In this episode of Paul English Live, we delve into the ongoing crisis of civilization, exploring the historical roots and modern implications of usury and unrestricted competition. Paul and his guests discuss the impact of these economic forces on the erosion of economic freedom and the rise of a destitute proletariat. They reflect on the writings of Hilaire Belloc and GK Chesterton, emphasizing the need for a spiritual and moral regeneration to counter the dominance of the money power.
The conversation also touches on the cultural and political dynamics in England, the influence of the Rothschilds, and the role of media in shaping public perception. With humor and insight, the hosts navigate topics ranging from the absurdities of modern life to the serious challenges posed by globalist agendas. The episode is a call to action for listeners to engage in thoughtful discourse and seek solutions to the pressing issues of our time.
This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymymyboost.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function with sluggish mitochondria is kinda like running an engine that's low on oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by PhatPhix, p h a t p h I x, dot com. And also iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency wand by Preif International. That's iTeroPlanet.com. Thank you, and welcome to the program. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[00:01:55] Unknown:
Yeah. I like that tune so much last week. I thought I'd play it again in the preshow role or whatever they call it. Hi. It's Thursday, April 2025. This is Paul English live coming to you from jolly old England, where certainly jolly, of course. It's, just gone 03:00 US eastern time, eight PM here in The UK. Welcome to the show. And I liked talking about the crisis of civilization so much last week, I thought we'd just talk about it all over again. And in today's show, we have music, laughter, may it be even some, brace yourself, poetry.
Oh, also in the crew. Hi, everyone, and welcome back. I hope you've had a jolly good week. I've had a very constructive week. It was good to get back behind the microphone, back in the saddle, whatever sort of terminology you wanna use last week. That was pretty good. And, I've been doing lots of house tidying. It's always exciting. I always like to talk about my domestic problems right at the beginning of the show or challenges. But I've got loads to tidy up, and we've had a pretty good week of doing that sort of thing. Had a lovely paperwork day today. Do you ever get those? I've had one. You'll be all pleased to know that it wasn't filing income tax returns, though. Terrible habit. You shouldn't really start doing that sort of thing. It's very, very irritating.
But, I've also been walking around a lot. Eric, when we bring him on, they're all muted at the moment, so I've got to, this week, remember to press the unmute button and bring them all in. But I'm not doing it just now. Eric will no doubt confirm. I think he's had a similar sort of result weather wise. It's been spectacular as the weather. I'm serious. I've had a wonderful, wonderful week. Very cold, though. Really cold. I think when was it? Wednesday morning. That would be yesterday, wouldn't it? I think it would. Yesterday morning down here on the Old South Coast, it was zero degrees at about 06:30AM. Warmed up a bit, but, very bitey. I'm going around in my shorts, and it's very, very bitey on the legs and all that kind of stuff. But this is what makes life so much fun. We've never had in fact, I was talking with a lady the other day. I was talking with several, actually, because as you know, I'm a real charmer. I'm always doing that sort of thing.
I was talking with a lady the other day on my little gadabout round town and up and down the country lanes and the highways and byways of West Sussex, I, bump into all sorts of people, particularly when, like me, they're big fans of the magnolia tree. And, I don't know if I was talking about magnolias last week, but I kinda wanna talk about them every week whilst they're in bloom. So you'll all be relieved to know that they're not gonna be in bloom forever. They they bloom for a very short period of time. And if you don't know what a magnolia tree is, well, you need to acquaint yourself with them. If you're into that kind of thing, maybe this is something that happens as you gather the seasoned years around your ankles or whatever, and you become a sort of vintage specimen of the human race. And, my appreciation for beautiful flowers keeps increasing all the time. So I've been speaking to lots of magnolia tree owners, and complimenting on their magnificent there's a double entendre there, but I'm not gonna go and use it. Their magnificent shrubberies and trees, quite spectacular they are too. So and, they're very they're very happy by the seaside. They thrive on salt air, and they're all just about to go. So it's been really rather wonderful and marvelous and all that kind of stuff. So I'm full of the joys of spring even though it's a little bit cold.
Anyway, we've got in, we've got all sorts of, things lined up for you tonight. So interesting that I don't even know what they're gonna be, which is what makes it all kind of fun. But I wanna welcome onto the show the the crew. I've I've just mentioned Eric, so I'll bring Eric in first. Eric, good evening to you. How are you this fine spring evening?
[00:06:40] Unknown:
I'm very well. Thank you. And I hope everybody else in the team, in chat is very well as well. And what a beautiful weather we're having. And, apparently, it's gonna carry on tomorrow and on Saturday as well. So I might actually get on my bike tomorrow. I might go with my first bike ride sorry. Second bike ride this year. So I hope it's not too cold. So
[00:07:04] Unknown:
Well, no. No. It it doesn't I mean, I've I'm I made a little guest appearance, didn't I, with you on Monday, which was a lot of fun. And I think I've talk told you then that I'd actually got on my bike, get on your bike, for the first time in about ten years. And, I discovered that my rear end was just not up to the task. It was my legs were fine. I'm okay now, and I've been doing loads of walking, but my rear end really is gonna need a I don't know. It's gonna need a bit of a training in its in its own right to get strong enough to actually cope with all this huge force that I put through the pedals. And, so I had a slightly sore neck because I can't hold my head up. It's all this kind of stuff. I go, oh, yeah. The legs are fine, but the neck and the and the rear end, they take, they're a bit softened up in these middle years.
[00:07:52] Unknown:
But it's not only that. If you got a racing bike, the tires are only about half inch thick, and you're sitting on what is like a sort of oversized razor blade, really, because the saddles are not that comfortable. That's one Tour de France. I think they're out of the saddle most of the time because it's so uncomfortable.
[00:08:12] Unknown:
It's just too painful.
[00:08:14] Unknown:
It is. Yeah. I know. But, I was gonna say that so what's happened with BitShoot this week, I think us people in The UK have been saying naughty words such as, as we said before coming on air, grunty's, and Shoe and things like that because, people in The UK will no longer be able to get into Bitshu unless they got a b, BCN. Not VCN. What do they call it? Proxy search, as I call it. Well,
[00:08:44] Unknown:
Trees m, very interesting handle there, who, contributes greatly into the Paul English Live Telegram chat group Sent that over earlier today, but I've just not had a chance to actually read it. But I've got the little thing here. It says, it's from BitChute. I did used to call them Shitbutte, but that's wrong of me, isn't it? I always got my worms mixed up. BitChute, it says, to our valued users in The United Kingdom, so all you American types, you're fine, really. After careful review and ongoing evaluation of the regulatory landscape, yippee, in The United Kingdom, we regret to inform you that BitChute will be discontinuing its video sharing service for UK residents.
The introduction of The UK Online Safety Act of 02/2023 has brought about significant changes in the regulatory framework, they do like that phrase, governing online content and community interactions. Notably, the act contains sweeping provisions and onerous something or others. Onerous what? Hang on. It was just lurking behind. And onerous corrective measures with respect to content moderation and enforcement. So, bye bye bit shoot for for Brits. It's a sad day for all of us. Well
[00:09:58] Unknown:
isn't it? Or is it? I don't know. I don't know. I've got a site on there, and my audience has dropped by, two thirds because of this, because it's mainly because I think the Bitchute is based in, Swindon.
[00:10:11] Unknown:
Last I heard. Because it is a I thought it was I I thought it'd gone to the Isle Of Man at one point.
[00:10:17] Unknown:
Know. But I'm pretty upset because, although I can get on to it, you can get a free, VPN. Yeah. There's loads of them around. Some people said you can get them free on Opera. Now I got mine on Proton, but I was told on, my Telegram channel that, it's for the snoops to look into. So you're snooped on where you're looking with Proton. But I did manage to, try it out last night. I got onto Bitshoot without any problems at all. And I also looked at, I wonder if I can mention it. Something today, which has been banned from The UK. Right.
[00:10:57] Unknown:
Starting a country beginning with R, which is probably going to be Oh, them. Russia today. Yeah. You can mention them. Yeah. They're fine. Russia today. R T. I know. Got they got wiped out here a long time ago. Yeah. Well But you see it live
[00:11:08] Unknown:
from ProtonVPN. So but I'm not I don't know if there's a better one. So I mean, as I say, I was told that that there were the snoops and the secret service use that to find out who's on there and it's data gathering, but what isn't? But I haven't tried the Opera VPN yet. So, see how that turns out because it's free with them. But it's what you know, it's quite honestly, it's really ridiculous because, they try and ban it in this country, but just get around it. It's it's just bogus.
[00:11:37] Unknown:
It's just like Yeah. But I you're right. I mean, people naughty people like us who are extremely naughty and would like to actually think some of our own thoughts every now and again. I know. It's pretty hard that we wanna do. Dare you. I know. Yeah. I know. I I it's quite exciting, isn't it, when I'm doing my own thinking? I actually have to go off into a small little dark room and make sure nobody knows I'm there and I start thinking away. Of course, they're paranoid even about that, but it shows you how important the whole of the thought field is to them. They can't have things arising like mushrooms and little clouds of interest all over the place. They can't stand all that kind of stuff. I mean, I know I'm only restating the bleeding obvious, but, it's the case. So if you're in America, you can enjoy your freedoms while they last. They're probably you're probably not as free as you think you are, although you probably think this is a whining Brit. And if you do, you're probably right to think so as well. But, what I I think the calling, Eric, for us over here to some degree is to look at these things called private membership associations.
And we need to have, like, our own members only private video site where you have to, you know, join it. You know, a bit like I'm sure we talked about this before. You know, when you used to go out and get wrecked in the pub? I know you say you didn't, but I'm not gonna believe that. But but many Englishmen used to do that. Right? And they go, oh, I might have ordered too many. But it actually wasn't one too many because you get kicked out of the pub. And then, there used to be, like, private members clubs, which you could join for, like, a tenner, and you got a free pint when you went in, and the licensing hours was till, like, 04:00 in the morning. Well, that's how pubs in the old days or, you know, to cater for the hardcore drinkers, which we all are really secretly Britain. I'm not actually. I'm not at all, but that's how you deal with it. So you basically sign a member's agreement. And, I think that's gotta be done carefully as well because it's as if every sort of little bolt holes and and little hidey hole that we can create, They don't mind as long as it doesn't grow. But as soon as it starts to grow, they come up with new regulations to ban that and and all this kind of stuff. So I don't know whether this is a good or a bad sign. I mean, we want to talk, that way everybody's got to choke, and, and all that kind of stuff. But, we're gonna have to find our own ways to keep on doing this. So it is a kind of sort of Well duck and cover dodge dodge the Bobby, dodge the rozzers type thing. It's ridiculous. Point. Good way I'm looking at it is
[00:14:03] Unknown:
when you look at history, censorship is generally the last bastion of tyrants. So the more they're censoring, the more you're you're seeing that they're panicking. We're finding out too much. And I'm optimistic. I'm very optimistic. As I often said, I think that is probably a blessing in disguise because he's going so far. He put he's he's the, shall we say, the the last straw that broke the camel's back. He's he's really pushing it too far. So we just sit back and watch.
[00:14:37] Unknown:
Yeah. I I guess. I mean, I suppose I'm slightly is jaded the right word? I don't know. It's not jaded necessarily because I'm completely open to spontaneous odd strange things happening. I think you've got to be because they are gonna it's just that most of them are sort of not in our favor. But I I still tend to sort of view the whole of the sort of reactive media, which I'm in that I include most of the alternative media. And we're kind of reactive solutions it's ever gonna come up with because I still think it's kind of it's observing dramas that are on the surface of the real problems, the real crisis of civilization, you see. And I don't think it's fully understood. And, I which is kind of a cocky thing to say, but I I don't. I've got not much evidence to suggest that people really are they're not thinking right. You know? I had this old thing.
I've said it be I've said it before, and I'll say it again. There's that old is it an adage? Maybe it's an adage. If they get you asking the wrong questions, it doesn't matter what answers they give you. And I'm gonna suggest that for decades now, the whole of the manicured manufactured mainstream press, whether it knows it or not, continually fails to ask the right questions. Continually. I mean and when someone does, like, certainly, say, like, Enoch Powell would make a political speech in a particular vein, and it would rock everybody, then you know that those are the areas that we've got to go to. And, of course, the bit shoot thing is part of that let's shut everybody off. We don't want them to even think that they can think about that. It's that far down the hole. They don't want it even coming up on your agenda. You know? So, I there's there's lots of room for brilliant creative thinking, and we're gonna need we're gonna need it. I think I think we're gonna need it. You know? Yeah. I think that they're brilliant creative thinkers
[00:16:27] Unknown:
in government, but in a negative way. You know, that that that their evil is quite brilliant when you think about it because every government for decades has an incredible job of, destroying this country from within. I mean, you can't, you know, I I've not given them praise, but when you look at it, they've done far better than any enemy could have ever dreamt of doing. So, you know, and I think that, Starmer's gonna get all the glory for that, for for for being so evil.
[00:16:59] Unknown:
So, he might well do. Yeah. Well, I think we need an alternative
[00:17:04] Unknown:
Churchill speech that he never made telling the truth. You're fighting for your sons and daughters to leave university and never have a drum. They will then be you know? And we can sort of go on like that. Give with AI, he could probably do a Churchill speech that that would be honest, that would be telling the troops at that time the future. You know? You'll you'll come out of the army. You will be denied an, a pension, and you will die in poverty of, freezing to death because you can't afford to heat your harems. That's what you're fighting for, the freedom to do that.
Seriously, I think we do need a good speech like that
[00:17:50] Unknown:
because Well, I think I think with a bit more creative time available, and I'm expecting to get some. Yeah. I'm writing I'm I'm writing a couple of speeches right now. Not in that vein, but I but I am. Yeah. I I think more structures well, I'm kinda drawn to it at the moment. It go through little phases, don't you, all the time of thinking, well, maybe this communications approach would be slightly more effective. I don't know I don't know where I mentioned this. Maybe I mentioned it after the show with you on Monday or something. Was it this weekend just gone? I had a really well, Paul and Patrick, thanks for being patient. We'll come over to you in the land of the free momentarily.
I, here locally, there's, a street market that takes place on the first Saturday of every month. So last Saturday was that April. And I just happened to be up there. It's quite reasonably lively. People are they shell out £30 for a stand about 10 feet by 10 feet, something like that. Lots of people selling honey and, monkeys and, trainers and all sorts of things. A bit of tuck, but most of it was pretty good, actually. And there happened to be a woman there who is in charge of a magazine, called West Sussex something or other, something like that. It's very well put together. I mean, it's got very high production value. It's all glossy paper and tons of color photographs throughout it. Lots of local advertising. I think it's a monthly. It's been going for quite a while. And, I didn't know that she was the person that was running it. She just said, here. It's a free copy. I said, I should think so. I'm not giving you a pound for that. I'm from North. I'm from Yorkshire. You know? How much? And, no. She was great. We had a really good chat. And I was just interested how many people were turning up. We got talking about the town center, which I had the misfortune to be in yesterday.
Well, I kinda took myself in there intentionally, not to really scout it out. I actually did want to buy some shoes. And I know I could have bought them online, but I wanted to go for a walk at the same time. So I did, and the weather was good, and I got in there. But, Wednesdays down there is also a market day, and it was dreadful. It was really depressing, and the center has fallen away. I mean, I knew, a guy a few years ago. I mean, if I saw him again, we'd probably have a chat. When my sons were playing tennis, we bumped into a lot of people, local business people that run their own shops and their own businesses and this and that and the other. This guy had a really long standing, I think his father had had it possibly, furniture business, for, you know, putting furniture in your house, you know, settees, that kind of stuff. It was pretty grand. And I walked past it coming out of the town, and all the builders were in there. It's all being knocked out. You know? It's it doesn't exist no more. So being a nosy sod, I stuck my nose in and said, oh, I said, what's going on here then? No. I didn't say that because it's obvious what was going on. I just said, when did this do you know when this place went under? He said, it's over a year ago. I said, which shows you how often I go down there, which is not that often, of course.
And, I said, well he said, yeah. We're we're putting two new shops in. I said, well, hopefully hopefully, I said, that'll be a Turkish barbers and a mobile phone shop because we can't have enough of those, can we? This completely went over his head. It was completely not in on the wavelength. And, and I left sharpish like it was very sort of serious kind of building bloke. Nice guy, really, but, not really on that kind of wavelength. So I've no idea what they're gonna be replaced with, but it's dead. The actual it used to be we we had a Debenhams here, which for people outside of The UK was kind of this, well, sort of luxury sort of luxury kind of store, you know, a superstore type thing. It's been around for donkey's years, actually, you know, selling good good men's and ladies fashion. So I'd always go there and buy my suits, which, of course, I never did. I just completely lied and made that up. But they had good stuff in there. You could always go in and buy a nice tie if you need with one.
That's gone. It was one of the nicest buildings in the town as well. So lots of emptiness, very drab atmosphere. You know that people are sleeping in some of those doorways tonight. The things it's not looking good. So I've it was good for me to go and sort of get the reality. But we talk about it here, but it's good to go and see it. Well, good's the wrong word. It's valuable to go and see it and let it impact on you because it's it's not a particularly energized place. And this woman here locally, which is much, much nearer, she said, yeah. This is actually better than what they're putting on in the center of the town, which it was. It really was. So I'm sort of umming and ahing about taking a stand to sell what ideas.
