Welcome to another episode of Paul English Live on WBN 324. Today, we dive into a mix of light-hearted banter and serious discussions. We kick off with a chat about the weather in England, noting the surprisingly cold temperatures and clear skies devoid of chemtrails. The conversation takes a turn as we delve into the political landscape, highlighting a CGI image of British political figures in orange uniforms, symbolizing public discontent.
We explore the controversial topic of Muslim grooming gangs in the UK, discussing the media's role in softening language and the political implications of these crimes. Elon Musk's recent comments on UK politics and the global population decline are also examined, raising questions about media narratives and societal control.
In the second hour, we shift focus to the devastating wildfires in California, questioning the management and possible underlying motives. The discussion broadens to include the global economic system, the potential of Bitcoin, and the concept of a debt jubilee.
We wrap up with reflections on historical events, the power of storytelling, and the importance of reading. Join us for a thought-provoking episode filled with insights and humor.
I've gotten plenty already.
[00:00:51] Unknown:
Hi. Good afternoon, good evening, good middle of the night to you and all that kind of stuff. It is Thursday, 9th January 2025. That's twice I've got the year correct in a row, so I think, up and running with that. This is Paul English Live. We're here on WBN for the next couple of hours. Welcome to the show. And we've got some, rather juicy things, I suppose, to talk about tonight. Probably some frivolous things too for those of you that tune in for the frivolity. I know I do. But we've got some serious stuff to look at because things have been getting quite serious here in jolly old England over the past year?
9 days, that is. Yes. Hi, everyone, and welcome back. This is Paul English live here on WBN 324. We're here every Thursday, 3 PM US EST, 8 PM UK time in the UK evening, obviously. Little fair notice warning. All shows on WBN are for people aged 18 and above because we sometimes get a little bit out of hand, not too out of hand, but that's just to let you know. Everything is designed for a mature audience even though, frankly, there's a great deal of immaturity coming up over the next couple of hours, few hours. I hope. That's one of the reasons why I turn up for the show.
And, of course, I'm joined by the usual crew. Now you might not know who the usual crew are, but most they do. They're here already in the in the system. So welcome, onboard, to the studio, Patrick, Paul, and Eric. Good evening, gents. Good evening.
[00:03:25] Unknown:
Hello. Evening, Paul.
[00:03:28] Unknown:
Good evening, Patrick. Good evening, Eric. Good evening. Good evening. Oh, good evening,
[00:03:34] Unknown:
all.
[00:03:35] Unknown:
Yeah. No. It's it's it's good to have you back. And, that week flew by. It did. It flew by. That was a that's been a pretty quick week, actually, and it's been, a beautiful day here because we always start off with the weather on this show because that's how we just get rolling. We just get rolling by talking about the weather. It's, very, very cold out there. I've just I I came back about an hour ago from a a little saunter, and it's very, very cold. And everybody that I said, isn't it cold? To in the street. They all agreed that it was cold. It doesn't look that cold, but it bloody well is. I don't know what the what will that but for England, it's pretty cold. It's about 2 or 3 degrees down here or something, so very nippy indeed, considering how warm and balmy it's been up until this point.
But a beautiful day here. I didn't have any cloud today, Eric. Did you have cloud? Were you cloudy or were you sunny?
[00:04:27] Unknown:
No. At all. Yeah. And no chemtrails. I looked up, and it's not I'm missing them already because because you get so used to seeing loads of, like, spaghetti across the sky. And when through these clear days now, there's no spaghetti. Isn't that weird? Very weird. Do you notice any chemtrails? It's strange. No. Free.
[00:04:45] Unknown:
No. I mean, we don't. We're on the main flight route from, we get a lot of air traffic coming straight from, let me get that one right, Gatwick, which is about 40 miles up the road from here. So a lot of the sort of, Torre Molinos traffic. We're all going to sunny Spain, all those sorts of jets. We get plenty of that kind of stuff because I think they shoot out from Gatwick and down this way. But, no. Sky was crystal clear. Lovely. Really just bloody cold today, but I don't mind that, as long as I've got, you know, the requisite 3 layers of underwear on. So you know, because you must you must wear the thermalactics to keep the vitals nice and hot and comfortable, I think. So that was all pretty good.
[00:05:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. That's a family show for sure.
[00:05:33] Unknown:
It is a family show. We like to talk about we like to talk about keeping important things warm and and in good condition. Actually, there was there was something on TV over here yesterday, which probably don't translate too well to a US audience. It was a little reviewer, a gentleman, a comedian over here used to be part of the Carry On crew called Kenneth Williams. And Kenneth Williams and Eric are basically 2 peas in a pod, I think, Eric. Because see, they are, really. They're 2 peas in a pod because Kenneth Williams' great forte, the thing that really amused him more than anything else was really potty humor. And, this was the and he he he spoke in such a sort of sophisticated and very nasally sort of way. Anyway, I won't try and do any more of that because it's it's not very good. But, rather witty chap, very eccentric, very unique, very sort of British, really. You wouldn't find people like that, I don't think, in too many other places.
But, yeah, that was that was quite funny. That was quite good. Those of you that have caught today's show image, of course, if you're on the radio, you wouldn't have caught it. It's a picture of a lot of British political reprobates, who, well, basically been causing us an awful lot of problems recently. And, somebody's somebody put together some kind of wonderful, CGI, a little sort of vignette of all these people. I mean, I'm just looking all it's got, of course, it's got Keir Starmer. He's there. Ricky Sunak's there. Boris Johnson. We've got David Cameron, good Gordon Brown. King Charles is there.
Tony Blair is there. And, what's the name of I forgot the name of the woman. What's the name of that conservative woman, Eric? Her name just completely run out of my head. Theresa May. Theresa May. Theresa wasn't there a song about Theresa May, or was it Rita May? I can't remember. She may or she may not. Oh my. Well, she may. Anyway, they're all looking suitably miserable, dressed up in their orange prison w e f uniforms. And, the little clip that came through onto the Telegram group was fantastic, I thought. Really sort of captured a mood. Anyway, I think it's an image worth promoting, because, it touches upon a feeling, a theme that's running pretty strong through the country over here at the moment. It's probably got across the pond, I think, to your side of the woods, which is that, there have been some pretty chunky and juicy criticisms leveled at Keir Starmer and his government, courtesy of Elon Musk, who obviously doesn't really run any of those companies. He just spends all his time now sending out tweets, which is all part of some great, I think, some great theatrical play that's been written for the world so that we all get stirred up. But it is working, and it's to deal with a problem that's actually existed in this country for decades.
It's been, in many ways, I guess, re represented back to the audio and visual consuming public as something new and alarming and something must be done about it now, but something should have been done about it now, 20, 30, possibly even 40 years ago. This thing really started rolling in the last century when, the whole, Calurgi plan, let's call it that, the, Richard Cudenho of Calurgi plan was put into practice to begin a process of swamping these islands with people who really shouldn't be here. Now that's just got me in trouble with the police or something like that. But, we can elaborate on that if we feel if we feel suitably safe to do so. But there's been nothing but a problems with it ever since it started.
And it's to do with Muslim Muslim rape gangs. Now that is the strongly, strong way of phrasing it. What they're actually using in the media, they're talking about grooming gangs. Somebody obviously hit on the word grooming. I don't know when it came about. 20, 30 years ago, you know how they manipulate language to soften the blow, to make it not sound as bad as it actually is, to enable them to carry on doing the sorts of things that they want to do. Yeah. It sounds a lot worse saying pedophile. Well, it does. Yeah. It does. And so, you know, the accurate and precise use of language is always something that they don't like because, as we know, really, those of us that have looked at lots of history, I suppose, particularly going back to the Russian Revolution, that's a pretty good one to look at. One of the first things they did and that's a 100 years ago roughly, thereabouts.
One of the first things those people started to do was to control language, and that controls thought. It controls the range of expression, it restricts people, there then become penalties for saying things a certain way, and this incrementally builds up over a few months, a few years, whatever it is. And, pretty soon people are not in a position to sort of communicate freely and precisely using the English language as it was meant to be used to create, sort of, clarity and understanding and what's that old phrase? The avoidance of all doubt.
And political language, of course, is for the creation of as much doubt as possible and it's very good at that. And it's able to achieve it to a great degree because of, the bullying tools that they have available to them. And I've been on, I've been on Elon Musk's tiny little communications platform, x, not really following Musk so much, although it's difficult to avoid him because he's, he sort of quoted and retweeted or re exed by so many people. Well but I've been on there really looking at lots of comments about this that have been going on over the past week. And, certainly comments from American, communicators have been interesting. They're, on one level appalled by what's taking place.
The country is gone. They're saying, well, this country, from that perspective, has been gone for a long time. I I don't think it is gone. What's actually occurring is that something that's been, repressed, intentionally so, and controlled very heavily. For some reason, someone's decided that that control is to come off. I'm always suspicious of why these things rise up at the time that they do, how they get the traction that they do. But the the image for the show with all of these participants in this process, they've all played a role ever since Tony Blair arrived in 1995 or 6 or whatever. The, these are the people that say all this nonsense like diversity is our strength.
And, of course, I think I think with a line like that, you have to try and understand exactly what they've just said. What they've actually said is when they've used the word our, they're not including all the people of Britain. They're just including their own coterie of traitors. I do view these people as traitors because they have communicated and enacted policies, which are absolutely not for the betterment of life in these islands and for the indigenous people, who are currently the stewards of these islands, even though we've been robbed of a great deal of the means of actually exercising stewardship here.
So, these people have never been viewed favorably, and that's an understatement. And they're and but there's something about the degree of hostility towards them that it's being amplified is, what word shall I use? Alarming? No. I'm not alarmed, but intriguing why it should be happening at this stage. Not that anything that Musk has said is necessarily untrue. You could say, well, what's this guy who's running a rocket company, apparently? You know, what's it any of his business to be sticking his nose in here? I saw some quote today, where he had said that his concern was the for the future of western civilization.
Well, welcome to the club, Elon, if you actually really are genuinely wanting to be in it. Some of us have been concerned about this for decades, for all of the reasons which now suddenly the mainstream media are deciding to cover. But this hellish relationship between governments and media has been responsible for suppressing this topic for so long. And now that it's come to the fore, it seems to have created quite a hullabaloo. And I think, the peak of this has been a decision excuse me. We've still got the still got the rolling cough. It's the it's the gift that will not stop giving. A decision yesterday. They took a vote in the houses of parliament. This is a place where all these buffoons meet.
And, the the item, on the agenda was, should they pursue an inquiry into this situation? And if you're not familiar with it, it's horrific. We're talking about the organized and systematic rape of 1,000, if not tens of 1,000 of English girls over decades. And, the pea the parties that are involved include political parties because there's a great deal of political, might wielded through, through their operations with all this stuff. A kind of hellish relationship between politics and sexual predatory gangsters. There's no way to to to put it. It's it seems to be very much that's the case. Anyway, the vote was such that I think about a 111 of the I don't know how many there are in there that day.
A 111 of them or thereabouts said, yes. We need an inquiry, not that I'd be holding my breath over inquiries. These are usually a great big theatrical farce as well, but at least these MPs, did at least signal the right intent. However, 364 of them, including my local MP where I live, who is a Labour MP, I e, of the ruling party, they said, no. We don't want this thing inquired into. And it struck me, that these 364 individuals have just committed treason or an act of civil war against the English and the and any other of any other nationalities here, Welsh. I'm sure these things have been happening in Wales, probably in Scotland and Northern Ireland, possibly Ireland too now as they get swamped with this organised immigration, attack.
So there's 364 of them that need to be not only put out of office, but really put on trial. Now this is a sort of coy thing in a way for me to say. How do we exercise or bring about a powerful situation where that could happen? But, it it it is serious. And of course, part of the psychological processing here is to sweep it under the carpet and, unfortunately, what occurs is that the public as a whole begin to ingest that as a sort of hidden command and begin to operate with their head bowed even further knowing now, even though they've hidden it away in their head, that they're being governed by traitors and accepting it. This is part of this great sort of bamboozlement of the mind. The Michael Hoffman has a good term for it, which I can't remember right now.
But he's absolutely right. It's about the psychological processing of the herd, and we've been undergoing that for a long time. So that was just my brief sort of run through about what's been happening here in public communication spaces, I e, the mainstream media for the last few days. And certain characters have been positioned as possibly going to be the champions of recovery on this. Maybe it's going to be Nigel Farage in his garage, is gonna be rolled out in some capacity to lead us all back to this, that, and the other. But the whole establishment basically stinks, and any MP that's voted to suppress this stinks worse than any stink you could possibly imagine. I'm just using gentle language to describe that. Anyway, that's my brief sort of resume, a summing up of that. And, Eric, what were you living here?
Yeah. Sorry, Paul. Yeah.
[00:17:40] Unknown:
Well, if if anybody does speak up and, make it known to the public that these 346, whatever, people should be called out on the carpet. Anybody that does that in a public venue, you need to watch what they do because that would be a perfect political maneuver to get people to look at that person as a sort of savior, and you may just be getting the antichrist. Just be careful.
[00:18:16] Unknown:
Yes. Oh, I well, I'm sort of aware of many of these sorts of threads, and many people that listen to this show or are close to this kind of inquiry space are aware of that as well, Paul, as I know you are. I mean, I couldn't I didn't have time to dig it out today, but there is the, famous or is it an infamous document called the protocols of the learned elders of Zion, which is always disparaged as being a forgery. But that means it's a forgery of a genuine document. It's genuine, alright, and, no amount of sort of, anti publicity against it by the usual mainstream media things. He's gonna stop that. That thing came out, got on the Internet at least in a big way. In fact, Andrew Cameron from Hitchcock, I think, published the entire thing in his book, The Synagogue of Satan.
And if you haven't read it, people, you need to you need to put aside some time to read it because it's an introduction to a kind of mindset that's at work. And no matter of denial is gonna change my mind about it. Sim I'm sort of with Henry Ford on this. I think he said something like, whether it's a counterfeit or not, all I know is that what's in it is coming true. And one of the things that's in there, there's a section in it about moments or a moment like this where they would I I can't remember the exact language, but the gist of the narrative is that they say that and I've mentioned this before here and we will be mentioning it again because repetition's key with all of these things, you know, we need more airtime for these ideas, I think, or to get these points across.
They said that they would, effectively, the the leaders that they had supplied to us, which is the case, these are all supplied. They're not elected. They're selected, with great sophisticated theatrical election, events and all this kind of stuff, but they're selected alright. And, what they will do is they will demean them or reduce their stature in the eyes of the public. In other words, they're gonna make them look ridiculous intentionally so that the crowd become utterly disgusted with the puppets that they've put there. And, of course, these puppets are ripe for manipulation in the public space. They really are. I mean, many of them are, of an extremely they have an extremely dubious nature.
I'd be very nice. I don't wanna get too graphic about it. Many people will know that these people do not are not, healthy decent people in many, many cases. We've used words like psychopath and sociopath to describe them. They're valid, I think. And there are varying degrees of sort of nutcaseness in there. Some of them though are downright evil and vicious and, very dangerous people for all sorts of reasons. And, anyway, what it says is there will come up a time where they will demean them and effectively destroy them in the public side so that the public yearns, Paul, as you were saying, for the savior.
Who is going to savors? And and a pre prepared savior or little group of saviors or some movement or whatever will enter stage left quietly at first and say all the right things and and and all the agreement, characters will wash up as well starting as support for these people and suddenly everybody will be swept off in another direction, which will be even worse than the one that we're currently in. So, that is definitely a scenario that's been detailed quite clearly in the protocols of the learned, elders of Zion. And I guess they are learned in the arts of cunning and deceit, and all the other sorts of terrible things that seem to be, basically the ground rules for being in politics these days. So, and, of course, we've got your chap rocking into office, mister Trump, very soon. I mean, how how long before he rolls up his trouser leg and starts doing his business? What's Oh, I mean, about another 10 days.
[00:22:05] Unknown:
But but another 10 days. But but literally literally the country is burning. We've got the wildfires that are going out, going on out in California, which oddly enough don't appear to be affecting structures with blue roofs. I don't get it. I don't understand that. And it's pretty much bearing down on all of the more affluent areas of Southern California, like Hollywood and Brentwood and, Pacific Palisades and all that. You know, really close to where they were planning on building the Olympic Park, you know, for the Olympics in 2028. And then we've also got, all the legislating bodies there or or the administrative bodies there that are making it very difficult for insurance companies to makes make money. So they've basically been canceling fire insurance policies and pulling out. I mean, I'm sure that's a complete coincidence that all of these $1,000,000 homes halfway up a hill are now uninsured and bursting into flames. I don't I'm I think if I was to go any further into that, people would call me a conspiracy nut. They would hand me a half a dozen rolls of tinfoil because they know that I've already used up every roll in the house with my hat.
But, I don't know. These are just things I think about, and, these are these are, like, George Carlin says, these are the thoughts that kept me out of the really good schools. I just
[00:23:36] Unknown:
I I guess. Yeah. It's true. I want to I wanna come back to that, whole thing as well. That's really useful for you to sort of drop that in as a as a flag earlier in the show because, we've been getting this stuff. When did it first was it today or yesterday it started? I don't know. It's been going 24, 48 hours or something, when once it gets I was I was thinking about I mean, the last big burning I'm aware of was the was that the Hawaii one with all the houses that were blue and escaped? Mhmm. Was that how was that? 2 years ago? Because that goes down. All of these massive events go down the memory hole, don't they? They all go down there were massive disturbance at the time. But they mentioned the hurricanes that they had out east in in the Appalachia mountains that that just devastated. That's right.
[00:24:23] Unknown:
Supposedly, you know, there could be thousands of people that are dead
[00:24:27] Unknown:
that aren't even accounted for. It's not important anymore. Winter on the news cycle, is it? It's just disappeared.
