few years time, there'll be a knock on the door. So I think you still have to be guarded about how you use it. But I have to say there's so many interesting threads on there.
In fact, I've just thought of one which I might I haven't even got it up on the screen right now, but as the show runs through, I might pull it up from a guy called Chris Langan. I think I read something out by him a few weeks ago. Reckoned to be the most intelligent man in the world. I know this sounds a ridiculous sort of comic book thing to say, but I think they've clocked his IQ at a 92. Whoever does that, the IQ clocking. Yeah. It's almost as high as mine, ain't it? Almost. You know? It's it's more almost as high as Lord Fockham's
[00:15:16] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:15:17] Unknown:
And slightly below that of your of your wrinkled of your local gardener, of the Fockem Hall Gardener. I know. He's That's right. Yes. Definitely. Oh. And he's, I've got I'm just saying this to myself so that I remember and pick it up. But, yeah. X is pretty it's cool. There's I I sometimes I've lost a lot of time in it recently, if lost is the right word. Now I've valued it. There's some tremendous threads kickoff and it's it's not in the kind of niche that we possibly cover. It's not really. Although there's stuff getting that way. But some of the comments and interactions from, you know, Joe Public, I'm not trying to Yeah. Be dismissive.
They're they're great. There's some fantastic stuff. There's good little sorts of, flame wars that go on between people. People, of course, incredibly rude to one another in writing. I still find this. I mean, I do sound like a middle aged fart saying that, but they write things that they absolutely would not say to your face in a bar because they get it'd really get nasty,
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You know? Oh, yeah. People are really disgusting what they say. And They're hostile. Well, I I went out today because, I went to a well known, shop. I won't say where I bought a new steam iron, you see. And when I got it Right. The the the there was it was a bit faulty, you see. So I took it back to this well known shop beginning with a and ending with s. And, I won't I won't mention Argos because, you know, I'll be giving them a free advert, you see. Oh, shit. I just did it. And, so anyway, they're quite nice about it. So they said, well, another one, I'll be in tomorrow. So I was like, right o. So I had another journey a day. And I went down there, and I picked my eye up, and it looks okay. And, the the woman said, have you got got your phone?
Now my phone is in my backpack, and I always have it on airplane mode when I'm out. So, you know, I don't get it doesn't ring or anything. So I couldn't be bothered. But I've written everything down on a on a piece of, you know, and I got I got a little I got a little notepad that I write things down. On a piece of paper. On a piece of paper. So I gave her this piece of paper, and she went, oh. Yeah. I said, yeah. So it's latest technology. It's an iPad. What? I said, it's an iPad. I said, it's my iPad. It's not an iPad. It's my iPad. And she looked she and she rolled up. And I said, look look at it. I said, no batteries. Also, I can write anything I want on there. I said, and nobody, the security people, are not gonna find out what I've written there, are they? I said, you know, even if there's cameras in here, they can still can't see it, can they? And she she said, you got a good point there. She said, I think I'll get an an iPad as well.
But she said, I was the first person to handle all the details written on a piece of piece of paper for a long time. She said, most people just show me show me their, smartphones. You know. So there we go. Yeah.
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I I think ditching oh, I don't. I keep sometimes thinking with smartphones, I like to get a dumb phone, you know, the old ones. They're just a telephone and text because, you know, people are concerned about all this ID tracking and everything, rightly so. You want to bugger up their entire system? Just don't use a smartphone. Get an old sort of Nokia from the late nineties or yeah. So that you can take phone calls, you can get texts, go online here and then they say, where's your smartphone? I don't use one. And if we if we don't use one, they can't have their I'm sure they can. They'll come out with a law to force you. In fact, they'll say, don't worry. There's a a government supplied one for free, you know, so that we can track you and all that kind of stuff. But, I'm not that I worry about that all the time. It's just most of the time. There's a new thing coming out now,
[00:18:47] Unknown:
which you can only send text with. I can't somebody in text somebody in, text what I'm talking about. Somebody in chat will, find the name for me. And what it is is it's done by radio waves. So you don't need any accounts or anything like that. You just buy this gizmo, and it's it's daisy chained. So for example, if someone's gonna send a text to you, they wouldn't don't need any miles or anything around. What happens, it daisy chains this gizmo that you've got acts as a receiver, and it's also a transmitter. So Alright.
And its range is about five or six miles, but that doesn't matter. Now I think you're about, what, seventy, eighty, or, say, a hundred miles away from where I live. What would happen if I sent you a message that would daisy chain to other people's little and all things, and the message would get to you. And I'd know when it's got to you because you get on the top of it. It says that it it has. And then you could send one back. And again, it goes all over the place, so the powers that be can't track it. It's very interesting.
And I'm looking into it. But,
[00:19:57] Unknown:
Well, I think we should get into the Fockem Hall passport. So I think Fockem Hall should you know, this whole thing, all that sort of if we write a list of all these documents that we don't know, we kind of know a little bit about. We know that they're all not good, like the birth certificate, you know, it basically being a chitty. It's a receipt for your life. Like the fact that they although this is not a documented thing, they try and take the placenta immediately away from newly born babies, then they go off and flog it and make money out of it. And all this kind of all these hideous nonsense things that that have crept up to sort of invaders, which are basically, I guess, signs of treating us like cattle, basically. I mean, they do. They treat us like livestock. I'm not even upset about that. I think it's hilarious that they would think like that.
You know, so if they're gonna treat us like livestock, I, I demand a really fantastic shed and I want it completely warm and I want to be looked after. We just have to throw it back at them and say, well, you're not looking after us well enough and all this kind of stuff. But I think, yeah, the Fockem Hall passport, Fockem Hall birth certificates, quite nice. How about a Fockem Hall Bible? And then you keep you record all your births, marriages, and deaths, and everything in your Fockem Hall Bible. There's so much tut to be made and to be done, Eric. There's so much stuff. I agree with you. I'm doing the passport
[00:21:07] Unknown:
because, you know, I'm gonna put it politely, you know. This is a passport. My I I think your mom must be proud of you if you if you handed it to one of these geezers in the uniforms and just say, I don't wish to stay long in your crappy country. I just wanna pass through. Something like that. Nice and polite. Yeah. So they, you know and I think that'd be very nice. You know? This is what. But you'd be able to download it like you can do with the money. Download it all free of charge. So you're short of a few bob, download some fop bobs off the Internet. That's the best way of doing it. So that's what the government does, innit?
[00:21:41] Unknown:
It is. Well, maybe when I form the Bank of Britain shortly, we'll we'll maybe one of the currencies listed could be the FOCBOB. Yes. Because I I do want to form a bank. I've I've I've drowned on about this. I'm slowly getting time available to sort of spend more and more time on my long walks thinking about madder and madder ideas that I won't have enough time to do. I don't know about you. Mentally, I'm always biting off more than I can chew. I've got about 16 things I want to do like printing books. I wanna be publishing everything. Yeah. We can get all this done. I have no idea how I'm gonna get it done. It always I'm not easy when you Yeah. Are you? Yeah. I just very much. I'm always buzzing with ideas.
[00:22:17] Unknown:
By the way, it's called Mesh, this idea. I just looked it up. Mesh Mesh Networks. Yeah. Mesh Networks. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And, they're about 60 or £70, I think, you buy one of these handheld gizmos. The trouble is they're pretty useless if nobody else has got one. But, you know, but, this bloke has tried it out down the London Underground. It works down there. Yeah. He's found gone to all kinds of places. And as as more and more people get them, the good thing is is apparently the powers that be can't spy on you. So he says so if they he said if they shut down the Internet, you'd still be able to communicate with people.
[00:22:55] Unknown:
Oh, tintinet as it's known in Yorkshire.
[00:22:58] Unknown:
Tintinet.
[00:22:59] Unknown:
Yes. Alright. Tintinet. Have you got it? Tintinet. Hey, Pat. I've got good lad. I still think I've said it before. I've said it before. I'll say it again. That line from Homer Simpson years ago when they're talking about it goes, the internet, is that still around? I just love that. I love that. Are people still using that? No. It's good stuff. It's good stuff. Quick shout out to everybody in Rumble, Eric. When I mentioned Chris Langan, Barefoot Forager, was outraged. She says or he says, no one has an IQ that high. This is about Chris Langan. Well, I don't know. My IQ is not high enough to be able to reply properly, Barefoot Forager. As an educational assessor, that's bollocks.
I mean, good grief. Is it really? It might be worth you going and checking out what it is. I'm sure I read some where that it was assessed at 01/1992 and if you don't know much about him he's definitely a guy worth getting to know something about. He's a brilliant writer. He writes like a very very intelligent man. He's out I think somewhere, he lives out of the cities now rightfully I suppose and he's working on the grand theory of everything. Seriously, of everything. Like, the whole of existence and stuff. Yeah, because he keeps him busy. He doesn't do crossword puzzles. I'm not even bright enough to do those. He's he he does all that kind of stuff. But his backstory is amazing. He works you're gonna laugh when I say this. I mean, he's a big lad. Right? He's strong. He used to be down the gym and everything. He worked in New York as a bouncer for twenty five years at clubs.
Really? How's how's that work? Yeah. A bouncer. The most intelligent bouncer. So you could say I've been bounced out by the most intelligent bouncer going, he's fantastic. I mean, he really is. And, yeah, people sort of take him on in these x things and it's not so much an argument. It's just he provides a permanent stream of logic which of course is extremely powerful stuff. It convinces everybody, particularly when he's backed up right. And recently he's been talking about the, you know, the onslaught of the migrant situation and what's really happening. And of and he's quite clearly stating that the plan of white genocide is absolutely real, which of course it is. It is. Even though people, you know, are still tentatively creeping up on this and saying it can't be be true. They wouldn't really do that. But when you start to just, you know, amass all the details around there, it becomes pretty obvious that that is the case, it seems to me. So, yeah.
[00:25:25] Unknown:
Well, I think derogatory words are like bees run a honeypot. If you talk about anything sensitive, in come the derogatory words, you know. Oh, you're this, you're that, you're that. You think, uh-oh. I've hit something. I'm over the target. That's when you find out. Because that's how the social engineers have worked it. You're frightened of talking about a subject because then you're gonna get all the the words coming in. So you always know when you're over the target, when you're you're when you're accused of being anti semolina and all that sort of stuff, you know. So there we go. But, regarding crosswords, did you know that Rachel Reid's and, our dear leader, they do crosswords.
And she was doing one the other day. Yeah. And she said, was it old Macdonald had one? The cabinets are puzzled. And Starmer says, I know what that is. He says, it's farm. Rachel Reese says, yeah. But how do you spell it? He said, oh, it's easy. It's e I e I o. Sorry. A terrible joke.
[00:26:25] Unknown:
Did you? Yes. Did you hear him? This is possibly I've got a I've got a film quiz coming up for everybody. Okay. A film quiz. Yeah. And, and you're gonna have to guess what film he did. I'm gonna have to do this now because you've just introduced him. So I don't know if you did you hear his did you hear his performance this week in in question? I didn't. I don't listen to these things, but I catch these little clips and stuff. Okay. So, this is him being this is him being questioned the other day. Let me just, where is this? I've just got this lined up somewhere. Oh, here we go. We'll just do it here to start off with. I want I'm gonna wanna play this all night. Okay? You'll understand why. This is only five seconds.
This is Starmer on Wednesday's Prime Minister's question time. I I I Yes. Let's say let's say that again. So this is your prime minister, everybody. Yeah. He's yours. I don't want him. Now on the Mike Graham show this morning, a guy called in and did an impersonation. So I'm gonna play that now. Okay? Here we go. Okay?
[00:28:08] Unknown:
It's Morse code.
[00:28:11] Unknown:
Yeah. It's just not Morse code, isn't it? It is. It's just incredible. It's absolutely remarkable. It's sort of like you can hear the fact that whatever his brain is, it's just stopped and he can't find it or something like that. It's just remarkably appalling. And I am really leading more towards this theory that they've put him in to make Joe Biden in retrospect appear to be a genius because it's he's just remarkably without any human qualities at all. Anyway, it reminded me it reminded me of a film. Okay? It reminded me of a film.
And, I thought, I wonder if Starmer did voiceovers in films in the past. And it turns out that he did. It turns out that he did. Right? Really? And I want to yeah. I wanna play you this clip. You've gotta guess what this film what this is from. Where have I put this? I've got it here. Are you ready? Here we go. See if you can see if you can guess this film, everybody. There's a free fuck them whole pencil that we'll send to you except we won't be able to because we don't know where you live, which is correct because you need to protect your privacy. So it's a metaphorical pencil. It'd be great. Yeah. So which film is this that in which Starmer appeared as a voice over artist when he was a young man?
There. Let's have that again. And again. So that that's him as a young man. Yeah. Yes. That's him as a young man. And, anybody got any idea? Any clues? There's a free pencil in it for you. Free pencil. Anybody know what film that is? Anybody Fifty fifty one says Starmer sounds like Zippy in Rainbow.
[00:29:57] Unknown:
But, I do. Actually. Okay. I think the perfect man who could have done the job probably better than Clint Eastwood, because, you know, they're all actors. I think Star would have been good in Dirty Harry, wouldn't he? Can you imagine saying, go ahead, punk. Make my day. Oh, but my knickers and all this excitement. I don't know whether I've got five or six shots in my, pistol. You know? That that would have been quite good, wouldn't it? You know?
[00:30:24] Unknown:
We've got a winner in the competition. You know? We've got a winner. Really? We have. Where is it then? Yeah. You're gonna have to send a pencil to Nathan Lucius. Yes. Miles He's about to join us on the show, isn't he? Yeah. I believe he is. Ange I know he's in the studio, but I'm just, Nathan, I know you're in the studio. I've seen you. I'm just being very rude to you. No. I'm just having an opening slot here with Eric where we just lay a few things then. We'll bring you in shortly. But yes. So well done, Nathan. Also Well done, Nathan. And I know his address. Robert. Got you. Right?
[00:30:53] Unknown:
So I can send him a pencil. Yeah. Do you think this is fixed?
[00:30:59] Unknown:
I don't know. He was just on he was off Herodotus got it too. He just put Mars, which is hardly the whole thing. I mean, is there a film called Mars? I but I I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. But, yeah, Mars Attacks. You've seen that film, Eric? You ever seen Mars Attacks? I've seen it. Yes. Yes.
[00:31:13] Unknown:
It it's a so it's like a billious attack, didn't it? You know, my granddad used to have billious attacks. Mars attacks. Bill billious attacks. You know?
[00:31:21] Unknown:
It's true. They did. I'm gonna I wanna play this again, and then we'll just talk briefly about Mars attacks because it's very important. Yeah. Ack,
[00:31:27] Unknown:
hack, hack, hack, hack, hack, hack.
[00:31:33] Unknown:
I absolutely love those little green fellas.
[00:31:36] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:31:36] Unknown:
They're just too good. Now, it's based they're based on bubblegum cards in the from 1962 in America. I remember having a few when we were when I was a kid. Yeah. They came out with you. As well. Did you? Yeah. They're really cool because they got proper flying saucers in that spin and all these proper real monsters. But if you if you remember the film, they're they're wreaking havoc on the Earth and on Jack Nicholson and all this kind of stuff and it's super weird. I think it's a Tim Burton film, isn't it? And it doesn't quite hold together. I thought it could have been I I liked it but I thought I'd give it sort of six out of 10 and I wanted it to be eight or nine but I'd sort of sit through it. But there's a bit where they're about to attack a grandma and she comes up with the secret weapon and here it is.
When I'm calling you. That's the great legendary Slim Whitman. Do you remember him? Slim Whitman. Yes. I remember Slip Whitman.
[00:32:46] Unknown:
And Rex Titler or Rex Lit, whatever his name was, he did, Yeah. Don't forsake me all my darling, didn't he?
[00:32:54] Unknown:
From, I know. Yeah. Daughter. Yeah. So there you go. Yeah. So his grandma, I think the the the young lad in the film, his grandma is just about to have her brains blown out by a Martian blaster. And they're all cackling and laughing. And she pulls the headphone socket out of out of her stereo and it starts to play that song. And it, I don't know if you remember the film, it's a very, very profound and dramatic moment. But the little fellas inside their little helmets, their brains, their green blades just explode literally.
We just go they go, they just go, like, they turn into jelly. It's just amazing. And she says, Radishes, I don't think they're very well. So they fuck. And the way they deal with the Martians is they stick they start going around playing slip that Slim Whitman song, which is the Indian love call by the way everybody for those of you keen to know that's Indian love call. I do remember that my mum hated Slim Whitman. Really? Hated him. Yep. Every time he came Slim Whitman and Gene Pitney. What was Gene Pitney's songs? Three thousand hours to Tulsa or something like that. He used to sing that song, didn't he? 300 miles from an old, sir. I used to think it was. Yeah.
[00:34:05] Unknown:
I think you get my mom also. Three hours from an old something. You know? That sort of. But, Yeah. Yeah. It's funny how parents sort of dislike certain people, you know.
[00:34:18] Unknown:
It is. They do. They do. They do. Absolutely. So, yeah, I and it rubbed off on me. So I ended up becoming verbally quite hostile to certain musical acts that I didn't like. I mean, it's all I blame my mother. My mother did that. But, yeah, Jean Pitney sang down his nose according to my mum and she couldn't abide that. She thought it was awful and she just hated all that yodeling from Slim Whitman. And he does look like a sort of northern have you seen pictures of him? He looks like a northern teddy boy to Slim Whitman. He's got that sort of greased backhand. He had this slim sort of but I think he was a pretty nice guy. He's not really a sort of rocker or a Hell's Angel, but he had this sort of thin weasel mustache across his upper lip, and then he's yodeling.