Opinions. Excellent. £3 each. I'll give you a good opinion. Only £3, sir. What do you want? I don't know. Well, what you've just described
[00:22:23] Unknown:
is really you're almost describing Waltham Abbey. Now Waltham Abbey, used to have a a market where you had to queue to get down the road, and it's it's I wouldn't say it's like the shambles, but it's very oldie worldie, Waltham Abbey, but it's rundown now. Now you go to the market, and it's like a very bad car boot sale. It's awful. There's hardly anybody there. You know? And they just got, you know, a few stalls, and that's it. And then because why go there? If there's any if you quit stalls, it and they've done that. That's happened since the council put charges on car parking. Because people say, well, by the park, they go and see a few stalls. We won't go down the local supermarket and park for free. And that's it.
[00:23:08] Unknown:
The big squeeze is on, and they're squeezing tighter, inexorably, with each passing month. Or is it the grape you know, the the boiling of the frog thing? It really is that. I I think I don't think you need to be a rocket scientist to work it out, but most people are even close to being rocket scientists and don't even think about it. They just sort of keep coping all the time. But Accept it. Enough of this gay banter about the restricted, imprisoned English. Let's go over to those wonderfully free American types. Paul, are you with us this evening? I know you are. Hi. How are you? How are you this fine afternoon? And is it really still as cold as you mentioned it was preshow,
[00:23:43] Unknown:
basically? No. Actually, it's in the forties now. It was, 20 morning when I woke up. It was it was terribly cold. You see, I always know when the mornings are cold because when I wake up, I discover that the cat has kind of burrowed underneath the blankets and is curled up in a little ball under my armpit. How she can stand to be down there and still breathe is is absolutely
[00:24:10] Unknown:
a mystery. Thinking about your poor cat. That's the first thing that that popped into my head. Yes. The poor cat. The poor cat.
[00:24:16] Unknown:
Well, at least at least it wasn't a morning after an evening's 13 bean soup. She she won't even come near the bedroom on the on days like that. But I was thinking of the magnificent strawberries. I was thinking of the magnificent strawberries, and I'm thinking that if if they can't actually have, shops or businesses that actually make money in that in that square, the circle that you were you were referring to, maybe they could have some inglorious bastards plant some magnificent strawberries, and there would be a space where people can actually go and enjoy themselves, maybe.
[00:25:04] Unknown:
I don't know. Yeah. No. They need a bit of that. I mean, they seem to love concrete more than they love trees. Although this is a pretty treed sort of place. It is, actually. It's pretty good. There's a there's a place called Grand Avenue, which is lovely. It is rather grand, and it must have been really grand when they laid it out, I think, probably in the late eighteen hundreds because it's, still, it's got maybe two thirds of the original houses, which are pretty massive things. They're all over sort of, like, well over a million quid these lot, maybe a bit more as well to boot. They're big old sort of Edwardian houses and stuff like that and Victorian stuff, and they're just fab. And the road's very wide for English, road measurement purposes. It's very wide, and that's why they call it Grand Avenue. So it's two or three times wider than a normal road. So it sets the houses off good, and half of them, of course, have well, as I said, about a third have been knocked down and turns into blocks of flats in the sixties and the seventies.
And they're not too bad, but they are blocky and square and really in comparison to a proper house. They're absolutely awful. But, it seems to tick over okay. I mean, I was, what was happening the oh, yesterday, I spoke to about four or five people because I just anybody that I see, they I'm gonna speak to them. That's why I just do it. But it's when when it, you know, when we're the English, we talk about the weather all the time. It's easy to get a conversation going. We just talk about the weather just like we did at the beginning of every show because it's the best way to start. And, I bumped into this guy about ten years older than me, John, who came from Lincoln, and he won't be tuned in at all. He was walking his dog, and we just struck up a conversation. It it was about, not very long. About three hours, I kept him pinned to the no. It was about ten or fifteen minutes, and, it was it was just good to talk to him. Similar story to me. It worked up in but it all happened ten years earlier.
We came here 02/2001. He came here in 1991. He was about ten years older than me. He was working in some sort of thing in London, got fed up a bit, moved down here because his wife's parents were here. It's the same in my case. My wife's parents were on the, South Coast here at the time. So I was going, oh, isn't this interesting? Then it turns out, that he comes from Lincoln, and my brother in law's from Lincoln. This is so parochial and completely not newsworthy, but I'm saying it anyway. And, then his his mother originally came from Leeds, And she moved to Lincoln. I said, well, I don't that's a terrible blow. Why is she not still there? But, no. Nice. They're really good people that I bump into. They're all, you know, bumbling around with their dogs and things and just talking and moaning a little bit. You can hear the sort of whine, the sort of economic whine in the back of everybody's sentences that's going on, and it's building up, you know, like an air raid siren, rightfully so.
So hopefully, it'll break out to something good. But Mhmm. Yeah. The shrubbery idea is good. It's good. We've got a lot of trees, as I said. We've got, we just do. And I, still being sort of pastoral about the whole thing. I was out walking, where are we now? Thursday. Two nights ago. Tuesday, I'm I go in fact, yesterday, I did 20,000 steps yesterday. I walked over 10 miles yesterday. I don't know quite how I did it. I think it's because I went out three times, and I couldn't be bothered to get in the car, probably because I didn't have one. So I walked all over. But on the Tuesday evening, I'm walking past this church, and they've got peregrine falcons nesting in the steeple.
And we saw them. Fabulous creatures. These are absolutely they're almost, like, mythical to me. First of all, they've got the most wonderful name, a peregrine falcon. It's just great. I don't know who named it, but, you know, top marks for that. And there are two of them nesting up there. And, apparently, they've got some over at Chichester Cathedral as well nesting up there. And I've been speaking to the to the father there about bell practice. I said, don't the bells sort of, you know, disturb them? He said, no. Because they have bell practice on a Tuesday evening. And one of them, flew off as I was sort of looking at it, which was great. And I saw the other one sort of hop up on the ledge, and the sun was going down, and and it all its breast was red and orange with the fire of the sun. You see? I'm feeling rather poetic today, but it really was very inspiring.
And, just to let you know, it's the fastest thing in the world. Those things descend at 240 miles an hour or something. Outrageous. Unbelievable. That's like you and me traveling at two and a half thousand miles an hour, if you think about it, and still being able to see through our eyes. I have no idea how they do it. It's absolutely amazing stuff. So beautiful. Windshield wiper. Really? Yeah.
[00:29:27] Unknown:
Fantastic. They're great. I get very giddy about stuff like that. I do. It's just really, wow. There's nature. Brilliant stuff. As far as the whole BitShoot thing, the only reason that BitShoot is not in The UK is because The UK people are allowing the tyrannical administrative state to pass laws, rules, and regulations that they enforce regulated regulatorily. You're actually allowing them to do it. Just stand up. Go tell your damn lawmakers, you're not going to censor what I can hear, and you're damn sure not gonna censor what I can say. Just back out of the whole thing. I mean, in The United in The U in The US, we have the national.
Okay? Mhmm. Where the administrative state doesn't have any jurisdiction or authority. They have no in personam jurisdiction over a national of The United States. So I I personally don't care what they do regularly because it doesn't apply to me. And any of them that try to actually apply that to me, I will let them know that, no. You don't have jurisdiction. You're causing me injury, and it's gonna cost you dearly. Mhmm. There has to be the same thing in The UK. You've gotta tell these people. Like, they can't keep messing with your lives just because they have a mahogany desk and people around them that say, yes, minister. Yes, minister. Very good idea. Bloody good. Bloody good. Let's implement that straight away. The people need us to live their lives for them.
[00:31:10] Unknown:
Bull cocker. Yeah. There's quite a bit of that going on. There is. I think, you know, this is gonna sound like a lame excuse or something, but the disease here has has sort of gone outside of political circles. It's been in media circles for a long time. It's difficult to find the sort of people's journalist. I mean, are are you aware of any, Eric, in any major newspapers, like somebody who actually speaks? You know, they used to have them. People like, was it John Sadler? He was a bit vulgar at times. But and then there was Keith Waterhouse. Do you remember him? He was a playwright. He used to write a column in the eighties, in the early nineties.
Mainly in the eighties, I remember. I can't remember when he passed. He wasn't he sort of responsible for Billy Liar, that play or something? I think he was Keith Waterhouse. No. They used to, some yeah. They used to write gritty stuff, and I'm not aware of that. We've just got a lot of flamboyant, goofy, well tailored, cheesy sort of echo chambers. I mean, they've always had echo chambers,
[00:32:04] Unknown:
but that's really what's going on. It's not journalists. There's journalists because they just churn over a load of propaganda. And then, to make sure they get their, monthly payslip, they just, report on what the propaganda wants them to report. And there's there's no such thing as investigative journalists anymore.
[00:32:23] Unknown:
I think Well, we need a I think, like, I think we need another we need a, we need a change in another area before we're gonna see changes there. I I think that I'm gonna close that in a moment. But before I do, let's bring on, our ambassador, over in Wisconsin. How's the cheese weather today, Patrick? Cheese. The ambassador of cheese. How's the cheese situation, Patrick, today?
[00:32:47] Unknown:
I think it's okay.
[00:32:49] Unknown:
Can you hear me alright? I'm I'm talking on my mobile right now, so it's a problem. Oh, I just thought you had a mouthful of cheese when you were talking. That's all. I don't mind. Of course. You can eat while we're doing the thing. No. You sound fine. I'm teasing you. You sound fine. I'm I'm, tending to at the same time, but, yeah. I can talk. I, You're multitasking. Is that what you're telling me? Multitasking for for a little bit here until I am free to to,
[00:33:12] Unknown:
devote my entire attention to, our our talk here. But, I think that I don't I I like what you're doing with the the peer tube instance as a way of getting around this whole, you know, censorship of bit shoot and getting people's voices, you know, from preventing them from speaking the truth to the power because the power powers that should not be are making these laws that, they where they think that they're they're the only purveyors of truth, and we need something that can get around that. And I think there's always gonna be something like that that's gonna take place where you get you you get one mode of communication taken away from you. We're clever at finding another mode of communication.
So I think it's necessary.
[00:34:04] Unknown:
That's the problem. I'm exceedingly clever at that. You're quite clever at it. And Eric and Paul are reasonably clever at it. But and all the listeners, of course, are exceedingly clever at this sort of thing. I I mean, when they do this, you see, they don't have to completely wipe you out. It's a bit like soft kill all the time. It's, very energy sapping when you build a thing and you build a sort of head of steam up with it, and then they change a thing. And it doesn't quite kill you off, but it wipes out a huge chunk. It's like when people lost a lot of followers on YouTube and things like that, and, they know this. I mean, it demoralizes the communicator.
They go, it is. It's you know, whatever people might wanna say. I know there are there are certain channels that got huge numbers of followers, and they tend to translate into lots of live listeners and things like that. I don't have much of a YouTube channel. Although, shout out to everybody on YouTube. That's growing all the time, so it's wonderful to have you here. I'm keeping an eye on the chat there. And, of course, to all the, all the reprobates over in Rumble, good evening or good afternoon, depending on what part of the world you're in. Welcome. And, I haven't even had a chance to even look at the comments, but it's reasonably lively in there and ticking over. So that's quite good. But, yeah, I I think sort of some a little bit more thorough planning might be it's very tedious that I say such a thing. But these private members associations apparently hold out, some kind of a a a defense, for this sort of stuff, and we would have to create some kind of a private member's club.
And this means, of course, it starts off very small, which in its sense in its own way, can be slightly discouraging for everybody. Well, there's only five people here. I mean, there will be a day, you know, with these things where there would only be five people. But, yeah, if we can get the sort of structures right and it could grow, in terms of, you know, building up membership and that kind of stuff and structuring it in a proper way. I mean, there's nothing stopping them, becoming members then seeking to, you know, chew it out from within. And they will absolutely do that once it gets to a size where they get concerned about it. That's exactly what they do. They just pretend to be a pal, and then they and then they cause trouble. Yippee. But nevertheless, we have to keep, I think, we have to keep using the tools that we've got available as best we can. And Patrick there, just for everybody, just mentioned a thing called peer tube, which is kind of, a way in which one can, set up one's own version of YouTube. It sounds a bit grandiose, but you can do it. It's not as sophisticated as, as YouTube is, not as it need to be, but it does provide, levels of controls and multiple channels for creators, as we are all called, or communicators, as I think he's probably nearer to the truth, to have their own channel and develop their own following. So, Fulgham Hall and Patrick and Paul and me and others, George Hobbs possibly because I mentioned it to him at the weekend.
It might take a few weeks to put it in place properly, but we're gonna have a go at this, I think, and see how it all works out, which means that this show would run here on Rumble and on YouTube and on this other platform as well. Initially, it could even be just viewed as a safe haven backup, which is fine. It's absolutely fine. But it's got live chat in it as well, which is really key, I think, for these sorts of shows. So we'll give it a go. These things always take a little bit of time to build up a head of steam. But, you know, if we can get it if we can get it structured right at the beginning, it might be might prove reasonably attractive to a broad array of chatters and chatterbox types like ourselves. So that that could be pretty good. Yeah.
Yes. Anyway, theme of this week's show. It's not I mean, we don't really have themes. I just come up with a picture and a title, and we will talk about it for five minutes or maybe fifty five minutes. I don't quite know. Last week, the show was called Crisis of Civilization, which is the title of a book by Hilaire Belloc. And for those of you on the radio, you can't see the magnificent image for today's show, which is of, on the left, GK Chesterton. I have to say looking rather slim in that portrait in comparison to most of the photographs I've got. I mean, he was a man who really did like pies or whatever. And on the on the right, we've got Hilaire Belloc. And, many of you will know I reference Belloc quite a bit, and in my mind, for very good reason because he's, he's tremendous.
You'd be very interested, Patrick, to know that some of his I think you will. Maybe everybody will be interested to know that, some of his essays have all been released by a publisher, which I believe are monks in Ireland. Came across his printing. They've released all his essays, which are some of they're fantastic things. They're extremely thought provoking. And Belloc has written on usury. He's written on banking. He's written on economics broadly and in great detail. He's written on the servile state, which is the condition we are now in everyone, even though it's not really fully detailed for everybody. He's written on the he he wrote a great book on the freedom of the press, and he wrote these things about a hundred years ago.
And broadly and he also wrote some tremendous things on the reformation. He wrote a book on the French Revolution, which I've not read, but I'm gonna get a hold of because I I think, you know, what I think I mentioned last week. When we started the show, I was, early on, I was reading Nestor Webster's The French Revolution, which is absolutely brilliant. But I'd like to see what Belloc's take on it. So he's a very bright lad, and he talks about the things that are still plaguing us to this day. He does. And, I think, Eric, when I was on with you on Sunday, I kinda brought this up a little bit, which is one of the things that he talks about that I was just reading last week or during the week with regards to what happened with this thing called the reformation, which is worthy of everybody's attention because, one of the points he made this is under Henry the eighth. Okay? Fifteen thirties is what we're talking about, this period of heads, choppy heady things getting chopped off and all this kind of stuff. It's a pivotal moment.
This separation of, or the creation of the Church of England against Catholicism. He deals with it in a really brilliant way because one of the things he points out is that the the the root of the rot had begun in Catholicism about a hundred and fifty years prior to that at the end of the thirteen hundreds, and it slowly built up. And big power structures and systems tend toward this as they get bigger and bigger and less sort of, you know, the communication lines get longer, particularly in those days, and and it it didn't go so good. The re so the reformation didn't cause it, but it enabled it to happen. Without it, it wouldn't have fully happened. So it's a sort of six of one and half a dozen of the other. And what he's taught he talks about three types of or three areas of what would you call them? Control, conviction, organization, which is the spiritual, the political, and the economic.
And what we actually do require, and, of course, this all comes down to what your definition of the word spiritual is. But what he talks about, particularly in the middle of the book, is he talks about the requirement for a spiritual regeneration. And then, in fact, all changes, all these major pivotal changes throughout history have started with that. Even the reformation started with a kind of spiritual disturbance within people being cross about paying mortuaries, where these colossal fees they had to pay when people died. They just kept adding things on, recognized today. Maybe I was saying this last week, but if I am, I don't mind saying it again because repetition is the key.
So everywhere we look today, there are additional charges for everything, and the existing charges keep going up. There's no accountability. Nobody justifies why your electricity bill's going up at all, and it's getting exhausting. And this is what happened then. That's that's what happened. So there was this change. Then once you've had a spiritual one, once people have decided that it might be good it might be a good thing for people to become moral and ethical about and have a standards, I e law, by which to live by because without it, we can't protect our civilization, then you start to tell the political class or the political class will respond to that to that emotional, spiritual outcry, demand, new direction from the people. That's those guys and girls.
And then finally, supposedly, in the in the proper organization of it, the poll the political force will structure the economic life so that it supports the desire on the spiritual level. What we've now got, it's not rocket science, is it's completely in reverse. Everything has moved over to economics, which is just a sort of deceptive way of talking about central banks and usury. That's really all it is. So central banks and usury hide behind economic reports, but it's all guff because nobody knows how banking works. So how can you work anything out? And they are now bossing the political class, and the spiritual regeneration is being kept down. Maybe courtesy of things like, you know, shutting BitChute down over here or whatever.
It's kind of it's all morphed the wrong way around. And, the pros the challenge before us, ladies and gentlemen, is to is to discover what it is that we think spiritually, and in more common parlance, you would say morally and ethically, what it is that we require, that we need to restore that thing called civilization, which you have to say is it's a bit of a stretch, the definition of it right now, what's going on, because there's so much uncivilized behavior and hostile behavior from the so called elites and these other people who are completely beholden to money, to the money power.
Did I say all that last week? I probably did, didn't I? But, that's kinda where we're at. And I can't recommend Crisis of Civilization enough like I've recommended other books. So I I would really if you don't read things in long form, I urge you to do that. It's I mean, you might not like that book, but you might have other things that you wanna get stuck into. But it gives you a longer period to actually think about things, and you'll start to think things and see things, I'm gonna suggest, that you will see that the political class are never going to see because they're too busy having dramas in the newspapers. They actually can't think straight.
