Broadcasts live every Thursday at 8:00p.m. uk time on Radio Soapbox: http://radiosoapbox.com
PAUL ENGLISH LIVE #111 · paulenglishlive.com
Thursday October 30th· 8pm UK · 4pm US eastern
This week's guest, Monika Schaefer. US listeners please note a later start for this week due to the clock change on this side of the pond.
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Tonight I open with the great time-change muddle: the UK has already fallen back, the US catches up at the weekend, and our listeners across Rumble, YouTube and the rebroadcast networks are wondering if we’re early, late, or merely English. From shorts-in-October bravado to dark-evenings melancholy, Eric von Essex, Patrick and I warm up with weather, wordplay and horse‑racing tangents before settling into the real meat: how crowd psychology, comfort, and compliance shape public life. Socrates, clocks, and crowd management give way to a spirited exchange on policing, paperwork, and the rituals of modern bureaucracy.
In hour two we’re joined by Monica Schaefer for a frank, challenging conversation about feminism, family, and the engineered drift between the sexes: women’s and men’s complementary roles, why online culture and “sex‑ed” turn corrosive, and how to speak hard truths without stoking pointless gender hostility. We range from schools and SOGI policies to birth‑control history, demographics and the old-fashioned virtue of duty—pausing for films, music and a few well‑aimed barbs. Monica also shares an update on her brother Alfred’s imprisonment and points listeners to where cards and letters can be sent. Next week we’re back at 3:00 PM US Eastern when the clocks finally align.
- 'Rumble': https://rumble.com
- 'YouTube': https://www.youtube.com
- 'Fabian Society' (UK think tank discussed): https://fabians.org.uk
- 'SOGI 123 (BC)' (Sexual Orientation & Gender Identity education resource referenced): https://www.sogieducation.org
- 'MSI Reproductive Choices' (formerly Marie Stopes International): https://www.msichoices.org
- 'Planned Parenthood' (US): https://www.plannedparenthood.org
- 'Nineteen Eighty‑Four by George Orwell' (work referenced): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nineteen_Eighty-Four
- 'Socrates' (background to the discussion on speaking uncomfortable truths): https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/socrates/
- 'Hobson’s Choice (1954 film, dir. David Lean)' (mentioned): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobson%27s_Choice_(1954_film)
- 'Housewives’ Choice' (BBC radio programme whose theme “In Party Mood” was referenced): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housewives%27_Choice
- 'Kentucky Derby' (US horse race referenced): https://www.kentuckyderby.com
- 'Preakness Stakes' (US horse race referenced): https://www.preakness.com
- 'Estuary English' (accent discussed): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estuary_English
- 'Langdon/Plotlands (Essex Wildlife Trust – Plotlands Museum area)' (location discussed): https://www.essexwt.org.uk/visit/locations/langdon
- 'Free Speech Monica' (guest website with updates, incl. address for Alfred Schaefer): https://freespeechmonica.com
- 'Truth and Justice for Germans' (guest’s archive site referenced): https://truthandjusticeforgermans.com
Hi. Hi, everybody. Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello. Well, here in England, here in jolly old England, it's now just gone 8PM. But in America, we're all confused because, our clocks went back, over the weekend. So it's, it's actually 4PM now in US eastern time, and then people have been calling in saying, where's the show? What's going on? Are you pathetic? Well, of course, I'm pathetic. But at least we're kind of on time, but it's English time. The, The States catches up with us this weekend. Anyway, let's get this show started and we can talk about clocks for the next three hours. And the dark nights are here, aren't they? Because our clocks went back. That's a good dark night.
Still got my shorts on though, my knees, they're already giving me chip. Leaves are falling all around. Actually, they've been doing that for ages. And, yeah. My knees are cold. I still got my shorts on though. Obviously, my knees wouldn't be cold otherwise, would they? I was out this morning walking around. Another good sporting English gentleman also had his shorts on, and we got into a bit of chat about that as you do. And, my goal is always to try and get through to November, with the shorts on. I must do that. If November's good, who knows? Maybe December. Maybe Christmas in shorts, Probably not. Probably not. Another person who's not wearing shorts, I suspect, or might be wearing shorts, it all depends because he's been turning it rather dapper into his studio performances recently, is Eric von Essex.
Eric,
[00:02:51] Unknown:
good evening. Welcome to the show. Greetings. Evening. And, now I've got my thermals on, actually. It's it's a bit cold in, in Fockham, you know, these days. But, I'm very I'm very worried this evening. I don't know about you, but you can probably hear it in my voice. I've been having sleepless nights. Well, you see, wherever I go, I go to a supermarket, and the girl at the checkout says, see you later. And you go into a shop, and they say, see you later. I wonder if they're all gonna turn up at the same time outside my house. That'd be a bloody great queue all the way down the road, wouldn't they? Because everybody's telling me that they'll see me later. When? Yep. Do you get that as well? Has anybody ever experienced that that that they've all turned up at the same time outside their house because they've always said see you later.
It's just a new saying. I don't know what it is.
[00:03:41] Unknown:
See you later tomorrow. Yes. C u l t, cult. Maybe it's a cult, the see you later cult or something. You never know. Yes. It's a bit worrying. Mine is nice to even see you actually, Eric. I was I've just been talking to Paul pre show, as you do. And, Paul was, of course, berating me for not informing everybody that we were broadcasting in American time an hour late. But, of course, we're not, are we? We're we're broadcasting in the correct English time. You're right to berate me, Paul. I actually I stuck it up on the website. But I but I wasn't. It was not clear.
[00:04:13] Unknown:
I was no. I was just saying it's better to be an hour early than an hour late. So I'm good. That's right. I don't know what you're doing, but I'm good. It is. We lost an hour somewhere.
[00:04:24] Unknown:
We will be lost an hour. That you that all you American types are very keen to be here. I'm very pleased about it, Paul. You can you can bet your bottom dollar I am. Of course, I do always rant about this. I'm not gonna rant about it too long because I suppose it's just like every sort of clock change. It's the same old script. But I'm gonna say it's first of all, it's a dastardly stupid thing that they change them anyway. But if they're going to do that Yes. Can't we all do it at the same weekend, please? I'd be quite happy to be subservient to the American system. I really don't care as long as we're all doing it the same. So in The States, you get a week long extra of summertime right now, so you're still on the slightly still lighter evenings.
But you're much more sensible in the spring side because you start yours three weeks before us, so you're effectively getting one month of extra summertime. And I feel a bit cheesed off, Eric. I don't know about you. I think our government's robbing us, and I want me I want some sunshine back. I don't know what to do.
[00:05:25] Unknown:
I don't like the EU, and I don't like the continent. Well, sorry. I like the continent. Yes. But I don't like the EU. But I how can't we be European time? The same as France. So we would be keeping summertime all the year round. But they did an experiment in the early seventies, late sixties, early seventies. And there was apparently, because every time they change the clocks, the accident rate goes up. It's the same in every country. The accident rate goes up. And also Is it? You think Big Ben, they have to change the clock like, the time on Big Ben, which costs a lot of money. Loads of clocks have to be changed. It it's horrendous. Anyway, in the early seventies, they did an experiment where they kept the clocks the same. So you woke up in the morning and it didn't get light until about nine or 10:00.
But you had, you know, brighten evenings, which is much better because in the mid winter, about December 21, gets stuck about 03:00 here. It's terrible. It's horrible. It's really depressing. Anyway,
[00:06:29] Unknown:
apparently really depressed though. I don't know about you. Yes. I love it. I love the gloom. I always feel as though it's only England when it's gloomy and dark and wet, and I go, oh, I I know where I I know where it gets sunny, I get slightly suspicious and nervous, as do most exaggerate. Always commenting about it. Oh, it's another sunny day, isn't it? As if it's about to end. And, of course, it does. But we've had a great year this year. I know we're always talking about bloody weather. I'm gonna have to find some different maybe start talking about horse racing. Although I don't know anything about it, you know, as the opening sort of bitten, you know. How did, you know, Flying Tart doing the 03:30 at Kempton last Sunday or something like that? Or whatever the name of the horse is, you know, all that kind of stuff. But, I actually But also you were talking about continents, weren't you, just then? And I I was thinking, I thought, well, I like the continent.
I like to be in the continent, but I don't want to be incontinent, I think. Correct. Well, what is it?
[00:07:21] Unknown:
Dover for the continent. Carrington Incontinent. Yes. That's right. Yes. Yeah. I think that's taking a piss, isn't it, in a way? Sorry. But, it's a piss.
[00:07:30] Unknown:
I I think I think we could try. I think we could try and talk about horse racing instead of the weather. Did you notice how wet the track was for the Derby Derby? I just What about the horse? Have you just had a big horse race this weekend, Paul, in The States? Is there a big one that's just gone off? Off? I don't know. He might have. Would have could have been the Kentucky Derby. That's a big one. Or there's the Preakness, which is the weirdest name for a race. What the hell is a Preakness?
[00:07:55] Unknown:
I have no idea. There's a whole Skin comp I thought it was a sort of It could be. Poof. It's a callus that appears at the bottom of the spine, isn't it, at the back? It it could be. I just made that up. It sounds as though it could be true though, doesn't it? I'm really
[00:08:09] Unknown:
disfigures. Stretching
[00:08:11] Unknown:
yes. Absolutely.
[00:08:12] Unknown:
But what about that horse that they called Hoof hearted? I don't So you made they they did. There was actually a horse called Hoof hearted. But, of course, any yes. Here comes Hoof hearted. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:08:30] Unknown:
Yeah. But then but they but they had to watch what they'd fed what they fed him because, if he was coming around turn three and Hoof Hardy farted, then he would take out the entire back 40.
[00:08:43] Unknown:
This this is true. This is absolutely true. But, anyway, I'm sure I'm sure everybody in Rumble and YouTube are enjoying our banter. So I'd just like to say good evening or good afternoon or late afternoon now. It's just gone 04:00 if you're on Eastern Time. It might be a better hour for you, really, to do it. Maybe we'll put the show later. This is a joke. I'm not gonna do anything at all. We will be back at the usual American time of 03:00 next Thursday because the clocks will all synchronize and mesh perfectly, you know, which would be great. But, yeah, quick shout out to everybody in Rumble chat and YouTube chat. Good good evening, good afternoon, fellows and fellowesses, and also to everybody on WBN three two four and our other stations, Global Voice Network and Radio Soapbox and Eurofolk Radio and Hollyland Radio. So great to be here with you again this wonderful, marvelous Thursday. I was supposed to be making, a a big, pot of Earl Grey tea for the show, and I, I just couldn't. Things went a bit pear shaped as they usually do technically.
So I haven't had a chance to put the kettle on, but I'm telling you at the halftime break, you might hear me slurping a big mug of tea. So it's a good night for it, really. I don't know if you're allowed to do that in broadcasting. You're allowed to get jolly, spiffing, happy on tea. You probably Well, whatever you do,
[00:09:58] Unknown:
if you slurp, slurp theatrically. It'll be good.
[00:10:05] Unknown:
I will. I will. You guys. Yes. I'll tell you what, Eric, as well. It's great to have you here because I'd not heard from your all day off for several days. In fact, we haven't done a show since last Thursday, have we? We have an Armageddon withdrawal symptoms. But, yes. And, actually, I'm sorry. It's a little late.
[00:10:24] Unknown:
I got a note from my parents. Yes. I'm a little late. I I I, you know, I've got a note from my parents, so, I'll push that in. I hope that'd be okay. It'd be sufficient, you know. But, yes. I was a bit late because what was happening, you see, I was on the computer. I thought, blimey, is that the time? And it was the time because I thought I'd caught an hour ago. It wasn't. It was actually on the time. But, like, what I was gonna say about the Daylight Saving was Mhmm. They said that there was a terrible disaster where because the changeover because they kept the the dark mornings there's this campaign, children going to school in the dark mornings, not worried about them going home and home in the dark, just going to school, that there's a terrible disaster and a bus run over several children in Wales.
See? And that's why they chain they went back to changing the clocks. Well, an investigative program, many years later, did an investigation into this so called disaster, and they went to the place in Wales where it's supposed to have happened. There's not a shred of evidence. Not a shred. It was made up by the funny funny pot funny farm department in another government. So, you know, it's surprising how they can change things when they want. So there we go. Not many people know that. No. It's good of them to do that.
[00:11:46] Unknown:
By the way, this is a shout out to everybody in who's online listening to this in front of their computer on their smartphone or whatever. You can call in at any time during the show. There's only one way now. We'd I've dropped the telephone stuff. It actually technically makes my life a lot easier. And I was just saying to Paul prior to the show, I think over two years, I've had about six phone calls in over two years. So I think we can say that that's not particularly effective at this moment in the show's history. We'll go back to it maybe at a later date, but it was just a bit too much of a faff and was causing me to, you know, become even clumsier than I often am. If you wanna come into the show, go into your browser, go to paulenglishlive.com forward slash call, and you can come in. We'll patch you in. Monica Schafer's due to be with us, in just under an hour's time at the top of this hour.
She'll be rolling by. I I I asked I was on her show a couple of weeks ago. I had to in fact, I'll I'm going to berate her about this. No. I'm not really. I had to get up and do the show. When was it? 01:00 till 2AM. That was fun. And, Eric, you didn't stay up to listen to it. I think I invited you to, but you weren't too keen, were you?
[00:12:50] Unknown:
No. Not at 01:00 in the morning, didn't I?
[00:12:54] Unknown:
That was very sad. That was very Yeah. The problem with that is afterwards, right? When you get sort of fired up, it's 02:00 and your brain's all whizzing around. You're going, oh, no. I've got to go to sleep now. So That's right. Whatever. Yes. Or the things we do for radio. Hey. Hey.
[00:13:17] Unknown:
But, no. It's, anyway, how'd it go? Okay.
[00:13:21] Unknown:
Because I heard Let's ask Monica. She was no. I think it went fine. And one of the things that we touched on so those of you may have caught the show about six months back. I can't remember what I called it. I think we're gonna sort of go over this ground a little in part. There's quite a few things to go over tonight, I think, because obviously a week's gone by, so that means tons and tons of awful, terrible, irritating, and pointless things have been happening, which we can always talk about. Was this, what was the I put some kind of provocative silly title intentionally. Why women shouldn't have the vote. And, that's probably more strongly worded than the original thing. It's meant to to obviously kick that conversation off.
And I know that Monica's been thinking about it quite a bit, Monica, and she had a few more comments. So we will see. She might have completely forgotten when she rocks up in fifteen minutes time or whatever.
[00:14:07] Unknown:
So yeah. Up to up the road to where you live, Paul, they've got a mayor that's just been elected. And, he can't speak English very well. Oh, good. He should fit him well, shouldn't he? Yes. Yeah. That's in Brighton, apparently. The the he's got, the the if you look it up, it's the mayor of Brighton can just about speak English.
[00:14:30] Unknown:
I know. So We've
[00:14:32] Unknown:
wait. We've got the city going on here. They're trying to get a Muslim mayor in New York City. New York City. Oh, wait. I don't know what happened. I just They yeah. They're trying to get a Muslim mayor in there. And everybody
[00:14:48] Unknown:
says through all these things, aren't they? These are their ways of letting us know that this is no long according to them, this is no longer our home. That's what this is all about. Couldn't they get home anymore, you see.
[00:15:00] Unknown:
Couldn't they get I've got a better idea. Why not go to Papua New Guinea and and go to, you know, deep in the jungles there and get a real life cannibal to be the mayor? That'd be fun, wouldn't it? You you can get you off the tribe down there, you know. And, you know, that'd be so it solved the crime problem, wouldn't it? They just eat them. Yeah. So the problem, you wouldn't have people going to prison, you know, they just eat them and all. So it it solved two problems. It it, you know, it shows that you're very, shall we say, a mixed multi, what do you call it, society. And and Toilet bowl of humanity. Is that what you said? And then and I'll have to say Well, you think about it, you think the money it cost us to get a prisoner. I am joking, by the way, into prison, where if you had a cannibal, you know, from Papua New Guinea, because there are tribes that are still cannibal, that would solve the problem, you know, you'd just be eating.
So and then and then, anything like that, any minor crimes, oh, don't worry, it'd be it'd be the next meal. So there we go. Solved the problem. Yeah. And we've had this At Cannibal Mayors.
[00:16:08] Unknown:
We've had this bad event in is it Uxbridge, I think it was? Yes. On Tuesday, was it? Tuesday morning
[00:16:14] Unknown:
or Monday morning? Oh, the knigh thing, was it? Was it a knigh thing?
[00:16:18] Unknown:
Guy out walking his dog, 55 years of age, gets into an argument with some Afghan or something, and a minute later, he's dead. Yep.
