Paul English Live & Chums 041725 -
AI Suggested Titles :
The Mystery of Missing Free Speech and Trench Coat Tales
From Sunny Days to Free Speech Frays: A Paul English Live Episode
Trench Coats, Free Speech, and Digital Dilemmas
Navigating Free Speech and Nostalgia: A Journey with Paul English
The Great Free Speech Debate and the Charm of Yesteryear
In this episode of Paul English Live, we dive into a variety of topics, starting with a humorous discussion on the weather and the joys of living in a sunny area. The conversation takes a whimsical turn as Paul and his guests reminisce about the fashion and footwear of the past, including trench coats and the nostalgic sound of metal-tipped shoes. The show also touches on the challenges of free speech in the UK, with a focus on the recent restrictions faced by platforms like Gab and BitChute. Paul shares his thoughts on the importance of maintaining free speech and the absurdity of censorship. The episode continues with a light-hearted segment featuring jokes and humorous anecdotes, including a story about a man saving a dog in an unconventional way. The discussion then shifts to more serious topics, such as the impact of digital IDs and the erosion of free speech. Paul and his guests explore the philosophical and societal implications of these issues, emphasizing the need for a return to traditional values and moral principles. The episode wraps up with a reflection on the importance of community and the power of collective action in challenging the status quo.
This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymymyboost.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function with sluggish mitochondria is kinda like running an engine that's low on oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by PhatPhix, p h a t p h I x, dot com, and also iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency wand by Preif International. That's iterraplanet.com. Thank you, and welcome to the program. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[00:02:00] Unknown:
Hi, everyone, and welcome. Did you hear that pregnant pause? Maybe you did. Maybe you didn't. It's Thursday. It's the is it the seventeenth? It's the April 17, I think. I do believe 02/2025. This is Paul English Live. We're here with you for the next couple of hours on WBN three two four. Let's do some radio stuff. Tonight, we're gonna try and find out where all the free speech has gone to. Won't take too long, I think. So we'll have to talk about lots of other things as well using free speech. Groovy. Hi everyone, and, welcome back. Hope you've had a good week. We've had a wonderful week. You know, we always start off with the weather here because it would be wrong to do anything else than to start off with the weather.
So I've had a wonderful week of weather, where I am. I live in a place called Sunny this, that, and the other. Literally, the name of my street is sunny something or other. I'm keeping the, other bit hidden so that I don't get detected somewhere in the universe. I'm just being silly, really. But it has been marvellously sunny here, for the past, oh, four weeks. Must be four four or five weeks, forty forty five weeks, something like that. And, it's just been amazing. So I've been out walking all the time, and I'm as tanned as an Italian on a hot summer's day, really. Well, okay. I'm exaggerating a little bit, but, not too bad, really. Lots of lovely fresh sea breezes, a slight nip in the air, but blazing sunshine, and again, was another day without a cloud in the sky. Seriously, it's quite a thing. I'm getting a bit worried though because I'm beginning to think that all the summer allocation of sunshine is being given to us now. Because, you know, you never know what they're doing with their newfangled weather machines or even their oldfangled ones.
And so, of course, there's always something to worry about, so I've decided to worry about that. Anyway, I have, the usual clutch of other freters and concerned paranoid communicators with me, and I would like to welcome them all to the show. And I'll start off by introducing, Eric because you've just turned up. I think we did Paul last week, so you get in first. Eric, good evening. Good evening. Welcome to the show. How are you?
[00:05:17] Unknown:
Very well. Thank you. And I it's nice to hear that you had some, Japanese air conditioning fitted into your house because you said the you know, there's a nip in the air. So it's There is. Yes. See? So There is. But, yes. I thought I'd just start off with that. And, you know, this is not a lavatorial gag, so, it's a it's a new one for me. Well, the night is young, Eric. I'm sure there'll be plenty of opportunities for us all to verbally move into the toilet as it were and, proceed, you know, from that point forward. That'll be great. I believe you're talking about a Flasher Max tonight. Is that is that right? I noticed by the English and chums, you know, trench coats and that type of thing.
[00:05:55] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. We go, well, it was just that the picture had trench coats in it, and I was desperately looking thinking around today. I thought, what do I call this one? As many people will have known, of course, if you're on the radio, everybody on WBN and I on Radio Soapbox, you don't get to see our glorious graphics. We don't do sort of video stuff, with this, but we are on video platforms because it gives us the, the chat rooms, which are fantastic. Hi. Shout out to everybody in Rumble already. Great to have you here right at the start of the show. It's great to see that you're also keen as are we. But, yes, it's just that the, the graphic just I was looking for something yesterday, and I saw this. I thought, oh, I do like that. I like it a lot. I like sort of cartoony comic book things that are sort of classy and slightly elegant.
And so we knocked that one up. Our our resident, high quality, hugely staffed graphics department, knocked this up for me overnight and, sent it back. And, it just happens to have trench coats and trousers in it. And I got I also got the word tranchent in or trenchant depending on how you want to pronounce it. And, so, you know, I was, I was using my alliteration skills here today. So we've got, tranchent trenchcoat and trouser transmission for this one. So there you go. And it's, somebody else's turn next week to come up with a highly alliterative title for the show, but there we go. Are you wearing a trench coat, Eric? That's what I want to know. Have you got one on right now?
[00:07:16] Unknown:
Not quite. No. But I actually did buy one, oh, this must have been years ago. Early nineties, late eighties. And it was a, copy of a acuscrutescrutum or acu whatever you call it. Beg your pardon? What did you say? There was a there was a place up in London called Accu Bummers or Acu Acrascrortum, did you say? What was that? Acrascrortum, I think it was called. It's in Piccadilly, and it was a copy of a acrascrortum or acrascrutum
[00:07:45] Unknown:
trench coat. I can't remember the name. I think I think the full name you're looking for is agroscrotum,
[00:07:49] Unknown:
I think, is what the name is. Right? That's what it was. It's something like that, isn't it? But I have to tell you something. It's unbelievable trench coat because, it's made as I say, it's made in Poland, and that was during the Cold War. And, well insulated. It's built for a Polish winter. And I bought it in London, and, I still got it. Very nice, it is. On the it's one of these trench coats you could never buy today because it's so well made. And, but my, late father used to moan in the late sixties, early seventies because they made trench coats, more shorter and shorter and shorter. My granddad used to moan as well. He called them backside freezers, but not exactly in that those those terms.
And Really? You noticed that trench coats got shorter and shorter until they're sort of up to your waist almost. Yeah. But, the old ones, if you look at the, your pictures of people in the nineteen thirties, they were very, very they're only about sort of used to be about four or five inches below the knee, didn't they? Very, very long. Keep you nice and warm. So there we go.
[00:08:55] Unknown:
Yeah. I guess it gives added new meaning to the word cold war. At least the poles weren't as cold as, say, your dad with his short trench coat or something. That's right. Yes. Existed in the seventies. Yes. His backside freezer. Because I remember him going at John Colliers. Anybody remember John Colliers? The window to watch?
[00:09:13] Unknown:
Now for listeners around the world, John Colliers was on Em's Outfitters here in jolly old England, wasn't it? Sixties and the seventies. Yes. Yes. And I think my grand auntie went in there, and he he wanted to buy a trench coat. And he said, this is a Bex side freezer, but not exactly in those words. No. Thank you. I don't wanna pay that sort of money for a very short coat. I want a proper check to go, please. And then he walked through. Have gone shopping with him because, you know, as blokes, we we love shopping, don't we? We just love to Oh, yes. To go shopping. Yeah. Especially when he was with my mom. You know? It was a cure for insomnia, shopping with my mother.
[00:09:53] Unknown:
I'm shuddering a bit. I'm getting funny, sort of twitching a bit, really, thinking about those things. Yes. Mothers were very earnest. My mom was a very earnest and keen shopper and, so I had to move around. I think I've mentioned before, whenever we went to buy shoes, my heart used to sink. It really did. It was just incredible. Right, Paul? Yes. We're going down to Leeds City Centre, yes, to buy you a pair of shoes. Or do we have to? Yes. We do. And it wasn't like the first pair I saw. They'll do. No. They won't. And it we would have to go to at least four shops. And when you're sort of 10 and 11 or even nine, I remember very difficult to sort of stay focused in shoe shops. They're very, very dull places. Oh, I always like the shoe horns and trying to slip my feet into small shoes and things like that, you know, because they're chop they're toys, aren't they, really? Yes. But my mom my mom had been raised as a shoe fitter.
It was one of her jobs in the fifties, before, she decided to get serious and marry my father. And, so she knew a thing or two about shoes and welts and, stitching and all this kind of stuff. And so if they were ropey, I couldn't have them. And we would often end up going back to the very first shop, of course, that we'd been to, much to my pleasure. See, I told you these were the right ones. And, and and get the shoes. Yeah. Of course. That's when I've still got a pair of shoe. Actually, I was wearing them all the other day. I've got a a fantastic pair of English gentleman's leather shoes, which must be I think they're about 30 years old now, and you you can't tell. A a, because I've barely worn them. I've worn them possibly two dozen times, you know, usually for weddings and christenings. Actually, I haven't been to any christenings, funerals, that kind of thing, or posh occasions, which is as you know, I go to loads now. I'm going to lots of posh occasions.
And they're just they're the most fantastic, Nick. I had them quarter tipped. Does anybody know what I'm referring to when I say quarter tipped? Make your eyes water. What does it mean? So on the to stop the heel wearing down on full leather shoes, which, of course, they tend to do or used to if you were wearing them a lot, you can put a piece of you can go to a cobbler. In fact, when I bought these, I didn't even wear them as I as I paid for them. They cost me a bomb at the time. They're very well made. And, I took them straight to a cobbler and said, will you put a quarter tip in that? And he said, sure. So on the where would it be? The inside is it in the inside or the outside part of the heel? I can't remember. It's the outside. I think it's the inside. Is it yeah. It might be. It's wherever you think your foot it would be the outside, wouldn't it? So as you put your foot down, I think it's the outer heel that hits the hits the the Road First. What they do is they saw, like, quarter of the actual leather heel off and down to an eighth of an inch, and they replace it with metal. And it's banged in with some nails, and it's and it's great. When you march along, you sound like a very small military platoon. It makes the most fantastic sound. And I was out in them the other day, and my son doesn't have these. Why are your shoes making that sound? I said, because they're proper. That's why, my lad. They're proper. He said, what do you mean? So I showed him. He said, can I get those done to my shoes? I said, well, not those with rubber soles. No. You can't. But when you get a pair of proper British leather shoes, men's shoes, to go with your trench coat later on in life, of course, is what I meant, you can get them quarter tipped. And I remember there was a day once, I'm getting all silly now, but I'm looking at these guys with trench coats. I think my dad had a big sort of raincoat and all that kind of stuff. And, of course, he used to wear trousers as well. You're wearing trousers tonight, Eric, aren't you? Is everybody wearing trousers tonight? Yes. I'm wearing trousers. Everybody got trousers on? Good. I've got blue jeans.
Okay. They'll do. Paul, you're wearing trousers. Yes? You got some trousers on?
[00:13:39] Unknown:
I'll I'll I'll never say. I'll I'll never tell.
[00:13:44] Unknown:
Well, this puts a sort of frisson of excitement into the show. I quite like this. Although, it's a bit worrying at the same time, so let's swiftly move on. But I I remember once waiting outside a bank for my dad, my first encounters with banks. Not that I knew it was a bank. And he told me to wait outside, and he came walking along, and his shoes had something similar in them. I don't know if it was quarter tips. It might have been segs where you, you know, nail him into the shoe, and he came walking on. It made the most fantastic crunching sound. And if I hear that crunching sound, I'm immediately taken back to being about eight years of age waiting outside for this bank to for my dad to arrive. And nobody needed to know any of this, but now you do. So, there'll be a test later on in the show. Did you remember Paul's escapade with his father's shoes? Yes.
[00:14:28] Unknown:
Who remembers Blakeys? You know Blakeys? You used to put them on his shoes. Were they the makers of Seg's? Yeah. You you just hammered them on. They used to have the the the the yeah. And they used to come off occasionally. But so when he's walking along, they made a fantastic and when I was at school, the kids who came by bus used to sit at the back. You you know, they used to have a platform you got on, and they used to Yeah. Put their shoes down on, do they use that when I when you was at school? And then Yes. You have all sparks flying up from their shoes because he used to Yes. The the tell the bus cadet to call them. You know? Very dangerous, but we survived.
[00:15:06] Unknown:
I don't know, did it. Similar childhoods, Eric. Yes. I mean, the yeah. Patrick and Paul, do you have segs in America? Metal things. They're like military boots. I don't know what your military boots are like now. Maybe neither of you have worn a pair if ever or not recently. But Segs. Like yeah. They're like a horseshoe, but for men's shoes. They're they're like a metal plate with spikes, and you literally hammer them into the heel and all over the sole. And what it does is it reduces the rate of wear on the leather soles. So you're actually walking around on a platform of steel. And Eric's absolutely right. There was like a competition to see how many you could get into your shoes, not by me. I was reasonably sensible apart from which my mum would have knocked 10 bells out of me if I'd have done it. But, yeah, guys used to just literally fill their shoes with segs, And then they would hold the back end of the bus, and the bus would drag them along, and they would be basically skidding along the road on the with sparks flying out. And the idea the more segs you had, the more sparks you made. Makes sense. Skews on a snowmobile.
[00:16:07] Unknown:
Yeah. That's right. Pavement. Yeah. Right? Yeah. They Yeah. There was Sometimes they're on the back of a bike as well. If you get the welder out of the bike. You just get the welder out and build up build up, you know, metal on it. That would work.
[00:16:21] Unknown:
Yeah. That's a really heavy industrial approach, but I quite like it. Yeah. Absolutely. Big metal boots. They were great. They were fun.
[00:16:29] Unknown:
Do you remember that also they used to, used to have Wayfinder shoes that had, the soles used to have, animal paw prints on so you knew, so you had to take your shoe off. So if you saw a paw print, see to see what the what the fleasiest animal was. Do you remember that? Well, I wonder if you thought that one up. And, I don't know. What and, what could you do is put Blakey's into the the heels of them and then sit on your mate's bike. And then as you're cycling along, you just put your feet, your your heels down, and you get sparks flying out the back of the bike.
[00:17:06] Unknown:
If you went downhill, of course. It's Yeah. Silly little things. Yes. Used to do. Yes. But this is how we had fun back then. Oh, you tell the children of this today. They won't believe you. No. It was just sweet, innocent, crazy, dangerous fun. It was good. The other shoe I remember as well was if you took it off, there was a compass in the heel. Do you remember? That was a way find that was a way finder, wasn't it? Yeah. It might. I don't know. Yeah. Hence the name. So instead of mobile phones, we used compasses and ordinance survey maps. But you had to take your shoe off. Meetings. You had to take your bloody shoe off. So you couldn't get anywhere because you're hopping around, look, trying to figure out what the bloody direction am I supposed to go in? You think of the logic. You see, animal paw prints will form,
[00:17:48] Unknown:
excuse my language, mud or shit. So you had to take your shoe off where there's mud and shit said that. To to look at the sole of the shoe to see what animal track it is. I mean Yeah. What genius trim that was. Do you think this is why Britain lost the empire? I think that was it. I think that's Some of the
[00:18:08] Unknown:
the marketing department. Yeah. It was just to appeal to children. It was to appeal to children. And there was a great battle at school over which footwear you wore, particularly when you were an early teenager. It was either the Doc Martin boot in cherry red or this although this was frowned upon severely by the teachers at our school, so people ended up getting the black Doc Marten boots. I ended up getting the black Doc Marten shoes, and I've still got a pair to this day, not the ones from all that time ago. I I bought them subsequently. They're the shoes that supposedly policemen used to wear. I don't know if they still wear them. They probably go around in ballet shoes now or something like that. I don't know what they wear, but, Doc Martens' most amazing shoe. You can just wear they're so comfortable. So there was that. But the the main competition was between the Doc Martens, cherry red, by the Bovar boys that went to school, and the Royals. Do you remember those? Which were a brogue, a men's brogue, and they were called royals.
All electric Those are the ones the royals are the ones that all the Blakeys were hammered into, the segs. Yeah. Fantastic. But modern modern
[00:19:15] Unknown:
day, though, who's got a pair of Ortbergs? Now they they they're made in Yorkshire, would you believe? Ortbergs, and the army use them. They're bloody good boots. Yeah. Have you had a good Ortbergs? Bloody good boots, you know. Yes.
[00:19:28] Unknown:
But you've also got the of tonight's show wrong, Eric, because it should have been called a load of old cobblers, really, because we just talked about shoes, really, for most of them. Although I've quite enjoyed myself. Well, we have a couple American brands that kind of
[00:19:40] Unknown:
are popular. Danner is one where they still make boots that are made in America and shoes. And then the other Yeah. Closer to me is Red Wing in Red Wing, Minnesota. They make Right. Leather shoes and mining shoes, that kind of thing because because there's a lot of mining and forestry type stuff. So they're work more work boot type stuff than dressy. I think the dressy stuff comes from Europe, from your neck of the woods or Italy, places like that, or it's more common.
[00:20:08] Unknown:
Well, we're very dressy here. We're very stylish here. Yeah. You don't have that. We don't have that. We don't no.
[00:20:15] Unknown:
We lost it somewhere.
[00:20:18] Unknown:
Well, maybe you did. Yeah. I mean, all those I know we talk about trousers quite a bit, and they're pretty important. And I've got some actually, I'm lying. I haven't got trousers. I've got my very long shorts on, and my knees are slightly cold of that because of that Japanese chap that's floating around the air nipping away a bit. But, my son who went to Italy, I've mentioned this before, was just wants to go and move there because he said, where did he go? He went to Turin or Torino, depending on, you know, how you say it. And, so that everybody's just dressed so well. I said, yeah. He does raise the tempo and the sort of feeling of life. It really does. So the Italians are pretty good at that stuff and top hat to them, unless you're a gangster, in which case they tend to go a bit overboard, I think, and always look a bit lurid. But that's me, being slightly reserved and everything.