You know, in fact, I, although this is slightly at a tangent where have I put this? I think I've got this somewhere. Have I got this somewhere? You heard of a guy called, Mike Graham. You you probably would have heard of him in the in The US, but he he's, a morning breakfast guy over here. His show is Monday to Friday, 6AM to 10AM. That's a bit of a shout, isn't it? I don't know what time he gets up. Good luck to him. But I just caught this little snippet. Now this is about the migration thing, but it's not really even about the migration. It's only about a minute long. I've mentioned here before, you know, when we talk about our rulers eyes being mentally ill, not as an insult, but literally true.
This is kind of on that thread. I can't he mentions the name of the guest, but he mentions it very quickly, so I can't quite work out exactly what he what his full name is. It's only about a minute long. Just just cop a load of this as they say.
[00:45:31] Unknown:
Perhaps William Pluston does. William, very good morning to you. Good morning. Very good to see. You've been away, traveling on your on your travels, which we'll get to a little bit later on. Yeah. I guess we should kick off with the big story, of the morning, which is the rape gains. Yeah. And what on earth this Labour government is doing, to basically deny justice to so many young women who they say they want some protection and who they say they want to fight for. Yeah. You know, they say they want to safeguard with young women and girls. And yet, here's an absolute opportunity to do it, and they've they've turned it down.
[00:46:01] Unknown:
Well, they will. Yeah. And I think it's because the whole episode, cuts against their worldview. Yeah. That's the reality. Mhmm. So all of these Labour MPs, they have a worldview based on oppressors and victims. Right. You know, and the oppressors are white people and the victims of various minorities. That's how they think, Mike. So they can't actually see the reality. Can't get the the reality cuts up against that. Yeah. It just it's so, so so butts up against the whole world view. And that's why they just their reaction is to resist it and pretend they're actually pretending they I think the reality of what's happened is so bad that their reaction is just to sort of deny it themselves. They can't deal with it. It is you know, it must be the biggest race based crime in postwar Europe probably. It got to be. Probably on the numbers. Yeah.
[00:46:48] Unknown:
It's horrific. I mean, it's almost like the the level for me, any worse of a terrorist attack.
[00:46:55] Unknown:
Worse than a terrorist attack. Now it's not really the migrant stuff, although we can talk about that. That's the because I view that as a symptom, but it's this the fact that these for Labour, read conservatives. Read all of them. They're all in a kind of psychological denial about what's taking place and what they're responsible for. Gents, I'm assuming you've kind of noticed this in whatever is your neck of the woods. Oh, yes.
[00:47:23] Unknown:
Yep. Because if they recognize it, they they may be put under pressure to do something about it
[00:47:31] Unknown:
That's right.
[00:47:33] Unknown:
Which they don't wanna do.
[00:47:36] Unknown:
Well, they don't have a clue what to do.
[00:47:39] Unknown:
Oh, no. I think they have ideas, what to do, but they don't know who they're going to upset or how it will, affected their position or their pocketbook or their chance for reelection, whatever. They just don't wanna be put in that position. And if they don't recognize it, if they close their eyes, they won't see it, and it's all good.
[00:48:08] Unknown:
All gonna go away, isn't it? Yes. It's all I mean, who could possibly disagree with bringing everybody to live in your country, and we're all gonna love one another, and it's all gonna work out fine even though there's literally no historical precedent for that ever happening ever, ever, ever, nor can it because it runs contrary to the natural instincts of how people really wanna behave. And they don't wanna behave hostile. Are they then you know, we mentioned this repeatedly, but we're gonna do it again. It doesn't mean that you hate the other people. It simply means that you wanna retain your way of life, and it's absolutely impossible to do it when you've got admixtures of different races in the same space, it cannot be achieved, which, of course, is the entire goal that they're after.
But I thought his point, you know, it's good that it I mean, that's a major listen to station, and you wouldn't have heard things like that. Where's that? That's talk radio over here. I'm not sort of saying it's all brilliant. I'm just saying that every now and again, you hear things coming through like that that you wouldn't have heard even a year or so ago. They're prepared to actually try and address these issues. There is obviously a major problem with the so called migrant crisis. First of all, because it's not a migrant crisis. It's a political betrayal crisis. That's what it is. And the political class that are betraying us are so stupid, they don't even realize that they're betraying the country. That's why I say they're mentally ill. They're not even aware of how recklessly stupid and dangerous they are because they've got their ideology, and you can't go against it. And I thought his point was well made. You know? They can't actually cope with it.
They're literally going to brain fade. And and, I mean, we've seen this for donkey's years, I suppose, in nearly all political speakers over here. I don't know what it's like in The States. I don't follow it as closely. But trying to get a straight answer out of a politician is not possible.
[00:49:51] Unknown:
Right. They're just I I I think they see it as a cost of doing business. They see it as a cost of doing business. They're they're bringing in massive amounts of illegal immigrants. Those immigrants are taking the, taking the jobs that, Americans or Brits could be doing, and they are being given the right to vote. And in some cases, many cases, they're given, public welfare. And at the highest level available Mhmm. The lion's share, I I don't have any numbers to back it up, but I would believe that the lion's share of people that are receiving Social Security are doing so at anywhere between a 1,200 to $18 or $1,800 US a month.
Some of these guys were getting, like, 3,900 a month. They didn't pay into the system. They're not American citizens. They're not naturalized. They weren't born here, and they're getting almost $4,000 a month in benefits on a card, plus they apply they, they qualify for food stamps. They qualify for Medicare and Medicaid for free medical care. They're getting all of these freebies when the Yep. American counterpart, is forced to live on less than a third of what these guys are getting, and they worked here their their entire life.
[00:51:35] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[00:51:36] Unknown:
Yep. Well, we have a similar thing, similar dynamic here at play. We really do. Well, they want voters. Seems to
[00:51:45] Unknown:
Well, you get a vote for. Do. Yeah. You you get somebody pardon me. You get you get somebody that's ready to give you $4,000 a month, in cash money, $250 a month in food, if not more, who are you gonna vote for? Are you gonna vote for the guy that's complaining about the, immigration and wants to shut it down, or are you gonna vote for the for the nut who signed the check to the detriment of the rest of the country just because he wants a vote. Mhmm.
[00:52:22] Unknown:
We have to get rid of these guys. If we wind that back a bit if we even wind that back a bit, we're we've got this point of why is it that people that are not of the nation, the home nation, get the vote? Yeah. I They shouldn't Nobody even asked me if they could have the well, we know I did it. They're literally being brought here to provide the vote to the people that brought them here. Right. And so what what you know? But it by law this is me being pathetic. By law, that shouldn't that shouldn't be allowed. I don't like it.
[00:52:52] Unknown:
No. It shouldn't be allowed. It should be considered treason. And Please stop doing that. It's really upsetting And, the ones that are doing it should be strung up. Not the illegals. They should be given a one way ticket back home. The ones that are doing it, bringing them in need to be struck.
[00:53:17] Unknown:
Eric, do you think that's a good case for capital punishment? What say ye?
[00:53:24] Unknown:
Well, it's, I don't think there's any case for capital punishment because, how far do you go? Nobody's got the right to play god
[00:53:34] Unknown:
because they'll So they're they're playing it. I'm I'm playing I'm playing agent provocateur here. They're playing it. But there's a lot of look at their decisions, it has resulted in the death of British girls.
[00:53:46] Unknown:
Yes. But also, they're psychopaths. And as doctor Haire, a Canadian doctor who's a leading expert on psychopaths has said, come very close to saying, rather, he hasn't really said it out loud, that they are a different breed to human. They are a a kind of subsection of breed to us. So they have not no empathy at all. And as they're a different breed, their their sort of, shall we say, programming is to kill humans, is to to is to make human life unpleasant. So my view is to put them on an island away from us. They have a much right to live on this earth as we do, but away from us. And then they never get off that island. And that's it. Full stop, end off.
It's the easiest way because, you know, had we are programmed not to kill people. So how are you gonna get someone like Pierpoint to lynch these sods? That that's those skills are no longer around. They don't exist anymore. Couldn't we just feed them to the lions? They used to do that a couple of thousand years ago. Couldn't we do that? Bit entertaining, isn't it, really? Or you could have a modern idea with with, like, instead of having the guillotine, you could have a circle of saw. It just goes along a long line of them. So
[00:55:00] Unknown:
straight along. You see? Yeah. Job done. I mean, I think the main maybe a main challenge for them I mean, I think we kinda sort of try to fulfill that role to some degree is to really get the finger point in the right direction. So, obviously, the knee jerk reaction around the the migrant thing is we don't want these people that's exactly what they want you to say so that they can paint you out as a racist and make it even worse. You know? It's a bit like Starmer's response to the stabbings whenever they were, you know, last year. It's just absolutely ridiculous. He he was more concerned about white people being outraged by this, and the potential upthrow of their ideology. Just going back to that little clip we just played there with, you know, from the radio.
It's that same thing. They can't actually cope with it. We have to find a way because we can't actually cope with our government. Yep. That would be that would be because they're not ours. We can't cope with it. I mean, if Oh, no. If they carry on behaving the way that they are doing and I I see no signs that they're just suddenly gonna go, you know what? We've been completely wrong about this. We're really upsetting our own people. When when has anybody ever said that? They're not going to you know, like, just plain common sense conversations that you're never gonna hear because everything's got to be so sophisticated, and it's got to have an expert. There's always an inquiry. Have you noticed that inquiries, they're for as if this is, well, there's gonna be an inquiry. Yeah. And that just means some people sitting around smoking a few cigarettes again. What do you wanna do about it? I mean, it's a joke.
We're gonna have to find force from somewhere. I mean, I think it's a mental battle first, to get this information published and beefed up. Maybe it's going I mean, there are positive signs. It is going up. But every time one of our people gets harmed and we don't do anything about it, we're gonna get harmed even more. The rate of harm coming to us is gonna increase the speed of it, and it is doing because that's how nature works. He goes, oh, push over. We'll push them over then. But but Whether it's right or wrong, it's not that I disagree with you. I I don't like the idea of it. But one put you know, if it's if it's us against them, this is what and that's what they're trying to make it. Right? Then it it they'll get the mayhem that they want. And people won't be sitting around going, oh, I don't know whether I wanna kill anybody. Someone will be coming at them with an ax, and they'll just act, won't they? And I know I'm getting silly. I know I'm getting carried away.
But but maybe I'm not because history tends to show that this is what occurs. If you keep projecting weakness out to people, they become more and more emboldened and think, well, if you don't want all this stuff, we'll just take it off you. Alright.
[00:57:22] Unknown:
That's what's happening. That's kinda what's happening. About the ongoing propaganda? I mean, my neighbors say to me, yeah. But the English don't wanna work. That's why we're getting all these people coming over. What? Mhmm. Now who started that propaganda off? Because to me, that's come from the social engineers. The British and the English don't want to work. They're too lazy. So you you got to employ people from overseas. That is 100% propaganda that's sent out. So my answer is, well, we weren't too lazy to fight in World War two, were we? Won World War one.
[00:57:57] Unknown:
See, when the government wants us to kill, we'll do it. Yes. So it's the connection to the government. Yeah. I mean, it's still there. There's no two ways about it. It's still there. Apparently, we would do it. Apparently, they're gonna line them up to do it again. But there's something else. I I just think there's, you know, there's something else that's gotta take place before we can actually deal with it all. So something internally. Something internally is still required. It really is.
[00:58:21] Unknown:
An outrage. That's really what that's what all will start with an outrage. That's it. And, I'm just waiting for the outrage to happen. World War one started with an outrage, and World War two started with an outrage. Mhmm. Usually just engineered. And, stupid idiots will believe it. Oh, yeah. Oh, yes. Isn't that terrible what those Russians have done? You know? People are stupid. They really are. And they'll fall for it.
[00:58:48] Unknown:
Like, they'll fall for it. I mean, I think this this economic thing that Paul was just mentioning and that we're having here, you know, where people are coming over here and getting houses and everything, I think it's part it's got to be, a component part of the, laying the groundwork for wheeling out central bank digital currencies as the solution to this economic problem, which they are currently creating for us. So they're creating this problem intentionally with all this outrage. They're ignoring everybody. They're manhandling it. They're using all their wonderful psychological skills to misdirect people and to get people emotionally connected to bottles of beer and cheeseburgers.
Nothing wrong with beer and cheeseburgers, but, you know, if that's all you've got going on in your life, it's a bit of a problem. And, they're undermining, literally, of course, all of the the remnant of the economic strength of here by design, so that they can say, well, what you here's the solution. It is the old problem reaction solution thing. It never fails to sort of work. So this we're in the problem emphasizing, problem expanding phase here. You know, I think it's definitely part of it. Anyway, let's take a break, shall we? Let's play some rock and roll music. I don't know whether it's probably rock music, actually. My brother sent me this the other day, and, I quite liked it, really. It's a bit rowdy for this show, so I thought we'd make a change. We're gonna do this. We'll take a short break and a little station ID. You listen to Paul English Live here on WBN three two four. We're gonna take a big break, and we'll be back on the other side of this little lot.
Tis a bit raucous, isn't
[01:03:27] Unknown:
Three four radio. Stop that. Stop that.
[01:03:32] Unknown:
Attention all listeners. Are you seeking uninterrupted access to WBN three twenty four talk radio despite incoming censorship hurdles? Well, it's a breeze. Just grab and download Opera browser, then type in w b n three two four dot z I l, and stay tuned for unfiltered discussions around the clock. That's wbn324.zil.
[01:03:55] Unknown:
The views, opinions, and content of the show host and their guests appearing on the World Broadcasting Network are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of its owners, partners, and other hosts or this network. Thank you for listening to WBN three two four Talk Radio.
[01:04:11] Unknown:
Hi, and, welcome back to the second hour. It's just gone three minutes past nine. Look at me doing all the sort of radio jock timing nonsense. I don't know what's getting into me. It's ridiculous. That I really rather like that song. Gents, did you like it, or did you hate it? I don't mind. You gotta tell me. What would you say? Think it was quite jaunty. Quite groovy, wasn't it? Jaunty, did you say? Did you say jaunty? Yes. Yes. What it No. Say that we don't expand your lexicon of words around it. Jaunty. Yes. That's a very good word. I quite like jaunty, Paul. You can come back next week. That's great.
[01:04:45] Unknown:
Yeah. Oh. Eric's not saying very much. I think he threw up. You hate it, Eric. Tell me. It was alright, and it actually it it does cure constipation, I think. So so I think it's okay. Yes. No. Actually, I I I I kind of I I could take it or leave it. It is yeah. It's it's a bit catchy, I think. You know? Completely indifferent.
[01:05:06] Unknown:
Not jaunty enough for you then, I think. I think we can safely say. No. You know, it's sort of it lacked sufficient jauntiness. That's what you're saying. You want a bit of
[01:05:15] Unknown:
German rock. That's what you want. That's what I kinda like. Yeah. Oh, there you go.
[01:05:20] Unknown:
Are you? Are you a headbanger? Secretly, are you a headbanger, Jake? Yeah. Yeah. It's all coming out now. I thought I better stop. Deutsch.
[01:05:30] Unknown:
You wanna fight this is Deutsch. Yes. There it is.
[01:05:35] Unknown:
Okay.
[01:05:36] Unknown:
Alright. I'm I'm getting a feel for this. Eric, you are Joe. Put a paperclip in the earlobe and black lipstick away from being a right proper rocker.
[01:05:48] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:05:50] Unknown:
I'll tell you what, Eric. You've thrown me. This is really, really weird. I've got all weirded out now. I feel like I don't know you at all. God. That's weird. Some John German heavy rock. Actually, it is very catchy. Yeah. I think you'll like it. Now I used to play it at the beginning of my show before
[01:06:06] Unknown:
YouTube, so it was a copyright.
[01:06:08] Unknown:
So it's like but, You send me some over in between shows, and I'll give it and and if it meets with my jaunty approval, I might give it a go. I'm a I've got to say I feel slightly trepidatious, there's another word for you, everybody, about it. So, yeah, I I I do. I'm slightly anxious about it, but there we go. Patrick, you you know a thing about Patrick knows a thing about tunes and cheese. What did you think about that tune, Patrick? Did you quite like it? Was it John Cena for you? Where's he gone?
[01:06:40] Unknown:
I might be working on something else.
[01:06:44] Unknown:
He's not interested. He's just left. He's eating cheese. It's all gone. I gave him such a great intro. Well Oh, he's, he's actually deserted the studio. Oh, I know what's happening. I yeah. He's deserted the studio, but he will be back in. I think what he said to me earlier was that he was gonna be on his mobile, for the first bit because he was, churning some cheese or whatever he was doing. It was actually, you know, all that kind of stuff. And he's probably hightailing it back now in his hot rod, to his studio so that he can, you know, get behind a proper grown up adult microphone and feel part of the crew. So, well, if you missed that, that's it. Anyway, for those of you who wanna be part of your misery, that was JD MacPherson.
Never heard of him before. An American type, in his forties. That was called Head Over Heels. There's quite a bit of material, from him. But, I thought you see, I thought that sounded a bit like Motown in a bit. His vocals were sort of Motowny,
[01:07:42] Unknown:
but he's, sort of, you know No. You want a bit of ice ice pressure. Put a bit of ice pressure on. I think that Monet got a lot of ice pressure. Very noise, he is. Bit of Well, they they are band called Ice Pressure. Ice that's e r e I s b r e c h e I. Ice how is that?
