In this episode of the podcast, we dive into a lively discussion about the current socio-political climate, focusing on the erosion of traditional values and the impact of modern policies on society. The conversation kicks off with a humorous take on the absurdity of global debt and the role of banks, highlighting the disconnect between financial institutions and the everyday person. The hosts explore the concept of fourth-generation warfare, emphasizing the subtle yet pervasive influence of non-traditional combat tactics in modern society. They also touch on the historical context of property rights and inheritance laws, drawing parallels to contemporary issues of land ownership and economic control.
As the episode progresses, the hosts engage with guests Frederick Blackburn and Eli James, who bring unique perspectives on the challenges facing communities today. Blackburn shares insights into the socio-economic transformations in Appalachia, while James discusses the broader implications of financial systems and governance. The episode is peppered with humor and historical anecdotes, providing a rich tapestry of commentary on the state of the world. The hosts also reflect on the importance of humor and community in resisting oppressive systems, suggesting that laughter and unity could be powerful tools in reclaiming autonomy and fostering resilience in the face of adversity.
Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
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This mirror stream is brought to you in part by mymitobust.com. For support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function without adequate mitochondrial function is kinda like running an engine without oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by snapfat.com. That is snap,phat,.com. It's also brought to you by the Preyf International Terahertz frequency wand through iterraplanet.com. Thank you so much for joining us, and welcome to the program.
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If it's love that's making you sad, then it's not the love you need. The love is supposed to make you happy. Go out and find the love you need.
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I've been I've been taking a look around me all week and, I've been taking a look around today and it's very gray and grizzly and all that kind of stuff. And I don't know what it's like where you are, but maybe it's been the same. I don't know. I really don't know. But they tell me, that's members of my family, my huge family, that, the sun is about to start shining again once more. So let's preempt that by starting this show today. How about that for a cheesy intro? Paul English live 99. What a number, a 99. An ice cream in there somewhere. Welcome to the show, everyone.
And we've got our usual opening hour kerfuffle coming up. Up. Lots of funny weird things to talk about but it's no point we're listening them because it always changes in mid flow and we never know quite where we're gonna end up. In hour two we're gonna be joined from a good guest across the waters there, Blackbird nine. And in hour three another guest from across the waters, Eli James is returning for the last hour of the show. Yes, It's a it's a nice kind of gloomy evening here, I guess in keeping with the rather somber mood of the country. If you've seen today's, show image, you'll notice that it's Robin Hood. I thought that was important because, you know, Robin Hood is emblematic and symbolic of certain things. And, of course, we're all merry men here, including our Maid Marians, if you're, around listening. So shout out to everybody in Rumble, whether you're Marian or a Merry Men, and also in YouTube. Welcome to the show again. It's good to have you. We're also, of course, running out on WBN three two four.
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And we've got three hours of something coming up for you, which is as much as a surprise usually to me and to Eric as it is to everybody else. And speaking of Eric, here he is. Eric, hello. Good evening. To the show. Greetings. How are you? Welcome. I mustn't grumble. I could do. And it's a bit murky here as well. In fact, my light might be going on any moment. It's getting rather dark, which is Is it? Yes. Yes. Normally, it doesn't get dark till about nine ish, but now it's about an hour early. Weird, isn't it? But that's life. Anyway, you've got Mary was it, Robin Hood? He was a nice boy. He was. And,
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He was a mighty warrior. He was great. Was he really? Yeah. He was. Yeah. Absolutely fantastic. All that Sheriff Anonymous, he was a bitch. Well, he was pretty bad. Of course, it's a bit difficult, isn't it, really, sort of having a negative view of the sheriffs when, in fact, we really need to bring them back, proper ones, real ones, you know, working for the people. I know that's a weird idea. No one's got you no one even knows what that means these days, you know. But we need sheriffs to put the government back into place. Maybe we could we could all become we could become sheriffs. I mean, I'm not gonna run around in a green leotard in the forest, Eric. Eric. I don't know about you. Is that something you've always wanted to do? No. No. Sort of, you
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you never know. Might get some strange men following you. But, I'm actually it's funny enough you're talking about sheriffs. I mean, when I was when I was a kid, I was a sheriff. Yeah, I got a sheriff badge because all the kids had that after what was it? What did we follow? Could you have a little,
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steps and that and things like that, you know? And I did. Yeah. I used to dress up as a cowboy. I mean, I did have a bow and arrow, though. Did you have a bow and arrow when you were a lad? I wasn't allowed bows and arrows and guns and things. No. I wasn't. No. No.
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My my father forbid me to have weapons because he said he saw enough killing in the war. My son will never have a gun in his hand. So he never put a gun in my hand. So I know wasn't that bad for the guns. Ever get did you ever get your lips behind a pea shooter? No. No. No. I was a good little boy. Yeah. Yeah. I never did. He was on a pea shooter. Yes. But I'm making up for it now. You know?
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Yeah. I thought the pea shooter was the sort of nineteen sixties equivalent of a bow and arrow for a young lad six hundred years earlier. Of course, I'm stretching it a little bit. My dad, by the way, was a travelling salesman and sold loads of stuff. One of the things he sold was marrow fat peas in their freeze dried, shrunken form. Yeah? And and it meant that I had an almost inexhaustible supply of ammo.
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Excellent. Excellent.
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And because of this, I had a lot of friends. Yeah. Because my dad would just bring so here's a sack, you know, and we would have them. And being Northerners, we'd eat mushy peas, you know, fun fun at both ends before and after, as you well know. Yeah. So it's a a gay time was had by all. And, but I became very popular with my friends in in the street because they said, hey, Paul. Can I have some ammo? I'm good. Yeah. Alright. You know? So I became quite important. I was like the, I was the ammunition supplier. I was basically, yeah, a weapons dealer in the peace shooter world in my street in the nineteen sixties. That's that's how big a guy I was. It was that good. Yeah. Well, down south, what they used to do, little sods in my school, they used to, take the,
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inside of a biro out, so you just had the casing of a biro pen, and then they get some paper in their mouth, pull it around, stick it in the bottom of the tube, and then use that as a pea shooter. So you got a horrible piece of damp sort of paper hitting your neck and things like that. That's what the barstards used to do in my school. And the really nasty little barstards used to put, used to dip dip the paper in ink and then shove that up the biro.
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Did they? Yes. Why do they have the baro?
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Yeah. Yes. It's it's nothing like having a bit of paper up your baro, is it? You know? But No. No. I get I guess there isn't really. No. No. But, no, they used to do that, and it used to be bleeding horrible. It didn't hurt. You just got got someone's sort of saliva into into your neck or other areas where they, like, decided to shoot their pea shooter. But it wasn't a pea shooter. It was a paper shooter. So, that's what, the little bar says you should do when I was at school. I was a good little boy, though. I never did it. Yeah.
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Really?
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Yes. I was a goody goody. But, now there was, I think that it's quite surprising how imaginative children are. The other one is we had some, fiberglass round, a water boiler, great big water boiler we had in the school, and they found out that fiberglass is very itchy. So what little sods used to do, you'd be sitting in class and they'd put some fiberglass right down your neck, down the back of your shirt, so you'd be sitting there scratching all the time.
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Yes. I don't understand.
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No. Have we done that? It's a good school, though. It was approved.
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I was actually anyway, just coming back swinging the conversation back to Robin. Sorry. I was slightly distracted there. I was listening to what you were saying, but we just had a slight technical. So, if you've just joined us on Radio Saltbox, hello. Sorry about that. Well, I don't know what happened. There was a switch that didn't trip. There's about eight things that have to happen here. And I was just boring someone before the show. I've got this technical doodad, Eric, and I sometimes talk about technical things. But, I haven't had a chance to set it all up today, but I think it's going to automate.
It's like a big script. I do sound like a bit of a nerd, don't I? I'm aware of this, but it's actually important. I've got about eight different things to do on two different screens, and I just go and it takes me about a minute to calm down. That's why I always talk about the weather because my brain's a bit frazzle. But it looks as I've got this script thing, and I'll just press a button and it'll go tick tick tick tick tick tick and check everything. So this is gonna be this is gonna be pretty good. I'm quite looking forward to this. So, yeah. Yeah.
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Makes me happy. Robin Hood bought the pants off people. If that didn't work, you'd try some other method. So there we go. Yeah. Absolutely. Yes. Anyway, my my quiz was
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was this, regarding the illustration for tonight's show. Okay. Now the illustrator, is a chap, an American guy who I love, fantastic book illustrator, and if you're not familiar with his work, shame on ye. N c Wyeth. Okay? W y e t h, n c Wyeth. And the the, the show image for today I know if you're on the radio, you don't know what we're talking about, but use your imagination. That's what radio is all about, ain't it? So, anyway, it's a fantastic painting of, an illustration of Robin Hood and his merry men. They're all lurking in the woods. And, we sometimes lurk in woods, don't we, Eric? We like to lurk a bit in the woods. Something Woah. I went for a tramp in the woods the other night, and the tramp really didn't like it.
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Boom. Boom.
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That's good. Anyway, my my question, my quiz, is this. I we have used, NC Wyeth illustrations for how many shows? How many? And which ones? Answers on a postcard, please. You can go off and look if you want. It's not much of a quiz, is it? Because everybody's gonna listen to the show and go, I can't be bothered to go and look. But he's actually quite interesting. Yeah. Yeah. I I like it. I I I I like them so much. I've got another one coming up probably another about five or six weeks. And then I sometimes get a bit panicky. I'm thinking, oh, I'm gonna use all this really great stuff, or what we're gonna do when we get to show 8,542. But then I worked out that I'd probably would have been dead for quite a bit it were, when that happens. So I'm not gonna get too worried about it. But, yeah, n c Wyeth, we've used him on how many shows? I don't know. How many? Come on. And the winner gets a Fockham Hall pencil so that when you get the pencil, you can sharpen it, and you too, with a little bit of practice, will be able to illustrate books as well as unseen by it. All you have to do is very simple with drawing. You just look at at what's in front of you, and then you draw exactly what you're seeing. I mean, how hard can it be? That's it. Oh, yes. Yes. Yes. Have you not thought about that? You just look at it, you go, oh, it's that, and then you draw it. I don't know if I've actually banged on about drawing in the past right, but I've got a wonderful book called, Drawing with the Right Hand Side of the Brain, which sounds weird. Right? You don't stick the pencil. You don't tape it to that side of your head. Right?
It's to do with the way your brain processes information and visual information in particular because, most people, if you give them a pencil, most people say above the age of 15 or whatever and say, can you draw me something? Everybody used it. Or they used to, maybe they don't now. They used to get quite nervous. I suppose now they'd say, no, I'll just use AI and do a brilliant illustration on the computer. No, no, that's not what I'm after. But if you ask people to draw things, I always remember my mum and dad going, oh, we can't draw for toffee, all this kind of stuff. Did you have that around you? Nobody can draw.
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No. Not really because they're a bit arty farty, my bad.
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Oh, I see. It's a bit bohemian out there, there, is it? Right? Yes. Oh, that's quite that's nice to know, actually. Yeah. Most of it are too. Bumble around, don't they? They bumble around with a pencil and stuff. And this is a fantastic book showing you about what what's going wrong in your head. And, it's fascinating really because it gets into all this stuff about, you know, you you the left hand side of your brain is the logic bit. So this is the bit that they really train in schools, you know, the mathematics bit and the language bit and the sort of logic bits, although it's very important. We need it and everything. But what it tends to do, it's kind of short-tempered that bit, and it tends to take over. So when people are looking, say, at a face, the left hand bit keeps jumping in in your head. He goes, I know what a nose looks like. Just it's sort of taking over control. You're having this little thing going on in your head, and you keep drawing what you think a nose looks like, not what you're actually looking at.
In other words, you're actually not drawing what you can see because the left hand bit keeps jumping in. It gets a bit impatient. He goes, I'll just do that. You look at it, go, that's rubbish. So there's a series of exercises in the book to switch that bit off, and it works. And it's quite amazing because I was yeah. It's it's really, really interesting. And any anybody you can try this at home. All you need is some sticky back plastic. No. You just get a, you know, a pencil and a paper, and maybe you can look up the book somewhere. It's probably online. There's a PDF freebie by now. But there are certain little exercises and one of them, which is spectacular, it's about the third or fourth one in is, is you take a photograph of of someone's face and you're going to draw it. But what you do is you turn that photograph of the face that you're about to draw upside down. You turn it upside down. Mhmm. And when you're looking at a face upside down, the left hand bit goes, what the bloody hell is that? It can't make head and a tail out of it. It just it starts to shut down because it can't name anything because it's never seen it before, so it just goes, I'm off to sleep, which is exactly what you want it to do. And the right hand side of the brain, starts going, oh, that's this shape.
And you just start to draw it, and I did it with surprisingly, how about this? I think the photograph I worked on was John f Kennedy. I turned it upside down and I drew a picture of John f Kennedy. I turned it round after about thirty minutes. He said, don't turn it round. Just keep working on it until you filled it all in, basically. And you turn it round, it's a it's mind blowing. It's really amazing. Yet anybody well, you know, you had a pen in your hand for years, didn't you, doing architectural drawings and stuff? Yeah. So you got the mechanical skills. It's the visual processing that's going wonky. And so and it's to do with our brains jumping in and mangling it up, which I suppose is the story of humanity, really. And, yeah, it switches it off. So all these little exercises and in the end, of course, it's like now, it's a bit impractical for you to go through the world standing on your head just so that you can draw things accurately, because it is. It would be a bit of a challenge doing that. So you go through a sort of phasing out of that, but it's to tune you in, and you learn this sort of condition.
And it's and you're extremely still. It is amazing. It
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is. Yeah. There you go. I'm full of this stuff. There's only one problem. I'm left handed. So it would be the opposite side, so it'd be my right brain, wouldn't it? I think, was it It might not be. That'd be really interest.
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Yeah. It may be it is. Is that the case, though? I mean, is that the case that left handed people process it reverso? I don't know. I don't know. But I know that left handed people, many of them went into tennis. They could play tennis because you got an advantage. You you left handed. That's cheating. It's cheating in tennis. We when we were in the tennis club, these left handed people cheating should be banned should be banned, really. It's wrong. Well, the majority of architects
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are left handed. I worked in an office where there was only two right handed blokes out of about 20 of us. We were all left handed.
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You see, it probably indicates it's interesting. It probably indicates that you've got more of that visual cortex orientation straight off if you're drawing with the with the left hand because your left hand side of your body is guided by the right hand side of your brain. I know. They swap over. I hear a voice. Paul, what does it mean?
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It means that left handed people are in I it means that only left handed people are in their right mind.
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Oh, very witty. That's very that's very witty indeed, isn't it? That's quite good, that. Actually By the way, Paul, we're we're picking up a bit of echo on your speakers. Yeah. We're picking up something from the background there, Paul. Sorry about that. If you could just
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get that Well, by the way, our son is sorry.
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Yeah. No. Please jump in. No. Answering is asked what was that book called again? She wanted to know what the book's called. I I'd like to know what it's called as well. I've got it on the bookshelf, but it's in the other room. It's called Drawing with the Right Hand Side of the Brain. How about that? Literally that, drawing with the right hand side of the brain. I think if you go and look or even do a search on anything to do with that, you'll find it. But you'll this left handedness that you're talking about, Eric, you know, the left hand path, the path of darkness, would probably indicate that you're likely to be slightly more artistic. I mean, interesting as well in tennis, which is also really rather odd, Rafael Nadal, who people probably will be slightly familiar with, one of the best competitors in any sport ever, possibly the the best I think I've ever seen in terms of pure competitiveness, he hits the ball with his left hand. Right? So his his tennis racket is in his left hand, but he's naturally right handed.
And when they were starting off, his uncle said, I'm gonna teach you to play with your left hand because there are so few lefties, and it causes such a problem for righties that it gives you an advantage. And there's an English player as well. I forgot his name. He's the top English player. His name's Jack Draper. He also hits lefty, but he's naturally a righty. So that's cheating, really. Isn't that interesting? Isn't it? It is. So,
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Woody Pekker said left handed people are more prone to being an ambidextrous due to living in a right handed world. Well I'm an ambidextrous when I played what is it shuttlecock I was crap with that badminton and I used to swipe hands and I was crap whatever had it. I mean let's put it this way if you play darts with me the safest place to stand will be at the, at the dartboard.
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I'm crap. Okay. So when I come around to the when I come around to the Queen's Legs in Fockham Yes. At the top there and we're in the darts team, what do I do? Do I stand well clear when you come up to the Ockey? Is that what I've gotta do? Gotta get out of the way.
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But, no. The funny thing is is that, do you know why Boy Scouts, shake hands with the left hand? I think I'm about to find out. No, Eric. Why do boys have to shake hands with the left hand? It's nothing rude. It was a Baden Powell. He spent his time in Africa, and there was an African tribe who, if they, thought a warrior was incredibly brave, they'd shake their his left hand, not his right hand. Everybody else, they shook with the right hand. Yeah. And they thought it's a brave warrior. They shook your hand with their left hand. That was a great honor. And that's why the boy scouts shook shake hands with the left hand. Oh, gord. And when I was a kid, it took me ages. Whenever somebody went to shake hands with me, my left hand would go out, and I'd have to hold it back. And I put I've then put my right hand out because it's natural to put your left hand out. That's it.
Yeah. Yeah. And But
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apparently, you can't You want to say something? Hang on just a minute. Paul, I hear a Paul rumbling. Paul, do you want to go there? Well, I don't know. I'm just I'm just sitting here. I'm just just chomping in the bit to say something that there was, a visiting dignitary that, visited like a like an India type company or country or whatever. And, they had, all the local soldiers lined up, and then they would go down the line. The visitors would would shake hands, and they would all extend, their left hands. And everybody would be shaking their left hand, but one of them didn't know the drill and was using their right hand, extending their right hand to shake the soldiers' hands. And then it wasn't until sometime later that they found out that in that area, they shook with the left hand because they didn't have sanitary tissue and would usually use their right hand to
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wipe. Oh, this is a So they use only is the information new. Yeah.
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But this is the first time someone's bent the topic around to toilet humor that wasn't Eric. This is a Well, okay. Let me alright. Then let me bring it back to the upside down lefty because there was a lefty that I went to high school with. He was a lefty, and his teachers forced him to write with his right hand, and he did so by hooking his wrist and using his right hand to write upside down. He still wrote left to right, but his hand, he was holding the pen upside down toward him, and it came out looking right. So he, in his in his mind's infinite wisdom, was reversing what they were trying to reverse in him because he was left handed and would have done it a different way.
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Few little comments coming in in the chat. First of all, just rolling back to the tennis thing, both in the YouTube chat hi, YouTubers. And in Rumble chat, good evening, grumblers. There's a bit of kickback of me mentioning Adol. XO says, we're Djokovic fans. And Gary over in YouTube said, Djokovic is better. Well, there's only one way to find out. Fight. No. Actually, of course, Nadal's now retired, and Djokovic is probably imminently away from retiring. I would have thought within the next eighteen months, something like that. You never can tell that. Miracles do happen. So but that's good to know. And then, comment from Sue Sparkle, always sparkling comments, writes, when I was little, I used my left hand, but my mom stopped me using it. I still do some things with my left hand. My dad was left handed. Yeah. Interesting. I I the mom said that straight line.
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Was she? Yeah. Yeah. She said he's left handed. He keeps left handed. And when when I went to school, I really, you know, I I thank my mom for this. Unfortunately, she passed away now, but, she was very, very, fierce. She said, no. He was born left handed. He keeps left handed. Don't force him to write with his right hand. Do what he comes natural to him. And and, I was never forced to use my right hand. So, you know, I'm glad that my mom's doing that, stepping in and and making sure I I kept left handed.
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Seems right. I don't know what the problem really would be. Didn't Leonardo da Vinci, he wrote from right to left, didn't he? Because he was left handed. He was left handed. So you have to you put a mirror up, don't you, to read it if you wanna read it. But there's one there's one sinister person who's left handed.
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Who's that? William Gates. He's left handed.
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Oh, good. Well, of course, it's interesting that you use the word sinister because that means left handed. Do you know that? No. No. That's where it comes from.
[00:24:30] Unknown:
I'm left handed. I am not sinister in the least. You are you're sinister and so is Eric. Are you Yes. I'm very sorry. This explains the mayhem. Oh, god. You're left handed as well, mate. Oh, that's good. We got two of us, at least as soon
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as Which means Paul We're still looking at echo from you, Paul. Paul, we're still getting echo rolling back in the background here. Sorry, but we are. Really? Yep. Couldn't be doing that. It's I can still hear it now. Good grief. Yeah. It's it's quite strong. And that sounds rolling through. So every American president
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most American presidents are left handed, which is weird. Bill Clinton was left handed. I think, I think Bush senior was left handed. Not sure if junior. And, Ford was left handed. It's it's weird, isn't it? But, Sinister. Because we're only was it ten percent of the population left handed?
[00:25:29] Unknown:
So You see, in in occult studies, the left handed path is known as the path of darkness. That would be the path that Aleister Crowley took, the infamous Aleister Crowley who said, do what thy wilt is the whole of the law, which, of course, is completely not true. But it is the whole of the law if you're pursuing the left handed path, which is the path towards power through darkness and evil.
