09 October 2025
PAUL ENGLISH LIVE #108 · Hitler, Churchill, Bankers, Reparations, Machines and the Stories We Are Sold - E108

Broadcasts live every Thursday at 8:00p.m. uk time on Radio Soapbox: http://radiosoapbox.com
PAUL ENGLISH LIVE #108 · paulenglishlive.com
Thursday October 9th · 8pm UK · 3pm US eastern
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Kicked off a little early and with the usual studio gremlins in tow, I sit down with Eric von Essex (and later Frederick Blackburn) for a forthright ramble through contested history, banking power and media narratives. We scrutinise Winston Churchill’s record, David Irving’s claims, and the financial levers behind twentieth‑century wars—from Montagu Norman and the BIS to Hjalmar Schacht—asking what really drove policy and propaganda. A listener clip of Victor Davis Hanson prompts a debate on Britain’s war aims and the Churchill myth, while the Jesse Owens story at the 1936 Olympics leads to a broader look at how facts are shaped, buried or re‑told. From there we segue to present day: reparations talk (including Sir Lenny Henry’s proposal), mass‑migration policy, and a new Restore Britain paper on deportations. In between, we still make time for music—spotlighting The Divine Comedy’s Infernal Machines and the classic National Express—and for reflections on culture, optimism and telling our own story rather than living inside someone else’s. It’s punchy, sometimes provocative, and very much a live‑show conversation among friends and callers, with history, law, banking and media all on the table.
- 'Paul English Live' (official site): https://paulenglishlive.com/
- 'Paul English Live' (Rumble channel): https://rumble.com/PaulEnglishLive
- The Divine Comedy (official): https://thedivinecomedy.com/
- The Divine Comedy – 'National Express' (official page): https://thedivinecomedy.com/videos/national-express
- The Divine Comedy – Office Politics (album, Apple Music): https://music.apple.com/us/album/office-politics/1457573675
- Caravan Palace (official store/merch): https://caravanpalace.shop/
- John Logie Baird (Science Museum profile): https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/people/cp3684/john-logie-baird
- Bank for International Settlements (about): https://www.bis.org/
- Bank of England – Montagu Norman Diaries (archive): https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/archive/montagu-norman-diaries
- Hjalmar Schacht (biography): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hjalmar_Schacht
- Edmund Burke – Reflections on the Revolution in France (Project Gutenberg): https://www.gutenberg.org/files/15679/15679-h/15679-h.htm
- Psalm 73 (NIV text): https://biblehub.com/niv/psalms/73.htm
- Thomas Sowell (Hoover Institution profile): https://www.hoover.org/profiles/thomas-sowell
- Dred Scott v. Sandford (case overview): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dred_Scott_v._Sandford
- Moses H. Cone Memorial Park (NPS info): https://www.nps.gov/blri/learn/news/blue-ridge-parkway-announces-the-release-of-moses-h-cone-memorial-park-developed-area-management-plan.htm
- Silent Sam (background and status): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_Sam
- Albert Pike Memorial (NPS page): https://www.nps.gov/places/000/albert-pike-memorial.htm
- Hamilton (official musical site): https://hamiltonmusical.com/
- John Adams (HBO miniseries official page): https://www.hbo.com/john-adams
- Bacon’s Rebellion (background): https://www.britannica.com/event/Bacons-Rebellion
- Virginia Slave Codes of 1705 (Encyclopedia Virginia): https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/slave-laws-in-virginia-1705/
- Tikkun Olam (overview): https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/tikkun-olam-repairing-the-world/
- Erwin Chemerinsky (Berkeley Law – Dean profile): https://www.law.berkeley.edu/about-us/leadership/dean-of-the-law-school/
- Restore Britain (official site): https://www.restorebritain.org.uk/
- Restore Britain – Policy Paper: Mass Deportations (published 09 Oct 2025): https://www.restorebritain.org.uk/pp_mass_deportations_legitimacy_legality_and_logistics
- Legalman ‘The Quash’ (podcast home on Apple Podcasts): https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-quash/id1517421323
- 'Barnum World' – feature film page (Rumble): https://rumble.com/v6uqzc9-barnum-world-feature-film-official.html
- Victor Davis Hanson (official site): https://victorhanson.com/
- Jesse Owens (official site): https://jesseowens.com/
- National Express Coaches (official travel site): https://www.nationalexpress.com/en/help/our-coaches
Well, we just thought we'd start things rolling a little bit earlier tonight. I don't know. I just thought I would really. So I guess that's the pre roll pre roll pre roll or something like that in, in broadcasting terms. What is it? It's October 9. That means it's Thursday. Beautiful day here today. Let's have a beautiful show. Actually, that might not be the word that we use in retrospect, will it? Welcome everybody to Paul English live. It's been a fun week, hasn't it? A fun week. People asking for reparations. Maybe we're all decent, ain't? This could be some kind of a pair, right?
I just coughed then. So I had to put myself on mute. So this is why it's a like kind of a start. Anyway, hi everyone. Welcome to the show. Paul English Live. We're here rocking out on, WBN three two four Eurofolk Radio, Radio Soapbox, we're on Rumble, we're on YouTube, and a few other places Global Voice Network, Holy Land Radio, and, good to be with you this week. Slightly different technical setup, not that you need to know that, but, it should prove to be a bit simpler. Famous last words. There's always there's always something going on anyway. But I think all streams, checked here seem to be working okay.
So welcome on board. Lots of, do you like the picture for today's show? I think a lot of people do. I know I do. I've had it on file for yonks and, never thought that'd be a good time to use it. But it's such a splendid image. Isn't it? Isn't it splendid? And, we'll talk quite a bit about this. Actually, there is a bit of a background reason for why I selected this week. But I'm, of course, ably joined as usual by our partners in crime here. Eric von Essex is, sitting in the, sitting in the studio ready to blast off into orbit. Eric, good evening to you. How are you? Good evening to you. Oh, I'm absolutely spiffing this evening. It's it's been a bit of an overcast day here and, a bit miserable. But apart from that,
[00:03:17] Unknown:
I think, the sun shines from our hearts, so that's what all that matters, isn't it, really? No. I've been, and I well, I've been actually, watching David Irving about Churchill. Very interesting. Oh, by the way, one minute you say the word. So have I. So have I today. How about that? Really? Hang on. We gotta grasp our lapel. Are you grasping your lapel? Because you gotta look skyward and say, a great, great man. You you gotta do it theatrical. Yeah. You gotta say three times, a great, great man. And then swallow. Like, you know, that's that's the way we we've been trained to do it. You see?
And, do you know what Churchill did in the nineties in the army? You see? Oh, hang on. Do you know what? Oh, hang on. Just a minute. Hold on. In the There we go. That's stopping. Oh, we got It's okay. No. I just had a monitoring thing coming back. There's always something to keep it fun. Anyway,
[00:04:14] Unknown:
where would I always like to keep me and you and everybody else on their toes. Yes. So that, you know, there's always one video gaffe. So there we go. But, that's right. Well,
[00:04:24] Unknown:
do you know what he did actually? Our our hang on. Great. Great. Have you got a sick bag ready when I say that? Because, Several. He actually was, he was actually, did fraud. He was he's a professional fraudster in the art world. And people go, what? Yes. Well, David Irving looked it up. And he went under the pseudonym of Charles Brin.
[00:04:52] Unknown:
Did he?
[00:04:55] Unknown:
And he sent his paintings to some sort of French art galleries, signed Charles Marin, and people thought that it was the actual Charles Marin and paid shed loads of money for his art when they didn't realize it was Churchill. There we go. Isn't that interesting?
[00:05:12] Unknown:
Well, I just thought slapping read all these other things about him he was one of the most honorable men that never lived
[00:05:19] Unknown:
oh what
[00:05:20] Unknown:
yeah
[00:05:22] Unknown:
well let's face it look at it the other way the breweries would have been in a tough state You know, people did the the, spirits and things like that. That, if it wouldn't have been for Churchill because he well, he saw a sign up drink Canada dry, and he went there and did. Sorry.
[00:05:39] Unknown:
No. I know. It's a good joke though and you should tell it. It's quite good. It's quite good as that one. It's interesting though that you mentioned David Irving because I was I was actually looking for a clip today and I just didn't have enough time to prepare one. Now that sounds pathetic. Right? And it is because for years I've had tons of them on file and there's a really good there was we can talk about we know these details anyway, so we can refer to this. And by the way, the show is not entirely meant to be focused on this, but obviously, we've got this fantastic image today and there's quite a few people have sent in going, wow, look at that. And I've gone, yeah, wow. And if you blow it really big on your screen, it's even a bigger wow because it's a very exuberant picture. Of course, this is wrong for us to say things like this because, of course, we're looking at all those evil people. Yeah. Right. And, but apparently they they could be happy quite a bit and this is a good thing. But, I couldn't find any clips, Eric. Here's why. Why could I not find a clip? Oh, I found clips alright. I found tons of them.
There's some kind of a I'm suspicious of this because I get suspicious of everything. There's some kind of weird vogue with these short clips with particularly with pertinent, communications which are basically what David Irving has always made. There's always some great, meaty fact in there. Right? They put background music on all of these things. And, it's an insidious, an irritating thing. It's irritating beyond belief. I have no idea why people do it. I often I I try and use a bit of AI, or I, to strip it out. But one of the track all the tracks I was trying today, I just couldn't get it. It just sounded awful. And I used to have all of them uncluttered. You just want to hear people talking. I do. I love music. I like talking. I don't want the two mixed. Thank you very much. Generally,
[00:07:31] Unknown:
all the That that gets right up my ooter. And you know who's starting that off? Disc jockeys on Radio one. And here we go. We have the music in the background. Yeah. Yeah. That's it. And they got this music in the background. Turn the thing music off. You know? I mean,
[00:07:48] Unknown:
I agree with you. That gets right up my hooter. It's good. Well, we are traditional British old farts now, so I really wanna play up to the road, you know? And I think it's that's it. But, yeah. So, unfortunately, I don't really have one. I couldn't find one that was satisfying. I'd spent forty five minutes on one this morning. You think this show just it's not. It takes a long time for me to turn up and cock it up technically every Thursday. There's a lot of work going to that. I just went, I've been at this forty five minutes and it still sounds like crap to hell with it, you know. I I get very irritated. You need to, you know, this technology supposed to save you time not create your light, in, you know, increase your labours. He said whining. But, the reason for the image, by the way, today was I I hadn't really thought about it for this week. But on and the weather's been beautiful here today, by the way. I mean, absolutely spectacular.
Yeah. I've I've been down on the beach. It sounds awfully exotic. Smoking my cigars, drinking brandy, staring at all the fine young girls. No. Because it's it's a little bit cooler, but, it's the most beautiful day. There's not a breath of wind. The sea's like a mill pond. The sun was setting. It sets over the sea now. Obviously, the days are a little bit short, so not over the land. And, so you get this great look at it. I don't know if you ever done, what is it, sun gazing? You know, when the sun's really low in the sky. Yes. Yes. And that's the healthiest time to do it. First thing in the morning and last thing at night. That's right. So I was there for about ten minutes just looking at the thing and it's it's very good for all sorts of reasons, I think. It makes you think about the sun, doesn't it? And just how far away is it really? I mean, you know, I don't have a tape measure long enough to measure it. Some people came along and said, how far away is that? I always ask people pointless questions that they can't ask. I don't know. I said, no. You're you're a big disappointment.
[00:09:29] Unknown:
And, the island's got a planned mission to land on the sun, haven't they? Did you hear about that? No. Yes. Yes. And and that's a well, it's a bit hot. They said, ah, we're talking about we're going at night. Sorry. Yes. This is was about as authentic as the, NASA Mars missions, isn't it? You know? Would you see It is. Pictures of, Devon Island. Oops. Sorry. I mean, Mars.
[00:09:55] Unknown:
Devon Island and Mars. Yeah. I was there anyway, I was down there Monday and, a neighbor, sort of well, somebody I know. One of these people I was talking to I've been told actually, I did talk to him about farm stuff and he was quite into into interested in it. So it's taken me a little while. I just keep bumping into people I've seen quite regularly over the last few years and they're they're out and about. And when I bump into them, I sort of we sit down and have a chat. Anyway, really nice guy and we just ended up sitting on the stoop underneath the yacht club. This sounds awfully exotic. It's not a super exotic yacht club, but it's nice to be able to say yacht club, isn't it? Not that I'm a member. Everywhere else. Yes. It's very nice. So I sat on the on the steps of the yacht club, staring out the sea, just having a good chat, and it got round to this topic. Okay. So I pushed it round to this topic, but, it was a good little sort of, you know, you've probably had things like this and I bet certain listeners that are always pursuing these communication channels have had a similar sort of thing as well, which is that, we we end up we start off talking about the state of the country, blah blah blah blah blah, why is it like this? And then, of course, I have to go back to this period of history because you have to, I think, if you know, you know, that That's right.
That most of the stuff. And I said, look, so I said a few things. I said, I'll stop if you like. He said, no. I'm interested. Say some more stuff. I said, okay. I said, if you get fed up, just tell me to stop. I said, because I could, you know, there's no end to this really. So we started just touching on a few of these, major pivotal events that brought it about and why people have got a distorted view of that period of history. And I guess in our plucky little way, Eric, and I I know we're not alone in this, but the alternative voice space has has been pounding away, you know, with little sniper bullets against these howitzers that mainstream media have got for many a year. But we've got to keep on doing it to try and, you know, at least gain some people's attention and say look, it's pretty important that you get a right handle on this period of history because if you've only got the mainstream media one, you haven't got that. And, you know, it's not a help. It's really very very unhelpful. In fact, it's designed to make your life as difficult and as helpful as it possibly could be. So, I went through a lot of these things, you know. A lot of this stuff, the build up to it, particularly the banking side, which is why I put the little comment on today because it's the key thing.
I don't think I used the word usury once actually. But you it's it's very useful to do it. Yeah. I mean, he's an he's an intelligent guy. So he's a good guy and he was open. And if he'd told me to stop, I would have stopped. Right? I've learned this, you know. I there's a bit of me 10 ago. I would have just pounded on regardless but I don't know. If people, you know, I've had enough. They've had enough. But it I I probably spoke for about twenty, twenty five minutes, which is quite a long time to cover a lot of these things. And we didn't even get around to Stalin at all which was which was I said, oh well next I said, then there's Stalin. He went, oh.
I said, yeah. I said, but we can cover that when I bump into you in a couple of weeks time. He said, oh yeah that would be good. So, that's what prompted the selection of that image today, which is a cracker. It's an absolute cracker. And did you say didn't you send me a voice message today, Eric, saying or somebody did. I think it was you. Saying, could you imagine Keir Starmer being in a photograph like that? That wasn't me that said that, but you're right. Could you imagine Keir Starmer being in a photograph like that? Because no. You couldn't. Because
[00:13:18] Unknown:
when you look at it, look at Chemin Mao. Do we see any photographs of Chemin Mao shaking hands of the Chinese people with absolutely thousands of them surrounding him? Nope. Nope. Stalin? Nope. Nope. And as I've often said when I said, when, Monica, Monica Schafer was on your show, I said, when I was a little kid, I'll never forget it. I was only about, I think I'd hardly started school by been before I started school. They had all the old war films on the television, you know, all the propaganda stuff. And I thought from that early age, I thought, well, as we're such nice people, us nice allies, why weren't the German army falling over themselves to surrender? I mean, surely, you know, we landed at d day. The German army said, oh, we're fed up with this nasty Hitler man. We're gonna surrender to these very nice, allies.
Yep. And that was from a child's point of view. I didn't know anything about it at that stage, very little. And it puzzled me. Why why did they fight so hard when this nasty evil Hitler man was in charge of them? Why did they fist fight so hard right up to Berlin with you know? And Mhmm. Now I know it took me a time to find the answer to that, but that's from a child's perspective. I was very, very young, and I realize now why they fought on so hard. And they realized that, you know, that's it. Sorry. I had a voice come in. Hello, Paul. There's a there's a question. Questions are always good things. Hi. Hi. You got a question for me. I'm looking at that photo.
[00:14:55] Unknown:
All those flags in the back, isn't that like an Olympic Stadium or or like an Olympic event? It might be. It might have been at the Olympics. I don't know. Would that be flags of attending countries? Could have been. It's interesting that you mentioned, Churchill Mhmm. Because, I had Holding holding your lapel. Videos. Yes. Are you holding your lapel? How so? No. No. No. I'm not. Yes. I don't have a no have a lapel. I'm wearing a t shirt. But Oh. Anyways, it it's interesting that you mentioned Churchill because, Victor Hansen, ever heard of him? Yep.
Yep. He's a World War World War two historian. Yep. There's a YouTube short. It's got, like, 4,500,000 views, and it's still up. Go figure. And it's Victor Hansen, going through, how Hitler had conquered Europe and World War two. And, and the at the very end of it, he says the only thing that took Hitler down was Churchill. You know?
[00:16:00] Unknown:
Yeah. It's true. It's about,
[00:16:03] Unknown:
it's about fifty fifty eight seconds. I can play it very quickly and, just go through those. Sure. Yeah. Run it right now while we're while we're here on this topic. Yeah. Run it, Paul. That'd be great. Okay. Here we go. Come on. Come on. Don't be stupid.
[00:16:22] Unknown:
We're very patient right here. Oh, wait. Wait. Germany invaded Poland with the Soviet Union thirty days, twenty eight days, the war was over. Germany invaded Denmark one day, Norway about six weeks, it was over. Germany invaded The Netherlands, Luxembourg, Belgium, and France. Nobody could believe that would be possible. They had not been able to do it in World War one. They'd only gone 70 miles. This time, they took the entire Western democracies, all that area in seven weeks. Battle of Britain, the first time they had been stopped, but not their army, only their navy and their air force, and they took the Balkans, as you remember, in April 1941 in Greece and Crete. And all that period, Germany only lost a 100,000 soldiers. Hitler had achieved what nobody else in history had done, not Napoleon, not Caesar. He had basically combined what is now the European Union. Any country that opposed him were pro Nazi anyway, Switzerland, Portugal, and Spain. He'd achieved it. The war was over. There was a problem in Britain only because there was this problem called Winston Churchill.
