In this lively episode of Paul English Live, we dive into a variety of topics ranging from the whimsical to the profound. As England basks in a rare heatwave, Paul and Eric engage in a spirited discussion about the fleeting nature of time, reminiscing about the durability of weeks in the past. They also explore the eccentricities of English weather and the joys of cycling in the sun. The conversation takes a humorous turn with anecdotes about peculiar place names and the quirks of British culture.
The episode also delves into more serious matters, such as the influence of banking systems on government power, with a notable mention of Liz Truss's insights into the control held by the Bank of England. The hosts discuss the impact of usury on society, referencing Ezra Pound's poignant words on the subject. The conversation touches on historical events like the American Civil War, examining its causes and implications. Listeners are treated to a mix of humor, music, and insightful commentary, making for an engaging and thought-provoking episode.
Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network. This pair of stream is brought to you in part by mymytobust.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, phatphix,.com, And also iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency one by Preif International. That's iteroplanet.com. Thank you, and welcome to the program.
[00:01:28] Unknown:
It's love that's making you sad, then it's not the love you need. The love that's supposed to make
[00:02:36] Unknown:
La la la la la la. Yeah. How about that for some singing? Hey. It's, it's Thursday, July. That means tomorrow it's the July 4. That's something to talk about later on the show. But what we're gonna talk about now is not much because it's a very sunny, summery day. This is Paul, English Live, episode 94. Welcome to the show. And as we here in England bask in a heatwave, hopefully, you'll be basking in a wave of hot debate and topic and spirited discussions and all that kind of stuff here on this rather beautiful Thursday evening. Yes. Hi everybody.
These weeks, these weeks, do they last a week? It's just ridiculously quick. It's got silly quick. I got a phone call from my brother a little bit earlier today. He called me up to complain about the length of his week too. They just don't last as long. They used to be really well made back in the sixties and seventies and eighties. The week was very well made out of stout timbers, very durable, easy to maintain, and lasted a long time. Now look at it. It's all plastic and crap and wears out after about ten minutes. And Thursday just rolls around all the time, which must mean that it's time for Eric von Essex to roll around too. And so, good evening, Eric. Welcome to the show. How are you on this fine beautiful evening, I'm assuming?
[00:04:59] Unknown:
I'm jolly bees and I'm very spiffing. So there we go. I I've, you know Jolly bees. It's a spiffing evening, isn't it? Yes. That's it. And it's what it wacko and, what's the other one? Wizard Prang. That's another one.
[00:05:12] Unknown:
It's Wizard Prang. It's topo, and it's really rather put a bit of a pearler. It's just absolutely everything about it is just amazing. Yeah. It's really good. I think it's the best weather I could remember since the last lot of best weather I remember. Yeah. That's right. It's been fab. Yeah. Really has. Certainly has.
[00:05:31] Unknown:
And nice bicycle weather as well if you're into cycling. Very nice. And, yeah. I've I've enjoyed every minute of it, but it's gonna, wee wee down apparently over the weekend. Does it not where we are? It's gonna be a bit clever. Yes. But, yeah, where you are and I am, it's gonna be the mist. But it's like they go to the desert where I am. But I'm not complaining. I just love summer, and, I'd like to go to a nice warm part of the world in winter. I don't like English winters very much. How about you? Right. Do you are you are you into English winters or not?
[00:06:06] Unknown:
No. Not really. No. I'm not really into English winters at all, actually. Oh, good grief. Hang on just a minute, Eric. We've got one of these little glitches where Rumble has betrayed me. Just a minute. And I wonder if YouTube's betrayed me. Yeah. The it's not going out. Let's have a quick look. It's not on let's have a look. Hi to everybody on YouTube. I think we're going out okay on YouTube. So I'm pretty sure that It must be on Rumble because
[00:06:32] Unknown:
because, we've had, Mark Anthony 72 has said good evening. Alright. So he must be hearing us. Alright. Okay.
[00:06:40] Unknown:
Let me just put a a little message in. Hi. Are we coming through a okay, question mark, or something like that. Yeah. So hi. Quick shout out to everybody. So, welcome everybody on Rumble, and welcome everybody on YouTube. Cool. Thanks, XO, and, good evening, Mark Anthony, and we'll be paying lots of close attention to you this evening. We'll be sending you questionnaires after the show but, yeah. Great, great that you're in here right at the start of things. And of course today's image, Eric, is what, what I do every summer. I I dress up in in in old fashioned English, costumes, and I dance around things. Do you do that sort of thing?
[00:07:20] Unknown:
Of course. Yes. Yes. And my case comes up next week. And my my my my neighbors think I'm a bit bit of a natter. Yes. I'm a bit of a natter. Maybe a little eccentric. Oh, yes. I mean but me, eccentric, never. We would put why should anybody call me eccentric? I'm normal. Everybody else is eccentric. That's that's Yeah. You know? But, anyway, we can always rely on Mark Antony to give us a nice feedback and XO, Yes. In chat. So thanks, mates. They do that on my show. They do it on your show. Brilliant. Got much appreciated.
[00:07:58] Unknown:
All comments much appreciated. I mean, I have to tell you, I've had a such a whack of a week. What do I mean by that? I've been I've been full on this week, Eric. Really. Absolutely flat out with lots of, technical trouser, challenges. That's just a euphemism really for I've just been working, yeah, working over hot servers, moving websites, rearranging mail servers. Gosh, this sounds tedious, doesn't it? It really is, to be quite honest. Wow. I mean, when I first started doing this about twenty years ago, Max servers. From a mail server. Yeah. Oh, seriously. We're not nervous. I would actually agree. I actually Good grief. I never even spotted that, but your wonderfully perverted mind picked it up almost instantaneously.
Yeah. But, you know, with these narrow servers Yeah. Steady with that old chap. Work No service. Yeah. We don't want any of that kind of palaver going on around here. Yeah. Absolutely. So now they're actually they're like they're they're sort of an arcane jiggery pokery thing and they drive me bug batty. But once they're set up, they generally not don't fall over and stuff. But, although I'm sorry. This is not really some world shattering news, but it's news from for for me. And I have a server I've got a few servers that I have to run to manage radio stations and this show because it streams out to WBN. And a quick big shout out to everybody on WBN three two four. We're here every, every Thursday, 03:00 till 05:00 eastern, eight till ten here in The UK. So good to have you along and to be there on the network.
But, yeah, I've just had a bit of a technical week, Eric. So I had to, the old server that I had literally became inaccessible for reasons which I probably could have found out, but I thought it's gonna take me a week to read all these manuals. Why not just move all the sites which I still could do and set up a new a new server? It sounds awfully posh and grand. I mean, it's the bread and butter of Internet stuff and I'm still sort of particularly keen. I know we're we're going out here over Rumble and YouTube whilst we still can and this show is not too contentious. I mean, we could do a contentious show if we wanted to and possibly do things that might lose the channel. I can certainly talk about those things and have done in the past but, I don't mind using them. However, I'm still of the view really that long term the future is to kind of still have our own networks, which makes me, I suppose, a bit of a kind of,
[00:10:22] Unknown:
I don't know. Do you know what I mean? What do you think about it? We're we're shadow banned. Well, I Yeah. I mean, I've I've had, I've I've I've guessing now. This must be about 20 my videos taken down by YouTube. And I've been banned five times. And Right. It's it is soul destroying because you got nobody to speak to, and it's a machine, I believe, that does it. It's all, you know, I don't I don't think people sit there. But it might be a word that you set out of place or something like that. But, you know, I I did have I've had guests that have said things that probably would not be, that are censored by YouTube. I mean, they are the hottest for censorship.
But why? I mean, but what my guests have said is perfectly acceptable. Children could hear it, and it'd be perfectly okay. So what is it Yeah. That adults cannot listen to, which is so terrible that they have to they have to remove my videos? Yeah. It's it's, but to me, censorship is the last bastion of tyrants. But I've got a question for our audience tonight. And this is a question from, before we get on here. Can anybody in anywhere in the world name a government that's been any cop and has worked for the people? I can think of two, maybe three, but not in this country.
So anybody can think of any governments that have actually worked for the people and not for the user scammers. So it's a difficult one, isn't it? I can think of three governments that have worked for the people. Yeah. But in the past Go on. And Which three? All three
[00:12:02] Unknown:
as three. Right. Number one, mister h. No. Start off at third. Who's third? Come on. Build it up like top of the pops. So in at third. What's Third.
[00:12:12] Unknown:
It's, I would say Saddam Hussein. He worked for the people. Second, it's Gaddafi.
[00:12:22] Unknown:
And now I don't think this is number one. Right here. We need a band. It's
[00:12:27] Unknown:
Adolf Adolf Hitler. Yes. He comes in at number one because between 1933 and 1938, say nineteen thirty nine, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. For about five to six years, he did work for the people of Germany. And, people weren't actually, dying of starvation as they were prior to 1933. And Yep. That type of thing. So, but all three did exactly the same. Banned usury.
[00:13:03] Unknown:
That's it. That's the elephant in the room that we Who did you have in at number 2? I was so busy singing songs. I didn't hear what you said because I'm a very rude A Gaddafi.
[00:13:13] Unknown:
Right. Oh, I'm I'm ruder. No. I'm definitely Gaddafi Duck. Yes. So as as, Saddam. Oh, hang on. We've also got the bloke in Syria. I don't know much about him, though. What was his name now? I can't remember. Do you know remember him? He's I think he's living in Russia now. He liked it, isn't he? Oh, Bashar,
[00:13:34] Unknown:
was it?
[00:13:36] Unknown:
Bashar. Bashar. Bashar. That's old Bashar, ain't it? Yeah.
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Or whatever it is. He was the,
[00:13:42] Unknown:
eye surgeon in, he spoke English, didn't he? And his his wife was English, I believe. And Yeah. Yeah. And, I don't know much about him, though, so I can't really mention him because I'm a little bit ignorant of what happened in Syria. But I have heard good things because they reckon that Syria was less Arab than all the other countries in that part of the world. There are more European. So, you know,
[00:14:09] Unknown:
XO says Romanoff. Three good ones. Let's see if I give you three good ones. Right? Go on then. Necessarily prime ministers because gov so when did government sort of kick off over here when when over here is after Charles got his head chopped off. Is that right? Really? He was all king up to that point. Yeah. I think so. Yes. Yes. And then we've been a hybrid ever since then. I mean, they wiped the monarchy out everywhere else over Europe, but they kept the one here, I don't know, probably for cosmetic and purposes. Actually, there there were all sorts of you know, in a weird way, because they couldn't placate parts of Scotland, it left they didn't finish it off, and they perfected the model of wrecking a Western nation, when they reran the whole thing again.
But this time in the French Revolution, and this time they managed what they did was they supplied guillotines, and they chopped people's heads off, and this stopped the monarchy coming back because they didn't have any heads on. I'm obviously being slightly flippant about it. But if I if I rock back in my mind to think about, say, three other noteworthies and, reconciliation. Good evening, Patrick. I think that's you under your name. So we've blown your cover, mate. It's terrible. Completely blown it.
[00:15:14] Unknown:
I know. He mentions But for a few fault bobs, we'll keep it quiet.
[00:15:19] Unknown:
What about that one? A few fault bobs, you know? Yeah. A few fault. We keep it quiet. Although we've blown it now, it's terrible, you know, and all that kind of stuff. Yeah. So, he he puts Tsar Nicholas, Tsar Nicholas. Is it the second? It must have been. Good point. Now he was jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly jolly j
[00:15:39] Unknown:
got, destroyed by the moment. 17.
[00:15:41] Unknown:
He got 1917. Yes. Him and all his family. Yeah. He was a fantastic guy. Top bloke. Really understood what was going on, but just didn't have enough, needed his iron sides. Cromwell, at least, that's one thing that Cromwell got right. And, Tsar Nicholas just had men close to him effectively betray him and, of course, didn't realize how deep the rot had got, but he was loved by his, by the great peasants. And as I should say, and as you can see in the picture, good evening, happy, merry, pleasant fellow peasants because that's really what we're perky peasants, I was thinking today. I'm always looking for alliteration because I'm just sad like that. And I've got a big I've got a lot of dictionaries and I just feel like because I paid all the money for the dictionaries, I got to read them every now and again, you know, dictionaries and I just feel like because I paid all the money for the dictionaries, I have to read them every now and again. You know what I mean? It's like a waste of money. Yeah. But, yeah. So, sir Nicholas, I like him. He he's in. He's a good one. Now, the other one I'm gonna pick is He's a good one.
He's a good one. I of course, I only really know all the English ones, of course. So I'm gonna say oh, where should I pick? I'd have to say it's a bit like Mona, isn't it? Derek and Clive. I'd have to say of the three, the next one I'd probably pick would be Edward the first, I think. Now, I know if you're a Scot, that's another terrible thing for me to say. Yeah. Yeah. Edward the first. And, the reason, Edward the first, Longshanks, six foot two in Oh, yes. In the December. My Longshanks. Big lad. Big lad. Right. And I know he's portrayed hellishly vile in, Braveheart and rightly so. These were vicious times, of course. People were not particularly kindly with with the other side because they all wanted to be in control, so it's pretty bad. But, he did actually sort out an awful lot of stuff. He came into a very troubled land and he sorted a great deal of stuff and, of course, he's responsible for an expulsion of a certain group of people, the statute for which is still sitting on the books. So if anybody wants to dust that off, and I think we need a few more statutes or Edward the first type statutes like that for the expulsions of several groups of people, including the originating one. Expulsion may seem a little bit harsh but what's happening to us is more than harsh and therefore I think it's actually, it would be a thing that could diffuse the situation, he said pathetically because of course it wouldn't do that at all, it would ramp it up. So that's it. And then number one for me, I suppose, even though I still don't know enough about him, but I've just got this phenomenally positive impression about him, is literally Alfred who literally was great.
And, so Alfred the Great would come in as my but we're talking over a thousand years ago now. So I never met the lad. Have did you ever meet him? Was he still knocking around
[00:18:18] Unknown:
in your knick of the woods when you were a lad? Well, he's let himself he's he's let himself go a bit recently. That's the thing. But, you know, back to Tsar Tsar Nicholas, did I ever tell you my granddad got dragged off by the Bolsheviks? It certainly made his eyes water. It really did. It was never the same again. Yeah.
[00:18:35] Unknown:
Right.
[00:18:36] Unknown:
But so I actually, you picked some good ones here. Yes. Sorry. I
[00:18:41] Unknown:
I can't come over that one. Well, there are. I think we can say positive things about a lot of a lot of our guys, Eric. There's a lot. I I think the other thing as well, we're in the comfortable position of being able to be hypercritical about people in the past, and we've got more information to be hypercritical about them than we've ever had for those of us that have jumped around and splashed around in all that information. So it's not as if any of them were perfect, but it's difficult to know just exactly what they were dealing with, you know, all the time. And we've got reports of it and stuff like that. Mhmm. But, yeah, those those guys were good. And I compete loads of others. Someone was talking to me the other day about Nelson, you know.
We're talking about good people. Nelson was a complete nutter, really. If you look at the Battle of Trafalgar and stuff, I mean, the guy was just off the charts. All of these things. And, you know, when you were told about battles in the past, I don't wanna make this all about a battle show, although we we can drift any way you like, really. And I just wanna say to everybody in YouTube and Rumble, it's me and Eric for tonight. We do have someone lined up. It's not quite happening tonight. We've got, we've got a nice guest on next week. Well, he might be nice. It all depends whether he's a bit drunk when he turns up. He won't be drunk. I'm just I'm just whining. I'm teasing.
I'm teasing I'm teasing it. And I'm also talking to some other cracking people. It's just taking a little bit longer to to roll them into my clutches as it were and to get things organized. But, yeah. If if you've got any suggestions for things that you want me and Eric to talk about over the next couple of hours because we're unlikely to run for three hours. I really am whacked today. Although, probably, I'll talk my I'll change my mind after two hours. I've done this about twice before when I think it's gonna be the two hour show as opposed to overrun. So we'll just see how it goes. But if you got any ideas or suggestions or you wanna prompt What about? Or you wanna yeah.
[00:20:24] Unknown:
What about, what I don't know what number he was. It was Edward after Victoria. Now not the dirty birdie. Don't know. Was he the ninth? I don't know. But anyway, him, apparently, they reckon he was bumped off because he was trying to sort out, the parliament. Because parliament would be going getting a bit too big for their boots, and were he he didn't like the corruption. I don't know how true that is, but that's what I heard. Do you know anything more about that? Anybody Well, that's Victoria's
[00:20:56] Unknown:
son. Yeah. A dirty bird. Son. Yeah. Yeah. Dirty bird. Oh, yeah. He was a bit he had a bit too much lasciviousness in his bloodline, didn't he? He was known for his carnal pleasures, wasn't he? Something like that.
[00:21:08] Unknown:
He liked going to France a lot, apparently. And,
[00:21:12] Unknown:
Is that a euphemism for something? It is, obviously, isn't it? Yeah. Yes. Oh, he likes to go to France a lot. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Nudge. Well, tonight's theme is actually smut. What a what a surprise.
[00:21:26] Unknown:
Oh, well, it it and so too often, you need to know where he's coming or going, you know, most of the time. But there we go. But What? For now?
[00:21:36] Unknown:
More tea, Vicar. Yes. So
[00:21:40] Unknown:
But, Patrick written as Pope Pius the ninth. Now was he the bloke around during World War two, Pope Pius the ninth?
[00:21:50] Unknown:
Well, if he's the one that kicked off the Crusades, I'm with I'm with Patrick, but I don't know if he is. So Patrick will probably step in and let us know. I think that was Pope Pius. Ah, exo should we met. I probably got it wrong. I don't know me popes very well. I'm English, Patrick. We don't know popes. We get quite cross with them as you well know. We think they're all a bit silly. But if it's any if it's any sort of, what's the word? Consolation, that's the word. We think the same of most of the heads of the Church of England too, you see. Well, I do anyway. I'm sort of they all worry me like like billio.
We could talk some church and religion stuff. I've been reading a lot of stuff on that recently. We will move it around. But what I I was just gonna reinforce the offer out to anybody that's either on YouTube or on Rumble. If you wanna pitch in on the show, you wanna just call up, bend our air about anything at all. I'm just gonna try and push this a little bit tonight. Don't worry. We won't be upset if if nobody calls in. We we know. But if you want to, you can. And, if you're on the in on Tintinet and I'm assuming that because you're viewing us on Rumble and YouTube you are probably on a PC maybe on your mobile it doesn't matter, you can come into the studio here directly where we are we can get about another two or three voices in and we can line you up and bring you in and you go to paulenglishlive.com forward /call.
