Broadcasts live every Thursday at 8:00p.m. uk time on Radio Soapbox: http://radiosoapbox.com
Paul is joined by Dennis Wise, who returns to discuss a the impact of Freemasonry on British society, the historical significance of the French and American revolutions and the influence of figures like Aleister Crowley. Dennis shares his thoughts on the power of documentaries, particularly his own works, including 'Adolf Hitler: The Greatest Story Never Told,' 'Communism by the Backdoor,' and 'The Secret Masonic Victory of World War II.'
The conversation takes a lighter turn as Dennis reminisces about attending a Deep Purple concert with a friend who had a hearing aid, leading. Paul and Dennis also discuss the innovative ways people are protesting against the ULEZ cameras in London, including the clever use of bat boxes to protect the cameras from removal.
Well, hello, good morning, good afternoon, good evening, good middle of the night to you, and all that kind of stuff. It is Thursday 28th of, February. Yeah, March even. 28th February or is it March? Let me just stop that little music there. Hi. Welcome to show. Yeah. Thursday, 28th March. Very, very windy where I am. It's just gone 8 PM. Has it gone 8 PM? Yeah. It's just gone 8 PM in the UK. 4 PM, for listeners in the US. This is our last week at 4 PM because the clocks go forward. This is Paul English Live. Welcome to the show. It's been a wonderful, wacky week down here by the seaside.
What do they say about spring? In like a lamb, out like a lion, or is it in like a lion, out like a lamb? It's certainly going out like a lion down here. And I'm joined again tonight, back again, wonderfully, with Dennis Wise, who's gonna be with us for the next couple of hours talking about, well, things. And I'm armed with some chopped juice. I hope you are too. You might need it. And I've also managed to just about get rid of my sniveling cold from last week. That was fun. Oh, I like the house band. Do you like the house band? I think they're pretty good. They're alright, those guys. I haven't told anybody who they are. You'll have to guess, really. Maybe I'll set up a competition for it. Who is that band? All I can tell you is that particular track, is not available on Spotify. So I'll just keep it a mystery for as long as I as long as I possibly can. Welcome back to the show. We've got, a few things lined up for tonight. Whether we actually get around to covering them all, I don't really know. 2 hours seems to last about sort of 25 minutes these days, and I was thinking also a week.
It's a week since we did the last episode with, second part with Thomas Anderson. That was a lot of fun, particularly looking at things like seconds, and all that kind of stuff. That was quite a chunky sort of thing, and today is probably going to be reasonably chunky as well. But I'm I'm thinking that a week now lasts about as long as a weekend. Anyway, welcome to the show. You listen to Paul English Live here on WBN 324. We're here every Thursday at 8 PM to 10 PM UK. There's sometimes an after show that that runs on on Rumble. So if you're into Rumble, if you like rumbling, if you want to chat, most of the chat takes place on the Rumble channel over there.
And as I said there at the beginning, we, it's just gone 4 PM US East Coast time. But this weekend, at last, at long bloody last, the Brits catch up. And we're putting our clocks forward this coming Saturday evening. So next week's show will still be 8 PM UK, obviously, but 3 PM US EST. So we get back to where we should always be, I think. And as I mentioned before, silly that they do it in the first place and even sillier, the, the US does it 3 weeks before us, and I think a week after us. So, if you're in the US, you get a whole one month's extra, whatever that might mean, of so called summertime. All complete madness anyway. Fantastic.
And when it comes to, little another little personal oddity thing that happened around here the other day, when was it? I think it was even last night. So it was blowing a hooly. There was a lot of rain. It was a very grim sort of evening. In fact, the last week has been more like wintery weather than like spring weather. Spring's often like that. You can sort of see it is over here anyway. You can see sort of every weather condition in about 2 hours if you stand on one street corner. Blazing sunshine gets warm for a bit, then you get a bit hail, seriously, and stuff like that. Now get this. We couldn't make out exactly what bird this was, but on my next door neighbor's house last night about 6:30 This is fascinating, isn't it?
About 6:30, as the sun was going down, and as the grey clouds made it even grayer and more English like, there was the most enormous bird on the roof of, my neighbor about 30 yards away. I didn't spot it. My eagle eyed, it wasn't an eagle by the way, but my, my eagle eyed son said, hey, dad. Come and look at this. And, unfortunately, it was a bit too gloomy to make out what it was, but it was either this is gonna sound bizarre. It was either a heron or a crane. Answers on a postcard, please. To I'm serious. This thing must have been 3 feet high at least. It was stood on this roof, and it made for a very surreal sort of image.
Rain coming down, not so bad. Of course, my heart went out to the poor little thing. I thought, there you are, you know, sort of bird on stilts hovering around, but probably better up there than on the ground where the foxes would have had it. So there you go. My wildlife reporting skills are coming into the whole thing. Right. Over to our guest, Dennis. Hello. Good evening, and welcome to the show. How are you this fine wonderful night, I suppose, wherever you are?
[00:06:48] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm fine. Thank you. Yeah. I was gonna say it's a wonderful night, but, yeah. It's it's typical English, doable.
