Welcome back to another episode of Paul English Live on the Global Voice Radio Network. This week, we dive into a variety of topics, starting with a light-hearted discussion about personal health remedies and the joys of using coconut oil for dental care. We also touch on the importance of maintaining a healthy lifestyle and the potential dangers of relying on pharmaceuticals.
As the conversation progresses, we delve into the political sphere, discussing the recent antics in the UK and the ongoing challenges faced by the ruling class. We explore the concept of the 'intelligence' in Russia and how it parallels today's woke ideology, highlighting the dangers of prioritizing ideology over reality.
Our discussion takes a historical turn as we examine the influence of architecture on society's well-being and the impact of modernist designs on our mental health. We also reflect on the importance of community and the potential for local radio stations to foster a sense of connection and empowerment.
Join us as we navigate through these complex topics with humor and insight, always aiming to uncover the truth and inspire positive change in our communities.
This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymymyboost.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function with sluggish mitochondria is kinda like running an engine that's low on oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by Fatfix, p h a t p h I x dot com. Visceral fat is weighing your body down. It's causing sluggish response of your organs, and it's gotta go. It's gotta go. It's gotta get rid of it. You just gotta. And also iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency wand by Preif International. That's iTeroplanet.com.
Thank you, and welcome to the program. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[00:02:23] Unknown:
Well, hi, everyone, and, welcome back. A week away, a week away. And it is, Thursday, March. Look. March is nearly halfway through. These months, they fly by, don't they? And, of course well, we'll talk about the time we'll talk about the time in a in a few minutes' time. That's what we'll do. This is Paul English Live. We're on WBN three to four with you for the next, two hours. Welcome to the show. It's been all fun and games in the political sphere. Over here on this side of the pond this week, lots of typical political pantomime.
What fun. Well hi everyone and welcome back. Hope you've had a good little week. Those of you who have got used to me snotting up and coughing over the last two weeks I'm sorry to be so vulgar so early on in the show. I'm not really I think I've cleared most of it. There may be one or two opportunistic coughs, hacks, and wheezes throughout the next few hours, but, generally, my nasal passages are gloriously clean, and I just thought you all ought to know. I'm sure you're all very, very happy about that, although not as happy as me. And, my wonderful abscess I like to go into all these things, aren't I? So I had an abscess at the same time. You can't beat antibiotics. That's what I say, and I just love them. Apparently, they're supposed to destroy all your gut fauna, but I would prefer that to having raging toothache, which is what I had.
And since then, I've gone on a little regimen of, salt water mouth gargling, which is quite interesting. So I'm doing that morning and night followed by coconut oil tea pulling. Actually, I don't quite do that. I haven't been using toothpaste for years. Yes. Filthy creature that I am. But that's because I've been using coconut oil instead, and I would heartily recommend it. It's very, very good. Somebody sent me a video the other week saying that this combination of, gargling a bit with salt water in the mouth, spit it out, you don't swallow it, of course. It's rather Yeah. And then follow that up with, coconut oil produces a a sort of thing in the mouth that absolutely annihilates all the evil bacteria that do your teeth harm.
And, I've maintained for a long time that without plumbers and dentists, this show wouldn't be taking place because it'd be smelly everywhere and we'd all have toothache. Civilization wouldn't have got built, and generally speaking, things would be so bad we wouldn't be bothered about anything much because of all the discomfort caused by that. So, that's kind of my stance. I went to my dentist, when did I go? About a week ago when they well, I actually just caged them, and I went into, to really catch the antibiotics out of them and managed to, of course, do that, only to discover, because I've not been in for about five years, that the entire medical crew had completely changed.
And it was full of people that, how can I put this tactfully, they didn't recognize? Anyway, they were all quite pleasant. I'm supposed to go back and they're gonna look at my teeth again. But now that I'm feeling good, I'm probably not gonna go. I I'm kind of leery about getting involved with things like the NHS and dentists and all sorts of other things. I didn't used to be like this when I was younger. I was completely trusting. Maybe you were similar. Maybe you followed a a similar sort of path of getting more and more, well, suspicious. And, there's something slightly gone wonky with all of that kind of stuff, and, certain bits of news that have been coming out over here over the past few days have kind of backed that up. All sorts of strange communications from Kier, personality bypass stoma, talking about shutting down NHS England and all sorts of other things, which I can't be bothered to actually wade into. It's just more sort of guff and drama in this space. But, I guess, we've had a lot of it since he rolled up. We've had a lot of it actually since before he rolled up into that position, and it doesn't seem to be ending anytime soon. So don't hold your breath on that one for a little while.
Anyway, welcome to the crew. The crew are here this evening. The gang's all here. And, Paul, are you gonna be joining us for the show or are you, still removing ice from your gutters? What's going on? No. Actually, gravity is taking care of that. I've done my usual thing. I'm asking you a question and then muting you so that you're not going out to the audience. So let me unmute you. There we go. I just unmuted the studio. There we go. Hi, Paul. How are you doing? I'm doing good. Actually, gravity
[00:07:53] Unknown:
is taking care of the ice dams. The dam dams are actually landing on my stuff. I have Yeah. Two propane tanks that are frozen to the ground that are in peril, and a completely flattened patio set from the last ice dam that fell off the roof and landed on it. So the dam dams are letting go and landing on my stuff.
[00:08:25] Unknown:
Oh, good. Good. Is it still cold with you guys out there? Is it still cold with you? No. It's actually warm enough that it's literally running off the roof as the ice melts.
[00:08:35] Unknown:
So that's not bad. Well, that's nice. But I just wish That's really good. I just wish it wouldn't have flattened my wrought iron patio set. Give me a break.
[00:08:48] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Pat patio sets. Oh, boy. I've just, I've just got some, I've just taken receipt of, my, re, improved chainsaw. My chainsaw went, a bit wonky, so I've I I've just repaired that. And then I've got some chainsaw oil, which I need. Mhmm. And now now that I'm over my cold this is all very exciting for you out there. You all want to know about my trees. I've got too many trees. So I I I have I guess for England, I've got a relatively large garden. It's about 50 foot by 40 foot, so it is pretty big. But you can't tell because there are all these trees everywhere, and I've not done anything on it for the last few years simply because my time has been taken up with other matters.
And, but the chainsaw is now ready to go. I borrowed a ladder from the neighbor. I'm about to start going in. We're gonna have a go at the cherry tree first, which was planted in 1922. How about that? It's a massive thing, way too big. And, so that needs a bit of trimming, and we've got the then we've got all the Leyland guys to have a go at. So, it's gonna be tree hacking with my, with my chainsaw coming up. I'm quite looking forward to it, actually. The weather's not turned bad.
[00:10:00] Unknown:
Yeah? The cherry tree, is that still producing?
[00:10:05] Unknown:
No. It goes into blossom. It goes into blossom. Cherry blossom, pink, apple blossom, white. Remember that song? I'll dig it up actually now that I've mentioned it. Beautiful song. Love that. And, yeah. No. It still produces a blossom. We also had an apple tree when we got here. So these houses were built, I think, in 1922. I remember someone telling me so. That makes them a hundred and three years old now. And they they were council houses built at the time, but they're built like a tank. They're really well built. And, so, I'm wearing a a sneaky little place, very quiet, and everybody likes our likes my garden even though they all admit that the trees are way too big. That's because we've got three cordylines. So these things look like palm trees, you know. They sort of manage to sort of get their way through an English winter quite easily because it's quite mild, really.
And, they do look rather beautiful and all that. So, yeah, cherry tree, because they were built on an orchard. This was an orchard. So every house that started off with started off with an apple tree and a cherry tree in every single garden of these eight houses, and ours is the only one that's got one left. So at least we've done our bit for keeping this tree going. And, it's such a mighty old thing. You know when cherry trees start to split down the main sort of section of the trunk and all this kind of stuff, and then they get all that gunky sap coming out, which I quite like. And the birds like it too. So always nice to start off with a bit of a nature report on my garden. Isn't it thrilling? Fantastic. So, you know, it's good.
Well, I like it. I like it. And everybody might be able to relate to cherry trees and apple trees. I don't really know. Maybe they can. Maybe they can't. Anyway, so, anyway, good to have you on board, Paul. Let's hop back to this side of the pond because I see that Eric is with us. Eric, good evening to you, miss. Greetings. How are you this? Grumble, and I'm pleased to hear that you're you're sounding a lot better because with all that nasal sound, people will think you're a bogeyman, weren't they? Well, I think I was a bogeyman, actually. Yes. It's why I couldn't join you really over over Sunday and Monday. I was just feeling still quite a bit grotty. And, yeah. And these things, they just last too long. I don't want any more. Although my son said he'd try and give me another one because he thought I ought to go for a world record. So, you know, yeah. Two and a half weeks these bloody things lasted. Over two weeks were incredible, really. They normally last about six days that day. Three days come in, three days going. That's right. Something like that. So You are lacking possibly a b vitamin or something like that.
[00:12:35] Unknown:
Is that is that b for beer? B for beer. Yes. You could have beer. But you could try something like, OODO's oil or something like that. That's pretty good to, it is well, it's one of these oils that you gotta have with a banana or something because, I have trouble keeping it down. It's it's got this twang to it. But, no, something like that. Miles will sort you out with that.
[00:12:58] Unknown:
It's definitely a bit of yeah. You've got a vitamin deficiency somewhere that's letting this in. So I might I might well have actually. I I think it's stress as well. Although, of course, I'm very relaxed here in the show. You ought to see it before we start. But, Yeah. I think it could be that kind of stuff. I tell you what, I have
[00:13:18] Unknown:
Yeah. So I was gonna say stress related.
[00:13:21] Unknown:
Try St. John's ward. It's very, very You mentioned that to me the other day. Yeah. I ought to go and have a look, shouldn't I? Actually, I've put it up on a page.
[00:13:29] Unknown:
When I was in the situation similar to yourself, I was catching everything on in this and and hello?
[00:13:37] Unknown:
That's my phone. Somebody actually thinks I'm important. That's ridiculous. I thought you were gonna have so many cabinets. I had to resend my phone, and now the vibrators come on. Not steady.
[00:13:48] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. Oh,
[00:13:50] Unknown:
that kind of stuff. You said the word vibrator. That's alright. Well, I've left it there. It's to add atmosphere to the broadcast. Yes. Yes. The only show with a vibrator on it. That's right. That's it. It's the it's our it's our new USP for the show. So you get the strange vibration sounds. Yeah. Sorry about that, everybody. But No. No. No. I have a question.
[00:14:12] Unknown:
Speaking of which, I have a question. Did did either of you hear about the old spinster that completely destroyed the batteries on her cell phone and vibrating pager all in the same day?
[00:14:23] Unknown:
You're fooling yourself.
[00:14:24] Unknown:
This is a family show. What have I done to deserve this? It's outrageous. We're only thirteen minutes in.
[00:14:31] Unknown:
She did the one that I've done a talking about vibrate.
[00:14:38] Unknown:
I'm sorry. I'm dead, Paul. I'm gonna have to have a word with the editorial foreman for this show. It's getting quite unruly. I mean, it's just outrageous. Yeah. Yeah. Saint John's Wharf. Well, I'll have a look into that. I'll tell you what I've eaten the last couple of days, though. Today was, a whole lemon. I've just eaten whole lemons, so I don't eat the skin. Although I used to have a friend that used to eat the skin. He used to eat the the whole thing. Right? So I peeled the lemon, and, normally, I'd stick it in the juicer or something, but I thought, but I'm letting all the fleshy lemony bits go to waste. Right? So I get the pips out. I tell you, it it fair takes your breath away when you put half a lemon in your mouth.
It's quite a thing. Well, we're gonna pass out. It's, do you know why I do it? I'll tell you. Someone that suggested it's the best thing you can do. Your liver loved it. Pasta in the morning
[00:15:33] Unknown:
What I have is lukewarm water with, the juice of lemon in it. And with the pips, I don't throw them away. I chew them. Now people say they got cyanide in. Yes. They have got cyanide in, but it's very, very minimal. And that does the view a world of good. I actually chew the pips.
[00:15:51] Unknown:
Do you? Yes. Yes. Gosh. They're really bitter, though, aren't they? Well, the cyanide is good. That that occurs in those, Hunza apricots, apricot seeds, apricot kernels.
[00:16:02] Unknown:
Basically, they're
[00:16:04] Unknown:
That's right. And they're prescribed for getting cancers into check. They're, Cyanide and cancer cyanide attacks cancer, but, obviously, it'll attack your whole system if you take too much of it. But I think the minimal amounts in the seeds are okay for you. That's obviously what you've discovered
[00:16:19] Unknown:
with the last few years. Sorry. Sorry. I didn't mean to talk about it. I'm terribly sorry. A lot's rude of me, but what I was going to say is, but I'm rude like that. You know? That so was it stop talking when I'm interrupting? So I was gonna say is is that Yeah. You're with lemon, you see, most of our food is, acidic, and colds and stuff like that feed on acidity on that acid. So you want to change your, system to alkaline, and lemon, believe it or not, is alkaline. That's why you have lemon and honey and things like that. So Mhmm. I drink you've got to rehydrate in the morning, and I use this, zero water filter. I wanna get money from these people. I can give them a free plug. But so no.
With a just a grain of, grain or two of Celtic salt and then some lemon in it. But not freezing cold, lukewarm, so a little bit of water out the kettle. And Yep. That should see off any nasty vitamins in there. But as for vitamin c, you can't beat, for getting your stomach in order, sauerkraut. And you can make it make it yourself. Don't buy it because it's such a easy thing to do sauerkraut. It's the simplest thing in the world. Just cabbage, two ingredients, cabbage and Celtic salt. That's all you need. And it takes three minutes. Is it possible to do cookery shows on the radio? Yeah. Why not? Yeah. What what what drinking with Craddock or cooking with Fanny Craddock? You live with Fanny Craddock? Yes. You too could have doughnuts.
Sorry. I better not take that one.
[00:18:00] Unknown:
No. No. What was the name of the guy that was with her all the time? It was always bubbling around. Was that her husband? He was great, wasn't he? He always he had a monocle as well, didn't he? He did have a monocle. I've forgotten his name. She she deserved him when he was ill, didn't she? Nice person. Yeah. Yeah. She did. Please. What was he now for? Please, Eric, please finish the recipe. What a how long does it take to make it? And then it's cabbage,
[00:18:22] Unknown:
Celtic salt. And how long does it take, and what do you put it in? Do you have to use, like, a crock, or do you use any container? Right.
[00:18:31] Unknown:
I use a large glass container. But what you do, you massage the cabbage. You you obviously slice it up or you can you got I like, you know, it's your own personal taste. And what you do, you weigh the cabbage before you start, and then you put 2% salt in. So you get the whey, and it's times 2% salt. No more, no less, because if you go over that 2%, then it's too salty. Then you mass off the cabbage after it's been sliced up, to make it and it becomes moisture comes out of it. It becomes all mushy and sloshy. And you know when you've got there, it takes about ten minutes, fifteen minutes, something like that. Then you, pour it all into a container. It could be glass container. I prefer glass.
And the most important thing is, before you start, reserve some of the outside leaves and cut the stalk off. And you make sure that all the sliced cabbage is under the liquid. That's very important because anything that's above the liquid, could get bacteria on it. And then you just, put the old cabbage leaves over the top, okay, and put a weight on there. It could be any sort of weight, or you could leave it, but you make you've got to make sure, as I say, everything is under the liquid. You just put the lid on the top, but don't screw it down because it ferments, and you don't want the glass exploding because of the fermentation.
And then you leave it in a very warm place, 70 degrees, 65 to 70 degrees, and you leave it for, some people say two weeks. Some people say three weeks. I'll leave mine two. It's just my taste. And then you seal it. It's when the fermentation stops, basically. Then you screw the lid on, put it in the fridge, and that lasts, oh, for a year, seven months to a year. And if you I mean, if it's not to your taste, you leave it a bit more because the long it's like like mine. The longer you leave it, the better better it is. But our ancestors didn't get have stomach problems as much as we do because it's got the good bacteria in there. And what you may find is when you first eat sauerkraut, you'll get flatulence.
And the reason why is it's killing off the bad bacteria. What's that? That sort of
[00:21:10] Unknown:
and how to buy I have a sneaking suspicion, Eric, that many of your recipes are gonna have the word one of the byproducts is gonna be flatulence in all of them somehow. Well, it's funny you should say that.
[00:21:19] Unknown:
Is it?
[00:21:21] Unknown:
Maybe it's that special Fockham Hall flatulence that comes from out of that space. So Yeah. Cool. I don't know. My mind went elsewhere when he said to me. Someone's not spoken yet.
[00:21:32] Unknown:
I'm just wondering if it's elsewhere when he said massage the cabbage. I I just Who's massaging cabbage?
[00:21:40] Unknown:
Oh, yes. It's it's very, therapeutic, I would say, when you do that. But it's a bloody messy job. Cabbage everywhere. And, but as I say, it's rich with apparently, it's rich with vitamin C and k two. And k two is what fights off the nasty nasty,
[00:21:56] Unknown:
illnesses. So there we go. Well, I feel better for the lemons for the last couple of days. I think they've definitely made a difference, actually. I really do. So, lots of other things to do. I've got to get some MMS, Jim Humble stuff that that in fact, there was a show on today. Someone was talking about it. On, George Hobbs' show, actually. We're talking about that. But, Patrick, how are things in Wisconsin? How are you? And have you just made sauerkraut? You've had enough time there to probably make some sauerkraut. How are you doing?
[00:22:24] Unknown:
I'm doing well. Yeah. It's nice here. We got the window open. It's that nice. It's 14 degrees c, just 57, Fahrenheit. Quite good. What you need, though, Paul, you need a safety pin, a pint of rum, and an old sock.