[00:24:33] Unknown:
Gone. There's winter storms that are right now bearing down on that very same area threatening to to drop 5 to 10 inches of snow on states that are absolutely ill equipped for dealing with it while people are still living in tents and and unheated garages and things like that. And then you've got the northern wildfires that happened in California years upon years upon years ago where literally the alloy wheels on the car parked in the driveway got so hot they were melted. But 50 feet away is the plastic trash container that is parked next to the tree that doesn't even have so much as a leaf singed on it.
How did these fires start? How did a wildfire start and leave all the plastics alone and to leave the trees standing, but obliterated the homes and literally melted cars in the driveway. How did this stuff happen? And now they're talking about winter storms that are supposed to come over the Central United States and working out to the east where there's going to be bitter cold, deadly temperatures, the potential for widespread power outages, and infrastructure upheaval like never before. I mean, we've got all this stuff, and it's all on the plate for the 10 days prior to Trump's inauguration.
Coincidence?
[00:26:05] Unknown:
Oh, I'm sure it is. Do you think? Do you think it's a I I think it's just a a a coincidence,
[00:26:11] Unknown:
Paul. Obviously. I think it I think prime example of a peaceful transition of power.
[00:26:21] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:26:23] Unknown:
Are you alright there? Yeah. I did. It's, well, their playbook, the way that they work away at these disruptive events and the and their ability to distract everybody. I mean, you know, I remember coming across this as an idea donkeys years ago, you know, that the the mainstream media is used to distract people. But I never really bought into it when I first stumbled across it because I personally didn't watch television at all. I couldn't imagine that anybody get so distracted. I thought most people were just focusing and getting on with their lives. But, of course, the way things have evolved, particularly this century, is that you're not supposed to get on with your life. The government's supposed to get on with managing every aspect of your life, including supplying you with the necessary dramas to keep you distracted and this, that, and the other. And, of course, it's courtesy of phones and people's connection to their mobile phones.
They've got a much more sort of intimate hold in terms of, controlling people's attention spans and distracting them. It seems to be a much more subtle and sophisticated process than it used to be, and therefore, it's probably way more powerful, because people are more than trying to be looking their phones around, rhythm and
[00:27:33] Unknown:
yeah. They said it before. Diversity is our strength. When he says our strength, he's not talking about them and the people. They're just talking about them because the diversity is going to be distracting and separating the people. And a and a house divided cannot stand.
[00:27:51] Unknown:
It just come on, people. See the writing on the wall, will you? Good god.
[00:28:01] Unknown:
I'm just I'm I'm I'm sorry. I I gotta put that soapbox back under my desk. Whenever they
[00:28:07] Unknown:
say diversity is our strength, they're always referring to their own in group, and and yet you are supposed to believe that we're all together in this. And yet it's it's become crystal certainly with this rape gang thing coming up. Right? I I think it's a a much more serious penny has dropped with a much larger group of people. It's gone out to the next wave of people. Not just people who have been keenly pursuing and focusing on this stuff, but lots of other people that have probably been slightly ambivalent about coming forward on it and this, that, and the other now see it. I've got a clip here anyway. I was gonna play a song, but I'm I'm not gonna because I couldn't find one, which is a quick shout out to everybody in the chat. Welcome to everybody on Rumble chat. We're going out on Rumble and d live tonight. I still couldn't figure out how to get YouTube working, which sounds awfully pathetic, doesn't it? But there are certain sort of little technical issues that are getting in the way and driving me a little bit crazy. So I'd and I you know, one gets bored of trying to settle these things up. Not that I necessarily think there's much future in YouTube for this show, but you never know, if we try. But if you're in the chat, over on Rumble, hi, everyone. Great to see you all back again.
And, if you've got any song suggestions, throw a couple in. Make sure they're nice and beautiful and wonderful, and they're gonna make us all happy or something like that. And, I might even play one. How about that we will? Although I'm thinking of playing some old stuff that I haven't played for a year. There's nothing quite so bad about that. Anyway, David, on the Telegram chat sent a little YouTube video over today. It's fronted by a Muslim gentleman called Raja Mia, and I'm gonna play the first three minutes of it because it's very interesting and very quite heavy what he has to say. And this is to do with some of those points I was mentioning 10 or 15 minutes ago.
This connection between political parties, in this case, the Labour Party, and sexual gangsterism. There's no other way to describe it. It's all to do with votes. Would you believe it? It's to do with votes. So I'm gonna play the first three and a half minutes of this particular thing. Just listen to this.
[00:30:15] Unknown:
Children were picked up from outside school gates. Teachers knew. Pastoral teams went looking for children and picked them up from houses. And these are 14 year old girls, white girls, 14 year old working from houses with Asian men. Now men in their thirties, forties, fifties. There's statutory safeguarding protocols that should have been followed. All of that went by by the wayside. Of course, the classic takeaways and the nighttime economy went but it was organized. It was organized. Shabir Ahmed, the ringleader of the Rochdale grooming gang, worked out of a community center. He was selling children out of a community center.
He had a black book of his you know, and he was making appointments, all of it hidden. He was establishment. He also was a senior figure on the board of trustees of the of the, citizens and vice bureau. These are establishment Asian figures involved in the systematic grooming and gang rape of working class white girls. And Shabir Ahmed was a prominent figure in the Labour Party, and there are counselors to this day in that council chamber who knew him. These were racially motivated crimes where the victims were white and considered to be an underclass by a metropolitan liberal so called liberal elite of whites who considered these white girls to be, and this isn't my words, you know, making lifestyle choices. These are the words of the social workers that say, how can how can a 12 year old girl make a lifestyle choice to be in a in a takeaway on the top floor of a takeaway with 20 men downstairs waiting to take their turn? It's it's horrific. Once you go into the graphic details of what happened, it's it's it's horrific.
Yet none of these people are arrested. None of these people have been prosecuted. Why? It's because working class white girls were a price worth paying. They didn't matter enough. In a town like mine, they didn't matter enough.
[00:32:09] Unknown:
What did matter enough? What wasn't Vote.
[00:32:12] Unknown:
Vote. Power. 100%. Vote and power. The girls were white, and these were racially motivated crimes. No doubt whatsoever. You you take the definition of racism in any other context, apply it in here, and and it every marker will be ticked. These were racially motivated crimes against white working class girls. Which demographic is responsible for grooming and rape in these northern town scandals? Predominantly Pakistani, occasionally Bangladeshi, almost exclusively Muslim. And I've been arrested for saying that, and I'll keep saying that. This town is run by gangsters, and the Labour Party are in bed with gangsters.
And the reason why they're in bed with them is because they're reliant on the block vote. And I'm not on about wider gangsters, very specific Pakistani gangsters, Bangladeshi gangsters, the Islamists from the mosque. The Labour Party have made partnerships with the most despicable of groups, and they are reliant on these people to provide them with a block vote to stay in power. They've sold our children, and they look the other way. These people peddle drugs. And if you go to every one of these towns, what you will find, and this is the bit I find really troubling, liberal white women.
Now so I'm talking about I'm not saying the word women on purpose. You know? I I'm like, part of me thinks these are girls who've been gang raped. She only does some sort of empathy with women. Yeah? And these are liberal white women who are quite happy to forget all of that because it comes back to politics. All all of this comes back to politics and the protection of the Labour Party and the dependency the Labour Party has on these bloc votes. My name is Raja Mia.
[00:33:47] Unknown:
Raja Mir. Now that's quite a telling communication. Whatever you may think of somebody called Raja Mir, that's one of the most, direct and truthful expositions of what's really been taking place. And Exo's written that he is a brave guy. That is brave. He's running counter to his own people. It throws up lots of other questions for me as well. But were are people aware that there is this relationship, literally, as he describes it? And he's worked in central government as an adviser and then all sorts of other things. This comes out later on. I'm not playing the whole interview. It's it's about another 7 minutes to go, but we're not gonna fill the rest of the show up with that. I think that was enough. Are are you is anybody really aware of this? That there is literally this gangster relationship between political Marxists in the Labour Party who have tunneled that thing out and the making use of people that they have enabled to come into this country as a block vote so that they can acquire power and are quite happy to sacrifice white working class English girls so that they can get their power.
I wasn't fully aware of that until I'd heard that. Eric, is that is that new to you?
[00:34:59] Unknown:
No. It isn't. No. They've been buying boats for years. And really looking at this situation, nobody mentions the word treason, because you did earlier. And it's I'm being quite serious here. I mean, I am passionately against the death sentence. But under the law, treason is leaped treason. And although Tony Blair meddled with that law in 1997 and changed it to life imprisonment, that is null and void. You can't change that law. And it is still death by hanging if found guilty. Now the question is, I'm pretty sure that one day, we will these people who's left of them will have their day in court. I'm looking forward to that. But then who if we got skilled who could actually, depart them from this world? Because Pierpoint is long gone now, and it's not an easy thing to hang a person. It's a very complicated, very technical thing to do. Just don't get a lump of rope and wrap it around a tree. I'm sure, Eric. There must be some YouTube videos out there that could help with that, surely. Well, how to how to link with an MP. You know? So you want to hang so you want to hang some gangsters? Because that's what they are. These are gangsters. Yeah.
[00:36:13] Unknown:
They're gangsters either politically or they're gangsters even, as sexual predatory rapist gangsters. But that's what's going on. It's gangsterism. It is gangster. How how else are we to describe it? How else should we describe it?
[00:36:26] Unknown:
The government is a mafia. I mean, I was looking at, that chat. Was it history debunked? He's got a YouTube channel. Was it Simon something or other? I can't remember his surname.
[00:36:36] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. He does. He's awfully prolific, and I'm I'm very dubious about a lot of the things he talks about and the way he talks about things. Yeah. Yes. But but, yes, I am aware of him. A very proud country. We're not allowed to criticize. And, Yeah. But, anyway, we won't go into that.
[00:36:52] Unknown:
And he reckons that, Starmer and his sidekick are not human. They're reptilian almost. And I agree with him. They're ice cold. They are psychopath. He's got no compassion whatsoever. And all he does, he just says whatever will win votes. So, you know, he took the knee, about that chap got shot. He's got no morality whatsoever. He just what he says and what he does are 2 different things. Which chap that got shot? Sorry. Who was that? Oh, couple of years ago. It was a a a black chap who was a gangster and, a cop in America.
[00:37:36] Unknown:
Oh, you're talking about here in Minnesota, the George Floyd. George Floyd. That's Yeah. They didn't shoot him. The the the the the police the the cop, Derek Chauvin, he put his knee on his neck until he suffocated and which is a tactic that he learned from the the IDF trained police forces here. They go on junkets, these police chiefs and and trainers, and they learn those tactics over where they're using them on innocent Palestinians, and then they come back here and use it on us. And that that that's part of the problem. And then at the same time, they exploited that whole situation to make it seem like, oh, the Black Lives Matter.
It was used as a weapon. And not only that, it was it was in the middle of the lockdowns when they were locking us down for COVID, which everyone had been locked down for months, so they're all just ready to to riot more or less, all the people in the city that in the ghetto, and that's what ended up happening. There are lots of instigators in that too. You had these people like Amy Klobuchar, who's the senator here there in Minnesota, who is going on junkets over to Ukraine. And, so, yeah, they it it definitely people like Keir Starmer, it was it's just amazing how international that became and how coordinated they are.
See that these parties, these Democrat and Republicans here in America are all tied to liberal and conservative parties in Europe, and they have organizations like, umbrella organizations that they all go to meetings, and and they're all getting the same basic instructions regardless of the country. You'd think that you'd be a little bit isolated from the politicians over there, but they all learn the same things, and they're they're very coordinated. And I think a lot of this grooming gang stuff is is a means of blackmail. Like, I I a friend of mine, Frederick c Blackburn, has this idea that it's the 5 b's of the meaning method, which is blackmail, bully, bribe, banish, and bury.
And that's what these politicians do. These grooming gangs are nothing more than, honey traps for these politicians, it sounds like, from what that Raj was talking about, the Raj Amir clip you just played. Mhmm. Yep. That they they sit and and and they, blackmail these politicians. So then you have a vote and it ends up being, what is it, a 100 a 100 people to 364? Yep. So you can just wonder those those 364, how many of those are actually blackmailed into voting the way that they want.
[00:40:31] Unknown:
Yeah. May maybe it would seem that there's an even more filthy story to be revealed in how they are full of that they couldn't do what a normal, healthy individual would choose to do. No one would choose the decision that they chose. You wouldn't do it. Because it's literally saying, we don't care about the people. About personal We are supposed to rep we don't care about you. Look at us not caring about you. We don't care. And yet the whole purpose, supposedly, of having representatives is that they are supposed to just do that, to care for the management of the nation, to make sure that it's healthy. Whereas this is clearly a decision that's not gonna produce health. I mean, if I the graphic details of some of these events are truly terrifying.
They're disgusting, and they're tragic. The fact that fathers have tried to defend their daughters have been arrested for defending their daughters with the police saying that the daughters had chosen this as a lifestyle. I think he mentioned it in this clip. This is insane. So where how has the police force become this corrupted thing that's not a police force for us? I'm just stating obvious questions. I know we we've discussed these before, and we'll keep on discussing them because they need to be sort of raised. We need to be conscious about these things. You know, we we all of us, we we slip into a comfort zone. I do too.
You have to. You can't go around in a kind of mentally asphyxiated, agitated state all the time. It's not possible to do it. But we we've currently got here over the last 2 or 3 days in in public discourse an elevation of this stuff, and now 364 of them have decided that we are not to have even an opportunity again to see justice done. I mean, again, I'd be cynical even if it rolled through. But like I was saying earlier on, at least a 111 of them did the right thing. 364 have been coerced by something. I mean, a normal person would never choose to do that. Not not someone who is saying, hey. I'm your political representative here to actually fight the good fight on your behalf so that the quality of your life is maintained and hopefully improved. Why would you make a it's like saying, yes. We've voted to allow these, 10,000 armed men into them to kill as many people as you want next week because and if you oppose that, you're a racist. Can you tell me a little more about how Elon Musk relates to this? He he weighed in on it. How did he do that? He he He's been goading. Let's use the word goading, but he he's quite precise. He's not sort of, he's been having a go at Keir Starmer.
But Starmer is a menace to the nation because of the decisions that he's making. Now we all know that. We've known that ever since this puppet, the puppet du jour, got in because he's obviously compromised as well, isn't he? None of them. I mean, this is the thing that everybody needs to jump at because the media are not gonna suggest this, but none of them are their own independent decision makers. No. And this is question.
[00:43:38] Unknown:
When did Ritchie Sunak when when was his term supposed to be up? I know that he called an early election. When when would it have expired had there not been an early election? Because I don't know. I don't follow these things about when he even got in. There's just a rotating door of complete mediocre assholes, really. I know. I know. Eric, you got any idea?
[00:43:56] Unknown:
Yeah? Have you got any idea, Eric, when he was supposed to see his term up? Was it next this year, was it, or something? I can't remember, I'll be honest with you. I really can't remember. I think it was
[00:44:08] Unknown:
this year. You mean Roland Wright as he was called. But, really, I just can't understand it. I think people are too comfortable at the moment. They're far too comfortable. But I have noticed, somebody said that the supermarket shelves appear to be empty. And the excuse now is, farms can't find the staff, haven't got the staff to, produce the products. I mean, I went along to the farm the other day, to pick up some eggs. They're completely out of eggs. There's been a run of eggs, apparently. And I think people are worried about this, new, oh, Or flu? Fake.
Oh, that's right. Flu epidemic, which is gonna affect animals. Yeah. There's always something that could go on. They're they're playing that card, but that's the excuse. They haven't got people to actually,
[00:44:59] Unknown:
produce because and then the next one is the English are too lazy to do the jobs. That's why we have to put farmers Yeah. And that's, like, the Elon Musk thing. People over. It was just a week or so ago, He was complaining about how America doesn't have enough tech workers and that it's such a great thing that we're importing all of these h one b visa Indians into the program computer. Yeah. Yeah. He's he's your pal now, isn't he? Isn't he Elon the pal of the Americans? My god.
[00:45:27] Unknown:
I know he's too busy. What Trump has been saying.
[00:45:30] Unknown:
Yep. So the the they sit in there. They have this hard, you know, hard line approach that we're supposed to applaud regarding immigration, and then they say things like that. And it just sends people spinning.
[00:45:45] Unknown:
Which is, of course, part of the plan. So the narrative department, the guys that are really writing the script, wherever they are, Chatham House, you know, I don't know, CIA, all these guys talking to one another in their little sort of, you know, coterie of psychopathic nonsense, they're spinning up a narrative that they've laid down. And the whole idea is to shift it. It's obvious that the I mean, we're quoting things here. We've no way of actually proving whether any of this is true. Like you were just saying, Eric, you know, the English are too lazy to pick pick, vegetable. If you say that to if you say it to anybody for 5 years, it's like the repetition. If you broadcast that relentlessly for 5 or 10 years, I mean, literally, everybody will start to think that. It's completely not true. Yeah. If you broadcast another idea, we are the most hardworking industrious people and we get furious with lying politicians. And if you are one, you better watch out. Then that will become the reality. It's to do with the words that are being allowed into circulation. It's like we're saying earlier. It's not about freedom of speech or the lack of it. It's about the control of speech.
There will be periods where you you do have freedom of speech and other days where they'll suddenly change all the rules and you've gotta go to prison because she said the word peanut or something. And this is offensive to, you know, whatever peanut pickers or some of you know, it's just nonsense, intentionally so. It's meant to be nonsense. Several of several of my neighbors say that. Oh, the English, they're too lazy. And I and my attitude is,
[00:47:11] Unknown:
well, we weren't turned late too lazy to fight in both world wars, were we? So and to me, when they say that, that is a that is an act of treason to say that, because that's like urinating on the graves of our ancestors. How dare they say that? We're probably we're extremely hardworking. Most countries are extremely hardworking if they've got the will to work. But the trouble is is that I think most of the indigenous population are a bit like a puppy that's been kicked down and down and down all the time. And, it what incentive have people got to work? You gotta look at the incentive. There's no incentive
[00:47:51] Unknown:
because you get Well, no. There is There is. The hill. There is. Well, it's a it's a kind even that. Even the incentivization is a kind of theatrical, sketch. It changes all the time, doesn't it? Under Margaret Thatcher, everybody goes out and you're all supposed to go make loads of money, and and and a lot of people did. And the idea that people should own their houses is something that broadly I agree with, but I don't agree with having to own them by paying a mortgage that's 3 times greater than the amount of money that they borrowed. All of these things are just they basically switch the ideology to keep restimulating the transfer of money. And, of course, we know where the bulk of it goes. And it didn't go in your or my pocket. It goes elsewhere.
