In this episode of Paul English Live, we navigate through a series of technical difficulties before diving into a lively discussion on various topics. We start with a humorous take on the cold weather in Wisconsin, featuring Patrick's experiences with extreme temperatures and the resilience of local cows. The conversation shifts to a critique of President Trump's recent speech, exploring themes of political rhetoric and the potential for action versus mere words. We also touch on the intriguing idea of politicians delivering speeches without trousers to undermine their authority.
Eric and Paul share their thoughts on the optimism surrounding Trump's promises, while also expressing skepticism about the influence of powerful financial interests. The discussion broadens to include reflections on historical political figures, the role of the CIA, and the potential for genuine change in the political landscape.
We delve into the cultural perceptions of Americans from a 1935 perspective, offering a humorous and critical look at stereotypes and national characteristics. The episode also features a light-hearted exploration of fashion, with a focus on bowler hats and their cultural significance.
Throughout the episode, we engage with the audience through chat interactions, addressing topics like free speech, digital currencies, and the influence of social media. The show concludes with a reflection on the importance of optimism and the potential for positive change, despite the challenges posed by entrenched power structures.
We're waiting for Paul English live to get started. Yeah. So is here's to still be doing the, the intro. I suppose in the meanwhile, we can open up the, outbound feed to the Neon Radio Ranch conference room. I don't know what's going on. Let me see when the, scheduled part time is. Really? This would be Paul English live episode 73. Let's see if we've got, a deal from there. We don't we don't hear anything anything. Well, the description of today's episode is president Trump, all talk and no trousers. Well, I don't know if there's going to be talk or not.
Still nothing going on in Streamyard. Let's see if I can pull it up on another computer here. Wow. Okay. Problem is with my studio system. Here we go. Anyway
[00:04:43] Unknown:
beginning is that WBN shows are for people aged 18 years and above. And I know you're all much, much older than that, you chronically old types. No. We might have some very young people listening too, and you're all welcome. And if you're under 18, we won't tell your mum and dad. Okay. We generally don't use fruity language, although there might be the word fart might slip out every now and again, because, well, this this show's kind of prone to them. Anyway, I I'd like to welcome the crew who you are probably familiar with. I'm joined this evening by Eric, from Fulkeham Hall and by Patrick, our cheese head, our resident cheese head from Wisconsin.
And Patrick, I just wanted to ask you, how cold is it? Because we always like to start off with a bit of weather chat, don't we, at the beginning? It's always a good thing. How cold is it right now in Wisconsin? Negative 14.
[00:05:36] Unknown:
Negative 14. Celsius.
[00:05:38] Unknown:
I feel like a baby in comparison. Negative 14. Well, that's amazing. It's just 6 degrees Fahrenheit.
[00:05:46] Unknown:
Well, that's quite warmer than it was. It's boiling.
[00:05:49] Unknown:
What did you tell me it was the other day? Minus 29 or something in the middle of the night, wasn't it? Yep. Yes.
[00:05:55] Unknown:
Yeah. I found minus 29. I think it was, Monday. Tuesday.
[00:06:01] Unknown:
I was concerned about that. I think I asked you about cows and what happens to them in such ludicrously cold temperatures.
[00:06:07] Unknown:
Oh, they do. Handle it.
[00:06:10] Unknown:
These are the toughest cows in the world. Well, I was listening to George Hobbs earlier today. I don't know if you caught his show. Not a little bit. Yeah. It was I I caught the whole lot. I was out for my daily walk. Actually, I didn't do it yesterday because the weather was really not encouraging. But it eased off this afternoon. The sun came out, the birds started to sing. No. It it wasn't that great, but, I went for a walk 11,000 steps today. How about that? That's, you know, my little phone app said you're almost getting thinner. I think I've got to do 14,000 ways. That's okay. Just a second. And, so I would urge everybody to tune into that. It's it's midday to 2 PM US EST on Radio Soapbox every Thursday.
And, that's what? 5 to 7 PM here in the UK, drive time as we refer to it, or walk time for me. I was walking around and doing all that kind of stuff, 5 to 7 PM. So he he did some fantastic work today, and, he's got some brilliant jingles in his show. I've got Jingle Envy. Have you heard all these jingles, Patrick?
[00:07:13] Unknown:
Yeah. Most of them in there.
[00:07:15] Unknown:
They're pretty good. He keeps he got all these sort of singing radio soapbox jingles and things like this, and I'm going, oh, we're so shoddy here at the tail end of things. I've gotta get my finger out and get sorted out on that. But, no, cracking show. So there you go. Every Thursday, he always gives me a good shout out, and it's not just, you know, quid pro quo, but it was cracking today. Really enjoyed it, George, if you're hearing this. And I'm gonna try and rope him into this every now and again as often as I can. Oh, Eric.
[00:07:44] Unknown:
Great. Thanks. Moving swiftly over to the fabulous Fockem Hall representative. Eric, how are you this evening? This fine evening. Yeah. Mustn't mustn't grumble. I enjoyed the sunshine today even though I didn't see it, and it was actually between the, the gray cloud. I mean, it was by about lunchtime, it was like middle well, it's like sort of, shall we say, twilight. It was chucking it down with rain, and then they finished off with some nice sunshine. So that was quite nice. So Yeah. This has been nice because the sun always shines on Fockem Hall.
[00:08:20] Unknown:
It's not a lyric. The sun always shines on what's that song? What's that from? Oh, hang on. Oh, it's that Swedish band, The Sun Always Shines on TV. You just sparked all those lyrics off in my head. I can't remember their name. I've just gone all nerdy and stupid right at the beginning of the show. Not ABBA, is it? ABBA? No. It was some blokes. They did a James Bond theme as well. I can't remember what they were called. Does it matter? No.
[00:08:47] Unknown:
No. It's just been managing the, the, Trump video and, you know, his, speech. Yeah. We'll go on to that a little later. But all I've got is a saying I made a lot of notes, But Did you? This word yes. And it's like all politicians, their words start to lose value when their actions don't match. Old saying.
[00:09:09] Unknown:
Well, I I'm with you. The subhead for this, little show is Donald Trump, all talk and no trousers, question mark. This is a phrase. It means, you know, your all words and no action, that kind of stuff. And it made me while I was walking around today, and I was wearing trousers, by the way, on my walk because it's impolite to do to not wear trousers, particularly in winter, particularly in all these nice ladies walking around, you know, with their dogs and things. You don't wanna scare them. But I thought, would it be interesting if one of the regulations that we were to impose for public speaking politicians is that they must deliver their speech without trousers?
This would undermine their authority almost instantaneously, wouldn't it? I mean, Starmer should be forced to not wear trousers in public so that everybody can at least have a good laugh and not have a have to listen to the dribble that comes out of his mouth. That would be fun.
[00:09:56] Unknown:
My name is Eric Fanakapan. I walk around the town. Sometimes with my trousers up and sometimes with them down. When they're up, they're up. And when they're down, I get arrested. Sorry. That's a spike in the.
[00:10:09] Unknown:
Good old spike. I like that one, Eric. I knew that one, but you did that very well. You you did that Thank you.
[00:10:17] Unknown:
You did that very well. That was that was cracking. We like that. Yeah. That's I actually I actually think the seats should have whoopee cushions filled with gravy that they don't know about. Yeah. So you have, like, cushions, but they're actually whoopee cushions filled with gravy. Wouldn't that be fun?
[00:10:39] Unknown:
The
[00:10:40] Unknown:
yeah. That would be good. I'm I'm thinking about that a little bit. And, yes, it would be it would be good with it. It would be good. But no. Anyway, I made a lot of notes here, and I noticed a lot of things, and there's a quite a bit. I went through it with a bit of a tooth comb. So, you know, it's, Hey. Well done. But I've got one question, and and Patrick might be able to answer this. Why is every president got a terrible memory because they have to have a pin badge of the United States on the lapel? Don't they know where they are? I mean, what do they have to keep tell you, I've been I mean, why do they have to have a pin badge in the United States flag on their lapel? I mean, perhaps they're lost. Perhaps they think they're somewhere else. Perhaps they think they're in Cuckoo land. I don't know.
Well, I I think Biden needed it because you, you know, you'd say I,
[00:11:29] Unknown:
I'm really here in where where am I? You know? You just you just reminded me of a John Prine song. It's called, your flag to Cal won't get you into heaven anymore. I'll I'll have to give that over to Paul
[00:11:42] Unknown:
to put as one of our You will. Yeah. Yeah. You will. By the I think we've only got we've got one song lined up by Elvis Preston. Sorry. Elvis Presley for tonight. I haven't even had a chance to pull my finger out with things. I've been so busy. By the way, Eric, this came in too late for the show. Although what I've heard was amazing. I can't really play it as a clip. It's too long. By the way, I don't want you to think I'm a big Trump enthusiast. I think I'm just an enthusiast for the madness of this week. Seriously, it's very, very different, isn't it? And I've said, I think, you know, even talking to you guys during the week that if you take some of the things he said in isolation and remove them from the cynical world view that we have developed rightly so based on what we've studied, then many of the things he's saying are fantastic. They're really, really good.
And, however, you know, the big proviso is under what context and where are they ultimately gonna end up. So I'm not getting all on the bandwagon and everything like that. But he's just given a speech this afternoon to Klaus Schwab and the WEF, and I caught about the first 20 minutes of it. And it's hard to disagree with any of the points that he raises. I don't disagree with any of the points he raises apart from the bit. And we can jump around on this one because I think it's it's been a slightly incoherent week for me. So let's have a slightly incoherent show as well. The the 500,000,000,000 for the AI stuff is a deeply concerning and also his continued persistence. Let's start off in a negative. There are some positives.
But the on this vaccine malarkey, and, we're gonna develop these AI vaccines. Gentlemen, what are your thoughts on this scientific quackery and nonsense and completely unproven killing build, which is really what it is? So what what what do you mean by AI vaccine? Well, he's earmarked $500,000,000,000 for a thing called Stargate. Right? Oh. And I've heard of them. Yeah. Yeah. Stargate. So we and it's gonna develop lots of AI stuff. Look. If I get garbled, someone call in and correct me because I might do. My heads are absolutely spinning with stuff right now. And this is, you know, it's a shared information and communication space. Right? But what they're going to be using much of that money for is, I suppose, develop rockets so that we can go to Mars or some nonsense like that, which nobody wants to go to. It's a silly place. But he's all they're also talking about using AI to develop advanced vaccines based on your genetic profile and all this other goof. He had Larry Ellison, who's like, you know, Bill Gates, another computer actor. These are computer actors who have been put out there. You're gonna act as the head of this company.
Larry Ellison, who's 80, giving some kind of speech about vaccines to people. Yeah. Okay. So you're really qualified to talk about this. Not that anybody is because I think that they're completely surplus to requirements. So they're all their eyes are all bulging out of what they're gonna be able to get up to to muck about with your genetic code and all this other stuff. Of course, it's gonna be really good for you everybody. It's gonna be great, you know, because they're gonna be able to sort of get your DNA profile and then come up with a custom built vaccine to stop you getting cancer. Whereas the best way to stop getting cancer is to provide us with healthy food, wouldn't you say? Or am I just being a Luddite?
[00:14:57] Unknown:
Yes. No. The fact is is is on word business. So all it's about all it's all is business. Business. But quite on quite honestly, when you look at other actually, with YouTube as well, so I gotta be care I'll be careful what I say. Look at other alternatives as do with our FOCOM doctor, doctor Miles Fleetwood, who's actually one of very few English people trained in Chinese medicine. It's, you realize you'd see things from a completely different angle, and you realize that most of the, shall we say, NHS, which is over or or, the big pharma people, there's a load of baloney in my view. Complete load of baloney.
[00:15:50] Unknown:
Oh, no.
[00:15:53] Unknown:
And and what gets me is that, with Trump, I had a deja vu moment because the way he was speaking was virtually the same as when mister Blair came to power. I think it was 1997, was it? And things started to move. There was a lot of optimism. Things started to change. Mhmm. And I remember my parents were going to hospital at that time, and nurses were saying, oh, yeah. Things are definitely changing under Blair. Look. They're looking a lot better. He's put a lot more money into this and bloody bloody barn. Everything seemed to be optimistic. And all of a sudden, it was like someone, shall we say, put a puncher in the balloon of this optimism. It just went and somewhere around a couple of years in, it all went titties up.
And I felt that that talk was it's very clever. It's very, very clever because he uses a firm who I haven't done my research. I should have looked it up, and I do apologize. But he and I think Nigel Farty,
[00:17:00] Unknown:
Fartas sorry. Farrah. Farrah in the garage.
[00:17:03] Unknown:
Farrah in the garage. Yeah. The man who I believe allegedly tells people what they want to hear, they use an organization that does research. So for example, if people don't like, flies. Okay? People don't like flies. So they'll put into the speech, we're gonna devote so many $1,000 or pounds to eliminating flies. And what it is, it's telling people what they want to hear, but watch whether they deliver it. They might deliver slightly initially like Blair did, but then the usury scammers will say, and then they'll back off. So that's what I think this is. This is the kind of, wow, this is fantastic situation, and it's all to drive up enthusiasm.
But as I said earlier, will his will his words met, match his actions, or will he be allowed to let his words match his actions? Because it all sounds impressive, but Blair remember Blair sounded impressive. I know what people think of him now.
[00:18:08] Unknown:
So we've got to be very clear. I have to say, I remember when Tony Bleier, Tony bloody liar, was, all mincing about in the nineties, and I knew people that voted for him. Of course, I didn't. I never vote for these creatures. And they were all sort of, you know, taken with him. I said, why? Why? I just couldn't work it out. I really can never really work it. He told people Well, he was polished out, wasn't he? They gave him new shoes. They polished him up. They made him look lovely on the camera, and I think lots of ladies fancied him or something. So I was told, which, of course, confirms that I'm completely puzzled about women.
I couldn't work that out at all, but apparently, it was the case. Middle aged housewives, I suppose, too much ironing looking at Tony Blair on the TV. Oh, he's nice or whatever, so they ended up voting for him. But, yeah, lots of talk and no trousers, really. All all going a certain way, which, of course, it tends to do that. Yeah. It all looks good. So his It's all kind of superficial, isn't it? It's a bit like when you, do you remember those mock auctions in London? Do you remember them?
[00:19:11] Unknown:
Where you go auctions? Mock auctions. Yeah. And let's say, right. We've got loads of stuff in that have beautiful stereos and televisions around the outside of this auction. And it would go on and on and on. This boat will waffle and waffle and waffle, tell you fantastic things. Right? And, eventually, it gets people to give up £10. Everybody gets 10. But you get a parcel from them, but you mustn't open it on on on the on the in in the room because you don't wanna show other people what you've got because it's so fantastic. And what happens, everybody gets the parcel eventually after keeping you there, after taking your 10 quid off of you and keeping you there for ages. I know. I hasten to add I never gave up any money. And then everybody goes to close the doors, and what you get in this parcel is a load of old tack.
It's a biggest
[00:19:58] Unknown:
con I do know what you're referring to. Yes. And that is It's they sell a lot of it's all sizzle. It's all sizzle, isn't it? They're selling the sizzle. This is sizzle. But there's no stage. He may do Yeah. That's right. He may do something initially
[00:20:11] Unknown:
to show, oh, Trump's things. Just like that. Oh, look. He's he's putting money in the NHS. Things that you oh, look. Things are better. The council's working better. The roads are going better. Everything and then all of a sudden, it just runs out. I'll give it 4 to 6 months before it runs out of steam. Because Mhmm. It's just a facade. It show. Because all these people are puppets. And I noticed that in the image that you've given, he's got a red tie on, which is rather strange, because I always really I always look at red linked with communism.
And it looks like, Chairman Mao's little red book in his hand. Is that is that what you got in his hand? So, I he's a nice personality. So was Blair. He's a likable person. Oh, he's lovely. Isn't he lovely, Donnie? And I do like He's a lovely chap. Wig. And I'll tell you something. I've I've seen some wigs in my time, but his wig is a good night. I'll tell you that. And now he's had a dry clean. He looks even better, doesn't it?
[00:21:11] Unknown:
It's it's it's coming on grand as this week. Yeah. It's really good. It's a lovely picture. And, of course, people seeing this picture that I put out with the show, I think, oh, Paul's gone old Trumpy. No. I just wanted to, I think the first comment was people are getting on the bandwagon. I thought I'd get on it too. We're so unbannedwagony around here. We thought we'd just get on the bandwagon and suck you all in. Everybody's thinking he's gonna be really positive about Trump, but we're just a bunch of cynical Brits in many well, I I don't know. Patrick and Paul, of course, are cynical Americans. Speaking of which, Paul, you've not said a word because, of course, I've not given you an intro. Welcome to the show. Good to have you. How are things? Fair to fair to Midland. Pretty good. Can you hear me okay?
[00:21:53] Unknown:
Yeah. We can hear you fine. Yeah. We can hear you fine. Good. I I had a little difficulty hooking up with the, with the studio at the beginning. The saved link that I had didn't work. It went to an empty space in time.
[00:22:09] Unknown:
I know. Well, I tried to communicate to you through Skype and things like that prior to the show, but it team seems to fail. So after this show or whenever, we've gotta set up a way where I if I need to get a little emergency message through to you and there's a change. The reason is I've got a we're, we're actually sending this out over YouTube as well. I'm getting greedy. So we're going out over YouTube Oh. Rumble, which is our main space. I mean, I'm not I'm probably always will be, thankfully. But I'm I'm quite willing to give YouTube a go, and we're going out on d live, and we're also going out on Telegram. How that through the Telegram group. There's a few people listening in Telegram. I was hoping to set up Telegram as a way to call in. So if you if you do want to call in, if you're just bursting to say something and people often aren't, but if you are and you're part of the, Telegram group, you can call in there because the video chat's running at the moment, but I can't quite control the participants and I want to control them. I figured it out. I figured it out. They have to raise their hand to speak now. Yes.
Cool. Oh, Patrick. Fantastic. That's brilliant. So everybody in the Telegram group, and I'm not looking at you right now because we're just chatting, but as the show goes on, we'll put out the shout for calls and things. Yeah. You can Patrick's just a wizard. Fantastic. You have to tell me how you did that afterwards, but, yeah, that you have to raise your hand. If I see it, we can bring you into the call, which is fantastic. That's really, really good. And this goes out to everybody listening on Rumble and WBN or anything else. If you want to call in and on Radio Soapbox, go over to Paul English Live. You'll see a link to the Telegram group there on the left if you're not already a member. If you're a member, great. So fantastic group, and I just wanna give a quick acknowledgment to everybody in the Telegram group. I really don't have to go anywhere else now. It's like this great sort of news gathering crowd that are pulling all this stuff in.
Lots of chat chats about distilled water today, which we might get onto a little bit later. I've got a glass, of course, in front of me, to keep my, chops all ready during the show. This is important stuff. But Paul, coming back to you. Are you full of giddy excitement, enthusiasm, and positivity for the future of America?
[00:24:11] Unknown:
Actually, I am cautiously optimistic.
[00:24:14] Unknown:
I am Good. I am as well, actually, in a weird way. Everybody now groans out there, but I am, actually.