Yeah. So, anyway, a lot of old cobblers to start it all off. Anyway, the mystery of the missing free speech. So has anybody found it? I'm, of course, referencing The UK. You guys are still luxuriating in being able to say whatever you want over there in America. But, we're we're getting to the point now where we can barely exist. And one of the things that just sort of prompted me to throw this in, because the titles, of course, is just a guide. We end up going all over the place in these shows, which is as it should be, is Gab, g a b, Com, which I think I've had an account at Gab even though I don't heavily use it.
I do put a notice up for this show, all the time. And anybody that's, heard the show from that and has liked those posts, hats off to you. Thank you very much for that. Even though, it's gonna be very difficult now for any sort of British types to get in there because if you go to gab.com from Jolly Old England right now, you get this. I'm gonna I I it's not too long. It says, access restricted by provider, I. E. Gabb have turned it off, and they write as follows. They say, after receiving yet another demand from the UK speech police, Ofcom, and that's short for the Office of Communism as far as I'm concerned. It's supposed to be the Office of Communications or something.
But he go Torba goes on, I'm assuming he wrote this, GAB has made the decision to block the entire United Kingdom from accessing our website. The latest email from Ofcom ordered us to disclose information about our users and operations. We know where this leads. Compelled censorship and British citizens thrown in jail, for hate speech. That old thing. We refuse to comply with this tyranny. Jolly good. You do right. Gab is an American company with zero presence in The UK. Well, there's me, and there's a few others. And May. And Eric. Yeah. Ofcom's demands have no legal force here. Jolly good. Well, they really don't need to have any legal force here too, but at the moment, we've got to endure this nonsense.
To enforce anything in The United States, they'd need to go through a mutual legal assistance treaty request. Oh, I quite like the idea of one of those. Or letters roguatory, no US court is going to enforce a foreign censorship regime. The first amendment forbids it. Good. We don't have one of those yet, but we maybe ought to draft one up at least for Sussex where I live and do it on a county by county basis. He goes on. He says, Ofcom will likely try to make an example of us anyway. Do you think? Probably, they will. That's because The UK's Online Safety Act isn't about protecting children. It's about suppressing dissent. Correct.
They're welcome to try. The idea that a British regulator they don't I hate all this kind of stuff. These are the fifth column inside Britain that are masquerading as Britain's. I yeah. The idea however, the idea that a British regulator can pressure a US company that's IP blocking the entire UK is as farcical as it is futile indeed. If anything, it proves our point. Censorship does not work. It only reveals the truth about the censors. Don't it just? We proudly join platforms like BitChute, who've also just had to go down the bin and down the same route, in boycotting The United Kingdom. American companies should follow suit. The power of the UK's parliament ends where the first amendment begins. Jolly good. The only way to vote against the tyranny of The UK's present regime is to walk away from it, refuse to comply, and take refuge under the impervious shelter of the first amendment. Good for you if you can. We're we're not in that position just yet, if ever. The UK's Rulers want their people kept in the dark, which we all are like mushrooms.
Let them see how long the public tolerates it as their Internet vanishes one website at a time. My my slightly jaded view is that the public, of course, the vast majority of the public here in The UK don't go to Gab and would possibly be terrified about seeing people exercising their free speech, although there's a growing number that aren't. I I I I think what Torben has done has been fantastic, to be quite honest. And the really weird thing is I was even toying with the idea, foolishly, my timing is absolutely appalling, with getting sort of a permanent subscription there or even a lifetime membership to support it. Not that I'm loaded, right, I think it's about $500 for a lifetime thing. But it's it's just a good he just says a lot of good things. I wouldn't say I agree with him on everything, but the fact that they've knocked themselves out to put this together is brilliant. And I think it's early days with all of this kind of nonsense. We're gonna have to see what happens. I did hear where was this? I might even be able to play it, although it's a bit worrisome.
Let's see if we can alright. Look. I'm just gonna play a minute or so of Alex Jones. Anybody heard of Alex Jones? I'm not a fan. Somebody sent me this over earlier today. And it actually kind of indirectly addresses this. I'll just play a minute of this. Listen to this. No free trade with US without free speech.
[00:25:50] Unknown:
Trump's been officially saying this, but now Starmer said he he's been given the direct in writing communication that if you keep arresting people for speech and you keep your transgender stuff targeting kids, we're gonna put bigger tariffs on you. And people they will that's what tariffs have always been about is also political power. You're like, well, wait. We're meddling in them. No. No. The globalist have taken over Europe and The UK and Australia, New Zealand, Canada. They're meddling in our affairs. Their lawsuits and regulations and attacks, I mean, on x and you name it.
And it was I learned, like, eight years ago, NATO was coordinating the plans for censorship of Americans and myself, and my name was listed in official NATO meetings. Because, again, our money can be sent over there, and then they don't have to follow our laws, and then they use it domestically to attack us. So and that's just some of the good Trump's doing. I mean, it's he really his people really get it.
[00:26:49] Unknown:
And he goes on a bit more, which I could play, but I'm not going to. But, yeah, tariffs? Well, let's see. Do you remember that Starmer was over there weaseling around like the dope that he is, saying that he's very proud of our free speech traditions? Oh, dear. Oh, dear. I just thought we'd have a pregnant pause then, and you all helped me out with that. That was good.
[00:27:20] Unknown:
I'm I'm busy. I'm looking up what Ofcom is. I'm I'm trying to get my get an idea of what what you're dealing with there. What is it? The office of communications.
[00:27:30] Unknown:
Yeah. It's like that agency in 1984.
[00:27:34] Unknown:
Yeah. Broadcast, Internet, telecommunications, and postal industries.
[00:27:38] Unknown:
Oh my
[00:27:39] Unknown:
goodness. Even in your mail. Postal.
[00:27:41] Unknown:
They're the regulators of the transmission of thoughts and ideas. That's what they are. That's why it's so expensive to send you anything.
[00:27:49] Unknown:
I mean, I I was, like, gonna send I sent some ear tips for for, headphones little earbud headphones for for to Eric. And I went to the mail to send them to him. I bought a padded envelope. And because it was over a quarter inch thick, the price went from $2 to $40 just because it was over a quarter inch thick, the envelope. Woah. It's ridiculous. And there was no in between.
[00:28:16] Unknown:
Did you No. Mail?
[00:28:18] Unknown:
Well, media mail. Yeah. I could do it like that, but then I'd have to say that what I'm sending is media, which wouldn't be true, technically. But No. No. No. No. No. No. Just go to the thrift store, buy yourself a 25¢ paperback book, and stick it in a box. Great. Cut cut holes for the
[00:28:36] Unknown:
for the concert. Listen to naughty Paul. Naughty Paul knows that I had to deal with this.
[00:28:42] Unknown:
Of course. I'm an American. You give us any any challenge, and we'll figure out a way to overcome it.
[00:28:52] Unknown:
Yeah. That's good. I didn't know that about Gab. I knew that about BitChute.
[00:28:56] Unknown:
But you can get around the sensors. You can get around the sensors by using a VPN. And
[00:29:03] Unknown:
Dun dun dun.
[00:29:05] Unknown:
You can And I'm on BitChute. I have a BitChute channel, and I'm still using it even though it's censored. And I've actually found we was talking about this was it the other day, Patrick, wasn't we? And, with Brave in The UK, you have to pay for the VPN. I don't know if it's a free in The States. No. It's not free. Not for Brave. But you see, I'm a tonight I'm very tough fisted. You notice I take large steps to save a shoe leather and that type of thing. Yeah. And, I found one, Urban VPN, and that's totally free. Proton,
[00:29:40] Unknown:
yes. Okay. That's free, but I found Urban. Is that right? Be a there must be a VPN lobby in your parliament that's making out like bandits right now.
[00:29:49] Unknown:
Well Maybe. I guess. Not really looked into it. I'll tell you if you use Opera use Gap. If you use Opera browser, everybody if you're a real tightwad like me I mean, I've got several browsers. I do use Brave. I use Opera. I also Yandex. I don't use Yandex. No. I also have, a sort of independent effort called FlashPeaks SlimJet. How about that? That's a mouthful, isn't it? But it's pretty good. It's all based on Chrome. However, Opera comes with its own free built in VPN, Eric.
[00:30:23] Unknown:
Well, I've tried that. It that didn't didn't work on my computer, so I thought something The index has a VPN function too.
[00:30:29] Unknown:
Does it? I've never yeah. Try that. Perhaps they have something. The other thing I've noticed
[00:30:36] Unknown:
I I was loading up some, I re you know, what I did on Monday onto BitShoot, and the I I chose The United States, but it's really slow. So I changed it to The Netherlands, and it's much quicker. So it's a little tip. Find a place near United Kingdom because it'll be a little bit quicker, I suppose. So and it it was. It was a lot quicker. So The Netherlands is what but what I like about it is, on YouTube, you get Dutch adverts. Yeah. They're as crap as what we get.
[00:31:12] Unknown:
They're probably selling quite a bit of cheese, aren't they, Eric? I bet there's been Dutch. There'll be a lot of cheese advertising. So well, on on opera, and this is to all tightwad Englishmen. I probably didn't need to use the word tightwad. It probably includes all of us. You can choose from The Americas, which I do. That gets you straight into gab. So this is easy peasy lemon squeezy, Asia, and Europe. And Europe, I think, is Dutch. I think it they have a Dutch one there. So I'm just letting you know. There'll be a there'll be a freebie solution. I mean, you know, I don't really need one all the time. But if you wanna go to Gab, so be it. They may see that there there isn't such a drop in their traffic from The UK anyway. I I don't know. But I would have thought if you actually look at the profile of Gab users, they are, by definition, people who've sought out free speech in a free speech platform and therefore are not likely to be completely ignorant about VPNs and things like that. So if they all start using Opera and that's one of the things he should have said in his post. Start using Opera or a browser that comes with a free VPN, and you can get it easy peasy. That would be okay. And, there we go. But but I'm reassured that Ofcom are trying to regulate me and look after me. You too, Eric, I imagine. It's nice to feel safer now, don't you? Setting up stumbling blocks for you.
[00:32:26] Unknown:
Yeah. That's right. And I'll tell you something. I close the curtains and make sure nobody's watching. Don't tell anybody between you and I, Paul. And and and and the two Pauls and Patrick. So don't tell anybody else. I watched RT live because Russia today is actually banned in this country, But with the VPN, you can actually see it. So I wonder if the boys are gonna be coming around tomorrow to arrest me for that.
[00:32:52] Unknown:
Well, they might be. They probably set up a new VPN police division, aren't they? Hello? Yes. We're the virtual police network. We're the VPN looking at the virtual private networks. Are you? Yes. All that kind of stuff. We we have a similar thing, though. If if you're in America right now and you go to presstv.com,
[00:33:09] Unknown:
it will say this website has been seized. It's been seized by the Department of Justice and the Department of Commerce.
[00:33:18] Unknown:
Really? Yes. Nice.
[00:33:20] Unknown:
It will give you the the, warrant issue and the US code and all that where it says the Office of Export Enforcement and Bureau Federal Bureau of Investigation. So FBI seized it, and that's the main, the RT equivalent for Iran is press TV. And I know from people that I've talked to that have been regulars on the press TV that, yeah, that happened, I think, under Trump back in when he was president the first time around. And they sit and talk about free speech, and they take away people's free speech like that, get getting a second opinion. And yet at the same time, they allow just the most ridiculous pornography on the planet that you can imagine.
Little children can access it anywhere, on the computer, on a phone, tablet, and there's nothing they they do about that. Yet they're gonna protect us from getting information from another country that they don't like, they don't get agree with, whoever they are, you know, who they might be, but it's I have no idea. It's sick. When you when you think about it, morally It is. Absolutely an outrage.
[00:34:43] Unknown:
It is. It is. And, of course, we've we've been exposed to it for so long that we're not morally outraged or not even just generally cross. I guess people like us are a bit cross, but we find ways around it to just sort of, okay. You put that hurdle there. Well, we'll do that. Just a lot of people don't. But then, as I said, those people that don't are not really in this space fully yet anyway, if you know what I mean. If you get into this space, there's so much information and help going around from people to actually overcome these silly hurdles that they put up. But it's the mere fact that they feel that they have to do it, but there's nothing new. There's nothing I mean, when they first set up the Royal Mail over here, I can't remember which king it was under, Whenever it kicked off, they had an intermediary sorting office that they didn't let anybody know about.
And, so as the letters were all flying around London, so when would it be? In sixteen hundreds? Maybe it's older than that. I don't know. So there you go. There's a doubt. I don't know. If anybody knows when the Royal Mail started, stick it in the rumble chat, will you? And let us know. Put me up in misery and find out what king it was. But the king, set up a team, and they steam they steamed open all the letters and read them. It's just nonstop. They might be thinking and writing things that I don't like. Well, possibly, yes. It's it's called living in a free country, supposedly. Well, we don't want any of that. It's gonna actually bugger things up. No. Steam all the envelopes over them. Reseal them and pass them on and let me know about any really super naughty ones. So there you go. From the minute of the postal service beginning, they were pilfering the mail. Absolutely. Paul, you were about to say something before I blathered on. I know exactly what it is. What we've got here is
[00:36:18] Unknown:
failure to communicate.
[00:36:23] Unknown:
I I think we do. Yes. We do. Actually, actually, I think,
[00:36:27] Unknown:
we haven't even touched on the depths of depravity that they have they have plunged the world into. Because if you look at the whole, COVID thing and the whole jab Mhmm. And, oh, two weeks to flatten the curve that turned into two or three months and everybody locked up, sequestered in their houses. They can't go anywhere. They can't do anything. And then guess what? Then right about the same time, I was getting reports that there was a flood of insect form that was just absolutely going bananas.
[00:37:02] Unknown:
And it was A flood of what? A flood of what? Incest
[00:37:06] Unknown:
porn. So here's families. Here's these families that are all locked up. They can't communicate with anybody but each other. And now Mhmm. There's these evil bastards do planting the seeds. Oh, well, you don't need to go out on a date. Just have a date at home. Just the depths of the gravity just I mean Yeah. You cannot even
[00:37:35] Unknown:
act as to keep these guys off. They did the same in Gaza. The IDF took over the television stations, and that's what they did. They brought back in 2013. They broadcast pornography to demoralize the people. They'd have nothing to to, get any news about what was going on outside their doors. That's all it. So it's definitely a weapon of war. And censoring like this is also a weapon because it they don't want people questioning the official narrative coming out of the the main broadcast units of ABC, NBC, CBS, NPR, BBC,
[00:38:12] Unknown:
you know, same thing. NPR? Oh oh, National Propaganda Radio. That one. Yeah. Okay. I know you're Yeah. Frankly.
[00:38:19] Unknown:
I mean, maybe I'm being a bit optimistic, but I tend to think that they're kind of, you know, closing the gate after the horse has bolted type thing. I think it's really. But but, you know, they're like a Leviathan. They're like a real dinosaur where it takes an awful long time for messages to ripple through their organizations and for things to happen. You know, they go, well, we're gonna do this, and three years later, it starts to happen. But it it generally always does happen, this sort of tightening up of things. And this this thing with Ofcom is ridiculous. But, of course, it's as we've mentioned before, the the parallels are everywhere in history, and this is very similar to what happened a hundred years ago in Russia with a kind of policing of communication, the criminalization of certain words, and sentences. And, of course, we've had the hurty feelings culture built up. You can't hurt people's feelings, which, of course, you can even when you're not trying to. Even when you don't actually mean it, you can do it, because someone can just say that you did, that kind of stuff. So, anyway, Ofcom are obviously throwing their weight around and, really enjoying it. Although I don't know who the head of Ofcom is, but they do stick their nose in. They regulate everything, and it's this kind of what would you call it? Soft yeah. It's a soft kill of human energy. And the soft kill is the most devastating.
[00:39:38] Unknown:
Sorry, Patrick? Michael Grade is the chairman of AvComm. Chief executive is Melanie Dawes.
[00:39:44] Unknown:
Oh, Michael Gray, the guy that used to head up channel four, I think. Wasn't he? Eric? I think he was. 88 to '97. Yes. That's right. Yes. Yeah. Yes. We did. Well, channel four is just another sort of globalist dung hole programming. It's always full of all that sort of lefty liberal, you know, hirty, hirty, everybody, let's pursue equality nonsense. It's just commie.
[00:40:05] Unknown:
So is channel five. But Yeah. The thing the thing with this VPN, I actually believe that censorship always shoots itself in the foot because it's the last bastion of tyrants, because it makes people, you you know, for example, if you had a a sign up saying, do not look behind this door, most people would look behind a a door to see what's behind there because people are are fast intrigued. That's human nature to be intrigued by something. So for example, you know, you put to children, do not walk on the grass. They will walk on the grass. Best thing to say is, walk on the grass, and they won't walk on the grass. You know, keep off the footpath, and they'll walk on the footpath. That's human nature.
So,
[00:40:47] Unknown:
you know, as I think there's a case, though, to meet to be made for censorship when it comes to pornography because it's I % agree with you. There is absolutely nothing being done to censor it.
[00:40:58] Unknown:
And I agree with you, Paul, Patrick, because there should be censorship with children. Yes. So I % agree with that. I would say even adults, but that's that, you know Well,
[00:41:09] Unknown:
pornography I think that should be punishable by capital punishment. I think you should be hung, drawn, and quartered. I think we should go really draconian with this. It'd be such fun.
[00:41:18] Unknown:
What about the ultimate punishment, being
[00:41:23] Unknown:
locked in a room and listening to a Tony Blair speech for an hour? Now that would be Hey. Now you've just let me in because you were just talking about tyrants as well, and I've got an hour. We can't listen to him for an hour. I've got this clip, courtesy someone send it through onto, I'm sorry, because it's forwarded from off grid island within Telegram. But this is Tony. First? Can I do one You do one point first before we go over to the beautiful Tony?
[00:41:48] Unknown:
Go on. Yes. Please, Paul. One point first as far as VPN. Okay? My the way I consider VPNs is is much the same way that I configure or that I I concern myself with the free lunch. Okay? As far as I'm concerned, the only free ride is the rotation of the Earth, and the flat earthers screwed data. Now if you were going for a free VPN and you want, utter secrecy and security, I don't think you're gonna find it because that VPN service has to monetize itself somehow. It has to pay the bills somehow.
[00:42:35] Unknown:
So statistics. Commercial statistics to companies, like, who's what's popular, what's not.