Paulenglishlive.com/call and it'll bring you in. I'm actually looking at it because I've got it on the screen this week, and we've already had guest two rocked up. Maybe that was Patrick a bit earlier, and I missed it because I was too busy banging on about something. But I'm just looking at the screen now. So if any of you get the urge to come in, bend it away. We're sort of a bit freeform tonight for all sorts of reasons. I haven't had I've just been flat out, as I said, tending servers and I only finished about 04:00 today because, and I I was up most of the night last night doing it. Well, I got about three hours sleep last night so I'm a bit sort of pooped out, you know, and, and that's really why it's it's the way it is today. But it won't be a problem because Eric's mind and my mind are just full of so much well, Eric's so much lavatorial humor that we two hours wouldn't wouldn't be long enough.
[00:23:59] Unknown:
Well, x x o reckons that, Edward the eighth met Yeah. Mister h before World War two, which would have been a bit difficult because he was I think he was killed about 1911. And mister h wasn't famous at that point. I think he was, living in poverty in '9 1911. So, know any more about that,
[00:24:24] Unknown:
So Yeah. Evening, Billy Silver has just joined the chat on Rumble. Hi and also shout out to Brad Evening. Brad Brad Spring Springgate. That's difficult to say, Brad. Brad Brad Springgate. That is a bit of a tongue twister. So Brad Brad Springgate. It can't be two Brads, surely. I quite like and Sue Sparkle. What a nice name. Sue Sparkle. I like that. So evening Sue and Brad and everybody that Oh, Sue. Hello, Sue. Alright. Oh, you're an old mucker of yours. You know Sue. You know Sue well. I see. It's like that, is it? Hello, Sudie. She must be on YouTube because I'm only looking at Rumble at the moment. So Alright. Okay. Hello, dude.
[00:25:06] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. That's pretty awesome. Where are these people come from? Yes. Mhmm. Yes. Now that's interesting because, there is a way you can get both chat rooms onto one, isn't there, I believe?
[00:25:19] Unknown:
So you could Yes. I'm actually looking at them both on one tab right now. I'm using, we can go through all this boring stuff afterwards, but for anybody that wants to do Opera, I've got this cool little maybe the older browsers have got it now. I just stumble across things. I've just been using Opera for years. I think it's been taken over by the Chinese, so it's probably a massive spying thing. But I'm so exhausted defending myself that you're gonna overwhelm us with spying on you as you try to defend them. But you can drag, two web pages together into one tab. And so what I've done is, I've got both of the chats on one screen and I'm looking at both and it means that I can type in both practically or copy and paste really quickly.
You know, when you tell me a joke, Eric, that I might have heard before before no. I you you won't do that. It's absolutely fine. So I'm just I'm just typing away. This is smutty. What happened to that? This is a family this is a family show. It's a bit bloody smutty, that is. It's a bit It's an innuendos because, you know,
[00:26:20] Unknown:
well, the trouble is most people think an innuendo is a, Italian suppository, don't they? That's that's the trouble. But
[00:26:27] Unknown:
Well, yes. Yeah. They did they? Yeah. Oh oh, I see what you did there. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:26:37] Unknown:
Yeah. But what what what could we entice people on air with? What a free raspberry of a politician of their choice? That that that's what I usually entice people on with. So, you know, I think you've said that magical word. You've said that magical word, Eric, politician. Oh, yeah. The which has now become an inexhaustible
[00:26:56] Unknown:
supply of laughter, mockery, shame, humor, ineptitude, inefficiency, adolescent mental attitudes. Now everybody, I'm a has everybody seen, is it Rachel? Is that her name? In accounts crying in the House of Commons earlier this week. Yeah. Yeah. What is that all about? I mean, really, seriously, what is that all about? What is going on? I'm a you know, at first, I thought, well, we're supposed to see this. Obviously, we're supposed to see this. Well, are they so desperate now that they're going for, look, you go out there and cry a bit and we'll we'll maybe get people's heartstrings, anything to get their attention or some sympathy on our side. And then then it turns out she was a director of the Bank of England or something, wasn't she?
No. I think she's in a junior. I don't think she's direct. Of course, the director of Bank of England is actually the prime minister of this country, isn't he? He's the bloke who rules things. Not not not Well not not Stalmar. Sort of. Yeah. He's the sort of peep he's the guy that takes the orders from the people that do real things. But but his he runs the country because he'll never tell you who those guys are that are giving him his orders. And then he gives his orders to the government, and then the government pretends that it's their orders. And then they start crying on TV because they can't do anything. It's quite sad really.
But Nigel's gonna save us, apparently. Apparently, Nigel's going to save us. No. I saw some looting. Yes, apparently, he he just is everybody tells me that reform are gonna save the day even though he's not gonna save the day. I'm going to go out on a limb here and suggest that he's not gonna do anything of the sort because because he wouldn't be able to. But he's come up with some new wacky I don't know if anybody out there seen it in chat. Some new wacky idea about buying British citizenship. I think I'm literally I think it's that. Something absolutely deranged.
[00:28:51] Unknown:
Well, he let's face it. He is. And, he's one of these false prophets. He's a he's a pied piper. And pied pipers are one a penny, two a penny. They just lead a group of people. Mhmm. A bit like Tommy Traus from Luton. Lead people into a, cul de sac and go nowhere. But does anybody what do people think of Rupert Low of a restore Britain? Because, according to Godfrey Bloom, he doesn't rate him very highly. I keep an open mind. But if you see mister Rupert Lowe, on mainstream media, then I the warning lights start to flash because nobody can get on mainstream media unless they are controlled opposition.
So Difficult to know. I I saw
[00:29:44] Unknown:
yeah. I saw that, can you hear me okay, Eric? We okay? Sound wise? Yeah. I can hear you. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'm like, thank you. Cool. Cool. Fine. Sorry. I just thought we'd made a little jump there. Sonia Poulton. I'm not gonna make a judgement either way. I know she's been around for quite a while and maybe done good stuff. It's not the sort of channel or person that I tend to follow much. I don't really follow anybody. I'm just sort of I'm reading too much of the time. But she's, she interviewed Godfrey Bloom. Now Godfrey Bloom, we played that he's the one of the few guys that's actually spoken truth in a public arena, and it was that clip that we played a few weeks back when we're just going through a whole sort of banking and law and usury thing, which, of course, I'm trying to not go back to as a default position twenty four seven. I found it very difficult, but I know it makes makes the show a little tedious if we just talk about it all the time.
But Godfrey is the guy that stood up, I think it was 02/2013, and basically said none the problem is none of you understand how central banking works. And that's the understatement of the year of the century. No. You see, the main problem is that you're trying to govern a nation, but you don't understand how banking works, so you can't govern it. I mean, it's just impossible. You cannot govern a nation if you don't understand how banking works. Anyway, he she was interviewing him recently. It's quite a, twenty nine minute I've got a twenty nine minute thing. Maybe it's an x-ray. It's on Godfrey Bloom's official channel on YouTube for anybody that wants to look it up. Godfrey spelled g o d f r e y. Bloem, b l double o m.
And, he's got credentials, and he's got, skin in the game as it were, and he understands banking. And he's also got a military background. So he said, well, I think it's worth listening to him. He's an exuberant character, I find. I like the energy in his voice. It's tremendous. I'm no doubt. I won't agree with him on everything. But it was a very interesting interview because he mentioned I mean, obviously, they use the word Zionism. We'll stick with that. Anybody here that knows me knows that you can read between the lines and what we're really talking about because it's wider than that for all sorts of reasons. I'm gonna suggest they they get hung up. Let's have an argument about this. Let's not. Let's just really nail it. But one of the things that he pointed out in the interview that was quite interesting that I've actually, I've watched nineteen minutes of this twenty nine minutes. I haven't seen the last ten minutes of it.
And a kettle probably went off. I had to have a cup of tea. You know what it's like, Eric. These things I'm so easily distracted particularly when the kettle goes. But he talked about who they really were as a people, and he got and this is happening. Now a lot of this stuff has happened since this Iranian, situation has blown up and, you know, what little sympathy that they may have had seems to have evaporated. Although, no doubt, they'll work to get it back through, you know, government diktat and all this, that, and the other. But he says, he said some really pertinent truths which people, I guess, around here and around other spaces I've been in for the last ten or fifteen years, we've been saying this stuff for a long time. These people are not the people of scripture. They're not.
And they're not even supposed to be there. And according to the narrative, God didn't leave the land to them because they're not them, and he mentions who they are. He says they're Canaanites. He didn't mention the word Edomite, but he should have because that's actually the more, important factor I would suggest, but it's an admixture. And, of course, the other point to make, even though I can't quote it from scripture right now, is once according to the narrative, let me put it that way, it's best to phrase it that way as opposed to sort of adamant thing. According to the narrative, once out of that realm two thousand years ago, they're never to return to it ever. There's no reason to. It's over. It was finished. That was the end of a chapter. Gone. So the idea that they're running back and saying God gave this land to us is bizarre on several levels. First of all, he didn't give it to anybody after two thousand years ago. That's the first thing, so he can't have it. And secondly, it's not you. And Godfrey, bless his cotton socks, basically brings this up, which is excellent.
So and you can see Sonia Poulton, she's not nervy about it. They're both talking in code language too. I think we've developed a kind of code where we can just leave silences in our speech. You know exactly what I mean, Eric, don't you? You leave a silence about you know, it's like you're talking about people being antiseptic and stuff like that, you know. We don't wanna be accused of antisepticism and, anti Seminarism. It's it's terrible. It's a terrible thing. We don't we don't want it. Well, you coined it. That's that was that's one of Eric's. Alright?
[00:34:15] Unknown:
We quite like that one. Oh, yeah. She's hiding Shivalina. You know, you know, all differently.
[00:34:20] Unknown:
Oh, at all. I see Shivalina down there. And that you don't wanna go down there. No. They Yes. Hate it. They hate Shivalina. So
[00:34:30] Unknown:
I actually thought it was a drain cleaner when I first heard when I was younger, I heard that term used. I thought it was some form of drain cleaner.
[00:34:38] Unknown:
Did you? Seriously. Or maybe you were maybe you were closest to the truth than you originally thought. Maybe your instincts were spot on, Eric, with the whole thing. Yeah. But it's good. Anyway, in that interview is where he and I really don't know what his question is about Rupert Lowe, just coming back to where you kicked it off a few minutes ago because Yeah. I saw I know. Now I've mentioned it, just to let you know, I never voted for a political party in my life. I probably never will, unless I was forced to do it and it was a fascist dictatorship, in which case it would probably work. Someone with some absolute determination because it's really what's needed. Everybody knows it, but no one dares say it. Or we need something absolutely ridiculously masculine and strong needs to come back in. And I think most people become so, incredibly weak and overly sensitive to things that they'd all end up, well, like Rachel Reeves, just crying about it. Well, you won't be able to get anything done. You wouldn't be able to actually alter anybody's doing it. You'd be all crying all the time. All the oh, no. We can't do.
It's just I mean, what words he's supposed to use? Pitiful is obviously true. It is. It is. It's just absolutely ridiculous.
[00:35:48] Unknown:
We don't we've got this book, but, Patrick has said, give Chris Coghlan Coghlan how do you pronounce his surname? C c o g h l a n. Coghlan Mhmm. Coghlan, MP, a raspberry, please. He is the Liberal Democrat MP for Doolking And Hawley. He is a UK politician. I've been running for. His is Bishop has communicated him. And, what else did he do? And what now I wonder why why oh, yes. For supporting the abortion bill. Definitely. Okay. There we go. So that's a raspberry to that's Chris Coghlan? Coghlan? Coghlan? MP. Yes. So, it gets a raspberry Yeah. Chris Coghlan. I think that's how you pronounce it. C o g h l a n. Yeah. Chris Coghlan. Yeah. Something like that. Billy Silver says, yeah, Eric. I thought the same about hesitated to contribute, a comment there.
But then, anyway, surely, anyone who thinks parliament works for the public yes. This is the thing about, places like The UK column. They do some very good documentaries, but they say, oh, write to your m p. Writing to your m p is like writing to the mafia and ask them not to be cruel, isn't it really? I mean, it's it's it's soft. I mean, what good does it make? None whatsoever. The m p is only there to look at, why ewes are urinating on the landing or to clean up the dog poo. That's about that's that's the only thing they can do. Mhmm.
[00:37:29] Unknown:
Well, I think I was listening to who was I listening? I was listening to Mike Graham earlier in the week or something. I could not know he had on. I mean, if I could sort of at the time to record these things and get the clips out, some of these clips are great. And it's that's the stuff that takes all the time. I sound like a right morning mini tonight, don't I? I just need a huge I want us to have a huge team, Eric, doing all these things because it it would help. We'd be able to really put even more extra vim in as it is. We've just got to get by on our wonderful charm and personalities. But no. No. We get around on some other things. But the comment was being made.
I think I'd said this a few weeks ago, really. I'm not the only person to say that we are basically we're we're smothered with politicians, but there aren't any statesmen. It's and there is a difference. And Correct. The the politicians are what we've got. What is a politician? Someone who is out for his or herself, generally narcissistic, and they're just ambitious. This is it. They're ambitious. They want to be given the next title up the rung, whatever it may be. Oh, I'm this now. Oh, no. I'm now I'm that. Whether they qualify for it or not, is it is irrelevant to them? They just want to angle and get that position. Whereas a statesman is someone who would, on points of honor and integrity, resign over it because they would have to say, I cannot go along with this decision because it's gonna harm the people of the country that I represent. I can't do it. I'm completely out of kilter with the rest of my party. I'm going to lose the whip, which sounds like a good thing to me. It never sounded like a bad whip rounds? Will you please stop whipping me? And, although, of course, if you're a masochist, I guess it's a bad thing. But, that's that's the kind of we don't have many and the point was being raised, oh, that was it. Apart from someone else, they also really applied it and it's true with regard to Queer Starmer.
And, he's a politician and he's a bad one. He's not even a good one. I mean he's obviously he's not coherent as a communicator. He's bizarrely crap and I I think also the fact that he's apparently sane, so we are supposed to, you know, accept this, is really rather amazing that we've got a guy in here who's actually worse than Joe Biden. Can you believe that? He's he's worse. Biden had the excuse at least of having Alzheimer's or dementia or whatever it was that was going on or at least that was his good cover story. Maybe he's canny. Maybe he's running around now and doing playing chess all day long and he's a wizard. I don't think so. But, Starmer's worse because you see that actually there is some basic brain function going on in there, but it's so corrupted and perverted and useless. And he can't he can't deal with spontaneous interaction. It's it's pathetic. It's like a kid's argument in a playground, which are quite fun, actually. They can be fun. He's not even any fun. But they are childish, though. Yeah.
[00:40:23] Unknown:
They are. But when you look at them, they are childish. I mean, it all seemed to change when Blair came in. Yeah. Now I've got a theory, and I and this is just my own personal theory. The generation that we got now, their parents and grandparents were from the hippie generation. The, the, what do you call it? The the invention of the CIA, the the hippies. And Yes. There's something about that generation, what they gave birth to, and that second generation. Then we got the third generation because the ones coming into Pan Alley, their grandparents were like the hippies. Where yeah. They didn't smack their children. Didn't put I mean, I can imagine people like Stummer being a right sport brat when he was a kid. You know? Don't do that. I mean, I don't there's a difference between, pulling your hair and tearing lumps out of it. I don't believe in being, aggressive to anybody, but sometimes a child needs to be reprimanded, which people have been doing since millennia.
But now we've got this new idea where you don't. We got, a spark brats, and that's clearly being seen in society generally. And people like, Rachel Reeves of the accounts department and Starmer. I can guarantee they were sport brats. Because when I was a kid, and I don't know what it's it's probably the same for you, Paul. I've got a clap around the ear hole if I if I if I was a bit cheeky. And I wouldn't be cheeky again because I get another clout around the ear
[00:41:58] Unknown:
hole. That it wasn't And there comes a period of punishment. Doesn't it? Yeah. It's not meant That's right. To be to hurt you. It's meant to knock a little bit of, responsibility into you for your actions. That's really what I always felt like was. I only got one severe Yeah. Severe devastating beating when I was a child. Not really. I only got one real clattering once. My dad was very, very good because his voice alone was usually enough. Right? Mhmm. Maybe your dad my dad was could be very loud. I can be very loud. So when you're that much bigger and and your and your father's much bigger than you and is very loud, it's intimidating as it's supposed to be, and he didn't have to raise his voice often. But it's also to do with tone and all these sorts of things and it's how you go, oh, there are limits to my behavior. Yeah. There are limits to everybody's.
Otherwise, there's gonna be a nuthouse down here. There are limits. This is why I've got this thing about I wanna be free. I'm going, no you don't. You don't really wanna be free. You want you want order. You want to be creative. You need certain constraints so that you can wrestle against them. They it's a bit like going in the gym. If nobody pushed against the resistance from the weight, you wouldn't build the muscles up. It's the same sort of thing, I think, with behavior. I'm not arguing for slavery. It's a different argument I'm trying to make. I'm not talking about that. But you just need constraints. They really work. They get you. They force you to be creative with what you've got. And I think also you think, you know, there's always there's always that sort of thinking in the head, oh, the grass is gonna be always much greener on the other side of the hill. And after about 50 times of trying that, you go, oh, me and dad were right. It isn't.
It isn't.
[00:43:33] Unknown:
Well, that's right. That's to somebody else. With you, aren't you? You know? Yeah. Well, that's right. But, also, our parents, were a similar age. My parents are similar to your parents, and their parents were Victorian or Edwardian. And I was brought up Victorian strict. And Mhmm. I think that I mean, I got, a clap around the ear off from my mom. And, of course, I had an elder sister that used to give me a clap around the ear around the ear. Mhmm. And, they say the gentle sex, oh, no. If you got a clap around the ear for my sister, you certainly bloody knew it. So Yeah. I was, my dad very rarely, but it was my mom that was more, you know, don't do that bash. Take that. You know? And probably a little bit vicious sometimes.