[00:17:24] Unknown:
Yeah. There you go.
[00:17:25] Unknown:
Yep. And it's not really Churchill, is it? Although, of course, he's the, he's the out front drunken sodomy actor that did it. As you can tell, I don't have much of a view of this guy. I think, you know, it's this is why I was looking, but it's a great clip, Paul. Thank you for that. I mean, I see a lot from him. I think there's one I caught from him the other day because they pop up a lot, I guess, on your feed when you've looked at one, don't they? But, he was talking about the fact that Britain was the only participant that was in the war from day one right through to the end.
And he said something in an interesting way but it there's another way of expressing it. He said that basically there was no reason for Britain to go to war but they did it to defend the freedom of the other nations. That's a lovely way of putting it. I don't at all. That's not true. That's not what happened. But it sounds great and it looks good. It makes for good copy and particularly when you write in the history books. The reason that it happened, as we all know, is that the bankers got hold of Churchill and said you've got to stop this. We're gonna stop this. This is what's gonna happen. Yes. And and you're gonna stop it.
And, Irving's comments this is why I was looking for a clip and if you're not familiar with it, we'll dig some up for future shows because this is gonna be a recurring theme probably until I drop dead I suppose. It's that important. I think there are four or five massively important topics and the total misunderstanding of this period of history is one of them. I know that we are derided by established historians and they can deride away because I deride them back, court historians. They're not really worth the paper that they're printed on because all it's tame. They won't ask the questions that need to be asked. And I think Spot on. One of the things that Irving was saying in one of the clips is to do with the whole of Churchill's personal finances, which are absolutely pivotal in his ability to be manipulated. It's, you know and what he did in taking the empire as it was, which was already sort of reeling a bit anyway, is he flushed it completely down the toilet.
Yes. He's the he's the greatest enemy the British have ever had. He he basically allowed and enabled communism, globalism, to come all the way into Europe. He opposed the one nation that sent us 38 offerings of peace that didn't want war with us at all and had even offered in other letters, I think from the one at Dunkirk, there's that meeting where, Hitler recalled all his tank commanders back to Berlin about a week after Dunkirk when they'd been given these orders to not shell the beach and he told them that they couldn't they didn't want to take on the empire because administering it was just too big a task and it was being run well.
And he would send divisions of German troops anywhere in the world where the empire was being threatened. He wanted to work with us. Well, of course, the people that actually run this country, not the British, who would have hooked up with the Germans easily, really. There wouldn't have been a problem with it, you know. We were in charge. And so he literally flushed and destroyed 200 years worth of building and and stuff. And, of course, you can criticize the Empire for stuff and I do because I don't think there really was one, you know. We were cannon fodder in that as well. But there was, it's not all bad.
It's not all bad. I'm not gonna sit around and say it was all bad. We we delivered some amazing things around the world at that period of history on the boats. A lot of stuff went on. The the law got expanded. Tons of stuff. So I I I I view him in a very bad light and that's a massive under understatement and I'm pretty sure, Eric, you're of a you're of a similar persuasion. Woah. You're of a similar persuasion.
[00:21:03] Unknown:
Well, yes. Be because, the agreement that Britain had, with Poland was identical to the agreement that Poland Britain had with Tibet. But when Chinese tanks rolled into Tibet and Chinese army took over Tibet, we there wasn't a whimper. And apparently, there's a few letters in the Times, and that was about it. So isn't it strange? You know, what's good for the goose is good for the gander. So we didn't take on China because we've had a a a we wanted to keep the freedom of Tibet. So, you know, it it that just rubs it in as far as I'm concerned.
[00:21:42] Unknown:
Yeah. It does. And I think, you know, obviously, the front end war is a horrific, colossal, tragic, you know, loss of life on all sides. It really is. It's just absolutely ridiculous. But, that's not even the right word, is it? That the thing is that without understanding that mainspring behind it, which is to do with the financial subjugation of the world, you won't understand it. I mean, it's not the only key bit that people need to know, but it's absolutely I think it's it's it's vital to understand this. When I was talking to my neighbour, Nick, about this, I said, are you aware of the economic miracle of Germany? He went, no. I said, oh, you know. I was slightly surprised. I thought a lot of people would be but you real people just don't get exposed to stuff, you know. We get we're sort of jumping around in it, splashing around in it, sort of twenty four hours a day. All of these things and and many people just have never really sort of incorporate that into their life that maybe they didn't need to. And I said, well, it's it's pretty important. I said, you know, this is why, this is why it was such a trouble. I said, there's a reason why that country had to be destroyed by them. I said, it's it's not, you know, it's not just about Hitler.
It's not really just about that. It's about a system. That's why I put the little caption under that picture. It probably is the Olympics or something like that, but you've probably seen many other photos like that of the of the open top parades and all this that and the other. And of course, I've been slightly circumspect about putting any image up for any of the shows that are related to that, purely because of the censorship out there. Maybe this will get flagged. Oh, these guys are Nazis. No, we're not. Nazis sort of disappeared in 1945, but I know that they are meant to persist within the within the public, discourse because anybody that's, not extreme extreme left is, obviously a Nazi fascist, you know, if you just want a decent life for you and your family. But we just want the truth. Yeah. Yeah. We do. The thing is we just want the truth, not magnitude.
[00:23:36] Unknown:
Yeah. You know, that that that does, because I looked into Marcy Tong and people like that. Does that make me a communist? No. It doesn't. No. You know, why can't we look into these people? And I just wanted to be the like a fly on the wall type of thing. But, you know, when you look at I mean, Dave's the late great star Dave Starbuck once said, he said, children are very perceptive. And you notice that when mister h was around, children would run up to him. Mhmm. When Stalin was around, they would run a mile from him. When Churchill was around, they were terrified of him. But mister h or uncle h, they came to him. And I've seen pictures of children running towards him. And that tells you something, doesn't it?
[00:24:23] Unknown:
You know? I think it does. Yeah. It does. I think it tells you a lot of stuff. And I it's it's such a spectacular positive story in this from '33 onwards, Counterbalanced with this tragic ending through to '45. And you see all these criticisms and from a certain you can all of them are kind of valid depending on what trousers you've put on that day. I mean, Michael Hoffman has written a I've still not got round to reading this, which is highly critic of saying that Hitler was the greatest disaster to befall the Germans because so many of them died and got killed in World War two and all the ruin of it. Okay. From a certain perspective up to a certain level of information. That's right. And he's not on mister Hoffman's probably even more knowledgeable than I am about it. I'm not trying to be cocky about it. He probably is. Right? But I think it's a matter of perspectives with these things. It's it's so easy to judge everybody, just like we were judging Churchill. But, of course, the judgments that I have or the view I have of Churchill now is nothing like the one I had forty years ago when I didn't know anything, when I only had one side of the story and barely that.
And I think, they're all liable. Yeah. A lot of people died, but I think the real question would be if you were in that position, what would you do? Precisely. What would you do? These are, you know, in in their position, they had basically shown the world, even though the world wasn't allowed to look, and that's what the bankers were desperately scared of. They've shown the world how to basically get rid of the bank. You know? That's true. No matter what you wanna say about it, we don't actually need one. Thank you very much. We don't need your services.
[00:26:01] Unknown:
I don't know hang on. I'm sorry about that. My my my my my micron just blunt just, wasn't able to do that. Thing? No. It had a hissy fit. It had a bit of a hissy fit. But what I was gonna say, is that I don't know whether the German secret services knew, but according to David Irving, Churchill had a plan to drop Sino what no. What's it? Anthrax
[00:26:26] Unknown:
on Germany. He's a lovely
[00:26:28] Unknown:
guy. Yes. He's such a nice man, to literally wipe the German race out. And he said if that had happened, Germany would have been un been uninhabitable to this day because the islands where they tested anthrax now in, I think, the Scottish islands, until recently, they were uninhabitable. That that really cleaned them up, and it was a big job. But that was the plan, and you had to be dissuaded from from from going ahead with it. Well, actually, spraying anthrax over Germany.
[00:26:58] Unknown:
Yep. So,
[00:27:00] Unknown:
evil. Evil.
[00:27:01] Unknown:
Yeah. I I don't know if you launch into I don't know if you get these opportunities, Eric, talking to people about this stuff. I it was just on Monday. I mean, I don't know how often we do talk about it on this show. Maybe it's too much or maybe it's not enough. But, all of these things dovetail back into it. I suppose you could talk about it. We could talk about it every week if we wanted to. But it was just in going through these sort of key little significant periods with this guy. I found it really rewarding to do it. It's very satisfying to have someone who who genuinely wants to listen to this stuff. It only takes one person. Oh, it is. It only takes one person going. Oh, yeah. I never knew that. Can you tell me a bit more? Go, cool. This is great. Thank you very much for letting me, you know, do my little thing because it's you feel as though all the effort's worth it. I know I'm sort of getting my violin out. You feel great afterwards, don't you? You do. Yeah. You bloody do. You do. And, I'm just going Yeah. And what it makes me think because no doubt, maybe you doubt yourself. I don't doubt the information. I just think, you know, are we doing the right thing? And I only need to get one positive response from one person going, no, this is the right thing. I know it's ridiculous. It's like sniper technique. One person a day for ten million years and we might get there. But still, it's what you can do and there are people that are not interested at all. So it's it gives me hope. Is that the right word? Maybe it gives me That's right. Encouragement that it's that it's all worthwhile. Yeah.
[00:28:25] Unknown:
Also, the night of the was it was it either Krystlknack or, like, I think it's Krystlknack, but don't quote me on that, that, mister h went absolutely ballistic, Mhmm. He said he didn't want anybody harmed. And when he heard that there was, businesses of the people we're not allowed to criticize being smashed up, he really did get angry. And he gave an order, direct order that he didn't want those people harmed. And that was
[00:28:54] Unknown:
it. And They they were fighting basically with one arm tied behind their back. And they were also, I think, you know, in the sense that, and this is right that they did this, they they still had more than one foot in the realm of chivalry. I'm serious. They did. And, Churchill didn't. Churchill didn't, in my view. I mean, the the mere fact that he'd even consider dropping anthrax just really reveals everything about his character. And, this whole situation with him living at Chartwell with all these with 40 people. He had 40 people on his payroll on a bank bench a salary of £500 a year. He's very good with his with his home bookkeeping. There was an interesting thing I found apparently, you know, he became a, he became a a writer for an American newspaper series.
So he wrote War and Peace and, Dostoyevsky's stuff. What I mean by that, Irving was talking about this, he got a contract He's not right. A thousand dollars a month or something to write these newspaper articles. And he had to take, say, War and Peace and condense it down into 25 pages. So he did. And he is a good writer. Of that there's no doubt. His, the simple directness of his language and the inherent rhythms within it are extremely good. There's no two words about it. I'm not I've never knocked that. And unfortunately, many of the things he said are also very valuable and true. But there was obviously some kink, major kink in his character, which is to do really with his weaknesses of being a drunkard and almost was he a gambler? I mean, certainly, he had to be bailed out. He lost practically everything. Oh, it it was a gamble.
[00:30:36] Unknown:
Yeah. Yes. But he was actually, David Irving in his talk, he said he was actually an alcoholic. Yeah. He because he he had all the traits of an alcohol alcoholic. And that's why the, Canadian prime minister called him a drunken bum in his diary because, he was drunk most of the time. And, there was a was it Delmar? No. Hang on. Not Delmar. Oh, sorry. I'm getting muddled up now. There's a chat that used to do all his speeches for him because you could take him off very well. Norman Shelley. Tommy Still's father. Norman Shelley. I'm terribly sorry. Delmar was the other guy. He was the, he's the black black propaganda bloke. But, no, what I was gonna say is him and, apparently, Tommy Still's father did as well. Right. Took Churchill off. So and they say that the one we can find in one of the beaches wasn't Churchill. It was that other fellow that did it. Shelley. So there we go.
Yeah. Yeah. Oh. Did it.
[00:31:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Hi. I don't know where you got that picture. I have scoured the Internet, and I even used AI to look for that photo that you have on the Internet, and it is not available. However, there is an image of Hitler shaking Jesse Owens' hand. But the newspapers of the, of the time that was the 1936, Berlin Olympics. Mhmm. And the newspapers of the time, the American ones, reported that Hitler snubbed The US, athletes Yep. When it was actually Franklin Delano Roosevelt who refused
[00:32:17] Unknown:
to shake Jesse Owens' hand. That's correct. And Jesse Owens could go anywhere in Germany and was treated, very decently. He went into, restaurants and places like that. Yet when he came back when he went back to, America, there was a color bar, and he couldn't go where he wanted. So he said that the people were very open to him, and that was in his diaries, apparently. That was Jesse Owens' diaries. So And it yes.
[00:32:45] Unknown:
The disin the disinformation is is just
[00:32:50] Unknown:
prolific. Yes. And of course, it's been around for so long. Absolutely. It's been around for so long and it was echoed in all of the major media channels. This is the stuff that we're dealing with all the time. What's that thing? You know, a lie is halfway around the world by the time the truth just got to the garden gate, something like that. It's difficult. I I know it's because the truths that need to be told were we touching on this the other day? I think we maybe were. The truths that need to be told are, by definition, unpleasant.
Because, you know, you got do you know about this? No. And when you're gonna tell somebody something that they don't know, it's nearly always gonna be unpleasant because it's the stuff that the mainstream media has been keeping out of their heads most of their lives because it's unpleasant. Because it runs counter to the fairy tale story that we're supposed to absorb and suck up and all this kind of stuff, you know. I suppose what we need, we need some great staunch advocate for Churchill to be on this show and give us a good verbal tongue lashing, Eric. Maybe that'd be fun, Okay? And, tell us what a great guy he was and all this that the other. I mean every time you do a search on Irving and I did a few today, there's still loads of stuff going is there's anything this guy ever written true and stuff like that and you're looking at these comments and you're going have you seen the sheer volume of work that this man's produced? Just the sheer amount of it, Right? And the caliber of scholarship that's got goes into it and the quality of the writing. Most people are still not familiar with it because they get bulked away from it. It's purely because he's a holocaust denier or whatever label of disrepute they're gonna throw at him today.
And, it's ridiculous, you know. You even get established historians saying, oh, no no no no. All this kind of stuff. And they're cranking all these phrases out. And it's like a kid's tea party. I mean, it's worse. You go, is any any adults in the conversation, please? Any? I'm not bothered about what you know. I'm bothered about the quality of your behavior. And they're just like throwing tantrums about this stuff, which tends to someone like me and you, I guess. And then, unless you just it confirms my prejudices. That's what they'd say I have. Okay. I've got them then. Whatever. But they've been formed through study not because I just walked past a TV set one day and saw something and went, oh, I'll have a bit of that. And, yeah, it's it's so major. It really is. It's a major thing. I think, you know, one of the guys I caught here is is a legal man.
The guy that's responsible for Barnum World, which you should all still watch if you've not watched it yet. It's fantastic. And it's on YouTube, Barnum World. And, he was I I think he put a post up a couple of weeks ago. I probably mentioned it at the time saying that the misunderstanding about World War two is so colossal and is so important that we've got that we've got very little chance while people are going around in a complete fog about it. And even now today, you still see this Nazi stuff coming up and you're going, oh lord help me.
Really? Doesn't haven't these people ever stopped to go, maybe I ought to just make my own inquiries. Why don't I do that? No. They don't do it. That's the problem.
[00:36:02] Unknown:
That's a key part. Yeah. But they they have to justify a war. For example, after the first World War, there was no justification for it. And there's almost a revolution in this country, and we're very, very close to it. Yeah. And, I mean, I've said this sort of thousand times before. The stuff that we're hearing now, like, all this going to there's a spiritual awakening. That was invented by the Secret Services in, 1919. So there's people and it was all misdirection. I won't go into that because I've gone into it a thousand times before, and for a million times, I must stop exaggerating. But I was gonna say is that I've got into that before. But the real fact of the matter is is there's there had to be a justification for World War two because they knew that if there wasn't a justification, then there would be an uprising after that war. So they have to keep on and on and on and on and on. So people say, oh, yes. We fought the naughty dancers today. We did a marvelous thing. We we we showed them what to do. Otherwise, we would have been goosestepping everywhere and, you know, and All these cliches. Sort of stuff. Yeah. It really is.
[00:37:07] Unknown:
But It's it's tragic. It is. It's moronic. Yeah. Unbelievably so. It is. I guess I guess every you know, having been one of those people when I was 18, not that I was sort of ardently I don't know my nose did stuff then, but, yeah, the cascading effect of mainstream conditioning affected me as well. And not having any sort of access to books that would rebut it or showing an interest frankly. I mean, there are a lot of people there were kids at school that really into World War two. I found them a bit nerdy because they just was collecting uniforms and all this kind of stuff. What the hell is that to do with it? Yeah. There was. Yeah. But for me, personally, once once the banking angle led into it, you go, oh, oh here we go. Here we go. And then, you see that all of these conflicts they've always got this thread and it's that people are subjugated through the contract through the administration of the bank which is to be given to reputable people, you see. Oh, so you've got all these bizarre stories and backstories to this entire conflict such as and we mentioned this, didn't we, a few weeks ago. You've got Montagu Norman, the head of the Bank of England being his best mate is Hjalmar Schacht, the head of the German Bundest Bank or whatever it was called at the time. This is in the late twenties and they've been talking away and writing a letter to where like Billio for forty, forty five years or something like that. Right? About forming the Bank of International Settlements.