[00:42:42] Unknown:
Of course, it's like the cookies And the government. They trade the Right. Okay. But what I find out, who who's looking at looking at things that are naughty? Like, for example, why can't we see Russia today? Right. Which but if you go over the to the channel, you got France or The Netherlands, you can see it. So what's the difference? I I don't I just don't get it. What I'm saying is VPNs,
[00:43:04] Unknown:
some VPNs actually log, where you go and what you do. They don't capture your data, but they do log where you go. And that information is out there and can be turned over to whoever asked for it. So if you're looking for a VPN, find one that's a few bucks and read their terms of service. Do you know what to expect? That's me that's my only point.
[00:43:34] Unknown:
Yeah. No. It's a good one. I don't know what difference, Paul, though, ultimately is between going straight through your normal ISP because they're fully monitored or going through a VPN. So I I wouldn't even I'm not overly concerned about it. I mean, for example, the one in Opera is obviously funded by Opera's other activities. They don't really care. It's easy for them to sling it together. It comes inbuilt into the browser. And Opera, of course, started off as a Scandinavian thing, but I believe now it's it is owned by the Chinese, I think.
Mhmm.
[00:44:02] Unknown:
So I think it was Norwegian. Yeah. The VPN can be code written into the browser. Now that takes care of the code, but that VPN is going to log you onto a secure channel and a VPN server somewhere. That server is gonna have bandwidth requirements. It's gonna have I mean, do you know you know how much, servers that route traffic cost? So Mhmm. There is a hard cost involved in doing that. And I and over and above, let's say they write a browser. There's the Opera browser. They have research development. They write the code. They present the code to the Internet so people can download it. That browser is gonna go directly from your computer to whatever website you want to see.
Opera is completely out of it. But now if Opera adds a VPN, they're taking every Opera user and funneling their traffic through the Opera servers and then out to the Internet. It completely changes their technological requirements as far as bandwidth and Internet pipe. Completely changes. So it's not something that they can easily implement and add with minimal cost.
[00:45:23] Unknown:
No. No. Not at all. But, Paul, for me, it's free, you see. And I mean, I don't Right. I've got short arms and deep pockets. So there there is that. I don't mind I wouldn't mind paying for a VPN, but if I paid for one, I won't trust that anymore, to be honest. I mean, ProtonMail is touted as a really strong thing, and it might be up to a point. But I know that most of the traffic that goes in and out of Proton goes through Tel Aviv. So that, I run my own mail servers because I'm a maniac. Right? But they're no more safer than anything else. And you find that if you run your own mail servers, you often can't get mail through because, actually, it's Microsoft say, this server is not approved by us because we're really caring for everybody else. And, of course, what we're talking about here is the age old protection racket, which is what government is that and what health care is. It's a protection racket. Oh, you could die from this. You need a government to protect you from it. Therefore, we're gonna restrict your freedom so we can care after you more fully by you not seeing this naughty information that might get you thinking things that could ultimately just lead to misery anyway. So why don't we take care of it? I didn't invite you into the conversation. I don't wanna contract with you. I think there are ways through with this. This sort of sovereign individual stuff is is picking up speed and possibly will. But I've left out the wonderful Tony Blair, and I'd like to get back to him because I know how how everybody's waiting with baited breath to hear Tony say something right now. Discussion could not be more relevant. So let me just The benefits Let me just get this clip lined up. Here we go. I'm not gonna play all of it because it's three minutes and twenty six seconds, and I would probably need to take some sort of, I don't know, thing to calm down.
But this is just also gives you the mindset again. I know we're kinda covering the same thing, but it's it's worth doing it. Here's here's Tony Bleu
[00:47:06] Unknown:
having a chat. The Times Commission has done important work highlighting the role of digital innovation in shaping the future of governance and public services, and this discussion could not be more relevant. The benefits are clear. Digital ID will make our interactions with each other and with the state faster, cheaper, and more reliable. It will allow us to judge who has a right to be in our country and who doesn't, and so solves one of the major challenges of immigration. Facial recognition can now spot suspects in real time from live video, tracking organized criminals at borders, in public spaces, even helping find missing people.
In London, live facial recognition led to 360 arrests by the Met Police between January and October 2024.
[00:48:00] Unknown:
That's enough. Anyway, it's all guff. I mean, I could, we could lead to the arrest of 600 people immediately without facial recognition. Just send the rossers up to the houses of parliament, or just arrest them. Or how about everybody in the city of London don't need facial recognition for that? Yeah. Of course, they are tossing out all this stuff as if we can't live without it. But as we know, this is building the fence around the the herd to, you know, control us for our own our own well-being, of course. So I know none of that was new to any of you and probably none a bit new to most of the listeners. But that's Tony Bleu, everybody, one of the most wretched individuals ever to, supposedly occupy, number 10.
Just an absolute oath, really, and a complete toady to the money power. So there we go. So we've all got this to look forward to. And I had another well, there was another article that came through here on Zero Hedge, which is in line with what, old, Manure for Brains was just talking about. UK MPs call for digital identity to tackle illegal immigration. Why don't you tackle it, you lazy, stupid, treacherous barstewards? That's really the answer, isn't it? Why don't you actually do your job? Oh, because their job is plunging and plundering our pockets. I'll just read a bit. This is by Tyler Durden. Of course, not a real name. That's a character from that film Fight Club, but he's written for years, I think, on, whoever he is, Zero Edge.
It turns out that the solution to illegal immigration, you'd all be pleased to know, is instituting a nationwide system of digital identity. Well, of course, issued to every baby at birth, hoorah, and containing all your social education, financial, medical, and employment information. Well, that won't be misused, will it? At least according to the 40 or so Labour MPs who cosigned an open letter calling for such a system. That's because these 40 Labour MPs are not very bright. Of course, that digital ID could solve the immigration problem, should come as no surprise. After all, it can solve every problem. Hurrah. Yes. It can. We're all everything's gonna work now.
It can make sure our elections aren't rigged, really. It can protect our children on the Internet. It can prevent the spread of disease. It can lower crime. It can tackle truancy and benefit fraud. It can, have government it can eliminate government inefficiency. It's just good for the economy too, and he writes, yay. So gosh. I can't wait, everybody. Everybody came for this. This is gonna work. This is gonna go so well. I can't see any possibilities of it going bad. It's sad. It's sad that this is what they think. It really is very, very sad. Warren Aparth writes, Blair is a twat. It's a bit harsh, isn't it, Warren? Although, I completely agree. I'm being slightly, you know, and all that. Anyway, Eric, do you like Tony Blair? Do you like his brilliant ideas? Do you think the idea of a digital ID is gonna really help us and really improve free speech? What do you think?
[00:51:05] Unknown:
Well, let's put it this way. Over the last eighty years or so, what has government ever done that has been in their favor? I can't think of anything. Can you? It's it's nothing.
[00:51:16] Unknown:
Just just think of what they did. Once reduce the price of ice cream when I was about nine, or was that just that my auntie started buying loads of it? I am pretty surprised. I have to admit. Yes. It is difficult, isn't it? Yes. Mhmm. Because, you know,
[00:51:30] Unknown:
it's like we was talking about earlier. I'm thinking of doing a, a Churchill speech where he says the truth of what's going to happen eighty years ago. Because when you think about it, every government has worked against the people. They've committed terrible treason. And when you look at Tony Blair, a complete traitor, the man. Absolute traitor. I think he's soulless. He hasn't got a soul. I don't think, Starmer has either. They're just like empty vessels. That's my feeling.
[00:52:04] Unknown:
Well, they're controlled, aren't they? All of them. Every last one, including, I would say, Putin. They just have, you know, as Shakespeare said, the world is a stage. We're all actors. They've got their lines. Their lines apparently are much more important because they're central figures in central casting in the movie called life on planet Earth, and they rock up and say all this stuff. I mean, it's you know, in a way, I'm kind of helping them by talking about them right now, or we are. I'm I'm aware of this, is that you have to pay some attention to it, but it has become it sort of overwhelmed the space. It's why, you know, over the previous two weeks, talking about the work of Belloc and Chesterton, it's kinda more up my street even though I know it has less sort of dramatic appeal. I'm fully aware of that. People are not really it's not as enticing to talk about the actual solutions Because it's also slightly depressing when you realize that they've been implemented for a short time, have often been spectacularly successful, and then get squashed and crushed by the same force that's in charge right now. Thinking about how that can be done without it happening to the people that do it occupies far too much of my time on my walks up and down the beach, but I still I'd rather spend my time thinking about those sorts of things than this.
But, yes, it's it's quite a challenge, all of this this kind of stuff. Obviously, the development of alternative information networks is gonna get more and more difficult. I I know that if we go back, say, onto Internet usage, say, fifteen years ago, 02/2010, '2 thousand '15, everybody was very confident, couldn't believe as it were, that we got all this space and we were running around saying all these things and all this information was coming up. What they've done very slowly, because not because they're slow, but because well, they are slow. But not that they don't intend to be slow. It's just that as a system, they're a behemoth, and it just takes a long time for things to work through that system. The problem is is that when they've worked through it, they become like concrete.
And this is why you can't communicate with anybody over on that side because by now, it's their internal operating system that we're right and all this kind of stuff. And you've got to do this because it's the law of the land and it's for the good of everybody. And, people have not spent enough time or barely any time at all thinking about the actual consequences of all of this stuff. But here we are, our little sort of troop, trooping along, one of many troops here on the Internet doing just that. So we must keep we must keep going. Yeah. And it opened up kind of stuff. It this opens up an opportunity.
[00:54:30] Unknown:
If you think about it, all those people who now can't go to Gab, can't go to pitch shoot, where are they gonna go? They gotta go somewhere. Mhmm. There's there's never a vacuum. So it it it does present a, an opportunity to people like us who have something alternative to even Gab or BitChute going at least something with the radio stations that we got going and this format and going other places. Yeah. It does. Create something that we can then get a new audience potentially. But it also is a hindrance because then down the road, you get big enough, they'll come after us for for doing for for doing wrong things and double wrong things.
[00:55:15] Unknown:
But I'm quite nice, Patrick. You mean, they'll even come after me. They might. They might. But they won't possibly go after Eric, would they? They'd never even find their way to the entrance. As long as we stay in the hall. It's such a maze before you get there. It's almost impossible to find, isn't it Eric? They'd never get there. That's right. Yes. It's impossible. Yes.
[00:55:33] Unknown:
Yes. As as I said, and also they'd need a visa to get in because it's a separate country. So they won't be able to get get in. I said that the TV man, you know, licensing man, I when he knocks at my door, I said, yes. You can come in providing you can, it's a Visa. What what you're about? I said, the Visa, it's a thousand £800, and we might sort of issue it or might not. You know? Yeah. Otherwise, they have to contend with the border guard. Precisely. It's
[00:56:02] Unknown:
I I think this area, Eric, that you talk about, like visas, passports, I'm for some weird reason, I've been thinking about them recently. These sorts of things, the bits of official tut that bind you into all their systems. I hate it. Why do we, yeah, me too. But why don't we just create our own then? Why don't we have a people's birth certificate office? And we and they say, oh, I go, no. I don't have my birth certificate with you. I see you, miss. I think there is a way of riding them on. So I I have it with my pals down the pub. It's called the pub's birth certificate system. Well And, this is kind of a parallel to the baptism.
[00:56:38] Unknown:
It it creates you know, you know, you you're counted. It's a new birth. You're considered a member of, you know, the nation of God, so to speak. Mhmm. So they're they're it's kind of, I don't know if it parallels the right word, but they're kind of parroting it and using it to the detriment of people rather than lifting them up to a higher moral standard. I think that's I think that's the goal anyway. Like, he like, Tony Blair was saying it. Well, we're gonna make sure that we got the people we want in this country, and the people we don't want will will expel them. Well, what are they gonna do with the people that they don't like? They're gonna they're gonna do what they do in other countries, go to war with them. Because if they they're willing to do it there, they're gonna do it here in in their own country.
[00:57:28] Unknown:
Well, the numbers he trotted out, Patrick, as well are lame. 360 people have been arrested. More migrants come in courtesy of being augmented into the country by the government every day than that. What's the point?
[00:57:41] Unknown:
It's just ludicrous. I mean, it's just PR stunt, and they're really Of course. I think
[00:57:46] Unknown:
you might have hit the nail on the head there. It's a PR stunt. It's a bit of the old fear boggling. I say we'd be able to arrest this man if you all got if, you know, if you're all on the electronic ID system. Oh, jolly good. Let's have a bit of that. No. I'm serious. I think why don't we just, you know Eric, you're talking about a visa. We just need to get in maybe we just get into all this clobber. I think this what's the word? Soft kill. I think this is really it it could well turn out that soft kill is the big arena that we can really work in and distress them completely so that they get demoralized. Soft kill is where you just wear someone out slowly over a long period of time by making things go slightly wrong.
It's like websites going down for no explicable reason, although there usually is one. We we tend to get slightly over paranoid about that and think we're being hacked all the time. But it's stuff like that. You know, like, they just gently interfere with things. Not so much that they destroy you, but they do sort of wear out your energy for actually creating something vital. You get all these sort of secondary and tertiary level problems, which turn out to be the problems. Like, for example, in modern living, dealing with all the bills and paperwork. There's why is AI not being used to just sort all that out?
It, you know, it's a nonsense in many ways, but it's probably a hangover from all the legal structures that used to exist when we had some power. So I I'm quite into the idea of forming these agencies or these institutions, but they don't have to do anything to start off with. People, how would we run our own bank? We wouldn't. We just say we've got one. It's the words that count. It's the idea of getting transmitted. I know this sounds fey, but I don't think it is. People get allied to sort of institutions in their head, and you can say certain words to them, and it suddenly all pops up. You know, with in the realm of money, people are gonna say, well, how am I gonna spend this money? Go, you don't have to do that right now. Just chill with you. Why don't you just get an account at the People's Bank and and build these things up? I'd like a People's Visa, really.
I think I'll have one for Albion. We'll call it Albion with the Alban Visas, and I want my own passport office and organizer. I'm gonna issue my own. Who says that you get to have the right over where I go? I I don't. And I know this is it is to actually sort of engage them and to just generally piss them off a bit. Maybe we can find a way of soft killing their efforts and energies and all this kind of stuff. The main problem we still face is not that people don't know what their problem is, it's that there's still insufficient number of us. And, finding a jolly way to rope more people over to this side is still, I think, a major part of what of what we should be involved with. And, of course, we are to some degree.
We're exactly that. What time is it? Look at this. It's come to the top of the hour. Somebody foolishly suggested that we should play some Bernard Cribbons. So we're going to. This is very short. It's only two minutes long. So we're gonna play a little two minutes thing and a bit of station ID, and we'll be back in the second hour. You're listening to Paul English Live here at WBN three two four, also going out over Rumble and YouTube, who still like me. But then the show is relatively civilized, so why wouldn't they like all of us? We're all such lovely chaps. We're also on Radio Soapbox as well. Here's Bernard. Here's Bernard Cribbins, with his hole in the ground, which most of us possibly feel we're actually living in right now. And we'll be back after this little tune.
[01:01:28] Unknown:
There I was a digginess hole, all in the ground, so big and so little round it wasn't there was I, digging it deep it was flat at the bottom and the sides were steep when along comes this broken Ebola which he lifted and scratched his head. Woah, we looked at Danny O, old he meant it so and he said, do you mind if I make a suggestion? Don't dig it down, dig it elsewhere. You're digging it round and it ought to be square. The shape of it's wrong, it's much too long, and you can't put a hole where a hole can't belong. I ask, what a liberty, You live back in right in the bowler.
Oh, well, they are was I, a sturdy meal, shoveling earth for all that I was worth. I wasn't there was him standing up there so grand and official with his nose in the air. So I gave him a look sort of sideways, and I leaned on me shovel and sighed. Woah. Wallet me a fag. I haven't been too good drag. I replied. Well, there we were discussing this all all in the ground. So big and sort of round it was, it's not there now. The ground's all flat and beneath it is the blow in the bowler hat.
[01:03:04] Unknown:
And that's that.
[01:03:08] Unknown:
Three four radio. Stop them. Stop them. Stop
[01:03:12] Unknown:
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[01:03:35] Unknown:
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[01:03:51] Unknown:
Indeed. Do. And that was Bernard Cribbins just then with the hole in the ground, and this is Bernard Cribbins again. Yeah. We're going Cribbins bonkers tonight with Right Said Fred. We'll be back talking again like human beings after this one.
[01:04:10] Unknown:
Right, said Fred. Both of us together, one each end and steady as we go. Tried to shift it, couldn't even lift it. We was getting nowhere, and so we had a cup of tea and right said Fred give a shout Charlie up comes Charlie from the door below. After straining even and complaining we was getting nowhere and so we had a cup of tea, and Charlie had a thing, and he thought we ought to take off all the handles. And if things were out of the candles, but he did no good. Well, I never thought he would. Alright, said Freddy. Have to take the feet off to get them feet off. Wouldn't take them all. Took its feed off, even took the seat off, should've got us somewhere, but no.
So Fred said, let's have another cup of tea, and we said, right on. O. Alright, said Fred. Have to take the door off, need more space to shift to so and so. Had bad twinges taken off the hinges and it got us nowhere, and so we had a cup of tea. And Wright said, we'd have to take the wall down. That wall is gonna have to go. Took the wall down. Even with it all down, we was getting nowhere. And so we had a cup of tea, and Charlie had to think, and he said, look, Fred. I've got a salt, a feeling. If we remove the ceiling with a rope or two, we could drop the blood through. Oh, right, dead free. Climbing up a ladder with his crowbar, gave a mighty blow.
From a z in trouble off a ton of rumble landed on the top of his down. So Charlie and me had enough of a cup of tea and then we went home. I said to Charlie, we'll just have to leave it standing on the landing. That's all. You see, the trouble with Fred is he's he's too aced. Now you never get nowhere if you're too aced.
[01:06:24] Unknown:
Yeah. And, I went through a whole cup of tea while singing that and gargling at the same time. Shout out to Al Von Kurt for that one. I hope you're all singing along, lads. Al Von Kurt says, I do hope you're all singing along. Well, I was singing in part, particularly the bit about the tea, Al Von Kurt, and why wouldn't I? That's the good old Bernard Cribbins stuff from the nineteen sixties who went on to play some kind of silly role in Doctor Who, which we don't wanna talk about at all, really. But that's when Bernard was well, he was just doing great. I love those silly sorts of songs. Wasn't he in the Carry On films, Eric? Yeah. He was later on. He came in later on, I think, in the late sixties. Yeah. Didn't Eric? Yeah. Yeah? That's right. Yep. Bernard Cribbins. He's also in the Railway Children. He made his fame in Railway Children in I think it was 1968,
[01:07:11] Unknown:
that film. Oh. And that was yes.