Well, I could say a lot about that, but I won't. But quite honestly, I think that I was told to, you know, sit down. Children of sleep should be seen and not heard. Always offer your seat to a lady. All these Victorian polite things that people, for example, I I noticed now on, this signs, I very rarely go on public transport. But you see signs, please give this seat up. This seat is for an elderly person. Give this seat up for disabled person. You shouldn't have signs like that. Society should be that people in the Victorian times that you never dream of having a sign like that. People would get their give their seat up for the elderly
[00:45:11] Unknown:
disabled people. Really interesting thing. Yeah. I think that's a really relevant point. You know that thing where you're being ordered to do something that you are already doing and how damn irritating it is? Yeah. Who was I talking to about this the other day? I can't remember. It's like, if you oh, I know who I was talking to Maleficos offline about something and he was in a strop about something because some and and I you'll I think you'll recognize this. You know, if you want to sort of I know. Say say around birthday cards, this is a good one. Right? So you're thinking I mean, this is seems awfully trite but it's the principle. Someone's birthday's coming up and you go, I'm gonna send them a birthday card. But then someone starts to remind you to send it before you've done it. It makes me not want to send the birthday card. Yes. I know what you mean. Yeah. Right? Ring a bell? It's like Yeah. No. You don't you don't get to tell me that. And and I was thinking about it the other day and I thought it's not just that. What it is is you've you're about to enter a little moment where you're gonna spontaneously give and as soon as someone's said that you've got to do that, that experience of just out of nowhere giving something has been taken away from you. You can't actually do it anymore. They've kind of blocked it off. What's wrong?
Yeah. They've taken away some of the natural sort of joy and interaction of life by saying you must do this. This is this is it. You know, you can't leave this. And I became terrible because of it. I became terrible at sending birthday cards. I it's probably because I'm just a callous, indifferent, uncaring sod, I suppose. I don't I didn't mean any harm by it. I used to just go they go, oh, it's someone's birthday. Was it important? I mean, you know. My son said, dad, do you want any birthday cards? Or happy birthday Father's Day. Why? I don't even know. It's alright. Every day is happy Father's Day when I've got you know, I mean I mean that. I'm serious. You know, I just I don't need a day for you to tell me. Does that mean all the other days were rubbish or something? So, yeah. That's, I think that's what it means with people.
[00:47:09] Unknown:
Yeah. In the office. And I got a Christmas card from someone called. It's just a line in the apartment. Look, bloody hells. And all it was Oh, I got a card from them as well, Eric. Yeah. And she just getting a card. Just put put just, you know, a blit across it. And then to give her what's the point? It's not given with any love, consideration. It's just a case of, I gotta get Christmas cards out, so I just give them out. So you just got this sort of line along the bottom. The part of the of of the card. Why? Mhmm. It doesn't really but Nathan had a brilliant idea. You know what he did? He actually bought a box of Christmas cards.
And when he was about about and he saw someone a little bit down or a bit, you know, someone begging or something like that, he'd go over to them and just give them a Christmas card. And he said, you'd see people faces light up, complete stranger. You know, they might be loaning them up on their own. It just said, this is for you. You know? That's a very nice thought, isn't it, really? Just give a complete stranger a Christmas card. Things like that. That's given with thought and love. Whereas when it's just sent, like, in the office, why bother sending it if it's not forgiven with thought or love or anything like that? So don't bother. I know. Hey. You know, we've come a little bit away from the point I was trying to make as well. I have on, Rupert Lowe.
[00:48:30] Unknown:
And just looking at the chat, by the way. Shout out so just a quick catch up on chat and everything. Over on Rumble chat, Yeah. Completely agree, Gizzy fifty one, but I can't say that on air, can I? Well, I could. I say that in the privacy of my own home all the time. Snigger, snigger, titter, titter, titter, titter, titter, titter, titter, There's one from from the seventy two. No. There's one from XO that was addressed to you who said, Eric's laugh makes me want to wash up the dishes. What does that mean? Is it It means, actually, that you that your dishes are dirty. That's what it means. It means you've got dirty dishes, and I ought to know because mine are dirty at times sometimes. Oh, me dirty dishes.
So there we go. I don't know what it means. He said, I hope it's not some Freudian stuff. It probably is, XO. You need help. You need treatment. Go and find yourself a nice psychiatrist, my boy. They'll sort you out. They'll get into your head. What could possibly go wrong? So, yeah, that's quite good. Well, psychiatrists
[00:49:43] Unknown:
need psychiatrists. You know that? Because when you look at psychiatrists, they look as if they need one.
[00:49:49] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. They do. That's my view as a psychiatrist. Yeah. No. It's that old joke. And anybody anybody that wants to thinks they need a psychiatrist needs needs their head examining. That's I always thought that that was that was really the joke. Yeah. That was the joke for me. Yeah. Absolutely. The the wonderfully named Alice Gorgeous as well is in, YouTube chat. So hi Alice Gorgeous. It's a great surname. Wish I'd been born Paul hand wish I'd been born Paul handsome but, but I wasn't. What a pity. Eric Dashing, you could have been Eric. Just think of the fantastic names we could have had. But that's great. I'd actually
[00:50:29] Unknown:
well, I'd call my surname darling. Mhmm. Because we say, oh, hello darling. And, if I had a dog and I live by the coast, I'd call it shark. That'd be fun walking over the beach, wouldn't it? Shark. It's not a shark. Yeah. Shark. Yeah. Shark. Yeah. Shark. Yeah. Shark. Yeah. Shark. Yeah. Shark. Yeah. Shark.
[00:50:46] Unknown:
What was that what was that little there was a little interaction in some comedy thing years ago. Man and woman. Darling? Yes, darling. Oh, nothing, darling. Just darling, darling. I always wanted like that one.
[00:50:58] Unknown:
Well, is it like Adam, wasn't it? There was was it darling? Was that singer? That's a right name. Darling.
[00:51:03] Unknown:
I'm just saying darling darling. Yeah. Yeah. He was darling, wasn't he? Yeah. Oh, darling. Yeah. I say that quite well, don't I? Anyway, yeah. Absolutely. Eric, Alice, gorgeous, Eric, by the way, thinks that your laugh needs bottling. Alice, you'd be pleased to know that in the Fockem Hall Laboratories, they've been working on this, but they it's still taking them a little while. They've been at it for eight years, and, they're still missing some some gubbins. They they can sort of capture it, but they can't get it in the bottle. It sort of escapes by the time they're just about to put the cap on. It's tricky, isn't it? But we could sell it. Yeah. Bottled laugh. Yeah.
[00:51:40] Unknown:
Bottled laughter. Well, I remember that, years ago, I mean, my my brother-in-law, he he he I mean, quite honestly, he often looked like I can I can explain it? He had that look a bit like Keir Starmer. You know what I mean? That sort of, you know, I I've just discovered that farts shouldn't be lumpy, you know, that sort of attitude. And, he came over one Christmas. So I got an empty aerosol spray and put on the side of it, party atmosphere, and I was just spraying it around just to be sarcastic.
[00:52:15] Unknown:
Hey. We could sell that. Fucking whole novelty gangs. Come on. That's great.
[00:52:21] Unknown:
Have you got two other people that you got an email?
[00:52:24] Unknown:
Yeah. I could just see the Internet. This is a bit of a dull party. Don't worry. I've got something in my briefcase, darling. What's this? It's aerosol party atmosphere from Fockem Hall Laboratories.
[00:52:38] Unknown:
Well Turns any dull party into a riot.
[00:52:41] Unknown:
Yeah. That's what it is.
[00:52:44] Unknown:
I bought from, like, a joke shop once. Falt spray.
[00:52:50] Unknown:
Really? I'm surprised. Yeah. You thought of that. Yeah. I'm shocked. I'm shocked. I can't believe that you thought of a Fart spray.
[00:52:58] Unknown:
I know. It's disgusting. It's
[00:53:02] Unknown:
it's just out of the Oh, boy.
[00:53:14] Unknown:
I thought I'll go ahead and get a
[00:53:17] Unknown:
comedy show this. You know? It's very, very serious at times. We're very serious about this stuff, aren't we, Eric? It's very, very serious. Yeah. That's fair. Anyway, what was this point I was trying to make about Rupert Low and Godfrey Bloom? Oh, yeah. Godfrey Bloom had said something about him. I didn't quite understand it, that he was like all the others. That somehow I know that maybe he's getting funding from some kind of atypical arena. I'm I don't know anything. I've got no nothing factual to say, but he he sort of implied that or said something. But I noticed on I think it was was it Monday? Where are we? Thursday? It's early this week. Monday or Tuesday. Probably Monday. There's a thing called Restore Britain sprang up on Twitter, which Rupert Lowe obviously is the is behind all this.
Now I've mentioned that Rupert Lowe, to me, seems to be the only one that can at least communicate like a man. I'm quite serious about that. I mean, he talks like somebody who understands what responsible talk is. This is a start. Right? Is it? I don't know. Maybe it's just another cul de sac, you know, another sort of Trojan horse type thing, but I don't sense that about him. However, my senses are limited just like everybody else's, so you have to sort of wait a little even though we're running out of time. But they put this organization up, it's not a political party. So I was immediately interested. Seriously, because it's not a political party, it's more like what we've talked about here, a consumer pressure group.
And I've always liked the idea of consumer pressure groups because, if they can get big enough they can they can what's that word? They can apply gentle soft kill on the government, which is the most devastating. A gradual wearing of them out. You were talking about the way that the these bushmen hunt animals. You know, they just literally exhaust them. They wear them out. Yeah. Yeah. Kahari bushmen. Yeah. Yeah. And as a model, that that seems apt for us. You know, as long as we can get off the settee and away from our phones long enough to do a little bit of the sort of running around. But I I signed up for the Twitter account. They had about 55,000 subscribers inside ten hours.
So I think if nothing else, it shows you that there is a tremendous hunger for the restoration of the nation. And he's talking about he's talking he's saying the things that we want to hear, but I think in his case, at the moment, he means it. It all depends if it comes and knocks on his door and then suddenly, oh, I didn't mean that. This is what happens, you know. Like, when they get in power, they go, oh, yeah. Well, when we said we were gonna stop immigration, it didn't mean straight away. And then everybody forgets that he goes down the memory hole five years go by and suddenly you can't actually move for this stuff. But I want to give him the benefit of what is currently for me a small doubt. I actually remember I had a slight little lift of optimism. I thought, if he can get a good crew around him and that really is the most important thing, you can't no one can do this stuff alone even though even though the voter base obviously identify with an individual. Of course, nobody identifies with Keir Starmer. You'd need your head examining by a psychiatrist, recommended by Keir Starmer to do such a thing. But I think, Oh, yeah. It seemed to be good. I I read through it. There's a good if you look it up on x, maybe I said Twitter, but x.com, track it down. It's probably going to be worth following it to see what they're going to come out with but there's a lot of, there's a lot of support for it as an idea and I think, I'm just spending a little bit more time each day on x and looking at certain things and there's some extremely, what's the word, vibrant posts. I'll use the word vibrant. Right? Things that you wouldn't have seen a year and a half ago.
And I'm gonna put the caveat in that I always put in which is I'm still slightly circumspect about it about whether it's a fishing bait operation to actually identify lively individuals and to deal with them a little bit later on. Now this is me either being pathetically wet and paranoid but, we've got we've got history on this sort of thing. And, you you need to, you know, you if you do read history and understand it, it's a bit dense if you don't don't put it into practice. I can guarantee
[00:57:18] Unknown:
I can guarantee there'll be one thing omitted from this. You see, what what I've noticed, for example, Blair, he was brilliant at telling people what they want to hear. And once they get to power, it they're they're they're okay for about a couple of months. He said he's gonna restore the NHS, and the NHS was sort of slightly restored. And then it all goes pear shaped. Same with Trump. Starting to go pear stripped pear shaped. And there's one thing, and probably people have guessed by now, he won't mention a word about sorting out the financial system and usury. He won't do it. Why? Because the he knows he he and his party will be destroyed. And this is the big problem all the way through. Because you know what happened in the BMP with, Nick Griffin.
He had a little knock on the door one night, and they said you would drop the, eradication of usury from your, manifesto, or will destroy you and your party. He ignored them. Look what happened? They destroyed his party and they destroyed him.
[00:58:28] Unknown:
Very powerful because It it is. It is in that arena. By the by the monetary elite. Yes. Yes. So We are. I don't know. We bang on it probably, and it's bore it's it's boring, isn't it, to keep saying it over and over again? But I've got a reminder here to myself, keep saying it over and over and over again till everybody stops listening to the show because they know what it's about. But it's the it's just the on the pragmatic level, it's absolutely it's pivotal. I was here's the thing. Guess this. Do you know what? UK. Right?
Annual interest payments on government debt. Guess. No. You probably guess well, I'll tell you because I heard the figure this morning. Yeah. This is interest payments alone each year. It's over £100,000,000,000 a year in interest. 100,000,000,000 in interest a year. 100,000,000,000. But there's no money for anything. Yeah. There is. You don't pay it. Then they go, oh, no. The bond market will collapse. So? And So what? Now what? Well, if the bond market collapse, we'll get these other countries to form armies. We'll come and blow you bits. Alright. Well, just say it, but they won't say that out loud, but that's what needs to be said. And that's why I think, you know, the only people that can actually solve the banking problem are the account holders. On another thing I wanted to mention to everybody, I stumbled across this the other day and I I don't think I mentioned it last week. You know that old chestnut that all the all the countries of the world actually, we're coming up to end of the first hour, but I'll just try and get this in. Mhmm.
All the countries of the world are in debt. Now The US debt is, what, 34,000,000,000,000 and rising, you know, because they just love to borrow money. And The UK debt is, what, £2,000,000,000,000 or over a trillion pounds or something. I don't know what it is. Proportionally, it's a lot lower, but that's it's all meaningless. And so every country in the world is in debt, and the question used to be, well, if they're all in debt, who are they in debt to? Yeah. And, of course, one of the stock answers, well, to one another. Well, they just cancel all the debts out then because the banks wouldn't want that because they wouldn't be able to charge on the outstanding debt and put interest on it. But they much of that could occur. Also, although the bankers make sure that the countries end up at war so they won't cancel each other's debt and they can still keep milking it off in the middle, blah blah blah or whatever they do. Right? All you know all you need to know is it's a con. It's just a complete deception, the con.
So the the answer, you know, that that's the good question. Who are they in debt to? I heard a guy called Ian somebody or other. Sorry. Can't remember his surname. He runs a thing called Matrix Revolutions or something and a thing called the Old Sovereign Society, which I've got to look into. He's an English guy. He used to be very high up in the financial service industries. I think there's a question mark against him and what he's doing. There's a question mark against everybody and what everybody's doing, so I accept that. But there's some very interesting points. And he was on with David Clues from the Unity News Network. I don't know if you ever catch that on Rumble.
David Clues is a Scottish fella. Very well screwed together show. Technically, works really hard on it. I don't catch many of them, but he's doing a kind of pretty energized alternative news take on things, and he's doing a pretty good job. And he was on talking to him and his answer to that, this, he said in total, the total amount of money that's owed across all these central banks is over 300,000,000,000,000 or over a 100,000,000,000,000. It's a huge sum, like it's ludicrous, it doesn't mean anything. It doesn't mean anything. Right? He said, who is it all owed to? If everybody if all these countries owe money, who do they owe it to? And he said, his answer was really interesting. He said, you.
The people of the world are owed all this money because it's your money that they've spent. But under the terms of the loan contracts and and at government level, they're just much much bigger, but it's the same scam, you know, just dressed up in complete jargon and piffle and all that other stuff. I thought it was very interesting. So I I think it leads into the idea that a vast movement of people that are going to get themselves back onto some kind of solid footing. And for me personally, this is gonna require quite a bit of research and work and all that kind of stuff because it's things about sovereign individuals, birth certificates, bills of exchange, what is a loan agreement, what is the power of your signature, Was it in ink? Is it assumed? Who created the money? You did, apparently, with your signature, so we are told, and it tends to look true to me. So that when you put you're the guy that creates the money when you take the loan, not the bank. The bank just pretends that it did because they're quite happy. You go, I'm gonna create some more money in my own name, and the bank go, oh, well, that's good. We'll charge you some interest on it. You go, okay, because you think that they gave it to you. It gets complicated. Anyway, Eric Nice. Well, let's just hold it there. We're at the end of the first day. We're just overshot, but I usually play a song here. And so I'm usually I'm gonna do what we usually do. And, as we mentioned at the beginning of the show, it's been very sunny over here in jolly old England. In fact, I think it's been the best stretch of weather since, what was it, mid March that I can remember for donkey's years. It's been absolutely fabulous, and my evening walks through the fields of barley, or is it golden wheat, and crap at crops. I've said this before. I don't know which one it is. I'm gonna say barley for now. Just fantastic. I'm having some wonderful things. But you mentioned here's one of your favorite songs.
And, it's quite it's quite old. You've mentioned it before, but it's all to do with the sun about having a hat. And I would ask you all carefully to listen to the lyrics because you can understand why this song wouldn't be recorded or be given the light of day today. I heard it today. This is by Ambrose and his orchestra, and it's called The Sun Has Got His Hat On. We'll be back after this little musical interlude.
[01:04:43] Unknown:
The sun has got his hat on. Hip hip hip hooray. The sun has got his hat on and he's coming out today. Now we'll all be happy. Hip hip hip hooray. The sun has got his hat on and he's coming out today. He's with tannin' niggers out in Timbuktu. Now he's coming back to do the same to you. So jump into your sunbath. Hip hip hip hooray. The sun has got his hat on and he's coming out today. All the little birds are singing. All the little bats are stinging. All the little bees in twos and threes buzzing in the sun all day. All the little boys excited.
All the little girls delighted. What a lot of fun for everyone sitting in the sun all day.
[01:06:53] Unknown:
I used to believe everything I'd see on the news, but that's before I discovered a brain.
[01:06:58] Unknown:
A brain is meant for everyday use. Those living with moderate to severe stupidity have seen immediate improvement in common sense with a brain.
[01:07:06] Unknown:
I thought the government had my best interest at heart, and then a friend told me about a brain.
[01:07:11] Unknown:
Talk to your doctor about what news sources you obey. A brain may also lower your desire to take life altering advice from celebrities.
[01:07:18] Unknown:
Getting lectured about my carbon footprint from people with three private jets used to make sense. But thanks to a brain, now I can think for myself every day. When my disregard for third grade biology began to flare up, I knew it was time for a brain. Do not try a brain if you're allergic to a brain. Common side effects may include
[01:07:37] Unknown:
accountability, discernment, homeschooling your kids, a better understanding of economics, awareness of the stupidity of socialism, and diarrhea.
[01:07:46] Unknown:
For tethering yourself to reality, the only no brainer is choosing a brain. Ask your doctor if a brain is right for you.
[01:07:54] Unknown:
For more information, visit tryabrain.com.