[00:16:29] Unknown:
Oh. This is not good. That's terrible. That's terrible. No. Well, what about Stevenage? As a, one of these asylum seekers walking along with a great big machete or knife in his hand, and he ends, he walks straight past two policemen, and they don't even bat an eyelid, and he just carries on. And people started screaming and shouting. The police said, why don't you do something? And they just sort of stood there going, That was in Stephen in Japan in Hertfordshire, just up the road to me. Yep. Well, we don't have a we don't have we
[00:16:59] Unknown:
that is concerned, you know, responsible citizens, if that's what we wanna call ourselves, don't have a police force that serves us.
[00:17:09] Unknown:
They don't. Do we? We don't have a government that serves us. Oh, no. Really? Sure. Can oh, I think I agree. Anything seriously, can you think of anything the government has done for the people it's supposed to represent? More people have been killed by their own government than all the wars put together. So when you look at government, why do we need them? We don't really need them. And I think Ronald Reagan was right. If they took a couple of months off holiday, nobody didn't notice any difference.
[00:17:39] Unknown:
So I know.
[00:17:40] Unknown:
And they've Why do we make it happen? Against us.
[00:17:43] Unknown:
I think it's tricky because I still keep you know, I can understand why people write these things. If you hang around on x, and I actually, I haven't been doing much of that at all for the last five days. How about that? Yesterday, I started to have a nibble around the old news feeds and everything, but I've not been doing that. I feel so much better. This is I don't know whether this is actually helping or not, me just feeling better about it, but it literally it wears you out. And I think it wears you out because there's some part of you knows that nothing that you say about this is gonna make the difference or that difference that's necessary to turn this thing around. And I spend a lot of time really thinking about the communications challenge, which is not that we don't have a lot of truths in this conversation and other similar conversations that take place in all the sort of alternative media. There's just tons of truth floating around.
But it's how do you get that truth to land with so called normal people? And this is why, you know, I haven't done too much vox popping this week. I mean, I just haven't. But that's, you know, I've said it before. It's why I do it. I'm trying to see where the sort of little line is and, of course, it's different with all sorts of people. But there's something to do with, it's not it's not I'm not guessing here. This crowd, let's call it crowd psychology, is the key thing. I mean, if we've got all these sentences that have got say truth in them, and I'm gonna suggest that we do. We say a lot of we say a lot of rubbish here. We we have fun talking about the weather because, you know, we're hanging around in this, virtual pub online called the radio show and doing our our gig. But every now and again, we're gonna say something pointed and sharp, and many of the comments that come in over the chats are exactly the same. So we're on this wavelength, but how do you get it to strike people, that aren't in this conversation? What is the different quality? Now this is is as if I'm claiming some great status for us. I'm not.
But there is a process that I think all the individuals here are in or have gone through. And I was thinking, one of the qualities, probably, interested to hear from the chat on this, that I think most people have in these sorts of conversations is the ability to contain discomfort. Do you do you know what I mean? Yes. Yes. It's it's on you've I've been containing it. I think when you're doing this for a long time, you don't realize that you're doing that. In other words, you know, this thing about truths. If we were, I mean, Monica's on. So if we look at, say, I not that this is a, a World War two show, although we may touch on some aspects of it with Monica around. I've got an interesting thing, actually, that's happened with Germany over the last couple of days, which is mad as a box of frogs as usual. But, when you're sort of bringing up you know what the standard narrative is about things that are out there in people's heads.
And you you're about to say something or you would like to that you know is gonna run completely counter to that. In other words, what is and it's all of the it's the implications of this. And, I was you know about you know Socrates? You've heard of Socrates. Right?
[00:20:58] Unknown:
Yep. He's he's a bloke that's, yeah. He's our he's our local postman. Yeah. Called Socrates. Hi, mate. How you going? Is he? Yeah. No. He's Socrates.
[00:21:08] Unknown:
Well, Socrates had to had to kill himself. Right? He took, hemlock, and they caught that. And and I thought, you know, I I had a vague idea why, but I was looking it up recently. Because it's a communications challenge. This was the result of his communications challenge and it's not dissimilar to the one that we face and that loads of people have faced and face all the time. This stuff is ancient. It's to do with how, the great mass of people in the crowd, sometimes you used to be one of those, so did I, right, respond in terms of their security and safety and how to handle discomfort or troublemakers, I. E. Someone who's gonna stand up and say an uncomfortable truth, right, which is going to disturb the equilibrium of the somnambulant crowd. And this is what it did for Socrates.
And I came across this little bit about him. I'm just reading it out without context here. What does it say? It says, the accusations against him of atheism, the introducing of foreign deities, so this is in Greece, BC. Right? I think one of the things he was saying is, look, you've got all these gods and I've got some other ones. And and the authorities of the day, again, this is about human authority systems, didn't go too well with that, and corrupting of the Athenian youth, corrupting them by introducing these conflicting and contradicting ideas to the established status quo at the time, which when you turn up and start saying things about World War two and this, that, and the other, that's although I'd I'd say we've got more leeway with it now than we've ever had, simply because so many people have actually inquired into it. But you see what I'm getting at? This is I see. Yeah. This is kind of the yeah. It it's the problem in every single area of these human power systems is that if somebody actually genuinely asks real questions, nine times out of 10 it's gonna make everybody else in the room feel uncomfortable. Because I was thinking the truths that you want to say by definition I mean, look, we can say loads of truths like, telephone boxes in London used to be read. That's true. Right? But it didn't really change the world. I'm just making so there's lots of sort of gentle truths that are just part of conversation, and it's all true. No one's trying to sort of, you know but the ones that we're talking about are the ones which by design, by definition, are the ones absolutely which are gonna disturb the equilibrium of the listener.
That's why you wanna say them. Because you say, look, I've heard what you said and I I know all that as well, but there's this lump of information here and I wanna bring it to your attention. And immediately you start to do that, you get this crowd closed down. I mean, I'm really sort of hamming it up. It's not always like that. I think it's way, way better now than it ever used to be. But you get people shutting down, particularly if their job is on the line. Right? And, isn't that reflected really, you know, even if we just go over to this Uxbridge thing, the police don't serve us because they're enthralled to something else, some kind of power structure there which exists because they don't wanna lose their job. So they're gonna allow injustice to reign supreme as long as they get employed next week. Well, I think we gotta understand our enemy.
[00:24:25] Unknown:
And when you look at the Fabian society, now I think you and I all realize that it's this country's run by the, usury scammers. But then let's let's look at the Fabian Society. Now the Fabian Society, was actually one of the founders who Hubert Bland. And, yes, it is bloody bland. My name was named Bland, and he was an author. But the thing is, with, the book nineteen eighty four, that's people believed that the author switched the because it is written in 1948. He switched that year around. That's partly clue true, but it was written a hundred years after the Fabian Society started in 1884.
So when you look at the Fabian Society, they believe they're and they're obsessed that we're overpopulated. So they're obsessed with depopulation. That's what that's what they're into. They want to kill us. And they so far, they've been doing a very good job of it, but people are waking up to it. And when you look at Keir Starmer, he's not he's not the full ticket because it's a kind of dictatorship that it's it's pure communism. That's what it is. But I think that they, Keir Starmer is doing a marvelous job of destroying the Fabian Society because people are waking up to it.
And he's not only doing that, people are you notice people are waking up very quickly to it.
[00:26:03] Unknown:
Well, it's like I mentioned the other week when I was out with those people on the street from the Reform Party. I'm not bothered that they were they could have had any name on them at all. That's not why I went there. It's because they were gathering on the street and and saying we're concerned. That's all I saw. Right? I'm not bothered about the label. And, this woman, I think I I mentioned it last week. She said, I've just heard about the Fabian Society. And the fact that she even said it is true. I mean, I think do we need to know about these societies? Well, I suspect say, if you took the brains of everybody listening here on YouTube and Rumble and elsewhere, we probably know most of it. Right? And a good question to ask is how much more of it do you need to know? Could you know an awful lot more? Yes. Would it really make that much of a difference? I mean, when you know 95% of it, do you really need to spend the rest of your life finding out that last three to 5%, which is not really gonna contradict what you already know. It's simply gonna refine your arguments.
But then you're you're probably doing that on the basis that you'll actually find someone who's willing to listen to them in the first place, which is really the big challenge, you know. How do you get someone's attention long enough to drop these things in?
[00:27:07] Unknown:
In a word, to answer your question, no. People don't need to know any more than is absolutely necessary to communicate to them in a very real way that the government is out to get them. There is no such thing as fair play and that they must fend for themselves. That's the only thing they need to know. Continuing to go down rabbit holes is nothing more than a distraction, and it is mentally taxing to the point that even if you come across an absolute honest to God truth, you're not gonna be able to put the pieces together because you've got brain fry from the last week. All you need to know is that shit is not right and that you have to stand up and do something about it. That's all you need to know.
[00:27:52] Unknown:
I agree with you. I think it is. I think there has to be a willingness for people to feel uncomfortable. Actually, I don't know if willing is the right word. They're just gonna you're gonna have to accept that with the territory of inquiry, discomfort is gonna be a permanent permanent companion. And you need to sort of wear it like a parrot on your shoulder. And it goes, this is gonna be a pain in the ass. What? You mean like every day for the last twenty five years? Yep. Yeah. That's exactly what it is. And I think most people are still, there's many, many people still ensconced in comfort and convenience. We talked about this recently as well, didn't we? This is the great sort of peril. I mean, I was just reading a little bit more about this Socrates thing. I'm just jumping down. Not that this is about Socrates, but this is this is this principle as well. It says the offense of Socrates consisted in unfolding to his disciples, I e communicating to them, the arcane doctrine concerning the gods, which was taught in the mysteries and was a capital crime.
So you weren't allowed to teach that. Probably for for pretty good reasons actually. It's a bit like teaching something too advanced to a mind that's not ready for it because that sounds insulting to most people. So you've also got to bear in mind that you will be insulted as your stupidity is exposed as you go down the trail. And if you're not okay with that, you're gonna be right all the time. You know when you're talking to someone, they're always right about something and you go, well, that was a waste of time because we couldn't learn anything. I mean, that's part of it. So, you know, they had to make him take hemlock. He's very cocky with it apparently at his trial. He said, I don't care.
I said, I'm not bothered. I'm not he was so committed to telling the truth. But it's a very interesting example because it's almost like a very, very wise man wasn't wise enough, you could say. I mean, I didn't know I wasn't there at the time, and I don't speak Greek anyway, so it'd be kind of old, you know, Martian to me. But wasn't sort of smart enough to perceive that this sort of mood of the crowd of the authority structure was so strong, it was gonna kill him, stopping any further inquiries he might want to make because he's gonna be dead pretty soon. And, you know, it's like when we've said here how even if we get a clutch of good men, the it's how the audience is taking this stuff in. What what would be the point? I mean, you know, I couldn't get Keir Starmer on tonight because he's reshooting Mars Attacks or whatever it is. He's got to reprise his role going Ack, Ack, Ack, Ack, Ack, you know, he couldn't make the show. But even if you could, even if we could get any of these big knobs on, right, what use would it be? Seriously, I mean, I was surprised that I thought, what would would it actually be real open heart communication?
It wouldn't, would it? Would it? No.
[00:30:34] Unknown:
What do you think? Anything anything pleasurable, anything that's good, you either have to pay for it. A very simple thing. Okay? Near where I live, there's some beautiful woodlands. You should be able to park your car up, go for a walk, lovely jubbly. Oh, no. No. No. No. No. Now you park your car and you have to pay by your credit card or debit card and your billed for every hour you're there. So you're worried about getting back to your car because it's gonna cost you a small fortune to park your car. Mhmm. Little things like that. Little tiny things.
For example, these electric scooters, these adult scooters. I think they're a bloody good idea. Marvelous. Oh, no. You can't legally use one. You can on the continent. You can't hear though. Oh, they're gonna look at you're gonna have to have insurance and tax. Oh. On the insure in in on the continent, you're gonna have to have insurance and tax. Oh. Hang on. I'll repeat myself. On the constant It's okay. You're not now. Oh, that's it. I mean, hearing myself. Wrong. I'll come over. All unnecessary.
[00:31:44] Unknown:
Everything was so well I thought I'm gonna cock it up. I'm I thought everything was going so well. Let's get an echo. I've not had an echo for ages, so I thought I'd just bring one in to remind you what the good old days.
[00:31:55] Unknown:
Hello. I did not do that. I did not do that. Wasn't me.
[00:32:02] Unknown:
For once in my life, that was not me that cocked it up.
[00:32:08] Unknown:
I just I I I'm fast I am absolutely fascinated with it. I was reading something the other day. I mean, I've I've known about it on and off. But you keep on thinking it's like trying to find out where the real what would be the next good blocking point to unblock. And it it's definitely something to do with comfort, and it's to do with people not liking to be worried or unsettled. I mean, I suppose you could say that events are moving faster than we could anticipate them through discussion because, Uxbridge, for example, these things are going off now with ever increasing frequency.
And, somebody actually I think on Telegram I'm sorry. I can never remember who it is. So but whoever you were, thank you. Someone sent through a a link to an x feed about it. And, all these comments from people here in The UK, and they're extremely vigorous, let me put it that way, if they are genuine. You know, I stop, I read it, and then I go, who's actually putting all these posts up? I wouldn't dare put something like that up. Why? Because I'm aware of the consequences, of writing, slightly vitriolic things and excessively excitable things, if you get my drift, which, the authorities could cherry pick, couldn't they? They're waiting for certain people to say things and they'll have a go at them.
If it's Billy No influencers shooting his mouth off, they'll leave them alone unless it's worth their while to sort of, you know, bully them and then demonstrate that bullying to the rest of the crowd as a warning. We don't want any of you stepping out of line and starting to think for yourself. We don't want any of that. It's,
[00:33:47] Unknown:
I don't know if you heard Nathan. Was he on was he on Monday? I can't oh, no. Sunday, I think it was. Nathan Unlandby. Now I might have got this wrong, but I seem to recollect him saying that a thousand organizations in this country have been infiltrated by the police. They are the biggest infiltrators. Yeah. And the way you tell them is they you never meet their family, you never hear anything about their family, and they're obsessed with wanting you to break the law. That's what they want you to do. Yeah. Break the law. And that's it. You know? Mhmm. And Casual provocateurs
[00:34:23] Unknown:
right in the Yes. Right in the belly of your club or wherever it is. That's it. Yes. That that's it. You know?
[00:34:29] Unknown:
But I think that quite honestly, you get a gut feeling about these people because they give off a kind of I don't know what it is. You just get a gut feeling. And Stench. Hang on. Something not quite yes. Like the way they stand or the way they look, you know? So I mean, they could be innocent, poor sods could be innocent, but you know, standing like a policeman because a policeman always stands a certain way, don't they? With their feet at 10 to two, you know what I mean?
[00:34:56] Unknown:
I don't think they do. I think they used to. Do they still do that? Even old? Do they still do it? Even old? Even old? Steady there, sir.
[00:35:05] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah.
[00:35:07] Unknown:
All that kind of I want those bobbies back, would you? It'd be a signal that at least there was some sort of semblance of sanity in that place. But yeah. Well, it's like at the, it's police concert, you know, will you accompany me on piano?
[00:35:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Things like that. Yeah. But, no. I think that there is something weird about a person that wants to be a policeman to be straight with you because Oh, yeah. They generally want to bully people well, not yeah. To dictate to people, and, they're on a kind of ego trip. And my father always advised me, when speaking to a policeman, always address them at a rank above what they are. And that might sort of, you know, ease their ego a little bit, you know. So if they're just an old repeatency plane captain? Oh, no. I'm just a constable. Oh, you're just a const well, I'd I'd leave off the stable if I was if I was you. Sorry.
Think about it.
[00:36:04] Unknown:
Well, you know, that's where officer comes from. It puts it puts the salutation, sir, right in the in how you dress them. And and if you Yeah. Yeah. Never say officer as Ocifer. Otherwise, you'll be blowing on a little doohickey on the side of the road and you might wind up getting a ride. Yes. Ocifer.
[00:36:32] Unknown:
Good boy. Yeah. But, apparently, we thought they always they usually say, do you understand? Never say yes.
[00:36:41] Unknown:
Because I think the best thing is to not talk to them at all now. I'd literally Yeah. I probably wouldn't even say a word, it's got that bad. I mean, it's just
[00:36:50] Unknown:
I do not answer questions. Am I free to leave? Also, if
[00:36:55] Unknown:
if you are arrested, just say no comment to everything they ask you until you've I don't answer questions. Listen to their yes, sir. Comment. It's I do not answer questions.
[00:37:08] Unknown:
I do not answer questions. Am I free to leave? Am I being detained? What's your reasonable articulable suspicion that I am in the process or I was in the process of committing a crime or that you believe that I was about to commit a crime. What crime are you detaining me for? If you cannot articulate a crime, you must release me. Am I free to go? No? I'm being detained? Then I'm being detained under color of law, and this is going on your personal responsibility. And you have lost your cloak of immunity because you were acting ultravirus and outside the law. Am I free to leave?
Just don't answer a question. I do not understand.
[00:37:57] Unknown:
Arrested. By the way, ask me, Ocifer.