[00:25:54] Unknown:
Well, apparently, some people say it's an advanced form of dyslexia, although I'm not dyslexic as far as I know. But dyslexia comes out in different ways. I mean,
[00:26:05] Unknown:
I haven't got a problem with reading and writing. I I write a lot. But dyslexic Many creative people are dyslexic. Many. There's probably a higher incidence of it. Although, you know, I think Richard Branson's dyslexic, but I don't know what you really wanna say about him. You know how he got his start, don't you? You know how you know how he got all his money in the beginning? I think Before he even before he even got in the record business. Right? No. He, he was a drug dealer in London from telephone boxes. That's how he made all his money. Well, well, well. I thought there was some I knew some geezers who knew some geezers who told me everything about everyone. I'm telling you. Those East End lads that I worked with in the nineties, they knew what they didn't know was not worth knowing, not never, not nobody. They did. It was just all this stuff coming out. So, yeah, that's how he got going and, and all that kind of stuff. And he must be knocking on a bit now. Yeah. But he imported Red Bulls from, Holland. Sorry. Yeah. The Netherlands, didn't he? That's how he made my The Netherlands regions, did he? The Oh, he was gonna check there and ship them in. Is that what he did? Well Right.
[00:27:07] Unknown:
They he started I remember his first shop in Oxford Street that was beyond a shoe shop. And yet they go through a shoe shop up some stairs, and then upstairs, you see. And, there was a hairy weirdo I worked with, and he said, hey, man. He said, you need to go to this this news place called Virgin Records Stores. So I went to this shoe shop, went up these stairs, and it smelled some strange smell. It wasn't tobacco. I can't think they beep. It was a sort of a a druggie smell. There's always a hairy weirdos. Yes. Beyond account. They're queer. Right. I I bought, what was it? A Genesis LP.
Okay, man. So I told my parents about it, and they said, oh, can you get this a James Last MP? Can you imagine? Can you imagine going in? James who, man? You you serious? You know? Oh, and we were also want The Entertainer by Scott Joplin. Sorry.
[00:28:01] Unknown:
I think it's good that you were put through such cringe making moments.
[00:28:06] Unknown:
Yeah. That's good. My parents loved electronic organs. I hate electronic organs. I had to sit through listening to their records of bloody electronic organs. And the only people that enjoy electronic organs are the ones playing them. The people that have to listen to the bloody things don't enjoy it. Yeah. Yes. Do you remember those?
[00:28:30] Unknown:
Yeah. Do you want to talk about something reasonably serious or not? Yes. Yes. Why not? Why not? But I want to come back to records and silly trousers again. I'm I'm actually picturing you in Virgin did you have bell bottoms on when you were in there doing that? When was this? Nineteen seventies, was it? Nineteen seventies. Yes. It shows you our old name. I'll tell you the another thing about the '19 we're never gonna get into anything serious, and we don't really have to. I'm just pretending to be a serious journalist here and and doing things. No. We will get onto something. We've got plenty of time. Do you remember the weird thing that happened with shoes? I always thought this was really, really weird. So, I just remember running around in pumps, Dunlop Green Flash up to a certain age. And then, of course, I had to make myself look amazing to attract all the girls when I was about 14 or 15. And do you remember they used to be platform shoes? Oh, so they were bloody things, with flared turn up trousers.
Did they have them in The States? I wonder if they had them in The States, platform shoes. They must have. Right? So it's glamorizing all that kind of yeah. Yeah. That's so so you've got those. And then what happened was about 1975 or '6 or something, they'd been in for two or three years. It was as if someone the the shoe design went completely the opposite way. It was as if someone had taken all the air out of that big raised up bit. Right?
[00:29:49] Unknown:
And they just went out and really wide. Do you remember that light spoon? Yes. That's it. I remember that. And do you remember the winkle pickers? They came in in the eighties and then went out and they come back in again.
[00:29:59] Unknown:
Winkle pickers. Yeah. Aren't they great? Winkle pickers. Yeah. I couldn't wear those. They were just ridiculous. You couldn't play football in Winkle pickers. It was ridiculous. But the spoon ones, when they went out really wide, they were very, very good if you got very, very drunk because you're like a weeble. You couldn't fall over. You had such a large play area on the ground because of these new really widespread shoes. I always thought they were really rather practical, but those were the sorts of things that occurred to me even though I never got drunk. Honest. Hardly ever. Yeah. So Yeah. But yeah. Yeah. Anyway, so there's an article there's an article someone sent over to Telegram today, from christiansfortruth.com.
It's very interesting article, and I'll stick the link in to both the chats momentarily, so just bear with me. Where are the chats? Oh, look at this. I can get them both in quick. Let me just paste these in so that at least you've got them for the record and, YouTube's got it now. I expect you all to thunder over there like mad. I don't really at all. It's called oh, you see, you go from one thing to another. How about the title? You'd like this. New study shows that the far right attracts higher IQs with Christian identity at the top. Now Christian identity is the viewpoint I've expressed, you know, at at certain intervals that that the lost tribes of Israel are actually to be found in the people of Northern Western Christian Europe, as it were, which is, an an unassailable fact as far as I'm concerned. Although many people like to assail it and tell me that I'm talking at my bottom, but I don't really mind. It's a very interesting article. It's tremendous. So I just want you to know that if you think you're a far right extremist, you probably are and it probably means you've got a pretty high IQ.
How about that? And one of the points that came out in that thing was that most of these things that have been done in the past, a, have been done by left wing think tanks. Although, I think that's a sort of contradiction in terms. Right? You can't have a left wing think tank, can you? I thought it was a a left wing, we can't think tank. Yes. Yes. Yeah. That's a great great title, wouldn't it? They should be known as left wing feel tanks, because it's all about feelings. I don't feel. This is tough. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And, so whenever they've done a sort of survey, they've obviously gone to what you what the normal population thinks is a right wing extremist, which is a skinhead shouting, spittle flying everywhere, fists brazenly, you know, all that sort of aggressive animalistic posturing. This is what they are. You know, skinheads and bovah boots and all that kind of stuff, which, of course, is not. When you actually really get into it, though, and this is what the article is talking about, and you look at the people that write the articles, it talks about, well, things like they use logic to these right wing people and facts, which you can't fit.
They use a lot of facts. Yeah. They use empirical and statistical reasoning, and they've many of them are very good. What does it say? It says, the sociocultural environment within the far right communities often emphasizes a rational, data driven approach to interpreting the world. The intellectual posture involves focusing on objective realities as perceived through statistical analysis, historical patterns, that's where I think much of what we talk about comes into, and logical reasoning. These traits are closely tied to cognitive ability, particularly in areas such as analytical thinking, numerical literacy, pattern recognition.
And the memes, you know, the little one image things, it says memes serve as a medium for communicating and spreading ideologies, and the complexity of many far right memes demonstrates cognitive engagement. Unlike many political memes designed to elicit an emotional reaction, whip crack smart, these things. You have to oh, yeah. You can see what it's because it it reveals itself after a little bit of thought. So there you go, ladies and gentlemen. If you do consider yourself, if you're not frightened of being labeled something, and I'm not, I think it's really funny when they do this, just know that this is the best label you can be called. And I was thinking as well today, Ari, because as I'm trudging around, I thought it we we live in a space now or it seems to me, that basically the truth is extreme, isn't it? It is. No. Right. But when you're an extremist if you're into truth Yeah. Because it it up it makes people feel bad.
They get upset.
[00:34:33] Unknown:
Did you go through a brief period of leftyism when you were young?
[00:34:37] Unknown:
Sort of Never. Yeah. Never ever ever ever did I ever even consider I didn't even look at politics. In fact, I've only been drawn into talking about it courtesy of what's been happening, you know, from the inquiry into banking and stuff like that. And then you you sort of look at it. It's like which puppet are they gonna use? So the I mean, the left ones have been much more effective. I mean, there's a little poster here as well. There's a picture of a scowling woman in this cartoon, and the headline is, if that is true, how do you explain my feelings?
[00:35:06] Unknown:
That's that's that's pretty that's spot on. My my parents were both firm Labour voters. You know, the sun shone out of Harold Wilson's backside. But my dad came round in the end and of course as a child you just, repeat what your parents are saying. And it's only when you when I started to get into my sort of late teens and early twenties, I started to think hang on a minute, hang on a minute, hang on a minute, what's going on? This is getting this is this is ridiculous. And I started to sort of wake up from my slumbers. But you you you do reflect reflect what your parents say because let's face it, you don't you're not experienced in the world. So that was my brief sort of lefty, but they weren't extreme or anything like that. They just voted labor because they looked after the average person. So they were thought, but the information they had wasn't wasn't as much as what we have now.
And I was saying my dad, he certainly wasn't the labor support. So by the time he passed away, you know? So Yeah. But when you think of the situation then, then was then and now is now, totally different world, totally different information, and you can forgive people for being socialist at that or or or shall we say left wing in that time because they didn't really know. That was the real fact of the matter. It wasn't really the terminology that was used back then, was it? People didn't say left and right to the degree that they've used it as a sort of tarnishing labels these days. Yes.
[00:36:31] Unknown:
I think in terms of the the kind of spirit of the labor concern for the working man, it's difficult to sort of say I don't agree with that because I would I would agree with it. But I always had this creeping feeling, not that I paid too much attention, that it was really sort of disguising something else. I also had exactly the same feeling about the Tories. So the idea that they were overtly for capitalism belied certain things and that labor were absolutely for the working man, it it just appeared I I couldn't have told you this or iterated it in this way back then, but there was something cartoon esque about it even then when you stand back and look at it. Our local MP was Dennis Healy. You remember him? The man with the most enormous eyebrows in politics. Right? Oh, Dennis Healy. Yes. Silly pealy man. Yes. Silly pealy. I He was our last MP.
Yeah. So he got in all the time. He was Labour. He got in all the time, of course. I don't remember my dad voting much. I think he switched. He voted Labour in the sixties, 60s, and then he started voting for the Tories in the seventies and thought Margaret Thatcher was a good thing. And my dad was just a working class bloke. And, you know, as I am, I'm a working class bloke. We're all working class blokes, really, aren't we? Unless you come from money, and we didn't. So it's as simple as that. And I think, but the work the bright working class are the ones that I love more than anybody else, I suppose. I feel most in common with them, not that I'm but, of course, like, now turns out I'm a genius, and you all are because you've got a very high IQ. We're we're we're really off the charts bright because we're employing things like truth, historical references, logic, and and questioning. I think that's the key difference. Right? I do think it's the key difference. I was talking to someone about this the other day, an old friend that I'm possibly gonna hook up with next week, and he was just talking about the sort of well, the lifelessness of people. And I was saying, well, don't you think they've kind of let the question mark fall into such disuse and for such a long time that they've forgotten what it is? They don't even know how to employ it. Nobody asks questions. They just go like that post. You're hurting my feelings.
And it's like, so what? And what's your point? That's right. Well I don't understand what what that's got to do with anything, but I'm upset. We're all upset. But you see, they trade on the fact that their upset is more meaningful and valuable than yours. If you're right wing, you can you're never upset because you're a callous, uncaring oath, which, of course, is is the other way around, actually. I think I think, you know, I would say that. I think it's that we care to a certain degree. We're prepared to actually put a bit of work in to try and find out really what the main issues might be and where the manure it lies. Of course, it's everywhere now that you can't sort of move without bumping into it but I do think that that's part of it. So yeah, the inquiring mind, left left brained or right brained is the thing to have.
Maybe we could start selling them out of fuck them whole, you know. Well, but we could we could do. Good price.
[00:39:27] Unknown:
But so if Woody Pete said, Eric, and I I was talking about you years ago when people voted Labour, He said, Eric, it was more like liberalism liberalism to me when I was a youngster. Yes. Yes. It wasn't extreme or anything like that. People voted for Harold Wilson or, who was it now? Ted Heath.
[00:39:46] Unknown:
And It wasn't extreme. It wasn't at all. I never got a sense of really polarized venom. I mean, apart from which, the the guys that were in the Labour Party at the time were some of them were bright. Wilson was very bright. He was an academic of the highest order. It doesn't appear that way, but he was. Then you had Roy Jenkins, who was just a complete Roy Roy Jenkins, you mean? Roy. Roy. Is Roy. Yes. The wife of Roy. I I played this a week or so back, and I'm gonna play it now. It's it's the brain. It's the brain clip. Okay? So as soon as I were talking about brains, let's play this brain clip. It's one minute. We'll hook back in after this, Eric. Here we go.
[00:40:25] Unknown:
I used to believe everything I'd see on the news, but that's before I discovered
[00:40:30] Unknown:
a brain. A brain is meant for everyday use. Those living with moderate to severe stupidity have seen immediate improvement in common sense with a brain.
[00:40:38] Unknown:
I thought the government had my best interest at heart and then a friend told me about a brain.
[00:40:43] 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.
[00:40:50] 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
[00:41:10] Unknown:
accountability, discernment, homeschooling your kids, a better understanding of economics, awareness of the stupidity of socialism,
[00:41:17] Unknown:
and diarrhea. For tethering yourself to reality, the only no brainer is choosing a brain. Ask your doctor brain.com.
[00:41:33] Unknown:
So don't you think if if you could get a brain sold in in your, shop, Eric. Yes. Yes. You know, this is really what what you would want is that you'd want to sell it sell it and get a a brain and fuck them all, really. I think that's the tagline. Let's face it, though. If we had, say, for example,
[00:41:52] Unknown:
like Harold Wilson's brain and you could sell could sell that for about a £100. And if we had Keir Starmer's brain, we'd sell that for £50,000. You think, well, hang on. Here comes Keir Starmer's brain is £50,000, and Harold Wilson's brain is a couple £100. Well, the reason why is Kier Starmour, his brain's never been used.
[00:42:12] Unknown:
Well, it's true. Of course, if it was his real brain Yes. Then all although that would be a bit savage, but it probably would be better out of his head than in it because it's certainly serving no purpose wherever it is, whatever's going on with it. I mean, it's it's really not right for us to even assume that whatever intelligence he's got in there is of any value to anybody. I mean, if he is he left brained, right brained? I think he's bottom brained, actually. I think he thinks out of his bottom.
[00:42:40] Unknown:
That's about as close as we're gonna get. Yeah. You know? Well, he he always looks as if he's, you know, I I kind of I can explain it. I've just wet myself.
[00:42:52] Unknown:
He even reminds me of Have you? Oh, oh, sorry, mate.
[00:42:57] Unknown:
I understand. I see where you're going from. But, no. The thing with Keir Starmer, he's always got the same expression, hasn't he? Whatever happens, he's sort of as if he's lost. Uh-huh. Well, a dream. But something exciting happens yesterday evening. I looked went to my front door to lock it, for, you know, as I normally put the bolts across at night when I go to bed. And there was a leaflet on my mat. Woah. And it was a booklet, little tiny leaflet, from the local MP telling me how marvelous. There's no election coming up, is there? And it said, inside, I am now delivering for you.
And there's loads of stuff saying, oh, what a marvelous man he is. It is it oh, you know, and Yeah. And then he says, my plan for the local area, see, bring back banking services to our town centers. Now there's no banks in the town center now. And he said that he's, so I've raised the need to change the rules. Was it, he's raised this in parliament Prime Minister's question times. Well, I'm gonna ask him instead of bringing back banks to town centre, why not do away with usury and have a people's bank So we can have a people's bank in the in the town center. That's a good, isn't it? Mhmm. Pick that one. Better access to health care. I've got an even brilliant idea.
Get all these stupid doctors to have, retested again, and, they'll have to sit exams on natural medicine, and they can they can stick the, pharmaceutical, rubbish where their sun doesn't shine.
[00:44:41] Unknown:
Strength and flood protection.
[00:44:44] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, yeah. Local I'll write this one. Local jobs for local people. I'll order it. Yes. Really.
[00:44:50] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. I've never heard that one before. Local jobs for local people. It's all meaningless, but it's just meaningless. It's been meaningless forever. It's just placard politics. It's totally nonsense because it's it's when you think about it, it's just childish. It is. What they're doing is really juvenile nonsense. Yeah. But it works because it appeals to the emotions. I mean, maybe we should turn this into a very emotional show. Maybe we should start bleating and playing the victim. You know? It's not fair that you're picking your nationalists. We all we want to do is fly a flag. That's true. What's it? It pretty good. It's just I mean, it repulses us to behave like that. It's disgusting.
It really is disgusting. And, of course, but they win on the emotional stakes. A few comments sent it here anyway. Just hopping over into YouTube, re, Keir Starmer. Is he a queer? He looks like a queer. He does look like a queer. He he looks very queer to me, you know. He does and he sounds like a queer. Bunny. Yes. Bunny, you're a queer. Oh, a frightful queer. Yeah. Anyway, sorry about that. It's a difficult to crack out of my
[00:45:53] Unknown:
I like that one as well. I think he's queer, definitely.
[00:45:58] Unknown:
I'm a fry for the quip. Probably a quip. We put him down as probably a quip. Anyway, red red snapper, red snapper, writes, I think Keir Starman knows what he is doing. Alice Gorges hello, Alice. Gorges. He knows exactly what he's being ordered to do. Yep. I think both of the I think he does know what he's doing, and I think he's also doing exactly what he's being ordered to do. We're we're sort of describing it in a certain way, but he is. He's under orders. He's under orders. I mean, the fact that he's not manly, that he can't communicate with any authority or strength, that he's weak in every department, that he's vague is all part of the act. He's the latest act. And I still maintain that he's been put onto the world stage to make Joe Biden's, in retrospect, look really rather smart because he does. Yeah. Well, look Yes. But he I I mean, it's just getting ridiculous. You just go, what? Hey? Woah.
So, yeah, I think that's all all part all part of the all part of the wizard theater that is the insanity, but it's not really insanity from their point of view. It's definitely studied. They're definitely orchestrating in this way, and all that kind of stuff. Herodotus writes, my brain hurts. Mine does too at times, Herodotus. It really does. It really does. It it hurts. You have to go and take a walk when it starts doing that. Billy Silver writes, Harold Wilson looks to have been a shadow communist. I think so, Billy. Yeah. Absolutely. Didn't they do a big sort of spy thing on him and discover that he really was, that he was just had all these leanings to being a commie? Yeah. Was he a member of the Fabian Society? I'm assuming he probably must have been. I don't know about that, but I do know that,
[00:47:36] Unknown:
one of the trade union leaders got payments, they found out, from the USSSR. So he was a spy. I can't remember what the who he was so I don't wanna name anybody just in case I'm wrong because you have to do that. But yes, he was a commie. A lot of them were. And do you remember Red Robbo? What happened to him? Remember Red Robbo?
[00:47:58] Unknown:
What was he? What was his full name? I don't know. What was his full name? Red Robbo.
[00:48:03] Unknown:
Red Robbo. I can't remember his full name. It's gone.
[00:48:08] Unknown:
I'll I'll look that up. What was he what was he the union leader of then?
[00:48:12] Unknown:
Cars, wasn't it? I think it was cars. Automotive. Let's have let's have a look. Red Robbo. See what comes up. Was it cars? Was it cars? Yeah. Or was it? Red Robbo. He died in 02/2017. Trade Union, formerly, the convenient and shop steward within the car manufacturer of British Leyland. Oh, that's why they went down down Cars. Down the pits.
[00:48:38] Unknown:
Well, I think they threw him in there. It's all part of chewing out the industrial base. I just think it's all planned. I think every single thing, every single bit of it, is planned in that way. And just hopping back to this thing about emotions and, stuff, don't forget Red Robber. Billy wrote, who was it who said a young man left wing blah blah blah? I just I know exactly what you're talking about, and this is the quote they think you were reaching for, so I reached for it and found it. You probably heard this one before as well, Eric. If you're not a liberal when you are young, you have no heart. And if you are not a conservative when old, you have no brain.
I think that kinda covers a bit. There's probably a bit more that you can embellish with it, but I think it's true. You are optimistic when you're young, and it's a wonderful space to be in and you think, I can change the world. But, of course, the problem is you don't know what it is that the world really is at that stage. So your changes are kind of like really just changing the icing on the top of the cake. You haven't really discovered that the bulk of the cake at the time is made out of shit. And that therefore, it doesn't matter what dressing you put on top of it. I'm sorry to be vulgar, but sometimes we have to drive these points home, don't we? That the whole thing's a joke. And that that is really a diversion. So I think, you know, the energies of you when you are young are basically hijacked and diverted into all sorts of twaddle, which is just fantastic at the time and can create, you know, a basis for your, hopefully, your reasoning and understandable mature cynicism as you get a bit older. The idea is to not sink into that pit as well, although, you know, being a curmudgeon, Eric, is just too much of a temptation to not take up, isn't it, really? It's just delightful, really.
[00:50:19] Unknown:
But but Red Robbo, just reading down, he was, he was a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain. Mhmm. There we go. And British Leyland, I remember. I mean, I bought a Morris Marina. The only thing that didn't go wrong with it is the doors didn't fall off. But it's like a clownish car. When you went out, you wondered what was gonna fall off of it or or go wrong. And when I lifted the bonnet up, it was actually, a giant series a engine, as a Morris thousand engine, basically, because I and I then bought a Nissan, and that, was a Japanese car, and that was a copy of the series a engine, but they'd ironed out all the faults, and it's an aluminum head, and it ran beautifully.
The Japanese had literally taken the series a engine apart and and put, you know, found out all the problems with it. But he this red robo, he he actually destroyed the British partly destroyed the British car industry. They said that, he had how many walkouts here? He said, oh, so he had 523 walkouts at the burning car plant during a thirty month period. 523 in a thirty month period. Walkouts? Well well, walkouts. Yeah. 523 in 30. So there we go. Okay, brother. Right. Old brother. Let's do this. Unbelievable.