I mean, you could argue, of course, that the from a technical point of view, life is better. It is. You know, we're living longer than we used to even though psychologically we're under such a sort of bombardment all the time that past generation wouldn't really know what we're dealing with, to be quite honest. And, in many ways, I'd rather live 200 years ago, although I probably would have been dead by now from a bullet on a battlefield or something like that. You know? It would have you just had different challenges. But it's the dishonorable and sort of psychological of the whole thing that that rankles. It's like psychological and spiritual warfare all the time, and it's very destabilizing.
It's it's distressing in a way that maybe physical wounds aren't. I don't know. I mean, I don't wish anybody physical wounds either, but, it's a different type of warfare because they're so clever, and they've had all their psychological research units, particularly since World War 1 and blah blah blah blah blah. And for what? For what? I mean, I've mentioned here before, you know, this idea of we no doubt, everybody thinks about action. What do we do? Should we be doing something? Why is there such, a resistance to acting in those ways which we're not gonna talk about on air? You know exactly what everybody knows what I'm talking about. It comes up. It's not as if it's gone. It's not that the English or the people of Britain are a nation of wimps, but they are a nation of people that have been cudgeled psychologically and are and are trying to find a way to connect up with people that see this. And this is what's happening in this show and others like it, which is great. But I came across a little quote, which I I sent to the Telegram group earlier today. I wanna read it out.
The author is unknown, but I think it really touches on a very, interesting and deep sort of psychological understanding. These are the sorts that I read it's like this is like seeing the situation in the 2nd and third degree, not just the first degree. Everybody sees everything in the first degree, the drama of the news. But what we're trying to do is to go to the second level and the third level to find out what the foundations for this disease are. But this is this is just a little thing that's written, but I think it's very powerful. It goes as follows.
The most terrifying force of death comes from the hands of men who wanted to be left alone. They try so very hard to mind their own business and provide for themselves and those that they love. They resist every impulse to fight back knowing the forced and permanent change of life that will come from it. They know that the moment they fight back, their lives, as they have lived them, are over. The moment the men who wanted to be left alone are forced to fight back, it is a form of suicide. They are literally killing off who they used to be. Which is why, when forced to take up violence, these men who wanted to be left alone, fight with unholy vengeance against those who murdered their former lives.
They fight with raw hate and a drive that cannot be fathomed by those who are merely play acting at politics and terror. True terror will arrive at these people's door, and they will cry, scream, and beg for mercy, but it will fall upon the deaf ears of the men who just wanted to be left alone. Now although it's quite a dramatic way of putting it, I think there really is an excellent point in that. This there is something I've felt this a long time that we talk about battles and warfare. I've never been in 1, and frankly, I don't really wanna be in 1, to be quite honest. We've got a historical view of these things, and we go, oh, yeah. And the guys that survived it, they all had you know, they had a great tales to tell, and this is true, of course. And it seems to be an inherent part of our history going back millennia that these things spring up every now and again. But I think there's something very telling about that. There is a pressure holding people back that we still think, right to the very last moment, if only these people that are in charge would start to behave honorably and decently, we would probably even forgive them all their crimes if they got us back on the right path.
But we have literally no evidence to suggest that they are ever going to do that. And I think what's happened over the past few days here is a lot is alarming for that reason. It's it's hitting something a bit deeper, a much deeper nerve with people than has been hit before. That's my kind of take on it. Because I've seen a lot of excellent and incisive commentary from people all over the place who are furious, angry, and disgusted, you know, the usual adjectives, but a little bit more than that. And if people go quiet with this inside them, it's almost like I think a bomb's gonna go off. I'm not saying I want one to go off, but you can we're being set up. I feel like there's something intentionally being organised here, like, as part of the latest psychological warfare. Yeah. There's something not still not quite right about it. Why now? Why does it just happen now? Why are they doing this now? That's right. It's like the farmers.
[00:53:45] Unknown:
Now there I I went into a farm this afternoon, one that's just around the corner from me. It's walking distance to get some eggs. Luckily, they've got a load of eggs. They're piled up with them. Strange. And, I love talking to the woman there. And I said, I actually think that the farmers are being led by the nose because the government have the most the best, social engineers that our money can buy. And they win every time. And they want people to march through London. That that is a data gathering exercise. And all these marches approved nothing.
To me, the way forward is to ignore government and act like a well, you look about it. Look at it. Governments want you to have leaders. We're conditioned to have leaders. Why? Because then, they can undermine those leaders, and infiltrate, and destroy whatever movements are against them. But we've got to be like a a river where where you block part of it off, you get tributaries. And these tributaries have leaders, and then they have sub tributaries. In other words So and so? Ever they try that's right. And it's like water. That's right.
And look at the, yellow vests in France. They were very successful because they didn't have a leader. Then they got infiltrated, and the leader got in. And who's who knows about the yellow vest today? They've just disappeared, as far as I know. Well, COVID happened. That that that bit a lot of people didn't disappear. That that they haven't reemerged in the strength, I don't think, as they as they were. They might have done. I don't know. But we get no news about them. So although anything on the mainstream really is a pantomime, so you can't really believe. But this is the thing. Why should we take notice of these buffoons that nobody voted for? And I've got a question for any politician that knocks on my door, they don't lock on doors now because they're too frightened. And that is, 1, do you believe we live in a democracy? Which they'll always say yes. So, well, could you please give me the exact date when we, voted for multiculturalism, please?
Please give us a date. If you believe in democracy, sure, you would have had a choice on that. So when was the date? And I know the answer because we never had a choice on it. And this is the thing, we don't live in a this idea of Well, that that's why we elect leaders, though. They're supposed to,
[00:56:00] Unknown:
do the voting for us, isn't it? It's it's not really a pure democracy. It's kind of a we vote for our oligarchs to to lord out over us more or less.
[00:56:12] Unknown:
But do we need a hybrid.
[00:56:15] Unknown:
Do we need a leader? Because we're conditioned from school to to always look for a leader. Well, if you want a leader, look in the mirror.
[00:56:22] Unknown:
Well, I think we need it's a it's a it's a it's a complex question. Maybe we just can't avoid having that. Maybe we we can't avoid it because people say in a group, a tribe, are at different levels of competence, different levels of competence regarding growing of crops or wielding an axe against an enemy or have greater physical endurance than other members of the tribe. Certain qualities lend themselves to being able to command the respect of other men. It used to be the guy who was the biggest and the strongest and swung the axe the most and took the most heads off. Understandably so. We would want people like that in and amongst our number if our tribe was attacked.
From looking at history, this seems to be what's always taking place. And, of course, you then get the rise of sophisticated civilizations, which have developed in a much deeper way. And, I think the fundamental management of civilized sort of organization was known 1000 of years ago. Okay. The form of the way that we live now with, what's the latest toys? AI and crypto and all this kind of stuff that's taking place have changed the form of it, but the essence of control remains that. And, of course, the types of people that control us now are the more cunning, developed and attuned psychopathic mentality that, you know, my sort of take on it today, it evolves all the time, is, hey, I come from a long line of guys and gals that have ruled you a lot and we're never gonna stop doing that.
Why? I don't care why. I don't think it's a logical thing for them. It's just in a it's like a behavior pattern. It's a bit like a lion goes around liening. You can't sort of talk it out of it. Will you stop eating those wildebeest? No. Like, I'm a lion. That's what I do. Well, that's what these people are like. We are leaders, they think. And, of course, the whole idea of democracy is that somehow we can change it. I mean, democracy is a sham, obviously. It's just a great theatrical deception. And why was it introduced in a way to undermine the authority of a natural king? I mean, we have to remind ourselves that we have had good ones. Henry the 8th wasn't one of them, by the way. I was just I was just seeing something today where, they're looking at the amount of people that Henry actually sent off to be killed.
It's estimated somewhere between 50 to 70,000. That's an unpleasant man, isn't it? What happened to him? Who was controlling him? Apparently, he was a great guy. It was about the age of 24 until he got thrown off a horse or something and started getting fat. You know, all of There already is no doubt. These other it's the influences behind the throne that we never get to see. And, of course, they're so strong, those influences, they never want us to see them, but we know that they're there. This control of a group psychology, group agreement at these higher levels, these people have become murderous because they've got so much cover that they never get caught, like the whole of the courts themselves have been, you know, roped into their cause.
And it's almost like the more theatrically they they proclaim things like, you know, the integrity of British justice, the more you know you're in the presence of the purest, finest bullshit you ever heard in your life. It's it's pure theater, and it's very effective for controlling the minds of people to think that this is the place. You know, I'll go to a court and I'll get justice there. Anyway, it's it's big stuff. I'm gonna play a song now. I'm gonna play a song because I think we should play a song. And all and this is in keeping. This is also in keeping. I played this years ago, actually. This is a Van Morrison song, Western Man, and the lyrics are pretty apt for what we're talking about. It's about what happened to you and why weren't you paying attention and all that kind of stuff. We're gonna listen to Van Morrison for about 3 and a half minutes, and then we'll be back. You'll listen to Paul English live here on WBN 324.
Here's the song.
[01:00:18] Unknown:
Western man has no plan since he became complacent. Stop believing in himself. Let others skew his rewards while he was dreaming. While he was dreaming, others were scheming, doing deals behind his back. Now this young man is a drift and under attack. What happened in between? Now there's no other bite of the cherry, unless he's prepared to fight. Start on and you've got the freedom. You've got freedom. The arsonist bolted from the stables. The lunatics have taken over the farm. Your tickets have taken over the main house. That stole that wine while he was dreaming.
Cat chickens have taken over the main building. The governors have gone over the wall. Baptiste meetings in the forest. Oh, there's was scheming. Screaming while he was dreaming. Oh, there's was scheming while he was dreaming.
[01:03:50] Unknown:
Attention all listeners. Are you seeking uninterrupted access to WBN 324 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.
[01:04:12] 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 324 Talk Radio.
[01:04:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Thank you. You listen to Paul English Live. We're here every Thursday, 3 PM to 5 PM US EST, 8 PM to 10 PM in the UK, and a bit longer for those of you that are tuned in on Rumble and a couple of other outlets, Radio Soapbox and elsewhere. Welcome to part 2. That was quite a heavy chunky first hour, I think, about as heavy and as, serious as as we've done here for some time, but these are heavy and serious times, I think. Let's let's not lighten the load so much, but let's change, focus. I'd like to go back to really what's happening out in California with the fires right now just to change tack.
And, what is, you Americans, you American types, Patrick and Paul, what's the latest there? What's what's the latest tolerable I've got a few stories that have floated across my desk about the completely artificial of what it would appear sort of establishment of these fires. There's something certainly not genuine about them. I saw that absolutely ludicrous interview with the mayor of somewhere, this Bint, who literally wouldn't say a word, sort of in all part of the mess. So what what's the current? What's the latest on that right now? Because what time is it out there now? 1 o'clock in the afternoon?
1 o'clock in the afternoon.
[01:05:49] Unknown:
Yes. Happy about that. Oh, Pacific time. The yeah. The mayor, I believe, was out in Africa. Has been, away from California and out in Africa attending something in Ghana for the, like, the inauguration of the new president. So she had you know, she's she's oblivious to the whole thing. And then, they had the plea they they there's a lot of talk about the fire chief who's some Lesbo, you know, DEI type person that got in and just oblivious to everything as well. Just sounds like incompetence all around. Otherwise, it was planned incompetence that it, you know, shuffled the neck and shuffled and
[01:06:31] Unknown:
This morning, I also heard something about them diverting, like, 14 or $17,000,000 from the fire department's budget. Something like that for, DEI.
[01:06:42] Unknown:
Equipment being sent to Ukraine in in the past couple few years.
[01:06:49] Unknown:
Yeah. Equipment being sent to sent to the Ukraine Ukraine. Funds for firefighting, diverted to their left wing liberal DEI inclusion diversity, bullshit, program. Yeah. Mhmm. And while, while California burns. Yeah.
[01:07:17] Unknown:
You know? It's talked about a lot of the people that special. These these homes are are all these Hollywood celebrity types, like Billy Crystal, James Wood. And I'm Yeah. I'm sure there's a whole list of others that I have no clue about because it's it's that whole area is is just full of, rich rich homes being burnt down.
[01:07:41] Unknown:
Well, Samuel You can't I heard that a lot of fire hydrants. Have you read that thing that many of the fire hydrants Yeah. Because the water was diverted
[01:07:50] Unknown:
be for, salmon fishing for the Indian population. That's one I heard. And then another was that a lot of the water was being diverted into the ocean Mhmm. From the rivers because they they wanted to protect smelt, which is a type of small fish that people you know, they have smelt fries around here where it's like a fish fry. It's just a small, you know, fish. And they closed down about the all all 4 dams there, so there's no water.
[01:08:25] Unknown:
Right. There was no water to fight the fires. Okay? Yeah. There was no money to fight the fires. There was no person, in authority, with the wherewithal or skill or ability to fight the fire there, you know, the whole inclusion bull thing, the whole the whole thing smells.
[01:08:54] Unknown:
It it's And Biden was just there, and they shut down the air traffic.
[01:08:59] Unknown:
Mhmm. I think it was a Yeah. So they So they couldn't do the air drops. Okay. Have they have they indicated
[01:09:15] Unknown:
what caused this? Is that this is what a Well, the term that was coming from a story yet. For heating itself. Homeless people getting
[01:09:24] Unknown:
cold, building a little building little fires, a 100 mile an hour wind whipped up, and next thing you know, Southern California is ablaze. It was a it was a homeless guy.
[01:09:38] Unknown:
So it's a homeless guy, but the homeless guys must be lighting fires every night because it's cold out there. So Oh, yeah. It's the wind, is it, that did it? They're saying it's this Really? The wind did it. If it hadn't been the wind, it would have 100 mile per hour winds,
[01:09:54] Unknown:
which doesn't help. I've I've only seen one video. It's a popular video that's going around of these 2 guys in the house with their dog, and it just looks like a bomb is going off constantly because of the the flames. And, apparently, he had cut down enough shrubbery around his house that that it didn't touch his house, but it's just a dramatic video if you if you see it. It's just Inflationary.
[01:10:21] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:10:21] Unknown:
So who who knows what actually caused it? I mean, these things happen all the time. It could have been a controlled burn that got out of control or it could have been intentional for all we know.
[01:10:33] Unknown:
Well, you know, it is another instance where everything with a blue roof apparently survived. You know?
[01:10:44] Unknown:
Is that so? All
[01:10:47] Unknown:
is well. All is well. Mhmm.
[01:10:53] Unknown:
Yeah. All is well if you've got a blue roof. Is that what you're saying, Paul? Yeah? Remain calm. All is well. All is well. So blue this is blue roofism chapter 2. First Hawaii 2 2 years ago, and now it's happening. I've not seen anything about the blue roofs. I didn't realize that there was, a blue roof Okay.
[01:11:16] Unknown:
Conspiracy taking place again. Okay. In in full disclosure, I did get that that information secondhand, but I'm sure it'll come out eventually. So don't quote me on that. It's okay. You know, do a little bit more research. You know, this program is not intended to treat, diagnose, prevent, or cure any liberal mind warp.
[01:11:41] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[01:11:42] Unknown:
Listeners are urged to do their to exercise their own due diligence and research any information presented here. It's all good. It's all good. I don't know. The idea,
[01:11:58] Unknown:
the idea that's one of the ideas that's flying around is that this is, sabotaged by the Democrat party to, cause as much disruption as possible prior prior to the arrival of mister Trump to lead you to the promised land. Is is is that a story that's flooding around over there? Could be. And it and it's just a it's just a miracle winky dink
[01:12:20] Unknown:
that they are burning areas that are basically earmarked for, like, the 2028 Olympic Park. I mean, that's the exact area where they're going to be building Olympic Park.
[01:12:36] Unknown:
Oh. And and is there concern therefore that if the 2028 Olympics were to take place, it would be under Donald's management, and he would get all the reflected glory of that, and they don't want him to have it. Is that part of it?
[01:12:50] Unknown:
Well, no. They've got a lot of land that they've gotta clear with a lot of really, really expensive houses.
[01:12:56] Unknown:
I'm hearing that. I understand. I see.
[01:12:59] Unknown:
So it's a bit like the fire of London. You wanna redesign London, let's burn it down and and say some baker set up some fire off. So what I hear from Is that what you're saying? Fire what I hear what I hear about the fire is that 5 people have been killed,
[01:13:12] Unknown:
and it's burned 20,000 acres and leveled 2,000 structures, and there were a 130,000 people evacuated. That's what I've got right now.
[01:13:25] Unknown:
Well, 5 dead is LA Times. Very low, I suppose, considering the scale of the whole thing. Right. If that's true. But, yeah, they had evacuations,
[01:13:34] Unknown:
so that that helped. But a 100 and 30 evacuating a 130,000 people is no small feat either.
[01:13:42] Unknown:
Right. Especially in California, even though they do have 13 lanes going each way.
[01:13:47] Unknown:
Well, it's the 2nd largest city in the in the USA after New York City. So that yeah, that's definitely definitely, probably not managed the best way because they they they should have seen it coming.
[01:14:08] Unknown:
I don't think it was managed at all. I mean, they've they've had okay. Let's look at what led up to it. They've had a drought. Okay? We've been dealing with all kinds of weird weather. Okay? They have a drought that that was that's unnatural. Okay? And then they've got insurance companies that are having problems with legislating bodies and administrative bodies, making it, possible for insurance companies to survive by raising their rates. Well, the insurance companies couldn't do that. They were regulated. So they decided, okay. Well, if we can't make a profit, we'll just pull out. Okay? Well, guess what? How many of these homes see that are burning right now do you think are not covered by insurance?