[00:38:00] Unknown:
By the way, in America, is it the same as here? You don't own your car. You're Yep. On your,
[00:38:06] Unknown:
note When you register it keeper. It's keeper. When you register the car at the DMV, the Department of Motor Vehicles, you actually transfer, the ultimate right of ownership to that car to the state. That's why they can they can force you to follow the rules of the road because you're driving their property.
[00:38:31] Unknown:
That's right. And does it say, authorized keeper on the details of your car? No. It says certificate of title,
[00:38:40] Unknown:
but it doesn't say title. You have the certificate of title to a motor vehicle, which is which they have defined as a vehicle that is operated in commerce, which is the only thing that they can govern is commerce. So if you're driving using a driver's license and the adhesion contract behind that driver's license says that you consent to being operating in commerce and agreeing to be operating in commerce and agreeing to register any motor vehicle that you own. It goes from a consumer good when you register it to a motor vehicle. A motor vehicle is understood or presumed to be operated in commerce.
And because the government has a property right in you, you are operating a motor vehicle in commerce, which they can regulate, transporting their property, which is your body, which is your serfdom, and they can hang you out to dry and they can take your car on the side of the road without any purpose, reason, or or any cause Right. And the only thing you've got to do to get it back is to raise enough of a stink so it actually comes out that they are absolutely not following any constitution or any rule of law. They're following only administrative policy through your consent.
Boy, that's a surprise. You consented when you got a driver's license. There you go.
[00:40:13] Unknown:
Yeah. What's the, what's the And what's nice to know, Paul, is that all the drivers in America and and England, they all know this, what you've just said, don't they? We all know that. We've Oh, they all know that. We're all surprised of our condition. We all know this.
[00:40:28] Unknown:
They set you down behind a cup of coffee or a Coca Cola, and they they go through every single one of those 500 pages of contract terms that you're agreeing to just by signing a motor vehicle application.
[00:40:43] Unknown:
Oh, they know. They shouldn't Now there's a sketch. Right? There's a thing to be done. How it how should it actually be? You like to sit down and say, here's a cup of coffee. I want to tell you exactly what you're about to do, okay, and then go through it. Do you still want some stuff? That would be great. Well, we don't we don't blame you, actually. Yeah. I haven't done it. No way. It just seems a bit silly, doesn't it? You know?
[00:41:03] Unknown:
All you would need is a ream of paper in a three ring binder, and the the the top five pieces of paper just, just just exposes all of the fraud, exposes all of what happens when you register a motor vehicle. And then when you get to the fifth page, you know, you've gone this through this very quickly, and the camera is just showing the person sitting there and his eyes are getting more glazed and more glazed and more glazed. And then finally, at page five, they say, now, are you prepared to con shall I continue or would you like to wee? And the guy gets up and, I think I shall wee, and you see him hightailing it out the door of the DMV. That would be perfect.
It would be a skip that take five, six minutes, ten minutes tops, and it would it would outline all of this crap and let everybody know it. I think it would go viral on YouTube. I really do. I really do. That's a good one. But did you know if you're forced to sign something
[00:42:07] Unknown:
or you sign something, always put v c in capital letters of absolute signature, which means Vica actus, which is under duress.
[00:42:17] Unknown:
Under no, it's it's under force, by force. By coactus is coercion. Yeah. But but you are very close. You're very close. You can also do a by colon your name and then a dot dot dot, and then follow that with, as, authorized representative for the title, which is your all caps name. You could do that too.
[00:42:44] Unknown:
Or executor to Is it capital so is that because they is it capital v full stop C full stop, or is it just V C?
[00:42:53] Unknown:
I don't know if it's any arrangement. V.cv.c,
[00:42:56] Unknown:
and I just melted into my signature. I, I, I signed my drive I maybe I shouldn't even say this, but my the signature on my driver's license application and the driver's license card both have v.c at the beginning of my signature, but it's melted into my signature. So you really can't tell unless it's pointed out. And all of my motor vehicle registrations, I signed by colonmyname..dot. So, that is, agreeing to nothing before and nothing after, which is the dot dot dot. So they cannot securitize my signature on those documents. Or if they try to, they can get in a buttload of trouble.
Mhmm. Anyway I don't know. It's just fun. I like messing with them.
[00:43:46] Unknown:
Yes. So we have Well, this correction of standing, I think Alice Gore just mentioned it, and there's a few other people in the chat talking about it, is obviously a process that I need to undergo. I think I do, don't I? I need to undergo this correction of standing. Well, there has to be one. We need some simple ways yeah. I yeah. We need it all. There has to be gotta be sold to me like a packet of cornflakes. I really need to understand that. No. No. No. No.
[00:44:09] Unknown:
It does There has to be an old English political status that you can claim, that you can declare before the crap really hit the fan. Like, ours hit in 1933. They rewrote the Trading with the Enemy Act, making, United States citizens enemy of enemies of the state, which means they can lie to us. They don't have to give us full disclosure, they don't have to, give us anything but civil rights as granted by the fourteenth Amendment. It's presumed as an automatic waiver of God given or natural rights, so they don't even have to give us access to the constitution unless we file an affidavit with the secretary of state claiming that we are nationals of The United States Of America, the original republic, and not fourteenth amendment citizens or legal residents of our state of location.
We have locations, we have domiciles, we don't have residences because residency comes from ambassadorial law where you are agreeing in residence to be under the jurisdiction of your parent's country, which is The United States or the District Of Columbia or a 10 mile square. So even though you live in New York, you're governed under the laws of the United States corporation that only has jurisdiction over the 10 mile square of Washington, DC, the District Of Columbia. It's not even part of this country. It's a nation state. So if you're in residence, you're agreeing to be a serf under the federal corporation, and that is how they nail you.
Are you a citizen under the fourteenth amendment, and are you a resident of the state of New York, which is a political subdivision of, guess what, the United States Trading Company, Washington, DC.
[00:46:18] Unknown:
Well, I think there ought to be another state of America called exhaustion, because you could say I'm in the state of exhaustion.
[00:46:27] Unknown:
Right. Well, we certainly have a state of confusion. We certainly do.
[00:46:31] Unknown:
What about Comifornia? I mean, let's face it. Chairman Mao must be looking up from hell thinking bloody hell, they're doing a better job than I ever did.
[00:46:40] Unknown:
Yeah. And they have palm trees. Yeah. They have palm trees and truth loops. Well, but those are really only in San Francisco, anyway.
[00:46:52] Unknown:
But have you seen that there's a new drug out which turns people into zombies? Have you seen that on YouTube where the people have just walked along and they're kind of in a zombie like state?
[00:47:02] Unknown:
I shouldn't Which one is that? There are so many. Was, I know there's there's ome there's Ozempic and that's just, that's the venom from a Gila monster. It actually, it paralyzes your stomach. That's why it helps you lose weight. Your stomach no longer works to digest what you're eating. So, you know, like crapping corn kernels whole. Good heavens. Perhaps I shouldn't have gone that far, but I'm sorry, Paul.
[00:47:35] Unknown:
No. No. It's nice. Good. You're there as far as you like. That take a lot of flushes when I get that down.
[00:47:41] Unknown:
I know I know Paul. He he's the perfect English gentleman. He's just sitting back there leaning back in his chair just just shaking his head. What is with Paul today?
[00:47:53] Unknown:
No. I'm just being I'm just being very polite. Actually, I saw there's, there's lots of videos springing up. They must sort of get a lot of clicks or something with, Americans going around England. These have been I guess they've been online for a few years now. Some of them are quite interesting. I suppose every all people are flattered by positive reviews from other people that come into your nation and say good things about it. Of course, it's a bit weird at the moment when the English know that the whole place is like turning into a toilet with ever greater speed. But some of the comments and observations are good. There was a guy from Texas actually floating around. He does these sort of little forty five one minute short things, you know, so I lost five minutes of my day today. But I I was accompanied by a good cup of tea, so it wasn't too bad. And he was just talking about English communication styles. And what you mentioned there was definitely a key point that he was talking about, about the understatement of everything and the politeness or the perceived politeness of people. And he's begun to read what it means.
You know, all this sort of they'll do anything to avoid directly confronting the situation and it's true. It's absolutely true. I think there's all sorts of reasons for that. I think it's because, I actually think one of them is to do with geography, literally. It being such a relatively small bit of real estate over here in relation, say, to just about anywhere, frankly, but it is small. And I think because we've been packed in like sardines for a couple of thousand years, certain sort of communication approaches have developed, which we found work best when you're living cheek by jowl with a lot of people within earshot all the time. You have to be you can't go around. You were saying that, you know, in Texas, if they want to say something's good to somebody, just yell it across the car parking lot. We don't go in for that sort of thing over here. That's not done. You can't do that. You know, people go, who's that over there making a disturbance? You politely go up and quietly whisper people's ears over here. It's all it is all a little bit different. And, it just I it's interesting seeing how they come into grips with what we say.
The one thing that most of them have noticed, they can't believe the bewildering amount of of accents that there are. And there are. It's absolutely off the charts. So I mean, we just take it for granted. But you can literally go 30 miles away probably wherever you are in England to somewhere else. They're talking slightly different. This I mean, not in London, of course, but you shouldn't be going there anyway because it's now a very, very silly place. Although I guess they do talk different. I in fact, they talk so different, we don't even know what they're saying because they're using completely different languages in huge chunks of of London. But, but it is that way. Yeah. Who's that comedian that draws,
[00:50:25] Unknown:
parallels between different areas of The United States and how they talk and accents, from Europe? He he actually draws parallels, between, like, the southerners and the northerners. What what the hell is his name? Oh, man. I'm gonna have to I'm gonna have to consult Google or AI. But it's funny, it's hilarious, and it's also eye opening because there are accents in The United States that very closely resemble accents over there.
[00:50:59] Unknown:
Weird. It's really weird. There's estuary English, isn't there? That's sort of people from London who who who who moved to Essex, sort of. That's estuary English. You know? But, is it yeah.
[00:51:12] Unknown:
The Thames Estuary. Is that what it's referring to? Must be. I I
[00:51:16] Unknown:
assume, I would I wouldn't know. But, what we're going back to earlier, I actually think that I'm optimistic that something's gonna happen is going to change things. That normally does when something you least expect.
[00:51:30] Unknown:
Now We're looking for the good, Eric, though. We're looking for the good. Well I like that. I'll buy it. I think there's the I think there's the hidden,
[00:51:38] Unknown:
shall we say, the the hidden majority you don't hear about. You know, there are people that are angry at us. I mean, can you imagine going back in time to about seventy years, say? That's what, the mid fifties, when we had the Cold War and people were very concerned about communism, etcetera, etcetera, especially in America Mhmm. If they could have seen what it's like now, they'd have said, you lost we lost the Cold War. And and, you know, when you when you when you look at the way everything is, nobody could have dreamt in a million years that how depressed everybody is.
And someone called Anna has on, YouTube. She's I think she's friends with the bowler hat farmer. I think so. And she was noting how everybody looks so down. And I've noticed this with my neighbors. You say hello to them, and they're sort of they're in like a sort of a zombie like state. Very
[00:52:39] Unknown:
different. It's not surprising though, is it? I'm not surprised by it because if we go back to any chunk or period of history at all, any, and you look at what the main narrative was at the time being emitted by the authorities, right, that's what's recorded in history and that's what sets the emotional tone for the population as a whole. Now under the circumstances we've got now with technology since the arrival of particularly radio, right, which is only a hundred years back. And then we've got TV and movies and all these other things, and now the absolute onslaught from the smartphone thing, people are involved in a completely manicured, bogus narrative.
I was on with Rhea at the weekend. We ended up talking about bread for an hour. It was crazy, really. It was really good. A lot of fun. And normally, I was actually wanted to talk yeah. Yeah. I do. It was it was a locally show and, but it was fun. It was interesting. But there were certain sort of serious bits. And we're talking about boredom, which is a very high state of being, by the way. Boredom. It means you're about to plunge into something quite interesting. But, it's this thing to do with the narrative, and we set it. I've been taking more and more time off. I mentioned it earlier at the start of the show from sitting in front of the computer grazing through news stories. What I'm actually doing now, which is what I used to do a lot, prior to the COVID thing and prior to other challenges at home, is I just have big old PDFs up, big old documents up. And I'm actually reading them on the screen and I love PDFs because you can keep belting the font size up, you know. So it's very it's good. I I I much prefer, a comfy chair.
You know, I did I say this last week? I know my priorities have changed, guys, when I'm getting quite getting quite excited about going through chair catalogs because I'm going, things have changed a bit, Paul. You're not looking at sports cars anymore. It's comfy chairs and it's true. And I've really valued you, I know this sounds like, oh, I would suggest and recommend, you know, listeners are gonna do with this, whatever. All I can tell you is what I am finding is I'm feeling more like myself, which is a big worry, I suppose, for people that knew me. But I am in the sense of having more consideration time that I'm driving.
One of the things about the screens is if you've got them up running, you've got Telegram or WhatsApp or anything like that, everybody will know this. This. You keep on getting movement on the screen. Ping. You get those notifications keep coming up all the time. Right? It creates a false impression that you're involved in something exciting and stimulating. Most of it is complete piffle. It's if you actually stand back and look at it, you go, this is a waste of time. And there's so much clickbait around now, it's got ludicrous, particularly with the AI videos. Although the Stephen Hawking ones are just absolutely hilarious.
[00:55:34] Unknown:
Have you seen those, Eric? No. Have you seen that, actually? I love to have to check them out.
[00:55:38] Unknown:
But you're gonna you will not want to turn them off. They're absolutely hilarious. So basically, they're using AI. I think it's Sora. Oh, there's some package that people are using. Right? And they're creating these, like, fifteen second videos. There's a whole series of them with Stephen Hawking in his wheelchair. He's doing, he's doing wrestling, boxing against the Queen, in one in one point he's a formula one race. He's in his in his wheelchairs doing 200 miles an hour. They're so brilliantly realistic. They will they kinda get me. They get me a lot. I'm thinking about them now. They're very funny and they're freakily realistic to the point I'm looking at these. I'm going, I ain't got a clue. I've just got to turn this off. I haven't got we're going to end at a point where you haven't got a clue whether what you're seeing is real or not anymore because of the sheer sort of capacity of these things to convince you in that way. But I think, just going back to the serious side of it, it's us I'm finding that by me choosing what I want to read and do things, again I've done that for many many years but not recently over the past few years, I feel more in charge of the narratives that I think are important in my head. And I think we've we're more likely to come up with valuable things, taking an approach more like that, than we are just being in a reactive state against their story. All of this is their story.
And the current what are the current bits of the story? Oh, there's a disease coming. You've got to be you know, you've got to have a jibby jab for whatever next one they've got lined up. Technology is great. We need AI is gonna improve the world. Oh, and then you get all these other countervailing stories which say, no, it's gonna destroy it. They're both but we are immersed in the story. Whichever side you wanna take in that, you're still immersed in their story. Whereas, being a neo Luddite, which I am, I think a thing to explore is how much tech do we need?
Really, how much tech do we actually need? Do we need more tech? Do I need automatic opening and closing kitchen doors? Do I really need that? Do I need an automatic toilet seat lid? Actually, in my case I actually might need one soon. But you know what I mean. Yeah. All these things, there's no enter and they're always delivered with a fanfare. Now we can do this. We're going, I don't wanna do that. No one actually says, how daft is that? And I think cars, we were talking about cars, weren't we, from the sort of legal ownership point of view a few minutes ago. But in terms of the technology they're putting into them, I don't want any of it. I don't want that as a car. I want a basic car.
[00:58:08] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. They said, China this was about ten years ago. China is going to import massively cars that you can work on, that you can if something goes wrong, you input right. Fantastic. I mean, I've gotta change the battery in my, car key, fob. And, well, why
[00:58:29] Unknown:
something extra can go wrong. Why can't I just put a key in lock, turn it, and the door opens? Lovely. Simple. Easy. Hold those hold those thoughts because now I don't want to take your mind back. It's the nineteen fifties, late nineteen fifties, early nineteen sixties. It's a Sunday afternoon and all the dads are out mending their cars. And this comes on the radio. We'll be back after this, everyone. Nostalgiatastic.
[01:01:40] Unknown:
Oh, it all came flowing back when I was a kid. Tragedy, our old age. Did it. And, Julie, it reminds me of, I went to a place called Plotlands. It's in Essex. Plotlands? Plotlands, P L O T, Plotlands. And what it was was, an area it's beautiful. It it was on a hillside. And, people in the nineteen thirties could buy a plot of land there and build a cottage to live. And they did. And they came out of London, and it was about, oh, I don't know, I suppose about an hour's drive. You had a car. But they came from London, and they had this place to go over the weekend, and some people stayed there permanently. And, unfortunately, the council in the oh, must have been the sixties or seventies, declared these properties unfit for human habitation.