Those two guys wanted it more than anything else to provide this super flexible thing. And then you find out that Schacht opposed Hitler's economic measures, which were basically the measures that began pulling them away from the control of the central banking mob. He took them away from the central bank mafia. That's what he did. That's why all those people that's why I put the caption. That's why all those people are smiling. They may not have known they were smiling for that. But when I look at them, I put my spin on it and I'm going I want to stand in a crowd like that knowing that I'm amongst a bunch of people where their own economic efforts, most of it is going to go back into their own pocket. How about that as an idea? No communism. No capitalism. None of that crap. Let's just organize and work together as a tribe, which is what they did. That's why it's so that's why this story would die because even though people intellectually have got all this other guff in the front of their head, at the base of them there's something that they can't stop looking at this period of history. I even saw something today said, oh, not another book about Hitler. It won't end.
They're not gonna end because because there's something else going on above and beyond even the mechanics of the whole thing. There really is.
[00:39:36] Unknown:
But look at Gaddafi. Now I've seen a YouTube video and I can't find it. It must have been taken down of him in an open top car. And it's no, what's this modern thing now? Well, it's it hasn't been tampered with. It was an actual film. I've been going around the, the the streets and people rushing out. And similar to what that that photograph, people were absolutely loving him. Why? Because the people themselves prospered from the country. And when the country got richer, they got richer instead of what we got now, where the country gets richer and everybody gets poorer. Yeah. You know, that's that that that's the thing. And when you see how pessimistic people are in this country, look at what the look on their faces.
Optimism. And this is what we used to have until about the nineteen seventies. Optimism in this country is gone.
[00:40:29] Unknown:
Yeah. The chirpy British character is hard to find. It's still out there. I do my best. I think you do. You you do more than your best. You bet you've got your batting average is very high. It's almost like you're I'm sorry. Stereotypes alive. I know that I'm acting when I do it. I don't care. I mean, people go, it's just an act. Well, everybody's got an act. Which one do you want? You wanna be a miserable shit that's not gonna achieve anything? Are we gonna and you need to find allies to do that, don't you? To keep your energy up. It's on these really sort of micro levels of negativity that they begin to cause everything to seize. It's very delicate on one level, and they just don't want a galvanized, alive, vibrant people, which is what you see in that picture. That's why that picture is powerful now. It's really powerful because you go, bloody hell. I don't look at people looking like that at all these days. No. You don't.
[00:41:20] Unknown:
Well, I went to the last farm shop within walking distance of my house Right. Today. Now the fact is, up to say a decade or two back, you were spoilt for choice. There were, you know, if you want, because it's a lot of lot of farms around where I live. Most of it's been built on now. And I went to this farm, and the woman said, oh, they wanna build, one of these, towers. I won't say what type, but it it's, five of them, and they're wow. Gee. You know? And British Telecom said that they're literally compulsorily putting this tower in her on this woman's land.
Right. And I said, well, okay. You know, I told her what I do on the Internet. And that I said, I'm a show I'm a show. And she said, we're gonna get people when they come along to erect this thing, to stand. Locals are gonna stand on the spot to stop them erecting it. She said, because that's gonna be within a mile of my house. You know, I don't wanna get a radiated bite, and those things make a noise as well. So it's very, very sad what's happening. But they're literally I said, isn't it lovely to live in a democracy? She said, well, they've said that they can do it. It doesn't matter about what people think. They're putting it in. That's it. All stop, end off. Yep. You know?
I I mean, I And I don't believe in democracy. Well So I said to us, I don't No. I don't believe in democracy. I don't believe, I said we should ignore the government out of existence. You know? So what? If the government said, oh, oh, really? Well, we've got our own police. We've got our own way of doing things. We're doing it out what that pleases the people, and we got our own currency. So sod off government. You can go and play with the usury scam, you know? That's it. I I think that idea and that attitude is worth spreading.
[00:43:08] Unknown:
You know, it might not succeed, but what else you're gonna do? You just have to keep pounding away and, you know, we tried a, we'll try b, we'll try c. Okay. Try it all again and just keep going, because it's an honorable thing to do. I think the main thing, you know, Eric, with the democracy stuff is that it just opens the portals for infection,
[00:43:24] Unknown:
which is why it was furnished upon us. Well, it's it's a word, isn't it? It's I mean, it's a bit like I said to her, you know, I said, there's a shelf of jam. There is a shelf of jam on her, in her shop. You see the farm shop. I said, well, if I said that that is a shelf of vodka, you could believe it's a shelf of vodka, but it isn't. It's a shelf of that of jam. And I said, this is the way governments change words. Council tax. It's not council tax. It's protection racket. That's all it is because there's no difference between that and the mafia's protection racket.
You pay money in, and if you don't pay money to these people, they'll rather if it's a mafia, they'll rather destroy you physically. Or if it's the local council, they'll destroy you psychologically. Same difference. So what's the difference? Yeah. You know? That that that's it. And they just changed these words. Like, they called it community child. Doesn't that sound nice? Why don't they just call it theft? Why do you call it tax? It's theft. Because if it came back to the people, fine, but it doesn't. It's taking money out of for, out of false percentages for for it's really it it is literally, there's I look on government as the mob. That's how I think we should describe them. The mob. Nothing more, nothing less. I I don't look at anybody in the political realm.
Well, I don't know of anybody that I would really trust, and not even the ones that backbite and so so with how bad it was. Because what is in the mentality of someone that wants to be a politician? Multitude, that's good enough reason for them not to be a politician. That's it. Yeah.
[00:45:03] Unknown:
Yeah. It's, I I know we're going over familiar ground, but we it's worth it. It's worth going over familiar ground. I suppose you end up sort of it's like paring down a suit. You end up getting to the essence of it. You go, really? This is the key stuff that we need to keep addressing and and looking at and trying to find a way of introducing it to wider audiences, which is a great challenge, of course. At least we've got this for now in whatever capacity we've got it. And, we could pretend to say that we're shadow banned or something like that. I don't know whether we are. It's it's gonna be impossible for us to find out, but, yeah. Definitely, the you know, with your show, what we do here, and a few others as well, we're trying to sort of, you know, to keep this keep this going. Some good comments coming in, by the way.
Cathy Cat seventeen or is it Cathy seven? Mentions the thing that we talked about just a couple of weeks ago. How the GDP of Germany went up during '33 to '39. It was higher versus The US GDP in 1939. Indeed, it was. A population of 80,000,000 had a higher GDP than a population of a 150,000,000. And with, I mean, this just shows you what would be possible. I mean, of course, if we do that, all the economists must are out of a job. You see, it's as if the actual solutions can never ever be employed because the advisory intellectual class won't have anything to do.
That's always been my thought. I just keep thinking we've actually solved all this. It's in the administration of it that it all goes wrong. The administration is literally hijacked. They put a front on it. They then control the communications around these things. You can't get access to the true data. They then start telling you stories and the end result is that they, as the mafia, end up in in charge as the middleman of producers and consumers and you have to go through their marketplaces either, you know, marketplaces of currency, marketplaces of ideas, courtesy of the media, and they're controlling it all. And you sent you you can't sort of articulate it when you're young but the more you look at it you go well this is this is why things are so crap. I've just I mean, I've had an experience recently having to send forms off, to private companies where I've been dealt with pretty quickly and to a council.
I don't I won't go into what it's about, but it's not that the people at the council are bad or anything. I can't be bothered to get angry with anybody, but the form that came back from the council was, like, 12 pages long, and it's mad. It's absolutely mad. And I look at these things and and you go, well, it's only a 12 page thing. Right? But it's indicative of a kind of mental crippling that's taking place in the administration of things and it's worth I mentioned this to Nick on Monday. I've said it here before but I'll say it again. 1859, the civil service running the entire empire at the time 16,000 people in 1859.
In 02/2025, the civil service to run The UK, which doesn't exist, this political construct, 500,000. Half a million compared to 16,000. And they've got computers which are supposed to simplify things, aren't they? Or remove the burdensomeness of administrative work. Aren't they supposed to do that, Eric? Or am I sort of Yeah. Am I sort of Oh, yes. What's going on? But these computers go wrong. Oh, okay. Because my local council,
[00:48:37] Unknown:
they sent me this snotty, thing that they said that I haven't paid the protection racket or council tax for two months because I paid it, via PayPoint, not PayPal. PayPoint. Troublemaking. And I contacted yes. And I contacted PayPoint, and they said the council have, it's gone into an account. So I've sent them letters since the September, and they haven't answered them. I sent them a check, and they haven't cashed it for October, protection racket. And it's what's today? The ninth? It still hasn't been cashed. So I'm going to send back to them and say, that unless they can prove to me that, you know, it's pointless me trying to pay them because I don't accept my money. So I'm gonna stop paying until they, you know, what's the point of this? So I'm not refusing to pay, but I'm just I better stop paying until they can show me a way that they can accept my money because they're not accepting it. So, that's it. Let let hold back.
Because really, they are registered in the on Dun And Bradstreet. If you look at Dun And Bradstreet, your local council is registered. They are a company, and they've got as much right to put count they call it council tax or an invoice in big in April every year, they've got much right to do that as a supermarket has. You don't have really any right at all. And all you really need to do, is to ask them for an invoice. Can I have an itemized bill of what you've actually done, the services provided? And the answer is they can't do it. They're actually working illegally and have been doing so since 9073. So, you know, this is the thing when we went into the EU.
So my the council, though, I I I mean, the people are very nice, as you say, who work for them. But the high ups, well, what they earn and what they do is questionable. And do do we need a council? I don't think we do. I mean
[00:50:43] Unknown:
Well, I think I mean, Keir Starmer's gonna save us, isn't he?
[00:50:49] Unknown:
Oh, what? Well, he might say I'll tell you something else he might say. For four days, I'm it's like Niagara Falls. There's water pouring down the the lane, which is at the top of my garden. Right. And it's coming from a water mains, which is about couple of 100 yards up into another lane. And it's been pumping out for almost a week. And apparently, the water water people have been told about it. But they might start work tomorrow, or they might have to start work on Monday. But they put traffic lights there to stop the the the traffic, you know, to hold the traffic up. So So the traffic are being held up for no works whatsoever. So they're gonna be held up all over the weekend as well. I mean, it's just bonkers and people are now ignoring the traffic lights and just driving along normally. Because it's pointless traffic lights are not serving any purpose.
So all that clean water, and it is clean water, drinking water, it's just being flushed away. It'll be about a week's worth. Must be gallons and gallons just, you know? And why? Because they keep repairing this water main along this lane, and they're bodging it. And it lasts for about a year, and it cracks again. And it just cracks. And it and and it cracks in a different place every time. Why? Because they don't repair it properly. That's it. So that's my little little rum grumble. But local authorities, are exercises in waste, as far as I'm concerned. Their bureaucracy is waste.
Total waste. And we do not need them. And as for civil service, well, I've got a little story about the civil service. Would you like to hear it, boys and girls? I'm I'm I'm thrilled. Will I be able to stay awake, Harry? You might do. Well, very quickly, I used to work alongside alongside the civil service. Yes. I was freelance. I used to interact. And it's the biggest cultural shock I think us contract blokes ever had because you do not actually, you go into kind of orbital eccentricity. So you want if you wanna go from point a to point b, it's in a straight line, not with the civil service. You go into, like, an orbit and try and collide with what you want to achieve. And what happened, this was when the RA bombed Longacre, a pub they bombed. Mhmm. And I was actually the opposite side of this pub in my office, and I thought the window was gonna come in. It's when the bomb went off. It was all ordered out the office, and blah de blah de blah. Anyway, what happened is, as we were in architect's department, they said, any ideas, in case, you know, another bomb goes off?
So I suggested that, there's it was actually the building where Yogi Baird made his first television transmission. Alright. That was the building it was in. Not, hi, boo boo. Not that Yogi Baird, but the the other one. And there's I don't know whether it's toughened glass or what. It was built in the nineteen twenties, this building. And it had this, sit water, you know, very lots of glass. So I said, why not put, net curtaining around? So if there's an explosion, any shades of glass will go into the neck curtain and prevent any injuries.
And there was a place around the corner. It was prepared to do it. And I can't remember the exact cost. I think it was about a thousand pounds because it's a big office. And what the civil service did was they got what was it? Risk assessment in a private risk assessment firm. I think it was £15,000 they spent, risk assessment, to prove that we don't need the shirt the the the curtains. And I couldn't we couldn't actually, hire these people to put the neck curtains up anyway, because I had to be on an approved list. And the person that was on the approved list was £3,000. Three times as much. But we couldn't use them because the risk assessment. So they spent £15,000 to save a thousand pounds. And they said, well, it's very good very good value for money.
That's how they think.
[00:55:04] Unknown:
It's didn't they just spend half a million quid changing the color of a dot in a government logo or something Yes. This week? Yeah. That's it. Yes. That was it. Yes. It's done to wind us up as well. I mean, this has got to be done to wind us up. But it I mean, basically, all of these things that that keep happening and have been happening for decades, they're just a symptom of this sort of ongoing demoralization process where we are supposed to view this stuff, which of course you can't avoid. It keeps tumbling around, doesn't it? And to come to the view that we can't do anything. And after a while, I've been told that for twenty years, you can't. You don't become a competent people. You become the incompetent people they've been saying you are for the last twenty years. That's what's actually gonna happen. It is happening.
People that's why people probably look kind of, you know, not so happy out there and everything. All that kind of stuff. There was a there's a fellow on my show all couple of weeks, but I can't even remember his name, talking about,
[00:55:59] Unknown:
what's that myth that that area that that supposed to have existed? I can't it starts with t to, Tartaria. Doesn't really matter. Tartaria. Thanks. I thought, as I say, little Joe, here he comes. I thought Tartaria was the red light district. Anyway, boom. And, yes. And, what happened is, I saw another video of his. He's talking to another person because he was a a freemason, apparently. And he met a high level freemason who said, I'm sorry I'm late to this whatever meeting because we was discussing, the, who's going to be next prime minister. And it will be, Bozo Bozo, you know, Boris. Yep. And he said he Boris must have been surprised because they choose what the prime minister next prime minister's going to be. Yes. And I can't remember what video it was on, but they just don't understand. Already been chosen, don't you think, Eric? Hasn't Nigel already? Oh, yes. I think I think he's been chosen. And what you'll have is exactly the same as when Blair came to power and when Trump came to power. You'll have about three months, and you think always carrying out all what he said he's going to do. And then, after about three to six months, I think they're asked into a little room.
A bit like what that comedian said. Like in America, the president is asked into a little room, and they show you a picture of, Kennedy being assassinated from a different angle. Yeah. And then they say, right. You do what we say. Any questions, mister president? You know? And that's it. And I think they do the same here. It okay. They let off the leash for about three months, and then if you don't do what we say,
[00:57:40] Unknown:
then it's going to be Yeah. Their their system's working perfectly fine. Wooden overcoat. It works Yes. Perfect as the system. It's just particularly when they've got a lot of people believing that it actually makes a difference. Anyway, we're just coming to the end of the hour. I've got a very long song to play. Very long. It's actually two songs back to back. I stumbled across this the other day and, I'm gonna try and do something. So this is this has got this is potentially fraught with technical, technical hell coming up. There's a video of it. It's actually a music track and I want to play it into the video streams and I think I might be able to do this. So we're gonna do it. It runs for seven minutes. I'm gonna warn you now. It's in two parts, very distinct parts. And the first part is very heavy. It's unlike anything I I've ever really played. Okay. It's an extremely somber and gritty sort of thing but it's it's it's quite an inter it's a very interesting song. There's a reason I want to play it. It came out about six years ago before all the AI stuff really had hit in vogue.
It's called Infernal Machines. Right, by the Divine Comedy, followed by something else. So you got seven minutes. You can make two cups of tea during this one if I get this right. Oh. That's what we we'll be coming back in in the second half. You're listening to Paul English here on WBN three two four. We'll be back after this song. Fingers crossed it's gonna work. Here we go. Will it work? I don't know. It does.
[01:01:05] Unknown:
Machines that make boys, machines that make girls, machines that make girls, machines that make girls, machines that make
[01:02:46] Unknown:
You
[01:02:49] Unknown:
wanted a life of ease. A world free of drudgery. Everything done by machines. Everything done by machines, people here it is, your life of ease. That crazy algorithm has you in its sway. It's making the decisions for you every day. You're living in a prison of your own design. That crazy algorithm's making up your mind.
[01:06:21] Unknown:
So there we go. The divine comedy. And, I don't know what you made of that. It's the first time I've ever been able to run a video. It it it jumped a little bit. Did you catch all of that, Eric, in the studio?
[01:06:33] Unknown:
Yes. So I saw some of it, and it is very, very good. Very interesting. It sounds a little bit like Caravan Palace. Have you heard of Caravan Palace?
[01:06:42] Unknown:
No. I haven't.
[01:06:43] Unknown:
They're a French electro swing sort of group, and very unusual. It's like nineteen thirties music, but with a kind of modern swing to it. It really is a bit catchy.
[01:06:58] Unknown:
Well, I think watching. I I don't get to listen to lots of stuff recently, but every now and again, I'll I'll just will and I really rate this guy. Yeah. I think he's absolutely fantastic and, Where'd you get it from? Where did you find out of it? I was stumbling around. Well, I was actually we're gonna play another song by them later on. It's already been mentioned. I've got it lined up so XO will be feeling psychic. But there's another song he did called National Express which is I think I played it about a year and a half back or something and I came across it and went and so I went off and looked for some more stuff by them. He's he's lyrically and melodically of I think on the highest level, he's they're barely known, really. But he's got a wicked cheeky sense of humor. And the lyrics to that thing are so spot on. They're amazing. It's absolutely I mean, it's, you know, it's one of those things. This is from six years ago. This is pre COVID, I I think. I think it's six years ago that it came out.