[01:08:01] Unknown:
And, Keir Starmer is, hopefully going over to tryabrain.com.
[01:08:06] Unknown:
Eric, welcome back. Welcome back. Thank you so much. I can't thank you enough for playing that because that's one of my favorite records. If you're ever miserable,
[01:08:15] Unknown:
that will cheer you up. It's It it can be I was clicking my heels. I was clicking my heels. The lyrics, a bit saucy in those lyrics, were they? Blimey. They are a bit saucy, but it takes me back to something.
[01:08:28] Unknown:
I don't know. I'll try and condense this right down. Okay? Now Sure. My mother's auntie, okay, she fell in love with a bloke in the nineteen thirties, and they were absolutely, besotted with each other. They were made for each other. And, he, at the beginning of the war, was on reserved occupation. He had his own business. And he was a carpenter. He made furniture until somebody put him out of business that we won't go into, and he was immediately conscripted into the navy, and then she got the telegram through saying missing believed killed. She was devastated, the poor woman. Yeah. And and, she had a young son as well.
And, putting cutting a long story sideways, she eventually found the first she refound the first love of her life who she met at school, and they lived in this fisherman's cottage next to the River Lee. Right. And when I was I I was before I started school, must have been about three or four. We went in there, and it was a time trap. When we went into that cottage, it was going back to the 1930s, and that record reminds me of that cottage every time. It was idyllic, and that's it. You know? And, I've never forgotten. It's a childhood memory. So and that must have been, I don't know, I was god knows. That was in the sixties. So, you know, I must have been about three or four years old. But I will I always when I think of that, I always think of that auntie Ethel, I think of her, you know. So that's it.
[01:10:07] Unknown:
Yes. That's a lovely story. My dad used to sing that to me. I'm really familiar with it as a song, although I've not heard Yeah. That's obviously the original by Ambrose and the orchestra. That line, he's been tanning down Timbuktu. Yes. I'm getting that's lyric light writing. Maybe that maybe that chap down at Glastonbury needs to hear that, that, dark fella that was having a go at everybody and jumping around like, whatever. Yes. Anyway, so Has he been arrested yet? I I hope not. I think that would be infringing his freedom of speech, wouldn't it, Eric? We don't want anything like that. It'd be a bit saucy, wouldn't it? No. You shouldn't. Jolly well jolly well speaker. But, Yeah. No. It's lovely. My when I always remember having a chucky egg. Right? You know, a hard boiled egg. Isn't there a little That's it. Yes. Thing about hard boiled eggs as well? There is. Oh, my my dad used to sing this one. Hang on. Chicky chicken.
Give it a Play a little egg for me. That's the one. Yeah. Chick chick chicken. I want one for my tea. I haven't had an egg since Wednesday, and now it's half past three. So chick chick chick chicken. That's it? Lay a little egg for me. Well Yes. Yeah. I love that. My dad used to sing it to me just like that. Yeah. Yeah. My my dad I think my dad did. And I go to a farm, which is about five or ten minutes before. Do we have the same dad, Eric? What's going on? It's a bit worrying.
[01:11:29] Unknown:
Hey. Hang on. Did your dad used to disappear at a certain time? And then
[01:11:35] Unknown:
And then he come back speaking all sort of Essex y and stuff. That was a bit odd. Yeah. Oh, it's all coming together.
[01:11:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Yes. It is it is going together. Yes. But, I go to a farm that's about all ten minutes, quarter of an hour's walk away from where I live. And when I go in there, I buy my eggs from the farm, and they've got chickens running around, and the woman says, would you like some freshly laid ones? Mhmm. Just say, yes, please. And they're still warm from the chicken. And that's how and they are cheaper than what you buy in the supermarket, and the shells are nice and thick because you know that the chicken has been because I gave something to my neighbor, and she said, oh, these shells are really thick. I said, yeah. That's organic. I said, they should be. You know? But the really big yolks are fantastic.
They're proper eggs. And they're cheap cheaper than ordinary eggs that you buy in the local supermarket.
[01:12:28] Unknown:
So there we go. We're gonna become chicken championers. We're gonna have to champion the chicken. I love eating chicken. But every time I speak to you and you tell me it's full of growth hormones, I'm put off now. I haven't cooked a curry for four weeks. So I I have a I use, I have this enormous slow cooker. It really is. It's vast. It's got I think it's seven liters of food I can put in. I think it's measured by the liters, so it's tons, you know. And I the I always cook something spicy because then it'll last for three or four days. And, I'm you know, I don't wanna be cooking every day. I don't wanna cook at all actually. I want to have enough money to buy us some slaves and a chef and a butler and and a Batman, and all that. I just think we should have those things, don't you? I I wouldn't mind one. I agree. Yeah.
[01:13:11] Unknown:
Yeah. But But And I loved all that. And I love sorry. Yeah. The little pit with chickens. Sorry. I didn't mean to chime in there. But if you go buy an organic chicken in the supermarket, supermarket, it costs you about £20. Very expensive. But, I got this from the Bowler Hat Farmer. You can go to farms that are not registered organic, but the chicken is an occupied chicken for about 11 or 12 pounds, which is which is half the price of a supermarket. And it's not packed full of growth hormones and sex hormones and god knows what. So you won't be growing boobs or anything like that. Your bits won't fall off. So What about those of us that want to grow boobs, though, Eric? That's a bit discriminatory.
What? The LBD or what do they call it? Group or
[01:13:59] Unknown:
Oh god. Oh, by the way don't need to go for all these ludicrously expensive things and having their bits chopped off and put on. They could just eat loads of chickens. It's okay. Just eat a chicken. Wait six months. No worries. You'll be away. Have you seen what those vandals have done? I don't know where it is. There's a seat that's got a rainbow on it and all this, you know,
[01:14:21] Unknown:
paraphernalia. And Yeah. The it's a black seat, and they've gone and painted over it. Yeah. So, and, apparently, you know these zebra crossings where they've got these rainbows going across, you know, to celebrate whatever it is they're celebrating? Police horses, there's video of it, wouldn't cross it. Couldn't go they they they just didn't like it. Yeah. They're they're very sensitive. What did they know that we
[01:14:50] Unknown:
are accepting? Interesting. Maybe they're still in touch with their instincts and stuff like that. Yes. They probably are. Hopping back onto our favourite topic, Usheri, and all that. There's a comment in the rumble chat, from Mark Anthony. Good evening, Mark Anthony. 72. So the other 71 Mark Anthony is not here but number 70Two's here. So good to see you. Mhmm. He writes the office for budget responsibility. Now this is the office that, Liz Truss ran foul of. I think I've mentioned this before, when she was actually, have I got the clip? Look. I can actually be almost professional if I've got it. I wonder if I've got it here. Dun dun dun dun dun dun. Because it's always worth hearing us say this. Apart from which I get to press a button but I can't find the blip where's it gone?
I thought I had it. Hold on. If I can't find it, I I won't play it, obviously. Let me just see if I can do this. I mentioned Liz Truss before. Right? Oops. Now I need to put a light on. I don't This is live radio, you know, everybody. By the way, Paul,
[01:15:55] Unknown:
Patrick's in the in I can't see him, though. Apparently, he's in the studio, but I can't see him. Alright. Cool. Okay. Well, I'll come to you in a second, Patrick.
[01:16:03] Unknown:
We'll bring you into the studio. Right. Liz Truss, Steve Bannon. I played this for a this is a year, and then we'll talk about the Office of Budget Responsibility. Yeah. She was on with Steve Bannon back in January 24, I think this is. So it's a year and a half ago. She's obviously no longer prime minister. Listen to listen to this if you can.
[01:16:22] Unknown:
What I found out when I got into number 10 is I thought that if I got to the top of the tree,
[01:16:28] Unknown:
I would be able to implement those conservative policies. So you think once you're prime minister Yeah. I think a little girl thinking, if I get prime minister, I'll be like Churchill, change the country. That's not how it works. Exactly. And what I discovered
[01:16:41] Unknown:
was that I was not holding the levers. The levers were held by the Bank of England, by the Office of Budget Responsibility.
[01:16:50] Unknown:
They weren't held by the prime minister or the chancellor. And I think that's a massive Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. That's a massive problem. Hang on. You're saying the central bank, the Bank of England is one of the things that controls are you a conspiracy third person? You almost sound like Gorham. You're you're MAGA. What what I'm saying, Steve,
[01:17:08] Unknown:
is that if the Bank of England governor can't be sacked and the prime minister can be sacked, then the Bank of England governor is gonna have more power than the prime minister. And that is a problem in a democracy because the fact is the left have succeeded in infiltrating our campuses.
[01:17:30] Unknown:
So have you heard that before, Eric? You heard that one? Yes. I have. Yes. Yes. Yes. It's worth playing for I I mentioned this before. That's the most truthful thing just about I mean, you know, maybe there's some more that I've heard in a public arena spoken by anybody that used to be prime minister ever in my entire life. That that's the entire It's a wonder she's still living, innit? Well, it is in a way, and I know she's got sort of, you know, she's gonna be portrayed badly because that was her drive. People have said, the the budget that they prepared must have been more competent than the thing that we've actually having to endure under this bunch of amateurs.
It must have been. Right? It just simply it couldn't be any worse, could it? But the point that the governor of the Bank of England cannot be sacked, but the prime minister can, tells you that there's no point voting. I mean, it's just it's an insane situation. It's like, say, look. You you elect some people to manage your nation. Yeah. But they can't. Why not? Well, we can't tell you why, but we're not gonna let them really manage it. Why? Why not? Okay. Who said that? Well, not us. You can't even find out who's saying it either, but she just bumped into it full on and hit a brick wall.
Yeah. So there's the enemy, everybody. I know I bang on about it all the time, but as we say, repetition's the key. This is the enemy and the bank's gotta go. And I was listening to, a little clip with Justin Walker the other day, the guy who, really brought all of the knowledge about the Bradbury pound to everybody's attention about ten or fifteen years ago. And, he he was connected, you see. He got the information from his I think it was his uncle. And he was talking about being on a train ride, 1971. He's going down to university or to take his final exams. So he's a little bit older than me. I don't know what he when he was born, nineteen fifties or something, so he's probably about '18, 1920.
And he's going it's 1971. They're on a train going to London with his uncle. I think it was his uncle who was a I I I remember. Yeah. Yeah. He was one of the governors, was an actual governor of the Bank of England. And they're on this they're in a compartment. You remember compartments. Right? Oh, I love the old railway compartments. Absolutely brilliant. Same thing. Having a conversation, you know, chugging down. And he starts to give him a bit some pieces of advice. And during this little communication, he says to him, he said, the government, can't do anything unless we allow it. That's what directly what he said to him. He said, if we don't allow it, they can't do it. He said, we control the press. We can control anything we like, basically. And he's not even a top guy. He's just a governor, but he knows. He's part he was bolted into that thing. Mhmm. And that's why, you know, literally, democracy is a sham. And for our American listeners, I'm not trying to upset you, but Trump can't save you.
He can't. Nobody can. It's all nonsense. He can't he can't do it. Not no elected official in these systems that we have in the West can save or help their people under the currency because they're all being got at. They wouldn't even be in the position in the first place if they hadn't been. This is not conspiracy theory. This is conspiracy fact. This is proven through countless hundreds, possibly thousands of papers and books, which of course have been controlled and hidden from the population for a huge chunk of time prior to the arrival of the Internet. Last twenty years, nosy beaks like us have stuck our noses in there and gone, oh, missus. This ain't right. And that's kinda what we've got, you know, what we've ended up getting roped into. Right. But just to go back, I never even quoted the, well, g. Ed Griffin did this brilliant work, but I've not I've not even read out Mark Anthony's thing. So one of the the Office for Budget Responsibility, so that's what Liz Truss was just talking about there, says Britain will spend nearly now brace yourself.
My pathetic 100,000,000,000 is about to be hammered into the ground. Right? So they, according to this from Mark Anthony, and thank you for this, says that Britain will spend nearly £600,000,000,000 on interest payments. That's just under a trillion dollars, about $900,000,000,000 on interest payments over the next five years. Okay. So it's 120,000,000,000 a year. Alright. So I wasn't far off But it is madness. I don't know what your interest payments are in The States, but they will be comparative. Right? It's all nonsense. And it's all this insane economic reporting game. Oh, well, we're gonna put the interest rates, so we're gonna do that. How would why why don't we just shut you lockdown?
Can we just shut you down? Oh, I'm deluded, aren't I, to even talk like that? But in the end, you just end up talking like an infant about it because all the highfalutin speech doesn't achieve anything either. It achieves absolutely nothing. You know BlackRock? You've heard of BlackRock. Right? Yes. Eric? Yes. And all these other guys? Yeah. I've heard of them. Yeah. Well, basically, they're all one company. There's just one company now. You've now got company that's running the world. The the empire of the merchants exists. It appears to be all these different multinationals. There's just one. There's effectively just one.
And this is why economic reporting is a joke. It's why they can keep pushing so much money out by government borrowing supposedly because I suspect there's no intention of ever having the governments be in a position to ever pay it back because they're gonna use it as a causative reason to say, hey, everybody. This has got slightly out of hand, in brackets, we know because we caused it, close brackets. Right? They they say that as an aside. And so the solution, everybody, is we want a central bank digital currency. That'll stop this sort of nonsense happening again. And they're right. It will stop that sort of nonsense happening again. It's gonna introduce a new kind of economic mayhem into our lives and an excessive degree of, you know, control to them.
I know this is You will own nothing and be happy. I suspect we own nothing right now, Eric, actually. You know, I was talking about, a low deal title in property, which is what you used to have under Alfred under King Alfred. Right? You had a low deal title. There's also some very interesting information about the Druids going back, two thousand years and how they managed land. It was owned by the Druids in these parcels all laid out. It's really interesting stuff. All of this stuff, I would suggest everybody, certainly if you're English, is still in your bones. I'm gonna just suggest that. You might not think it is, but I think it is. It's in our bones. There's a sense that everything is out of whack and we've really got William the Conqueror to thank for it, you know, to for for for for shifting things across. But, thanks very much for that information, Mark Anthony. That's excellent. So a 120,000,000,000 a year. Yeah. That's fine. We can afford that, can't we? I also, there was a thing. Let me bring Patrick in now. Sorry, Patrick. I've not been ignoring you. I just didn't add you to the stage. Hang on. There we go. Patrick, good evening. How are you? Oh, good afternoon, I should say. How are how are things is it sunny in Wisconsin, as sunny as it has been here in England? Oh, it's gorgeous.
It's 30
[01:24:26] Unknown:
We we got a darling. Sound. We got a darling. Sound like a darling. If we exterminate exterminate.
[01:24:32] Unknown:
Yeah. You're having you're having audio technical trouser problems, Patrick. They're in quite incredible. You almost sound like Keir Starmer.
[01:24:41] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:24:43] Unknown:
He does. He almost sounds like Keir this is what you sound like, Patrick. He does. Right? Doesn't he? Sounds like that. Why you sound a bit yours sound a bit like this. There you go.
[01:25:00] Unknown:
Did you hear about Kia Starmer and his his boyfriend, walking by the quayside?
[01:25:06] Unknown:
And, Which one? He's got three. They all tried to burn his noses down.
[01:25:11] Unknown:
One of them and, one slips ass over to sorry. You're after 09:00 to say that ass over to it. In the in the water, you see. And Kirsty, I was saying, oh, how oh, what should I do? Just just help. Help. I'm drowning. He said, oh, try throwing you a boy. His partner said, oh, no. Don't don't do that. I ain't got time for that. Sorry.
[01:25:31] Unknown:
I assume I'm coming through now.
[01:25:34] Unknown:
No. We can't hear you, Patrick. That's right. No. No. We can't hear you. No. You sound great. Alright. Hold on. Hold on. I'll be right back. No. You sound fine. You sound great. I'll be right back. I was just winding you up. Okay? Because I've got to. It's great. Oh, he's gone now. Have you gone? Eric. You took me seriously, Eric. Well, look. All these voices are coming everybody, if you don't know what's going on, all these voices are coming into the show from America, and we don't know who they are Yeah. Except you might be Paul.
[01:26:00] Unknown:
Eric, it's just me. And and, Eric, isn't that bum over teakettle?
[01:26:07] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. Bum over teak. That's a good one. Yes. Bum over teakettle. Yes. You like that one. I I guess you like that joke. Yes. Yes. Because, you know, Keir Starmer isn't gay, but his boyfriend is,
[01:26:20] Unknown:
apparently. Well,
[01:26:22] Unknown:
alright. So he's only half playing on the other team.
[01:26:30] Unknown:
Yes. Oh, goodness. Well, they've actually published the photographs of the three of the three youths, that were responsible for setting fire to his, properties. Right? And, of course, it's very interesting how that's gone completely quiet and everybody's forgotten about that. Because a really good question would be, how did they know where those properties were? This is just a simple question. How did they know that he owned those properties? It's a bit of a bummer, isn't it, when you come to think about it? It's a bit of a bummer. But apparently, it's a it's a triple bummer, actually. It looks like to me it's triple header bummer of a problem. Don't worry, everybody. They're gonna inquire into it in June 2026, by which time memory hole it is will have will have taken hold on the media and no one will know what's going on because they will be informed to pay attention to it. Hello?
[01:27:20] Unknown:
They've literally been arse warning about, haven't they?
[01:27:23] Unknown:
Sorry. Mhmm. Is it about that one? How's it going? Yeah. How's everybody going? It's fine, Patrick.
[01:27:31] Unknown:
Good. How's it going with you in Wisconsin? Is it sunny? It's sunny and beautiful. It's 31,
[01:27:37] Unknown:
88 degrees Fahrenheit.
[01:27:39] Unknown:
Oh, that's nice. Yeah. Very nice. One of the best days of the year here. Oh, well, that's good. Yeah. We've had a beautiful day here. I I heard you talking about,
[01:27:49] Unknown:
BlackRock. I remember I worked on a case called JPMorgan or what was it? Lehman Brothers versus JPMorgan Chase. And, Barclays had bought out Lehman Brothers. And I think they own a substantial share in BlackRock. Barclays does. So that it reminded me of that. And then what's interesting about Liz Truss is, well, for one thing is what happens when you when the prime minister is also the head of the Bank of England? Like, who who do they get their orders from? That's the real question. Well, that's a really good question. He he's the prime minister of Canada at the moment, which Yeah. Doesn't make any sense if, you know, okay. Well, if you don't get any higher than the, Bank of England had, then who, you know, what else is there? There's gotta be some something. I I remember you talking about
[01:28:44] Unknown:
wanting a list of the shareholders of the Bank of England at one point. That's right. Yeah. Yes. That would be something Should be just published in the papers. These chaps and chapesses are the ones that own it all. Yeah. But would you be able to rely upon the integrity of the journalist? You maybe could, but you'd have to assume that it'd already be nobled prior to the article getting published. I mean, it's literally You know what? Nothing can be accepted. Kill
[01:29:10] Unknown:
Liz's trust because she's already come out. I remember when she was, running either running or just became prime minister. She came out and was in a big room with people, and she said very proudly, I'm a Zionist. So I don't think they're gonna go after her. And if we're if only for that reason.