And they were, apart from one, there's one still there, but they were all hand built by the people who who, you know, bought these plots of land. So when you go there, you can you can see, like, the little old flowers and old gardens and that. But the there's just a base where the plots were, where the houses were, but there's photographs of the house that was there. And you can imagine sort of happy memories of a child in the nineteen thirties, the nineteen forties and fifties going there. Must have been the heaven to go out of the No. I've got a little tear in my eye, Eric. Yeah. I am. So look up Plotlands. If you if you're on Google or anything like that, Plotlands in Essex. You know. So, or or not Plotlands.
Well, it would have been because they'd have they'd outside they'd have outside toilets, I think, which was a bucket, normally. But, that's the reason they closed it. Absolutely. For those not in the know as well,
[01:03:31] Unknown:
that music, was by Jack Strachey and his orchestra. I think it was recorded in the early nineteen fifties. It's called In Party Mood. And that's what parties used to be like in the nineteen fifties. They were polite, charming things. But it also is more better known amongst ears of a certain age, I happen to have a pair, as the music for Housewives Choice. That's it. That's it. On the BBC light radio, I don't know who would host it, and they would play all these cheerful little tunes of a morning to assist the ladies with their cleaning rotor. I shouldn't have said that, should I? But I did.
It makes me think of my mum baking apple pies and things like this. That's it. We've seen that baking the week. Anyway, somebody else who I think might have liked that tune, who has joined us now, is our good guest from across the waters in Canada, Monica Schafer. Monica, good afternoon to you. Welcome to the show.
[01:04:27] Unknown:
Well, good good afternoon. Good evening. And I'm so happy to be back. Thank you very much. And, Nice to have you back. Yeah. We've got blue sky day today. It's it's really quite lovely.
[01:04:42] Unknown:
Good. And how have you been since you kept me up all night the other week on your show?
[01:04:49] Unknown:
Thank you again, Paul, for joining me. I think that was an excellent little chat we had on my flip side show, which, yes, I know it was in the wee hours of the morning for you. We should have waited till this week because this week, we it wouldn't have been as late for you, I don't think, because you we are now closer. We're closer together now. You know? I mean, we may not be closer together geographically, but we're closer together in time. We're
[01:05:20] Unknown:
we're bonding marvelously, aren't we? Do you feel I feel much closer to Canada. Do you, Eric? And to America, I feel really close to our I do. Yes. Across the water now. Yeah. I do. Yes. Show. Well, actually, you know this, I heard your show, oh, by the way, good day. Good afternoon, Monica. I heard your show where you're talking about was it native rights?
[01:05:41] Unknown:
That got me thinking. You see, Paul and I are English. And as we're English, we had our rights stolen from us, from the Normans. So why can't we be saying, can't we have Aboriginal rights
[01:05:56] Unknown:
in this country? Well well, don't call it Aboriginal, but, yes, you should.
[01:06:01] Unknown:
Yeah. Because we're English.
[01:06:02] Unknown:
So maybe we'd have original rights, wouldn't we? Wouldn't we have original rights? Thank you, Paul. You corrected it. The, you know, that's good.
[01:06:10] Unknown:
Yes. I say, have original as if it means not original.
[01:06:14] Unknown:
Exactly. Thank you. Thank you for pointing that out. It's it's kinda crazy. I I like using that term for them because they say first Nations as well, but they are not. Think of normal and abnormal and then just say the original and aboriginal. And, actually, a friend of mine, she just wrote me something just a few minutes ago. I gotta tell you what her new name is, Mongolian migrants for the North American Indians. I like that, that Mongolian migrants. It has a good ring to it too, you know, but anyway It does? Yeah. Mongolian migrants. That's what they are.
They they came across Bering Strait. Right? And and so the They did? Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. The the current Indians of North America, those who call themselves Indians or First Nations, which they are not, or Aboriginals, which they are, or Natives, they have many names, you see. But, it it's to keep us a little bit scattered too because we're told from one day to the next which of these terms we are allowed to use or not. And, you know, if you wanna be all politically correct, which I generally am not, but they themselves call themselves Indians. So, you know, that's that's basically that's what they are, but not to be confused with with the, well, I heard an Indian herself use this. She said, well, we're the casino Indians, and they the others from that other part of the world are the sand Indians.
We could use a different term that would be much more derogatory for those that sand Indians, but I'm not gonna say it because I might get into trouble here on the on your show. I know you're in trouble already. I won't worry about that. Yes. I've got Yeah. I've got a naughty joke about Indians, but I can't say this before
[01:08:10] Unknown:
10:00 our time. Oh, well, that's going on. 10:00. Yeah. So that'd be coming up after after 10:00. Yeah. So the last the last hour that's not on WBN is the highly vulgar filthy hour Yes. Where it all hangs out, and it's disgusting and wretchedly not fit for anybody's ears including our own. But there you go. So if you're into that kind of thing, stick around. But, I So so, Paulie
[01:08:32] Unknown:
It's the custard joke. So remind me of the custard joke. Okay? Oh. Sorry. Well If I can remember, I will.
[01:08:39] Unknown:
Okay. We'll make note of that, the custard joke. Custard? Custer.
[01:08:43] Unknown:
Custard. You know? Oh, yeah. It could be custard. Yeah.
[01:08:50] Unknown:
Okay. Well, Paul, I don't wanna stop you from also greeting Patrick. But after that, I'll I'll carry on with you had introduced the subject of you being on my show and some of the aftermath. That's what I wanted to talk about. But you go ahead first with, you know, your Oh, no. That's that that's fine. It's, that we're not formal around here. In fact, we generally forget people. But, hi, Patrick. Yeah. Welcome to the show. I was just welcoming Monica into the space. So welcome to the show, Patrick. Yeah. I was just sitting here sitting on my tea listening. I I heard that show. Good show, by the way. Oh, good. Thanks. I'm glad you liked it. So one of the things that I brought up, and I I purposefully it was tongue in cheek when I said to you, whatever possessed you whatever possessed you to have a show called Women to Lose the Vote, question mark. But, really, that's tongue in cheek because, really, I I was quite keen on it. And, Paul, I've relistened to that show this week, like, just within the last few days.
Listened to about half of it one day and then the next half the next day. And it really was a good show. And it was on February 27, and I believe it was number 78, p EL78, and your your,
[01:10:06] Unknown:
listings there. Would you And you like to become my archivist,
[01:10:10] Unknown:
Margaret? This is brilliant that you know all these things. I can't remember what we've done from week to week. This is excellent. I loved it. Well, it's because of, you know, some of the comments I got in private emails from people after you came on my show. And I do have this general concern, and I think I even brought it up in in our February show that that when we talk about these issues, you know, about feminism and the harms that feminism has brought to us and whatnot, one of the dangers and I've seen it happen and I saw it in in, you know, big colors happen after you came on my show.
Some really big, hostility from men against women. And I thought, woah. Like, where is this actually productive for us? See, here I am, and I think that I have, I would it's almost like I've, it's less dangerous, let's say, for me to talk about this feminist issue and how bad it's been for our society than perhaps for some men, because men might be worried that they're gonna be trampled on by all these feminist women, you know. But I'm a woman myself, so so that part of it doesn't frighten me at all. But the thing is, what I got in some of these, messages, and I'm I'm not really done with with communicating with these people, but was a huge amount of hostility that was really directed at the wrong cohort.
And it it's like there was this hatred for women who, you know, these men have basically, steamed the harms of feminism, but I think that they like, we need to keep our eye on the ball. And I would say we need to keep our eye on those who have brought us this thing called feminism and this this ideology of that. And and, yeah, I I have, myself done a lot of sort of rethinking. I didn't I wasn't I didn't grow up in a vacuum, you know, so and we talked about that on that show too and and and on mine as well that, you know, I grew up in the 60s and 70s and my goodness that was a pretty much a heyday for, you know, the the feminist movement and of course then there was also the hippie movement. And none of these things just came about organically.
And this is really important for us to know that none of it came about just because that's a natural evolution of things, you know, getting better or whatever. No, these were engineered. This was social engineering taking place. So, anyway, what I guess, what I wanted to talk about really is this this danger of, well, it's not gonna help our people, men nor women, nor any of us as a you know, us, our people, our folk, if men now really take it out on women in a way that is just kinda like, ew, women have wrecked everything, and it's just this hatred that's spewing out. And I wow. That took me a little bit by shock.
Can you comment on that? Mhmm. Yeah. Please. Please. Please. I wanna stop now anyway.
[01:13:40] Unknown:
Thank you. No. Actually, no. I want you to keep going because you're absolutely spot on. And what's going on is because they have become so effective at emotional manipulation and planting the seeds deep in the subconscious, I mean, that's where Trump derangement syndrome comes from. Everybody that hates Trump, but if you ask them why they can't tell you, they just hate him. All they know is they hate him. There's the Trump messiah syndrome where people are absolutely blind to the questionable things that Trump is doing, and they're expecting him to save everything and fix everything.
Guys that are just attacking and and blaming women for for in an irrational manner, women that are that are blaming men for toxic masculinity syndrome. You're absolutely right. It is all absolutely subconscious and subliminal conditioning that people get from their TV, from their prime time news broadcast, and their prime time television shows. It's absolutely by design. The only way to combat it, and it only works a small percentage of the time, is to actually try and get the person on an intellectual level, well, okay, I I can see your point why you think that women are the are the the end of everything.
What makes you say that? Can you show me some examples and and so I can clarify it in my mind? Get them to start thinking about why they think women are the end all, beat all to the to the human race and the bane of our all of our existence because they're absolutely not.
[01:15:30] Unknown:
Okay. Well, I I will interject here just to make it clear that I have reached the conclusion that women should actually not be in certain, roles in our society, like positions of power of institutions or, you know, more and more that that women make up, you know, university professors or heads of departments in in the sciences or or this or that because this actually does lead and this is extremely controversial, and I'm gonna say it anyway. It does lead to decay. However and and we could go into that. But that said, this does not mean that, oh, the solution to that is for men to now hate women because, okay, we are in the stages of decay.
And at the same time, you know, this is while women have taken more and more the positions of power, whether it's political parties, whether it's the, you know, on the bench, like, being judges and and then getting pretty much at par or in the majority in well, in the law profession. I think they have reached majority in the in the faculties anyway, like, as students, so we know where that's going. That means that soon as the older generation retires, women will be in the majority, and these are not good things. I'm saying this as a woman, and now it's really a new area of study for me. So I'm not gonna be able to, you know, roll out all the statistics and the history of what is all going on. But I'm not a woman hater. I am a woman, but what I I do see that we have a different role in our, folk. And we because of our nurturing role, we are more easily swayed into more leftist thinking and manipulatable by, you know, by the the hidden hand, okay, that those that we're not allowed to name, lest we'd be called anti Semitic. These are the hit this is the hidden hand.
They know this very well. Right? Sorry. What did you say? Yeah. What did you say? Anti Semitic. Okay. Antiseptic. Oh, yes. Yeah. You don't wanna be called you don't wanna be antiseptic if you Okay. We're yeah. Exactly. If we if we name the perpetrators of all these movements, all these isms, you know, feminism and all these other isms. Okay. So they are the ones that are bringing this about, and they also know. And like you said, I think that is the other Paul that spoke. Right? That Yes. Your excellent comments that, that there this is such a psychological, you know, manipulation.
Yes. But it doesn't mean that we should just ignore the fact that as women do gain more and more in leadership positions of power and and whether it's political power or or in universities or whatever or in other institutions that that that's necessarily just fine. It it isn't. And I'm just gonna be so bold as to say that.
[01:18:54] Unknown:
So because I agree with you. We yeah. Okay. Great. I'm I I no. I agree with you. The only way to combat the, the the emotional outbursts and the irrational response is to try and focus that person on a logical discussion about why they feel that way. It you may not be able to turn them or change their attitude, which I don't I don't even know if you'd want to, but you can at least put some logic in front of that, that just cultish programming. But that being said, doesn't the Bible say that children will control you and women will be your oppressor or your oppressors?
[01:19:44] Unknown:
Or was that the other way around? Oh, that's so interesting. And Yeah. When you fall away when we fall away,
[01:19:56] Unknown:
disintegrating civilizational situation, Not all the time, but a common denominator or an event that seems to occur is the rising of the power of women and the arrival of alien races into positions of power in any civilized. They go almost together and you can see it now. I think the other as she was talking as well, Monica, I was just thinking across all men and all women, we've got different types. You do have the highly suggestible women and we've got highly suggestible men who go along with the group agreement rapidly and are the first ones to succumb to the bombardment of the media. They want to get in. This safety in the crowd, this sense of comfort about being in with wherever the event is. I mean, you know, you talk about the sixties. These things were yeah. Absolutely manufactured.
And we're trained to be like that. I mean, if you're not like that, you were basically a troublemaker, maybe large or small, at school. Certainly, maybe not overtly, but in your head you were. You weren't actually always going along with what you were being instructed to go along with. And that's a quality, of course, that Power Structures don't like. They want everybody to be doing that sort of thing. I think you've got women who are absolutely you've got if we look at it, and it's the same for men, you've got men that are ardent feminists. Right? I've no idea. Whenever I meet people of that view and the other end, you think you've not thought this through. You've got to look at the whole spectrum of what's really taking place. So you've got women that have really pushed it, then you've got those that follow the women that really pushed it. These are the ones that end up often with very sad lives as they move through their life because they they're actually their natural bias bias is to go towards motherhood and be in a family situation because it's natural. It's also one of the most brilliant things that can happen to you in your life. It used to happen for most people.
Even not you know, at no point in history has it ever happened for all people. But predominantly, you know, families were what made up the bulk of a civilization. So you've got radicals, like radical feminists or whatever words we want to use. You've got slightly passive ones that get drawn along into that. You've also got women to this day who are traditionalists. And and, of course, I warm to them more. Of course, this is supposed to be a terrible thing. And you've got men that are that, in terms of they look at the sort of the things that our forefathers did when things were being done at a much slower pace and therefore, in my view, are more natural.
We live in an unnatural times because, and we don't tend to see this because, you know, like fish being in water, you just don't notice it certainly when you're young. But we live in this highly technocratic age. It wasn't as technocratic in the 60s as it is now but it was there. TV had arrived. So, you know, the bombardment of the conditioning of having to be in receipt of their story all the time just taking place. And most people wanna be in the main thing and they don't wanna they don't wanna swim against the tide. They don't like it. It means they're exposed out on the reef and they but there's a few maniacs like us that do. We go, well, we can't go along with all this stuff because it's clearly not sound. It's not based on good principles and it's happened so rapidly. It really has. It's over the last hundred years, hasn't it? This and that's relatively rapid in human terms. You don't think about it, you know, because most of us won't make a 100 in But it's been very, very quick. And so it's undermined some of it. So you've got people at different levels. We've got I think there are traditionalist men have got allies in traditionalist women. That's what we need to beef up more. I've also noticed if you if you take it if you do any searches, say, on YouTube, not that I sit around watching these things, but if you start going typing a few things in about this, you'll get all the sort of recommended videos. There's tons and tons of them coming up now, more frequently than there was, say, five or six years ago, about lots of women expressing themselves or maybe it's just a search algorithm for me, you know, saying I've been had.
I've been had by this. This has not actually worked at all. And you're getting these sorts of confessions. I saw one the other week, a woman over here in her early sixties, without a man in her life and she'd been an ardent feminist in the sixties or whatever and had followed whoever, who was that Germaine Greer, she's one. And there was that lady from America, I can't remember their names, but you'll know the names if we if they came up. There was a Jewish lady that was in charge of it in The States. And she said I read everything and she had all these intellectual books, very bright lady, right? She'd been to Cambridge also and she'd gone to a really good school when she was younger, so she'd had a privileged educational background.
And she was, in this article, she was basically saying that she's looking back seeing how she belittled men that she was in relationships with and in due course they all tired of that and left. And one of the things I noticed recently just because you'd mentioned it to me the other day when we spoke, so I spent a little bit of time sort of looking at things over the past couple of days. Many of them are saying, where are all the men? No one none of the men want to go out dating anymore. And there's loads of this stuff about blokes going, it's just too much hard work. I'm fed up of this stuff. Right? I do all this stuff, and they don't wanna I'm sure you've got victim stories and victim mentality and rightly justified on the female side as well. They're right to say that certain blokes are pigs. They are. I've met them. Right?
So they exist. It's but it's not one size fits all. It's the it's the general tone of the whole thing. I came across, by the way, I came across this wonderful quote, which is quite old but I thought it'd be worth reading. This is Samuel Johnson, wrote all these letters and stuff. You might know about heard of Samuel Johnson over here. Right? This is from '17 '63. I don't want you to say that we don't go back into history for this. It's very short. He says this, nature has given women so much power that the law has very wisely given them little. Samuel Johnson in a letter to the Reverend Doctor John Taylor 1763.