[00:06:57] Unknown:
It is. I mean, it is. We always we'd like to talk about the
[00:07:02] Unknown:
weather a lot, don't we? Because we should talk about the weather a lot, I think. But,
[00:07:04] Unknown:
it's, it has been pretty grim here. A lot of rain today. A lot of wind. Took my wife out for a walk along the seafront, nearly blew her over, which is, not surprising considering she's quite frail at times, but, that that was pretty good. And, since you were here, some now normally, we've had you on roundabout 1 you've been back here about once a month, but, of course, we got delayed because that German the other week mucking about, you know, causing us to have 2 shows with him, which was fun, actually. They were okay.
[00:07:33] Unknown:
It's fine. Yeah. No.
[00:07:36] Unknown:
Break. Yeah. But what have you been up to then this last month? Have you been up to anything interesting? Got any any new projects on the go? What's what's running through your head at the moment? I wouldn't say new projects, but,
[00:07:48] Unknown:
I do get sent quite a number of video videos. Yes. And documentaries to watch, which is pretty time consuming the the number I get. And, obviously, I find, some subjects myself, which interest me, which, I take time to watch. And then amidst all that, I've suddenly gone into a bit of a a thing about Stephen King movies, so so that ties me up as well at times.
[00:08:16] Unknown:
Now what you mean, you're sat around what you can't be you don't mean you're just sitting around watching them. Is it that you're watching them for something else, or you are just watching them?
[00:08:24] Unknown:
No. I'm just watching them. I'm just fascinated how someone's brain can work so so deep and dark.
[00:08:35] Unknown:
It's very dark. I mean, he's a bit of an oddball, I think. I always I mean, but then, you know, you can't really argue you can't really argue with his success. It's, he's he's almost like a sort of 19th century American folktale teller revved up for the well, obviously, when when was his big period as a book writer? It'd be late seventies and the eighties, wouldn't it? And into the I mean, he's probably still going strong
[00:08:56] Unknown:
now. I haven't Yeah. It probably is. But but, I mean, he has done films like Shawshank Redemption, you know, which is not quite as dark. The Green Mile is another one which he did.
[00:09:06] Unknown:
Yeah. I think they were short stories, weren't they? They were You are, I think most of them are, aren't they, I think? Yeah. Well, those 2 were. I mean, they're both they're they're really fantastic films, actually. They've got a a terrible and engaging atmosphere about them both. And, in fact, I've I've seen them both. My son's I've only seen, the first one, Shawshank Redemption. We watched that maybe 2 or 3 months ago. And, of course, the good thing with King, I suppose, despite his really rather odd political views in my in my view, his oddity, but, is that he he's just a natural storyteller, isn't he? I mean, they just he he understands storytelling.
[00:09:45] Unknown:
For those people who may not know Morgan Freeman who who was starring in, Shawshank Redemption, that was actually originally for an Irish guy, the park Was it? You know, in the book Yeah. Or the storage, was it? Yeah. It was an Irish guy, but, of course, woke Hollywood came along and decided Morgan Freeman should appear.
[00:10:10] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, absolutely. Of course, I think that role kinda made Morgan Freeman, didn't it? Because he got to use it I think he did. Yeah. It did. He got to use it because he was the narrator. Everybody got very comfortable with his voice, which is a good narration voice. There's no two ways about it. Yeah. The ironic thing about him is that he usually
[00:10:28] Unknown:
narrates as god, but I saw that this was several times in believing god. So
[00:10:34] Unknown:
Hello. We need someone to play god. Call Morgan Freeman. Oh, what's that? Yeah. What, again? I've got to play god again. Yeah. I do. God the series. Whatever. We can't get nobody else to do it like you. No. Well, I don't know about that. There's, there was a guy, you know, I forgot his name, which is terrible, but it just jumped into my who narrated the whole of the Bible back in the sixties. American guy. Actually, he had a kind of mid Atlantic twang. I can't remember his name now. And it's he's he's got a fantastic tone for that sort of thing. I've I've heard some of it. He tends to sort of, in my for me, he reads it a little bit too quickly.
But, he he's pretty good at that, you know, sort of thing, tapping into
[00:11:21] Unknown:
the the epic nature of all those sorts of things. Yeah. Absolutely. Well, I've been looking at a few of Trey Smith's videos as well. He goes back into Genesis and, the fallen angels and all that. That's really, really interesting.
[00:11:33] Unknown:
Yes. Trey Smith, you say?
[00:11:35] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:11:36] Unknown:
Okay. So who's Trey Smith? Go on. I think I've seen the t r e y. I think I've seen the name. It's
[00:11:42] Unknown:
it's it's kinda very, you know, he's that action type of narrative. He well, he's quite demonstrative when he's when he's, talking about the the angels and the, you know, Noah stories from the Bible. But he's really informative, and he he he well, he he kinda scorns the, intelligent scientists and, you know, going about the, you know, the big bang and all that. It really goes to town on them, which is really pleasant to wear. Yeah. I think I'll be with you on that one.
[00:12:23] Unknown:
I mean, because, you know, yeah, they get very, very sort of quiet on the big horse about all that. But the big bang explains everything. No. I don't. What came before the big bang? Conspiracy going, ain't it? Because Yes. You get something from nothing.