[00:34:54] Unknown:
And I think it was just too much for my poor mom. She just she couldn't deal with that. It was just too much. It was too much. I don't think my mom liked Ella Fitzgerald. Well, I never knew whether Ella fit fit Gerald or not, but, I kinda like Ella Fitzgerald, which is an unfortunate name, isn't it really? You know? It sounds like a sort of a a gay gay couple, didn't it? Ella Fitzgerald. Sorry.
[00:35:14] Unknown:
I don't know about that. I I could see why you would like that name. I just as soon as you said it, I thought, oh, there's a joke. There's a gag coming in. There's a the bottom top coming in here.
[00:35:24] Unknown:
But, no, she's a very good singer. I I like Della Fitzgerald. Yeah. But, even if it is two gay blokes.
[00:35:34] Unknown:
Even if it is. Let's let's bring, Nathan in. Well, I'll add him to the stage anyway if he's there. Hi, Nathan. Good evening. You're on the show.
[00:35:42] Unknown:
Hello. How are you? I'm alright, I guess. Same same am I?
[00:35:48] Unknown:
Yeah. Don't worry. That's fine. I'm just gonna
[00:35:51] Unknown:
Okay. It's cool. It's alright. You play with your microphone.
[00:35:54] Unknown:
It's actually it's Eric that's very quiet. There we go. We got you. I've just turned you down a bit. Don't worry. You just just the thing. I think we're there. Yeah. Go on. Please. Hi. No. I definitely need toning down. I mean, what what's your, policy of,
[00:36:06] Unknown:
of swearing on the show, though?
[00:36:09] Unknown:
No. You're not allowed to bloody well swear. Okay? No swearing. No. So no f I mean, I'm The bloody's quite, nothing. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We're going we're going out over a proper radio station right now in The States. We're going out over WBN and, so, it's, whatever it is. Half three in the afternoon over there. So we've got to, you know, be careful with our language. I mean, you can be fruity but you can't be excessively vicious and nasty and you're not in a pub. It's not that kind of a show. We're all very nice and polite and I hope you're wearing a tie Nathan because me and Eric always wear a tie for this show, don't you Eric? Well, I can wear a bow tie.
[00:36:42] Unknown:
Yeah. Totally wearing a tie on top of my t shirt. Yeah. It's, it's it's I look very smart. I mean, very weird. Yeah. So, right. Well, I'm I'm gonna disclaimer myself then. So if I do swear, I'd, I'm gonna say I've got Tourette's at this point to cover us all. So I will I will try very, very hard and not swear. There you go.
[00:37:01] Unknown:
Well, Tourette's, that revised
[00:37:04] Unknown:
something. Sorry.
[00:37:05] Unknown:
Sorry. Even by funny bone.
[00:37:08] Unknown:
Well, it could be it could be doing the
[00:37:11] Unknown:
or something like that anyway. Well, does does anybody remember that documentary about people with Tourette syndrome? And I've gotta be very careful what I say here. But after some time, when it's I do remember it, so be very, very careful. And there was they're going around France, and apparently, there's this leading professor who's the top professor of Tourette's. And they go to this, university lecture hall, and it's a bit like a cinema, and this bloke walks on the stage. He's got, a pair of trousers on there about four inches above the ankle, flared, and Yeah. He looks a bit of a goof.
And all of them, all at once, shout out a word that rhymes with Paul Anker. And I absolutely fell off my seat with laughter. I thought this is hysterical. Because I said what majority people were thinking.
[00:38:06] Unknown:
Well, I've actually got a relation. It's not on my side of the family. It's on my wife's side of family who's got it. I'm serious. Right? He's got he's got Tourette's. It's it's I think he's retired now. Yeah. Yeah. It is. Oh, well, you wouldn't think it was serious if you met him because an absolute hoot. I mean, he was he's not as bad he's not as sort of viciously bad as those guys. Wonderful, very lively guy, really tremendous, almost overpoweringly lively. Right? And he's about he must be mid to late sixties now, and he's still got the energy of a sort of cup of atom bombs. He's just incredibly and then he'll conk out altogether and just sort of. And then when he's he's either, you know, a % or nothing. That's kind of what it's like. First time he ever met my sons, this left an impression on them which they've never ever forgotten.
It doesn't sound that great but at the time if you saw their faces, wonderful. He came down having sort of stayed up in the spare bedroom, and he came down, he was wearing his, fortunately, he was wearing his dressing gown which was good. That wasn't that wasn't necessarily guaranteed. Right? He was a bit sort of bohemian in many ways, you know. So, but he he had, he had bananas in his pockets a bit like six shooters for a cowboy. He had a banana in each pocket. Yeah. But his mouth was full of grapes. And as he pulled the bananas out to shoot them, he spat grapes at them. It was fantastic.
They were gobsmacked. They'd never seen anything like that. This guy had turned up really noisy spitting grapes at them. They were the bullets, of course, you see in this Yeah. In this imaginary cowboy camp. And he was just wonderful. It was wonderful and he used to do a thing where, he probably still does it actually. Obviously his parents didn't know quite what was going on with him when he first started to exhibit signs of, sort of, you know, this sort of behaviour and he did swear quite freely. And I I do have recordings of him which I will not be playing on this show, but, he used to go and help, young people that had got it, that had been diagnosed with it. And so they'd have sort of like weekend retreats and him and people who'd had it for many years and had found ways of dealing with it so that they could become socially acceptable.
And he really became socially acceptable. He actually became a, like a a motivational speaker for huge sales forces, all over all over The States. He they moved out to Canada. He's English, but they moved there when he was a young a young lad and he lived in Canada. I think he's up in Vancouver way now or somewhere like that. And, lots of photographs of him, like, I think there's one where he's he's revving up 1,200 Pepsi Cola salesmen. 12 hundred of them in this room. Right. Yeah. And he's like mad and he gets them to do all this mad stuff and they just get sort of it's just like a big b no I guess for, you know, for for grown ups acting like kids. But one of them, one of these weekends they had a lad, and I I can't use all the words but everybody will be able to fill in the blanks because this is so politically incorrect.
His, verbal outburst took the form of him being extremely insulting towards persons of color. Right? With the n word everywhere. With the yeah. It was. With the n word everywhere, really, it would really shout it. And they were at this, they'd gone to lunch at this restaurant where the cook was a person of color. I'm using words really well here aren't I? And avoiding the bullet. And, every time this guy came into sight through the back of the kitchen or came through the swing doors, they all jumped on this lad and got their hands over his mouth because it was like an almost automatic response that he would just shout this out. They would just jump he told me. I said, really? He said, yeah. It was just we just had to. We we couldn't do that. We didn't want him to do that. I said, no. I could quite understand it. He said, you know, people take that thing the wrong way. I said, really? Do they? Yeah. I kinda noticed that. So, yeah, that's part and parcel, all that kind of stuff. Yeah. It was, yeah. So I give him back, I guess, to the people because the parents are kind of, you know, not very happy when they find out. They're really sad, to be quite honest. You know, they're like their lives are about to change massively depending on the intensity with which they've got it. And, of course, when you first hear about it, you don't think it's a real thing at all, do you think? That's
[00:42:23] Unknown:
surely that's made up. That's that's made up. And Plausible deniability though, isn't it? I mean, you know, anyone can use that to cover up their own mistakes and hope hope they don't ask for medical proof or anything, you know? That's true. Yeah. No. You're absolutely right. Yeah. They I mean, that would cover me. Absolutely. So
[00:42:42] Unknown:
I know I know. Do you have Tourette's got it? Do you have it inter I sometimes think Eric might have it intermittently, but I'm not quite so sure.
[00:42:49] Unknown:
I think, I think Eric has a as case of the fart Tourette's because,
[00:42:53] Unknown:
he Yeah.
[00:42:55] Unknown:
He's got he's got a very strong toilet humor bias in his Tourette's. I think that's really how it manifests. It's actually this this really is. It is. Yeah. I was gonna say something about Magna Carta here today, wasn't I? In fact, I've got a lot to say about it. Now I'm slightly off balance because I don't know whether Roger Sales is gonna be with us in about twenty five minutes time or not. Possibly not. I've not had a message through from him which would indicate that he probably hasn't got any electricity which is everybody can imagine is a bit of a barrier to getting on the Internet. In fact, it's an insurmountable one. So, but I'll still keep looking out for him. I wanted to talk about have you heard of a group called, the New Chartists?
Have you heard of those? No. The New Chartist Movement. But you've heard of, the Bradbury Pound, haven't you? Yes. Yes. People have heard of the Bradbury Pound Yes. Which is an absolute wizard idea in which we need to implement immediately, but we can't because we're governed by mafia. But, there's a thing that sprang up called the new chartist movement because there used to be a thing called the chartist movement, I think, in the eighteen hundreds, which was to do with land ownership. And in 02/2016, and I think I might be able to read most of this out, It's a little long. It's probably gonna run about seven or eight minutes, and you can interrupt or I just wanted to give you a sort of flavor of what they put together. They met in Winchester in 02/2016, I think. I can't see the date here on this doc document, but I think it is. It's called the Winchester declaration to restore the rule of law to the British people and this is why it would be relevant with Rogers knowledge base as well but, not to worry. We'll we'll thunder into this anyway. There's a preamble, three paragraphs. I'll just read this back back out then we can have a chat. It says, our ancient forebears from King Alfred the Great, the lawgiver, to the barons at Runnymede, which is where Magna Carta, of course, was signed, secured for us a system of law and governance that guarantees the rule of law, a trial by jury common law constitution, where all of the people from the monarch to the most humble are equal under God and the law, the law of the land, the common law.
The great charter of 12/15, known to the world as Magna Carta, a peace treaty between a lawless king and his people, confirmed in perpetuity our common law inalienable rights to trial by jury for all trials. The presumption of innocence rather than guilt, unimpeded access to habeas corpus and the due process of law, cost free prosecutions by ordinary citizens for infractions of common law by those in authority, and the right of juries to annul unjust legislation and statutes passed by parliament, thus giving the British people the ultimate protection against the imposition of tyranny by ruthless agenda driven and self serving politicians.
Contrary to the widely held and mistaken belief of our political class today, parliament is and has always been subservient and answerable to the supreme will of the British people and cannot in any way repeal or diminish the integrity and importance of the twelve fifteen great charter. It is with this fundamental truth that we now make the following declaration of our own free will and on behalf of all those suffering from the current lawlessness of our country. That's that's the preamble. That's the how's that grab you, chaps? How does that grab you? What do you think?
[00:46:23] Unknown:
Sounds very promising. I mean, it's, you know, some a lot of people say this anyway, but something has to change. It can't keep going on like this. Obviously, there'll be a fight against it. But Yeah. I mean, I would consider it necessity at this point to, to push something through. I mean, I'm let's I'm an advocate of the whole common law thing. I just I I just don't see it as being feasible at the minute because because the powers that ought not to be definitely don't want that to be a thing, do they? So
[00:46:57] Unknown:
No. I think it's I I agree with you. I think it's a communications challenge, and I think it's a challenge about scale. So I can read those three paragraphs out, and everybody here can hear them, and you can go read them, and I can provide the link to the document, and I probably will. I'll stick it in the rumble and YouTube chats momentarily. But this information's not reaching enough ears. And even when it reaches those ears, people are still kind of at a loss to know quite what they're supposed to do, apart from which it creates an impression, I think, of it being slightly above what what most people are thinking about. What are you talking about? Something eight hundred and ten years ago that can't because most people don't even know it exists.
I mean, it's they don't. They just don't know that Magna oh, why is that significant? It's massively significant. I mean, the key bit in this preamble, the key bit as far as I'm concerned, there's many bits in it. It's all important, is this, the right of juries, that's you and me if we get stuck on one. There are I've got a lot of questions about juries though about how they're selected, are the right of juries to annul unjust legislation and statutes passed by parliament. This means, I think we talked about it here before a few months ago, When, when someone is a defendant is accused of a crime and brought to a court where trial by jury is in operation as it should be according to the laws of this land in all court cases, the jury has got two powers and the first power is the one that everybody would think about which is whether they find the defendant guilty or not guilty.
But they also have another power and to do that all 12 of them have to agree. If one disagrees, you cannot pass a judgment of guilty of the of the accusation. It cannot pass, which is interesting. But the other one, the power to annul the legislation is awesome. It's just it sounds so boring, doesn't it? They can annul unjust legislation. What it means is that we're in charge of the law. The jury, at that moment in time, is literally the highest lawful power in the land at the moment that it's deliberating over its decision. Because one of the things it can deliberate on is it says, hey. This crime that this guy has been accused of staring at a sheep's bottom, you know, I'm just making up something really fractious and stupid. Right?
After 03:00 in in the town centre is a ridiculous law. How's this still here? What they can do is they can annul it. They can say, this law is unjust. It does not fit in with our way of life. It is not our custom, this is not what we and our forefathers have done, this is not what we want to do, we're not bothered about that. Like, one of the ones would be writing hurty words on the internet. Writing hurty words. You would say Yeah. The guy's not guilty. All those people that have been locked up, like this woman, Watsonette Connolly or whatever, you know, for that that it was a rather guileless and daft tweet that she sent out. But she retracted it after forty five minutes and apologized. Why on earth is she spending two and a half years in prison? What is Because it's they're they're basically making an example out of her own. It's it's fear mongering so that we we are all kept in check by censorship without Absolutely. Any worse effectively. They want us now to self censor
[00:50:13] Unknown:
for fear of reprisals and the same kind of punishment. But any any society, any country that has this kind of censorship is is just to me outright tyranny. There's there's no excuse for it whatsoever.
[00:50:26] Unknown:
No. You're right. You're absolutely right. But imagine let us know imagination. We're going to the realm of the imagination. Right? If that was a trial by a jury if that was a trial by a jury, this law would be struck down by us because it's obvious none of us want it. And I've of course, I'm including everybody in this conversation, amongst the listeners. Yeah. But I would suggest the vast majority of British people, England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, even the Irish, anybody would say, this is ridiculous. We don't want this. We don't we can cope with hurty words. If people are advocating for violence, and in a way she sort of was, but she retracted it. It was a a pretty loose thing to say.
But she's paid it. It's absolutely outrageous. They're they're letting rapists out after two years. Now we would say you can't do that either. In other words, what what the reason why they don't want you to know about this is that the entire law establishment is under our power. Ours. And that's where it's got to go because that's what Magna Carta was all about. He said, you can't be making your own judgments about your own guilt. The people will do that. Therefore, that would be would that not be direct democracy in the best possible way? We're all gonna participate in the law making to actually bring about you know, I'm fed up with reading these stories of us all, and we have to moan about it. Go bloody hell, there's no justice anywhere. My dad used to say this all the time. He said, this is ridiculous. Look at this. You can't get any justice. Well, you would if we had trial by jury. So do you think that's a pretty good reason why they've kinda put it on the back burner? And you remember that guy Yeah. Jack Straw? You remember him in the nineties? Army room. Yes. Yes. Yeah. I remember him. One of the things I remember him coming out with this crap back then. He said, we don't need we don't need juries.
We don't need trial by jury. Yeah. You do. Yeah. Jack, it's not your decision. He's probably dead now. I don't know. It's not your decision, mate. Whether jury will say we do it. In fact, if you keep saying that, we're gonna have we're gonna lock you up for actually opposing the common law. I mean, that's we have no way of whacking them back at the moment.
[00:52:24] Unknown:
They they made their way that way. They they've done it like that deliberately. I mean, when you think I mean, does anybody really believe that these bozos such as Starmer and, the one in Canada, they actually get elected, genuinely elected? No. They're chosen.
[00:52:43] Unknown:
Then I I They're chosen years ago, aren't they? And they're trained us by effectively the same company that run the, the World Economic Forum, you know, the young leaders. Yeah. Okay. It's not an institute, but, you know, something along those lines. They've been trained up by the by the powers that ought not to be to do exactly what they're doing. And the idea that the laws are left in the hands of politicians and lords is very concerning. You know what I mean? They are going to make the laws to suit themselves not for the in the best interest of the people.
[00:53:15] Unknown:
You're right.
[00:53:16] Unknown:
So I don't. But but this is the way back. Right? I know I'm speaking like a naive fool. I know today that's not gonna happen. But this stuff is still enforced because the keyword is in perpetuity. When it was signed, it said, this is the law of the land forever because it's just and it's directly in line with the laws of God, which is where we draw all our common law from, from scripture. This is why it's important to know this stuff because even if people go, oh, I don't believe in all that Bible stuff, you've got to understand that their entire system is a warping away from it. And if you do know it, we have a means of bringing them to account. I know it sounds so now you how are you gonna do that? Well, I'm not gonna do it alone. That's what I would say. None of us can do it alone. This is why it it to some degree, sort of like the people that really know this stuff deeply and communicate about it, I think, to some degree, becomes sort of their own worst enemy because they lose a sense of being able to pitch this literally to the man in the pub. It's the layman's communication that's missing and I'm accusing myself of it as well. You end up sort of tunneling into this stuff and then I'm I'm you might have had this with, you know, sort of knowledge base or whatever it may be. You're talking to someone you go you've got to sort of catch yourself and go that they can't fit this in. It's not even their fault. They can't fit it in. They haven't got any place in their brain where they go, what you talk, you know, this is a bit like, what are you talking about? It's so boring. You know, I wanna go and do some other stuff. But it's not boring to you and me because we're looking at it and we're saying, good grief, this is this is where we've been abused.