I mean, we're talking 1,000,000 of dollars in properties. You know, even if you look at just one, I'm sure you could find a $1,000,000 property halfway up a hill. Well, then there should have been an incentive for them to clear out the fire hazards beforehand. It shouldn't, but they're not allowing why you didn't. But they but they, there are what is 6 was it 6 miles or 60 miles of forest that started burning, and there were absolutely no firebreaks in that nat national forest. There were no fire breaks whatsoever. So the fire started at one end and went all the way through.
[01:15:40] Unknown:
Which there again, planning could've could've been intentional.
[01:15:45] Unknown:
Exactly. And and this was the fire before. This was the earlier Northern California fire. No. No. Nothing about this smells right. Nothing. Not any part of it. No. I No.
[01:16:01] Unknown:
No. It doesn't. Is it I mean, it it feels exactly the same as the Hawaii thing. It's obviously in a different location, but it still feels artificial. And the sort of polling communication is not what is not the way your nation would have responded 30 years ago. It just isn't. It's like all the governments respond to all these situations in a weird way. That's obviously by design. No matter what the issue may be, whether it's the Muslim rape gangs over here, your fire, or whatever's coming up next week. Like, we have a new thing every 2 weeks, don't we? 2 or 3 weeks something. Some great big thing has to be paid attention to, and then it goes down to the
[01:16:43] Unknown:
That's the thing. And and like the song goes, it never rains in Southern California. And for the last 2 years, there hasn't been rain to fill the reservoirs that they need, and they didn't plan it right for the filling the other you know, taking advantage of the dams Mhmm. And and diverting water to to this place. It it's obviously incompetence or it's planned incompetence by some devious people, but I I don't underestimate people's stupidity even in high positions of of government that these people just didn't do it because they're they're lazy or they're just stupid. Mhmm.
But then again, what I act Paul was saying they have the Olympics coming, so maybe they wanted to clear it out. Maybe the people are so devious that they would do something like that. Of course, they wouldn't. Would.
[01:17:37] Unknown:
Course they would do that. Of course. Of course. They would. I have I have an answer for anybody that thinks that anybody in government is actually looking out for the people or is actually following their oath of office to the constitution. I have the perfect response for them. That's such a crock of shit. There you go.
[01:18:02] Unknown:
I think it is. It
[01:18:07] Unknown:
is.
[01:18:10] Unknown:
Hello? Yes. It is a crock of shit. We'll have to get you one of those, aren't we? You'll have to get Paul to get you one. Yes. Yes. Well well, crock of shit. No. Thank you. I don't think I'd have a crock of shit. No. What? Deliver through a letter box. You know, that could be a prize, couldn't it? Star prize. Get some manure delivered straight through your letter box. First prize.
[01:18:31] Unknown:
That was, Monty Python, wasn't it? I I was just told they did get rain. The problem is they didn't have reservoirs set up to collect the rain.
[01:18:42] Unknown:
Well, isn't that special? It's
[01:18:46] Unknown:
I I I think it's all of these sorts of the way that the thing's handled with these really what are feeble excuses from the political class for all of these things, they're it's also feeble. There's nothing coherent about it, which means it's obviously preplanned. It's meant is this part of this process of displaying, you know, back to the electorate just how stupid, bumbling, and useless your government and governors are? I mean, not that you need a degree in rocket science to work back that out, but it definitely seems part of it. It's it is. It's just artificial and weird. I've just we've just caught the news footage over here in the morning, our time, which is like 9 o'clock in the morning for us, which is 1 AM over there, just showing the sheer scale of it, which from the brief bits I saw is it's enormous.
And the idea that anything would get to that size, is odd. It's not the it's like I said, it's not the sort of thing that would happen in America 30 years ago, Is it? Maybe it did. I don't you did have fires that big. They got completely wiped. They've had these for for probably centuries in California. So you think they'd know how to deal with it. Right? But as you're saying, they don't know how to deal with it or they've decided to step down. They've stepped down. Stupidity. The whole don't under underestimate
[01:20:01] Unknown:
stupidity because it's it's just the it it's how it works, especially when there's corruption in government. California is gonna be one of the most corrupt governments out there. Really? And they the way they charge for every little thing that they they tax you on, and it's all going into pockets of gangsters. Mhmm. Yeah. They have to you know, I I wouldn't I would say my first thought of it is it's incompetence, and the second is devious incompetence.
[01:20:32] Unknown:
Yeah. Don't forget gruesome Newsom.
[01:20:35] Unknown:
Well, that's the weird thing about Newsom. Right? He he was supposed to be the Democratic candidate that that took over for Biden because Biden dropped out of the race back in the summer. They were all there was a speculation because Biden had announced it, and then right away everybody's like, oh, it's gonna be Newsom. And it turned out to be Harris, Kamala Harris. Well, Newsom, he he's a he's an odd duck. He's I think he's Nancy Pelosi's nephew. And then he was married to a woman. His his first his wife divorced him and then married Donald Trump Junior.
So figure that out. It'd be this such such a crazy situation we have in American politics, and these are the best of the best dem democracy you can imagine.
[01:21:24] Unknown:
That's a free word. And I'm not talking about a Winterschnitzel.
[01:21:29] Unknown:
I mean, I don't really I mean, I don't know if I'm gonna upset Americans, but none of us here look at America as a bastion of integrity. No. Nor should I. We don't look at our own country as a bastion of integrity either, nor the European Union, nor any of them. Maybe Putin by default is the least worst of the law. But even then, you know, don't hold your breath. You've no idea what kind of game is being played here. It's difficult. I mean, they they want to as we said, they want to throw out little heroes that we're supposed to go and connect to. I see that, you know, Nigel Farage, apparently, Elon Musk has had harsh words with him or something thinking he's not the guy to lead reform. What is all this? Really, what's going on? I mean, Musk obviously doesn't. Someone pointed out in the chat. I can't remember what it was. Billy or someone, you know, he obviously or Steve. I can't remember who who wrote it, so my apologies. But By the way, I have He obviously doesn't his companies. He's too busy tweeting. I mean, what does he actually do? I mean, he's a fake.
[01:22:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Exactly. They're all fake. By the way, I can't do it in the rumble chat. You I try to post something in rumble chat chat, and it gives me an error. I've reloaded it a few times.
[01:22:37] Unknown:
Well, it's you, Patrick. You're a troublemaker. Look at all these other people firing
[01:22:42] Unknown:
messages. Problem on Eric's show the other day.
[01:22:44] Unknown:
Bless you. You know? It could be. It's you. It's obviously Wisconsin it is or something. Something's taking place out there. Mhmm. But I would suggest you log out and log back in again, but then what do I know? But, too Sorry, Patrick.
[01:22:57] Unknown:
You're the common denominator.
[01:23:00] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:23:00] Unknown:
We got locked out of the studio, didn't we?
[01:23:04] Unknown:
That was last week when wasn't it? Patrick and I got locked out of the studio. We couldn't come back in. This this was rumble. I couldn't just literally could not get back into the studio. I think the software is a bit dodgy actually on there. I'm locked in the studio.
[01:23:18] Unknown:
Anyway, jumping jumping over to some more another comment from Elon Musk recently, which, I stumbled across or came through the, the Telegram chat. This is in the, this this is sort of another one of the sort of bizarro statements one would think. This is in the Daily Express, express dotco.uk. Has it got a date on it? Probably somewhere. Can I see it? Tuesday. So just a couple of days ago. The article reads, Elon Musk names the world's biggest problem as China and India lose combined 773,000,000 people. Elon Musk has labeled population decline the greatest threat to humanity as China and India are expected to lose a combined 773,000,000 people. I'm hard pressed to know what where are they gonna lose them anyway?
I mean, do they just sort of wake up where have those people gone? Do they just misplace them or something a bit like I do with my car keys? I mean, I you know, Emilie's in my car keys. That's serious. No. No. But this is just a bit isn't that an odd thing?
[01:24:26] Unknown:
Yeah. Cool. We're talking about a combination of decline in fertility, decline in the childbearing age, young adults, and the, death of the aging population. What they're doing is they're talking about the the the cove. They're talking about the cove. It's taken out a bunch of people, and and, there's going to be an inevitable decline of the human race globally globally because that was their plan.
[01:25:00] Unknown:
They was looking for that from the beginning. I'm telling you. I'm telling you.
[01:25:05] Unknown:
Okay. Okay. Well, yeah. It's it's as if he's in place now. I know. Like, come out with a contradictory, narrative. Obviously, you know, we've, they're always talking about the reduction of popularity. We've got the Georgia Guidestones, which fortunately haven't been burned down yet. Georgia's not on fire, I assume. They've not blown up.
[01:25:24] Unknown:
They've been blown up. Are they? They've been blown up. No more. Alright.
[01:25:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Are they? That was during COVID.
[01:25:32] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:25:33] Unknown:
Yeah. They're blowing up. Mhmm.
[01:25:36] Unknown:
There's video of it even. You can you can see it. Hey. By the way, this article as well has got these guys in there in loads of articles, experts. I've gotta meet these experts. He said, experts have, for many years, agreed that the world is set on a path for future population decline. Okay. Though there is disagreement about how fast this process will be and which countries will be affected the most. Why is this an issue? I don't understand. I don't understand why it's an issue. Is it are they arguing I mean, I've got a thing by Bookminster Fuller, you know, the guy he wrote Critical Path, which is a wonderful book. And, I think he did some calculation to say it would be relatively easy with proper organization.
Don't hold your breath on that. But with competent management of affairs for the planet to easily carry 50, 50,000,000,000 if we wanted. I don't understand what the point of it all is. It's it's as if there's a frenetic, economic activity thing in place all the time. Always some alarming story has to be communicated. I mean, I don't know what the population of the world was in the late 1800, but it might not have even got to a 1,000,000,000 by then. I mean, it's just it's obviously increased rapidly over the last century because of technology and the ability to produce more food and to transport it to where the mouths are in a timely fashion so that people can eat regularly.
Why would it be an issue? I really don't get it. There's a couple of little comments in regard to it as well. The the article, it says, gives no I'm I'm not going through the whole thing. It was just the headline that was really worth mentioning. It says, the article gives no reason why a reduced population is a bad thing. I would think the opposite, especially in 3rd world countries that can't blah blah blah. And someone else writes, for us here in the UK, this article seems like a sick joke. Population decline? Not. Would it be such a bad thing if the world's population stagnated or dropped slightly?
I mean, maybe it's bad for them because it's, isn't this the source of all his IT workers or something? Is that what he's concerned about? As he ships them and pushes them all over the place. It's a sort of manic narrative of everybody having to move around to fulfill economic job roles and quotas and all this, that, and the other. And this is contradicted by the claims they make for AI, which is that it's gonna reduce the requirement for work all over the place. And then there was that, who's the guy that heads up BlackRock? Larry Fink. Is that his name? I think it is. Yeah. Yeah. I think he's no. Yeah. Yeah. Larry's names.
He's a he's
[01:28:14] Unknown:
a shill for George Soros.
[01:28:16] Unknown:
You don't say. Really? You don't. But Larry, good old Larry was talking the other way about saying that the countries that would really do well are the countries whose population is declining because there would be room as it were. I think part of his there were many points he covered, not that there I'd and listen to them. But, one of the points he was making was that, the countries with lowering populations, there'll be more room for the implementation of AI systems and automation to automate things. Now
[01:28:50] Unknown:
these things always basically, I think you can argue these things either way. I never think it's about the technology. I always think it's about the intent behind it. Yeah. Is I think that's true of everything. That's what they're doing in Gaza, though. They're using these AI systems to go go over there and target people so that they can kill it and wipe kill them and wipe out the land, you know, every everything on the land and make it into, nature preserves or casinos or whatever they have in mind. Yeah. You know? Yeah. Right. I'm I'm not sure what
[01:29:20] Unknown:
I'm not sure what the study was, but, I heard not too long ago that every man, woman, and child on the planet could fit within the territorial borders of the state of Texas and have a few square feet to them to themselves. The entire global population could fit in the state of Texas. I don't think population is a problem. I think the fact that they have, lowered the sperm count and lowered the fertility rate to such an extent that the population numbers are going backwards. People are dying. There aren't any new birth certificates being issued that can be treated as warehouse receipts backing the bonds that are opened based on what the the child, the baby, is expected to earn through a lifetime of work.
[01:30:21] Unknown:
You know? It's probably that. You know?
[01:30:23] Unknown:
It's going it's it's like a roller coaster. It's a roller coaster. Let's let's bolster the population so we have all these birth certificates, and we can fund we can back these bonds for this totally huge albatross of, of a debt monetary system. Oh, crap. Well, let's see. We've got too many people. It's costing us too much to feed them. So let's kill a bunch of them off. Oh, damn. In about 25 years, we're gonna have to switch gears, and we're gonna have to build the population again. But the good news is is we'll get a brand new batch of birth certificates and a brand new batch of bonds. Yay.
[01:31:06] Unknown:
It's it's it's it's the game player. They the p these people obviously are very good at playing the existing game and want it to carry on. So anything that threatens the continuance of of the game is a bad thing. I think I think that's probably gonna be a key part of it. They've got this system that they've been running for a long time. By the way, anybody that's not quite fully up to speed with what Paul was just saying by way of sort of, you know, pairing it down, When babies are born, their birth certificates are valuable because governments use them to trade the expected tax contribution from that baby on financial exchanges.
A more silly and inhumane and daft arrangement, it would be hard to imagine. Unless, of course, you're an international financer and love the idea of controlling the economic life of everybody on the planet because, you know, for their own safety and all that kind of stuff. I'm all I keep coming back to the fact that we're operating in a game that was designed in prehistoric times and that to a great degree, the the the actual benefits that could accrue from modern technology, if I'm just impartial about it and don't get so all heads up and wound up about AI, which does slightly irritate me, but that's because I'm a sort of steam driven Luddite. You know, but, we can't actually really find out what those true benefits are because they're always filtered through this financial system, which nobody, certainly the politicians, don't understand. Rachel in accounts. Rachel Reeves or whatever she's called.
I saw something. Was it yesterday? They're about to do a massive bond issue, which means that the government needs to raise lots of money. So so we are told maybe they will do according to the rules of the game. And they'll need to do this because some bond holders who bought things 20 years ago or 10 years ago are about to come running through the door and they want their money back. So they have it's just a great big pyramid scheme and all this, that, and the other. It it's it's simply that the management of the earth then falls into the hands of the bean counters. And it's the bean counting system that's that's really the key part of the problem as we touch upon here repeatedly and will continue to do so, because we have to still find a way to get that overthrown, you know. It's whether as men, we decide to go to war and destroy all our previous lives as the anonymous quote was talking about.
[01:33:28] Unknown:
The United States has been in the hands that have been counted since 1900 or thereabouts, since 1900, for sure. Yeah. 1933 was when they when they turned the first cruise, and 1950 something with the IRS code, that was when they finished turning the screws. And now we're just dealing with trying to get these rusty damn screws out of the hinges. It's a I know. So
[01:33:54] Unknown:
Listen. I got a little clip here. Actually, it's not that long. It's about 5 minutes long. I'm gonna play the whole thing because it's kind of, appropriate given what we've just moved on to. This is from Greg Rees, who I catch every now and again. I love that guy. And it was released the other deal of him. Okay. Well, then you're gonna like this then. It's certainly from him. January 6th, it's called Debt Jubilee, and we've been talking about Debt Jubilee, haven't we, Patrick? Quite repeatedly. And both all of you here. We've been talking about the complete remission of debts, which is a biblical law supposed to happen every 50 years.
This is called Debt Jubilee Bitcoin and the Digital Age. The first bit's a bit of fluff, I think. Let me just make sure that it's actually you're gonna be able to hear it because I had to mute it. It was about to play. Let me just unmute that. Here we go. Let's let's listen to this. It's about 5 minutes long, but I think it'll give us quite a bit of food for thought. As I said, I think the first 30 minute 30 seconds to a minute is a bit of fluff and then it kicks into it. Here we go.
[01:34:51] Unknown:
Never sell your Bitcoin. Right?
[01:34:56] Unknown:
The Trumps have been very bullish on Bitcoin and cryptocurrency.
[01:35:00] Unknown:
Again, it's coming. Everybody knows it's coming, and the people who don't embrace it early are are gonna ultimately lose. Eric Trump recently met with Michael Saylor at Mar a Lago who has been proposing a plan to preserve
[01:35:14] Unknown:
US dollar dominance by utilizing Bitcoin as a reserve. Here's the strategy.
[01:35:20] Unknown:
You dump gold, demonetize the entire gold network. You buy Bitcoin. You buy 5,000,000 or 6,000,000 Bitcoin. You monetize the Bitcoin network, and you network, and you just define digital currency as the US dollar backed by US dollar equivalents and a regulated US custodian replaces every currency in the world with dollar, which the US controls, and it siphons off 100 of 1,000,000,000,000 of dollars of 20th century capital assets and half of the capital in the rest of the world. And most 75% of the capital of our enemies it's siphoned into Bitcoin.
And the bid beneficiary is the US government, and after that, every US company because we're the ones that own and run it.
[01:36:08] Unknown:
Trump has been rebranding the North American Union as Canada being the 51st state of the United States. And Justin Trudeau has now resigned, leaving a clear path for Pierre Poliyev to make significant changes. We haven't really seen a lot of concrete proposals
[01:36:26] Unknown:
from mister Polya. I mean, he he he did make one. That's not fair. You're right. He had one great opportunity for people to opt out of inflation. He recommended this last last spring. You can opt out of inflation if you invest your money in Bitcoin. Yeah. No. No. No. No. No. He stayed up late, watched all sorts of YouTube videos, and came to that conclusion. He said that himself. We're going to buy this shawarma
[01:36:51] Unknown:
with this Bitcoin. Send
[01:36:54] Unknown:
Done.
[01:36:55] Unknown:
Yep. I got it. You got the You got it.