[00:12:35] Unknown:
Yeah. Can't get a bigger conspiracy, can you, really?
[00:12:39] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I I mean, yeah, it's how much study do you wanna put into these things? I mean, one of the things symbolically, of course, is that that light, can only come out of the darkness. So the darkness must have been here first. Right? Or maybe not.
[00:12:58] Unknown:
And then what is darkness? Is it just the absence of light? You know? According to these guys, they they can tell you what's going on 200000000000 years ago.
[00:13:06] Unknown:
Yeah. So That's good. But they can't tell you what happened 3 minutes ago, truthfully, can they? Exactly. Let's talk about this stuff in the past that's got that literally, even if you knew it all, there's nothing you could do about it anyway and it's completely pointless you knowing it. But let's spend a lot of time talking about that. So, yeah. I I mean, this thing over in CERN, I heard somebody I heard some clips somewhere yesterday. I mean, I ain't got time to track all the things that keep rolling into my ears. You're possibly the same. But, there were maybe it was on Jeff Rents actually, because I do sort of catch that in the morning. It's my sort of cup of coffee or cup of tea listen as I'm sort of bumbling along and, you know, trying to find my trousers and things like that. And, she was talking about having gone there and what a dark, rather oppressive, and utterly sort of evil place it feels like. I mean, they're mucking about with something over there, aren't they? It seems to me because they Yeah. The the story is that they're,
[00:14:03] Unknown:
you know, it's like a a gateway in it to another dimension.
[00:14:07] Unknown:
Yep.
[00:14:08] Unknown:
So I'm surprised because Hollywood's made several movies on that kind of theme, have they, over the years? Yeah. They have. Predictive programming. Yep. But but why mess around with some of well, maybe maybe they they do know us on the other side. But it's it's like, you know, why mess around with someone? What might not necessarily be friendly.
[00:14:29] Unknown:
You know? I guess. Maybe it's just another deception, Denis. Maybe it's actually really lovely, this gateway. They find out it just leads to a big happy valley full of people, and they go, no, this is no good. We need somebody to scare the pants off. Oh, yeah. Keep keep well big. It's almost not possible to know exactly what their motives are all the time.
[00:14:47] Unknown:
No. I'm I'm of the opinion that, you know, these aliens and UFOs, etcetera, do come from not outer space, but, inner space, another dimension. And, actually, they are demons. That's my humble opinion after, looking at all the evidence.
[00:15:07] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. Well, it's an interesting word, demon. I don't know what the root of it is. I don't have anything in front of me to actually tell you what the root of it is. No. But it won't be pleasant. No. Probably not. Probably not. Now before when we were having a chat a little bit earlier, we we were talking, weren't we, about what we should talk about? I can't think of anything now. No. It's not a couple no. No. There's a couple of things. There's a couple of things. I just wanted to tell everybody about my about my crane or or the heron, and we were hoping it would come back. It was, in fact, we looked up cranes.
You think, what's a crane doing on that? But there are sort of wildlife bird reserves around it. It was very surreal. It really was. It's like sort of some mythical creature had arrived, because you can only see it half through the gloom, but it was moving around a bit. But apparently, a crane, if it arrived Right. Is it Stephen King like? Yeah. There you go. It was. We're all looking around. We're waiting for an owl to an owl to hoot in the cops, yeah, and the squealing of foxes, and everything's all kicking off. I'm going, oh, by by heck. But apparently, a crane, when it arrives, is, apparently, it's a good omen. It means long life.
Of course, under present circumstances, I don't know really whether everybody's really targeting long life. What? Like this? Are you kidding me? So, of course, we got to sort things out. But, yeah, it's a positive omen, something like that. I'm gonna play a clip now, Dennis, just to move it. We were talking a bit, weren't we, about about the state of this nation. And when I say this,
[00:16:40] Unknown:
Putin has fallen. It's fallen.
[00:16:43] Unknown:
Well, I've got I've got I guess so much bad news. Has been in place for 300 years. I know. Anyway, but, apparently, the conservatives have a lot of people will have already heard this because they've been doing the rounds over the last 5 or 6 days, but it's very good. This is a a apparently a party it's a broadcast, a communication from the Conservative Party. I hope you haven't heard it before and other leaders, but this is fun. Listen to this if you can. For 200 years, the Conservative and Unionist Party of the United Kingdom has bravely
[00:17:11] Unknown:
and consistently betrayed not only its own voter base, but all native peoples of the British Isles. From constitutional reforms to dissolving the British Empire, from desecration of tradition I am I am immensely proud of what we have managed to achieve as a party. Taking the greatest empire to ever span the face of the earth to being a pathetic, miserable, and broken nation mocked the world over. In recent years, we have greatly accelerated our plans to crush the ethnic Britons, making sure we openly show our hatred to you at every turn. And let me be clear, we do hate you. We despise you. We have not done enough, though.