Actually, it's longer than that. It's about 2018 from an album called The Office Politics. And someone said, well, the entire album is amazing. I haven't listened to that track on it because I'm just busy. I'll get around to trying to listen to the rest of it. But he he comes up with almost like perfect pop songs. Do you know what I mean by that? Where they're just balanced perfect. You might not like them. You might not like all of them. I mean, I don't like them. But you go, wow. This guy really knows his way around music, and he just does instinctively.
It's it's tremendous stuff. He's got a very light soft delicate voice, but there's a very keen sharp and very humorous intelligence at work, and I love that blend. I thought the video was amazing. The video is absolutely stunning and, it's just got a mood of the, you know, I did I don't like that stuff at the beginning. It's not the sort of stuff I listen to, but the reason I played it is that counterpoint. It works. In that instance, it really, really works. It's getting across this industrialization of everything.
Machines are just doing everything. I mean, come on. It's really what's taking place. And you'll never work in this town again. Although, apparently, according to the government, we're all going to, you know, we're gonna create lots of jobs. Nobody knows why. What's the point? But what Yeah. But the thing is we could have
[01:09:04] Unknown:
you think how creative our society could be because whilst the machines are doing all the drudgery and the things that we don't like to do, we could have some absolutely fantastic you think we could have cathedrals and churches, which look absolutely fantastic. Houses that look brilliant with craftspeople doing all beautiful carvings and things like that. We could we could look at things like that going to that area where there'd be plenty of work to do, which machines could could not do. So that that that is the way I think we should go.
[01:09:37] Unknown:
You know you know that thing we were talking about the other day? I don't know which show. Is it either here or on yours? Because we're a right couple of radio tarts in and out of each other's shows all day long. It's tremendous. I was just that it's this thing about their store it's their story that we consume and respond to. They're the ones telling the story, and we're going, we don't like this. We I've been saying that my entire life. No. I don't like that. I don't like that part of the story. No. That's crap. No. An idiot wrote that bit. Oh, god. You're all idiots. Oh, dear. We never get to write our story. And in a way, you know, this picture from today going back to the nineteen thirties, that's a glimpse into our story. Our story is like that in part, not entirely, but it's got the essence of how we want to live. And we're being denied that by effectively an alien ideology that's taken up residence in the heads of basically, you know, I suppose psychopaths.
Actually, I saw something the other day. Somebody posts something about Madame Blavatsky, during the end of her life. I've got most of her books. I've I've only sort of nibbled at them every now and again, and people, oh, you you won't be watching that stuff and all that. But I'm I'm interested in anything where intelligence has been brought to bear. And apparently, about two years before she passed, she was given an insight into soulless people. This is how it is. People that exist that haven't got one. Right? That's right. And it's what we would call psychopaths and and basically the description that she put down in the journal or that was being presented in this video was very much along the lines that you and I and many others are aware of and have discussed that they are effectively like, photocopier machines, these people. They mimic their emotions that but there's actually nothing really there. They're glassy eyed. I mean, you look at Starmer. This is a dead fish of a human being.
There's something not alive in there that should be there. It ain't there. You can feel it.
[01:11:29] Unknown:
That's right. Blair and most of these politicians. Mhmm. I mean, there's a book. What's it now? Puzzling People. I can't remember who it was by now. That was quite interesting, although I do disagree with a lot of what you've put in there because, you know, he said that psychopaths tend to have high testosterone and can perspire a lot. I found no I do that. That I disagree with. Yeah. I play spire a lot. You know? And, I got masses of testosterone, Eric.
[01:11:56] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. Well, you know, I don't know. Well, I've got loads of it because I'm bleeding, bald headed, and that's a sign of an overload of testosterone, isn't it? You know what my dad used to say? My dad was like that. My dad was follically challenged from an early age. Yes. And he used to say, when people had some my uncles would sometimes tease him about it, but he took it really well. It didn't matter to him. He couldn't give a crap, as nobody should. Right? He just said, well, he said, grass don't grow on a busy street, and I quite like that one. A straw. Yes. It's very, very true. Right? And speaking of busy streets and grass not growing, this is a terrible sight. We got Call will come in. We got We'd Yes. We have another American who's joined us. This is outrageous. We're absolutely overwhelmed with them, but Frederick Blackburn, welcome to the show.
[01:12:40] Unknown:
Greetings, good sirs.
[01:12:42] Unknown:
Thanks for having me back on and great first hour. I've been taking notes. Have you? Good stuff. Yeah. Oh, I don't think we would have we would have touched upon anything that you weren't already fully aware of, but it's always good to air these topics every now and again and bring them out of the cupboard, don't you think? And and just take a another look yet again and and talk about them just to at least remind ourselves of what's been lost and and the lies around all these historical things.
[01:13:09] Unknown:
And also, what about the truth about the salute? Because apparently, it is not a Roman salute. The Romans did not salute that way. So as any, I I I always believed it was, look, I have I I have an open hand, and I come in peace. That's what I thought the salute meant. Anybody else any ideas what the salute meant? But apparently, it wasn't Roman.
[01:13:30] Unknown:
So I don't know. But if you do it in public, it makes it makes woke people cry.
[01:13:35] Unknown:
So It does, doesn't it? Yes.
[01:13:38] Unknown:
And Come over there. I'll do this under a hood.
[01:13:42] Unknown:
Yeah. You heard about brother Alfred Schaeffer. Right?
[01:13:46] Unknown:
Well, I don't I haven't heard the latest. I know he was in and out and on suspension and then released a bit, and then they're reviewing his case. But have there been further developments for him? The further developments, they Oh, no. For him at 6AM in full battle rattle. What today? And,
[01:14:02] Unknown:
two days ago, I got the letter from miss or the email from miss Monica. Right. Oh, no. Yes. And let's see here. So this was on Wednesday, wacky Wednesday. Anything can happen. Right. But, yes. She says that they came for him at 6AM and dragged him off, and, nothing is we're interesting that, there's no arrest warrants. Nothing's been signed. Nobody will put their name on anything, but they're, you know, following due process nonetheless, but nobody's apparently signing off on this action. So it ought to be interesting in the court. So, apparently, he's doing well. It, shook him and the wife up, I'm sure, to have that happen.
When they thought they had everything settled, that's the main thing is,
[01:14:50] Unknown:
you know, they Oh, they like to do things like that. He must be he he's got sort of I don't know. You think that almost it's as if Alfred draws energy from their their deranged energy. He's like revampiring them back. You know? The the the at least that's how he comes across. I'm sure it must be tough at times. But his buoyancy is, you know, I just wish he'd look I can't tell him what to do. He's a grown man. But you just think, you know, I've often thought maybe Monica would take issue with me over this as well. I don't know. But I thought Alfred, there's more than one way to skin a cat, you know. But, he likes to skin it this way so
[01:15:27] Unknown:
each to their own. But, I hope he I hope he comes out of that well. Yes. Yeah. Right. So, yeah, that was but I just thinking of, you know, today's show page and that image and the Roman salute and, you know, that's yeah. This is what that because they lost. Now Germans get thrown into prison
[01:15:46] Unknown:
for thought crimes and for, you know, hate facts. You know, there's horrible hate facts. Well, we do over here now, don't we? And and now The UK, and they're trying so hard here in The US, and you know who'll be on the shortlist for that one. Right? Yeah. So I'll be the canary in the coal mine. You'll end up be you'll end up talking all differently in and then double entendres like the English do very soon, the Americans. You won't be able to talk directly with that directness. I I don't want you ever to lose that kind of stuff, but it's the creep of it, isn't it? You can see that this is a creep and the creep works.
[01:16:19] Unknown:
Oh, yes.
[01:16:20] Unknown:
It it it that's why, you know, we have to really transmit urgency. I can't do it all the time. I get burnt out with it, but we've got to transmit urgency. It's why it's worth everybody's while to just keep talking to anybody in the bus queue or anything and just keep prodding and prodding and prodding. You don't know what you're gonna get. There were gonna be some really good eggs out there. We gotta just keep prodding away every any opportunity you get, and so we can have a mass rally at the Fockem Hall Festival next year. That's right. Yes. And all look like that in that picture, Eric. That's what I want. I won't be sitting in the Fockem Hall Field, the field of Fockem, and we can say, you know, the the order goes out. What do you think? Fockham. We all cry.
[01:16:58] Unknown:
We say Fockham. Yes. Yes. That's the that's the best way because quite honestly, we wanna bring back happiness because did you know that it affects your cells in your body? If you're if you're depressed, it affects your the cells, and you you feel ill. Whereas, I think that happiness is a form of medicine, unless you got diarrhea, of course. And then, and then and quite and quite honestly, this is what they're doing. They're destroying us through this continuous, blind negativeness, nothingness. Mhmm. And these people are mentally ill. There is no ifs and buts about it. Totally mentally sick.
And, have, by the way, I guess, in America, have we had enough of, Trump yet? Or is he?
[01:17:49] Unknown:
Oh, is he not turning out to be as good as the newspapers have been telling us for the last umpteen years? He's a bit of a naughty boy, isn't he?
[01:17:57] Unknown:
Oh, do you? The press releases.
[01:18:01] Unknown:
What's he been up to now? What what part of America are you from, Blackbird?
[01:18:06] Unknown:
I'm over here on the East Coast in the Appalachian Mountains. I'm at about Oh, very nice. Seat elevation here on Blackjack Mountain. Oh, ain't that nice? It sounds right. Accent sound like
[01:18:18] Unknown:
Paul's, doesn't it? Blackjack Mountain. Yes. I'm a bit jealous of Frederick. He gets to say that. Here I am living on Blackjack. I just go I'm living down in Worthy. It's just This is the This is the Worthy. Good. You get all the best names. You've nicked all the pretty good names.
[01:18:34] Unknown:
Southern. Well,
[01:18:35] Unknown:
you think about the Andax.
[01:18:38] Unknown:
You're in the Adirondack. I left my heart.
[01:18:41] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm I'm I'm in the Adirondack Foothills of the Bay Shore. Nice too. That sounds lovely.
[01:18:47] Unknown:
Why does America have romantic names like, I left my heart in San Francisco? It wouldn't sound the same as I left my heart in Bognor. I mean, it just wouldn't rhyme, would it? Or I left my heart in I left my heart in Bognor Regis. Yeah. Bognor Regis. My audio is a little bit different.
[01:19:02] Unknown:
The English names are different because they are kind of Yes. I used to have that when I was a kid, you know. Like, I used to live near Scunthorpe. Seriously.
[01:19:12] Unknown:
What? Oh.
[01:19:14] Unknown:
So all these all these northern names that we have, you elegantly gifted Americans with your town names and everything, you know. We've got names like Grimsby, Scunthorpe, Scuttleworth. Right? Little Cluddington. Yes. They're they're really grungy. So I love them now. I love them now. Trottersbottom
[01:19:31] Unknown:
near where I live. Trottersbottom is where I live. It's just out the right of me is Trottersbottom.
[01:19:36] Unknown:
Yes. Within Trottersbottom in 1983 that this political movement sprang up, and they were known as the bottomists. Yeah. They formed the bottom counties. So And they all got the trots. Okay.
[01:19:51] Unknown:
So the name so the names of our locations and our places are, precocious and, proper. I mean, you have to give us that. I mean, Britain's got the got the proper of everything else. So
[01:20:06] Unknown:
Well, the the the we used to have a there's a tea, in Britain. I think it was typhoon tea. And their advert well, excuse me. Just have a quick glass of water. Gin. Sorry about that, folks. Gin. Oh, that's it. Was, a typhoon put the tea I think it was it tie was it Tetley put the tea in Britain? But anyway, whatever what it was, doesn't matter. They put the tea in Britain, you see. Mhmm. Now then the joke came out. If they put the tea in Britain, who put the I won't say the word in Scumthorpe. I know. Yes. Work it out for yourself. I think after We did. For the workout scum yes. So if you might tell me what that is, it is a a family it's a family show, so I won't. So How much of a you've got typhoon put it. Typhoon put the two, Brett. No. Put the one sit in Scunthorpe. Yeah. So Yeah.
[01:21:02] Unknown:
About It's so right, Michael. Your head. Yes. We got Boston here. Boston Spa in Lincolnshire or Boston. Right? And, of course, you've got Yes. Boston over in The States. Boston is some way in America. Well, obviously, it's much much bigger. And it's the home of the Red Sox. And I picked the Red Sox as my baseball team when I first watched baseball on the TV in 1986.
[01:21:22] Unknown:
I don't know why. My I just did. That's when I was sad. Yes. Yeah. No. Not my auntie. Sorry. It's my father's cousin lived near Boston. Place called Con Concord, Massachusetts. There we go. Frederick, I should remember where you live.
[01:21:36] Unknown:
The I was reading something the other day about all the fantastically interesting and rich musical history, right, of that of your neck of the woods.
[01:21:46] Unknown:
Were there a lot of Irish and Scots Irish moved into there at some point during the seventeen, eighteen hundreds that brought all this music with them. Is that the history of it? Something like that? That's the thing about this region is you had the first wave of English settlers, and that's where my father's family, you know, they trace their lineage back to that first I'm very glad to hear that, Frederick. Proper. Proper. Yes. Yes. Good. And, you know, Blackburn Lang. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But, that was where the family originated, supposedly. That's the local the family legend according to my cousin who researches this stuff. Right. But, anyway, the second wave was what they call the Scott Irish, though.
And that's where you got a lot of the Celtic Irish music into this area that merged with the English that was already there. But, and you saw, like, the development of the dulcimers and hammered dulcimers because Right. You couldn't get the pianos up the mountains, but you could take the soundboards out and, you know Right. And, you know, play those. And that's basically the development of the hammer dulcimer and, just just very unique, music style. And also the, the dance is like, you know, you have clogging, and you can kinda see how clogging, kinda was a derivative of, river dance type of, you know, movement where it's, you know, all in the feet. You know, it's you don't move anything else. Right? Yeah. So great place, but they are trying their best to blot us out and turn us into just another fake and gay multicultural diversity, you know, inclusivity, blah.
[01:23:29] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[01:23:30] Unknown:
You know, and that's, you know, the big culture war here. It's like in every other white country, and they definitely hit us on this wonderful chicken swingers with their NGO money. And, you're talking about the banks and just, you know, that that's the big scam is you and I, you know, or you guys, if we want money, we have to go to the bank and borrow it at interest. The chicken swingers, they just get the money, and they don't have to pay interest back. And if they lose it, then it's just kind of written off. If there's a profit made, everybody shares in the profit. And so you've got this two tiered economic system since, you know, it's basically 1913 when the Federal Reserve, you know, did their coup over us.
And so now we're at this part of NGO warfare where you've got all this BlackRock and Vanguard and George Soros that just have infinity money. Mhmm. And they can just, you know, finance all these NGOs. You know, they were actually paying people to move into these areas and be social justice warriors and, you know, destroy the existing systems, get rid of those good old boys.
[01:24:43] Unknown:
Yes, sir. It's what's unfair. Yeah. You can't have,
[01:24:48] Unknown:
Solinski says, first step in, community organizing is community disorganizing. You destroy the community that was there before you got there. Right? And that's what they have done. It's amazing how effective they've been in just, like, twenty years. Yeah. This change has happened.
[01:25:05] Unknown:
Well, they they've actually parachuted people in. The local MP has has been wanna say parachuting, you know, metaphorically. Nobody voted for him. And the local MP, he's, well, he speaks that thing. He speaks that thing. Yes. A nice boy. And he's been, yes. And the old, woolly old conservatives, you know, the Blue Rince Brigade, they they can't stay in about his guts. So, there he goes. But to me, again, what they say is it's totally irrelevant because they're not prepared to sort out the economic problems. And you just ask them the same question every time. And what you can do about a usury? Hey. Hey. Hey. What you can do about it? Yeah.
[01:25:44] Unknown:
Kind of the fundamental problem, you know, until we solve that. And that was, you know, uncle h's, you know, big crime was they developed a system that was independent of this, you know, usury syndicate. You know?
[01:25:58] Unknown:
And, also, if you got married and had one child, you'd have a quarter taken off your mortgage. If you had two children, you'd have half taken off your mortgage. And if you had four children, you'd have your house for free. Third courtesy of the government. No wonder people were shaking his hand. And those type of things, when you hear what Gaddafi did in, Libya, very similar. You know, it it was there to help people. He wanted everybody to have air conditioning in their house. They lived very, very good lives. But, of course, the powers that be, the, psychopaths in power don't like that because they love suffering. They love stress.
And, that people don't really understand the psyche of a psychopath, but that's what it is. They are at their best when people are under stress around them, and that's what they love. Well, they're energy vampires, aren't they, of a type? Yeah. That's right. That's energy.
[01:26:54] Unknown:
Yeah. Mhmm. Yeah. Yep. You were talking about Blavatsky early and Yeah. The soulless people. And, you know, her counterpart was, you know, of course, Aleister Crowley. Did you ever read his book Moonchild?
[01:27:07] Unknown:
That was the whole No. I I've avoided Crowley. I'm aware of Crowley's overall views, and they don't coincide with mine. Let's put it that way. But, you know,
[01:27:17] Unknown:
defense against the dark arts here. But Yeah. In the Moonchild book, the whole story was they were going to have these ritual births that did not have souls with the idea of the, the tabula rosa that, you know, this will be the perfect person that we will be able to program however we want for our purposes. They achieved it. And that yeah. That was the whole point. And you see, you know, what MK Ultra and all these other programs have done and the Mhmm. The, Tavistock Institute, etcetera Yeah. Is basically destroying that's what's good and wholesome in these children and then reprogramming them to be the ultimate spies. And there was a really bizarre science fiction book from the sixties called The Violent Man by a e Von Vogt. And it's about, you know, the man with no morals. The total, you know, I just need to get the job done, whatever the job is. The ends justify the means. It's basically describing a massage Cheka type person that, you know, whatever I'm told to do, I will do with no problem.