And so for eight hundred and ten years as of June in a few days time, this thing has been floating around. It has been enacted tremendously, certainly in the early years, although they tried to rewrite it and write things out of it and they edited certain lines out of it. It just don't stop this process. Oh, we'll just rewrite this to our particular, you know, bias, and they've been doing that all the time, but it exists. So this chart is the new chart is are certainly part of that. I've been trying to get in touch with them because I'd love to get a spokesperson on. A Justin Walker, is part of their setup. That's why I was just doing some search on Justin Walker and, I sent them an email the other day. They've not got back to me. They might not. I don't know whether their systems are up. I mean, the last post was from 02/2023.
This always worries me when things are not being updated, but it's really well screwed together And it needs to be, in my view, we need to find a way of building
[00:55:42] Unknown:
the biggest jury you ever saw, like, a million of us as jury people. I I agree. And and we got the the trouble is we've got the facilities to do that with the Internet, but the the powers that be have got the facilities with the Internet to fiddle with it. And fiddle it, they will. That's the Well, not just not just that, mate. It's it's I mean, they can literally turn it off if if they think that it's it's gonna, you know, get into in in a few with their authority. They they just switch it off.
[00:56:09] Unknown:
But but going back to what Paul said earlier, you know, no one can save the world alone, you know, or however you wanna look at that. You can't change the world alone. You need these days, you need an army, however you want to look at that, whether it's an intellectual army or an army of, you know, people marching down the street, just non non compliant, whatever. You you can't do it alone. So, I mean, you know, this this stuff can make a difference, but you need people on board. And obviously, then you need the things that will get people on board. So it's it's quite the challenge because see first before you can even get them on board, you've got to get through to them the the importance of what this means. You know? Anybody who loses freedom of speech, for example, has no rights, and they've taken this away from us by censoring us. So that so effectively, now we need to take that back.
[00:56:56] Unknown:
I agree with you. But I'm old enough to remember, and I think you are, Paul. My parents used to say, you can say what you want. It's a free country. Do you remember that?
[00:57:04] Unknown:
That was a very common Yeah. But you were allowed to talk about sex, politics, or religion at family parties.
[00:57:08] Unknown:
Oh, that's right. Yes. Especially when Do you remember? Oh, and I I tell you something, I I they never let me forget. There's, my aunt and uncle, they were quite rich, and they had these, you know, the, sixties style, seats, which had sort of arms that went out like airplane wings. You know what I mean? Up and around. Well, I actually put yes. Well, I put my trifle one Christmas on the arm, and it slid down onto the seam. My granddad sat on it. You did that purposely, didn't you? No. I didn't. I didn't put it there for a little while. Yeah.
So he had this sort of trifle stain on his trousers. It was all all all Christmas. Should laugh.
[00:57:57] Unknown:
You should. You should laugh. I mean, but you know that thing about what you're not supposed to talk about and all that kind of stuff, but you should laugh for that kind of stuff. It's great. I'm just looking at some comments here. Barefoot Forager says, sorry for Paul with his soothing voice. Hi. That meant I couldn't maintain concentration during those paragraphs. Oh, come on. You can. She's a clever girl. Don't believe a word of it. She's a badass. I know. I know. I'm being I'm being played again. Yeah. I'm being played.
Yeah. And, I mean, look. I'm gonna I'll put the link to the document in here because you need to read this stuff. This is a great declaration. We're gonna go to we might as well go to it. We'll make it the basis of the show because I'm Yeah. Reasonably sure looking at things that Roger probably will not make it. So there you go. I've just put out false advertising.
[00:58:44] Unknown:
I'll probably go to false advertising in prison, won't I? Yeah. What about, the political party
[00:58:49] Unknown:
that could never be elected? Do you remember that? I what As you're arguing. I know. I've I'm writing some speak I've I'm getting more time. I'm gonna write these things. They need to be really short. Also, when we talk about your show as well, I'm gonna talk something about one of Churchill's speeches because I hit on an idea today, not just about one of his speeches, but many of them and many other famous speeches throughout history. I've got a little sneaky idea about how we can twist them over to our purpose and how we can respeend them back. Yeah. There are all sorts of things that can be done, but Plus, it's a pocketbook of film. Doesn't exist. Yeah. It's the way to go. It is. And I'm just trying to stitch these little sort of fields of thought together. We've got 15,000 parishes.
You've got that's where all your jurors are going to come from and it's alright saying, oh, it'll never happen. I don't care. It keeps me happy.' And you don't know. You don't know. We've got to envisage a thing. Now, I think that the sort of the law thing is so cold and will not strike a chord with people. For those of us that have looked into it, that is that's the ultimate power. If you have the ultimate power over the law, you don't, that's it. It's got to be applied. The guy that taught me all about the banking stuff years ago actually, let's go to a song. We'll pick this up afterwards. So, I'm gonna play a tune. We're just gonna play a tune. I've got Right. I've got a Beach Boys tune. I don't know why it's a Beach Boys tune. It is actually. I've got a Beach Boys tune. So there we go.
Do It Again by the Beach Boys. This will probably get plundered out of all the podcast files, but I don't care. You're listening to Paul English Live here on WBN. We're gonna do a song, and then we're gonna be back after this in about four minutes. I'm here with Nathan, our guest guest and Eric. So we're gonna we're gonna give that a go. Here's the beach boys. We'll be with you after this break. The sun's coming out here.
[01:04:46] Unknown:
Attention all listeners. Are you seeking uninterrupted access to WBN three twenty four talk radio despite incoming censorship hurdles? Well, it's a breeze. Just grab and download opera browser, then type in wbn324.ZIL and stay tuned for unfiltered discussions around the clock. That's wbn324.ZIL.
[01:05:08] Unknown:
The views, opinions, and content of the show host and their guests appearing on the World Broadcasting Network are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of its owners, partners, and other hosts or this network. Thank you for listening to WBN three two four Talk Radio.
[01:05:24] Unknown:
And mister Starmer, did you like the song?
[01:05:29] Unknown:
I I
[01:05:33] Unknown:
I I I I I Yeah. Can't stop playing that. Welcome back to part two.
[01:05:37] Unknown:
Good day. What's your old Beach Boys?
[01:05:39] Unknown:
You know? Yeah. It was. I love that. It's my favorite Beach Boys song and that's an extended version which I found lurking somewhere on YouTube today. So I don't know but, you know, we play a song every now and again. So I love the Beach Boys. I never went to Cal I've never been to California, and I'm not a surfer, although my cousin is. He goes to Scarborough or Scarbados
[01:06:00] Unknown:
and goes surfing in Scarborough. Yeah. In the Oh, well, we've we've got a friend in Scarbados.
[01:06:05] Unknown:
We have. John Hamdew. Oh, that's Yes. Oh, yeah. He didn't go surfing, does he? Is he No. He's a he's a he's a cultural ambassador, isn't he, I think? Isn't he? Cultural ambassador.
[01:06:15] Unknown:
Yeah. I think so. And It needs to be your surfer, your surfer commercial or something. I mean, I can I can vouch for him? He does he does go surfing on a on a on a weekend, you know. If he heard me say that, he'd probably bought me one, but there you go.
[01:06:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. And it's quite a while. We'll get John on the show at some point. He's married now, isn't he? He's got a wife and things, hasn't he? He got one. Yeah. He he's happy. Well, I don't know what that's about. What's what's going on there, like? Happy. Oh, I used to be happy. Did did you were you used to be happy, Eric? And you Yes. Were you happy? I remember that.
[01:06:47] Unknown:
Yes. Well, surely, I'm not happy because the, the, Samaritans are engaged this morning, so I couldn't get through them. So so I'm not very happy as a day, you know, because you you know, you start your day. You find out the Samaritans and see
[01:07:01] Unknown:
how you to get you through the day.
[01:07:03] Unknown:
Paul English therapy sessions. So we so there's a there's another franchise waiting for you here, Paul. We can we can go into, you know, therapy for the awakened and the enlightened.
[01:07:13] Unknown:
Yeah. What kind of therapy would I give them?
[01:07:17] Unknown:
I mean, you know, drugs? No. I can't say that, can I? I show just just,
[01:07:23] Unknown:
you know.
[01:07:25] Unknown:
I know we will just do calm soothing healing sessions. Yeah. The Barefoot Forager. Come on, if you're a bit tired, just tune in at 07:00 and I'll read the phone book to you and we'll do that. There was someone who wanted me to read them the phone book. I said, no. No. I haven't got one. Anyway, look look back to the back to the bloody matter at hand anyway. So this is we just we just read the preamble. Hold on, you know you see my mind's going off in 500 directions now. So there's a this is about three pages long the main thing I'll go through it slow. Actually, listen. What I'm gonna do now in both, the Rumble chat, I'm gonna send you the link to the PDF, everybody, in Rumble and in YouTube because we're on, we're multi platforming, multi streaming today. There you go. If you want to get hold of a copy, it's there. I've just sent the PDF link through to everybody there in the chat, so you might wanna give it a go, because it it just lends itself to causing a little sort of, you know, comments as we go through. So here's the declaration in full. It's three pages. Let me just have a look at the date when it was actually done. They did it at Winch I think it was at Winchester Cathedral or something. Maybe not. Maybe I'm getting a bit carried away.
But but but but Guildhall. They did it at the Guildhall Winchester and we were talking about guilds a few weeks ago, weren't we? So there you go. You see we still got all these things lurking around. 11/19/2016 this was delivered. Okay? To an audience of well, there's a good little photograph there at the bottom of them all. It says this anyway, the declaration in full and it's got some really it's got the key bits in here about what we're facing. It says, we who are sovereign and who are gathered here today in the ancient capital of King Alfred the Great on this day of the 11/19/2016.
Hang on. I'll just put my judge's wig on so I get into the role. Do now serve notice. No. To our elected servants and representatives in parliament that we require the rule of law to be fully restored to the British people with immediate effect by their passing of the restoration amendment. So they must have obviously filed one or put one in, however, it goes. It goes on, they say, we are compelled by the supreme law of the land, the common law, to serve this notice as the evidence is now absolute that there is an elite and secretive cartel of powerful bankers, financiers, and industrialists who, using deception, entrapment, and outright criminality, and most importantly, without our given consent, are seeking to establish an alien system of corporate justice and governance for our country and its people that is in direct conflict with our ancient and god given laws, customs, and traditions.
I quite like that paragraph. Do you like that paragraph? What do you think about that one?
[01:10:16] Unknown:
Yes. Nailed it. It's yeah. It's it's very empowering.
[01:10:20] Unknown:
It is. It is. These sorts of speech things are very effective if we just sort of knuckle down with them, I think. It goes on, he said choking. This system of planned corporate control known to the world as globalization, I guess we call it globalism now, and which created by use of deception and stealth the European Union, results in the unlawful imposition of invasive and unaccountable control in people's everyday lives. It is a system that oversees the increasing privatization and corporatization of our essential services and vital infrastructure, whilst at the same time imposing unlawful debt servitude upon our nation, our communities, and our families.
It is a system that seeks to benefit the financial interests of the City Of London at the expense of the overall well-being of the British people. I mean, and that's a regular theme here on this show. This is absolutely the case. So, if you're not familiar with that as a thought, everybody, you are now. And if you've downloaded a copy of the document from the chat, that's great because you can read along. It's like read along with mother.
[01:11:32] Unknown:
It goes on. Just just to Yeah. Nick. Yes. Yeah. No. Please interject at any point. Just go or hit your proverbial metaphorical buzzer. Yeah. Please do do it do it. Okay. You asked me to do a key of stoma then. Oh, anyway. That's very good, by the way. Doesn't it make you proud to have a prime minister that way? I was saying that. Yeah. I forgot what I was gonna say now. Just know I haven't. Right? So the city of London bit as well, that's an interesting thing to put in there as well because I suspect the vast majority of people in The UK still haven't got a clue that the city of London and London, I e London City are two completely different entities. You know. I mean, one's the capital of The UK, well the capital of England and the other one is a is an independent state.
So it's interesting that they've put that in there. I'm quite I'm quite impressed with that.
[01:12:15] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, this is the stuff we've got to boil down to conversations, to pub level conversations and that's not easy. It it really isn't but it is. So hey, did you know, like, there's the ominously named The Remembrancer. You know of this chap?
[01:12:30] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:12:31] Unknown:
The Remembrancer. It is an ominous name. Sounds like a good name though, doesn't it? It sounds sounds like Yeah. It is.
[01:12:36] Unknown:
Like, wizard schools or something, you know. It's a Yeah. It it is. And we've come up with some absolute fantastic words to describe things, really to describe you know, we've made our imprisonment look so beautiful and ornate with all these words. But oh, he's oh, he's such got such a nice title. I don't really mind if he's actually destroyed my life. But yeah. Yeah. The remembrance, sir. It is quite an ominous thing. Oh, okay. It goes on. Yeah. It's good. As a direct result of this, we are now living in a lawless and increasingly bankrupt country. A country where our ancient trial by jury common law justice system, which is there to protect us all from arbitrary government and outright tyranny, has been deliberately diminished in its effectiveness.
A country where loving families are having their children seized by courts without juries. A country where senior rogue elements of the judiciary, the police, and the legal profession are brazenly protecting establishment led pedophile rings. A country where bogus courts without juries using fraudulent documentation are causing innocent people to lose their homes and their livelihoods. A country where our government is pursuing an unlawful and dangerous foreign policy to support the vested interests of the financial and corporate elite. A country where our armed services are being deliberately distressed and cut back to the point where our nation's defenses can no longer be relied upon.
And a country where the poor, the vulnerable, and the elderly in our society are increasingly suffering from unlawful austerity cutbacks. Don't you think that kinda sums up these this first period of, ack ack, Keir Starmer and his party? I mean Yes. All that everything that's there has happened.
[01:14:25] Unknown:
Yeah. Hasn't it? Can I can I just interject again then?
[01:14:28] Unknown:
Yeah. No. I want you to interject all the time. Yeah. So do it often.
[01:14:32] Unknown:
That that is brilliantly up, mate. I mean, the the way that they've put that across. But here here's the the thing that stands out to me about that is doesn't that mean that if the the government of the of the country of the people that they they're supposed to represent and support and, you know, if they are deliberately bankrupting us and putting us under undue pressure and stress and making us be afraid and or isn't that treason? Isn't that treason where they're putting the interests of, foreign, let's call it interests above the the the the interest of their own people. That to me is is high treason. And, you know, it's funny how Tony Blair changed the the penalty for treason a couple of years back when he when he had the reigns of authority in this country of ours. He did. He did. But he's got no authority to do that. It's null and void.
[01:15:18] Unknown:
Well, it You and I are saying, no, Tony. You can't do that. It's so it didn't happen. That's what you know, I sometimes bang on here about sort of the way you talk to yourself and the way we phrase things. Yeah. They work for us. Now I know this sounds comical but you start to adopt that in your speech and it'll transmit to others. This is how it worked, that's how they got King John and brought him to the table. You're not just doing what you like. I mean there was a lot of skullduggery as well, the barons had their own vested interests at the time back in 12/15, but nevertheless it resulted in, really a breakthrough in terms of, I suppose you would call fair justice to actually make the monarch accountable. He serves us supposedly.
There's an actual arrangement in all of this that if it was done as it's written out would work. It used to work. It worked for long periods of time but of course vested particularly commercial interests, I e the money power, I e the money changers, the usurers have whittled away at it. And they've been able to do that by effectively financially corrupting the the descendants of the barons as it were. And then as a got shot to pieces, you know. Yeah.
[01:16:29] Unknown:
I mean, well, it is. I mean, it's would I be correct in saying this is what they refer to as the dispensation of power? So it's kind of like spreading it out. And so even if it is going to the nobles and the barons and etcetera, it's still it's still taking, you know, sole authority out of the question.
[01:16:46] Unknown:
Yes. Well, I mean, the the other thing They've they've removed us from the court. I mean, if if we're talking about courts and juries, that means that human beings are selected as jurors and they go to a place where a trial is heard. Where is that place? They contra they have said, well, these are the courts. We could hold trials in the back rooms of pubs. That might revive the pubs. They're going out of business, aren't they? 3,000 a year or a week or a month. Ouch. Yeah. No. It's a local court. I'm serious.
[01:17:13] Unknown:
I know, mate. It's it's sad. I mean, you you you know, whether you're in a town or the countryside and you just see them all boarded up, it's depressing. I mean, it really, really is horrible to see all these pubs going under. I mean, but but but isn't that part of taking down the, the, you know, the great British establishment or whatever you want to call it, where this is part of our heritage and culture. And it's very, very deliberate attack on pubs. You know what I mean? I I think it started all the way back with the smoking bans. I mean, I'm not a smoker and never have been, but that's not something I would have supported. And it's just it's just spiraled on from that point where they're absolutely just tearing down the fabric of our, you know, society if you wanna call it that and they're not stopping. Without our consent.
[01:17:51] Unknown:
Without our Exactly. We haven't agreed to any of this. Like, we didn't agree to migrants coming in after 1945. All of these things don't stand. That's I mean, that's how I talk about it. My I go, it doesn't stand. The guy does it doesn't, it fails. You haven't enacted anything because she in every single instance you never asked my permission. Who the hell are you? I happen to be an Englishman who's alive right now and therefore under the laws of God, this is why you have to invoke them, right, I stand under those commandments, I'm a steward of this place obeying the law and you're not. Therefore you're gonna be put on trial and we've got to start the more of us that talk I think approximating this or something like it or however you want to do it, It's about developing an attitude of we don't buy into the idea that this is their place. I don't buy into it. I don't buy into economic reporting because it's a joke.