[00:51:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Wow. Yes. So he caused a bit of trouble then, didn't he? Yeah. He caused a bit of trouble. He certainly he certainly did.
[00:51:49] Unknown:
Red
[00:51:51] Unknown:
robo.
[00:51:54] Unknown:
Yeah. Anyway, the thinking lark is quite a challenge, really. It is. And I think, you know, I'm trying to think of a political communication made by anybody in politics where I actually thought there was more than an ounce of spit of thought behind it recently. It's the most goofy tripe that they come out with. It's not that I'm disappointed. I don't go, oh, I actually don't do that. I just I'm looking at it going, this is so broke. Surely, people are beginning to see just how broke it is. I I I accept that the crowd here on YouTube and Rumble, you know how broke it is. And I think more people are getting to that point. I think it's difficult for people as well. We're we're talking about this the other day. It's to do with this sort of momentum around voting and the convenience of it all and the fact that you've always that people have always done it. I've never done it, by the way, a point I'm always sort of keen to stress.
And so they're they're signing up for their own sort of con. It's like a personal con. And I think to to invite people to consider that the whole process is so insanely stupid that it can never give them what the politicians how can it possibly do that? Because it never ever has, has it? Never. Precisely. Precisely. Not that I'm aware of.
[00:53:12] Unknown:
The, the communist party, apparently, the first, member was Andrew Rothenstein. That's interesting, isn't it? First What year is that? It was starting I'm just looking up now. Started in 1920, so it was a hundred and five years ago. Communist party. Right. Yes. So, so really, basically, signing up for their own execution in many ways, isn't it? Because Yeah. Every communist party is ended to with genocide every time without almost with yeah. Without a foul.
[00:53:50] Unknown:
Can you can you Well, we can we come back to this one yeah. I know. We come back to this thing, don't we, that, we've got this dream of utopia, they say. Oh, yeah. And we're gonna share everything out. Okay. And that's great, isn't it? Go people like us. Well, how's that actually gonna work? And then they bang on, of course, it gets more and more complicated and you go, well, I'm not really in on this. And they go, well, if you're not in on it, you're obviously against the happiness of the people of the Earth, so we're gonna kill you. Don't you think killing people that oppose your idea kind of invalidates your idea? This is lost on them.
Yeah. You can't even get that across. There's not because they're in the field of emotion, aren't they? They're waddling around in it. How can you possibly oppose my utopian dream and our utopian dream? Look at all these young people. It's gonna be great. I saw one of those clips the other day, you know. Oh, good grief. I I I shouldn't watch these because they are bad for your blood pressure. Some guys trudging around at some street march recently, you know, with all the sort of purple haired, you know, rainbow flag wearing. You know what I'm talking about? The absolute Yes. I I don't wanna be dismissive of them, but it's very difficult not to be when you've been faced with this stuff for years and years and years. I really view them as weaklings. They're weak.
Now that doesn't mean that we're there to abuse, but they're weak with an attitude. They're weak in the sense that they feel that they can't make it in the world without sort of their entire This is why I'm against this idea of rights personally. Right? You don't have to agree with me. But I think rights are a sign of a victim culture. Oh, I've got me rights. What are you talking about? Just work well with the people that you love in your village and make it I know I'm living in La La Land when I say something like that but isn't that the basis of it? Isn't there something sort of honorable and good and almost, like, reasonably exciting about that as opposed to, oh, no. The government's got and the handouts, of course, have bred this subculture, which has got out of hand, but it's all by design.
[00:55:46] Unknown:
But It's by design. That's right. But it could be a reason, why these sort of extreme lefties are the way they are. There's a, doctor who, studies nutrition. She's on YouTube, and I'll just look up her name. Well, I look up her name once you know, when you have a break in it. But what she said, was that, we've got to Now I'm gonna upset a lot of people now, and I'm not gonna I was a vegetarian at one time, but we've got to eat meat. We're designed to eat meat, and she said that vegans are basically starving themselves to death, and they get they're very prone to a lot of diseases. But she said, one of the things with vegans, because they're not eating meat, it makes them extremely aggressive.
[00:56:35] Unknown:
Extremely aggressive. It's so it's I you know what? It it does. It makes them extremely virtuous, doesn't it? How about this? What a good thing that you've just brought this up because I wasn't necessarily gonna include this today. Starmer's local council could become fully vegan. Yeah. A Labour led council covering sir Keir Starmer's cons constitution constituency, could become fully vegan. Camden Council in North London, oh, boy, commissioned a report that concluded a 100% plant based catering regime regime, interesting to put that, was in line with their food mission. What is their food mission? To kill us off. There's a study though that I'm not gonna read the rest of it out because it's piffle, of course. Study, seventy percent of men would rather die early than give up meat. Count me in.
[00:57:27] Unknown:
Count me in. Yes. And by the way, the poor woman that said this is doctor Natisha Natasha Campbell MacBride. And you can look her up on YouTube. She's, she lives in Norfolk or not at Norwich area, I believe, but she's, Russian. I think she's married to an English person. So it's doctor Natasha Campbell McBride. Now I know that, you know, there are other doctors on there. So that vegetarian is excellent and this, that, and the other. And, you know, as as Mark Anthony said, you you will have to mention that to Dawn Lester next to next time she's on the on the show. Yes. Because, Dawn or she's a vegetarian.
But That's okay if people That's the it's the it's I don't mind if people want people can choose to do whatever they want to do. I'm not again that. But it's not the vegetarians, but it's that's not the problem. It's the vegans that are the problem because they're starving themselves to death. So I didn't mean to talk over you then, but they're starving themselves to death. And she said in some extreme cases, this is in the wild, not obviously in civil cities and things, they they have turned to cannibalism. It's she said they get exceptionally angry. And when you look at these lefties with their purple hair and, god knows what, screaming and shouting, these feminists and that, the majority of them are vegans.
And that's why they're so angry. But again, it's different between vegetarians because vegetarians, they do get the right proteins. It's the vegans that don't because they have nothing that's animal. Vegetarians do have things that are animals such as, I believe, eggs, milk, and dairy, and things like that. But vegans is what I'm talking about, not vegetarians. So I make that very, very clear because I'm seeing in the chat people saying, I've been eating meat for thirty seven years, and I'm like, yeah. It's because you're probably a vegetarian, not a vegan. So is there any vegans in chat?
[00:59:22] Unknown:
I don't mind whatever they do. It's just that, you know, maybe vegan shouldn't be allowed to input we're gonna just have to deal with it. People are gonna eat the way that they want. But when they impose and dictate on others because of their misguided stupidity, apart from which it's gonna produce, as it has done, these sort of pipe cleaner bulbous, saggy boys that we got far too many of, you've also got it going in the other direction, which is great. There's a it's literally a split. You've got you've got these guys as well working out like maniacs, built like the proverbial brick toilet outhouse, who are extremely strong, almost going excessively and consuming nothing but meat. There's a guy called Liverman, I think, who ate nothing but liver, but I think he got seriously ill. I mean, can't what about common sense? You remember that old thing where you just balance things out a bit? And if you like a bit more meat than veg, then have a bit more meat than veg. That sounds like you're uncle Fred. I don't you don't need to go crazy on anything. Just mix it up a bit. But, you know, cabbage is good for you, and it's exciting a bit later on, isn't it? And that's what you're saying. Yeah. That's right. Yeah. But I work with a bloke whose neighbor,
[01:00:28] Unknown:
it's nothing but, I I can't remember exact date, but I think it's egg and egg chips and beans. Yeah. And, he all he lived on was egg chips and beans, and he collapsed one day. And, he came to hospital, and they said he's suffering from malnutrition Because his body got egg used to egg chips and beans, and he's getting no nutrition. So it we're it's important that we have a very varied diet. And what I do, I I I I have very varied diet. I mean, with this keto diet, and I don't talk call it a diet. It's a change of lifestyle. Yes. It's mainly meat based, but I ensure that I have vegetables and vary it, you know, from time to time. You know, I might sort of eat my neighbor's cat or one day, and I might then go over to the other neigh that's right. The other neighbor's dog. Yeah. I'm joking. I'm joking, fellas. I'll go because I can guarantee someone's say, all the little soddies, petals, cats, and dogs.
[01:01:26] Unknown:
No. I don't. Yes. We're coming to the end of the hour here. Anyway, just one last little quote I would rate. Lot there's lots of activity in both chats. Shout out to both of you. Brilliant. There's so much. I can't scan it all, so I apologize, but I'm just picking things that jump at me on the topic. Billy Silver wrote that Starmer is an Ephialtes. I probably mullet the pronuncher the deformed traitor in the Spartan standard Thermopylae. Alright. You can look him up. E p h I a l t e s. Ephialtes of Trakkis. He's the one that betrayed them. If he'd not betrayed them, probably none of them would have died. It enabled the Persians to get around the back of them as it were and do them in from the side. Bad lad. You don't wanna be doing that. They don't lock it up. And do they? Well, you don't wanna be an Fealtees, do you? Because it's, it's not a good thing. Anyway, we're at the end of the hour. And because Robinhood is, of course, the image for tonight's show, I think it would be appropriate that we play the nineteen sixties British TV theme to Robin Hood. Don't you think? Did you watch this as a kid? Yes. Yes. What was it? Richard Green, wasn't it? Was it Richard Green? Richard Green. That's right. Yes. Richard Green. I can't remember the other ones.
So everybody, get your green, leotards on and everything. Get your bows and arrows out. We'll have a bit of Robin Hood, and then we're gonna, Frederick Blackburn's gonna be joining us for hour two. Here we go. Oh, like that.
[01:02:51] Unknown:
Robin Hood, Robin Hood, riding through the gladden. He called the greatest arches to a tavern on the green. They vowed to help the people of the king. They handled all the trouble on the English country scene and still found plenty of time to sing. Robin Hood, Robin Hood, riding through the Glen. Robin Hood, Robin Hood with his band of men. Eared by the bad, loved by the good Robin Hood. Robin Hood,
[01:03:45] Unknown:
Robin Hood.
[01:03:49] Unknown:
That was quick, wasn't it? Wasn't that quick? Here. Well, it was his station ID. Very, very quick. Yes. Three four radio.
[01:03:57] Unknown:
Something across South.
[01:04:00] Unknown:
Attention all listeners. Are you seeking uninterrupted access to WBN three twenty four talk radio despite incoming censorship hurdles? Well, it's a breeze. Just grab and download opera browser, then type in wbn324.zil, and stay tuned for unfiltered discussions around the clock. That's w b n three two four .zil.
[01:04:23] Unknown:
The views, opinions, and content of the show host and their guests appearing on the World Broadcasting Network are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of its owners, partners, and other hosts or this network. Thank you for listening to WBN three two four Talk Radio.
[01:04:39] Unknown:
Thank you indeed. That was a very short thing. I thought it was gonna go on for ages, really. Anyway, it took me back. I don't know if it took did it take you back, Eric? It took me back. Yes. Yes. Yeah. Took me back. Yes. Yeah. I I saw one recently. They're all in yeah. The the scripts are pretty good, actually. Mhmm. The yeah. I actually I realized there's something very strange happening to me that I could actually get a a bit of a buzzer. It's because they were it was an actual story, you know? Yes. With a plot And it was innocent. Plot.
[01:05:08] Unknown:
It wasn't rude. It was innocent, and it was it was just nice. And look at what children have got now to look at. Peppa Pig, where that's, an agenda like, turning against men and fathers. Whereas we used to watch Bill and Ben the Flowerpot Men and Andy Pantry and things like that. Much better. Yeah. I I still love it. I don't know the actress was who played Maid Marian, but she's very pretty. Of course, that's a sexist male. I shouldn't say that, should I? Shouldn't
[01:05:33] Unknown:
but she was. And it it it and certainly in the episode I saw. Anyway, it's jolly good. Anyway, enough of this merry men gay banter. Let us now swing our attention three and a half thousand miles over to the west and welcome our guest to the school, Frederick Blackburn. Blackburn nine, how are you this fine afternoon, I guess, for you, sir? How are you doing?
[01:05:52] Unknown:
Neigh neigh, I say good sirs. Neigh neigh. Let the merry men banter continue.
[01:05:59] Unknown:
Oh, this is great. You're in already.
[01:06:01] Unknown:
This is fantastic. You'll get a free fucking whole pencil for that, Frederick. It's great to have you on board. Yeah. Wonderful. I have thoroughly enjoyed the first hour. I've got about 12 pages of notes here. You guys have been brilliant. I don't get to sit down and listen to many shows. So this has been quite, the pleasure on a rainy Thursday afternoon. So Yeah. Because you host the show regularly on RBN, don't you? Yes. The Saturday snack shack, from seven to eight eastern time. Even on the web page for RBN, it's central time. It throws people off. But yeah. And they're they're actually rerunning the best or, basically, the breakfast club revisited.
And so they're taking the second hour of my breakfast club series that Golden Pieprench and I did, and that's the hour of the long timeline. I always say it's Paul Harvey, the rest of the story for a post 09:11, you know, audience. And so those are running on Sunday night, so, check those out. I got the late night show on Sunday night.
[01:07:05] Unknown:
So so you're live on Saturdays, but it's a a rerun of, a classic from you on the on the Sunday. Yeah? Yes. Okay. You got 350
[01:07:14] Unknown:
episodes we are, you know, and change of episodes we did, and that's where we introduced the Pathfinder. Of course, you know, mister Paul English is a Breakfast Club Pathfinder.
[01:07:24] Unknown:
Oh, yes. I remember him. Yeah. God, that's me. Yeah. That's gosh. How long ago is that? That's a few years back, isn't it? Wow. So, yeah, those inter early pathfinder interviews are still out there. So,
[01:07:36] Unknown:
there's lots of good stuff.
[01:07:38] Unknown:
Do you find, as a show host right? I know you just said you enjoyed sitting there and listening.
[01:07:44] Unknown:
Do you isn't it easier to sort of be the guest than it is to be the host? Don't you do you find that or what? What do you think? Do you prefer to just be invited? You know, being out is is maddening. Even though with RBN now, I have a producer. You know? So that's great. Just you got at least quite a deal with the technical problems. You know, with The Breakfast Club, it was just, you know, me and Golden Pipe Wrench, and we were trying to deal with the problems as they would come on. You know? And we had lots of problems. Yeah. So that's nice. But still, it's maddening to be the host of the show because he's like, one, you every week, you've got to find a guest.
And that is I find you. Yeah. Great, Paul Kreminski used to lament on that. It's like, this is maddening. I've got to find a guest for every week. And Yeah. That people want to listen to. So, you know, that's, you know, a lot harder than it seems. You'd think people are knocking down my door to come on the Snack Shack. You know? Also, you know, I have to bribe them with trinkets and things. You know, could please come on the show.
[01:08:42] Unknown:
I know what you mean. I know what you mean. I've talked about this with Patrick, actually. I think we talked about Adam Curry and John c Dvorak when they kicked off their no agenda thing, which is quite a lively twice a week, three and a half hour gig that they do. It's got a pretty huge audience. It's very American, of course. So, but it is. Obviously, it would be, and it's got all sorts of bells and whistles in it, which is pretty cool. But I I remember them saying that when they started, they were faced with the same thing. They thought, great. Well, I've guests on, and they ran it for a few months, and people just wouldn't show up, and they wouldn't get back to them, and all this kind of stuff. I dream about having sort of you know, in radio stations, they must have a lady or a bloke, but probably I always have mentioned it a nice lady. Sorry, I can't help it. I was born in 1960. I just think it's better that way. Who's in charge of, like, organizing and booking all the guests because they're brilliant at that kind of stuff.
You know, always Parkinson used to have this assistant that used to book all his guests, and he just comes in, reads some paper, you know, three days before the thing goes right. Who's here today? Yep. Cool. It's Austin Wells. Oh, who's he? And, yeah, he used to rock up all the time and everything. So he got to talk to some fantastic people. But the idea of having all that laid on a plate is pretty cool, isn't it? So if anybody wants to volunteer, get in touch with with you. Anybody's I'll be your booking agent because, it's actually a full time job, particularly if you're sort of trying to expand it out to other shows. I mean, do you have a booking agent, Eric? Do do people book does somebody do all your booking for you?
[01:10:09] Unknown:
Yes. Me. Oh, yes. Yes. Really? I'm still here. Yes. I I I I do it. Yes. I do it all. And, I've actually found, people okay. They they sort of tell me beforehand, but I tend to get a bit lax with it with guests, and, I need to sort of leave it to the last moment. So, you know, would you like to come on this Sunday? That sort of stuff. You know? Yep.
[01:10:32] Unknown:
Well, I think you kinda get comfy and get into a mood with your crew, whoever sort of gloms on to whatever you're doing. And it it does get good, and it's almost like the more you do it, the better it gets in the way as long as you, you know, can bring something new to the party. Hope we're not boring you all to death out there. We're talking shop here, aren't we, on the show? It's ridiculous. Oh, I am a little at least. I remember back in the day and all that stuff.
[01:10:56] Unknown:
Yeah. One of the things about the Snack Shack was, you know, my idea was I've got all these wonderful Pathfinders out there in every country, you know, every zone. And as things happen, it's like, okay. I need to get them because I I need somebody from Australia or I need to get them because I need somebody from Canada. And so you're kinda watching the news cycle and trying to get somebody that's boots on the ground and then compare, you know, what the media is telling us and what they're seeing. You know? So that was the idea for the Snack Shack.
[01:11:30] Unknown:
Yep. No. It's a it's a good idea. I, I mean, do you still have many of those Pathfinders left? Do they still come into the space with you on the show, or is it? Yes. We have some. Yeah. Lots we had never heard from again.
[01:11:42] Unknown:
But, you know, a lot, you know, tried and true. It's amazing, you know, just how many,
[01:11:47] Unknown:
were still around that, you know, come on the show regularly. So That's fantastic. That's great. And I I think I'm on with you in a couple of weeks' time, aren't I? You said bigging himself up. But yeah. What date what date am I? It's a week on Saturday, isn't it that I'm with you? Is that right? I don't have my calendar in front of me, but that sounds right. It's nothing I think so. Next week. So that's midnight to 01:00 in the morning for you UK types. And don't say you won't tune in because it'll be brilliant.
[01:12:13] Unknown:
I appreciate you staying up late. I don't when I have people on from Europe and The UK, it's like, okay. I'll buy you coffee. You know?
[01:12:22] Unknown:
It's not that bad, actually. I've gone into the terrible habit. I don't know about you. I've actually gone to bed too late. I know I'm doing it all the time, but I just get engrossed in piffle and stuff. And I'm going, or I'll find I the worst thing is to find an article late in the day and I go, oh, this is amazing. This is just what I needed to read right now. And I'm plowing in. It might be a reminder of something or whatever, you know, that kind of stuff. But, yeah. Anyway, I mean, in terms of recent trends over there, the the big thing I'm thinking of with regards to you and where you live was the big flood that you had. Was that towards the back end of last year, was it? I can't quite recall, but there was a lot of flooding in your area. Up on the anniversary
[01:13:00] Unknown:
of hurricane Helene, a totally organic storm that wiped out Western North Carolina, Eastern Tennessee, and surrounding areas, and we were promptly forgotten about by everyone at the, federal, state, and local levels. And it was amazing. All our Robinhoods stood up and, you know, boots on the ground, and it was amazing, especially, you know, the Cajun Navy came up from Louisiana, and they were formed after the debacle of hurricane, Katrina. Right? And so you had all the Cajun Navy guys, and then you had the Appalachian army militia guys, and, you know, the Mockingbird media, you know, just hate it to see us out there. They called us the camo guys, so the camo pants guys. Right?
And just the amount of disdain so many of these commie carpetbaggers, as we call it, that have moved in to these mountains of Appalachia to set up their version of California, New York, and Florida and get rid of all we locals. You know, they just hated us, but yet, you know, they're we're in a complete crisis, and it was, amazing to see the amount of and the Amish. Oh, my God. The Amish came down, and they are still working. You've got crews of Amish coming down from various parts of Appalachia and, just rebuilding entire communities that were completely wiped out.
[01:14:32] Unknown:
And And, of course, we get no coverage of this positive aspect of human behavior at all over here. Do you get it much in your mainstream media over there about the work that they're doing? Or is it just a low is it just local knowledge now? Well, the the
[01:14:46] Unknown:
thing that you see are we're got we've got to push the agenda. So where is the DEI person that's doing something, and we're gonna put them on the camera. You know, but the guys that are out there risking life and limb and these, you know, swift water rescue operations and things like that, you know, they are not talked about. But, you know, all the the NGOs, the philanthropists are busy giving each other awards. And of course, Appalachian State University with their girl boss leadership that were completely useless. I'm surprised if the local, you know, white Christian community hadn't stepped up, you know, that you would have had, you know, horrible casualty results at Appalachian State University.
It was insane how incompetent all these girl bosses were when they're faced with an actual situation. And they were at the same time, they just hate it having to give up power. You know? So they're out there worried about how to get NGO money and stuff like that. You know? Like I said, you got these guys out there in a hurricane trying to get power lines back up. You know? That kind of thing is, and, you know, people that had completely lost everything that they're on a roof and trying to get to them, you know. But, it was just a very cultural experience, you know, and, so that That's one way of describing it. When you said it was an organic storm, I'm assuming you had your tongue firmly planted in your cheek. Right? Yes. Yes. It's like I have gone through many hurricanes and I am quite the weather buff. After you go through enough hurricanes, you'd learn, you know, to watch them and how they behave in the history of hurricanes and you are hit with something and you have the sinking feeling that this is not right. This, you know, there's, you know, we are in a different dimension now. This is, you know, beyond what we normally would experience with what that kind of storm should have brought to the area and that it was being amplified as it moved. And you can't argue with that. Those are hate facts, as you said in the first part of the Asia, those pesky hate facts. And you know, the, like those laws of physics on nine eleven, you know, this is how things behave. They're not going to gain power unless something's putting power in that system.