[00:22:42] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Yeah. The old sock. Yeah. Socks. They're a wearier as you get older. They never match, do they? They never match up the socks. We all got too many white socks in the house. They're never matching up. Everyone's got this insignia on it and another one. It's always a bit of a worry. Anyway, welcome everybody to the show. Look. It only took us twenty minutes to get through all the sauerkraut, the lemons, and all that kind of stuff. It was pretty good. And a shout out to everybody in Rumble. So if you're if you're just tuning in for the first time, probably not, but if you are and you wanna, know where all the, the communication action is, it's over on the Rumble feed. So if you wanna head on over to the Rumble, that's the most active place. We got a lot of people there typing away, and making their contributions in this thing. And Sally says, with regards to our lemon conversation, she peels the lemon close to the skin, not too much pith. Well, there's always a bit of pith taking around here, and, Sally, as you would well know. And then I slice up the peel and put it in some coconut cake that I make. It's lovely. I have the rest of the lemon throughout the day in cups of tea. I yeah. My, I have a good, old auntie friend. Well, a relation on the other side of the family who does that. Yeah. The peel is good. I'm so
[00:23:57] Unknown:
Yeah. I know. The whole thing.
[00:23:59] Unknown:
Oh, I know. Now what's the peel called? That's the zest, isn't it? When you the zest of a lemon is the yellow stuff. Yep. And didn't Bill Gates try to paint the lemon? He did, you know. Tried to paint he tried to get hold of it because if you freeze lemons and start grating off that zest, it's known to be massively powerful at subduing cancers. A bit like, what you were talking about with the pips, Eric. I don't know whether there's cyanide in the zest, but there's certainly something in it. So lemons p 17.
[00:24:28] Unknown:
Yeah. I think it's p 17. But I'll tell you something. Do you know how to preserve lemons that will last in your refrigerator for, about two months? You just put them in a jam jar of water, seal the top, and put them in the refrigerator, and because otherwise, they'll start going off after about a week. You can preserve them for about two months in water. Right. Cool. And that's that's what I do. I just put them in the jar. I keep you know those, oh, those jars of coconut oil, they are perfect for putting lemons in. And I put my lemon in each jar. But I've noticed that my local Lidl, two of them, I can't seem to get that coconut oil, in two two littles where I go. So Really? I don't know whether they stop yeah.
I don't know whether they just run out of stock, but I'm gonna stock up again. I bought a big stock of it because for $1.99, which is about what? Yeah. $3.
[00:25:25] Unknown:
Buy two. Yeah. I used to get it at Aldi. Look at us advertising supermarket chains that are poisoning us, but they they've got some good stuff. You're right. It was only £2 a tin, or a jar, and looks like £5 elsewhere. It was absolutely I the last time I went to Aldi, I bought 48 jars. We're down to the last eight. So I'm due to sort of stock up. I buy them in in bulk when I see them like that. Yeah. Really, really good stuff. Anybody that's by the way, as a slight aside, anybody that's seen the image for today, which is absolutely marvelous. I don't know where I found it, but I absolutely love it. The the five gentlemen in the middle, one's one's not us, but the other four are us. So you've gotta guess which ones we are. Okay. This is, of course, complete nonsense and piffle, but it makes the show more interesting. And, it's got a Russian theme to it, and I'm just wanna sort of move over to that a little bit. And away from the lemons for a while, although we can always come back and talk about lemons and even vegetables later on. Who knows where the conversation's gonna take us? But, the title or the little sort of is this is not the whole show, but I just it's called The Woke Intelligence.
And, that kind of doesn't make any sense, does it? Unless you know what the intelligence were. And the reason why this taps into wokeism, and all this kind of, psychological and sociological engineering and mental decay in the political class, which they always had, but which seems to be really, really obvious. And I came across an article on a website called european conservative dot com, which is pretty good, actually. You look at the rest of the articles. Europeanconservative.com. This was published on January 2025, so just a couple of months back, by Rob Dreyer.
Dreyer is spelled d r e h e r. And I'm gonna read through practically the whole of it because there's a really interesting insight. It just sort of builds the well. The little sort of subhead says the and you'll understand where we're going with this. The rape gang scandal makes it abundantly clear that liberalism, as it has been practiced for decades in the West, is the suicide note of a civilization. And I think we've touched upon this regularly that it absolutely is. I think we would categorize it as a mental illness, which it is. And this article kinda goes in and touches upon it from an aspect I'd not seen before.
So I'll just run through it. And if you wanna just butt in at any point, guys, just, you know, just butt in. It's absolutely fine, because the first bit's a little bit anecdotal. It's yeah. I don't know how long it'll take to go through, but we'll we'll probably finish out this hour looking at this. So he he writes he says, I've just come back from three days on Mount Athos, the Orthodox Christian monastic enclave, on an isolated peninsula in Northeastern Greece. And to enter Athos and its archaic monastic culture is to leave time at least for a few days.
To come back down the mountain and go back to the world is to return to history. And these days, history is moving vividly and fast for Europe towards some sort of cataclysmic reckonism reckoning. What more can be said about the Islamic rape gang scandal in The United Kingdom? Not enough. Not enough until something massive and substantial happens to right what has gone very, very wrong in that country, which has been cursed by its ruling class in government, academia, media, and other institutions. Do you feel cursed by a ruling class, Eric? What do you think? Do you feel cursed by it?
[00:28:57] Unknown:
Yes. And I think it goes back before World War one. Because what did the Germans say? Lions led by donkeys. And this is what we've had all the way along. Lions led by donkeys.
[00:29:09] Unknown:
Yeah. And I think we we've got a very mature sort of political system of decay over here. It's very old, and all the sort of wiles and all the little skills needed to maintain, retain power and to ensure that others don't get anywhere near it have been learned a long time ago and are applied almost unconsciously, I think, all over the place. It's why there's this sort of well, it's not a sort of it. Literally, there is an asphyxiation in public discourse. There isn't any, really, of any substance whatsoever. And, of course, we now got the ultimate noncommunicating
[00:29:40] Unknown:
chump in in Keir Starmer, a man who's, you know, blah blah blah blah blah. Anyway you a look a look at life. Sorry to butt in here, but No. Go on. I was going to say is that, I I keep hearing you. I have an I have an exciting life. I have a walk down to the out of town supermarket, which is about forty minutes walk. It's good exercise. I'm like you, Paul. I like to, you know, I like to it's easy to get in the car and drive somewhere, but, and it's too cold to cycle, so I walk. And, on my journey, there's a doctor's surgery one side of the road, and there's a chemist shop the other side of the road. And it looks like you you never know you used to have, what is it, booting out time at pubs where, you know, the doors would open, then everybody would leave at the same time. I was down there the other day, and I was seeing all these very obese people, ill looking people, leaving the doctor's surgery, going over to the care shop, then coming out their little doggy bags of toxins.
Right. And that is a sad situation we're in because the amount of people that are on antidepressants, that are on, special drugs, this, that, and the other. Can you imagine if that supply stopped? It'd be like a zombie apocalypse, wouldn't it? Think about it. It really would. And Mhmm. And why is it that, years ago, say fifty plus years ago, people have been well, longer than that, eighty odd years ago, people have been through the second World War, but there was very few people on, drugs and things like that. I I might not sound more about drugs. I'm talking about big pharma drugs. But now, I've I don't know what the percentage is, but it's a phenomenal percentage of people on big pharma toxins.
But again, they're being suppressed, these people. And the amount of strange, shall we say, alright, I'll be very blunt, loonies that are all around. There is a lot of very mad people. And, I would dread to think if that supply of, pharmaceutical toxins stopped, we, again, we would have a zombie apocalypse. I just wonder if anybody else thinks about that.
[00:31:55] Unknown:
I think it's kind of, probably a symptom of this long term, reduction in the freedom of speech. It's a reduction in other freedoms. But when you can't really live your culture freely without being criticized and without the force of law now being applied to you, that's what they've done. You know? They said, well, you can't insult people. Well, you can't do this. You can't do that. Actually, if you do that, you're gonna get charged. If you do it online, you're gonna really get charged. This it's been the slow drip, drip, drip, and the closing of all the freedoms. And what it does is it produces a I know it's a cliche, but it does produce demoralized, deenergized people because people are unsure about where they stand in communication and what they can do. And, of course, we've we touch on this regularly, but we need to because this force is always being brought against people. So once you've restricted freedom of speech and freedom of inquiry, which goes with it, you you begin to produce, a deadened people. The people become dead slowly but surely alive. You know. Supposedly.
And that's kind of what we're facing all the time. I I still see outbreaks of cheery Britishness all over the place, usually from me. Yeah. Actually, it's like going, hello. All that kind of stuff. Really lady on the thing. Do you remember Harry and Phil? Was it the slobs?
[00:33:16] Unknown:
Now Mhmm. The people coming out of the quacks, I don't call them doctors, they're quacks. The majority are obese. Most have got tracksuits on. They look as if they they they they're dressed in rags, like slaves, basically. They're just hobbling over the road to the chemist, and then they get in their four by four car to go down to the, takeaway and fill their gob up with, takeaway rubbish. So, you know, it's it's a kind of it's a it's a circle, and I think it's probably similar in America. That's what's happening. It it is frightening. It really is. But how many people do you see that are well dressed? Very few. Most look like tramps.
Scruffy, dirty, smelly, you know? So,
[00:34:05] Unknown:
I'm open to the audience.
[00:34:08] Unknown:
Yeah. Tailored clothing tailored clothing is, you know, it's it's long since gone, long since passed. And I think it's important to really, really highlight what Eric said a moment ago, the antidepressants and and the the rampant move. I mean, every time you deal with any kind of a a government office or or, like, a medical office or health, health care professional, whatever, they give you a questionnaire of, like, 20 questions that, you know, do you often feel, useless or or, helpless? You know? And and you have your five options. You know? Never, sometimes, oftentimes, most of the time, and all that stuff. They are pushing the antidepressants and the antipsychotic meds because they know that all they have to do is flip the switch, shut them off, and a lion's share of the population is going to go absolutely off the rails. That is planned.
Don't fall for it. Don't let them push you into that corner. And if you are on that stuff, pull yourself just kinda wean yourself off of it. This program is not intended to treat, diagnose, prevent, or cure any disease and should not be considered medical medical advice. As always, consult your own local health professional before acting on any information presented here. But for god's sake, try and wean yourself off of that stuff because if your supply dries up, then where are you gonna pay?
[00:35:44] Unknown:
I can see it. I can see it right now. Need every every single one of us, and this is an example, a case in point, need a peer group. You need to be plugged into a group. You have to find a group. It it doesn't even have to be big. It just has to be more than two of you, and it's required. I think it's absolutely vital. If you think about your happy days at school, and mine were, frankly, apart from a few canings, which I didn't deserve, of course, and still intend to prosecute the headmaster even though he's been dead forty five years. But, you you cluster together, and it's a buoyant exuberant sort of time. And then after that, you go to the pub with your mates.
So when you're young and and just connecting up with people all the time, there is a real sort of you wouldn't call it this because it's just normal living, but there's an exhilaration. There's always something that's coming up. There's the moaning about the fact that you've run out of money before the end of the month when you started working, all these sorts of things. But there's a kind of dynamism to it. What's occurred in part, in great part, is this kind of subduing of life, and there are many, many sort of influences, I think, that have brought that about. We we touch upon them here all the time because we're really looking to sort of look at the culture, which is a reflection of these decisions that have been taken, I think, further on up the decision making tree, all by, you know, the master social engineers who literally want a compliant cow like people, which is completely against our instincts and, you know, reduces the quality of our life. I don't think you know, everything is about, the promotion of fear. I normally stay in the bloody obvious here, but it is the news cycle is just one big fear and anxiety inducing role of items.
I I know that good news doesn't work, but that's possibly because we're trained on nothing but bad news. But there are so many good stories that could be communicated on these major platforms, but we know they never will. They're not going to be because these people are very anxious about what might happen should we wake up. So I I take your point, Eric, but I guess that they're much more interested in the zombie apocalypse than they are in terms of a a kind of willfully spirited thinking people. Everything that, you know, you look at has been to reduce that. This article, by the way. Let me just read a little bit more of it here. We're gonna I'm gonna go through the whole thing
[00:38:04] Unknown:
because he just I think Patrick is trying to get out of the back room. If you can, you can add him in, if you can. He's trying to get out. Yeah. Well, he was out, and then he came back in and it yeah. He had to leave and come back in if he used him in the in the backroom.
[00:38:20] Unknown:
There you go. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'm back. Okay. Welcome back, Patrick. You have a nice time there. Right? And then yeah. Have you just a good time? Yeah. Had fun? Alright.
[00:38:27] Unknown:
That was good. Yeah? I just wanted to make a comment that, today, I was at a place where everybody was well dressed. It was a funeral. Right. And it's like they wait until a funeral happens in order to dress nice, but, why not dress nice every day?
[00:38:42] Unknown:
Right. Oh, you could just attend a lot of funerals, I suppose. Too. You could have funeral every day, I guess. Yeah. My son's talking to me about buying a suit. He's got to go to a wedding, which is quite nice. Like, someone of his friends is getting wed. And, he keeps on saying, I've got to buy a suit. I keep on trying to dissuade him from buying a suit. It's not I'm against suits. I said, what you need? I said, how often do you are you invited to places where you're gonna wear a suit? I said, it won't be that often. Very formal. Get a nice jacket and trousers.
Right? Then you can mix and match. Of course, he doesn't really understand. He's got his heart set on a suit. We were watching a a little video the other day of the documentary about Al Capone, And there was all this footage of New York Chicago and New York in the twenties. And, we were basically, what we were both commenting on was the quality of the trousers. The men's trousers were outstanding. Lots of rummage for your scrimmage. Proper. They just look great. Everything just looked good. Everything just looks great. And, of course, that kind of clothing has been removed from the world or is certainly so very expensive that most young men can't buy it. And there aren't any places to go and wear a suit, really. I mean, if everybody's gonna work at home, and I can see that that you know, where do you go? I mean, of course, for this broadcast, I'm wearing a three piece suit, as I always do with a spinning bow tie because, you know, and because it's radio, you can't prove me wrong. This is why I don't have a webcam. Okay? So it's all part of it. But, there's not too many opportunities to get dressed up. And and I'm thinking that that's a sad thing. That is really, really sad. It's why we have to do things. I know we're talking about things, but we have to do things like organize these country dances, which sounds so quaint and wacky, don't they? And I kind of I'm going I'm kind of having a little shiver of embarrassment even thinking about it. But these social scenes that used to be just all over the place, they've all gone. They've been replaced with a kind of more egotistical, individualistic sort of entertainment space, and it doesn't help. I don't think it helps at all. You know? So, you've gotta give people an opportunity to to get dressed up. And I when I used to work at this place in the eighties, they used to have the the annual Christmas bash was at the Dorchester on Park Lane. Okay? And the first year I went, I felt like, you know, a fish out of water
[00:40:59] Unknown:
had to go and hire a dinner jacket because I didn't have one. Went to Mossbross. Remember do Mossbross still exist? Yes. The hiring of suits, do they? Of Mossbross. I'll tell you something. If you wanna buy a suit, if you're someone to get a suit, go down the local charity shop. But go to a posh area, you get better quality there, and you probably pick up a suit for £20 or £10. And Yeah. And the thing is is that, I sometimes wear a suit when I just go out just, you know, if I go shopping or,
[00:41:27] Unknown:
anything like that because it's surprising. People treat you differently when you're wearing a suit. It sounds weird. It's not a stop thing, but you walk into the But you treat yourself differently as well, Eric. Don't you? One Yeah. Treat I mean, you know, as a bloke, I don't get the last time I actually turned out smart was just for this Christmas bash when we went up to this pub, and there were about, 40 people there. It was fantastic. It was just it was just good. I don't expect to do it every night. It's not as if my life depends on it. But the fact that everybody just makes an effort to turn up and be sort of well turned out, it's good. It gives you a buzz. You go, oh, look. We can all get dressed properly. I know it seems idiotic because, you know yep. Three piece. I mean, I often wear a three piece with a pocket watch.
[00:42:12] Unknown:
And, but the thing is I don't tend to have a tie. I prefer to have a cravat. I think that's much better because it's more relaxed. But but really, when you look at the Also, it would offset your cigarette holder with your Fockem Hall filters, wouldn't it? That's right. That that that's right. And also, the Fockem Hall wonder pencil. I'd have to show the wonder pencil in your top pocket. Yes. I've heard that. The Fockem Hall wonder pencil. A thousand wonder pencil. My brain again. Missus Smith wrote in and said it's it's it's, it's very good for her married life. It's,
[00:42:53] Unknown:
a marital aid. Don't know how, but it I just know. You do realize it's the middle of the afternoon in America. Right? Such things. Sorry. Sorry, American listeners on WBN. Sorry for all this. This is all very rather British at the moment. We're in the evening, so we're all getting a bit sort of leery. It happens. You can't help it, you see. So this is what kinda kinda oh, and by the way, I I haven't mentioned to everybody in The States, of course, because you did your clocks at the weekend. We're out of whack. We're out of sync. So this show started today at 04:00 in the afternoon, not 3PM.