Despite all of our betrayal, our blatant loathing of you, you still vote for us. Even as we refuse to simply deliver a referendum, and then when we do, we subvert your wishes by then opening our borders to the world, even as we take all of your wealth and make the promised public services completely unusable, there are still some of you who vote for us. It is you, our voters, who we find the most disgusting. To combat this, I am incredibly proud to introduce our new policy, 0 seats. 0 seats is the policy where we shall do everything possible to make sure at the next general election, we as a party obtain 0 seats. You will have already seen 0 seats in action such as arguing over how much of your money to send to foreign conflicts that are nothing to do with you or straight up making you homeless as we lavishly treat foreign peoples and hand over your property to them, and then criminally punishing you if you so much as point any of this out.
So please, when you think about the next election think 0 seats. If we all play our part, we can finally make 0 seats a reality.
[00:19:05] Unknown:
Hey. Maybe they're worth voting for after all, Dennis. What do you think?
[00:19:09] Unknown:
Yep. Even I can tell that's AI.
[00:19:12] Unknown:
Of course. Of course. Absolutely. He speaks better than he does, actually, doesn't it, really? Sounded like Blair, to be honest. Did it, at first? Yeah. I guess so. They're both slightly overly enunciating everything and little bit delicate voices, aren't they? Not like us northerners. Gruff all the time. But, a bit effeminate. Yeah. Yeah. I quite like that because I've thought for some time, having these honest political communications might help. I mean, I could be completely wrong. Maybe people who are already got their head in the sand have just stuck it in even further hearing things like that. Just to let you know that wasn't a genuine I'm sure everybody gets this, but you know by way of public information service, that wasn't an actual genuine conservative communication, but the content was pretty close to the truth, it seems to me.
[00:19:57] Unknown:
Oh, hang on.
[00:20:00] Unknown:
Yeah. So I mean, one I can't believe people still vote.
[00:20:04] Unknown:
I really can't. I know how people woke up, you know, with with the with the COVID thing, but, no, I can't believe people even bother to vote because that ain't gonna change anything, And matching the threes don't change anything.
[00:20:17] Unknown:
No. Vote harder, Dennis. Isn't that the slogan? Really get some big heavyweight voting in. That's what we I'm I'm doing some press ups. I'm gonna really mark my voting card very heavily. As I've mentioned, I've never voted, Dennis, ever. I mean, I don't do that. Well, I don't blame you. I mean, I I have. I did fall for it a long, long time ago. Oh, god.
[00:20:39] Unknown:
I know. I know.
[00:20:41] Unknown:
Well, it should be hanging whatever you've got to hang in shame. That's just shocking. That's appalling. But I couldn't even I've I've said it before. I couldn't tell anybody why I didn't vote when I was young but my instincts were that none of these people were actually any good at all and this turns out to be completely 100% true. None of them, not one of them. I mean, Enoch was good. Maybe there's a couple of people like I said, I played that clip the other week. I don't know if you call it Liz Truss. Now that she's out of power actually telling the truth about who's got more control, I. E. The Bank of England. She literally said that. She said, you know, we we can't sack the governor of the Bank of England but the prime minister can be sacked.
And We can't believe that. Yeah. But she's she's the I mean, I'm maybe I'm over egging the custard with it, but she's the only sort of ex prime minister that's even come even close to telling anything true.
[00:21:27] Unknown:
Yeah. Don't you think they they have never got an air of arrogance where they they can all play speak about these things knowing that things can't be done to stop it?
[00:21:38] Unknown:
Well, I think things I think things can be done. I just don't think we're thinking in the right ways to know exactly what we're enough to stop it, are we? Or even if we're powerful, then I'll fail at all. Yeah. I guess it all depends how you design how we how we want to determine what power is. I mean, it seems to me that, you know, when you were on last time, you mentioned soft communism. Yep. I was thinking about the word soft, in regards to all of them. Many of the topics that we discussed, particularly, you know, this control of power. And the soft power is the more lethal of the types, really, because this is the one that's worn people down.
Yeah. It's worn them down. And so when we're trying to, you know, set people on fire internally with some kind of passion or interest in their own life and I have to work on myself with that as well. It's an it's an ongoing thing that we've all got to keep doing. You can see that this soft cushioning effect that's taking place, particularly since 1945 around here and in most of the Western countries, has been staggeringly effective at sort of robbing people of their will to determine how their life turns out. So everybody's now hypnotized by the economy, by, a war that they're trying that they're just making up. They're just manufacturing a war out of thin air. There's literally no reason to have a war with anybody at all. None of these things. There's any plausible or sensible coherent reason to do any of them.
But because these are the only things that are spoken about on the mainstream media, everybody's agenda in their own head is either are you for it or against it? Well, I'm actually for something else completely, to be quite honest. That's me personally.
[00:23:15] Unknown:
Well, to be honest, if if you want my humble opinion, the only way things will change is you've got to look to America because America if America falls, the world falls. Mhmm. What America needs, it's not an election. It's not a president. It's a dictator. A dictator who is probably high up in the army with enough power to galvanize an army or parts of the army to be able to take over and then arrest things. Yes. That's the only way they're gonna solve it. Only way they're gonna solve it. Trump ain't gonna do it. Biden ain't gonna do it. No. Just a dictator.