You know? And that is the mindset of these people, and they are you know, it's like the werewolf game. They're in all your communities. They're there undermining everything your ancestors built in the shadows. That's the way they operate.
[01:28:44] Unknown:
It's as if they're they're working to destroy the connection between, rounded, I. E. Us, human beings, and their connection with God, with something higher, with that connection. Because, you know, I've often a. That we are told they don't have one. Their behavior would indicate that they don't have one. Their ideology, you know, you know, it predates even Marxism but, you know, communism's just as good a place to start as any other because it's the one that's most prevalent in terms of how it's manifest today. Is this thing that, a mechanistic approach to life is the way to go, and of course they're materialists.
And I've been watching a few things recently with discussions with, an Irish scientific Christian, called, Lennox. I think his first name is John Lennox. He's a brilliant guy. He's been in all sorts of debates with atheists and they're worth watching if you want arguments to deal with atheism. Not that I'm, atheist don't upset me frankly. In fact, I think they're quite useful in a way because they at least get the conversation going and they they get the audience to begin to question certain things. But, Lennox effectively dismantles every argument they've got.
And this whole thing about a materialistic thing is undermined, I think, by the by the idea of well not the idea, the actuality of death. Death is the biggie, in that, obviously, as far as we're aware, everybody that's ever lived before us that's not alive now died. Everybody, sorry to be so of, in this I'm not actually sorry about it. I think it's profound, actually. All of us here, we don't know the day and time of our departure but we've got one coming up and everybody that's just been born they've got one too. Now, I know that they don't want that. That that's why that we hear all these stories, don't we, about them mucking around trying to move their soul from one body to another but this is a bit weird for people that don't really have one or believe in all that kind of stuff. So it's obvious it's some extended hostile war against the higher cosmic authority at how However you want to term it and this is how it kind of manifests in day to day living. This is why, you know, liberals that the current modern liberal is this kind of soulless reactive exhausting tedious dullard, really, and very dangerous. And without doubt, the most evil people that have ever lived.
You know, and they they safeguard. They say, well, we want to help everyone. Oh, if you want to do that, why don't you just kill yourself?
[01:31:21] Unknown:
That that Oh, that's the when they invade it here after 09/11, that was under the banner of Tikkun Olam. There were all these fluff articles about, you know, oh, we're getting this synagogue, and it's all about Tikkun because we're bound to repair the world. What they didn't say was, and all you white Christians are the problem that has to be fixed. Y'all gotta go. Yeah. That was yeah. The they gave us the big print on but not the small print of what they really mean when they start talking about in God we trust and tikkun olam and mitzvahs and all those other phrases that you use. But they mean it.
[01:32:01] Unknown:
Yeah. They do. It's just is gone. Yeah. They do. They absolutely it's a very difficult one to to to get that penny to drop with people. I think, actually, you've just reminded me of something that I might read out in a minute, which I'll dig up, which is sort of addresses that. It's about their system as a whole, which is the issue. It's got nothing to do with certain individuals within these groups. They're they're really good. I think they are. Not that I would associate with them but, unfortunately, that doesn't make any difference. Because it's it's the system as a whole has got such momentum behind it and it's built on I suppose it's why when we tell these truths that we seek to tell here and and establish them, they are the they are the most powerful thing that we can do. It might not seem it but I'm I'm not aware of anything else much that would be more powerful than that because it it keeps blowing little holes in their lie framework and it's it's a considerable lie framework. In fact, it's total.
Practically everything they say is not true. And, unfortunately, they've managed to convince an awful lot of people about that. You know, last week I read out that Psalm, Psalm 73. Don't worry everybody, I'm not gonna read another Psalm out this week but there might be one coming up in a week or two if I can find another good one. But there was there's a line in Psalm 73 talking about the, the wealthy and the successful in the earth don't seem to be plagued by the problems that normal people are plagued by. And their what does it say? Their their their tongue walks through the earth. It's a wonderful phrase. Their tongue walks through the earth and this is why the the psalmist is right, and this is why my people listen to them. They are seduced by this, and forget, you know, that there's something else other than physical flesh and blood. I mean, I like my physical flesh and blood, don't get me wrong, and you've got to look after it.
But they don't include any of that. It's a complete lie that they do, you know. I mean, Eric, are you familiar with Tikkun Olam? Have you heard of that before? I'm just I'm not trying to Never heard of it. No. I I I'm pretty no. Sorry about that. No. I don't know anything about it. It's their, it's as Frederick would say, it's the thing that they trotter. It it basically means to heal the world and and we're going to heal it. And I'm always going, but I never invited you to. And why do you say that? I I never I don't remember sending you the invite, actually. So
[01:34:23] Unknown:
Ah, yes. It's been like spiritual awakening that was invented by the, Secret Service. Mhmm. And so I didn't mean to cut in there, but what happened is it was so successful that that's how the CIA got the idea of, dreaming up the hippie movement. And because, you know, the hip the CIA, they were the the the the the America was always on the point of revolution. So what they do, they brought out the hippie movement. And it's similar to us. There wasn't really a hippie movement after the first World War, but the spiritual awakening thing, spiritualism and that, it it actually was a misdirection to stop people thinking about revolting, and that's it. So, that's what I I think is happening all the time. It's always misdirection to stop people finding the truth, and that's it.
So, that's my little piece for this evening.
[01:35:20] Unknown:
Slaves, Frederick. Sorry. Please. Oh, go. No. No. No. You say. You you had an idea. Go on.
[01:35:27] Unknown:
Well, in the first hour, you were talking about Churchill, and, you know, one of his main handlers was a guy named, unfortunately, Frederick a Lindemann. Yeah. I should make him give me my name back. But he was just this total Zionist fanatic that was handling Churchill. And according to, mister Mike King over at Tomato Bubble, there may have been some homosexual relationship between mister Churchill and David Lederman.
[01:35:56] Unknown:
Yeah. You were saying that the leader of the free world was a was a raging Well,
[01:36:02] Unknown:
that's a bit of a bummer, isn't it? Weird, That's a bummer. Weird. It's a real bummer. Weird. I'm shocked.
[01:36:08] Unknown:
I can tell you. Fair took my breath away, but it's completely true. There are some terrible stories of him. I've I've mentioned that thing. There's a I've got a little leaflet kicking around here by Major WG Thurgood. I don't know if that's a real name but it sounds great, doesn't it? It's called That Bastard Churchill. Don't know if you've got it, Eric. You need to get up. It's about 25 pages long. It's literally called That Bastard Churchill and, part of it, there's a a report from his, officer training at Sandringham or whatever where his officer had written down, he is a predator a predatory sodomite of the worst kind.
I remember things like this. Ah. And he was. He was a he raped two Irish soldiers in South Africa in a carriage and stuff and got away. They're just and that sort of stuff used to go in the British army as well because lots of those public school boys, I'm afraid, are all fiddled with it at their elite education establishments. Then they behave like that for the rest of their life and it's a bit like this club and it taps into the sort of buggery things that Crowley talked about. All this kind of stuff. It really is the most, filthy, abominable sort of evil behavior. It really is. But they seem to be inducted into it from an early age and just, you know, yeah.
[01:37:21] Unknown:
That would explain it.
[01:37:23] Unknown:
But this
[01:37:24] Unknown:
explain it because, you know, when you when you started talking about Churchill and homosexuality, I I just the only thing that came to mind was how gay would you have to be to actually want him? I've seen pictures. Paul, I think we better stop this. I've been thinking right now. I'm feeling a bit ill. Poor boy. Can we stop this? Him being predatory, that explains everything.
[01:37:45] Unknown:
Well, what about Bob Boothby? Everything. Have you ever seen a picture of Bob Boothby? Yeah. Lord Boothby. It was Bob Boothby. He was a MP in the conservative government. Lord Boothby in the early sixties. And he he was, ACDC. You know, he slept with male male as well as female. Fat ugly git. And, the Kray twins who were, jolly nice people, in their gun gang people, they used to supply rent boys to him. And,
[01:38:18] Unknown:
Good lord.
[01:38:19] Unknown:
Yes. So, and if you see, there's a picture of, Cliff Richard next to the Kray twins and some lots of fame. Another chap called Sewell who was a, actor standing next to the Kray twins. And, they were they they they rubbed their show rubbed shoulders with a lot of high profile people. But, yes, lots of foodie.
[01:38:41] Unknown:
Yes. A lot of I'm not sure. I am a phone well, the I am a phony group that supposedly, you you know, was talk working with, Neil Aspinall and other people from Apple. You know, they said that there was a big connection between the Beatles and the Kray twins. And so Maybe. It has to be. There was some interesting things, especially with the Isle Of Right, white, holiday camps. There was there was a lot of organized crime going on there. So it
[01:39:12] Unknown:
was nice stuff. Boothby, by the way, as a young man, was the was the person that Churchill wrote to. There's a an extract that came out twenty five years ago in the early days of net research and stuff. It's still fun. Of course, now it's it's being demolished now. This is how it's not genuine. I've noticed this. So that that first flush of hitherto unknown information that was coming out from 09/11 actually being coming out in the late nineties when the net got rolling. There's all these sort of counter stories have now been built up. So that oh, no. That's that's completely made up, and this is what they say about everything, '9. And, he said to Boothby, the quote is something like Germany's great crime was to extricate itself from the world financial system and deny the banks their share of the profits. Of what profits?
You know? Their share of the profits. And that's, you know, I'm going, great. Why is that a crime? Well, it was for Churchill's employers, basically. And there's that group called the FOCUS, which is the one that basically paid for his life in the nineteen thirties. They they paid all the salaries of the, 40 people that worked at Chartwell. And one of the things in one of the Irving clips I was listening to earlier today, just by way of reminder, is that the official biographer for Churchill, Martin Gilbert, I think it is, he was saying that it's a good position to have but it's also a terrible position to have because he can't write anything, not that he would.
Right? But he can't write anything that would, reflect badly upon him and therefore, these official autobiographies are practically worthless. They're just propaganda. They're just court historian pap as usual and you can't get to the base of it, and you can't see these threads. I mean, you mentioned Mike King as well. I'd love to get him on Frederick actually. I I I love what he does. I've got a lot of his stuff. I spoke to him maybe it must be a long time back now, maybe ten years or so ago at 02/2017. That is nearly ten years ago, isn't it? Eight years ago. And, his his short booklet on Napoleon is fabulous.
I mean, it's about a 120 pages long and it gives you all the meat and potatoes, the real nitty gritty about Napoleon. And it's worth letting everybody know that more books have been written on Napoleon and Hitler than anybody else in history. There's I think Hitler's now winning, but Napoleon, it's over a 100,000 books. I think Hitler is about a 160,000 different books on this whole period. And there's a lot of parallels between them. A lot, you know. Obviously, we get painted history here, but the the truth is that they were fighting a defensive war in many cases. It didn't appear that way the way it's sent back to us, but they were to protect what they'd built at home. Although, I think that, you know, the origins of the French Revolution are beyond hideous.
And, like I keep mentioning here from time to time, there it really was, there's something psychologically degenerate about it. It's almost Aleister Crowley like. Seriously, I think in terms of the utter disregard and contempt for the welfare of decent people, it's it's truly appalling what happened to France. But it's very similar in the sense that they actually were economically the strongest nation in Europe, were France, up to this point. And yet, a series of interferences on the money front in the seventeen eighties gave this false causative reason that the, royals were basically screwing the country. They weren't.
This is all manure as usual. And it's worth also talking about Edmund Burke or just putting this out again. Burke was practically the only man in England at the time that opposed it, And he wrote, a book called Letters on a Regicide, which is obviously about the kill the killing of King Louis and Marie Antoinette. And at the time, he suffered a lot for it because of the agreement in the Continental Club where all this stuff was planned in London. Right? And financed from and aided and abetted from there. They were all against him, but you look at it now and he's just right about everything. Everything.
And his question to them, I think I read it out the other week from the essay, was something like, right. Now that you've done away with this, with this honor in the laws of God, what you're gonna replace it with? What you're gonna replace it with? Well, death, basically. That's what they replace it with every single time. So it it's almost like the first commie revolution is the French revolution. I mean, it's the Jacobins, but it's the similar this excessive liberalism, you know, and that crap. What is it? Liberty fraternity egalite. What a load of horseshit. It's just unbelievable shite.
It really is. So it really is.
[01:43:58] Unknown:
Well, if if you look at different historical things and, like, the availability of books and information on it, you really have to wonder, did they do the like, you said that Napoleon and Hitler, they there's been more books written about them than anyone else. Mhmm. Is that kind of like the Google disinformation, the early iteration of the Google disinformation thing where, if you wanna search for something, Google will have 10,000,000,000 hits on it, but how many of them are factual? So did so are there a few books on Hitler and a few books on Napoleon that are actually factually correct and that are true, but because they're buried under this mountain of over a 100,000 different books, they're never seen. Good point.
[01:44:54] Unknown:
Yeah. It's an excellent point. I mean, I think, you know, I guess that's the negative side of it and you're probably right, I think. I I just there's something about those characters. Obviously, it's after it's sort of during this industrialization of Europe. I mean, not so much for Napoleon. He had horses and cannons. But cannons were pretty heavy nasty things and he was pretty brilliant with them. Wasn't he? I mean, I would still marvel at the fact that the French army walked into Russia and back. Well, not many of them walked back. I mean, they lost 85% of all the men that walked in mainly to the weather. But the idea that you go, right, we're gonna walk to Moscow.
What? Yeah. We're gonna walk there. I mean, I don't know what those guys were made out of. It's quite it's an amazing thing. And, look, everybody says that in both cases, you know, both Hitler and the body, it was a big mistake to go into Russia. Well, obviously, yeah, it was but, probably, in both cases, they really didn't have much choice to be quite honest. I mean, in Napoleon's case, it's because, Tsar Nicholas, I think it was, basically, asked about with him. Or was it Tsar Alexander? I can't remember which one it was. But he lied, basically, and really hacked him off.
I think with Hitler's in Hitler's situation, I don't think they had any other choice, really. I just don't think they had any other choice. I know these are drifting into the military stuff, but if you've got six, a 6,000,000 man army sitting in the East on the board, you're thinking what's it there for? Who put 6,000,000 armed men there? You know, having what three meals a day? I imagine 18,000,000 meals a day. It costs a lot to have loads of blokes sitting around armed to the teeth. You think what they're gonna do next? So But I think, you know, there's so much to there's so wide ranging and such huge lives. I mean, we mentioned it before. I've seen the Napoleon film. I don't know if any of you guys have seen it by Ridley Scott. It's not bad. It's what I expected it to be. It's not good either, because you can't actually tell that guy's life in two and three quarter hours. It's not possible. It really does need one of those lavish TV show things in 50 episodes, each episode being two hours long. You might just be able to sort of touch on some of the key points in a hundred hours. It would take that much to do it. But, but Yeah. Anyway, I mentioned a little bit earlier, Frederick, about slavery.
Were many slaves brought into your neck of the woods? And were they would they have been Irish and English and Scots slaves? I know that were many Irish were enslaved and taken to America, but is that is is your area a recipient of that, or is that not part of the the traditions and history of where you live?
[01:47:33] Unknown:
Not really, especially in the mountains. What you had were pioneer colonialists that wanted to go into the wilderness and build their own little utopia villages away from everything else and be completely independent. A slave model doesn't work in that. You know, what you had were large plantations owned by you the chicken swingers, and they were the ones that brought in the majority of the slaves to work those big plantations. But the individual families, that, you know, colonize these mountains, it was a very alien concept. And what you had was after the slaves were set free, the rich people, mainly the Jewish carpetbaggers, that owned the textile industries like in Winston Salem and Durham. That's and the tobacco industries that was huge there.
You know, they had their places in the mountains, like the Cone Manor. Right? Moses Cone, who was just this huge, textile baron, a total evil man, but he donated his hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of acres as part of the Blue Ridge Blue Ridge Parkway project. But all of the slaves in these mansions that these Jews had, they had, you know, their slaves. And when they were set free, they basically just kicked them out. Right? And so you had these Christian families that basically took them and set them up into little sections of town and looked after them. Right? And, there's one here in Boone called Junalaska, and they keep trying to make it into this. The black people found it, Boone, North Carolina.
Right? Just make it out that they were the real leaders that settled these mountains. It's like, no. No. No. No. They were basically kicked out slaves that the Christians took in because they had been abandoned by their Jewish owners. Right? And, so it's interesting how they just keep trying to demonize the South. You talk about, you know, demonizing of Germans and everything. The demonizing of the South for the civil war. And, you know, the whole story of it, that war is just as wrong as World War two. It was not about freeing the slaves in any way, shape, or form, but that's what you get judged by now that southerners are bad because they had slaves and their black people are on reparations from white Christian people.
And it's like we weren't the ones who had the slaves. We weren't the ones that had the slave markets. We weren't the ones that had the slave ships. We weren't the ones running the slave markets, and we weren't the ones having the big plantations. You know? But yet, we get blamed and we're expected to have reparations. Little mountain town of Asheville, North Carolina actually tried to pass a town ordinance saying that black people were gonna be given reparations because of the slavery. And the Trump's Department of Justice came in and shut them down and said, no. You're not, because this is completely racist and blah blah blah. And if you proceed with this, we're going to take all of you to court, and they dropped the whole thing. So which that was pretty interesting, but there's this this real push to, you know, really ramp up the racial tensions in America by putting the blacks against the whites and saying, you know, white southerners are you know, you're owed something because of those evil white southern people.
Right? And so you just see a lot of blacks acting out against whites. And when they say why, they say because of slavery.