And it's gonna be starting at 4PM ridiculously for another three weeks, I think, because our clocks go catch you up on the March 29, the last Saturday of this month. So we've got the thirteenth day, the twentieth, and the twenty seventh. So the next two shows are also gonna start at 04:00 US time. Then we all come back together, and we're all coordinated again. And it's just what a bloody mess. Three weeks have just been out of kilter. It's mad. I don't know. I don't know why major corporations are not winching about it. We winch about it, but it's just mad. I mean, what do they do with all the timetables and everything? And I'm assuming they have timetables or scheduling and this, that, and the other. It's it's mad. You know? They shouldn't change at all, but if they are, they should at least all change at the same time. Anyway, here end of the whinge about the Northern Hemisphere's buggered time schedules. But, back to the story. Now where did I left off? Let's just zoom back in on this because we'll we'll propel us through another little chunk of the show, which is good.
He said, the I'll read the last sentence, the last bit. What more can be said about the Islamic rape gang scandal in The UK? Not enough. Not enough until something massive and substantial happens to right what has gone very, very wrong in the country, which has been cursed by its ruling class in government, academia, media, and other institutions. This has been a gradual cursing. On Wednesday, he writes, at prime minister's question time, so this is sometime back in early January this year, Tory leader Kim Kemi Badinoff or Bad Enoch made a complete fool of Keir Starmer, that can't be too difficult to do, who could only twist and turn as he tried to avoid accountability for the atrocities.
But it is also true that Badenoch's party, the Conservatives, which held power from 02/2011 when reporting in the Times of London First revealed the phenomenon, and there would be many more revelations to come until last autumn's Labour victory did nothing substantial to address the problem. This is true. This is a crisis that consumes the entire British establishment, even King Charles, who disgraced himself with a Christmas address in which he burbled the usual platitudes about diversity being our strength, complete piffle and nonsense. And they say that all the time. But, of course, I I tend to interpret that that when these people are saying this Blair used to sort of, you know, like on autopilot, say it all the time. What he means is diversity is the strength of the ruling class, because it makes them strong at our expense by effectively dividing to conquer that kind of thing is what it what it does.
And he goes on here. He says that the ongoing scandal in Britain stands for the crisis throughout western liberal democracies in which leaders and institutions in the grip of ideology failed both by commission and omission to deal forthrightly with the problem in front of them and usually made them worse. So I I think that there's a there's a similar pattern in The States, isn't there? It's not as demonstrably dramatic as we've had with the Islamic rape gangs here, But there's there's similar pressures building up in terms of the, well, the diversity is our strength nonsense. Although, apparently, mister Trump is supposedly gonna do something to address that, but we will see.
[00:46:44] Unknown:
Yeah. We will see. Rule, though. That's what they've done It is. This is our this is our Britain run the empire divide and rule. And, I was talking to an Indian chat once, and he said that, they've never had, the draft or conscription in India because they didn't need to because there's enough manpower there. It's a bit like China. But he said what they would do, if they needed more manpower, from a certain province, they'll create, start starvation in the province. And the recruiting offices would have no problem at all. It'd be be queues outside. And he said, that's what they do all the time.
And, you know, and I think that they what they do is more psychological. People here, for children, young people leaving school, getting work is very, very difficult now. And getting work that they like and like doing, that's even more difficult. So, where do they go? Army recruit or or to go into the forces. And I think that's what they do. They just make life tough for people, so they go into the forces. And I know that's Yeah.
[00:47:51] Unknown:
Yeah. They do. I mean, it's not all a lot of things could be organized. It's not as if there's not a lot of useful work to be done, but there's no impetus to get it done. There's loads and loads of things that could be We we need optimism.
[00:48:04] Unknown:
Loads and loads of optimism. I I mean, in World War two, did you know what the British Army Ruteco recruiting offices, I was told this, were actually, there's a lot in Southern Ireland because there's mass poverty in Southern Ireland. Yeah. And they got a lot of Southern Irish. Well, they signed up for both sides, didn't they? But because they were neutral. But that's the trouble. This ideological subversion is causing mass pessimism all the time. Look at the sixties. Look at how optimistic it was. In the seventies, it was optimistic. And then it suddenly gets starts getting pessimistic all the way along.
[00:48:37] Unknown:
It kind of in the system. Yeah. I suppose people would blame Thatcher for that and say it became me, me, me decade, which it did. But I wouldn't directly point the finger at Thatcher. I don't think any one person with these things is of course, they have figureheads out there for us to kick about, and we should kick Keir Starmer about a bit because he's absolutely beyond belief. I don't really wanna keep droning on about him, but he is. He's just obviously been picked. We've got a new low tide watermark in political communication skills and everything else. He's just a hideous human being at the moment. Who knows? He might have some redeeming qualities. But you're right. I mean, all of this thing has just been unfolding steadily since 1945.
And even before that, really, you know, the the fix was in in the, like, eighteen hundreds, and then they rolled out wars and so on and so on and so on. Let's carry on with this little thing, though, because I wanna, I haven't really got to even to the meat of the article, but I just like running through it. It goes on. It says, the Catholic church got there first from the moment the extent of its cover up of child sexual abuse by priests began to be uncovered in 02/2002, starting with the situation in Boston. The behavior of the Catholic hierarchy has been lamentable overall.
Yes. There have been some needed reforms and enough apologies to take up a shelf in the Vatican library. And yet, pope Francis continues to indulge and protect alleged sect abusers favored by himself. Last week, he appointed the arch liberal cardinal Robert McElroy of San Diego to the archbishopric of Washington even though McElroy unquestionably turned a blind eye to the sexual depredations of his mentor, the disgraced former cardinal Theodore McCarrick. And we've had the same thing going over here with the Church of England, haven't we?
That's why, what's his name? The ass that was in charge of it had to resign because he'd been covering up for some kiddie fiddling priest for donkey's years. They all knew about it. So this is it's another aspect of it. You know? That aspect there within these hierarchical structures and so on and so forth. Let me read the next paragraph. Jump all over me if you if you get the urge, but I'm still looking up to the meat of it because it's to do with the Russians that I wanna get to. But I just thought the preamble's worth it. Meanwhile, he writes, the moral authority of the Catholic church having crashed, the church continues to hemorrhage members, and yet the pope and the hierarchy carry on as if nothing could touch them.
With Europe threatened by Islamic violence, both of the terroristic kind and of the sort carried out by Muslim rape gangs, Francis persists in in lauding Islam and condemning Islam Islamophobia and in hectoring Europeans to keep open the doors for mass migration, which he does. Now last week was it last week? It was last week. We talked about the crusades. We talked about the book, God's Battalions. We talked about why the crusades were justified even though I hadn't finished the entire book. I've just about done it. But the the the key story was amazing, and I'm still recommending that book if you wanna know as a as a primer. There's no such thing as Islamophobia. It doesn't exist.
A phobia is an irrational fear. That's what it is. An irrational fear of something. There's nothing irrational about it. If you go and read God's Battalions, you'll understand that it's a completely justified fear and anxiety and concern, whatever word you wanna use, about a culture that has systemically proven itself to be hostile to the places where it goes. I know that it is not all Muslims. I know that many Muslims argue against that. I'm not interested either way. As a locationist, this problem is bound to arise again and again and again, and it does when you move, people into the same geographical space.
And so there's no such thing as Islamophobia. It's nonsense. It doesn't exist. Comments, anybody? Anybody think it's a phobia?
[00:52:24] Unknown:
It's an alien culture that has nothing to do with us. And, I you see, the thing is is that this is the big problem. They've got all these they they got all this waffle about your this ist and that ist or what whatever ist or racist or whatever. But, but that was a term that was I think it was Trotsky that first said racist in the early thirties because, Russians were being moved into satellite states and allowing them to destroy the satellite state's culture. Now it is cultural genocide as far as I'm concerned. The people themselves are like, they're pawns.
They've been enticed into this country. Why have they been enticed into this country? And and, really, we've got to look, why has every political party been, or government's come to power has been the most treasonous lot, and how have they got away with treason? How have they got away with it? This is what we got to analyze because they're working against us. You couldn't destroy a country from within better than what they've done. They've done a fantastic job of destroying this country. You know, you couldn't have dreamed of better of it. So
[00:53:45] Unknown:
what is it happening? A great deal of it must be to do I think a lot of it must be to do with the types of individuals that are groomed for political office because they are they're selected learning universities. They are preyed upon there. They are turned in some way. They are introduced to the dark side, but they are. I I have one to say about this. I I wanna hear some more of the meat of of this this article. Yeah. Yeah. Let let's go keep going through that because we're still we're just in the run up to it, really. So he goes on, blah blah blah. He says, next paragraph, with regards to Francis, talking about Islamophobia.
He says, he is not alone. The rape gang scandal in Britain shows that UK Officials from the prime minister down to local council officials and police officers repeatedly refused to come to the aid of working class white British girls being drugged and gang raped by Pakistanis. This is true. They did so out of fear of being racist, ta da, and being thought racist. Yes. It's where this thinking comes from. It's this is the bit. They did so out of fealty to liberal ideology. One aspect of which is belief that any culture other than one's own is right and good and must be kowtowed to. To do otherwise is bigotry.
Now that rings a lot of bells. I know he's just spelling it out, but this is what we're told is that you're a bigot. Right? You're a racist. Right? This is a terrible thing. We've got to be nice to everybody. And you hear that comment or at least I've seen a lot of clips. It may be not exclusively this, but, you know, when we were talking the other week with Monica about, the so called empowerment of women, it's led to a huge and I remember we were talking then that this is why so many women end up becoming liberals, or they do. I don't know. It's what if if it's a causative reason, but they do. They end up becoming liberals and embrace this liberal ideology, and then they become sort of like, we can look after everybody in the world. And you, who live it, you must be nice to everybody. Right?
Because if you're not, this means you're going against our ideology, and we're gonna go nuts over it. And this is what this article in part is is about. So welcome bigots one and all if you're a bigot. That hurt, didn't it? No? Oh, yeah. Oh, I'm really, really suffering on that. So next one he goes, we have been here before. In his extraordinary 02/2023 book, Wonder Confronts Certainty Wonder confronts certainty. Gary Saul Morrison, a leading scholar of Russian literature, writes of how Russian novelists this is the bit. That's what the picture's about on the show. Right? That's why I picked some Russian novelists. Writes of how Russian novelists and writers of the nineteenth and early twentieth century dealt with the big questions that would haunt the twentieth century and our own.
In Mawson's telling, the conflict among writers of the period had mostly to do with reality versus ideology. That is to say, should we strive to understand life as it is or as it should be? This is a very useful sentence because I would suggest that the context for this show and for most of people listening to it is that we are interested in trying to understand life as it is and are not interested in the ideologies of these utopians who are saying it should be like this. You agree? Have I got agreement? Yes. What do you think?
[00:57:21] Unknown:
Well, the fact is is that what we've got now are, thick academics that live in a a kind of theoretical world or not a practical world because none of them have had to do anything practical in their lives. And it's like it's a I mean, I look on communism as a mental illness. It is a mental illness. You know, there's some buts about that. But, and you when you look at you you start a business now, and how complicated the tax system is. Why? Why should these things be complicated? They make finance complicated. Why? So they can hoodwink you. And this is the thing. We government and mafia, to me, government are far better than the mafia because they have got better PR, which is the best PR that our money can They've got psychological
[00:58:13] Unknown:
control of government. Yeah. That's right. They've got a psychological control that you the mafia can't achieve except amongst its own subculture, which it achieves through violence, or at least that's the impression that we get. And it doesn't have to be literally fisticuffs and murder. It can be applied violence. But the governor are absolute masters at that. It's that slow squeeze because the bill and the demand through the door is the regulatory system on people. That's why they're subdued. That's why they're demoralized. I mean, you know, butter I'm I'm the now I'm going to Paul the housewife now. Have you seen the price of butter, Eric? Oh my god. Yeah. It's like two pound two pound 80.
It was like one pound 50, I don't know, about a year ago. It's nuts. I like butter. You know, I have a whole slab every a whole bar of butter every day. You can't have enough. And, it's and that's how web you can see that no one's got any disposable income left. It's it's a ridiculous phrase. I mean, maybe there are a few, but the vast majority don't. They don't have any. One that shook me was I I actually buy a straw. I haven't got a pet rabbit or anything like that. But, actually, you put it on the soil, and it stops slugs attacking your plants.
[00:59:22] Unknown:
Right. Because the bloody slugs may short short work of my primroses, but they don't now because I put straw down. Now a small Mhmm. Bale of straw, which was, you know, a very small bale from Pet Shop was 99p about two months ago. It's now £2.39. So it gone from 99p to £2.39. That's a phenomenal price. Fuck. Phenomenal increase.
[00:59:48] Unknown:
You know? It is. Let me just read one little more bit because we're we're coming to the end of the first hour, and we're we're gonna play a song. I've got a nice song about vegetables coming up. Everybody will be giddy about this. I know you all like a good song about vegetables. I love them. Let's just read this last little bit. So I'm gonna read that last paragraph again very shortly. It says in Mawson's telling, the conflict among writers of the period had mostly to do with reality versus ideology. That is to say, should we strive to understand life as it is or as it should be?
Those Mawson calls the great realists, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Chekhov, and others, the good guys, right, insisted on telling the truth no matter whose ideological convictions were offended. Their opponents, writers whose names have been all but forgotten in the West today, obviously, he's forgotten because he doesn't write any down here, and I couldn't find many, believed that art and literature should be judged by ideological criteria. In the mid nineteenth century, there arose a class in Russia called the intelligence. That's the thing in the title here.
Intelligent with an s at the end. They were known as the intelligence, the equivalent of our woke scholars, journalists, and their sympathizers throughout institutions. Education does not make one an intelligent. A shared dedication to progressive ideology does. Even if one does not agree with the intelligence, one keeps one's mouth shut. This ring bells. One keeps one's one's mouth shut to protect one's own career and reputation. As one Turgenev character says, today, even those who dislike progressive ideas must pretend to like them to gain admission to decent society.
And I think you see the mind control in play, and they were dealing with with this back in the mid nineteenth century, which is quite a thing. Nothing new under the sun. And he goes on to say, sounds familiar, doesn't it? Yes. It does. So, I'm gonna come back to this after the break. We'll take a short break now, so I'll let that run around inside your brains. I hope you've got some, and they're working. By the way, I've put the link to the article in the Rumble chat. So if you wanna pick up the page as we're going through it, it might help. I know this is a bit sort of teachly or whatever, but I think it helps with this stuff because it's useful to go back and and see certain things. Right.
Let's have a song. We have a song in ages. This is by Billy Cotton and his band, and all I can tell you is my dad hated Billy Cotton. Did you hate Billy Cotton? Eric, did you hate I think my dad hated Billy. He was the guy that used to come on and go back. White key. White key. And I was gonna play it, but I I I thought I'll play that. And I went and got a clip to them. I looked at it. No. I can't. It's awful. I just couldn't stand it. But, anyway, this is a really this is a fun little song. This is the marrow song for three minutes. It's all about marrows. It's a really good vegetable, and it's silly, and it's very English, and it's got nothing to do with what we're talking about. So this is three minutes break. You can air your brain a bit. We'll be back after this.
Great lyrics, by the way.
[01:03:12] Unknown:
Down the road, there lives a man I'd like you all to know. He grew a great big marrow for the local flower show. When the story got around, they came from far and wide. And when the people saw the marrow, everybody cried. Oh, what a beauty. I've never seen one as big as that before. Oh, what a beauty. It must be two feet long or even more. It's such a lovely color and nice and round and fat. I never thought a marrow could grow as big as that. Oh, what a beauty. We've never seen one as big as that before. Oh, oh, oh, oh, what a beauty.
We've He was leaning on the garden gate the other day and beckoned to a lady who lives just across the way. He took her down the garden path and suited her with pride. And when she saw the size of it, the little lady sighed,
[01:04:19] Unknown:
Oh, what a beauty.
[01:04:22] Unknown:
She'd never seen one as big as that before. Oh, but a beauty. It must be two feet long or even more. Such a lovely color and nice and round and fat. I never thought a marrow could grow as big as that. Oh, what a beauty. I've never seen one as Then the flower show was held and everybody went to see the great big marrow lying there inside the tent. Soon the judges came along to give the prices out. They only took one look at it and then began to shout. It's such a lovely color and nice and round and fat. I never saw a tomato who could grow as big as that. Oh, I've never seen one as big as that before.
[01:05:56] Unknown:
Three four radio.
[01:06:01] Unknown:
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[01:06:29] Unknown:
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Welcome back to hour two of Paul English live here on WBN three two four. I hope you're all still reeling from that mighty song about marrows. That was,
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Well Hey. He he used to be on a thing called the gang show. Have you heard of that? Ralph Rees? Yes. I do. Yes. When I was very, very young, I remember it, and my dad couldn't stand it. And it was always, groups of kids marching around the stage so that, you know, their their mothers could say, oh, look. It's all Toby walking across the stage. Give us away, even all that crap, you see. But, anyway, I've never forgotten it, and I don't know whether they they got a recording of it. And, because we had a flickering black and white television, and we couldn't afford color in those days. And, I think it was actually before I don't know. I'm showing my age now. But, anyway, they're all sort of singing along. Was it, riding along on a crystal wave? That was it.
You know, all all all showing off I hate that stuff. I hate it. I can't understand that stuff. I I'm shivering and thinking about it now. They used to call the gangbang show because there's a lot of things going up behind the scenes. But, anyway, open the story. Yes. Sorry. Yeah. It is a family show. I should, wish to get. But, I'd well, I just the fire got out of control. It was on stage, and they had the fireman come on squirting all the, you know, foam all over the fire, and they're still singing at the back. They're still carrying on as normal as if nothing's happened. And they just hit my funny bone. I've never forgotten it. But, no. It was, a lot of people, I think it's Dick Emery came from the gang show, didn't they? And it was,
[01:08:18] Unknown:
it was, let's say, Ralph Reeder. But, Yeah. It's one of the best songs about Marrows, though, that I've ever heard. I mean, I don't know how many songs there are about Marrows, but if there are any, that's gotta be amongst the top 10 Marrow songs of all time. Maybe there's a whole album about vegetables. I mean, I'd probably got vegetables. Even you could even do a b side. It could be all about fruit. It's quite exciting, really, when you think about it. The Beach Boys did one, didn't they, on vegetables?