[01:07:15] Unknown:
I love that film. I absolutely I can't watch it, though. It's very difficult for me to watch because it's just it gets me going. And, yes, I have a soft and sensitive side. I just I think it's a brilliant film there. It was also my wife's favorite film as well. You know who's now? Well, actually. Yeah. So Shay, I can't watch it because I'm gonna start crying. And if she started crying, I'd start crying. I said, oh, will you stop it? I've gotta go and have a cup of tea. So that's what I used to do.
[01:07:43] Unknown:
Well, was I mean, I'd we're obviously looking back on those times with rose colored spectacles, but wonder if it was like that in those times. I mean, it might have been, you know, lovely. I mean, you just look at those, children up where that took pictures of fairies. Was it the common common somewhere up north. And Yes. It fooled everybody. And, until in the nineteen eighties, '1 of the girls who was very old like you then said they were fakes. We cut them out of pictures from out of a book.
[01:08:18] Unknown:
It fooled even sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Indeed. The creator of Sherlock Holmes. Cottingley. Cottingley fairies. Yes. The Cottingley fairies. I think it is a romanticized account of that period and jolly well good for it too. It makes it all the better, to be quite honest. There's something about steam trains and girls in those long flowing Victorian dresses and all that sort of decorum and sentences spoken correctly and no swearing and no spitting and no tattoos. It's just brilliant. It's just What was the railway children.
[01:08:51] Unknown:
Yeah. The railway children. What was it what was the plot?
[01:08:57] Unknown:
They have a they live a well-to-do life in London, and their father is pretty high up in something or other, the government or something. And one night, surprisingly early on, right at the beginning of the film, two policemen, from his, majesty's force arrive, knocking on the door, and, they wanna have a word with him. And it's quite serious as you can tell from the ashen look that falls upon his face, much to the consternation of the rest of the family, which is, his wife, her their two daughters, and a young lad. And they are then put upon hard times. It's kind of Dickensian in this, but they can't afford to stay in London because dad's gone to prison for a couple of years or whatever it is. So, the mum being, resilient and rather beautiful all at the same time, which is a really tremendous combination and doesn't happen all the time, but in this film it does, takes them up to Yorkshire.
And, they move up to Yorkshire, and there happens to be a railway line, very near where they live, and they end up in all these sort of very sweet, and interesting adventures, like runners that are injured and saving trains and things and all this kind of stuff. And, this is a spoiler alert, really, isn't it? But they make connection with a very wealthy gentleman, although they don't know that he's wealthy, on the train, who takes an interest in their father's case, and it all ends up wonderful and fantastic. So, and I think it's a film that, strikes into the hearts of daughters with fathers of a certain age. That's what Kath told me, my wife.
She said, oh, when he comes back, when daddy comes back. You know, it's that stuff. And I can see it. It's absolutely you know, it's mega. It's really good. So it's old fashioned and full of great virtues in the best possible way. It's a wonderful film. Absolutely wonderful. It's really great. It is. It's just fantastic. And I, of course, when it was being pushed, I was a teenager, so I was too busy out with segs in my shoes, Eric, you know, kicking sparks around to be bothered with any of that girly nonsense. But as I got older and mellowed and drank more red wine, it suddenly appeared to be a much more splendid film than I'd given it credit for. And I've seen it a couple of times, and it's really it's just such a wholesome story. And all the characters, with the exception of a couple, are pretty lovable.
And Bernard Cribbins plays the role of this fantastic station master who's slightly out of breath all the time as he's pulling the gates up, and they help him out and do things. And, yeah, he gives him a clip around the ear and all that kind of English stuff, and it's great. Yeah. It's fantastic fun.
[01:11:32] Unknown:
Sounds sounds nice. Good plot device too with the railway.
[01:11:37] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, you can't beat steam engines because you can I think, like, at the end of the film, the her father steps out of this sort of, you know, field of steam that's being emitted all over the platform? So she doesn't know whether it's him or not. So you can use that for dramatic effect, and it works. And you want people to use things like that for dramatic effect. Gets the point over so much more emphatically, which it did. So, yeah, tremendous stuff. Really brilliant.
[01:12:02] Unknown:
Yeah. I was just I had a conversation with someone somebody earlier today about the railway that used to come through our our town and how it developed our our, town as it is, the village as it is, and how all of these little towns that are spotted throughout the area are Mhmm. Sprang up because of it. Most of these places wouldn't even exist as a town if it weren't for the railway that came in, and then they took it away. And now it's like you wish you had it back. And instead of these cars that we have to sit and drive, no. Yeah. We're we're not we're independent, and we're not dependent on the the public transport. But I think that public transport would be very nice after having a taste of it myself.
[01:12:49] Unknown:
Used to it used to be fantastic, I think, and I like it back as well. And it doesn't have to go quick. It's all this sort of thing about speed and efficiency, and it's like, really? Boring. I don't want that. I want mess and sluggerliness. And the whole reason why that culture is built up is that the bank's got to get its money. That's all that is. It's one of the symptoms of living under usury, a pressure all the time for people to behave abnormally over the top, scrambling like mad, competing with everybody else to do these things. It's an agitated so called civil. Everybody's agitated, literally. You know?
And, it's not good. It's really, really it's rubbish, actually, but, you know, I say that we say that every week, though, but in slightly different ways to keep it interesting for everybody. But it is. I mean, just tapping back into as well all the the the little things I've been touching in the last two weeks, the crisis of civilization, which I've just about finished and which I would recommend again to everybody, and much of Belloc's work and Chesterton's too. But particularly, the crisis of civilization and the servile state. I would almost, like, say, you should really all read them. And even Economics for Helen, even though technically it's kind of inaccurate with what's happened in banking.
But these are fantastic bits of logical deduction and insight informed by a deep knowledge of history by Belloc in particular. It's tremendous. It's absolutely tremendous stuff. You begin to see a world when you're reading it, the world that you know you should be in. And that and and of which we've had glimpses and even longish periods of living in it. And, one of the things I don't know if I've used this word before. It's a it's a bit of a clunky sort of word, but it's worth anybody looking up a thing called distributism. Distributism is effectively the political and economic philosophy, in pragmatic terms, laid down by Belloc and Chesterton, And it's outstanding.
It's outstanding because all of the themes that we've touched upon here ever since the show started and ever since I've got on the air and ever since blah blah blah blah blah blah blah are addressed by that. So at the center of it, there is property ownership. Because without property ownership, you produce, you know that lovely word, the proletariat. Hello, proles. What is a a proletarian? It's someone who's basically relying upon a wage to survive, hasn't got any property A renter. Terms. A renter. He lives at at the good grace of the man that he rents things from and can be kicked off at any moment. And therefore, his life and the life of his wife is not stable.
And therefore, this breeds unstable thinking and unstable decision making and a reliance on a management structure that gets heavier and heavier with each passing generation. So distributism says and it's it's in its words. It's a bit of a mouthful, I accept. But, that, basically, the the more widely distributed property ownership and wealth is, the higher the quality of the civilization in all regards, and this is true. So I think when I was talking to you earlier, Eric, you know, when we're having a chat this afternoon at some point, one of the old adages about money is, in support of this idea of distributism, is if you have a pile of money all in one place, it stinks to high heaven. But if you spread it around all across the land like manure, everything grows. And that's the analogy.
Money is like manure. You stick it in one place, it stinks, and it causes a greater stink. And then you have to have a police force to regulate the stink. The city of London is the great stink in this country. It stinks to high heaven. You spread the money around, you start to get more dispersed property ownership, and everything starts to settle. Everything grows. And as we've mentioned here before, you know, a couple of months ago when we were referring quite frequently to the year of jubilee and the forgiveness of all debts, That's in line with that. So all the solutions are known. We're just stuck with a class of people that don't that want it all
[01:16:58] Unknown:
in simple terms. It reminds me, yesterday, I had a bible study and catechism class that I did with my neighbor. And we're talking about Acts chapter four, where they're describing the early Christians in Jerusalem, as as being a distributors type setup where everyone gave their property up, and it was distributed equally among the poor and the rich alike. And then it even dealt with a couple, a married couple, who sold their property and decided they'd be clever and only give half of it and declare that that was all all of what they had and keep some for themselves, you know, greed greed, and they end up getting struck dead out of out of the you know, like, miraculously struck dead when it's found out that they were lying. And, I think there's a lesson to be learned from it because of, like, the greed that we have now of of the plutocracy that we have where it's all about not not about your merit, not about your skills, which would be a real aristocracy, but it's more of a plutocracy where it's about who who has the most gold, who has the most possessions, who can accumulate the most.
[01:18:14] Unknown:
Yep. Well, I know I mean, we have to sort of and we rightly should boil it down to these simple sorts of understandings because they are the ones that lie at the heart of it. There's that painting, I don't know, made it. You you I bet you're all familiar with it, where there's a feast. Oh, it's that thing, you know, the difference between heaven and hell. All the knives and forks are really, really long. Like, have you seen it? It's a it's a it's a painting. It's really faint. So the knives and the and the knives and the forks are, like, three or four feet long. So you everybody's trying in hell. Everybody's trying to get their own food off their own plate into their own mouth and they can't because they're gonna hold the knife and fork and they just can't hold them high enough to even get the food. It's just complete so that's hell when you're self centered, when you're thinking of one's own stuff. And, of course, to some degree, you have to do that.
Heaven is the next picture is what they're doing is they're reaching over to the plate on the opposite side of the table, and they're feeding the person on the other side, and they're feeding them. So it's the difference between self obsession and cooperation. And I know these are old sort of platitudes, but they need to be out there in the reminder sphere because all we're gonna ever hear from the mainstream media is the culture of greed, really, and sort of excessive sick levels of it. Like, they become addicted to behaving that way. It actually doesn't really profit them at all, I don't think. Not in any real sense. They're chewing up their own souls, whilst they chew up everybody else's, whilst we pay for their mistakes, which are mistakes that they're making in pursuit of a goal that isn't worth achieving.
I mean, what what's the point of it? Hey, Paul. It's just pointless. Yeah. It's Paul.
[01:20:00] Unknown:
In in defense of greed, there's an old saying, he who dies with the most toys wins. When Mhmm. In effect that that saying is false because they're still dead.
[01:20:14] Unknown:
Wins nothing. They they die. You don't win anything.
[01:20:17] Unknown:
And you can't bring it with you.
[01:20:20] Unknown:
So they can't take it with you.
[01:20:22] Unknown:
Yeah. By the way, Paul, I I believe Eric got
[01:20:26] Unknown:
slingshotted out of our conversation here. Oh, no. He's always legging it. He's gone down the pub again. Eric, what have you done? Well, get him back in.
[01:20:33] Unknown:
Hello? Hello, Ed. Yes. I I think What do you do? I think I said a naughty word, and StreamYard booted me out.
[01:20:40] Unknown:
You didn't. I don't think Why would it start out? Nothing to do with that. I think what you're doing is you're reaching for that beer. You take yourself out so we can't hear you slurping it, then you forget to bring yourself back in. That's the it's something like that, Eric. No. It's not. Say that. Yes. You're always sloping off to the pub in the middle of the street. Outranges.
[01:20:58] Unknown:
I was the one that was reaching for the cold snack. But seeing as you're talking about heaven and hell, I actually have to share a story.
[01:21:07] Unknown:
Please, Paul sit comfortably? Can we all sit comfortably? Yes. Yes. I'm sitting comfortably, Paul. Please tell me a story. I love I love it. I love stories. Go on. Politician dies, goes to heaven.
[01:21:18] Unknown:
You meet Saint Peter at the door and Sarah at the gate. And Saint Peter says, well, chief, we don't get very many politicians up here. We really don't know what to do with you. So let hold on just a second. Let me let me see what the protocol is for this, and I'll be right back. So Saint Peter goes away, and then he comes back. And he says, okay. Here's what we do. You have to spend one day in hell and one day in heaven, and then you get to decide where you are going to spend eternity, and then we'll figure out what to do with you after that. And the politician says, oh, no. No. No. I think I'd be perfectly comfortable spending eternity in heaven. Saint Peter says, well, you don't understand.
This is our protocol. This is what we do. So he leads the politician to an elevator, and they get in, the doors close, and down, down, down, down, down, down, down, and then the elevator doors open, and the politician steps out of the elevator into the middle of a golf green. Beautiful blue skies, trees, birds are singing, and off in the distance, he sees the clubhouse for for the golf course. And he goes over there, and all of his friends are there and fellow politicians that had passed before him are there. And everybody is they're having a great time. They're dancing.
They're they're eating caviar and lobster. They're drinking champagne, and it's just a raucous fun time. Very enjoyable. Very enjoyable. Then all of a sudden, Saint Peter shows up because his day is done. And Saint Peter takes him to the elevator and up, up, up, up, up, up, up, up, up, up, up, up, up, up, up, back to heaven. So they come out, and everything is all peaceful and serene. Everybody's moving. All the all the contented souls are moving from cloud to cloud. And and there's harp music playing, and angels are singing praises to the Lord, and and everything is just so joyful and so peaceful. It's just a beautiful sight. And Saint Peter shows up and says, okay.
It's time to make your decision. Where would you like to spend eternity? And the politician says, well, you know, heaven is wonderful. It's very peaceful. It's very serene. Music is beautiful, but I really think I would be better better off in hell. I I really do. And Saint Peter, are you sure? Are you sure? And he says, yes. I believe I am. So they get into the elevator and down down down down down down. And this time, Saint Peter's with not with him. And the door is open, and he steps out. The elevator doors close and disappear, and he finds himself in the middle of this desert wasteland. I mean, there is nothing nothing around but just death, dirt, rocks, and blistering heat, and trash all over. And he sees all of his friends, his buddies, his fellow politicians with black trash bags feverishly trying to pick up the trash that's continuously falling from the heavens, and they cannot get ahead of it. And they're they're sweating and everything else. And all of a sudden, the devil shows up, and the devil steps up next to him and puts his arms around him and says, welcome back.
And that politician looks at the devil. He says, I don't understand. I I was here yesterday. It was beautiful. There was a golf green. There was a clubhouse. There was lobster. There was champagne. The devil gets a slight grin on his face, and he says, yesterday, we were campaigning. Today, you voted.
[01:25:17] Unknown:
Spot on. Oh, yes. Very spot on.
[01:25:26] Unknown:
We like that. Yes. Don't we like that? That's a nice little tale, Paul.
[01:25:31] Unknown:
Thank you.
[01:25:33] Unknown:
It's a nice tale. Ronald Reagan said one, didn't he, about a politician that went to heaven. And, he went up there the same day as there was a couple of priests, you see. And, Saint Peter says, right. Okay. To the priest, there's your small room where you can, you know, spend your days. And, it's just a single room with a bunk bed. And then they show the politician this fantastic house, you know, with limousine and everything. They said, hang on a minute. How comes the priests just get a room with a bunk bed, and we got this I've got this fantastic house. He said, well, you're the first politician we've we've ever had. That was a Ronald Reagan joke. Not very good one, is it?
It's a sort of slight snigger joke, ain't it? Yes.
[01:26:26] Unknown:
Yes. Not even that. Well, it's a shorter version of Paul's.
[01:26:30] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, there's another quick one. A bus driver and a priest wind up at the pearly gates, and the bus driver is first in line, and Saint Peter says, oh, we're so happy you're here. Here, let me give you your harp, and let me give you your golden robe. And and here's your night here's a nice golden tassel for it. It just go in. We have everything all prepared for you. The beautiful home, at the far lane on the left, that's yours. You see the one that's glowing? It's got a halo over it. That's the one. That's the one. We'll we'll see you in a bit. And then the priest comes up, and, he says, oh, well well, wonder. Welcome. And he gives him the cotton robe, and it gives him just a rope tassel and, you know, a pair of bad sandals, whatever.
And the priest is going, wait a minute. Wait a minute. I I've been serving the Lord. I've been I've been preaching for over thirty years. The other guy the other guy the other guy, he was a bus driver. Why does he get all this stuff and I don't? Saint Peter says, well, we we're results oriented here. When you preached, people slept. When he drove, people prayed. Okay then then.
[01:28:08] Unknown:
Well, I don't have a joke for you, but I've got an item for you which moves it possibly into Eric's territory. This is, somebody sent this into the Telegram group. Again, I I apologize because I'm forwarding onto myself and stuff. I need to make a note of these things to give you a bit of acknowledgment, so my apologies. This is a post on x, and there's a video with it, which I I shouldn't place. It's oh, it's it's awful, really. You'll understand when I read the story. I'll just read the headline. Man saves a small dog from violent German shepherd by repeatedly sticking his finger up the dog's ass. It it took a week to get the smile of a dog's face. Sorry. Here's more news from our man on the sport, Ron Savage.
Diabolical. The incident took place over the weekend at Rowgreen Park in Northwest London. Multiple people tried stopping the attack by using various techniques, but it wasn't until one brave man, I should say, stuck his finger up the dog's ass that they they knew something else, that the dog backed off. Sticking a finger up a dog's ass is an extreme but sometimes effective way to get the animal to drop whatever is in its mouth according to online threads. The dog briefly stopped before he turned his attention to a different small dog and continued the attack. It's unclear what the small dog's current condition is. It's also unclear what happened to the dog who had a surprise colonoscopy.
So there you go, everyone. If you're ever faced with this troublesome sort of moment in your life, you know what to do with your index finger or whichever finger you prefer, that's what you do. So, apparently, it's, like, it's a response. It causes their jaws to anyway, not that I want to get into all that sort of thing, but I just thought you ought to know. It's not a joke. It's a real thing, which is a bit,
[01:30:07] Unknown:
anyway, at least I got to say the word arse three or four times, which is always something about it. Who is the first person to find that out, though? Must have been a bleeding kinky gear, mustn't it? Because, I mean, someone somewhere find it out. Yeah. But who did it first?