[01:51:16] Unknown:
And that justifies it. Right? Yeah. I got a little clip here from Thomas Sowell. You'll be familiar with him, Frederick. Yeah? Oh, yes. And and shout out to XO, I think it was, who sent this in or sent it to me earlier today. This is three minutes long. Thomas Sowell on the real history of slavery and his ancestry because we're coming up to what this is only three minutes. We're gonna play this and then we'll come to the end of the hour, but I wanna carry on with this into hour three. But let's just I haven't even listened to this, but nearly everything that Sowell says, you can't help but agree with. He's a natural leader of his people if he could get into a position like that. Here he is, on the real history of slavery and his ancestry. Back to your book,
[01:51:54] Unknown:
chapter the third chapter is the real history of slavery. Yes. What is the real history of slavery? The slavery was much bigger and involved infinitely more people than people have realized. It was not confined by race. It was not defined by race or created by race. It existed for thousands of years. History professor had a student come up to him and asked him, well, when when did slavery begin? He said, you're asking the wrong question. The question is, when did freedom begin? Because slavery existed as long as we have any records. And from archeological finds, we realized that people were enslaving other people before they could read and write.
So, and that's always existed, and it's existed all over the world. The number of white people enslaved by pirates in North Africa was greater than the number of Africans brought to The United States. You know, and yet, that's not, that's not, that's not even mentioned in most of the discussions. So I try to look at slavery as a worldwide phenomenon. And it's something that's lasted for thousands of years. I also try to ask the question, why did it end? It ended here because of a civil war, but it didn't end anywhere else because of that. It took over a hundred years to root it out. And again, the literature, there's tons you can find groaning with books about The United States, the Western Hemisphere, and Africans, but virtually nothing about the rest of it. This book about the, Europeans enslaved by North African pirates came out in 02/2003.
By 02/2004, you couldn't find a copy. It had, for all practical purposes, gone out of print. There was just no interest in it. What should this knowledge you put in this chapter, what impact did that should that have on people who read it in this country? What do you what impact do you want it to have on? Well, I I guess I want them to understand what the facts are, which, you know, is a major undertaking in itself. And also realize that racism in The United States grew out of slavery, but slavery didn't grow out of racism. The Europeans enslaved other Europeans for centuries before the first African was ever brought to the West Hemisphere.
That wherever there were people that were vulnerable for whatever reason, those were the people that were preyed upon. Even though for most of history, those who enslaved and those who were slaves were the same race. Have you ever gone back and looked at your own family history? Not really. No. You have no idea where your folks came from originally? No. I guess, I don't know even the names of my grandparents. On both sides? On both sides. Partly it's because I'm an orphan. And, so that link was cut. But I really don't know the name of the grand, people who would be my grandparents and the adoptive family either. Did you ever know your original parents? No, I have no, no, I, my father died before I was born.
And, I my I my mother, heavens, I was so young that I have no memory whatever of her.
[01:55:00] Unknown:
Thomas Sowell there on the real history of slavery and his ancestry. And,
[01:55:07] Unknown:
yeah, Paul. It was spot on except for one thing. The Civil War didn't end slavery in The United States. It just changed it from physical slavery on a plantation to debt slavery. And it enslaved everyone because it brought in the civil law. Yep. So it did not Fourteenth amendment. In The United States. It made it infinitely worse and spread it out to the whole of the population.
[01:55:34] Unknown:
Yeah. It freed the slaves. He just nationalized the plantation and saved everybody with the fourteenth amendment, the red amendment.
[01:55:41] Unknown:
There you go.
[01:55:44] Unknown:
Exactly. Yeah. You know, talking about the pirates, you know, and and, what people don't understand is in modern current year, there is still a ton of slavery happening in the Muslim world. There's a ton of slavery happening in Israel. You know, there's a ton of sex trafficking slavery in The United States to this day. But, you know, nobody wants to talk about that. They wanna talk about, oh, no. Let's go back to the civil war. We always have to go back to the civil war because that justifies, you know, everything from George Floyd to Black Lives Matter to OJ Simpson, you know, somehow. It's just that go to card. It's like the holocaust.
You know? You said something I don't like, so the holocaust. You said something I don't like, slavery.
[01:56:33] Unknown:
Yes. It interferes with the current story. They don't like it. And, the Barbary Coursays thing is huge. I mean, I mentioned it here. I've got a book. I still haven't been able to find it. I've been looking for it for a few days about the history of Thomas Pelo. I mentioned it last week. The numbers are colossal. The thing that there's a difference though. There seems to be a difference that Europeans understand that this happened in the past. We do. We know we're fully aware of it. But, you know, we've maybe we should get organized, Eric, and sort of send a letter to the pope and say, look, you've got all this money and the Roman the Roman legions, you know, basically, they enslaved us. So what we must be owed trillions as well. Aren't we owed money? I Right. I threw my
[01:57:13] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, that's right. They they threw my, my,
[01:57:17] Unknown:
ancestors to the lions. And since then, I've had a fear of lions. Well, if a lion walked into the room where I'm now, I'd I'd have a laundry problem, you know? That's terrible. You've been psychologically damaged. Anyway, look, we're coming to the end of the four. We're coming to the end of our so my patch you'll have yeah. You'll just have to I'm just gonna wrap up now. We're just at the end of hour two, and we'll we're gonna carry this thread on after this. You've been listening to Paul English live here on WBN three two four. We're gonna be back again same time next week 3PM US Eastern 8PM in The UK. If you want to carry on listening head on over to Paul English Live dot com and click the rumble or the YouTube link or the soapbox link or whatever link you like. And we carry on. We're gonna play out, this, our section here with WBN, with another song from the Divine Comedy because it's very good. This is National Express. It's very funny but it's a great term for us. We need to be joining the National Express. We'll tell our American friends what National Express is all about afterwards if they don't already know. We'll see you same time next week on WBN, but the show goes on on the other channels straight after this.
[01:58:46] Unknown:
Take the Nashville Express. When your life's in a mess, it'll make you smile. All human life is here. From the feeble old dear to the screaming child. From the student who knows There's a jolly hostess selling Christmas and tea. She'll provide you with drinks and theatrical wings for a sky high feet. Minnie skirts were in style when she danced down the aisle back in 'sixty three. But it's
[02:03:10] Unknown:
Yeah. I get to do my DJ over voice. Now that was the great Neil Hannan and Divine Comedy. Don't know what you thought about that. If you don't know what National Express is, guys, it's a coach firm over here in The UK. Okay? Called Oh. It used to exist called National Express. The lyrics in that are fantastic and I want to read out verse two because I just think this is great. On the Nash I'm gonna read it like a poet or something. It says this. On the National Express, there's a jolly hostess selling crisps and tea. She'll provide you with drinks and theatrical winks for a sky high fee.
Mini skirts were in style when she danced down the aisle back in '63. But it's hard to get by when your ass is the size of a small country. That's lyric writing for you. It's hard to get by when your ass is the size of a small country. It's just tremendous. It's a brilliant video that goes with it as well. It's fantastic stuff. I think he's really rather a wit, that guy, and a great songwriter. So there you go. Anyway, National Express is what we want because we want nationalism back and, of course, now I'm a Nazi. Oh, what a pity. Put my foot in it there.
So No. Sorry. Your jack booted. You didn't put your foot in it. You put your jack booted in it. I put my jackboat right in there. Yeah. Completely brilliant. That's right. Yeah. Yeah. By the way, if anybody wants to call in, the lines are open. I am looking at the screen. You wanna call in and do stuff. We're gonna talk a little bit. I wanted to carry on with this, you mentioned reparations, Frederick, just before we went to the break there. And we've had an interesting little development over here this week or last week. There's a a chap who, was intermittently funny twice back in the nineteen seventies and, called Sir Lenny Henry. He's a Sorry. Yeah. You're gonna say Eric? Well, it's a rumor that he's a comedian, isn't it? I think it's a conspiracy theory that someone that someone says a comedian. I I I can't don't know. He did a few things early on that that were funny. I I I still I still quite found him eating condensed milk sandwiches on Tizwas when I was a kid really rather amusing. I quite liked that. Not that it ever made me want to drink or eat condensed milk sandwiches.
And he did some good impersonations. But Anyway, I thought I would, shout out to EXO for sending me this thing. This is from Metro which is a sort of cosmopolitan London rag that's just full of what you'd expect. The head this is from October 8. Sir, because he's been knighted, sir Lenny Henry calls for black people to be paid £18,000,000,000,000, well, not too much, in slavery reparations. There we go. And I'll read you a couple of paragraphs here, not that you will be surprised by any of this, but he says, sir Lenny Henry believes Britain should pay slavery reparations to the country's black population. The comedian whose parents were Jamaican immigrants rose to fame in the early nineteen eighties. His self titled sketch show, The Lenny Henry Show, first hit screens in 1984. I didn't watch it. While he also went on to found the charity Comic Relief, which is, with Richard Curtis. And in recent years, he's appeared in The Lord of the Rings, The Rings of Power, that dreadful ridiculous TV series that should never have been made but does.
And he's now writ co written a book called The Big Payback, the case for reparations for slavery and how they would work. In itchy in which he helps to argue that The UK should distribute £18,000,000,000,000 in compensatory payments. I wonder, gentlemen, what you think Thomas Sowell would say about that. Maybe we ought to introduce Sir Lenny Henry to Thomas Sowell and they could actually maybe have an intelligent conversation about this. I don't know whether that would be possible. Of course, as a racist, I couldn't possibly do the introduction because I would be just totally not on. But, it's one of the more hilarious and goofy things that's happened over here recently.
But we get these things from time to time. So, yeah. Don't know what your thoughts are. I don't I think 18,000,000,000,000 we can probably afford. What about
[02:07:19] Unknown:
Hang on. The the white slave trade, so I've heard Mhmm. Went on longer and was more intensive than the black slave trade. And Yeah. The and what happened is they needed tribes in Africa to pick up slaves, which was part of their culture Mhmm. For the white slavers. So because the white people did not go into the in interior of Africa at all. They let the tribes get the so there was a trade going on between, black tribes and black slaves. So, you know, they were going against their own, so to speak. So woke up, but I mean, look at look at the, look at what happened with the Barbary pirates where they came in and literally took whole villages from the coast, and everybody disappeared into the white slave trade.
So we want reparations from the Arabes. I mean, they've got enough money. What about Saudi Arabia? Get a bit of money from them. If you bought, you know? Well, why don't we just,
[02:08:22] Unknown:
kill two birds with one stone and say, Lenny, sir sir Lenny, sir, you can have your 18,000,000,000,000 but you've got to take it from the Muslim community here in Europe. Because they owe us loads of money so we'll just get them to pay you. And whilst you're doing it, right, I mean it's, it would it would be actually one of the least beneficial things that those people could could ever happen to them. It's absolutely ridiculous. In a sense that's a terrible way of phrasing that soft. It sounded like a right Nelly. It's not ridiculous. It's just a sort of symptom of the disease that's taking place. Like we're saying all other races know that this has gone on and have to put it to one side. What happened to our forefathers is both good and bad and, this won't fix anything.
Apart from which he's got you got the bizarre situation where he's now living at a higher standard of living than he would have ever have lived had slavery never taken place. I'm not trying to argue for slavery. I'm just saying that that is true. And, so what he's basically saying is, hey, working class English people, you've got to pay to feather my nest for something that you didn't do. It's not really very sensible. Although, I guess, with a Liberal government, they might think they might be able to get away with it. Who knows? Anyway, I've saved a few I put a few bob aside, Eric. I don't know about you. I could chip in to the £18,000,000,000,000. I'd be happy If I'd be happy to sell my house and all my possessions just to make sir Lenny Henry happy, it would be it would be Oh, that's right. Fantastic.
It would be fantastic. Sir Lenny Henry my reparations. Have you got some due? Have you got some due? What are you owed?
[02:09:58] Unknown:
Well well well, of course, everybody does. Everybody does globally because everybody that has a monetary system that has notes, they're debt slaves.
[02:10:08] Unknown:
That's right. So we need to claim off a Rothschild.
[02:10:12] Unknown:
They've actually supported the monetary system for the globe. If it's not backed by gold, it's backed by labor. Who who owns the labor? I own mine. They took it.
[02:10:25] Unknown:
Give it back. You're a troublemaker, Paul. You're just a troublemaker. Let's just I am a troublemaker. Let's just give them their money. They're Rothschilds. Every last penny. The Roth
[02:10:35] Unknown:
it's the Rothschilds, the Warburgs, the, Federal Reserve, the Bank of England. They need to pay they need to open their coffers and pay the people.
[02:10:49] Unknown:
Okay. Reparations. I agree with you on that. I think that's true. So do you think we could get Zeleny on the show and introduce him to the idea that he can get that but we don't have it but we can tell him the people that do and he needs to go there and then he can, muster the West Indian Afro Caribbean community that's living here or however it's described. I'm not trying to lure anybody out. It's the best of my abilities. And they could go to the city of London and say, look, hey, you guys were the ones that were profiting from slavery so you need to shell it out from your own personal accounts. And we understand. I mean, it'd be nothing. I understand that the Rothschilds have got 500,000,000,000,000 stuck away somewhere so it's only an 18,000,000,000,000 it's nothing.
It's like pocket change to those lads. So they might as well go there. I mean we just need to get out of the way. We just say look yeah we might owe you but we're also owed. So what we'll do is the two the two debts will cancel one another. But in the end, yeah, you go up there and sort it all out for everybody. In fact, you can have 500,000,000,000,000 if you can get it out of them. You can have the loss, but you've got to leave England. Well, you you won't wanna you know, you won't buy anything.
[02:11:51] Unknown:
The thing is we don't owe reparations to them. I know. Because you didn't own slaves. I didn't own slaves. K? No. No. Nobody owed nobody owes reparations to, any any race that is alive today because those people were not in slavery. They were not enslaved.
[02:12:13] Unknown:
Well, no. No. They're they're enslaved now
[02:12:16] Unknown:
in a different way. We're enslaved now. Not until the fourteenth amendment. Yeah. Once the fourteenth amendment happened, oh, yeah. Then they're enslaved, but so were we. Mhmm.
[02:12:26] Unknown:
Well, we've been enslaved since 1694 since the Bank of England. So and apparently, that was set up by the Dutch. So I want a lifetime supply of Edam cheese and cannabis, please. I think that's that's the least we could we could ask for. Don't you think, Eric, from the Dutch? They owe us all that. Yes. I'll take it. Why not? They came over here. They they just enslaved us with their with their banking system. I know because I read it in a book.
[02:12:51] Unknown:
It's Dutch, you know. I'll take mine in. Yeah. And I'll take Oliver Cromwell with that. And cigars.
[02:12:56] Unknown:
Yes. An old Ollie Ollie Cromwell. They they they came back in thanks to Ollie Cromwell as well, didn't they? They did. That's the reason why. Yes.
[02:13:06] Unknown:
They did. I was a bit disappointed by the way the other day to you know this I don't know if you know, Chaps. We've got a guy over here who I like a lot called Rupert Lowe, MP. Or no. Maybe I shouldn't say I like him a lot. I'm gonna come to rue that, aren't I, down the line when something bad happens. But he's the least worst at the moment, but and by such a margin that you could say he's actually one of the the few honorable people in politics. But he's not in politics. He's done something much more intelligent, something that we were talking about actually for quite a while before he did this, which is that it's not a political party that you want. It's a a consumer pressure group, and that's basically what is formed.
Restore Britain is a a cross party, sort of event as it were with politicians from all sides. I don't know how many at the moment, but they've got a good think tank. They've got a little bit of money behind them and they're doing work. Anyway, unfortunately, there's a specialist club you can join, Eric. I don't know if you've seen it. For £2,500 a year so that you're like a mega supporter and for some people they'll be able to afford that and want to do it. Unfortunately, they've named it the Cromwell Club. I nearly puked when I saw it. Oh my god. Yeah. I just thought I've got to write to them and say, wrong wrong person. Wrong all. Are they sold do they enter sort out the financial problems in this country,
[02:14:26] Unknown:
at all? I should think they're not going to say anything about that. That's my Well, I doubt if they will to start off with. I'm gonna just give them
[02:14:33] Unknown:
I look. I've never done that sort of work. Do you know how grindy it all is? I mean, it's unbelievably tedious stuff. You have to have people getting paid to write documents things. But that said, they've written one. They've actually just put one out. It's and it got published today. I've got a copy of it here as a PDF. It's a 113 pages long. Here's in fact, here's Rupert Lowe talking about it. Let me just play this little This is a minute and forty eight seconds. Here he is talking about it earlier today. It's called, I'll just tell you about the document. What is it called now? Come here.
Mass deportations, legitimacy, legality, and logistics. It's very interesting. Here he is talking about it earlier today.
[02:15:14] Unknown:
Quote, it's a very exciting day for a still one. Britain. As justice We just introduced our first piece of in-depth, detailed research on a topic which is closest to the heart of our membership, who voted for this to be the subject of our first piece of research. It's entitled Mass Deportations, Legitimacy, Legality and Logistics. So it's been done by my team. I'm incredibly proud of all of them. It's been a huge piece of work. It's not a sound bite. It's not a one sider. This is a serious read. And I would urge everybody who is concerned about this issue to wade through it, and I think you'll find it quite enlightening.
It looks at the constitutional and legal reasons why we have a problem, and it then goes on to talk in detail about what needs to be done to solve the problem legally and also then logistically deal with what has become a massive problem. It will save the country, in our view, conservatively, £15,000,000,000 a year. That's very conservative. And therefore, obviate the need for more statism, more tax increases, more government, more incompetence and a general malaise which is currently besetting Britain. It requires political will and it requires the right people in charge in order to deliver this.
But I think you'll all find it very enlightening and I would urge everybody, put a cold towel on your head and have a serious read. Enjoy.