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And you didn't really hear it. Yeah. It was almost instrumental.
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It's just something about I love my vegetables. I really love my my vegetables. I'll and I've I've only heard it once. I've never heard it another time. So You know the bollahatted farmer, Eric? Of course, you do because he's a regular ghost. Well, I think he should make that song his sort of anthem. Every time you bring him on, oh, what a goosy. I've never seen one like that before. I like that lady's voice in the Yes. The middle. I think I'm gonna, yeah, I think I'm gonna get that as a as a sort of, what do you call it, a jingle or something. So I think it's very and there were slight double entendres in there. There were some double entendres. Paul, you wanted to say something?
[01:09:18] Unknown:
Yeah. As far as this being a family show, I think that ship sailed about forty five minutes ago. It's
[01:09:25] Unknown:
Oh, I'm just pretending it's still a family show. Keep indulging me in my delivery. It's huge.
[01:09:34] Unknown:
What about Harry Roy, my girlfriend's, should we say the slang term for a cat? Starting with p and ending in y. And that came out in the nineteen thirties. If Patrick wants to look it anybody looks it up on YouTube, it's my girlfriend's
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cat. I'll be very glad. Shocked when I saw it to think that everybody was smutty and filthy minded in the nineteen thirties. It destroyed my romantic view of a nice, prim, proper, decent, well behaved English types. It just turned out they were just it's just a pot of filth. The whole culture is disgusting. I know exactly what you're talking about, and we can't play it today. But I'll I know it's not see what we can do. We'll have to go off. We'll have to maybe we'll have to write to the BBC and see if we can play it and whether we actually pass censorship clause because it's a it was a pretty outrageous song. But it's not rude. It's really rude if you think it's rude because it's a slang Well, then it's rude, isn't it? Yeah. That's like so it's only only if you think that. Well, I only think everything. Everything that's going on with me is about what I'm thinking. I can't Well, the other one, it's, she must've lost it at the Ester. There's another one.
Steady. Lost it at the Ester. Anyway, swiftly, let's get back to vegetables and the story at hand. Right? Because we're we're moving into the chunky bit. So we've just been discussing, and I'm gonna finish off this, a great article by Rod Dreher from europeanconservative.com. And as I said, I put the link into the Rumble chat if anybody wants it. You'll have to probably scroll up a bit now because I'm all going like Billio, and I'll try and have a look. But let's just carry on with with this. I'll just sort of recap the last bit just before our marvelous vegetables song. It says, even if one does not agree with the intelligence, these progressives, these ideologues, one keeps one's mouth shut to protect one's own career and reputation. As one Turgenev character says, today, even those who dislike progressive ideas, that's you lot, by the way, must pretend to like them to gain admission to decent society. Of course, there isn't much decent society left, but but that was the state mid eighteen hundreds.
He goes on. He says, sounds familiar, doesn't it? We see in that line an explanation for why so many otherwise sensible people, even conservatives, keep their mouths shut. This is the issue at hand. Keep their mouth shut about the rape gangs, about mass migration, and so many other ills that mostly afflicted those outside decent society, like working class white English girls. They don't talk about it because it doesn't affect them, because they're in decent society, and those lots, scumbags, peasants, we're not. And therefore, we're cannon fodder for their ideology.
Anyway, he goes on. He says, as time went on, the intelligence came to this is really when it gets very torturous, and it's kinda sort of delving into how their minds are dysfunctional, I would suggest, because their spirits are as well. Tom, the intelligence came to idealize the people, not based on who the Russian people actually were, but rather as a totem to help them deal with their own psychological feelings of guilt for their own privilege. Now that's a big idea. Yeah. I'm gonna read it again because I think this is the meat of it in a way. As time went on, the intelligence, that's these progressive idealists, these utopians, basically, you know, the bedrock of communists, came to idealize the people. Yeah. The mighty working, all that kind of stuff. Not based on who the Russian people actually were, but rather as a totem to help them, I e, the intelligence, deal with their own psychological feelings of guilt for their own privilege.
Citing the work of two lesser known Russian writers, Mawson says that they exemplify the troubling consequences of basing politics on guilt, which may lead people to adopt whatever solution promises psychological relief even if it does not help or even positively harms the victims on whose behalf the guilt is felt. Is your brain spinning? Because it's a big chunk. That's why I put the article up because you gotta sort of read this thing over and over again. I think there's something there's it just feels right. There's something in this that there is some kind of because they've got guilt, for all bad things that we've done, Someone's got to pay for it, and it's gonna be the working class. It won't be them. But if they if they say it's all of us, they get to look good in part. This is me extrapolating, and I'm bumbling a bit. They get to look good, whilst sacrificing us on the altar of their ideology, saying, yeah. We deserve all this because we're really bad. We're really, really bad. You know?
But they're not gonna pay the price. We are. And this is the thing that, you know, the guy always that told me about the banking. He said, we always pay for their mistakes. That's how the system works. They make mistakes. We pay for it. It's hypocrisy on an institutionalized level. And you can't confront them about this because, they're so uncomfortable about it. They would rather kill you and do. I'm quite happy to send you off to war just to get rid of the plebs you see. It's this. It's an internal problem that has allowed the external disease to come in, seems to me. Paul?
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Thoughts? If
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if there is just so many things wrong with that. I mean, if you said anything against it, you would immediately be labeled a racist and and all kinds in all manner of of despicable person. And it's a load of crap. I I it's the only thing I could
[01:15:34] Unknown:
Sorry. Well, you think the idea that the the intelligence are trying to handle and deal with their own guilt, that this idea is rubbish. Is that what you're saying? You don't think it holds water? I think it's just a little bit of a think I don't think they have any guilt.
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You're you're talking about those those who think they're in control. Right? They don't have any guilt for anything they do. The only guilt that they're going to actually present
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would be the guilt that they're trying to talk the masses into accepting for themselves because that's what they do. That's right. Well, we're horrible. Yeah. There's definitely something We should be I think Right. I don't think they have guilt, but they've based politics on guilt. It's like part of it. I mean, I don't feel guilty for anything, but this this thing comes up all the time, doesn't it, in conversation? People go, well, look at what you did when you went all around the world and killed everybody. Well, I didn't do it. But I go, they've have they got a point? And there are there are aspects of the behavior of the East India Company and the Empire of the City of London that are not good. I don't condone that sort of stuff. They're not good. And, of course, the idea is that somehow Britain benefited as a whole from this is also a lie because most of the people that were in it are the are the peasants described in Dickens' novels. That's who most of us would have been back then in the treadmill, you know, on the treadmill and all this kind of stuff. Let me let me carry on with the next paragraph because it I mean, it's something that needs to be thought about a bit. Obviously, I'm just trying to cover something. It's quite detailed, but I think it's I'm I'm I'm interested in this aspect of it. He goes on. He says, to help members of the British ruling class feel better about themselves, whether you go along with this or not, the whole of Britain had to be wrecked through mass migration and deliberately turning a blind eye to the evils done by non white Britons.
You see, there's something that's maintaining this. You know, it's because it's been going on for decades. Why is it how is it maintained that normal people go, this is wrong, but the people in power go, they just ignore that. They just care on making it worse. He says, running sorry. Turning a blind eye to the evils done by nonwhite Britons. The same logic explains the rampage of gender ideology, which has resulted in the lifelong sexual mutilation of gender dysphoric British children, which is another sickness. As Mawson explains in chilling detail, the utopians of the Russian left, once they gained power in 1917 in the revolution, sacrificed the lives of tens of millions of innocent people to pay homage to ideological principle.
Yet as Dostoevsky and only Dostoevsky in Morrison's judgment saw, the seeds of the twentieth century's mass murders were already in plain sight in the writings of the nineteenth century progressives. Now it could be that there's another explanation here as well because there are two types of people that we're talking about with regards to Russia. But these sorts of behavior patterns seem to be exemplified. You know what I'm saying? I'm being quite diplomatic as I'm talking about this. So most people will probably know or at least should be familiar with the idea whether they subscribe to it or not. As laid out that the Russian revolution is not Russian, and it isn't.
It wasn't the Russians killing one another. It was another force that got enabled within Russia that systematically tunneled it out and, brought it to the most hellish situation. They really did. I mean, it's just it's horrific. But we've got kind of an echo of it here. There's something it's the same sort of unfolding of, behavior patterns and that those that are in power that are supposed to look after the people. I know that sounds pathetic and is pathetic, but that is apparently, what it says on the tin, they don't.
They actually make everything worse for us. Do they not?
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Yes. Yes. Yep.
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Yeah. I I agree.
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A lot of crap. But but but,
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really, what gets me is all the time you're getting negativity, And like attracts like. They want us to be depressed. They want us to be down. And this is why I think our greatest weapon is laughter. We should laugh at them. I mean, throughout my our youths, when we were young, it was nuclear war threat. Nuclear war, we'd be griddled alive. There's films, there's documentaries, all shock horror, grim. Now what we got? Pestilence and plague. Oh, get a squirt of bills toxic, armbore in in in you. You know? All that's all it is is peddling fear porn over and over and over again.
And let's face it, a fearful population is a controllable population. And this is why I think we've just got to, adopt a mentality. This looks at it as a pantomime and laughs at it all the time. Yeah. You wanna go and invade Ukraine? Well, go go on, stoma. Piss off. Go there. You know? Good luck to you. Or sorry. Russia or you wanna invade Russia? Yeah. Go on. Sod off. You know? It's it's just fear, fear, fear. I mean, I'd hate to be of military age now, a teenager. Must be terrifying for poor kids. I mean, it's the the threat of being sent to war, what a horrible thing all all the time. You know? But I don't think anybody's gonna go, Eric. I think there's something I mean,
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whatever this mindset is that they have, it's actually this is the problem because it's this it's this mindset that can't seem to be killed off. I mean, I think it it's got to be in some way. And and then when we get distracted by a war, it's actually moving away from this psychospiritual disease that's right at the heart of things. There's something not right with these people. They don't subscribe, to obedience to god. In very simple terms, it's simply that. And, this sort of ego driven thing that they have, you know, and it's you know, all the old cliches are true. The road to hell is, literally paved with good intentions, and it's a bloody road. And we've said before that the Liberals, the left, the socialists, the commies, have just got literally rivers of blood behind them, and it's all done in the name of creating utopia.
If only you would tolerate all this stuff, and those of you that won't tolerate it, we're gonna kill you. And they don't even hear that as an ironic or weird thing.
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If I could just pick up on one thing. You said people won't go to war. Well, there's two examples of this. British this is one thing this country is very skilled at, and that is propaganda. We're really good at it. And the situation in 1939, this shot this, country was very anti war, totally anti war. And, in the nineteen thirties, even the British Legion, which wasn't Royal, and it didn't become Royal until 1971, sent a delegation to Germany to prevent another war because of the horrors of trench warfare of World War one have been over less than twenty years. So it's just a generation ago. Now what happened within a matter of weeks, they turned public opinion round from anti war to chomping at the bit for pro war.
That literally in a matter of weeks with with, Poland. Now they'll do it again. They'll have a false flag. You know, what was first World War, that was Germany marching into Belgium. Now second World War was Germany marching into Poland, which was going away from us, not giving this country any threat at all. And what is not said is that, and there's there's evidence of this. My father says this in his book. The suicide rate amongst teenagers and youngsters went through the roof, and there was lists of names in the newspapers, almost every day of people of military age that have committed suicide.
Very, very high rate. And I think it must have been similar in Germany as well. I don't know. But they can turn public opinion around on a sixpence. They can literally turn it around overnight.
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People are that dumb. That's stupid. Look at what we've done for years. I include myself in that dumbness. I'm serious. Just less dumb than I used to be. But I'm still dumb enough to not be able to affect the situate. I mean, that's really trying to find out how and why they think, not because I'm just curious about it, but to bring it to a halt or to get away from us, to find some way of stopping it because you got people go to war. Nations go to war because somebody thinks it's the thing to do, and they're able to transmit that thought to the cabinet. And all this force comes into play and people feel compelled. And as that wave goes down the command structure, thugs are quite happy to come and beat up their fellow countrymen, I. E. Press gangs to get them in the military because it's for the national good. There is no national good. What they mean is it's for the good of us running your nation.
They're always separate from us, aren't they? They always have been. That's right. They intend to maintain that, and you're not supposed to find that out. They don't want that kind of stuff. Let me carry on with these things because we've only got about four paragraphs to go. He says, what Britain has lived through and what many European countries are living through as well is the cost of the utopian ideals of their liberal elites of both the left and the right. This is true. There is no right. There is no there's no the idea of there being a a far right is just hilarious. I mean, it's just it's nonexistent. There's nothing of the sort. He goes on, after all, what was conservative German chancellor Angela Merkel's infamous 02/2015 declaration opening Europe's floodgates to migrants?
We're Schaffen Dass, we can do it. Is if not a manifestation of liberal utopianism. In other words, this is a great challenge to let everybody in and mingle together, but we could do it. It's gonna be great. You know? It's just nuts. Britain today has a feckless Labour government in part because the conservatives in power, despite all their stated convictions, also lived by the same hollow beliefs. The raped working class girls of Britain are the price people pay for liberal ideology. Mawson writes that the great Russian realist refuted progressive theories, not by taking them on directly in their novels, but by showing what it means to live by them. Well, Britain now has its answer, and so does every European country cursed by migrant rapes and other crimes.
The rape gang scandal makes it abundantly clear that liberalism, as it has been practiced for decades in the West, as distinct, for example, from its Hungarian version, is the suicide note of a civilization, which it is. Both The UK and the European Union are rapidly approaching a decision point. A cataclysmic reckoning will be a horrible thing to live through, but the only thing worse is no cataclysmic reckoning at all, just resignedly going gently into history's long and barbarous night, which which is generally what it feels like is happening. You know, we're talking about demoralized fat, people who are not well dressed. These are all signs of it. You can just it's like a disease everywhere.
It's gradual, and it's incremental, and there's a sort of mental and physical slovenliness building up all over the place. Two paragraphs to go. He finishes. He says, we saw what happened to Russia when those in positions of leadership refused to take the warnings of its Dostoyevskis seriously. The same is true of us in our time. Indeed, it is happening right now. The West is burning while the Starmas, the Scholzes, the Macrons, the Vondelayans, that's asshole of lying. That's how you pronounce a name. And even the pope all fiddle, which they do. And he closes out with this. It says, on Mount Athos, a priest told me that the monks there are so removed from the world that they were late to learn about the existence of the second World War. I'm not sure if that is true, but experiencing how cut off they are deliberately from the outside world, even in the Internet age, it is at least plausible that the monks in their medieval peninsula readout have an excuse for not seeing what's happening in the world beyond their personal horizons.
We do not. And this is true. We don't have an excuse, but we're not sort of reading the signs right or as well as we could. Anyway, I know there's been a kind of chunky heavy piece, and I'll put the link in again in rumble, but I think it's worth a read and a reread simply because, well, it pulls together a lot of threads. And I I think there is something to do with the you know, we've said it here before. The people that are in charge are mentally ill. How do we get that to such a thing that we can get them sectioned? I think I I basically think that utopians need to be sectioned because they don't understand reality, and they don't want to. And reality includes all these qualities that we're looking to have back in our life, like decency, you know, and families and these things, the things that make life worth living. We're only here for a short period of time, and, you know, they're doing their damnedest to ruin even that. The, the blink of an eye as they were as we would say.
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So anyway set up our own separate government. Although, I I personally am against government. But the thing is, anybody that stands up against them will have to have top, security around them because they'll be taken out as they always had been taken out. Because, again, we're dealing with mafia. That's it. And they're possibly a politician that goes rogue, maybe. Mhmm. That that is a possibility that knows the ropes and knows how to get away with it. I don't know. We're not if I may, we're not
[01:29:25] Unknown:
dealing with the mafia because the mafia respected family. They respected order, hierarchy, and a decent cannoli. These people are scum. The mafia is a step above these people. As horrible as that sounds, as weird as that sounds, the mafia had more order and more concern for the mafia actually understood that you can't kill somebody and continue to collect protection money from them. You have to protect their life if you continue to want to harvest them. These guys, they're spraying chemtrails. They're putting chemicals in in food, the water, the air. They are killing us at every turn.
These guys are simply psychopaths, narcissistic psychopaths. They're not the mafia. Sorry.
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My We need some ant Excellent point. We need we need, like, a bug spray, anti psychopath spray. Or how is the problem solved? You see, governments seem to be an unavoidable part of human nature. They seem to be. I'm not saying they have to be. They all start off with good intentions, at least according to their own mythology, and they all tend to go wrong pretty quickly. Because they become a nexus of power, certain types of individuals, people that we are currently calling sociopaths and psychopaths, are naturally drawn to it because they perceive themselves to be the rightful rulers of everybody else. And there is definitely a type of person that thinks like that and comes from a long line of breeding with that kind of attitude. I mean, I I mentioned this thing.
What's her name? Elizabeth Manningham Buller, who used to head up MI six or ML five, one of those. During these trainings that they were giving to agents in PowerGen in Birmingham in the nineteen eighties, there's a whole series of blogs about this. We're abs absolutely fascinating. It was all under the aegis of British Royal Arch Freemasonry. And Royal Arch Freemasonry is a subset or a side set or whatever. Who cares? It's just another club within a club or the over club. I couldn't care less. She said, we are the people that are born to rule, and we're going to rule. And that attitude is very, very strong with them. And when they've got that belief and are projecting that all the time, it starts to happen.