[01:08:03] Unknown:
I quite like Ice Pressure, though. That's the way I heard it because I'm an English type. Ice Pressure
[01:08:09] Unknown:
with lyrics. Yeah. Go on to YouTube. Get there about that. I think you'll enjoy that. Alright. We're gonna get banned. If you start talking like that, they're gonna go
[01:08:17] Unknown:
they're gonna go, who are those Nazis out there? I'm a Nazi, and so is my wife. Yeah. And all that kind of stuff. Yeah. Okay. Well, I'll try and get my local friends.
[01:08:27] Unknown:
No. They play a big concert in Germany. You know? And, they're quite all above board. They're they're very good, actually. And, they certainly do a bit of, well, they'll give, quite a few, shall we say, stateless core run for their money. I'll tell you that.
[01:08:49] Unknown:
XO says war. XO writes by the way, hi to everybody in the chat. I'll start looking now. We'll we'll bring you into the show. We're so rude. You know, they're all we're all so into ourselves around here. It's awful, isn't it, really? XO says, send Paul that awful song by the Scorpions. No. Please don't. Please don't. I can't be doing with that stuff. It just Which one by the Scorpions? All of them, Paul. All of them. No. I I actually
[01:09:14] Unknown:
I actually have a USB thumb drive in my car that has nothing but Scorpions tunes on it. I have the entire discography. I could I could literally drive for 1,200 miles and not repeat a song.
[01:09:27] Unknown:
Alright. Okay. Okay. So am I sort of detecting a head banging subculture here in the show? This is really what's going on. It's getting quite alarming now. Now. Well, you're so passionate. It it brings it brings I did yeah. But you're finishing it off. I feel finished off by all this stuff.
[01:09:43] Unknown:
What about a bit of ice press? Yeah. It's it's loads of them. You see? I mean, Rammstein. That's another one. R a, double m, s t e r n. No. And now you're.
[01:09:54] Unknown:
No. No. No. No. Oh, I'm shuddering. No. No.
[01:10:01] Unknown:
No. They're all about. You know? I mean, take your granny at one of their concerts. That's how nice it is. See? So that's how nice it is. I mean, what's wrong with Des O'Connor and Vera Lynn?
[01:10:13] Unknown:
Listen. I want I know nothing. I mean, listen. There is there was a head banger in me, but it really hurts. And in the end, you just go, this is very, very silly. Right. It's very silly. And, also, the fact that nearly all those musicians are now literally deaf, you know, from what they're doing, it's just it's very, very silly. It doesn't need to be so I'll get some Morris dancing music as a bit of counterpoint. How about that? That'll make everybody chirp at one. What about Charlie and his orchestra? That you introduced me to Charlie and his orchestra. They're alright, aren't they? Yeah. They're good. They're good. I mean, I did play you the greatest one, which is the man with the big cigar, which is without a doubt. Yeah. For and I've listened to a lot of them, and it's just outstanding. Lyrically, it's outstanding, of course, because it's so wonderfully cutting and true.
And, of course, it's also politically, colossally incorrect, and so I can probably only play it once without getting banned from everything. But, yeah, they're good. Challengers Orchestra, cracking little band. Anyway, where were we? Oh, I know what I wanted to play. This is completely going off. Were you talking about you know, Ursula fond of lying or Ursula von der Leyen as she's known? Is she German or Dutch? What is she? Anybody know? Who? Answers on a postcard, please. I can't work it out. Is she German or Dutch, everyone? Anybody in chat now? I don't know.
Sounds like Ursula von der Leyen. Yes. My grandmother. Ursula von der Leyen. Yes. She took hers, but it went away. Sorry. I know. It it well, she's that sort of blonde haired bent that's always talking complete nonsense. I mean, that that would be much they all talk nonsense. You know the one. Right? And she's been dropped in there. Nobody voted for anything. So, whatever. Gotch. Is Gotch like Dutch x o? He's written Gotch. I think it's Dutch. Right? She's Dutch, is she? Yes. Hang on. I've got a little clip of her saying something absolutely hilariously insane. You might have all heard the I I wonder if anybody put in the chat. I I got it a few days ago, actually. Where have I put this? Where have I put this crazy little thing? Hang on. I've got it here. It's very brief. You ready? Brace yourself.
[01:12:17] Unknown:
Do that. Europe is the values of the Talmud. The Jewish sense of personal responsibility, of justice, and of solidarity.
[01:12:30] Unknown:
Let me play that for you once more just so that you Pump up the level. You heard
[01:12:36] Unknown:
is actually pardon? What's that? Pump up the level a bit. It was real quiet.
[01:12:40] Unknown:
Pump up the volume. Yes. Here we go again. Pump up the jam. Europe is the values of the Talmud,
[01:12:47] Unknown:
the Jewish sense of personal responsibility, of justice, and of solidarity.
[01:12:57] Unknown:
I'll just play that little bit right at the beginning again.
[01:13:00] Unknown:
Europe is the values of the Talmud.
[01:13:04] Unknown:
There we go. Europe is the Europe is the values of the Talmud. Okay. Yeah. So this is someone who redefines the definition of a blonde bimbo. She actually makes most blonde bimbos look hyperintelligent, and I don't think blondes are necessarily bimbo ish. In fact, I think they should play on it. Most of the blonde ladies I've ever met have been sharp as razors, to be quite honest, but she's just that's just hilariously insane. Don't you think that's insane? It's like someone who literally doesn't understand who she is, what the history of Europe is, or anything, or what the Talmud is at all. She would have to become more sane to be rated as insane, I think. Yeah. Am I in banable territory with YouTube now? I think we might have just moved into it. Their AI bot's gonna go crazy. They've just said the word Talmud.
[01:13:52] Unknown:
No. No.
[01:13:56] Unknown:
I just it's, should I be what are we supposed to do with something like that? I mean, you can only just draw the logical conclusion that, a, she's never read it. I have. Not all of it. I've read enough of it, to know that it's not worth reading all of it, at all. And it's a very silly book in my considered opinion. If you have a different opinion, that's fine. But mine is it's silly. It's also very dangerous, and it's got nothing to do with Europe at all. In fact, it's a complete antithesis of everything that supposedly the traditions of Europe stand for. So are we to believe that she's basically a Talmudist?
Well, if she's a is any surprise why things are yeah.
[01:14:31] Unknown:
I should think so. She's trying to promote position. She's trying to promote the Talmud in The UK. She's trying to promote it. Suggesting?
[01:14:44] Unknown:
Yep.
[01:14:45] Unknown:
She's not suggesting it because the people that that have already been lulled to sleep by the little wavy blue lines while they're watching the mainstream news, they're already in a hypnotic receptive state, then they'll just be all glassy eyed saying, oh, yeah. That's where that comes from. The UK has the talmud. Okay. Please. Right. Give me a break.
[01:15:13] Unknown:
I've just got to go and get something to calm down. I need some drugs or something.
[01:15:18] Unknown:
I think I need bubbles. Absolutely. I do. I think I need bubbles. Yep.
[01:15:22] Unknown:
But what do you mean champagne? It's 05:00 somewhere. So it is 05:00 somewhere.
[01:15:30] Unknown:
Have you seen these bubble tea places, springing up? What is bubble tea when it's out? There's one that sprung up per I I actually went down to the town today, and there's a new place called a bubble tea. What is it? It looks as if it's from the, Far East. It looks Asian or something. Does anybody know what bubble tea is? I mean, is it like an arrow that's melted in melted
[01:15:56] Unknown:
into a cup? I mean, what is it? Are you just making this at what I eat? Bubble tea? What
[01:16:01] Unknown:
bubble tea? Tea, but with bubbles in it? I don't know. It's it's just it's a place called bubble tea. Come and get bubble tea. Yeah. You can actually buy bubble tea. What the hell is it? I don't know. I'm It's expensive, though, whatever it is. Does anybody know in the chat? It's probably a tea that's been injected with carbon dioxide to make it carbonated.
[01:16:24] Unknown:
I think it's just a carbonated tea.
[01:16:28] Unknown:
Why not? Well That sounds weird. What's wrong with normal tea? Normal tea is great. Doesn't it? Hang on. Hang on. I've got it in. I've got it on your juices. Bubble tea is a popular Taiwanese drink known for its chewy tapioca pearls, bobber, and various flavors, often including milk, tea milk tea, fruit, and different sweeteners.
[01:16:51] Unknown:
Oh. Which, at least, is very expensive.
[01:16:55] Unknown:
Sounds horrible, doesn't it? Sounds bloody awful.
[01:16:59] Unknown:
I'll just stick to PG tips and the monkeys, if you don't mind. Yeah. Absolutely. Alvin Kurt writes, hello all cooking away. That clip made me laugh out loud and spit a mouthful of ale out. What a waste of good beer, Alvin Kurt. Personal responsibility rights. I'm just doing a really theatrical laugh for you, Alvin Kurt. Yes. It's just absolutely tremendously insane what she just said. Like, 180 degrees completely, totally incorrect. Marvelous. But, Paul, you're right, unfortunately. This is a thing about developing things further and fuller. Now, I know this is not necessarily a place for poetry, and I've not talked much about GK Chesterton.
Although, as you know, I am a bit I'm partial to a good poem. And, the picture so just going back to today's picture of the show because we dip in and out of sort of this, that, and the other, don't we? I'm not in control of this, everybody. I don't know what's going on. But, GK Chesterton and Hilaire Bellock were very good pals. It was down to Bellock that, Chesterton became a Catholic. You might think I'm an advocate for Catholicism. I'm not. That's not what I'm talking about. But I am an advocate for brains, and you've got to admire them wherever you see them. And these two fellows had more than their fair share of brains in all sorts of ways. And, also, until you've actually read Belloc's stuff, you don't get the right sense of what he means. He he's talking very much about the organization of Europe and of Christendom.
And I know I mentioned this last week, and I think that this is certainly, at the moment, it's looming large in my thinking. Something has got to take place. And I know every time I say things like this, people think I'm advocating for you to go to a church. I'm not. In fact, by the strict definition of a church in its early days, this is a church that you're in right now. You might not be able to see us, but this the initial definition of a church, which comes from Kirk, which means circle, which means circle of the elders. It's a gathering of the elders to get down and to discuss the affairs of state, I e the condition of life, what is important, what is going wrong, and what we can put right, etcetera, etcetera. You know, what human beings have been doing for thousands of years whenever they can.
And so this is this is one. And Christendom, certainly when you read about the organization of England prior to the reformation, under this whole structure was better than this. I'm gonna say it now. It was better than this. And the reason is we've moved over capitalism could only have come about after the reformation had basically destroyed that structure. That's why we live in a world dominated by the money power. Now the money power has always existed, but there were lots of safeguards placed upon it by the church, whatever you may think about that, to stop it getting out of hand. Usury still took place.
But it when it was found, I know, certainly in England, up to about 1,500 and odd, if you were caught issuing a mortgage, you could be hung, drawn, and quartered. So there's capital punishment for you, Eric. You're not gonna tell me you disagree with that, or are you?
[01:20:10] Unknown:
No. No. Not for you, sir. No. Not there we go. I found it. I found it, everyone. So he's a headbanger.
[01:20:16] Unknown:
Eric's a headbanger, and He bang on. It's, yeah. Go on. If you hang them using
[01:20:22] Unknown:
bungee bungee rope, then there will be egg bangers because they go straight up, knit their head on the top of the the the gos, won't they? Boing, boing, boing. That would be fun, wouldn't it? Yeah. Yeah. And it's like I was saying to you the other day. We need that T shirt that says usurers' lives don't matter. Oh, that's a brilliant one. I like that one.
[01:20:41] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. You yeah. I I every now and again, you know, I have my moments. So, but it's it's key. It's absolutely key stuff to get a real handle on this org on how the organization should work. Now one of the other things that, and I don't have much on it at the moment, although I've read essays by Belloc particularly where he addresses this, is the power of what is known as the guild. Everybody's heard of guilds. Right? G u I l d. They're not kinda what they used to be. They're still kind of clinging on to all the really excellent, qualities of what a guild was. It was to protect craftsmen and to make sure that competition did not get out of hand. And we live in a world where competition has not only got out of hand, it's almost impossible to have any competition with those that are favored by the money power. For example, Amazon, for example. Yes. And all these other massive concerns, which are basically an amalgamation, I guess, of what we would now call the deep state, which is this combination of control of markets, control of money, which it can only be achieved, you know, through the control of money.
Chesterton had a lot to say about this as well, and they're thinking on broad economic grounds and how men are reduced down to a state of slavery, which is where we're headed. So the highest level that we've achieved, really, as the common working man was the free peasant. So you start off as a slave. You move into being a serf, which is where they're trying to push it now, you know, to get back to feudalism. And after that, you had you were we were free peasants. We owned land. And without ownership of land, you can't get nowhere. Anyway, we've also been talking about look. I'm just trying to stitch a little idea here together so I can read you this poem, if I can find it. Here it is. It's it's gonna take about five or six minutes, but I am gonna read it. It. This is a poem by Chester, and he wrote it about nineteen o eight. He's about 33, 30 four years of age, and it's for us.
It's absolutely for us. It was for us then, and it's for us now. It's called The Secret People, and here we go. So just sit down, get your cocoa. It's gonna take about five or six minutes. There might be a few fluffs, but here we go. The Secret People, smile at us. Pay us. Pass us, but do not quite forget, for we are the people of England that never has spoken yet. There is many a fat farmer that drinks less cheerfully. There is many a free French peasant who is richer and sadder than we. There are no folk in the whole world so helpless or so wise. There is hunger in our bellies. There is laughter in our eyes.
You laugh at us, and love us. Both mugs and eyes are wet. Only, you do not know us, for we have not spoken yet. The fine French kings came over in a flutter of flags and dames. We liked their smiles and battles, but we never could say their names. The blood ran red to Bosworth, and the high French lords went down. There was naught but a naked people under a naked crown. And the eyes of the king's servants turned terribly every way, and the gold of the king's servants rose higher every day. They burnt the homes of the shaven men that had been quaint and kind, till there was no bed in a monk's house nor food that man could find. The inns of God, where no man paid, that were the wall of the weak. The king's servants ate them all, and still we did not speak.
And the face of the king's servants grew greater than the king. He tricked them, and they trapped him, and stood round him in a ring. The new grave lords closed round him that had eaten the abbey's fruits, and the men of the new religion with their Bibles in their boots, we saw their shoulders moving to menace or discuss, and some were pure and some were vile, but none took heed of us. We saw the king as they killed him, and his face was proud and pale. And a few men talked of freedom, while England talked of ale. A war that we understood not came over the world and woke Americans, Frenchmen, Irish, but we knew not the things they spoke.
They talked about rights and nature and peace and the people's reign, and the squires, our masters, bade us fight and never scorned us again. Weak, if we be forever, could none condemn us then. Men called us serfs and drudges. Men knew that we were men. In farm, the flame at Trafalgar, in Albuero Plains, we did and died like lions to keep ourselves in chains. We lay in living ruins, firing and fearing not, the strange fierce face of the Frenchman who knew for what he fought. And the man who seemed to be more than man, we strained against and broke. And we broke our own rights with him, and still, we never spoke. Our path of glory ended. We never heard guns again, but the squire seemed stuck in the saddle. He was foolish as if in pain.
He leaned on a staggering lawyer. He clutched a cringing Jew. He was stricken, it may be. After all, he was stricken at Waterloo. Or perhaps the shades of the shaven men, whose spoil is in his house, come back in shining shapes at last to spoil his last carouse. We only know the last sad squires ride slowly towards the sea, and a new people take the land, and still it is not we. They have given us into the hands of the new unhappy lords, lords without anger and honor who dare not carry their swords. They fight by shuffling papers. They have bright dead alien eyes.
They look at our labor and laughter as a tired man looks at flies. And the load of their loveless pity is worse than the ancient wrongs. Their doors are shut in the evenings, and they know no songs. We hear men speaking for us of new laws, strong and sweet. Yet it is there no man speaketh as we speak in the street. It may be we shall rise the last as Frenchmen rose the first. Our wrath come after Russia's wrath, and our wrath be the worst. It may be we are meant to mark with our riot and our rest God's scorn for all men governing. It may be beer is best. But we are the people of England, and we have not spoken yet.
Smile at us, pay us, pass us, but do not quite forget. There you go. That's so you don't get culture on this show. The Secret People by GK Chesterton. You should look it up and read it every now and again because it's, it nails a lot of really jolly good things. Now where do we go from there? Comments, anyone? I don't know what you're supposed to say, really. Better than the rock song?
[01:27:17] Unknown:
Well, he sums it up, doesn't he, really? I mean, let's face it. We're we're since October, we have just been slaves, Full stop, end off. And we're Mhmm. Apparently, we work more hours now than the peasants did. A serf did years ago. Yep. It's getting ridiculous. You know? Somebody here what are we paying in all this money for? It's just ridiculous. And I've noticed prices have shot up dramatically. I usually buy my eggs from the farm for £1.65 for six. Now it's £2 for six. Unbelievable. Yeah. It's quite a price rise. And it's going up everywhere like that. Not just a few pence, but by I mean, the water, we have to pay 40% more after the April 1 for our water, which is horrendous.
Where are people gonna find the money from? It's leading the country somewhere. And I'm Surfdom.