[01:30:20] Unknown:
Someone has filmed it because they got it on that thing, and it looks a genuine incident plan. So
[01:30:27] Unknown:
But then when you come to think about it, in history, who was the first man to discover that? I mean, someone somewhere someone well, who first saw, oh, I wonder if what would happen wonder what would happen if I stick my finger up a dog's ass. A twisted saw.
[01:30:42] Unknown:
Yes. Well, for those of you that that feel as though I've I've sold you a bit short by not giving you access to the footage, and let's face it, I have. And if you're on the radio, you've got no chance. But if you're in Rumble right now, I've just put the link to the Xcom post so you can watch this the whole sort of affair. And I don't know whether there's an an award that this chap should have. Index finger of the year or something? What what would it be? Best house of a of a human digit? I mean, there's got to be some sort of award. I don't know. I think he and the dog are living happily together now, aren't they? Sorry. Yeah. I mean, honestly, in the footage, the the big dog is rather big, and the little dog is very small. And you look at it looks as though he's gonna eat it at one point, literally. So it's all a bit much. You obviously got cross with the little dog. I don't know. I have no idea what was going on, but there you go. Now you know. Isn't it exciting?
[01:31:33] Unknown:
So Isn't that what you talk about, Eric, in your two finger salute at the beginning of your shows?
[01:31:39] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. What's this?
[01:31:45] Unknown:
Well, every Monday yeah. You can actually have a politician of of celebrity of your choice, and I'll give a two finger salute and then blow a raspberry at them. So, you know, and I think you should have this on your show. I think, you know, people
[01:32:00] Unknown:
people in check cons I mean, do you know who is the top runner of the whole lot? It's Rachel Rachel Reeves. Oh, re oh, no. I mean, as far as the winner of who who gets it on your show, who's usually the first one on the show? Yeah. First one on the show. Okay. And right to raise score. You should you should keep score of who who who's the first Yeah. To do the soundcheck.
[01:32:20] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:32:22] Unknown:
But Rachel Reeves is the top politician.
[01:32:25] Unknown:
Yeah. She gets the raspberry almost every month. Americans.
[01:32:29] Unknown:
Who who's the top American? It
[01:32:32] Unknown:
I think we've had Trump once. Oh, hang on. Biden. No. We had Biden. That was it. We had Biden once. We had Trump once as well. But, see, we need more Americans on the show to to get on there first. Steady on, Eric. Steady on. Don't get carried away.
[01:32:46] Unknown:
Well, if I was on the show, I got I got one. It was Chuck Schumer I chose.
[01:32:51] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, you know who he was, though, didn't we?
[01:32:53] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. You didn't know. If the
[01:32:57] Unknown:
if the aggressive dog in that x article could only talk feel that?
[01:33:02] Unknown:
Can you feel it, captain compost? Yes. Probably something like that.
[01:33:12] Unknown:
Yes. It well, probably it was it's erotic moment of the week, probably. You never know the top. Oh, there's not too many dogs listening to this. It might give them bad ideas.
[01:33:31] Unknown:
I really don't know where we can go from there.
[01:33:35] Unknown:
I'll tell you the funniest one. Have you ever seen these outtakes?
[01:33:38] Unknown:
We could we could bring the show to its own if
[01:33:42] Unknown:
it's got out of hand. Because it got out of hand, it feels like it might have got out of hand. What's going on? There was an out Are we alright? Out outtake. I don't know if you've ever been to I suppose you haven't, in America. Might be a few Americans. So been to a typical British holiday resort, and I think it was Clacton. And, it there's a chap saying, come to Clacton. You know? Who needs to go abroad when you can go to Clacton? You know? And the camera goes round. And this is beautiful, clean beaches. Just as the camera goes round, there's a dog curling one out on the beach.
[01:34:23] Unknown:
You you brought the signboard. Just I thought is this show have only really been heading in one direction for the past few weeks, and it's picking up speed.
[01:34:32] Unknown:
Oh, dear.
[01:34:33] Unknown:
Picking up steam.
[01:34:35] Unknown:
It's just picking up steam indeed, Patrick. It is. Yeah. It is.
[01:34:44] Unknown:
Okay. Well, I certainly hope the listeners are enjoying this as much as I am.
[01:34:53] Unknown:
Yes. Yes.
[01:34:55] Unknown:
Does anybody have anything serious or intelligent to say? No? No? Well, I don't mind. I'm just I'm just playing the role of the slightly sort of, you know, impatient headmaster in all of this kind of stuff. I actually really well, I can't I'm not very good at it, to be quite honest. Yeah. This weekend is Easter, to bring it to a serious note.
[01:35:14] Unknown:
Yes. Kind of a happy note. Yeah. It is. It's quite a weekend, really. So today is what? Maundy Thursday. Right? Maundy Thurs yeah. Maundy Monday, Thursday, which doesn't make any sense when you say it like that. Maundy? No. Monday?
[01:35:29] Unknown:
Monday? What about Wednesday, though? There there was a special occasion on Wednesday. I think that was when who was it that went against Christ? It was Judas. Judas, wasn't it? I think Wednesday was the day that Judas
[01:35:42] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:35:43] Unknown:
Decided to, work for the opposition,
[01:35:46] Unknown:
shall we say. Yeah. He was handed a bag of money to betray. A draincoat. That's one of the first. Yeah. And then, then then after that, all he did was think about how to plot to to grab him and deceive him. So, yeah, even today is is the day when they recognize, the, Last Supper and the washing of the feet.
[01:36:15] Unknown:
But don't you think these police in Great Britain here that go around arresting ill pensioners and people like that for hate speech. Go there. Whoops.
[01:36:25] Unknown:
Sorry.
[01:36:27] Unknown:
Whoops. Sorry. That is something I've eaten. I'm terribly sorry about that. You know? Oh, jeez. I'm sorry. But but no. But seriously, don't don't you think these police are Judas? I mean, the police should be there to keep us safe.
[01:36:41] Unknown:
Not safe from old age pensioners. They're wage slaves, Eric. Yeah. Like practically everybody else, this control of I can't pay if I step out of line, I lose my job, my wife's gonna divorce me, I lose my this is a real there's a whole series of pressures on people, which ends up bringing them to a point where they behave badly. I'm not trying to let everybody off off the hook because, obviously, some people just do behave badly anyway. Just But that's really what you do. So you're not having a human conversation. They are their role, and they need to get paid at the end of the month. Right. And the those pressures removed, like like we're saying, if everybody owned their own house, that pressure would be you'd have more intelligence across the whole spectrum of civilization because people would begin to operate on their own volition, their own common sense, and reemploy it. But it's been hijacked by the reliance of a wage.
It's spot on. Because In the fear of proletarians. You can see it. Yeah. The,
[01:37:42] Unknown:
it's it's the whole change in the pair in the, the rules as it were. You know, decades ago, I mean, all of the squad cars were called cruisers, and they had to protect and serve written on them. And the the sheriffs and, cops were, they were actual law enforcement officers. Well, they've taken to protect the serve off of the cars. They're no longer peace officers. They are policy enforcers. That's where police comes from, policy enforcement. And they are in for enforcing the rules and policies of the deep state and the corporate actors see that it's ruling the world. They've changed.
And their methods of training and their intelligence has been altered. I mean, if you have a IQ higher than a hundred, they won't hire you as a cop. You're not supposed to be smart enough to actually be able to figure out if what you're doing is harming people or if it makes sense. Your job is to enforce policy and to feed the deep state. Even if that deep state is just your own governor and your own legislative body in your own state, that's your job. Mhmm. Your job is revenue enforcement, Revenuwer. And the ones that got it right were the ones that had their liquor stills halfway up a mountain in the Appalachians, and they were just doing what they needed to do to survive.
And the revenuers showed up and fed the government.
[01:39:34] Unknown:
The g men, t men, and revenuers too. So it's one of the places where he made his brew. Mhmm.
[01:39:42] Unknown:
Yep. You can see this sort of it's like a pressure wave that's on everybody. And, of course, we see policemen in the light that they are. I mean, this other thing about a lower IQ as well. I think we I don't know if we touched on this last week, but I know we've certainly touched on it in terms of, soldiers returning from battle and the whole Roman thing. So, you know, we don't want any legions walking into Rome, is that the political class in due course understand that, robust intelligent men who have a capacity for physical violence, who have served the government, also have a capacity to turn on the government if they're mistreated, and therefore, they're anxious about it. So the idea of having people that are a bit dim working for them is all part of this disease that's running through all these structures. It's everywhere. And I'm going to continually say that it's the money power that's the root of all of it, and that if that can be sorted out, then we can sort everything else out. How that's to be done, of course, when you really start to give it more detailed thought is tricky.
It's tricky because they retain so much power as you're possibly making inroads into their power that they can still overwhelm me with this stuff. Yet I have no idea what else to do except to keep paying numbers. Strength and numbers. It is what we're counting on. If you suppose we've got a pound on. And and I think Easter is is a it's this Maundy Thursday was the Last Supper, where he basically saying keep my commandments, love one another. These are extremely, vital things to be revived in sort of general discourse. I mean, if if you were to say to everybody here, no matter I know people have got understandable reservations about organised religion. I'm one of them.
But move remove that out of it and look at the essence of what it's actually all about. I don't have any reservations about that. I never did as a child. It's completely spot on. Everything's completely accurate. It's the way it ought to be. I was thinking, I thought, if if it were the case I'm just going back to what something you said about an hour and a half ago as well, Pashuk. If you said to everybody, look. If we all got baptized, we could sort this out. Would you do it? People go, well, what for? But we need almost like a symbolic or some binding thing that we all do to be able to identify one another as people that want the honorable world back. And one of the things that Belloc and Chesterton talk about, particularly Belloc, about bringing distributism as about is how complicated it would be with the maturation of an industrial society, and he's right.
And he was, you know, he's writing that in the nineteen twenties, although he's fully aware of the machine age and of the telecommunications age. I think we touched upon this last week. But these principles are really the only ones that are gonna make us happy. Right. Right. Reason why anybody should should be borrowing money and paying three times the amount back to a mortgage company to live. Right. But but where Bellock
[01:42:35] Unknown:
was where he was at a disadvantage is he didn't have firsthand knowledge of how they have actually dumbed down everyone. The, education system I mean, and Roger was talking about a study where there was, twenty twenty some percent of people, that graduate high school are functionally illiterate. And of the remainder, fifty six percent could only read it in eighth grade level. And here they are graduating from high school, and they're four years behind the times on being able to read and write. That's absolutely ridiculous.
[01:43:15] Unknown:
So Mhmm. Do you know what's even worse? It is if they're immoral.
[01:43:20] Unknown:
Absolutely. Absolutely. And Bellock, he did not have firsthand experience or knowledge of what actually we would be dealing with in today's day and age. So we can take our marching orders from him, but we're gonna have to tailor what we do based on the immaturity of the public in general. I'm I'm of the mind that 80% of the people would be of little or no consequence in any battle for freedom
[01:43:55] Unknown:
because they're just comfortable in this country. I hate saying it, but I agree with you. They're comfortable in this country. Stand even thinking like this, but it's true. I mean, the whole thing with democracy is to, basically whittle down the civilization. It's slow burn communism. Yes. It's just that's that's all it is. It takes hundreds of years. They don't care, but that's what it is. It basically if you think about voting, not that many of us do. Right? You've got lots of people are given a vote, and they're not qualified to actually make decisions about this. This is why prior to all this democracy nonsense, we had an aristocracy held in check by the moral and ethical standards of the church. No matter what people might wanna think about it, it's way, way better than this. Way better. And I I you see, aristocracies just naturally arise.
You you they they it can't be helped. No one is the equal of anybody else ever in any moment, at any time, throughout their life. That's what makes life the wonderfully chaotic, joyous, and amazing thing that it is in part. But when it's abused, So the whole idea of, you know, this plea for equality, which, of course, is still running and being pumped into the heads of the young. Yes. We've got to have equality and all this kind of stuff, a condition never ever yet witnessed or ever will be in the whole of non creation. It's a madness.
So if you're gonna have an aristocracy, which you are, if you've, you know, like I've said before, if you took 50 people and stuck them in a room, there'll be four or five that'll be a few steps ahead of everybody else in everything, practically, because people just are that way. And there'll be four or five others that are three or four steps behind everybody else as well. This doesn't mean what do you do? You abuse the people that are not up to speed? You do not. It's ridiculous. There's a place for everyone. But this is what's happened. We've got this sort of accentuated, exaggerated, situation, which has been amplified colossally by high speed telecommunications, which in which we couldn't have done without. We wouldn't be having this conversation without them and I think are fantastic.
But we've also got to see that the the bulk of that power lies in the hands of these morally and ethically distressed, revolting evil people. They're completely absent on this stuff, and they haven't got anything to contribute apart from their received power, which is really what it is. You know? The it's it's centuries worth of the grasping of stuff and the holding of stuff. They're holding on to their sort of inheritance. And, I think one of the things that Belloc even talks about with inheritance is that said when they get rid of that, which, of course, they're trying to do certainly with the farmers, you're completely finished completely finished. I mean, we're but you're basically just floating around like particles of dust in their game. There's nothing you can you can do. So I I think property or technically, all these things can be done.
Humanly, I there's the rub. There's the rub.
[01:46:47] Unknown:
Well, you need to get over the fear of the punishment, first of all. And the more people that are fearless, they don't they don't like you said, there's strength in numbers, and the leaders in charge, the corrupt ones, fear them the most. And yet that's they're the they're the most, vocal in in promoting democracy or at least the appearance of democracy and dumbing down people because and making them immoral so that they don't go after them for their crimes. And that's where we need to come up with this this lesson. And like I was saying, read read Acts of the Apostles chapter four, and it describes it perfectly, where you had the Sanhedrin going after Peter and the apostles for preaching in the name of Jesus. And they're like, you can say anything you want, but just don't preach in his name. And they refused. And and they were afraid because not just of the apostles, but they were gaining followers.
And the followers, they were afraid of the reprisals from the followers, so they couldn't touch them. And that's Mhmm. Where that describes where we're at perfectly because if you have enough people on board, they're the people who are ruling right now in corruption are gonna be fearful of those people. And that's why you see such a determination of these groups like you Ofcom as the example, putting us, you know, getting rid of the democracy, the, you know, the the actual good democracy. There's good and there's bad. And I think what we're seeing is desperation, which is a good thing. It's a good sign for us.
But at the same time, we have to be able to, take advantage of that and work toward the good and do it in a moral way ourselves and keep ourselves in check. Because if we we start becoming immoral, what good is that too? I know. Yeah.
[01:48:48] Unknown:
It is. You're you're all called to be jolly good chaps and jolly good chappesses. It really is. It's these old traditional values are absolutely required. I can't say any other way. So that, you know, if even in the small groups, you form a peer group, which is like a power battery to you. Like, this is like, this show is to us and, hopefully, many of the listeners. It's a little battery that pumps you up every week, and you go, good. I'm not out here in the hinterlands. And, of course, when you begin to research this, you realize that in the past, there were huge numbers of people that understood this instinctively, and much of it was being operated upon. It was actually being enacted in society, although it's been in decline, for a long time, certainly according to to Belloc.
And what all your points are absolutely true, Paul. Of course, the the form changes, but the experience is the same. So the actual machinery that we're dealing with, all the logics that we have to apply will be different from each age with all the toys that they've now got. Of course, they didn't invent any of these things. They're not responsible. So people you know, really bright guys come up. They're like, there's an aristocracy of technicians. There are some that are just that little bit smart and a bit quicker because there's gonna be. No one's at the same speed about anything. But one group could be fantastic, you know, in the nineteen tens, and thirty years later, it's another group because they've got a different understanding of things, and that benefits everybody. But when we've got this intermediary, this, ridiculous group of people who are deluded enough to think that they know what's going on, and, you know, going back to what Paul's just said recently about, you know, he who dies with the most wins.
It's just, what? What are you talking about? You know, well, you should write to Klaus Schwab and say, you do know you're gonna die, don't you? Yeah. And everybody that you work with, you're all gonna be dead. Right? And your contribution is less than zero. You do realize this, don't you? But you can't it's not it seems to me it's not possible to get through to them. I mean, it literally like, they've got a mental condition. I've said it here before. They are mentally ill. Because they've only focused on one narrow area, which is our economic and political prowess. Yeah. We're really good at this. Yeah. You are. Yeah. Fantastic. And nothing else exists outside of this. If we just keep controlling everything, it's just gonna get better and better. Haven't you noticed that it's getting worse and worse? If we kept controlling this, it's gonna get better and better. It's literally you know?
There is I don't know what the solution is. Can't they come up with a sort of vaccine for that?
[01:51:15] Unknown:
I know. But No. It's it's tougher. They do live. They they do live by the moniker, he who dies with the most toys wins because, if they pass that wealth and those toys onto their heirs and their heirs are properly trained, they will continue the 102 three year or three hundred year plan to take over the world. That is their goal. They are multigenerational
[01:51:52] Unknown:
in But like you said, what good does it do? What good does it do if they pass on that? No. But, well, then what good it But In their mind, what see But they what everybody should be focused on is the four last things that we all are gonna face. We're gonna face death, judgment, heaven, or hell, and we have that choice.
[01:52:12] Unknown:
So these people who think that they're gonna die, well, they don't believe in it, obviously, but that that's all. A bit of a surprise to them then when they find out. I mean, this is obviously why they're pursuing this idea of being able to transport their souls into other bodies, which is a bit odd. And it's such a sort of you know, or maybe they're demon, literally demons who know what's coming up for them if they can't make that work, which but that's just a little weird. Why would they even be here in the first place? It's just a bit daft, really. I mean, don't they know? You know?
I I don't know what they do. You know, the the ground for us is to warm more people up to the idea that life really must you want it decent for your family if you can reconnect with that desire and get your head out of all the distractathon that's going on. It is about reestablishing moral and ethical behavior in a in a framework that works under a system of law that, guess what, we've already got it. It's just not being applied. And we've got the technology, and it's just not being applied. I mean, so many stupid examples of this. I'm going off a slight tangent here. Applied, but it's not getting attention.
[01:53:20] Unknown:
Mhmm. It it it's like someone who who's doing things quietly in the background rather than trying to be the center of attention. And that's kind of how we have to appraise how we're doing it and not do it for any our own glory, but for for actual good purposes, which don't always get recognized in this world, but there's always the next world.