[00:24:20] Unknown:
And and I'm completely on board with Eric's Yeah. Impression of what happened with, Blair. Everybody's everybody when they were listening to his speeches, everybody thought that there was movement going on. But it took a matter of time, but then that movement turned out to a different kind of movement, which resulted in a steaming lump of fertilizer.
[00:24:47] Unknown:
It is? Yeah. It did.
[00:24:50] Unknown:
It sure did. A steaming lump of yeah. It did. Fertilized. Turned into the thing. Letting me know we're on YouTube so I could, like, tame that down a little bit.
[00:25:00] Unknown:
Oh, I'm not first. Blow it out. It doesn't matter. Look. I was saying earlier on in the show, one of the things he's banged on about, let's see if this holds water, is the censorship controls in American media have been removed according to the words that have come out of his mouth. Mhmm. So you've got free speech back properly. So, I mean, this if it's correct, this is a mighty thing. I am encouraged by that because there is a ripple effect that carries on. So I'm I'm sort of of the view. I'm quietly optimistic. I'm very pessimistic about other aspects of his agenda that they're deeply concerning. So don't think I'm just alright. It's all gonna turn out great. I'm not like that at all. But I think you've got to take good when it pops up. And let's face it. If he was able to get a third of what he's claiming to do done, we would be in a better position, or you could say at least we've bought more time to keep maneuvering ourselves to actually achieve the sort of fundamental results that we actually want. But I'm glad you're quietly up. Somebody asked me that the other day, and I said, you know, surprisingly, I am in a way. Not about him or about that because there are definitely gonna be some banking chaps telling him what to do. I've already seen a thing on Alex Jones the other day. I don't watch Alex Jones, but somebody kindly sent a tweet through with a clip from him. I did I couldn't listen to the whole half hour. But the gist of it was that already, certain figures within the Federal Reserve, you know, that private corporation that's got no right to exist at all, just like the Bank of England, as far as I'm concerned, were already sort of ringing the fences and trying to limit his ability to do these things. Have you heard anything about that or yet? I'm I'm sure it'll come up at some point. No. Not yet. But aren't aren't the Federal Reserve and the Bank of London,
[00:26:45] Unknown:
like, 2 wings on the same bird
[00:26:48] Unknown:
kind of? They're joined at the hip, aren't they? They're dancing the, the the tango together. Yes. They're they're a sort of, I don't know, Tweedledum and Tweedledee of international global gangster finance.
[00:26:59] Unknown:
Something like that, aren't they? Yeah. Well, it's like Republicans and Democrats. You know? I mean, they're two wings of the same bird. And they always make
[00:27:09] Unknown:
it's it's so funny. They always make such a big deal of we've crossed the aisle to get this important work done for the people of the United States and the planet. And we're so full of ourselves that we just completely erased that chalk line going down the carpet in the middle. And if you believe that, I've got a bridge for you in, in, Arizona,
[00:27:34] Unknown:
I I think, somewhere. We're we're not oh, damn. I lost it. Never mind.
[00:27:42] Unknown:
Yeah. No. It's, well, you know, the the free speech thing alone Yes. It chain I've noticed just how fast me, my mood changes. It's like I don't know if anybody else is like this. You know? I I try to be stoic about many things, but the truth is you want to we want to hear positive things. I'm aware of it. You could say, well, that's a weakness. Okay. Let's admit it's a weakness then. And that means that you can be played. Okay. I can be played, but at least I'm conscious of it. And the idea is I don't wanna get too cynical because you might be looking at gift horse in the mouse and kick it into touch. I still think he's likely to be compromised to some degree. And, you know, like in the tagline, you know, is he it's almost like, is he really wearing the trousers, or are there other people wearing the trousers behind the scenes? And I suspect it's a bit of both at times.
But the way he's communicating as well, this is not to say he's forgiven for all sins. This is the guy, by the way, that, of course, launched the vaccine in America and pushed it and has bragged about it. And, of course, I've got this massive I should have anybody that's aware of this would have this huge cognitive dissonance about that. You go, what are you talking about? It's one of the worst things that's ever happened on the planet, and you're bragging about it. But, of course, they're pushing this narrative heavily through this huge funding for Stargate and all these other things. And you've got Musk and and Larry Ellison hopping around, you know, like, Christmas has come every minute. You're great. We can do all this crazy stuff or whatever they're gonna do and banging on about manipulating everybody's DNA. I mean, I may be getting slightly conspiratorial with all this kind of stuff, but I don't think so. It's kinda like that, isn't it?
[00:29:20] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, it it it's like everything everything that's out there is a tool. You know? I mean, guns aren't bad. Guns are tools. Hammers aren't bad. A hammer can kill. A hammer can build a house. A hammer can Mhmm. Break a window if you need to escape a car that's, sinking into the drink or whatever. They're all tools. AI is a tool. Okay? MRNA is a tool. It's the person that's using the tool. It's the force behind the tool that is the problem. I think that if the people in the driver's seat are worth a damn, then these things will will eventually turn out to be a good thing.
But we've gotta know who's in the driver's seat. It's certainly not, oh, Trump's chief of staff. What is it? Screaming Zionists. Screaming Zionists. And everything's gotta go through her to get to him. You wanna speak to the president, you gotta get by her first. That's that doesn't bode well for him being accessible or in a position to actually deal with the truth and not the stories people around him are giving him. I don't know. I'm cautiously optimistic, but I don't have my head in the clouds.
[00:30:50] Unknown:
No. I I'm I I think I'm gonna try and take that that funny little path as well apart from which it means you can talk to more people about this. There will be some people that will be absolutely gung ho about this. I mean, I've come across somebody sent me a clip the other day of a couple of guys over here running some, you know, show. Couple of English guys, they do a kind of news thing together. They were kind of you know, it's like their Christmas had come as well, but they made a simple point. It's just a simple one. And in the end, these could all turn out to be quite ephemeral and trite nonsense, and I accept that they will be, to some degree. But they were just saying they said, look, compare the way Trump's talking to the sort of drivel that we have to listen to from Starmer, and it's true.
What I'm simply reminded of is that if you have someone and I accept, you know, we're dealing with a compromised individual here, so we're probably being played in a wonderful way. Okay. I'm in the audience. I get it. But there's literally no inspiration from the people in charge of this country at all, And there never will be because as we've mentioned here before, they are beyond mediocre. They actually don't have any ideas or visions because they don't really understand anything other than they want to retain their position of power, and they're very good at doing that at least. Unfortunately, that's of no benefit to the rest of the country.
It's it's very poor. Whether that actually what I've said amounts to anything, I don't know. But I've had several clips sent to me of English people sort of going, this is great. It's fantastic. But there is a knock on effect. There is. Weirdly, the political establishment over here will be feeling pressure because it you see, the the thing that is good is that many of the ideas that we touch upon here that should be present, he's talking about making them present again in public life. Like, there are only 2 genders. This is this has always been true. It's been true whilst everybody's been running around for donkey years saying that there isn't.
And the idea that I mean, I've just watched the thing. This came through too late for the show. I was mentioning it a few minutes ago. Somebody sent me a he's been talking to the WEF today, and Klaus Schwab looked either suitably awkward and embarrassed or he was just acting awkward and and embarrassed. Take your pick. I mean, I don't think they're superb at containing all their disappointments and everything. And, Trump was hooked up by some kind of satellite feed. It's too long for me to play in this show. It would be the show. I think it's about 40 minutes long. I I managed to catch about the first 15 or 20 minutes. And apart from the bit about Stargate and the all the AI vaccine stuff, which is, of serious concern to me and no doubt many others. I mean, this is complete nonsense.
But the other points are good. Whether they come out of his mouth or the or a mouse's bottom, they're still the right things to say. Of course, it makes a difference because apparently, he's the president of the United States right now, albeit surrounded by, this of people with nefarious interests. Yeah?
[00:33:56] Unknown:
Yeah. Oh, yeah. I I think that just about sums it up. And, I don't know. I I really like what, didn't we talked about it on the show this morning. Trump issued an ultimatum to Vladimir Putin. He said, end the war with with Ukraine. End it now. And Putin responded back, extradite Fauci to Russia for trial, and I'll end the war. Well, I think Trump should have countered that demand with, I'll send you Fauci, I'll send you Gates, and I'll send you Schwab. You can have all of them.
[00:34:39] Unknown:
Yep. Who knows? I one of one of the things I saw in this first bit of this WEF speech, he was talking about Saudi Arabia, another dodgy place. Everybody knows that they're all run by cryptos, Saudi Arabia. Okay? And people that don't know what that means, look it up, we're on YouTube. You'll know what I mean. Right? So the whole of their royal family ain't and let's put it that way, and they're in control of all those oil reserves. But he was saying, he said, you've got to drop he was almost like ordering them in this speech front of these 3,000 people at WWF said, you gotta drop the price of oil. He said, it's too high. He said, and I'm very disappointed that you didn't drop it when you knew I was gonna become president. It's very cocky, but I quite like it actually.
He's very bossy, and he's going, look. I'm in charge like of the whole world. Okay. We'll give it a go. You know? If we're gonna go to hell, I mean, at least it might be fun in that way. But, he was ordering them to do it. And and the the conclusion of that according to his logic, I haven't fully worked this out, was he said if you drop that oil, that war in Ukraine will end almost immediately if you drop the price of oil. I don't know how that works, but there's obviously some sort of domino effect with all of these things. So maybe some intelligent person in the chat can inform me about about what that means. Yeah. The domino effect is the lower price of oil, the lower price of,
[00:36:03] Unknown:
manufacturing goods because your Mhmm. Utility costs are lower, your transportation costs are lower, your Yeah. Your energy energy costs all the way through the chain from, from product from raw material, creation to the end user, to the end consumer. It's all lower all the way through. So it's definitely gonna have a boost on the economy. Definitely. No. There's no question. One of the emergency, one of the the emergency declarations that he made was drill, baby, drill. We're sitting on a bunch of oil, and I think he's gonna go after it. Well, let's see what happens.
[00:36:52] Unknown:
The way he said this again, he repeated it quite forcefully just now earlier today for the WEF. He said and I you know, we've known this for years. We've discussed this before, haven't we, in shows? He said the US is sitting on the greatest stores of energy anywhere in the world. It probably is, although I think Russia is, although I don't know they drill through all that ice. Russia's got plenty going on. It's pretty big. There's a lot of stuff out there too. They used to brag about it or talk about it so much. But we've talked about before about this gas and oil field up in Alaska that was discovered in 1973.
This is the thing that, pastor Lindsay Anderson talked about. I think he passed away a few years ago. He was sent up there. I know I'm repeating a story, but it's always good. It's radio. Repetition's a good thing. Anderson was sent up there in the early 70s because there was a high suicide rate of workers upon the Alaska pipeline. It's a miserable place and all the psychiatrists, trick cyclists, couldn't get anywhere with them. He went up as a pastor and the suicide rate dropped considerably, and he became favored amongst the management team because why not? You know, it's a good thing. And his story goes that he was called into a meeting or he went into the office. I think it's early seventies, 73, 74, some somewhere around then, and there was literally champagne flying and they were jumping around for joy. And he said, what's going on? He said, we've we've checked all our figures. We've just discovered an oil and gas field that's big enough to keep America in energy, I think, for the next 400 years.
This is based on all the projections of the increase in the demands for your energy and everything. And they got the pipeline there to do it. He said, then what happened a few weeks, few days later, all these helicopters flew in and there was nothing but misery the next day because the order was you can't do that. We're not gonna let you take it out. And this has to do with borrowing money from banks. You don't need to borrow money from a bank to actually get hold of your own resources, do you? So the fact that he's addressing this, that he's against all this green energy stuff. I mean, we've talked about this here as a theme on this show whilst we've been running, and I've been talking about it, and no doubt you have, and Eric, and Patrick for years about these things. It's ridiculous. You know, today on my walk, again, I had to witness these £14 100,000,000 worth of propellers sitting in the sea, not turning, not doing anything, and I just view them as a big free masonic backhander scam.
£140000000000 for junk and it produces nothing. And now, of course, the other thing when he's talking about people buying whatever cars they like, great. There goes battery. Yet Musk doesn't seem to have a sour face about that. Surely, he should he should have a face looking like a slap star, shouldn't he? But what about my battery cars? Yeah. Well, they're crap, mate. It's not thought through. They are crap. They're complete crap. A total menace, those things. Well, definitely, lithium I know I sound enthusiastic, but allow me to because I'm, you know, being miserable year after year after year does kinda wear you out. It is nice. Even if this all turns out to be complete fiction, to at least be reminded that there is a view of how the life on this planet could be managed way, way better.
He also said that everybody should basically come to America and set up their businesses. So I'm thinking of making a move, Paul. Oh, there you go.
[00:40:03] Unknown:
Hey. Come on down. I'm going to Georgia. Why would I stay here?
[00:40:07] Unknown:
Why would I stay here given my tourney list? I'll stake out a couple acres for you. Would you? Oh, hell I don't know. I don't I you yeah. I can't go to Wisconsin, Patrick. It's too bloody cold.
[00:40:18] Unknown:
You can't go to New York either. It's too bloody blue.
[00:40:24] Unknown:
It gets cold. It's winter.
[00:40:26] Unknown:
It's called climate change. But that's silly cold, isn't it? I I sort of would like to survive it. I mean, it's just George was talking about his chickens, George Hobbs earlier today. He's been having a lot of trouble for his chickens. Poor little things. They can't cope with it. He's in Delaware, but I think he's been pretty nippy there as we would say too. Yes. So, you know, I don't know. I'll talk to you both. I'll either go to the Wisconsin
[00:40:50] Unknown:
or Delaware or Georgia. Georgia. Why we don't we we don't speak British English in America. It's probably probably because we get too cold here.
[00:41:01] Unknown:
You got well, you have to just be short worded because if you go open your mouth too much, your your lips freeze. Is that what happens? Yeah. Yeah. It's it's hard to understand when your teeth are chattery.
[00:41:11] Unknown:
Come on.
[00:41:12] Unknown:
Or your jaw's completely frozen numb into a block of ice. Yeah. Yeah. It would be, wouldn't it? And don't forget the weight of the icicles from your beard. Yeah. I've got something coming up probably at the beginning of the second half. I've just reminded. So, Gary, quick shout out to Gary. You don't Gary Reese. I shouldn't give this surname, but that's it. Gary, you're in the public domain now. You're done for. Gary, who I know is part of a little sort of Skype group and everything, he sent me a document a couple of weeks ago, and I'm gonna read some bits out. It's an assessment of all the different nationalities of the world from 2 British ladies that were probably fit to run the British Empire. It's written about 1935.
Of course. I might read the bit out on the Americans. It's quite long and quite rude to you, but very funny because of it. So we I'll I'll do that aft we'll do that after the top of the hour. You can brace yourself, and, we'll probably do that. So Gary, I've got that. It's loaded on my screen. It's coming up. We'll do that, just after 9 o'clock here in the UK after a song at the top of the hour, which would be, what, 4 o'clock US EST. Anyway anyway, Eric, are you feeling more enthusiastic about mister Trump? What do you think?
[00:42:23] Unknown:
Am I feeling more enthusiastic? No. I think he's a Tony Blair Mark Tow, personally, on a negative side. On a positive side, if he comes up if he comes up with all what he's saying, fine. But whenever in history as a politician who's under the rule of the usury scammers ever come up Trump's. Excuse the I know. Because what if I know. For me, if he said we are now going to abolish usury, and we are now going to arrest the Rothschilds who incidentally helped him out with his biz when he had business problems financially. Hotels, wasn't it? Hotel thing. That's right. He who was it he who's The seniors.
That's right. And so who do you think is pulling the strings? Because they don't help people out unless they're gonna get something back, are they? They're not gonna do it out the kindness of their heart, because I don't think they've got kindness of their heart. So, no. I actually think that, he's a puppet on a string. And this is all a kind of facade, a glossy facade. People will see fantastic things happen in the next couple of weeks, and then it'll just sort of go down the drain.
[00:43:38] Unknown:
We need Let's see, shall we? I'm with you. Fundamentally, I think you're right. What I'm doing with my own head though, I'm I've decided to take some optimist tablets just to see what they feel like. They're really a bit addictive, actually. Need optimism.
[00:43:51] Unknown:
Yeah. But we need optimism. That's the thing. And that's what that's the good thing he's giving is optimism. Because Mhmm. When you well, you go to your local town. Now I went to Waltham Abbey yesterday. It was a very smart area. If you look on Google and you look look up there's and also on YouTube, there's lots of people been to Waltham Abbey. It's oldie worldie. It's typically English. Now all you've got is drug addicts and drunkards walking around. Mhmm. And the actual shopping, the high street is dead because 2 out of town supermarkets have opened up one end, and an out of town shopping area has opened up the other end. So why bother paying to park when you park for free in the out of town shopping areas with the with the supermarket? So people don't get there.
No. It's it's sad. And that talking about the rust belt, well, this is the sad belt because you see people walking around with no optimism at all. And we need optimism. We need the optimism of the sixties, but everything's gonna get better. Everything's Absolutely.
[00:44:54] Unknown:
Going better.
[00:44:55] Unknown:
There's and I just hope that the optimism wins through. I I do hope. I mean, I like being optimistic. We need optimism, and that's what's gonna win through. Yeah. I made quite a few other notes. Now he said, he's having the common sense approach in his speech, but common sense isn't common. Because if it was common, people would be sensible, wouldn't they? Think think about it. It's a bit logical, ain't it? So
[00:45:26] Unknown:
It is. I just noticed that today though, it's good. I'm glad, you know, I'm optimistic about optimism. You could say, well, you've just seen everything through rose tinted spectacles. Sometimes it's good to put them on just to remind you of what fun it could be. And when you were talking about the sixties, I think it's even more than that. I just remember being pretty buoyant, really, up until 911. That changed things a lot, but it didn't I had I was, I had a young family by then, and that just took up all my attention. Well, not all of it because, obviously, there's a lot of reading to be done and things like that.
But even then right up to maybe 2017 or 18, I didn't really feel super cynical about all these things. And it's not really cynicism that we're talking about. I think it's probably just measured knowledge. You acquire it and you go realistically, the viewpoint that we have here is likely to be far less wrong. That's the way I phrase it back to myself. I don't pretend for any moment I've got everything right, but I certainly think there's a lot less a lot a lot fewer mistakes in the thinking around spaces like this and particularly around this space in terms of what we're talking about. It's it's just interesting to see the galvanising effect even if it all turns out to be bullshit, which it may well be, that, maybe we need to start employing some bullshit around what we're doing. Because if we get people optimistic and energised to do things, then it works. So, yeah, this is all bullshit, by the way, but doesn't it feel good? Oh, yes. Look. I know I'm being a bit daft in saying that, but it's there is a a kind of just to be reminded of what it's like to have a good time. You do need time out from all of this stuff because it's like wading through treacle in the darknesses.
[00:47:05] Unknown:
It can You're right. It can wear you out. It can. Yes. Go on. But I noticed that, sorry. I didn't mean to talk, Hope. You carry on.