But most people out there that we're surrounded with, they don't have the background historical knowledge to see the hellish crime that's been perpetrated against them all the time. That's part of
[01:18:54] Unknown:
Sorry. I was gonna say this again. I've mentioned it in the comments there. Again, smoke and mirrors or, you know, bread and circuses, however you wanna put it across. As long as people are distracted, entertainment, however, that might be. It's usually sports and stuff like that. As long as they've got that, they're quite happy to just sit back and say, well, that's somebody else's problem. No. Yeah. If if a problem is affecting you, then it's your problem. And if it's your problem, then you have responsibility
[01:19:17] Unknown:
to do something about it. And correct me if I'm wrong, but we're all being affected by what's happening now. So I think it's all our problem and therefore our duty to rectify it. I agree with you. But the trouble is is that you are you go out to anybody in the street and you say the Magna Carta or usually there were another clue what you're talking about. Because the best, social engineers that money that our money could buy are being used against us. And this is so I see. If it wasn't for all the social engineering and all their, psychologists that government use and things like that, they would be swinging from a lamppost tomorrow.
[01:19:56] Unknown:
Is that I mean, that's great to see that. I mean, could could you imagine that, Eric and and Paul, that, you know, if we could, make this into a reality TV show that's based entirely on, just justice, where you could see I mean, that that's been like The Hunger Games, but for politicians in a way, wouldn't it? I mean, that's pay per view special, that one. They've made a fortune out of that. But I think you're right. But, Eric, you see,
[01:20:19] Unknown:
though this is a bit of a reach, this is I'm gonna make a wild claim. What we're doing here, what others are doing, needs to become the new enter infotainment space. We have to make it better. It's just your abs everything you say, we don't have the resources that they've got, but I think that this conversation, not necessarily me, this conversation has got the support and the hearts of the people. It's just that they don't know it yet. They don't even know that we're here doing this show. Not enough, you know. I need to we need lots of money for an advertising budget on the Internet or more brains or more people saying what can I do to help? I'm always banging on about this. It's important to form a team. The thing I, you know, there's something in this inquiry lark, this alternative information research lark that ends up becoming at a certain point I think slightly counterproductive and I'm I'm fallen victim to it as well. It's understandable. You start off, I've mentioned this before, you start off you go oh, look at this document, I didn't know this existed. Ten years later you've bombed around everywhere and you've got this much fuller picture and you go good grief, everywhere I look is bent out of whack. Everything is designed to hurt me. Nothing is designed to actually support me. The laws of the land don't apply unless it suits the goals of those that are in power or that have assumed it.
So you can't actually deliver all that information in the ear of the man in the pub in five seconds, you can't do it. There's a massive communications challenge. It's not for lack of knowledge or for the lack of standing mainly in the truth we're not always right, I grant you that and you're always correcting these things that's that's healthy to say 'look, I was mistaken on this' etc. But it's the sheer scale of the amount of stuff. So we need, I feel, like these simple stepping stones like memes, six word posters, things like that but something's got to follow after that. I mean in marketing you don't just, you know, I was involved in direct marketing which is called below the line. I can't remember quite why and then you've got your sort of your publicity marketing which is above the like TV advertising posters. They're to create awareness of a product but direct marketing was to close the customer.
So you you know you used to get these things, right? I mean the Internet's full of it now. You fill a form in don't you? You go, here's my now we go. Here's my email address. But in the past Mhmm. The coupon would come through. If you send this, we'll send you a catalog and you get 20% off your first ordering of Daymar Thermolactyl underwear, which which I did by the way. It was lovely and warm. And just
[01:22:47] Unknown:
just as an observation here. So I sorry. This has gone gone completely off topic. I'm I'm sorry to interrupt. Right? Just I walked past Marks and Spencer's earlier. Are we allowed to, mention things like that? Yes. You just did. Okay. Well, I know, but I don't know whether you get censored for it. Anyway, they they had, like, you know, one of these notices in the shop window that says, you're no longer allowed to use, paper vouchers. So if you've got like a coupon or a voucher for Marks and Spencer's, they no longer accept it. In other words, get on your phone and and, you know, download the app and all of that stuff. And I just thought, wow, how sinister is that? I mean, again, most people will go past that and say, oh, I need to need to get it spent and put it on. No, no, you need to you need to say something about it and stop it. But another one as well, you know, when you're saying about getting the message out and you're on about, you know, we need we need to start discussing this in pubs and stuff like that.
Know, beer mats. You can you can you you this is, you know, the you've got two sides. You can stick on information and QR codes and all of that stuff. And just if you go into a pub, you I mean, can you imagine how you could distribute these all the way across and all is the beer mat, you know, and everybody's gonna look at it, pick it up, and say, oh, this is interesting. I wonder what this is about. With it just small captions of information, that's one way that you can get the message out and get people talking about it in your port literally.
[01:24:05] Unknown:
It's just an idea. I mean, the prop Yeah. I mean, I like the idea of beer mats. I like the idea of beer mats. And, I also you remember that beer mat competition? You had to sort of flip them with your fingers and see how many you could do. You went good. Do you do that? I do for that. Yeah. Yeah. You know what I'm talking about? Yes. Yeah. I could do a oh, no. They're going everywhere, and they fly into everybody's beer, and then you get hit. I used to have loads of that. Right? But the thing you mentioned earlier about the closing of the pubs, I mean, I'm watching Clarkson's Farm. Right? He's opened this pub, and all this kind of stuff. And I think, actually, when he opened the pub, I haven't even got to that episode yet. It's brilliant. Best thing on TV that. Is, he has a chalkboard with the names of people that are barred from the pub. And before it even opened, he'd put Keir Starmer's name on the board.
[01:24:47] Unknown:
I like it.
[01:24:48] Unknown:
Topboard. I like that. That's how you do it. It's it's that yeah. That's it. I mean, and going back to the pub closures, it's it is important because it's about an attack on our culture.
[01:24:58] Unknown:
It is. The
[01:25:00] Unknown:
the the the discussions in pubs pubs have been getting sort of nullified and made tame for years. You're right about the smoking stuff. I don't smoke, but I if someone wants to smoke, they can get stuck in. I don't see why they should go outside. I can make a decision whether they're going that pub or not. Right? Exactly. I don't wanna go in that pub because I don't wanna stinker smoke. And I and right now, I don't. I don't really wanna stinker smoke. But when I was 25, I couldn't give a crap. And, so people will choose. Who's that? Who are they to say whether people want to smoke themselves to death or not? We'll do what we like thank you very much. It's the mere fact that they think I'm gonna look after you. I didn't invite you to look after me but you're gonna get the this disease. I might not and I don't care anyway and it's none of your damn business and I never asked you, Right? So, you know, take your hook.
Bellock, who I mentioned here, Hilaire Bellock said, talks about pubs because he used to go to a place called the Franklin Arms, which is just up the road from me here in West Sussex. I walked back it's a lovely building. It's still pretty much the same as it was a hundred and fifty years ago, fantastic pub, and he said, if you lose your pubs, you will lose England. And he's right. Spotful. Look at what that that all those congregation spaces, Here we are, we're doing this over the internet but really, although we don't live near one another, which is unfortunate, but if we did we ought to really be down the pub doing it so that other people in the pub can earwig in. That's what it's for. It's not for us three, it's for the earwiggers and And the table behind us go, what the bloody hell are you talking about? Don't you know about that? And you draw people in. So they they're breaking everything. It's like a scientific approach to stop us replicating the ideas that would be good for people because they're certainly bad for them. They don't want that. And that's definitely part and parcel of all of this.
[01:26:40] Unknown:
I I like the idea of an awakened pub crawl. I mean, I think you're onto something there. You could make that into a you know, that sounds that sounds like a fun activity. Can I just just another thing I've noticed in line with this as well? I don't know whether this is a local thing or whether this is national. I've noticed that since Sunday, everything opened up and, you know, business as usual on a Sunday. I've noticed that Mondays is now the new Sunday. So there's places around here in the Northeast where if you go, like, to small villages and and small towns, Mondays is where everything should. And I find it so bizarre that that, you know, why is that a thing? Isn't isn't Sunday supposed to be our holy day? You know, again, culturally, you know, it's our tradition to have Sunday, to take, you know, the day of rest. And yet now it's a Monday. Well, what religion has Monday as their, holy day? Isn't it isn't it Islam? And again, that's not an attack, it's an observation. This is this is me questioning stuff. And so the fact that we were killing the pubs, but there's a rise in coffee shops.
And we've we've now diverted Sundays to Mondays as the the day where businesses shut. That's that to me is very concerning. And again, I might be wrong on this, but it's it's join the dots. You know, I I'm not I'm not a Christian as as you know. Well, depending on your interpretation of Christian. But it's the other thing that that upsets me in the country is the fact that, you know, churches and cathedrals are shut. Right? I like to go in churches and cathedrals. I find it peaceful. I find the architecture interesting. I want to be able to walk into the house of God, however you want to interpret that. On my terms, when I've when I need to do that, and a lot of them, it's it's like the pubs, you know, let's close the churches as well. Well, why? Why are we closing the churches? Why are we closing the pubs? It's just the stuff that people need to be questioning.
[01:28:27] Unknown:
I agree with you. You're absolutely spot. I mean, I would say the thing about who isn't isn't a Christian is a really we'll have to do a whole thing on it at some point. I mean, I've I've my definition of it is is that it's a race of people. So I'm gonna say you are a Christian because you're in that race. But it's a big topic. We've had this discussion in the past. Again, how about this? We have. Yeah. We have. There's lots more to actually add to it, but the the fact that the thing about going into churches, like, I've got one here nearby, and I go on a walk, and they've had the peregrine falcons nesting in the steeple, which has been fantastic. And all the parishioners wanna talk about it, and they seem to have gone now, which is a bit upsetting because they were fantastic. They were just brilliant bombing around killing pigeons and everything and just being these fantastic birds of prey. They're just so awesome. They're absolutely awesome birds. Not big. These are these things that do about a 80 mile an hour and they drop like a a bullet out of the sky. They're amazing. Wow. And, I sometimes stop in this church and it's open all the time. So you wanna come in and chill and you go in there and it's a different world and it causes you to think and feel differently which is what Sundays used to do. Now I remember being a kid and hating Sundays.
I'm bored, mum. Well, find something to do, you know, and there was no TV and there weren't any films on and we didn't have 8,000 channels of television and there was no sport to watch because they all played it on Saturday, but it was I think it was better. I think the boredom is good because it in particularly when you're young it causes you to go and find your Fockham Hall pencil, for example, and start drawing. It causes you to get creative and play with your own imagination. What can I do? I don't know, we'll go to the woods and then you think and creativity comes from having that kind of national solitude for a day. It's good to be at peace, to rest, to recharge. There are a lot going on in it, and I think it's very important, you know.
But, yeah, they took that away from us too. And now what is the major religion in the country? Shopping, it seems, apparently. Yeah. Toot. Buy some toot.
[01:30:25] Unknown:
Well, also, Patrick has just come and chat and said Friday is Islam's holy day.
[01:30:31] Unknown:
Yeah. Right. I just I just realized that. Can I can I tell you where I got the Monday from? Because, you know, we we've got, like, the three major religions. So you've got, sort of like Judaism. You've got their their, you know, holiday on the Saturday. That's their Sabbath. And you've got Christianity, which is, you know, the the cross and Sunday and all of that. And so to me, with with the moon symbolism, I was kinda going off that for moon, Monday. So, again, I did say I could be wrong, but jeez, Patrick. Thanks for, you know, I'd if you yeah. I think again, it's definitely an interesting thing that Monday seems to be the day where things are now closed. So if it's not linked to that, I'm I I I would suspect there's something else sinister going on with it anyway.
Yeah. Cheers, man. Anyway.
[01:31:12] Unknown:
I I think it's just a part of the overall plan to erode our culture. Well, they're doing a good job, aren't they? You do yeah. Yeah. Well, they yeah. They they do. But it's because we have no defense mechanism. We're wide open. We don't have any defensive mechanism. And I think this is what we have to I think Magna Carta is part of that process to get it back. It might not be the ultimate solution for us, but it's without a doubt a massive a series of massive steps in the right direction. It requires some thought, but we can't sit around discussing it forever because we've got to act as well and understand that we're gonna make mistakes. You know, you have to, you know, smash up a few eggs. You're gonna break a few eggs if you're gonna make an omelette. Right? It's that kind of thing. It's gonna happen. Yeah. And no one should go, oh, you're completely wrong about that. Because people stop. They go, oh, they're not 100% right about everything. Nobody is. Right? But it's about attitude. Is it Yeah. Well, it no. It is this. Right? So so I've noticed, especially with truthers so called and conspiracy theorists, etcetera,
[01:32:07] Unknown:
they have this thing where they absolutely have to be right. And it's like, well, no. It doesn't work like that. Everyone makes mistakes. You're going to come across information that's wrong. You're going to get sidelined. You're going to get misdirected. All of this stuff. It's okay to be wrong as long as when you are wrong, you can say, right. I was wrong. I've learned from that. And I I I can fix that. That that there's nothing wrong with being wrong as long as as long as you can do something with it and and, you know, get a little bit of humility with it.
[01:32:31] Unknown:
I mean it must be great to be a politician, right Nathan and and Eric because they're never wrong, are they? They're never wrong. That's amazing that. And they're so gifted at not being wrong, aren't they? Absolutely amazing at not being wrong. Fantastic. Let's get back to the script. Yeah. Let me just jump back in on this script because it's getting good. So it goes on, next paragraph, it It says, our ancient forebears utterly condemned usury. You like them even more, Eric? Aren't they good? I don't. I yes. Yes. Yes. That's a specialist subject. You're gonna you're gonna start them off on the usury thing, though. That's, because you know, you know, there's only a there's only a couple of subjects. I think there's only a few subjects that we really need to know about. Usury is at the top of the list. One. Yes. What about farts? Okay. Farts
[01:33:15] Unknown:
and usury. Yeah. That's why sub particular subjects, you see. Well, copyright I have to tell you that I don't have.
[01:33:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Although usually carries interest, I don't have too much interest in your farts, Eric. I have to tell you this. Okay?
[01:33:29] Unknown:
Alright. I would I'd like to tell you I'm sorry. I couldn't resist that one. I'm a big stink round Terry, you know? So, you know, better watch out.
[01:33:38] Unknown:
That man could clear the Gyldoll in five seconds. Anyway, where was that before? I was so rudely interrupted by this human raspberry. Here we go. It says, our ancient forebears utterly condemned usury by the moneylenders as a common law crime against the people. Today, our elected servants and representatives in parliament, contrary to common sense, common decency, and the actual precedents of history, remain willingly submissive and compliant to the machinations of the world's privately controlled, debt creating central bank system hosted by the secretive, unaccountable, and indeed criminal Bank for International Settlements, as everybody knows, located in Basel or Baal. Baal being the name of the god to whom they used to sacrifice babies.
Baal, b A A l. And there's a reason to that because they're little jealous. Nation deity. Sorry, mate. I caught you off for the again now. No. No. It's fine. Cut me off anytime you like. It's good. Otherwise, you won't get a word in. I could go forever. Right? So it doesn't matter. It goes on, it says, despite history clearly showing that a government of a sovereign nation such as ours has the absolute right indeed duty, I love that word you see, I'm not into the rights but I'm really into duty, to create, issue, and control its own debt free and interest free money through its treasury its treasury that is based entirely on that nation's wealth and potential. Our elected servants in parliament, when taxation receipts are outweighed by government expenditure, insist, that's not actually the right word but I know what they mean, on borrowing money from the usury practicing private banking and financial sector. Money that is not based on anything tangible and which has been conjured up completely out of thin air as debt. It's not so much that the governments insist, it's that they have absolutely no power to resist it because they're all corrupted.
They can't resist it. They can't implement. In other words, the government cannot do this because it's already gone. You know, when you use the word traitor or treason, these are correct because by their fruit shall ye know them. They conform to the definition of a traitor in that they are not informing us of things, so therefore that's a conspiracy. Their decisions hurt us, therefore they're acting against the welfare and well-being of the people of these islands.
[01:36:10] Unknown:
That's just on the list that they form of, terrorism as well, though.
[01:36:14] Unknown:
Would I be correct in saying that? Well, I think so. I mean, I would class George Soros, for example, as a financial terrorist. Yeah. Yes. Yeah. Spot on. Yeah. There there's a I don't know if I mentioned her last week. There's a journalist called Charlotte Gill. I don't know where she comes from, but I quite like some of her stuff. She's on Substack. She's very good. She's a trained journalist. She does good research into the funding for charities. Soros' arm is in all of them, and they're all arguing for re compliance with the European Union and all this kind of stuff. This guy is interfering with our national life and therefore an arrest warrant needs to be put out for him. It's warfare. It's conducting warfare through finance. Why is it warfare? Because there's no communication taking place. I want this, he says, so I'm gonna do it underhand or through these agencies and we're gonna go that's not allowed so we're gonna put an arrest warrant for you and we're gonna put you on trial by jury and if you're found guilty it's not going to turn out too good for you. But he says you can't do that because I'm going to crash your currency on the international exchanges and that's why governments can't move on this.
So whenever an honorable and honest money system has been put in place, it's always the bankers that can curtail it and always have. So even if we and they're going to mention I think they might even mention the Bradbury pound, didn't it? They do actually in the next paragraph. The Bradbury pound came to an end because the incumbents in the City Of London had got their strength back and wanted to get back into the old interest charging usury game. Once they'd once the Bradbury pound had revitalized commercial exchange here in 1916 during the war and got it back up and running again. They went, oh, now that it's working again, we'll start milking it. That's really all it's about. Does that really surprise us?