And what that's alluding to is the sexual power that women have, particularly in the early stages of life, is considerable. It really is. They're in charge of that game and men learn certain roles or ways to behave in relation to that, but this stuff is not working anymore. This is why or it would appear so from many of these sort of video testimonials that men are not even bothered about it. They've just had enough of this sort of demand upon them. Maybe this is only taking place in the cosmopolitan areas like London and New York and stuff like this where it's much more concentrated. I'm sure probably out in the countryside, people are still many people will still be behaving in a good way.
But the whole thing has become literally it's a bogus situation, but it does need to be corrected because, you know, I think we mentioned it before. The true the true the best word, I think, to describe good relations between men and women is that we're supposed to complement one another.
[01:26:55] Unknown:
Yes. That's in a nutshell right there, Paul. And I would also just add, if we really wanna boil it down to one thing that would make it work better again is for women to be feminine again. For in other words, women be women. And for men to be masculine again. In other words, men be men. And so both women and men have suffered the consequences of the unbelievable, indoctrination that has taken place over the decades. So those men that you mentioned, there are some men who are ardent feminists. Well, they think that they're the heroes for being ardent feminists because they're just trying to bring, you know, bring women back up from being so downtrodden and oppressed and enslaved by men. And I'm putting all of that in huge quotation marks because that's the narrative they've been taught, that women were just, you know, enslaved in the house, in the home by the men were just the slavers. Right? And then, of course, men yes. Of course, it is.
[01:28:15] Unknown:
It's actually insulting to women. Excuse me. I'm sorry. But I do have to say this. It's actually insulting to women because it's those men saying, don't worry about it. You just hang back there in the kitchen. I'll take care of your rights for you. I will get them. I will get them. No no no no no no. Don't get up. Don't get up. I'll take care of it for you. I will fight your battle. It's it's alright. It's what I'll do. A biblical principle is the women the woman is supposed to take care of the children and to take care of the household when the man is away. And when the man is not away, the man's responsibility is to protect the household and the woman.
The woman takes care of the children. Everybody has their job. Each compliments the other. You were absolutely spot on with that. They need to compliment each other. Yes.
[01:29:05] Unknown:
That they do. That that is and and yet we've now come up in this age where it's a big competition. And I'll I'll just repeat this story. I think I did say it in February, but it's been a while. So I'll just repeat it now. But, you know, when I was getting into all kinds of trouble for, you know, talking about World War two history, my well, we still had communications with family members, and sadly, we don't have open communication with all these other family members anymore. But anyway, one of the next generation young men, he at the time, I think he was in his late twenties, he said to me, gee, Monica, in an email. He wrote this in Onan family group email.
And he said, gee, Monica, I'm so surprised that you have become this, that, and the other thing. He used all kinds of weaponized language, which I I wasn't even going down those roads. I was just, at this point, talking about nine eleven and and like I say, you know, that their piece of history. And but he put it all together because I guess that's what the media does. They lump you into all kinds of, weaponized concept words. And one of those things was, I'm so surprised you've become anti feminist. Now I don't even know where he got that from because I wasn't talking about these issues back then. That's a few years ago. Right? And he says, I'm so surprised you you've become anti feminist because somebody like you, you are the one who stands to lose.
And I just thought, wow. He thinks it's one big competition between men and women. Yeah. I was I was blown away by that. So that's what he had learned through his indoctrination. I was gonna say schooling, but really just the indoctrination. So he thought I mean that's the type of man who probably would call himself a feminist. I don't know. I haven't talked to him in years now. But from that comment, he obviously has a very strange picture of what men and women's roles are in society. But obviously, to him, it's a big competition. Paul, English, in response to when you said that, okay. Women in power and then men going along with that or whatever. But men have be become pressured, I guess, to go along with those notions of women gaining, like, coming up through through the ranks, so to speak, like increasing their numbers in the sciences or in the professions of certain professions that used to be male dominated.
And so men are pressured. They're under a huge amount of pressure to kind of acquiesce to that, but also for them to become less masculine. They they need to become less masculine in in the way they talk, in the way they in the policies that they might be forming. Let's say there's a board, and the board has, you know, 15 men and three women on it or whatever. Well, those if those women speak up about something, the men on the board, they will be bringing themselves into a less masculine position to I can't explain it very well, but to basically, they're they feel that that's what they have to do. So the men become less masculine just in their role.
Automatically, they're gonna get rewarded for being less masculine. Like, there's gonna be quotas to bring more women in, and and I don't know what I I need to, pass over the microphone to somebody else because I feel like I'm bumbling here. But I think I read a really good article just just recently, and I should dig that ode again. And and they explained that all very well, how the men the the pressure would make them become less masculine in their ways of thinking, in their ways of, running an organization or whatever it was they they were in, whatever role they were in. So really everybody stands to lose in the end. And of course, those that are, you know, we don't wanna be antiseptic about, they know that full well.
And they are the hidden hand who have brought this about. But bringing it full circle to my original concern today was the some of the, things I've heard from men or the the blowback from men who are just absolutely hating on women. And I'm thinking, oh my goodness. This is this just blows me away. It's it it was very disturbing. I actually lost sleep over it. Okay. Over to one of you.
[01:34:08] Unknown:
Well, I was just gonna say what we've got, is a gradual, effeminization of the whole of our civilization. That's really what's happened. If you think about, I hear young males. I'm not really gonna call them men, and I'm not picking on them. But because we've had this is just a simple point, we might have even mentioned this six months ago. They over enunciate and they're very clear and delicate in the way that they speak. Right? They speak in a more feminine way, many of them. Far too softly spoken as it spoken as if they're never ever gonna really bark. It's as if they can't do that. It's as that it's as if they've not got any force in their gut. It's gone.
Something's getting too delicate about them. And if you think about the mass of, talking heads in the news, there are so many women talking at men all day long that they're picking it up. It's like a mimicry. It's very subtle. Actually, I don't think it's that subtle at all. We see lots I see lots of young guys. They seem to have broken into sort of two camps. There's probably more than two. But you've got these overly articulate ones who are trying to prove how sensitive they are about everything and that they care about everybody, which is ridiculously immature, right? As if that what they're implying is that if you're not like them you don't care about everything.
It's just such a a shallow way of approaching it. There's, you know, there's all sorts of ways to care for a situation. Sometimes, acquiescing is the right thing to do. There's not one set rule. Other times, you have to lay down the law, just like your dad did you with you when you were a kid and you were kicking the beetroot patch up and he said, look, I've just planted those. I told you to not do that. You've got to stop. You need to learn these guidelines and they're there for the overall benefit, in that case of the family. We want to eat beetroot. I mean, I don't want to eat beetroot, I can't stand it, but you get the idea. And so we've got a lot of over enunciating very delicate males running around.
And I think also the the ones that declare themselves as feminists think that they're gonna get a bird by doing that. But the sorts of women that the sort of men that women really want are not like that, in my view. They're not like that at all. They're still looking for actual males that can protect them. And they're right to look for that. They're absolutely right to look for it because that really is our role. But women have got so uppity that the men don't want to protect them because they're not worth protecting when they're like that. I think another aspect of it is when they want to do everything and sort of be in charge and, you know, metaphorically and literally wear the trousers, you rob the man of the opportunity to serve his wife or his girlfriend.
You rob them of that role and that's really dangerous because then the bloke's thinking what am I for? Am I decorish? Am I just decorative? You know, what's the point of this? What am I actually doing? Will I actually grow in a relationship that's like this? And I've been around relationships where the women were too bossy and I just find them completely repellent. I don't like it. It's it's not so much that the guy, was massively masculine and was acquiescing, it's that it's something that had morphed over time. And I suppose the the old archetype is the henpecked husband, that kind of thing. Well, it does take place. You also get the bullied wife as well to redress the you absolutely do. I'm I'm clear about that. Natural
[01:37:31] Unknown:
instincts. I don't wanna interrupt. I'll just one little phrase. Natural instincts are completely thrown off by the this feminist movement. They are. But carry on, please. You're doing but this text is all doing
[01:37:45] Unknown:
everything. Yeah. But still looking for a male that is strong and will protect the family and bear good children, good strong children is still, it's still welded into the genetic code of the woman. And no matter what society says, she is looking for a strong, confident man that will be a good father and a good provider. That is that is hardwired. But what is not hardwired is the soy and the foods and the feminism and the the effeminate male and all the the neutering that's been going on. It's absolutely ridiculous, and this is a great conversation because this is basically the core of how they have destroyed the family and the societies globally as far as the traditional male and female roles.
They've emasculated the men. They've empowered the women. And if you don't think they've empowered the women, just look at the at a Rosie the Riveter poster from World War two. I mean, the men were over there fighting, and Rosie the Riveter was there with her bulging biceps and saying, we can do it, and that's what everybody was saying. That was this is a great conversation. I'm just loving this.
[01:39:15] Unknown:
Well, I mean, that Me too. If we go back if we go back into ancient history, you know, when a tribe was under pressure, the women would fight with the men as a last resort Because they'd have to, because there would be nothing left. But you also have a situation where because women are physically weaker than the attacking males, if the tribe that attacks wins, they would, by, and I completely understand this, purely from a matter of survival, have to cleave to the protection of the invader and they would go over to that side. Right? Now one of the things that they've done here and across all of our nations by bringing in aliens, they're setting that up as the next stage of the destruction. We see loads of it here. We've got you have more women out arguing for the rights of migrants to come in and turning a blind eye to what they do once they're here. Not all of them mind, but it's they there didn't used to be any of it because they weren't here. And this is why if you go back to these basic laws of not having the alien live amongst you, you remove that one as well. So it's been a whole stage. They they basically they've attacked women or put ideas into their heads about how their lives are supposed to be. And I'm not saying that they haven't improved in some regards, they have. But it's all a matter of actually finding that optimum point of duty.
I think I mentioned that I I saw this priest giving a speech about a good marriage and the and what he said was, and he was celibate so I found that quite funny as well and I think he did, but he said he said the essence of a good marriage is that the husband and the wife absolutely will not give up on one another. Absolutely will not. And that's what it's all about. It's that that I think women are looking for in blokes. If you look at all the sort of dating culture that sprung up because of the dating apps and everything And and it's like blokes are rated by how much money they've got and I'm going, yeah, that's never gonna be the basis for your for happiness. It's not gonna work.
I've got I need all this money because when we go out to a restaurant it costs me $400. Okay well stop going to restaurants. Oh I can't because I've got to go out with all my friends and I've got to take these pictures and put them on my Instagram account. And it's all, it's a kind of false life. The whole thing is like a permanent party. A permanent party that's got no substance to it because it's not building anything, it's just one distraction after another. And now they're heading their early thirties and they're getting sad, they're going to go get a bloke. There's a bloke I turned down eight years ago and he won't return my calls. No, he won't. Because, you know, guys just find it's too- a lot of them are finding it's just too much trouble.
And another interesting thing is to do- and I've often thought about this when I was younger about really astonishingly beautiful women, physically. I don't know how they cope in life. I would have thought that every bloke in the world is gonna be hitting on them, but apparently this is not happening either. There's been a reduction in that. Blokes are beginning to look at these women thinking that's just too much trouble. I can't I'm not gonna better deal with that. It's more trouble than than I want to find out whether we've got something in common. So it's the males by acquiescing to this lose their masculinity and in that point the whole thing that's the second stage of it And then you've got this destruction of people being able to bind together and knowing that that the reason you exist is because your mother and father got together and did the hokey cokey because it was all done right and you rocked up and you were looked after in a loving family. At least I was, right, I know it's not true for everybody, but I was. And you think you don't even question it because it's completely natural, it's how it's supposed to be, it's how we've been for tens of thousands of years, and yet within a hundred years that's been smashed to bits because of brainwashing basically, you know, a bombardment.
You can have it better. The grass is greener on the other side. No, it isn't. You see, you know, wherever you go, you take yourself, don't you? So you've still got it's this thing about I like old fashioned words and and a good old fashioned word is duty and it really is about that. And the duty of the man and the woman is to the marriage because it's it's that's what you do. You go, hey, we're a team now. Yeah. We're like a little company. Yeah. We are. I mean, there's a there's some wonderful things. There's a film I've mentioned before, one of my favorite films ever, that for me has got the greatest love story in it of all. It's not an obvious one. It's Hobson's Choice, which takes place in the North Of England in Wigan, in the early nineteen hundreds. That's when the play was originally written. The film is is by David Lean and it's just an amazing film because he's got Charles Laughton in as Mr. Hobson who runs this boot shop.
The love story is between his eldest daughter, who, he says is on the shelf because she's 30, right, she's 30 years of age. So she's on the shelf, Maggie she's called you'll never get wed and all this, he's completely crystal clear about this in the opening part of the film. And his boot hand, Will Mossop. And Will Mossop is an extra he's a brilliant cobbler. I've got he's just he's a brilliant cobbler and Maggie recognizes his value. So she decides, without him even knowing this, that he is going to be her husband. This is you want to see real proper feminine power? It just it tickles me somewhat wrong when I watch the film. It's brilliant because she calls him into her room and she says something like I've had my eye on you and what I see I like. And he's getting all sort of embarrassed and fumbling with his hat because I don't know what you mean miss Maggie and all that. She said, you'll do for me. He said, what? He's sort of he's sort of breath. She's just decided like that that he's gonna be her husband.
And he says well I've got to tell you I don't love you. She said oh don't worry about that. It's not important. And I love that. It's actually you know we never talked about that because I would imagine women are raised on romantic novels or at least I saw that in all the girly magazines that were kicking around. Eric will know about this. I don't know all these teenage girl magazines in the sixties and seventies about getting the latest skirts and dresses and how to attract a boy, you've got to do this, all that kind of stuff. Right? The the boys are going, what jeans do I need to wear because, you know, Debbie won't look at me or whatever it is, all this kind of stuff. But in the olden days, you know, you know that even this thing about arranged marriages, I mean maybe they all fell apart, I don't know, so I'm probably talking out my backside. But there is something really rather charming about it. You go, right, that's it, we've made our mind up, we're gonna make it work. And when that decision is made then something else can start to take a place. Not always. I accept that. Right? There's not one size fits all here.
I was watching something the other day. What was I watching? Some silly film. It wasn't actually that good. Excuse me. It wasn't that good really. It was called With Honors and it had, made in the early nineties and it's set in Harvard and this that and the other and there's a street bum in it played by Joe Pesky, which is very interesting. But at one point he turns to this Harvard studio student and he says he says the greatest thing he said do you know what the greatest thing in life is? He said no, he says is when a woman wants you. And I knew exactly what he means. When? Because the decision about this really does come from the woman. It does.
If the woman doesn't decide on that it won't happen. That's my experience personally. So if you have the qualities as a man that they're looking for and you stick to your guns and you don't buckle and you don't go along with the agreement, I think women do find that attractive. That's just my take on it. I could be wrong. They don't want some sort of compliant wimp all over the place, but they've got to learn to deal with that. It's like, oh he works he didn't bring in enough money, forget all that. It's not important. That will all sort itself out. My mum and dad said that. They said you don't she said it'll be tough, you know, it could be tough with all these things, but if you really support one another magic can happen and it does and it's happened for so many people, in that way. And it's having that sort of faith in the whole old process of duty to one another that's been robbed and taken out of our culture as well. If you look at people that raise big families, and they used to be huge over here, 17 or people have like twenty two children of which eight died in childbirth and things like this, you're thinking bloody hell things are different now. They really are. People say, I can't even afford to raise one child.
But the whole purpose of life is to raise children. Otherwise, we wouldn't be here having this conversation if our parents had decided to not do that, would they?
[01:47:42] Unknown:
Exactly. So, you know, remember that saying behind every good man, there is a good woman. Just something you said a moment ago, you that, you know, a woman like, if the woman what was it you were saying? Something about the man doing things, but if the woman didn't support it, that that wouldn't come. But somehow that very nice saying got twisted and turned in in the propaganda to mean that the, you know, the woman is, again, oppressed. She's under him and but, no. That's not how it is. So I like that. Behind every good man, there is a good woman. I think maybe we should we should think about that a little bit.
Something else you said earlier about go ahead.
[01:48:31] Unknown:
I thought that was behind every good man is an amazed mother-in-law.
[01:48:39] Unknown:
That's too funny.
[01:48:41] Unknown:
But I think I think it's a biggie is that. I think it's really important because instead of like, the idea of a woman molding a man, if they do it right, not boss him around.
[01:48:55] Unknown:
Supporting. Like a supporting.
[01:48:58] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I most many women I think would be amazed about what they can get out of men, but men have also become demoralized as well through this process. There's a sort of demoralization process. The women have all the cards sexually in that early stage of life. The life, you know, when you're 24 and you think you're never gonna die. Fantastic that, innit? I can't remember what that was like. But I do remember it when you're just literally bouncing around full of beans and you think it's gonna be like this forever. You don't realize that things are going to sort of change a bit in time when you're 24. It's just amazing. But the women have all the power, and so they are the ones that choose the males. And it and that's how it's always been.