[00:47:13] Unknown:
Well, I just wanted to make one quick point. I mean, I'm in in complete agreement with you. Optimism is important. And speaking about optimism and talking about it and and him, doing speeches and talking about this stuff, I mean, the the attention span of the globe, particularly the United States is, like, shorter than it's ever been in in recorded history. So, I I mean, if you tell somebody something and then you you do a 360 degree turnabout on on one heel and you ask them what you just said, they're they're still amazed that you want to talk in the same spot.
[00:47:52] Unknown:
Popular right now, Paul. TikTok. It's like you you only have an attention span of less than 20 seconds. Right. And then it's on to the next thing. You just scroll.
[00:48:02] Unknown:
Yeah. And you just, you know, just wipe off. Waste all day doing it. Well, here's the deal. Here's the deal. Now that they're talking about how things can be, now that they're talking about the way things ought to be, should be, bringing back you know, getting rid of censorship and and bringing prosperity back to the country, just giving them the idea, this is the way it's supposed to be. If it turns out not to be that way, they're gonna be pissed, and they are going to be looking at ways to motivate and mobilize and make it happen in their lifetime for their for the good of everyone, particularly their friends, loved ones, kin, all that happy stuff. No. It's good. Optimism is good. Gives people an idea which direction we should go, and let's just refuse not to be diverted from that direction.
We're driving.
[00:49:06] Unknown:
I'm I'm with you. I just it's like a new it's like, an old friend that I've not seen for a long time, a sense of buoyancy. Mhmm. And, you know, the thing about the mind and one's attitude is, it's it is your reality. People go, oh, no. It's all in this. It's it's everything that we see is because prior generations imagined things and then built things as a reflection of that imagination. This is why, of course, the foul buildings that are going up are completely symptomatic of the total absence of creativity in what we refer to as the commie left. I mean, they're they're just
[00:49:45] Unknown:
devoid of it. That's why the world is not a beautiful place. Yeah. It's all regulations, isn't it? I mean, that's the that's the trouble there that, I've said this before, but if, the the motorcar had never been invented and we was at the stage where they are now, Henry Ford would never have been able to build a hot model T4 because there's too many rules and regulations. You just won't be able to do it. Right. And but the other thing, I was gonna ask, have have you noticed how badly dressed states people are now? I noticed that, Trump Trump is Trump is yeah. Fairly just but the trouble is he has baggy trousers.
[00:50:22] Unknown:
Well, he was wearing high waters at at the inauguration Trousers. So
[00:50:29] Unknown:
Really? Yes. Have we got have we done a deep dive trouser analysis? Because it's pretty important, you know. I'm kind of into trousers. I'm sure it's pretty important.
[00:50:37] Unknown:
Have you well, I saw what I've noticed is people have got shirts that are too small for them with very wide necklines with, like, like, kipper ties. And, trousers, they're all baggy as hell, too long. Do you see that bloke with the long trousers that are just draped on the floor? And but at least when you saw politicians of yesteryear, they were all smartly dressed. They're scruffy as hell. Haven't they got good tailors or something? I mean, I would have thought Trump would have had his I mean, I saw Trump walking across when he was last president from Yeah.
What what do they call a helicopter? It's not air force. Can't be air force. Right. Because that's a marine one. Or marine one. Yeah. I'll pass. Yeah. And he's walking along, and his trousers, like, sort of flagpole. Breeze. What is it? Connie have you look at Pewton. His suits are perfect.
[00:51:27] Unknown:
He's absolutely immaculately dressed, but I don't know what it is about. A bit like me, Eric, and you, no doubt, when you're lolling around in Wackham Hall. I should imagine you're immaculately dressed. I know I am most of the time.
[00:51:40] Unknown:
Oh, pocket wash always and waistcoat. But, I mean, what what is it about is is what is it about Trump's trousers? He does have a trouser problem right now. Night. He just can't get trousers. The look's right on him. And the other
[00:51:53] Unknown:
one is We we don't have very many haberdasheries around here anymore. Those are those are gone. The tailor, you go you can't find a tailor's Nope. I mean, nobody even says that word, Patrick, do they?
[00:52:04] Unknown:
You've just used that word, haberdashery. No one even says haberdashery anymore, do they? No. It's just gone. It's gone.
[00:52:12] Unknown:
But, I mean, when you talk about smartness, you look at the Germans. Now I'm not being political or anything like that because we're on YouTube, but boy, weren't they smart. Oh, that's good. Oh, you know what I mean? It just so it was it they would say, clothes maketh man. That's what my mother told me. The man. Yeah. Yeah. And you just look I mean, but why does Bill Trump wear a commie red tie? I don't understand. He's a Republican, isn't he? But then he probably, you know, he's a Republican.
[00:52:43] Unknown:
I've always been red Republican because I thought they were public. Yeah. They they hey. The Republicans, they had the Abraham Lincoln League in the, Spanish Civil War. So, yeah, they're they're blood red.
[00:52:56] Unknown:
What was the Abraham Lincoln League fighting on the side of the commies in the Spanish Civil War? Yes.
[00:53:02] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:53:03] Unknown:
How stupid. I know. Hey. I wanna here here's a good time for a little quote I've got from Yuri Bisminoff. You have all heard of this, but I was just thinking today as well well about it's this is a slightly different one, but it's still good. And, courtesy of a post on Telegram, so shout out to every whoever put that up because this is really good material all the time, this stuff. Yeah. The left guys, the people that are now being left are watched during the inauguration speech. I mean, what are you supposed to say about the look on the faces of the Clintons? I mean, maybe they're all just playing. And and Biden obviously, Bill Clinton's completely gone. He looks in a worse state than even Biden.
Biden just looks as stupid as he ever I mean, I never viewed him as your president. Okay? I'm I hope nobody takes that as an insult. It it it was just a complete cheat and a steal and a nonsense, and he's got that bent next to him, whatever her name is, the vice president. And you looked at them and they just looked like the biggest sad sack of assholes you ever saw in your life. I mean, really unbelievably funny.
[00:54:09] Unknown:
Very funny. They didn't they didn't clap. When he said when they everybody was clapping and they didn't clap. They were sitting there. And Biden, I I didn't know whether why he'd look as if he's, shall we say, he's just well, he always looks as if he's just discovered that fluttering shouldn't be lumpy because he's sort of sitting there with a kind of,
[00:54:29] Unknown:
slightly less than Biden. It shouldn't. No. Biden
[00:54:33] Unknown:
only claps for a second. I'm glad we agreed on that. I actually saw a film clip the other day where that came up. Who was it? It was the actor who's die oh, I can't remember his name. Really good act, American actor. He died way too young, probably mucking about with drugs. What was he in? Scent of a Woman. You seen that film with Al Pacino?
[00:54:55] Unknown:
Scent of a Woman? You wrote a bit. No. No.
[00:54:57] Unknown:
That's a great film. You should see. It's a wonderful film, isn't it? Anyway, I'm getting slightly derailed. Yeah. He he was in a film clip, and he said that he'd shot, and then he explained what it was. And it's what you were talking about. Anyway, swiftly moving on. We've just plumbed into a bit of toilet humor there, but not for long. Let me read you this Bezmov thing because when I saw it, I was thinking of all those leftist those democrat leftist commie loosas for now. Okay. We know it's a game. We know it's act 15 of the great play. Well, let's see how it all swings around again. But this is from Bessemanov, not too long. Quite I wonder if Donald's gonna read this. He says, you see, useful idiots, the leftists who are idealistically believing in the beauty of Soviet socialist or communist or whatever system.
When they get disillusioned, they become the worst enemies. Reminded me of them. They look like they're going to be trouble. Right? I'm sure there's going to be some trouble. He says, that's why my KGB instructors specifically made a point never to bother with leftists. Forget about these political prostitutes. Your leftists in the United States, remember he was saying this in the early 1990s about 30 odd years back, your leftist in the United States, all these professors and all these beautiful civil rights defenders, of course, we've got them here as well, They are instrumental in the process of the subversion only to destabilize a nation.
When their job is completed, they're not needed anymore. They know too much. Some of them, when they see that Marxist Leninist has has come to power, obviously, they get offended. They think that they will come to power. That will never happen, of course. They will be lined up against the wall and shot. Yuri Besenbach Besenbach, former KGB propagandist. So I just thought I would drop that in. I hope nobody's gonna get lined up against the wall and shot. It's a bit it's a bit sort of 20th century there. I'm sure it'd be something else. They'll probably have some chips put in them and be controlled or something. Although you could say that that's what's happened to Biden already, to be quite honest. But there we go. Yes. The, the wonderful Yuri and a great comment. So, as I said, the Federal Reserve, the rumors of the Federal Reserve causing a problem. Oh, didn't what's the name? Who is it? Who's the Bint that was in charge of that? They're all they're gonna get called Bint. It's lovely English word.
Yeah. Didn't she she left, didn't she? And didn't she sign loads of ludicrous stupid things on the final day or something as they all do? I'm sure she'd done something even daft her than they normally do. Yeah. She's a trustworthy.
[00:57:27] Unknown:
The trouble is if Vauci was honest, why did he have to come apart? This is this is this is the thing.
[00:57:33] Unknown:
What what what did he do? You in anticipation. Yeah.
[00:57:37] Unknown:
So Did he pardon her?
[00:57:40] Unknown:
He pardoned Fauci. He pardoned Fauci. Yeah. But
[00:57:44] Unknown:
Margie pie Biden doesn't know what day in a week. He doesn't know if he's having a crap or haircut. That's right.
[00:57:49] Unknown:
The rudeness there. Does it matter, Eric?
[00:57:52] Unknown:
Yes. I mean, the the mister Biden, you're having a haircut. Oh, because you're going to move. You know? Yes. Oh, oh, about the move? No. You're having a haircut. Oh, yeah. I mean
[00:58:02] Unknown:
If Biden has a chip in him, it's malfunctioned Yeah. Or his battery's dead. No. He's
[00:58:09] Unknown:
he looks if he's had a brain transplant that rejected him.
[00:58:14] Unknown:
Seriously?
[00:58:18] Unknown:
Yeah. Do you know a bit. You know the, like, those Google famous places? The Google famous places and and, like, things to see and stuff like that in Google Maps, there is actually a place that, has been dubbed Brandon Falls, and it's where Biden wiped out on his bike.
[00:58:39] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. That's great. Oh, that's really good. Yeah. The bike crash. The bike crash is something else. It's pretty impressive there, isn't it? That that corner is now dubbed Brandon Falls, and it's even on the map.
[00:58:52] Unknown:
There's Fab. There's a place called, I believe, it's on the television years ago, Wet Beaver Falls. It's somewhere in America. I don't quite know where it is, but it's called Wet Beaver Falls. I wonder where it is. And on that and on that
[00:59:08] Unknown:
highfalutin note, highly elevating note, we come to the end of hour 1, few. We're gonna go we're gonna go to a song. We're gonna come back. We're gonna have a bit of Elvis Presley because, you know, it's an American themed night. We've got most of coming up. You're here listening to Paul English live on WBN 324. We'll be back after this.
[00:59:36] Unknown:
Well,
[00:59:48] Unknown:
know it can't leave me
[00:59:54] Unknown:
here. A horse of guilt. You owe them my money. Yeah. But you just want to eat me right. Everybody, but I'm I'm in misery. So bye bye bye, baby. Yeah. I won't be coming no more.
[01:01:38] Unknown:
Attention all listeners. Are you seeking uninterrupted access to WBN 324 talk radio despite incoming censorship hurdles? Well, it's a breeze. Just grab and download opera browser, then type in wbn324.zil, and stay tuned for unfiltered discussions around the clock. That's wbn324.zil.
[01:02:01] Unknown:
Views, opinions, and content of the show host and their guests appearing on the World Broadcasting Network are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of its owners, partners, and other hosts or this network. Thank you for listening to WBN 324 Talk Radio.
[01:02:17] Unknown:
Yep. Thank you, and thank you for here we go into hour 2. We're here talking about all things Trumpist and inaugurationist and speeches to the WEF, all of the optimism and all of the cynicism and the up and down and the wonderful theater of it all. Some good comments by the way. Guys, I'd I'd direct your attention to the Rumble chat if you haven't got it there because there's always good stuff to quote. Very, very important one, from XO saying that we need more early 19 eighties teacher padded elbow jackets. I couldn't agree more. I'm saving up to get a tweed jacket. They're not cheap. £380.
So, you know, I'm gonna have to go and run a few errands to get that, but I I want to get one with the leather patches on the on the things because, you know, we've got to look the part. I'm not I don't wanna look like a sort of socialist, teacher, you know, because they sometimes wear all that sort of stuff, but I think tweed jackets are okay. Anyway, gentlemen, welcome back to part 2. Hope you're fully refreshed, after listening to, to good old Elvis Presley. It being an American thing night, it seemed very appropriate. So good choice there, Patrick. Like that. Yes.
[01:03:24] Unknown:
You need your tweed jacket, but you need a pipe and a bowler.
[01:03:29] Unknown:
I'm looking at bowlers. You know, I've I've found them, bowler suppliers over here. There seem to be quite a few. 44 quid for a bowler, Eric. What do you think?
[01:03:40] Unknown:
Not bad. Well, actually, I had the bowler hat farmer on my show, and he's got a bowler hat that he's I think he's very great father had. Yeah. Which was in the, the let's have a think. I think that was in the Edwardian times, but he actually bought between you and I And, Brent, but don't tell anybody else. So is any us three listening tonight, isn't there? I think he bought a a second one off of eBay, a plastic one. But that's strictly between us, of course. What? Hey. Because I think you can get plastic bowlers off of eBay. So there we go. Because Because he doesn't wanna wear his grandfather's one out.
[01:04:16] Unknown:
Well Wow. Yeah. But a plastic Oh, that's that's rather depressing, isn't it? It's like what they sell at Seaside or something. You kiss me quick hats and all that nonsense. Good grief, man. He's on the side, Dan. Give him a good rollicking as we would say. That's privilege. 44 quid's not bad for a hat. My head's enormous, though. I've got the most colossal head. I've got to tell you. I did I ever tell you about the head head measuring competition I had with a guy I was working with years ago? He's really good. He he said, I've got the biggest head here. I said, no, you aren't. And he was so we got so Charlie was fantastic. We got a tape measure out. He measures his round. I can't remember what it was. I said, give that a year. I was like, 2 inches bigger. He was crushed. I said, there you go. Don't muck about with your elders. I've got a bigger brain. That's why I knew I had a bigger head. So that's it. I've I've never been able to find a hat. But what I thought it would be good to follow in the footsteps of Mark and develop this movement of of bola hatted gents who want to bring Britain back. It's like one of those hidden things that'll drive them crazy, won't it? That kind of stuff. But then what we do, Eric, is over the years, we morph from being bowler hatted sort of nice types into the droogs from Clockwork Orange.
Oh, yes. Kubrick. Yeah? Because they all had bowler hats, didn't they?
[01:05:31] Unknown:
Well, you can get 1, blast plastic black flock bowler hat 599 of Ebay.
[01:05:38] Unknown:
So there you go. You get a pla That's wrong. And it's a black bowler. That's just plain I know you can, but it's wrong, isn't it? You can't be doing things like that. It's completely out of order. You can't do that. It's sacrilege. It's £5. Not for a plastic bowler, it's sacrilege. It's completely wrong.
[01:05:51] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I got a stethoscope on here, for 4949, but, that's a fancy dress. It's a proper bowler. It looks like a bowler. Probably smells like a bowler and, it's right apart from the plastic. Did you know that the, cowboy hats, they wore more bowler hats than cowboy hats, West Stetsons. And the Stetsons were actually made in Manchester in Great Britain. See, not many people know that.
[01:06:19] Unknown:
Do they? The Manchester milliners were making a fortune by shipping Stetsons to Wyoming. Is that what you're telling me? Yeah? That's what yes. That's true. Yes. Yes. Wow. A lot of them. Not all,
[01:06:30] Unknown:
but if you look at the pictures, most of the blokes in the West wore bowler hats, rather than Stetsons. So it's a bit of a myth that they all wore Stetsons. They didn't. That's why Bush Cassidy and the Sundance film is a little bit more closer to the truth than we you know, it's because, Bush Cassidy Oh, yeah. He has a bowler hat, doesn't he? Yeah. He does.
[01:06:50] Unknown:
There's a comment from Woody Peak here saying, wasn't the bowler hat the first hard hat worn on building sites, etcetera? Maybe it was, you know.
[01:07:01] Unknown:
No. I don't think so. Because I think the first hard hats were when they built, Hoover Dam, and they poured tar over baseball hats to protect them because the poor sailors were yeah. They were up you know, they they they there have been stuff falling on them. So they poured tar tar over the baseball hats to to as a sort of a form of hard hat. But I remember the time when you never wore a cycle Pete, you never wore a cycle helmet. And now I see loads of people with cycle helmets, but is it really necessary? I mean, in the No.
[01:07:34] Unknown:
Do you have law there that says you have to? No. No. You don't. No. You don't. You can't you can't on a push bike, you can. But I've seen so many people get brained on bikes that I actually do wear one now. And it's, it's a bit like getting thrown off a horse. If you get if it's it's generally okay, but, you know, I'd I'd certainly wear one if I go mountain biking. At first, I thought but then, you know, I'm a bit of a middle aged puff now. And, but when I was 17, I I rode for 4 or 5 years practically every day on my bike from, like, the age of 12 to 17. I never wore one then. No one ever even thought. They didn't they hadn't even been invented. You just put a bait a reverse you got a cycling hat. It's like a sort of lightweight baseball hat and wore those. And, of course, all the footage of the Tour de France, which we used to get intermittently on ITV's World of Sport over here in the seventies, fronted by a guy called Dickie Davis who had the largest mustache in broadcasting history.
They were absolutely I I I remember just how exciting I thought that the coverage of the European cycling was because France and Belgium were like exotic places to people in England back then. It was totally it was really completely distinctively France and there wasn't much sort of attention paid to the Tour de France but they used to cover it. And, I thought it just looked amazing. They had all those air horns going. They're all on scooters in the whole place, and they're going like hell. You know? And people did die in the race. They did. You know? They fall off a cliff and stuff. Not often, but it, regular enough, it used to occur. But it I don't think the helmets would have saved them,
[01:09:05] Unknown:
at all. But in but in Fockem, the cycling helmets there are, Raypro, German Army World War 2 helmets, which you can find. Get one. Yes. They're 1599. That's and the dollars only only bucks is that, do you reckon? The 15 20. 60. About 20 bucks. Yeah. 20 bucks. A retro German army World War 2 plastic helmet, but you can actually buy, Spanish ones. Because the Spanish army don't use them anymore from army surplus places, which are cheap, and they look exactly the same. But that that save save your head, wouldn't it? You know? And you can also get, I don't really like the, Brodie style, the British army one. They're not all that. Mhmm. But, we can actually buy a genuine, Austrians was it?
An Austrian army helmet. There's loads of American oh, we get them brand new army American army ones, for 25, say, $30. But, no. I I think that that would be good cycling along. You know? As long as you don't go through I I can see no. Eric's cycling emporium. You see that's good. Eric's emporium is quite good.