Yep. But whether if that's gonna ever happen. You know?
[00:23:59] Unknown:
I know. Well, they keep rolling out the word Nazi as fast as they possibly can now. It's obviously losing its weight, so they have to say it a 1000 times a day now. You know. Nazi, Nazi. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. You know, it's just got ridiculous and, it was always pretty ridiculous to start off with. Hey, I've got a let me just following on about that mic migrant stuff, and I mentioned this to you before. I don't know whether I've played this before in the show recently because I've had it around for a couple of weeks. I might have, but it's definitely worth another rerun. Run. This is an old soak.
A soak is an English term for a man that is not permanently drunk, but he's nearly permanently drunk, if you know what I mean. He's just topped up. Mhmm. So he's sort of semi coherent, but he's a suck, basically. From Great Yarmouth. Listen, this is this is that party political broadcast as communicated genuinely by a man in the street in Great Yarmouth.
[00:24:48] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. What's No. What's life like in Great Yarmouth these days? Shithole. Shithole? Yes. Why do you say that? Those are all over Mongolians and every bloody thing. Jesus. They're all on social security. They're all. No good. Now Has it got worse as time's gone on? I pay my council tax. Bollocks to that council. You're not happy? No. No. I'm as a shithole. Okay. Has it got worse? Absolutely. So when did it start going downhill? After the war, we had a challenge. Great people. We had a horse group. We had the the Greeks. Restaurant, the army was great.
No. I live around here. God, the dustbins are full. Nobody know what they do. It looks a bit disheveled, a bit in decline. Says, oh, yeah, I'm with this. Okay, mate. And I'll go pay my council tax. Stop paying it. See what they do. I know. Just stop paying it. I'll tell you what. Why can't they pull these down and out in silence, like, as in the bloody town? Maybe if I can. Yeah. Yeah. Good idea. Have a good day.
[00:26:13] Unknown:
You're like that man. What do you think, Dennis?
[00:26:16] Unknown:
Well, he's always saying, but everybody knows it. Really.
[00:26:21] Unknown:
Like I said, England's Volley, not just where he is. Well, I can't I can't accept too much of that defeatist talk around here, Dennis. Even though even if fallen, I've told you. Well, I guess it all depends which bit you think it has. Maybe it's got to fall completely for any chance of it being restored.
[00:26:38] Unknown:
Are people gonna Oh, the wells has fallen because because you can only drive 20 mile an hour. And there, right? Mhmm. London's fallen, because Canon's in charge and these U Less cameras. Mhmm. And the rest of Britain's just just neglected. I mean, Scotland's fallen with that cranky woman.
[00:27:00] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:27:01] Unknown:
You know, she wrecked Scotland, so there isn't much less then, is there?
[00:27:07] Unknown:
It's an odd situation where huge numbers of people, us, are being dominated by a bunch of pack animals who, frankly, are not that bright and are definitely under the control of something else. And that something else that's controlling them obviously must have a great deal of s h one t on them. It just must. I can't Of course. You know, the one of the things that no one the media never observed this, because they can't because they're completely gone, we don't really have a media that can communicate anything of any value to us. I mean, I know I'm only stating the bleeding obvious here. But Mhmm. It's never pointed out that there is never one coherent energized dissenting voice against this that comes out of any orifice of any poll politician at all. Nothing.
[00:28:00] Unknown:
Well, there's no problem.
[00:28:03] Unknown:
All of them. That's the problem. Absolutely. They're all mediocre. They're all in love with themselves. They love the power that they've got, which is unearned. They like being in charge of things. They haven't a clue what to do about a thing and they don't care. And and I'm I'm not actually expecting them to care. I mean, these sorts of character types don't have that as a quality inside of them. They're only really cared about I know it's an old cliche, but it's true. They're only really caring about themselves. But I think the main thing would be that if if pushback comes and starts to pick up speed, they are naturally anxious about the filth and dirt that they've been involved in possibly coming to light in front of the eyes and ears and hearts of a mobilized motivated population.
And that's where we still have to work on that because I think, although we look at it, say, as the big picture in terms of political structures or the world situation. I tend to really look at this in terms of my street and the people that I meet. And if we can work, and I try to all the time. I'm always attempting to communicate with people about anything, you know, to pull people out of a particular rut and to get them possibly, you know, would sir, would you would you mind awfully being interested in the outcome of your own life? What do you think of it as an idea? You know? And it's trying to move, like, through I'll ask you a question. I'll ask you a question. Yep.
[00:29:26] Unknown:
If if, say, I don't know the, you know, percentage, but you say when COVID was around and 8 just say 80% of the nation wore masks. If tomorrow, the government came out and said, we must all wear masks again, what percentage do you think would still wear masks?
[00:29:46] Unknown:
Maybe 70%.
[00:29:47] Unknown:
I think there'd be a slight larger problem. I think so.