[01:49:38] Unknown:
And then and they like, this role of behind every good man is a a good woman, but it it's in a supportive role, not in a domineering role, not in a I'm just gonna tell you what to do role. No. It's it's a supportive role, building him up, build up his his role as a masculine man and not to, you know, knock him down. And so that needs to be understood the way it it really is in the natural order of things. Right? I because but I think that whole notion got twisted and turned as well as everything else getting twisted and turned in this destruction of the family, which was very deliberate, which is very communistic, by the way. I mean, it it's like the number you know, it's it's a very important tenet of communism is is the destruct the abolition of the family.
[01:50:34] Unknown:
Yeah. They that got turned around by stupid people. Because if you look at it logically, behind every good man is a good woman. She's behind him, supporting him. Hello, people. Who's up front? I mean, really.
[01:50:57] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, it doesn't mean it's better. It just means it's different. You just got different roles to fulfill. And I think, you know, although it's a bit of a a sort of, what was I gonna say? I don't know what I was well, I was in terms of lifespan, women live longer than men. Used to. Maybe the change in our industrial lives for men now means that we are living longer. I don't really know. Not that the duration of life has necessarily got much to do with the quality of the life that you lead, but, men used to be called off to war and would die young a lot.
You know, I always thought the Spartans had that right. You weren't allowed to go fight until you'd sired a child. You couldn't go fighting because you needed to In fact, in some in some cases, until you'd sired a son, because otherwise, you'd lose all your warriors. Right? That's right. There were there's there'd be nobody to defend the tribe in in twenty years time if you just go off and peg it. What we're gonna do? So all of these things are quite oh, that's oppressive of this, that, and the other. We should be allowed to do what we want. Not if you wanna be part of the tribe. See, there are commitments that we have to make. If you want the benefits, of course, you know, we're being forced to have these benefits which they tell us are good and we we don't want because we're not consulted at all in regards to these things now. But I think in the older older tribal societies where we're literally moving around at the speed of our legs or if you're lucky enough on the back of a horse, that's as fast as life went. And everything's slower, there's more time to see things and to build it up. So these systems of family security are natural. They're built up because of the pressures of nature and the pressures of any warring tribes who might get a little bit jealous of the amount of wealth you've just created because unfortunately human nature has tended to show that they're gonna come down the road and try and kick shit out of you. And, so you need to say, well we don't like the idea of fighting other people because we know it results in death, but we're gonna have to take measures to anticipate that because we see that it keeps happening. And we'd be foolish to not at least take steps to prepare for it in some regard. Of course, that gets mangled as well, but I think a great deal of it comes from that. You know, on a really primal level, if we want physical fleshly life to continue, you've got to set up the conditions to be able to do that. And that's how these roles generally have come about, men being just they have a different aptitude set to men to women. You know, women have, the we say this, don't we, that women have got the ability to multitask in a way that men don't. I think this is true. And there's this thing that connects the two parts of the brain called the corpus callosum, I think it is. It's like a big trunk between the left and the right hemisphere, and it's thicker in women than it is in men because they they scope in a better way. Women are also generally sociably far superior to males as animals, certainly in the early years. Men develop in a different way. You need to be around a bit as a bloke if you can make it. You know, many didn't because they get killed in battle. But those that would would develop a different type of form of thinking. I mean blokes are the creatures that do want to go off into the cave and figure out how to design a hovercraft.
There's many guys that want to do that. It's just built in us. What can I come up with? What how can I contribute in some sort of way only to get discouraged because you're a bit too thick and you can't do it? So you do something else. But it's generally a tendency that men are quite happy leading a solitary life, but for women that is not all good. And, of course, it's terrible for the tribe because you've got to get together to produce the children.
[01:54:26] Unknown:
Like, one of the most harmful things that has happened to us is to tell us when and they they tell the adults, but they also tell the children that you are all the same with, you know, all these little boys and little girls only develop differently through through social engineering, which couldn't be further from the truth. Like, it's the opposite. Right? So the social engineering has caused them to think that they are all the same, but it's only because, oh, parents dressed the boy in blue and dressed the girl in pink and gave her dolls to play with and gave him trucks to play with that they developed differently, which is so incredibly false.
And, actually, it it's interesting because I I remember, my friend, she had children before I did, and she ended up with three sons. And I remember her saying to me with such forcefulness and adamance that boys are definitely different than girls. Like, they just are wired different. And I wasn't arguing against her. I just found it an interesting statement that she was saying with such such, strength of conviction. And it's just that we were surrounded by the message that, no. The only reason they turn out a bit different is because bad parents are directing them, you know, put putting them in a different stream with different toys and different clothing and treating them differently. And so that's the only reason these little boy children will turn out differently, Lynn, the little girl children.
And I'll I always remember that how my friend you know, there she is dealing with three rambunctious little boys and and just saying, oh, I don't care what you say. Not that like I say, I wasn't arguing against her. I was listening, but I don't care what anybody says. I don't care what you say. I don't care what anybody else says, but boys are wired differently than girls.
[01:56:22] Unknown:
And I found it Well, they are. Yeah. They are. Of course, they are. They they are. Very different. You know, there was a thing they did years ago. I'm sure I've mentioned this before, and I'll no doubt mention it again, when we get when we keep going over this ground. They did an experiment with a mother who had a son and a daughter about how little boys and little girls deal with the physical universe. And they were in the garden and while the little boy a little girl was playing in the garden, they put a fence up between the garden and the house.
And so she comes back and she can't get to her mum, right, because her mum's on the other side of the fence. So the little girl just starts to communicate. She goes mommy, mommy, mommy and this goes on mom, mom, come here mom. Because mom doesn't come, right, that was part of the thing. So that's how that's the sort of I know this is very simplistic stuff but it does illustrate a point. So that that's how the girl responded to I'll talk my way through the problem. This is this is the the way that I'm gonna deal with it. I've got to communicate with someone who's gonna sort it out. The boy comes up to the fence says mommy mommy me a couple of times, sees nothing's happening, looks at the fence, climbs over it.
That's the difference. Well, it used to be the difference. There's a different there's a different sort of approach. Blokes are looking at what is, not who's gonna help them. They're going I can sort this out, I can deal with this, hang on let's just let's have a cup of tea, work it out, we get it sorted. And this is it's a different approach to dealing with things. That's because blokes have had to deal with practical threats in the field, you know, being chased by a tiger or something for thousands of years. You just go and that's why you have your mates around you as a bloke. You go, there's some situation we can't cope with. So you're thinking in practical ways about coping with the threats of the physical universe. Women, of course, back in the in the hut are doing things differently. Anyway, we're just coming up to the end of hour two. We've got to say goodbye to our listeners on WBN three two four.
We'll be back again at the same time in England and Britain next week, that is 08:00, but at your new time in America of back to the old time of 3PM US Eastern, whatever it is midday US Western Pacific time. Okay. So you can figure it out wherever you are. Yeah. But we're back at the same time next week because you're you you've got the joy of your clocks going back so you get an extra hour's sleep on Saturday night which I'm sure you're all looking forward to. Anyway, I was mentioning, a film earlier on, Hobson's Choice, which is about a cobbler and I'm gonna play a little song about a cobbler. We'll be back after this and we'll see you all on WBN next week. I am a rich old golfer, and that makes me The very next time that I got drunk, Well, now I've lost my shoe thread and don't know where Shoe Cobbler by The New Mules. I love that little song. It's fantastic. That guy can make my shoes any damn he likes.
So it seemed appropriate really. We were talking about cobblers. We're still here for another hour by the way, for US listeners. I know you think the show has ended. It hasn't because we our clocks are different and all that kind of stuff. Anyway, yeah. Where were we before I started talking about a load of cobblers?
[02:02:14] Unknown:
Boy, little boys and little girls are very different. I discovered that at a very early age. Yes, well I got to the age where, my dad took me to one side and he said, son, boy scouts and girl guides, remember that, you won't go far wrong.
[02:02:30] Unknown:
Your dad's got a lot to answer for Eric. He has, he has, hasn't he? On a more on a slightly more, civilized basis, comment in here from Made in Cornwall says, I remember the boys at playgroup would always make guns out of stickle bricks. Yay. And the boys just wanted to play rough. You bet. Instead of craft making, which the girls loved. That's right. That's exactly right. I don't think boys need to go to school till they're at least 11. They should be just let loose in tree in woods every day. Get in there with some rope. Get covered in shit.
[02:03:07] Unknown:
Get to it. Yeah. And then they can sit down and learn stuff after that. You know? It's much more important. You know what else I've thought of now in recent times? And and I don't know. Maybe other people will comment on this. And it's just a thought. I'm kind of thinking out loud here. But maybe the day should come again where well, first of all, I should say that I I think people should take their children out of the public school system. It's nothing but pure poison these days in in many, many regards. But okay. Let's say we did have a a a healthy, you know, school system that wasn't lying to our children and and telling them, oh, do you feel more like a girl today or a boy? Oh, well, we'll keep that secret from your parents. All this stuff. Right? That just as a backdrop to what I'm about to say. But if we were to have schools, which are good schools and functioning, maybe it is something to consider to go back to, schools for boys and a different school for girls. I mean, when I was growing up and we heard about that from, you know, past times or there were even still that was still going on in some places, there were boys schools and girls schools, and we just thought, oh my goodness, how awful, how primitive, how stupid, how whatever whatever else words we use to describe that. But maybe that notion is actually a really healthy notion. What what do you all think?
[02:04:31] Unknown:
I'm for it. I'm absolutely for that. I think I've mentioned it before. I mean, so I went to school I bet it was similar for Eric over here. I went to school, infant school and junior school. Infants school was five to seven and then junior school was seven to eleven and girls were there. Sure. But they weren't much interest because they were all craft making, and I was making machine guns and things like this. That's what we were doing. And then when we went to high school, 11 to 12 years of age through to 18, I went to an all boys school. And it was and I had a choice. I could have gone to a comprehensive, which was mixed. And my mum and dad said, what do you wanna do? I said, I don't want any of those girls around. I want a crammers. So I went to an all boys school. It's fantastic.
And it creates that wonderful awkwardness. You do I did realize because I I was one of my friends, a couple of my friends went to the the mixed school, and they seemed to be much more relaxed around girls at 14 and 15 than I was gonna be until I was 20. And I didn't I don't mind. Looking back on it, I think it was really pretty cool actually. I ended up becoming sort of immersed in books and doing sorts of really boyy things and stuff like that, and I'm glad of it. I wanted to do that. And I was you know, all of our masters at school were men.
Well, nearly. There were males. Some were really fantastic. Some were fantastic. Some were and of course the the, the verbal abuse amongst boys is, it's where you learn your craft. It really is. And it's where you learn where the line is and you get whacked and all this kind of stuff. I don't think they had much of that going at the comprehensive. They're much more gentle on the students. I don't believe it. A good beating never did anybody any harm. No. I'm not into corporal punishment per se. It's ridiculous. And there were some masters, of course, that were out of order. But I think it's good. And then I remember when we were about, the last two years known as the sixth form, was it called that where you went, Eric? Did you have a sixth form? Sixth form. I mean, I went to an all girls school. So That's nice. I tell them that I tell them that well. Your developed nature. I understand now. It's all it's all getting cleared. It's all getting cleared out.
No. Actually, it's a comprehensive I went to and, it was mixed. Yeah. Was it? Yeah. Right. Well, I remember they had a party. They had a, at the end of the very last year, there was sort of like the summer ball. It's more more like an American but it'd been going along a long time. I don't think it was sort of mimic from America. It was just a thing that they did. And there was a corresponding all girls school quite a few miles away, actually. And that year it was held at our school. I think it would alternate. You would either help hold it at the girls school one year and then the next year. And all these girls came over in coaches and everything and it was wonderfully awkward and rubbish, but I don't forget it.
It was great. Although, you know, some of the boys actually did have the bottle to go and talk to the girls, which was really quite fun. So I'm nearly 18 years of age and completely backward by today's modern standards and quite glad of it. Because they don't need to teach all this stuff that they say they need to teach at school is just indoctrination. I wouldn't allow them to do sex education at school. I'll tell you, I'd just stop it immediately. There wouldn't be teachers on this. Oh, no. You've got to have this, that, and the other. No. They talk to their parents. They sort it out. And it's down to the mothers to talk to the girls because you're robbing the role out of the mothers as well. Wow. The mothers talk to the girls and go, you'll be careful like this or your dad will give you a belt. Right? Okay? Got it? And, if you meet a boy, you bring him back home and me and your dad will let you know whether it can carry on. All that kind of stuff. You go, this is a bit formal and strict. Yeah. It is. Don't worry. You'll get your freedom. Life's you know, you got plenty of life in front of you. It's fine. Now
[02:08:10] Unknown:
I'll just comment about this thing that you call sex education. I would say it should be actually called porno pushing. And, you know, like, it's it's absolutely unbelievable. So in the name of some in some jurisdictions, they call it family health education. In other jurisdictions they'll call it various things. In British Columbia, the province where I now reside in Canada, they brought in this program a number of years ago and they did so very with stealth. It's people who were on, school board school boards, like trustees, didn't even know about it until it was installed, and it was called SOGI123. SOGI, s o g I. Can anybody guess what that stands for? I'll just tell you what it stands for. Sexual orientation and gender identity.
And then the one, two, three. I don't know what that was. But I I'm telling you, this was just pure hormonal pushing and degeneration. This was in the name of, you know, what what you would call in in what we might have called sex education, where you're just perhaps in the beginning, they thought, well, it's just about the birds and the bees. That's that expression. I don't know if you have that over in England. It's just that expression for how life comes to be. But that's really something for a biology class, you know, if you if to learn about the birds and the bees metaphorically speaking, that's biology class. But these, in the name of sex education or family health, honestly, in some jurisdictions that's what they called it, This is where they brought in this this absolute, I don't I can't even think of words strong enough to describe what they did. It's pure poison, mental poison. And, you know, once the children see something, they cannot unsee it.
That's a really important concept, and children's brains are still developing. They should not be even exposed to some of this stuff. Actually, adults shouldn't even be exposed to some of the stuff they were bringing to the children younger and younger and younger. But the point is that children being exposed to this, that actually changes their brain wiring. It changes them. And this cannot be Oh, a 100% agree. Undone. So it is a huge harm. And that's why I say people should take their children out of school, out of the public school system until we get this sorted out.
[02:10:49] Unknown:
And, you know, well, anyway, I'll pass it over. Some of this rather shock shocks me is how the women's or girls role has changed, where they are openly, proud of how many partners they've had. Oh, that is horrible.
[02:11:10] Unknown:
Oh, I've seen some of that lately. This is what what's it called? This this, on there's a a a program, like a website or something, and it started out as a very benign business. And then it it this guy lost lost it, and it was sold to somebody who who's of that tribe, the unmentionables, and it turned into this site where women were competing to sleep with, in quotation marks, as many men as they could in in a single day.
[02:11:44] Unknown:
Yeah. Well It's shocking. You know, I heard a couple of girls It's damaging. It's really dangerous. It's very damaging, that culture. Well Sorry, Eric. You know well, sorry. That's okay. I mean, what I was gonna say is a couple of girls and, they were sort of saying, oh yeah I packed him up, I'd have missed the next sex though, I'm thinking of just finding someone for a one night stand. Yeah I'm thinking of doing that, I think I and it was just sort of and I found that you find that all the way around that once upon a time where women were rather, shall we say, respectful, now they act like alley cats. They're they're they're just same as alley cats. And I know who is responsible for it, but which we can't really go into. But Yeah. The thing is is that it's it is well, I think that's why there's so many divorces, you know, because
[02:12:40] Unknown:
Well people have got unrealistic expectations when it comes to doing the hokey cokey between the sheets. They just do. Precisely. Because it's precisely I mean, you know, it's, they just do and it becomes the be all and end all of everything. And, why? Because it's talked about so much. There's so many bits that go to make make it up. And you know, long term, something else sorts of replaces all of that. It's much subtler. The, you know, this is why when I was talking about that thing where Maggie says I'm going to literally marry you and he says I don't love you. She says don't worry about that, that'll come along. It does in a way. I think not for everybody, but I think through a beautiful thing. But we've been led to have these colossal expectations about all this kind of stuff. Right?
And, you hope that magic happens for all people, but I suppose it it can't or doesn't for everybody. And, it's a delicate thing. You you've just gotta go you see, when it gets systemized, which it has done, you're removing all the chances of sort of spontaneous little sensitivities and instincts at play. And we talked about this before. I did a show with someone a few months ago about the perfume industry. I think we might have mentioned it here before. Perfumes are really damaging to the culting process because they block out the natural pheromones that the two people are giving off. And these are picked up subconsciously, because what it tells the woman is if I get together with this guy, we're gonna have healthy children.
It's to do with the way the other the guy smells and the way the woman smells naturally. I know this sounds sordid, but it's just true. Look at it in nature. Scents and glands for scents and stuff like this are really important. So when people get into all these perfumes and stuff, what they're doing is they're actually mangling up the natural instinctual courting process. So I was thinking that you should have a we need dances where everybody turns up and no one's allowed to wear aftershave or perfume. Not that I'm on the market for that kind of stuff, but you get the idea.