[01:36:59] Unknown:
Guys,
[01:37:01] Unknown:
we did it. We bought the shawarma with Bitcoin. So that is my plan to enable Canada to become the blockchain and crypto capital of the world.
[01:37:11] Unknown:
Debt slavery has existed on earth for 1000 of years, which is why a cashless society has been of great concern to freedom loving souls. In the earliest days of civilization, farmers would borrow against their harvest. And if the harvest failed, the farmer would lose everything and become a slave until the debt was repaid. Eventually, the amount of slaves with nothing to lose becomes a threat to those in power, and so debt jubilees were issued at regular intervals as a matter of public stability. The Bible describes a debt jubilee that would happen every 50 years as an economic reset, a year of liberation and restoration where debts are forgiven, land is returned, and slaves are set free. The ancient Greeks had debt jubilees to avoid violent revolutions and uprisings.
As economist Lynn Alden wrote, it wasn't out of kindness that rulers did this. It was a solution to a societal math problem. If you run a computer long enough, eventually it starts to work less efficiently. Refreshing the power and rebooting the system gets the computer running smoothly again. A jubilee year has been celebrated every 25 years by the Catholic church since 1300, but the need for debt forgiveness has been avoided by the current debt based fiat system and the uniform commercial code, which has been running for nearly a century, and it is at its end. 2025 is a jubilee year, and pope Francis has called on affluent countries to forgive debts and to address ecological debt, which sounds like a carbon tax.
The emerging system is much more than just money. It is a cataloging system where every person and every piece of property can be connected via a digital identity. This is called tokenization and is set to replace the birth certificate and every other document of title in the real world. Biblical prophecy Christians are saying that this is the mark of the beast, but there is no need for a mark when facial recognition will do the job. And if it comes with debt forgiveness
[01:39:20] Unknown:
and universal basic income, then those who fight against the system will be seen as terrorists by the public. What's going to happen is the US dollar is gonna be the world reserve currency, and it's gonna run on 1,000,000,000 and 1,000,000,000 of mobile devices. And the digital asset that underlines underlies that currency is gonna be Bitcoin.
[01:39:48] Unknown:
Cool. Hey. Great. So should we all move to America? Looks like you're gonna be running the show, guys.
[01:39:54] Unknown:
Got it. Yeah. Well, Bitcoin is said to have been started by Alan Greenspan. Yep. I was part of the plan all along. I I assume that's what's happening. I think so.
[01:40:07] Unknown:
Not not that Japanese kid Satoshi in his basement eating noodles. Not him.
[01:40:13] Unknown:
Nope. No.
[01:40:14] Unknown:
Really? Well, I'm shocked. I never I never bought the originating an originating story when it came out. So hasn't it just gone through a $100,000 supposedly?
[01:40:25] Unknown:
Yeah. Not that long ago.
[01:40:29] Unknown:
Well, if it's gonna be worth a million, we all need to be buying them right now, don't we, or something? What are we doing? The whole thing just sounds like the next stage of madness. It's now a sophisticated AI driven madness, but it it still doesn't sound that much healthier.
[01:40:41] Unknown:
Yeah. It's just that's like another casino tactic of robbing you of your money.
[01:40:46] Unknown:
Why do you need a world reserve currency?
[01:40:50] Unknown:
Yeah. Exactly. Why? Why do you need one?
[01:40:52] Unknown:
I mean, the world reserve currency, which used to be the pound before it was the dollar, is basically the currency that's of the strongest the strong armed commercialized
[01:41:02] Unknown:
lot, the merchants of the earth. Paul, now that you mentioned the pound, people do metal detecting around here, and they find British pounds here because they used to be trading. Yeah.
[01:41:16] Unknown:
Proper money, Eric? Proper money. Silver. Yeah. Oh, yeah.
[01:41:20] Unknown:
No. We need we need fuck bulbs. That's what you really need.
[01:41:24] Unknown:
We do. We need the Fockham Hall. I think the Fockbob should be the world's reserve currency. Might as well be. Why not? Yeah. Why not? I mean, it's it's,
[01:41:33] Unknown:
well, let's face it. People believe in a bit of paper being a currency. Someone says that's a £10. No. You believe it. So why can't you have a 10 well, no. There's no £10. It's it's actually a 99p for no. Fot Bob. Because as most things are 3.99, 4.99, why hasn't anybody brought out a 99p coin? And wondered that? Just think about it. It'd be handy, wouldn't it? And there you go. 395 or 399. So what do they have? 9599 pence. I think it's the same in America, isn't it? You know? Sort of 99¢ coin. 99¢. You know? They want to have a 99¢ coin.
[01:42:09] Unknown:
Well, it may makes it a bit challenging, but, yeah, maybe maybe there'd be a roaring trade in them. I just when I'm hearing things, I mean, it's a really good piece by Greg Rees that, is very useful. That's the second or third time I've heard it, and I've put the link to it in the Rumble chat for those of you that wanna watch it as well. Not that you really need to see it, but, of course, it can help. Alvin Cort has just written that Bitcoin is £74,000, which I guess is around about a $100,000. £74,000. Oh, if only I hadn't thrown those 300 bitcoin away in 2015.
What did I do? I've heard stories like that from family. Oh, these horrific ones. There's a there's a skip somewhere in in Wales. A guy had, 10,000 Bitcoins on it and his wife threw the computer away because it was driving her crazy. And he spent 2 years with a metal detector. This is about 10 years ago going through the community dump. Never found it, of course. Just got slowly losing his mind. I mean, this is a terrible thing. You don't want that, but you can see what would happen. But I I find that you see, the way that they're thinking when they're describing this, it's as if the whole description of the game, the plan, the system is out is out of date with the technology. I still feel that. I don't know exactly what I mean, but it still didn't feel right to me, because the challenges are, I think I mean, look. I'm getting slightly sort of utopian about the whole thing.
Really, there should be no issue with producing the finest quality food ever. Why? You know, we've got Musk here saying people are dying. It's it's a big problem. People are dying. So why are they trying to kill us off by wrecking the food system? Because you've got these contradictory stories, I think, intentionally, we touched upon this early earlier, you know, to create confusion. $92,500 is BTC, so it's it's nowhere near a 100,000. It's not worth very much, is it? 92,500. But you've got these contradictory stories which are knocking us off balance all the time with with regards to where we're supposed to go. But if I just if we just sort of do the sort of, you know, the idealistic thinking stuff, we've got all this technology to move things around at a lower energy cost than we've ever had before. You've still got these incumbents in the energy space who insist on controlling all that, through the use of oil or whatever, and now through the city windmills, which don't work, and then now the battery cars, which are rubbish.
There's limitless amounts or unlimited amounts of hydrogen that could be used and harnessed quite easily to produce the cleanest and most efficient form of power and energy that we need. There's so much good that can be done. Yet all these brains, there's such a huge amount of and they are clever. I I grant you that. These people are very clever, but they're all involved in running a system for them to be top of a game, which I've never felt needs to even be played anymore. What's the point of playing it? I don't you know, I know I'm being sort of a bit of a dorkier, but I I just don't get it in the gut. It never made too much sense to me. I've often thought that the real challenges would be that if you get huge swathes of populations all over the place really well sorted with regards to food and energy, clothing and shelter, and education. It's needed because you've got to have a focus for the mind. The main challenge is gonna be, what do you do to keep people occupied?
I mean, the thing that's kept us occupied for the last few 100 years has been economic hardship, is what's driven people and battles and wars and all this kind of stuff because of the perception that there's not enough stuff around. And I guess pre the industrial revolution, there wasn't enough stuff around. It was all relying on manpower. But now you've got Musk creating these robots. You can buy can't you buy a robot for $16,000 now if you want? And these are just the first phase of the if you want one. I mean, I'm not particularly keen myself. But, you know, technology has a way of, not being resisted. It just goes on and on and builds up and builds up. Okay. So it's coming.
But yet again, somebody wants to control it all. This is the bit you go, can you just let go of that old fashioned idea because you've actually solved the problem? It's as if people don't wanna realize or have us realize that in principle, the problems have been solved and were solved a long time ago. And what we're dealing with is kind of a drama that they create, said this before, to justify their continued existence as problem solvers. Where we're saying, there are actually if you just pack it in and just shut up for 10 years, most of these problems that you're playing us with, they're gonna naturally disappear if you just allow people in local communities to have access to the energy, to work with one another, to supply their own food on a local basis, and create happy happy families everywhere.
Don't worry. I'm gonna take I'm gonna take some tablets in in a few minutes' time, but, you know, I'm just spitballing there and just saying, you know You're talking about shoot me to pieces.
[01:47:16] Unknown:
First of all, you're talking about biblical positions there,
[01:47:20] Unknown:
Paul. Calm. Sorry. Calm calm down, Paul. Take a deep breath. You're you're starting to, like, go off the deep end here. They've spent all of their time and their energy and all of their resources to kill people that have actually invented things that would accomplish exactly what you're suggesting, which obviously is craziness because it goes completely against the economic model that they have built for us. Calm down. Relax. Have some dip.
[01:47:51] Unknown:
It'll all be okay. Enjoy your slavery. It's good for you. Honest because we're in charge, and we do have your best interests at heart. But I just I think it's you're right, of course. Yes?
[01:48:04] Unknown:
Oh, one moment.
[01:48:05] Unknown:
Welcome to slavery.
[01:48:09] Unknown:
No. Thanks. I already have a wife.
[01:48:16] Unknown:
Oh, wives are great. Everybody should happily be a happy wife. Everyone should be a happy wife. I'm not being cynical. They should. Every every well, every husband should have a happy wife. Yeah. That's what we want. All those things. And, but it's true. They they've created an economic game, which I think much of the technology, would invalidate if it was allowed to actually, you know, percolate. I I it's it's fair that there is a concern about other nations wanting to get hold of that technology to take you over. But even then, you can't work that out. You go, what is up with you? This place is enormous. We can all live in Texas if you like.
Not that people of Texas would welcome that and and rightly so. No. I don't think so. We're not looking for Texas. No.
[01:49:01] Unknown:
The Biden administration isn't trying to import the rest of the world into Texas, but they're trying.
[01:49:08] Unknown:
That's right. They are, and they're doing it in such a way that it's gonna create a whole nest of further bureaucratic management jobs to deal with all the discord that's gonna come back from ramming people together rapidly over a short period of time from cultures which then prove to be wholly incompatible with them. I mean, that's really what what we're talking about, which kinda brings us back in a way to where we were right the first hour, you know, with regards to what's been going on here in the UK. Yeah. And I there's a great article by a chap called millennial woes. Many people will know of him. He's a very articulate Scottish lad who's been around for some time. I've never spoken to him, but, he's he makes some very fine points and he makes them well. He wrote an article that's very wrong, long. I can't go through the whole thing. The Muslim rape gang epidemic, but I just wanted to read a couple of points early on.
He says he's talking about the fact that as it's come out, this is uniquely horrifying news, which it is. But it's not merely a news story, he writes, and nor is it finished in the past as some American commentators have ignorantly stated. It is ongoing, this is true, And this is a shame upon Britain. Yes. It is. To rival surely anything else in its history. Absolutely. It's it's hellishly bad. Of course, I'm gonna try and distance myself and say it's not a thing that the Britons created. It's that the controlling government that has been deceiving the Britons has done. But nevertheless, we have to deal with it. And he says, I believe the rape gang epidemic is the most significant thing to happen in Britain since World War 2. I agree with him. And he says it signifies 2 appalling things. And these were the 2 things I just wanted to read out. 1, enormous numbers of Muslim, typically Pakistani men, have been raping enormous numbers of white English girls as young as 11 for decades.
This fact alone destroys the myth of the multicultural nation, the benefits of diversity, the equality of mankind, and the idea that people can or ever should be race blind. Point number 2. The civic, legal, cultural, and political systems of Britain colluded to hide this ongoing mass crime. In so doing, they condemned yet more thousands of native girls to be raped, debased debased their offices and the nation itself, and humiliated those girls as well as their families and communities. The thing I was in that clip that we played, from, the Pakistani gentleman or the Muslim or Indian gentleman earlier on, whose name I forgot, of course, because he goes down the plug hole with me, but, who was clearly stating what the problem was.
The one of the thoughts that's that I've mentioned here before is and I know this is sort of like a goofy question to ask. It's not even really a question. It's sort of like a dorky observation. Why is it that people that have come here have been given the vote? I mean, not only were we not asked whether we wanted them here. Why? Well, obviously, we see the reason why now. The reason is is that the globalist left socialist communist Bolshevik blah blah blah blah blah blah blah, add whatever words you like, they have done this to expand the electoral base so that they can get those votes. This is a similar thing that apparently Biden's been doing by allowing your borders to be intentionally flooded by people because they're gonna set up the welfare state and therefore who they're gonna vote for. My my question is why do they have the vote?
It didn't work. I know it's asinine the way I'm saying. I'm like a child asking it. I I know that. But they should not have a vote. I've mentioned here before, the only empire that successfully managed a situation like this is the Byzantine Empire, where all aliens were forbidden from being involved in the law, government, banking, and politics. They they just couldn't get involved in those areas at all. They were not allowed or you education. Sorry. All of those things, education, government, the law, and banking couldn't get involved. I just so when he when he was talking in that clip about the fact that the Labour Party in these areas are allowing this to go on because they want to receive the bloc vote from Muslims, obviously, Muslims shouldn't have the vote. This is a Christian nation.
It's not a Christian nation because we all run around in this. It just is 1, and it will remain 1 no matter what happens now even though we're probably gonna go through a period of absolute hell. Nothing nothing ever is taken and retained through force. History shows this. It's like the sea in the end, even if there was an inundation that that fills a region up for 500 years, in the end, the water rolls back. You can't it's can't be done. And it's and it's obviously for disruptive reasons that it's done so that the little coterie, the usual crew, can get to run and manage the earth, a job which was never advertised, isn't required, and is totally surplus to requirements and causes nothing but trouble. Oh, I do sound like a broken record, don't I? But, I think the points that millennial wars make there is true. And I've mentioned it here before. There is no such thing as a multicultural society. There's never been one. You can't have one. It just doesn't exist.
And what this is doing is this has take this event here in the UK is taking the lid off that. People are beginning to see that the whole thing, you know, normal people who suppress it and won't talk about it at nice dinner parties, possibly are beginning to think about it. And this is a good thing, even though it also comes with that kind of, you know, slightly scary bit, about, about where it's gonna lead to.
[01:54:39] Unknown:
There's no such thing as a multicultural society. What you wind up with is a fragmented society and that is easy to control. And that's what they're looking for. Yep. Yep. That's their deal. It is.
[01:54:58] Unknown:
So we're we're really looking to get rid of them. The management class of the Earth has to go. We we really you know, like we said it before, we only really have one problem, and that is the government have killed more people in more nations down through the ages than any other institution. And since we had democracies, it's got even worse. Kings, of course, could have a fight and everything, but it used to be contained, I suppose. But under democracy, it's now, you know, industrialized slaughter in so many ways. Of course, we've got Bill Gates running around now using the lie of vaccines and all this other nonsense to wipe people out. Meanwhile, Elon Musk is worried that so many people are gonna get why don't Elon Musk and Bill Gates just have a fight and whoever will win is gonna decide?
[01:55:42] Unknown:
Yeah. A duel. A duel.
[01:55:44] Unknown:
Appealing to the common good. If if you don't appeal to the common good, you have no force of law because that and that's why there's all this, you know, wishy washy talk about, oh, it's for the common good that we give out vaccines and everybody take it for their for the sake of other people. I don't wear my mask for myself. I wear it for you. That mentality. Oh, yeah. Mhmm. And, like, you're go go back going back to the Byzantine Empire, you had this idea of the money changer and you had approved money changers, and then you had people who weren't who were aliens that were trying to pass themselves off as the approved money changers. Well, that that's what we need to focus on is, like, who who do we approve of to do to handle the money?
In in the long run, that's gonna be the the thing because, like, anything like, if you're dealing with, soldiers, let's say, in military sense, those soldiers need to be paid because they're doing a service for for their country, for for the people that they're protecting. And that approval process needs to be scrutinized, and that's not happening. You you you're not even willing to scrutinize what's happening with these rape gangs. So how can you how can you even hope to get them to do anything decent for the people in looking after the money purse of of the people's wealth?
[01:57:09] Unknown:
They're benefiting from it. They're benefiting from the from the rape gangs.
[01:57:14] Unknown:
They're leeching off of the system. Yeah. Of course. They're absolutely leeching off of it.
[01:57:19] Unknown:
The It's like
[01:57:20] Unknown:
a a a fog bobbery is what's required, Eric. I mean, you're gonna have to get it set up. You're gonna have to appoint a treasurer or it's you. Some we've gotta get it going. Yeah. Who was it? I I think that that would be quite quite good. And,
[01:57:33] Unknown:
I've got the printing press ready here. I could do about, about half a dozen an hour. So
[01:57:40] Unknown:
There you go. Oh, yeah. Yeah. That'll that'll that'll suffice as the world's currency. Who was it? Benjamin Franklin that said when he was asked, excuse me, sir. What have you given us? I gave we gave you a republic if you can keep it.
[01:57:58] Unknown:
Mhmm. That one that one went out the window. Minute 40, Paul, till the end. I know. I was just about to to wind up this section. We're gonna play out with a a a little bit of music here. We're coming towards the end of our 2 hour slot here on WBN, but we will be carrying on on Rumble for those of you who just can't get enough. So if you head over to paulenglishlive.com and click the Rumble link, you'll find the show still there running. It's also still running on Radio Soapbox. This song is is, hark hearkens back to Britain during World War 2. Not that I'm necessary I just quite like this. If you've not heard it, you've not heard it. It's by Public Service Broadcasting. Very interesting band. It's called Spitfire, and it's just it's just kinda cool. It runs for about 4 minutes, so we're gonna play out with this. This is just to remind people a little bit about what the culture of this country is really about, this nation's about to some degree. I know I sound a bit old fashioned and hackney, but we're gonna do it anyway. And we'll be back after this song. So we'll see you on the other side of this in about 4 minutes time.