[01:10:16] Unknown:
You know, and the
[01:10:18] Unknown:
We have we have a shop. I knew we have to get this on the call. We have we have this, shop here. It's called Eric the bike man.
[01:10:25] Unknown:
Really?
[01:10:26] Unknown:
Yeah. He's obviously a relation, Eric. You know? Well, I've got an m 6 m 65 jacket, which I use when I cycle. So I've got my m 65 jacket with the, Repro plastic German army helmet on. So, well, I wish to go forward and sort of put your hand forward and upwards. You know? Is it as you would so it was a a signal, isn't it? Because, I've noticed motorists do give strange signals to me. They tell me I've got 2 2 they could tell me that I was 1 person on my cycle by sticking one finger up, and sometimes they stick 2 fingers up. And, they think my name is, oh, dear. Yes. I won't go into that because it's too rude. But anyway Phew.
[01:11:13] Unknown:
Yes. When you dodged a bullet there.
[01:11:15] Unknown:
Yes. It's good of them to tell me that I've just got one person on there, and I've got my 2 wheels are still attached. Isn't that nice?
[01:11:23] Unknown:
But Yeah. That's great. There we go. Yeah. And the the bowler hat thing's rolling. Everybody's really into talking about bowler's. We've struck a chord here. I think we better get one up, and then everybody can support the show by buying a bowler hat. I'm seriously gonna look into it. I think it'd be funny. Yeah. Yeah, Warren writes, he says, this is interesting on Chinese bowler hat industry. You'll be keen on this. The bowler hats sold in most shops here are made in China and are solidly blocked. Only steam can soften the material so as to make them fit, but they are difficult or impossible. Damn those Chinese fuckers.
Can we make our own? To hell. Yeah. Yeah. But can we make our own? Surely, there's someone DIY jobs in my life. I think I did find an English, mate, manufacturer. As I said, there were about 44 quid. I'm gonna do this. Anybody doing a search now, you'll find someone doing it. They were doing all sorts of exotic colors, though. They had, they had one actually, which I quite liked, which was British racing green. You know that dark green that jaguars used to have it in the fifties and lotus in the sick it's a fantastic green. And they also had a blue one, like a a dark navy blue, which I quite liked.
And then they had the classic black one. The model they were using there looked all fade. Didn't look like a gent at all. It's terrible, you know, and he wasn't he didn't have a monocle in. Hey. We could get into monocles as well. That would be quite interesting. Although I don't know if I could hold it in.
[01:12:47] Unknown:
They've got them here. There's a there's one here. It's pre owned, 1799 plus 395 delivery, and it's a 100% wall. It's a medium size, so it wouldn't fit us because we've got big heads.
[01:13:00] Unknown:
Mhmm. So Have you got a big head, Eric? Have you got a big head? I've generally You wonder what big is in head size? I'm gonna have to get my measurements. I bet there's someone out there who's got a head bigger than mine, and then I'll be, of course, slightly depressed. Hang on. Minus 61 centimeters. What's a centimeter? Good grief. We don't know what they are.
[01:13:19] Unknown:
Hang on. Patrick, centimeters? What are they? I just I just know this because I
[01:13:24] Unknown:
go ahead. We've got the we've got one for 29.99, 100% wool, men's black bowler hat, finished hat, satin lining, 4 sizes, 29.99. So that's not bad, and that's not a plastic one. I'll take
[01:13:44] Unknown:
it. Yeah. Well, maybe we could do YouTube videos about testing them out and getting gazillions of views and use it to promote the show. We could just make out that the BOLA hat's making a massive comeback. It's the new fashion and style accessory in communist Britain under Keir Starmer. It's a sign of defiance, and we've all become city gents or workers on building sites wearing bowler hats, you know, all that kind of stuff. That'd be cool, wouldn't it? Well, they certainly do they do them. I think that, they got ladies' ones, gentlemen's ones. Let's go to this one for 29.99.
[01:14:14] Unknown:
And, what we got? Me oh, extra large extra large. Yeah. Still 29.99. And, it's a place in Sussex that does.
[01:14:27] Unknown:
Are there any Eric, you you've been good as one of those street hawkers. Eric, you need to be a street hawker like you were talking with those false auctions. You, sir, come here. Try this on. Oh, don't he look handsome, man? All that. Are there any more Oh, he makes you look 10 years younger. Really? Yeah. You look you look absolutely marvelous. Yeah. You oh, that one's gonna drive the ladies crazy, sir. I think you better hand over the cash. Come on. I think I was there. A tin foil. Shoot shooter.
[01:14:52] Unknown:
I'm getting some feedback that, Eric's a bit quiet on his mic.
[01:14:58] Unknown:
Really? Hang on. I'll I'll deal with it. No. You're okay. I can hear him fine. I don't think so. I hear him fine too. I don't I don't think Yeah. So for those of you who are hard of hearing, listen.
[01:15:10] Unknown:
I agree though. We need we need better dressed people. I I I think you need a nice tweed jacket. And if you have a nice tweed jacket, you you could wear shorts so you can wear a t shirt, but as long as you've got that jacket, you kinda look a little bit better than you would if you were just wearing a jumpsuit.
[01:15:26] Unknown:
Well, as as I was saying, you know, I I've I've got a dog tooth jacket. I always like dog tooth jackets, and it's 30 years old, and it still fits me. I can still pull the buttons together at the front because I've been losing weight recently, and I'm really quite thrilled about that. And I got to wear it the other day, and I thought, oh, I feel good. I you see, I don't put suits on him. I used to put a suit on and go off and and mingle with other people in workplaces all wearing suits and looking jolly sharp. And it does actually raise your energy. It's pretty good. Anyway, Eric, when we get the Fucking Hole Gazette running, we can all be in there as newspaper men shouting one another, with, waistcoats on, dressed in suits, pocket watches, and we can get those, silver cufflink bands to hold your cufflinks up. You know those sort of expander things that go around your arm to keep your sleeve, your shirt sleeves up? And we can sweat into them profusely with pencils behind our ears and shout at one another drinking coffee and tea. Great. Fountain pens. I'd love to do that. Yeah. Yeah. Fountain pens. Abs Yeah. I I can get them cheaper, actually, 2799.
[01:16:27] Unknown:
Loads of them. And they're and actually in America, they call them derby hats, I believe, not bowler hats. Is that right? Oh, yeah. That's what I heard. Yes. Alright. No. It's it's it's it's here, but, who knows? Oh, £19.44 is even going down cheaper. Derby hat with inner satin lining, men's classic collar hat. Satin lining. Yes.
[01:16:48] Unknown:
And that's no. You get paint change out of £20, which is about And, of course, if the hat's big enough, it's a good place to keep your pet mouse, isn't it, on the top of your head? It's always quite awesome sandwiches for later on in the day. Nobody knows. It's always pretty good. Yeah. Billy Silver Richard can't Billy Silver writes, he says sorry. Go on. You speak. I'll speak.
[01:17:08] Unknown:
Like, they call me on the bike. I I I think I can certainly wait after non hot. So that land they call me Richard Head. I don't know quite why. They say, look at that Richard Head over there.
[01:17:16] Unknown:
Ah, I can see where you're coming from from. There. Yes. Yes. Seriously, the place I worked at in the eighties, we actually did have a client called Richard Head. And nobody nobody nobody wanted to meet him for appointments for for for updated meetings. It come in once a week and nobody wanted to meet him. They were drawing lots. I can't talk to People can keep a straight face because they didn't want to call him by his nickname. You can imagine how awkward it would have got and did often, much to hysterical laughter over. Yeah. And, of course, you think, you know, what were your parents thinking of? Obviously, not much. But there we go, you know. Yeah. Absolutely. That's good.
[01:17:56] Unknown:
I was a bloke with a bloke who was called Pyle. My name, Pyle.
[01:18:03] Unknown:
It's a grand name. Let's not mock it. You know? Maybe he maybe he meant he was very rich, Eric. Maybe he'd made a pile, you see. Yes. Maybe he That's what it is. Maybe his first name was Rich. Rich Pyle. That's what his real name was, and he's just loaded.
[01:18:17] Unknown:
That's a stretch. You know it. It is.
[01:18:20] Unknown:
I know. I know. I was just saying Billy Silver says he's not fussed on the bowler. Me, I've never been attracted to it either, Billy, really. It's just that I thought, you know, needs must and all that, and it is a tradition. However, so many great English hatter types over the centuries. Yeah. Been great. We've got a great millinery history of milliners and all that kind of stuff. Apart from that, they used to go mad, didn't they? Wasn't it? They put lead in the brim of the hats, they steamed, they all went bonkers, didn't they? Which is where we get the phrase mad as a hatter from from lead poisoning. Groovy.
How about that? Now I'd like to just I'd like to switch back to this old, is the president in control of things and everything? Got a little clip here from you for you. I don't know. I, I think this, my good friend, she knows who she is, sent me this earlier today. It's Tucker Carlson talking a couple of years back. I think when he he must have been still on wherever he was, CNBC, was it? Or MS. I don't know what he was on. Right? But it's about president Nixon and the CIA. It's about 4 minutes long, but it it's this can of worms and it's really good. So this is about 4 minutes.
Let's listen to this because it it actually chimes back into that conversation that we were filling most of the first hour with. So if you wanna understand, if you really wanna understand
[01:19:35] Unknown:
how the American government Oh, yeah. And there's a birdie in the background. Level. And if you wanna know why they don't teach history anymore, one thing you should know is the most popular president in American history was Richard Nixon. Richard Nixon. Yet somehow without a single vote being cast by a single American voter, Richard Nixon was kicked out of office and replaced by the only unelected president in American history. So we went from the most popular president to a president nobody voted for. Wait a minute, you may ask. Why didn't I know that? Wasn't Richard Nixon a criminal?
Wasn't he despised by all decent people? No. He wasn't. In fact, if any president could claim to be the people's choice, it was Richard Nixon. Richard Nixon was reelected in 1972 by the largest margin, the popular vote ever recorded before or since. Nixon got 17,000,000 more votes than his opponent. Less than 2 years later, he was gone. He was forced to resign. And in his place, an obedient servant of the federal agencies called Gerald Ford took over the White House. How did that happen? Well, it's a long story, but here are the highlights, and they tell you a lot. Richard Nixon believed that elements in the federal bureaucracy were working to undermine the American system of government and had been doing that for a long time.
He often said that. He was absolutely right. On June 23, 1972, Nixon met with the then CIA director Richard Helms at the White House. During the conversation, which thankfully was tape recorded, Nixon suggested he knew, quote, who shot John, meaning president John f Kennedy. Nixon further implied that the CIA was directly involved in Kennedy's assassination, which we now know it was. Helms' telling response? Total silence. But for Nixon, it didn't matter because it was already over. 4 days before, on June 19th, the Washington Post had published the first of many stories about a break in at the Watergate office building. Unbeknownst to Nixon and unreported by the Washington Post, 4 of the 5 burglars worked for the CIA.
The first of many dishonest Watergate stories was written by a 29 year old metro reporter called Bob Woodward. Who exactly was Bob Woodward? Well, he wasn't a journalist. Bob Woodward had no background whatsoever in the news business. Instead, Bob Woodward came directly from the classified areas of the federal government. Shortly before Watergate, Woodward was a naval officer at the Pentagon. He had a top secret clearance. He worked regularly with the intel agencies. At times, Woodward was even detailed to the Nixon White House where he interacted with Richard Nixon's top aids. Soon after leaving the navy for reasons that have never been clear, Woodward was hired by the most powerful news outlet in Washington and assigned the biggest story in the country.
And just to make it crystal clear what was actually happening, Woodward's main source for his Watergate series was the deputy director of the FBI, Mark Felt. And Mark Felt ran, and we're not making this up, the FBI's COINTELPRO program, which was designed to secretly discredit political actors the federal agencies wanted to destroy, people like Richard Nixon. And at the same time, those same agencies were also working to take down Nixon's elected vice president, Spiro Agnew. In the fall of 1973, Agnew was indicted for tax evasion and forced to resign. His replacement was a colorless congressman from Grand Rapids called Gerald Ford. What was Ford's qualification for the job?
Well, he had served on the Warren Commission, which absolved the CIA of responsibility for president Kennedy's murder. Nixon was strong armed into accepting Gerald Ford by Democrats in Congress. Quote, we gave Nixon no choice but Ford, speaker of the house Carl Albert later boasted. 8 months later, Gerald Ford of the Warren Commission was the president of the United States. See how that works? So those are the facts. Not speculation. All of that actually happened. None of it's secret. Most of it actually is on Wikipedia. But no mainstream news organization has ever told that story.
It's so obvious, yet it's intentionally ignored. And as a result, permanent Washington remains in charge of our political system. Unelected lifers in the federal agencies make the biggest decisions in American government and crush anyone who tries to reign them in. And in the process, our democracy becomes a joke.
[01:24:00] Unknown:
I like that clip. Now, gentlemen, to what degree is the CIA controlling shenanigans right now? Considerably? I think we'd have to assume that they are if they still exist.
[01:24:15] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Definitely. I would say that it's interesting that Gerald Ford was on the Warren Commission.
[01:24:22] Unknown:
Yes. Because
[01:24:24] Unknown:
another person that was on the Warren Commission was Senator Hale Boggs from Louisiana, and he ended up being driven to the airport by Bill and Hillary Clinton. And he got on a plane and was never seen again. So it it that whole situation is, ridiculous. And then do you know who Gerald Ford's vice president was?
[01:24:49] Unknown:
Wasn't it a Rockefeller?
[01:24:50] Unknown:
Yeah. Nelson Rockefeller. Well, I never. Yeah. Well
[01:24:55] Unknown:
yeah. He wasn't a he wasn't a supreme doer, Gerald Ford. He was so an he was what was he called? Didn't they call him Frankenstein? They did over here anyway. That's what they called him because he just walked around dead and inert. And I I mean, it's way before my well, it's not before my time. I was aware of Nixon, but it's kind of interesting, this whole thing, but that tends to always get I mean, I don't know what CIA actually stands for, communists in America, is it, or something? Because it obviously is an agency that does all this kind of stuff. And I think, Larry Ellison, who we touched upon briefly before, and we should be as brief as possible, He used to work at the CIA.
Well, I never. And, yeah. What about Musk? Did he he must have worked at the CIA. I mean, all of these major figures that are out there that are sort of leading the tech vanguard, which are now entwined with Stargate. Oh, god. They're all be CIA placement, won't they? I mean, you know, these people are not this clever to be able to amass 100 of 1,000,000,000 of dollars without the CIA approving of it or allowing it or even coaching it or arranging it, which is probably more like it. And so you begin to see that the this force, in other words, the employment of the men with muscles and guns and poisons and all this other stuff is a key part of the whole setup.
I mean, to what degree we did touch upon this. To what degree do we think that the assassination attempt on Donald Trump was genuine? He obviously seems to think it's genuine if we take his words as being true. He was quite, you know, quite not animated, but very sort of forceful when he was talking about that in his inauguration speech. Whereas I'm thinking, well, they managed to kill Kennedy apparently with a rifle, you know, back in 1963 in a moving car. That didn't seem to be too difficult. If it was a genuine attempt, he would be dead. But maybe it's difficult to know, isn't it? I'm not trying to profess one way or the other, but I'm suspicious of it being a genuine attempt.
Simply because I think if they want him dead, he'd be dead.
[01:27:03] Unknown:
Yeah. But Trump is a very good actor. He was an actor. He's you can see him acting in lots of roles. Mhmm. As part of what he's done. And WWE. That's right. And, well, look at, I mean, he says one thing, one moment, another thing, another moment. When he was wanting, Hillary Clinton to go to jail, and then the next moment, he's praising her. They're good people. Yeah. Yeah. And this is all part of the act this is why they're puppies. It it it's it's a pantomime. And give it, I would say, 3 to 6 months, and we'll we'll be back into a situation. You know, it it It it also
[01:27:47] Unknown:
I I wanna say something. It it legitimate, It made it seem that, it was organic that Biden dropped out of the race just after that. If you hadn't had that assassination attempt, it would have been a little bit more ridiculous, him just dropping out suddenly. There have been a lot more questions about it, and it it this way, it didn't get questioned. And then you put in someone who, who is not very intelligent, let's say, Kamala Harris. It to and it just it didn't make any sense. And then it's very fishy, and there are a few other things that don't make any sense about it that I could talk about, but it probably shouldn't.
[01:28:31] Unknown:
Put put yourself in the position of of the Rothschilds. I mean, they are brilliant at manipulation. Do you want a government coming in saying they're gonna destroy a couple of 100 years of business they've been doing making becoming the richest people in the world? Well, of course, they're not. They're gonna have politicians and and and governments that are friendly to them. And when you see pictures of one of the Rothschilds pointing, literally pushing his index finger into the Prince Charles. Prince Charles, that tells you everything because nobody else will be able to get away with it, but they can.
[01:29:10] Unknown:
Yeah. And and I I think that we've got It's like when the pope meets with them.
[01:29:16] Unknown:
Yeah. He's he's kissing their hands instead of the vice versa. That's right. How long do you think it'll be before you see Trump? I'll give him about a week. He's there with a beer mat on his head to went to a wall surrounded by the,
[01:29:29] Unknown:
some people dressed in cowboy outfits, if you get one. Well, he's already done that. He did that the first term. He loves doing that. Alex Jones was talking about doing that the other day. I think, George played it as a clip. Yeah. Today, that you caught that, did you? So Alex is saying, Alex, he's my pal. You see? Alex, the shouting man. Mister Jones was saying that he wants to go to the Wailing Wall with all that history. What history? What are you on about, mate? It's all blabber. It's nonsense. It's got nothing to do with them. But it's just oh, boy. You just you gotta give up, really. No one can read me on the first sentence. It's just ridiculous.
[01:30:04] Unknown:
Yeah. Follow the money. You get you get you get to, Wall Street.
[01:30:11] Unknown:
We we we I think we got to just look through this and look forward to the time when people have had enough is enough. And as I've often said that Keir Starmer, I think, is, I think he's a blessing in disguise. I've said this several times because it's it it it's showing us what communism is really about. And he's gone in full blast. And, that will be his undoing, but I still think he'd be there a long time because he's ruthless enough to keep there a long time. But, again, he's a puppet. So when they want to shuffle him, kick him out, put him into a nice cushy number somewhere, then they they will. They they'll put him out to Grey's.
But the thing is, I think all these people are blackmailable. I really do. Even Trump. So they can't go too too far. They wouldn't be there, would they, Eric, if they weren't? No.
[01:31:06] Unknown:
That's right. You know, the thing is I'm just playing a little game with myself, allowing myself to go along. But I've got my my editor a bit like a parrot on my shoulder. He's whispering into my ear all the time. Don't fall for this. I haven't fallen for it. It's just I am interested in some of the things he said. I mean, basically, we are being told what we want to hear.
[01:31:27] Unknown:
Right? So Which is a good thing in a way. It's a good thing. Because they have to they have to placate the people to get them to participate in the democracy. That's the that's the there are 3 branches of government, and I think there's a 4th one. There's, you know, the judicial system, the executive branch, and the legislative system. And then you have the press, which is the media, which Yeah. Blues them all together and gives them the credibility.