No. We're not surprised. We're not surprised, but that's that's how it works. That's absolutely how it works. Next paragraph it says, to negate with immediate effect this criminal fiscal policy, we, today, serve notice to the British government that they must immediately embrace the simple and common sense principle of sovereign national credit by restoring the 1914 Treasury issued debt free and interest free Bradbury pound. Yes, please. Of course, they they will not do that but we would love to be able to insist such that they could and would. This one action, it says, will ensure that there is proper funding for the National Health Service as opposed to the National Health Service, which is what it's become, for the vulnerable and elderly in our society, for the effectiveness of our armed services in their defense of our country and our sovereignty, for our critical strategic industries and major infrastructure projects, and for our students to enjoy a debt free and robust education that directly contributes to our nation's well-being, happiness,
[01:38:57] Unknown:
and future prosperity. It's not possible to disagree with any of this, is it, really? Have you noticed as well how they they said the defense of the country as opposed to being able to go out and attack other countries? I mean, that that isn't that what a a standing army should have been for, is to defend the nation, not to go to war with others? I mean, I I like the way they've worded that. It's it's brilliant. It's a brilliant document, mate. It's it's a good find.
[01:39:20] Unknown:
It's it's perfect. It is. It's it's plain common sense. That's what it is, which is what common law is, which is not so common these days. It's like hen's teeth, isn't it? Well, I like I like to say that common sense is an endangered superpower in twenty twenty five. So it's, yeah.
[01:39:34] Unknown:
Again, it's deep, isn't it?
[01:39:37] Unknown:
It is. Absolutely. Hey. Actually, speaking of hens, I've got a I wanna play you a clip about chickens. This is gonna completely derail the conversation for five minutes.
[01:39:46] Unknown:
We can talk about it at the start, okay?
[01:39:56] Unknown:
Yeah. No. I'm sorry. I just I'm never gonna stop playing that. This show is ruined. I just absolutely love it. It's terrible. It's a new toy and I just every time I play I just see Starmer, you know, actually doing the voice over for that considering have you heard of a so slight aside, I just want to talk about this is just hilarious. This is just a thing about chickens. You heard of a German film director called Werner Herzog? You ever heard of him? Yes. Yes. Yes. He's this is him talking about chickens for forty seconds. Just get this. The enormity of of their flat brain,
[01:40:30] Unknown:
the enormity of their stupidity is just overwhelming. You have to do yourself a favor when you're out in the countryside and you see chicken. Try to look a chicken in the eye with great intensity, and the intensity of stupidity that is looking back at you is just amazing. By the way, it's very easy to hypnotize a chicken. They're very prone to hypnosis. And in one or two films, I've actually shown that.
[01:41:05] Unknown:
There you go. Your lives are all much improved from hearing that, aren't they? When he talked about flat brained, I immediately thought he was talking about politicians, really. And if you actually replace the word chicken with politician, you're pretty close, I think.
[01:41:19] Unknown:
You're pretty close, I think. If you think, you know, flat brain, is it is it akin to being flatlined? I mean, you know, the I mean, is there anything in there? Are they are they, you know, agents of the matrix? I think they're just operating on bloody autopilot some of the time. But, yeah. What what an interesting video you've discovered there. So, you know, you need you need another one for next week with another German, different German guy talking about how stupid pheasants are.
[01:41:43] Unknown:
Oh, Herzog's done some amazing things. I one of the comments on that was that they were hoping that Herzog would do a video where he basically has a go at every animal. Boy, how stupid they are. I thought that's brilliant. I'd watch that. He did one on penguins. Right? It's really quite sad. You go and look it up afterwards if you want to. If you're all interested in Werner Herzog's comments on animals, they went and shot a documentary down at, I don't know, North or South Pole? South, isn't it? Is that where all the penguins are? I guess it is. Right? South. Yeah. South Pole. Yeah. So they're down there, and he was talking about penguins that get disoriented. It's really quite sad. It's funny and sad all the same time. So he shows them they have to go waddling off sort of like three miles to get to the sea but one of them, and this happens quite often, just heads off to the interior and they're under instructions not to actually interfere with the penguins at all. They can't touch them or anything. They've got to get out of the way. They must not affect their behavior, you see. This poor little bugger, and he's he's commentary is a bit like it was about the chickens. He's like sort of like, you stupid penguin. It's a bit like this. Poor booger's going off to die. He's just walking off sort of, you know, 50 miles into the interior over a mountain range. He's got no chance. It's quite sad really because I quite like penguins. They're tough. I actually I I used to have a penguin as a symbol because I thought we're gonna need their robustness and resilience as a sort of anyway, I'm getting slightly off the point here. Do you do you remember
[01:43:03] Unknown:
there was a chap in Belgium. Do you ever do you remember that program? Was it Eurotrash? One of my favorite museums that was. Oh, good. Yeah. Yeah. That bloke in Belgium that thought he was a penguin and used to feed him more fish. Yeah. Yeah. He's a He's a bleeding fruitcake. Yeah. He's walked around in a pint penguin costume all day.
[01:43:21] Unknown:
Do you think he was Do you think it it's something to do with black and white animals? I mean, you've got you've got penguins there that that we're saying are, slightly daft. I mean, just look at a panda. Right? I mean, it it I I've only been introduced to how pointless pandas are. I mean, pointless, maybe not the right word, but my god, they are, like, really dumb. I mean, what what They're lovely and cuddly, though, Nathan. Oh, they're cute. They they they are cute, and I wouldn't hurt them. But it's like it's we don't need to because if we leave them to their own devices, mate, they're gonna make themselves extinct.
[01:43:53] Unknown:
I don't know. Bloody lazy pandas. Get on with it. Have some fun. Go meet missus panda. Come on. Bloody hell. What? I know they're tiny, mate. They are they are they are re they are reindy because they said they eat shoots and leaves. Sorry.
[01:44:05] Unknown:
Pretty much all they
[01:44:08] Unknown:
do.
[01:44:09] Unknown:
But, a few comments from the chat. Let me just read a couple out here. Just skip I am looking at these things. I'm just talking so much. I can't actually include stuff, and I keep getting interrupted by Nathan and Eric. It's terrible. There's all this stuff. I I I do apologize. I'm I'm really bad at interrupting. So I'm not No. I am not. It's great. And speaking of interruptions, by the way, anybody out there who's got the nerve, pick up the phone and call us. The numbers are running on the screen so you can call him. We got a switchboard here now. So if you want to call in and sort of take issue with our criticism of penguins or chickens, we can do that. But just going back, Exo writes that the Christie this is going back to where we were a few minutes ago. Christian hierarchy are giving churches away in, certain areas to, certain cultures out of human kindness. This is because they're deranged, of course. They soon become scrapyards, indeed they do. The one that I got past here is just amazing.
If you were to picture the atypical English country church in this lovely churchyard with all these wonky gravestones going back to 1715. It's one of those. It's just fantastic. Absolutely love it. You're just sitting there. Like, in the history of England, just sitting in the graveyard, it's amazing. It's lovely. Well, there's a church not that near where I live, But the trouble is, it's closed. It's only open when there's services going on. Sorry. I didn't need to chat in Sydney. No. I ain't. Carry
[01:45:24] Unknown:
on. No. No. Not not a problem, mate. I don't wanna take a bowl of chat. I was just gonna say that that we're in regards to those wonky, you know, the graveyards and stuff, those old churches, I mean, you find some wonderful stuff growing nearby. You know, mushrooms, for example, you you know, there's some really rare gems in there. But one thing I've noticed, you know, in the gravestones in, you know, the the, relate back to the great war or first world war. Have you noticed that, you know, that we are told at school and college that the war was between 1914 and 1918. Is that correct?
Yes. Mhmm. Yeah. Yeah. But when when you go to these churches that are out in the middle of nowhere, have a look at the dates for the great at the dates for the great war because it says 1914 to 1919. And I've not I don't know. Maybe there's a good reason for that, but it's something I noticed before. What what are we not being told?
[01:46:14] Unknown:
That is when the, armistice was finally sort of signed and sealed, 1919. Because it was actually because it was a c it it was a kind of armistice they have armistice day, which is eleventh eleventh Yeah. 1918, but all the paperwork was done in 1919. So officially, it was sort of finished in 1919.
[01:46:32] Unknown:
Well, that answers that. Thank you, Chris. That that's that's Right. Area. How how how did they know you're on? Is it Eric or Chris? What what am I going for in this one? You can call me anything you like as long as it's not too late for me dinner. Cheers, Bob. Right. So, yeah, we'll go for that. Thanks for answering now. That's I've cleared that one up. That's it. And Can we get back to the show, gentlemen? Yeah. Sorry about that.
[01:46:51] Unknown:
Did you know that Channel Islands is still fish sorry. Until about ten years ago, Channel Islands are still officially at war with Germany.
[01:47:00] Unknown:
Good choice. How are they getting on? Have they won? Did they win? I don't I don't know. Eight nil. What? Eight bloody nil. It should be just resolved with football matches. Oh, don't get me anyway, just go back to the comments. Anyway, Barefoot Forager asks is a really good question. I'm just gonna come back to it in a second. Was a couple of other things. No. I'll mention that one now. So Barefoot Forager writes, what do we think of Islam's stance on money? It's sound. Okay? It's sound. It's sounder than this and it's all to do with the way that you actually charge for issuing loans.
I've talked about this before. It's a technical thing and, because it's a technical thing it might be a bit dry but the the problem with the corrupted Western banking system, which is not one that we would have chosen, is that it's got this variable rate of interest as a percentage stuck onto money, any form of interest. So interest is the charging of money for the use of money and it's absolutely forbidden by scripture. It's it's it's just an abomination. It's hell and it's really clearly stated in scripture but the churches don't talk about it anymore. They just don't. They don't emphasize it. They think it's about singing songs and stuff. I'm not against people singing songs, that's great, but we've got to really pay attention to the fundamentals here like the plumbing and the foundations of the building because the whole building's going to come down. Because of this, it's chewing up the substance of everybody. Islam's stance on money is way sounder. You're not allowed to charge what they call REBA, which is interest in Islamic banking.
And what they actually do is they arrange a service fee which is fixed. So if you borrow, say, $10, they might charge you a £1,000
[01:48:47] Unknown:
service fee and that's it. You know that you're gonna pay $11. Isn't it? It's fixed. Exactly. But it has to be getting a a fixed contract there which says that we are offering you a service. You know, this is the terms. But whereas interest, they can build it and build it and build it and then penalize you constantly on So, yeah, okay. Fairly. You're a continuous slave. Oh, by the way, do you know Patrick says he's in Streamland?
[01:49:09] Unknown:
I do. I do. Yeah. We'll we'll pick Patrick up in a little while. I'm just yeah. I've I've seen the I've seen the thing. I, it's worth looking into Islamic banking if you're really keen on all that kind of stuff. It's still not perfect in my view but it's way way better than what we've got. And the the problem we have now is that as many people are aware there's a large and ever growing Islamic community which shouldn't be here, which is here, which was brought here by the traitors that have brought them in. I'm not whether I'm for or against Islam is irrelevant. What I'm actually for is that our own home remains our own home. This has got nothing to do with anything else. It's absolutely it's vital. Otherwise, we've got no ground to stand on or live. We're not gonna have any.
But they're a massive advantage over us because of the way that we structure finance. Yeah? Yeah. Massive it's a massive advantage and therefore this tells you that the plan is to keep wiping us out by any and all means. They're allowed to conduct a banking service that is way better than ours. It's way better because it's actually restrained but it's still not perfect. There should be no charging of money for the use of money. None. Absolutely none. Banking is not to be a profit driven business. The whole everybody's got used to it. They go, oh, no. We can make some money out. No. You can't. None to me you wouldn't. I wouldn't let you. It's a natural resource, it's like tape measures. Money is like tape measures. Someone says, oh I visit, you know, the Bob Smith tape measure and every time you use it and you measure up a building you've got to pay me some money, get stretched.
No. But it's not viewed that way. It's viewed as a tangible real thing but it isn't. It's an accounting system that moves around. I want to read you something actually here about this is interesting, right? One of the books I'm reading at the moment just hopping in with all these du- Usury in Christendom, The Mortal Sin That Was and Now Is Not. It's a book by Michael Hoffman, came out about ten years or so back. Brilliant, really really good if you're into this kind of stuff. Chapter two, just at the beginning, I'll just give you an idea. It says this: in Idaho in 2012, a state that prides itself on its Christian and conservative Republican ideals, an interest rate of up to 400% is permitted to payday loan sharks by the Idaho legislature.
Few priests or preachers in this heavily church state have any thundering denunciations of this predation, nor do they impart the doctrine of the word of God and his law concerning this ungodly oppression. What the church historically termed terpe lucrum shameful gain. What we have in our time among Christians, even though they are well versed in the laws of God and the traditions of his church, is willful opposition to the established truth of God concerning money and interest on money, amounting to a determined and malicious hatred of God's truth. We have tens of millions of Christians of this description and they are going to continue in their pursuit of interest on money even after this book is published and even if it should gain a vast audience. Because to such people God himself sends spiritual blindness.
Their sin against truth is so aggravated that God punishes it with final blindness and impenitence. Without repentance there can be no forgiveness and remission of sins is not obtained. Now I know that's kind of biblical type language at the end but the principle's sound. People have gone blind to these things, like where I live there are banks charging interest on loans. Churches around here don't talk about it. It's the it's the main thing that the church should do. It's this number one job, it's to hammer the bank. Hammer it. The word I actually like is extirpate. I don't know if you know it means to tear out by the roots so that it never grows back.
The banking system, as it stands, needs to be extirpated and the only way we can do it, I think, and maintain that is by everybody being educated about what hell is raining down on us because of the charging of interest on loans. And people go, well, I'm only borrowing a bit of money to get a car. That's not the point. The point is that every single pound that moves around in this country has got interest sitting on it. Every single one. That's one of the reasons why they wanna get rid of cash.
[01:53:19] Unknown:
Well, yeah. This this is the other problem, isn't it? When it when it stickers on a digital currency, they'll say, well, we're not we're not using, you know, it's not usury anymore. We've got a different system. But let's face it. It's not a system that's built in our favor, is it? But the other thing there is that, you sorry. I've I've gone off track because I'm looking I'm looking at the the, the Templar iconography in in the background there, and I'm thinking, well, they they were money lenders as well. They were bankers that, you know, the Knights Templar, which were obviously linked into the church. I don't know whether they used to add interest onto that. You know, I'm not I'm not entirely sure what their what their stance and interest is.
That was my point. Why why if we had a healthy society economically, we wouldn't need to lend money in the first place. Because if we if we could go out and earn, you know, a decent wage that that would cover our needs and our wants and things like that, and if we had a healthy society, we wouldn't need to borrow money in the first place to in debt ourselves to the banks or to anybody. And therefore, it shouldn't really be needed. Right?
[01:54:18] Unknown:
No. No. It wouldn't. We're we're basically paying off. The reason why loans have to keep on being generated is to actually provide the purchasing power back into the economy, into the circuit, so that the money exists for the current debtors in that circuit to be able to meet their interest payments. Does that make sense? In other words, the the we say let's say there's a million quid in circulation but on the bank's books they're owed £1,200,000. Where's that 200,000.0 gonna come from that they say they're owed? They have to issue more loans. This is what they do. It's it's it's it's crazy. 200 grand's missing and we want it. So let's get so and so to borrow $200 to build a shoe factory. Right? And we'll and we'll charge him interest as well. It never stops. This is now so if you're in The States or even if you're in The UK, the state's debt is what $32,000,000,000,000 over here it's over a trillion pounds or something now and climbing and you see this gormless bint, Rachel Reeves, she's in a long line of gormless idiots that have acted as exchequers, liars basically, saying, oh, we can't do this and we can't do that. But apparently Keir Starmer last week could say, well, no, we need to raise a lot of money to actually rebuild our army but of course he's forgotten about that because he just goes because I can't think.
Right? We're literally governed by imbeciles, fools, liars, and deceivers. I you didn't need me to say that, but I liked I enjoyed saying it. They are That sounds like a great title for a book there, Paul. I like that. Yeah. What is it? Ack, ac, ac, ac, ac, ac. No. That's a subtitle, mate. Or ac, ac, ac, ac, ac, ac. Yeah. Absolutely. I mean, that that is the case. Because people don't get fired up about it enough in my view. I get fired up about it all the time. I can barely sleep. I wake up furious every I mean, it's been going on for years. I'm serious. How was it? As a man was out thirty years ago, I wake up every morning and go, shit. They're still alive. They're still doing this to us.
[01:56:11] Unknown:
Really, I'm serious. So I'm not the only one who goes into random rants about the state of this stuff. And I mean, people look at you as if they say, oh, isn't he isn't he daft? Doesn't he get, you know, upset about the daftest things? No. I'm getting upset about the stuff that everyone should be getting upset about because it impacts us in a very negative way. Why isn't everyone else doing it is my question, but there you go. Maybe we're just mental, mate.
[01:56:32] Unknown:
No, we're not. We're absolutely not. What it is it's a yearning for the truth and that there's something available to us which our forefathers had, albeit briefly maybe for a couple of hundred years, which we want. I want that. And what it is We have a right to it as well. Well, we do. We want to live under the laws of God. People want, oh don't say that. No that's exactly what it is. Where do you think all this stuff comes from? It doesn't come from out of nowhere. We've been given the instruction manual. It goes, these are the laws, this is how it works, you obey them, you're gonna thrive, your enemies will be nowhere to be seen, you have to defend yourself. I mean you think about this thing about a thriving economy it built that's why you need an army. Why do you need an army? Can you do it? Oh it's nasty all that. Really?
[01:57:16] Unknown:
It's it's nasty if a massive army comes on you don't have one. That's what's happening. You need a defense force. I mean, again, there's a difference between an army that goes out and attacks and an army that defends. A defense force, I've got no problem with.