[02:17:01] Unknown:
So there he was talking a little bit earlier. I've put the link, by the way, to the document for those of you that want it in both the YouTube and the, and the Rumble chat. It's a PDF, a 113 pages. I've read about 30 pages this this afternoon. I'm gonna plow through the rest of it. It's pretty interesting. The first 30 pages are well screwed together. It's a sign of intent, if nothing else. And so, he's the only one. These are the only group that are addressing it with a robust, responsible tone and attitude. I don't know what you think about that, Eric, but that's what it sounds like to me at the moment. Yes. Can you put the can you put the link in the studio chat too? Yeah. Sure. Sure. I'll do that in a sec. Yeah. I'll do that.
[02:17:44] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I wanna polish post mass postal voting because that's where the biggest ever. So that's one thing they they're gonna do. So they say. Mhmm. Was it Direct Democracy? Our Direct Democracy platform has been launched. Has it really? Join, restore Britain to vote on your policy ratification process, which then leads to a full campaign.
[02:18:08] Unknown:
You know what? Sir? Thinking about that, we have mail in voting as a consequence of, George Floyd. You can thank him for mail in voting here in America. Can't can't you, Frederick and Paul? Because of, the whole COVID lockdown, I I guess that's the main reason that we've got it is because everybody was supposed to be locked down in their houses, and you couldn't go out to the polling stations because it was too dangerous, because of the the invisible disease that everybody had to mask up for. Which led to this direct democracy now where we don't even question it. Nobody challenged it.
When I I I heard all sorts of people that were against direct voting like that through the mail mail mail in voting, before that meeting.
[02:19:03] Unknown:
What what was it? On the Radio Ranch a few days ago, somebody received a package from Amazon. It was a package that they that had something in it that they never ordered, but there was also a bound stacks of votes, of voting forms that were in the box. They were delivered by Amazon.
[02:19:29] Unknown:
Who?
[02:19:30] Unknown:
Yeah. Dropped off by an Amazon delivery truck, but it wound up going to the wrong address apparently because they didn't order anything from Amazon. They didn't order what was in the box and but they still got the box and the it it was literally hundreds of mail in votes. Literally hundreds of blank vote forms.
[02:19:57] Unknown:
Yeah. And it was a dead drop. Dead drop? I believe it was. Yeah. So when you're using somebody else's address and stuff to ship clandestine stuff, but the problem is, you know, getting it before they get it. You know? Because if they the person that you're using finds it just like this that's exposed. Why am I getting voting forms when it's possibly some next door neighbor Tifa guy that's using your address, you know, as a sock puppet, basically. That's what a dead drop is. Sure. But, yeah, they were going everywhere. It's amazing how many, voting forms went out during that election while we were under lockdowns. And we have video of people sitting there just stuffing ballot boxes, and they're never arrested. It's like, why aren't these people in front of a firing squad?
And it just disappears. And recently here in The States, it was revealed that they were running this operation called Arctic Frost where the FBI was wiretapping eight senators that were questioning the election results. And, you know, after Biden stole the election, they were still questioning it. That was what the whole January 6, you know, insurrection
[02:21:14] Unknown:
was. Right. I was just gonna say that that the real insurrection was the voting fraud. Yeah. The voting fraud was the real insurrection and treason.
[02:21:22] Unknown:
But, the the, senators, they were actually listening to their people saying this was a rigged election, and the f b and Biden was using the FBI to spy on them. So that's a big scandal that's breaking here in The States right now.
[02:21:39] Unknown:
Interesting. I was gonna say about the reparations here in Wisconsin, we never had slavery, at least as far as, our history as a state. In fact, it we had the the Dred Scott decision was based on a slave that had I forget where he was from originally, if it was Illinois or Indiana or somewhere. And he fled to Wisconsin. And then the supreme it went all the way to the supreme court and it and then Dred Scott had to go back to the original state he was enslaved in. But, and that led to the civil war. So we've been he's over told
[02:22:18] Unknown:
Dred Scott. It was your fault that he had to go back. No. Well, Wisconsin It was your very own fault. No. It was your very own fault, Patrick. I'm appalled on this, Patrick. I mean, you should pay reparations. Yeah. I'm appalled. I'm appalled. And I'm I'm appalled, and I'm appalled. So so I'm doubly upset.
[02:22:39] Unknown:
Well, one of the, funny things about slavery in North Carolina was the first legal slave owner in, the history was a black tobacco farmer named Anthony Johnson, and the largest slaveholder in 1860 was a black plantation owner named William Allison. And so and also the, Indians, they own thousands of black slaves. Right? The Cherokee and stuff. Mhmm. They all the so called, you know, I hate to say Native Americans because they weren't native, but, you know, the The Indians. Because yeah. Indians,
[02:23:15] Unknown:
you know, they were still killing and eating and enslaving each other when we got here. Well, you you you come from the area where Daniel Boone used to be and where he went after the Indians that kidnapped his daughters, shot one of them, and he became a national hero after that. Everybody wanted to be like Daniel Boone, even, it was the, last of the Mohicans. James Fenimore Cooper, all those all those, leather stocking tales that were based off of Daniel Boone and the adventures in the wilderness going from, you know, the the colonial outposts into the into the woods, into the forests where all the the natives were, the Wild West.
That's where we get the Western the idea of a Western from from our Right. Fiction.
[02:24:09] Unknown:
I mean, the the Black Lives Matter movement, they got they got quite a bit of money, didn't they? They used it really constructively,
[02:24:17] Unknown:
didn't they, I think? They had to buy houses and such.
[02:24:21] Unknown:
Yeah. That's right. They they put it into bricks and mortar for the organizers of Black Lives Matter, didn't they? At least they did okay out of it. That's that's right. At least somebody benefited a little bit. So, yeah, very honorable and and integrity driven process they had there. No doubt Sir Lenny Henry would be looking for something similar, I guess, amongst amongst this ridiculous proposal that he's trying to gain traction on. I mean, we shouldn't really give it airtime. I mean, it's really it should go into the sort of comedy section of the show, which it has done, I suppose, automatically even though we weren't laughing too much. But, yeah.
We the Black Lives Matter thing, all of these things. I'm just thinking back now, the last five or six years, the amount of pantomime horseshit that we have to be on the receiving end. I mean, it just doesn't stop, does it? It's it's considerable. They've obviously got a little sort of storytelling factory out there that goes, alright. Now we're we wait that run that one for nine months, and then we'll have a little break, and then we'll we've got something dafta coming up next. And, and on it goes, on it goes, and on it goes. Yeah.
[02:25:34] Unknown:
It's unbelievable, isn't it? It really is. But the thing is is that, they try and let's put it this way. There's two versions of history always. The Hollywood version and what really happened. But, unfortunately, the majority of people believe the Hollywood version, and that happens every time.
[02:25:52] Unknown:
Well, I think it's time for Fockem Hall Studios to get built and set up and get into production, Eric. I think I agree with you. I agree with you. And we know who ran this
[02:26:02] Unknown:
yes. We all know who ran the slave trade, don't we? But we won't go into that.
[02:26:07] Unknown:
Yeah. This was the first write the account. Eskimos, I think, wasn't it, Eric, that ran the slave trade? I'm pretty sure it's Driver's witnesses, I thought it was. Yes. It's Eskimos. Definitely. Yes. Eskimos.
[02:26:16] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. The survivors write the account.
[02:26:21] Unknown:
They write whatever story they want. Well, the winners that's right. The winners Winners. Always
[02:26:28] Unknown:
Well, I didn't wanna say winners because I hate giving them the win. So I so I chose the word survivor. That's right. But they The victories. I hate giving them the win with the victor.
[02:26:40] Unknown:
That's why French history books have got so many blank pages, isn't it? Oh, wow. You and the French, Eric.
[02:26:48] Unknown:
Exactly. Hey. Bloody hell. If in doubt, have a go at the French. This is bullshit.
[02:26:53] Unknown:
Actually, do you know who was the most successful army in second place next to the Roman army? The French army. They won won more battles. They they won, I think, as almost as many battles as the Roman army did. Yeah.
[02:27:10] Unknown:
When? What happened to them?
[02:27:13] Unknown:
The Napoleonic times. Oh. But if you there was a list of it showed you it was actually on YouTube, where it showed you who was the most successful army. And it was it's quite surprising. It was the French. You know? Mhmm.
[02:27:26] Unknown:
So next to the road I think the the average height of the French male dropped, though, considerably after the Napoleonic wars, didn't it? Because all their strongest men were in the army, many of them got killed. And so they lost something like four inches in average height across the whole of France because all the strongest guys are out there getting killed. Yeah. And they were the first countries to introduce compulsory military
[02:27:51] Unknown:
service, weren't they? Because, they were conscripts who were actually in the, yes. Oh, yes. In Napoleon in Napoleon's army, they weren't volunteers. They were conscripts.
[02:28:03] Unknown:
There's so many good I've been done. There's so many good sort of things, not good, interesting, good's not the right word, bad things that are really compelling that are not known about from that period of history. Like, there's the revolt in the Vendee, which is barely ever spoken about, where the whole of the peasants of the Vendee rose up against the French Revolution, and they killed about a 165,000 of them.
[02:28:26] Unknown:
These were farmers and good people. I mean, this pattern's just repeated. It was also the most Catholic area of France at the time of Vendee. Right. Yeah. Really? Well, the French Revolution, they went after the church big time. That was that was, you know, they murdered tons of priests and nuns and monks. Mhmm. Yeah, they went They established the secular government that stands today. Killed the king. If they hadn't killed the king, it's just what the imagination goes wild because here in America, you had new France and what would have happened to all of the French territory that Thomas was it Thomas Jefferson that did the Louisiana Purchase?
Right. That was all French territory. And I I suppose there was a reason that the Americans by Americans, I mean the American government got involved in the French Revolution after the American Revolution because it did nothing but, secure their power over the country here.
[02:29:29] Unknown:
Yeah. That's another thing that's not there's not many films about that, are there? Not that I'm aware of. Is there a film about Jefferson in Paris or something? There might be something about that. I I can't remember. Another is about that. You don't see too many you don't see too many films about the founding fathers
[02:29:44] Unknown:
of America. You you know, there there are plenty of Abraham Lincoln type films, but I can't think of too many with the, original American founding fathers. Can can you, Paul or Frederick, think of any? Well, there was 1776,
[02:30:00] Unknown:
the musical that came out in 1776.
[02:30:03] Unknown:
The musical.
[02:30:05] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. That they did in 1976. That was a big bicentennial year thing. I remember being in grade school, and they put us on the buses to go see the, you know, the founders and
[02:30:22] Unknown:
But they really don't focus on that time period in Hollywood. It's like they don't want us to think about it. Yeah.
[02:30:30] Unknown:
Every now and then, they'll do a like a series on, like, Madison. And, I remember they did that and there was one on John Adams. But yeah. And you said, yep, Jefferson in Paris, very few Thomas Jefferson films.
[02:30:46] Unknown:
But yeah. Yeah. What's the one that they did with the musical recently about the the guy who started the first Bank of America?
[02:30:54] Unknown:
Oh, you're talking about, Hampton? Hamilton. Hamilton. Yeah. Yeah. Alexander Hamilton. Oh, god. Yeah. Alexander Hamilton. Hamilton. He was the Rothschild's stooge spy in the Continental Congress.
[02:31:08] Unknown:
Yeah. But they don't they don't want us to celebrate that part of our history. They don't want us to know about it. I I I think it is the main thing. Not so much even celebrate one way or the other, just to know that the real history of what went on in that in that era. They play out Napoleon films.
[02:31:28] Unknown:
Yeah. You think of what they're teaching students at places like Appalachian State University where basically the founding fathers were horrible because they were slave owners, they were misogynistic, and the constitution is just a piece of paper, and we need to move beyond it. And that is what this whole entire generation is being taught in public schools that there's nothing about the, you know, War of Independence that is good. There's nothing about the founding of America that is good because it was based on the original sin of slavery, and America can never be clean of the sin of slavery.
And that is the Marxist mantra that these kids are being, you know, pumped with. And so they're not going to watch a movie that makes the founding fathers anything but demons.
[02:32:22] Unknown:
That's your alma mater that
[02:32:24] Unknown:
that you have there at the Appalachian State University. Yeah. I didn't go there. My father did his graduate and undergraduate work. No. I went to, North Carolina State University in Raleigh. But, my father and my brother and my sisters all went to Appalachian State University. It was a different place then. Everything changed after 09/11, especially education in The United States. But that is basically the thing. It's just this, you know, the culture of critique where they just go in and start beating on all the white guys that we were taught were heroes, and they find that foible. You know, whatever one little thing that they did or accused of, and that's what they're taught to break down that hero image because you can't have any more alpha male heroes that that that they're ever gonna let that happen again. Hitler, uncle, you know, h was the last one, supposedly.
[02:33:21] Unknown:
You can't honor your own ancestors, but everybody else can honor theirs, and you have to respect them. And you have to have George Floyd day, but don't you dare have a Thomas Jefferson day. You have to tear down their statues and top of them, which was another thing that happened with the George Floyd stuff. Just tons of toppling of statues. Even in England Right. You you all had that. I wish I You had black lives matter, didn't you? You still got it. You still got it. Wow. Yeah.
[02:33:52] Unknown:
Yeah. They, BLM and Antifa and Chapel Hill tore down the Silent Sam statue that was put up by the daughters of the Confederacy to honor the Confederate soldiers that died in the uncivil war. And Antifa and, BLM not only, you know, tore it down, but destroyed it. And, it was moved off campus and, you know, all efforts to try to get it repaired and move back to campus have failed so far. But it was definitely a lightning rod after Charlottesville. Yeah. Charlottesville was the big one to, you know, get everybody going. Then all these confederate fly all these Confederate statues need to come down. Then it was all the statues of the white guys need to come down. So they were attacking Lincoln statues, then Washington statues, etcetera.
It was interesting when they actually tore down the Albert Pike statue, but that one, I think, got put back up and Yeah. It did. Yeah.
[02:34:53] Unknown:
Yeah. They even tried to tear down the the statue Of Saint Louis in Saint Louis. Yeah. I remember that. Yeah. But they didn't. Too many too many people came out in defense of it. They wanted to, though. They really did. Oh, yes. And and he he is, numero uno number one enemy of the, chicken swingers because he wanted he burned the talmid back in. Burned the talmid and found enough for the harm. Exactly.
[02:35:19] Unknown:
I don't know. That's not very ticking a lamb, is it? That's not very ticking a lamb. If they wanna take down
[02:35:26] Unknown:
if they wanna take down the Lincoln Statue, they can start with the Lincoln Memorial in DC.
[02:35:34] Unknown:
Oh.
[02:35:35] Unknown:
Well, there is those books. I don't know. I I I've got both of them that I've who's wrote them? Just absolutely demolishes the whole Lincoln myth. They're brilliant. They were written in the early two thousands. I can't remember the name of the author, but I've got both of them PDF kicking off. He hated Christianity.
[02:35:49] Unknown:
He he wrote a whole thesis on it for his doctorate. And, one of his advisors told him get rid of it because it ruined his political career, but he hated Christianity.
[02:36:00] Unknown:
Any guy that's a pen pal of Karl Marx, right, is a twat. It's just that simple. If you can't figure it out, you know. I was just, Frederick, I was are you familiar with, legal man, Lee Gollman? Do you know of him? This US loyal I'm mentioning him to you because I think he's he's definitely worth following on x, and he's the guy that's the creator of this video that I've mentioned quite a bit, and I'm gonna mention it again. Barnum World. Have you seen that on YouTube? Barnum World? No. You like I think it might be right up your Appalachian Street. He's wonderful. I I think he's he's hilariously funny, incredibly cynical. I wanna read I'm just looking to see if there were any posts here that were worth just and I wanna know what you guys in The States think of this. This is a minute to read. Alright. This is a recent ex post from October 7. They're very much in this vein but I can read this stuff every day because it's invigorating even though I know he gets exhausted. He says this and this is equally applicable really to our situation here with the sort of mental decrepitude of the vast majority of people. He says this, one thing has been made undeniably clear.
The belief that our government is fundamentally the good guy is such a deeply held belief that it just can't be shaken in the vast majority of the population. Sure. They'll believe that mistakes were made in certain circumstances or by certain particular men etcetera, but they simply will not or cannot even consider the hardcore truth that our government is not the good guy, has never been the good guy, and that our entire founding story is a fairy tale designed to lock in loyalty to what amounts to nothing more than a criminal cabal to control the population and resources. And unless that changes, nothing of import will ever change. We'll simply continue falling into this Bolshevik nightmare that everybody can see no matter how much empty patriotic rhetoric and name calling is spewed out in an alleged defense of my constitution and freedom.
He's very much in that vein. So I I would recommend on x by the way is US crime review if you look up look him up. These posts are brilliant. Lots of good responses and he's also got one here. Right? You've got to go and see the picture of this. This is a post from October 6. You'll work it out without me being I won't have to go too detailed. There's a picture of this guy. Right? You know we were talking about people that don't have souls and it's a and he's called Erwin Chemerinsky and he says, Erwin Chemerinsky, one of the most celebrated so called legal scholars around. He's the Dean of the Berkeley Law School, was Dean of another law school before that, went to Harvard, then worked for government of course, and was a professor before all of that. This is the face. You've got to see this face as well. This is the face of expertise in this country. This is the face of so called academic scholarship. Take a good look at it. Why do people trust men like this? Look again if you still haven't. It's guys and gals who look exactly like this who have made sure that physiognomy is now considered quackery. You've got to see the face. He's completely loony. Are people really this blind? Do they think that there is no connection?