[01:31:55] Unknown:
So it's interesting that they have they have to speak like this. I agree. I think you're right. It is interesting that he has to speak like this, and we do wanna hear it. And the mere fact that it's going out across the airwaves and that millions of people are hearing it is they're hearing what they know is how it should be going in the right direction. As I said, the thing let's just see what happens with things like YouTube and the sent the so called censorship stuff that he's saying is gone, that Americans will be allowed to speak freely because if that's the case, it's almost I think the reason why I like that is it reminds me of the experience of using the Internet 5th 5th 10, 15 years ago. There was that feeling all the time that America was a place of free speech, but, of course, you've had the attack of wokeism too.
And it's come in a different way. And it's weird. If we go back 8 years and think of America just having all these goofy transgender people, all the rest of them are basically ill. These people are mentally ill, and they're a menace. They have no sense of humor. There's something literally wrong with them. It's not
[01:32:59] Unknown:
part of the Hegelian dialectic. Of course. Yeah. You put you put out all these crazy people in order to, come up with the solution that you've had all along.
[01:33:08] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[01:33:11] Unknown:
And the solution's what? Stargate, $500,000,000. Yeah. Stargate. Larry Larry Ellison AI and your own unique custom built vaccines to stop you getting cancer. Great. That's fine. And they talk about this as if we all want this stuff. It's all I mean, it's like getting an insight into a techno nerds club. And And the problem is is that they have amassed all this financial power because the financial the money power has allowed it. It's part of the money powers plan. I know that I mean, I put up a post on my little Twitter thing. Somebody even reposted it, which is amazing because I've only got about 44 people that I don't regularly post on Twitter stroke x. And I'm slightly suspicious of its relaxing of its censorship stuff at the moment. You see things on there that we would talk about and would if we talked about them, we would expect YouTube to shut the account down. Not that I've got a strong following on YouTube or anything like that, but you would kind of expect it, but it's being allowed to run. And my suspicion is it's like, an identification process.
They drop the censorship barrier down. People pile in. They make a note of who they are, then they raise it up again, and then round the back of the bike sheds, these people are basically removed from public communication spaces. Like like the project That's a possibility?
[01:34:24] Unknown:
Have you ever seen the video of David Goldberg's final words
[01:34:28] Unknown:
talking about project Pogo where they're going to do that? They're going to I have. Yeah. But I'm glad yeah. That's yeah. That's not been in my mind. I'm familiar with it. Yeah, Patrick. Go on. Expand on that a little bit more. Well, this David,
[01:34:41] Unknown:
Goldberg, it was the July 2019, and he was talking about this, about how they wanted to tag, track and ID people, that engage in political speech that is detrimental to the powerful of people in charge. And not only that, they also had another one, Project Zephyr, which was rolling out a pandemic. And this is July 2019 that this video came out. So there was, you know, it's just it's speculation, but the guy knew what was coming up and the way they were going to do it was they were going to let everybody say whatever they wanted to say. And then just tag them, you know, have them give out their personal information and then, you know, keep a list of the people that were the most active and had the biggest following people. Other people, the influencer type people, which this TikTok thing is interesting because, they've been talking about getting rid of it on the government level here. And the main reason is the Free Palestine Movement, which is drawing attention to the war crimes that are going on in Gaza. And it's getting out there to people, especially young people.
And that's the the market. The market, right? The market of ideas, the young, the youth
[01:36:01] Unknown:
are the ones that are going to inherit the the land. The more impressionable minds. Yes. They're getting molded in a direction that the powers that should not be don't like.
[01:36:10] Unknown:
Yep. That's why they they say that Trump led a a group of people that bought TikTok shares, and now they're controlling it. So if you'd say anything related to free Palestine, you get censored on TikTok. They won't they won't allow it. They have new community guidelines like YouTube used to have and still does. Yeah. Well, apparently, some YouTuber called the beast or mister beast or something. I think he's out of North Carolina. Yeah. Is he? Alright.
[01:36:39] Unknown:
So, he's in someone's neck of the woods. And, yeah, he's got a colossal following. These things have caught and so I I just I heard his name yesterday. I went over to see what the videos were all about. They're sort of, you know, entertainment fluff, very well produced. It must be because he got bucketloads of money, from his YouTube following. I mean, each video has got, like, 70,000,000 views within a matter of days. This kind of thing. I'm going, we're not there's something we're not doing right around here. Well, we don't have enough money. It's they're donating to the Paul English show, everybody. Yeah. Come on. And then we can get we can get 70 viewers opportune no. It's it's a challenge, isn't it? But, how how much money has he got? So, apparently, he's putting some consortium together to try and buy it up or buy the American division of it according to that. TikTok?
[01:37:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Oh, yeah. There's this news story floating around. He bought the little red book. And then your your graphic with Trump there, he's got the little red book, which is the Mao Zedong little little red Oh, Mao Zedong. He's good. Full also another guy that didn't have any other ideas was controlled by the money power. Yeah. Well well, that's the site that all these TikTokers were flocking to when they they shut down TikTok for a few days there. Oh, yeah. Yeah. That was the old that's right. That I I checked it out a bit. I got an account on there. I wanted to publish, you know, Radio Windmill or through it to see what I could do. You know what I needed to do? I had to prove who I am with my ID, show them my passport, my passport number, all this stuff. It's it's just ridiculous that it goes to the Chinese military more or less. It's what I figured out from it. I had to translate every little thing because it's all in Chinese.
So most people, you know, unless they're sophisticated in translating things, you can't you can't figure out what how to use it except you know, you could spend all day looking at these things that are just all all those viral videos that are 20 seconds long and just Yeah. Waste time time suck. It's a time suck. We're meant to waste your time. But you can't And it works. But the thing of it is you can really reach people in 20 seconds. It's like it's like commercials on radio and television. You you can reach, people in the marketplace pretty quickly that way.
[01:38:57] Unknown:
Yeah. We need some goof the marketing stuff. We do need some goof I mean, Shelley, who, runs a show on Soapbox on Wednesdays, always worth checking out everybody. It's going up to 2 hours next week, 7 to 9 PM on Wednesday evenings, UK time. She put a she sent us a post the other day. You must have seen it. She'd got a video of a puppy or a dog from a couple of years ago. She put it up on was it tick she put it up on TikTok or Instagram or one of those things. Right? And within a day, there'd been a 108,000 views.
Obviously, little puppies running around is really so, you know, my son keeps on wanting me to buy a dog and I just no. I'm just too busy not doing any of that. We did have some dog chat last week, didn't we, about things like that? But maybe if we get a dog and brand it with the URL of the station into its fur and and get it to run around, maybe we can get the name of the stations out there or something. Got in trouble talking about dogs, so you gotta be careful.
[01:39:54] Unknown:
Oh, yes. Remember that, Eric? Yeah. I won't repeat the joke. Yeah. So I got really alright about it. Oh, terrible. Yeah. Really rough with their feathers. Oh, yeah. Yeah. There was the stuff happening. Yeah. I think that that little red
[01:40:12] Unknown:
book, I do see a lot of politically incorrect videos on there and, of Chinese making food out of animals, live animals in particular. It's kinda cringe, but, you know, cringeworthy.
[01:40:25] Unknown:
So Yeah. They're
[01:40:27] Unknown:
unspeakably cruel, the Chinese. Yes. In parts, they they well, there's this story from if you go from Hong Kong to mainland China, the first thing apparently or one of the things that strikes visitors arriving in China is how quiet it is. And the reason it's quiet is there aren't any spare animals around because they've been eaten. Seriously, this is an observation that they make. It's quite a thing really, Fat. I mean, just going back to the democracy stuff as well, we were allowing the word to run through, but Warren correctly points out that the USA is not a democracy. No. Apparently not. Even though I keep using that word all the time, it is a republic or supposed to be 1. As Benjamin Franklin said, if you can keep it, and probably I suppose we might suggest it hasn't been kept by now.
But, yeah, in name, it's a republic, and it's all, you know, it's all part of this, the great drama, the great political acting, play which is taking place, so which Trump is a new type of actor or certainly in his role now. It's changed a bit, supposedly. So he's his lines are good. We like the lines. The audience like what he's saying. Will it actually turn out to be true? I don't know. XO writes this is a good comment too. Ask you so this goes over to the Elon Musk side of things. XO says, ask yourself on one hand why Elon, a while back, agreed to punish himself and go to Auschwitz, which he did and starts all that groveling stuff. Yet a few months on anything goes is the situation on Twitter and x. Yes. There's probably some command come down the line. In fact, I saw something to that effect. This is why I think this is a relevant thread to pursue. We don't have to sit on the I don't know a great deal about it, but like I was saying, it appears that the censorship laws are being relaxed for the next level of identification, processing. Oh, these are the ones that oh, gosh. There's millions of them. Well, we're gonna have to it's gonna take us another 5 years to sort them out or to come up with a way of curbing this thought that they don't like.
And I suppose the war on thought has always been part and parcel of, dictatorial or tyrannical ruling classes. They don't want Oh, that's funny. Said. Yeah. Then Stalin said something to that effect. He said, thinking is more dangerous than guns. We'd, we don't allow people to have guns, so why would we want them to think? It's something like that? Well, there is no you have a a gun license and all that kind of stuff for things that otherwise would be lawful in a free country.
[01:42:51] Unknown:
So it's, you know, it's a situation where it's same thing with marriage. Think about that. You have to have a marriage license in order to marry according to the the state. Isn't that, a play the place of the church?
[01:43:06] Unknown:
Because Uh-uh. Originally correct or run.
[01:43:10] Unknown:
Actually, speaking of churches,
[01:43:12] Unknown:
during his you know, after the inauguration speech, I don't know if you saw it, when he was coming out there, he he went to a church service, didn't he, afterwards, which was held by some pink haired lesbian, calling herself a priest or something. Absolutely. Confidential. Oh, is that what is that alright? Okay. You can call yourself what you like, you know, confectionery. I mean, it's just complete joke. It's like I mentioned before, it's a joke. I mean, they don't even understand what they're reading from. I'm a woman, I'm a lesbian, I can be a priest. Yeah right. So Why is he going why is he going to that kind of a service to begin with? That's my question. I don't know. I thought it was kind of compulsory or something that the president has to go and be seen in a place of worship after his speech or something. But his comments were quite good. His comments were good, weren't they? He said, what did you think about it? He says, what did you think about it? The journalist got something.
And, basically, he said it was crap in English, though. He said, I wasn't very impressed. It wasn't very good, was it? It was Why did he go? He he should that's the thing. He should've he should've just stood him up and said, I'm not I'm not gonna tolerate this. Well, maybe that's staged. Maybe this you know, so we now got 2 genders. So this emphasizes it. He gets this spontaneous moment. You know? Well, it generally discredits the Christian faith. Or she does. Like that representing yeah. Exactly. Of course. Well, I don't think it discredits it because I don't think it's anything to do with it. I'm more severe that she's literally disbarred. It's just these people are deluded when they go around dressing up and saying, I'm a priest. You know, you're very strange. What what another you're another actor, are you? You're clearly not because for those of us that understand how it's supposed to work, you can't be. Now bugger off. You know? But then what do you expect from a mentally ill person? She's already got everything wrong. Well, that yeah. Why why why subject us to the the audience of that? Well, you know, it's not just him that's
[01:44:58] Unknown:
participating. It's the whole people. You know? Yeah. Focuses on him right now.
[01:45:04] Unknown:
He just I guess. But, you know, now that he's yeah. I'm just coming to that point. You know, he stated today to the WEF, there are only 2 genders. Well, maybe that little incident was to reinforce this communication. Yeah. Let's set it up. What we'll do is, Don, you'll go to this church. We'll have this crazy bin presenting to be a priest. She'll she'll talk rubbish. Apparently, he just looked so unimpressed from the journalist reports while she was doing her gig. Yenny comes out and he says, basically, it was crap, which is which is, you know, you go Why some drugs too? It was. He should have known better though. That's the thing. He doesn't seem to have discretion in these things. He just does goes along because of tradition. I I don't Yeah. No. No. I I accept what you're saying. But what I'm what I'm trying to get across is that that was a that's a staged thing on purpose. Right. So to reinforce this position that he's pushing across that there are only 2 agendas. He said, let's really get it across. We'll put a crazy bin in there with the
[01:46:01] Unknown:
priest. Yeah. With having the his political foes up on stage during the inauguration and him giving the speech when they're all there, it's just Absolutely was. It's like WWE wrestling, this professional wrestling. Oh. Yeah. Buu, you gotta have the bad guy. You gotta you gotta have do. It's Punch and Judy show. Mhmm. You gotta get have someone there getting beat beaten up with the club.
[01:46:24] Unknown:
Yeah. Is it normal to have
[01:46:26] Unknown:
the previous presidents at the inauguration? I mean, is it a normal thing? I've never Yeah. I think that's a normal thing. It's to show courtesy. I thought they used to just beat them with sticks as well. The incoming president is allowed to beat the outgoing president with a stick and knock them off the stage. That wouldn't I mean, if we're really gonna go for it, let's go for it. Well There's a really interesting comment coming in here about something he's just said, from Avatarin. Hi. Breaking. President Trump has signed an executive order banning the creation of a central bank digital currency, a CBDC.
Okay. That's from at General McNews or General MC News. I don't think it's from by McDonald's. Thank you for that one, Avatarin. That's interesting,
[01:47:08] Unknown:
isn't it? What do you what say you, gents? What's going on? What do you think what do you think about a, state bank digital currency?
[01:47:17] Unknown:
Well, the post I put up on yeah. You know, we were talking obviously about, the Bank of North Dakota last week. Right. And I've thought about it ever since. The and I've read the article again, and it really is. It's a fabulous thing, this. It's not that it's perfect, but as an actual functioning day to day bank right now in North America, it's the model. It's as close to a good direction for the model as it should be. The Fed has to be closed. Private ownership of central banks is the money power's greatest crime against everyone. But, of course, he will be being controlled by the private owners of the Fed. We have to I'm gonna assume that until I get evidence otherwise because I think it's a sensible stance to take, not that I'm in charge of anything.
But that Bank of North Dakota is tops. And in fact, after we talked about it on, Ria Bowe's show, this Sunday just gone, both Katie Daley and, Joss the Boss were both, I think, talking about usury. It's not that we've got a claim that we talked about usury better than anybody else. I think it's great that it's getting out there that peep that more and more there's a wall of communication building up around this because my little thing on Twitter was basically, look, if you run a bank along it's the greatest power the government could have if you want this government to have power. That is if you think you know who is in charge of the government. Apparently, it's Donald Trump, but we tend to not think that totally. He's getting some fantastic lines to say.
But the CBDC is being shut shut down for what reason? You see, I I really don't have a problem, like I've said, with a central bank digital currency so long as you, the people of America in your case, and us, the people of Britain in ours, own the central bank. That's what it's all about. If it's a public service owned by the public, fine. Why wouldn't we want a nationalized, transaction service? We would. It's the fact that there's somebody else owning it that makes us rightly, I think, suspicious of all of these moves, not knowing quite where it's all gonna go. So what is the emphasis now to be on Bitcoin? Is that why everybody's in fact is gonna go to a $1,000,000,000,000 or something? Is that what's gonna happen? That's the thing. Who's accountable for all of these these digital currencies? Where who do you go to to complain? Is there a complaint to offset Bitcoin Incorporated
[01:49:40] Unknown:
or or, you know, Ethereum or any of these other cryptocurrencies that you can go to and
[01:49:46] Unknown:
file? Well, no. It don't work like that, does it? They're decentralized, and it's this great big accounting system. So on one level, it's kind of interesting, but then it's not interesting because, of course, the back story to Bitcoin is this Japanese rocket scientist in his mom's cellar called Satoshi creates it and just gives it away to the world. And, like, yeah. Right. I'm supposed to believe that. I mean, it's just complete piffle. It's been allowed to grow because the central bank has allowed it. It's enabled it. I mean, these things, if they didn't like I mentioned before, eGold, which was around 25 years ago, was cool. It was great. Lots of people using it. It was digital gold. I mean, supposedly, they had it, you know, in some vault somewhere, so let's say we believe them.
But I got hammered. Just got got hammered. It just got taken out. It was I was run from, I don't know, sort of Caicos Islands or something like that. 2 American Brothers were running it. And Egold was really interesting. And then there was a thing called Big Gold and Seagold. There were lots of other sort of copycat systems came along, But in the end, they're saying, look. You're actually spending grams or tenth of a gram of gold, and it would just give you the dollar value at the time that you made the transaction. What's the problem with that? Well, the problem, I suspect, is that the central bank were in charge of it, and it was a little bit too much. They don't they wanna get away from gold for some reason, because they're gonna find it more difficult, more expensive for them to manage it, whereas digital is great. And I don't really mind about any of these systems. It's just that if if it's not run as a public service and the ownership is It's just that if if it's not run as a public service and the ownership is distributed amongst the public, then it's not it cannot be trusted because those guys have got their hand in the till around the back end. And you've no way of knowing it, but they do.
Tada. Right. Yeah. Fun fun fun.
[01:51:32] Unknown:
I'm short of a song for the end of the top of the hour, you know. I've got any Well, I gave you one. I sent one in Telegram. There's actually You sent another. Yeah. I think You sent another? Telegram made a request, and then I have that, John Prine song there about the flag decal.
[01:51:47] Unknown:
Oh, well, that's what it is. Oh, cool. Your flag decal won't get you into heaven anymore. Okay. Cool. What's the Pentangle one like? I quite like that. I quite like oh, that's 5 and a half minutes. It's probably a bit too long, really. Yeah. We'll get we'll get this one up and running. What's that? Who said oh? I said oh, because Pentangle,
[01:52:05] Unknown:
they did a thing tune to a BBC program when the BBC was BBC, called Take 3 Girls. I can't remember what the full name of it is, but it is really
[01:52:18] Unknown:
done in the sixties. It is a really beautiful piece of music. It's really well done. And that's Alright. Vote in the chat. You got a minute or 2. What do you want? No. Pentangle do the Pellets. Let's do alright. We'll do Pentangle. That's this one. Patrick's outvoted everybody. That's fascism for you. That's what this show is all about. Okay. So, yeah. No. Well, it's interesting about the CBDC announcement. It is. It's saying all the and it's saying lots of lovely things. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Cool. Thoughts, Paul? Do you have any thoughts on that?
[01:52:54] Unknown:
I think it's extremely interesting. Extremely interesting that, he would I mean, it's I mean, they're talking about the quantum financial system. They're talking about Bitcoin. They're talking all this other stuff, but he absolutely blatantly banned CBDC. That
[01:53:16] Unknown:
Yeah. But what's the alternative gonna be? Is it gonna be tied to the US dollar? And then there again, it's the central bank because the Federal Reserve is tied to the Bank of International Settlements. So what what's it's a word game, word salad. Yeah. I I don't I don't I'm leery of it. I'm like Eric. I I don't think it's anything good that he's doing. But then again, it sounds good. Just like America First, it sounds good. Hearkins back to Charles Lindbergh. Yeah. So he's saying the right things. So who who knows? He's got a lot of power. He just needs to wield it properly. It's like during the whole COVID thing. He could've just stopped it right then and there because he had the power to.