[01:29:29] Unknown:
Typically, that Yeah. Well, I I tend to think that they view them as assets, Patrick. In other words, you know, maybe in the olden days, opposition was just done away with. You took their head off or whatever you did or you poisoned them, and those things no doubt still go on. The main thing that they use is this sort of sexual perversion stuff and control them through that. Right. And they view them, I suspect, as a controlled asset. They go, no. No. We don't wanna kill them. There's so much use that we can just wheel them out to divert attention with this. They're like actors on it. We're gonna rewrite the play for the next month, and you're now gonna be the villain for the next two years. Yeah. Yeah. And you'll go to business.
[01:30:05] Unknown:
Steve Bannon was, he worked for Goldman Sachs. He was high up in Goldman Sachs. So how can you trust any of them? Nope. There's supposedly right now a big split between mega the mega movement, you know, the make America great again thing with Trump. And Steve Bannon somehow has become a spokesman for that. And it's like, well, okay. Who made you the spoke and same with Tucker Carlson. It's like these same these people are all actors on a stage. They're not They are. They're not on Patrick's
[01:30:35] Unknown:
spot right on. Yeah. They are. They they have to be actors because how can you get the amount of energy that they have to keep saying all these things with such theatrical dramatic effect all the time for years and years and years unless you're getting paid.
[01:30:52] Unknown:
And you can't do it. Dialogue going with the president of The United States. You know, how can how can any plebian type person even dream of doing that? It's another quest you know, it's like it's out of the question. Yeah. You can't
[01:31:05] Unknown:
you can't It is. It's out of the question. You you look at these operations that that are supposedly in the old alt media. Like, well, let's just take Alex Jones. Right? Entertaining and all that kind of stuff. There's a huge team around him to produce that stuff. Yeah. So there's a whole team. We don't know who's on his team. We don't know who's actually responsible for the editorial content and who picks what he's gonna do. Maybe it's him. I doubt it. If anybody's actually sort of worked on doing these things, even just this little thing, right, takes me hours to set up. I I obviously, I'm not properly trained and I'm bumbling around and it's getting more efficient, but you're all facing that. I mean, at least we've got the situation where we can comb and and scour all these alternative sites. But I'm not going to the main ones. I still really rely on sources that were writing proficiently ten, fifteen, twenty years ago if they're still alive and doing that sort of thing because the material that was being unveiled then is still the most relevant. Now we've got this kind of it's tended to hybrid sort of infotainment space. I mean, you mentioned Tucker Carlson. So obviously, he's well known because of his broadcast media stuff and now I'm I'm outside of that and I'm and it's not that he doesn't do good stuff. This is the thing. They have to mix good stuff in. I mean, his interviews with Catherine Austin Fitz have been fantastic. She's brilliant. She's right on the ball, and she can pare it down. She she nails exactly what's going on.
And so it's useful. It's difficult to sometimes gauge these people and maybe that's part of the operation too so that we're always slightly off balance, you know, because our instincts are that we're looking for someone to back and that's probably where we immediately go wrong.
[01:32:40] Unknown:
Yeah. That's why they have us vote. It's like going to the confessional. You feel clean afterward, like, you confessed all your sins, and now you put it on somebody else. To society.
[01:32:49] Unknown:
Like, they did vote. Yeah. Yeah. I think I mentioned before when I've had discussions with people about voting, one of the things that came up repeatedly was, you know, people would disapprove when I would tell them and say, well, I've never voted in my life. And then a common report told us, well, you can't complain then. I said, you've got it the wrong way around. I said it's you that can't complain, you put the buggers in. I said I can complain all day long. I said I'm not responsible for this, you are in part. I mean, you know, it's a bit rich for me to say that because it's all a bit so farcically minute, that conversation, in comparison to the large scale idiocy of organized government.
But it's true, you know, participating in voting is basically sort of rubber sealing your own approval of your own imprisonment to some degree. I mean, who knows? Maybe Rupert Low really will be able to do something. At least the idea of a consumer pressure group, I'm just calling it that, I don't think they call it that, is what I think a much more effective it's got much greater chance of being effective. So that because you see a lot of these alternate groups here, no doubt probably Patrick and Paul, if you're still listening in The States, they're hankering after another political counterforce to come in and sort it out, but that's never ever happened. As Eric was saying earlier, think of one government that's ever worked for us. There there aren't any.
There have been great individuals though within the political class. And in America, half of those have got assassinated. Right? You know the good guys. They're the ones that get bumped off. And you're thinking, well, you know, this McKinley,
[01:34:18] Unknown:
Kennedy Yeah. Lincoln.
[01:34:21] Unknown:
Those sort of Mhmm. Absolutely. Roger Kent Lincoln wasn't that good though,
[01:34:26] Unknown:
was he? Because he he had You could say that a lot of them, you know, toward the end, they get good. You know, it's like anybody. You you get a you can be wicked your whole life, but then toward the end, you can suddenly see the light and repent from what you did. So I think there's a lot of that going on in their lives, whether they were exemplary saint like people in in their whole life. I doubt it.
[01:34:49] Unknown:
But till the end, there's a reason they get bumped off. Like, wasn't Lincoln the one that was pushing the greenback?
[01:34:55] Unknown:
Yeah. We were just talking we all was talking about that last week or the week before. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It was some good stuff. You just need an Have you heard of it? Call it an intaglio printer. You get one of them, and you can An intaglio. Money you want. Intaglio. Alright. Okay. Printing press, a big drum, and it just prints Does it? Out bills.
[01:35:16] Unknown:
Eric, doesn't the Mhmm. Doesn't fuck them wholesale intaglio
[01:35:20] Unknown:
presses? I'm sure they We might we might go into that. Yes. But it's the only country in the world where you can actually print your own money off, you see. So if you get a bit shorter dosh, you just print your own fob bobs off. Simple as that. Trouble is you can buy for for for for very little from them with them.
[01:35:39] Unknown:
You're actually down low. So far.
[01:35:42] Unknown:
So far, you can only you can you can only buy a little bit so far, but yeah. Absolutely.
[01:35:48] Unknown:
Now there's a guy at this office in The States called,
[01:35:51] Unknown:
I've got to I've got to read these. In fact, I just downloaded them the other day. Again, another plug for this online library, welib.org. Welmib.org. 46,000,000 books. I'm just absolutely harp I'm just scooping stuff out of there. I'm going, oh, no. I want to read all this stuff and I'm looking at my time clock going, this is gonna take me eighty five years to read all this I'm I need another head. But, there's a an author over there called, Thomas DiLorenzo. Have you guys heard of him or Tom DiLorenzo? D I l l o r e n zed o. He's written two books on Lincoln, and, Soapbox was playing an interview with him or a a presentation he made the other night.
And, of course, people don't know what's on Soapbox because the scheduling thing is not providing enough information. So it's a bit like potluck. I'm in the same position even though I throw the shows in there. I don't know quite what's coming up at the moment. It's just a matter of time, but, he's addressing an audience talking about Lincoln. Lincoln's not a good guy. I mean, I've always he's just not and and he was couching it in a different way And you realize how powerful spin is and the way that people frame arguments to create myths in people. Lincoln did a lot of things that were not on Oh, he was buddies with Marx.
Yeah. He was. And he was persecuting Northerners. There were some terrible things really heavy. Holding seances in the White House with his wife. Yeah. Yeah. And then you think about that statue of him. What's the building where there's that huge stone monument. It's on our penny
[01:37:17] Unknown:
on the back of the What's that all about?
[01:37:20] Unknown:
That's the same thing they've done with Marx, turning these guys into gods. You know, we got one of Cromwell outside the houses of parliament. I mean, who does this stuff? It ain't us. I'm not interested in these dorks. Every single one of them is associated with war, the death of our people first and foremost, they're all involved in that. Oh, we're going to champion them? Hang on just a minute. What about all these people who've actually done something good? They never get a mention and so it's the it's the hidden hand. Again, it's not that hidden these days for for those of us that have looked but it's that hand at play and I think so yeah Tom DiLorenzo, I think he's still alive, he's probably still doing some recordings, he's a seasoned individual but there's one called Lincoln Unmasked I think and the other one and if you're a Lincoln support you're probably hating me but I think everybody owes it to themselves to read stuff that goes against the grain of what they currently believe and I include myself in that. I'm trying to get one that there's having a pop at Hitler because I want to see I want to see what information's in there that I might not know. I mean, because when people advocate a certain viewpoint they tend to I do this. We all do this. You tend to gather information that supports it. You do it subconsciously, unconsciously almost, and that doesn't mean to say that it hasn't got merit, but there's generally always something that you're not looking at that needs to be included. And so I think he's done, he's done two books, Lincoln and Marce. I forgot the other one. And it's about his crimes, really, about this with this war because it's really an invasion of the South. And, of course, I I've heard people say, no. The South were and the South were riddled with it as well. They had what's his name, Benjamin, Judah p Benjamin from the Rothschilds in there stirring yeah. The treasurer. So yeah. They were being played off against one another. There were these disturbing forces inside there, that were having a go and Joseph p, Farrell has just written a book, the Rialto something or other. I can't remember the title of it, which it just released this year.
Who was the leader of the South? What's his name? Jefferson Davis. Yeah. I think it's Jefferson Davis. Well, they they all got away at the end. You know, he's sort of yeah. What's that all about? You know the stories that are not told about what happened afterwards? I'm going and it stares you in the face when someone points it out and I'm going I'm always missing stuff. You just can't scope it all. It's not possible. We're easily distracted. I include myself. Hopefully, I'm less distracted criticals. But they're very important because, in the Nameless War which we were covering last week or the week before, I can't remember when we're doing it, the the great document, which if you haven't got it, everybody, you need to go get a copy. You can get it on welib.org. The Nameless War by Archibald Moll Ramsey. It's definitely worth your time to read it through. That's a good One of the conflicts by the way. That's a good sign. Yeah. It's fan anybody It's fantastic. Wants to find any book, welive.org.
Yeah. It's amazing. It's amazing. And they've got a track record of, the the previous incarnation, Anna's archive came into trouble with the free speech controllers. So, whoever the crew is that's doing it, they've done a magnificent job. I mean, it's just I don't know. I mean, you have to know about these things, but 46,000,000 books. It's big gear it's big gear time and and sorting all that out, and they've done a fantastic job with it. So I hope we can we can keep it going. But, and I've completely forgotten what I was about to say. What what book? No. It's okay. I got you. I've gone I've gone off on a beam, and I can't come back to the thought. The thing about those digit those digital books
[01:40:43] Unknown:
that's nice, especially if you already have the book, You can do a word searches for a particular part in the book so you don't have to sit and write down the page number when you come across something that you find interesting in a book you're reading. I so I Yep. I found it very nice for going back to books that I already own, hard copies of Mhmm. Getting a digital copy and then going back and finding the part parts that I found most interesting in a book. Yes.
[01:41:13] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, it's it's coming to the fore I'm using, Amazon Kindle to read, those things, and it's coming to the fore for show prep. Although, as I said for today, I didn't have any time this week really to do. I've just been sort of technical all week. But, you can put notes in into the books and it collects all your notes then you search your notes and and so you can just underline stuff, make a note, call it what it is, and these salient points start to come through. They're very very useful and,
[01:41:39] Unknown:
what was the name of the author of the the the book you were reading about? Was it Lincoln?
[01:41:46] Unknown:
Or or Yeah. The two books by Tom DiLorenzo. I think it's one one word, d I l o r e n zed o. Tom DiLorenzo, American guy, really good. I'll play it again sometime in the interview, with him. I've got to listen back to it because it's about two hours long. I thought, woah. I kept I was out walking, catching bits, and then saying hello to people in a cheery voice. Hello. Isn't it a beautiful evening? Because I do that sort of thing, you know. But there was some some really good stuff, and I I think I stumbled across him about a year and a half ago, and I just not had chance to get into his books. But it's very easy to pick him up on Wheelib, and it's the speed of it. I think if you don't act on getting a book when it's in your head, you forget about it and someone else comes along after three days, and I don't I don't get hold of this stuff, you know. So, but yeah.
And what I was gonna mention I know what I was gonna mention. Yeah. In The Nameless War by Ramsay, he's detailing these pivot points in history from, the so called English Civil War, which, of course, had an alien influence in it as Ramsay points out. He doesn't cover the he doesn't cover the war between the states though, which I always thought was an odd omission. Maybe he just didn't have the information at the time. He he he can't have, but it's definitely on the line. It's definitely on this line of propelling things from a state of order into the state of disorder that we now find ourselves in to enable, obviously, BlackRock to take over. We just call it that for now. It's somewhere else, of course. There's the people that control that, but we gotta name it something.
So, yeah, all about this disintegration, the reducing down of monarchies, which and, you know, they're questionable. I think they're possibly the least worst solution, but that's not saying much, is it? You know, I'm not into democracy because look at what we're having to endure. It's basically slow burn communism and and blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. So that's kind of where we've we've ended up. Yeah. Thrilling. Thrilling stuff.
[01:43:49] Unknown:
I I was mentioning you're talking about ending usury, and I was mentioning Pope Pius the ninth. He was the last pope to have the Papal States, which were the Italian Peninsula up from Rome up to the North. And that was taken away by Mazzini, who was, known as a collaborator with Albert Pike over in in The States during the civil war. It's about that same time that the Papal States were taken away, that the Civil War in America took place. And the Pope was actually on the side of the South with, you know, regular correspondence with, Jefferson Davis.
And he was all for that. And the and the thing with the pope was they did not allow usury. That and yes, you you had things like the Roth Childs. That was kind of the downfall of the Papal States was they had no way to pay their soldiers. So they ended up taking out these loans from the Roth Child bankers in order to pay soldiers. And then eventually, it just got taken over by the likes of Mazzini and that those types that formed the Italian Republic. You know, the Madame Blavatsky and Mazzini, they had a big collaboration together during that time. And then the Yeah. It's the the Freemasons.
They were the revolutionary force in the nineteenth century, where you you had this breakdown of Christian civilization suddenly allowing aliens to become citizens that previously didn't have any rights to be citizens. And that those tended to be the bankers that took over. They were given tremendous amount of power as a consequence of that breakdown civilization.
[01:45:36] Unknown:
One of the things Di Lorenzo was mentioning in these snippets from this speech that I heard a couple of days ago was talking about, the opinion in England with regard to the war between the states. And so they the people were buying stuff. There was a big naval battle at Sherbog between, a Confederate ship, I forgot the name of it, and, a Yankee ship that came over. They had a they had a battle in the English Channel. And they I think they happened in Scotland as well, didn't they? I think there was a bad day in Scotland as well. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's it's serious stuff. And the the Confederate ship made its way back to Liverpool, I think it was, where it got refitted out, at great expense to get back. It had a sort of an ironclad hole and it'd been causing mayhem with Yankee merchant shipping. Can I say Yankee or I just offended a lot of people? But No. That's that's fine. Yeah. Doesn't offend me. And, and that they were doing the sort of, the trade battle plan. They thought if they could smash enough ships out of the water that were delivering stuff into the Northern states, they could begin an economic, you know, or a a material sort of stranglehold. There just didn't have enough firepower in any of these things. But I think Delanzo is basically saying it was it's it completely broke the law, the agreement between the states. And listen, anybody hearing this, you understand I'm an Englishman, and I don't understand all the details by a long chalk.
But he was saying but it was a you know, there's it was a declaration of war. It's not a civil war. It wasn't an internal war. There was literally no right to do this at all. And therefore, something has sort of got in the place to put them up to it. And it's a continuation of this stuff. It's absolutely a continuation of the same old same old One thing every single time. And they were saying that they were reading a lot of the newspapers and journals over here in England. And broadly speaking, the the English, what would you call them, opinion formers, the newspaper editors and people high up in politics, most of them were on the side of the South. Their sympathies lay with the South, you know, which is interesting. I mean, I've I've got no documentary evidence to quote from here as I say this. And I want Trade was a big reason. And I'm thinking of cotton. Cotton the cotton trade was in the South. And you needed that
[01:47:55] Unknown:
the one the one big thing with cotton was you needed it for gun cotton, for making a rifle powder
[01:48:02] Unknown:
for Yeah. Cordite.
[01:48:03] Unknown:
Cordite. Cordite. Well, they maybe needed it in the mills opening. And that too. You know, which which were going hammer and tongs. Right? So, you know, we've got all these automated looms that you got the what's that thing? What was that thing that was invented over here? The the Spinning jelly. Flight Spinning jelly. Loads of stuff. Yeah. All these machines that were invented in the eighteen hundreds. So for the mass production of decent clothing, obviously, you're gonna need some cotton coming in at one end. So maybe that was part and parcel the whole thing. It always comes down to trade. Every war is a trade war. That's all it really is. It's a money war and a trade war and they just get people to die for it so they can maintain their stranglehold over markets and that kind of stuff.
While we're speaking about usury as well, let's see. Soldier of God who writes on the Paul English Telegram chat asked me the other week to play a clip of Ezra Pound reading it's two minutes and fifty seconds. So this is a recording of Ezra Pound on usury. Usura is the word he uses which is possibly its original spelling or pronunciation. It's from the Cantos. This is Canto XLV, whatever that is in English. What's an l stand for? I can't remember. Doesn't matter. Anyway, I'm gonna play it. It's two it's three minutes long. This is It's 50. This is how you l is 50. Okay. So this is how you address this is how you deal with usury if you're Ezra Pound and you're gonna write it as a poet and put it in a poem and put some emotional force into it. It's quite interesting and he doesn't sound like an American when he's saying this. He almost sounds like someone who's come from the West Country over here. It's close to that. You'll get the drift you'll see what I mean, Eric, when you hear him. Anyway, here we go. Here's Ezra Pound recorded, I don't know when, after he got out the loony bin, I suppose, maybe the nineteen sixties or something, talking about, well, his poem on
[01:49:55] Unknown:
With Usura, with Usura, hath no man a house of good stone, each block cut smooth and well fitting, that delight might cover their face. With Usura hath no man painted paradise on his church wall, or where virgin receiveth message and halo projects from incision. With Ursula seeth no man Gonzaga his heirs and his concubines. No picture is made to endure nor to live with, but it is made to sell and sell quickly. With Usura sin against nature, is thy bread ever more of stale rags? Is thy bread dry as paper with no mountain wheat, no strong flour. With Azura, the line grows thick.