Right? Yep. And this is, yeah, thermodynamics one zero one. And, you know, they, just happened to wipe out all this, you know, last of the, you you know, Dixie, if you will, the white Christian family based communities of this part of Appalachia. And right behind them come all the black rot folks because of the lithium that's underneath the town of Asheville that so they want all that land and all these, you know, globalist, you know, agenda twenty thirty types that have these philanthropist groups that are coming in and putting the land under land covenant. And, you know, the one of my big nemesis here, they have us pinned down because our Rockefeller demon spawn neighbors are the, you know, the people behind it is Blue Ridge Conservancy. And so they're out there like a fire sale, you know, tracking down these distressed properties, trying to buy them up. And people are like, you know, we really don't wanna talk about that right now.
And so they just really showed themselves just, you know, what they're about in this area because they just wanna turn this area into a resort property for retire rich people from, you know, other places and get rid of the, you know, traditional heritage, you know, you know, the English, Scott, Irish, you know, culture that was in these mountains
[01:18:33] Unknown:
from the beginning. Yeah. This Yes. My family Which is deep and long and rich, isn't it? The Appalachian music. All of these are quite distinct. I mean, there's a there's a guy over there with a great an American guy, great I can't remember his name, but my sons are watching him a lot. And he bombs around America going into unknown towns, sometimes very well known cities, and and sort of providing a different view of them. And he's great. He's spent time with the Amish. He's spent time going through Appalachia. And it's they're better than any sort of TV journals that I ever sell or the BBC do because he's just out there hanging around with guys for a couple of weeks and produces a one, two hour video or whatever. And it's really well done. He's got a huge following. I can't remember his name, but he's done one on there. The way you're describing as well, Appalachia Frederick, is, hasn't he got echoes of the carpetbaggers during the war between the states? Isn't it sort of something similar to that? It is the exact formula. You know, people coming down with ill gotten gains
[01:19:30] Unknown:
and hutzpah and just taking over. And everybody who tries to stand up against it is destroyed. It was amazing the little, maneuvers they used here to shut me and Atma down. Just just what our, you know, our happily ever after dreams, what we wanted to do on family land that had been in her family since colonial times. And you've got this, you know, group of, you know, globalist. Yeah. There's the rootless cosmopolitans as, you know, they're called that have properties everywhere and they just move between them, and they just want this little mountain valley to be their own little gated community, basically. And they're the homeowners association and, you know, they just I'm sorry, but, you know, your business has to be shut down and we're gonna do it legally, of course.
You know, we're going to, you know, basic and now we're gonna gentrify you. So you're gonna pay five times as much property tax as you used to because now you're surrounded by our McMansions. And so we lost half the land and now we're paying, you know, three times as much property tax. And it's all because of what they've put in.
[01:20:46] Unknown:
Wow. You know? I mean, the way you're describing it is nothing new, but it's this is the latest form of it. And all the little steps that you're describing would really indicate that it's a thoroughly preplanned event, isn't it? There's nothing sort of accidental about this. This is all it's all completely preplanned. They've got a complete system of actually sort of subduing it. We've had a situation over here where our highly esteemed prime minister, has apparently been in meetings with that oath from BlackRock who, and the little lines that were coming out is that, oh, there's a lot of farmland in England that's undervalued and BlackRock is gonna buy it. Really? But, what are you doing here? We seem to have no defense mechanisms against this predatory buying.
But then is it not the case that their real point of power is through the courts? Is that how they're able to
[01:21:40] Unknown:
overwhelm local resistance, do you think? Right. And that's the thing. You know, after nine eleven, every rural town in Dixie, especially those that had universities or colleges located on on them were invaded by these highly organized, highly trained and highly funded cells. And they just move in, set up, you know, established residency, set up eight zillion NGO groups and start funneling out of town, out of state, out of country money to basically buy up everything they can get their hands on and turn it into their agenda.
And anybody, any of the locals who stand up to them, you know, is immediately destroyed. It was one of the first things they did was take control of the communication. So this guy named, Stephen Adams, whose father was Cedric Adams, and you might remember that name, Cedric Adams, cause he was the voice of the Midwest on CBS radio in the run up to the war. And he was the guy who basically sold the idea of going to war with Germany to that region, the Midwest, which was 90% German. Right? And he was such a schmoozer. Yeah, he had some real good pill pool skills. You know, he was able to do it. He was just this famous guy and his son, who's also skull and bones is Steven Adams, who basically came in to North Carolina and bought up every small struggling newspaper, family owned newspapers in this whole region and turned it into propaganda for globe o hama. You know, we had a genuine Columbia University graduate from New York that became our shadow editor who immediately banned me from being able to comment on not only, you know, the local platform, which is the Watauga Democrat, but the entire High Country Press line, every Adams publishing, you know, I am banned from commenting on.
And, you know, so this is you know, yeah, they definitely had an agenda and, you know, highly financed. And another group was the Schaeffer's. I won't say the what we call them on your show, but
[01:24:10] Unknown:
but not Oh, no. We can't. We all want to stay free men here. Yes. Free men in inverted commas. But yeah.
[01:24:17] Unknown:
The the they came in and just, you know, oh, we're going to donate all this money from our daddy's, you know, the, the mall merchant daddy. And, you know, and should they hang out with, you know, Gloria Schaeffer. Right. And it's like, oh, we want to, you know, help the people of the mountains of North Carolina, you know, so we're gonna bring change to the area. Change. Oh, that's good. So they bought up the university and bought up the healthcare system and bought up the local government. You know? And it's just you know, we're living now in little Seattle. You're in little Los Angeles, and everybody's kinda like, what just happened?
[01:24:55] Unknown:
Mhmm. So that's within the last year, really. You're somewhere only coming up to, yeah, one year. Amazing this curve that, you know, it started after 09/11, but it's just been accelerating.
[01:25:06] Unknown:
And the last ten years has just been this insane buy up of every product. COVID basically destroyed all the last of the local businesses. You know, pretty much everybody, all the local people had their like mine driven under into bankruptcy during COVID and then their brand buying up all the properties and then moving in all the out of state chains. So you don't have a local tire store anymore, but you've got Mr Tire with eight zillion locations in the Southeast. Yeah. So it's that kind of thing.
[01:25:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. There's a it's as if I mean, it's it's very it's similar sort of thing, not as intense as you've described it for your particular area, but that that pattern is definitely has been running here for donkey's years, I guess. It it really has. There's, I can't remember the name of it. It just reminds me of some sort of terrible example from nature. There's a spider, that goes into an ant's nest. I've forgotten the name of the spider. And of course there's gazillions of ants which if their systems were working properly could destroy the spider, but it sprays some kind of a chemical into the hive.
And what it does is it warps the communication system of the ant and the ants end up killing their own queen. In other words, they commit social and tribal genocide courtesy of this complete confusion that runs into their communication system. And there is a parallel really with what's taking place there with you and all across the West for want of a better phrase. In terms of all of these mechanisms that are coming to bear. I mean, in the past, Frederic, what would have defended you against that? I mean, I'm assume this is 02/2024, 02/2025, this time. If we go back a hundred years, I'm assuming this wasn't possible. Maybe it was because they didn't have enough money to do it, so the idea had not fully occurred to them. But there must have been sort of local barriers, that sort of lawful barriers that existed. Maybe they still exist, but they've just all been paid off. Is that is that kinda what's happened? Well, you had people that were committed to the idea
[01:27:21] Unknown:
of the values of the community, and this was the culture. And what you were talking in the first hour about Aleister Crowley in the left hand path and the do what I will, global, homo counterculture, echo echo echo, that we were, you know, really got slammed with in the '19 you know, and that came after the beat generation of the fifties. And you think now what the beat generation is all about was destroying the white authoritative personality in the culture. We're going to beat it down. And so this idea of, you know, raising everybody else up while putting the traditional white Christian community leadership down, you know, that's basically, you know, what we've seen. And so now it's the town of we call it New Boom is, you know, all about global homo and everything. You know, the ADL is now the moral, ethical, and intellectual authority on all matters.
[01:28:29] Unknown:
Right? You know, every bit of Well, of course, it really probably couldn't be in finer hands, really, could it, Blackbaud?
[01:28:34] Unknown:
Yeah. And it's just they and, you know, you never see in the local papers anymore the local ministers. You used to in the local papers, the, ministers of the big churches and the priests of the big churches had their own columns, you know, on the editorial page. Right? No. No. No. They don't exist anymore. So that's the big thing is everybody, if the old way of doing things is not given a voice anymore, like me. You know, being shut down, but, you know, it's like, what terms of service community standard did I break? And so you don't even get a reply.
It's just you're a wrong thinking person. You can't have that because it goes against the Solomon Ash group conformity thing. We have to have a unified message up here if we're gonna take over. You might, you know, make people start questioning things. And, you know, so it's like you said, this the spider going into the, ants and spraying it, and they all become NPCs, you know, non player characters. And, I'm now, you know, a stranger in a strange land that used to be my home. And they are weaponizing the students at this university to, you know, they bring in Antifa folks. They bring in, you know, all these people to talk about the white supremacy problem in Western North Carolina and how we have to transform away from that and become this multicultural, you know, welcoming, inclusive community, that, you know, you just do what you're told and don't complain. And that's, you know, the whole they're talking about the communist utopia.
[01:30:18] Unknown:
That's it. You know? And there's no place in the, you know, communist utopia for people like me or you or mister Eric, you know, or mister I know. Eric. Eric. You were you were you called me up this was it the message you left for me this morning? Something had happened with you recently. Where did you go and you had a bit of a moment? Sort of a bit of an impactful moment. Where was that? Yes. I went to the local town,
[01:30:41] Unknown:
and, I was quite shocked. What happened was, I was, there seems to be a great influx of immigrants all of a sudden. It seems to have happened overnight almost. And, I was walking along and there's, a kind of, there's a rub, a litter bin, like, a little grass area. And there's an immigrant, bent down, curling one out with his pants down, curling one out. And, sort of, people walking past, and I thought, well, this is, I suppose it's something they call it, cultural, multiculturalism, is it? I don't know quite what it was supposed to do. You have to respect his culture. Mhmm. Yes. You do? Yes. Yes.
And it's just getting like that. I mean, someone's gotta clear it up. And, you know, I don't know. It's it's unbelievable. And, but I actually found that as I was walking around, I was in a minority. And it seems to have happened all of a sudden. Couple of weeks ago, it's the other way around.
[01:31:45] Unknown:
So have they sort of dumped these people in in in the town? I just don't know. It's weird. Yeah. They have. Yeah. They've dumped them. Yeah. They've dumped them. How far are you from London then, Eric, miles wise? How many miles away, roughly? About 30 miles, but like that. Yeah. I mean, we're about sixty, sixty five, something like that where we are. And, yeah, it started happening here. But I think the COVID thing was part of the blind, you know, part of the cover Yeah. To get everybody distracted. And then they were doing an awful lot of administration work to start porting this. I mean, this is a big plan. To get us to twenty thirty, they've gotta just basically wreck everywhere. So the idea of this electronic prison, which some of us probably read about there was a book about it about 02/2005.
I remember reading it then thinking, I guess, you know, I didn't really take it too seriously. There were lots of other things to actually focus on, but it made sense. Now you can see they've got the technology to do it. One of the things, Frederick, we've been talking about here or that's popped up is the amount of I don't know if it's happening. I know it's happened with Patrick, who has now joined us in the room. So good evening, Patrick. Is Hi, Patrick. The amount of roadworks that have been taking place locally with them laying all sorts of cables, which are five g stuff, you know, basically I'm looking at going, control grids being put in and get your free cheap super speedy Internet. I'm going, really? I don't really need anything faster. Everything works okay. What the hell are you? Have you had any is any of that going on under the cover of this rebuilding of of Appalachia?
[01:33:10] Unknown:
Oh, definitely. And it's interesting that the only industry that did not stop during the COVID shutdowns was the five g rollouts worldwide. Every country, you know, all those unit eight two hundred alumni telecom companies were rolling out those five g towers, like clockwork. And Mhmm. You know, my concern you know, this is where I'm pushing the Overton window with my crazy conspiracy theories. But when you look at, you know, their model of how do you destroy the family system and identity, I just go back to, you know, the old, reel to reel tapes and, you know, cassettes where when you wanted to erase what was on them, you would use a thing called a degausser, which would basically use, you know, magnetic waves to scramble all the information that was, you know, stored on that tape. Right? And you think about what the brain is, is basically you are storing electrical impulses, to create memory.
You have long term long term memory, short term memory, and working memory. And so you think, okay. If you're dealing with the synagogue of Satan, they're completely diabolical and evil, you know, how would be the best way to accomplish that? And it's like, what if they put in all these towers that at these power levels, these are the safety power levels, this is where it will work as designed to for your five g devices. But if it's also capable of going up to this power level, you know, is there a magic frequency that at this power level, at this frequency, it will basically degauss a human brain.
Right? And so that is one of my concerns. It's like especially when I hear about all these secret tunnels, it's like, okay. Do they have secret tunnels? Because they know that when the moment comes, when everybody's gonna get zapped, you know, they need to be outside of that EMF wave. Right? And so you're just going through possible scenarios of, is this possible? Is this feasible? What are the probabilities that they would do something like that? And I go back to HG Wells story of things to come and, you know, one of the things is the wandering sickness that came from the plague or in the great war, right?
And everybody would forget who they are. And one of the things for people not familiar with my work is when I found out I was no longer gonna be employed in my telecon telecommunication industry anymore, I went into eldacares specializing in dementia and Alzheimer's patients. Right? And to see just how widespread in The United States Alzheimer's, dementia, and also, autism are population wise. And, yeah, that is the perfect fourth generation warfare tactic of you don't kill your enemy, you wound them so everybody else has to spend all their resource taking care of them. And if you've ever taken care of a, you know, autism person or an, Alzheimer's, dementia Mhmm. You it's constant. You know, you have to be with them all the time. It's like a kindergarten student. You know, you can't turn your back on them for a second.
[01:36:35] Unknown:
And so And that's something you have personal experience of, isn't it, in your Right. Other part. Yeah. You know about that really well. Yep. So,
[01:36:44] Unknown:
I think, you know, one of my biggest heartbreaks in my life was the first time I walked in to, see my mother, and she no longer, knew who I was. And, you know, that was, because they kept giving her all the jabs and everything and all the flu shots and this, that, and the other. And to see my mother, this woman, you know, brilliant lady, you know, to just fade away and not even remember who I was anymore. You know, it's like that. You know, not even your mother would know who you are. And then, so when you deal with these people and just watch them fade and nothing you can do can really bring them back, that is the worst feeling in the world.
[01:37:27] Unknown:
I know. I know it. Yes, sir. Personally as well. I know exactly what you're talking about. Yeah. It is. I I mean, there's a phrase let's talk about this thing that you've talked about for many years, fourth generation warfare. Yeah? You've talked about this. In simple terms, what do you mean by that? I mean, I know what you mean. But for the listeners here that have not heard you maybe talk about that before, what what is it that you're addressing with that with that phrase?
[01:37:53] Unknown:
Warfare. Yeah. People you know, a lot of people still think that, oh, when you go to war, everybody has uniforms and your idea is to kill the guy in the other uniform than your uniform. Right? And you have things called battle lines and that's how it works. Right? And it's like we've moved into this asymmetric type of warfare where you no longer have battle lines, you have battle cells, and they basically infiltrate, start subverting, start taking over all the power systems in an area while working to undermine the existing power systems. You know, it's like, a I saw Alinsky always said, the first step in community organizing is community disorganizing.
You tear down the system that was there, all the leadership that was there, so you can replace it with your new leadership model. And this is all done legally. So if you, the Kafka trap of this is when you realize what they're doing and you go into the natural rage, then they have you arrested because you're threatening them. You are a hater. You are a racist. This is a hate crime. I'm a philanthropist doing good things to Tikkun Olam, your commune our community.
[01:39:14] Unknown:
Right? Yeah. We're gonna make you all better for you. Why are you resisting all this? You're a troublemaker.
[01:39:20] Unknown:
Best. And it's we just have to have a now an inclusive community. We're not gonna have any more white communities that's racist and old fashioned. It's all bound to Amalek must be blotted out. That's the game rule. They got three mitzvahs about it. And Mhmm. This is, you know, where we're going is they, you know, want the existing system wiped out, and the Calerici plan was, you know, how to do it. And so Calerici plan to me was one of the most diabolical of all those diabolical communist plans that they came up with in the, you know, bloody, you know, red revolution to the Holodomor to the Armenian genocide. And he's just like, yeah. There is Sun Tzu on steroids here, and that's, you know, fourth generation warfare is just, you know, fighting with NGOs and dirty money and communications. It's information warfare and organizing little cells of activists. And that's the thing I've really watched here since I've been back around Appalachian State, that they use these students at this, school to be just a constant source of useful idiots, you know, little foot soldiers, to carry out all their agendas, you know. And it's just,
[01:40:35] Unknown:
sad to see. It's terrifying to see. It's like, wow. This is It is. It's unnerving. I think this is isn't this this is definitely one of the the things that's causing the ongoing demoralization and glumness, as you would call it everywhere, that people don't fully detect. Of course, they're not gonna be informed about it in the mainstream press. And you also mentioned just the rules for radicals. That was one of Hillary Clinton's top books, wasn't it? Top reading. Her mentor. Yes. She did her thesis on our,
[01:41:05] Unknown:
Solinski. On Chicago?
[01:41:08] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Out of Chicago. Mhmm. Absolutely. So for listeners that are not familiar with it, you can probably get it as a PDF. It's called Rules for Radicals. When did it come out? Was it the sixties that that came in? '72. Comes to mind, I'll look it up properly. '72, I think it was. '72. Okay. Yeah. So the author, if that's the right word descriptor to use, but I'm being decent, Saul Alinsky, a l I n s k y, rules for radicals. If you don't have a copy, it's heavy. It's a heavy thing. Who did you dedicate it to? Who did you dedicate it to? There's a dedication. Are you asking me me a quiz or do you know the answer? I can tell you. You don't know the answer. I know the answer. I know the answer. Yeah. But He dedicated to, to Lucifer. I think it was, wasn't it? The the first great radical, he said. Yes. So there you go, everybody. If you don't think it's satanic, Saul Alinsky tells you that it is. Thanks, Saul.
[01:42:01] Unknown:
Glad you're dead. Quote here. You wanna hear the full quote?
[01:42:05] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:42:06] Unknown:
Run it. Okay. So this is from the original edition in '72, and it says oh, I just lost it again. I had it right in front of me though. Okay. Lest we forget at least an over the shoulder acknowledgment to the very first radical from all our legends, mythology, and history, and who is to know where mythology leaves off and history begins or which is which, the first radical known to man who rebelled against the establishment and did it so effectively he at least won his own kingdom, Lucifer. End quote.
[01:42:44] Unknown:
Yep. Yep. That was, Milton Paradise Lost. He'd rather rather reign in hell than serve in heaven.
[01:42:52] Unknown:
Which what a charming gentleman. I don't think.
[01:42:57] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, just for those of you that think we can all get on and it's all gonna work out together, just make sure you put that in your pipe and smoke it every now and again because it ain't happening. Okay? And it ain't us that started it. So it's you have to understand the mindset. Mind seems to be giving them a bit more credit than I would like, but you get you get it. They have a mindset, and that's one of those sentences and statements that really sums it up. Absolutely. It really does. Lovely book. A lovely book. And yet it's hard to imagine. All your children at Christmas. Here you are. Come on, Tommy. Here you are, Sally. There you go. Read that for Christmas. No. It's not Winnie the Pooh. It's Rules for Radicals by Saul Alinsky.
Go on. You'll learn a thing or two. What's the first rule of community organizing?
[01:43:43] Unknown:
Community disorganizing. Yes.
[01:43:47] Unknown:
It's just riddled with all that language that makes people like us puke. I hate it. This this new language, you know, we've talked about this about creating new words. They create these new words and they intentionally, because they're designed for this, befuddle the mind. And when you're talking about this fourth generation stuff, it's everywhere from like tooth. I just look at every sort of small thing that bugs me and everybody will have these things and you go, these things are actually hindering our ability to be fully expressive and to sort of use our lives to the full extent because we're basically dealing with a whole host permanently of repeatable or new versions of them bogus problems. They're all artificial just like your weather event was artificial, I'm afraid. You know, it's bogus. It's not a genuine thing, and we've got all sorts of I I mean, a lot of people, of course, are understandably concerned about the weather when they look at chemtrails and everybody's aware of that, which are a genuine thing. And all of but that is the amount of interference in every single sphere is as if the very technologies that we've created have been hijacked by the administrative class, which of course is depraved, and are being used to wipe us out, which is the fourth generation warfare, this soft kill as I call it. It's much more devastating, you know, than armed combatants even though that's hellish as well. But we understand that I suppose by historical precedent, but this one is why it's this, you know, this war that's taking place in our minds and our ability to perceive what's going on. And then even when you've done that, you're left with, okay, how do we combat this when most of the people I live with can't see it? It's very difficult.