[01:53:44] Unknown:
There's so many profoundly dense things taking place in the public space. You can't keep up with them. Over here, for example, these are just all signs of the sort of complete mental degradation of so many people in ostensibly positions of power, and they're incapable of even recognizing. So we've had a thing over here where they're shutting down coal mines and everything, and and now they need some coal to save the British steel industry, which they didn't wanna save anyway. They wanted us to sell it off to everybody. And, of course, I say they. Who are they? Again, the politicians are gonna get it in the neck because it serves the real control as well for them to get it in the neck.
But but this thing of globalist markets and free enterprise around the world, it's complete bunk. It's just rubbish. We don't need it. I mean, it's just absolutely bizarre. We do not need it. I don't want handbags from China. I mean, maybe many of the women do. I don't really know. And if you wanna buy a handbag, I think the place to buy them is China because they're about one tenth of the price than if you go and buy them from Gucci because that's where they get them all made. But this whole idea that we've gotta have all this stuff. So you've got the stuff, then you got the advertising industry promoting this and beaming it into everybody's heads to buy things that they don't need.
You know, if you're gonna buy a toaster, get a DeLonghi one. Ours is over 30 years old. It's absolutely brilliant. This has never ever broken. A DeLonghi toaster. What a piece of kit. It's a kitchen thing. It just does toast. Right? You drop toast in it. Thirty years about it. It's absolutely fab. That's what I want. I want stuff made well. You know, remember some time ago, we're talking about Silvio Gesell and this whole idea of, products decaying, and therefore, you have money that decays Yeah. At the same rate called demurrage. Okay? Is that what you called? It's called demurrage. Yeah. It's a funny word. Plan down to less. Means to give way. Yeah. That's it. Yeah. Absolutely. So he created a money that basically lost purchasing power unless you stuck stamps on it. And what it caused was the the quality of workmanship in everything went up because people said, I don't wanna keep running around spending this money. If I buy a I want it well made. I wanna last fifty years. I don't wanna last five.
So everything got whereas now we have the IKEA box pack stuff. Not that it's bad. My bookshelves have lasted twenty five years, so it's pretty good. So I'm not moaning about it all, and I guess it's sort of supplying a need given the sort of madness of the situation. That's intelligent. There's all these other wonderful things that we can't anticipate, and we're never gonna see until we crush the money power by its own testicles. It's gotta have its entrails wrapped around its neck and thrown into the abyss.
[01:56:31] Unknown:
And people have gotta get that passionate about it because it's stopping all of us from actually living life to the anywhere near to the full. It's like that story of the the the three servants that the master gives talents to. One one he gives, you know, like, five talents, the other two, and then the other one. And the the first two double it, the the last one buries it in the ground. That's perfect analogy for what you're talking about where you have an expiring current currency where that value is going back to the common pool of of of the people where you have to spend it right away. You could and I think there are certain cryptocurrencies that are operating on that principle right now, but it's just a matter of how how would we implement that in our day to day life right now? It's
[01:57:20] Unknown:
Well, I don't I I think, you know, going back to that little three those three areas of, of a spiritual, let's call it a regeneration, and then the political sphere and the economic. Until the fire gets back into people, they're not gonna work hard enough to transform politics and the and the economy in line with moral and ethical law. They're not gonna do it. And, so we've been we're like birds in a gilded cage. Although everything that we talk about is ruinously bad and is only gonna get worse, if you can still go go down the supermarket and get and just about afford your shopping now because it's getting absolutely we will run out of adjectives to describe it. But, of course, this is all part of the plan.
They never really talk about supply and demand or any of this stuff anymore. They just talk about this colossal debt, and it doesn't even matter. It's not even spoken about as if it's a really serious matter to deal with because it isn't anymore. Because the whole economy probably already is centrally controlled courtesy of organizations like BlackRock and the AI systems that they have. So I would have thought because of all these things that they control, they can adjust sort of global supply chains and go, well, if we put the price up of this here, it means that everybody in Nuneaton's gonna be paying 10p more for their eggs in three months' time, and that's good. And then they find out how much purchasing power everybody's got left, and they make sure you don't have any left. The prices are just gonna rise to meet whatever you've got so that you can't plan. That's all part of it as well.
This is literally part of this sort of high-tech feudalist state that they wanna bring. So, I mean, there's two things that we have to do. It seems to me, and there's probably more than two. One is, to restore fury inside the hearts of our own people. They've gotta get mad, As Peter Finch said, first, you've got to get mad. You do. And then you need to channel that anger in a constructive way. And the second thing that we have to do is to find ways of disturbing the other side. Soft interference so that they can't work. And the main thing, of course, is the media, which we're massively outgunned on. But what else can we do? We gotta do something. So I think, you know, if it's one person at a time, finding effective messaging and improving the messaging is absolutely the way to go. Oh, look. We're coming to the end of the, I'm banging on so much. We're coming to the end of the thing. Where are we now? Oh, yeah. We're just coming up. Let me, just say, thanks for being with us. No. We're we're glad for being with you here on WBN. We're just coming to the end of the end of the the end of the first two hours. We're gonna carry on.
Yes. Absolutely. Here on WBN three two four. Sorry about that bumbling around saying all sorts of things. And what did I wanna do here? Let me just check something because I wanna play out with the song. So we were talking earlier about sunshine, weren't we? We're gonna be back here at the same time next week. Look at me gobbling my closeout messages here on WBN. Classic song here is The Sun Has Got His Hat On. Eric was requesting this a little bit earlier today, and rightly so. So, we're gonna play out with that. We'll be back again same time next week, at 3PM US Eastern, eight PM here in The UK. We're gonna play out with this. And if you wanna carry on listening to us, come over to Rumble, and you'll find, the link to that over on, PaulEnglishlive.com.
We'll see you all next week, and we're gonna carry on for another hour or so. Here's that lovely song that Eric was after.
[02:01:29] Unknown:
Sing along, everyone. Has got his hat on. Hip hip hip hooray. The sun has got his hat on and he's coming out today. Now we'll all be happy. Hip hip hip hooray. The sun has got his hat on and he's coming out today. He's with tanden niggers out in Timbuktu. Now he's coming back to do the same to you. So jump into your sun bath. Hip, hip, hip, hooray. The sun has got his hat on and he's coming up today. All the little birds are singing. All the little ants are stinging. All the little bees in twos and threes buzzing in the sun all day. All the little boys excited.
All the little girls delighted. What a lot of fun for everyone sitting in the sun all day.
[02:03:40] Unknown:
The sun has got his hat on. Hip, hip, hip, hooray. Although it's 10:00 at night, so I can't see the sun, but I saw it all today. Eric, one of your favorite tunes. That was jolly good, wasn't it?
[02:03:54] Unknown:
Are you there, Eric? Is he still there,
[02:03:56] Unknown:
or did he disappear? He's still on he's on screen. See, I give him these great intros, and he's Eric. What am I supposed to do? Anyway, did you hear one of the like one of the lyrics in that in there? Good grief. Must have stepped off. Something needs to go look at the lyrics. I couldn't possibly repeat that lyric on here, but it was written in 1932 when life was slightly different.
[02:04:23] Unknown:
Slightly? You think?
[02:04:24] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:04:26] Unknown:
Mhmm. I think it was quite a bit different. I think it was worlds apart from what we have today. Mhmm. World literally worlds apart.
[02:04:36] Unknown:
Yes. And that arrangement was by who was that by? Ambrose, I think, or something. The son has got his head on Ambrose and his orchestra. So there you go. Jolly good arrangement. I need more stuff like that because I find that if I play even things that are relatively modern, YouTube says there's a copyright strike on this. And, this the podcast of this show is also distributed to Spotify, and they came back and said 38 of your shows contain songs that we think are rather you shouldn't be playing them. But if you prove that you cannot. And I just thought, oh, get yeah. So what? I mean, I'm not upset. I don't really mind. I don't know how many people listen to me on Spotify. Although someone did write in and say, I listen to you on Spotify and all that kind of stuff. And I couldn't get this shout. I went, yeah. Well, there's just a problem with it sometimes, and, and there we go. There's not too much that we can do about it.
[02:05:22] Unknown:
Anyway, Eric's obviously down down the post. One on Telegram, that's that wouldn't fall under copyright
[02:05:28] Unknown:
restriction. Alright. Okay. So, yeah, so we need the we need the non copywriting phase. And speaking of people, writing in and saying jolly good things, you forwarded this to me earlier today, didn't you, Patrick, from Lisa. Hi, Lisa. Thanks very much for the message. I'm going to read it all out to you. This is a listener's letter into the show, into the studio, and, we've had it checked by the secretarial department. It's all fine. It says, hello, Patrick. I've been listening to David Irving on YouTube talking about World War two, and I'd like Paul English to explain more fully what really happened as the audio is not great, I guess, with reference to David's stuff. Also, it's great to hear everyone's thoughts on this. I absolutely love the Thursday show. It's the highlight of my week. Well, reading out this letter from you, Lisa, is the highlight of mine. This is tremendous stuff. Sorry for messing you, but I don't know how to message Paul directly. Yes. I'm tricky to get hold of. I'm not very techie. Thank you, Lisa. And thank you very much, Lisa, for sending the message in. So if anybody wants to write in and send polite formal letters like that, that's great. It's really good. It came across Telegram.
We don't necessarily have to talk about World War two. I was hoping that Eric would be around because he's lining up a show, I think, for this weekend. It's April. So this Sunday is quite a thing. It's Easter Sunday, obviously, for those that are keeping a note of those sorts of things, which should be all of us to some degree. And it's also Adolf Hitler's birthday. And, also, we're here we are in 02/2025, and I think coming up on May, is it? It's the end of World War two or the eightieth anniversary of the end of it. Of course, it's difficult to sort of get too excited about it when we're slap bang in the middle of World War three. Yeah. It's the end of the third republic, and we're in the fourth republic now here in America. Yeah.
[02:07:16] Unknown:
Yeah. Eighty year cycle from Are you back again? 1776.
[02:07:21] Unknown:
Yeah. So I'm back. I I got booted out. I I the sound just went straight off. I'm about to come back in again. I don't know quite what's going on. I I think we need to get you in we need to get you a new computer or something. I think it's nobody.
[02:07:32] Unknown:
I think it's I know what it is. Do you use I'm a big big big a steam powered computer. Yeah. It is actually. Yeah. I'd say I begged you up. I wanted all your comments about the son has got his hat on. It was a little line. Song.
[02:07:44] Unknown:
Yeah. Beautiful song. And I tell you something. I I have suffered from depression, and that normally helps to get me happy. I don't know what it is about that song. It just cheers me up.
[02:07:57] Unknown:
Strange. So if you if you're a bit depressed, just play Have you got the have you got the lyrics in front of you? You ever read the lyrics? Do you know the lyrics? Yes. They are a little bit naughty in certain places. I didn't even realize I just caught it today for the first time. Yes. I used to sing it as a kid all happy and innocent. And now I realize that the politically correct squad would have our guts for gartners on this one, Eric. It's terrible. It's not our fault. It's 1932. You better take it out with Ambrose and his orchestra, but they're all dead, so you can't.
[02:08:23] Unknown:
So there we go. But can we be done for listening to it? Because we're we're supposed we'd be, far right for listening to that, surely, won't we? Oh, I'm shocked. Yeah. Yeah. I'm getting quite sensitive in my middle years. I don't want to upset anybody, everyone. Yeah. But we don't wanna do that. You see, that's the thing. That that's that's what happened is is and you notice that most of the records in the thirties were to cheer people up. Why? Because they've been through a terrible war in the first World War. They wanted cheering up. And going back to what we're saying about the cosmoline fairies, people wanted to believe it because there was something nice after they've lost loved ones and the hell of first World War. So I think that was a case of And here, you couldn't drink until the thirties
[02:09:10] Unknown:
from from the end of World War two. Oh, yeah. Probably the Excuse me. World War one till, yeah, 1919 until 1933, I think it was. Mhmm. Yeah. They went dry. Couldn't even have a glass of wine.
[02:09:25] Unknown:
What was that thing? There used to be that ginger ale called Canada Dry, didn't there? Yeah. Still is. So there's a joke, something. I knew someone. Saw that thing, drink Canada Dry. So he went there and did, which I quite
[02:09:43] Unknown:
I think because Dean Martin was, because, you know, Dean Martin, he acted drunk, but he wasn't. He wasn't sloshed. Apparently, he didn't drink much. He's he's drinking all the time. Yeah. Mhmm. Yeah. He he knew how to drive drunk. Drunk act. Yeah. Yeah. Because he said if he was stoned, no agent will book him because he would be drunk all the time. But he said he wasn't. So and apparently, Oliver Reed, when he went on to the Aspil show and showed himself up, that was an act. He was sober. He did that. It's just to give him publicity.
[02:10:17] Unknown:
Well, when America was dry, there was a lot of illegal activity crossing the border from Canada coming into, I think it was down in Kentucky was Right. Where where it's centered, and Kentucky was like the Las Vegas. And then it eventually ended up in Cuba and then Las Vegas, Nevada. All of that, the, the naughty stuff of society. Let's put it that way. But they they would bring whiskey and whatnot from Canada, from the distilleries where they didn't have prohibition down to The States and
[02:10:59] Unknown:
made a fortune, in fact. All by design, I would suspect, Patrick. The whole thing. The whole event was probably to bring that bootlegging industry about. Yeah. I just think.
[02:11:11] Unknown:
And look at the They were all the bootleggers. And if you see the bootlegger shoes, they actually tied wooden soles onto them that were, modeled on, cow's hooves. So when they were but but we're moving the bootleg stuff around, when the police came along, they didn't see footprints. They saw cow's hooves. So that yeah. That's We're talking about cows.
[02:11:35] Unknown:
Early earlier, weren't we? You said something like putting a horseshoe on your shoe. Yeah. The clock So make the click clack noise
[02:11:44] Unknown:
when you walk. Oh, that's it. Yes. Yeah. Well well, that's what they did. There's there's a famous picture of it. If you look up Wikipedia, you see the the bootleggers. You actually see this wooden wooden things that were carved to, like, cow's hooves and things or whatever. Or horse's hooves or something. Yeah. Anything like that. Yeah. So it's quite quite an idea. But if you I mean, there was a famous somebody in chat might know what it was. It was a famous drink they had in Ireland that was officially illegal. But you could go into any pub and sort of quietly say you got some some of this brew, and they they they serve it to you.
The Irish government realized it was just it was so open in the air open in the end that that that the police took turn or the was it the guard deed turned a blind eye to it. The government made it legal, and sales dropped like a stone. I didn't but he wanted it. Strange, isn't it? Yeah. So did they have prohibition in Ireland for a period of time? No. No. They didn't have prohibition, but it was a certain owl that people made, the traditional drink that made I think they made it from potatoes or something. I don't know. Somebody in chat would know. It's a bit sketchy. I'm terribly sorry. I didn't do my research on this, but it was a name of a drink that they did have a prohibition on, but you could buy any other alcoholic drink. But I think it's because it was homemade, and I was a bit worried they were helping safety and all that old twaddle.
So it was outlawed. Oh, they couldn't tax it, in other words. They couldn't tax it. That's right. And then when they made it legal, people stopped drinking it. But, they used to be out like Mead and, wine. It was illegal here until 1964, to actually brew your own ale and make your own wine, and they changed it in the budget in 1964. Before then, you could be sent to prison for for brewing your own ale. But it's still illegal to distill, isn't it? You can't distill whiskey and things like that. Is it? Yeah. In in Yeah. Where you're at? In Britain. I don't know whether it's still in America. Is it the same in America? I'm not sure. It's kind of blurry
[02:13:57] Unknown:
what the rules are here. It probably varies from state to state. Mhmm. Well, it's not blurry at all in New York.
[02:14:05] Unknown:
Not blurry at all. If you even own a still with a higher capacity than one gallon, it's a felony. And Really? They will lock you up because it's presumed that if you have a still greater than a one gallon capacity, that it would do it to
[02:14:27] Unknown:
When I was in Moscow, I was going to all sorts of these these stores, these big mega stores, and they had stills that they were selling. Like, it's like going to Sam's Club, Paul, where you go and you see, like, pallets and pallet racking of things, and then they could have, like, all the different stills and things that you could buy. And it's like, wow. We don't have anything like this in America. Well, I certainly need to go to Russia then. Yeah. Yeah. Putin, here I come. A little bit more free.
[02:14:54] Unknown:
A little bit more free. Freer. Well, apparently, you can say what you want about Putin in Russia, and nobody's gonna pick you up or anything like that. And you could say, you know, you haven't got hate speech laws there. And the food, I believe, is more pure. I'm only going by secondhand information. It could be wrong. Mhmm. No. I'm probably right. Please tell me. Everything I have heard think of GMO.
[02:15:16] Unknown:
Everything I have heard is genetically modified. If you have a Here here I've got a seed. And you get I've got a George
[02:15:24] Unknown:
Yeah. You know you know George Galloway? Yeah. Yeah. Here I've got one for I've got one for you.
[02:15:30] Unknown:
I have been in a gay bar with the village people throbbing out YMCA within earshot of Lenin's tomb.
[02:15:47] Unknown:
That's it.
[02:15:53] Unknown:
Well, they had a guy on time, ain't they? Yes. Yeah. Yes.
[02:15:57] Unknown:
Well, I mean, there's a one of the good things that's happened over here as well, apart from there was the bit about coal recently, which I mentioned where they're buying shipping coal in from Japan. It was not even a coal exporting company. That's ridiculous. Need a certain type of coke. No. They apparently, they need a certain type of coke to to go into this furnace to retain the last steel plant in England, which they sell to the Chinese anyway, and they didn't want it, or Tata or some Indian firm. I mean, it's just and then all of this is just a cover story. Basically, it's just the fact that we're not in charge of our own nation, and it's been taken over by super capitalism and blah blah blah blah blah. So that's been really, really great to see. It's fantastic. Of course, all the windmills are doing nothing. They're just these huge stupid monstrosities. It's just like a testament to idiocy, really.
So, you know, I'm not saying anything new. The other thing that's been really rather brilliant this week is that, women are apparently women again. This is amazing, but there's been a massive judicial inquiry into things, and it turns out, and I could've I'm bowled over by this. It turns out that we've been right all along, and by all along, I mean, for millions of years, that if you're, born a female, you're a female, And if you're born a male, you're a male. And this is amazing. And this is a great victory for women to have this confirmed. Yeah? And that trans women, which don't exist, there's no such thing as a trans woman. This is complete linguistic Marxist crap as usual.