[01:53:56] Unknown:
But if he did, he would've ended up in a wooden overcoat. Well That's the thing. Because he's I think he's a puppet. He hasn't got that power. I think he's, you know, somebody you can't get into that position unless you're bribable. Sorry. You just can't do it. I think that's that's that's the fact of the fact. We've quoted lord Acton here before. Everybody will be
[01:54:15] Unknown:
quoting lord Acton for a long time. He's the guy that said power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Thank you, lord Acton, for that. Spot on. He also had this other one, which is fantastic, totally relevant to what we're touching on right now. The issue, lord Acton he's lord Acton, wasn't he? Didn't he used to come over to Fulham Hall in the old days, Eric? Oh, yes. Yes. Oh, yes. Oh, yes. Yes. He did. I'll tell you what. I've got a picture of him. His beard is about a foot long. That's a beard for you. Wow. Impressive. So if if the beard is in relation to his wisdom, this is a very wise chap. But this is another short pithy one. This is spot.
The issue the issue which has swept down the centuries and which will have to be fought sooner or later, I say now, is the people versus the banks. That's what this show is all about really. Seriously, right at the heart of it, it's that. 'tis for me, it's the people versus the banks, and, we have to decide whether the banning of a CBDC is a good thing. I suspect maybe it might be, it's gonna throw a few things up, bloody interesting, but the only way for the people, to overcome the bank is for us to own our own as a public service organization. Everybody run on over to North Dakota. Let's all let's all go there.
No. China to North Dakota if I come to America. No. The
[01:55:38] Unknown:
the the Bank of England becomes an actual state state run bank. That's the idea, isn't it?
[01:55:44] Unknown:
Well, can't you have a Bank of Wisconsin then? Yeah. That's the same thing. Yeah. Yeah. And then Paul needs to set one up in Georgia. The Bank of Georgia. Paul, that's your job. And, we just have to find everybody in all the 50 states and just get them all set up, and then they can all just be happy with one another. And and we'll all live in la la land. It'll be tremendous. But, no, seriously, my slight sarcasm aside, I still think it's a spectacular thing, the North Dakota situation. I I mean it. It's the fact that it's still existing and chugging along. Yeah. And I wonder why they've not interfered with it purely because it must be good for measurement purposes, and they can draw up more cunning plans to under undermine any any sort of thought ideas that are coming down the line, you know, all that kind of stuff. So I don't think they can. Yeah. I don't think they can interfere with North Dakota
[01:56:32] Unknown:
because they can't interfere with state business to individuals. Well
[01:56:39] Unknown:
well, it's like the pipeline. They had a the Enbridge pipeline going through there. There's interference with that. You know, you set up with a bunch of protesters. They can stop anything. So I it's it's not failed proof, but it it's a step in the right direction, I think Yeah. To have it state controlled just like Bitcoin should be state controlled and regulated. But then again, there again, what how do you define a central bank digital currency? That's the question. Is it gonna be tethered to the US dollar than it's a central bank digital currency?
[01:57:11] Unknown:
That's a that's a good point. I mean, if he outlawed it, did he define exactly what he was outlawing?
[01:57:20] Unknown:
Right.
[01:57:22] Unknown:
Yeah. That is a very good point. That that would just make it, word salad to to to quote one of Pentangle.
[01:57:33] Unknown:
What's this band pentangle about, Eric? Yeah. Well, we're coming to the well, we're coming to the end of the show here on WBN, but we're gonna run on after that. So if you wanna stay plugged into what we're doing, you can carry on listening to us on, Rumble, which is where all the chat's taking place, is where all the heavy hitters are and all the geniuses writing their comments. Seriously, it's great stuff, and I really appreciate it. It's wonderful. Keeps the show propelling along wonderfully. I love everyone in the chat and in the Telegram group. Brilliant stuff. It's great. Can I do the out tag? We're also
[01:58:04] Unknown:
what's that? Can please, can I do the out tag?
[01:58:08] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:58:09] Unknown:
This program was recorded to give the cast time to make a getaway. Very interesting, but they'll never make it across the border. Okay. I'm done. Thank
[01:58:21] Unknown:
you. That's cool. I like that. We're gonna have to get you to record a few of those, Paul, and put them in. I'm gonna play you out with Pentangle. This runs for about 5 and a half minutes, so we're taking a long break. That means I can go down the pub, have a glass of wine, and be back in time for the beginning of the second bit for or the 3rd hour. Thanks for joining us this week. We'll be back again the same time next week, 3 PM US time, 8 PM in the UK. As I said, we're carrying on. Go to Paul English live for all the links. Here's Pentangle. See
[01:58:51] Unknown:
you all
[01:58:56] Unknown:
next
[01:58:58] Unknown:
week.
[02:04:24] Unknown:
And that was Pentangle. Who, who suggested that? Steve on Telegram. Steve, thank you very much for that. That was really rather beautiful. Oh, hang on just a second. We've run into the next one. Stop that.
[02:04:38] Unknown:
Yeah. The theme is really very 3 girls. Yes. Sorry. I didn't mean to show me, but the tape the theme from tape 3 girls is even better. It's and it's shorter as well. That is a real that that one is a real haunter because, it'll stick to the side of your brain like chewing gum. It's very clever, the the other one. And, but Pentangle, I think they're still around actually. They're very good group.
[02:05:04] Unknown:
Well, we need we we we need another song later on. We might we can't do the same band twice in one night, can we? But that I I don't know anything. I know the name of them, but I don't know much. It's the sort of music I would never have listened to as a teenager in the seventies, believe you me. But her voice is beautiful. It's amazing. Flawless, isn't it? One of those clear voices. Tremendous.
[02:05:24] Unknown:
Steely I Spam was another one because that one all around my hat, apparently, in Southern Ireland, it is an absolutely filthy tune, and they couldn't stop laughing when it came out. And Steel Eye, Spain actually cleaned it up. Seriously.
[02:05:39] Unknown:
Yeah. Didn't I play that? I thought I played I might play it again. I've got it lurking around all around my there was a live version that I Andy Hitchcock, offered it up on an interview Yes. 2 or 3 months back. Well, I might play it again because it's fantastic. I might we might play out with that. So anyway, look. Welcome back to our the beginning of hour 3 here on Rumble. We're still going out over Soapbox. We're on Telegram. We're still on YouTube and got a little cluster of listeners there on YouTube. So for everybody listening on YouTube, welcome. It's first time I've been able to get it up live and running on YouTube. We don't know how long we've lost on YouTube, but we're pretty civilized with these sorts of things. So hopefully forever, he said optimistically. I mentioned earlier on in the show that I had a very interesting book.
It's called and, shout out to Gary again. Thanks for sending this to me, Gary. I've been reading it on and off. This may make depending on how this goes down, we've got, a lots of nations and countries to abuse verbally by reading this out. It's not me doing it. Actually, it's a bit strong, but it was caught. It's called the book foreigners or the world in a nutshell by 2 ladies who I don't know anything about. They're British. Obviously, you can tell from the writing style. They're called Theodora Benson and Betty Asquith.
Okay? Household names, everybody. I'm sure you've you've all heard of Theodora Benson and Betty Asquith. Right? And, it's basically a look at all the different sort of nationalities. Now the book was written or published, anyway, 1935. This is to give you some ideas. So we're going back, well, 90 years. I can't believe that. 1935 doesn't sound 90 years ago, but it is. So it looks at people like the French, the Swiss, the Dutch, the Belgians, and things like this. And it might be worth my while I'll only do this once, I think. I'll just read the preface. It's not too long. And then I'm going to look at the Americans because, obviously, this is very much an American oriented show tonight to give you a view of how they view the Americans. But the preface says this, there's an old saying, that's me speaking French in a northern way.
And they go on to write, for the benefit of those Englishmen who have abstained and rightly from learning any language but their own, lots of nodding going on, I hope, we will translate this. To understand all is to forgive all. Looking around the world today, we see that the need the need rather than the demand for forgiveness far outruns all available supply. The Englishman sees that most foreigners are in a mess and is apt to reach the conclusion that almost every foreigner is a mess. The Dagos, the Germans, the Yankees, why damn it, they simply seem to make trouble deliberately. Their thoughts, their actions, their words, both printed and spoken, generally seem unforgivable.
Should we feel differently if we understood more? This little book is our contribution to world peace. We have considered the idea that it is beneath an Englishman's dignity, Eric will know about this, to understand other nations. And as we have not reached a definite conclusion on the subject, we are working upon an ingenious and valuable compromise. We do not attempt to add anything new to the sum total of English knowledge of foreigners. What we here offer is a complete collection set forth with care and accuracy of all that is already known. We're not telling you, we're reminding you. This book will refresh your understanding, rub up your toleration and forgiveness, strengthen you in the task of dealing patiently with foreigners, and as many of them have had the elementary decency to learn English, it will teach them to understand each other. We are hoping for the Nobel Prize. So that's just to give you a flavour of it. Right?
Now the Americans, the section on the Americans is quite is probably the longest section of them all. It's a couple of pages, a bit longer than what I just read out. But I think you might find it quite interesting, if not slightly critical. Remember these are the views from 1935. And they they have, I don't know whether this is laugh out loud funny, but it's maybe sort of whimsical in a way, but I'm gonna read it anyway.
[02:09:45] Unknown:
So Paul and Patrick, are you bracing yourselves? Okay. What was the name of that book again?
[02:09:53] Unknown:
I'll, I've lost the pay foreigners or how to understand the world. I'll come back to it in a second. I'll give it to you at the end. Okay? Let's let's plunge into this bit on the Americans. So if you're an American and you're listening to this, brace yourself. Don't worry. The English are covered later on. I'm not gonna cover them all in one show. We'll go through a lot of them. The Americans. America has the New Deal. Remember, this is 1935. Right? America has the New Deal. President Roosevelt invented it, but neither he nor anyone else knows what it is. America has a thing called tamani and graft.
When an Englishman speaks of an American, he means an East Coast American, if not a New Yorker. When an Englishman speaks of America, in 8 cases out of 10, he means New York with a vague background of Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and Long Island. Yeah. It is, however, very well known that New York is not America. In two cases out of 10, when an Englishman speaks of America, he means Hollywood with a vague background of California and Florida and Miami. But, of course, no one thinks for a moment that Hollywood is America. It is known, if you really get down to it, that what is really America is the middle west but nobody in England cares. If you ask an Englishman whether America is what's that?
[02:11:10] Unknown:
It's too cold, that's why.
[02:11:12] Unknown:
It's too cold but we just back in 1930, even now we don't know what it is. It's just all big and full of not enough cowboys and stuff like that. Goes on. If you ask an Englishman whether America is kind of large, he will, of course, say yes. And if you press the point, you will even find that he knows, as it were on paper, that it is many times larger than Germany and really less compact. And apart from the American, impure and simple, he knows certain things about various cliques of other Americans who undoubtedly exist, though they are not so salient as the American.
Before dealing with the very clear cut figure of the American, it will be well to take a rapid survey of the established facts concerning these various other Americans. It's it's really so southerners. Southerners are tremendously gentry and therefore rather decayed, and they have charming soft drawls. They are thin elderly colonels and dazzlingly lovely daughters. They live on fried chicken and mint juleps. They are served by laughing childlike Negroes who though now deprived of the pleasure of being slaves are just one big happy family.
They are unspeakably cruel and always lynched Negroes. They have the chain gang, which compares for bestial inhumanity only with Devil's Island and Siberia, see France and Russia. They think the northerners are scum. They have plantations. The Midwest consists this is you, Patrick. Okay. The Midwest consists of vast plains of corn all exactly alike and potty little provincial towns, ditto ditto, where people gossip and backbite. They know very little about the east of America. They have never heard of Europe, and they are not aware that there was a there was the great war. They have Chicago. The wild west is full of yeah. Okay. The Wild West is full of cowboys and ranchers and rough diamonds. They punch cows.
I don't know if they do, but they ought to. They sit horses that book jump. They lasso everything and can shoot a bull's eye until the target is out of sight. They wear fringe trousers and large hats and a lot of guns and are nature's gentlemen. They dance in high heels and spurs. The inhabitants of Hollywood are stars, Jewish managers, producers, directors, etcetera, authors who are overworked, driven, insulted, and derided, and beautiful girls out of a job. Hollywood is full of beautiful ravishing girls who are starving as waitresses and and stenographers. You cannot get a job unless you sleep with a producer, and even then, you may only get a disturbed night.
The stars are the stars are immensely rich and have vast marble bathrooms. The film companies are broke and pay no wages. Less is known about wild parties than used to be. Everybody gets divorced and married dozens of times. Purity is in all their contracts, and there is a scandal if 2 people lunch twice together. Then there are collegians. American colleges are very immoral, all coeducation and sex. American colleges have yells. They have cheerleaders. They play football very roughly and are frequently killed. The national game is baseball, which is really rounders, but Americans are offended if you tell them so.
There there are also in America, Puritans, hot gospelers, and gangsters, particularly gangsters. These are tough and of illiterate speech. They trade in drugs. They muscle in on rackets, and they shoot to kill. They destroy each other with machine guns and then send each other flowers. Their sweethearts are called moles. They live in Chicago. And now at last and now at last we come to the American. So this is you lot. This is the vast majority of you according to 1935 opinion. The American, what does it say? Now we come to the American. The Americans live on clams, popcorn, pie, particularly pumpkin, corn in the cob, chewing gum, and in Boston, beans.
The Americans, and this is really the most outstanding feature, the Americans brag and bluster and boast. They rub in all the time that you're played out and that they get things done better and on an outsized scale in half the time. You must be prepared for that boasting. Maybe that's Donald Trump right now. I don't know. Yeah. The Americans the Americans wear horn rimmed spectacles and smoke cigars. And whenever they're introduced to a man, they thrust a cigar on him as they say, how do you do? They have gold teeth and dyspepsia. Just thought you ought to know.
American men belong to childish masonic orders called elks and buffalos, and American women belong to culture clubs. Americans drink too much. Such Americans as you tip expect to be tipped colossally the whole time whether they have done anything or not. If you try to be reasonable about it, they insult you. The Americans are very shrewd and can always get the better of a simple childlike English in any kind of deal. The Americans live in deep snow, and they shut railway carriage windows. The Americans have one great redeeming point. They are hospitable. This is so true, by the way. All American husbands are henpecked.
They just pay the bills while their wives do all the talking and insist on whatever they want and run the whole show. Unfortunately This is accurate. Right, guys? Unfortunately,
[02:16:59] Unknown:
no. That's the problem with America right there.
[02:17:03] Unknown:
Well, and then we're nearly towards the end of this, but it because it is I think it's probably the lengthiest entry on all of the nations or the foreigners that they're looking at. The Americans are rude. They talk you down and shout at you and contradict you and speak to you without being introduced and slap you on the back and jostle you off the sidewalk and call strangers brother and sister and baby and kid and push you madly on the streets and on public conveyances and won't give a civil answer if you ask the time or the way. The Americans are so frightfully hypocritical.
They talk about ideals and they are so practical. You wouldn't mind so much if they weren't so false and highfalutin about it. The Americans talk about pep and hustle and do things in double the time. The Americans have no sense of humor. That's it.
[02:17:54] Unknown:
Well, that's the definition of a foreigner is, anybody that laughs at anything but your jokes, that's a foreigner.
[02:18:02] Unknown:
It makes sense. Right. It does. Anyway, yeah. I think you're right. Because there's no I'm gonna throw one of these in every week, but that's I think that's probably the longest one. It seemed appropriate seeing as how we were dealing with it. By the way, nearly every entry ends with the, in this case, the French or whatever have no sense of humor. I think it's just a sample. Okay. Throughout the entire book, nobody else has a sense of humor except us. It is not true, of course. Things have developed substantially since 1935, but I just love the manner of the writing of this shit. Uh-huh. The sheer sort of boldness of it all is hilarious. Give me the title again slowly. I'm trying to find that. I'm I'm not having any luck. No. You can't have it. Listen back. Listen back to the show, everybody. Download the show. You'll have the title ready. Yeah. I'm not telling you, Paul. It's a trade secret.
Talk to Gary. Never gonna find out. Oh, I'll tell you. It's not fair, is it? You you don't need Gary on here someday. Yeah. He he can come on. Maybe Gary can read it. Gary, thank you so much for this. By the way, the whole book's a 144 pages, and I just read 2 of them. Okay? I might read you the Belgians in a minute because it's only 4 lines. It's only 4 lines. It's called I'll read you the Belgians. There's there's I I get carried away and read them all out. Some of them there's one on the Jews, by the way, which I am gonna do. We won't do it tonight. It's amazing. So funny. It's it's written by Theodora Benson and Betty Asquith, who as I said, I think they were yeah. And they used to come around with Lord Axon for tea at Fockham Hall, I think, Eric, didn't they? I'm sure Theodora and Betty used to come around. I'm pretty sure. Oh, yes. Yes. Every week. Yes. Yes. And,
[02:19:42] Unknown:
yes. The the type, shall we say, the type that were on that BBC interview with the gardener, but we won't go into that. Oh, yes. We're after the Kardashians here. The one that impaled his finger on a a rose thong.
[02:19:56] Unknown:
Okay. Totally. We're not I can't you can't tell that one again. Not just yet. We're you'll wear that one out. It's a cracking it's a cracking gag, but not now. We We can't do that one again. You'll wear it out. I'm gonna have to limit you 10 times a year on that one, Eric. It's a cracking joke. But, yeah. The book, Paul, by the way, to put you out of your misery is called foreigners foreigners or the world in a nutshell. But don't go looking for it because I can give you the link to the PDF. Okay? I can give you the link to the PDF at some point if I forget or don't forget.
[02:20:29] Unknown:
It's true though. New York is about the, well, the way, British people think of New York as being America because that's if you think about it, New York City, everybody within a 100 mile radius, that's a third of the US population right there. So you you don't get a a feel for the rest of the the 2 thirds of the population if you don't go outside of that area. Okay. And and Chicago is the epicenter of the Midwest, and and I'd say America. And it's underreported, like, what goes on there. I think it's it's Like George Hobbs was saying earlier today, it's the heart of the beast. It's where the federal government Chicago. Yeah. Yeah. Chicago. You know, the mafia and all that kind of stuff. It's it's it's the devil's playground in a way.
[02:21:20] Unknown:
So and and then the the monetary look up the Commerce Club of Chicago once. That's the root of the Federal Reserve System. Right there. Really? The Commerce Club of Chicago. Send me some links. We'll we'll feature them. Let's let's have a 15, 20 minute section in an upcoming show on that. The Commerce Club of Chicago. I'm interested already, Patrick. That sounds great. Would you like me to give you their assessment of the Belgians? It's very brief. Yeah.
[02:21:45] Unknown:
Miserable fat Belgian then. It's chocolate. It's
[02:21:48] Unknown:
yeah. Okay. So there is that Monty Python sketch where you had to come up with an insulting phrase for the Belgians. It was the what was it? Was it the biggest show or something? And the three answers were the first one was the Belgians. That was in that was apparently an insult. Right? The second was the sprouts, which I do quite like. Because we were talking about sprouts, Eric, weren't we, on the other week of a powerful little vegetable? Yeah. Eric's still very cross because the sprout prices in England apparently have gone through the roof or into the ground or whatever. Hey. Talk to the woman that farmer about gardeners. But I think the winner the the winning insult was from missus Betty Smollett of Manchester or something. Those bloody fat Belgian bastards, which is just tremendous.