[01:45:28] Unknown:
It really is. It's very difficult. And, you know, you Do you have any answers, Frederic? I've got are we are there any good American answers for this? Well, you know, just analyze the problem, and it's like this came out of the Frankfurt School, and it was the psychological warfare that was the follow-up to Pavlov's work on inducing neuroses in dogs to shut them down. That was what Hal was. And so they couldn't figure out why, you know, the revolution didn't take over everywhere, so they formed the Frankfurt School. And it was like, we have to tear down the authoritative personality, and we'll do that by shutting down their reasoning skills by constantly giving conflicting information. And so, what is it? Adam Curtis, his follow-up to the Century of the Self documentaries about the Frankfurt School and Edward Bernays and Freud, being imposed on marketing. His follow-up was about this concept of oh, dear ism, where everybody is defeated and sees what happened is happening, but they've developed learned helplessness and feel they can't do anything about it. So they just say, oh, dear.
And that's a hard what we're up against is people that have been shut down thinking that they can't be disposed. They're too big. They're too strong. And, you know, the so that learned helplessness kicks in.
[01:47:02] Unknown:
That learned helplessness has just sparked something off in my head as well because there's this wonderful word, ebullia, which is really you know, it kind of describes what it is. And and I'm sure, Freddie, you must be familiar with I've mentioned it here a few months back, the Revelation of the Method essay by Michael Hoffman. You're familiar with that? Yes. If you're not yeah. Because that sums up very much this sort of, you know, destruction of will, the destruction of will. And so if we're looking out there and seeing people in this condition, this is part of that that that process that's been basically that we've been undergoing. And I'm just I'm just looking for it actually. Oh yeah, I've read this before but it's so good. I want to read it again really. It's just it's pretty brief but it really works. He says, it's risky to reveal to the people what has been done to them by the gangster class that lords it over them. Patently, in in the wake of the revelation, the risk is one of reprisal, retribution, and rage by the people. That's you lot everybody, okay? So rage is good. But where there is little or none of that, then the cryptocurrency has tripled its hold on the minds and hearts of Americans.
It has strongly hinted about the mass murder it committed on September 11 and yet there are few significant repercussions. This non reaction tends to demonstrate that the people of The US accept at the subliminal level of their consciousness, and we've got similar examples over here in The UK, that their own leaders are mass murderers of their fellow citizens and mostly what they do in return is shake it off and head to the mall. And then he illustrates it with this little story, this is just under a minute I think for me to read this. He says this, it's as if, and I love this story, it's as if a bank robber were to stand in the town square and declare I robbed your bank. He then provides the citizens of the town with the phone number of the sheriff's office and makes himself available for arrest. Rather than call the sheriff, the people are shocked, awed, confused, and deranged by the audacity of the robber.
The next day dawns and finds the bank robber now an official at the bank. The people recall something peculiar and vaguely sinister about him. An eccentric school teacher along with the village idiot and the town drunk proclaimed the new bank official to be the crook who robbed the bank the previous day. The citizens aren't sure and the bank robber himself flatly declares that it was a dark skinned foreigner with a large mustache who robbed the bank. The robber makes no reference whatsoever to his previous day's confession and takes up his official duties at the bank with aplomb. Gradually, as the citizens patronize the bank as usual and the robber continues as an official of the bank and warns the citizens that if they do not support him, the bank will be robbed again.
The citizens of the town become slightly deranged, exhibiting characteristics of paralytic apathy, amnesia, and the bullia, and suffering from mysterious terrors, learned helplessness, trained. And I think this is key. This is definitely part of the ongoing psychological processing that we're all at the receiving end of, but being conscious of it helps. So at least, you know, we're partly conscious of it. I'd like to make a little comment because you you were talking earlier about rights, Paul, and how everybody's obsessed with them.
[01:50:17] Unknown:
I've been I've been watching there's a video by Peter Helland on YouTube called, one year honeymoon
[01:50:25] Unknown:
where Oh, yeah. I saw the link. I've not got around to watching it. It's up here on my tabs. I've just not had time today, but I've got it there. Yeah. It goes in it goes into,
[01:50:33] Unknown:
Deuteronomy and talking about how a husband should have a one year honeymoon where he doesn't go to work, he stays at home and pleases his wife, and and it's mandated in scripture in Deuteronomy. And there's also he he goes into how the problem in America started with in in Deuteronomy, I think it's chapter 22, it it talks about how the firstborn son is to inherit a double portion of anything from the father, and it's regarded as an inalienable right. There are so few inalienable rights in the bible itself that that's one of them. And one of the first things in America that Thomas Jefferson did in Virginia was take away what's called primogeniture, which is the right of the first born son to inherit the father's wealth and land.
And that's been a cause for our downfall because we don't have that inherited wealth passing on to the family, and the family breaks up after the father dies, and then we all go our separate ways, and that's why we have the democracy that we have. We have these broken families that can't sustain themselves, so they end up going out and work, all the women go out and work. And that's why we don't, we have to bring in, you know, that's why the reasoning is, oh well, you guys can't provide for yourself, so we're gonna bring in foreign workers or whatever it happens to be. And there's no passing on of of the heredity of the genes of of, you know, that's that's the buzzword right now, you know, like, good genes.
[01:52:14] Unknown:
But, it's, Yeah. Sydney Sweeney's got a lot of answer for.
[01:52:18] Unknown:
Prima Geniture. Look that up.
[01:52:21] Unknown:
Well, bring it back. Bring it back. I mean, I don't like the use of the word rights, but I I I accept the point. It's absolutely sound that we do those things. The old things work in my view even if you haven't thought them through simply because they were learned over thousands of years without the invasion of mass media to pervert people's thinking. It's only in this so called modern age, you know, since the mass bombardment of the mind courtesy of electronic media that all these things have been able to be twisted if in in real terms so rapidly, you know, say over the last hundred years, the destruction of family, voting rights, my rights, this that and the other, I'm offended, all this other wet stuff that's come in is literally it's not part of the whoop and woof of the way we operate. It's not in our bones to be like that. We don't care for it. It's not our way. We have a different way.
And of course it's that way harnessed really to the best laws from that Christendom has provided that the other side really don't like. I think detestation is probably the word that they would use to describe it because you know all the evidence around us demonstrates this all the time. It really does. Absolutely.
[01:53:30] Unknown:
What is the way forward, though? That's the thing. How are we gonna go forward? Because this is a war where we don't quite know our enemy. It's not clear cut, and it's all confusing all the time, and we're they're just playing games with our minds all the time.
[01:53:46] Unknown:
So, any ideas? What's what's the Well, I just I just think of Frederick's situation over in North Carolina, you know, the fact the father passes away and then leaves the property to the family. Will the family then disperse it and it becomes nothing? You know, like, all of that culture, all of that heritage and the work that went into the farms.
[01:54:05] Unknown:
Yeah. I've got something happening like that right in my own space at the moment, which is of of I'm having a tea time a dark tea time of the soul, as we would say, really figuring it out what's the what's the best. And it seemed, you know, the thing about things staying in family lines is a good thing, but not from their point of view because it means you're far less malleable. You know, it's this thing about a low deal title in the land in your house, you have to every man and family has to have a place that they can stand unviolated. But when you look at it, we've literally all the defense mechanisms that had built up over a long period of time have been quietly stripped away all in the name of progress. We're all gonna get on and love one another. And if you just actually care more for other people than your own family, it's all gonna work out great. I don't think so.
I don't think so. I mean, the evidence is not I mean, I've I've banged on about it here repeatedly and will continue to do so. The family is literally the pinnacle of civilized life. There's nothing greater. There's no institution in human affairs that's greater or better, full of more value and challenges, but right challenges, proper ones, than the family. It's just it's phenomenal. But, of course, you just take it for granted, but people are not gonna be able to do that soon the way we're being Rent a Sunday. But Frederick, you have to leave in about five or six minutes because I know you've got to go down to the pub. Doing this so much. I hate that I'm gonna have to leave, but I've been No. It's okay. I'll be with you in a couple of weeks, and you're more than welcome back. We'll rope you in in a month or so's time. It'd be lovely to have you back. But I just wondered if you had some sort of wrapping up thoughts or things that you wanted to share with us that were still on your mind that you'd not had a chance to say yet. Well, yeah, you were spot on, and I love what,
[01:55:41] Unknown:
Patrick had to say about the generational wealth. And this is when you saw the law change to all the siblings have an equal share, and suddenly, you have a independent farm, family owned farm that had been there for hundreds of years, and all that multigenerational blood, sweat, and tears that went into create it. And then suddenly, you have a generation that thinks that they're entitled to something from the family even though they left home at 17 or whatever, never came back. And suddenly, when the parents die, they're there saying, I demand my rightful share even if it means that the family farm can no longer function as an independent unit anymore. And that's what happened to us. You know, I had, my family had a, you know, 100 acre independent farm in Wilkes County, and Optimus Farm had a 50 acre independent farm up here in this mountain valley.
And after all the property deals, etcetera, of settlement after the parents died, You know, basically, we have two pieces of landlocked property that we can't really do anything with. But you've got BlackRock and all these other foreign land grab companies offering us big bucks every week to sell our land. And, yeah, that's the situation we're in.
[01:57:09] Unknown:
Yep. It's not good. Sorry, everybody, for the little there was a technical problem here for about fifteen seconds. I'm sorry about that. There was something actually, caused a problem here, but I caught most of that, Frederick. I'm sorry about that. But, yeah, like I mentioned earlier, BlackRock talking to queer stoma about buying up our farmland, you know, I'm going, well, you better ask me. But, of course, at the moment, under the terms of their private club, which we are roped into courtesy of birth certificates, they don't have to do that. They just pretend that they do so that we are always meant to feel that we're part of democracy and freedom and all that other guff.
We had a guest on here a couple of weeks ago, Hannah, and I'm going over to a presentation she's making in London on Monday evening. I've managed to get my life organized, and it's about status and about I see that as a fundamental plank at the moment. We'll see what I think about it next week on the show because I'll come back with a report on that. I'm really looking forward to it, about getting you out of their system completely to remove their jurisdiction. But we have to we've just got to fight on every single place that we see and spot. This is why there's so much to do. So there's lots of work for people to do. We're not short of employment opportunities around here. The wages aren't too good. I have to tell you that.
But, you know, what the the reward is that you can actually live your life as god intended and as you probably intend as well, which is probably a little bit more important than just getting paid. Although I know how powerful that is and so do they. That's how they've managed to control people so well. So yeah.
[01:58:42] Unknown:
Well, that's part of the whole merry men thing is realizing that you are in a full spectrum warfare situation that whether you like it or not, you're at war and getting your head in the game to start defending yourself for one and an existential war surviving is winning and start fighting back. You know, that's the thing of using your skills and what do you have, to get your head in the game to, you know, identify who's destroying your way of life and, you know, stopping it and, you know, how to, you know, re vigorous the family units and the idea of private property because they're moving from a free will society to a post free will society where every aspect of your life will be controlled by a computer and you will have no say in the matter and we're struggling for independence and that's why we're such a threat to the system because they realize we can never be enslaved. We will never be the worshipful slaves they want us to be. So, therefore, there's only thing to do is to put us down as quickly as possible. And I think that's what we're leading up to in the great reset of twenty thirty, is just shut off the supply lines and watch everybody fighting, you know, for resource and then come in with the solution of, you know, their new world order. You know, that's the worst case scenario.
[02:00:07] Unknown:
Yeah. We're full of cheery good news for you tonight, but we are it also just happens to be the truth or at least is the is the least error strewn communications you're likely to find. I mean, that's generally my thing. Hopefully, we're less wrong tomorrow than we were today, but I think we're we're pretty much over the target. Frederick, it's been fantastic having you here. We're just coming up to the end of our time slot on WBN, so I'm verbally gonna say goodbye to you on WBN. Thanks very much for being with us for the past couple of hours. We'll be here again, next week on WBN at 3PM eastern, 8PM in The UK. We're carrying on the show on Rumble and YouTube, and if you want links to that, go to paulenglishlive.com and join us in the chat rooms there or listen on Radio Soapbox and a few other outlets as well.
But Frederick, I look forward to being with you on Saturday. It's been great having you, and we wanna have you back again in a few weeks' time. We've gotta do that because it's been great tonight. Really enjoyed it. I really enjoyed this. Seems like old times. I'm looking forward to our next show together. So y'all have a good day. It's been too long since we spoke, and I've I it's been, in a way, so rewarding to get back and just hear you talk again. And the fourth generation warfare stuff is absolutely what's going down, and we've got to keep on communicating our little socks off and keep finding ways to deal with it. So have a cracking week, and I look forward to being with you in about a week and a half's time. So that'll be brilliant. Yeah. And Frederick, I I wanna go on your show again. So
[02:01:27] Unknown:
give me give me a holler. Oh, definitely. We'll have you on. Alright. I'll I'll jump to my eight of my booking girl. Alright. Yes.
[02:01:35] Unknown:
Have your people get a hold of my people. Right.
[02:01:38] Unknown:
Okay. Cheers.
[02:01:42] Unknown:
Cheers, Frederic. I'm gonna I'm gonna kick you out the studio now. I'm I'm gonna play the thuggish role because we're gonna bring Eli James in for the second hour or for the third hour, I should say. Sign off a cliff as you throw me out of there? Yeah. Do if you can. If I have a sound effect, I'd do it. A Warner Brothers thing. We need some of the coyote, you know, going over the cliff or something like that. But no, brilliant stuff. I look forward I'll I'll be in touch during next week. I look forward to hooking up on your show and returning the favors, so that will be great. Brilliant. Thanks. Bye. Thanks, Frederick. Thank you very much. Bye for now.
Okay. Frederick Blackburn, everybody. What was I gonna do now? Oh, yeah. We got a little song to play. Eli James wanted me to play that. He can hear this. He's in the studio. I've just got him it sounds awfully sophisticated. I think we are this is By the Beautiful Sea. I think it's a seaside song. It's only a couple of minutes long. Eric, you might well know this as well. I think you might well know it. Yeah. What important? Absolutely. Yeah. Are you? It's a seaside song because as you all know, I live by seaside and we have seagulls. No seagull backdrop tonight. They've all gone to bed by this time. But we're gonna play By the Beautiful Sea, and then after this, Eli James will be with us for hour three. You don't have to go underwater to find music in the ocean.
[02:02:52] Unknown:
You just have to go to the beach.
[02:02:59] Unknown:
By the sea. By the sea. By the sea. By the beautiful sea. You and me. You and me. Oh, how happy we'll be.
[02:03:07] Unknown:
When each wave comes a rollin' in. We will duck or swim. And we'll float it full around the water.
[02:03:15] Unknown:
Over and under. And then up for air. Pa is rich. Ma is rich. So now what do we care? Weather, so let's go to that beautiful sea. Follow along, say you're with me. Anything that Joe would suggest to her, Jane would always think it was best for her. So he'd get his Ford. He'd holler all aboard gee, I wanna be. By the sea. By the sea. By the sea. By the beautiful sea. You and me. You and me. Oh, how happy we'll be.
[02:04:09] Unknown:
When each wave comes a rolling
[02:04:12] Unknown:
in. We will duck or swim.
[02:04:14] Unknown:
And we'll float and fool around the water. Over and under. And then up for air. Pie is rich. Pie
[02:04:38] Unknown:
By the beautiful sea, everybody. Don't say we don't pay play quirky tunes here. Anyway, Eli, that was especially for you. I hope it I hope it made you feel by the seaside. I am by the seaside, but welcome to the show. How are you?
[02:04:52] Unknown:
Have you dipped your toes into the water yet?
[02:04:56] Unknown:
Yeah. I have this year. Yeah. It's good. The the water got very well, not literally tonight, but, the water has been quite warm over the past few weeks. It's been a bit cool the last day, but I'm told a big blast of sunshine is on its way back. And, we find in the summer here, we've got a very sort of, it's a very, a long draw on the beach. The tide comes in over a long distance. It's it's not a sort of rapid tide. So the water will sit there for weeks on end with the sun beating down, and there are certain years, although I've not been in had it this year, where the the water in there is literally like warm bath water. It's quite exciting to England, actually. We don't normally get things like that. It's usually icy. Yeah. Yeah. I understand where you are. It's very hot. Circle.
[02:05:40] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. 93 degrees. Yeah. And then and sweaty. It's sweaty.
[02:05:47] Unknown:
Yeah. But So you're you're our sweaty guest. You're today's sweaty guest, aren't you? So it's not the Arctic Circle that you're from. You're from the Arkansas Circle, aren't you? Yeah. Yes. Arkansas. Arkansas.
[02:05:59] Unknown:
They, they had very politically incorrect lyrics. It said, whatever Joe would suggest, Jane would wanna do it. That was before feminism. Bad.
[02:06:11] Unknown:
Yeah. That's bad.
[02:06:12] Unknown:
Horribly incorrect. Horribly. Okay. But that's the way songs used to be. Okay? So those are the good old days. We wanna bring those good old days back.
[02:06:23] Unknown:
We do. Well Oh. We tend to think, mistakenly probably, that during these three hours, we're in the space where we're doing our best to evoke some of the good old days in this particular way. And I think when they used to talk about the good old days maybe thirty, forty years ago, it was not necessarily needed, but I think now it's absolutely vital that we remind ourselves because they really were better. Yeah. Absolutely. By the way,
[02:06:47] Unknown:
yeah, I caught the last few minutes of your discussion, and I've been doing a show about, Richard the Lionheart. And when he came back from the crusades, he found the, kingdom was all in disarray. But what what was what's going on in Britain and virtually every country on the face of the earth is that the bankers would, move in and get all the people in debt, and, they would get angry and the lords would get angry because the king would always take a cut of what they because they also had the right to tax collect. Right? So the king would always get a cut of the tax collection. However, when he came back, they had a special, a special banquet, and the money lenders were not invited.
Right? The money lenders, but they came anyway. They came anyway with money to bribe King Richard to to get him to, you know, cooperate with them. Right? And so, what what happened was the crowd got angry figuring, these money lenders have no right to be here. They were actually they were actually asked not to come. They came anyway, and so the the rioters beat a few of them to death. Alright? And so Richard de Lionheart got the blame for that, but it was just one of those things. Right? Where where it's just Mhmm. Too many money lenders in one place with angry angry villagers. They're taking vengeance upon them. And so what what happened was the, some of the villagers set set fire to the house of records.
And so now the bankers, Nora Richard, had any records of how to collect what the money lenders owed to him. Right? Because he always took a cut of their their profits. So so he had a special he that's where the exchequer was created. The exchequer to make sure you always have records of how much people borrow, how much they owed, and what what all the dollars and figures and cents are. Okay? So the the the solution to all this is just burn the house down.
[02:08:53] Unknown:
If they don't have I like that solution. I I like that solution. We were talking there's there's a brand of matches over here called Swan Vesters, and we were talking about these just the other day, weren't we, Eric? About the power of the Swan Vesters. Yeah. Yeah. We were. That's right. Yes. During the peasant's revolt, Eli, 1381, of course, I was I was only a young lad at the time. They used to when they kicked off, and we can't do it like that now for what it's not that sort of a fight, although it is. Ultimately, it's still that kind of a fight. They used to go when they went to these houses to to destroy all the contracts, which basically said, I own these peasants. That was basically the gist of it. Right. They used to they used to go to a room, which has got a lovely name. It's called the Muniments Room. The Muniments Room.
Okay. And, I really quite, yeah, it's not a word that's used too much these days. May maybe it is in some professions. I don't know. But it's a place where all the records, all the sheets of paper, the signatures, and the wax seals, and the binding stuff, and all that kind of stuff was all kept just in line with what you've been talking about. And so they would, they'd go in there and just destroy all the papers, basically, removing the records. Yep. Yep. Yeah. And it yeah. Yeah. And if we look
[02:10:13] Unknown:
Sorry. Yeah. All the birth certificates. Get rid of them. We don't need those birth certificates.
[02:10:18] Unknown:
No. We don't. They do.
[02:10:20] Unknown:
Yeah. They do. We don't. Right?
[02:10:23] Unknown:
Well, that's what I what I'm going to on Monday, Eli, is I'm hoping pretty much is gonna be about birth certificates to some degree. I'll give you the the the description of the president. This is by Hannah, who was on about a week and a half ago. It's a talk about the land court and declaration of foreign status outside The UK political union. And one of the things that we were discussing is that The UK does not exist. It's a political union. There's no land called The United Kingdom. Nobody lives on The United Kingdom.
I suppose you could argue that we live in the political system that's got the label The United Kingdom. Maybe they would argue that. But we have to get out of the system at the root start of it, which appears to be pretty much the birth certificate. This seems to be the the sort of receipt document that they generate when you arrive. And from that point on, even though you don't know it, you've inadvertently been roped into the rules of their private club, which is so big and extensive that everybody understandably thinks that that is the system that we're supposed to be living under and that you are a troublemaker if you disrupt the rules of the club and therefore you need to be dealt with. And of course because everybody in the club thinks that, not knowing what their true status is, they end up becoming the very enforcement agent against the process that would actually release them back into freedom. I include myself in that. You know? We've done it through ignorance and stupidity. Yeah. Let me give you a
[02:11:53] Unknown:
hypothetical. Once they get rid of all the white people and there's only Muslims and blacks left, who are they going to steal from to keep their racket going?