[00:29:53] Unknown:
It does. It does. But hasn't it always ever been thus? Is it just the case maybe that in the past, because there was still a racial coherence to the nation, which there can be, a nation can't be racially incoherent because it's not a nation then, that although we obviously had crooked politicians going back into the 19th 18th centuries, yes, they existed back then, their ability to actually wreak havoc was massively, less than what it is right now. This sort of the organization of the system through electronic control systems and blah de blah de blah de blah de blah means that any old goofball, and that's unfortunately what we're burdened with, can now be manipulated into a position of wrecking things on a much larger scale than they ever could. So, it's this sense that no one is literally speaking for us? I mean, you are. You speak for us. I seek to speak for us. Many of the listeners here will seek to speak for us, but we've got to overcome certain sort of, I think, barriers in one to one communication. You know, when that that person that you're talking to starts to shrivel a bit, you can see them and they're reaching for their mask. Don't put it on, sir. It's very silly, you know. Be people people can see in in my 3rd documentary,
[00:31:05] Unknown:
the secret Masonic victory of World War 2, where all this began. Yep. You know, like, people can see this on, you know, the website, monetary publishing.com. Mhmm. You know, and that's the documentary, the third of the third of 3, which which explains where all this began and where it where it's taking us, you know. So there is a power behind the government. The government does what it's told. Yeah. And, you know, us ordinary people are outnumbered by our own normies.
[00:31:40] Unknown:
That's the biggie, isn't it? That really is the that is the big concern. That really is the big concern. I think maybe when you were on before, I know I've certainly mentioned this many times that, and as you were talking there about the people wearing masks, you know, it was when I saw how many people were rapidly complying with insane directions. How many people don't have, an internal navigation system for themselves? They haven't got one. It it's that's the bit that's truly chilling. That's the Stephen King horror, novel, Dennis.
That's the one. Okay. It really is that it's the fog, which he didn't write. That was written by some other guy, but it's it's the fog that's in people's heads, and this sort of mental torpor. Are there ways through it? I think is this new? I don't think it is new. I think, you know, I have to operate on the basis I tend to that human nature has never changed. It never does. Okay. We've got more, bells and whistles and complex systems and you have to listen to these people using this modern language which is complete guff, the whole lot of it, you know, diversity, equity, and whatever it is. And, all this other inclusion, you know, all this nonsense.
Diversity is our strength. It's a completely meaningless sentence. But the fact that some idiot politician said it means that it gets reported ad nauseam and people suddenly think that there might actually be something in this, which, of course, there isn't. It's a ridiculous thing to say, but they keep saying these ridiculous things.
[00:33:16] Unknown:
What a lot of people don't realize is is all this immigration started a long long time ago, straight after world war 1 in Germany. Yep. You know, in in the Rhine Valley, what the French did, and again, you can see it in the in the third documentary. What they did, they got the colonial black soldiers, which fought which fought for France, during world war 1 and pushed them on the Germans in the Rhine Valley. And they were they were armed to the teeth. Yeah. Took any white woman they wanted. Mhmm. And even even the people when back in England heard, complained about it, you know, how how the Germans were treated.
Well, this has been an agenda from well, let's admit to that, the the Calergi plan.
[00:34:03] Unknown:
Yep. It's probably even older than that. The idea of subjugating a people comes probably from military circles going back to Rome, predating Rome. You know, how do you do you know, if you've if you've defeated their army in a battle, how do you then subdue the rest of the population who, if they were to get organized, would be a major problem for you? So, I mean, what did they do? They used to put on games, circuses, bread and circuses. I'm not saying everything the Romans did was bad but that's what, you know, they learned these things or they they had received them from previous civilizations that had used these techniques to control and subdue people.
So we, you know, and we've had the ultimate bread and syrup. We've had the television. Holy moly, you look at that thing and you realize I mean the television rules. It is the to paraphrase Tolkien, a lidless eye, wreathed in light, blasting garbage into people's heads 247.
[00:35:00] Unknown:
Not really just I think about the television, you know.
[00:35:04] Unknown:
No. No. I do.
[00:35:05] Unknown:
Is that they didn't give everybody a free television because it's in every household. It's the perfect propaganda machine, and yet there's no charges for it.
[00:35:19] Unknown:
We're the British Brainwashing Corporation. Oh, yeah. And we've set it up so that you'll be actually paying for your brainwashing. How about that? Oh, that's jolly good. Yes. Well, you need a license to watch it. Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. A license. You need a license to watch your own promotion. Can't get the red brand that one for now.
[00:35:37] Unknown:
I mean, if we just can't they can't sleep. They can't get their engine and get no license to watch TV. No. And I don't blame them.
[00:35:45] Unknown:
Well, in its defense, which is gonna I'm gonna come across as a knob here, but in defense of the old BBC, the idea of being able to watch television without adverts is really good. Although, you could say from a governmental point of view, this is excellent because we've got full spectrum control of everything we put in front of them. And this is true. And yet, you know, I don't subscribe to the idea that, say, every university professor that's ever existed or people that advised on those great shows that they used to do, the natural history shows, the documentaries. Their documentary team used to be pretty good. It wouldn't have gone into areas that you've gone into because they couldn't, but they did some good stuff.