Anyway, their entry is a little bit more yeah. The though their in their entry is a little bit more civil. It says it's only three lines. Belgium is little and gallant. Belgians talk bad French and worse Dutch and are dirty. They probably talk good Flemish, but what use is that anyway? They eat horse. That's it. That's all they put on the belt. Horse. They're eating horse. Humor now. Come on. I get it added to the end. Yeah. They've missed that off there. They haven't they've missed that off. Maybe yeah. Yeah. Like, I'm just looking at the Dutch. The last one on the Dutch, I'm not gonna read the whole Dutch one says, just so that you know that I'm telling the truth about this is, owing this is about the Dutch. Last line says, owing to their jollity, it is just possible that the Dutch have an abortive inkling of very of a very primitive sense of humor.
So there you go. They criticize everybody for having no sense of humor. So, we have a lot of notions to go through, and I'll be dropping these into the show for years to come, unless everybody writes and then says stop it with all that old 1935 nonsense. But we've got just to give you what you can, think about coming. We've got the French. Can't wait. The Swiss, Dutch, Belgians, Flemish, and the Walloons, Irish, very funny. Scotch, Welsh, Scandinavians. By the way, the Scotch, don't like being called the Scotch. They they wanna be called the Scots, but they've written Scotch here simply because Scotch is the reference to a drink. The Welsh, Scandinavians, Eskimos get an entry. How about that? Of course, Eskimos definitely don't have a sense of humor. Russians, Poles, Latvians, and Estonians, Germans, Austrians, Italians, Spaniards, Portuguese, Czechoslovakians, Bohemians, Hungarians, Balkans, Turkey in and out of Europe, Armenians, Asiatics in general, Indians, Chinese, Japanese, other Asiatics, Africans, South Sea Islanders, the Americans, which we've covered, South Americans, Red Indians, Negroes, Australians, Canadians, and New Zealanders, Jews.
And then the last bit, what the Americans know about the English, which is quite interesting, what the continent knows about the English, what the English know about themselves. But seeing as though those are too embarrassing for me to read out on radio, we'll have to leave them for another time. So
[02:24:49] Unknown:
so there you go. What exactly are Belgians again?
[02:24:53] Unknown:
Miserable fat Belgian bastards.
[02:24:58] Unknown:
That's it. They are they are miserable fat Belgian bastards. That's exactly what they are. They eat horse, and that's probably why they are miserable and fat.
[02:25:07] Unknown:
Oh, I heard that's a delicacy. What are you talking about? Horse? Come on. What horse is it? Cheval. It's very rare here. No one eats horse. No. No. It's very, very uncommon.
[02:25:19] Unknown:
They don't eat horse at Fockham Hall, do they, Eric?
[02:25:24] Unknown:
No. No. Definitely not. No? No. No. Not even in sausages. No? Well, apparently, the local supermarket where every little helps, they did at one time accidentally sell food that was contaminated with horse, didn't they? That was a few years back now. Remember that, Paul? I've never had horse. I'd like to try it though. Yes. It's, well, I don't know. If you go to China, you have horse and something else, a DOJ. You know? Rover a la carte. Sorry.
[02:25:57] Unknown:
You're talking about whiskey?
[02:25:59] Unknown:
Oh, sorry. Go ahead. How do they serve up dog? I mean, do that dove over with this orange in his mouth or something. I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean
[02:26:08] Unknown:
XO writes here, by the way, in the chat says, where did the early American accent come from? I don't know what the early one would have been like, actually. I've always thought it was an admixture of Irish. You can I I know people from Southern Ireland? Their accent's very different from the people of Northern Ireland. I like both of those accents. They're very different though when you've hung around them for a bit. So you can really hear the American accent at times, in the Irish lilt. It's definitely there. But I've seen some videos which say or are trying to make a case for the fact that there were parts of England, like 200 years ago, early early 1700s that kind of period.
Yeah. Where the sat if you heard them, they think that they sounded very close to the American accent that you have today. Whatever that might be, of course. Yeah. Especially. I remember you played that clip of the actress who was doing the different American accents. Oh, wow. She was amazing, wasn't she? Yeah. Yeah. That was amazing. Want a southern accent, you just have to replace your i's with a.
[02:27:08] Unknown:
Ah. You know? A. Some. Oh, really? Yeah. It works. Like, you want to I like southern accents. So instead of I want some firewood, you you want some firewood. You know?
[02:27:21] Unknown:
Firewood. Okay. Well, you know, Gone With the Wind with, you know, Gone With the Wind. Who there was an English actress who played Scarlett O'Hara. Not was it Scarlett? Her name. Osk. Yeah. Scarlett O'Hara. Or was that de Havilland? Olivia de Havilland was No. Olivia de Olivia she was in it. Yeah. They were both English, actually. So Olivia de Havilland was of English descent or very strong, I think, and close to it. It was the the woman that married Laurence Olivier, very pretty at the time. I can't remember her name. She died quite young, actually, in late forties.
And I can't remember her name. How about that? I've never seen that film anyways. Is it worth watching? I don't know. Yes. You've never seen that? You've never seen No. Gone With the Wind? Have you seen Wizard of Oz? I can't stand The Wizard of Oz. It's just honestly, I don't know what it is that freaks me out. Vivian Lee. Vivian Lee. Thank you, Eric. That was it. Vivian Lee. So is her is her accent any good, or is it is it noticeably slightly awkward?
[02:28:24] Unknown:
I don't I don't know. Her her her accent you couldn't tell that she's British in the in the film.
[02:28:31] Unknown:
I I mean, I think whoever does the language, you know, the accent coaching for actors now is amazing. The fact that they get Americans to speak regional English at times in films is is fantastic. And some of the English guys doing and gals doing American accents are pretty good, I think, these days. You you would be interested. British?
[02:28:50] Unknown:
Mittelstrup Street. Victor Fleming. Was he British? He's the one who directed the film. And then it was David O'Selznick, and then David O'Selznick, I think, did a lot of work with Alfred Hitchcock later on. But he was a big time
[02:29:05] Unknown:
producer. Meryl sorry. I didn't mean to cut him. Meryl Streep is very good. I don't like her as a person, but as an actress, she's very good with an English accent. It is really close. But I'm sure if you wanna see a real American marvelous act and I'm being sarcastic now. The worst was Bob Hoskins in a film where he actually and McCartney cannot do an American accent. It it sounds like he had, irritable bowel syndrome in it. Irritable. I I I and and the word the very top of the list is, Michael Caine in Cider House Rules.
[02:29:41] Unknown:
You've really got him for Michael Caine, aren't you, Eric? Because he hates Michael Caine. British?
[02:29:46] Unknown:
Yes. Okay. Or or what okay. And I can't he can't do them. And, Cider House Rules. And, again, he sounds if he had irritable valve syndrome as well. It's awful. It's terrible. And, I mean, normally, as a Brit, you can't if someone's taking off an American. Yeah. You you but it was so bad. I mean, it's so bad. It's almost good. I mean, have you ever seen Side of House Rules?
[02:30:12] Unknown:
Never. At all? No. I don't think I've I've never heard of it. You're not selling it very well, Eric. I'm not sort of when when was this made? What was this a recent movie or, like,
[02:30:22] Unknown:
don't know about that. 30 years ago. 30 years ago. 19 nineties? Must be the nineties. Hang on. Hang on. Hang on. It's a John Irving book, isn't it? That novelist that's he wrote The World According to Garp. It's it's one of his novels. I've heard of that.
[02:30:35] Unknown:
Hang on here. It's not, it was written in 1968, and the film came out in 1999. It's called The Cider House of one.
[02:30:43] Unknown:
Cider House of And,
[02:30:45] Unknown:
as I say, if you want to really cringe, but it has to be Bob Hoskins. I can't remember what film it was, but it was so it was it was crazy. I can. It's,
[02:30:55] Unknown:
it's that animated thing. No. No. No. No. No. Roger Rabbit. No. It wasn't. It was another one he did, and he's He's pretty bad in that.
[02:31:04] Unknown:
It it's so it is absolutely horrendous. It really is horrendous. But why do they have an Englishman acting like American? Why can't they get an American do it? What's wrong? I mean, why don't I have an American It's no fun. Come on. It's you gotta have an American talk like an Englishman, and that's even more fun. Yeah. It's like Or might you?
[02:31:25] Unknown:
Brad Pitt and Snatch or whatever that movie was. That's or the the Irishman.
[02:31:30] Unknown:
Have you seen the original, 1984 film that was made in Britain? It made in 1956, and it was American actor who acted the part of Winston. And I have to admit, alright, he's a little bit overweight for the part, but he did do it well. He did it very, very well. I can't think of his name now, but you can actually see the whole film on YouTube now free of charge. Have you ever seen the original 1984 film? Because that is the best thing. I've only seen the the one from 1984. Oh, the one from 1956. Alright. It's a bit tricky. It was actually filmed in, the, well, it was left of London after the bombing. Because remember, it was only 11 years earlier. And there's loads of bomb sites surrounding London that time. So that gave it a a a kind of grittiness, and it was black and white, which made it even more gritty.
And the weird thing about it, I mean, my father, he saw the BBC one. And, the chap acted the part of Winston so well in the BBC drama that the BBC had more complaints ever. I mean, I think that was in 1955, the BBC drama. And it was, oh, what was his name? Peter Cushing, actually, part of Winston. And he acted so well, they thought he was actually being tortured. And, my dad my father saw that, and he he always commented on the film 1984 and the book 1984. And when you see the film, Winston opens the diary, and he writes in it. He opens his diary up. This is 18th April 1984.
The 18th April is my father's birthday. Strange coincidence.
[02:33:13] Unknown:
I've read the book. I've never seen the film. I mean, I've seen the film, the 80 1984, but not the 56
[02:33:20] Unknown:
version of it. The 56 one is worth it. It's about an hour and a half or an hour, but it's just that grittiness. It it's just it's got it. And there's quite a few there's Donald's, what's his name? The Presence Pleas Pleasants, innit? Yeah. Yeah. And he's there's a what the what little girl that acts the part of his daughter does it really well. It's a good actress. She I don't know where she went after that. But Donald Pleasants, he acts the part well as well. And it it is really good. The 1956 is is a really good Michael Redgrave?
[02:33:53] Unknown:
That's right. Yes. He's in it. Is he is he related to, what's her name? Yes. Yes. He is. Vanessa? Oh. Yes. It's his daughter. I I like her. She she was a good actress. Yes. Yes. She was a good actor. Movie. I'm trying to think of the name of it. It was, The Ballad of the Sad Cafe. She played this this, character in there. It takes place in the South where she runs this, bootleg. She has her own still and makes moonshine and sells it to all these Depression era townie type people. It's a and it's got Keith Carradine in it. It's it's funny. It's funny, and it's, think it was Edward Albee was the the writer of it. But, yeah, Vadette Well Michael Michael Red Redgrave is in, 1984,
[02:34:42] Unknown:
1956 version. That's Vanessa Redgrave. She was actually in a television film about something that, supposed to have happened, over 80 years ago, which we won't go into because of, YouTube, but something beginning with h. And this is a 100% true. When it was shown on television, there's a hell of a hoo because when the adverts come on, you know, they focus the adverts towards what's actually on the film on on the film. So they have soap adverts? And they yeah. And and and what that well, no. Not what they had. An advert for British Gas. Seriously.
Sorry. I shouldn't laugh. Someone with a very good sense of humor actually did that. But, oh, it's a terrible it's a terrible I saw it. Made for television, it was. I think seventies or eighties. I I don't know. But, no. She she,
[02:35:41] Unknown:
she had to call her father. Film studios. We need to start making our own movies. Yeah. Fuck them films. That f's quite good in fuck them, isn't it? There's a lot of fuck them festival, fuck them film studios. Fuck them films.
[02:35:54] Unknown:
And, fuck them hall films. That would be a better sort of sound, I think. Yeah. Hey. Look. It's fuck them hall films. But, no. It it it I've never forgotten that, the hoo about it. British ghost. I just everybody grazed up. But it was overdramatic. It was overdramatic. And, oh, it's, you know, usual. And why is it why do they have awful always have awful morphe violins
[02:36:25] Unknown:
all the way
[02:36:29] Unknown:
What what's his name? The guy that did the the violence for Psycho and Taxi Driver. Oh. Bernard something or other Herman, I think, was the guy's name. Yeah.
[02:36:40] Unknown:
Yeah. Reminds me of that stuff. But, you know, it's the same with the drumming music. You know, they show you the German songs. Why? It used to reminds me when I was a kid. You know, why did they do it?
[02:36:53] Unknown:
It's it's it's it's The war drums? Oh, that's just to get you in the mood. Yeah. And we're gonna go to war and kill people. That's that's war drum thing. Music is effective that way. It it it it can put you in the mood to go to war. It can put you to sleep. 1 of you know? Any of those
[02:37:11] Unknown:
Yeah. Quite quite quite something. You know? That's, anyway, changing the subject, I'd like to announce that, here in little old England, the nights are drawing out, and it didn't get dark until about oh, what was it tonight?
[02:37:29] Unknown:
About half past 4. Isn't that nice? It's nice. It was a bit lighter here for me. I was walking, on by the sea. The sun sort of runs across the sea for longer. There's nothing to sort of interrupt it. I was walking along at 10 past 5, and it was still pretty good. Yeah. It's great. Really?
[02:37:45] Unknown:
Lovely. Yep. Because, it's granite.
[02:37:48] Unknown:
We have the sunset right now.
[02:37:51] Unknown:
What what time does it get down, where you are? Well, it's 4:38,
[02:37:55] Unknown:
and it's it's starting to set, but it's not down yet.
[02:38:00] Unknown:
Yeah. Proving that the Earth isn't flat.
[02:38:05] Unknown:
Hey. Geocentrism versus heliocentrism.
[02:38:08] Unknown:
That's the real question right there. Yeah. Sunset here was 5:0:1 PM today.
[02:38:15] Unknown:
Similar to here. I don't have an answer for that. Oh, shut up. Don't get down like this.
[02:38:21] Unknown:
Cancel.
[02:38:26] Unknown:
Bugger off. No. Thank you. Winter. It's it's about half past 3, and sometimes 3 o'clock it gets dark, don't it? It's it's terrible. It works. The the shortest day, that's really that really is the most depressing day of the year.
[02:38:42] Unknown:
Again, I suppose Yeah. But it's all warm. Thing is January is an immensely long month, isn't it? It's an immensely long month because it start well, it starts on Christmas Eve, does January. That's what I think. I've always thought it's just enormous. I had my neighbor saying, oh, I've still got 2 weeks to go, and I've got no money and all that kind of stuff. Oh, really? Shouldn't have spent it all then, should you? It's what I wanted to say.
[02:39:06] Unknown:
No. He's fine, really. Someone said in in, this is in Telegram chat. This is Steve. I said, sorry, Eric. Sunset certainly don't prove it's not flat. Mhmm. Oh, okay then. Fair enough. But I've actually been up in an airplane. I've seen it slightly, and I've seen the curvature. And I've also been to Dover on a well, they were the clearest days, I would have thought, for years, and that was many years ago. And the channel between France look look like a river. You could actually see the French coast,
[02:39:39] Unknown:
and you could actually see the curvature of the Earth then, and it was amazing sight. Oh, wow. The actual curve. Yeah. That's kind of the same thing with, Michigan to Chicago. You can see you can see the curvature with with the city skyline. Mhmm. There are photographs that you could take where it looks like it's curved, and you can tell it's sunk below the waterline.
[02:40:00] Unknown:
Both sides put in a very good argument. I mean, John Hamer, good friend of mine. He believes the earth is flat, and then he comes on the show. He he explains it. I don't agree or disagree with it. I just listen. I like to keep it over my mind. If someone can prove it Have you heard of, like, allegedly
[02:40:14] Unknown:
Dave
[02:40:15] Unknown:
over there? You know who that guy is? Yeah. Oh, allegedly Dave. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, yeah. That that allegedly Dave. Yeah. He's a he's a He's been on the show Has he? More times. Oh, okay. Yeah. Yeah. And, he's very interesting. He drink his own wee wee at one time, didn't he? Yeah. Urine therapy. That's pretty good. That's what I heard about. Therapy. And, I don't know. I think he's a I might be a flat earther. Sorry, Dave, if you're wrong, but I think he's a flat earther as well. Yes. That's why I mentioned it. He was Yeah. He's a player. There's yeah. As I say, I don't if someone puts up something, you know, I I don't I'm not
[02:40:54] Unknown:
I'll keep Well, there's this guy over in Los Angeles. His name is Robert Soungenis, and he did a documentary some time ago when the whole flat earth just just before the flat earth thing came up where he more or less went back and said we really should reconsider geocentrism rather than heliocentrism. And it was shortly after that that the whole Flat Earth thing came about as kind of a way to divert the subject from heliocentrism to g and geocentrism to
[02:41:26] Unknown:
Steve has come up with a good one. I bet in Telegram, he said you shouldn't be able to see France if it's a spear. Well, Steve Steve could call in right now. He's in our Telegram
[02:41:37] Unknown:
chat, right Yes. As a participant. If he wants if he wants to participate We we haven't we've got 18 minutes to go. But if I mean, you could do a flat earth thing, but, of course, it's not flat, Steve. It's round, but it doesn't spin. This is, this is my tactic for avoiding the discussion altogether, and it it usually works. It's round and it doesn't spin. So I prefer that one. Well, does it but, does the Earth spin around the sun or does the sun spin around the Earth? No. Everything goes around the Earth. Yeah. Okay. Good. Hang on. That's alright. Hang on. Hang on. Michael Benton
[02:42:09] Unknown:
Michael Benton said the earth is square. So there we go.
[02:42:13] Unknown:
Some people think it's shaped like an egg
[02:42:15] Unknown:
or it's oval, but who knows?
[02:42:18] Unknown:
What about the Hollow Earth theory where there's a Hollow Earth? There's another one, isn't it? We the entrance is in the Antarctic, and that's why I like that idea of the ice wall. That's kind of an an imaginative thing. I think someone in your Bacomhall Telegram group posted a book or Yes. Or some some sort about ice cream. Right. Beyond the coming on this Sunday. He's coming on it's John Hamers who published a book with AME about, because he's a flat earther. And you've got Admiral Byrd, Dickie, and I suppose a little Dickie down below. And, sorry, little Joe there. And, he was the bloke who's supposed to have met anglions or something on the in the Antarctic in his diary.