[02:12:03] Unknown:
I don't I yeah. I mean, it's a good one. But I think that that they probably view the technological advances as being so great, which they are, that they won't need people to do that. I mean, have you seen this thing with Elon Musk? He's come out with, the price of his robots. They're gonna be under $11,000 I saw the other you know these human robots that walk around and do everything? Always. What are they called? Yeah. Brian or something. I don't know what they're called. Maybe they're gonna, you know, or maybe they'll name them all Kier. They'll name them Kier Borg or something because he's a bit of a robot. Yeah. So $11,000, which is what, about 9,000 pounds, you can get your own robot. He's saying, oh, I think households will have two, and they'll do all your work for you and everything. But, of course, this is the replacement of you. They won't need, you know, in their economic system. They don't need us. We're now now an expense. We're a cost. We've got to be fed now as we cause trouble and everything.
Yeah. In their world. Okay. Do
[02:13:01] Unknown:
do these robots come with birth certificates?
[02:13:05] Unknown:
Maybe well, they probably have an origination date. That I guess that's the similar thing. Made in a factory, you know, in Taiwan on the tenth of the tenth of the whatever.
[02:13:14] Unknown:
Something like that. Yeah. They must do. They must do. Yeah. They must be able to tax the income of that robot. Right? They must. So maybe that's how they keep the system going.
[02:13:24] Unknown:
I mean, I just I think the whole somebody was, called into Roger Sales' show today. I was catching a bit of it as I was taking my afternoon walk, talking about this interview. And I mentioned it last week that doctor Richard Verner has done recently with, Tucker Carlson. I haven't watched the whole thing, basically, because I'm a cocky booger, and I know that I know it all. But, I I might get around to it because I like to hear Werner speak. He's he's excellent, and he's a good authority. He's a guy that is a proper sort of economist who's a renegade one, effectively, because he's telling the truth about stuff. But one of the thoughts that came up, and and I've is and I've mentioned this with regards to so called economic cycles. There's no point studying. It's a complete waste of time. The whole space is totally artificial.
It is literally like an AI simulation as it is because I remember and, Eric, you'd remember this. Every time the government used to spend money, there was a massive sort of uproar about the amount of borrowing that they were doing and how we got, like a genuine one, at least emotionally. Let's put it this way. There was emotional conviction behind the critics of it. Now people just say that they this government and the previous ones really run back over the last ten, fifteen, twenty years. They just go, we're gonna spend a 100,000,000 on this, we're gonna spend a 100,000,000 on that, and we owe £3,000,000,000,000. The whole thing is complete artificial hogwash. It doesn't mean anything. It doesn't mean anything at all. Although, there is an idea there's a guy I'm trying to chase up, actually I haven't chased him very hard, who has said an English guy over here who's been part of the financial service industry, and I've, I've forgotten his name for now, but I've got the link somewhere, who's saying, you know you know this argument, Eli? I mean, what's America in what's your what's the American debt now heading up north of $35,000,000,000,000?
Is it something hilarious? Yeah. And over here, I think it's about three it's what is it here, Eric? £3,000,000,000,000 or something?
[02:15:16] Unknown:
Stupid I don't know. It's it's it's it's a hell of a lot of money. I know that. Well, it is if you're really
[02:15:22] Unknown:
behind. Yeah. Sorry. We gotta spend, spend, spend.
[02:15:28] Unknown:
We gotta spend, but he Seabiscuit. Seabiscuit. Running to the ocean to drown.
[02:15:35] Unknown:
Sea Biscuit is a famous horse, everybody. Those of you who are not American and don't know about it. Although the film's great. If you wanna see a good film, Sea Biscuit's a really good it's about this beat up little old horse that beats this thoroughbred. It's a genuine story as well. It really is a typical American story and it's tops. It's a fantastic story. It's great. Yeah. But, yeah. Here's you know that question, Eli? You will have heard it. Hey, and I've I've said this as well. I'm I'm not the only one. Loads of people have said it. Hey. If if all the countries of the world are in debt, and they are, of course, by central bank design, which is a private cartel.
Okay? If all the governments in the world are in debt, who are they in debt to? Right? Mhmm. Which is a good question. So the answer would be, well, the banks, but that's his answer is much more intriguing and better. He said, no. The the the banks the all the countries are in debt to you, the people. It's our purchasing power that they've been drumming up and spending. So given that we would be able to administratively ho ho ho. Forgive me for a flight of naive fancy. Sorry about this. Given that one day we were invited along and said, could you just send some representative down to the Bank of England? We just need to cancel everybody's debts. We just want to sort it out and make the world a better place. Isn't that a nice picture? Yeah. I'll wake up in a minute. Good morning. Right. Then we could just write it all off because it doesn't it's not really a tangible real thing. It's a control mechanism. And this is why when people say, well, they're getting all the money. That's not what they're they don't need any more money. They didn't need any more money a long, long time ago.
What they're really after, of course, is is total control and the technologies that have come along particularly in the last thirty years. Obviously, they've seen that they can get it. Yeah. Okay. Well, that reminds me, supposedly, your country
[02:17:26] Unknown:
is going digital with CBGC sometime this October?
[02:17:30] Unknown:
Northern Ireland is, I think. Is that right, Eric? Have you heard anything more about that? Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland will be. Yes. That's right. I've heard that. Yes. Okay. I'm backing that up. So that way,
[02:17:40] Unknown:
all all of their monetary transactions will be totally invisible. Nobody would be knowing how much money was created, how much was spent, and what for. It'll be totally not that it's it's transparent now. It's supposed to be transparent, but it isn't. There's nobody really how can you keep track of 8, what, $16,000,000,000,000? Pounds?
[02:18:04] Unknown:
Okay. Yeah. Well, you can. With a computer system, you can. But I I've mentioned you know, when I remember I had this conversation back in 1995 at Liverpool Street Station. I had many at Liverpool Street Station in the mid nineties with this chap that was basically bending my brain out of my bottom telling me that everything was a complete you know, I came to the conclusion very quick after about two years that this is completely pointless, me participating in this thing called the economy because it doesn't exist. It's a complete nonsense. The whole game Yeah. Is just a complete it's a sick game. He said, and this is true and everybody would recognize this, what they're seeking to do is to get rid of cash because they can't track it.
And let's face it, all these things oh, it's so convenient to do this. No. I'll tell you what's really convenient is to have a big wodge of notes in your pocket. You go buy some petrol and you give him some notes. Nobody talks about anything, and you can get on and live your life. That is you know, that was that was flawed massively as well, but less flawed. And, of course, the arguments for their for the efficiency, are the efficiency goes to them. It's not coming to us. We're not gonna get anything out of it apart from a reduced quality of life, but it's gonna you're gonna be very safe. You know? Even that's a lie. Even that's a lie. There's no way they're gonna get rid of cash because you need cash to do money laundering.
[02:19:19] Unknown:
Okay? Yeah. You can't have a record. You can buy stuff with cash and have no record of it. You remember the case of Jussie Smollett here in Chicago where where he hired two black guys to pretend to beat him up, and, I guess he got a Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. The fake beating up. I I do. There you go. Yeah. Yeah. He he wasn't satisfied with his lack of stardom, so he hide these two black guys from, Nigeria or somewhere to beat him up and make it look good. Right? You gotta always have to rough him up a little bit. Right? But he made a big mistake. He paid for them with a check.
[02:20:02] Unknown:
Weren't they their whole they they were his coworkers too at some point too. No. No. No. They they were, bodybuilders. They came to the Chicago Bodybuilding Club every so often. But Right. And they worked with him, though. They worked with him as extras on the show he was doing.
[02:20:18] Unknown:
Right. Right. And then after the whole the job was done, he wrote him a check. Well, that's easily traceable, isn't it? I think so.
[02:20:29] Unknown:
I think so. Now that we're in a slightly jocular mode, somebody sent this clip into the Telegram group. This is I don't know who this comedian is. He's got a very he's either Swedish or he's some Scandinavian or Dutch fella. Listen to this. This is a minute, a minute and a half. This is this is amusing. It's so weird how the whole planet can be in debt. But but I I think it's possible because countries don't owe money to each other, but countries owe any money to banks.
[02:20:55] Unknown:
And if the countries owe money to banks, how stupid are the countries to pay it? Like, because a country has an army. The bank has four cashiers and a clean label. We have to pay. They have threatened us. They sent us a letter. If we don't pay now, they might send a a letter. What do we do then? We have a nuclear submarine, but they have a stapler. Like, it's so weird. Like, I'm sure that if, like, for example, Genghis Khan would have, like, in his time borrowed some loan from some mortgage from some bank. I'm sure that he would never have paid it, like, banked at the door that you have to pay.
Well, I have 10,000 horsemen with spears. Do I really have to pay? Well, no. No. But it will affect your credit rating.
[02:22:14] Unknown:
So that's how it works. I quite like Pay you back with interest. Pay you back with interest. Spear test. Yeah. I don't have 10 have you got 10,000 horsemen with spears? They they might come in useful. They could be quite useful. They're useful. Yeah. Yeah. Why not? Yeah. You don't want your credit rating getting affected, do you? Right.
[02:22:34] Unknown:
I I I wouldn't be able to buy any more guns, would I?
[02:22:37] Unknown:
No. I'm I'm sorry. You need loads of those. You need but, of course, they need I mean, they'll be looking at all these control points a bit like what Frederick was addressing, you know, with this fourth generation stuff. It's like what you would call soft war, but it's much more devastating because people don't realize it's going on. They can't cotton on. They know something's not quite right. Actually, that's not true. Many people are cottoning on, and, they're getting there. There's just so much to it, I suppose, but finding a way however, his premise there, of course, is flawed, but it's very amusing the way he did it. And I wanna play another clip that's longer. This is a couple of minutes, but this is so and I played it once before maybe about six or seven weeks ago, because this really although this is a personal situation, if you just think of it in terms of nations and the bank, you've got exactly the same thing. This is from Wolf Hall, and Thomas Cromwell is confronting, the then husband of Anne Boleyn because he's going around shooting his mouth off. And you just have to listen to this little exchange. It's two minutes and forty seven seconds, and this will kick us into a different communication space. Here we go.
[02:23:43] Unknown:
Oh, you're wasting your time. I was pledged to Anne. She allowed me such freedom with herself as only a betrothed woman would allow. Cardinal bullied me out of saying anything last time. I'm not afraid to speak the truth now.
[02:24:00] Unknown:
Good. My lord, you've said what you have to say. Now listen to me. You're a man whose money is almost spent. I'm a man who knows how you've spent it. You're a man who's borrowed all over Europe. I'm a man who knows your creditors. One word from me, and all your debts will be called in. And what are they gonna do? Bankers don't have armies. Neither will you without any money. Now, lord, you hold your earldom from the king. Your task is to secure the North to defend us against Scotland. If you cannot insure these things, the king will take your land and your titles and give them to somebody who will do the job you cannot do. No. He won't. He respects all ancient titles. How can I explain this to you?
The world is not run from where you think it is, from border fortresses, even from Whitehall. The world is run from Antwerp, from Florence, from Lisbon, from wherever the merchant ships set sail off into the West. Not from castle walls, from counting houses, from the pens that scrape out your promissory notes. So believe me when I say that my banker friends and I will rip your life apart. And then when you are without money and title, yes, I can picture you. Living in a hovel, wearing homespun, bringing home a rabbit for the pot, your lawful wife Anne Boleyn skinning and jointing that rabbit. Yes. I wish you all happiness.
You were never pre contracted. Any understanding you think you have, you didn't have it. And if you think lady Anne loves you, well, you couldn't be more mistaken. I've just come from her. She hates you. She despises you. She wants you gone. So if you say one more word about Lady Anne's freedom with you. I will come and drag you out of whatever hole you're cowering in, and the Duke of Norfolk will bite your bollocks off. I do hope that's clear, my lord. Ouch.
[02:26:26] Unknown:
Who would talk like that to Henry the eighth?
[02:26:29] Unknown:
Well, he what he was talking to, he was Henry the the main guy there making the threats was Henry the eighth's fixer. And Henry was about to marry Anne Boleyn, and he was talking to her then husband who'd been shooting his mouth off and running down her reputation, which Henry, of course, didn't like, so he sent him to visit him. And Cromwell, being in with the bankers and a man of commerce Yeah. Was able to make that threat. But if you translate it over to nations, and this is why it's so difficult or why we need to look at the role of money in all warfare. You know when he said to him, you won't be able to raise an army because you haven't got any money. Well, our government can't raise an army if the international banking cartel stops it happening because all of the armaments, producers, and everywhere are all running through the banking system. People don't necessarily think of it in this way. Oh, we've got a government. They're in charge. They're not. They never they haven't been for hundreds of years, and this is the main thing. So the only solution, of course, is the removal of usury, which is literally the lifeblood of central banking and the ownership of the bank directly by the Americans. The Americans should own the Federal Reserve. That's your equity in your own nation. You don't get a birth certificate. You get you get a share. You should own it, and we should own the Bank of England. And that's at least it's an idea to Marshall. Of course, the achievement of it is probably a long way off, but it's it's it's even further off if people are not aware that that is one aspect of the solution. And doctor Richard Verner, who has just been talking with, Carlson recently, meant is basically addressing this issue. I mentioned it last week, and this taps more into your bailiwick in a way. He's talking about, 1917 and the Bundesbank being run by Max Warburg and the Federal Reserve being run by his brother, Paul, and in the middle, Americans and Germans and everybody else blowing each other to bits, paid for by the same banking cartel. That, in a nutshell, is history for thousands of years. That's really what's been going on. Yeah. And, so I love you I love you a lot to get the Federal Reserve under your belt. You need it, you know? You need to own it. I want Americans to own the Fed.
[02:28:45] Unknown:
Well, I may able I may be able to deliver that for you because I'm gonna be running for Congress here in Arkansas on a Ron Paul anti Fed ticket. Okay? So we'll see what happens. Right? It may happen sooner than you think.
[02:29:00] Unknown:
You've gotta feel that there's a grand swell of knowledge among sufficient people that might actually get behind you. I hope they do. At the end, whatever happens
[02:29:08] Unknown:
whatever happens, something good will come out of it, Eli. I'm sure of it. Yeah. Well, the the people have never had it explained to them how this system works. You know, they just assume, well, the the banks get money in from, depositors, and then the depositors' money gets loaned out in interest and blah blah. No. They just create the money out of nothing. It's promissory notes that are forged. It's forged promissory notes, and then and then these forged promissory are let at interest. So you have to pay interest on top of the forgery, and and on and on it goes. And nobody seems to understand this.
[02:29:45] Unknown:
You know, I'm it is hard to ex it's a really difficult pitch. Earlier on in the first hour, we were just talking about this thing that, if you're on the classed as being on the extreme far right
[02:29:58] Unknown:
which is everybody here I hate to interrupt. The soapbox stream is down.
[02:30:04] Unknown:
Is it?
[02:30:05] Unknown:
Why has it done that? Oh, hang on. Oh, you're gonna pay your banker's mortgage. I don't know. Sometimes it just gives me grief. It's back up again. Thanks for it always interrupts on that one, Patrick. I was looking at the screen, and it just died. Sorry about that. It's back. Sorry, soapbox guys and gals. We we disappeared there for a bit. But, yeah, what were you saying, Eli? Sorry.
[02:30:27] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Well, the, the explanation of how money is created by bankers is never explained in any public although there was one of the branch banks of America did actually explain how they create money out of nothing by simply lending numbers, and then those numbers come with interest rates. Right? And then Yeah. And then then then the branch banks lend to your local commercial bank. It's all just numbers. And then you borrow those numbers from the commercial bank, and then you pay tons of interest when you pay the loan back. Okay? Mhmm. That's how it works. And the best way I can explain it to people is this. Imagine that you're playing a game of monopoly. Okay? And if you you guys you have Monopoly, though, over there in in Europe, the Monopoly game?
Yep. It's a board game. Yeah. Okay. It is. So Yeah. Yeah. So there's usually four players. And, the banker one person plays banker and doles out all the money to start the game, and you store the dice, and you move your pieces. Right? But when when somebody lands on the banker's square and he has to pay rent, he just reaches underneath the table, grabs more money, and pays the debt, but he doesn't lose any money at all because he just created more money for himself. Every other player is eventually gonna lose the game, and the banker's gonna collect all that property and all the rest of the money. Bankers always win.
[02:31:52] Unknown:
Yep. Yeah. Absolutely. We we were talking in hour one about, I just remember my train train of thought there. We were talking in hour one about how we tend to appeal to logic, or we we have to for our own sanity. Right? Well, we have to, don't we? We we kind of think that the truth and historical facts are valid, which, of course, they are. Of course, it's difficult to get traction when they're ignored and willfully removed from the public space as we well know because of their control over the communication sphere. But the the left, as it were, gain all their appeal on emotionalism. And I keep thinking, is there an emotional argument that needs to be constructed? I mean, I dread the thought of going up and bleating in front of a crowd. I go, we've got to die. I don't know what it's supposed to say. Everybody's dying. You don't get it. But maybe that would work. Maybe that's the level that's required. Some emotional carrier wave is required, it seems to me, because, we are a bit weird in here and I'm including all you people listening as well. You're a bit of an oddity when you think about it. You've you are actually applying your brains to work out the problem and yet in the great mass, you're surrounded by people who are just simply too busy to do that or haven't perceived that there's even a problem here. How do you get it through? And I bet all of you have tried to explain one or another thing from history, some conspiracy thing that you know is true, something like that because there aren't really conspiracy theories now and you're not conspiracy theorists. We're conspiracy analysts and it turns out that our analysis is 90% accurate because it's all proven all the time.
So how do you know, that's the thing. I keep thinking, how can I talk to someone for thirty seconds and they just almost explode and go, what do I have to do? I go, turn up here tomorrow and bring a mate. Yeah. Then there's three of us, then turn up the next day and bring four of us. And so that's what you gotta do.
[02:33:46] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Don't forget those pitchforks.
[02:33:49] Unknown:
The pitchforks. Oh, they took all the pitchforks offers. Peasants revolt, we're not allowed to pitchfork.
[02:33:54] Unknown:
Oh, no. Oh. No.
[02:33:57] Unknown:
Okay. Well, we don't look right without pitchforks. How can you sort of have a mold without pitchforks? They've all got sort of, I don't know, egg beaters and wooden spoons. I don't know what you've got, Eric, that you could bring along. I've got a wooden spoon, you know, quite threatening. That that that would be a great image for Hannah.
[02:34:13] Unknown:
Her her symbol should be a pitchfork. Well, maybe villager. Okay? Yep. A pitchfork.
[02:34:22] Unknown:
There's something about Yes. At least, I I find the idea appealing of throwing some kind of structural, virus back into their system.
[02:34:33] Unknown:
But it is about creating
[02:34:35] Unknown:
we have to play the game. It's numbers. It's about numbers. You know? No. There's because it's not a peasant revolt. It's peasants.
[02:34:43] Unknown:
How many? Exactly. Yeah. How many? Millions.
[02:34:47] Unknown:
Well, it should be millions. It needs to be millions. It needs to be absolutely millions.
[02:34:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Here's the game I I plan here. Okay? You have you put a a bunch of bankers on the ground, and you sedate them. Right? And then you put a bunch of straw over them. You get a big pile of straw, and then you give the the peasants the pitchforks and say whoever gets the banker gets a million bucks. Okay? Can you can you see the carnage? Can you see the carnage?
[02:35:19] Unknown:
Well, maybe lots of laughter as well. It's a bit like game. What's it? A bit like pin the donkey. What was that that There you go. Pin the tail on the They used to play at parties when you were at kids parties.
[02:35:29] Unknown:
Yeah. What about hanging them by a bungee bungee rug Oh. Bungee. Around the neck. There you go. So then they go up and down and then underneath they hang them over a sewage farm. So go down up and and you can actually bet on how many times they bounce before they snuff it. Yeah. So you know that'd be great. Yeah.
[02:35:50] Unknown:
Although Alice Gorgeous is no longer around, she's departed the chat, but she wrote a little bit earlier on Paul, she said we need 51% of England to rescind consent to be governed. Yeah. I think I don't think we'd even need that much actually. I think it's a substantial minority numerically would be would be what it would take because if you You're in a way There's something about a crowd getting to a certain size that ignites everyone else. The fencer does suddenly go, I better choose. Yeah. Yeah. You better. You're gonna have to. You're gonna be forced to choose whether you like it or not, You know? What's this business about consent to be governed? Aren't you supposed to have representatives? Yes. We're supposed to have those. Whatever happened to representation?
Well, they got bought up by the bankers, Eli. Governed. They got bought up by the bank.
[02:36:39] Unknown:
Right? Okay. They did.
[02:36:42] Unknown:
They got bought up by the bank. Did you hear that, Eli, did you hear that, discussion we were having earlier about premature in Deuteronomy?
[02:36:52] Unknown:
No. No. It didn't. No. Okay. Basically,
[02:36:55] Unknown:
in in God's law in Deuteronomy, the firstborn son of the the wife of whoever the husband is Yeah. Is given the double portion of the inheritance in the land. And that was done away with by Thomas Jefferson in our country early on in Virginia. He that was one of the first things he did is get rid of primogeniture. And that caused that causes havoc in the society because the firstborn son then looks after the family, that that family inheritance continues on and that family is sustained. These people who are peasants are are being dispossessed of their land and the biggest the biggest bill that anyone has to pay usually is their mortgage on their land. Right. They don't really even own it if that's the case. It's more like renting. Okay.