Now in other words, your thoughts do manifest in reality out there. And when we look at beautiful things, like beautiful buildings, that's the result of obviously good quality thinking at the time and people willing to do it. Now we've got you know, I I pick on the buildings because they're the most obvious symptom in a way and people's dress. So we do we just form new institutions? It's as if we have to form our own institutions, and then we're faced with the challenge, but there's no other way around this if if we think this is a good use of one's life, which I think it is, of how you deal with stop with it being infiltrated because it will be.
And are you strong enough to smash people in the teeth when they start destroying what we're trying to build because that's that's really what's going on all the time Yeah. This this fight.
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When when I first started studying architecture, first things they said is that the way something is built works on your subconscious, and it creates a kind of, atmosphere or a mood. I'm going back quite a few years now. Mhmm. And that's quite true. You walk along one of these modern shopping precincts or anything like that. It's horrible. But you go to somewhere quaint with old Gothic buildings, beautiful, jetties, like York, the champ was in that. It does something to your subconscious. It may it's a feel good situation. It makes you feel good. And this is what they're trying to snub out because, again, it's all designed to, make you manic depressive.
And I actually think that architecture has something to do with the amount of people on, these antidepressants. I really do. Because they're building depressing areas. You go to places like Harlow in Essex, it looks as if they had loads of con cement that it delivered, and they didn't know what to do with it. So they may build, Harlow. Horrendous. It's everything's concrete. Everywhere you look, it's concrete. Concrete is fine when used correctly, but it's cheap, and it's it's bland. It's gray. It's horrible. And, this is a big problem. And I can guarantee, I mean, where you live, I bet you you've got some really old style buildings.
In the sixties, there's a there's a concrete dump in the middle of them. They do this all they do this all the time. And the thing that, they like doing now is heating the facade of a building and then gutting the inside and turning into offices and things like that. That is just not criminal. It really is. Absolutely criminal.
[01:34:54] Unknown:
I mean, I think at the root of it, we come down to, you know, the old the old sort of, conflict, which is no man can serve two masters. You cannot serve god and mammon. And in the past, a greater percentage of people were serving god. And in the present, that switched over to mammon. It's very simple terms. It's been morphing towards it for a long time. The commercial control of the planet is the thing that has molded much of the way that we live. We're trapped by it. You have to pay the bills, all this kind of stuff. I mean, I think, you know, dealing with what appear to be relatively small things, although council tax is not a small thing. This is like going from the big to the very, very small. But learning to defeat them at these levels and finding ways to defeat them or to stop these ways of encroaching upon us, has got a great deal of merit in it because it sets an example, maybe a tone for future things.
The buildings that we talk about, and I'm just going back to buildings again that we like, I work on the basis that the architect themselves were, to some degree, inspired by an understanding of life beyond their own life. Whereas the materialists, as it were, you know, this whole science thing, this is all there is. It's miserable, and it's wrong, and it's incomplete, and it's wretchedly poverty stricken. It's just plain wrong. When they when the Royal Society was formed in 1700 or whatever it is, when they decide we're gonna have this Royal Society of Science or whatever, I haven't got the date, there were about 50 people that signed up for it to get it rolling. And the day before they all signed up, every single one of them was an alchemist as well as a scientist.
That is, there was an aspect of their education, of their daily life where they spent time studying metaphysics, the nature of existence, not just what it's made up of. And they decided that they would remove that from, like, science curriculums, that everything had to be materialistic, had to be measured in terms of measuring instruments. And if you can't see, it doesn't exist and all this kind of stuff. And so one doesn't exist and all this kind of stuff. And so one fell swoop, they they they it was an attack on things like poetry and creative writing and thought and dreaming, all of those things that oh, they're to be dismissed. The world doesn't need all that stuff. It absolutely needs it.
It absolutely needs it. It's it's completely vital to the idea of life being a buoyant. If, you know, if you wanna embrace it, how are you to bring beauty in the world if nobody's envisaging it? This is why we've just got all this miserably designed junk everywhere. It's awful.
[01:37:37] Unknown:
To break the Christian spirit. Yeah. You're right. It's interesting that you mentioned Mount Athos. I had been invited to go to Mount Athos Right. A long while ago. What what it kind of inspired me to learn about Eastern Christianity was I had gone to visit a friend of mine in the seminary in The Vatican. And he, one day, told me to go to the orient Oriental Institute, Pontifical Oriental Institute. And I and there, there were, people from Russia and from the Eastern Christian, you know, Ukraine and other places, Greek. And they had a liturgy that looks a lot different than, I mean, it looks it's different than the Roman Catholic, you know, the in the West here, the type of liturgy we have.
It's quite Mhmm. Quite unique, quite more reverence for what's what was going on, at least compared to what it was like then to go to church, because we our spirits kind of been kicked out of us in the West after World War Two. And there is a collective guilt in the ruling class, where you can see that they have to create a false narrative in order to cover up the crimes that they committed in bombing Germany. Yep. This is this plays a lot into it. And what you've kind of what you read about the Muslims, I don't fear any Muslims. It kind of reminds me though of Anthony Burgess's book, Clockwork Orange, which got made into a movie by Stanley Kubrick, of all people.
And that notion that you can correct the person's morality through scientific methods and not the church. It kind of makes light of the Church of England for good reason, I think, too. But, it it reminds me of that notion that, you know, it's the same kind of thing. It's like a rape gang, going around raping and pillaging and creating violence, and then they can't spiritually correct him. So they come up with a scientific method of just showing him just the worst violence in the world. And it's it's all done in the name of science to reverse engineer and make him a good person, the the character of Alex in that novel.
Yes. It it just reminds me of that. And and I I want so I had an opportunity to go to Mount Athos. I never took it, but it was a a business partner of my dad's. He was a part of the Red Lake Tribe in Minnesota, and they were taking fish because we have a lot of carp here that was brought back in the day after the Civil War. They figured it would be a good idea to stock it up with carp, and now it's an invasive species, and nobody eats it. It's just disgusting So what they were doing is they're bringing it Russia flash freezing it and putting it on ships bringing it to Russia. Well, they they bring it to Russia and The first thing that happens is the Russian mafia takes takes all of the fish.
He steals it from them and feeds it to the people. This is back in the early two thousands. This was taking place. But I remember being invited to go to Mount Athos, and I researched it. And it's interesting because there are different monasteries on the peninsula and each according to a different nationality. So there's the Greek, and then they have Serbian. And a friend of mine was actually friends with the Serbian patriarch. And they showed me the big cathedral in Belgrade that they were building at the time to Saint Sava that, exists now. And there's a lot of rebuilding of churches in the Soviet former Soviet countries.
As a matter of fact, in Russia, Serbia, and Ukraine. But you the the thing of it is they wanna divide Christians from each other and get get us to see that Christianity is the enemy. And what it's what's happening in Ukraine is a perfect example of that because they should be getting along. These are two Christian nations, two Orthodox Christian nations. And yet they're at war with each other because they've been manipulated by an outside force. It's it's a very sad state of affairs that we're in. And I don't blame the Catholic church like this the author does for this sexual scandal of the pedophile priests allegedly.
[01:42:22] Unknown:
Oh, I don't think he was blaming it. It was just citing it as an example. I put link, by the way. It's worth reading it. But Yeah. Yeah. I'd refer to the there's a work that, E. Michael Jones did about this because he covered it quite extensively.
[01:42:42] Unknown:
Pennsylvania, Josh Shapiro, and there was another DA in Pennsylvania, Lynn Abrams, where they, they went they have the power of the press, and they went after priests. This was 02/2002. Well, what was happening during 02/2002 was they were trying to get people to go to war with Afghanistan and Iraq. And the main opposition to that war was the Catholic Church where people would go to church on Sunday, and the priests would give a sermon against the wars. And it was a way to shame them and to make them fearful of speaking out publicly against this popular effort that they wanted to they wanted to make it a popular effort to go to war.
So they purposely accused hundreds, if not thousands of priests throughout the country and put like, for instance, what Lynn Abrams was doing was she was accusing them, and they would print, like, 200 pictures of priests in Pennsylvania in the newspaper that were accused. But then they were never all there were no charges brought. They were just accused. And then it would go away, and there'd be no apology for that. And and then it becomes a popular perception. Well, the Catholic church protects all these pedophile priests. What they were doing is it's the black you know, the blackmail operations that they pull is it's tremendous in getting these politicians to go in line with going to war.
And what is, for instance, the Epstein thing, that's a that's a hot button thing with what Robert Maxwell and his daughter and Epstein and all these other characters Les Wexner Yep. Are all involved in. And it's getting people through the sexual sins because they're more easily controlled that way. I mean, you can, you know, oh, he's cheating on his wife. That that's kind of the way it used to be. And now it's gotten to the point where it's like you got these these LGBT freaks controlling the narrative on the popular culture in the in the news and whatnot.
So it has to get more extreme as time goes on. So they have to pull out things like that in order to get people to shut up. Because if you're if you're gonna have a war, you can't have opposition to it. Just like in World War two, they had to shut down all the people who were speaking out against it, like father Coughlin, who had millions of people listening to him. And then they had to create this licensing scheme through the FCC, create a an organization in order to license people's right to broadcast whatever, you know, on the radio waves and use that as an excuse to shut them down. And then they finance other clerics, like Fulton Sheen and Jack Warner from Warner Brothers, you know, to get the get the Christians to get along to go in in in quite another crusade of of a sort because they can't do it without Christians because Christians make up the majority of pop the population still.
You know, it's dwindling, and they want it to dwindle because it's the main opposition to what's going on there. It's just like Yes. You in in London, you know, you got Londoners that belong to a certain race that can go fly to Tel Aviv, engage in a gay orgy, and then go out and shoot Palestinian children, and then fly back on the weekend back to London, and and it's all normal. I mean, this is the the level of insanity that we have going on. But, I I just wanted to make that point that it's it's just it's not good.
And for some reason, Clockwork Orange came to mind because of the rape gang notion. I mean, that that's what happened as a consequence of of these these wars. And I'm reading right now Pope Francis's autobiography called Hope that just came out last month. And it's it's interesting. You can kind of see where he's coming from a little bit more. He was from originally from Piedmont in Italy. His grandparents were and they they they were anti war. They were against World War one. So they moved to Argentina to get away from that because they saw so many people getting sucked into these wars for nothing for these rich elites that didn't care anything about them and was just sending them off to be cannon fodder. It's the same kind of situation that's happening now.
So there's more there's more of the story of of what's going on. And and as far as pope Francis, he's one of the few leaders in Europe that have any clout that actually opposes what's going on in the the hot zones of Ukraine and and Gaza right now. Like, he takes the he calls a a parish in Gaza every almost every day now, and he's been doing it since October 7. So the he's not on the side of the people creating these wars. If anything, I think he I mean, he might not be, but his comments about allowing people to come here is just completely not. Yeah. I know. I mean But that's the consequence of these wars too. You have to admit that if it weren't for these wars, they wouldn't have a reason to come.
[01:48:03] Unknown:
What what reason But but they've always I mean, you could yeah. Well, maybe. But that I mean, you could say that they've always had a reason to come, but they just couldn't get here before. So they're being enabled to come. Yeah. And I I think that's true. And then and they but I think a lot of the
[01:48:20] Unknown:
the troublemaking that goes on in those places happens so that it agitates in order and it's the same group of people that these the race of people that we're talking about, that go in there. And they they're the ones that benefit from the wars. Let's put it that way, because it's just like in the Iraq war. What benefit did it do to anybody in Europe or in America? Nothing. But it benefited that group in West Asia that had taken over and are trying to create a greater state than what they already have.
[01:48:55] Unknown:
Yes. So that's my 2¢. How do you I mean, it's a every time we acquiesce or do a thing, it's as if we don't wanna be tough. And I don't wanna be I you know, the idea of people having to suffer because of all this, it just repulses us all around. But the ones that are gonna do the most suffering are us, and I think we are. Everything has been destroyed. If okay. I just come back to this thing about locationism and the fact that you can't mix races together on the same bit of real estate. Now it seems as though this is now gonna be impossible to correct and reverse. No. There's no will to do it, or there appears not to be. I've got plenty of will to do it, but I don't think I'd last ten minutes to get shot. I mean, I think the thing is that no one man can change this.
I mean, it's they never have, really. I mean, the idea of sort of fascist dictatorships, I was thinking, they don't really exist because they've got to have a body of men around them to carry out the orders. And you find historically that within that body of men that are very near power, they all want it too. And at some point, it all goes pear shaped, and they undermine the leader. These sorts of things happen. So how to affect these situations is tricky because, I mean, what we're faced with, therefore, is just compromise on everything, no satisfying life, and the inability for us as a race to thrive.
And, of course, what's happened, yet again, we are paying not just for the mistakes, but for the intentional actions taken historically by our governments for hundreds of years. But, you know, normal people in America and Europe never wanted not aware of it. I don't remember my dad saying. I just it was great that World War two started. I just couldn't wait. Nobody said that. Happened. Like, Eric was talking about, they come up with something, another nine eleven.
[01:50:36] Unknown:
Yep. That's traditionally traditionally, that's what they do. That's the conservative. The Republican way of doing things is create a big distraction for everybody to get motivated around to go and fight a war because you have a new enemy that pops up out of nowhere. You know, like Al Qaeda or ISIS, you know, happened back 2011 whenever that cap happened because or it was probably before that with nine eleven and all that. They tried to make it out that Al Qaeda, which is the CIA front, trying to get people whipped up into this area.
And we gotta go and kill these people because they wanna kill us for our freedom. It's like, what freedom What freedom are you talking about? You know, and how how envious and jealous are they that they would want to do that? And why are why are why are they in such a poor condition? What made them that way? That's nobody wants to deal with those issues. It's like the the whole migration thing from Africa. It's like, why would they want to send their best people, you know, these doctors and lawyers and, you know, that's an excuse to to get people to come in. Well, we need we need workers. We need laborers because no one's having children anymore because of the Malthusian policies that were put in place by these Western governments. And it's like, if you'd followed the Christian way of doing things, you wouldn't have those Malthusian policies for one and be having a good society.
And that's that's the issue. It's like, why are we killing ourselves and then giving an excuse for people to come in and take over. It doesn't make any sense.
[01:52:23] Unknown:
I know. But it's not we, is it? Well, it isn't. I know what you're saying, but it's not if you're gonna ask normal people that's doing it. Of course. And they're doing it to us. And it's so, I mean, you know, this thing about whenever these politicians say we, I never accept that I'm included. I don't wanna be included. You don't get to speak to me. I'm not part of your we. Go away. But it's it's I mean, otherwise, we're just gonna acquiesce to everything. It's this I mean, I thought the article's right in the sense that this is a slow dribbling burnout of everything until we find a way to correct it. And, of course, the way does exist.
And it is it is Christianity in the best sense of the word, but it's not the organized religious versions which get corrupted as well. That's my take on it. How you actually structure these things is another challenge. But I think that, this is why I think that race is so important because it we're like different operating systems. Kept apart, it functions well. Each internal network amongst racial members of it functions as well as it's gonna ever function and and has got the best chance of producing happiness for people in that race. But when you put them in different locations, it's like a virus. Naturally, each operating system becomes a virus to the other one because they're not aligned. They're not right or wrong. They're just different.
And, it's like, you know, before, like, playing music in different keys. It's just discordant. It causes it wears. Everybody can tolerate it for a while, and then bang, something happens. And, of course, our brains have been massaged day and night by the media, which is in the hands of the agitators. We know all this. It's just looking at ways to actually sort of bring it to a halt.
[01:53:59] Unknown:
Yeah. And I totally see where you're coming from. And in in my mind, a race coincides with one's faith, one's understanding of of the world and the outlook in general, because, you know, your family you grew up in determines a lot about your character and not how you're going to behave in society. Yes, it does. And you It does. And and that to me, that's that's the ultimate race is is your faith, your your your being, you know, like, what why are you here? That those important questions that don't get answered in the schools, like these schools are set up, these government schools, you're supposed to teach morality. That's the main reason that their children go to school is so that they can be moral people.
So that if you have a constitution of that you follow of law and order, that you're able to uphold that. But the moment that you start teaching them perversion and making little Johnny think he's little Susie, you're gonna confuse them, and they're gonna grow up and be adults real quick. It happens really quick. And then they're gonna have to they're gonna be the politician, the next generation of politicians, and they're gonna be all messed up and not able to keep whatever form of government that we have going. And our Yeah. The the traditions that our families held to for centuries will disappear like that because Well, they are disappearing. Like the morality.
[01:55:25] Unknown:
They are disappearing. And I guess we're not facing a problem that previous generations in in the past haven't faced. They've faced hellish things. As far as most of us never expected to face something as bad as this is. About Dostoevsky.
[01:55:38] Unknown:
He started out as, he started out as kind of like a communist, revolutionary type person, then he had a dramatic change in his life when he was put in prison and gonna be executed. And at the last minute, in front of the firing squad, they they pardoned him. Mhmm. And then he became a Christian, and he really advocated that toward the end of his life that that's the only salvation out of the the government problem that we have. And the obvious chaos that was going on at the time in his his century, which wasn't that long ago when you think about it. And it affected what we're dealing with right now with with, you know, Russia.
Russia, Russia, Russia. It hasn't changed. No. It hasn't. It shows you that, though, it shows you, though, that there is a that we have to be able to get along in the world with people from other nations and that there should be a mutual respect between nations that goes on. And that's not this not that's not to, have a false, you know, the social is this international socialism, right, where every religion is equal, and and every race is equal. It's it's all it's bunk. It's meant to it gives you a false hope and a sense of security that isn't there because not every race and faith that people believe in is equal.