[01:28:19] Unknown:
Intentionally. It's designed to bring it about. They have this is the technology that they're using, the technocracy, to create the perception, it's not true, but the perception that everything's askew, which, of course, it is, but not for the reasons that they're gonna give you. And as I said, the solution is gonna be the only way to stave this off is for a highly efficient money system called central bank digital currencies. Really? Is it? The actual And another thing. Is is to forgive all the debts
[01:28:48] Unknown:
And and to restructure loans. Yeah. So that so that the government knows exactly what you're doing, can dictate to you. I mean, these handouts, the governments they're all give to me, that is failure of government. Because if a government's doing its job right, you shouldn't have benefits, shouldn't need them. So that's showing their failure. But, you know, we don't we get politicians knocking around the door like we used to. But if one does knock on my door, I'll just ask them one question. What is your party prepared to do about, stopping usury?
A strong question. Very simple. And they'd be off like a rocket. I almost guarantee it.
[01:29:26] Unknown:
Most of them really don't even know what it is. Yeah. Great. They don't, you know, they just don't know. I mean, because there's no awareness that it's a topic worthy of thought. It's that bad. It's, you know, it is the emperor's got no clothes thing. It's right in front of everybody's face, but their ideology, like that clip I played, literally makes them incapable of doing it. So it's obvious that any minute and, we've spent minutes addressing them, talking about them, or thinking about them is, on our part, a minute wasted. I mean, it yields literally nothing back to us. It's not as if we don't know, insufficient degree. I'm not saying 100%, but it's not as if we don't know what is the primary fault to fix.
There's a primary fault above all of the faults in the practical realm of living, and it's this. And, a great length and in tremendously precise, language, Belloc addresses all of these things in the crisis of civilization a hundred years ago. I mean, there's a whole section about manufacturing and the speed of telecommunication. So that brings him right up to date, irrespective of whatever phase of this advanced technology we're now in, whether he could or could not have envisaged the Internet is irrelevant. What he's really talking about is that as this competitive element in society has now been unbridled, there are literally no checks on it and haven't been for some time.
We are absolutely stood there, naked in the marketplace with no defense at all. No matter what they say, they get you all you know, you've got some rights and all that. In concrete terms, it translates to nothing because they're, you know, the the political class is literally the puppet class of of the banking class. So, you know, I've it's good to ask your politician whether they would ban you, Sri. They probably couldn't even spell it. But I can I mean, even this magazine I was talking about that I picked up on the street the other week, you know, at this little market, there was a little column in there by the local Labour MP? It's just completely insane what this stupid Bint is talking about, but she doesn't know it.
She doesn't know that what she's saying is completely counterproductive to producing civilization. It's, I mean, it's a serious mind problem that's out there. It's, like, serious. I guess this is what happens when when you, you know, you do have to make a decision. You're either gonna obey the laws of nature, the laws of god, whether you're comfortable with that way of expressing it or not, or you, become an adherent, a disciple at the temple of Mammon. And it's us against the disciples of Mammon that's the that's at stake. It's really very simple. And they want all the freedoms for themselves to basically extract as much value from you as they possibly can because they're now concerned that, you know, you might if you really find out how much you've been robbed, you might fight back, and they don't want that. So they're actually putting most people in a situation where they will never find out to what degree that they're being robbed. And, of course, because we are high highly adaptive creatures, which we have to be, of course, we get used to just about anything.
Right. And on one level, it's a good thing, and on another, it's a terrible thing. It's terrible. It breeds this sort of, you know, demoralized complacency around everywhere. Oh, yeah. And Paul? Quite cheery little sentence there. Yeah. Paul.
[01:32:56] Unknown:
They're kept too busy to actually be able to look around them and see what's happening to them. The alarm goes off at 05:30 in the morning. They choke down dry toast and a cup of coffee. They get in the car. They fight gridlock for a half hour to forty five minutes or an hour in their commute. Mhmm. They punch in. They sit in this little square cubicle, six foot by six foot, and then they punch out. They go home. They're exhausted. They've already fought traffic yet again for the day. They sit down. They pull something out of the freezer. They pop it into the microwave. They completely kill any food value in what they eat. They sit down in front of the TV.
They listen to the night's evening programming with the with the mainstream news, and then they watch some stupid humor just so they can unwind a little bit and relax and prime time TV. Then they go to bed just to wake up the next morning and do it all over again. They don't have the time or the capacity to actually see what's going on around them. They are kept completely in the dark. And because they don't know what rights they have, because they don't know what rights God gave them when they were born, they will never declare them. They will never claim them, and they will never defend them. Therefore, they will never have them. You only have the rights that you declare you have, and you can defend.
Otherwise, you have nothing.
[01:34:30] Unknown:
Nothing. Spot on. Yep. Absolutely. It's absolutely that. And it's it's finding these conversations. I mean, I often think, is it worth it? I mean, you know, it's diff I I I'm in a conundrum. I've been in it for years. I know that maybe many people listening here have the same sort of challenge. Do I pour more energy into this group, these people that I'm with? I mean, it's not as if I'm this happens that often now to me. It doesn't. But, you know, we've all probably communicated certain things that you know are true that are completely alien to the ears that they're going into. And, of course, you just get rebuffed. I don't blame them. I'm just thinking, are there any sentences available to me that would actually unlock those ears? Are there? Or is it such a long, slow, gradual process, which I suspect, unfortunately, it is, that the idea of thinking that you can actually get through to someone in one conversation is really a little bit wrong headed thinking. That's true. But someone's gotta communicate this stuff. We gotta communicate it, and we have to build up some kind of a communications army. That's That's the best way to think of it. Not a military one, but it's it's an army that's that's gonna be able to communicate these truths in such a way that people go, really? Although I've noticed that even when people have a bingo moment, and I've mentioned this before, you might meet them again then a couple of weeks later, and it's as if you never said anything. You're back to square one. It's as if it didn't really it only went in blindingly for, like, ten or fifteen seconds, but there was no further follow-up. And it's that, really, isn't it? It's something about being a sort of really bugged by this. It causes you to continually question it twenty four seven. I mean, I suspect you guys are like that. I wake up on a morning thinking like that, and it's like that all day. And I go to bed thinking I could stay awake a bit more and think about it a bit more. I don't know whether it's a good use of time. I take a break every now and again, you know, because you gotta have a cheese sandwich. But
[01:36:19] Unknown:
There is a way to fix that. That. Yeah. I'm sorry. Go ahead, Eric.
[01:36:24] Unknown:
That's alright. I chimed in after you. It's okay.
[01:36:27] Unknown:
Okay. There is a way to fix that, What they need to do is see if you talk to somebody and they have an moment or a bingo moment, like you call it, then they go back home and they turn on the telly. And the next day, they turn it on again, and they turn it on again. There there's people who leave their TVs on 247365. What they need to do to fix this is they need to take their television. They need to unplug it. And if they're in if they live in a two story and three story house, they need to carry that television up to the top floor that they have. And if they can get to the roof so much, the better. If they can get, high enough off the ground where they could open a window or go out to the ledge and just toss that TV and let gravity take care of their programming, they would be much better. They need to turn that damn thing off because they call it programming for a reason.
Tell lie vision. It's programming. Get rid of it.
[01:37:34] Unknown:
But It's it's difficult to get people to get rid of it, isn't it? You're right. You're absolutely spot on. I think yeah. I don't know. Answers on a postcard, please, everybody. Someone got the magic. There isn't a magic bullet, is there? There isn't one. It's just you know? At least you could say the positive here is that we get fed at least mentally, all the time by being mentally so concerned about this stuff, which I think you have to be. You know, there's that other quote that if you are reasonably bright, let's assume that we are. Let's at least give ourselves that sort of credit.
The the problem that you kinda have, the more you research into things and you become aware of things that the the vast majority of people are still completely oblivious to, is it makes your life quite grindy, doesn't it? It's quite a thing. It's like the more intelligent you are about the problems of the world, the more miserable you get. You go, oh my god. It's actually not that difficult to fix, except these people don't even know what I'm talking about. Right. Well,
[01:38:32] Unknown:
just just look at what the the mainstream news is doing. Okay? You've got this talking head sitting behind a desk, and he's bringing you stories. I mean, all of the stories are negative. There are very, very, very few human interest stories or any uplifting stories. It's all negative. It's all, this person was shot dead, because, police caught him doing something bad, and the police took care of the problem, or the police took him into custody. What that's doing is number it's doing two things. It's telling you that the world you live in is unsafe, so it's building it's building a a foundation of fear, just in your daily lives. And and if you're coming from a place of fear, it's impossible to come from a place of logic to look at things. And it's also telling you, well, it's a bloody good thing that the cops were there to take care of this bad guy.
I need the cops to protect me because the people in this story needed the cops to protect them. So it confirms and and reaffirms the helplessness that people feel, that they need a nanny state. They need the government to take care of them. They need the government to do tariffs and things like that to, to support the country so they can protect the populace. It's all about the nanny state. What we need to do is we need to find a way to shake people and get them to realize their own power and their own individuality and their own strengths and get them to stand up for god's sake. They have to do it,
[01:40:11] Unknown:
and they're never going to find some is there a drug that we could just stealthily
[01:40:16] Unknown:
administer to people? I have no idea. Well, they say LSD, you know, like, opens up Is there a chemical solution? Can we go to parts of the world. Out there. What could we do? Yeah. Yeah. Let's let's get some balls in a bottle. Can anybody come up with a formulation
[01:40:31] Unknown:
for that? Yeah. Come on. Balls in a bubble.
[01:40:34] Unknown:
I quite like that. Bubble juice. I'd buy some. Yeah. Get some bull get your balls in a bottle.
[01:40:40] Unknown:
Patrick, you're back. You're back. We were speculating on how you disappeared in Cheese Land or something. Have you have you hightailed it back to the studio? I I don't know how long I'd left you out there hanging and drying. Alright. The tapioca. No. I was only there for a few minutes. I yeah. I'm doing well. Just got back. Had had some business to take care of. Sorry about that. That's alright. Yeah. I was I was interested in the bubble tea
[01:41:02] Unknown:
conversation. I know what this drink is. It's it's like these big tapioca things, and then you just suck them up with the straw, and then it's way overpriced type stuff. But, yeah, balls in a bottle, that's that's what I think of when I think of bubble tea.
[01:41:18] Unknown:
Oh, it's a phenomenal price. And there's some toffs sitting in it, you know, drinking this stuff. I mean, I don't know. I mean It's trendy. Just go for a nice cup of tea or a cup of coffee.
[01:41:29] Unknown:
It was damn easy. Cup of tea.
[01:41:31] Unknown:
Nice cup of tea. Yeah. Nice cup of tea. Most of the time, never ever cup have a cup of tea in an English pub because normally a cup of piss.
[01:41:41] Unknown:
And always have coffee when I'm out now because nobody can do a cup of tea like you can do at home. That's what I found. Very rare do you get a nice cup of tea when you're out there. I know. I know. It's always better in a pot, isn't it, if you make a load? So I'm always trying to incur I don't yeah. It is. The the one teabag thing, you can make it work, but you've gotta be patient with it. But in a pot, it's fantastic.
[01:42:00] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm not talking about tea almost as much as I like drinking it, really. And pour pour some cow juice on the top, you know, some milk, but make sure that it's, make sure it's either goat's milk or it's, raw milk. But the trouble is you pour it into hot tea, what it does, it's, homogenizes it because it over a certain temperature, it it knocks out all the all the goodness of the tea sorry, of the milk. Mhmm. So, so you get go buy go and buy some raw milk, pour it in your tea, and then you've got as good as homogenized milk. So, that's the secret of the story. Don't pour it in your tea.
[01:42:39] Unknown:
Or let your cool your tea cool down.
[01:42:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Wait a couple minutes. Down? That's what maybe Pam is. Real men drink hot tea. That's what we do in this country. Hot tea. I bet you drink hot tea, don't you, Paul? Real men don't know what to do. Milk in their tea. Yes. Yes.
[01:42:57] Unknown:
Well, the English do. Yeah. We're frowned upon that it's terrible that you're supposed to put lemon in it, but we're I've told you that I I was telling someone the other who was I telling the other day? Oh, yeah. About last night, actually, I was out with some people drinking wine, not tea. How about that? It was really rather nice, actually. And, people I'd not seen for quite a while had had a jolly good laugh. We were talking about Graham what's his name? Hancock. Norton? No. Graham Hancock and all that kind of stuff. Yeah. It's really good fun and and and talking about all that. It was groovy, really. Not as heavy and miserable as this show. It was fun. It was actually fun. But, yeah, we were talking about tea and all that kind of stuff as you do. And, the pub was selling tea and it wasn't very good. So, but the the thing, you know, I've just, I've I've said this before, but for new listeners, there's a reason, about the English tea break.
So, because they were talking about yeah. That was it. They're they're kind of working guys. They said, yeah, we have a tea break at eleven. You know why you have a tea break at eleven? I said, it it it doesn't have to be eleven. They said, what? Well, we just like tea. I said, no. No. There's a reason why it's in the English culture. Right? Is that when they were building all these, massive cities across Europe and Britain in the eighteen hundreds, you know, with the arrival of gas and electrical things and conduits and all that kind of stuff, they were being built. And the form of transportation all around them were horses at the same time, right, horses and carts. Horses are rather dirty creatures, of course, as you know, and they're rather unruly with the control of their bottoms and the other parts. So there's lots of fluid and and all that manure flying around everywhere. You've got pools of stagnant water. You've got gas and everything. It's a pretty toxic rather nasty atmosphere to work in lots of sort of airborne viruses and very easy to get ill. What they discovered was that if you, start get your workforce drinking tea, which they did in England but not in Europe, the tannin in the tea lines the lining of the stomach with a kind of coating, which makes it much more impervious to, receiving infection. It actually makes you slightly more resilient. So they instituted it. You had to drink tea. It wasn't an option. You were gonna drink it. And, the amount of days lost in England to illness were about one third of the days that they lost to England.
[01:45:14] Unknown:
Sorry, that they lost, across Europe in building these big so there you go. And it's too bad. Made this country what it is today. Alright. And you heard about the queen and the whole, haven't you? Have you heard about one? It's apparently, this is supposed to be a good story. Okay. It's supposed to be true. Whether it is or not, make up your own minds, but it's supposed to be true. In the fifties, some bigwig from some country out in the Pacific, some Pacific Island, Lord, whatever, came over to this country, and there's Queenie next to him in one of these horse drawn, you know, open carriages where she's waving to people and all that. And suddenly, the horse let out a terrific fart.
And the queen said, hey. Pardon? And this king of Fiji, whoever said, your English is so polite. Before you apologized, I thought it was the horse. Sorry.
[01:46:07] Unknown:
Oh, Eric. It's only taking you an hour and forty five minutes to get one in. That's pretty good. Yeah. We like that.
[01:46:19] Unknown:
But we're going back to a more serious stuff again. Before the lockdown, I always used to, puzzle me how Chairman Mao managed to genocide almost, what is it, a a a a billion people? We don't know the true score. And, Stalin, what is it? Oh, that was about 8,000,000, wasn't it, or something? Or 80 I I I don't know the we don't know. But phenomenal amount of pea people. How did that happen, and how did they get to power when Stalin only got in with 7% support of the population, and Chow Mein Mao got in with only 5% support of the population.
Of course, they were backed up by American dollars, so we're told. And then after the lockdown or during the lockdown, I could see the reason why. People are so bloody compliant. I was the only one walking around in a great big superstore without a mask. The only one. Mhmm. And everybody else walking around with his mouth face dappies on. And there was a mobile injection unit set up in the local, town square, and the police said they'd be called in to keep the crowds. And there's a queue wrapped around the corner of people having Bill, William's toxic armbore, you know, Bill Gates' toxic armbore.
And I realized people are just compliant. And that mass fourth mainstream theory, which we was talking about on Sunday, it's very true. One third will believe what everything the government says. 40%, so it's 30%. Forty % will go with the flow, and 30%, like us, can see straight through it. So that's what the government play to the 40%, and all it needs is 5% of that 40% to be pushed over to your side for any big major change. Mass formation? Yes. Yes. Mass formation theory. Yes. Mhmm. And it's a very interesting subject because it's always one third 30%, forty %, thirty %.
[01:48:41] Unknown:
That's why they push the the notion of higher education. Then these people end up becoming the, leaders in the society afterward. And and they exclude the the the people that they don't want. You were you're mentioning chairman Mao. He he was schooled by, the University of Yale here in America. Had a Really? Had yeah. He well, they had a an extension university over in China that they ran, and he was part of that. And an an another fellow you could look up, Sydney Rittenberg is, was his handler for the bankers.
[01:49:24] Unknown:
But I'm Maurice Strong, the Canadian businessman. Yeah. I've heard a bit about him.
[01:49:30] Unknown:
Well, Strong died in China. He died in China, did Strong. He loved it so much. It's because it's their blueprint for everything. That's what they think is great.
[01:49:39] Unknown:
I would I would way off. I mean, when you said that chairman Mao won the election with only 5% of the popular vote, I was thinking that you were gonna say that they used the American system of voting.
[01:49:55] Unknown:
Well, no. He he wasn't voted in. He just came in, didn't he? I think he I don't know if they voted in. Same with the, Stalin. But the the percentage of support they got was only 5% in China, Seven Percent in Russia. That was it. Very small percentage. So how do they do it? Just how do and they're obviously, know exactly how to, program people. And my theory is that psychopaths have the ability to hypnotize people. Well, of course. Noticed that, during that lockdown, the amount of people would look they walk around like a hypnotic trance.
[01:50:34] Unknown:
Well, what did what did they do? Most of them sat around their houses. They were locked in. They didn't have any interaction with other people, particularly if they lived alone, and the only entertainment was the television. And I thought we discussed that minutes ago.