I think. What? There we go. Oh, didn't wanna play.
[01:59:14] Unknown:
The birds fly a lot better than we do.
[01:59:17] Unknown:
See how they wheel and bank and fly? All in one. Wing, body, tail, all in one. Sunday, I'm going to build a plane that I'm just like a bird. This isn't exactly a bird I'm creating. It's a curious dog bird. A bird that breathes fire and spits out depth and destruction. A spitfire and It's tiring all with stretching up to something that's just out of reach, but I get it. After all, what I want is as easy as all that. You have to do 400 miles an hour, turn on a 6 foot, climb 10,000 feet in a few minutes, dive at 500 without the wheels coming off. Navigate machine guns.
[02:03:03] Unknown:
Yes. That was, called a Spitfire by, Public Service Broadcasting. And the voice you could hear was that of Leslie Howard taken from, the film, the first of the few. Although, I think in America, it was called Spitfire, and it was about the life of RJ Mitchell who was the designer of it. Anyway, irrespective of all that kind of stuff, I just think it's quite a groovy song. Anyway, welcome back to the show. We're here on, just gone, oh, 3 minutes past 10 here in the UK. That means it's 3 minutes past 5 over in the US. And, we're all still here. And, chaps, if you wanna push the conversation into areas that we've not touched upon, I covered many of the thing. I've got loads of other stuff that we could go into.
But if there are things that you want to draw the audience's attention to, things that you've spotted this week that you wanna bring up, please just jump in and let us know what's on your mind, Derek.
[02:03:56] Unknown:
Why not? You see, I I I think that's let's let's say it's impossible to wave a magic wand, and we could get what we wanted. And you could get all these bastards that's ever been in government, into court, first of all. And I believe that, once found guilty, you shunt them off to an island somewhere never to come back again. They're permanently on that island. Because what these what they do, psychopaths do, they play the victim all the time. So they'll try and get people to feel sorry for them, for what they've done, and that type of thing. But what about those, for instance, like doctor Hillary Jones or Killery Jones, as you know, who pushed the jabs?
Surely, shouldn't he be done for manslaughter or murder or some? What would be the what would be the, charge for him, and people who push the jabs? And also people that openly administered it. Because remember, under the law, ignorance isn't isn't an excuse. They were putting a substance into people's arms, which we've now has been proven to be interest to their health. So how would we deal with them? So open this up. What do people think? Because, you know, I'd the last thing I'd want is a country full of people swinging by gantries. We don't want that. I believe that's not civilized. The civilized way is to just say, okay. You're guilty.
People like Hillary Jones, my view would be, it'd be completely asset script sent to the island. They'd have to work to pay back his debt to society. And then when he's paid back his debt, he can come back. And this is the way I would look on it. You don't have jails. People just pay back their debt to society. Obviously, you'd have to have places where the loony bin loony bins, where loonies can go, and where there's people that are are not safe to be on the streets, where, I should say psychiatric cases who need to be treated, who are ill, and they need need treatment.
But open this up. What does anybody else feel about this idea of an island and people pay back their debts to society? Any ideas? Australia?
[02:06:13] Unknown:
Isn't that what they did in Australia?
[02:06:16] Unknown:
They said Australia. Yes. Yes. They did a lot of nasty things. They seized people as well, falsely, a bit like press ganged them and sent children over there for all sorts of reasons because the criminality was in the court system at the time. But what you're talking about, Eric, I mean, there's no we we have no yeah. They did. We have no shortage of islands around the the main islands here. I think about 3 and a half 1000. The island man.
[02:06:39] Unknown:
Oh, no. And ruin it. It's great. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No
[02:06:52] Unknown:
Yeah. That's they did, experiments with anthrax during World War 2. Perfect place to send them. They've I suppose they said they cleaned it up now. It's just populated by sheep. It's cold, wet, miserable. But the other place is where NASA do their fake Mars pictures from. That's Devon Island. That's near the Arctic. It's a huge area. I mean, obviously, they'd have to do their fake, photography somewhere else. Yeah. Yeah. Send them to Greenland. Perfect. Perfect.
[02:07:25] Unknown:
I mean That's been in waters lately. Mhmm. It's that it would cost a taxpayer nothing,
[02:07:31] Unknown:
although there wouldn't be tax as such. I I don't believe in tax. You obviously have to pay for some form of administration, but how that could be raised, there are some countries that have voluntary tax. So, I mean, I don't even believe in having a driving license. You wanna drive, you drive.
[02:07:51] Unknown:
I mean, I think you've you've gotta do something short term, Eric. I, yeah, restrain them in some way. I I agree with that. And and, of course, then I'm concerned about the manipulation of the court process because I just think it's such an overly complicated thing that it it its complexity enables it to be manipulated.
[02:08:12] Unknown:
I like what you say, though, about compensating society for the crime gun. Mhmm. That's a good thing. That that should be done. Like, if you steal cows, you pay back 2 cows.
[02:08:24] Unknown:
Correct. Yeah. The bib the biblical laws on theft are brilliant. They just work. You're gonna reduce theft, not overnight, but it will actually bring about a cultural change
[02:08:36] Unknown:
a behavioral change. We need attention brought back to biblical principles, and we need catechism to people because there's a there's a lot of ignorance, and there's a but there's a lot of wisdom in the Bible that it could be taught, and it's just you have to pay attention and actually do the work of reading, which there aren't enough readers. There's a lot of people looking at their phones, looking down at their phones, and, yeah, you can say it's reading, but it it really there's nothing like having a good book and just going through it page by page.
[02:09:11] Unknown:
And I I agree with you. I I think there's a great requirement for rewriting, though. If you look at know what's in them before he can even begin to write. Somebody does. Yeah. The writers need to know that. And, of course, that's not a perfect process. But if you you know, I've thought about this. I think about it quite a bit. You know? I can sit down and read books that are written in the 1800. I quite like them. If you throw Dickens at most people, they're not gonna read it, I suspect. I could be wrong about that. I mean, you know, a tale of 2 cities is apparently the biggest selling novel of all time ever because it has been around quite a bit. I still I still like that fact you told me about him being a a transcriptionist
[02:09:53] Unknown:
in the court court reporter. That that that tells you something about the the character of him and that Yeah. The discipline of having to do that to take down notes.
[02:10:04] Unknown:
And I think it's what he was exposed to. He was 19, I think, when he started doing that. And, you know, when you look back on on these people that lived on both sides of the Atlantic in that period, they're much more grown up at 19 than I than I am now probably because of the pressures of the time. You know? There's a maturity about them. There was more trust in the rich. Society too. You can fathers trusted their sons
[02:10:29] Unknown:
because they had a new tech family more often than not. They did. Everything was also a desire for it. But people were practical.
[02:10:37] Unknown:
Yeah. Because I mean, look. A perfect example. Cars. Now you go back what? Cars of the sixties, everything was manual. You had to pull out a choke to start the engine. How many people would know what a choke is now? Yep. You also had to turn a handle to open the window, But Yep. Less went wrong because it was so mechanical. Now people get in a car, they just start the engine, press a button to open the door, close it. Everything's electric. That's right. Computerized, and it's so minuscule.
[02:11:04] Unknown:
Yeah. You can't you don't even know what's going on because you can't see the operation of it. And there's not an understanding of most people what they're even partaking in.
[02:11:13] Unknown:
Sat nav. Now what is it going somewhere, say 40 years ago, you get a map out. Yep. Mind you, when I my satinap's so bleeding useless, so I I I actually still use a map because it's alright if you wanna go halfway around Will's mother's, but I like to go the direct route. But, no, seriously,
[02:11:32] Unknown:
I still use that method to help you out today. Mechanical things back in the day, the architecture, everything was done on pen and paper. And I wanted this is what I wanted to thank you for. You you got taken up a fountain pen recently, and I started getting I bought a big bottle of India ink for my dip pen that I have here. Oh, it's catchy. Excellent. It is.
[02:11:55] Unknown:
I'm I'm not a dip pen, though. This is a cartridge one. Yeah. That's yeah. I know. I know you're telling me about that. That's cool. Oh, we shouldn't sorry. I'm just showing off. I got a tablet. No. But seriously, though, they are as cheap as chips as we call it. The Chinese have I have to hand it to them. They brought out the quality that's,
[02:12:16] Unknown:
is really I was looking at pens the other day. I was looking at this brand that I had, Mont Blanc. And I'm looking at their website, and and it's like, who's gonna spend $4,000 on a pen? Some of these pages, basically.
[02:12:30] Unknown:
You would. If you had that kind of money, you probably No. I did have a Montblanc. Back in the eighties over here when I was in London, everybody started by as a sign of your status within the office, you had to get a Montblanc. So I had a Mont Blanc pencil and a Mont Blanc I think it was a Biro, which I quite liked. They were pretty nice. They were pretty good. But everybody had to buy them because it was the eighties, and you were nobody if you didn't have a Mont Blanc. I love all that stuff. It's great, really. That's smart. I mean, the thing is it's actually a lot of fun unless you don't have a Montblanc and everybody's got one, and then you're less than, and you go off and become a serial I've got some cheese feed ball dip pen. That's what I'm using. But just going back to this thing about writing and stuff and and Dickens or that period.
And when I say rewriting, what I mean is if you look at the era in which all those guys were and and some of the greatest writing in terms of the distillation and the refinement of writing is found, you know, from the 8 mid 1800 onwards, in my view. You know, some people would find it slightly laborious. Of course, Dickens did write for a weekly magazine, so he really spun it out. That's why it's just, you know, rivers of adjectives. But I if you get into it, it's actually it takes you to other places. There's so much detail provided you end up getting hypnotized by it, which is of course part of the storytelling process. You enter into it. It's like a little contract that you have with the author. I'll pretend that this is all real if you do you know, if you take me along for the ride, and it's great. But the what I'm coming to is that people just had they put more time into writing because there was nothing else they had to put time into. People were using literally gallons of ink and quills and their hand.
I mean, you know, the fact that Dickens wrote all this longhand in cursive writing is quite amazing. When you see the amount of it before he went off to the typesetters and all this kind of stuff. Okay? So it's huge. There's just huge and so they wrote in a way and when people read, what else were they gonna do? There wasn't much else to do. People could afford those weekly magazines, and that's where all the stories began. And, of course, you know, it goes from Dickens, then later on, you've got over here, we got Conan Doyle and Sherlock Holmes, which became this sort of literary phenomenon because it's just he created these sort of archetypes in a way. Then you've got all the pulps in America with the shadow and things like this. So as it moves through but it's all about the written word and people buying printed magazines. The the wisdom in the past just needs to be, respun in my view.
I don't mean simplified. I mean clarified, and and I'm providing a bit more brevity. And the reason why I think at least there should be versions like that is that they have a greater chance of being consumed and understood more rapidly. I do think that, you know, there was greater focus in the past on what they did because they weren't spread as thin. If you look at all the pursuits that were available the technology is limited, I guess, sort of the things that you do, although it was expanding all the time. Maybe you're an engineer. Maybe you're gonna design engines, steam engines, and bridges, or maybe you are gonna design bridges and buildings and and other things like that. So there was a lot of concentrated focus in in in fewer areas. Now there's so many other areas because, you know, technology keeps opening other things up. But to get people to read again, I think, is key. And I do think that people will as long as it's put together again. I mean, I know it seems a bit flippant to say it, but the Harry Potter books sold in colossal numbers, didn't they, 20 years ago? Yeah. Yes. Right?
Okay. So Accord, whatever it was, and I think that we can almost do a a show about that because I think that there is there's a backstory. I've got some intriguing conspiracies, theories, and websites about that, particularly a post from a woman living in Essex who said she wrote most of them under compulsion from Mi 6. That sounds weird. Right? But it's very interesting. What did she write most of them? The Harry Potter books.
[02:16:35] Unknown:
Oh, so JK Rowling
[02:16:38] Unknown:
isn't That's the story. I'm not backing it. I'm not championing it. I'm just throwing it out. Well, actually, I've been yeah. There have been things like JK Rowling's been apparently at conferences and being asked questions about her characters and can't answer any of the questions as if she's not familiar with her own work. I've heard several reports of that. And, also, it's phenomenal success worldwide as a publishing event. Makes me think like the Beatles. Right? Seriously, I have to go, you know, how did that happen? It's really and they're enormous. Yeah. Have you wrote all of that? Yeah. And they they they do they tap into ancient archetypes. And something about the school setting is very compelling. It really is. Of course, I know a lot of people in the States got all worried and said, well, they're teaching them demonology or it's all satanic and this Yeah. I do remember that about that. That was such a huge deal. Yeah. It it it is a deal and, you know, dark arts and all this, that, and the other, and it touches upon it. And maybe, you know, maybe it is the case that they've written these lines into those stories in particular to, usher a generation of youth into thinking into those spaces. And maybe these are the youth that we now see today who've got purple hair and are covered in tattoos and got studs to their head. I don't know. It wouldn't surprise me if there was a link because, you know, these guys, they they plan out the social engineering in all sorts of ways. And I know I think there's a quote from somebody in the c I CIA years ago saying that books are the best.
The the for controlling civilization, books and novels are the best because you the thing about a reader, when you're the reader of the book, you decide to read the next page, don't you? You propel the whole event. You're not it's not being projected at you. You are having to work. And this is a good thing. This is why I think reading is good because it builds up a kind of mental stamina and the ability to focus on things and track things through. And if you think about some of the plots back then and the the sheer detailed nature of the characters, they're of a degree that you tend to not find in films these days, which are just, oh, quick aliens. Let's blow it up. I mean, that's basically what's been reduced down to. It's a sort of sensory experience in many ways. But it's fine. It's all fine, isn't it, though? That that value. Everything is bums on seats.
[02:18:52] Unknown:
And Mhmm. Notes. And I always remember what Dave Starbucks said. He's passed away now. He said, do what your heart desires, and the money will follow you. If you go trying to chase Danny Dollar, you you you won't be as creative. Just be creative. I agree. The money will follow. And Yeah. I think that's that that's the thing. Don't look at it from a financial point of view because I got fed up with those programs. Reminds me of in the States, without thing, dragon's dead or something. Well, all it was was money, money, money, money, money, money, money, all to get rich, not on somebody doing what they passionately love doing and and and trying to get forward in that. Oh, no. Nothing like that. Sorry. Who's gonna say, Patrick?
[02:19:37] Unknown:
Well, it just it just kind of reminds me of biblical passage I was reading yesterday. It is about spending your money on your brother and friend. Hide it not under a stone to perish. Mhmm. Dispose of your treasure as the most high commands, for that will profit you more than the gold. Store up almsgiving in your treasure house, and it will save you from every evil.
[02:20:02] Unknown:
We've all got a talent, I think. We've all got a talent. Well, do you remember when you were, say, a teenager and maybe you hung out, you had pals, chums, you know, buddies, whatever you wanna call them, and, you would be reading books? We were in the seventies. The guys I hung out with were some of them all got into reading a lot of science fiction. It wasn't for me. I found that a little bit I don't know what it was. I never found that it had much soul. It used to bore me to tears. Erich von Daniken is what I used to read. Erich von Daniken. Chariots of the Gods.
[02:20:30] Unknown:
Chariots of the Gods. Yes. Yes. Yeah. He's still alive. He's still still around. And Is he really? Wow. Yeah. He's about old. I think he's in his nineties. He must be close to Maybe he is a god in a chariot. He's that old. I mean, maybe he's become one. That's right. A lot of it's been debunked now, but then loads of people got on the bandwagon. Then you got what is it? The, the Welsh triangle, then you moved a triangle. Every triangle we could have to wish to think of. And there's people making fortune out of it. But the real fact of the matter is there was a book that came out called Supernature. Have you ever heard of that one? Yeah. No. By a South African chap.
And that was brilliant. And, they said in that that, if you constructed a pyramid of a certain dime dimensions and you put blunt razor blades inside this pyramid, they would sharpen. Well, the office where I worked, we used razor blades because we worked on drawing boards, and the the razor blades are always getting a bit blunt because, you know, you're scratching out ink and things like that. So they did it over a weekend, and it worked, which is quite interesting. And there we go.
[02:21:41] Unknown:
Is there much money to be made in the razor blade sharpening service industry? No. Bring your razor blades in for us, and they'll be sharp by Monday morning. There's not much to be made on that, is there really, unfortunately? They got a rough people. It's interesting.
[02:21:52] Unknown:
Tight fisted kits, you see, because we went through loads and loads of razor blades, because you think scratching out ink and things like that, it does, you know, it does blunt the razor blades down. But, there's all other things like, different coincidences and things like that, and, where people can communicate over large distances and gut feelings. And, and this book, I think it's still in print, was years ahead of its time. So it's called Supernature.
[02:22:23] Unknown:
Yes. So let me go Desmond Morris.
[02:22:25] Unknown:
No. Not Desmond Morris. No. No. Somebody else? Somebody else. Okay. He's a South African bloke. He's croaked it now. I think Desmond Morris is still around, isn't he? Because he used to be on the television
[02:22:35] Unknown:
showing things up crocodile's bums and things like that, didn't he? It was his zoo tongue. What a jolly good job. And what do you want to do, Desmond, when you grow up? I wanna put this up crocodile's rear end. Is that okay? Cool. It's stuck in. Could I put this up there? No. You may not. What about this? Stop it.
[02:22:54] Unknown:
Yeah. Do you remember when Desmond Morris was, at London Zoo? I think it was Chi Chi or Anan. That was the panda. They wanted it to mate. And there he was. You know the old sort of, like, reporters, but at the sports at sports events where they used to have this microphone, and he's getting a running. Yes. Chi Chi's now running around. Yes. He's looking a bit roundy. No. No. He's back in again. And I saw I didn't remember the original, but I've seen it on YouTube. And it's hysterical. It really is. And he's doing it all serious, and I I was off my seat. So if you look up YouTube, Desmond Morris, and I think Chi Chi is on there. She had a good laugh. Eric, were you talk you were you talking about Graham Hancock
[02:23:32] Unknown:
who wrote No. He's talking about Lyle Watson. Thanks, exo. Super super Oh. Oh, Lyle Watson. Supernature's Lyle Watson. Yeah. Yes. He died, oh, just a couple of years ago, I think.