And some are some are way worse than others. Some are way like, Christianity, in my mind, that's the pinnacle
[01:57:19] Unknown:
of institutional power. Well, for us for us, it is. Yeah. Historically. And It is. Racially, it is. It might not be very good for Aborigines. I don't mind. I'm not you know, I think the imposition of it is where it all goes wrong because, it's run contrary to what the instruction says. Yeah. It is designed for one people.
[01:57:41] Unknown:
It's like the missionaries of America. They they had a tremendous respect, the early missionaries, for the people that lived here. They would come here and codify their language, write down their their legends and the myths and that sort of thing of what they believed in. And they log that down and got to know those people. And as a consequence, those people benefited from that experience.
[01:58:07] Unknown:
And in that Well, we say they did, we say they did. And from
[01:58:11] Unknown:
from my view They did because I wouldn't be here Yeah. Right now if it weren't for that. Because you know, you go back far enough, and you've got people who came here long ago that that intermingled and created a civilization that functions whether it's, you know, on a good trajectory now that's the consequence of, you know, our parents' generation.
[01:58:34] Unknown:
Well, I don't know. I I think it's a I just always think whenever I we try and see things from our perspective about what's good. I I know what works for us. I know we're people that make tools. We've made a lot of tools. It's because of the tools that we've made that the world's changed so much, particularly over the last five hundred years. It's just been astonishing, all these tools and things that we create. But if you're a red Indian living on some reservation these days, demoralize. I mean, I don't know quite what they're like. I know they've got casinos and things. But what happened to them is now what's happening to us in a kind of different way, a different phase, but it's it's like a removal from the very things that connect you to your way of life. I mean, you could I I accept that maybe these things are just unavoidable. History scene is just lifted with it all over the place. No one can keep their business to themselves, and maybe we've just got this urge.
You know, there had to be the Roman Empire because if there hadn't have been, there would have been a Turkish one. It's like we're saying it last week. You know, if they hadn't if they hadn't repelled, the Islam in Spain and elsewhere, you know, basically, you would have been speaking Arabic right now. There wouldn't have been a sort of European, growth out of England in the fifteen and sixteen hundreds. It wouldn't have happened because we'd have been completely colonized by it'd been Islam we'd have been Islamized by then. I mean, I heard someone talking about Islam who's saying, you know, what have we contributed to the world? It's not that much. I'm not trying to pick on them. It's just a different culture.
But but maybe they don't have to contribute stuff to the world. Why would I even measure if they were at peace? But, of course, the history of that one is that it's it seems in great part to be based on agitation. Now I'm quite prepared to have someone sort of verbally take me apart on that, but that's my current impression of it. So it's the it's when they meet. And is it always the case that civilizations are gonna clash and gonna meet one another and and generally, you know, it's all gonna get cocked up? Anyway anyway, where are we now? Oh, look. We're coming to the end of the show. I bet I'm I'm gonna play out with a song. So we'll be back again here on WBN. Look at that. Just really running for the mouth. Only fifty seconds left.
We'll be back again here on WBN same time next week, which is 4PM US eastern. We're gonna carry on a bit longer. If you wanna tune in, go to PaulEnglishlive.com and click the rumble link. I'm gonna play you out with cherry pink and apple blossom white by the fabulous Thunderbirds because that's the sort of guy that I am. It's only two minutes long. We'll see you next week. And as I said, you wanna carry on listening, hop on over and join us in Rumble. We'll be back after this. Short and very sweet. Fabulous Thunderbirds, cherry blossom pink, apple blossom white. There's a different rendition of it for you if you've not heard that before. I used to play that in a band, actually. How about that? I used to be able to play that long time ago.
[02:03:11] Unknown:
And quite terrifying. Well, I was quite terrifying. No. Or that song was terrifying. No. That song was quite terrifying because when it held that note, my second hand gonna die. No. My second hand on my clock stopped. Yeah. It didn't move. I'm going, wait a minute. What happened here?
[02:03:34] Unknown:
I know. When I but here's a play that I had to really make sure that I had an absolute lung full of air because it's quite long. Yeah. I know. And then and we'd sometimes ham it up, and I'd get my wristwatch out whilst I was playing and looking at my watch, and others just wait and just until you go red in the face and fall in love. Yeah. It's a bit silly. It's a happy little tune, though. Yeah. A happy little tune, and they were one of my favorite bands. I I think I've seen that band play live more than any other band, so they used to come over here quite a few times in the eighties, mid eighties. I was in London at the time. I've seen them about five or six times.
And that was when they had Jimmy Vaughn on guitar who I rate as one of the top five guitarists ever. I absolutely love Jimmy Vaughn's guitar playing, and, that's when I was really into all that kind of stuff. So a lot of good fun back then. A lot of good fun. More fun than what we've been talking about, miserable bastards that we are, isn't it? Oh, no. And not really. Well No. It's just I mean, it's serious. It is difficult. And I sometimes my brain goes into sort of, what's the word, fun? I just get locked in on it. It's almost like, you know, you can talk yourself into sort of like a mental standstill. It's like, what do we what do we do?
[02:04:42] Unknown:
You know? And I suppose logical subversion, isn't it? Yeah. It is. Yeah. Right. But, Yeah. It is. Back to architecture, most architects will worship Le Corbusier or Caborgier, whatever you wanna call him. Yeah. The Swiss architect who was, shall we say, the father or mother or whatever way of these horrible tower blocks who was possibly one of the worst architects you could ever wish to come across because, he was, set to design a whole new city in South America that was hacked out of the jungle. And he thought everybody were traveling cars, so he had no pavements for anybody to walk on. And it has well, it did have, I don't know if it still has, the highest pedestrian accident rate in the world.
I mean, the man was bonkers. Absolutely. Where where was this? Paraguay? Or I'm not sure where it was in South America. But if you look up the Cabuzier, it will actually tell you. And but,
[02:05:46] Unknown:
you probably can't hit the someone in chat might find it or you might find it. Because I I have a friend in Uruguay, and he showed me the flats that they have there, and they're just as ugly as they are in other places I've seen.
[02:05:58] Unknown:
Well, he did he he did wanna flat in sorry. I didn't mean to call go across you there, but he did a flat in South Of France. And it's it's a it's a it's a sort of blot on the landscape. The architects go, oh, it's fantastic. It's a statement. That's what all they say. It's a statement. Well, so is a pile of dog poo. And was he around the Bauhaus area at that
[02:06:21] Unknown:
time?
[02:06:23] Unknown:
Yeah. He died in 1965. He's born in the yeah. So he would have been Bauhaus, which is was it less is more which, it's ugly. Bauhaus. Vile.
[02:06:36] Unknown:
I I did a book where I worked as an assistant photographer. We went and did, photographs of the historic lake homes in Minnetonka, Minnesota, just outside of the Twin Cities near Minneapolis. Kind of a real posh area, people that from General Mills and that sort. And so I got to learn a little bit about these architects. Like, you you you you've heard of Philip Johnson? He was a modernist architect. Okay. He did a lot of the skyscrapers here. How about Frank Gehry? Yeah. So that hey. Okay. So there was one house we went to. The guy who's retired, he used to be a CEO of General Electric, and he had a Philip Johnson house. And it was really interesting. I mean, it looked like a brick prison on the outside. But then you go on the inside, and there's, like, a glass atrium, very beautiful type of thing inside, but it's it's all modernist and not my taste. But in his backyard, he had a guest house by Frank Gehry, and it was just the ugliest looking thing I've ever seen in my life.
It looked like a trash can. It looked I mean, or a trash bag, you know, with trash coming out at the top. And nobody lived in it because the way they designed it, it would acquire black mold all throughout it because of the cheap materials that were used to make it. This is the guy that, was notorious for taking pieces of cardboard, gluing them together and then carving out furniture out of that to make disposable furniture. It's just like, can't
[02:08:14] Unknown:
Well, they're on a different planet. They're in a different world. And, I was always moaned at because I like, Art Nouveau. And they said, oh, it's just because you've got used to something, that you accept it. But, even Tower Bridge was looked on as ugly when it was first built. I disagree. It wasn't looked on as ugly as when first built. Something's either beautiful or it's ugly. And if it's bloody ugly, it's ugly. It doesn't matter how long it's there. And, I mean, when you look at the, 911, the building that came down there, that was an ugly bloody building. Very ugly building. There's no architecture in it.
I just I don't know. I actually found that it's the King's new codes. And I think that the RRBA or the architects, I don't know what the equipment is in America, was infiltrated by the commies in the nineteen fifties. And, that's we got the results of it. Now, it's all I mean, Le Corbusier, he designed in a communist way even though there's no real evidence that he was a member of the communist party or supported communism. But, a lot of architects were rampant communists. People don't realize that. So that's Yeah.
[02:09:42] Unknown:
Especially, like, the modernist type architecture. Mhmm. And it it was kind of weird. You know who Frank Lloyd Wright was? He Oh, Frank Lloyd Wright. Yeah. I know him. He had kind of a weird, cult going on here in Wisconsin down south. And at one point, he had, it was Stalin one of Stalin's wives had moved to Wisconsin, and her and her daughter were part of his cult Mhmm. Down down near Madison somewhere. And it's just like, you're right. These the architects are part of these these movements and the the intellectuals
[02:10:19] Unknown:
in the in in our society. I mean, this this when we boil it down, it's obviously been the unpicking. The root of Western civilization is Christianity, no matter what people may think about it today, just is by historical fact because it's not anything else. And so there were there's always been problems with it, but they're far, far less than the problem that we're faced with. And, of course, everything in the so called progressive modern world has been to undermine and destroy it. And it's happened because certain people live amongst us that are, the complete opposite of everything that that moral, ethical, and spiritual code represents. For the labor that they put out, and then they
[02:11:05] Unknown:
they get like that.
[02:11:07] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[02:11:08] Unknown:
It's the use the usury class. The people the Paris class that benefit from it and don't have to earn it. They don't understand what hard work is. So when it comes time to build a building, they're just like, oh, just here's some money. Get it made. Make it functional. That's all we need. You know? They don't think about the other details
[02:11:28] Unknown:
because they don't, you know, it's like Because it's not part of them. No. They don't know how to use it. I mean, here we are talking about we we are talking mean, it seems to me that an appreciation of and a a bringing of beauty into the world is a key part of our physiological, spiritual, and mental makeup. We actually need it. It's not a luxury. It's absolutely vital for making sense of the world because it's the language through which you get to in your quiet moments, and you get more of them the longer you live, or you can have more of them unless you sort of decide to be busy into oblivion until you drop dead. You're gonna get to consider the bigger questions about life, which seems to me really to be a great part of what if it's not the part.
You know? I was reading something the other day just about everything. When you and as one's years go by I sound like an old fart now, but I guess it's just unavoidable. You realize how fast everything has gone. I wouldn't have been convinced of that when I was a teenager. Everything was very, very slow. It wasn't fast enough. Right? You know, going to school and all those sorts of things. But it goes really quick, and it is the blink of an eye in the great sort of scheme of things. And yet we're here trying to pick stuff up and make a good show of it whilst we're here and and be creditable.
And it's something about working on ourselves, and we are interfered with. That's the bit. Now is that by design? Are we supposed to be just interfered with? Is it supposed to be permanently frustrating and irritating and not what you can see? Because I don't see how it can be because there have been periods. Maybe I was just really happiest when I was less informed about how horrible it is. I don't know about you know, I remember just I remember with fondness being broke as a teenager, but very happy, being very lively, and having every day was just full of laughter and joy. It was not it's full of scathing humor and, you know, teasing one another and all that kind of stuff and a few little fracas. But overall, it was just absolutely brilliant. And I guess it's because you think, oh, I've got my whole life in front of me. It's gonna turn out great.
And for some people, it does turn out whatever you think great is. But then you hit a point where the acquisition of stuff ain't gonna do it for you
[02:13:45] Unknown:
because it never did anyway. And you and you don't appreciate it until you don't have it. It's like the that's why poor people can have a sense of happiness greater than a person who lives in luxury their whole life. Yes. Doesn't work. Yep. Absolutely. You do then appreciate those good things in life. And that's why the further back you go Have you seen that clip of Nixon?
[02:14:06] Unknown:
There was a clip I saw of Richard Nixon. Did I play I don't know if I played it, but I saw this clip of Nixon. Of course, Nixon's interesting. We ought to do a show on Nixon because he's completely framed. I mean, it's just all coming in. It's all set up. And, you know, Bob Woodward's not even a journalist. He's just a CIA operative, the spiff. I mean, it's just a joke, these whole things, but completely if you'd have asked me in 1976 to 16 year old, yeah. Of course. That'd be amazing because I didn't know any better. But Nixon had the highest approval ratings of his by any president ever. And there was an interview with him violent majority. Yeah. Well, he's just it's interesting. And I saw this little this is before it all gone fully per ship. He was talking about it's this point you've just been making in a way, Patrick. Well, he was talking about the rich and the wealthy retirees in Florida.
He said, you don't wanna be like that in this interview. He said he said, have you been down there? He's talking to the guy. It's just a casual sort of off the cuff conversation over a cup of coffee or whatever. He said, if you go down there, you'll see that this is Richard Nixon talking. He said, you'll see these people. They're playing cards all day. So they don't know what to do with themselves. He said, they they got no worries at all. They just play cards. They, yeah, they retire. Yeah. And he said and it's and it and it's the end of he said, they've got there's nothing to get out but he this is my words. There's nothing to get out of bed for. So I think in a in a in a way, although we don't like California driving hot rods with cruise shop
[02:15:29] Unknown:
in his retirement, that's what Nixon was doing. So I did. Yeah.
[02:15:34] Unknown:
Well, it's just but it's almost as if you do need a problem. And if you ain't got one, some of us will just have a knack for making them turn up in our lives so that you've got a hurdle to overcome to to create some focus in your day. Because although it sounds appealing to be sitting around maybe playing cards forever, actually, that's, to me, now it's a terrifying thought. I'd go nuts. I couldn't do that. And I don't know about you. Do you ever get panicky about thinking about what you're gonna do with your week? I mean, it sounds ridiculous. It's not as if I'm short of things to do. But sometimes I think, I've been doing these things over and over again for a long time, and I like doing it. Is this gonna last? You know? Am I supposed to become a mountaineer? Well, not my age. I don't really want to. I don't like mountains anyway. But, is it this yearning for always got to have novelty in something else and what you're kinda running away from? So
[02:16:23] Unknown:
You have to appreciate each day, and it could be your last. You have to look at it that way. And then you you're a lot happier as a consequence because you you realize you don't take anything for granted after a certain point.
[02:16:36] Unknown:
Well, I'm I think the older you get, the easier it is to actually think like that, Patrick. Yeah. It is. When you're when you're 19, you are literally bulletproof. You just you could just there's nothing that you are basically as close to Superman as a bloke from 19 to 25 as you're ever gonna get. Then when he gets about 26, you realize it wasn't actually that close. Funny. Something like that.
[02:17:00] Unknown:
Well, that's the thing now. A lot of children are detached from the elderly their elders. Yeah. They're just put into their peer group their whole life through the schooling. They never get to associate outside of that peer group, so it all becomes a big popularity contest and who's got the most stuff. They never get a chance to talk to the older generations because they're just not in that they're not given the opportunity to do it if they just go through the the government type, you know, program that most people go through or the military or whatever it is. But when you start dealing with people who are older than you and more have a more experience, they can kinda reassure you, hey. You don't need to, you know, you make these mistakes that I made. Here's what I did and tell tell the story about it. And it's just fascinating, and that's why we need more people just getting disassociating from that system.
Yeah. Homeschooling is a good good thing to do. Just get your children and raise them yourself. Don't worry about the socialization. You they don't need that. It doesn't make them a moral person. And you're you have a better walk than your child and what they do, and you're better able to discipline them than some, you know, teacher who has a hundred children under under their control. But, really, it's just a madhouse. And it doesn't and they're not really being taught anything other than to No. They're not. It's it is a madhouse.
[02:18:32] Unknown:
But that was a great fun of it. Yeah. That was a great fun of it, you know, at school. I loved it. I thought it was, I I loved my school days. I really did. People, oh, school's awful and boring. They all went to leave. I thought, this is a hoot. It's fantastic. And, yeah. But, of course, I was really there for the ice creams and the chat at lunchtime. That was the best thing and making, you know, making friends. But in terms of the sort of the organization of the school day, it wasn't thrilling. I never liked homework. And, anyway, this is all really rather boring. I should imagine it's probably everybody's experience to some degree with all of that. And, you know, boys young boys just need to be loose amongst trees until they're about 10 or 11.
You don't need anything else. I you know? That's what we live for. We did the most I mean, if I if my sons had done some of the things that I did, in terms of physical risk, I I'm glad I don't know. We used to climb on the outside of railway bridges over trains and things whilst they were coming back. I was just mad when I think about it. Don't you go playing down on the railway line? Where else we gonna play? You know, swinging from trees and stuff and things like this. No. They're just gonna do an inner city But you just deal with it, don't you, when you you go Yeah. It's great. But think of it now. They got cops in the schools and, you know, they they worry about buying It's so much fun. Burning down railway carriages. Whoops. Oh, no. I never said that. There are all sorts of things that happened when I were young that were very, very naughty, and they were great. Not really evil naughty, but just a bit naughty, you know, and stuff like that. So, we just had a lot of cow fields where I were. I had more fun there, particularly when we used to take, may I mention this, but we used to take golf clubs out there and hit the cowpats and play cowpats golf. It was just amazing.