[01:50:48] Unknown:
Yeah. We did. But, but what I like to do when it during the lockdown is act deaf. That was more fun than anything else. Because when someone said Yeah. What? I was gonna say I What? It's fun for a radio show too. Yeah. Hey. What? What do you say? Okay. Go ahead. Speak up. Oh, what? Aye. No. Because you know when they look put little arrows in the stores, you get that in America. You have to go follow the arrows. I went the opposite way around the arrows. And some and there's people posted members of staff said, hey. Excuse me. You're going wrong way. So I'd say, pardon? Can you come a bit closer? I can't hear you. Pardon? Sorry. Sorry. And in the end, they gave up. So I said, could you come a bit closer? I can't hear you. Pardon? Pardon? Do you want?
[01:51:33] Unknown:
Wasn't really difficult. I think I tried that a few times. Yes. Especially when you get into that situation where it's like they're gonna do something, and it's like, well, I'm I'm just gonna play dumb. What? Yeah. Or play deaf in in that case.
[01:51:49] Unknown:
But, oh, they they loved it, didn't they? I mean, I I had security guards running out to me. Oh, smile, sir. Have you got a mask and all this? You know? And all all those. And I said to one of us, well, have you farted? You know?
[01:52:01] Unknown:
Well, and then all the viral videos of all the instant incidents of it going on and people sharing them and spreading that paranoia.
[01:52:09] Unknown:
Yeah. It just kind of amplifies it in a way too. Do you remember that bloke with a lint roller? It was, it it was standing outside. I don't know. I thought it was in a shop or somewhere, and he's telling people to put their arms up, and he's going over with a lint roller. Okay. And going. And the other one, it was asking people personal questions. Do you see that one? No. I don't think I I saw that one. I saw the lid roller. Said that's excuse me, madam. You said excuse me, madam. Have you had the, COVID jab that you should die? Yay. Yes. Right. Have you had a hysterectomy?
[01:52:42] Unknown:
And he's just like, oh, it's different. You should've had fun with that. Yeah. You should've. The compliance of people was just off the charts. Yeah. That's good. Have gone in.
[01:52:52] Unknown:
Did you guys see the YouTube video of the guy that took, took the term face diaper to a whole new level? He went to a drugstore, and he walked in. He actually literally had a diaper on his face, and he's walking around and he's shopping. Okay? And and when he got up to the checkout, the guy said, I'm not gonna be able to check you out until you put on a proper a proper mask. And the guy says, well, this is my mask. Then he says, no. Here, we can provide one for you. And he pulls out one of the blue masks. The guy takes the diaper off. Okay? And what the cashier didn't know and what everybody else in the store didn't know was he had chocolate pudding inside the diaper. So when he took it off,
[01:53:40] Unknown:
he had all this brown on his face. Everybody in the place goes,
[01:53:47] Unknown:
oh my god. I actually think they scrubbed it from YouTube. It was on YouTube, and I think they deleted it, erased it. It was but it was it was so hilariously funny. I should have downloaded it.
[01:54:04] Unknown:
He took the term face diaper to a new level. I like that. That's brilliant. You said woman took her niggas off? Woman said, oh, you gotta have a you gotta have a mask, so she took her niggas off and shoved it over right. Oh, god. Oh, It was just bonkers. Absolutely. The worst thing I ever saw was a woman that had a mask on and a poor little kid in a pushchair. Not only had a mask on, but had, like, a, you know what the security guards wear with a plastic visor at the front? Like, the plastic visor over his head. Yeah. Little top shit. I mean, it's that that's that's that's right. Face shield. It was, well, it was cruelty.
[01:54:44] Unknown:
And then when Biden came out with two masks, not just one mask, you have to have two masks on.
[01:54:49] Unknown:
Sorry. I'll just take that Chuck Whit put in there. Let's cut it my funny bone. If we have another lockdown, that's given me ideas.
[01:54:59] Unknown:
You know, if people only knew that when the mask mandates came out, it was a CDC, administrative rule, and it only applied to CDC employees. It never applied to anybody but Centers for Disease Control employees.
[01:55:16] Unknown:
Oh, but the media ran with it. Yes. They did.
[01:55:19] Unknown:
Well, that that's the real control there. Well, have you seen control. Sorry. Please continue. I'll Oh, I was just saying if you can get control of the media, you can get in control of the populace. I guess that's the moral of what we're talking about here. It is. Yeah. It's a key thing. It is. If you've got the communication high ground, it's it's really difficult for people, with smaller operations to do it. And, you know, this is the idea of a free press would be that the the ground is, it has to be regulated. Otherwise, the big players, which now exist, arise, and it just gets worse and worse and worsera, I think, is the correct word to describe it all as it does because there's no safeguards for the little guy. And and, you know, if we look at the rise of the money power since the Middle Ages, since Henry, since the reformation, since this unbridled use of usury, that's what's happened in every single field. So I guess, you know, over here, we think, yeah, it'd be nice to have, you know, Bill Smith be my cobbler and all this, that, and the other. It it's a much more natural way for us to operate. It's how we would like it to be, like living in Hobbiton or something like that. This supposedly, I you know, an ideal which used to exist.
Yeah. It's not sort of something made up. It actually used to be like that, because as we're saying, you know, the the power of the guilds to protect barrel makers so that some bloke couldn't come in and set up a large barrel making business in your county and undercut the price of everybody and put them all out of work, creating loads of social distress. It's needed. I know you see, I'm completely for tariffs. I don't believe in free trade at all. I believe in total national commercial boundaries, and you just negotiate them slowly up. If you wanna swap fish for, you know, hamster pelts or whatever you wanna do, get on with it. But the idea of not having tariffs is dense. I think it's really, really stupid. Of course, it's argued that way because it's commie.
The whole idea of so called free trade is just a globalist idea. It's nonsense. It doesn't make anybody happy because it puts all your workmen, doesn't it, on the home base under pressure from, what were they called, the sweatshops of the Far East, which is exactly what's happened. So Yeah. I think Trump should just raise tariffs on everything. I don't care when they're all bleating about it. So it's because the people that govern all of our nations have fallen into this interdependence crap. Oh, yeah. We've all got to be reliant on one of the no. We don't. And that's to destroy nationhood. The whole thing is about destroying nations. You can't have communism if people actually identify with their own nation and their own culture and their own people. Actually, identify is not a strong enough word when they know that they that that's the most important stuff to them, which is where we've had all that diversity, which has been, you know, the natural cultural diversity of different peoples, which is a great thing.
You know? I can't remember I mean, I don't remember there being so much sort of interracial hatred supposedly and stabbings and, you know, kiddie fiddling and all this when it was like that. Maybe I'm deluded, but because it just couldn't happen. The the the opportunities for that to take place didn't exist, so that's why it didn't happen. And that's why we've gotta get back to it in my, humble, parochial, nimbyest attitude. So I love being a nimbyest. I just think everything that they actually attack is exactly what you should be. Just go against every single thing that they say because it's only going in one direction with what they say, isn't it? That's why. So there was a comment in the thing about someone saying that they didn't comply with anything during COVID. I'm exactly the same. I did nothing at all. Will you put a mask on? No. Stop talking to me. I remember in the supermarket, you said, Eric. I I remember at the time I was often in the super the only person without a mask on staring people down if they even you know, it started to get uppity with me.
It's just nonsense.
[01:59:00] Unknown:
Oh, bloke come up to me and said, where's your mask?
[01:59:03] Unknown:
I'll tell you what is strange. I'll tell you what is strange is that we've nearly run out of time. So I need to look at this. We've run out of our time slot here on WBN. Anyway, we're coming up to the close in a minute and a bit. So, I'm gonna do an overlapping song, which will start momentarily. But just to let everybody know on WBN that we're here every Thursday at 3PM US eastern, three till five US eastern. And, in The UK, that's 8PM to 10PM. We carry on with this show as we do most weeks on Rumble, and on Radio Soapbox and on YouTube at the moment because I'm being optimistic and naive and can't wait to get thumped.
But, I mean, maybe this one will get I don't care. Anyway, we're looking at other options around that kind of stuff. So we'll be back again same time next week. If you wanna carry on listening and, plug in, Rumble's probably the best place to go to, I guess. Go to PaulEnglishlive.com and click the Rumble link there on the left. It'll bring you over with all the other reprobates in the Rumble room. I'm gonna play us out with a song. Gerry Rafferty, Get It Right Next Time. I've played this before, but it's a groovy little number. So we're gonna play it again. It's about four minutes' time. Go and get your cocoa or your bubbly tea or whatever it is, and we'll be back after this.
[02:01:34] Unknown:
Time. You need direction. Yeah. You need a need when you're standing across from the highway. After a while, you get to recognize the signs.
[02:01:52] Unknown:
So if you get wrong, you'll be right next
[02:01:57] Unknown:
time.
[02:04:42] Unknown:
So there we go, gents. Maybe we we we'll have to get it right next time. Groovy Little Number That by Jerry Rafferty. That'll probably get it banned from YouTube. They sometimes get a bit cross about the records these days. And coming back to that thing that we were talking about a bit earlier, about creating our sort of continuing to have a go at creating platforms that that grow, that's the bit that I've always found tricky. Maybe it's just to do with the nature of the sorts of topics that we talk about and the fact that they are by definition, unfortunately, even now of narrow appeal.
But I guess that's not shouldn't be too surprising because if you think about much of the work that we have put in and that many of the listeners certainly here on Rumble put into actually acquiring all this information, It's kind of not for the faint hearted to some degree. But although that sounds naggy, the fact is that there's been more of a growth in this sort of space over the past four or five years courtesy of COVID than anything else. Unfortunately, I would suggest, we've also had an absolute glut of sort of copycat communicators, who are brand new into it. Very good at marketing, much much better than me and probably most of us, which is kind of a, you know, I, you know, gathering the crowd up.
But, we mentioned earlier, I think somewhere in the first hour, this talk about, when Patrick came on, you know, about developing a kind of video platform, and we're gonna do that. I've actually got it running at the moment. This show has been going to it, and it's all working fine. So I've just sort of switched it off. It was just a test. We need to just stick it on a new name and, maybe look at forming it as a club, which sounds awfully twee. But I think, really, we probably do. Maybe if we can find some mechanism to make the club membership grow rapidly, that would be cool. Maybe we could tell them that they're all gonna make loads of money if they just join the club. That usually works, doesn't it?
Join this club, and we'll send you a thousand dollars or something or something like that. I don't know what how we're gonna do it, but, but there we go. Yeah. Anyway, welcome back to the the the third hour, gents.
[02:06:43] Unknown:
Yay. Yeah. It's
[02:06:47] Unknown:
lovely, ain't it? The other week actually, I've got I've got another little thing to play here, another little clip. You know, last week, on the show where was this, actually? This is just a quick shout out to because I made a note of this. Where's this gone? Come here. Where's it gone? Yes. On the on the Telegram channel, Billy Pitt. Hi, Billy. Wrote to me. I don't know if you're listening right now, but, anyway, you if you hear it on playback, you'll hear this. He was catching up with last week's show and, said he couldn't stop laughing at the forty, forty five years thing.
And I know, Patrick, you didn't know what it was all about, and maybe, Paul, you didn't. And not a first. Not a first. Are you familiar with this sketch, Eric? Have you heard this one? Do you know this one? I don't know until you played it. Well, I'm gonna play it. It's three minutes long, and it's absolutely marvelous. And it's very, very and I think this conversation actually originally took place in the Fockem Hall Library, actually, Eric. I'm pretty sure it did. Yeah. Oh. Oh, that that will be fantastic. Yes. It did. Anyway, this is, oh, just listen. There's a couple of chaps. I'll tell you who plays their roles. A couple of chaps is about three minutes long. This is really this is just for light relief at seven minutes past ten for you all. So if you need another cup of cocoa, go grab it now. Three minutes long. Here we go.
[02:08:09] Unknown:
Knock. Knock. Knock. Am I in tutoring Charles? Not at all, Sharon. Shirley told me you'd be popping by. Is it time for a brandy? Twenty nine minutes past six, Charles. No. It isn't, sir. Is that all we need? Yes. Of course. Could it's me now, please? Thank you. I've actually come to some unsaid news in for you, Charles. Poor old bunny Armstrong Miller popped his clogs last night. Oh, that's terrible news. I could do with a brand, dear. Is it that time? 06:30. Yeah. Yeah. I've had any conchos in the night. Thankfully, it was very quick, but poor Joyce is in a terrible stew. Oh, it must have been a terrible shock. Yes. A frightful business. How old was Bunny? He was only 85.
Still very young. Very young. Oh, poor Joyce. She'll be at a total loss. I mean, after all, they'd been married for what? Forty or forty five years?
[02:09:03] Unknown:
Forty or forty five years. Forty or forty five years. Forty or forty five years. Forty or forty five years. Forty or forty five years. Forty or forty five years. Forty or forty five years. Forty or forty five years. Forty
[02:09:14] Unknown:
Forty, forty five years. Forty, forty five years.
[02:09:16] Unknown:
Forty, forty five years. Forty, forty five years. Forty, forty five years. Forty, forty five
[02:09:23] Unknown:
years. What about you, Charles? It's forty forty five years. Forty forty five years. Forty forty five years. Forty
[02:09:30] Unknown:
forty five years. Forty forty five years.
[02:09:33] Unknown:
Total. I mean, terrible shock. Terrible shock? Did he have a condition? Oh, no. No. No. He was fit as a butcher's dog. I mean, he whopped me at tennis last week, six two six love. He wasn't still playing club tennis at his age, surely.
[02:09:46] Unknown:
No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. He only played three times a week,
[02:10:04] Unknown:
Yes. So one has to climb down from the Monticello to the Pinot Grigio, as it were. I wouldn't go that far, she would. Of course, her majesty would be terribly upset. Of course. Yes. I mean, she and Bunny have known each other for what? Forty forty, forty five years. Forty years? Forty five years? Forty five years? Forty five years? Forty five years. Oh, forty, forty, forty, forty five years.
[02:10:32] Unknown:
I top you up.
[02:10:35] Unknown:
It's a very good brandy, Charles. How how old is it? Forty forty years for that one. 40 40 five years. Interesting to think, isn't it? When this brandy was cast, Bunny would have been, what, 40, 40 five years old? Well, I suppose it's 40 years old. He would have been 45. As 45 years old, he would have been 40 years old. 45 years old. 45 years old. Funny old Bunny.
[02:11:04] Unknown:
Poor old bunny, but very funny. Anyway, that's very English humor. I just thought you ought to hear that. And thanks, Billy, for finding the clip and, one of my favorite sketches ever. And so there you go. I just, you ever heard that one before, Eric?
[02:11:19] Unknown:
Never heard of it before. No. I mean, I was thinking, is that Peter Cook and Dudley Moore? But, no, it's not.
[02:11:24] Unknown:
It's not. That was Harry Enfield and Paul White house. And, Really? Yes. I mean, it's not even a joke in it. Is there really? It's just them, they're they're brilliant. Yeah. Sheridan, who's played by Paul Wifers. Yeah. Well, they're two doctors, right, who work in Harley Street. You should see all of their sketches that they come to they're fantastic. And I'm sure those guys used to come to Fulcrum Hall quite regularly, Eric. They're the sort of crowd that would rock up. That would Yeah. And they probably stayed there for, what, forty, forty five minutes or something like that? You know, forty, forty five forty five minutes. You'll say you'll say you'll say it forever now. Actually, I mean, looking at the clock, we've got about forty forty five minutes left, actually. So it's all, you know, it's almost good. Yes. Yes. But
[02:12:06] Unknown:
but, really, with gags, though, it is the delivery. That I mean, the art of a good comedian is to say something that's not funny and make it funny, just by the way they say it. And so Isn't it all about
[02:12:18] Unknown:
timing? That's the joke, isn't it? It's all about says timing, but Timing.
[02:12:25] Unknown:
Also, reading the audience as well. Delivery. Delivery. Yes.
[02:12:31] Unknown:
You mean reading the audience because they're all covered in tattoos with sort of inscriptions on them? They're all made. Say that. You didn't quite think that, did you?
[02:12:39] Unknown:
Julian Clary came on stage and said, oh, I do like a warm hand on my entrance. Well, it's not really funny, is it? But for me
[02:12:50] Unknown:
No. But you're laughing quite a lot, and I'm getting a bit worried. So there's that. There's all these Julian Clary gags. There's the German headbanging stuff. Headbanging. Yeah. They'll get my This has been quite a revelation tonight, Eric. I've got a very different I'm I'm getting a very different picture here. Yeah. Well, I actually introduced
[02:13:08] Unknown:
Deb. You know Deb who comes on my show? I I do. Introduced I introduced her to the German head banging stuff, and she can't get enough of it. She loves it now. Is that Deb from Yorkshire? Yorkshire Deb. She loves, the German head head bangers. Yep. She likes, she particularly likes ice pressure. This is Deutsch. And, and I actually played it, and I didn't get paid for it because they're they're they're they're they're, legit. You know, they're legit legit group. They're proper.
[02:13:42] Unknown:
They're proper. Are they? Represented by,
[02:13:45] Unknown:
high high end music lawyers.
[02:13:47] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But, oh, that that, as I say, state is quiet. They've got nothing. The the the the the these people really they really know it icebreaker. You know? But, give it a try. You might like it.