Every single thing that we look at that's modern interferes with it. It confuses the signals. It it reduces them. It impairs them. I have a question for Monica. Yeah.
[02:15:04] Unknown:
Monica, have you heard of Marie Stopes or Margaret Sanger? Oh.
[02:15:10] Unknown:
Oh, the the word Margaret Sanger is familiar. The other one isn't familiar to me, but I couldn't tell you right now anything about
[02:15:19] Unknown:
Eric, you know Marie Stopes.
[02:15:22] Unknown:
Yes. Oh, Stopes. Personally. Stopes. Yeah. Birth control.
[02:15:26] Unknown:
That name is familiar.
[02:15:28] Unknown:
But go ahead.
[02:15:30] Unknown:
She was she was, one of these, characters that, promoting birth birth control early on in, turn of the century after World War one into World War two and then to this day they have in in The UK these things called Stopes clinics which are women go to get their birth control and men go to get fixed And in in America, we in The USA, we have what's called Planned Parenthood, which is Margaret Sanger's operation that she started. I was wondering what what they have in equivalent in Canada, if they have anything up there. I I can tell
[02:16:11] Unknown:
you that I mean, this this was just one of the most upsetting things to me that the teachers in school, and this would be about fifteen years ago or so, They were coaching the children who were clearly underage. Like, I think this might have been as young as 14 years of age, maybe even younger. But they they could go to the doctor, get themselves prescription for birth control pills to so the girls without the parents' knowledge or consent. I pretty much flipped a lid on that when I learned of that. And I don't need to go into the details of, you know, how this all came to my attention. It it actually still hurts me to this day when I think about it. So this is what they are doing in the schools, another thing that they're doing. And that was then it's probably what far worse now. But so everybody's going all the systems are going along with this anti family stuff. So the doctors, they're going along with it. They don't need to have the girls' parents there to consent or even to consult with or even just to have the knowledge they can prescribe birth control pills to these young girls who have just barely reached puberty,
[02:17:40] Unknown:
which changes the body. It's and it's even worse than that. I mean, that's that is a a evil thing. They they have, abortion pills now so they could give, you know Yes. Anyone in in a child. Well
[02:17:57] Unknown:
Yes. So but think about that. The school is coaching these girls to go to the doctor. Don't talk to your parents. Just go to the doctor, and then the doctor goes along with that. To me, that is yeah. Evil is the right word, Patrick. I'm actually, I'm gonna mute myself now because I'm gonna get carried away here. It it made me so angry when I learned that. It makes me so angry. It says, hey. Well, go for it. Do you know what they're voting on in this country? Do you know what they're voting on this country?
[02:18:25] Unknown:
Bringing the abortion up to birth. Oh. Yeah. Seriously.
[02:18:30] Unknown:
Yeah. Here too. They had that in New York.
[02:18:34] Unknown:
Late stage abortion.
[02:18:36] Unknown:
I I had been I I watched, recently, a a documentary about Marie Stopes and her involvement. Because I wanted to learn more about her relationship with her husband who was part of the Avro corporation that made the Lancaster bombers during World War two that bombed Dresden and all the other places, Hamburg. So it it's just to me, it's very, concerning to to see that that was a policy of the government. It's it's been something that has implications as far as society is concerned. And it wasn't just schools. It was the military who was brought in as a as a purposeful thing to get people not to conceive of children anymore and to, you know, and as a consequence, that's where we're talking about people being replaced here because you have cultures where they're promoted to have children. They come from strict for instance, Muslim countries where their sexual mores are are and morality is such that they have children and large families because they don't have this idea of birth control and abortion on demand and cast you know, basically, sterilizing people.
So we've this has been a long term project over the years, and it's malicious as all get out. And I just think it it's very interesting that they were using the excuse in Germany of Hitler euthanizing people, and and that sort of thing. And yet at the same time, the people who were bombing Germany, the wife of the guy that, you know, that ran that corporation was the one promoting the Brits to to, basically follow a eugenics program to wipe themselves out. And to this day, they have these clinics in honor of that woman who was who was promoting it. She had written some book and became popular. It was called Married Love and it was all about how married couples couples should promote birth control in their relationship, which was taboo in the teens and 20s when it came out because of the scandal.
But you think of what it what society is like now, it's just like peanuts compared to what's going on. So, anyway, I just thought I'd I'd bring that up because Thank you. Patrick,
[02:21:10] Unknown:
something you said there you said there. So back then back then well, you talk about the the other cultures. They don't they don't have these these, pressures to towards less children. They they promote lots of children. Think about what Allstate did to our people back in the sixties and seventies. They were telling us there's too many people on Earth. So they weaponized our, you know, we have concern about the environment. We we love to take care of things. Our people do. In general, that's our empathy, which is also, you know, it goes over into the natural world. And then we're also very trusting or that makes us quite gullible to believe lies.
But then, you know, Paul Ehrlich comes out with that book called The Population Bomb, and that really scared us. And so many in our generation chose to have less children, to have smaller families. And then you fast forward a couple of decades, and they say, oh, the demographic curve, you know, that we need more workers. We don't have enough workers, and so that was the beginnings of opening the floodgates to the third world.
[02:22:33] Unknown:
Yep. And we're just being interfered with. I mean, the idea of Mary Stopes and these things coming along in the twenties, if you step back from it, we've just had the slaughter of World War one. So the population's vastly diminished, and then there's this push to reduce it even further. Whereas, in fact, the natural instinct would be for it to recover in some way. But by now, we've also got the mainstream press bombarding people's heads, convincing us of things that we can't actually know whether they're true or not. I mean, most of the world that we live in, courtesy of the media, is unknowable. Isn't it? I can't go out and measure these things that they say. I've got a certain picture that's formed in great part by what's being projected into my head or what I choose to read.
It's what I mean, you know, it's why I prefer the older stuff because I think with the distance of time you can see a bit more clearly. What's going on right now? It's often a case of you can't see the wood for the trees and they're in charge of the trees all the time and creating these confusing pictures. So everybody kills one another in World War One, then you're supposed to not start having babies, then there's gonna then there are too many people. And this is all the primarily, we're talking about things directed at our people. Because I know back about nineteen o five, we accounted for something like 31% of the world's population.
Now numerically, we're now greater, but we now account for something like 10%.
[02:23:54] Unknown:
Or less? Yep.
[02:23:57] Unknown:
And all of these things we've talked about dovetail into that as an outcome, which of course is as we you I think you mentioned earlier on it's definitely on the, International Communist Manifesto, the destruction of the family. But particularly the families of one particular racial group are definitely on the list. And you could even, you know, and if you think about civil wars as well, which are the most uncivil warfare that ever takes place, it's almost like males competing for the remaining females. There's something really savage about civil wars. They're terrifying really. They're they're worse than any other one. And I think by extension you could say, because we are racially of the same kith and kin, that the wars in the last century between Britain and Germany fall in part into that category. I mean, there's a level of savagery there that's just off the charts. It's ridiculous. It's not about actually achieving a result militarily. It's about, you know, as as you well know, and as Churchill said, it's about the utter sort of genocide of the Germans in that case. That's what they were into. Not that, you know, Churchill's a anybody would call it a person.
[02:25:05] Unknown:
Fratricidal
[02:25:06] Unknown:
wars or brother wars? Yeah. Brother wars. Yeah. Yeah. Like, absolutely, in in Ukraine with Russians fighting Russians. Mhmm. That's right. That's right.
[02:25:16] Unknown:
I just spoke to Oh, go ahead. Well, now very quickly, I was gonna say I spoke to a veteran who's in the Weimar during the World War two, and he said, we just couldn't understand it. He said, it's brother fight fighting brother. He just he said, we just couldn't understand why Britain was fighting us.
[02:25:33] Unknown:
He just you know? And he was right. My mother kind of spoke along those lines too, especially when she brought up Dresden. She always just went really sad and melancholy, and she would say, why Dresden? Why Dresden? Because, you know, she would then bring up that there was no military there, and it was stuffed to the hilt with German refugees, women and children and whatnot. And she would always say, why dress she just couldn't understand it. But you see, what they didn't understand is who was behind this brother's war.
[02:26:06] Unknown:
I think they didn't want Germany and Russia creating peace between those two countries, because it was a competition of labor from the from the Brits and the Americans and and the people in the West, not not to the benefit of the majority of people, but for the banking groups. It it behooved them to keep all of these groups from communicating with each other and having any sort of solidarity, fraternity, whatever you want to call it, because it it behooves them to keep us fighting each other, to keep that's like psychological warfare is preventing two subjugated groups from communicating with each other. That's that's the whole point. They create all of these distractions to get us to sit and quarrel and quibble with each other so that they can do what they're doing without notice.
[02:27:04] Unknown:
And I might as well say, why following on from what Monica just said, why Dresden? Why, Hera Nagasaki and Hiroshima? The answer is because they were the two highest populations of Christians in Japan. Most Christians were in Nagasaki and Hiroshima. That's a fact. And it virtually wiped Christianity out of Japan
[02:27:30] Unknown:
when they're born. This thread is all up and down the line for the last two, three thousand years. When you see it, it's there. Mhmm. But I mean, definitely, the attack on women or using that as the front is is the thing that's that's brought our civilization low. It's a major part of the whole thing. It's difficult for me to think that women have been empowered. I remember seeing this little meme ages ago. There's two women talking on the phone, you know, one of these one picture things. And this woman the first one's saying, I went to university. I got a degree. I'm a scientist. And the other one said, I didn't go to university. I got married. I had three sons, and they're all scientists.
And I Oh. Rather liked the I really liked the point of that. That's nice. Yeah. And I think I know it doesn't happen for all women, but I I'd like to think it should happen for the majority that they get in the family way. Who am I? I mean, I can't lead somebody else's life, but I just look at that and think that that's healthy. And I think as long as the predominant mass of a tribe are involved in family life, you've got that's the basis of civilized life. Nothing else could be because we're about to have a technocratically organized totally uncivilized existence if these buggers get their way because they've got all their electronic circuits. We're going to they're like kids that have gone nuts with Meccano sets and just think we can solve everything through science, whereas science is really, at best, only addressing half of the issues of life. And it's probably not even that, to be quite honest.
I spoke yeah. Sorry.
[02:29:05] Unknown:
I just say one one other thought on this whole thing about women and men. And one of the things that I like to say to encourage people, if if we're talking about these things and it's kind of like, oh, boy, it's really bad, isn't it? But I I like to encourage people that, okay, if you're young, you know, get in the family way. Like, that's a good thing to do. Get married. But, it was one of the I'm still in communication with this fellow, but it it came at me quite with hostility. He said, oh, you just told men to get married. I don't think I said just men to get married. Obviously, it takes two. So young people to get married and have children, that would be a a of our race, our people. Like, don't miscegenate and marry your own and, you know, birds of a feather flock together and encourage that rather than, you know, what what a lot of young people, they feel very discouraged and they think, oh, it's, you know, like you said earlier, Paula, oh, I can't afford to have excuse me. Like, that's what life is about, is having it is to procreate, isn't it? But anyway, I still can't figure that that out, the hostility that came at me from that statement to encourage people to get married. I'm I'm gonna get to the bottom of this. And maybe on the next next round, next month, I'll have an answer to that one. But what could it be that that why why this I don't know. You know? The the the this person took offense.
This he's he's a leader of men's groups and this and that. But, boy, the the the hostility that came at me for just just saying get married. Like, wow. I don't know. Can anybody I don't I don't know if there's something to comment on that. Well, difficult. I I don't know. But
[02:30:47] Unknown:
when people's ideologies are attacked, they can sometimes go berserk. So it sounds to me like his ideology is how could you possibly oppose feminism? The whole world No. No. It's no. No. It's no. No. It's sorry. You misunderstood.
[02:31:01] Unknown:
Alright. You know, this is this is this this would be the opposite of somebody who has taken on the ideology of feminism, but there there's hostility. Like, what I said at the beginning of when I first joined you today, that the mistake that's being made is that some, and I would say, some men are now okay. We recognize that, gee, women in power, that's not such a good thing, and and, you know, women in in in over like, when you have this feminization of institutions by having more women in these top positions of authority, you have decay in society, so they're taking it out on women directly. Like She's talking about MGTOW.
[02:31:47] Unknown:
Hate hating. Sorry. Say again? You you've heard of MGTOW? Men go their own way.
[02:31:52] Unknown:
Oh, okay. I've never heard that that,
[02:31:55] Unknown:
expression. It it's an acronym. Men go their own way. So the society is such that the imbalance has been that, feminism has created this environment for men where men just become incels and forget women and and just become complete misogynists and and turn inward.
[02:32:17] Unknown:
Okay. That that would that would fit. That would fit the bill. Thank you for chiming in on that, Patrick. I've heard of the term incel involuntary celibate, I guess, that stands for. Right?
[02:32:30] Unknown:
Yeah. This would be kind of like they they'd say it's voluntary. Yeah. But it MGTOW, that's I've heard this term, and it's it's men go their own way because women and feminism is been such that it's just, you know, like, what's the point?
[02:32:46] Unknown:
So then there's a hatred on women, and that's certainly not gonna help us get out of the predicament we're in whether, you know, either both ways. Like, women hating on men, which is what the feminist movement basically, you know, made us do, like, what you used that term earlier. One of you did this toxic masculinity. Holy comelly if people are talking about. Oh, that's just toxic masculinity. Well that's hating on men being masculine that that's this whole paradigm that masculinity is evil and awful. So that's hating on men and now if there's MGTOW that you talk about, that's basically, I would say well, it's a giving up on women, but it I I'd say it's also hating on women. Well, that's not gonna solve our our predicament at all, this this type of things. It is demo.
[02:33:39] Unknown:
It also makes men effeminate because it's like the the desire of man is to be with a woman and vice versa Right. To procreate. I mean, that's part of God's plan when he said go forth and multiply in the beginning. So it's yeah, it's it's social engineering too on the part of the people that are planning this because they don't want people procreating and having families, strong families that can then pass on inheritance to their children. They wanna these people that are in charge are greedy, and they they want everything for themselves and everybody else fighting each other so that they can get away with their crime.
[02:34:17] Unknown:
Well, professor Gloria Moss, she wrote a book called Women See Polka Dots, Men See Straight Lines, and she was on my show. Oh, she spoke about she's leading authority on the Great Fire of London, which it isn't I'm going off a slight tangent, isn't what we've been told. It's a complete pack of lies, what we've been told, because the fire went the opposite way to the wind. So, you know, it's it's it was done deliberately. But going back to what and she reckons that she she's looked into this, and she reckons that women prefer rounded shapes and men like straight lines. Men see the world in straight lines. And, also, do you know that women's eyes, they can see much more color than men can? Compared with a woman, a man is virtually colorblind.
And that's why at Kodaks, they only had women employed to do the color, to to to to monitor the color photography, you know, these sort of, oh, you know, the old days when you used to have to send your, film away to be, developed, because women can see colors much better than men. And the the reason for that is when the men went hunting, women, women used to pick the berries, and they had to sort out between the poison berries and the non poison berries, where the men were mainly long sighted so they could hunt better. And that's the way it's where it's apparently it's come from. But, yeah. So,
[02:35:54] Unknown:
Wow. Super interesting.
[02:35:56] Unknown:
Super interesting. Yeah. That is. Didn't know that.
[02:36:00] Unknown:
So so it's, professor Gloria Moss, m o s s, and you'll see that, you know, she, I thought she I think she spoke on one of my shows about it. Yeah. It's very interesting.
[02:36:12] Unknown:
You know, the I once read a book by a fellow who really got good with horses. I think it was called The Horse Whisperer or something like that, but he was colorblind. And it he said that his in retrospect, you know, after he why did he have all these special abilities to be able to communicate with horses, like with body language? I'm talking I'm not talking with words. But it's because when he was observing horses in the wild and he had opportunity to do so where he was, I don't remember where he was, but there were wild horses around there. And he spent oodles of time observing them, and his colourblindness actually gave him greater ability to read them, like, to read their movements, to read their own internal communications with one another. Something about the, you know, the shading of light and dark rather than colours gave him that ability. That I just thought found that fascinating. And if you look at black and white photography, there's something special about it, that you see things that you wouldn't see in in color photography. I I just find what you just said is so interesting, Eric. So atmospheric. Well, actually, in architecture,
[02:37:28] Unknown:
if I sort of design anything, I'll be very blunt here, it's like a brick built shithouse, you know, and I I mean, a standard h bomb. And I teamed up with a female architect, and I did the design the structure, and she did all the frilly bits on the outside. And it absolutely worked a treat, and we really got to unlock our house on fire. And it and because she couldn't see because I mean, I would build she what happened is she started doing all this frilly stuff, and the the structure wasn't there. So being a bloke, I could see the structure, whereas as a woman, she could do all the sort of, like, frills and things like that. And it it we really did work well together because, we saw the world in a different way.