[02:23:44] Unknown:
Very interesting book. I think it's still in print. I don't know. I'll look it up, but I think it's still in print. Supernature. Yes.
[02:23:51] Unknown:
When did open question to you both. When did you last read a novel? Can you even remember? Was it recently, or was it so far away you can't even remember when or even what it was? Which wouldn't surprise me. I'm just asking. I'm interested.
[02:24:05] Unknown:
Hobson's Choice at Skoll. I hardly remember it. The play? Yeah. The play. Yeah? Not a book. Hobson's Choice.
[02:24:13] Unknown:
Alright. Okay. That's the last time you read a novel or a piece of fiction or something. I'm trying to remember the name of fiction.
[02:24:22] Unknown:
I I I read the novel by this, author named Wally Lamb, and it was about 2 twins. And I'm trying to remember the name of the book. That was the last novel I remember reading, but it was a while ago.
[02:24:39] Unknown:
I can't remember the last time I read a novel either. But as we're talking about it, I remember how I used to feel at times when I was reading novels, and it was a sense of magic in many cases. I can't it's a in other words, a real, totally being disconnected from this world and quite enjoying it and being utterly immersed in another one. I didn't get nerdy about it. You you get these people who get you know, they dress up. These things literally, what what on earth are you doing? Oh, yeah. I'm this character from this book. No. You're not. You're not. Stop doing that. It's very embarrassing and silly. I just thought but there's something about it for the mind. And I I don't know why stories are so powerful, but they are.
And maybe it's something that we need to reharness. I mean, in a way, a nation is through its media, which, of course, we don't control, telling a story back to itself 247 these days. And, of course, the story that's being told is rotten. Like we're mentioning like you're mentioning earlier, Eric, you know, the English are lazy and won't go and pick their own vegetables. That's no. You know, I would make things like that a criminal offense because I think it's to demoralize people. I think it's dangerous talk. And people, oh, it's only words. Well, if it's only words, then don't say them. No. But Because he's always
[02:25:56] Unknown:
Mhmm. But sorry. I didn't mean to chime in there, but I I but people are duplicators. So all they do, they just set off a rumor, and people would duplicate it. That's the thing. I mean, after World War 2, my parents were saying that they used to say, the only good German is a dead German. That's what was what the government was was Oh, yeah. Yeah. I remember. I remember that. What was the other one? And the other one is, if you find a good German, shoot them before they go wrong. Terrible things. Horrendous. Now I can say that because and get away with it because, it's about another European. But if I said so said that about some other race, oh, I I don't I don't have the the thought police knocking on my door tomorrow.
[02:26:37] Unknown:
Is it you know? You might do. You might do, Eric. Yeah. There's a there's a good chance. So don't that at the thought police tomorrow. It's not on next week. Then but there's also the historical factor that there was an actual war that went on where, you know, that kind of humor was being used. It's kind of like a gallows humor. Yes. I found that book here, by the way, the Wally Lamb book. It's called I Know This Much is True. And I'm looking at I got it in my hand here. It's it's about 900 pages long. By the way I don't remember exactly what it was about, though.
[02:27:08] Unknown:
SuperData looks relatively easy to get. I've looked on the page, look at Google it, and it's you can get it off eBay. EBay was it £1.56 for it, the ebooks. Oh, we got £2.80 delivery. So you can get it almost anywhere. So it's it's pretty so I don't know if it's still in print, but you can get secondhand copies of it easy.
[02:27:28] Unknown:
So there we go. So if you wanna sharpen your razor blades, that's the thing that that's the book to buy. Sorry. It's a little bit plugged in. You know? You're talking about the Spitfire earlier. I I learned that the Merlin engine that they they put in those a lot of those engines were built for roll Rolls Royce by the Studebaker company here in in, Ohio.
[02:27:49] Unknown:
Were they? Yeah. They won't surprise me,
[02:27:52] Unknown:
I guess. And that's another company that went out of business that should have stayed in business. I think, they the company that preceded that made the the Packard, the big 12 v 12 Packard engines.
[02:28:07] Unknown:
Well, apparently, Rolls Royce wasn't what they're quite cracked up to be. Bristol were a better firm, apparently. And the a lot of it was a lot of PR. I mean, I know that during the Battle of Britain, pilots, a lot of pilots around that time refused to use fly a Spitfire and preferred the Hurricane because the Spitfire, it wasn't until they got to the mark 5 that they ironed all the problems out. It's it's pretty road when it first started. And it's like most it's strange like the World War 1 tanks. So when they got to the mark 5, they died at all the problems. And, of course, after the mark 5, it was pretty good. You know, it's brilliant. But they had to rush it to production so quickly that there's a lot of things going wrong. But, actually, the American Mustang is actually a Spitfire, the Progression
[02:28:57] Unknown:
Spitfire because Wow. Yeah. I'll I'll you noticed a lot of these planes between the allies were a lot of a lot of them were just based on American planes. I I remember reading about Charles Lindbergh mentioning how so we we're building so many airplanes, and they were supposedly be gonna be used only for our own defense here in America. But, secretly, they were being shipped away to places like like Britain and the Soviet Union, and he he he alerted the public to it in his speech, actually, when he it was 911, 1941 in Iowa. He made a speech about how all of our planes and and these the the military equipment was being put into the lend lease program.
Yes. And they were gonna start a war whether we liked it or not, and this was before Pearl Harbor happened.
[02:29:52] Unknown:
Well, the Russians built a Super Fortress, which was an almost exact copy of the American Super Fortress because, actually, they got their parts from America. Well, apparently, one lane lanes in the world. Accidentally, and I sort of, sort of took it to bits and rebuild it, you know, sort of thing.
[02:30:12] Unknown:
But so It's like I I learned about the blast furnace that they have over in Magnitogorsk, which is the the big steel making production center of Russia besides Donbass, and that was designed by an American. So and they had American engineers go over there and build the thing because we had US Steel and pits Pittsburgh was full of or, Pennsylvania and Ohio, and these places were full of steel steel mills and whatnot. And nowadays, it's all gone away, and that's why they call it the rust belt because all of all of that, industry has just been, you know, put over to slave labor.
Well, not slave labor, but to, like, places like China, Brazil, the BRICS nations. They have the the industry, whereas we're more of a consumer service economy type setup and less manufacturing than we should. But there's, you know, there's still We can't. It it's it's horrendous.
[02:31:18] Unknown:
And, really, again, it's treason what has actually happened. But when you look at what has has happened with industry, over in Europe and in America, it is a crime. A total crime. I mean, what do we produce now? I mean, what does America produce? What's the is Ultra produced in China? I mean, when you buy tools, you think, oh, Dewalt and and all these different things. You look at it, and on the side, it's got made in China. But it's so cheap. It's it's sad. Early computers were made in Ireland. Now they're made in China. Do you know of any computers that are are made in America at all?
Actually built them?
[02:32:04] Unknown:
Apple or not? I don't think. They do. They do. Well, they won't be made soon, Eric, because there's 773,000,000 China about to get lost. They won't be able to make anything, will they?
[02:32:14] Unknown:
Yes. That's a point. Yes.
[02:32:18] Unknown:
Well By the way I mean, I do you know, a a little more information is worth reminding ourselves that there's 1,700,000,000 Indians, the same number, if not more, Chinese, and about 900,000,000 Indonesians. So in that little relatively small in comparison to the rest of the landmass of the Earth area, you've got over 4,000,000,000 people, which I understand is more than 55, 60 percent of the entire world's population. So numerically, we, Europeans, are probably per square meter or square yard of land. We probably are occupying way more considering our population, but, of course, we're being, you know, reduced out in numbers rapidly.
And this, of course, is, I would suggest, because of the ancient spiritual war between us and another little group who have been waging and conducting that war in all sorts of ways for the last 2, 3000 years. We don't necessarily need to go there again this time. We can cover that next week if you'd like. But, I think you can identify them by the little ones. Yeah. You can. At least you can do that. No. I think they believe that they're bar,
[02:33:32] Unknown:
tables or I was gonna say bar stewards because they got beer max on their heads. So they're people that it's like Queen Victoria. She always looks as she had a sugar bowl on her head. So perhaps it's some sort of weird thing. They they think they're a a table and they put something on their head. But going back to where you're talking about airplanes in World War 2, I don't know if you've heard the story about the dive bomber, that wouldn't, pull out the dive. Have you have you heard that? And it's supposed to be a true story. Well, it's supposed to be the The early Spitfires had a problem with
[02:34:00] Unknown:
certain,
[02:34:01] Unknown:
fuels the fuel system. That's right. Yeah. Is it it was gravity fed. So when they actually turned upside down, the engine cut out. And it wasn't until, a few, fault walls sorry. Messerschmitts crashed in the Battle of Britain. They took them apart, and they decided to copy, the Messerschmitts, which they had fuel injection. When they put fuel injection in, there it wasn't a problem. But the early Spitfires, yeah, you couldn't turn upside down because fuel would stop. The engine got cut out. Yeah. Because I used it I think it was s u carburettors, which are gravity fed. So, but now I was gonna say is in the 19 thirties, there was a big race on to find the the the the thing was dive bombers.
And, American government put out tenders, to for a dive bomber could could do this, that, and the other, whatever, you know, put the specification down. Now whether this there is an element of truth is what I'm gonna tell you, but whether it's a an element. Make up your own minds. But, have you heard that apparently, I think it was Dauntless. It may not have been, but there's a dive bomber. And when they put it in a wind tunnel, every time it pulled out of its dive, the wings fell off. And this thing was years ahead of its time, and it would have won the government contract. And every night, the, designers were sitting around heavily smoking, and they just everything they tried, they just couldn't get around this problem. The wings, you know, the dive breaks and the the the wings coming off.
And one evening, the cleaner that had been going around every night, she'd, excuse me. Well, she had an American accent, but I can't do an American accent. So I should, yes. She said, I heard you got it's I'm sure you got this problem with your, with the dive brakes. Yes. She said, well, why don't you drill holes along the brakes? And, I'm sure that'll stop the wings coming off. Anyway, oh, come on. And then we'll bloke, so hang on a minute. You got your slides all day. I said, she's got something. This is genius. They did it, and it worked.
And they said, are you a designer? She'd know. She said, because in those days, they had, very thick paper, toilet paper. She'd know. She said, when you tear along the serration of a toilet toilet paper, it never goes along the serration. She said, that's how I thought of it. And that's supposed to be a true story. So there we are.
[02:36:33] Unknown:
Well, that reminds me. It was also a woman that that that first, model of the Spitfire, she she was the one that came up with the mechanical design to to fix the fuel problem. Yeah. And the dive. I forget the woman. So what
[02:36:50] Unknown:
so what you're saying is the Spitfire, if it went into a dive dive and it inverted, it would kinda spit, or would that be more of a sputter?
[02:37:01] Unknown:
Well fire.
[02:37:03] Unknown:
Spotify. But the the the latest the last one, what was it? Is it the 23 or the 28? One of them. It was nothing like the original. Yeah. Clip wings, and it had a Griffin engine on it, which is a much bigger engine. They're right. And that that went like what, you know, sort of, watch it off of a shovel, that thing. Did you know? You know who would be good for this conversation about airplanes is Maleficos Scott.
[02:37:27] Unknown:
He knows a lot he knows a lot about them. Yeah. He he got me playing this game called War Thunder.
[02:37:35] Unknown:
Well, we'll have to do an airplane show. We'll have to do airplane types.
[02:37:39] Unknown:
Aviation. I I tell you what we've got over in this country. Radio aircraft enthusiasts. That's right. We've got a Grumman Avenger with the Pacific colors on it. And it's a park just up the road to me, an airfield. It's privately owned. It must have belonged to the I assume whoever's got it must be very rich, because I know that the coast guard American coast guard used Grumman Avengers for years after the war. So that's probably the only way he's got it. But it's actually got Pacific colors on it, which is very rare in this color country. And also, a Corsair, the Whispering Death.
[02:38:16] Unknown:
Got one of those. He's a collector. Yeah. That was my my grandpa's favorite plane. He used to tell me a lot about those. It was just Volt Corsair. Beautiful plane. Yeah. The Corsair.
[02:38:27] Unknown:
Yeah. Whispering Death.
[02:38:31] Unknown:
I think that the p 51 Mustang, as as it for me, there's something about that plane. They got everything right on that plane. They knocked out all the hard corners. And it's still a winner today. It really is. And there's a American firm making replicas of them, isn't there, that are much cheaper? Because to own one, it costs a lot of money. But, yes, that's, that's one heck of a plane. But, yeah, I don't know. But I still think the Huracan is very underrated
[02:39:06] Unknown:
for what it did. Yeah. And that started out as a a biplane airplane, and they just took the top set of wings off and used and modified the bottom. And the the original the tail section was all wood.
[02:39:23] Unknown:
Oh, yes. That's right. And Yeah. The good thing about it is that if it got shot up, you just, what they did in Malta is they get copies of the, Maltese times and stuck that over the holes and put some clear dope on it and it flew again in the hurricanes. But the strange thing is that, what people don't realize is that, when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, Yamamoto copied what the British did when they attacked a Italian hull using string bag, Soulfish Aircraft. And the attack on Pearl Harbor is very similar. It was modeled on the way the British did an attack on I can't remember the name of the Italian port, but the way we you know, we actually attacked up an Italian port. So there is. You know?
But, because I guess you all know that well, it's like Granny telling you start start sucking bald eggs that Roosevelt knew about Pearl Harbor.
[02:40:24] Unknown:
The British were telling him No. He didn't. It was a complete mystery. He was total surprised to him. He said so in the papers. He didn't have a clue. Well, it's What Pearl Harbor, you say? Really? Japanese?
[02:40:35] Unknown:
Because they'd climbing. The fuel coming into to Japan, which was, you know, a a war crime. It's like it's like today. They have collective sanctions on an entire country. For instance, Iran, where you can't do business with the entire country. It's collective punishment for what the the the governors of the country did, and it just leads to warfare. And then you can see it coming a mile away that that's probably where they're gonna next have war if it should break out on a large scale.
[02:41:11] Unknown:
But, talking about polarizing
[02:41:14] Unknown:
plan. They need a new game plan and not to resolve everything with war all the time. Maybe it is unavoidable. I don't really know, but it's just Have you seen
[02:41:25] Unknown:
sorry. I didn't mean to cut across you, Lee, but have you seen his Spike Milligan gag where you just seen? I don't know if you're aware of Spike Milligan in the States. He was a comedian over in this country. Nutty's a Fruitcake.
[02:41:37] Unknown:
We had Spike Jones.
[02:41:39] Unknown:
Ah, the city sickers. Yeah. And, though, with Spike Milligan, he said, there's this scene where there's these Japanese tourists in a house, taking pictures going click click click click click click. And, there was a chap, like, doing a commentary. He said, how they are? They, you know, they they they they're interested in the English house. And suddenly, one of the Japanese tourists goes over to this bloke who's doing the commentary. He said, excuse me. Can you tell me the way to the toilet, please? And And the commentator looks into the camera and said, now that's an interesting thought. They can find their way to Pearl Harbor, but they can't find their way to the car seat. But, yes. Well, I think you gotta see the I think you gotta see it. It's a more of a visual gag.
[02:42:28] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm playing. Spike Milligan. Yes. Yes. I want to play you something by Spike Milligan, but I'm not going to. How about,
[02:42:38] Unknown:
came across this the other day. Oh, is this working? What about a German opera single? See see some money. He was very good at that. Eat more fruit. That's a beautiful piece of music, Bob, Spike Milligan. You're very moved. You've got to see his visual, though.
[02:42:52] Unknown:
Is it?
[02:42:53] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. There's this,
[02:42:55] Unknown:
let me play you this. Now maybe I'll play out with this. It's called the raspberry king by, Jack Hodges. We'll we'll play out with that. It's only about 3 minutes long. That's the one. Is that the one you're thinking of? Okay. It gets a little bit exhausting. I'll play out with it. You can all turn off when we go through it. Yeah.
[02:43:13] Unknown:
Yes. Not the only way to understand the Now this is a clip
[02:43:18] Unknown:
from, yes minister. You probably it's a comedy TV series in the eighties. I barely caught it. But this is how to understand the press. Okay? I'm just changing the pace, the the pace. And this is how to understand the press, and this is them having a little con flag. The only way to understand the press is to remember that they pander to their readers' prejudices. Don't tell me about the press. I know exactly who reads the papers.
[02:43:41] Unknown:
The Daily Mirror is read by people who think they run the country. The Guardian is read by people who think they ought to run the country. The Times is read by the people who actually do run the country. The Daily Mail is read by the wives of the people who run the country. The Financial Times is read by people who own the country. The Morning Star is read by people who think the country ought to be run by another country, and Daily Telegraph is read by people who think it is. Prime minister, what about the people who read The Sun? Sun readers don't care who runs the country as long as she's got big tits.
[02:44:21] Unknown:
Not the only way to
[02:44:23] Unknown:
So there you go. That's a bit of salient wisdom from Britain. So there we go. And if you don't know what The Sun newspaper is, it was a newspaper which featured a a a a scantily clad busty girl on page 3 that became known as page 3 girls. It was all part of the titillation of Britain
[02:44:39] Unknown:
in the seventies and the eighties and the nineties, and I think they've I don't think they do that sort of thing anymore, do they, Eric? I don't think they have page 3 guys anymore, do they? They have naught naughty ladies showing their, bits anymore. No. They're considerable assets. Absolutely. Yeah. That's right. I don't think you read the ton, do you? I think you just look at look look at the pictures because a bit of the look, get the sun. I don't think they can read, can they? Not quite sure. No.
[02:45:03] Unknown:
No. No. It was very powerful, though, in the eighties nineties, wasn't it? It was 4 and a half 1000000 daily circulation. Something was actually colossal for a country so small. It was pretty big.