[02:14:06] Unknown:
I'm trying to bang my head right now, but it's giving me a bit of a headache already. Yeah. I've got you know? Oh, that hurts. I have no idea why anyone would do it. Not I mean, if what if you do it for forty, forty five minutes? I mean, that's not gonna forty or forty five minutes is gonna really hurt you. Seconds. Yeah. Forty, forty five seconds. Oh, yeah. Forty, forty five seconds, actually. Yes. Absolutely. There we go. I always wanted to
[02:14:35] Unknown:
have a pregnant pause. Can you hear that pregnant pause? Yeah. But how did Eric get into this kind of music? I'm I'm I'm wondering because I I hate that kind of music. I hate Yeah. Me too. I can't stand it, Eric. It makes me ill. Are you still you know, Ozzy Osbourne is is kind of like, quintessential
[02:14:51] Unknown:
headbanger type. No. No. It's not quite as headbanger. You haven't heard it yet. Here it is. Just a little bit of it. So listen listen to, icebreaker. This is Deutsch. And, it's it's it's it's pretty good actually once you get into it. It's like Deb, she's she's really, you know, she really loved it. Oh, I like that.
[02:15:13] Unknown:
Stop. And you do you wanna do a head banging show? Maybe you and Debs could sort of play that stuff where we could get you on. Head banging. Yeah.
[02:15:20] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. So I think that's
[02:15:23] Unknown:
I might not show up for that one. You don't mind, mate. You want me to sort of put out. Well, you listen to it. I bet you you will be a convert. It's bloody good. It really is. I don't normally like to what, though?
[02:15:36] Unknown:
German rock music. It's alright. You people don't hear of it. You see? Thing is, I don't normally like heavy rock at all. You know, soft machine, all that sort of stuff. No. I don't like it. But this is a bit different. It's very, very different, and it's very clever as well the way it's done. And, yeah, they they they do some real good ones on on there. So because you don't hear German music very much, especially rock music. Mhmm. But they, you know, they are good. So they play the guitar. There's one that they did in a lavatory. They played was it to the hilt, it's called. And is that it's actually recorded in a lavatory. See? So it I'm not the only lavatorial person.
[02:16:22] Unknown:
There's no farts in it at all. It Have you ever heard of Schlager? German Schlager music? No. Oh, man. No. It's it's kinda like well, it's like bony m. Bonnie m or however you say it types. Oh, it's not like bony m. No. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No. It's really cheese ball type type of music.
[02:16:42] Unknown:
Now this is some of the words. Was it left, right, in the square, kindergarten, tin soldier, always punctual, and never, invariably correct because something German is embedded in us. Correct. Perfect. That's the word. It's translated into English.
[02:17:03] Unknown:
Profile Do you want to hear do do you wanna hear a little bit about what just jumping from the lavatorial head banging back into back into the intellectual assessment of unitary. Okay. Just to sort of get things slightly back on track or some kind of a track. I've got a little there's a little page here by, I just want this is by Belloc. Just on just this is how he writes about usury. It's quite good. This is only a minute read if that right? He goes, usury, so extended throughout a community, so taken for granted, lays the community under an unjust tribute, and at the same time becomes the central controller, whether through productive or unproductive loans of most social activities.
The larger the unit of capital present, the easier the transaction called emission of credit. Centralized lending of this kind, which is today universal, don't we know it, actively promotes the absorption of the small man, that's us, everybody, by the great. He doesn't mean that they're great and fabulous. He just means they're huge. You know? The reduction of small property owners to to a proletarian condition. Hello, proles. It is with usury as with other evils in society. Apart from its original immorality and the manifest causes thereof, it produces secondary effects, which are also evil, until it lasted as infected the whole community. We're all infected. This is the real virus.
As long as usury was forbidden by the moral law and its immorality admitted, Even though it took place widely, it took place under protest. It was always checked by the public disrepute into which in in which it was held, and by the fact that unless it were disguised, the interest could not be recovered by law. Disguises were indeed often used. As for instance, the promise to repay on a certain day a certain sum of money as having been lent, when as a it was in fact, a smaller sum had been lent. But though such subterfuges were continual, the evil could not spread until the taking of interest upon money alone became an admitted practice of which no man was ashamed. Everybody's okay with it, you see. Which no one thought evil, which was taken for granted. And he says that is precisely what happened within the space of about two lifetimes after the reformation first broke down our common morals.
By the third generation, great central banks had arisen, notably in Amsterdam and London. Shortly afterwards, during the eighteenth century, men had everywhere begun to think, later in Catholic societies than in Protestant, but everywhere at last, as though interest on money were part of the nature of things, as though money had indeed merely as money a right to breed. The false doctrine doctrine was bound to lead to a deadlock at last, and in our own time, that deadlock has been reached. The recovery of the vast usurious loans is becoming impossible. Recourses had to be taken to repudiation on all sides, and the whole system is breaking down. Now they found a way, of course, of not stopping it breaking down for a hundred years since he wrote this. But still, we or the you know, technology has come to the aid of them by extending all these sorts of whiz bang ideas to actually improve purchasing power. Whereas, in fact, the fundamental foundation of the whole thing is absolutely destructive to all of us.
And, I just I just thought I would that's how he writes about it. It's very precise stuff, and there's a lot of it. And it's really well, when I say a lot, the book's about 200 pages. So it's not it's not in men's time. That's from The Crisis of Civilization by Belloq. So there you go. I know you probably didn't learn it. About 1915,
[02:20:51] Unknown:
I think, something like that. Pre war or Maybe not during the war.
[02:20:55] Unknown:
Right? Or maybe just after nineteen twenties. Yeah. Because, I mean, he also wrote there was a a paper. You know, you're thinking about the Fockemhold Times. There was a paper called The New Age, which is a a weird sort of thing in a way. I mean, I can't find many copies of it. It's it had a very high reputation. Some of the writers are absolutely, you know, the leading thinkers.
[02:21:14] Unknown:
The New Age here in England. Yeah. Oh, in England. Because in I think in America, we had one, and it was brought up by the Freemasons. Okay. It was their main magazine.
[02:21:24] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, this had people like George Bernard Shaw writing for it, who I'm not a fan of. And there are pictures of Bellock and Chesterton with Shaw, so I suppose they must have had some commonality of their bodies. Yeah, sort of. I mean, Shaw was a champion of socialism, but Belloc points out that socialism is basically a false solution. It's a complete red herring. It doesn't work because it doesn't address this issue. You don't address this issue, you can forget everything else. It's just all the isms Well, that's what you can't. Now is socialism bringing in Yep. All sorts of different social,
[02:21:54] Unknown:
you know, cultures and whatnot, the diversity and and under the banner of socialism, socializing with these these groups that don't get along very well, putting them all in one geographic space and expecting them to to, I don't know what they expect, but, to divide labor more than anything, to keep people from asking for a higher wage for their for their labor.
[02:22:19] Unknown:
Absolutely. Well, it I'll just read you these. I'm just glancing at these next couple of par I could read this all night, but you probably all got to sleep, I suppose. Or it's not it doesn't make for some really great stuff. Let me just finish off this little sub paragraph. He says this. He says because it addresses kinda what you just said. He says, but remember that the worst of its effects is not its own self destruction, but the way in which it has gathered into a few centers the power of controlling the lives of the community and particularly of the proletariat. Hello, proles. Whose employment and therefore existence depends upon the advance of credit by the holders of financial power, the money power, basically.
For all our great enterprises today are possible only through the favor of the lenders of money or credit. We may sum up then and say that the unrestricted admittance of usury as a normal economic function about a lifetime after the Reformation advanced the destruction of economic freedom, the swallowing up of the small man by the greater man, and the ultimate production of a large destitute proletariat in the following fashions. One, by the eating up of small property through usury, falling as it did habitually upon men already embarrassed, I'm embarrassed, and achieving their ruin.
Two, by transferring real wealth in goods and land to those who directly use their mere money power, that's all it is, often enormous and impersonal through mortgage and foreclosure. And then he goes on to talk about he says I won't go into all this. He says, the second of the two forces, because the first one is usury, but he says, the second of the two forces, let loose by the reformation for the ultimate destruction of economic freedom and the production of capitalism with its now revolutionary proletariat was the force of unrestricted competition. And that's the thing that the guilds restrained. It wasn't unrestricted.
Guilds made sure that you didn't get unrestricted competition because it choose it it leads to this situation where the small man, that's us, as we've descended from free peasants into serfs, and they'll get us down to slaves again if they can under feudalism. That's what there's a so you're always told competition's great. Yeah. It's what we want. No. Rubbish. Every single thing we've been taught is complete crap. All of it, because these fundamentals are not really addressed. I mean, then, you know, why should we outcompete each other for cabbages? It's completely bonkers when you think about it. I'm not a commie, by the way. Everybody thinks, oh, you were all gonna share it up. No. We're not. So that system in the Middle Ages really worked, and it had to be held together by a moral and ethical framework, which the church managed to do. Although, as I said, it as as Bellhop points out, it was falling apart. And and his line there, the reformation advanced the destruction of economic freedom. It had already begun during the tail end of of the Catholic control of England anyway and probably most of the other countries in the in Europe.
But the reformation basically, like, turbocharged it. It opened the sluice gates and bang, we moved into this new phase. And, of course, by what we're talking? Fifteen thirty. By 1692, is it, or whatever, we've got the Bank of England. And the, that cleared everywhere all the sort of, impediments to unrestrained development of the money power, which we now still live under. Hurrah. Aren't we happy? So, we're amongst groups of really brilliant men who all understand this stuff, and we've still yet to find a way to to bring this thing to heal and to crush it
[02:25:47] Unknown:
so that it can't rise again. So it was 1692 the Bank of England started, and then a hundred years later, the American Revolution happened.
[02:25:55] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[02:25:56] Unknown:
Yep. Yeah. And then fifty forty years later, you've got the Battle of Waterloo, which is absolutely pivotal in this country's history simply because of the Rothschild's ability to, well, they took over the whole of the whole of the, 62% of the economic base of England, and we were finished. That was it. Done. They've been in control ever since since Waterloo. Tada. And and then control the the Bank of England. Were they part of establishing the Bank of England? Do you Well, I don't know if I don't think they were in sixteen ninety odd, but they came here in the seventeen hundreds. And and, well, they must have been at some point because they played a role in they had their agents in the South, for the civil war, but that's what eighteen sixties. So it it may be seventeen hundreds that they came here, but they were certainly here by 1815. I can't remember what the exact dates were, but that's definitely part of it. Yeah.
You know, I mentioned that really bright guy, Chris Langan, the other week. I think we I mentioned something from him. He had a post up. He was responding to a comment that somebody had made into him. I won't read the whole of it. He says, in the comment that came in was England is being conquered. The mayor of London is Muslim. Birmingham, Blackburn, Leeds, blah blah blah blah blah. Some of, he said all of this was achieved by only 4,000,000 Muslims out of the 66,000,000 people in England. If these numbers are correct, we don't really know. And he goes on the number of mosques and all this kind of stuff. But Langan deals with it completely accurately. He said, yeah. England is being conquered, and, yes, this is an invasion. However, this particular invasion did not begin with Muslims. No. It did not. It's not even their fault they're being used as a pawn in all of this. It's still a problem, nevertheless.
It began with Zio banksters freely let into England by English royals and bureaucrats as an easy source of fast money courtesy of the reformation.
[02:27:46] Unknown:
That's what happened. Paul That's really what happened. Have you ever heard of the the term millenarianism?
[02:27:53] Unknown:
Yes. I have, but you're gonna have to redefine it for me because my brain's gone blank. But I've definitely heard of it. Yeah. I I think it's it's what ended up becoming Zionism
[02:28:01] Unknown:
and Right. Christian circles where it's the the the rapture type mentality. Like, there's gonna be a second coming, and it's gonna bring in a thousand years of peace or however long they they consider it and, hence, the the term millennium or millenarianism. So and it's been a a long time heresy of sorts that you could say it goes back, you know, to the time of Christ, but and that's run parallel with the church ever since then. And what it did in England was create people like Oliver Cromwell and led to this this idea that the Messiah, the second coming of the Messiah coincides with the the Jewish first coming of the the Messiah. So they're involved. It's like a socialism between Jews and Christians Mhmm. That you could say, where it's where instead of being separate by religion, they they make this secret pact amongst themselves to cooperate, kind of like the Freemasons do.
It's a so I would consider that socialism of a sorts. And that's that's how it was enabled to operate in Christendom, which the reformation enabled it to to really take hold of institutional power and eventually collapse the Christian monarchies to the point we have it today
[02:29:30] Unknown:
Yep. Where we have I've just put by the way, I've just put the link to that Chris Langan post in the Rumble chat, and I would suggest to all of you, you give it a good it's a great summary. You've probably heard much of it here before, and that sounds a bit cocky, but it's true. But he really he sums it up. It's great. It's really good. Particularly point, three is Who is Chris Langan? He's the brightest man in the world. Good. Good. He's in your neck of the woods. No. Seriously. He's got an IQ of a hundred and one and two. That's the guy. That's the guy. You talk about He used to be a bouncer for twenty five he's the most astonishing sort of history. He was a bouncer in New York nightclubs for twenty five years, and then he he got a bit bored with it. I don't know why he was a bouncer for so long. He's very, very bright.
And, you you can find interviews with him. So here here we've got one of the brightest guys on the planet, and we've still we still got to figure out a way to turn this around. I mean, point one is he talks about the Rothschilds and lending money to the British army in Waterloo and all that kind of stuff. So that's great. Two, he says, with regards to England, is wealth depleted? England was forced to take hat in hand and beg the Rothschilds for money. Yes. Being the humanitarian that he was, Rothschild bailed them out ever since Rothschilds have controlled the English economy. I've been banging all the bells for years, but many people here know this already. From the ground up, in no time flat, they gained dominance over the European economy, which they smoothly parlayed into control over the world economy. That's why they own the Federal Reserve. Okay? So this stuff is absolutely vital, and that's why it's not taught. Money is power, he writes in point three. Thus, very soon after they took over the English economy, the Rothschilds and their fellow Zio banksters effectively took over the English government. This is why I've never voted, and there's no point voting because it's a waste of time. As every Englishman knows full well, you all do, don't you, the English government has never had anything but utter contempt for English commoners. Hooray. We've got nothing but utter contempt for them, of course, in return, but we didn't start it. It despises them in an off with their heads kind of way, just as it once despised its American colonists. Absolutely true.
We've we've all we've still had the same enemy. Number four, he says, consistently with the Cudenhove Cullurgy population replacement plan generously funded by Warburgs and Rothschild Charles from the nineteen twenties onwards. The Zaya Banksters have used their control of the English government and its EU umbrella bureaucracy to unleash a flood of third world migration. That's the flood, by the way, that's referenced in the Bible. Yeah. The United Nations to that.
[02:31:58] Unknown:
Yep. Which he if he were in New York City, he would have seen a lot of the United Nations type people there because it was just in and out constantly. It would.
[02:32:07] Unknown:
He said so that was point four, and the last one's point five. He says, as a result, London is now an Islamic city and other British cities are on its heels. But don't worry, diversity rules. Yes. Of course. He's been ironic, of course, and so I guess, the plan is to thin out the Muslims with Asians and Africans in order to replace Englishmen with what Caloheg called the Eurasian Negroid race of the future. Everyone will be an identical shade of brown and mercifully unburdened with the excessive national IQ and low crime rates for which England was once envied the world over. Never fear, Englishman. Thus far, everything has been going right on schedule.
[02:32:45] Unknown:
That's it, really. Wow. That's it. When when you say they're gonna turn brown, is that because they're gonna be start they're they're gonna work outside a lot and get a tan?
[02:32:54] Unknown:
I don't think he meant that. No. They certainly won't be drinking tea. Maybe excessive tea drinking turns you brown. I don't know. But that I mean, that's the gist of it. That's the gist. And because if we look at the woke movement, it's to actually completely counter any sort of understanding of that, isn't it, to a great degree? You go, yeah. You know, we just we don't want any trade barriers. Everybody can move around. We don't want any of that. So in everything that you know, if if all these qualities and characteristics of retaining nationhood are extreme right, we're extreme extreme extreme extreme extreme. We're so right. We're we're off the map. Of course, it's a nonsense because everything's been moving left for two hundred years. Well, and we're just talking about Churchill earlier. He was talking about Churchill, how it would be nice to go back and and,
[02:33:40] Unknown:
put words in his mouth and of a sort. But I think I have copies of of his speeches where he literally plays out what's gonna happen post war Europe with the the loss of borders and the the mass migration of peoples into Europe. He he he talked about that during the war as a plan for the United Nations getting together and and creating this u utopia type situation. I I think it's They already they already did this. I I could I should find it for you because I I've I've come across it a few times playing it playing it back. I've got thousands of hours of it of old World War two broadcasts, and it's just fascinating listening back to the just the the brainwashed nature of people in the reporting and how they're getting people whiz bang amped up to go to war and and just the the thrill of victory in the air. And they had a good propaganda. You're talking about Charlie and the orca his orchestra, but I think America had a much better propaganda ministry along with the Brits
[02:34:48] Unknown:
than the Germans ever did. Do you think it has something to do with the year '92? Ninety '2? What have we got? Well In 1692, the Bank of England was created. Right? Yeah. Seventeen ninety two, '17 '90 '2, the the American version. Fourteen ninety two, Columbus discovered America. In 1592, sir John Harrington invented the flush toilet, which is pretty much where we've been since.
[02:35:19] Unknown:
Harrington's contribution's the greater of them all. Yeah. Yeah.
[02:35:24] Unknown:
Yeah. Well Made life easier. Old Harrington. A lot a lot less pleasant smelling too, I'd imagine. So but I was talking with e Michael Jones just after a show last week, and he was mentioning that there's this this notion that a a empire can only last about eighty years and or republic for that matter. And that, for America, it was the first republic started with the revolutionary war and ended with the civil war, brought in the second republic, and then came the first world war in, America you know, in Europe and whatnot. And up until maybe about the second world war, and that brought in the third republic. And now we're kind of going through a transition period into the fourth republic.