You know? Because I did a blokey as I say, I'm a blokey sort of designer, and she's a female sort of frilly designer. And that's it. And this is why you can always tell the difference between a building that's been designed by a female architect or a male architect or a detailer.
[02:38:32] Unknown:
The typical approach. What what's your custard joke? You we were supposed to remind you. Oh.
[02:38:38] Unknown:
Oh, yes. The Custer joke. Well done, Monica. I don't I'm not I'm not sure whether it'll, I'm not sure whether it'll be one that goes across the Atlantic. Well, you see, on a American Air Force base, which there's very few of now in Great Britain, they wanted to remember the Custer's last stand, you see. And this was way back in the sixties, and seventies rather, when woke was just sort of coming in. So they decided to get one of these sort of very nice sort of feminine type sculptures to do this beautiful sculpture to show general Custer, you know, Custer's last stand, you see. Anyway, they had this this bloke's bashing away for ages. And they got this, it comes to the day of the great unveiling, and they got the old generals standing there all saluting as the planes flying over, bloke's marching past, and it comes to the point where they're giving a speech. And he said, okay. He says, now now I can't do an American accent very well. We're now coming to a point of unveiling, and, Custer's a brave man. He has a large stand. And they pulled a sheet down, and they all go, and at the top of this sculpture, there's God, and then there's a load of fish underneath God. And then there's Indians having sex, all different like the Kama Sutra all around the bottom. They're quick quick cover it up. What what the hell is all this? And and the sculptor said, what's wrong? He said, it's Custer's last name. She said he said, yeah. It's his last words. Holy mackerel effing Indians. Sorry. It's a terrible one, innit?
[02:40:19] Unknown:
I like I liked the telling of it. That's a really bad joke. Yes.
[02:40:25] Unknown:
That's a bad joke, yeah. Holy mackerel, and then the, I didn't get it. Effing Indians. Acoust oh, effing Indians, you say? F ing Indians. Well, I did come out with the f word, you know. I I thought it is a family show. Oh, yes. Of course. If you see yes. I did. Yeah. Only Macklefucking Indians. Yeah. Actually, that was one of my alcohol shows. So he told me that one. And, we was all on fits of laughter with that because, you know
[02:40:56] Unknown:
Good one.
[02:40:59] Unknown:
Oh, hey. That's good.
[02:41:04] Unknown:
By the way, I got, I got, there was a little post earlier today in the Telegram group, with an interest I can't I just had it in front of me. Oh, yeah. Billy Peart wrote in, I I put up, a video today of, mister Hitler with the music of inception behind it, which you may or may not I'll send it to you, Eric, if you've not seen it. It's three and a half minutes since Yes. Yes. It's extremely moving, actually. It's absolutely brilliant. Some brilliant photography in it. Anyway, he wrote he said, and I said I might throw this into the show. So So thanks for this Billy. This is just to change tack here for the last twenty minutes or so. He said, the Inception science fiction score has me wondering, if time travel was a thing tomorrow and only to members of this telegram group or people behind the microphone here, what would we go back to advise mister Hitler of and when?
So if you had the option to go back and advise him of something that might avert the disaster or the outcome, what would it be? If
[02:42:15] Unknown:
it's a good question, is it? Well, with rush with the invasion of Russia, people say, the operation Barbarossa, mistake. But Germany had no option. No option at all because the generals said if we wait any longer, Russia will sorry. The Soviet Union rather, I've got that wrong, will attack us, and we haven't got the strength to hold them. We've got to attack them first. And what happened is Hitler had, dysentery, seriously,
[02:42:45] Unknown:
and there was rain. But it is serious. Dysentery is serious. Yes.
[02:42:49] Unknown:
And and there was rain, which they couldn't run tanks through. So they went late, and they went two months late, and that was that was a problem. Because they went late, they caught the Russian winter. If they'd gone early, what's was planned, they'd have cracked it. They'd have done it. So, you know, that that So that's what you would say. Don't go. That that's the one that you'd go. Don't do it now. Wait till Well, the trouble is might be. Yes. Know about that. But, yeah, I can see But then but but then Russia Russia would have taken them over. That's the problem. That is a problem. Russia would have attacked in the rest of Europe. Look. I I keep saying Russia. I mean Soviet Union. It wasn't Russia. They had Soviet Union. Terribly sorry. Yes.
[02:43:32] Unknown:
It's difficult to know, isn't it? Hindsight's a great thing, but it's a good question. It's kind of thought provoking. I thought this is gonna sound awfully treacherous of me. But the thing that jumped into mind is, don't let them get away at Dunkirk like you just did. That would have stopped Oh, yes. Everything. There's 390,000 said, you don't kill them, but you don't let them get away. Of course, they could have brought them into camps and educated them and probably found even more sympathizers. I don't know. There's probably something even better than that. But, it's difficult to say, isn't it? By the way, there's been a development in that sphere yesterday in Germany. Where is it now? I've got the little post somewhere.
Click click here we go. So this was October 29 I think it was. Oh no, it's today. It's earlier today. How about this? Germany pledges $1,000,000,000 for 200,000 Holocaust survivors. October 30, 09:50AM today. How many?
[02:44:34] Unknown:
How many 200,000,
[02:44:37] Unknown:
apparently. Germany has agreed to provide more than $1,000,000,000 in new funding to support Holocaust survivors worldwide, helping many continue to live independently in their own homes. Oh my god. This thing just will not It will never end. It will never end. I I I don't have They're in their eighties and nineties, but they'll need more money to be able to live into their hundreds and 100.
[02:45:03] Unknown:
This is very important stuff. It's just nuts. But what about those that are born afterwards? I mean, let's face it. They're only gonna get they're they're just what it is is that if he was born, say, thirty years afterwards, I go, would he get compensation for it as well? Because, you know, it's it's just a conspiracy that that that is that is born thirty years afterwards. Generational
[02:45:26] Unknown:
trauma.
[02:45:27] Unknown:
That's it. Generational trauma. That's the one. They've used that. Yeah. They've used that, haven't they? Yeah. Have they? Yeah. Yes. They do. They have.
[02:45:36] Unknown:
It it's kind of the reverse in a in in a, what they do to the Palestinians with the children killing it's how they justify killing children. They're gonna grow up to be terrorists, so we gotta kill them.
[02:45:48] Unknown:
It's kind of Or traumatized as well. Yeah. But you think of the post traumatic stress disorder on those poor children. I mean, you don't know what hell they're gonna be going through in their minds. We'll never know. But they're going it is I really feel for them. I think it is it's horrendous at such a young age to see to to to go through that. But I tell you an interesting show that you did, Monica. That was the one about, uncle h, whether he escaped to Argentina. I don't think he did, but that was quite interesting, the, what the point she's bringing up. And they keep on and on and on. Like, it's like a sort of an old organ that keep winding up.
But the funniest one I heard was a chap who said that he escaped to Argentina, called it was called Operation Winnie the Pooh via Spain. Well, you know that Hitler and Franco hated each other's guts. They detested each other. And, because I think as Hitler said, he'd rather have his teeth removed without anesthetic than meet Franco. And there's this picture of them shaking hands, and they're not even looking at each other. They just tested. But no. I mean, I think Mark Felton, I don't know if you ever heard of him. He's he he does suffer from acute naughty naughty Nazi syndrome. But, well, no. Not that acute, but it is pretty bad he's got it. But he's actually looked into it, like a detective, and he's pieced together.
And what he believes is that, yes, it it did die of his own hand and so did Eva Braun, but they knew that they didn't have enough petrol to to cremate the bodies. So they put them into a mass grave, and they got bodies that looked like the two and put them in and and and burnt them. And that's what he believes happened. He says a lot of evidence for that. Wonder what your thoughts I mean, we'll never know, but what's your thoughts on that, Monica?
[02:47:56] Unknown:
Well, I I'd rather comment on this whole resurgence of this theory that Adolf Hitler went to Argentina. And I think it's not coincidental that this has been pushed harder in recent years. And I think the reason for that being pushed is because this man who has been so, demonized is making a comeback in terms of how the people are regarding him now. There are many people who are no longer regarding him as the worst man that ever walked the face of this earth, and they are starting to discover that they have been lied to about him. And so those who wish to push him back down are very active in pushing various narratives even within the, you know, the so called truth movement so that, you know, people are fighting each other within the truth movement, people who are cognizant of the the big lie of about World War II that but they're still arguing about what did this man do.
Did he die at his own hand of his own free will in Berlin, or did he escape and live another couple of decades or so, just have a nice, you know, live the high life in Argentina, which would make him a coward. You see? So this is a a way of pushing him back down. It would make him either a coward or an agent. Like, that theory has also been bounced around a lot. And so funny one. That one is. Yeah. Yeah. An agent. Right. And and and that he just jumped ship instead of going down with the ship using the the metaphor, I guess, where for a captain of a ship. So that that's but as far though as far as the details that you were asking me to comment on about what exactly happened to his body and that of Eva Brown, I I don't wanna comment on that because I really don't know.
[02:50:06] Unknown:
Yeah. I I've heard a lot of Harry Cooper's stuff. He did the the one on hit Hitler in Argentina. He has a respect for Hitler. I don't think it was, you know, I don't think anything malicious regarding that. But it's just kind of, an interesting theory. I kinda doubt it happened too.
[02:50:25] Unknown:
I I don't He got really mad. He he he kind of answered with an angry I I did publish on the the website, thetruthandjusticeforgermans.com. I published a little exchange that we had, an email exchange, so you can see his attitude towards
[02:50:45] Unknown:
Did you talk to Harry Cooper? Is that who he Well, through through email. Okay. We emailed directly. I've never talked to him myself. I don't know. Yeah. So I know Blackburn nine Blackbird nine had him on once.
[02:50:56] Unknown:
Oh, okay. I didn't I didn't know that. I should look for that. But, anyway, check out that article. If you go to truthandjusticeforgermans.com, and it's one of the more recent articles. Maybe it's even the most recent article. I don't publish very many articles there. So, anyway, I did publish that little exchange we had plus a link to a video that doesn't do a lot of explaining about, you know, this this controversy and the myth of it. And, you know, you can decide for yourself the attitude. Like, he kind of says that I have a bad attitude, but I think I was quite polite, to him. But anyway, so that's there. But while I'm talking about websites, I just think I must point this out before the end of the show here. We're coming up soon to the top of the hour that, on both that website that I just mentioned plus my own free speech monica.com, I have posted Alfred's most recent address because he has been moved from Stadelheim Prison, which is in Munich.
He was moved two days ago, so this is very, very recent. He was moved to another prison in Bernau. And so I've posted his address, and I just did that today because it was confirmed to me today where he is in case people would like and I do encourage people to write letters to political prisoners in general. But, of course, I would encourage you to write letters or cards, postcards. It doesn't need to be anything big and profound and long or anything. It just could be a nice friendly greeting, to Alfred Schaeffer, my brother. You could go to either of those two websites and find his current address where he is.
And so that I did wanna make sure I got that in before the end of the show. Oh, no. He's back in jail again. Oh, hell, I love that. He is, and he was he was jailed on yeah. I guess you know what? I guess the last time we were on this show, that wasn't the case yet. It was October 7.
[02:53:08] Unknown:
That's it. Yeah. As as soon as I've heard of it, I didn't know he's back in jail. I'm I'm I'm so sorry to hear that, Monica. My heart dropped.
[02:53:16] Unknown:
Yeah. Thank you, Eric. Read the article on my freespeechmonica.com website. Yeah. He was picked up and and put in jail. He's in jail on remand. Like, this this you know, they haven't put him on trial now for all these new charges that they made against him. Just a stack of charges. And so this could take a while because by the time they start a trial and then by the time they have a trial, then it gets appealed, appealed, appealed. The thing is and not necessarily by him, but the prosecution side, they just always want more time, more time, more time in jail. And so they put they arrested him because they say, oh, there's just so much against him that he'll run away. Well, he's never made any hint of a sign of running away. He is at home in Germany, happily married there, and was, you know, going about life, thank you very much, you know, doing a lot of work out in the garden and getting the winter wood up and stuff that, you know, he was doing. So okay. Yeah. He talks on podcast too and on videos, and they don't like his words. And so that's what they picked him up for. Monica.
[02:54:25] Unknown:
Yes. Have you heard of mister Bond?
[02:54:29] Unknown:
Yes. I've been in correspondence with him for several years already. Like, I'm on to I number my letters. I'm into the twenties already for letters to him. And, yes, I I have his address posted as well. That would be, oh gosh. I have a mental block right now. Philip Hassler. Philip Hassler in Austria. So mister Bond, that's Philip Hassler in Austria, and he's he got a ten year jail sentence for for, as he calls it, you know, bad mouth noises, as he says sort of sarcastically. He's a wonderful man. He's he's got the most beautiful handwriting, and he's just so he's he's just such a wonderful writer, you know, writes with such intelligence and grace and politeness.
This this is a really a wonderful man, and and he's in jail for songs that he's written. I mean, there it's like rap music. It's not my style of music, but who cares what what's my style of music? But it's just for words, for his message, for being for noticing patterns. That's what Frederick since since you spoke of For noticing. Notice noticing patterns. He notices patterns. Right? And so yes. But go ahead, Patrick. What were you gonna say about him?
[02:55:50] Unknown:
Well, I just there's another musician that went away, and he's probably got the record for it now for the amount of time that he he got. And it was just for music that he had written. Exactly. That's how that's how much they're afraid of it of any sort of messaging reaching the youth because the music that he was doing was a little bit different than these other musicians that got put away that were reaching an older generation. His music was the type that went directly to the young people,
[02:56:26] Unknown:
and they don't want that. Point. Very good point that you make. I'm glad you pointed out, Patrick, that that music was reaching the younger people. Yes. And his brother was also incarcerated for a while, but he's also not jail anymore. He had some website that he was, picked up for. Austria is particularly strict, I would say. Well, that's not even an an appropriate word, but they're particularly
[02:57:01] Unknown:
fearful and bad. And I I I would think that's possibly because that's the birthplace of that certain man we were talking about a few minutes ago. That's what I was gonna just say. And if I had gone back and I would have changed anything or been able to tell him anything, I would have I would have gone into he does in chapter three of Mein Kampf, he talks about his choosing between, George Schoerner and Karl Luger, and I would have told him to side with Karl Luger. And he probably would have been better off for that. And if he had had an ally in Franco, it would have been a different story. So that I'll just I'll just leave it on that because I see we're short of time. Oh, but, Patrick, another day we should talk more about that because I have to learn more from you about all that.
[02:57:50] Unknown:
There's so much to cover. We've covered a lot tonight. It's been good to go back over the, the male female situation with all of that. It's been really excellent having you back on, Monica. We'll have you on again in a month's time, which will be fantastic. I'll put the links to your website into the show notes as well when we finished. I'll put them in the chat, but that's good. Thanks everyone for tonight. Thank you, Monica. Thanks, Paul. Thanks, Patrick. Thank you, Eric. Thank you, audience in, YouTube and Rumble. It's been great. We've covered an awful lot of ground. We'll be back again next week, back to our usual time in The States, 3PM. Enjoy your extra hours of sleep, your extra hour of sleep on Saturday night. I enjoyed mine. It was brilliant. Probably the best hour of the year, really. I love that extra hour.
It was really good. And we'll see you all next week. So until then, keep good everyone and, keep up the good fight in whatever way you see fit. We'll be back with you next week. Bye for now. Bye bye. Thank you.
Opening hellos, time change confusion and dark evenings
Shorts in autumn, cold knees and English small talk
Introducing Eric von Essex and banter about weather and clocks
Rant on clock changes, accidents and gloomy winters
Horse racing chat, playful wordplay and Hoof Hearted
Shout outs, stations and tea plans for the break
How to call in, dropping phone lines and upcoming guest tease
Crowd psychology, discomfort and the Socrates problem
Dealing with police: rights, tactics and legalese riffs
Consent, signatures and administrative law tangents
States of confusion, drugs, AI clips and cultural observations
Nostalgia interlude: Housewives Choice and Plotlands memories
Guest joins: Monica Schfer on time zones and Aboriginal vs original
Aftermath of prior show: feminism debate and misplaced hostility
Complementary roles, masculinity, dating culture and Hobsons Choice
Family, duty and the engineered destruction of tradition
Boys vs girls: schooling, single-sex education and play
Sex education critique, SOGI programs and protecting children
Birth control, Planned Parenthood and social engineering
Population, brother wars and demographic manipulation
Perception differences: colours, design and how men and women see
Custer joke detour and gallows humour
What advice for Hitler? Alternatives, Dunkirk and Barbarossa
Germanys new payments, perpetual guilt and current events
Did Hitler flee? Competing narratives and motives
Political prisoners: Alfred Schfer move and Mr. Bond in Austria
Wrap-up, links and next weeks schedule