[01:57:27] Unknown:
That's right. You you've got to have one. You absolutely must why? Why have you got to have one? You've got two countries next to one another. There's a cluster of them. Right? One starts to really thrive. I can think of a really good example like Germany, Nineteen Thirties. Right? After nineteen thirty three, thirty four. It's going through the roof. All the other countries around it are looking at this going what the bloody hell are they doing? Right? Oh, they're thriving. Oh, it's going through the roof. The international moneylenders, of course, are absolutely mightily pissed off about this. So you have to understand they went from being one of the most destitute and ruined people in the world in 1933 that by night end of nineteen thirty six, at six and a half million men unemployed, there was only about 600,000 left needed a job. They put 6,000,000 men back to work in three and a half years.
How did they do that? They cut the bankers out. There's a bit more going on people say oh no they got money from Yeah they did, they got money from everywhere. I'll tell you if I was that guy I'd take it from any bugger to get my people back on their feet, right? So they're thriving. Now you're you're the guy running the country next door and your people are coming at you and going why is our country not as good as that? He's thinking I'm losing control of my own people. This is how it works. This is how it's always worked. You've just got a tribal level. They'll look you you're not a very good king, you? You're crap. Why are you good why are you good like that bloke down the road? He's brilliant. Look at him. And they they're looking over the fence metaphorically speaking. They go, they've got fridges and everything. Right? We want that. So in the end, he said, well, I don't know how to do it. Let's go kill them.
That's why I said go take that stuff. Yes. Let's take lives. When the Russians you know when we'll come into this, when the Russians were were plowing into Germany Nineteen Forty Four their troops couldn't believe what they found in German houses. Gas stoves, fridges, and stuff. They said, these are decadent westerners. Yeah. That's right. Decadent.
[01:59:13] Unknown:
Well, for a couple of the modern conveniences that we've all got these days.
[01:59:16] Unknown:
Yeah. Did you know German ships, luxury liners? Because were because, mister h, started, holidays, and they their workers could go on luxury liners on cruises. And the Yeah. The British government stopped, the these cruisers, docking at any British dock because they didn't want our workers to see how well off the Germans were compared with them. That's right. Because
[01:59:47] Unknown:
anyway, we're coming to the end of the second hour and we're about to leave WBN. So I normally do a little song here to do the sort of crossover thing, so I've got one lined up. I wanna thank you all for being here. It's been great being here with you on WBN for the last couple of hours. We'll be back again, of course, at the same time next week. We're carrying on the show on, Soapbox and Rumble and YouTube so if you wanna stay hooked into what we're talking about for the next, hour or so we will we end bang on 11:00 at night, which will be what 6PM US eastern time so we're on for another hour. Head on over to paulenglishlive.com and click one of the rumble or the YouTube links or whatever when you want and you can stay plugged into what we're yakking on about. Hope you can come and join us. We'll be back again same time next week as I said. Came across this little song.
I don't know quite how it was all put together and it's kind of sort of hauntingly melancholy. So it's not an upbeat song by somebody called Huntress. It's called Lost to the Deep and it's about the Winthrop fleet which you might want to look up. It's Puritans that went to America in the sixteen hundreds and, they had a rondue of it. But I'm gonna play this about four minutes. We'll be back after this song and we'll be back on WBN same time next week. We look forward to seeing you then and we look forward to seeing everybody else on the other side of the break. We'll be back after this.
[02:01:10] Unknown:
A wooden world creaking hole. The sea was vast. My hands were cold. Mother's a trembling sound. Father's warmth nowhere to be I see him sinking endlessly. Lost to the deep, I'm left to weep. A child alone where memories creep. 11 ships through mist and brine, The ocean stole what once was mine. His stories spun of hills and streams now drowned in dark and sunken dreams. I see his face in every wave a ghost no shore could ever say. The water's cold, it holds him tight. A shadow lost to endless night. Oh, father, do you hear my cry? Your girl still dreams of your sweet smile.
Lost to the sinking endlessly. Lost to the deep, I'm left to weep. A child alone where memories creep. The sea is a thief. It keeps him still. Its whispers haunt, they always will. A little girl with eyes like storm carries grief for what waves have storm.
[02:05:09] Unknown:
A very delicate, haunting, and melancholy, and beautiful song, Lost to the Deep by Huntress. So there you go. I only came across that this afternoon, and I really rather liked it. Hello, chaps. Welcome back to hour three. How are you doing? Greetings.
[02:05:23] Unknown:
Hey. Can you can you put the, the the song name and artist somewhere? So because because I I really enjoyed that, actually. Somebody else had just mentioned there, Herodotus.
[02:05:32] Unknown:
He's mentioned he said sweet song. It's quite pleasant, though. It's fan it's fantastic. She's she's doing a lot of things over on a site called ftjmedia.com. You can work out what the f tj means. We won't go there. Freedom, Truth and Justice. Yeah. Freedom, Truth and Justice. And, she Oh, Patrick? And I don't know I don't know whether they're a hi, Patrick. Yeah. I'll I'll do a proper, intro to you, Patrick. And, yeah. She, there's quite a lot of stuff going up there. Some of it I don't like. It's kinda heavy bongo stuff, you know, sort of the heavy metals thunder stuff, which I just sort of yawn at. I find it absolutely appalling, but that I that is just comical to me. I just think, oh, I can turn my own book to 300. Yeah. Great. But, that's really I thought that was really good. Beautiful song. So it's called Lost to the Deep and it's about, the Winthrop expedition Puritans that went to America in 1630 or '40, I think.
Part of the first colonists at Jamestown, not the absolute first but sort of that first wave, and Winthrop came from Suffolk and and most here's an interesting thing. When they, when they went over there, the pilgrims, 90% of them came from Norfolk and Suffolk. Isn't that interesting?
[02:06:46] Unknown:
It is.
[02:06:47] Unknown:
It is. And there's a reason because they were actually at a, a heritage of Dutch people there as well which had been here for hundreds of years. I mean, people think, you know, England's full of all the Europeans. They've all been here at some point and hung around, and that's why we're kind of a as long as you're from the same race, it works. If you're not, it don't. Did I just say a bad thing? I didn't I said a natural lawful thing. It's just true. It's just true. For anyone for any I don't wanna go into that thing, mate.
[02:07:11] Unknown:
Yeah. But but you should be right. It doesn't matter whether it's right or wrong, I guess. You should still be entitled to your own opinion regardless without without fear of reprisal. So, you know Oh, there there's no there's no chance that I would never ever feel entitled to my opinion, Nathan.
[02:07:26] Unknown:
And anybody that's with an ear blast is gonna get it if I get cross about something because that's how I'm sort of trying to do my contributory bit you know all that kind of stuff so, but yeah so, probably I need to make these songs available for download somewhere so I'm gonna try and evolve the website as well to make it a little bit more interactive. We've got work to do on Radio Soapbox as well to get chat there. There's a lot of work to do on the glue as I call it. The glue is the bit that makes you stick to a site, makes it worthwhile coming back and to develop a sort of a camaraderie and a connection with other people and we've been short of glue. I've just not had much time ever since the show started I've been I've had my hands full with all sorts of other challenges which have I'm now not in my life to the same degree so I've got a lot of time left, a lot of time available and I'm just slowly getting back up to speed with things and then there's a I've got a massive to do list but I'm looking forward to getting it done. But Patrick, hi! Welcome to hour three. How are you doing and how's Wisconsin?
[02:08:22] Unknown:
I'm doing quite well, Paul. I, Cool. I wanted to say that Werner Herzog is a filmmaker that I I I really find his films fascinating. And, one of them involved a dancing chicken.
[02:08:40] Unknown:
I know. That's why he was talking about the chicken. That's why he was talking about it. Yeah. And, it was about this group of German outcasts
[02:08:49] Unknown:
who move out of Germany because it's so oppressive there, and they decide to move to Wisconsin. How curious is that? Yeah. And and they they end up, splitting up and going in their separate directions, but I just here here, I'm gonna play a little clip. Just one little clip here, Paul.
[02:09:10] Unknown:
On the fifth. We have a ten eighty out here, a truck on the farm. We have a man on the left. We're unable to find the switches, turn the lift off. Can't stop the dancing and chicken. Alright.
[02:09:25] Unknown:
I'm gonna be dancing chickens. I mean, if I it might be worth getting chickens at home if they were gonna dance for you. That'd be our entertainment. We set newer pubs with chicken dances in them. That'd be great. We were talking about the pubs going out of business, right? So I mean the the old tradition, you open your house up. You said my house is a public house on Sunday from you let everybody in and they all come around have a beer. You can still do that, can't you? Or maybe we don't on the land, so we're gonna get turfed off by the landlord. And all I know is people say you need a license to be able to do that, you know, because you need a license for everything these days, don't you? Yeah. You do, don't you? You need a TV license?
[02:09:57] Unknown:
I mean, I I mean, where was it? Where was it? Zimbabwe, you need a, car radio license to have a FM radio in your car. Used to in this country. Years ago, you used to have a radio license. Yeah. Yeah. To listen to BBC propaganda.
[02:10:12] Unknown:
So you can get it. You know? But, no. It it it peep yeah. I remember when we first told you, Patrick, about us having a television license. He's going, no. This being in Germany, it's even worse. It's about, $400 a a year for a TV license, which is compulsory. It comes with a council tax. Well, in France, they they make you pay per television that you have.
[02:10:37] Unknown:
Or is it is it the same there? In in No. No. No. No. There you have to register your television. I've got hundreds of TVs, Patrick. I've got lots.
[02:10:47] Unknown:
I can't get enough TVs. I absolutely love televisions. Good grief. Because it's always full of such enriching culturally profound
[02:10:54] Unknown:
stuff. Is that what you call it?
[02:10:57] Unknown:
No. Not really. No. I say I use other words, but I can't really broadcast it. A funny word for crap, ain't it? Who is saying it? It is. It's it's my new way of saying crap. That's right. It's probably an acronym actually. You need to come up with an acronym for CRAP. It's probably a good one to be abusive, you know. So, anyway, let me get back to the document because we we're we're probably gonna get this done by the end of the hour, I think. Oh, yeah. We we should do. Where did I got to? Yeah. The last sentence I said was something, money that is not based on anything tangible and which has been conjured up completely out of thin air as debt. My thing with all this thin air of debt stuff is it's not so much the fact that it's that that happens.
It's the fact that we don't own it. We have no say in how much how and who gets it. This is another thing about the creation of loans. Right? When it goes to the idea is it goes to the people at the top and it filters down. This is bunk. Yeah. Because what happens is when the money supply is gloated or boosted in that way, the people that receive it first, it's got its maximum purchasing power. As it gets dissipated throughout society, its purchasing power is reduced because inflation, the prices of everything starts to go up because Sir Sydney Big Trousers has just spent this that and the other on whatever it is and all this that. So it swells them. Anyway, it gets awfully complicated. The bottom line is to not even get the complications, it's wrong that's that it's privately owned. That's the bottom line. It's wrong and it's a crime against God basically because it's usually. Anyway, next paragraph, it says this. To negate, did I cover this? Oh, yeah. I did. We did the thing about the Bradbury, didn't we? To enjoy a debt free and robust education that directly contributes to our nation's well-being, happiness, and future, prosperity, income, well-being, happiness, and future, prosperity. In conclusion, to restore the rule of law fully and to provide complete remedy, I love that word, for the current lawlessness, debt, and treason affecting our nation today, we who are gathered here today at Winchester, do now require from our elected servants in parliament the immediate passing of the restoration amendment, which would secure forever our nation's future prosperity, security, and happiness, whilst confirming in perpetuity our ancient rights and privileges under God and the law of the land.
The restoration amendment is comprised of two parts. The first is the full restoration of our common law trial by jury constitution as confirmed by the twelve fifteen Great Charter, and that this system of proven and fair justice is supreme over any arbitrary legislation passed by parliament, and that statutes contrary to the common law are void. This is that power of the jury. If it's junk and we don't like the law, it's in the bin. The second is the simple restoration of sovereign national credit as embodied in the 1914 debt free and interest free treasury issued Bradbury pound in order to provide the liquidity needed for the British people to enjoy prosperity, security, and happiness free from the criminal influence and interference of the private debt creating central banking system and the city of London.
No one who understands that could argue again it. Of course, the other side fully understand it and they do argue against it because it it will rob them of their ability to fleeces twenty four seven and they wouldn't be too happy about that. Next paragraph reads, our country is fast becoming a corporatocracy as the interests of the financial elite are allowed to take complete precedence over our sovereignty, well-being, and democracy. Collectively, our elected servants in parliament on both sides of the house from different ends of the political spectrum have completely failed us. As to whether this is due to their ignorance, arrogance, and complete stupidity, or to their conscious and consensual agreement to take part in high treason remains to be seen.
How they respond when individually challenged to support the passing of the restoration amendment will provide us with the answers we need. I like that. Put them on the spot if we can. It's just that they won't turn up at the spot at the prearranged time and they'll be absent for some reason. It says, the choice taken by the British electorate to leave the European Union, a criminal institution created by the central bankers and the financial elite in order to further speed up their process of globalization at the expense of sovereign nations, is now being challenged by a sizable number of our elected servants who cannot bring themselves to accept the democratic decision of their electors.
I think, the isn't Keir Starmer one of those? He can't accept it, can he?
[02:15:26] Unknown:
He can't accept it. He's accepted something, but not maybe maybe not, not not these terms and conditions. I think somebody else pulling the strings he's accepted a few things from, but, you know, I mean, he's very much asked about it. He was asked about it. This is what he said. That's all we could get out of him. Yeah. That's great, though. I do like that. When he played it the first time, that'd mean stitches that dude. It's great.
[02:15:53] Unknown:
It's gonna have me I'm gonna be playing it all the time. People stop tuning in. Will you stop playing that bloody flip flop? No. No. I won't. I'm gonna keep playing it all the time. It's brilliant. It is. It's complete insight into what's left of his shell. I mean, it's just that's it. That's the sound he makes.
[02:16:08] Unknown:
It's just ridiculous. Too much cocaine.
[02:16:12] Unknown:
Yeah. Or not enough. It all depends, I guess. Not that I'm not that I've taken all those things. I mean, tea what's wrong with tea? Can't people just stop? A cup of tea is fine. No. They have to get carried away with all the other malarkey, but there we go.
[02:16:23] Unknown:
Gotta be cut off you guys. I'm sorry. I know that's gone against your Yorkshire values, but, Yorkshire tea. It should've been cut off. Don't invite them on again, Eric.
[02:16:33] Unknown:
Bloody hell. Bloody hell.
[02:16:35] Unknown:
My bad.
[02:16:37] Unknown:
The the passing of the restoration amendment, as it is all based on the truth, the rule of law, common sense, and historical precedent, will put an immediate end to the complex and drawn out negotiations being planned to frustrate the clear will of the British people. And he's frustrating them right now by doing these deals and thinking that somehow we're supposed to agree to it. Indeed, he goes on, the Winchester declaration today will be an inspiring and shining light to other sovereign nations as they also seek to ward off the advance of globalization and all that it entails. Now we're nearly through the last paragraph. Here we go. So we did cover it. It says, so today at Winchester, we do serve notice to our elected servants in Parliament and to those residing in the corridors of power that if you do not now actively support the Restoration Amendment to restore fully the rule of law in our country and you persist in your treasonous ways with your malfeasance in public office that we are compelled by the common and God given law of this country to take whatever appropriate and peaceful steps that are needed to bring you to justice. This is a pledge that we take willingly today that cannot be lawfully broken. The rule of law will be restored to our nation. It will because if it isn't, we won't have a nation. It's a complete symbiotic thing.
We aren't a nation without the rule of law and particularly it's such a pity because we've got such a jolly good one. We've really got a jolly good body body of law. So I think that's pretty brilliant actually, it sums up a lot. I mean obviously it is, isn't it? And I think that that notice needs to be restored because this is 2016, that's nine years ago, So we this needs to be restored. This declaration, it needs its own restoration. It needs to be transmitted more effectively. And, of course, I'm coming back to this thing. It's about the marketing and the selling and the transmission of ideas. This idea.
And, of course, you know, we can go back to Stalin when he said, you know, people thoughts are far more dangerous than guns. We don't let people have guns, so why do you think we wanna let them think? And he's right, because thoughts move. There's no barrier to them. As long as the ears are there and we can get into people's ears and get their attention, it's getting people's attention, of course. And like what you mentioned earlier, the the destruction of the pubs is the removal of those spaces where a spontaneous attention can be garnered.
It really can. I mean, I've been in discussions where people who were not even part of my little group have stepped on in and wanted to talk in a good humor, you know. Hey. I've been thinking about that and this. What are you teaming up for? And all that kind of stuff. It's there. But, you know, they're removing the someone else as well.
[02:19:19] Unknown:
So sorry, Paul. Hey. No. Haven't they just passed along in this this country that if somebody overhears you saying something in a pub, that they can have you permanently barred out of that pub? The
[02:19:33] Unknown:
the I'm sure it's a problem. Respect. Right. So I think it's gone through. About respect. Yeah. They've used the word respect, which is more cultural Marxist crap Yeah. To disguise things. Who could possibly be against respect? That's not what they mean. They're talking about the inhibition of thought. Absolutely.
[02:19:51] Unknown:
Well, I mean, it's it is gaslighting. It's pure gaslighting because all or it when they say, oh, it's to it's, you know, to reinforce respect. No. It's not. It's to keep people silent and censored. But, you know, nice to play it. They they they do love their, wordplay and legislation, don't they?
[02:20:06] Unknown:
They do. They absolutely do. Have you ever anybody here read or got a copy of the appendix to 1984, which is by Orwell on the principles of Newspeak? Do you know about this? Two minutes. I No. You need a copy of that, everybody. It's been a long time. Yeah. It's it's it's awful. It's all it's brilliant and awful all at the same time and it it it describes why the control of language ends up becoming the control of thought, why the control of thought therefore becomes the control of behavior and why this therefore makes you massively controllable.