With Azura is no clear demarcation, and no man can find sight for his dwelling. Stonecutter is kept from his stone. Weaver is kept from his loom with Uzzura. Wool comes not to market. Sheep bringeth no gain with Uzzura. Uhura. Uhura has a maren. Uhura blunteth the needle in the maid's hand and stoppeth the spinner's cunning. Pietro Lombardo came not by Uhura. Duccio came not by Usura nor Pier de la Francesca. Zuan Berlin, not by Usura nor was La Cornelia painted. Came not by Euzora Angelico, came not Amorogio Praetis. No church of cut stone signed the damo may fake it, not by Euzora Saint Trophim, not by Euzora Saint Hilaire.
Euzora rusteth the chisel. It rusteth the craft and the craftsman. It knoweth the thread and the loom. None learneth to weave gold in her pattern. Azure hath a canker by Euzora, karamis is unbroidered. Emerald findeth no mumbling. Euzora slayeth the child in the womb. It stayeth the young man's courting. It hath brought palsy to bed and lieth between the young bride and her bridegroom, contrad naturam. They have brought whores for Eleusis. Corpses are set to banquet at behest of Azura.
[01:52:47] Unknown:
Ezra Pound giving it some. Don't sound like an American to me reading that. Absolutely fantastic. Sounds Scottish. Yeah. Is he actually American? Because he sounded Scottish.
[01:52:59] Unknown:
Yeah. Yes. That's that's certainly very Scottish. Yeah.
[01:53:02] Unknown:
I
[01:53:04] Unknown:
but, I mean, you you get the gist of it. You get the gist of the whole thing. It's just, Yeah. That's it. That's how damaging this stuff is. And until it's lifted, people can't see where we he he just everything is blunted by it, as he said. What was that? I like that. The maid's needle is blunted by you, Azura.
[01:53:21] Unknown:
He he sounds like an Old Testament prophet reading out a curse.
[01:53:27] Unknown:
I guess if we think Old Testament prophets sounded like that, then he obviously sounds like one. I suppose most of us do think they sounded like that full of thunder. But it works. It gets your attention, and, I don't think you'll get Keir Starmer being able to speak with such conviction, passion, and an ability to actually hold your attention. What do you think, Eric?
[01:53:47] Unknown:
I very much doubt that. Yes. Yes. Keir Star sort of or Keif. He's known as Keif now, and it's Keif Starmer. Because, but the the thing that well, I'd like to find out is, we always with American Civil War, it's always based on the the the history is written by the victors. And as we know, that's why French history books have got so many blank pages. Oh, you're not. From America oh, from an American point of view, what's your point of view, sort of Paul or or Patrick, of the American Civil War? Because, you know, the attitude is that, it was about slavery. Well, I don't think it was about slavery because the North had slaves as well as the South. So
[01:54:34] Unknown:
So it wasn't about slavery. Patrick? It it was the war to bring in the civil law, the just civil. And the reason that the war happened was because the South had all the money, and the North kept borrowing money and spending money they didn't have. And when the debt came due for the country, the North wanted the South to pay it, and they didn't want to. Basically, it was the war to bring in the civil law and to lock everyone in, wait for it, usury. That's a my take. Amazing. So
[01:55:18] Unknown:
yeah. I mean, did the civil law. They didn't have income tax and things like that. No. It was that Well, they had a victory tax. Themselves.
[01:55:27] Unknown:
They had a victory tax that was supposed to fund the war effort, and it was supposed to be a temporary tax. However, it never went away.
[01:55:37] Unknown:
So No. Are you saying they introduced a tax and just forgot to rescind it? Well, I never.
[01:55:45] Unknown:
Well, I think I'm sure it was done. Just a minute. A perfectly honest oversight.
[01:55:50] Unknown:
Perfectly. I'm sure it was. Actually, god, it must be just a pure coincidence, Paul, because exactly the same thing happened over here after the Napoleonic was. They introduced income tax during it to fund bullets and things and people getting blown up, And then they got rid of it. And then in the early eighteen twenties, they went, oh, that was such a wizard wheeze. What a great hang that was. Let's bring it back. So they did. And we've been cursed with the bloody thing ever since, of course. Yeah. Income tax. Yeah. Didn't didn't used to exist, everybody.
[01:56:18] Unknown:
That's because they don't pay income tax in Russia, by the way.
[01:56:22] Unknown:
Right. That and now that's because the people that you think are in charge are not actually in charge. You know, like all of these world leaders. I mean, you talked about it. The prime minister of Britain can be fired, but the the head of the the World Bank cannot be. Okay. Well, Evelyn de Rothschild poked prince Charles in the chest and got away with it. So, basically, that meant that Charlie was Rothschild's bitch.
[01:56:56] Unknown:
That's a bit harsh.
[01:56:57] Unknown:
I'm sorry. I'll take it back. What about, Marina Abramovic? Not very many people know about her, but everybody that's, in any reasonable position of authority bows to her. She's a performance artist. The shocking life and performance art of Marina Abramovic. Her work explores body art, endurance art, god only knows what that means, the relationship between the performer and the audience, the limits of the body and the possibilities of the mind. Well, I Sounds like spirit cooking to me.
[01:57:40] Unknown:
Sounds really exciting. Doesn't it sound I want to get into a bit of that. Although, the word art seems to be the wrong word. I I'd probably replace it with the word ass, which seems to me to be really much more appropriate.
[01:57:54] Unknown:
I don't. No. I don't know her. I don't know her. I'm not speaking from from factor authority, but, from everything that I have seen, people that should not have to bow to anybody actually do bow to her. So there's gotta be something we can call. No. You're right. Yeah.
[01:58:14] Unknown:
Well, Andy, are we after 10:00 yet? No. Andy, beginning with an o, hole. That's what we used to call him when I was at college. You know? I was Andy you. Hole. Yes. Yes. Because, I don't get abstract, and the and the lecturer gave up with three of us. We just did not get abstract. I don't get it at all. To me, it's just There's nothing to get.
[01:58:37] Unknown:
Yeah. He's cracked. He was a con man.
[01:58:39] Unknown:
Yeah. Because he was. You may need to see pictures of him. He's just knackered. A drained, withered shell of a human being just full of his own whatever it was. I mean, there are it's all A sex maniac as well.
[01:58:52] Unknown:
Yeah. And a sex maniac as well. Oh, but where all that? And the the other one was, who who's the other one? Picasso. Picasso, I can't see anything in his stuff either.
[01:59:04] Unknown:
No. You know, cubes and things. One thing about him is his early stuff, it showed some real talent, but then you look, he just it's like he purposely went against it.
[01:59:15] Unknown:
That's that's the worst part. He gave into the money. He gave into the money, Patrick. There's a there's a painting he did when he's about 14, and you go, wow. It's like a proper painting. I like saying that because it really gets their end back up. Oh, you're just a tradition. Yeah, that's right. Can you paint? Oh, no. I'm creating this. Yeah, I'm not really interested, love. Thank you very much. Do us a favor. Go away. It's just a it's it's nonsense. I I love the idea in the old masters. You had to be an apprentice for fifteen years or something before they'd even let you anywhere near a canvas by yourself. You won't even get on. No. You're not well, you're not you've got you don't know how to do it yet. It's gonna take you twelve years or something, and you'll sit with this bloke. You're gonna learn to draw everything.
And, anyway, there's this kind of with that. He was a brown painter or something. Is that Eric's joke?
[02:00:03] Unknown:
I don't know. You don't wanna talk about A brown.
[02:00:07] Unknown:
Anyway, I've got a song lined up for you, Eric. I've got another song lined up for you, everybody, as we transition from the end of a bunch of noise. Hour two. We're we're gonna leave you all on WBN three two four. We'll be back again next week. We're carrying on I don't know for how long. I I thought we were gonna be sure, but I'm all in the mood now. So you see, always I'm always contradicting myself. We're carrying on in Rumble and elsewhere, but this song that I'm gonna play you out with is, very exciting. It's the prune song, by Frank Krummit.
Oh, good lord. It's called the song of the prune. I was telling. The song of the prune by Frank Krummit. I don't know how vulgar it is. I just heard a little bit of it the other day. It's a naughty song anyway. So and Patrick likes these two. Frank Krummit, three minutes of great the great Frank. Here we go. We'll be back after this one, everybody. Only the latest hits here on Paul English live, you know.
[02:01:21] Unknown:
Nowadays, we often gaze on women 50 to see the stress of wrinkles on their face. Doctors go and take their dough to make them young and. Doctors I defy to tell me just why. No matter how young a prune may be, it's always full of wrinkles. We may get them on our faces. Prunes get them every place. Prohibition worries us, but prunes don't sit and brood. For no matter how young a prune may be, it's always getting stewed. In the kingdom, all of the fruits, the prune is snubbed by others. And they are not allowed to mingle with the crowd.
Though they're never on display with all their high brow brothers, they never seem to mind to this fact they're resigned. But no matter how young a plume may be, it's always full of wrinkles. Beauty treatments always fail. They've tried all can all avail. Other fruits are envious because they know real well that no matter how young a prune may be, hot water makes them swell. Baby prunes look like they're dead, but not wrinkled quite as bad. Every day in every way, the world is getting better. We've even learned to fly as days go passing by.
But thought about the poor old prune, his life is only wetter. No wonder he can't grim in the awful stew he's in. No matter how young a prune may be, it's always full of wrinkles. We may get them on our face. Prunes get them every place. Nothing ever We act very kind, they say, when sickly people moan. But no matter how young a prune may be, it has a heart of stone.
[02:04:11] Unknown:
And I bet we all feel as though our lives are that little bit richer now that we've heard the Prune song by Frank Kremet.
[02:04:18] Unknown:
They don't make them like that anymore. I thought
[02:04:21] Unknown:
They don't.
[02:04:22] Unknown:
No. And They don't sing songs like that. Has the biggest tits. It's You do think, Paul, your your show has the biggest biggest tits, isn't it?
[02:04:32] Unknown:
Does it?
[02:04:33] Unknown:
Yeah. It has the biggest hits.
[02:04:35] Unknown:
Tits. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Sorry. Sorry.
[02:04:42] Unknown:
Oh. It probably does. See, I told you it's got these tits. Yes.
[02:04:46] Unknown:
Benny Benny Hill used to what was that thing you said? Now, here is Roy Orbison's musical bum. Music
[02:04:56] Unknown:
album. Yes. Album. I'm sorry.
[02:04:59] Unknown:
I always quite like that. Roy Orbison's That's music album. You know? No. No. Music album. Just completely I love all that. Yeah. Good stuff. By the way, I've been rather rude, not to you lot, but a couple of people called in and I was so busy guessing. I need another screen. Sorry about that. I've got to apologize to you, but guest two and guest three arrived in, in the call in studio. I've just put it back up on the screen. So if you're still getting the urge, we can I'm looking at it now. So if anybody calls in, we'll bring you into the show if you wanna have a chat or anything. The details are up on the screen on Rumble and YouTube spinning across the top there, for best audio quality coming over the Internet, if you wanna do that. If you don't, we'll see you next week but, we're here for a little while longer so any questions you have, particularly about the construction of lavatories and things, we'll hand those over to Eric and everything else we can, we'll, we'll we'll discuss accordingly. But, yeah. The prune song, they don't make them. What was that one that I played the other week? Oh, yeah. It was, I know. It was by Edwards, wasn't it?
Remember, on your show? I remember that. Yes. Yeah. Well, my That was it. Yes. It's such a it's another one about fruit as well. We've got all these songs about fruit and vegetables. They don't write them anymore about fruit and vegetables. It's a pity, you know? No. No. It's a pity. What about the one with Spike Milligan, dude?
[02:06:21] Unknown:
Do you remember the one with Spike Milligan, dude? That was one that said, do do do do do do do do do do do do do do. Eat more fruit. Oh, that's goons.
[02:06:30] Unknown:
Yes. Oh, I've got that. I've got that. It's in some top of my hits. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Eat them off. Yes. Hang on. I I wonder if I've got it. Didn't the Beach Boys write a song about vegetables?
[02:06:42] Unknown:
Yes.
[02:06:43] Unknown:
Yes. I did. Not that long ago. Did they? A while ago. Yeah. They did. They wrote a ve veg Yeah. Eric, you know it. Yeah. What's it called? Vegetables?
[02:06:51] Unknown:
I don't know. I can't remember. Called vegetables? Because my sister used to buy all their albums. She The Beach Boys. She got the Beach Boys. And my pet called himself.
[02:07:03] Unknown:
The Beach Boys wrote a song about Brandon.
[02:07:07] Unknown:
We have Brandon here. Let's go Brandon.
[02:07:10] Unknown:
Biden. Did they? The Beach Boys did. Are you sure? Well, the well, you just said that they wrote a song about vegetables.
[02:07:18] Unknown:
I'll provide
[02:07:19] Unknown:
more. Yeah. How many years in there. Oh, have have I told you guys have been have I told you guys about a a a point of interest in the country? You can even find it on Google Maps. There's a push pin there. It's a, it's a historic site that where, the actual corner where Joe Biden wiped out on his bicycle, they've named that Brandon Falls. And it's right there on the map.
[02:07:54] Unknown:
Yeah. Is it really where you're telling them about this? Yeah.
[02:07:57] Unknown:
Oh, I like that. That's cool. Yeah. That's good. Brandon. Hilarious.
[02:08:01] Unknown:
Fool. You're talking about Benny Hill. Benny Hill, Boots Randolph was on the same label as, Roy Orbison. Boots Randolph is the one that did the yakety sax intro to Benny Hill. Yes. Yeah. Yeah.
[02:08:15] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. That song.
[02:08:16] Unknown:
And did you did you know in America, I don't know what state I'm very very serious here. There's a place called, Wet Beaver Pass.
[02:08:28] Unknown:
And after Oh, so we're past 10:00 now, so you're really going for it now. And, I thought
[02:08:33] Unknown:
it's college. Show that she fragged the service office at Wet Beaver Pass on a live television show. Who was it now? Is it come easy now where you did it years ago? And this yeah. How is that Wet Beaver Pass? It it it felt very difficult to talk about it without bursting out laughing.
[02:08:56] Unknown:
But, Really?
[02:08:59] Unknown:
I don't think why.
[02:09:01] Unknown:
No. Yes. No. Not too old like fuck in the hall.
[02:09:05] Unknown:
It is.
[02:09:07] Unknown:
They they they put humor there.
[02:09:09] Unknown:
Yes. So, that was interesting what you said, Paul, about the American Civil War. Very interesting. So really, I mean, the South, so I did hear, after the war, the women were raped. It was terrible. Then all that army went straight through that. Am I is that true? Or is that just a myth? I don't know. Yeah. Well, we there was a general in the Union Army. His name was Hooker.
[02:09:39] Unknown:
And that's where we get the word Hooker from to to describe a whore. It was because he he supposedly liked them around camp and that was, that's hence where we get the name hooker from. It it was
[02:09:53] Unknown:
Was there a mass rape? I'm learning some I'm learning some things tonight. I didn't know that. Tell you. I didn't know that.
[02:10:00] Unknown:
We could we could talk about, some of the wackiest names of American tourist locations now that, Eric has, let the open Pandora's box as it were. At Lakehead Hill, Michigan. Oh, yeah. Well, some of the some of the American tourist locations with the wackiest names include Intercourse, Pennsylvania, Booger Hole, West Virginia, and Ding Dong, Texas. Other noteworthy locations with unusual names are Cut And Shoot, Texas, Bangs, Texas, and Dinosaur, Colorado. Intercourse, Pennsylvania, this town in Lancaster County, is known for its its Amish population and unique name, which is rumored to stem from an old road intersection or now defunct in, in according to a travel site.
Booger Hole, West Virginia. Booger Hole. Booger Hole, West Virginia. This town is named for the secluded spot along the Little Kanawha River where settlers supposedly saw boogers or ghosts or spirits. The
[02:11:11] Unknown:
the the boogeyman.
[02:11:13] Unknown:
Yeah. Just Booger. Booger.
[02:11:15] Unknown:
Not far from me, there's a place called Trotter's Bottom. Seriously. At the right Trotter's Bottom. Yeah. It's actually in, did you look at that? It's in the Hertfordshire, actually. And it's a place near Potter's Bath called Trotters Bottom. Yeah.
[02:11:34] Unknown:
Wow.
[02:11:35] Unknown:
And my, my father's parents for a short time lived in a place called Ugly. It's one of the most prettiest little villages ever. It's called Ugly. But the Oh. Posh people call it Ugly. Ugly. It's actually ugly green. Yes. Ugly. Yes.
[02:11:54] Unknown:
I'm desperately trying to think of some funny and witty town and place names, but I can't think of any.
[02:11:59] Unknown:
Well, there's a place called Ham and the sandwich. There's a place called Sandwich, isn't there, in Kent? Is it Kent? And a place called Ham? Yeah. Sandwich in Kent. The signpost was There's a place
[02:12:10] Unknown:
in Yorkshire called Blubber Houses. Yeah. Blubber. Blubber Houses. Really? Yeah. We used to drive past it when we're going out on picnics with my mom and dad in the sixties and seventies. Oh, we're just going it's like a hill, really. You'd call it a hill. It's, it's it's quite a tough hill when you were on your bike because I when I got a bit older, I used to ride around there and stuff. Did they did they do a lot of When I was running, I thought, what what are they doing dragging whales into inland to cut all their blubber up? That's all I could think. Oh, yeah. You know, what's I didn't understand the rimming. They're doing the seaside? Yeah. Maybe. I don't know. No. Someone will know why. It'll be it'll be some other strange reason.
[02:12:46] Unknown:
There's a nitwit the wild it's called a Huawei station first, wouldn't you?
[02:12:50] Unknown:
Mhmm. Nitwit?
[02:12:52] Unknown:
There is a Nitwit Ridge in California.
[02:12:59] Unknown:
And XO was born near Lickie End.
[02:13:03] Unknown:
Oh, good lord.
[02:13:05] Unknown:
Lickie End. Yes. Yeah.
[02:13:09] Unknown:
Oh. There is apparently a place up,
[02:13:14] Unknown:
a a new estate, and they changed the name. And it was actually called No Sex Drive.