[02:36:14] Unknown:
And all of the wars all of the wars were created by bankers to bankrupt countries so they could loan them money.
[02:36:23] Unknown:
And then There's a proper term for the bankers, but, yes, I agree. Seize them.
[02:36:28] Unknown:
Seize the countries. I mean, the, American war, one side was funded by Britain, the other side was funded by France, but France couldn't afford it. So what did they do? They got the money from Britain. So Yep. We had no choice but to go bankrupt because we were pushed into wars that we couldn't afford. That never should have happened in the first place.
[02:36:54] Unknown:
So now we've got we've we know the backstory. It's worth repeating it often. It actually boils down to a few really pertinent sort of dynamics that are at play, and so we are faced with solving it. Or someone is. Anybody? Any solutions, anybody? I still quite like the chemicals idea, Paul, actually. Any chemist here with balls in a bottle? Balls in a bottle. You take it. You've suddenly got testosterone in a jar. Yeah.
[02:37:31] Unknown:
By the way, you know you're talking about toilets earlier.
[02:37:35] Unknown:
Well, you do.
[02:37:36] Unknown:
I do. Yes. Did you know the toilet seat? Or did you know the toilet seat was invented by the Irish? Did Do you know that? It's been invented in Ireland, and it's the English that actually designed decided to put a hole in it. Sorry. It's a terrible word. Oh, dear lord.
[02:37:57] Unknown:
I always get slightly nervous whenever we have anything to do with plumbing or toilets. Eric's slightly
[02:38:03] Unknown:
slightly on edge with the whole thing. I started it. My fault. When you put
[02:38:08] Unknown:
No. It's alright. Well, you're allowed.
[02:38:11] Unknown:
Slightly. I mean, when you look at the American Civil War, the North was bankrupt, and it was Lincoln that introduced the, greenback Mhmm. That, you know, tied it over. And, of course, he was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth, who was Sherry Blair's great great great grandfather because her name was Sherry Booth before she met Blair, and that's the ex prime minister of Great Britain I'm talking about, his wife. But then, of course, Britain was bankrupt in 1914 when, First World War started. So they introduced the Bradbury Pound, which I'm sure the, people in chat know about, by Lloyd George, who was chancellor at the time. And then when he became prime minister, he somehow, for some weird reason, phased it out. And nobody knows the reason why, Well, we can guess.
And that's it, basically. And I think that's, again, Usury has to have wars in order to get to keep going and to get kind of He does. Into into into
[02:39:21] Unknown:
debt.
[02:39:22] Unknown:
I mean, when you look at the first World War, what those poor souls went through, and what they were promised, and what they came back to, they came back to worse poverty than when they left. And people don't realize that in 1918, '19 '19 in fact, 1918 was the lowest turnout ever, up to that time, of people voting. And this country was actually on just teetering on the edge of a revolution. Just teetering on the edge. And it was very, very skillful manipulation by the secret services that prevented it. So, a lot of things happened in 1921, such as the firearms act and also the, British Legion was formed.
[02:40:12] Unknown:
And When, World War two was declared in in your country, how was it you know? Yeah. How was it promulgated? What did you did you go to parliament? Did parliament do it? Was it an act of the prime minister? How how did that work?
[02:40:26] Unknown:
Well, though, the prime minister actually gave, Germany a deadline. And the deadline was if, they do not stop invading Poland, I I can't really repeat it verbatim, then, a war exists between Germany and Britain, at 11:00. So the prime minister declared war. That's right. Neville Chamberlain. Yes. Yeah. It was never prom promulgated by the the parliament properly. No. It wasn't. But what people don't realize is that that it was a coalition government during World War two. And the real there was two prime ministers. It was Atlee and Churchill. Now people Churchill was the mouthpiece, but the person that was really running the country was Atlee.
That was that was what was really happening.
[02:41:12] Unknown:
So there were two prime ministers? What what what was were they called prime ministers? How how did that work? No. What it was, it was a coalition government,
[02:41:21] Unknown:
because there was no elections. So, by some strange way, Churchill became prime minister. He took over from Chamberlain. So what happened before the war, the conservatives were in power under Neville Chamberlain. And then when war was declared, there was no elections. So what they did, they had a coalition government where Labour, who had the highest amount of votes, and Conservatives, they got together. So the, leader of the Labour Party was, he was actually the man that was, Clement Attlee, was actually running the country whilst, Churchill was going around spouting his mouth off. That's an actual fact.
[02:42:08] Unknown:
Yeah. In America, it was it was kind of a similar situation where it was up until '41 when, there I believe it was the presidential election that was going on. I'm not I'm I'm not certain about that, but I I'm pretty sure it was a run up to the presidential election because that's that's when Lindbergh was running as the third party candidate, which is quite rare to get a, a popular third party in America that had a chance to make it, but he lost because of the fact of Pearl Harbor. And it was after that that obviously Mhmm. That they were going to war. So he But that was engineered.
[02:42:49] Unknown:
Slim. But I can understand Americans' feeling because if I was in America at that time, I would want to be in isolation. I would I would I would have backed, back to Lindbergh. Why should America get involved in the European war? Yeah. But when you look at it, Roosevelt knew that that Pearl Harbor was gonna happen. We all know that now. Lying out of his back teeth, he was. Awful person. The evil man. But when you look at all these films, as I say, there's two versions of what happened in World War two. The Hollywood version that majority of people believe, and what really happened.
That's it, basically.
[02:43:35] Unknown:
You know, it could well be that a path to, a solution to this could be given a great boost through politics, not with a view that we could have a political party with these policies get elected, but to be in a party that held the and I know there are some. I think there's the English Democrats and maybe the British Democrats or whatever they're called. I don't know all the names of them. There are all these little of course, the the history of the Democrats. Yeah. When they get together the British constitution party. Yeah.
When they get together, there's often so much sort of there seems to be a history of infighting. Whether that's genuine or is brought about by agent provocateur, I don't know. But there's certainly a history of it, and it's difficult. The idea that those parties would gain power would not be the goal. I mean, you'd state that it was publicly because people think you're insane not to state it, but it wouldn't necessarily need to do it. I mean, it's in the same way that, like, I think somewhere in Australia, the Green Party has colossal power because it's got these sort of deciding votes in decisions. So, you know, they've only got a small handful of seats, and they're able to sort of influence it that way. But a political machine in the sense of so you form a party, but the purpose of it is is to develop its communication side off the charts. That's the real thing to work on. You know, we need to find the modern day Goebbels
[02:45:01] Unknown:
in simple terms. Yeah. But that's what the British Democrat Party are doing. They're actually going for
[02:45:08] Unknown:
they I've got a feeling they will actually come round and knock on the door. Well, I better go work for them then. Yeah. Because Or something anything that's constructive that's out there on the street that's doing things. And at least if you're doing it with people of like mind, at least you can hone your own sanity in in good condition whilst all this is going on. And, you know, it's not with the view that you're gonna gain power. But if you start to actually affect people because that's really what people need to see. They need to see a sort of unified group of some sort, that's coherent and that's saying the the right things and that can back it up with factual, truthful sort of expositions of it, brief, short, wonderfully entertaining YouTube three minute videos to get complex points across in bullet point versions, you know, because of the,
[02:45:54] Unknown:
supposedly massive reduction in people's attention span. Maybe it's only ten seconds we've got these days. You know? That that's what they do. They they're pointing up around where I live, and I'm like, they're leafing through the door. That's how I found out about them. And I believe that they're offshoot from what used to be the BNP.
[02:46:10] Unknown:
Because Yeah. Because you know what happened to Nick Griffin in the BNP. Did did you ever hear what he said? Well, I've kind of got I've kind of yeah. There was some kind of undermining process. That's all I can really say. I'm not knowledgeable about the details of it, but I suspect, you know, no smoke without fire and all that kind of stuff. Yeah. Well, their policy was to eradicate usury,
[02:46:28] Unknown:
to actually outlaw usury. And he had a knock on the door by the, men in Fadi Suits. And he was basically told that if you don't take that out of your election manifesto, we will destroy you, and we will destroy your, your party, your political party. He didn't take it out of the manifesto. And, look what happened. They destroyed him, and they destroyed his party. Yeah. They're gonna BNP today. They're gonna coach it in terms of Semitism,
[02:46:58] Unknown:
pro pro Semitism versus anti Semitism. Yeah. That's how how it goes with that. And it's always been the British liberal position. And and as far as usury goes, and you'd think that being a Labour Party would be more prone to be against usury since it's supposed to be about with a working man, but apparently
[02:47:19] Unknown:
Well not. There's a lot of lot of Jewish people against it. Because when we're talking about the money people, we're talking about the psychopaths' tops. That that that's my attitude. The top of the top of the pile are the psychopaths, and I don't give a damn what religion they are, what nationality are. Well, a psychopath is a psychopath. Full stop. End of. They are our enemy. Again, full stop. Our eye you see, once upon a time, an enemy was that lot coming over the hill towards your lot. And if your lot don't kill that lot, they're gonna kill you. Nowadays, we can't see the enemy. Nobody knows who the enemy is.
[02:47:59] Unknown:
Well, it's just like the whole Christian thing too. You have the millenarianism of certain Christians that doesn't represent the entire entirety of Christendom. I would imagine that's the same on on the other side of, you you know, the religious argument. You know, even with Muslims, they're, you know, they're bad Muslims and they're good Muslims that don't appreciate you as a branches, isn't there? That there are there are
[02:48:24] Unknown:
different there are the shall we say, there's always fanatics. I mean, with Christianity, you've got Methodists. You've got all different branches of of Christianity. I think so probably in the Catholic church, there's different branches that are different sort of Persuasions. Yeah. Persuasions. Yeah. In every religion, in the Jewish religion, there there are different there there are there are moderates as as hardliners. There's all kinds. I mean, there is, a group, who actually are on the side of Palestine, and they they are actually treated like, you know, they're shit by the rest of the Jews. And they they are that they actually, hold the Palestinian flag, and they are totally they were totally against the state of Israel.
Now you don't hear about them. They never brought the news, but they are you know? So there's a lot of and this is why I say, the psychopaths, what they're doing is they always stir up trouble with the natives. And whilst the natives are fighting against each other, we're not looking at who is the real enemy, and they are the real enemy. Yeah. And that's it. Divide and conquer. That's it. And they're doing this all the time. I mean, I I I there there was a, on, Telegram I can't remember. Can you remember Paul or or Patrick? There was a a professor that said that this country is actually on the verge of a revolution.
Do you remember that posting? And and anybody I I don't. No. It was. I think it's I think it might have been on your site, Paul. Can't remember.
[02:50:04] Unknown:
Alright.
[02:50:05] Unknown:
Hang on. I'll have a quick shifty. It's it's it's
[02:50:08] Unknown:
definitely they they do that when they when they wanna make a quick getaway. When they're they've been caught in some criminal act, they create the distraction for everyone to focus their attention on. It's like same here with the whole racial tensions between blacks and whites, kind kind you know, getting people all stirred up against each other so that you're not focusing on the real problem, which is the usury class of people who who are stoking the violence because it it deflects any attention to their theft that's going on.
[02:50:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, that's it. That's it. And people still fall for it time and time again. That's the big problem.
[02:50:51] Unknown:
Well, not all of us do, do we, Erica? You're absolutely right. They do. But I may you know, I've fallen for things in my younger days, and, of course, one dreads falling for something again as you supposedly think you're mature and have worked it all out, but the truth is I haven't. So I'm prone to that. It's why working in a group is so important. And, of course, they don't want that. The group, you know, a cell as it were. You need you could call it a support group, but it's actually something where you're operating on the same frequency of thought, and it's got so much more, power. It actually gives you power. That is a sense of, well-being and sort of sanity and stability as you actually plough through all this stuff. I mean, I'm just looking further on down this Langham post as well. Someone's, you know, on his post, someone wrote, the Muslim invasion is really because of the Jews? Question mark. And then he's put, your post has been rated stupid beyond belief because of how stupid it is, and all this, that, and the other. Lyon's response is just another completely accurate thing. He just says, relax. You're just a lowly cog in the Zio Bankster machine and don't need to shout in all caps.
Once you simmer down, crack a decent history book, a man after my heart, Chris. It might do you some good. This is why I bang on about it. Then start using that sore, painfully swollen little head of yours for something other than holding up your pink pussy dunce cap. While the Rothschilds and other founding members of the international banking community are both Jewish and Zionist, it is presently the case that not all bank sters are Jewish. This is true. However, all banksters are indeed Zionists if only because no one opposed to Zionism is tolerated by the most powerful Zio banksters. Also correct. See how clear and irrefutable it all is? You needn't stalk your favorite pinup girls, Kamala, AOC, Ilhan Omar, and Nancy Pelosi for comment. Your choices are simple.
Either stand up and insist on reform. I would suggest even bring it about because no one else is gonna help us. Or roll over and continue to be painfully sodomized by your bankster dungeon masters. That's plainly the case. So, you know, I'm Yeah. That's why we're not we have those two in hell, the the sodomites and the usurpers.
[02:53:10] Unknown:
Mhmm. The same circle of hell, the seventh circle.
[02:53:13] Unknown:
So, you know, I'm personally I know for me, I can't speak very well. I know that I want more structure in what in in what I'm working on. I love doing this, and we're gonna keep on doing this. But I always get this sense of slightly going around in circles with the communication, not be that we're intending to, but there's something that, I sense in myself I'm avoiding, which is an action plan. And I know those things get shot down, and I know they get infiltrated. I know they often end in ruin, but I'm hard pressed to think of anything else. And it seems that the action plan has got to be about communicating these I mean, there's such a lot of data that we've even talked about in these last three hours that most people are very familiar with.
And it's so easy to forget that people outside of this sort of conversation haven't a clue about these sorts of topics because they never come up for the reasons that Paul was talking about. You know? That they're literally working all day, you know, and all that kind of stuff. But that we can reach them. I I believe that we can. And even if that's a false belief, it's one that I'm gonna retain because I think it's very constructive, and I feel moralized as it were. Not demoralized, but moralized by it. I think that this is sound a good way to spend my life
[02:54:21] Unknown:
doing these things. And I know that many other people feel the same way. That's why there's so many of us talking about it. And we got I think we gotta use the emotion of laughter. We just got we I think it's a it's a very good tool to get an information through in small Mhmm. Sections to make people laugh, to get them to laugh. Because that's why they've gone for our humor. Because that is part of our culture. They've gone for our architecture, which was part of our culture. They destroyed that. When you look at these beautiful old prop buildings that are being knocked down, it's criminal, total criminal. But they've done it. Why? Because you've then wiped out a person's culture. When you take a picture, this modern architecture or postmodern architecture of, say, office buildings, you could be anywhere in the world now. They're the same all the way around. That is that cannot go on.
But I think that's
[02:55:16] Unknown:
it's sorry. Eric, there's a there's a a movie out now that got the Academy Award at least for the best actor. It's called The Brutalist. Now You put that put that on the link. Yeah. I did. I sent that to you. Yeah. Thanks. Yes. Brutalism. I don't I'm not familiar with that term for architecture
[02:55:36] Unknown:
so much, but it sounds terrible. Sounds like We got a we got a minute and a bit to wrap up with you guys before I play the outro song. Sort of. I just wanted to read one last little, comment really from this, Langan thread. I've put the link in. There's a a really good thread. He comes in many, many times. I can't read all of it, but these some of these threads on Twitter are fantastic. They're really, really good since they've kinda opened it up. And, there is, an account onto it called Christians Against Usury. And in this thread, they've written a very short thing.
Permit usury, expect usurpation, God. True. And that's it. That's really it. So we we have to find this we have to sort of work on developing this communication platform that we're a part of and get it focused in on these key things. Another worker, Roger Sales, is very key because that's about status. And, he would just to let you know, Paul, he'd get a lot from, Belloc's review of status because, basically, that's why status gets replaced by contract when you move to a usury system. And it was status that people had under the guild system. They were defined they knew what they did. Everything got stable. People could raise families.
They could produce good quality work. They didn't get threatened. They didn't lose their livelihood. All of these things were just completely wide open to total abuse, by these bar stewards as it were. I know you all know that, but there we go. So Anything you know of by Belloc that is available in audiobook,
[02:57:05] Unknown:
let me know, and I'll pass it on to him.
[02:57:08] Unknown:
Alright. Okay. Well, I'm I'm gonna do one, but I need to profile my voice. I really sort of need to get all that kinda sorted out. Okay. We're gonna play out now with I Can Help by Billy Swan. I hope you can, Billy. We we want as much help as we can get from everybody. Thank you very much everyone for this week's show. We'll be back again, same time, next week. Of course. Of course, we'll be back same time next week, 8PM. And I'm I'm I'm kinda like this thread that we're on for the past couple of weeks, so we might be pushing it again. We might throw in a few more news stories as well just to keep us all, you know, drama written and all that kind of stuff. Eric, Paul, and Patrick, thanks very much for being here this week. I look forward to your company next week. Yeah. And to everybody on Rumble that's contributed this evening, fantastic. As I said, I put that link to the Langham post in the Rumble thread. I suggest you all give it a click and go through it. It's excellent summary. Getting things in short form is brilliant. See you all next week, everyone. Bye for now.
[03:01:03] Unknown:
Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
Introduction and Host's Week Recap
Weather and Magnolia Trees Discussion
BitChute and Online Censorship
Censorship and Government Control
Local Markets and Economic Decline
Weather and Personal Stories
Political Denial and Migrant Crisis
Economic Challenges and Government Inaction
Historical Context and Usury
The Secret People by GK Chesterton
Cultural and Economic Observations
Humor and Light-Hearted Segment
Usury and Economic Control
Political Solutions and Communication