If you hit one of those things right, you can get your all your mates get covered instantaneously in fresh. So everybody was running around with a golf club trying to find a cowpats to fire it at everybody else. I came back. What are you oh my god. My mama. What are you covered in? Oh, we're just having a bit of fun. It was great. What That's all you need to do. Yeah. Sorry, Eric. Something I never did.
[02:20:43] Unknown:
You know, something I never did, but a mate of mine apparently did, put two pennies on a row, when the train was coming along. And when the train left, the pennies were welded together.
[02:20:55] Unknown:
I never did, but apparently, that that's No? What I've You didn't do that? Oh, we did that. We also used to put mat you remember matchbox cars? Those little matchbox cars that were Mhmm. Two or three. We we used to get really flat ones of those. It was, you know, sort of increase their reduce their drag coefficient when they were pushed because they didn't go again, but they were very flat. We were always kind of impressed by that. Very impressed. Well, we had to go down there because it's where all the blackberry bushes were. And I just remember as a kid picking blackberries. It was so exciting because I knew my mom was gonna bake these amazing blackberry and apple pie. This would be in the summer, sort of like 1968, '60 '9. Why am I saying all this stuff? But it was just fantastic. People don't We all go down there. Loads of us. And I just on the fresh cream and, oh god, I want it now. You know, when when it comes out the oven and it's still warm, that's all that counts. I think in the end, they're gonna say, what was the best bit of my life? And I'm gonna say, pie, probably.
[02:21:53] Unknown:
Yeah. Pies. There's a certain smell, wasn't there? That that there's there's a beautiful smell of a pie that your mom made
[02:21:59] Unknown:
that Oh, yeah. You you
[02:22:02] Unknown:
I don't know. I haven't smelled it since. It's sad. It really is. But,
[02:22:08] Unknown:
that's right. Yeah. It is, really. But I I, you know, I think, I like that article. I'll put the link up. If you want it, Patrick, I'll give it to you. I think it's good. It's stimulate. There's some I don't know whether there's this thing about knowing more and more stuff. You know? It does lead to becoming more and more miserable. I mean, there's a direct correlation. The more you dig into how bad it's all been, and yet I think we're obviously driven to do that. I and you want to. But it does it sort of creates a gloom, a gloomy view. Maybe you can never go back and sort of I'm probably looking back at my youth with completely rose tinted spectacles. I remember being bored out of my brains during summer school holidays when they were six weeks long and everything. And, you know, you you read a lot of books, and I didn't wanna read, and there's no one to play football with, all that kind of stuff. So I'm I've got a rosy view of it. But as you learn all this stuff, and we've been given this great opportunity over the last sort of twenty, twenty five years to do such a thing, it's a marvelous journey. But I'm left at the moment recently, a a recurring thought is, do I need to know anymore?
No. Not really. I mean, I'm not trying to be cocky or arrogant. There's lots of things I don't know, but the broad principle of what's going on is there. The thing is, what what would be the best action, the best behavior to enter into to correct it? And what do we wanna see? And I think, you know, we we do touch on the right things in pragmatic terms, and it's useful to talk about these things because the layman can understand it. And I'm a layman, and I wanna remain one, is that the banks have got to be transformed. That's a nice word. But they have to be if we want to have any chance of being able to reinstitute a world in which, the laws of God apply, because that's really what we're talking about. And I know people find it awkward. Even I have done up to a point, but I can't see any other way of phrasing it. It's either one direction or another. It's either earthly man made power and control. Hello. That's what we're living in right now.
Or it's everybody obeying, getting humble, and going, hey. You know what? What we're all gonna be dead in a hundred years' time. Why don't we behave well? Because we are. Everybody's alive right now. We won't be alive at some point. It's a very weird thought. Or I find it a bit strange and striking because, you know, you live a huge chunk of your life. Like, you are you know, your mental attitude is, I'm gonna live forever. I've got a career. I'm gonna do all this kind of stuff. But in the end, I don't know whether it actually amounts to too much. Am I being completely nihilistic and miserable? I don't know. Tell me to shut up if you think it's rubbish.
[02:24:36] Unknown:
Us too. I mean, you, Paul, myself. We grew up in an era where, the country was run by World War two veterans. People who that work This is true. You know, will will will that generation are dead. They're gone. And what's taken over from it is a generation who are the children of the hippie generation. The hippie generation, which was CIA, and we got the results of it. I mean, look at Starmer. He his parents were of the hippie generation. There's something weird about them because that was the time when they started injecting children in the late sixties. Luckily, we were just before that, so we missed it. But, I remember a queuing up at school. I was about 11 years of age. They used the same needle on all the kids. Next. Yeah. That's it. You know, you got a squirt of crust nose what in you.
But I haven't had knee injection since I was about 11. But when you look at the loonies that are in power now, they've all most of them have come from that hippie are the their parents were the hippie generation.
[02:25:43] Unknown:
But, Eric, what's it gonna be like in twenty years' time then? We're gonna have a Well, I'll tell you what. It's unavoidable becoming an old fart. I never thought I'd become one, but I have. And
[02:25:56] Unknown:
You look, you look at Rachel from accounts. She's the chancellor, and I call it she get Rachel from accounts. She's thick excuse my language, as thick as shit. And, David Lammy, thick as shit.
[02:26:10] Unknown:
I mean But they're dropped in there, aren't they? We know that there is Yeah. There is a management team that selects the actors to play the roles, and they've been selected probably for their rank stupidity and the fact that they are an insult to the rest of the population who they then lord it over and think that they actually know something. We don't. The system obviously does not put the best people into the positions of power. It's never done that. No. Never never never will do. It's a pantomime.
[02:26:38] Unknown:
Because what it is, if it wasn't for us, we wouldn't need government. So we need government. Its job is to take people's minds away from why they're being robbed. That's all it is. That's all government is there for. Because, really, the country is run by civil servants, not run by governments at all. Mhmm. And it's dictated to by the usury scammers. That's that's basically it. And if anybody in politics meant dares to breathe a word about usury, they end up in a wooden overcoat. Simple as that. And I think mister h got into power in the 1933 by a fluke. I think it was a fluke. He wasn't meant to get into power.
But, I think that in the future, you never know someone might get into what happens in history is the unexpected happens. And I've got a feeling the unexpected will happen, and someone will get to power in a fluke. So so who knows what's around the corner? But it can't go on like this.
[02:27:48] Unknown:
People are well, people are waking up. I don't think they intend for it to go on like this, do they? They intend for it to get worse or something. I mean, you know, the Trump thing's weird. None of the things that everybody believed is gonna happen are gonna come true. I it just damn me. If they don't if we can't muller the bank, we're not gonna be able to muller anything. And, of course, I was thinking when you actually work out, you think, what are the real practical pragmatic chances of doing it, and how would it could it be achieved? The problem is is that the incumbents have got so much power, it seems to me. I don't wanna talk myself into a sort of state of mental apathy, although it's easy to do it. It's like you it's like a rabbit in the headlights. You go, but they've acquired so much power over such a long period of time.
Their behavior is oriented to retaining it and maintaining it at any cost. We're quite nice people, really, I think. We don't wanna kill, hurt, or harm anyone. We just like to peacefully cooperate with people and have a good, solid, healthy life with our children and raise families and have all that kind of stuff. And yet their power is based on denying that to us for no good reason other than it's what enshrined, you know, keeps them in power. Maybe it's always been like that. Maybe this is the great conundrum. Maybe we're not in a nice place. Maybe this really is purgatory. Some doesn't that thought sometimes occur to you? It slowly reveals itself itself to you the more you look at it. I'm not negative all the time. I mean, I think there is grounds for sort of optimism going forward. And even if there aren't, I just create some I just create some and just go, right. I'm gonna be optimistic, but you've got no reason to be optimistic. Correct? I haven't got any reason at all, but I'm gonna be that way. And you can kinda man you can make things happen around you, can't you? And I I find I mean, I delight really in just small x little exchanges with people that I don't know when I'm walking around. It's just absolutely I love it. Oh, people are nice. I love just connecting it with people I don't know and having a polite conversation on the street corner. Yep. Blah blah blah. Okay. See you. And I always walk because I'll never see you again, you know, and they always start laughing. Probably won't. We'll never meet again. What? No. Ever. This is just complete feet one off. It's very funny. Precisely.
[02:30:02] Unknown:
But when you think about it, our enemy holds all the ace cards where it comes to propaganda. They're genius at it because they employ the best liars. So that's the thing. And this is why I think the only way of getting power back is to, go for their seats of power. Now, you look at the BBC. Who looks at the BBC nowadays? Once upon a time, they had that, well, what, % viewing figures. Don't know. Mhmm. Who reads a newspaper? I don't. I've noticed very few people read reading newspaper. You get on any, you you look at the buzzers and things like that. There's no one reading a newspaper. No. Nobody at all.
[02:30:48] Unknown:
You go to that area But they're not very good at newspapers, are they anymore? Apart from the Fockem Hall Times, that's an outstanding journal, I understand. That's amazing.
[02:30:56] Unknown:
Well, that's right. Yes. Advertising the Fockem Hall wonder pencil. A joy for everybody. Yeah? Yes. Yeah. Yes. You you use it to, you know, well, you know, if you're constipated, you can work it out with a pencil. You know? The these sort of things sorry. It's a terrible joke, that one is. But, you know, but the real fact of the matter is, again, I think something unexpected will happen. It's about to happen. I really do. It might be for the good. We always think it's for the bad, but it might be for the good. The reason why we think it's the bad is because we've been programmed to look on the pessimistic side all the time.
[02:31:40] Unknown:
But Well, it it would be nice to have a few people in power that had brains. What do you think about this? In terms of real world things happening recently, this little Ferrari with the, Nigel Farage of the garage, his party over the last week, really illustrates so many points, doesn't it? That I mean, I know we've Farage has got has made some kind of presence known in America, you know, because he rocks up to Trump's thing, and people think and he's got a certain charm about him. But, basically, he's a destroyer. He's not a he's not a serious guy. He's not serious. Well, if he had a brain, he'd be dangerous, wouldn't he? I mean, let's face it. He would be Oh, I think he's quite smart. I I think I think he knows what he's doing. It's just that what he's doing is so he's very proud of having destroyed the BNP. That's what he says because it was a racist organization. It needed to go. So that got destroyed.
Now he's in the process of destroying what appears to be his own party. I mean, is he basically an outlier that's just been sent out there to basically corral people together in a cul de sac and then destroy it so it can never challenge the conservative party? I don't even know why I'm talking about this, but I don't expect anything from him, except I suppose I paid attention, Eric, because Rupert Lowe, the guy that's got it in the neck, is one of the few people I've heard communicate in the last few years who actually sounds like a man. Does that make sense at all?
He's actually said sensible things. He says things that are closer to where we want things to be. We will get in other words, he's he he appears to be from his language. He's he was a guy that's high up in the reform party. The reform party is this, I suppose, it's the third biggest party now in The UK. Farage runs it. And Rupert Lowe is, a long standing politician, a successful businessman, I understand, but he communicates well. He communicates like old type politicians did, steady and clear and in a kind of calm but clear way. He's good. I quite I just warmed to his communication style. I quite liked it. This doesn't probably mean anything.
But I I thought, well, you you appear to be at least someone that we wouldn't be embarrassed about to communicate on behalf of the nation, whereas it's just embarrassing with the rest of them. They're just so atrociously. They're like a comedy act, and it's done to actually, you know, humiliate us, and make us look stupid, which we are, therefore. We are made to look stupid because of the stupid people in charge. Lowe doesn't come across like that. And so what's occurred is, as I understand it, this is the drama the political pantomime act of the day is that Lowe's power, as it were, or his charisma or his presence or his clarity, whatever you wanna call it, within the reform party, was making this is I'm reading between the lines here, but there have been a lot of reports of this effect, was making Nigel Farage uncomfortable.
I'm the dazzling star of the party. I'm the one that's gonna have all this. So some kind of weird charges have been concocted that he's been, I don't know, abusing female staff in certain offices, and he's been kicked out of the party or he's had the whip removed, which sounds quite pleasant, really. Don't wanna be whipped, but whatever. This is a bad thing. Right? And yet most of the people in this office have come out in his in Lowe's defense and said this stuff is basically all made up, and the charges were not about Rupert Lowe because there were some charges. They're about some other idiot in the office who was, I don't know, tampering with women. And this is typical sort of, you know, political fare, isn't it? We see moral morality being used as a Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Weapon. Yeah. But he appears to be he appears to be clean, and I think Right. Yep. Farage is not gonna do it. He's not he won't do it. I've even thought because I'm interested to know what people think.
There is a there's a branch of the reform party here in my town somewhere. And, I think I might have mentioned a couple of months ago, I bumped into someone I'd not seen for a little while who joined it, and, because he was just concerned. It doesn't mean that he necessarily broadly is gonna agree with it all, but it was interesting that he thought something needs to be done. Now this is a good sign. Even if going and joining the reform party is not that thing, at least actions were being taken. And I I'm won't mind knowing what they all think. But Rupert Lowe impresses me considerably in comparison to Faraj. It just does. Faraj is, obviously, very media savvy and media friendly.
But yet again, this is the guy that had the the plane accident. And, I heard someone saying that they thought he'd never been the same guy since because he nearly got killed in this thing. And the one of the theories is it was a warning shot across his bows that was meant to do him in. Paul, did that take place? But he's got the message or something. Yeah. Can you hear me, Paul? Yeah. I can hear you. Yeah. Yeah. When did that plane incident happen? About 02/2010, wasn't it, Eric? About twelve, fifteen years ago, something like that. Do you remember?
[02:36:40] Unknown:
Yeah. I remember it. Yes. And he was right close to death. That's about the time I started picking up on him,
[02:36:46] Unknown:
after that. There was a time, I think it was Sandy Hook. It might have been after Sandy Hook when he appeared on Alex's Alex Jones's show. I mean, that's I think that was one of my first introductions to him.
[02:37:01] Unknown:
He he's skilled at telling people what they want to hear, but then going back on it afterwards. Blair was Right. Skilled at telling people what they want to hear.
[02:37:12] Unknown:
He he he you meet him at a pub. He he's a real Yeah. Pub crawler type personality.
[02:37:18] Unknown:
Who's Faraj? Faraj. Yeah. And he comes out with the same I think I think he's quite fun, actually. I think he's quite fun. And and I think he's got a good turn of phrase, and he is and he does tell people what they wanna hear, Eric. You're right. Yeah. But he says, this is the change we need. How many times do you hear this from political parties even in the nineteen thirties when they first got sound on film? Oh, this is the change we need. It's always the change.
[02:37:44] Unknown:
Change here, change here, when in reality, there's no change whatsoever. Well, there's some website out there where you can pay people to to say whatever you want them to say. And I I know Nigel Farage is part of that. Like, we we could we could pool our money together and get him to to, do an advert for the Paul English show with the right amount of money.
[02:38:08] Unknown:
That'd be good. We could. Well, I think the thing with the you know, is I I don't know about you guys. I don't know how you think about your show, Zari, but I keep thinking, you know, there's so much fear porn out there. Fear porn reporting, so many podcasts about it. And I just it's just a melee of stuff. There's nothing it's as if everybody needs to calm down and have a cup of tea, and then we might be actually be able to hear a clear idea. And that's really what I heard with Rupert Lowe's communication. I'm not saying he's the savior or anything. Please don't think I'm backing the guy. I'm just saying in comparison to everybody else, his demeanor, his calmness, and his clarity in the way that he communicated things is helpful.
When you hear these other people talk or try to, it's not helpful. There's nothing reassuring about them. They don't look as though they could withstand a force, you know, a five mile an hour wind. Popular podcast format is, it's true crime.
[02:39:12] Unknown:
Like, most people are are are just fascinated by criminal behavior, and I think that's what these everybody else is trying to be popular and play to that and just be, like Yeah. An outrage. Oh, this is an outrage. You go from one to the other to get people's attention. But someone like what you're describing is someone who's not like that and who just No. Calmly calmly examines the the facts
[02:39:40] Unknown:
and can Well, I was just reminded of of older of an older type of political communication approach, which I prefer. I just thought he's got a better chance of some sanity breaking out in a sent a sentence every now and again. Most of it is just now such polished spin and performance. It's yeah. Forget it. It's a waste of time. They never talk about the issues, and they never talk about shutting down the bank. Right. They're never gonna. Have you heard of our politician in Kentucky, Thomas Massie?
[02:40:08] Unknown:
Yes. I have. Is he is he is he now getting it in the neck? He's getting it in the neck. Yeah. Trump came out and is gonna primary him out of office because he's the only one. He's the one that's he's one of the few that's telling the truth. Well, he Yeah. He had an interview with Tucker Carlson back in July that broadcast. Yep. I remember that. Telling about how every congressman in our congress, whether it's the senate or the house of representatives, has an APAC. I I call it IPAC, which is the American Israel Political Action Committee. They have a APAC advisor, babysitter, he called them, assigned to them.
And he's the only one that refused to have one.
[02:40:51] Unknown:
That's right. They've all got a babysitter.
[02:40:54] Unknown:
Yeah. So that they vote on be on behalf of the Israelis and every vote that comes up, they'd be they're there to to whip them into shape if they don't do it. You know? Mhmm. Blackmail agents, essentially. But after that interview came out with Tucker Carlson, his wife, unfortunately, passed away, and a lot of people suspect that there was foul play even though he claims there wasn't. But No. The only one that doesn't take money from them. And it's just interesting that, we've got this I'm supposed that he stole this phrase, America First. That was Charles Lindbergh back in Yep. That was an actual party that was gonna win the presidency.