[02:13:22] Unknown:
Oh, good Lord.
[02:13:23] Unknown:
Yeah. What you did To satisfy my own to satisfy my own curiosity and before you get too lurid, although there's probably no holding you back now, I've just had to look up blubber houses and it says this, it likely originates from the Anglo Saxon, blubberhus, meaning houses by the bubbling stream, which is quite nice, isn't it? But it's not how blubber houses sound because that's how they say, I'm just going up to blubber houses and it's a bit, you know, like it the poetry gets removed but the idea of a house by a bubbling stream is really quite nice. Why can't they call it Bubbling Stream Town or something? Anyway, if they didn't, they call it Blubbers. Not very interesting. In fact, rather tedious and dull that. No vulgarity in it whatsoever. I'm sorry about that. It's a completely factual piece of information. So it looks as though that's where it came from.
[02:14:15] Unknown:
I'm I'm trying to think of strange Wisconsin names for towns. Yep. We we've got a next door town. It's called Luck. Luck, Wisconsin. Right. So when they have a big signpost that says, the year of
[02:14:31] Unknown:
luck. I don't And her her her address sorry. I didn't mean to talk across you there, but the address get folks that is there's a place called Dick Lane in Bradford near, Lemony Snicket. Dick Lane. And XO says he's driven up Dick Lane many times. Really.
[02:14:52] Unknown:
Oh, Right.
[02:14:54] Unknown:
Right. Okay. We went to hell in a handbasket.
[02:14:58] Unknown:
Yeah. Herodotus, is there a place called Lemony Snicket or have you made that up? Yeah. Oh, now we're getting into Ginnells. So I don't know what you so and back passages and things like that. Down here so I don't know if you got it in The States, but over here, because all the little villages were used to back up on one of the houses, it'd be close. The back garden, sometimes you'd have a pathway that everybody could share to come in to the house through the back gate. And they'd be like only three or four feet wide. And they're called different things in different parts of England. So there's a a snicket is one of them. I think you've got that, don't you? Upper snicket. We've also got up north, they're called ginnels.
A ginnel, which is a obviously an Anglo Saxon old thing. Down here in Sussex, they're, of course, confused. They call them a twitten. A twitten? I suppose, because you you better be a twit to waste your time. Have you got any unique names for back passages in your neck of the woods? I have to say that, Eric. Back? I just have to say that.
[02:16:02] Unknown:
Back back. The gate. Out back. Yeah.
[02:16:07] Unknown:
You you you made me think with these weird place names. There was a down the road from me here, there was a bow and arrow shop, and it was owned by a fella named Richard Strait. So he called it Dick Strait's arrow shop.
[02:16:19] Unknown:
Right. So Yeah. And, we we used I used to when when we when I was a kid, there was a, there was a greengrocers called f Hall. F stop Hall.
[02:16:33] Unknown:
Yeah. And, yes, yeah. You got any vegetables there? No. I'm actually No. You got f hole then. Yeah. Right. Got it. Yeah. Roll out of vegetables.
[02:16:40] Unknown:
Yeah. You guys you guys keep it up. I've got one that'll actually get us booted off the air.
[02:16:48] Unknown:
By me, probably. I'll be so embarrassed. I would never heard such atrocious smut.
[02:16:53] Unknown:
Well, there's, in Minneapolis, Downtown Minneapolis, about a half a block away from the old courthouse, I don't know if it's still there, but forty years ago, there was an adult bookstore called Lickety Split. No. I never went in there. I Just in case you're wondering.
[02:17:21] Unknown:
And, there's a fish and chip shop in, Bristol, the outskirts of Bristol called Cod Almighty. Oh, there you go. Oh, that's amazing. That's good. I love that. Oh, and there's another one. It blokes, it hasn't changed it, but there used to be a show with Jimmy Saville called Jim Will Fix It. And there's and and it's still the same and there's and you know those, cement mixers that drive along the road, what they call them, you know, ready mix things. And, it the company's called Jibble Mix It. Yes. Very unfortunate name. Yes.
[02:18:00] Unknown:
Oh, I think it's brilliant. So Yes. Okay.
[02:18:06] Unknown:
Alright. Now I think we're getting into a weird area here. Civil war. You know, let's get back to the civil war. Okay. Let's do that. Yeah. I think it was about religion ultimately. Really? Like any of these things.
[02:18:18] Unknown:
They're about religion. Really? No. I don't think so. I I think the the The US was, was smacked into wars that they couldn't afford. They borrowed money, from England, and the other side borrowed money from France, but that came from England. Then when that debt became due and we couldn't pay it, they signed over the resources, the natural resources of the country, like, the national parks and forests and things like that. They put those up as collateral, and then they didn't have anything else left to be able to fund the government. So what they did was they made serfs of all of the people. They securitized their birth certificates. They traded bonds on their future income, and they propped up the government and just kept on spending money that they hadn't made yet.
And the civil war was the war to bring in the the Babylonian merchant code and the Roman civil law. So everything from that point went from republic to, fascist democracy. We have we had a a republic before that happened in 1933. Yeah. When we switch to a democracy I mean, the difference between a republic and a democracy is a republic works for the people, but a democracy is basically mob rule, which basically means a fox and a coyote and a rabbit vote what's for dinner.
[02:20:09] Unknown:
Well, before the American Revolution, we had monarchies that controlled by proxy. You had the French and Indian war. We if if it had continued where the French had been dominant on in that, we would have been under the French king. And he was he you know, after that, it after the American Revolution, the French king was finally was deposed. He had his head cut off. I mean, there's a lot of stuff that could have happened but didn't. And the money system, I I suppose you under a monarchy, you can better regulate that sort of thing. But in in a because you have more control, I I would imagine under a monarchy to, say, regulate usury because it's the king the king sets the law.
He could say no. No interest on loans more than a democracy where you have a big bureaucracy and you can't you can't do anything. You're you're the condition we're in now is we can't do much of anything because it's such a huge mess that you have to go through to get anything changed. Any of these laws, it it what do you what do you do, say, for instance, to get rid of the Federal Reserve under the current system? You can't you can't do it so easily, especially if you don't have the press. Because in a democracy, the press become the the movers and shakers of things because they get the if you have a democracy, it's it's dependent on voters, their beliefs, and what they believe is, the best, you know, governor of whatever place you're in.
So when you have the press, you know, the propaganda is a big deal. It's like the oh, in Edward Bernays, he wrote a book on propaganda back in the twenties, I think it was, or the teens or the twenties. And he was modeling what he was doing off of the Vatican's propaganda arm, which exists to this day. It's called Fidesz Agency. And they saw that as a threat to what they wanted to set up for the monetary system. So they came up with, the Bernaysian Freudian type propaganda system we have now that control all the ad agencies. I mean, it's a science when you look at the ad agencies and what they try to promote and push. They they look at demographics, and demographics determine what goes on in a democracy. Because and as you find out, you know, with the whole immigration thing, dem demographics set the tone. Because if you've got all these people coming in, they can change things dramatically just by the amount of people that you can bring into a spot.
I forget what's it called here, gerrymandering,
[02:23:03] Unknown:
where you set the boundary No. Boundaries. Yeah. Yeah. That's that's I think that was off of a civil war general. Demography is destiny or something like that is another one, isn't it? And speaking of that, let me just there's a thing I just just to illustrate it with a point here. This is just crosses a few little things here. This is a post from Gareth Davies on Twitter. This is to do with The UK, just to give you an idea. Yet again, another, money thing. Since 1997, he writes, over 12,000,000 immigrants have entered Britain. I'll say that again.
Since 1997, so in just under thirty years, over 12,000,000 immigrants have entered Britain. I can't prove any of this, by the way. I'm just reading the post, so these numbers may not be exactly accurate. 80 of them remain firmly firmly dependent on welfare. Alright. It's about nine and a half million, 10,000,000. Total cost is £50,000 per person per annum for these people. This is a staggering amount of money. Yes. It is. Close to £500,000,000,000 a year. Hello? £500,000,000,000 a year. A 120,000,000,000 on interest payments and so on and so forth.
Right? That's what's going on if these numbers are correct. Even if they're a tenth of that, let's reduce it make it a tenth, it means that it's costing 50,000,000,000 a year plus a 120,000,000,000 a year on interest payments but there's no money for old people or for ex soldiers to have a bed.
[02:24:44] Unknown:
Well, it sounds like it'd be one thing if they were out plowing fields instead of collecting welfare. It might be a different story, but
[02:24:53] Unknown:
it's not It would be. But then English fields wouldn't look right with foreign people in them. Probably probably not. But it's still No. We just you know, it's still a different story. They just all gotta go. Again, you know, I I always keep coming back to this because my dad was and they were around at the time and everybody in that generation after World War two were never asked, this doesn't stand. Consent's never been given for this ever. The English have never consented to this and they're not consented to it now. Yeah. So, they've all got to be remigrated.
All of them. I'm just not in the slightest bit interest, neither's anybody else. This is building up ahead of steam, this remigration word. It's getting cool and it's not because we dislike them, it's that they can't live in our home. You got you can't. I mean if you think about money, 500,000,000,000, suppose they were all back at home, we could send it to them there.
[02:25:45] Unknown:
Well Well look at Why do we do that? We'll send you £500,000,000,000
[02:25:49] Unknown:
a year. You can have it. You can have $50 a year each for the next ten years, build your houses, live, but you can't live here. I'd rather be poor, broke, and without all sorts of things as long as I'm living with my own people. I'm quite serious. Of them aren't the majority of them coming from Syria and in places I think they'll take it from anywhere, Patrick. They don't care where they come from as long as they're not English. You know, the the the breakdown of the places in Syria is, like, the biggest
[02:26:15] Unknown:
of all the places in the into Europe of all the migrants. And what's going on in Syria right now? I mean, there's it it's all chained together with with what's going on with these wars and all the impact that they have on Europe as a consequence. And it's like and then the politicians, all they wanna do is, oh, let's spend more money on our military. We need to spend more and more and more. That's like, these people are insane. Because Mhmm. That's exactly what's happening. You you end up having people on your doorstep that you had no expectation of ever seeing because of these politicians. And like you said, it's a dirty word. A politician, it's almost like a tax collector is a dirty word too. And I think Jesus said something about tax collectors and publicans, that apply to that.
What it and It's just obvious that there's rivers.
[02:27:13] Unknown:
There are there's rivers of money available to sort things out properly, but they're all being used to make it intentionally worse for everybody. And, so that the the idea of national spirit and the cohesiveness, it'd be better for those people as well. I like your idea. Those people that are here, but way better for them. They'd be much happier. Why don't we just send them 500,000,000,000 a year?
[02:27:37] Unknown:
No. No. I'd much rather spend it on staying at home. You can have it. I don't think we'd have to do that. I love your idea. If we sent them $10,000 a year for five years to stay the hell out of The United States, to stay the hell out of Britain. And the I mean, they're all coming from economically depressed countries. That's why they're leaving those countries. They can't afford to live in those countries. That's why they're coming here. That's why they're going there. We give them $10,000 a year for five years. Yep. Stay the hell out. We can actually raise their level of living, their standard of living Yeah.
Leaps and bounds over what they could do themselves. They'd get a leg up and go on with life. And all it cost us was 50 k.
[02:28:31] Unknown:
Well, the problem is with these organizations like the World Bank and the IMF, they end up putting loans on these places. Give and then, the people who have all of these the stock, are the rich people that get paid off the on the interest because they're able to buy up the stock in these banks that give out the loans. And then they're like Argentina, for instance, went bankrupt. It was it was quite a while ago. And they're paying, like, 46% interest on the loans to the IMF. And then they they get taken over. But you get rid of the people like Millet going over to Schneerson's tomb and kissing the rear end of,
[02:29:13] Unknown:
okay. Never mind. So we get rid of the bank first. So we get rid of the bank first, and then they can have $50 a year each. I don't mind. We go we do it for five years. You can't sort yourself out that way. That's it. That's tough. Oh, you know, you Patrick. Just get rid of the bank, and we can sort it out. Yeah.
[02:29:31] Unknown:
That's a good idea. Now now, Patrick, I'm I'm interested in your take on the American Civil War being about religion. I haven't heard that one before. So what is your I'm interested in what your take of it is. You you look into,
[02:29:46] Unknown:
people like John Brown. John Brown was a radical abolitionist that wanted to radically, you know, just go around killing slave owners and and having slave revolts, you know, black army of slave former slaves going after all the slave masters, that sort of thing. Anti Christian, same with same with Abraham Lincoln. He wasn't a Christian. There are a lot of people like Thomas Paine. They were people who hated Christianity. And I would say that a lot of what happened there was a consequence of of people who wanted to abolish Christian way the Christian way of doing things. Like for instance, in Christianity, slavery isn't a thing that is, forbidden.
Like, Jesus talked about slaves and slave owners quite a lot. It it's it's a value of labor that dictates a lot of how society operates. Whether you call it slavery or not, you're still in a form of slavery as we have it now. It's just, you know, we don't call it slavery. We call it something else. We call it Earth. Job. Yeah. Servitude.
[02:31:01] Unknown:
Debt
[02:31:02] Unknown:
servitude. Debt servitude. But we had leaders that were trying to make this into a Christian nation. Even though, you know, it didn't have a monarch. We all of those things were fairly new concepts of getting rid of the monarchy. Because when you're in Europe, it was filled with monarchy up up until the seventeenth, eighteenth centuries. I what happened was an abandoning of that and that you look at, for instance, evolution and Darwin came along during that time of the Civil War. And the whole notion of six day creation went away in in the way people looked at things. We even had a president, I think it was before Lincoln. He was the shortest president. I think he only was in for like a month. I forget his name now. I think Paul would know it, possibly.
But he was really spouting how this was gonna be the how it our country was originally founded as a Christian nation. But as a as a consequence of the civil war and what took place in the emancipation, it became less, about a Christian nation and more about what we have today where we have, you know, suffered Judaism. That's another thing. You know, the women being liberated with feminism and that sort. Yes. It became more and more prevalent after the civil war and those things, you know, all all of the old Christian, safeguards in society were abandoned for the new new philosophies.
Like I said, evolution is a really big one. Because if you can if you believe we come from apes and the world's a million years old, then what does it matter what we do, really? Because it's just a drop in the bucket and we're all gonna become butterflies someday. So what's what's the point of even worrying?
[02:33:01] Unknown:
And I just If I may. Many of the things many of the things that have that have been instituted in The United States, they were instituted socially and politically, and they were done for a purpose. Like, let's take for example the, prohibition. Prohibition was an action that was caused by the women's leagues. The the women applied pressure on government. The government caved, and they prohibited alcohol. The women's suffrage movement. Do you know what that what was behind that? There were too many women that were homemakers that were at home providing role models and nurturing care to the children and teaching the children through homeschooling and paying attention to keeping the family unit together while dad went off and worked, well, some somehow, some way, someone decided that there was an entire work force available in the country that they weren't taxing because they had no individual income.
So there went the the women's suffrage movement and women's liberation and get women into the workplace, put them in the factories when making, making weapons and tanks and and artillery shells. And they had advertising campaigns where they had, what, Betty the bomb maker or whatever. She was this buff bicep bulging woman of of today, this modern woman that goes to work in the factory, and she's building America. You need to be like her. And the result of that was more taxes for them, more productivity from the populace, and less attention to the proper rearing and upkeep of the children.
[02:35:11] Unknown:
Then Carl Marx was all about that. Exactly. Of the family, getting rid of family and that having communal wives and that sort of thing. And you look at the communist manifesto, it's full of that kind of garbage. The preschools down the the family, Christian family. The preschools and the public schools became surrogate parents. Right. And that was, like, in, in Prussia in in, Germany. You had the culture camp where it was segregated before that time where you had Catholic schools, you had Protestant schools, and and they didn't have a pub a public government run public schooling system that was mandated.
And as a consequence of Bismarck and the culture camp that took place, they mandated through the Freemasons and the Jews and all these other groups that were revolutionaries. They mandated that you send your children to the government school and that you can't bring with you your bible, your your catechism and raise your child and your religion through the schooling. And you had to be taxed in order to provide for this for this, orphanage of of all your children that that, you know, that you provided the state to groom them to be good workers, docile, and obedient to their bosses. And it's it's what became. And it's the revolution, you know, the industrial revolution at at the time that the civil war took place with Marx and all that kind of stuff. We've had,
[02:36:45] Unknown:
we've had a little didn't Starmer a few days ago bang on a bit about making more money available for childcare or something? Have you heard that one, Eric? He's he's talking about this as some No. I haven't. No. Yeah. Oh, as if that this is an important thing. It just just isn't. It's just not important.
[02:37:06] Unknown:
Yeah. But children are being brought up by strangers. Right. That's the trouble. And I'm wondering whether that's another contributing factor of why we got such idiots in government. Because, you know, I bet
[02:37:24] Unknown:
sorry. You should say. Well, I was gonna say that, homeschooling is is the only option that you have. None of these schools, even the private ones and the the charter schools are any good. You and a homeschooled child that stays at home is more likely to be truthful in public than one that's been indoctrinated falsely indoctrinated in these schools to not to to be peevish and not raise your voice when you see something wrong going on because you've been conditioned to accept it and to do what the teacher says no matter what. And whereas in a family situation, it's more of a matter of the truth. Your mother cares about you, your father cares about you, they're not gonna let you out of their sight when you they say there's danger about whereas these mothers and fathers are conditioned with these government schools to put them in harm's way potentially.
And not care about trimmidity training.
[02:38:24] Unknown:
It's basically to create taxpayers of the future that are less trouble than the previous generation when it comes to all this kind of stuff. We have this thing over here. I mentioned it, this thing that's happened at Glastonbury. I don't know if you've seen it. This African gentleman has been running around on the stage, filling his mouth off. Bob, yeah, Bob Villan. Is that his name? Yeah. Bob Villan. Bob Villan. Right? And, obviously, comical stuff from our perspective. I don't really care what he does because but the tragic thing was not him to me. It was the crowd. The crowd were gone. The it's you can see it, and I thought we really I had the same sort of little shiver run through me that I had when I started seeing everybody spontaneously, instantaneously putting masks on because they'd been told to. This is such a swathe of conformist people and they the only way that they make themselves distinctive, it seems to me, is by covering themselves in tattoos and coloring their hair purple and putting studs through their head.