[02:45:13] Unknown:
So What was what was the name of that show again? I never read it.
[02:45:18] Unknown:
Well, the clip, it was from a thing called yes minister or yes prime minister, I think it was.
[02:45:24] Unknown:
That was the name of the show. Actually.
[02:45:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Yes. It's full of a sort of it was a very scathing and sarcastic view about how power really works, written by people who'd actually been involved, I think, in the government press office. I can't remember the name of the writers. It's quite witty. I mean, it's quite light touch. That was a bit vulgar for them. It's not all it wasn't really vulgar at all, generally. So, but yes. Pretty popular, I think, in the eighties, wasn't it? Was it the eighties? I don't know. It was. Yeah. Yeah. I was too busy reading novels back then. So That's novel. Actually not yeah. That was novel. Yeah. Absolutely. I I have to say, since we talked about it half an hour ago, I keep thinking, what should I go and read? I I probably do need to read for a bit of escapism. But every time I pick something up, I just go, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah. And I just turned round. And I was looking at my bookshelves here. And, god, you know, if anybody walked in and looked at these, they'd go, what a dullard.
Seriously. I think there's not a it's just also quite earnest, really. I think it's time to give it all up. Maybe I'll take up cookery or something in my later years and, you know, become a bon vivir chef or something. I'm actually looking at actually a collection of novels by Kurt Vonnegut junior. I think I've read everything by him, and, I found them absolutely fantastic, very funny, very dry, and a wonderfully scathing and sarcastic view of the operations of the world. He's the guy that wrote Slaughterhouse 5. Are you familiar with that, Eric? You know, if that was as I've talked I've heard of that. Yes. Yes. Slaughterhouse 5. Because he actually was in Dresden. Not that I wanna go all Dresden y because we're near the end of the show, but but Vonnegut actually was literally in Dresden as it got blown to bits, and he survived by, staying in a slaughterhouse, slaughterhouse foomf, slaughterhouse or however you say slaughterhouse in German. I don't know.
But, yeah, that's
[02:47:17] Unknown:
The only book I read by him was a book called dead eye dick, which was about nuclear war. Mhmm. And it used the example of what nuclear war is like essentially on a large scale, of course, that this the main character goes up on top of his house with a gun and just randomly aims it and shoots, and he ends up killing some pregnant woman who's vacuum cleaning. And, and then it goes off from there. It's it's kind of like the idea of what nuclear war is like and as far as the type of people that are targeted. It's the innocent.
[02:47:56] Unknown:
Cati 7 has put me out of my misery. Thank you, Cati 7. It's Schlakhtauss, if I I hope I didn't mull that. But that's for slaughterhouse, Schlakhtauss. Okay? It's in the chat, everybody, so
[02:48:09] Unknown:
practice your German pronunciation. Yeah. I worked with a bloke who was actually on the Dresden raid, and he was a navigator during the war. And he said that I'm not quite sure what wave he was on. I think it was 17 or 18. And he said, you could see the fire. You can see it was navigate. He said, you did not they they didn't really have to. He said there's bombers at all different levels. And when you flew over the target, you flew as high as you could to get above all the flack. And he said, when they he'd never seen anything quite like it. And he said the whole that they went at night, and he said you could actually see trees being uprooted and cars rolling over because it was the suction of the flames drawing the flames in. And he was about 17,000 feet, 15 to 17,000 feet. And he said and he felt the bottom of the plane, and it was hot with the heat from the flames.
You know, I think it's called convective heat or something like that. No. It's horrific. I don't wanna know. Said It's horrific. Horrendous. And I think that what he told me, it it it shook him. He'd never seen anything like it in his life. It it is he was almost in tears when he's telling me. He said it was it it was something he would never, you know and he said to think he was dropping bottles on these poor people, it's horrendous. You know? And that was it.
[02:49:34] Unknown:
But, Well, that attitude, as we've touched upon here and will continue to do so, that attitude has not left them, whoever they may be at the time. It's that thing. You know? Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely, and they go mad really with it. And, it's you know, we have a system that unfortunately enshrines these people in these positions. And, you know, even with today's show image, which I do quite like because it's just full of all the reprobates, the thing to be born in mind is that there's someone controlling them. That that really is the key. There's another force behind that that ensured that these sorts of controllable ones as it were ended up in the position that they ended up in. No one ever senses really that the British prime minister really is in charge of prime ministering things. Oh, no. And, no.
[02:50:23] Unknown:
No. There's a theory, though. It's that the, pharaohs never disappeared. They just reinvented themselves. And they the descendants of the pharaohs are actually running things now. And there's a chap that's got a very, very good theory on that. It's very interesting. I don't know too much about it. But, he's Have you got his name? Do you know do you know the name of the chap? I've heard that before, by the way. He was actually on the, what's the name, Eastwood show many years ago. Billy Eastwood. He was in New Zealand. So look back through his old shows, although a lot of them have been taken down.
But when you look at a certain family who I won't mention, whose family name begins with r, when you look at the back of their heads, they're kind of conical shaped, just just sort of passing, just notice. And certain things like that, you see, there's certain physical features about them that they look very much like the pharaohs. So that's something that, I'll look into it. But it got me rather interested interested. And it's it's funny. They seem to win through everywhere. I'm talking about the people that control the strings with the banks. So there we are. Mhmm.
[02:51:40] Unknown:
So there we are. Yeah. They do. It's an ancient thing. I think we've, we've kind of tumbled towards the end here, unless there's any final points that people want to raise. I didn't wanna go back over the ground that we covered, with such seriousness at the beginning, although I've got more clips about that kind of stuff, but I don't think we need to sort of go over that one again. I think, I think we're in a funny period anyway. Funny is not necessarily the right word, but I'm I'm I'm feeling sort of more sensitive to what's going on. I think the public communication space is a quite a thing at the moment, and I wonder if they will just try and bury this completely. I've got a feeling I guess, maybe it's down to mister Musk. If he's gonna keep on verbally agitating on his big social networking platform, then maybe there could be more fallout from this. I'd like to think that there would be. As I said, we've got 364 people who've just voted, that they're okay with further harm being done to English girls. That's really what they've said. So it's okay, for people to rape and abuse English girls, which therefore should lead us to think, well, it's okay for you to be raped and abused then, isn't it? What's good for the goose is good for the gander, or am I just being vile? Is this a terrible you can't say it's such a terrible thing, but they can. They can say such a terrible thing, can they? I think it's like the what they're doing down in,
[02:53:05] Unknown:
is with the Israelis and saying it's okay to rape prisoners, men and women Mhmm. And bragging about it on their television. And, like, it's like it's normal behavior, and it's it's not. And they they try to justify it, the people that are supportive of that regime down there in your country and in my country where they try to legitimize it, and and that's they've got guilty consciences. And I think I think they know it, and they're being blackmailed. That's that's my thought on it.
[02:53:39] Unknown:
Yep. Is, is everybody up for Twatology? Are we I'm sure you, you know, have we I think we're all fully qualified in Twatology. That's the, recognizing of twats in high office. So, you know, we'd like to put some twats forward. I'm sure you've got plenty in America. Yep.
[02:53:57] Unknown:
So, you you up for that, Paul? Twatology on Sunday? Oh, yeah. Yeah. I think so. I mean, I think what's the events that are rolling out this month? I think, obviously, the inauguration of mister Trump really is a top twat. There. Yeah. A top twat day, really. And, Will he switch And yet, it's still, what, 11 days off, is it? Is it 20th? Is it 20th? 20th. It's 20th. Yes. Okay. Are they So I think a lot's gonna happen. A lot's gonna happen between now and then. And it's all show. They had, you know, the the whole January 6th uprising.
[02:54:29] Unknown:
All of this stuff was show. Because if if it were real and they really thought it was an insurrection, they wouldn't have have let him get to the point where he's at now. And it's it's funny because in order to qualify the vote, the final, the final say was done by Kamala Harris, who was his opponent. She's the head of the senate. She's the president of the senate being the vice president. So
[02:54:55] Unknown:
it's just too odd. Yeah. Yeah. Here's a question. Yeah. Yeah. But everybody's I know it is. Does Donald Trump use the hair same hairspray as the women astronauts use on the space station? It also stands up. I mean, are they They're the same diapers. Yeah. It could be the same diapers. Yes. You never know. You know? So it because, is it amazing that, when you see women on their they call it the vomit comet when they put plane, they put it into a shallow dive, so they become weightless. Their hair is flying long haired ladies get their hair flung all over the place. Yet, when they're in the space station, it stays in one position all the time. Isn't that weird?
[02:55:36] Unknown:
No.
[02:55:39] Unknown:
And Sally writes in the chat, by the way, just hopping back to what we were talking about a few moments ago. How did the war generations, also known as my and your parents, never tell us about Dresden? I think, Anne Sally, because it was never really fully broadcasted or communicated over here. I could be wrong about that. Obviously, people would have known about it. But it may well, not it's I don't think people dwelled on it to to to that degree. I don't think they understood it
[02:56:08] Unknown:
and the media controlled That's right. In Coventry, they always carried on about Coventry, which was like a nothing compared with Dresden. But did you know that Churchill knew that Coventry was gonna be bombed? But he let it go ahead because he didn't want the, Germans to know that we've cracked the codes.
[02:56:26] Unknown:
Yeah. That's Well, when we get around to, when we get to February, 14th, I don't think this show falls on 14th. But when we get around whatever the nearest show is, we'll we'll do a Dresden thing because it's 80 years this year.
[02:56:43] Unknown:
And that's one book that I wanna read is the the the book that was done by date gosh. My mind's blank. The one the the historian that you you just did the David Irving. David Irving. David Irving. David Irving. You're right. The he his first book was on on Dresden.
[02:57:03] Unknown:
That is one book that I would really like to read. Yeah. I haven't read that one either, but, no. I think that's the one that brought That was pretty good. In the sixties.
[02:57:13] Unknown:
It's on a Friday. It's on a Friday, Paul. So Well, the Thursday before the day before. Yeah. I will do And I'd like to do 1 or 12 on the Sunday because I think that, I've actually I did speak to a woman who was very, very young. She must have been about 3, I think it was. And but she remembered it even though she was very young at the time, and it affected her for the rest of her life. And I I I think that it is what it was a war crime. That's my it is that was a genuine holocaust of of of it's horrendous. And,
[02:57:53] Unknown:
Dresden was.
[02:57:55] Unknown:
Yes. Well, the Brita, they were prepared to commit that war crime then, and they are in a way, although it's not what it is. In emotional intensity, it's just as vicious. They're committing a war crime on the British right now by allowing rape gangs to continue their practices. This whole thing is so disgusting, and it needs to be bigged up even more. I think there's a way of actually getting incumbent MPs recalled. You need something like 10% of the electorate. I'm gonna try and spend some time looking at that. This is when it gets into that really boring tedious stuff, doesn't it? And we all back off and nothing really happens.
[02:58:31] Unknown:
Right. Yeah.
[02:58:32] Unknown:
And it's also so dry, and you just go, oh, good grief, you know, and, and all that kind of stuff. But this is this is their great power. It's the same power that they have with the banking. It becomes so confusing and bewildering that literally you just go, because it's designed to do that. It's it's designed to keep you away so they can maintain control of it. But I think it's definitely worth looking into. So And because they're in court, it's a religion.
[02:58:55] Unknown:
Yeah. So, Eric, your show, Twatology, is when? This Sunday, is it? This is time. Yes. And so if there's any Twatologists out there, we'd be very interested to hear from them. And I'll tell you what we'll be interested. We we got about a month to go. Maybe Katie Semmer might know. It it's doubtful there's any survivors alive today, but the sons and daughters of survivors, it'd be very nice to hear what they have to say, because we've been shut out of a lot of information in this country about what did happen in Dresden. From Dresden?
[02:59:27] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I just There might there might be some that were toddlers.
[02:59:33] Unknown:
Maybe. But Yeah. It might be difficult there. But I I'd leave that with you. I don't think daughters.
[02:59:39] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Might be around. You know? That would be interest because I think that, you gotta be careful with emotions and things like that. But I I I think that as it's 80 years, that is a very special time. And
[02:59:55] Unknown:
my heart just goes out. It's horrendous to know it's about Well, I've I've come across the the show I did with Tom Goodrich. I think it's 2017, and I'll probably replay it at some point on Soapbox. I might even upload it to my Rumble channel as well because it's probably worth having keeping it in a permanent place. I was listening to his voice the other day, and I thought, oh, Tom, why are you not around? I could have done with a good chat with you, but he's not. That's for later. But we did a really good. I thought it was pretty good. I'm a bit green. I'm a bit sort of, you know, less bombastic than I am now. Less coffee, but, it's pretty good. There's a couple of hours. So I'll I'm gonna dig that up at the same time. I think we will cover it and and have a look at it. We can do a wide ranging show about that because it's always worthwhile recovering it. I've noticed actually on x, an awful lot of posts, particularly addressing the real context for that conflict are beginning to pop up at a rate of knots. Mads Palsvik, who someone links to regularly on the, Telegram chat. Thank you for that.
He's does a great deal, on these things about recontextualising stuff. I think to us here, none of it's new to me. I you know, he sounds cocky. I I know most of this stuff.
[03:01:11] Unknown:
You don't need to know it to the nth degree. It's the key principles that we need to know. It's been taboo, Paul. The thing about Dresden has been very taboo because that's if you look at it historically, leading up to the war, leading up to the turn of the century, it it was the the focal point and the capital of where they created what was known as the anti Semitic party, and that was the proper name of it. And Yeah. And that's the reason it was targeted. Mhmm. The leaders from that movement were all based in Dresden for the most part. Yes.
[03:01:49] Unknown:
Also, do you know where the largest Christian population of Japan?
[03:01:54] Unknown:
Yeah. Nagasaki. Correct. And here's Hiroshima. Correct.
[03:02:00] Unknown:
Absolutely. Guys, we're gonna wrap up for now. We've gone past the top of the hour. I did a little sort of odd little test as well the other day. It was just me mucking about. It ended up sitting on the Rumble Channel for about 45 minutes. It was me. I wasn't really intending to fly solo. I just ended up whispering on about things as I did. I'm planning, hopefully, though, to do something a bit more structured like that. So I'm looking at during the weekdays, adding 1 or 2 slots, possibly Monday and or Wednesday and or Friday, if I can get carried away. It's just a matter of finding the time. But probably UK drive time, which would be 5 PM to 7 PM, or maybe I'll just do 5 to 6 to start off. There's so much good information coming through on the Telegram channel that I'd like to sort of gather it up a bit. And if we could get call ins from you guys on the telephone or here or something, I know they don't tend to happen that often. You you could do it on Telegram, do the call in. Yeah. Maybe if you're on Telegram, we could take calls in that way and have a slightly more interactive thing with lots of different voices as opposed to the usual crew here. I'm thinking of something like that just to make it a bit livelier.
It goes out under the label of the slapdash radio show, and it probably will keep that because it will be quite a bit of slap and a lot of dash, I think. But I'll let you know, and I'm hoping to get that started this month, possibly even as soon as next week if I can find the time. That might be a bit of a pinch to do that. But I'll let you know. I just thought something winging it, almost not planned at all apart from a lot of sort of news stories and stuff. This is actually slightly planned, by the way. I know it might not appear, but but it is in a way. Well, that's comedy
[03:03:34] Unknown:
comedy news where we we're we're we're actually, being a bit sarcastic. Because you can get a lot through, lot over with comedy. And I think something where we can be we need a bit of more
[03:03:47] Unknown:
sarcasm and a little bit more Well, I used to be funny. I don't know how funny I can be on a Monday, though, 5 o'clock. I'm usually quite dull then. We'll we'll do that. I'm sure there's some tablets we can take to really pep it up, Eric. I guess it's just I I'm sure there's loads of things that we could cover, and I and I'm on for that. So I'll keep you posted because we'll need a little rotating sort of group. I might not even be there at the front all the time, but I wanted to sort of, like, get a like, a news show going, or at least try and give it a go for a few weeks and see what it if it if it doesn't sit up, it doesn't sit up. But if it if it goes, it would be nice because I keep finding I've got so many things that we haven't used tonight that could have been used, and they keep going down the, and and they'd be useful to talk about to flush things out. Anyway, we're gonna bring it to a close for tonight because we're just well, we're well past 11 o'clock now. I got a Gerry Rafferty song, which I must have played before in the past. I'm gonna play as that with that get it right next time. Although he doesn't sing it in such a sort of commanding way. And, hopefully, we will get it right next time.
Let's see what happens in the public spaces this week with all our wonderful politicians wriggling around and just generally being the complete, you know, ridiculous, traitorous assholes that they are. They are detestable. Apart from the 111 that voted or whatever it was in favour of that, the rest of you leave now and never come back. You know, I just say that to the ether. It makes me feel better if nothing else. God bless everyone for being here. Have a cracking week. Hopefully, my I'll be gone by next week, but you never know. This thing has lingered and lingered and lingered. And we'll see you all next Thursday. So go good. And, if we get a show running at 5 to 7 during next week, it will just I'll advertise it on Telegram and probably on the website, but it'll just happen. It might just happen. So if you're subscribed to this Rumble channel, you'll at least get the alert, but that's tentatively what we're looking to do. So, keep you posted, and, hopefully, we can build up our stamina and do a bit more broadcasting every week. That's the aim. Alright.
Thanks, Paul. Thank you, Eric. Thank you, Patrick, for this evening. Have a cracking week, and we'll see you next week. Bye for now, everyone. Bye bye. Night night. Night.
Introduction and Greetings
Weather and Chemtrails Discussion
British Political Satire and Criticism
Elon Musk and UK Politics
The Protocols and Political Manipulation
US Wildfires and Conspiracy Theories
Grooming Gangs and Political Corruption
Psychological Warfare and Public Discontent
Van Morrison's Western Man and Cultural Reflection
California Fires and Government Incompetence
Debt Jubilee and Economic Reset
Multiculturalism and Social Fragmentation
Aviation History and War Stories
Philosophical Reflections and Future Plans