What is your own personal experience with this connection? We all see it in our own lives but are shamed for daring to address it. Academia is full of people like this guy Bolsheviks who are destroying our way of life from within. Personally, I'm sick of these people and, he's actually far worse looking than Keir Starmer but they've got the same inherent sort of goofy, not rightness about the way that they look. This one's unbelievable. You got a It's wrong. Yeah. It's, Erwin Chemerinsky. He's one of your guys, so you can have him. Well, he's not really. I think he's a ticcan alarmist myself, but, you know, I don't want to cast aspersions here. It's a family show. But, yeah. Yeah. Physiognomy, I didn't realize that they don't talk about that anymore. They did a whole thing about that, didn't they? About being able to detect criminal faces. And I think when you see the illustrations, you go, oh, yeah. They are all criminals. You can just see it. It's writ large. It's on that Phrenology? Yeah. Is that what it is? That's the shape of the skull, isn't it? Phrenology? Yeah. Yeah. It's totally unrelated, but,
[02:40:33] Unknown:
in 2021, the Jerusalem Post ran an article that said that over 82,000 Israelis underwent plastic surgery and rhinoplasty nose jobs in 2021.
[02:40:49] Unknown:
That's not a big shit. It's what was that number again? Over eighty thousand, you say? Eighty two thousand. That's a that's a sign of anti Semitism on the rise. Yeah. So somebody that does nose jobs, are they known as a rhinocerist? What is the name? Rhinocerists. What are they known as? A rhinoplastographer something. I wouldn't mind putting that on my business card.
[02:41:13] Unknown:
Woah. I went to one the other week, and I'm writing them my right snotty letter. Yeah.
[02:41:26] Unknown:
So Berkeley.
[02:41:27] Unknown:
Pregnant schools. What was
[02:41:30] Unknown:
that's alright. So who was this character that went to Berkeley Law School? And it doesn't really give him any sort of, you know No. Berkeley is known as a wildly liberal sort of university, wild
[02:41:47] Unknown:
You've got to just see this face. I'll tell you what, I'm gonna put the link in I'm gonna put the link into this post onto the chat. You've just got to go see this face everybody, and then you'll know exactly what I was just droning on about. I'll stick it in, rumble. That's the and, we'll stick it into the old YouTube thing. It's just, you know, now we're picking on people because they look funny. Well, why not? Go have a look at that face. You'll get exactly what he's talking about. So, yeah. And politics and administrative bureau bureaucracies are actually riddled with those sorts of people. They really are. We've got them over here. They're very funny, very odd, very strange people. Very, very strange indeed.
So
[02:42:33] Unknown:
Frederick, I have a question for you. Have you ever have you heard of, Bacon's Rebellion in the '16 I think it was 1667 or '76, I'm not sure when exactly.
[02:42:47] Unknown:
Bicom's Rebellion.
[02:42:49] Unknown:
It it was, okay, so at the time you had Jamestown. Right. And more or less you had Irish indentured servants, which are basically slaves, Irish white slaves. And then you had African, you know, servants, slaves. And they were on the Jamestown plantation and, this fella named Bacon organized against the, king, it was King Charles the second at the time. And what it what they did was the Irish ganged up with the blacks with the African, slaves. So it was a slave rebellion. And after that occurred, they started to make some of the first racial laws in the country.
So as to divide the two from ever rebelling against the, should I say the, overlords, you know, chicken swinger overlords that were appointed at the time. And made it so that one would resent the other in order to prevent them from ever trying to establish any sort of unity to to go after the real culprits in the future like they tried to with the Bacon Rebellion. But this it took place and then it was shortly after that Jamestown was disestablished and then moved up to Williamsburg. So, I just thought I'd mention that because that's like, as far as racial laws in America are concerned, that was one of the first that established that as far as black and white.
[02:44:32] Unknown:
You know, rebellion and then, like you said, that resulted in the Virginia slave codes of seventeen o five according to this.
[02:44:42] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. And I I would imagine too, it dispossessed a lot of, say, like, the Irish weren't allowed to own property and caused a lot of them to move out to places like North Carolina as a consequence to get away from the the you know, there's that whole move westward into the wild territory in order to establish, some sort of civilization outside of the British control at the time. Anyway, it's worth looking into if anybody wants to do any more research into it. Bacon rebellion. Bacon rebellion. Yeah. The Bacon rebellion. Is it got is it got anything it's nothing to do with Francis break Bacon, is it? Yeah. That was what I was thinking of Yeah. Either Francis or No. Not Francis Francis Bacon. It was, one of one of the I think it was like a a nephew of of, I think the guy's name was Berkeley that was the British rep rep lord or whatever he was.
But it was his nephew that rebelled against him I think with all of the indents. Inbreeding.
[02:45:50] Unknown:
Sorry about that. Inbreeding. Yeah. Who's that? Well, I just got a little post come through on Telegram from Helen. She might not be listening to the show. I haven't listened to it, but I've just read it. It's two minutes and twenty one seconds long, and it's about inbreeding. Shall I play it? This is politically really incorrect stuff. Let's listen to this. This this looks pretty good. It looks quite here we go. It's to do with The UK. 70% of all Pakistanis are inbred. Should I say that? Have I just lost the channel?
[02:46:22] Unknown:
Okay. We're not on YouTube, are we?
[02:46:25] Unknown:
I don't care, really. We got it. We're here to do things. This is just this is fact. Well, I I will I'm Joe. Just read it. Let me just read this out. Joe Rogan is shocked by UK inbreeding statistics, but this is serious stuff. This is to do with all this race mixing stuff. It's just another aspect of it. Why it's dangerous like permanently, like for multiple lifetimes. 70% of all Pakistanis are inbred. Half of everyone living in the Arab world are inbred. Half. BBC investigation in Britain revealed that at least 55% of the Pakistani community in Britain was married to a first cousin. Turkey has between 25 to 30 more stillbirths among immigrants.
BBC so I'm quite the BBC here. BBC's research also discovered that while British Pakistanis account for just three point four percent of all births, in Britain, they accounted for thirty percent of all British children with recessive disorders and a higher rate of infant mortality. Medical evidence shows that one of the negative consequences of inbreeding is a one hundred percent increase in the risk of stillbirths. Findings on intelligence research shows that if one per if one's parents are cousins, intelligence goes down 10 to 16 IQ points. The risk of having an IQ lower than 70 increases four hundred percent amongst children from first cousin marriages which is clinical retardation.
End of this thing says we're going to be called Islamophobic for even bringing this up. People don't like the truth. Well, they don't. I just thought I'd drop that as a sobering thought to as we're moving up towards the end of the show. So here we go. In the Catholic church, it's forbidden.
[02:48:04] Unknown:
It's forbidden. I was I was gonna say, Paul, in the Catholic church, it's forbidden to marry your first cousin.
[02:48:12] Unknown:
Well, yeah. And it's frowned upon in in the second cousin in any of those. Well, it's just basically wrong. It's plain out. It's flat out wrong. Although, I know some of our people have ended up doing things like that. But does isn't that what that's what's created those sort of, the people that are displaying deliverance. Isn't that the idea behind that? Yeah. That's the idea. And it has occurred, and it doesn't work. Nature will not be mocked.
[02:48:40] Unknown:
Well, what's interesting about that is because of the Christian stigma of that that the South is always accused of having inbreeding, but our actual numbers are very low, especially considered against things like the Rothschild family tree and the Warburg family tree and all these others, that do marry first cousins to keep all the wealth in the family. But the actual numbers of the South are relatively low because it is a taboo here. It's like incest is a taboo. Mhmm. But yet It's projection. There's always projection on that.
[02:49:18] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. And they they use it, what, to make out make to to cast southern people in a more negative light. It's amplified, is it, as a story? Right. Christians. Christianity.
[02:49:29] Unknown:
It's it's meant to make them seem like the bad, you know, like the ones that do that sort of thing. Even though in certain areas in the South they do marry a lot younger than they do in other areas. But that's, you know, that's the way things used to be back in the day too. It's just not it's our modern culture that's different. So,
[02:49:57] Unknown:
Are there any we're moving towards the end. Are there anything, Frederic, Frederick, that you wanted to bring up that we've not touched upon anything that you had in your noggin that you wanted to to throw into the show this week?
[02:50:08] Unknown:
Just wondering what's your take on the announcement about Tony Blair and Jared Kushner to head up the peace contingency in the Palestine Israel thing.
[02:50:23] Unknown:
Well, probably probably the best men for the job, aren't they? It's on merits that they've got those roles. Surely, they they'd be the best man for the job, won't they? Just like Tony Blair's son is apparently part of a company that's gonna get the contract for the the ID system, which will not happen. We're not gonna have an ID system. It won't occur, not in the way that they think. The kickback's gonna be absolutely normal. It already is. Soapbox is dead air. Soapbox is dead air. I just wanna look at it now. Okay. Don't know why it's done that.
[02:50:53] Unknown:
And I just remember Tony Blair from the nine eleven days. Thanks, Patrick. And he was in charge when the infamous Downing Street memo, came out that they were basically working with the Americans to cook the intelligence to go to war with Iraq. And so it's like, okay. That same Tony Blair is gonna be in charge of New Palestine, New Gaza.
[02:51:16] Unknown:
So, I'm interested. Eric, I think weren't you Eric saying something about him having a mansion in Jerusalem?
[02:51:24] Unknown:
It's a flat, apparently, in Jerusalem. Yes. Yes. You took the you know, you you actually reading my mind there. Yeah. And apparently, it is alleged alleged that he may have a girlfriend there. Yeah. It's only alleged. A real girl? A real girl? Might be a bloke in bloke in a dress. He is. Well, you know, I mean, he's he's missus is a psycho, ain't she? I mean, like, her great great great grandfather, John Wilkes Booth, who, shot Abraham Lincoln.
[02:51:55] Unknown:
Apparently.
[02:51:56] Unknown:
So we're told. Apparently. He's related? And now we're back to Yes. She is related. Yes.
[02:52:00] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. She's, what's her name? Yes. Her surname's Booth.
[02:52:07] Unknown:
Or maybe we should do a show on Lincoln and this whole war between the states thing. I'd need to I've got a few books I'd need to read up on beforehand. We'd have to have you guys on talking about that because it's obviously your Oh, I'd love that. I've been running lots of buckets of rocks on Lincoln. Stinking Lincoln.
[02:52:23] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, apparently, he was gonna he he he, hung a load of blokes, didn't he? He was a really nasty piece of work. And he had a plan that he's going to get all the black slaves, put them on ships. It's too expensive to send them back to Africa, but dump them off the coast in, South America. That was his plan
[02:52:42] Unknown:
before he was assassinated. He wrote that great thing about genocide. Yeah. I mean, he's he wrote some interesting thing. He wrote that really good thing about the greatest opportunity for government is to issue its own money. But then when you think about him being in charge of that, it's a worry, really, if he's sharing, you know, if he's a pen pal with Karl Marx. But it's absolutely true, what he writes about that stuff. And we maybe we have to assume that there was some kind of a change in his understanding. I don't know. I haven't read enough about the guy, to be quite honest. But, obviously, it wasn't very long after the cessation of hostilities that he got a bullet in the head. Hostilities didn't really end for him. And I have to assume, and, you know, sort of in a simple way that it was because of his desire to, to have the people's government, that old thing, in charge of the money supply which, of course, is something that you would say he would share, this kind of overlap with what Hitler did with Germany.
You know, these things JFK.
[02:53:43] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[02:53:44] Unknown:
Yep. Yep. And in an honest situation, that's what you want, isn't it? Water. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, if you think you can actually maintain, honest government, but it's very difficult looking throughout history to see when that's ever really happened. Now, I guess, it must have happened through through certain periods. I mean, I tend to view that maybe the British government in the seventeen hundreds was pretty good. But No. It's just been as a non and above note. Well, it probably was, you know. Anything. You're gonna take away every every sort of little pathetic story I've got, Eric. I think you should. Well They're probably all wrong. Well, no. You know, I think, you know, any time in history Yeah. When government has actually worked for the people, it never has. Never will do. Every now and again, I like to pretend in my head that it might have done. Just thinking Yeah. Yeah. But because when you come out with these ideas, well, if we do this and we do that, but it's how do you maintain it? I mean, you're absolutely right. Even if you get good men, they go into that arena, the way it's structured, and they go bad.
It literally turns good men bad. They can't maintain their integrity in a when they're in a rat sack. Yeah. But we are con
[02:54:53] Unknown:
we are conditioned to look up to a father figure, and that's the trouble. We're actually
[02:54:59] Unknown:
and we get this from school. It's sort of Well, in a major military setting, you want a general taking order taking action and and moving large swaths of people. I mean, a good a good general, not just, you know, the corrupt ones that we're we're thinking of. But I wanna know what, Frederick and that you think of Thomas Massey and what he's doing.
[02:55:23] Unknown:
Well, that's the thing. Is he organic or is he synthetic to play this part of the loan, you know, kinda like what Ron Paul used to be, doctor Ron Paul. He was always doctor no, the one person voting no against the GOP, you know, and the Zionist party, etcetera. And so, is he got a shot for the presidency run-in 2028? You know, it's a job. If he's organic, I love it because, you know, I agree with so much of what he's saying, but, you know, I'm always I have trust issues after 09:11.
[02:55:56] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. You shouldn't trust any anybody in particular.
[02:56:00] Unknown:
Somebody called Mer Mer Bailey has said Lincoln, Lincoln Stein, imprisoned 30,000 without charge just because they didn't like him.
[02:56:13] Unknown:
That's interesting, isn't it? Well, he waged war on the Northerners, didn't he? They were very many people in the North didn't wanna fight from my own. I'm gonna have to do a bit of reading, actually. There's these two. I can't remember how long they were. They introduced conscription in, 1862,
[02:56:28] Unknown:
I think it was. Both the the Confederacy and the North imposed it. And, because they were running out of men, and there was not enough volunteers.
[02:56:38] Unknown:
So, I think, with what happened to the South and with what happened to Germany.
[02:56:43] Unknown:
There are parallels. Oh, definitely. Same playbook Yeah. When you start seeing that. Go see, Mike King has a multi part series he's doing on the rise and fall of the new world order.
[02:56:56] Unknown:
What what's his website?
[02:56:58] Unknown:
Tomatobubble.com or something like that. Yep. But he his section on the US Civil War and the rise of Lincoln is just amazing because he goes into, you know, all the bankers that were backing all the different factions and what was happening in France, you know, and how everything connects and that the stuff that you don't learn at college or university. So definitely check that out.
[02:57:22] Unknown:
If you have connection with him, I may just be I I'd love to get him on the show. I've tried to been trying for years to get him on my shows. Oh, sorry. I'll try to get him on both of us. Catch him from you, and you haven't even got him yet. It's terrible. It's like what an incestuous space this is. Why don't you get him on
[02:57:38] Unknown:
why don't you get him on this show and come on with him? There you go.
[02:57:43] Unknown:
Oh, Paul. You're a dealmaker par excellence. We we need guys like you. You you're from the Trump School of Deal Making. I quite like that. That's good. That's really good. Guys, it's been great. Been really good. I've really enjoyed it. It's been lovely to have you back, Frederic. Yeah. We're just drifting. Any final words? We got half a minute to go. Any last words, guys?
[02:58:04] Unknown:
No. No. Just thanks for having me, and we'll have to do the Lincoln show. Keep me posted.
[02:58:08] Unknown:
We will. Let's try and chase up Mike King. He's trying to escape us. That would be great.
[02:58:13] Unknown:
Oh, he would be awesome for that show. I think he would.
[02:58:17] Unknown:
Anyway, thanks everyone for tuning in on Rumble and YouTube and Soapbox and elsewhere, Global Voice Network. We've been here with, Patrick and Paul and Eric and our special guest this week, Frederick Blackburn. Been great to have you, Frederick. And, we'll be back again same time next week talking about whatever's come up. I don't know. Maybe reparations for the English. Who knows? Probably not. Have a cracking week, and hopefully, we'll still get some good days yet. We're having a bit of an Indian summer. Keep good. We'll see you all same time next week, everyone. Bye for now. Bye bye.
Cold open, tech checks and show roll-in
Introductions, stations, and the show image tease
David Irving, Churchill, and playful banter
On clips with intrusive music and broadcast gripes
Beach reflections, sun gazing, and light humour
A seaside chat leads to WWII narratives
Crowds, leaders, and comparing public images
Victor Davis Hanson clip and Churchill debate
Bankers, Churchill’s finances, and empire’s fate
Poland, Tibet, and selective moral pretexts
Germany’s economy, usury, and censorship worries
Anthrax plans allegation and wartime chivalry
One-on-one outreach and the value of persuasion
Kristallnacht claims, restraint, and narratives
Disinformation, media echo, and Irving’s reception
Barnum World, WWII fog, and public complacency
Central banks, BIS, and Schacht vs. Hitler policy
Gaddafi parallels, optimism vs. demoralisation
Local issues: towers, councils, and ‘democracy’
Bureaucracy stories, risk assessments, and waste
Demoralisation by design and Tartaria aside
Music break setup: Divine Comedy ‘Infernal Machines’
Post-song debrief, electro-swing and craft
Machines, drudgery, and writing our own story
Soulless people, psychopaths, and politics
Alfred Schaefer arrest update and free speech
American callers join: places, names, and levity
Place names humour and cultural riffs
Tea ads, wordplay, and banter interlude
Back to history: handlers, propaganda, allegations
Energy, faith, death, and materialism vs. theism
Tikkun olam, NGOs, and cultural engineering
Napoleon, Hitler, volumes of history and parallels
Russia campaigns, necessity debates, and films
US Appalachia history and slavery context
Thomas Sowell clip on slavery and ancestry
Debt slavery, modern trafficking, and slogans
Sir Lenny Henry reparations proposal reaction
Who pays? Banking families and historic debts
Restore Britain paper: deportations legality
Mail-in voting, dead drops, and election doubts
Daniel Boone, frontier myths, and slave owners
Statues, BLM funds, and narrative factories
Founding Fathers on screen and Hamilton aside
Curricula, hero demolition, and statue wars
Physiognomy, academia, and culture critique
Inbreeding statistics segment and taboos
Lincoln, the South, and parallels to Germany
Lincoln’s money, JFK parallels, and governance
Government, leaders, and trust in figures
Mike King invite idea and show close