[02:37:49] Unknown:
So A question, for all all you Brits that are still here aboard, is there a form of primogeniture in Britain? Like, your eldest son inherits more? Or do you still have inheritance or do they overtake everything? We don't. No. We don't. They take everything.
[02:38:06] Unknown:
Well, they're attacking inheritance, which, of course, is one of the last, bastions for the communists to overthrow. Once you've got rid of that, you've got total free rein communism. I mean, it's just literally you can't decide on anything, and all of the assets are now under the control of the state. You know, I've been banging on for years. You live under communism? No. I don't. Yeah. You you do. It's just dressed up, you know. We've just got a better TV system. Yeah. They call it capitalism. It's communism. You've got a central bank and a progressive income tax. You don't need income tax. You don't own the bank. The bank's robbing you blind and, but you don't care because you get to go on four holidays a year. So while everything's going good, which it has been, or relatively good, and people could do their things, And I don't deny people that. They they could do an awful lot more things if it was but if they wanted to do that, then people don't notice. But now they're beginning to notice and, of course, it it's whether we're too late. I'd anyway, I'm not gonna say that we are because I think this game still got quite a few moves to be made yet. Right. I really do. Okay. Hey, Paul. I've got an interesting,
[02:39:07] Unknown:
comment for you on on what you just said. Obviously, inheritance is a biblical, platform. Okay? We're all supposed to be able to to inherit from our parents, etcetera etcetera, right on down the line. But it's interesting that in in, Denmark, in the, who the Vikings. The Vikings had a form of primogeniture. And the oldest son and they they obviously got it from because they were Israelites and they forgot that they were Israelites. So they had primogeniture, and the eldest son would get the biggest inheritance. However, what the eldest son usually did was he disinherited his younger brothers, and they wound up with nothing.
And those are the ones who became the vikings and the marauders of Europe and England. Yeah. Okay? Mhmm. It was a disinherited younger sons who became all the marauders.
[02:39:56] Unknown:
They better treat your family nice. Okay? Well, yeah. That's the story also of Joseph being sold into slavery by his brothers. They were gonna kill him.
[02:40:05] Unknown:
Right. They were gonna kill him. Right. Because only Judah So that's when family life was not so harmonious. Right? It wasn't so Right. Yeah. Has it ever been? Cain and Abel. It hasn't ever been. Right? Yeah. He got that feel for the McCoys. Right? Yep. Yeah. Who who makes that life miserable?
[02:40:22] Unknown:
Yeah. The squabbling's over inheritance and stuff. They're full of the most intense drama, aren't they, and the worst aspects of human behavior. I mean, Dickens, many of his novels really trade on that. Particularly Bleak House is about that interminable court case, Jarndyce v Jarndyce or whatever it is, that's been going on in the court of high chancery for twenty eight years when the book opens. And he's talking about all the lawyers that have grown fat and rich over those twenty years and have been exchanged for another one on both sides as the estate that they're squabbling over is basically plundered in legal fees. Yeah. There's nothing left by the time they get to it because no one can come to a a decent agreement and so this I don't know whether it's purely greed although that's got to be the the main sort of ingredient, but there's this sense of entitlement that builds up. It's a very powerful force in people and they go that's wrong, that's fundamentally not just.
So, you know, the idea I mean, when my parents died, I've got a brother and a sister. They just said three ways. I didn't go, hey. Hang on. I was I'm the eldest. I need to have it all. I need to have lost it. Now that you're mentioning, I I missed I missed my chance there. A double portion.
[02:41:34] Unknown:
A double portion.
[02:41:36] Unknown:
No. I need a portion. A double portion. I need a double portion because, you know, I was the one that brought all the first joy and happiness into your life. Me. You know? Yeah. And I designed it that way. And it's me, and you're gonna give it to me. And, yeah, I love my brother and sister, but come on.
[02:41:53] Unknown:
Yeah. No. I mean, that never happened. Yeah. The Danes were pagans. Right? So somehow they kept this tradition of primogeniture going and forgot they were Israelites and, but they were pagan, inheritance people. Right? So they're They've got a bit rough around the edges of life. They've become a bit royals of people. Yeah. They were a bit rough. Thank god for thank god for Alfred the Great who straightened those people out. He said We could do with him back. Or we'll kill you. Alright. We could. We could
[02:42:22] Unknown:
we need Alfred back. We do. We're trying. We could Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Or we need his spirit back.
[02:42:28] Unknown:
These peasants, the peasants are dispossessed of any land. They should be given more land.
[02:42:33] Unknown:
That's right. That's another
[02:42:35] Unknown:
problem worth solving is is it's not so much you know, the solution of a socialist is, well, we just need to put it all in the hands of the government and they'll distribute it. Oh, right. Yeah, right. No, no, no, no, no. And then the capitalist is like, well the survival of the fittest, the biggest, the fattest gets the most. And that's not the case either. What you need is, you need everybody having it more equally distributed, meaning everybody has a piece of land that they can go to. Even the small peasant that they can farm it, they can sustain themselves and not fear getting it taken away
[02:43:10] Unknown:
by usurious debts like we're having a case now with mortgages. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's interesting what you were saying, Eli, about the kings because the kings from a certain point on are an intrinsic part of the problem. Because Right. I mean, prior to, William arriving here, what you were just describing, Patrick, generally was pretty much the case under Alfred, that people did own the land. They couldn't be just turfed off it because every man has to be able You're literally stood or sat somewhere right now. You've got to occupy physical space. And because we are land animals, it's called the land. I mean, you can go and live on a boat in the sea these days, but it's not so easy back then. You certainly can't grow much wheat in the sea as far as I'm aware, although no doubt there's a technology coming up for that any day now, but you need that space. So, I mean, when William arrived, he basically said, all the land's mine, and I've got 10,000 men with spears, right? And then what he did was he apportioned it amongst all the chief barons that had come over with him, but he set them up in different parts of the country so they couldn't gang up and come back and have a go at him. This permanent sort of infighting, you know, and that kind of stuff. Right. And so everybody lost everything, and then we moved to this feudal state. And then we moved to this we get the doomsday book, the world's first tax database. There might have been one in China before him, but it's the first one I know of.
And, of course, we're then in the indentured we're in this basically being viewed and handled as a chattel, a sort of goods in a in a system of commerce Right. Because they overthrew the true law of the land by replacing it with, well, the law of the muscle, you know, basically. That's right. Yes. Deceit
[02:44:50] Unknown:
deceit and tyranny, go hand in hand. It never fails. So the the real problem is why do people who have a democratic tradition not see the problem? Mhmm. Why can't people see the problem? You know? Well, the educational system is part of the problem too. Right? Yeah. All these liberals are stone cold idiots. Idiots, not Indians, idiots, who who haven't got a brain cell operating in their heads, but they think they're smarter than we, we Anglo Saxon. By the way, you sent me that article that shows, ultra right wing radical people like you and me are the smartest people on Earth.
[02:45:30] Unknown:
That's right. We are. I'll buy that.
[02:45:32] Unknown:
I buy it too. Why are we so poor?
[02:45:36] Unknown:
Because we're we are we've got this terrible habit of wanting to obey the truth.
[02:45:41] Unknown:
There you go.
[02:45:43] Unknown:
And we love it, don't we? And what's that phrase if you love truth, you love God because God is truth and it's the it's the case. You need it in pragmatic terms. That's kind of one of the manifestations of it down here. And when you're in a group where everybody recognizes the truth, it's a bit of a delight and a rarity, but it does happen and it's a fantastic thing. And you go, oh, I just remembered why life was worth living. This is life. This is a good thing. This is a great thing. And it's family.
[02:46:07] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah? The true family. Yeah. But but Jesus said, you will be hated for my name's sake, so get used to it.
[02:46:15] Unknown:
Mhmm. Yeah. It's it's spot on. It's absolutely spot on. And and that's what that article's about. We were kind of addressing that in in sort of part one looking at that. And the fact that they think with their emotions, you know, it's a Yeah. There's a little image in there, like, you've told me the truth, but what about my feelings?
[02:46:32] Unknown:
Hello? Yeah. Right.
[02:46:34] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Your feelings. Oh, I'm sorry. Oh, yeah. I'm sorry about well, sorry. We gotta overthrow all this decency because this person doesn't feel very well about it. I think it's rather rotten. Yeah. So, yeah, people and we're also talking about left brain and right sides of the brain with regards to drawing. This might seem like a tenuous link, but it's to do with the way that we actually operate. And, I suspect, you know, really, when you look at the so called schooling system, I think it's pretty true to say that the vast majority of people that end up going into it, they're educated out of their creativity, and they're educated out of resisting authority through questions because they don't like questions. And questions are the great training tool for the mind.
It's it's the ultimate thing. Hang on just a minute. I don't know about that. Well, I'm right. Well, that's okay. I don't mind that you're saying you're right, but I'm not sure. I gotta go off and read a few things. I'll come back to you in a week. Okay. You don't mind, do you? Well, it's yeah. I I remember People do mind. When I was going
[02:47:34] Unknown:
when I was going to college in the sixties and seventies, the Liberals always had this bumper sticker that said question authority. Mhmm. Now that the Liberals are in power, you never see that bumper sticker anymore. Have you ever had those in in England?
[02:47:49] Unknown:
Question of Question of maybe maybe we did in the sixties when the hippies were around, but we probably don't have it now. Yeah. I suspect we don't have it. They're gone. Yeah. Because the the the Liberals don't want their authority questioned. Right? No. So
[02:48:04] Unknown:
nobody who's in power wants their authority questioned. You know? But that's what we're gonna have to start doing. Okay? So we have to come up with some emotional tricks to get people agitated. And how can you how can you make people love truth? Is there a way to do that with emotionalism? Love truth?
[02:48:23] Unknown:
You get a giddy? I know. I get you get Yeah. Well, I mean, Eric Eric's approach Eric's mantra, one of the things that, Eric, you regularly say that's absolutely right and that we're all in agreement with, I think, naturally, is that you've got to have a laugh. They they don't like us being humorous.
[02:48:42] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. And I think, that is we we look at what happened with Ceausescu. People started laughing at him. And he lost control, and he banged comedians from sad jokes. So what they did, they did a minor, which was even more funny to get around the cave. Right. Right. And this is the thing. Psychos do not have a sense of humor. And No. When you laugh at them, what can they do? I mean, you imagine if Starmer came out and we just whistled Lauren Hardy tune every time he came around. Yeah. Right. Wouldn't that be fantastic? I mean, the main Yeah.
We we got to bring them down with laughter.
[02:49:21] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Right. Yeah. We've we've got a few things to do, don't we? We have to amuse ourselves at their expense Yeah. Because, you know, if we can't have any schadenfreude around here and it's a drink drunk best drunk regularly, what fun can we have? We have to do that, but we also have to, I think, go back to these foundations. There's a a, a comment from James, James Newans over in YouTube. Hi, James. He says, isn't being ruled over by kings part of our punishment from turning away from God?
[02:49:51] Unknown:
Yep. That's right.
[02:49:53] Unknown:
Yep. It is. Yep. I mean, that whole thing with the Israelites saying we want a king, God basically said, alright then, didn't he? Isn't that the gist of it? They just Right. We got everybody else has got a king. We want one too, you know, all that kind of stuff.
[02:50:08] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, you guys in England did did us one better. You got the kinks.
[02:50:13] Unknown:
Oh, yes. Did he catch you following in fashion?
[02:50:17] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah.
[02:50:24] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah.
[02:50:26] Unknown:
Yeah. That that would be a good a lot a lot of time. I forgot how to start. What what was her big hit? The the the one that was before that was even bigger. But, yeah, it's it's rock and roll, baby. It's time to rock and roll.
[02:50:42] Unknown:
Yeah. What what about having a saying, watch out watch out. As a politician, mate, say it loudly something here. Better not be say anything about usury. Yeah. Whoops. As a politician, shh, won't say anything about usury. And then it could catch on. Don't you dare. Yeah. Yes. Right. Because they'll end up in a wooden overcoat. You don't want your local MP to end up in a wooden overcoat, do you? Yeah.
[02:51:04] Unknown:
Well, video makers out there, if if there are any of you, and if you if there aren't, you need to plunge in. We need lots of communication going on. I mean, the Telegram's fantastic. I suspect they're gonna have a go at us through that at some point soon, so brace yourselves. I'm always on the lookout for independent connection Oh. Technologies that we can use, but they will. They'll have a go at us through that. They're bound to. Yeah. I just had a great idea.
[02:51:28] Unknown:
You you guys have have you ever seen Steve Allen on television?
[02:51:33] Unknown:
He's very, very He's American comedian from when? Sixties and seventies, was it?
[02:51:37] Unknown:
Sixties and seventies. Right. Right. And he did this great schtick. He would take the lyrics from popular songs like Wild Thing. No. That was the trucks. Wild Thing was the trucks. Right? And and say, okay. We have to analyze the lyrics of this song. Right? This is this is sheer poetry. Right?
[02:51:59] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[02:52:00] Unknown:
Wild thing. You make my heart sing. You make everything groovy. Right? He would he would recite the lyrics in in utter seriousness. Right? And, the audience was side splitting laughter rolling on the floor while he would this is what you should do speeches. Hear Starmer's speeches in in a mocking tone of voice like that, about it and knock him dead.
[02:52:28] Unknown:
Knock him dead. Do you do you remember Peter Sellers doing a Hard Day's Night? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, no. Yeah? Yeah. I remember it. No. Don't you remember it? Yeah. I do. Yeah. I'm gonna play you a bit. I've got it here. Listen to this. It's two minutes long, but I won't play it all. It's him doing Hard Day's Night but as if it was a Shakespearean play, I think.
[02:52:47] Unknown:
Okay. Right. There you go.
[02:53:09] Unknown:
It's been a hard day's night. I should be sleeping like a log. But when I get home to you, I find the things that you do will make me feel alright.
[02:53:25] Unknown:
So that's him as Richard the third, I believe. Yeah. Richard the third.
[02:53:30] Unknown:
No. It's not a Shakespearean.
[02:53:33] Unknown:
It what yeah. Absolutely. He was delivering Shakespeare, It's a Hard Day's Night by The Beatles. So there we go. That's how you do it. Get hold of those lyrics, and you just rearrange them and deliver them in a slightly different way. Absolutely. That's what we've gotta do. So whenever a a British politician
[02:53:48] Unknown:
gives a speech, everybody sings, wow thing. You make my heart sing. It just drown them out.
[02:53:57] Unknown:
Yeah. We I mean, the thing is they never turn up into public they don't occur in public spaces now. Everything is so tightly yeah. They're just not there. There's no sense of connect certainly with this lot or there's no sense of connection between that enclave called the houses of Parliament and the peasants. Yeah. The the pleasant peasants. Yeah. Right. And I've got the whole thing is being kind of manipulate. I've seen things now, like I saw some headlines last couple of days, like, England's just weeks away from civil war and all this kind of stuff, and I suspect that they're behind that. That's what they want. Sure. And everybody's nervous. You know, they brought all these guys over that are basically nutcases that they're putting in hotels. They're gonna arm them up, and it's a bit like you always bring in foreign troops if you're gonna put down your own people. Right? Because they don't care.
[02:54:45] Unknown:
Right.
[02:54:46] Unknown:
Yeah. So it might get very nasty. That's right. It might get it it could get nasty. And it's to subdue the people with something shocking and awful so that people go back in, you know, it might well work. I mean, you know, history shows that this is the case when the people are really hammered. They buckle. Any any people would. Okay. Is there is there any awareness at all in Britain that all these illegal aliens from third world countries
[02:55:10] Unknown:
are actually a proxy army to be used against the British people, or are the British simply so nice and gentle and kind to strangers that, they're just all gonna be hacked to pieces?
[02:55:25] Unknown:
I think both. I think there's definitely a growing percentage of people that understand your first proposition as we do here. It's definitely you've gotta put it down even if it's not absolutely true. You've gotta put it down on a list of strong possibilities. You go, yeah. Okay. Because there's literally you know, the ongoing discussion about immigration and illegal immigration, all this kind of stuff, is basically designed to be a never ending discussion with no action taken. Oh, we can't do this or we can't do that. You go, go and ask the peasants. We'll sort it out for you. I mean, what's his name? There's a guy over here called Cummins who used to be part of the Conservative Party, and he did a thing a couple of weeks ago saying it's quite easy. He said, you just get a boat, you go out there, you blow one boat out of the boat out of the water, it'd probably kill them, and they won't come anymore. That's it. Then we go and see the French, and we say, we're not doing any more deals. It's not one in and one out. I don't know if you've heard. Starmer's got this sort of insane thing. For everyone that comes in, we'll send one back to France.
This is just it's meant to be an insult to us. It's meant for you to think. Right. We're being programmed that the government is useless. They want you to think that. They want you to give up any sort of idea that they're gonna help you, but it's all couched in these terms. A bit like that story I was reading out about the bank robber. Yeah. He's very I didn't do it. And it just goes on and on and on. Nothing ever happens. This is by design. But whilst they're always pleading, you know, that Right. Oh, we can't do it for this reason. Of course, they got loads of women in politics now who seem to sort of love all this emotive stuff.
[02:56:54] Unknown:
And I'm not just blaming the women because the rights are just too bad. I like But it that's what they're used for. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Especially after a couple of shots of ale. But the the French have done us a great big favor by exposing the Brigitte Macron story. Mhmm. Okay? Yeah. And it it is so downright degenerate that it can only the the the only thing they can really do is smack their chops I'm talking about the comedians. Smack their chops with with one liners against Brigitte Macron and the fact that she is a a boy. Okay? Yep. And and is it possible that France is ruled over by a, well, a a homosexual who, likes to molest boys? Is it possible?
[02:57:43] Unknown:
Well, England is. That that yeah. Oh, I thought I was talking only about France. Okay. No. I I reckon nearly all of it, Eli. I reckon the whole thing Probably. Is to provide, demoralization in every single sphere of public life. Everything. Industry doesn't work. You can't control your borders. You're governed by maniacs. Everybody the people that that cry the most to get all the money. Your own people can't be fed and housed, but everybody else can. This is happening. Don't worry. We're gonna love everyone. The whole thing is designed to be mad. It's insane. It really is Sololinsky on steroids. You know? It really is. That's that's exactly what it is. That's what's going on. It is. Yeah. The the barbarians have invaded the village, and the villagers don't care. Yep.
But as as I was mentioning last week, getting hold of the white dragon Anglo Saxon flag and beginning to get that pushed around a bit. Yeah. I mean, the easiest thing is a t shirt. I personally need I need a red with a white dragon t shirt yesterday. I want one. I need t shirts anyway. Yeah. So I want t shirts and I want some sweatshirts for winter and stuff like that. So anybody out there, just get to it. And if you come up with it sooner, just let us know, and we'll direct things over there. We need people to build shops and start selling this gear and becoming hub hubs for all of this stuff. Just we just gotta get on with it. Okay.
[02:59:04] Unknown:
So I'll send you a few bolos. I'll send you I'll send you some bolos. Texas bolos with with maybe a, handgun on it. Yep.
[02:59:15] Unknown:
Yeah. Do that. Yeah. Well, maybe. I don't know. I just need I'll tell you what I would really like. If you find them, I'll tell you what I would really like is a forty eight hour day. If you've got any of those Yeah. That would be great. Yeah. Well, we'll pass a law.
[02:59:30] Unknown:
Nobody goes to sleep, though. I went for forty eight hours. Alright. Okay, guys.
[02:59:36] Unknown:
Eli, it's been great having you here. I'm gonna I'm gonna call you at short notice again in the next few weeks and bring you in because it's fantastic every year. Yeah. Yeah. Nice. Cool. I love it. The looser it is, the better it is, actually. It works really well. It's been great having you again. Eric's keen to talk to you about your Vietnam stories. We'll do that in another show and because they're always great. Seriously. So fantastic. Oh, boy. Yeah. Absolutely. Anyway, look. Keep us informed on your campaign to rule America. We need you to we need you to get in charge. Get in charge for you. Come on. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I got energy. I got energy now. Okay. You do. Alright. Fantastic, Eli. Eli James, everybody. Fantastic. You can catch him every Sunday on Take care. Bye, Paul. Bye. Yeah. See you. Everybody. You can catch him every Sunday on, Eurofolk Radio and on Radio Soapbox. What What time? 3PM. He's on for an hour and a half. Great show, everyone. Thank you. Shout out to everybody in Rumble and YouTube. Absolutely brilliant. We'll be back again same time next week. Have a cracking week. Get thinking about that white dragon, will you? Anybody that comes up with stuff, let us know. Bye for now, everyone.
[03:00:43] Unknown:
And we're clear. We're off air. That was bloody good that was, that show. Really enjoyed it. Fantastic. Yeah. And Frederick was interesting. Eli's interesting. Are they still there? And,
[03:00:55] Unknown:
I don't know. You'd see them on the screen if they're still there. I don't know. Quick look.
[03:01:03] Unknown:
I think they're gone. No. I think they've all gone. Well I better I better hit the hay because I'm feeling a bit unwilted a little bit. Alright. Thanks for sending that information through about Hackney. I might go actually. I might just go. I'm thinking it's through. It's it's it's, not an easy journey, but I I think that, I'll crack it,
[03:01:27] Unknown:
as I say. Well, if you if you I'll send you the details of where I'm parking, which is, as I said, Stratford International. Yes. Yeah. Something or other. And, yeah, we can meet there or wherever you wanna meet. We can meet there. It should be quite easy, I think, and I could, you know Well, I'm gonna pop down by row. I'll actually do it by row, and,
[03:01:49] Unknown:
I might take my folding bike with me because getting home will be the problem. Mhmm. I'm about three miles from the station. So that, you know, I'll cycle back.