And it was a it was the third party, the only third party that has stood a chance against what we have now with Democrats and Republicans. Back then, it was the Republicans and Democrats and then America First. But that went away with Pearl Harbor. Like, it that was such an such an event that all of a sudden, we go from peace, peace talk, we'll never send your boys to war to we're gonna we're going to war against the we're gonna slap the dirty little jab and bomb bomb them to kingdom come. And is it I'm not playing that record again. It went real quick. Might do, but not today. Yeah. Well, that's not the that's the attitude. You see how bloodthirsty they they become at it, and it becomes normal and accepted. Whereas before that, it's all politically correct. They're our brothers. We're all one. Brother love.
[02:42:26] Unknown:
You know, the whole main Well, I think I think, you know We're all brothers. Yeah. I know. You see, it's very powerful, the the centralized political game, in terms of drawing our attention. Look. It's drawn mine. I'm talking to you about Rupert Lowe. He's an established, you know, central government figure I would like to be. Talking about George Galloway. Yeah. Yeah. And we yeah. We just can't start, you know, and all these guys that are in these things. But I'm I'm trying to remind myself even now as I'm talking that I do think that the local community effort is the only way to go for us.
Well And it's got to be, you know, we've got a I don't know if I was talking to you about it, Eric, but we've got a freebie newspaper around here, and I've just been researching it. It gets forty five seven sorry. 47,000 copies are printed once a month. It's very nicely there, and it's full of all the normal sorts of cheesy type soft local community stories that you would expect. Lots of adverts from funeral directors, people that relay your roof or your drive, all that kind of stuff. You know, people making a living doing that kind of stuff. Yeah. And, it goes all over parts of West Sussex here.
And I'm looking at it, and I'm thinking, should we build a radio station for it? In other words, we couldn't the things we're talking about here are kind of a subset of a subset in a way, and, and it's fine. And people here and everybody that's listening, and shout out to all of you in Rumble and on YouTube and on Radio Soapbox and elsewhere. It's great, and we're we're gonna keep on doing this. As we bumble around and hit high points and sometimes meander a bit, this is all part of it. But I thought if there's a way to create something softer that will grow up in a bigger audience, that might be worthwhile. And there are things out there that are driving people crazy on a huge scale. Cancel tax is one.
It it's it's mad. And then all of the this basic thrust with life over here, which is no matter how much money people are making, it's just taken off them. They don't have a disposable income like they could. They can't even think like that. No one's even thinking about that. I suppose that some people still able to afford these things called holidays and get very upset when they can't have them. I have no idea why, but, apparently, it's very important to some people. But, everybody knows that everybody else is being squeezed, and it seems to me that, therefore, should it not make the ground ripe in a way for local coalitions or things to come together? And like I've mentioned here before, we got 15,000 parishes. There's 12,000 village halls and parish halls in The UK, and they could be used to create some kind of a of a network. And so I was just looking at this. I thought, well, if I could get a if I could build a station for them and we stick it in the newspaper, that's 47,000 copies every month. And then they've got all these writers that are writing on things like local musicians. There's a good historian actually here locally. I'm gonna try and get on the show because he's written a book about Hilaire Belloc because Belloc used to live around here. And this local historian in fact, I was out with some people the other day. He's called Christopher Hare, h a r e.
And he writes a column in this paper, and I thought, cool. In fact, he did a really interesting article about defense, placements built here to defend against Napoleon in 2000. They were very concerned about this time, you know, but Napoleon wasn't gonna come across or dig a tunnel or whatever. They were expecting invasion at some point over here. So the the resources are there. I would imagine that you've got a a kind of a mirror of that in regional papers all over. And then I'm sat here stroking my chin pondering as you do thinking, is this just an awful lot of work that's not gonna go anywhere? But it see it it feels that it could be good. Although, you know, if you're doing a lot of local radio programming, I guess it's a lot of local radio news. I mean, I wouldn't I wouldn't mind net curtain news. I think it'd be quite funny. Missus Jones at 56 Belvedere Avenue, we just got some new curtains. I mean, I would I would actually probably listen to that. No. No. No. Purely is a bit of diversion away from international of roof repair she needs done. If anyone has the ability to repair roofs Yeah. There's missus Jones' contact info. Yeah. Contact us, and we'll give you missus Jones' details to protect her eye. Do you remember stars on Sunday? So do you remember stars on Sunday? Oh, I'm just shuddering a bit there, Eric. I do.
[02:46:45] Unknown:
Yes. And, and we have a lovely letter in here, card from missus Smith. This is to her beautiful neighbor opposite. And she says Mhmm. I've got a bigger and better washing machine than you could ever wish to afford. You know, that sort of stuff. You know? Yeah.
[02:47:02] Unknown:
But But I've I mean, it could be I was looking at the whole paper, and I thought, I bet there are like, I bumped into a guy in a charity shop here, and they have a a record section with selling albums. Everybody remembers LPs, you know, 4040 fives and 33 and a thirds, and these were all these 33 and thirds. And there were about four or five of us around there one Saturday afternoon. I was looking for something else, but and, people just got talking. Oh, well, I called the old records. I'm like, oh, it was great. So I'm so a guy comes in, a bit culturally all over the shop because he had dreadlocks, but he was one of those. He was a but he was a nice guy. When he started talking, he was great. Really good sort of heart about things. I wanted to actually take this sort of stud out of his nose immediately. I want to just remove it, but I had to sort of pull all this aside. And he got around to tell you he's completely obsessed with vinyl. He'd probably get on more with him, Patrick. Okay? So he's obsessed with it. And he was telling me that he bought 15,000 albums last year. He said, I've got a bit out of hand. I mean, he can't listen to them all. He's buying them and reselling them. But he was he said, I'm about to open a record shop. Yeah. So he's got this colossal vinyl. So I'm thinking, right.
There's a guy that could run a late night music show. He was just I just looked at him and that it would happen. Right? Mhmm. And I've there's so many people in the local areas that if you tapped in and just gave them something so I was looking for actual radio stations around here. There's one or two that have got broadcasting licenses. You look at what they're offering. It's just piffle. I mean, it's just modern pop music. No one can listen to that. It's just rubbish. It's complete junk. Advertising. It's just the same advertising over and over again too Yeah. For corporate And it's boring, and they're just playing all this modern music, and it's it's junk. I'm old. You know? Oh, being old is being really cool because it's not cool to listen to this stuff that's young. It's really naff.
It's total rubbish. And, it's not even the witterings of a middle aged fart. It just literally is no damn good. And, when you say how they make it, there's no wonder it's no damn good and all that kind of stuff. So, I just thought there might be something in it. Maybe I'm I'm trying to talk myself into doing something, but I don't know what the business plan would be. I could just I'll create an awful lot of work. But if there was a model to do that, the idea was you got this is the this is what you do. You do this. This is the workflow you build up. Because it I mean, realistically, anybody out there listening, it costs peanuts to run these things. I mean, just create an app. It's peanuts. Yeah. You know, you can get a server for, like, £20 a month, and you can reach 12,000 people if you sort it out. They can all listen at the same time. I I'd dream of that. You think, well, where the where are those people? Maybe they're just clustered around local communities.
[02:49:38] Unknown:
You know what I'm gonna call, though? I want I want a million watt broadcasting station right now. Oh, you and your million watts, Patrick. Wouldn't that be something?
[02:49:47] Unknown:
It would. Well, how much do you need? Why don't you just do a a GoFundMe? We'll all chip in, and you can get it. And you can have the Whiskums and Cheese radio station. That'd be fantastic. Okay. And, I don't mind. Just get it. You could probably do it over there. The they wouldn't let us do it over here. Well, I don't have to do anything with that. Modulated
[02:50:05] Unknown:
harp installation.
[02:50:07] Unknown:
Yeah. There's your Yeah. I'm still like it up there. Here here here's an advertisement
[02:50:11] Unknown:
for you, Eric. Buy a Rob. Buy a Hoover vacuum cleaner or washing machine at your Northeastern Co op, and you get a chance to win dinner for two in London in a London restaurant with Jimmy Savile, including free travel overnight accommodations. Dollars
[02:50:34] Unknown:
spending money. Yeah. Count me in.
[02:50:37] Unknown:
Yes.
[02:50:39] Unknown:
And, actually, there's something in that because a night out dinner with Keir Starmer that'd be a good price, wouldn't it? First prize, a a night out eating fish and chips in the fish and chip shop of your choice in London with Keir Starmer and Rachel from accounts. Yeah. First prize. It's the best prize ever.
[02:51:03] Unknown:
Oh, boy. Can you imagine being trapped in a lift with him? I mean, you'd you'd end up well, you'd be suicidal by the end of it, wouldn't you? I mean, they must have zero personality.
[02:51:15] Unknown:
He's such a lying turd, isn't he, really? Yeah. Really is. He's a terrible he's a terrible individual.
[02:51:22] Unknown:
He really is absolutely awful. Well, actually, there'd probably be a lot of people that are going for a for a dinner with Kia Starma at, at a fish and chip shop, especially if that particular fish and chip shop had a tremendously large fry fat vat.
[02:51:43] Unknown:
Yeah. They would. They would. They would go for that.
[02:51:47] Unknown:
Stoma. But have you seen the British Democrats? That's sort of new that's a party on the block now. They're gaining support locally quite a lot in Cambridge here and that.
[02:51:57] Unknown:
Is that Jim Looswaite?
[02:51:59] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. Yeah. The XBMP, I think. But, yes. It's quite interesting. Of course, I've got a leaflet through that door the other day. I've never heard of him before the other day, and that was it. But he's been around a long time, apparently. Do do you know of him? Have you spoken to him at all? Or I've I've seen quite a few of his presentations, his video presentations on YouTube over the years. He's very active and works hard, and there are others around him, aren't there?
[02:52:29] Unknown:
You know, is I suppose if if we maybe I should try and get him on. If we if we spoke to Nick Griffin, he would, from what I understand, the last communication that I heard with regards to politics is that there's literally no political solution. And I tend to that view as well very much. I wouldn't view it that it would be the ultimate winning play. But is it possible that the development of a political party in terms of its membership base, even though it couldn't get direct power at Westminster, would be enough to actually unsettle power on a local level? It's it's local power that's needed.
And let's face it. The people that work on councils are just they they behave badly not because they're bad people, but because they need to get paid at the end of the month. This is this whole thing with the people end up doing bad things to other people because they gotta get paid. They're frightened of losing their jobs. That's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. Yeah. Yeah. That's true. So I understand it. Enough. Yeah. He did he did. I mean, isn't that the sort of communication you would have with someone from the castle? Look. I understand why you're behaving like a complete shit towards me because if you don't, you'll probably lose your job, and you won't get paid, and then you'll probably lose your house or something. So it must be not good for you. How do we can we work as a team? You need to find a good lawyer, and a good lawyer is a poor lawyer. So it's gonna it's gonna tough. Yeah.
[02:53:51] Unknown:
You would also need to have a couple of panzer tanks around you. Tractor Couple of pansies, did you say? What did you say? Couple of pansies. And We could have a couple of pansies. Yeah. I don't know. That might frighten them off. You never know. I'm not that surprised. I'm not that surprised. You know, you you would have to have a a solid wall around you because the Secret Service would take you out, that you wouldn't be able to you wouldn't last long because Really? They are there, not for us. They're there to to to to keep the,
[02:54:23] Unknown:
usury scammers in power. That's what they're there for. Yeah. Well, that's where we need a strong church, but you you got a you got a lot of work ahead
[02:54:32] Unknown:
for sure. I think we do need a strong church in the best sense of that word. The problem with that word currently is that when you say it to people, it it just triggers all sorts of understandably negative, disinterested yeah. They just go, what?
[02:54:49] Unknown:
There's a reason for that because they they're the ones that can oppose the politicians
[02:54:54] Unknown:
I yeah. I know. And and drop it But put all that connection's being lost. And, of course, the feeble mindedness of those that are in charge of I mean, wasn't there something going around about shutting down the Church of England? They're now beginning to say it directly in some sort of political communication about a month back. Just what's the point of it and all this kind of stuff. Because this has been the whole goal along all along the lines. And I think it's understandable why people are disinterested in protecting it because it's not it's been tunneled out and worn down. Well, it's the same thing. Fantastic buildings in Parish Halls. Why don't we form you know? I Yeah. I've said that the congregation need to do a reverse buyout. Of course, most of the listeners here and including me are not in a congregation. We don't attend churches for reasons that it's most of what they talk about is off putting.
Certainly, that's the perception of it. They have all these wet nelly things that take place, and they're like the alpha course, course, which is just complete crap. And it's just not robust enough. The whole thing's soft and useless and is part of the problem. It's literally become a wolf sheep's clothing. And whether these things are true or not, the perception that's the perception.
[02:56:00] Unknown:
Well, perception is I and and I I totally sympathize with you because you you're talking about a different church than what I'm talking about in a way too because the Church of England is not the same as what I belong to. The Roman Catholic church is different. You don't have women bishops. You don't have homosexual unions and all this kind of stuff that are permanent. All a mess in my view, Patrick. I mean, I'm not gonna say that one's worse than the other. They're all a mess. Somehow And they're a mess. I know. I know. And and the thing of politics, though, is you go for the lesser of two evils because you don't have a real choice in the matter. Most of the time, we're pretty impotent when it comes to democracy being in our favor. It doesn't it doesn't suit us. But, yeah, but I totally see the point in the lesser of two evils because you do have to choose, and it's sometimes better and buys you more time.
And and as a tactic, and when you're in war, because it's a spiritual war, you you have to buy time sometimes in order to move out of danger zone.
[02:57:07] Unknown:
And that's kind of where we're at. Yeah. What about Godfrey Bloom? The pub, Eric? Do you think the pub the pub No. I don't. Godfrey Bloom Yeah. Was saying that, you can open up a pub so you can have a shed in your garden, which is just like a pub, and people bring their own drinks in. Cancel. So you actually buy a drink. Pub. Yeah. Something like that. And and quite honestly, it's it's the atmosphere is what is necessary to bring back that sort of we can have a chat to people and talk to people. End of loneliness. People become, you know, more very friendly.
And,
[02:57:42] Unknown:
you can always get around the licensing laws. There's there's ways and means of getting around the licensing laws with ease. You know, just be Well, I think public houses, you know, they started by people just opening their houses to the public and saying, come in and have a beer. So Yeah. That could be it's the the the buildings are there. We're just not using them right. And I'm still trying to think about it's it's like the best use of time and maybe where I'm kind of impatient as well. It's unlikely to be resolved in a lifetime, as it seems to me. Although miracles can happen. You can have things turn around in a couple of years if we hit the right note, whatever that might be. They're very careful to get people pissed off, but not so pissed off that they actually do something about it. And that's it. That's part of that sort of boiling the frog slowly. We got a minute left to say things, a minute and a half, and then there's some music. We've got about three minutes left in the show. We're gonna go hard break at 11:00, this evening, which is, what, 7PM US eastern time. So any closing comments, gentlemen? Anything you'd like to say?
I've been quite serious tonight, I think, but I've enjoyed it.
[02:58:44] Unknown:
Whatever happens sorry. Oh, you go ahead. Go ahead. Just whatever happens, have a bloody good laugh. That's what I'm gonna say.
[02:58:53] Unknown:
Yeah. I We'll have to get that fucking festival going and have a few beers. But then I don't drink beer. I've stopped. I don't drink anything now. Don't know what's that. It's just tea. Tea towel as well. Tea and eat a lemon. God, what's happened to me? It's a bloody joke. What do you do all day? I drink tea and I eat lemons.
[02:59:11] Unknown:
Oh, tough guy. Damn. Yeah. Patrick, you wanted to say something? Yeah. We'll make I like the idea of the radio still. That's still a good good idea.
[02:59:21] Unknown:
Open up communications locally. If we can find a model for it that works, then we could show this is what you do, and then all these little parishes or communities could start to to roll it out. It's just got to be satisfying and feed energy back to the people that do it and a little money. Yeah. It just does. I think for a sort of self respect of money, but no one's gonna make millions out of this. It's just to actually cover costs and keep ticking over. So we'll have a look at that one. Paul, any last words from wherever you are with less ice than you had last week? Don't forget to order your official fuck them all
[02:59:56] Unknown:
at Wonder Pencil. They're amazing fun at parties. Be the envy of the neighborhood and all of your friends. Supplies are limited. Act fast.
[03:00:09] Unknown:
Next week, we'll go into pencils in a big way, and we can work it out, can't we, as the actress said to the bishop. I think, I would talk about that. We also should talk about Skype. I meant to talk about it today, but we'll we'll cover it very briefly next week. Skype's closing down on May. I'm hacked off about that. Twenty odd years of contact and all this kind of stuff. Good old Microsoft just shitting on the world as they always do. Anyway, at least it's a leper that never changes its sports. Thank you to, the team here tonight, Eric and to Patrick and Paul. Hope you've enjoyed the show. We'll be back again the same time next week.
Thanks. Shout out to everybody who's made blistering comments in rumble. We've not included too many tonight, but thank you. And we'll see you same time next week. So go good. God bless and all that kind of stuff. We'll see you next Thursday. Bye for now.
[03:01:22] Unknown:
Blasting the voice of freedom worldwide, you're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[03:01:29] Unknown:
Boys. Have fun storming the castle.
Introduction and Personal Updates
Political Pantomime and Health Updates
Health Regimens and Personal Anecdotes
Weather and Home Maintenance
Gardening and Home Projects
Community and Personal Stories
Woke Intelligence and Ideological Conflicts
Liberalism and Societal Challenges
Cultural Reflections and Historical Context
Political Figures and Local Engagement
Community Radio and Local Initiatives