Transhumanism. Yeah. They're just people that have mangled themselves. It's tragic, but they've done it. And, it's sad, and they need help.
[02:17:41] Unknown:
You can't actually change what you're born as That's it. Well, that's why they indoctrinate people with the evolution. Yeah. The theory of evolution becomes reality in their minds, and it's like, well, no. It's just a theory. It's not the Mhmm. Doesn't mean it's back.
[02:17:57] Unknown:
It's a theory that Darwin didn't fully subscribe to himself. He had doubts about it. So there you go and all that kind of stuff. So, anyway, it's good, isn't it, Eric, to know that all the women in England will be women again. But and JK Rowling, the author of the of the Harry Potter thing, she's thrilled to bits because she's been on the right side of this all along. She's been, I think, played by some sort of one of them. I don't know I don't know their names of these things. There were some some a bloke that thinks he's a woman or something. I mean, it's just, you know, I don't even know how to use the right language. I'm not trying to give offense. It's just me. I'm a thicko. Right? Mental illness. But, yeah. It is. You're right. It is a psychosexual behavioral disorder, which is the same as sodomy and all the others. It's but people get confused.
Probably go to confused.com. No. They don't deal with that sort of stuff, so do they anyway. I mean, there's a thing in the Daily Mail here. It says trans women set to be barred from female bathrooms and sports and could be asked to use disabled toilets at work after new landmark ruling links gender to biological sex. Who made the ruling? Links it. It's ridiculous. That women, if you're born of the female sex, you're a female. Yes. Anyway, everybody's had a be now making money. I hope all the lawyers have made piles of money at somebody's expense, probably ours as usual. Good grief. Who who is this woman, Paul? Who who who is doing this? Oh, it's a very high court. It's a very high court, though, isn't it? Yeah. It's a very high court. TV. It's a very high court. TV. It's a very high court.
[02:19:27] Unknown:
It? Oh, I'm sorry. I'm wrong. I didn't realize it. It's the whole thing.
[02:19:37] Unknown:
It's the old kitten caboodle. The Supreme Court's ruling that the definition of a woman in equality law is based on biological sex means trans women, you know, with a gender recognition certificate.
[02:19:57] Unknown:
It's it's like the licensing scheme. Recognition.
[02:20:00] Unknown:
Oh, I need a certificate. Yeah. I've got to have one from an an authority, another clot. Can be excluded from single sex spaces if proportionate. What does proportionate mean? There's another judge coming in to decide what is and isn't proportionate. Equality and Human Rights Commission chairwoman Baroness Kishwa Faulkner has described yesterday's ruling as enormously consequential, and she vowed to pursue organizations which do not update their policies. Well, it it is, a a step back to sanity because it's basically been in the realm of insanity by design, of course, for some time now. Going on, the mail says on issues such as toilets, changing rooms, and sports, Baroness Faulkner echoed the government in saying the ruling had brought clarity to providers on their duties under equality law around single sex spaces. Asked if it was now simple that trans women cannot take part in women's sport, she told BBC Radio for Today, yes. It is, though they can't. Actually, they never did.
They never ever took part in it. It's just been a fuss. It doesn't even exist. It's not even in the record books. It's just another one of these great delusions. We can have to put it in the book, delusions, you know, of crowds or the delusions of governments, and that's really all it's been. Tragic, really.
[02:21:20] Unknown:
I don't even like to see men dressed as women, these drag acts. I could I could never see anything in a drag act. To me, it is demeaning women because a man is a man, a woman is a woman. I don't wanna see a man dressed as a woman. I I find uncomfortable and distasteful. I really do. It's satanic. What's the easiest? It's weird. I I actually went to, town today, because, Aldi's got, some vegetables for eight p, which is not bad, is it? You know? They're doing a cheap run. Eight p vegetables. Eight p vegetables. Yes. Yes.
Excellent. This I I I was sort of I could hear this noise going on in the town center. They've got this big display on, and, they're singing the monkeys, I'm a believer. I have to admit that's that's doing a really good job of it. I was thinking, Crams, that sounds right. And then I went around the front where the stage is, and there's all these rainbow flags and rainbow clap, things. And I was thinking, and then the penny drops. I don't know what it was all about, but it was, loads of charities there. And
[02:22:28] Unknown:
so I saw mate. He's always for charity.
[02:22:30] Unknown:
That's right. So I just charity. Yeah. I did the human equivalent of, getting into top gear straight off, you know. I I I think there was skid marks where my my feet were. I didn't wanna have anything to do with it. Because, you know, I I just find that it's a gender thing. And there's all children
[02:22:51] Unknown:
around. There's these blokes dressed as women. I just found it very sick. It's completely sick. And it's telling me right behind this. And it's sick. Yes. It's Weimar Republic Two Point O or whatever you wanna call it. It's the same thing. It's same thing as the porn stuff. It's it's to set up a conditioning
[02:23:09] Unknown:
space in which people think that this is acceptable. It isn't. And the poor children, they they they're just there, and they're thinking, oh, I like rainbows. Rainbows are nice. And and, you know, and a rainbow is an interesting thing, but it's been made into this perverted icon that we all see as something perverse now It's been inverted. To what it should be. Inverted. Yes. Rainbows. I used to like rainbows. I thought they were very nice.
[02:23:32] Unknown:
Unicorns. Now something nice for children to believe in, but it's been corrupted to mean something else. So you use unicorn. Isn't it sick? Everything's sick. I I just
[02:23:43] Unknown:
I find it awful. It's by design. It's by, you know, these little psychological deranged boffins know where the emotional sort of, kindly points are in our makeup, and they exploit them by design. Yeah. They think they're so clever. And I guess you are, you stupid Herberts. But and, you you know so our job is just to defend as many people as we can from this stuff, I think, in many ways. And it's everybody's job to do that. And, you know, and So this is a good decision. Even though we're slightly semi mocking, it is a good thing. It should be bizarre that you have to actually go back to, well, we now understand what's actually in front of our own eyes. What? You mean like we always used to? Until it, you you know, what they should be saying is we've wasted loads of money implementing things that were deranged, and we all need to sack ourselves. Yes. That's now that's more like it. Just go, you know, the lot of it. Anyway
[02:24:36] Unknown:
For example, do you know, I don't know if you saw, dad's army in The States. Did you at all, dad's army? Probably wouldn't have done. I haven't. No. Yeah. What it was, it was about during World War two, we had a thing called the Home Guard, and it's mainly elderly men that, were too old to fight in on the front. And they joined this thing called the Home Guard, and they went home every night. And they were given sort of NAF rifles. In fact, they didn't have enough rifles to go round. And that's to raid a museum. In the sixties? Of guns. No. No. No. No. No. No. This is during the war, during World War Two. No. No. Oh, no. No. I mean I mean, the show was a No. The show was in the late sixties, early seventies.
[02:25:17] Unknown:
And, it reminds me of there's a scene in doctor Zhivago. I don't know if you've seen the David Lean film doctor Zhivago where Yes. Yes. The white the white army, you know, it's mostly old men and young boys with Yes. Ancient weapons, and they're just getting mowed down by the modern Soviets.
[02:25:34] Unknown:
Reminds me of that. Well, the thing is what it was is that there was a scene in it where, was the famous scene where they captured a German U boat crew. And, the captain is making notes of how they're being treated. And, anybody making a mocking result, remark about the Germans is saying, what is your name? And, the captain Manneron, who's the, you know, who runs the platoon says, don't tell you don't tell you he says, what's your name? He said, don't tell him, Pike. You know, that's a that was a famous scene. But what I was gonna say, as that that particular program went on, there's a scene where they had to put a bomb, they put a bomb down. It's supposed to have been Captain Mannering's trousers.
Okay? And they were so victorious down his trousers? A bomb down his trousers. And, apparently, he thought it was so disgusting that and he was very Victorian. And most of the actors refused. And, eventually, it was Clive Dunn that said he said, okay. You can put a bomb down my trousers. Now that was how stiff starts they were, and that was in the late sixties, early seventies. So think about bloody right. That's what we want. Moved on since then. Down anybody's trousers. Yeah. Absolutely. But that was all you have to do. Moved on. No. I don't think we have moved on. They just moved on. On. We've gone backwards.
[02:26:57] Unknown:
Well, yeah. It's it's to do with this mainstream media thing is that they keep bombing a thing out long enough and people sort of morph into thinking that that is the genuine context for life. It isn't. And so the idea is just to become robust in different and repel the progressive world, which we do. That's what this is about, isn't it? This is kind of a little life raft. Maybe it's a big one. Now we're gonna turn in a super ocean going tanker armed to the teeth to mow these people out of the water, which is what needs to be done, so that people stop buying into this stuff. Some interesting little comments, here recently in Rumble with regards to, the Supreme Court.
Billy Silver writes, the gender ruling has beaten the Bolshevik society inverting vermin with a broom a little bit back towards the door. Yes. What's that thing? You know, we don't wanna discuss the rat. We wanna beat it to death with a broom. We're not interested in actually analyzing the whole thing. It just gotta go. Alvin Kurt writes, so can they stop biological born men for from dressing up in women's clothes now? I don't think that can be stopped.
[02:28:03] Unknown:
You could you could from doing it out in public.
[02:28:07] Unknown:
Yeah. You could. You could make it an actual public offense, and it should be Or shame them. Because it is offensive. There again, if you have Well, then I don't think they can I don't think they're shamed? They're already too far gone. You you you might be right. You you you could, with enough people,
[02:28:22] Unknown:
get them to leave a public square. If enough people just imagine it, the scenario where they come into the public square and there are enough people there that get out of here. We don't need that stuff here. You know? The crowd if you had a moral crowd, I think that's what we need. And that that's where the power is is with the crowd
[02:28:42] Unknown:
and and knowing what we're shameful. We probably need to we need to find, a champion of the the new Mary White House Society. Oh, yes. Yes. I agree with you. Debs would be on for it. I'm maybe in
[02:28:58] Unknown:
be very Art Sally or Debs would be perfect for it. Yeah. But what gets me when you think about it, you think of these tribe tribes in the Amazon and all around, you know, they don't wear anything. So suppose then there's a bloke in in those tribes that wants wants to be a female. I mean, how long would he last?
[02:29:20] Unknown:
But they don't they don't wanna be females because they're actually proper. They're at least They're proper blokes. They go out and hunt, and they come come and come back with a meat during it it is. Guys are scary. You don't have you ever seen any of those interviews? Those guys that have hung out down in the Amazon. You don't wanna go down there, mate. We walked last two minutes. They kill anything and everything. They're unbelievable hunters.
[02:29:39] Unknown:
Yeah. Oh, they they are. They're they're very, very clever. I mean, there was an SAS bloke that went, stayed with the tribe down there. Yeah. And they were kill they were, with a a bow and arrow, they were killing monkeys up in the trees. Now this bloke was a SAS. He knew how to use use rifles. I'm not sure he was a crack shot, but he was pretty good. And he said, he felt really puny and pathetic. They did they actually, half killed a monk and let him finish it off. And he was trying to fire arrows at this thing. And, you know, he said, these people are incredible, and the speed they run through the jungle. It's that they they really know their stuff, and they they come back with the meat every night. You know? That that that's the thing. They're hunters.
But Mhmm. I think that's, I think these people that want to be women in that, I think they've got too much time on their mind in their hair on their hands. Then they've probably got too much money as well. Because,
[02:30:41] Unknown:
if you're busy working, I mean, you know, or they're on drugs. We need a great challenge, don't we, as a civilization? You know, before it was like, let's go take over the world. Alright. Done that. Now what? I mean, I don't know. But, yeah, there's not you know, we think of the sort of the manly things that you would do is like wielding a sledgehammer or being a welder or you know? And there are still jobs like that. But, of course, we've created they're tough and horrible jobs, you know, but they created a sort of type of bloke that existed. And they made for great cannon fodder, didn't they? All the miners and all these people that worked in fields, they're already leathery and tough as you and I would be had we lived lived such a life. Had we lived such a life, we probably wouldn't be alive by now. Most of them passed away before the age of 60 anyway, you know, because it was that that grindy. But, it's different times. It just really is. You know, anyway, look. We still got a little bit of time left. And, I mentioned, last week and I want I've just come across a post from him here. Chris Langan, the brainiest man in the world. You know him? Yep. Not personally. No. But, No. I don't. I'd love to get him on the show. I've gotta find a way. I'd love to get him on here. Everything he writes, I just go, yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes.
Anyway, here's this is kinda lengthy, but it kinda taps into some of the things that we're talking about about thirty five minutes ago. And you know how we jump up and down this sort of little timeline here, which is fun. He writes this. He says, according to Milton Friedman now if you don't know Milton Friedman, he's no longer alive, but he was an economic theorist and monetarist. I think he's the father of monetarism out of the Chicago School. Anyway, Langan writes, according to Milton Friedman, cheap goods like pencils are available thanks to a combination of globalism plus the magic of the price system, e free trade plus capitalism. So far so good, writes Langan. He goes on. But, unfortunately, we're no longer talking about old style nation building capitalism.
No. We're not. Now we're talking about global monopoly, super capitalism, in which fascistic, government embedded super capitalists monopolize resources and production and use their monopolies to control demand by limiting the consumer markets to just their own products. These elite globalists are black holes of greed and sociopathic narcissism who produce just two things. One, corporate governmental hierarchies whose products are bad for mankind, e g lots of invasive surveillance and control technology designed to promote a great reset in which everyone else will owe nothing, won't be happy. Now eat your cricket paste and bend over for your next round of toxic vaccines.
I include the Klaus Schwab doctor Strange love pronunciation as he did. Number two, the outrageous hype, also known as deceptive self dealing nonsense, to sell these harmful products or rather to force them down our throats while picking our pockets. There are two levels of capitalists who count these days. A, billionaires, often of the techie. Gee whiz. Look what I hired engineers to think up for me, Stripe. Quite like that. That's true. B, the trillionaires of the global banking system who produce nothing but funny money and the creative financial technology that supports the pocket stuffing portfolio bloating billionaire trillionaire circle jerk.
We could add political bribery and corruption along with a steady stream of lukewarm piss. I think I can say that because it's half past ten. In the upturned faces of humanity, but why dwell on negatives? The billionaires, he goes on, are critically dependent on the trillionaires. Interesting, but it's probably true. This means that when the trillionaires go spectacularly bad by, for example, committing white genocide through the calculated weaponization of mass third world migration to all and only white nations for over sixty years straight, The billionaire either either get with the program or they end up drained, dumped, and defamed.
That's why virtually all billionaires support the nefarious Calergi program and pledge allegiance to the bankster master race, joyfully heralding the engineered Eurasian Negroid slave race of the future as, written by Clergy back in 1926. But all of that being understood and given the obvious fact that free trade has now been clearly revealed as a transparent scam called monopoly super capitalism, can we please lay tired, patronizing old freedmen here to rest as the disingenuous disingenuous facilitator of monopoly capitalism that he most certainly was?
Yes. Yes. I know. It's mammonistic money driven global cooperation that created this pencil. But here's the thing. People are getting tired of bending over to have the pencil utilized as an all purpose rectal probe, and inserted point first by the sociopathic idiots snatching all the profit from its manufacture and sale, which is why they continue to fatten like hogs as the rest of us slowly starve to death due to the inflation they cause by printing free money for themselves and their corporations and telling everyone else
[02:35:50] Unknown:
to go piss up a rope. Thanks, Chris. Those those hogs those hogs should be treated like those dogs you were talking about earlier.
[02:35:59] Unknown:
Well, it's interesting that things about going up people's bottoms has come up twice. There's that guy that saved that dog by sticking his finger up that dog's ass, and he's talking about pencils going in the same thing. And he's absolutely right. I like Langer a lot as you can tell. I'd not even read that before. I just while I was just, looking at clips that popped up from last week's show. But there you go. A little long, I know, but I like it. It's clear, and it's excellent stuff. So so that's it. So so a bit like What do we do? Do we all become bouncers and beat them to death? Because some of them
[02:36:31] Unknown:
It's it's a bit like a constipated clerk who works it out with a pencil. Sorry. It's a terrible joke, isn't it? Yes. No. I quite like that. Bottoms. Yes.
[02:36:46] Unknown:
But, no. It has a
[02:36:49] Unknown:
I just think that, capitalism, the ultimate objective of capitalism is communism. That's it. And the com because you you destroy all your opposition, then you get a end up controlling the country. And this is why I believe in free enterprise, but not capitalism. And I think Henry Ford, he believed in free enterprise, but not capitalism. Because, he could have taken over Lockheed, but he didn't. And he said, well, we're good at making motor dropped them. Yeah. He said, we're good at making motorcars. They're good at making brake parts. And let them keep on making good brake parts because we make motor cars. Like, we don't make brakes. You spawn.
[02:37:29] Unknown:
That's just the thing. Well, it becomes the Wall Street Casino where you're just buying stocks and bonds all the time, and you you don't care about the people involved in the actual manufacturing and the service. The actual
[02:37:43] Unknown:
production. Cars now. Aren't they boring?
[02:37:47] Unknown:
You look at cars They're all the same color too. There there hardly any bright colors at all.
[02:37:52] Unknown:
You look at the cars, the sixties and seventies. They were I mean, my dad had a Morris Oxford. I mean, a Morris Oxford, if you look that well, Austin Cambridge, I don't think they sold in The States. The only one that did was a failure, which was called, Austin Metropolitan. And, Americans didn't want it. I can't understand why. But the thing is, lots of the cars just look different. I mean, you look at,
[02:38:17] Unknown:
other than by CADCAM, aren't they? That's the problem. They're all designed for aero efficiency, blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. You've got this guy in The States who's just designed a a diesel car engine, which is being ignored, that's doing a 10 miles to the gallon. I think, Tucker Carlson just interviewed him a couple of weeks ago. Right? So and he's saying with tweakage, they could probably get to a 50. And if you get even better materials, probably even more than that. Now if you take that and apply that to all the diesel trucks running in America, haven't you just effectively halved, possibly even reduced by 66% or something, all of the entire fuel bill for the for the nation? Not as an emission. Thing.