[03:02:00] Unknown:
You're you're only three miles from Stratford Station, are you? No. Not from Stratford Station. No. From Bloody,
[03:02:05] Unknown:
no from Alright. Local station. No. No. I'm not further than that. So, I'll cycle down to the station, take my folder with me, and then on the way back, I could cycle home. And, it's a lot easier because otherwise it's an hour's walk prepared Yeah. Compared with a twenty minute cycle ride. So I think the twenty minute cycle ride is better for better for me. So, that's what I'll probably do, see how it goes.
[03:02:30] Unknown:
But, Yeah. Cool. No. That'd be great. Well, I'll speak to you before then anyway. You'll be doing your show Sunday night. That's right. I can't be there for Monday. If you come, you can't be there for Monday. So we'll I'll sort something out to fill in the spot. Not that that's a big deal. That's easily done, so don't worry about that. But yeah, I think it could be just one of those sort of galvanizing factual things. I've got an old friend who I was speaking the other day, he said he's in he's well, he's in Northland, he's quite a way off. He said, can I come? I said, I can't stop you coming, it'd be great to see you. So, he's probably gonna rock them. Somebody wanted to come up with me, that I've got to speak to. So I say, yeah, my car's absolutely tiny little cars, so they're not gonna be very comfortable. It's a it's a little sort of buzz bomb of a thing. Got this little old Kia,
[03:03:12] Unknown:
you know. Well, if you think that's small, look at a smart car.
[03:03:18] Unknown:
Oh, yes. Yes. Smart cars are quite small, aren't they? Yeah. They're quite smart. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Don't worry about that. That's fine. No. That's okay. That's just something
[03:03:28] Unknown:
running around No. It's it's a it's a very strange place to get to, really. It's an odd place to get to because it's not an easy place, believe it or not. I'm gonna go down the main rail on the Anglia rail service, and now change at was it Hackney Downs? And I catch a chain for three stops to Hackney Wick, and it's about ten minutes walk from Hackney Wick or site or cycle ride. I don't know. But you walk past the canal. There's a canal there. So it's because, I don't think I've ever been to Hackney in my life. So it's gonna be a new new experience.
[03:04:00] Unknown:
I've been all around London, but I don't think I've been to Hackney. But, apparently, it's a very up and coming mail place now. Because I'm seeing it. Heard that. I got I got a report from someone saying that it was a bit of a dive, but it's actually an up and coming thing. I've got from the station to the venue is a thirty minute walk, which I'm fine with. It says it's one and a half miles. I'm cool with that. It doesn't really matter to me. I quite like walking anyway. So,
[03:04:25] Unknown:
we'll sort out on the day. I mean, I'm probably gonna leap yeah. Sorry. What's all I was gonna say is I wonder whether it's a a a very safe area to walk around because it used to be an absolute notorious area.
[03:04:38] Unknown:
Yeah. I know. Well, I don't I don't know, but I think it might be, apart from which I can shout quite loudly and I I can speak like a Northerner or we can speak in a strange dialect of Arabic or something.
[03:04:50] Unknown:
I don't Or do what do what they they say in the shops. You know, these shoppers, this is, you go, you know. I find out with women a lot. Have you should we do sell some sauce? You know. Yeah.
[03:05:07] Unknown:
Yeah. Anyway, Paul I think we'll be alright. I'll speak to you again before it anyway. Oh, yeah. We'll we'll see. That. So we'll we'll have a chat beforehand.
[03:05:16] Unknown:
And, you must excuse me. I better zoom off because I'm absolutely tired out.
[03:05:21] Unknown:
And, we'll speak No. That's cool, man. That's absolutely great having you along, and I hope it's okay with the guests. And I know you don't get to speak as much, and I'm I'm very conscious of that. I like to pull you in. About that. Don't worry about that. I I because it's your show and I'd like to hear the guests and and I'd love to have that show, where we talk about Vietnam
[03:05:41] Unknown:
with, Yeah. Yeah. We'll do more on that. Yeah. That would be bloody good.
[03:05:46] Unknown:
Yeah. We'll bring more in stuff on that and everything. And, next week, of course, is, show 100 next week. So make sure you're wearing your best bib and tucker. Oh, yes. Yes. Clean underpants for that one. Clean underpants and Robin Hood tights.
[03:06:00] Unknown:
And by the way, Patrick has sent a message through. I don't know if he's still on there. Yeah. Alfred Schafer is out of prison.
[03:06:08] Unknown:
Yes. He is. He's he's been released. Is is he on bail or Oh, that's good. Yeah. It's something like bail. He's I think he's in for another ten months
[03:06:16] Unknown:
possibly here. Oh, wow.
[03:06:19] Unknown:
But he's out for now.
[03:06:21] Unknown:
Couldn't he leg it out of the country? Yeah. Right.
[03:06:24] Unknown:
That'd be good.
[03:06:27] Unknown:
But I don't know what's worse, Germany or Britain. I think Germany is probably worse because Well, Canada
[03:06:35] Unknown:
Canada is pretty bad, apparently. I I don't I don't know. Yeah. Come to America.
[03:06:42] Unknown:
Well, you can at least say certain things that we're not allowed to say because you notice I I try and keep off I mean, I was going a bit hot and cold when Monica was on. Yeah. Yeah. And, you know, perspiration was coming strictly down my back, but I thought, well, hang on a moment. This is why, you know, I was trying to show moderation, but what you say and what you think are two different things in this country. You know, you just gotta be very careful. Yeah. But,
[03:07:10] Unknown:
they Frederick did a good job with that tonight. Yeah. He did. I I had met him from Graham Hart's show back in the day when Graham was doing his his, program.
[03:07:25] Unknown:
Yeah. Because he got locked up for doing a,
[03:07:28] Unknown:
parody. Yep. Yeah. And and now there's there's
[03:07:32] Unknown:
a lot of back and forth too with it was the it's the this guy Gideon Falter, the campaign against anti semitism. That's your version of the anti defamation league of Bani Berith that we have here. Mhmm.
[03:07:47] Unknown:
He went for him. Yeah. So they but you've heard Gareth Hyatt. He's put he's what he's mentioned, he believes that, the reason we've got all these immigrants coming into this country, fighting Asian men, is because, of a of Israel wanting the larger Israel or increasing their look borders. They want the people moved out and apparently a lot of these boat people are from Lebanon and, Syria, places where,
[03:08:21] Unknown:
Israel wants to take over soon. Yeah. That's the big big thing right now. Lebanon, they're trying to say that Hezbollah has to be disarmed, and they're giving an ultimatum. Well, we'll see how that goes.
[03:08:33] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, it's all to do with, later in the trial. I see. Yeah. It's called I mean, it's been the long term plan for a long time ever since they got their hands on it, and that's why they've got that court there. And the whole idea is that the whole world is to be run from Jerusalem. That's why. And they, you know, so they're getting rid of us. We are the main problem for them.
[03:08:53] Unknown:
Yes.
[03:08:54] Unknown:
Yes. That that's really it and they've used us to kill they've ensured that we killed one another a lot over the last three or four hundred years all over the place And because they were the bank, they were picking up all the booty all the time and this is what it's all about, you know? But very difficult for people to see that. And then they're just coming out all the time with a continual defense, you know, the Jewish people. And I heard one on the radio this week on Mike Graham, some guy, rocked up and he's going, well, God promised this land. And I'm going, he didn't promise it to you. And apart from which, in scripture there's no way that we're ever going back, that the Israelites are going back. They don't need to go back. It's finished. It's done. It's over. But they're hanging on to the misunderstanding that everybody's got. Yeah. I'm just it's finished. It's over. We're never going back because we are those people, not them. And this is the whole thing, but because people don't know that, they think, oh, yeah. They're the people of the Bible. Really? Okay. Do they have any of the characteristics?
None. And this is this is it, you know? They're they're the mammonists, the temple of mammon, and that's it. That's why that bit's for me very important to get that across as a sort of foundational thing. And the other thing is looming large in pragmatic terms is this birth certificate stuff. So we've got to get a move on. We do have to get a move on,
[03:10:07] Unknown:
because they We were talking about, the Queen Mary, the ocean liners. There's only one ocean liner that goes between America and and England or the continent across the ocean. And it goes to Southampton from Manhattan. Right. So Southampton, that must be an interesting place. You get a lot of traffic there, I'd assume. Yeah. From motion liners coming in. Isn't it isn't it the big is it the biggest port in Europe? Sorry about that. Is Southampton the biggest port?
[03:10:44] Unknown:
No. I don't know. I don't know. But, you heard the you heard the joke about the, gentleman from overseas, shall we say, goes into an off license and says, excuse me, could you could you recommend a good port, please? And a bloke behind the behind the desk says, yes. Southampton. Sawed off. Sorry.
[03:11:04] Unknown:
Or boats.
[03:11:05] Unknown:
Get out of here, in other words. Yeah. I wonder if that's where they bring the boat people in, someplace like that.
[03:11:15] Unknown:
Don't know. It's Portsmouth, South End. Well, do you know port? I don't know. It's the largest port. Is Portsmouth one of the largest ports we've got?
[03:11:23] Unknown:
Possibly, I suppose by now. Yeah. It may well be. Mhmm. May well be. Yeah.
[03:11:29] Unknown:
Well, they're coming in somewhere.
[03:11:31] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, they're coming across
[03:11:34] Unknown:
About dinghies. Yeah. Dinkies across Dover.
[03:11:38] Unknown:
They're just the whole idea that it's, an uncontrollable situation, of course, is complete nonsense. It's totally controllable. It's just they don't wanna control it. So the language of the media is still incorrect, you know, where all this outrage about it, it's just gotta be called for what it is. Our government continue to wage war against us. That's the language. That's that's the words. You're right. I'll tell you what gets me, though, is that,
[03:12:05] Unknown:
like I was saying the local town there's like a deluge I just couldn't believe it I was I came back quite shocked you know it's sort of one minute you go down then it was about I don't know 90% indigenous Mhmm. I went down that day and I was about the only white person walking around. It's just all of a sudden. It's it's
[03:12:28] Unknown:
When was this?
[03:12:29] Unknown:
This was, when do I go out? Was it? Wednesday, I think it was. Wednesday, I went down That quick. Yeah. And, it's it's happened in a couple of weeks. It really shocked me, especially that bloke, you know, easing himself next to a little bin. I suppose at least he's next to a little bin. You know, he's just
[03:12:52] Unknown:
Well, we I mean, we know people who are going to Australia. Loads of people are leaving. They'll end up destroying England. It won't exist. It's I don't know. I'm not going. I'm gonna die here. What under whatever circumstances, I'm not going. I think my sons might need to go and I don't mind if they do, if they feel that they can create a better life. There's huge enclaves, but where are the where are the English gonna go? Travellers
[03:13:18] Unknown:
Australia is is is is a prison planet. That's not like it used to be. It's it's it's No. It's full of Chinese. The Chinese own most of it. They've used other races
[03:13:29] Unknown:
to basically become the intermediary owners of these spaces. The goal is to wipe us out. That's all it is because we're the only ones that are really capable of actually obeying God's law even though we've not been obeying it very well for a long time. That's really the truth of it. And God's law all to do with these things of decency, ultimately, in sort of simple terms that the layman can get his brain around. The reason why you might have a happy village is because even though you might not detect it, these cultural values in the form of the laws that we've inherited are in play. And when they're removed, then you get what we've got right now, whinging people, deranged, completely spiritually rudderless, clueless, looking at science as the answer of everything, whereas in fact, it's just been abused, you know, shitty buildings everywhere, nobody laughing.
[03:14:18] Unknown:
I mean, it's it's a it is a sort of spiritual devastation that's taking place, and that's exactly what they want. Have you you saw, you know, Hackney, I actually looked at it on Google, and there's graffiti on all the walls everywhere you look. There's graffiti everywhere. Yep. So where we will be going it's it's unbelievable but, there's someone took a film of the London Undergrounds, you know, the tubes, in the late sixties. Have you seen that? No. And there's not one foreigner to be seen. There's always people. Not one. That's right. That's what we want.
[03:14:57] Unknown:
Yeah. But you see, if there's huge rafts of our own people that don't go that down that route because they've been indoctrinated and confused and befuddled, then we've got a major part. And I've said it before. What's that thing that the government say? Before you can take your country to war against another country, you must first go to war on your own people. Regrettably, that's kind of the situation that we're facing. Now by war, we have to mean linguistically and from a point of view of ideas, but it's so slow. It's not gonna be it's not gonna happen quick enough. That's what my that's the way I look at it at the moment.
But you never know. History has a way of throwing up conflagrations that they don't
[03:15:35] Unknown:
anticipate. You're spot on. I've actually got a this is why I'm optimistic. I think something's gonna happen that we least expect. I really do believe that. Because they've got away it's a bit like a thief. A thief would start off stealing something very small and they think, well I've got away with it this time. Let's get something bigger and bigger and bigger and bigger and eventually they'll bite off too much, they'll go too far and they get cold and this is what this lot are doing. They're going as far as they can but they won't get away with it. I'm positive. And they've got away with it so far but every dog has its day.
[03:16:14] Unknown:
Well, we have to play our role in that, I think, don't we? It's it's finding ways to show people what role they've got to play, but getting the spirit up is is very important, the morale of the of the of the people. 100%. And the main the main challenge we face is that most people don't view themselves as being part of a people. That's been broken down in many, many people. This individualism has been running for forty, fifty years now, and people become obsessed with their own trinkets and their own They're chasing their own toys. The filthy And they're chasing money. Filthy Luca. Mhmm.
[03:16:46] Unknown:
That's all it is. Yeah. Money money money money money, you know. And, I think that, again, it can't go on. It just it's it's unsustainable as they say. But, I mean, but when you listen to people, you know, people are just depressed. My neighbor's depressed. Most of my neighbors are, well can you do I can't do anything. When I said about that Greater Israel project, she said, what proof have you got of it? Yeah. I said, well, just open your eyes. Look around.
[03:17:17] Unknown:
Just look. Read a book. Come on. Yeah. They don't read books. That's the problem. That's a big problem.
[03:17:24] Unknown:
Oh, nice. They don't. Most most people
[03:17:27] Unknown:
don't have time because they're too busy chasing their money and working and watching television in their downtime just to Have you I've just had a message in from a good friend, my,
[03:17:39] Unknown:
someone who helps a great deal, a lady in Idaho. She says, whilst you all were jacking your jaws, I made a blueberry apricot peach 12 inch pie with walnut crumb crust. And then she sent me pictures of it, which of course photographs of it, which is absolutely rotten, a rotten thing. And then she says, by the way, sure enjoyed listening to the show. Especially enjoyed hearing Frederick. Please send him love from me any chance she gets. So I will. So yeah. Wow. Lily. Yeah. Lily. That's right. It's Lily. Yeah. Lily. So She's nice, isn't it? Yeah. The pie looks great.
If I could send you a picture of it here, I'd send it to you. Well It's, it's actually one pie. I got confused. So the pie has got blueberry, apricot, and peach in it with walnut crumb crust.
[03:18:31] Unknown:
That sounds very American.
[03:18:33] Unknown:
And someone is gonna eat that quite soon and it won't be me.
[03:18:37] Unknown:
I I would just want blueberries. Just blueberries.
[03:18:41] Unknown:
Yeah.
[03:18:42] Unknown:
But Idaho What do you have with blueberry pie, Patrick? What do you have with blueberry pie?
[03:18:47] Unknown:
Just blueberry pie. I don't know what I ice cream. Probably some Right. French vanilla ice cream or some New York vanilla.
[03:18:55] Unknown:
One of those two. I'm gonna send you hang on. I'm gonna send you a picture of it so you can see it. I'll send it to you here in StreamYard. Just hold on. You might as well at least go to I don't see why I should be the only one who doesn't have a pie. It's wrong really, isn't it? Let me see if I can yeah. I'll just bring you this. Just a minute. You can see this pie. You need to see it. Documents. Here we go. And then I'll just tell everybody So you use pathfinder. I like that. Mhmm.
[03:19:30] Unknown:
There it is. Very nice.
[03:19:32] Unknown:
Oh, that's what you call pie, innit? Yeah. That looks yummy. I saw up in Idaho on a sunny afternoon. So what time? They're eight hours behind. So what is it? 04:00 in the afternoon? 03:00? Yeah. Something like that. Five I don't know. Something like that. 04:00? Yep. There you go. And we're not eating it. And we just we've earned that. We've just been talking for three hours. If somebody deserves a pie around here, it says, why is it not here? Why haven't we got an instant pie transference technology? I want pie here now. I'll tell you what I was thinking the other day. You know how that you've got all these dating sites and all this that and the other, and of course, they're just bleh. But I was talking to someone last night, I thought, I'll tell you what I won't mind is come round and bakemeapie.com.
Yes. So Yes. If you find you've got a whole network of of ladies that bake pies, you come to my kitchen and I'll pay you and you go to the kitchen and you come in and you bake a pie for three hours because I want the smell of the pie baking and running through the house, you know that thing. I miss that. I miss it so much, Somebody busying away, usually my mum or my wife or whatever, in the kitchen going, oh, look. I've got this cooking. And you go, this is not it's a lovely feeling when someone's cooking for you. When someone's cooking for you, it's just magic.
[03:20:51] Unknown:
After mass, during fellowship, all the ladies, they they take turns. They have their little ladies groups where they have a fellowship, where they bring all sorts of food usually. Except except in Lent and other play times of the year, but usually they have it after every Sunday.
[03:21:09] Unknown:
Maybe that's maybe apart from flags, we need to look at food. Maybe baking. We could bake Britain back to back to beautiful
[03:21:18] Unknown:
Perfect meeting place. Just go to the parish hall, get get these women. The women, they have Mhmm. Their own little council, and they all take turns doing it in their groups.
[03:21:31] Unknown:
Yep.
[03:21:32] Unknown:
That's what's needed. That's really yummy, don't it? That really See, doesn't it look yummy? Cool. Don't it look yummy?
[03:21:38] Unknown:
You couldn't have one piece. You should have to have two just to see if it's alright, wouldn't you? You know? And three maybe. Just Yeah. Sort of oh, dear. Yes. I tell you what, I I used to like my mom's lemon meringue pie. That was that was delicious. Yeah. That's good to do. I've I've done that for years. I haven't seen it for years. Has it been done away with us, I mean, by the EU? You know? I haven't seen lemon meringue pie anywhere. Did you still have you seen it, Paul? I haven't.
[03:22:05] Unknown:
No. I don't think so. I I don't see pies at all in my town. We used to have a bakery, and they would have all sorts of things like that. Baked goods, donuts, breads. Now now it's gone. That work ethic is gone.
[03:22:20] Unknown:
That's sad. Because, I mean, when you go to France, say, you have a you got, Le Patisserie. Patisserie, is it? Or something like that. Because they have separate cake shops to bread shops, and their cakes look disgusting. You think, ugh. But the most disgusting looking cake is the most tasty, surprisingly. You think, oh, they really know how to cook, the French. They really dolled good at it. Yeah.
[03:22:48] Unknown:
Yeah. The Italians are are better. They're the French, though, they they've got good wine.
[03:22:54] Unknown:
Yes. That's for sure. I think you're right. Yeah. Italian's good. Greek, I find a bit greasy, but apart from that, it's alright. You know? In fact, I like to eat food.
[03:23:06] Unknown:
I can try. Me too. Me too. Yeah.
[03:23:08] Unknown:
Although, I'm on a seafood diet. I see food and eat it. But, anyway, I better zoom because, my bed is beckoning, and thank you, gentlemen, for a fantastic show. Have a nice day, Patrick. Thank you. Hope it it's it's nice and sunny where you are, is it? It is. I'm gonna go out right now,
[03:23:31] Unknown:
go outside for a bit.
[03:23:33] Unknown:
That's nice. And, Thanks, Paul.
[03:23:37] Unknown:
It was fun. Thanks, Patrick. Fantastic. You know you're not Paul. Not Patrick. Not anybody else. I'll be in touch, Eric. I'll be in touch to speak to you. Speak to you. Speak to you. See you in a bit. Okay, mate. Thanks. Thanks for being here, Patrick. Thanks, Eric. See you soon. Bye for now. Bye bye.
[03:23:53] Unknown:
Blasting the voice of freedom worldwide. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[03:23:59] Unknown:
Bye bye, boys. Have fun storming the castle.
Introduction and Opening Remarks
Hour One: Kerfuffle and Guest Announcements
Robin Hood and Cultural Symbols
Childhood Memories and Play
Technical Challenges and Radio Operations
Art and Creativity: Drawing with the Right Brain
Left-Handedness and Cultural Observations
Political Reflections and Personal Histories
The Evolution of Political Ideologies
Historical Figures and Political Influence
Robin Hood Theme and Transition to Hour Two
Introduction of Guest: Frederick Blackburn
Appalachian Culture and Community Challenges
Fourth Generation Warfare and Community Impact
Personal Stories and Dementia
Generational Wealth and Family Dynamics
Strategies for Resistance and Community Building
Hour Three: Introduction of Eli James
Economic Systems and Debt Discussion
Historical Context of Banking and Power
Inheritance and Family Structures
Cultural Reflections and Humor in Politics
Closing Remarks and Future Plans