We were talking about this before, you know, that if you think about what people what they're doing I heard this thing with AI actually, some I don't have the clip here. What's occurring is AI is removing certain words. Mhmm. It's just they're gonna occur less frequently over years. You go, oh, that's no big deal. It is a big deal. Yeah. It's a massive deal.
[02:21:08] Unknown:
Yep. Just to yeah. I mean, I've got a copy of 1984 in here and the appendix, the principles of new speakers in here. So, yeah, that's that's thank you for pointing that out to me. That's a good one. Groovy. It's worth reading every year or so every every now and again. It's it's it's awful. It's really depressing
[02:21:24] Unknown:
because it's true because it's true. That's the Yeah. They're rolling it out as we speak. Well, no pun intended for Absolutely. Orwell knew a thing or two. I mean, he was an insider, so maybe 1984 was one of these, sort of deals where, you know, it's dressed up as a story, but they're actually programming you to this is what we've got in in mind anyway. And as you resist it order in the Spanish Civil War. That's right. As you resist it, you actually speed it up its approach to you because you're taking it on bodyguard. They're doing this to us. They're doing that to us. Hang on. We don't need to talk about that. Let's get some common law court sorted, and then we'll do it to them. Forget about what they're doing. Right? We need to get trial by jury back, and that's going to require a lot of people that are informed, knowledgeable and go I see that this is very important, that there is no life for me and my children or any possibility of grandchildren if this process is not halted now, it's criminal and I stand with you. I don't know what to do, I'm thick, I'm not so thick, whatever, I can't do that, I can do this, I can serve tea at meetings, it's all massively important. Everyone's got a role to play and it seems to me the first port of call is for everybody to realize and to be invited and welcomed in to playing a role whatever it is. Whatever it is. There was that thing wasn't there, Eric? You know about this. In Germany during the sort of restoration period when they were having those big rallies they had architects stood next to plumbers, next to car mechanics and they were all one.
Because he said we're all in the shit together and if we don't all work together well they've broken that down in Britain, a place where it just naturally occurred because we're an island people. That's what we're all railing against internally. It's a volcano going on with people, but they don't realize it because no one talks about it, you see. So, oh, well, I'll just go and get some new curtains.
[02:23:11] Unknown:
It's that The thing is that's been this was huge, haven't they, really?
[02:23:14] Unknown:
Mhmm. When you say so too, when you when you just look at I mean, I went to a local town. It was chucking it down with rain today. And we used all I saw was fat blokes that are really obese with tattoos all over their legs, wearing shorts, and extremely obese women. And that's all it Yeah. I mean, slim people, and I'd like to think I'm in that that that brigade of slim people. We're we're we're like a sort of a diminishing breed, you know, where there's very few of us around now. Maybe everybody's overweight.
[02:23:48] Unknown:
Well, yeah. But, I mean, it's because of all the the the great diet that we've got all over with all these fast, you know, fast food chains that are serving muck. And, you know, clearly people have got a healthy outlook and they've got a healthy, desire for life because they've got a great purpose. You know, I mean, everyone's now got skin. Where is it? Where where where's people's self respect and dignity? I mean, you know, even if even if the country's gone, I'm I'm saying curtail on my words here. Even if the country's gone down the pan, right, that doesn't mean that you can't make a stand against that. You know, get a bit of self respect and, you know, stand in that authority. That's Well, actually, Nathan,
[02:24:25] Unknown:
because you recognize that and I recognize it and Eric and Patrick recognize it and most of the listeners here recognize it, it falls to us to do that. Yeah. Absolutely. If you're the one in the room that sees the thing that needs to be done and no one else does, you have to do it. It's your internal ethical ometer having a go. It's going, this is out of order. No. Everybody else wants to slope off. You see, people don't like the idea of conflict.
[02:24:54] Unknown:
They just don't like it. They don't but sometimes it's necessary. And this this is why we should be leading by you're absolutely bang on, mate. We need to lead by example. Right? This is stand on principle and lead by example. Somebody has to say something because if nobody says anything, guess what? We've all lost our voice, and we're gonna get trodden on. We are being trodden on. Yeah. People don't even know that these ideas exist. I mentioned it before. Right? This is a conversation
[02:25:18] Unknown:
which probably to us and most of the people listening here in Rumble and YouTube is like oxygen to the soul. Even if we're not hitting all the marks, we're not. We bumble around a bit, we listen to chickens, that's fine, right? We're having a free flowing conversation. It's important. I want to have fun as well, you know, and we've got to be able to take the mickey out of ourselves. It's a Absolutely. We have to do that. People go, oh, you're being trite and you don't get no no no. We're living life to the full. I'm not gonna let these people tell me I can't have a laugh or that Eric can't say the word fart whenever he likes because he can. We're not talking to Eric. I mean, that that would be a terrible crime in and of itself to to, censor Eric's farts. I mean, what you know, what do you think? It would. I know. There's the fuck them whole farting festival coming up at some point soon. I know. That's right. Yeah. Tickets for it. I don't tell you that. That sounds great. That does. I was thinking going back to the films,
[02:26:05] Unknown:
I actually think a mister methane could actually act the part of Keir Starmer quite easily. It'd be quite good, wouldn't it? You know, mister methane
[02:26:12] Unknown:
is Keir Starmer. Play the clip again? I mean, what's what's what's Starmer going to say about it? You say Starmer. I want to play the clip. I nearly played it again. Right? There's only three people listening now. They've all gone home. They've had enough. He he plays that bloody clip one more time. Yeah. But No. I love it. Just the actually
[02:26:30] Unknown:
looks like a fart, doesn't he? When you look at his face,
[02:26:33] Unknown:
if a fart and a face, it'd be Keir Starmer, wouldn't it? I mean, it's just Yeah. Bad. I think you've been on a fatter of farts, mate. I think that's what it's been. I mean, right now, he's a figure of ridicule, and he will probably remain that for the rest of his life in in British historical memory. Although they have a chance, don't they, to rewrite these things, they don't care. They go, don't worry. Yeah. We'll put all our lads in charge of the history books. She'll look great by the time we've finished. Well, Churchill said Yeah. He did. Yeah. He did. He said, you know, I'm gonna look great in history. I know because I'm gonna write it. Yeah. You did, Winston. Yeah. Top bloke. Top bloke.
Now speaking of top blokes and and top blokes, I mean, I've got a long clip here. I think I've got it here. I've got it here somewhere. Enoch Powell. You remember him? Yeah. Remember Enoch Powell? Okay now this is from, the Dick Cavett show which, Patrick will be familiar with. We are over here, it was brilliant actually. He had a chat show probably late 60s into the early mid 70s something like that. This is about seven minutes. Yeah, it was just yeah he did really. Well he talked like a sort of very educated East Coast guy. I don't know where he came from but he he does sort of, yeah. This is Powell 1970.
I've got the year written down somewhere. I think it's 1971. It's 1971, yeah. It's about seven minutes long but it's worth listening so this will bump us into the last section of the show. Get your logos around this, get a drink, pull up a gin or whatever you're doing and listen to Enoch, the best man that was never prime minister. This is true.
[02:28:07] Unknown:
This is what an educated grown up man in politics actually sounds like. For those of you that never heard one, this is what they're supposed to sound like. I guess the the immigration issue was the thing is, you know, that, changed your life and and made your name probably better known throughout the world than it had been before that. And when you made a speech, as a result of which you were called a racist by many of your own papers and many in The States who reported it. And it's easy to see reading the speech, why you could be called that. Do do you understand why people call you a racist?
[02:28:40] Unknown:
It is one of the modern terms of abuse. Mhmm. And the term of abuse is the more effective, the less defined it is, then you can throw it at anybody and anything. Mhmm. But I find this word race very irrelevant in the British context. Indeed, it's rather a word which we've borrowed from America because in The States, the term race simply means Negro or non Negro. Now, that, of course, is the form in which this sort of conflict or potential conflict primarily presents itself in The United States. But that's a very different background, a very different origin, from the problem which we have here. I I wonder if you'd, allow me a minute or two to sketch in the background here in Britain because it is unique in the world, and one gets it wrong if one imports ideas from anywhere else. Mhmm. You've got to go back to the fact that alone of all the countries in the world, we never had a definition of ourselves.
There was never such a thing as a a United Kingdom citizen. Unlike The United States, which has its own citizenship, France, Germany, we never had that. We were British subjects. We were subjects of the king or the queen as the case might be. Consequently, as the British dominions expanded, automatically, everybody was born in or belonged to any part of a British dominions, hundreds of millions of human beings, were all British subjects. And in the law of this country, there was never any distinction between one British subject and another. There was no way of labeling the British subject who, if I may use the word, belonged to this country.
Now this was, had many advantages, when Britain was the center of an empire. And if the numbers from the rest of the empire who availed themselves of this identification remained small, then no problem arose. But the rest of the empire had its own citizenships. An Englishman wasn't allowed to go and settle in India or Jamaica. On the contrary, they had their own very strict, demarcations and definitions. And now after the second World War, there was a big technical revolution that took place, and that was air travel, which made the movement of masses of people from one continent to another possible on a scale which had never been contemplated before.
As a result of that, there moved into The United Kingdom growing numbers of British subjects, from the rest of the well, it was by now the Commonwealth that ceased to be the empire who had no other connection than that with this country, with The United Kingdom. Now it wasn't that this was asked for. It wasn't that these people were brought in, as labor, like the movement of labor on the continent. It happened because without a major change in our law, it couldn't be prevented. Indeed, it couldn't be seen. You see, we actually don't know how many came in because they were all British subjects. You only counted well, you didn't count British subjects.
And, a Hong Kong Chinese or a baton from the Northwest Frontier or myself coming back from a weekend in Paris, we were all the same going through the port of entry or Heathrow Airport. Well, eventually, reality breaks through. And in 1962, at last, the law was changed so as to make a difference between the British subjects who belong to this country and those who don't. But by the time that that had happened, I'm simplifying, so large a number had already settled here, plus the inflow in the years after 1962 for reasons which I won't enter into. They are complicated. That we now know that unless some drastic change happens, large parts of many of our cities will, by the beginning of the next century, be occupied by a population which has nothing in common with the people of this country. Now I've defined the problem. Yes.
[02:33:15] Unknown:
That that all sounds reasonable. I think the, It is reasonable, you mean. Well, it also sounds reasonable. The thing is that I I think in reading the speech, it's obvious that, many of the examples that you chose to illustrate the problem, were much more pungent, if you'll pardon the expression. I mean, you talked about a lady in a small town Yes. Who had excrement shoved through her letterbox by Now we must black people. Now we must, here, have the context to that speech. Yeah. That speech was made
[02:33:48] Unknown:
two, three days before the conservative opposition had decided to oppose a race relations bill. And the reason that we were going to oppose it was that it would do more harm than good. And it would do more harm than good because the danger to race relations, basically, was the fear of the indigenous population of the growing numbers and growing influx of immigrants. And it was that fear, which was the reason why that bill we believed and all believed would do more harm than good, that as the member representing one of the places primarily affected, I set out to illustrate and to explain to parts of the country that had no knowledge of it in that speech. So that's the context of that speech. I was making that speech against a bill which the Conservative party as a whole opposed. And I was saying, you know, it isn't really the danger lie lies not so much in discrimination against the immigrant.
It lies in the fear which increasing numbers inspire in the minds, and not surprisingly, and not unnaturally,
[02:35:03] Unknown:
of the population here. That was the message. But do you still have any question in your mind as to what in the speech caused
[02:35:10] Unknown:
such manifestations afterwards as, if you want a neighbor for a neighbor, vote neighboring. That that phrase that phrase was used long before and was never used in connection with my speech. That phrase dates back to the nineteen sixty four election, if not earlier. But, of course, there was a terrific explosion Mhmm. Of relief that at last somebody had drawn attention. Not we now know to the full dimensions, for I underestimated the numbers in that speech, but to generate to what were then thought to be the full dimensions of the problem. And people who had watched year after year, particularly in the areas concerned, something happening which was altering their lives, but nobody apparently caring, nobody referring to it, nobody worrying about it.
We're certain, Finn. But at last, at least somebody's spoken about it. Now we can face
[02:36:10] Unknown:
That's what we have to do. Right? We have to speak about it. There's lots of its. I think it's the tail point that's the key point there. I mean, if you're an American listener and you don't know what that's all referring to, Enoch Powell made a speech, I think when was it, Eric? Was it '67 or '68? Oh, he's gone. Have you disappeared? I don't know. Well, I can't hear him anyway. Interesting. So he's Anyway, I don't know what he made a speech anyway, did Powell. I think it's 1967. I've got it somewhere. It it became known as the rivers of blood speech because he pointed out this concern. He was the only one with any courage, I. E. He was actually serving the people to address this issue.
There are these topics that are just literally not spoken about. If they're not spoken about for thirty years, people don't think the topic even exists. So when you start talking about things that people have not really looked at for like eight hundred years like Magna Carta other than as a curio, isn't it nice they did that thing back in 12/15? Is it lovely? Oh, I've got a nice copy of the document. Not the idea of it being a dynamic thing that would actually affect and improve the quality of the vast majority of people in this country, then they can't talk about it. And we're also tapping back into, you know, this thing that Orwell's talking about which if you if you reduce the quality of the language, people literally lack the words to describe their problem. You actually can't describe it. I know it seems a bit sort of, academic in this way, but it's massively important.
I it it I agree. It's hugely important.
[02:37:43] Unknown:
Well, I was thinking as well. You know what I mean? They've they've convoluted certain words as well. I'll give you an example. Right? So so they've changed the meaning, the the the basic meaning. So if you take the word wicked in in England when I was growing up as a, you know, in going through school and as a teenager, wicked changed from, like, an evil act, something that was malevolent, and it changed to the opposite, which is, oh, this is wicked. This is good. Right? Well, there's another one that's in pop culture at the minute. I I forget the word, but do you know what I mean? They they take certain words and they twist them. It's almost like they're they're inverting them so that their original gay is another one. Right? So so but now suddenly, it refers to homosexuals.
So so it's twisted it, and then it put a negative connotation on it.
[02:38:26] Unknown:
What what's that one that they use these days? Punk used to be a word you didn't wanna be called, and then it became cool to be a punk.
[02:38:34] Unknown:
Yeah. Exactly. That that that's it. This is what I mean. It's exactly that so it's the convolution or or well, is that even a word? It's the twisting and inversion of the language, which is in in so doing that, they are dumbing it down. They're taking our vocabulary. And, of course, what what what do you replace it with? So, I mean, again, I swear a lot. So to me, it's it's becomes habitual. Right? You start swearing instead of using, you know, your full vocabulary, and suddenly you've got a dumbed down language in an in a in a country where the education standards are failing and IQs are dropping. I mean, you know, I'm just saying there's a correlation there, isn't there?
[02:39:10] Unknown:
Yeah. There there absolutely is. I mean, every single aspect of the way that we would normally live our lives is under attack. The language, the culture, the way that we want to operate, the time keeping, the days being open or closed, this, that, and the other. Churches, of course, are not doing their job at all. Like I said, they're just not doing it. Why are they not attacking you, John? Nonstop twenty four seven. He he said that the word race was kind of an alien word to the English language. Did you know that No. I don't think he said that. He said he wasn't he didn't say it was so so much alien, although it's inter what he was talking about is the fact that the definition of a of a citizen the reason why I had the clip lined up, by the way, unfortunately of course Roger has not been able to make it because there is no electricity in Ecuador.
But he's talking about status which is really Roger's area with specific relevance to Americans because that's his field of study to do with being a US national And it's to do with how the laws I can't explain them all here right now of course it's it's not directly relevant to us here. We've got our own problems. But it's to do with how you're defined in law and that all these acts and statutes come to bear on that. And it's true. You know, there's a thing is it the English Democrats over here? They talk about there is no Englishness. We are the only one of the nations here that have no representation.
The Scots have got their parliament. But England's just subsumed.
[02:40:28] Unknown:
Either though. I like it. For instance, if I were to put on my, race, you know, in and my driver's license, which is a new category that I never saw before in the last ten years. Right. If I were to put American, I I doubt that would be acceptable. Because what is an American? You know, is it a native American? Is it an American what what are you? Yes. Once you become here, are you are you native American after so many generations? Like, how does that work in America? And I what what he was talking about there, Enoch Powell, was about how Amer the American interpretation was being, imposed on the British interpretation with the whole black and the white, you know, black and the non black, you know, there's no really white until you're confronted with someone from Africa who's black,
[02:41:22] Unknown:
and then it becomes The concept of the author right to contrast it with it, I think, the I mean, he he meant he did he did specify it.
[02:41:30] Unknown:
Well, it was a different category because you you had, the Irish who were more or less slaves. The some of the first slaves, in fact. And then you had, the blacks that were brought in as slaves, and they were expected to either work together or, you know, when you're the the wealthy slave owner of both black and white slaves, What what better way to get them to behave than to, keep them prevent them from organizing as a group.
[02:42:06] Unknown:
But they can't, Patrick. They can't organize as a group. That's the whole thing in my view. They just can't. It's just history shows it just never happens. The whole idea, it seems to me, with the slave thing the Irish were the first ones there in The States being enslaved was to race mix them because race mixing is one of the direct weapons for destroying a people And then people go: well I don't know what people are. Yeah you do. I absolutely know. Anybody knows. You could pick out an Eskimo from, you know, an African any day of the week. Oh no, but he lives in Africa so he's an African. No, it's not about that. This is my take on it. Right? I mean, the the Irish were treated worse than the blacks, I understand, in the early days of slavery and the English too. There were a lot of English enslaved and sent over there. Of course But even I think it did that they were in your own country. The lords here dragged them all down to Australia and imposed the most hellish sentences for like people stealing sixpence, right, twenty years in Australia. Sick. Yeah. Yeah. It's that attitude of an elite, self appointed elite, abusing the law of the common man to predate on the common man.