Yeah. Well,
[02:38:56] Unknown:
should we So that's that done. Can't we can't implement it? There's a big difference, though. I mean, we got this green agenda, which is just communist politics. But, almost everybody, it's in their interest to have a pollution free free environment. Yeah. They don't want pollution. But that's a completely different subject to the communist environmental nonsense. Yeah.
[02:39:21] Unknown:
Well, it's interesting that Ukraine produces the steel, and they're doing it in the traditional way with coke and lime and Yeah. Iron ore. And and yet all the other places, they close down and open up windmills and and that sort of thing. And then they wonder why, oh, we don't have any coal to produce steel anymore. It's like, well, because you shot yourself in the foot. And it's it's funny that the green and blue or or the, yellow and blue flag of Ukraine makes green, and yet we have this green new deal that's being foisted on us. Oh, yeah. That's interesting. That's a brilliant one. I never thought of that one.
[02:40:00] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, you see, the thing is crazy. We're over there's too many laws, too many regulations. It's over bureaucratic. That's the big, big problem. Everything is bureaucratic. Even, you know, a simple thing like parking your car, you got to check all over the place. There's no sign up telling you you're not gonna get a fine or something ridiculous. It's getting so tedious. It's just becoming well, the the rules are as claustrophobic. And I think you're probably freer in, the Soviet Union or communist China in some some places than in here now.
You know, it's it's it's ridiculous. It really I'll give an example.
[02:40:44] Unknown:
In Russia, say I want to pay you back for you know, we can go out to dinner and or supper. Yeah. And then you you got the bill, and I'm gonna pay you back. All you have to do is know the credit the debit card of that person, their number, and you can pay them back from card to card. Now here in America, we can't do that sort of thing. You gotta cut a check or you gotta do some sort of, you know, PayPal or some other method like that. Whereas there, it's straightforward. You just bank to bank. No problem. Wow. And they can't do that here. It's ridiculous.
[02:41:19] Unknown:
Well, I know that their council tax is £200 a year, whereas in this country, the average is £200 a month. A month. Mhmm. Yeah. And And it's just and you don't you get your bins emptied every two weeks. So in the summer, you got, maggots crawling out of the bins, and it stinks. Was it like in, where you are at Wisconsin? Do they empty your bins or anything like that? We have to pay. Council tax. It's something it's
[02:41:47] Unknown:
around $50 a month or more for a bin, and then they come every week and pick it up.
[02:41:55] Unknown:
Every week. We have to pay, as I say, two which is about, what, $250. This is a private company, though. Once every every two well, I prefer that. I mean, I worked it out. Where I live, there's 55 houses. If we everybody chipped in, we could have a far better service than the council is providing.
[02:42:15] Unknown:
How often do they come? Do you got it two weeks. Oh, that's that's ridiculous because then it sits and stinks and rots and That's right. Terrible. Midsummer
[02:42:24] Unknown:
I mean, we are pretty hot. It's humid here during the summer. When I was doing the film oh, what was it? The Kubrick film in the city of London. Can't remember. It's about the Vietnam War. It was filmed in Docklands because there was knocking down a lot of buildings. It looked like a massive that's the one. Thanks, mate. That's much appreciated. And the advisers that were revising on the film, who had been to Vietnam, said it was just like Vietnam, the humidity. It was the temperature, you know, it it was steaming hot, and this you see the perspiration on the actors' uniforms. It was genuine because it was so hot because it does get it gets very hot here. People don't realize that Because it's an island, it's humid as well. And that's the worst thing is humidity.
Do you find that, Paul?
[02:43:16] Unknown:
I guess at times. Although, I'm now being on the South Coast, you see, and parallel to the wind. We get bracing. Yeah. We get lovely all that ozone stuff and everything. It's, everybody down here, they live for hundreds and hundreds of years. You know? I think I mentioned to you before, there's a place down here where the vicar said it's where where is it? Was it Hastings or somewhere like that? He said, yeah. It's where people come to die and forget. They just keep living. Is that right? Yeah. I guess. Yeah. Of course. All play dominoes, don't they? Or something like well, it's a similar thing down here. So I'm I'm part of that. I'm get I'm getting there. I'm getting all crusty. I'm not I'm miles off, but, she's a bit briny. Does the air get briny where you can taste it? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We get we get salty sea air. That's quite nice when it comes in. We and a sea frets. Great. I love sea frets. They're really exciting. You suddenly stood there, and suddenly you can't see cars and things for about ten minutes in the middle of a summer's day. It'll come in. It's really great. Really? It doesn't happen that often. Yeah. It's like a mist.
Like a sort of a sea. A mist. It's like a sort of thing that a Dickensian character would emerge from or something like that. Yes. It's misty and moist and all that kind of stuff. Moist and misty.
[02:44:27] Unknown:
Well, I'm 38 miles from the coast. The nearest one is Maldon On Sea, which is not quite close. It's it's it's but Southend, I suppose, is the nearest, which is about 40 odd miles away, 48 miles, something like that. And, I was speaking to a chap that married an American lady, and he lived in the Midwest for a long time. And they decided to move back to little old England. He said, when he got off the plane, he could smell the sea air. You can actually smell the sea, and that was in Heathrow. And he said it lasted for about a week until he just got used to it. But he he he said that around this country, you can smell the sea air, although the locals don't because we get used to it. I didn't realize that. So No. I guess, it's We don't really get that. And so we we have the Great Lakes, and they're all freshwater
[02:45:18] Unknown:
so we don't get the the brine. Yeah. But you get the lake effect.
[02:45:23] Unknown:
But the well, that's it. But the thing is, in the summer, it'll be cooler where you are, Paul, than it is here because you've got the sea. Whereas Well, in the summer Bloody old. We also get,
[02:45:35] Unknown:
we get the attack of the seaweed. The beach here is very pebbly and rocky, And you get sort of stretches where you will have sand, of course, but you get these great rock pools with rocks in them, surprisingly. And all over them, probably starting pretty soon when the temperature goes up. It's been really sunny, but it's also been nippy, which has made it very interesting. But when when it warms up, we get an abundance of seaweed. And that stinks to high heaven after it's been out in the sun a few days. It was really quite pongy. But, apparently, it's really, really good for you. You have seaweed soup and all this. It's full of the most tremendous stuff. So maybe I should go down there and start a seaweed harvesting business. Yeah. You can just pick it up. There's lots of guys out there digging for worms. Yeah. Maybe bread. That kind of stuff. What you were saying earlier, though, about do you know, I keep I don't know. Maybe it's just me. The idea of these sort of soft things, like organizing our our organizing our own refuse, producing our own agency that distributes passports. It doesn't matter that they're not usable.
It's like a statement of something. Maybe I'm completely doolally. There's something in it, though. I just feel that there's something in it. It's all about marketing words. It really is. It's about marketing words and thoughts and feelings, which is our culture, and going, well, we just wanna be like this, you know, and we're gonna be and we've decided to set up our own office, and it's got just as much authority as yours because you're a bunch of traitors and imposters anyway. And they go, no. We're not. We're gonna take you to court. We go, okay. And then we get loads of publicity around it, and it bolts more people onto it. It's it's like, what would you call it? Event marketing. It's to it's to gather attention. It's like, I may I don't know if I mentioned last week. I am interested in political parties, not so much because I even care whether they get elected. But as a communications platform, any communications you make from a platform like that are heard differently.
[02:47:31] Unknown:
They just occurred differently. Nick Griffin has the he's been promoting the British Freedom Party. What are what are they all about?
[02:47:39] Unknown:
I don't know. British Freedom, I guess. Well Yeah. Oh, I like small parties. We've got the, we've got the, British Democrats around here, and they are Yeah. I believe an offshoot from the BNP because the BNP was absolutely decimated, by, I believe, the Secret Service, because of we know what Nick Griffin was saying that, that they had in their manifesto to abolish usury. And he was told, take that out of your manifesto,
[02:48:09] Unknown:
or we destroy you or your and your party. He didn't, and then the rest is history. Yeah. Well, we need so that you don't if you don't if you don't put it in yours, we'll destroy you and this country. Then we have a big fight, don't we? And we die. Yeah. Is that right? Because it's contradictory. What it is. You don't get to tell us what to do. We're gonna destroy your banking industry. How? We don't know. We're just gonna keep saying it. And then next week, there'll be 50 people saying it. And the week after, that'll be 25,000. And when we get 8,000,000, we're gonna shout your face, and your ad's gonna come off until you take this down. We've gotta We don't Something's gotta change. I agree with you. I mean, the thing is, we don't get, excuse my language, hairy ass MPs
[02:48:46] Unknown:
or hairy ass politicians coming around your door anymore. Now the election, we've got local elections on the May 1, not government ones. And the local elections, the British, Democratic Party is putting up. And they might come around the door. The small parties do come around the door, though I haven't seen them yet. And I told my neighbor this, ask just one question and one question only. What is your party prepared to do to abolish usury? Full stop. And see their reaction. And that's all you have to do. Just one question. And if they get that to every other door that they knock on, they it's surely, it's gonna make a little bit of a can must make them start thinking. There you go. Yeah. It's things like yeah. I I don't even mind how small and ridiculous it all seems.
[02:49:36] Unknown:
It's like it's good market research. You should view it like that. Oh, we're not getting anywhere. Yeah. We are. We're building up a knowledge base. You gotta just do something. So that's why, you know, all of these things. I think they're valuable. I won't mind working for a political party. I've got to tell you. Hello. This is the voice of the EBC. That kind of stuff. You know? The fuck on party. What about the fuck on party? Because I'm actually thinking Are we gonna fuck Bob? That's what I wanna know. Are you the leader? Alright.
[02:50:04] Unknown:
Well, I was actually thinking they're giving them a fuck bob. Well, I've got a amazing, Eric. Yeah. You you know what it is? Fucking hall party. The fucking hall party. Got a good ring to it. Yeah. The fucking hall party. And,
[02:50:16] Unknown:
we could give them a fuck bulb. I was gonna give them a fuck bulb because on the reverse side, it's all about using Why do we form one? Look. Form it. If you wanna do it, let's form it. Let's have a part let's just do everything. Everything that they do, we just need to do. We do it really on the cheap with few bits of paper.
[02:50:31] Unknown:
Well, actually years ago, down in Italy, they had the five star party. It was a joke. And it turned out that they ended up getting candidates elected and took over most of the government.
[02:50:41] Unknown:
What about Titilina? Do you remember Titilina? She was a porn star, Italian porn star, and she used to go out canvassing. Yeah. Name was Titilina. You look at it. Didn't you just make that up? No. I've not made it up. There was a porn star who Right. Got a load of votes. She started a political party, and she loads of blokes actually voted for her. And her name her slang name was Titilina. That's what I called her. But, that was around about nineteen eighties she put up. She's probably on a Zimmer frame by now. But there was also, Cynthia Payne. She did a political party and she was a high class prostitute.
Do you remember that, where people pay for her services via luncheon vouchers? Do you remember that in years ago, Paul? So that's what luncheon vouchers were for. Yes. Their name was, Cynthia Payne, and she called it the Pain and Pleasure Party. And she had put up for parliament and got votes for it. Pain and Pleasure Party.
[02:51:43] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. And, If anybody can if anybody knows the URL for the British Freedom Party website, could they stick it into the rumble channel? You, Nick Griffin on this Telegram had just posted something of his video Oh, cool. Thanks, Patrick. Channel. I gave it to you directly too.
[02:52:01] Unknown:
Yeah. Actually, there's I'm just thinking about this. It's a Fockham Hall party. You should do it. It could international. Yeah. And, I mean, it could be We have American history. Yeah. International. I mean, all our policies would be the policies of a party that could never be event never be elected. So it'd be, abolish usury, anything else?
[02:52:22] Unknown:
It's to do with the delivery. A lot of it could be to do with the delivery, you know, the way it's just delivered. It must be. So that common issues. Well, the purpose would be to get people, for the first time possibly or one of the purposes, to think about it. Yeah. Because it's very difficult to get people to think about thing two days in a row, even something as important as this.
[02:52:45] Unknown:
To help fairgrounds. Now do you know on fairgrounds where the where you can shoot at little ducks that go along this line and get a prize. Well, we could have politicians go along the lines a bit like, oh, oh, I got in there. Well, they they used to have the dunk tank. I'm joking. I'm joking, folks.
[02:53:03] Unknown:
Well, they would do that with the dunk the dunk tank. They would have, a chair above a pool of water, and if you throw a ball and hit the target, the the politician Oh, I just don't hear you. Yeah. The tank.
[02:53:15] Unknown:
But, now I assure you are time left, gentlemen. Six minutes of talk time. Sure you're joking there before, anybody comes knocking on my door saying, you know, talking about sort of hate speech and all that because what's happening now, people are putting and I think it's part of the psyop to stop people, giving you a point of view. And they're now printing stories of old age pensioners being arrested on hate speech and things like that. That's done deliberately to silence the rest of the population.
[02:53:48] Unknown:
So I remember very much. Concentration camp, guards in their nineties being arrested and put on trial.
[02:53:55] Unknown:
Oh, okay.
[02:53:56] Unknown:
Thing happened here. We had one guy from Ukraine. He got arrested and brought to the one of the international courts because of it.
[02:54:05] Unknown:
Well, look at that Canadian fellow. What's his name? He died recently. Oh, can't think of his name. Zundell? Zundell. That's the name. Yes. A very nice man. A very polite man. And that's terrible the way he was treated.
[02:54:19] Unknown:
Eric, we've got three and a half minutes left. Have we? Yes. We've got four minutes left of talk time. Yes. And you're doing a show on Sunday. And, That's right.
[02:54:29] Unknown:
Maybe you'd like to say a word or two about what you did. Oh, that's very kind of you. Thank thanks, Paul. Well, it's going to be called the War Justification Industry, and it's the, it's the eightieth anniversary. I don't know if that's the right correct thing to say it's an anniversary, but it's eightieth year since World War two finished and World War three started. And I'm going to be looking at it from a different point of view. It's basically reflecting on what my father, his viewpoints. I did interview him quite extensively before he died, but I'm only gonna pick a few sort of, like, few minute extracts out of what we were saying. But what he did reveal is quite an eye opener. And what we what we know in the history books and the what he can say from personal experience was two very different things. And I think we're going to get somebody rather hopefully, a little bit more famous on the show as well.
[02:55:29] Unknown:
We won't measure any names yet because we don't know whether they're coming on or not. But, Tony Blair. I'm reaching out to him to get him. Lance Corporal Johnson reporting for duty and responding.
[02:55:42] Unknown:
Good grief. Yes. But that that's about it. Your wardrobe is but if you go on to warveteran.co.uk, you can see a film that I made, some years ago called The War Justification Industry. But unfortunately, not all the links work on, Chrome. And, I think it works on Firefox and maybe Yandex, but you'll see the war justification industry. It's for about five or ten minutes, this film last. And, I think you might find it rather,
[02:56:16] Unknown:
I'd say, moving and educational at the same time. So I think it's it's but it's Well, it's eighty years on. No doubt. We'll, like, we'll be able to do a few more shows and and things with with it this year. We've, so they can catch that on Rumble, and it also goes out on Soapbox, isn't it, on Sunday evening? That's right. And and Windmill as well. And it's 8AM Cool. UK time. Thanks, Paul, for that. It's much appreciated.
[02:56:39] Unknown:
And, it's got to be done. You'll be joining us, won't you? And, every Should be. Absolutely. Yep. Yes. Yep. And,
[02:56:49] Unknown:
it'll be the sort of normal team there and hopefully a few extras, and that's it. Yeah. So Cool. Any last words, Patrick and Paul? And we've got about a minute and a half of talk time, and then we're going into a jolly old British song again, another one which I've dug up some. Well, everyone have a good rest of the Holy Week and a happy Easter. Yes. Yeah. Good sentiments, Patrick. Absolutely right. Yes. Absolutely. Paul, are you still there? You wanna say anything?
[02:57:16] Unknown:
Yeah. Keep your head down and your powder dry. Yeah. That's fantastic. Thanks every
[02:57:24] Unknown:
yeah. No. No. That's great. Thanks everyone for tonight. I'm just let me just have a quick I'll look at the old scoreboard here in, in Grumble, where everybody is. And, thanks everyone for being in Grumble, and thanks for your comments tonight. Yep. Jolly, jolly good. Britishfreedomparty.com. Well, there we go. Thank you very much for that, XO. I'll, I'll give that a link and go and have a look. So that's all pretty good. Alvin Kirk was talking about something earlier on, which I meant to mention. Oh, yeah. He's gonna try and get a a car engine running on Liberals' tears, which I thought was pretty good. So we quite enjoyed that as well. That's what we're gonna do. We'll be back again, of course, same time same time next week, which is 8PM here in The UK, 3PM US time for another three hour show, I would imagine.
And, we'll keep on exploring all the things that we like to explore. Till then, have a fantastic time, and I'm gonna leave you here with the thunderous tones of George Formby singing Chinese laundry brew blues, which is genuinely one of my favorite songs. I love this. I really do. There's something in the chord changes that I just wanna wait. Catch you all next week, everyone. Bye for
[02:58:41] Unknown:
Now mister Wu was a laundry man in a shop with an all green door. He dying all day, you're leaning away. He really makes me sure. He's lost his hat to a Chinese girl and his laundry's all gone wrong. All day he'll flirt, scorch your shirt, that's why I'm singing this song, oh, mister Wu. What shall I do? I'm feeling kind of lime, I was Chinese laundry blues. This funny feeling rudder, mister Wu. What shall I do? I'm feeling kind of limo Chinese laundry blues. Now, mister Wu, he's got a naughty eye that flickers. You ought to see it wobble when he's ironing ladies' blouses, mister Wu. What shall I do?
I'm feeling kind of limo, Chinese laundry blues. Now, mister Wu, he's got a laundry kind of tricky. He starts my shirts and collars, but he never touch me waistcoat, mister Wu.
[03:00:53] Unknown:
That's a wrap everybody. Forward movie and focused on freedom. You're listening to the global voice, radio network.
Introduction and Weather Talk
Trench Coats and Fashion Nostalgia
Free Speech and Censorship Concerns
Historical Anecdotes and Personal Stories
Railways and Public Transport Reflections
Moral and Ethical Discussions
Music Interlude and Listener Engagement
Economic Critique and Capitalism
Upcoming Show Preview and Closing Remarks