[02:42:59] Unknown:
So there we go. So Well, have him on Jeff Rents' show. Yeah. He'd fit in. Well, you know,
[02:43:06] Unknown:
I think I I'll tell you a thing I won't mind looking at is is the Tartarian thing. I find that The Tartarian? Really? Yeah, I do find it quite intriguing, the Tart area. No. I don't wanna talk about the Tart area. I wanna talk about Tartarian. There are people that, when I was in Russia, I went to,
[02:43:24] Unknown:
near Tartaristan or Tataristan. Not not Tartar, but Tatar. And they're right north of the Caspian Sea near the western edge of the Ural Mountains in Kazan. So there is something to it. You know, I think the the the length the word even, Tatar, is very similar to Tatar. Yeah. Tataristan or where where or Tataria. It's, yeah, Tataria. Doesn't that doesn't that cover from, like, Ukraine all the way over into near Mongolia?
[02:44:02] Unknown:
It's pretty big. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's pretty big. I mean, I don't know whether all the claims about all the architecture necessary. It's as if nobody actually designed and built anything in the 1800s. Like but then I'm thinking, I don't really know too much about it. It's almost as if all these documents get destroyed and stuff. Why is there no real history? I mean, if you've got plans of, you know, this would be really good. We've mentioned it about the Fisher Building, for example, in Detroit, which definitely was designed by human beings. I I'm pretty sure. You can find the architectural practice, but there's a lot of other ones that weren't. And I would love to see the plans of these things because they are there there's so much more scope in architecture back then.
You know or was it I mean, I remember speaking to someone, an American guy. I won't be able to get him on, actually. I've not been in touch for a few years, but this would be about 5 years ago. I remember talking to him. And he made the claim to me, which I find very intriguing. Of course, it's been backed up with a lot of, additional posts all over the place on the Tartarian thing that when, the west in America was being settled, when they they were going to cross it, these buildings were already there. They arrived in one of these There's one near me in, River Falls, Wisconsin,
[02:45:19] Unknown:
which Right. Just I don't know who built it. It's just amazing this this it's out in the middle the backyard of some farmer in the woods. I went out there to to look at it. There's this lady out of Bulgaria I found out about it from, Sylvie Ivanova out of Bulgaria. And she talks she had this site called megaliths.org, and it listed on the map of the world all the different megaliths megalithic sites and star forts and that sort of thing. And there was one in River Falls, and I I went and I checked it out. And sure enough, there was one there. And it's like, who built this? And it's obviously older than the state, founding, you know, in 1848. I think it was about the time I I I seen a picture of people there that excavated it, and it looked old even back then. So it's like, who built this? What who are these people? And we used to have supposedly had a land bridge from Russia into Alaska where people could just walk right over.
So possibly, there could have been people from that tart tart area that that walked over. But, it's fascinating. Yeah. I I agree. Who is it? Max Egan talks a lot about that. Well, he talks also a lot of doodles because
[02:46:36] Unknown:
problem you find is someone will have a theory, and then the powers that be because I think a lot of these fake, and I'm not saying it is, a lot of fake conspiracies in that. I spent I I think I spun by government agents. I really do believe that because there's a lot of took on there. I mean, for example, on the Internet about, things like getting electric from the ether in the air when they used to do it in the Edwardian tires. Well, no. For a fact, they didn't. And some bozo, has taken a picture of, what is called a a datum line. And what that is, it's like a sort of a a a metal A datum line? Square. A datum line. What that is is that Okay. Yeah. What it is is when you do surveying, which I dump a fair amount, is that, there's a place called Newlin, which is in Cornwall, and that is supposed to be exact sea level.
And if you go to, look around, so the city of London, you get these what is called Newlin datum plaques. And the Victorians put them on churches and government building and things like they're fantastic because it's, like a a piece of metal stone, and you've got a slot in it, which goes horizontal. And then you've got a slot that goes upwards and then one another one that goes at 45 degree angle either side. You see? And what you do is you you you know how many feet above or below sea level you are, and then you could do your surveying from there. Brilliant. The Victorians are really good at that. And Suboso has taken a picture of a church, and there's a lightning construct, conductor going up there. And there's this data level. He said, oh, this was at the Edwardians. They came along with this plug, and they plugged in and got their electricity for the.
That is the the the, shall we say, the shit of the bull. No. It's a tatum level because you see n d, and he's going in all these technical things. No. It means newly tatum, and the numbers at the bottom are how many feet above or below those are the plus or minus sea level. And that's all it is. It's it's it's it's for surveyors. But, there all I found is some of the best designed buildings have not been designed by architects, and one of them is New Swan Castle in Bavaria, Germany is where Chitty Chitty Bang Bang was filmed and a lot of films from there. And it was actually, designed I think it was Ludwig did it, and he got theater designers.
[02:49:04] Unknown:
Theater set designers. He's the one that did the Oktoberfest?
[02:49:08] Unknown:
That the Oktoberfest is all about? I don't know because he he he got he got he was found mysteriously dead.
[02:49:16] Unknown:
Didn't he go mad?
[02:49:18] Unknown:
No. You can go mad. Oh, that's I must be thinking of someone who's doing good. Now, he's hang on. Let's have a look. He was friends with, Wagner, and he, actually financed Wagner a lot. And I think he, he was found face down in a lake nearby, in 18/86. And it's a mystery how he got killed, but his castle is mind blowing. And it was designed by theater set designers. And Saint Paul's in London, it was designed by Christopher Wren. And Christopher Wren was not an architect. He never saw the architecture.
[02:50:03] Unknown:
Paul was a technician.
[02:50:05] Unknown:
Now there is a podcast called Datum Line or Datum Line, by Virginia Dare. What was the guy's name? Do you know who I'm talking about, Paul? English?
[02:50:16] Unknown:
He used to Yeah. I'm trying to think, but the name's not I think Vida is in a lot of has disappeared, doesn't it, now? Datum Line. Yeah. A Datum Line was by Or was that an Economist guy? He was the economist guy that used to be on RBN, and I've got most of his shows, and his names are not in my head. They're absolutely brilliant economic shows. They're very deep. They're a big deep dive into the drifting away from I like them. Because the car is I I just can't remember his name, but I've got all of them somewhere. I've got the whole locks. I I edited all the ad breaks out of the music in there. Yeah. They're brilliant. They're really good. But just going back to the Tartaria thing, I'm moving. We've got about 8 or 9 minutes left here. We will close out the top of the hour or thereabouts. I've got the, I've got the Steel iSpan thing. It's not the one I originally had with Andy, but it might be. I've I for some reason, I haven't got it. It's a live version from 2016. But there's been, there's a on Telegram, there's a tartaria and history channel. It's all quite interesting.
And there's been an 8 part post about Queen Victoria. And there's some very interesting things in it. I'll just read you some snippets from it here. I can't I won't read the whole lot because they're quite lengthy, but it's just to wet your appetite. Maybe we could look in this more detail at some point, maybe next week. It says the queen has an exquisite monument in Calcutta. It is huge, ornate, flanked by sprawling gardens and 2 artificial lakes. There are many magnificent statues inside and outside in the gardens. The 2 large statues of the queen are of superb artistry and are well tartarian without doubt. Well, okay, unless we find out the name of the sculptors who did it and if there's, historicity on that. So I don't know quite what that means or maybe it's influenced by these people of very high high skill.
And, it's quite interesting. She says let's dig a bit. Queen Victoria died in 1901. This monument called the Victoria Memorial was started in 1906 and completed in 1921, which is quite a thing. I mean, she's dead. They spent 15 years on it. Calcutta was the capital of the British empire in India at that time. But lo and behold, the capital was shifted to Delhi in 1911 before they'd even finished it. Why build it in Calcutta when it would not remain the capital of India? Well, there may be really sensible reasons for that. But going further down this thread, the amount of things built and painted in her honor, there's a list of them here, the number of them is really quite amazing.
It said, we searched for statues of Queen Victoria, and would you believe how many we found? Well, they found a 160. That is quite a lot. 4 in Africa, 6 in Asia, 10 in Australia, 4 in New Zealand, 12 in Canada, 10 in Scotland, 63 in England, understandable, and 12 in London. A 160 statues all exquisitely produced, and they say exquisitely Tartarian, all depicting the same person exactly. Well, we didn't need to see the history of how they were, you know, who produced them. I I just want names and sort of origination dates. Is that information not available? But the really interesting bit is not even to do to me, it's not even to do with the with that. It's to do with this bit, part 6. I'll just read this bit out.
It says, if she was the Tartarian leader, there is expected to be destruction of evidence like the fire narratives for almost all old world buildings. Uncannily, we find it here too. That is destruction evidence. It says daily journal. I didn't know this. I only found this out earlier today. Queen Victoria used to write 2,000 words per day, probably the Fockem Hall fountain pen, Eric, since the age of 13. 60,000,000 words and 45,000 pages in total as per Wikipedia. That's what they say on Wiki. Her youngest daughter, Beatrice, was given the task of editing and publishing her journals. As per Wikipedia, Beatrice paraphrased the journal entries in her own words retaining only 1 third of the total and then destroyed all the originals.
That's a bit weird for the output of a royal person. Why would anyone want to do that? And it took a 30 years to write this edited version starting with the demise of the queen in 1901 to 1931. Finally, a 111 notebooks remain. This entire archive was made available online in 2012, but was withdrawn and is reportedly available only for UK residents now. Well, I think I'll go down and read the loss, only a 111. But it is quite interesting, this whole Victorian era thing and what was really going on. I mean, if it is the age of these amazing buildings, do we attribute it to the Victorian architects of the time? And if we do, who were they? I mean, you can find the names of some of the architects, like I said, of the Fisher buildings, the architectural practice, and that's really quite an impressive building, certainly with its internal deco. It's amazing, actually.
I love all this stuff in a way. I think
[02:55:22] Unknown:
find very few drawings, if any, will be done by the architects. It's the technicians that actually get it to to to to design it to put it all together. And this is why with Christopher Wren, I was talking to, Gloria Moss, Professor Moss. She studied the Great Fire of London, which was started deliberately, didn't start by accident. And she was saying that there's very few drawings with Wren's name on them. And she thought that was a bit weird until I explained to her that's how architecture works. It's the technicians that actually make sure that everything components go together. But they're they're not mentioned. It's always the architect.
Because the architect's like a manager, and that's it. You know, you you Christopher Wren probably did very few drawings, if any. Did a few outline sketches of what he wanted, and that was it. And the technicians went on and did it. For what? So, but the the fact is is that I think that when you're doing CAD and when you're working on a drawing board, your brain thinks differently. Because with CAD, it's pushing you all the time. It's instant. Whereas on the drawing board, you've got time to think. And when they have the days
[02:56:29] Unknown:
of the, boat on the drawing board with a pipe and the white coat, that's when they're trying to think things through and do a work of art. So Well, I think so. I think that there might be sort of quite a even so I'd love to see buildings like that come back. Oh, we can't afford them. Yeah, we can. If they could afford them back then, we can certainly afford them now. But it's like there is a spirit, you know, the buildings are a reflection of this spiritual warfare on something that really was. The building buildings are amazing because when they are beautiful, everybody knows it. It's not a language thing. You have someone sit down and tell you. You just sit there in front of it and go, wow. That's what happens to people. It's it's amazing.
[02:57:08] Unknown:
But the first thing you're instructed is that buildings work on your subconscious. That's what they do. They're working on your subconscious. Now you go into, say, no, I haven't been in this movie. So I've been in a police station. In Britain, they used to have this strange green color, and that was done, And they're designed to make you feel subservient. These big buildings and things like that. Banks were made to make you feel subservient. Yeah. The communist architecture that made you feel lesser than that. That's right. Yes. Yeah. You
[02:57:40] Unknown:
got about 2 minutes, Paul, by the way.
[02:57:42] Unknown:
I know. Okay. Well, we we'll wrap up now. Any any last we got this song lined up to to wind out. It's been it's flown by 3 hours, absolutely flown by this week. Anyway, we can all look forward to a magnificent, wonderful world and the leadership of, Donald j Trump. Nothing's gonna go wrong. He's gonna deliver everything that he says, and that's the cynical side. On the other side, if we get a few good things out of it, that could give us more time for discussion. And as I said, if if it is true that the censorship on free speech is being, removed in America, this is great because it'll ripple out like a a shock wave all over the place, and it'll make things very awkward for people in Europe, the the busybodies in Europe trying to shut everybody up.
You know, it's not Britain that's been ruined. It's basically an infection that's in not only Britain, but all across Europe and has been to some degree there in the States. If we can remove a good part of this insane infection that's been obviously put there by design, then that could help. But we will see. I expect there's gonna be a lot of stings in the tail, and, I, I'm not going to budge. Every bank in America should run like the Bank of North Dakota or something close to it, and the public need to have a bank that operates as a public service and no private ownership ever. Right. All commercial banks to be shut down, we just need one bank. It's for, like it's just for measuring stuff. That's all it is. But, of course, that's not what it is. It's for people filching stuff and controlling everybody because we all want money and all that kind of stuff. So, yay. More money for all of us. If I only had more money, it'd be all sorted out. That's not what we're saying here. It's not that we personally want more money, although, of course, temporarily. Even for one lifetime, it would help. But long term, it's just a menace.
So I'm still on for year of jubilee, or or getting that or at least just getting the momentum around this communication, which does seem to be building, which is wonderful. And then we could see what might happen. So, shout out to everybody in the chat. Very active tonight. Been a very quick show. Thank you, Paul, Patrick, and Eric, for your wonderful presence this week. I think it's been a lot of fun. And if you if you guys have got any ideas for future themes for shows, just let me know during the week. We can always sit on anything really and move around. And, we will, of course, be having more extracts from foreigners next week. That's going to be a regular unless I get heavy letters of objections to it, but I think it's delightful. I've also got some other books on the way which are full of witty things.
Actually, have I still got I might still have one last thing I could read out to you, which is to just close out on a letter, but I probably won't find it in time because I know what I'm like. Where did I stick the damn thing? I'm not gonna find it. Am I am I gonna find it? Oh, I've got it here. Alright. You're ready. Myself that every day. So this is this I can say this now. Okay. So this is the last shot, and then we're gonna go to a song. So this, my brother sent me this the other day. He said it's from the golden age of letter writing. I don't know whether that's really true. It's dated the 6th August 1982, so it's not too old, is it? 4043 years ago, 43, you know, that kind of time. It's sent by, a lady called Mary Grant and it's written to a mister a Walker of the rank Xerox Limited company in Belfast.
And this is what she wrote. Dear mister Walker, I want to thank you for the lovely transistor radio you and your so kindly sent me for my birthday. It is all the more wonderful that an absolute stranger like yourself remembers old people like me. I am 97 years old and have been at the home for the last 26 years. We are treated very kindly, but the lonely hours are very hard to bear. My roommate, missus James, has a radio but will never let me listen to it and often switches it off when I come into the room. Now I have one of my very own.
My grandsons and granddaughters are very nice and come to see me once a month, but I know that they only come along from a sense of duty. This is why your gift is all the more wonderful and thrilling to me as it was given out of compassion for a fellow human being. God bless you all. Today, missus James radio broke down and she asked me if she could listen to mine. I told her to fuck off. Yours sincerely, Mary Grant. So there you go. I used the f word for the first time on the show, but it I I couldn't I couldn't tell you what I was gonna do. So there we go. And, that's that's a classic letter from Mary Grant from 1982.
I've got more letters like that coming along, an insight into the human condition. We try to do it every now and again here on the show. The show may well get banned for that. I don't know. But at least you know that I do swear every now and again. So there we go. No harm done. Doesn't. Could we know the censorship ban is true? That's it. So that was a censorship ban test. Right? We will see. We will see. But, of course, if I didn't use that word, the whole impact of the letter would have been lost. It's just wonderful. So, anyway, that's how you write a letter, just to let you know everybody, although you do yeah.
[03:02:56] Unknown:
It's it's a bit like sorry Dimini's cutting there, but it's a bit like those, letters, sent into the welfare people. And one of them, which, because my uncle got a load of them from the sixties. And one of them was I've, is complaining about it in earnest, and someone wrote, I've had diarrhea through the hole in my shoe. Sorry.
[03:03:16] Unknown:
T h r o u g h. Through the hole in my shoe. It was like the weather. In the doctor. Yeah. Sorry. It was like the letter that was sent to the weatherman. It was, from a kindly old gentleman. He said, dear mister weatherman, we the wife and I dearly love your programs. We sit in our comfy chairs and listen to you every single night. And it is just so comforting to us how you share all the the vast knowledge of weather that you have with us every night. I just wanted to share with you, though, I just finished shoveling 11 inches of fair to partly cloudy off my front doorstep.
Just thought you'd want to know.
[03:04:01] Unknown:
Nice. That's sweet. Yeah. Well, guys, we're gonna wrap up with a song. I think we'll wrap up with a song. We've just gone through 11 o'clock here. That means we've just gone through 6 o'clock in the in the US eastern time zone. Patrick, I hope I hope you don't get too cold tonight, and I hope Georgia's nice and hot for you, Paul, when you finally get there. Yes. And Eric, look forward to there'll be a a is there there'll be a, Fockem Hall broadcast this Sunday, I'm assuming, Eric, at 8 o'clock. Is that right? Yes. Yes. 8 o'clock. And, of course, you gentlemen are all invited.
[03:04:33] Unknown:
And that will be with John Hamer and, Andy talking about their new book. And there might be a test broadcast with be between someone I don't know. You heard of him Paul English? Never don't know. Some bloke Paul English. Yeah. We'll do some things. And Yeah. As I said before, I'm try I'm trying to wangle another show in, Eric,
[03:04:51] Unknown:
in some way during the week. It might be Tuesday evenings. I don't really know. Yeah. Or during the week because I've got I've just looked at my Telegram sort of I've got a little group here where I should try and pin a lot of things to there's just tons in there. And I think the thing is it kinda goes off a bit, but it would be they're good little kickers for promoting a bit of discussion. And if we can get call ins going a bit better, and I my apology in Telegram if you tried to call in, it's it's a bit clumsy for me at the moment. I I need another screen to see things. We'll see how that goes. I can even provide a thing with literally telephone numbers, but I don't know if people are even gonna wanna do that. But to just get a few more voices in here would be a good thing. I'm not begging for it. We'll see how it goes. We'll try and we'll try and get it sorted out. But, yeah, there's there's a lot of things to talk about right now. There always is, I suppose, but, there there really is at the moment. And I think, you know, if there's an energy wave, we should ride it a bit. Why not?
And there's lots of fun stuff to drop in. As I said, there'll be more extracts from foreigners. We will definitely be doing that. And I've got some other, I think, witty things due to arrive with me next week, which may be brief and therefore would lend themselves well well to breaking up the show with little quirky witticisms and comments from other people up and down the history line, which are always good fun, I think. So that would be great. Cool. Okay. We're gonna play you out. We'll see you next same time next week. We're gonna play you out with this live version of Steli Span from 2016 singing all around my hat. And, of course, they mean a bowler hat, don't they? See you all next week, everyone.
Of course they do. I probably better unmute it, haven't I? See you all next week, everyone. Bye for now.
[03:10:42] Unknown:
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Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
Introduction and Weather Chat
Discussion on Trump and Political Promises
Skepticism About Political Leaders
Free Speech and Media Censorship
Economic Policies and Oil Prices
Cultural Observations and Humor
Fashion and Political Image
Reflections on American Politics
CIA Influence and Historical Insights
Digital Currency and Economic Control
Cultural Stereotypes and Humor
Architectural Mysteries and Tartaria