And that's it. And it's and it's such it's tragic. There's no in in a life with them. They don't have the I mean, look, this is completely over the top. But the overall impression is of people that can't actually discern things much. If the crowd does it and it feels good, we'll do it. It's now got to such a ludicrous, almost childlike level, but childlike in the worst possible sense. I there's a viciousness about it. And if they are going to be the people that are supposed to move into the middle management, positions to manage the economic future of companies and businesses and organizations in this nation, we're already done for.
I mean, because, you know, if we look at the caliber of not that they've got any, but the total absence of any caliber of quality within the people that are managing the nation right now at the helm supposedly, it's it's already over. I mean, you know, this is the thing about building teams. The most important thing is to have intelligent people around you, and the intelligence extends to emotional intelligence, and it also intent it extends to courage, and it extends to telling putting people right when you see that they're wrong and being willing to be corrected when and it's pointed out to you. It it those qualities that you get, they can they come with maturity, and they don't come from getting some Mickey Mouse degree in cat juggling or whatever horse nonsense they picked up. And they're all going along. I mean, it's just it's it's ridiculous. I know we were talking about the hippies earlier, and I accept absolutely that the CIA got involved in their really big time, you know, particularly with the LSD and all that other stuff, anything to wreck it. But they did have a genuine concern as far as I understand because if you look at the student movement in France in the early sixties, it was totally it was highly almost militaristic. It was a militia, and they were really genuine. And they they had to control that and deal with it a different way. I think many of them said they were communists or whatever.
So no doubt there's that there'll be the hidden hand behind that as well. But the whole idea of youth rising up, it never happened before. So the reason it never happened before is that there weren't any agencies making it happen. It's just unnatural to go against your parents. It's just not it's not sound. And, it leaves a disturbance in you whenever you've done that. I remember disagreeing with my dad over a couple of things. And then years later, I really regretted it. I thought it didn't matter whether whether I thought I was right or not. That's wrong what I did, and I apologize later. But at the time, you're young sometimes. You shoot your mouth off. I did it on two occasions. I've been mortified afterwards, and when I realized what I'd done. It's not that he couldn't handle himself. It's just that as I was growing up, I sometimes just said stupid things.
And, you know, I re even now, there's a bit of me that regrets it, And it probably almost could've been her family, you know, Monica Schafer
[02:42:15] Unknown:
growing up thinking that she was, you know, to shame her parents for being so evil, for being Germans Yeah. Type of deal. It's it's a level of ignorance, on on the part of of that. And the thing of the hippies that you were talking about, they were kind of the gatekeepers to keep an actual anti war protest from gaining any foothold because they wanted the war to continue. They had the CIA and the military, drugging up these people in order to keep them from having any power. To discredit them as much as possible from actually pro having an effective protest. And it was the same thing in the fifties with the hipster movement that took place then. I could go into that, but that it's the same type of situation where you had these people that were against getting involved in wars and and that wanted the culture to be to be, upright and just Yes. And protesting when there's a need to protest. Because there there are needs there are times when you should protest what's going on and and people don't Mhmm. They get called into indifference.
And that's what these government schools are meant to do is to call these children into indifference about real politics and get them, obsessed with celebrities and musicians and these kind of woke heroes that we're supposed to look up to. Oh, the celebrities. The celebrities.
[02:43:36] Unknown:
What's gonna happen to them? It's so important. The celebrities. You're right. I mean, I think the the protest process, however, they've got that completely handled now as well. You know, people marching and stuff, it's not worth it. What's the science? I mean Well, you're just getting photographed and going into a database. Now they're using all the facial recognition stuff and everything. It's it's it's it's not an opposing world view. It's that there's a small group of people who are prepared to abuse the goodwill of everybody else. They've been doing it for hundreds of years. Let's just call them Masons because there's many of them in there. And I know most Masons are not bad. I understand all that kind of stuff, but at the top it's not good. Say socialism. There's, you know, to to an extent because it's like taking all the groups together and socializing.
[02:44:19] Unknown:
Yeah. It's a multiculturalism.
[02:44:22] Unknown:
It is. And these exhausting topics, I mean, we talk about them here, you know. I suppose you get well, at least it it gives you something to talk about, but there could be so many better other things to talk about. If this weren't here, it's such a vexatious, almost bogus set of problems. They're not genuine. They're completely manufactured as weapons of war, you know, soft disruption is devastating. And that's what it we're a disrupted people, a distracted people. You know, we're talking about the media earlier. Actually, I've got a little clip here. I wanna play it. It's slightly off beam. No. It's not. It's only a couple of minutes long. You might have heard it before. Where is this? It's just about the power it's this thing I've talked about people getting distracted and stuff. This is called how how the news works. I don't know. This is how the news works.
[02:45:09] Unknown:
Person. People.
[02:45:12] Unknown:
Person realizes people need Hey, people. What do you what do you want? Some news? Yeah. Some news. We want news. Some news, please. Person gives people news. The world is round. Oh. It's going to rain tomorrow. Wow. Less people are dying because technology is improving. Oh. Wow. That's so cool. Bad things happen here and then, but oh my god. We have pleased to catch the bad guys, so it's okay. Oh, that's okay. That's okay.
[02:45:43] Unknown:
The next day.
[02:45:44] Unknown:
The news is still pretty much the same as yesterday. Oh. Oh. Okay.
[02:45:51] Unknown:
A few days later.
[02:45:53] Unknown:
Yeah. The news is still the same. This is getting boring now. Yeah. This is getting boring.
[02:45:59] Unknown:
A few more days later.
[02:46:01] Unknown:
Anything interesting happen or? No. Oh. I don't like the news anymore.
[02:46:09] Unknown:
A wild news competitor appears.
[02:46:12] Unknown:
Everybody, I have more news. Yay. Yay. Hooray. A man died yesterday. Oh, that's so sad. Hey. You're stealing my audience by only telling them worst case scenario stories which take advantage of a human cognitive bias. That means we naturally pay more attention to negative events. Screw you, pal. The competition for attention begins. Hey. Some random celebrities that you don't care about are getting divorced. Hey, everyone. The sun gives you cancer. Bacon gives you cancer.
[02:46:59] Unknown:
Terrorists.
[02:47:01] Unknown:
They're coming to get you. There's a virus spreading around the world. Nobody can do anything to stop it, and you're all going to die.
[02:47:13] Unknown:
That's the world we live in, ladies and gentlemen. Don't you think? Isn't that it?
[02:47:17] Unknown:
Mhmm. It's all destruction. It's all distraction. It's all distraction. Predictive programming, even the prime time, TV shows. I've been watching a series called nine one one, and, I forget what season it was in. Either the third or fourth season. There was one episode, and in that one episode, they had this person that had a toothache, and she got some, like, OraGel tubes, like, industrial sized OraGel tubes, and she was using it to deaden the pain of her toothache. Well, she used, like, the these four tubes in, like, a week and then emptied one entire tube in her mouth so she could get some sleep because she was so sleep deprived.
But the crux of the matter is she woke up blue with blue skin from head to toe. And then when they, poked her in the arm to put the IV in, her blood was blue. And what did they do? They asked her, have you been using colloidal silver? A colloidal silver, they've been demonizing it because there was one guy that completely overdosed on it, used it topically and everything else, and it turned his skin blue gray. So all they needed was one case. Oh, colloidal silver is very, very bad. It's very bad. It'll turn you blue. Stay away from it. So and they asked, did you take this demon liquid that would have turned you blue? And when she said no, they reached for, they diagnosed it as, as a, a hemoglobin imbalance or whatever.
And they reached out for methylene blue, which is a industrial fabric dye. And they injected two units of methylene blue into her veins, and lo and behold, it's a miracle. Less than a minute later, the skin returns to the normal color. Her blood is nice and red, and it's happy. Okay? In that one episode of predictive programming, they demonized colloidal silver, which has a a hundred plus year track record of safety, and they promoted how miraculous methylene blue was. And that was within five minutes of the program. Five minutes. And that that stuff is being drilled into the subconscious of the people that are watching that program.
My personal take is, colloidal silver, absolutely nothing to be afraid of. It's a miracle. Methylene blue, there's way too many people saying, oh, this thing is the greatest thing since sliced bread, like Google and some of those some of those sources. Yep. And there are a few doctors that are saying, oh, no. Stay away from that stuff. It's extremely bad. Extremely bad. These are incidentally doctors that no longer have licenses because they were taken away for telling the truth. And this is what the people is the what the public is being bombarded with. Daily.
The nightly news, prime time television, even their entertainment is killing them. What are we gonna do about it? It's true.
[02:50:51] Unknown:
To re read a book instead.
[02:50:54] Unknown:
Good idea.
[02:50:55] Unknown:
Yeah. Read more books. We need more books. More books and less TV, less distractions,
[02:51:03] Unknown:
and more time with the I think I mean, I just I it's a great maze that you that will never ever stop being great in scale and size. I think it's it's a challenge, really. The more you kinda look into things that require your first levels of knowledge, the more you get to that point of saying, oh, gosh. There's so much more knowledge to find out. Am I qualified to understand myself? Do I need a qualification? I think half of the you know, if we look at all the medical stuff, it's very easy to get people going on it because the anxiety over being ill is a real one. People would prefer not to be.
Although this is not a short term solution, a long term ingredient for reducing the amount of, illness amongst people is obviously to return the food system back to its natural roots, which could be done. But there's no mention of this because it's all driven by markets. We need a more efficient farming system. I don't think we do, actually. I think we just need to do make use of the resources that we've got. It's, I think they've proven that supposedly organic, I. E. Natural naturally grown stuff, which is what it was like before agrochemicals got pumped into the ground everywhere, properly managed can produce loads of stuff. I mean, the sort of the the the blights that they had on crops in the past was to do with weather.
They used to have terrible weather in the eighteen hundreds. I remember I've just been watching an episode of Clarkson's Farm where they've had a terrible crop yield because of the, colossal amount of rain that fell. I think it was last year, 02/2024, when they filmed it. But Clarkson was going through the record books to find out that in 1882 or something, it was even worse. There was nothing, you know. They managed to survive and get through these things. It's just someone's always gonna solve your problems and it generally, nine times out of 10 turns out to be a protection racket. They induce anxiety. Of course, I don't know whether I've got enough time to find out medically how my own body works. Of course, I do I continually am amazed how, completely incompetent I am at understanding how parts of my body work. But I guess, going back even a few hundred years, nobody ever opened one up except in battle to have a look inside.
Why would you wanna do that? You'd no way of actually stitching it back up again and making it work. So I mean, I'm saying really rather silly things here, but, even methylene blue, I hear what you say, Paul, but I remember seeing that interview with Jack Crews and he was talking about it and maybe it's all come from him to some degree. I mean, he's a brain surgeon. They use it in brain surgeries to stop the swelling of brains. After they've operated on brains, they tend to swell up or will do, obviously, because they've just been fiddled around with. So they use a lot of methylene blue or as much as necessary to keep the swelling down because he's talking about I remember he was talking about this operation. He'd done this girl who'd had her head beaten in, and he worked on her for twenty three hours. It was an amazing anecdote that he tells because it's completely true. I think he was in Chicago at the time, probably in his early thirties, and he pulled a twenty three hour stretch solo with some assistance, saving her life, and it sounded unbelievable.
And after it sort of refit her skull back together again, they left the top bit of the skull off because the brain was gonna swell up. So they almost, like, covered it in cling film and then she was sedated for weeks or days and they used tons of methylene blue to reduce the swelling and it's so it's got it's got certain positive qualities. But I suspect maybe these things in combination can produce disastrous events. They can. Well,
[02:54:34] Unknown:
I'm I'm not okay. I'm not saying that methylene blue is horribly bad. That's not what I'm saying. I'm saying that using it, like, as a daily as a daily routine. I mean, just because Tylenol can get rid of a headache doesn't mean that you should adopt a practice of chewing five Tylenol a day for the rest of your life. That's like ibuprofen.
[02:55:01] Unknown:
It can it can cause all sorts of problems. Like, I heard It has. You know? Yeah. It has I mean, all this stuff has a specific purpose.
[02:55:10] Unknown:
You know, fine. Put some in your medicine cabinet. Hang on to it. You may need it someday, but don't do twenty, thirty, or forty drops twice a day for the rest of your damn life. All it's gonna do is turn your piss blue and your brain the same color.
[02:55:26] Unknown:
I think we have a trust problem in in in society in general. Just who do you trust? And it's kind of like you have to get your own house in order before you can order other people's houses. The same same with, like, it's like a plane, you know, when the plane, the stewardess comes out and says, okay. If the cabin depressurizes, here's a mask that'll drop down. And put yours on first before you try helping anybody else because if you zonk out, you're gonna be useless to anybody else. It's kind of the way we have to look at things is we have to get our own house in order before we can even give advice to other people. Yeah. Yeah. I guess we do. I mean, if you look at so many things that are are ruled on by governments, they're all about,
[02:56:15] Unknown:
concentrating power in the centre. That's all it's about. So when we're talking about even say good food, the reason why we have many of the sisters we have is that houses don't have big enough gardens to grow their own food and they need them. And like every family should be trained in growing vegetables. My dad did. I don't. Although, we're taking the garden apart and I'm looking at it and I'm thinking I really should be growing food in this. And, and, yeah, I don't I feel sort of bone idle about it as well, which is just me. So I don't wanna bore you all to tears about it, but it's I look at it and go, we could be growing quite a bit of food here. And then I'm looking at everybody that I live with going, I really need to get together with some other people because I need some energy back from other people. Someone else that only one other person being enthusiastic about it will make it happen. I think you can do a thing solo, but you'll burn out.
You just do. That's my observation. You can't maintain it forever. You end up becoming the noble solo martyr.
[02:57:11] Unknown:
About that, Paul, is you gotta you gotta you gotta start with little things. Have little victories instead of having realizing one big victory, you know, you have a lot of little things that you can tackle and they will become a bigger thing as you get in the habit. Because we're creatures of habit, we're not just gonna be able to go out there and build a victory garden in one day. It's it's something that takes a long time, and it takes days of doing things, you know, little things like planting a seed every day.
[02:57:43] Unknown:
You'll have a big garden if you Yeah. No. I I agree. We drink good water around here and there's there's so many more things that I could do that would improve things, but we we're doing better things now. I just you remember that scene in, what's that Harrison Ford film where he gets, isolated in that Amish community? Witness, is it, or something? I can't remember what it's called now. Do you remember that film? Yeah. Witness. Is it Witness? Yeah. I remember it. Yeah. Witness. I think it is what he's And he's been hunted by Danny Glover and these bent cops who wanna kill him because he's witnessed something. And it's really quite interesting. He falls in love with whatever it is. The the one of the best scenes in the the thing I remember about the film more than anything else is when they all get together to build a barn. Remember that barn building scene? Yes. Yes. And have you seen the barn from the move forward? Yeah. Have you seen the barn being moved? Yeah. But I just wanted to join in. I wanted to be there. Can I it's something about a small supportive team is massively more effective than doing a thing solo? You do have to start. Many man even light work.
They do. And it doesn't need to be that many because then it gets blown. They go, oh, well, we'll organize this on a huge scale. No. No. No. No. No. It's okay. Little villages really work well. Of course, they don't now. Everybody's bitches and snipes about everybody else. Does somebody good? But not always. I'm not in all places. I shouldn't be entirely negative. I've got good neighbors around me and I keep thinking, well, maybe if we could get our act together. But I haven't put the word out yet. But because I'm clearing the garden and our house is not a big house but it it sort of sits right in the middle. Everybody has to drive past our we don't get passing traffic because there's just five or six houses around us where the cars go by so it's very quiet. We're we're in a nice little spot and I'm looking at everybody's gardens going, you know if we turn if we just got organized and said right I'm beetroot, not that I'd be wanting anybody's beetroot and your tomatoes and potatoes or whatever, we could probably produce quite a bit and it is a bit of a la la idea and I'm saying it slightly ineffectually as if I'm not really convinced about it and I'm not yet. I'm just talking trying to talk myself into it. But it definitely would be a better use of the land and we would build a much happier little space for ourselves here.
And they're all it's those things it's it's really it's those sorts of things would help and I I view that as a little but very important thing. They're all important really if you can do it then you could say well we grow our own all our own food and we get all our manure from this horse yard and we're doing this and the food tastes great and my tomatoes taste good and all that kind of stuff. Hey, look at that. We've come to the end of our time, ladies and gentlemen. Let me just crank that down a little. So, we did run for the whole three hours and I was whinging about nothing at the beginning there. I, want to thank everybody that's been commenting away like Billy O in, Rumble and YouTube. Some great stuff. Some of it I should have read out. There's a good little comment about you, Paul.
Warren Apartha says, well said when you were talking about the taxation situation with women and getting them to pay tax. That's true. Also, homeschooling is superior to the school of fish systems and doctors need to be hung. Well, I don't know if about all of them need to be, but, I know what you mean.
[03:00:52] Unknown:
The doctors have their place. And,
[03:00:55] Unknown:
yeah. Billy Summer says, all the people that are put in charge now were without doubt the absolute winkers at school. See what I did there? I'm sure it wasn't like that before. Probably not. Everyone, thanks very much for this week. We'll be back again same time next week. Keep good and, we'll, thank you, Paul. Thank you, Patrick, and thank you, Eric. Look forward to be we got John Hamer on next week as a guest. I'll let everybody know, but John Hamer's coming on courtesy of Eric, so we've got an author on next week. We'll see you all then. Bye for now everyone. Bye bye.
[03:01:38] Unknown:
Blasting the voice of freedom worldwide, you're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[03:01:44] Unknown:
Bye bye, boys. Have fun storming the castle.
Introduction and Welcome
Sunny Summer Day and Episode Introduction
Weekly Reflections and Quick Weeks
Weather and Seasonal Preferences
Technical Challenges and Server Management
Shadow Banning and Censorship
Questioning Government Effectiveness
Historical Leaders and Governance
Historical Reflections and Monarchy
Alfred the Great and Historical Governance
Royal Intrigues and Historical Figures
Listener Engagement and Community Interaction
Political Figures and Public Perception
Godfrey Bloom and Banking Insights
Historical Narratives and Truths
Politicians vs. Statesmen
Leadership and Political Critique
Parenting and Generational Differences
Social Norms and Spontaneity
Restore Britain and Political Movements
Usury and Financial Systems
Global Debt and Financial Realities
Musical Interlude and Nostalgia
Banking Power and Political Control
Global Financial Influences
Historical Figures and Financial Systems
Ezra Pound on Usury
Cultural Reflections and Humor
American Civil War and Historical Perspectives
Social Changes and Historical Context
Media Influence and Public Perception
Personal Responsibility and Community