I saw one. They did one years ago. It only aired once probably early seventies about Russians being held in London during the tail end of World War 2 and how they were mercilessly returned back to Russia by the authorities who knew exactly what would happen to them and did it anyway. And and it was a good documentary about that. It was rough. It was unpleasant. It was distasteful. It had that element of raw truth in it. Of course, they couldn't go to the key topics that we talk about or at least think are allowed to think about. Actually, we're probably not even allowed to think about them soon, are we? But, those topics, it didn't it didn't cover that kind of stuff, but it was excellent.
And so, the old stuff was good. Of course, then they they did give us the world at war, which at the time was amazing because, you know, you've got sir Larry Olivier, in his braces looking like a journalist, the man of the people reading this stuff out from behind a typewriter or whatever. But of course, in due course, we find that that's only about 30% of the story and the other 70% twists away everything, all the elements and the sort of conditioning he was he was trying to instill in people. It undermines all that, you know, so but then you already knew that.
[00:37:35] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I'll cover that again as well. That that was one of the the biggest propaganda, documentaries of the seventies. A lot of people remember that one. They do. And it it it was it was bad. I mean, I covered that again in the last documentary, but, god, it's I know. Awful.
[00:37:52] Unknown:
Yeah. I was bedazzled by it because I'm a I'm a young teenager. I didn't know any better. And I always remember being young at that period, you know, as an infant in the sixties and a teenager in the seventies, that World War 2 just seemed a 1000000 years ago. It seemed so so far away. And of course, the the black and white footage and the nature of the camera work seem to date it even more. One of the things that's interesting with this AI stuff when you apply it to old movie films, you bring them to life. It's as if suddenly all of history is just immediately on your doorstep. Did you did you see that, you know, what's his name? Peter Jackson, the guy that did the Lord of the Rings thing.
Did you see the, that piece of work he did called, I think, they shall never grow old? I think that was it. It was about World War 1. Did you get to see that? No. I haven't saw it. I've got a copy of it. I'll send it to you. It's it's astonishing. It's really an amazing bit of technical work. They took all they got a lot of World War 1 footage, him and his team. They were and it was from, 2018. So the 100th anniversary of the cessation of hostilities, supposedly, certainly military ones in Flanders and elsewhere. And, they put all these clips together, and then in interviews with Jackson, he was using all this sort of computer enhancement stuff.
So they were filling in all the missing frames. They got the frame right up to whatever it is, 24 frames per second. Is it these days or 3rd? I don't know what it is. But they got the frame right up to the actual standard movie rate. They then colorized it. They enhanced the sharpness of all the images, and as an absolute amazing touch, they got, lip sync actors to look at what these, in many cases, British troops were saying as they were digging these trenches. And there's a Yorkshire regiment a Yorkshire regiment. Right? So because you could see it was on that, they they walked past this thing and they're out in the field and this bloke literally is talking like I'm talking like that. Right? You'll get over there.
And it was just it was amazing and the the it's the it's the weight cuts. They're running. So you'd be familiar with that all black and white footage where it's jumping around and there's, you know, that kind of stuff. Right? They show you 3 or 4 guys walking towards the front in its original footage and it's hopping around a bit, you know, and that's it. It's all all, you know, little Tommy Atkinson off to the war and all this kind of stuff. Then it slows down, then it sharpens up, then it goes from black and white to color, and then the sound comes in. And I'm not kidding. It was as if someone had gone down onto the trenches with an iPhone and filmed it and put it on TikTok. It's absolutely amazing, and I just went you go wow. It's absolutely stunning bit of work, and Jackson has said he said every bit of old footage that we've got should have this treatment as a and it should because it really it brought it back in such a powerful way. And the, the basis for it as well was that in the sixties, 19 sixties, the BBC were able to record interviews with many of the last, infantrymen that had fought in World War 1, because they're what they'd have been in their twenties in the 19 tens or so. They were now in their late sixties early seventies and many of them of course had suffered a lot and were dying from you know injuries and things.
And, so they did a lot of really high quality audio recordings and these commentaries by these guys are laid over this film. I'm gonna send it to you because it'll I think it will see it's it's an amazing bit of work. It really is. And some of the comments from these guys were absolutely incredible. One guy said, well, I was 17 at the time. I'm paraphrasing from this. I'm 17 at the time. He said, I can't wait to get there. He said, when we were coming up to the front, he said, I could hear it all going off. He said, I was getting more and more excited, he said, And I was really worried. He said, because I thought it might be over before I got there. He go, what?
[00:41:52] Unknown:
You know? Well, you know, they they can always they can always get the 1st documentary, the greatest story for the for the truth.
[00:41:58] Unknown:
Mhmm. Yep. They can. Well, maybe we could go knock on the doors of the BBC and say, do you wanna do it right now? What do you say? We've been paying for you all our lives. Can we actually use the budget and get it done right?
[00:42:11] Unknown:
Maybe we should put mine on TV. Yeah.
[00:42:14] Unknown:
Dennis, I'm I'm all for it. Do we what do we do? Do we get a petition going, or do we march? Do we or do we have?
[00:42:21] Unknown:
Well Or do we Yeah. Well, you you you can march.
[00:42:24] Unknown:
Yeah. Can I? Thanks very much for that. Anybody else wants to march with me?