And race and usury and all these things, these are the major weapons that they use and then people become culturally rudderless. They go, oh well I think I'm this and I think I'm that. Well I bloody well know I'm a Yorkshireman and I know I'm an Englishman and most people in from whatever county know that they're English and we know who the English are when we see them, we know who Americans are. I suppose in your case it is different because it was started off with an influx of, what would you call them refugees? I mean that song I played earlier, the Puritans.
Yeah. Yeah. It's interesting looking at all that because, you know, they were non conformists.
[02:43:45] Unknown:
They got fed up with being interfered with by the king. They they didn't like the king. They were willing to kill the king so he he gave them the boot. Yep.
[02:43:55] Unknown:
So yeah. Because they'd That's a whole You know, and the king had got out of order. I mean, this is going back as well to Henry the eighth. All these things are still bearing down us, but they don't bear it down on anybody that's not aware of them. But, like, Henry, what he did was he he basically changed the laws on usury. You've got Henry to thank for this arrival of all this garbage.
[02:44:16] Unknown:
Right? He just did. Would this be because What? Henry Henry the second or who who were going to No. Eighth.
[02:44:22] Unknown:
The the whole thing with Henry the Eighth is yeah, it's it's massively important, I would say, in world affairs. It really is. This was a dung hole at at the top. It was it's not good. This is not good. He didn't just chop people's heads off. I think he was into I've got all sorts of sort of guesswork on it. I think that his entire court was riddled with Venetian spies and Venetian physicians which may explain why he couldn't get sons from his wives. I don't know. They had potions even back then for buggering people up. Don't think that they didn't. And, you know, Venice was in a war with the Pope.
[02:44:56] Unknown:
It is to do with this. Here as well. We've we've got the black nobility in a sense and so on. This is the social from the black nobility is Venetian.
[02:45:03] Unknown:
Yeah. It is. Absolutely, Patrick. And the and the black nobility is made up of Magyars, but the main Khazars hello hello same old Britain and uh-uh yeah it just it repeats. It's permanent throughout history. Everywhere you look wherever something that we've got starts to disintegrate you'll find the black nobility or their emissaries present. And the whole thing you know the Reformation is a major event. It's it's awful. It's a terrible thing. It's just a complete rip off. These the barons that were there in 12/15 had been replaced three hundred years later by the early 1500s by a bunch of spivs and stuff who were loyal to their own pockets and they were quite happy. I mean basically Henry had to say to them, look I want to tell the pope to booger off and I need you to stand with me and they were worried because they didn't want to get excommunicated. It was a big deal, right? They said, well we'll do that as long as we get loads of money out of it. So you said, alright well we'll rip all the monasteries off. That's it. They just stole all this stuff, right?
They did. They need to they just they trashed things. You even even today around England, you can go and see these, what were, at the time, amazing abbeys where he just took all the roof off for the land and all this kind of stuff. Could you replace the word
[02:46:15] Unknown:
race with cult? Or is it something different?
[02:46:20] Unknown:
Well, I don't know. I know what I mean by race. I mean, you can supplant, I suppose, with ethnicity. But, you know, a a nation I'm just going back to this definition.
[02:46:31] Unknown:
Ethnicity makes more sense to me, that, to be fair. Again, without without I just
[02:46:36] Unknown:
a type of person who is unique and distinct from other races. If you want to use ethnicity you can it's just got more syllables in it so I prefer old English shorter words because they're better. I just do they're better it's only got one syllable so we know what we're talking that's just me right? I prefer it And, you know, a definition of a nation is was mentioning the the the American being the influence on the term race at the time that he was he was speaking. So what what was Yeah. He was. Maybe in the idiom of the day. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know. Maybe it wasn't a word that was flight. It's only coming to more common parts, but I've sort of grown up with it. It's always existed. A different race of people. Yeah. I know exactly what people mean when they say that.
[02:47:16] Unknown:
Yeah. But then they can weaponize it. See and they they have the word race. They weaponized it so that now you become a racist. Well, that's why I say cult because it's like, yeah, you can sit in, like, after 09:11, the big thing was demonizing the cult of the Muslims. Oh, the Muslim hijackers, the Muslims this, and the Muslims that. And then it becomes, oh, you gotta fear these people. And it it's because there it is. It's cult. And whether or not they were ultimately the ones behind it, people feared and probably due to this due to this day. It's
[02:47:50] Unknown:
it's worth It's definitely a cult mindset, isn't it? I mean, if you look at, you know, the the indoctrination behind it, I mean, you you could look at it as a Well, it's called
[02:48:02] Unknown:
you bring up indoctrination, which can be good or bad depending on what kind of thing you're indoctrinating people, what kind of doctrine you follow. And do you do you do you believe that it's right to take an eye for an eye? Or do you believe in the words of Jesus and turn the other cheek? Or, you know, take up the good Samaritan principle of when you see someone dying on the street,
[02:48:27] Unknown:
you go and help that person regardless of who they are because So you see, for me, this is where I would say act on conscience. Right? Can you is it something you can live with? Is it is it objectively morally right? You know, are are you standing on principles? That that's that's where I would come from. I mean, I know, obviously, Patrick, you you know, you've got, like, a is it Catholic background? Am I correct in in that? Yeah. But that's a common Yeah. Common Christian civilization, you know, print principle. Yeah. Well, I mean, you know, I'm familiar with with, you know, the the idea of turning near the cheek and the good Samaritan. I'm familiar with all these things, and I would say that each can have their own merits.
[02:49:04] Unknown:
Yeah. And I think context I'm gonna use I think context is very important. In fact, vital. You see, this turning the other cheek, you don't turn the cheek to people outside of your tribe. You get killed. The reason why there is a fear of the reason why there is a fear of Islam is to do with the historical record. It's not it's not to do with the fact that you could bump into a Muslim and just instantaneously hate them for no reason. That doesn't happen. No one's suggesting that that takes place. But when you look at it as a progression from June when Islam started, It was built on bloodshed.
Absolutely. When did Islam actually what a wonderful thing to bring to the world. Say, yeah. Well, West the Western powers were built on bloodshed. Okay. Well, then it's obvious that we should just not be together. That's my take on it. I'm just trying to look for the logical reason. Forget it. It's death. Dude, it's, you know, like the George Floyd thing here. You know, the same people that sit and preach lovey dovey, multi culty,
[02:50:01] Unknown:
all get along type stuff were the same people that were all provoking these riots
[02:50:06] Unknown:
to take place. It's just Yeah. But again, whose hand was in that? Because we've mentioned him already, haven't we? Who's whose whose hand was in that particular, movement cult?
[02:50:16] Unknown:
Yeah. Well Yeah. It's all it's all part of it. I mean, you've got spokesman from the you the spokespeople say for African Americans, the ones that you need to listen to, they're killed. Like Malcolm X. Malcolm X nails the Liberal. Absolutely. I don't know if you've read any of his stuff or heard his speeches. They had to do it in But the nation was blind what he he ended up, with, what's his name? Farrakhan. He did. He did. Yeah. He was Farrakhan. And they're entitled to do whatever they wanna do amongst themselves just as we are. But you see the the globalist power says what we do is we mix them all together in the same location, make them work pointlessly to try and get on and we'll just wreck all that and get them fighting one another. Is that what this is all about? Though. Isn't that what I don't think it's even an ism. No. I think it's a I think it's a pure racism. You the enemy hates the races.
[02:51:11] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, you could argue there's an attack on culture. Right?
[02:51:17] Unknown:
It is, but it's to wipe people out.
[02:51:19] Unknown:
And it's right now, everything is pointed at wiping us out because it is. It is. Yeah. But you you mentioned something earlier about Welcome back, Eric. Nice to have you back. Chris. You're okay. Oh, I lost you for a minute. Come back. No. It it it it it no. Me me. I've I've recently had a brain transplant, and it's rejecting me. That's the problem. But Alright.
[02:51:38] Unknown:
Hope you get well.
[02:51:41] Unknown:
You you mentioned about work. Now, for example, in Germany, the aim was to build the country up and make it a real decent place to live. Now Roosevelt, he wanted to he they said he's creating an employment. But what did he have? Groups of blokes, this is true, digging a hole, then another group cut blokes come along and fill the hole back up. Pointless work. Not really to build the country up. It's just pointless nothing. And that is the big, big difference.
[02:52:12] Unknown:
And, you know I mean, if you look at sorry sorry to interrupt. If you look at if you look at the economy now, it's filled with pointless positions and pointless, you know Yeah.
[02:52:20] Unknown:
You know. Pointless nothing. That that's all it is. Ruthless.
[02:52:24] Unknown:
That's it. We've actually solved. You're right. We've solved most of the problems. It's just that we're not allowed to enjoy the solutions. Because if if you put them into practice, the requirement for borrowing money from banks will evaporate. There's no real requirement for it. It's an artificially created demand and it's created by the application of interest on loans. That's one part of it. I mean, we're just talking about these abbeys that Henry destroyed. But if you go back in the ones that are still standing, right, you look at these things they were built these great gothic cathedrals in England and across France and Germany and all these places, were built by a people that didn't have usury in their life. They were death free. They're gone. Well, they were each other.
They were working as villages and teams amongst with a common shared culture, history, and language which is what a race of people is, what a tribe is. And we've got this uniform race and then we've got all these different tribes, the Scots, the English, and so on and so forth. They get formed, they move around a bit, but it'll work. But when you introduce people, this is my take on it, with a different internal operating system which is designated by the outs by the way that they look and act and talk and behave and I'm going back to what Muhammad Ali said in that clip, right? He didn't want he wants to be with his own people. Fantastic. So I think Ali was good at. They got at Malcolm X. One of X's speeches about Liberals absolutely nails them. He said that they're the most dangerous people going. They are.
They're the people that have got this self appointed I'm more virtuous than you'. Yeah. And we know better and I'm occupying the high moral ground and you, you white racist pig' right? That's the implication, that's the subtext of what they're saying. They're not saying, in other words, it's wrong for a peep for a person to stand up for his own people. So I admire Malcolm X and Muhammad Ali but I don't admire black liberals and I don't admire white liberals because these people are dense, they haven't thought it through. They're going, we can ignore the laws of nature. Okay. Go on. Do that. And then we're going to keep on repeating all this pointless conflict between us. But they're mainly townies. They're they're they're city folk. Yep. Because look what happened in Stalin's,
[02:54:31] Unknown:
USSR. They sent blokes from the towns to tell farmers who had had generations
[02:54:39] Unknown:
after generations of farming how to farm, and look what happened. What did it leave you? The way followed from that, didn't it? And there was an absolute mass slaughter against the farmers and the food producers, you know? Yeah. There was also revenge involved in that Holodomor, you know? It was a a revenge against the Ukrainians
[02:54:57] Unknown:
because, Yannrick Yagoda, of the black nobility, let's call it that, he had a personal grudge. And when these people get in power the blood flows like intolerance. These are the ones who are going to make a better world right? It's always paved. The road to hell is paved with it's always that. It's just because they think they know better They we're gonna ignore these laws. I know better. I'm a bloke with a clever brain. Look. I've got these degrees. I came from a university. They don't have a dick. You know, the kulaks is what you're talking about. All those farmers, the Russian farmers. Yeah. Yeah. They just wiped them out.
[02:55:31] Unknown:
Insane. In China. Just dust. That that they took people's furniture away and burned it. That because you was to own nothing. Everything was owned by the state.
[02:55:41] Unknown:
Well, they they burned it to make blast furnace iron, you know,
[02:55:45] Unknown:
pig iron. And they and they took their cookers away. They didn't want people to cook. You had to go to communal place to eat. And to call the metal away. Yes. That's right. It was free, but the amount he was given was dependent depended on what sort of work you did and how many points you got for being a good citizen and and all that sort of stuff. It's to keep people's you know, people under the thumb. And he was educated at Yale. Yeah.
[02:56:15] Unknown:
You know, the same the same group of people that And who and who financed them?
[02:56:20] Unknown:
Rothschilds and people like that. Yeah. Yeah.
[02:56:23] Unknown:
It's a completely it's a it's a an opposition of world views and it's not it's more than that, but let's just call it that for now. That's completely irreconcilable. No compromise is possible at all and the sooner white people realize this the better. I mean, like I was saying earlier, most people understandably shy away from conflict. The problem is that it's upon us whether we would have it or not and it's upon us so clearly that people are going into a funk because they don't even want to recognize it and if you recognize it and speak out about it a bit like Powell did, right, you become persona non grata in the establishment. That's what happened to him. He couldn't become prime minister because he had the people on his side and their view is that we're against the people. They don't represent us at all But we're running we're running close-up to the end of the show. We've got we've only got three minutes left of talk time, and then we got the outro. Eric, I wanted you to I want to play you something, Eric, and then I want you to talk about your show tomorrow. Okay? That's right. I've gotta play something else that's reference to Keir Starmer. I'm sorry about this. I'm sorry. This is a different clip. Okay. You'll all recognize you. Everybody knows Dad's Army. Listen to this if you can. No. This is great.
[02:57:36] Unknown:
Who do you think you are kidding, Kea's stomach? If you think we're all so dumb, we are the vultures who will stop your little game. We are the people who will make you
[02:58:05] Unknown:
Did you like that, Kier?
[02:58:07] Unknown:
I I I I I I I
[02:58:13] Unknown:
That's the last one. Eric, I just had to get one one last one in. Eric, you've got about a minute and a half or a couple of minutes. Picture shows for for tomorrow. Right. I I think that leads into it as well. Yeah.
[02:58:25] Unknown:
Tomorrow night, Eric Von Essex. Monica Schafer's coming on. Some bloke called Paul English, don't know who he is. He's coming on, and, we're going to do an alternative d day. I talk about the and I'm going to be revealing quite a bit about that you won't find in the history books which is a % true. So it's be gonna be quite a show and it's called there was a film called was it the longest day and the show is going to be called the longest psyop. So there we go And thank you very much for letting me,
[02:59:00] Unknown:
give a little plug there. Very kind of you. Thank thanks, Paul. That's what it's all about. Nathan, it's been great having you here tonight, and you're welcome back. Thank you very much. I guess at some other point or whatever. No. No. We'll we'll keep on. It's great. No. It's worked really well. It's been very lively and, sorry to everybody that Roger Sales couldn't make it. I'll I'll try and book it. No. It's brilliant. It's great. We'll talk about your book next time and and other things because it's been a great com a great conversation tonight. We've covered and hit a lot of nails and we're gonna have to keep on hitting them. Thanks. Shout out to everybody in YouTube and Rumble for listening and on Radio Soapbox and Eurofork Radio. It's been brilliant. We'll be back again, of course, at the same time next week, which is 8PM in The UK.
Patrick, great having you here for the last hour. Wonderful. No. Thank you. I did have something I was gonna say about Wisconsin but I can't remember so maybe I'll remember it for last for next next week's oh, good grief. Sorry about that. So yeah. We'll be back again same time. We've got the outro music coming up. Keep well everybody. Think about trial by jury and what we have to do to increase the size of whatever it is that we think we're up to because we need it we need it really huge. We need to get enormous. We need to become the biggest consumer pressure group in the whole of British history to shake this out of the tree. There's the outro music. It's been great being here for the past, three hours. We'll be back again, as I said, next Thursday. Look forward to it. Go good, everyone. Bye for now. Bye bye.
Okay, chaps. You can talk. We're clear from broadcasting. Sure.
[03:00:58] Unknown:
This program has been presented on Global Voice Radio Network telus Paul English live on radio.globalvoiceradio.net. The opinions expressed on the program by the hosts and contributors, guests, etcetera, may not necessarily reflect the opinions, viewpoints, and policies of the Global Voice Radio Network. Their opinions are their own. Thank you so much for joining us for this program. Catch Paul English live every Thursday, 3PM eastern on PaulEnglishlive.com. Thanks for joining us.
[03:01:56] Unknown:
Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio
[03:02:06] Unknown:
Network.
[03:02:56] Unknown:
Okay, guys. I do believe that I have FCC turned back on again.
[03:03:10] Unknown:
Thanks, Paul, for broadcasting that.
[03:03:14] Unknown:
You're welcome.
[03:03:16] Unknown:
Well, and we quit working it. Not a good shit.
[03:03:22] Unknown:
What, William?
[03:03:27] Unknown:
Oh. Pardon? Thanks again, Paul. Let's hope, Roger gets his Internet back up tomorrow or tonight.
[03:06:27] Unknown:
Well, yeah. Let's hope. Or, Brent Winters might have to carry the show all by himself. You know how hard that would be for him to do.
[03:06:42] Unknown:
Oh, no doubt. Yeah. Yeah. I guess we'll cross that bridge. I guess I'm going yonder to, do some more surfing. Catch you later.
[03:07:22] Unknown:
Alright, dude. Take it easy.
[03:07:26] Unknown:
You too, man.
Introduction and Show Overview
Magna Carta and Its Relevance
Weather and Technical Challenges
Guest Introduction: Roger Sales and Power Issues
Magna Carta and Legal Status Discussion
Mesh Networks and Communication
Humor and Cultural References
Guest Introduction: Nathan and Tourette's Discussion
Winchester Declaration and Rule of Law
Music Break and Show Continuation
Financial Systems and Usury
Cultural Commentary and Humor
Hour Three Introduction and Guest Patrick
Enoch Powell and Immigration Discussion
Show Wrap-Up and Future Topics