[00:42:28] Unknown:
No. No. No. No. I don't all that stuff's a nonsense. Just on the website though, you know, just just to make sure people know what we're talking about. Yep.
[00:42:37] Unknown:
Yeah. Sure. So if you want to and I know many listeners will know this but, I'm here with Dennis Wise and Dennis is an auteur. He's the creator of 3, maybe 4, but 3 incredibly substantial documentaries about the 20th century particularly. And the one he's most noted for is Adolf Hitler the greatest story never told, which is a view of that conflict in that period in history from the other side or from many other sides, bringing together material hitherto most people will not be familiar with at all. And that really is the response I get from everybody that sees it for the first time is basically, I never knew any of this stuff. I go, no. Not surprising really. Not surprising.
You know what, Dennis? Now might be a good time to play this, David Irving clip, which just came across my desk about 40 minutes before this show. So I'll just play it. I don't even know what he's he's just talking about some stuff. It's 2 and a half minutes. Here we go. It might be relevant. Churchill said to Kennedy, you watch when Adolf Hitler begins bombing London and bombing towns in Britain like Boston
[00:43:40] Unknown:
and Lincoln, towns with their counterparts in United States. You Americans will have to come in, won't you? You can't just stand side aside and watch us suffering. But he knew from code breaking. He knew from reading the German air force signals, which we had broken on March on May 26, 1940, that Hitler had given orders that no British town was to be bombed. London was completely embargoed. German air force was allowed to bomb ports and harbors and dockyards, but not towns as such. And Churchill was greatly aggrieved by this. And he wondered how much longer Hitler could avoid carrying on war like this. But Hitler, as we know, carried on until September 1940 without bombing any English towns. The embargo stayed in force.
You can see it in the German archives now. We know from the code breaking of the German signals that Churchill was reading Hitler's orders to the German Air Force, not on any account to bomb these towns. So, there was no way that we could drag in the Americans that way unless we could provoke Hitler to do it. Which is why on August 25, 1940, Churchill gave the order to the British Air Force to go and bomb Berlin. Although the chief of the bomber command, the chief of staff of the British Air Force warned him that if we bomb Berlin, Hitler may very well lift the embargo on bombing British towns. And Churchill just twinkled because it was what he wanted, of course. At 9:15 that morning, he telephoned personally bomber command himself to order the bombing of Berlin. A 100 bombers to go and bomb Berlin. They went out bomb Berlin that night, and Hitler still didn't move.
Hitler ordered another raid on Berlin, and so it went on for the 7 or 10 days until finally on September 4th, Hitler lost his patience and made that famous speech in the sport palace in Berlin in which he said this madman has bombed Berlin now 7 times. He bombs Berlin once more than I shall not only just attack their towns, I shall wipe them out. A very famous speech. Of course, German school children are now told about the Hitler speech. They're not told about what went first. They're not told how Churchill sent out deliberately to provoke the bombing of his own capital. And on the following day, Churchill ordered Berlin bombed again.
And the result was the German air force started bombing the docks in London, the east end of London, finally the City of London and the West End on the 6th 7th September 1940. And in September 1940, 7,000 Londoners were killed in the bombing as a result of Churchill's deliberate provocation. The files are there. The archives are there. No wonder Harold Macmillan didn't want my book published.
[00:46:09] Unknown:
That did seem an appropriate clip in many ways, Dennis.
[00:46:13] Unknown:
Certainly did. Certainly did. Well, we all know what church what what Churchill was.
[00:46:19] Unknown:
It was our prime minister, Dennis, and he led us to victory over the evil Germans. I read it in a newspaper so it must be true.
[00:46:30] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. That's if that's what you believe.
[00:46:34] Unknown:
I'm being sarcastic, cynical, and disgusting all at the same time. Good question in here on the chat from, XO. For you, Dennis, I quite this is interesting. Can Dennis tell us about some of the reactions to the greatest story, your first, your epic work from his friends and family when it was first released. What kind of reactions did he get from those people, I guess, close to you to some degree?
[00:47:01] Unknown:
Well, close to me, most people close to me knew about it anyway. Mhmm. You know, as discussed it with close friends and and family over the years. So other than that, the people who saw it for the first time actually have the biggest reaction. In fact, life changing. And even now, you can go to, IMDB and read the comments. Yes. And the 10 out of tens far outweigh the 1 out of tens, which which were all coordinated. I don't believe that they watched the document the document at all. No. Certainly not all of it. But the 10 out of tens and the reviews are are are stunning, absolutely stunning.
And it's it's just one of them documentaries, I think, which, came just at the right time. I think people must have been ready to accept something. Probably, you know, there there's certain things happening around that time. Maybe the Trump election. I don't know. But certainly around that time, there was an appetite for truth. Maybe 911 was another one, but the greatest story never told, As many people say in in in the reviews, quote that after watching it, it really is the greatest story never told.
[00:48:23] Unknown:
I think it really is. And it's just such a huge story. I mean, we're listening there to David Irvin. He's done an awful lot of telling about it, And I know he's physically not in great nick right now. Somebody, Eric, puts this in. He says, according to David Irvin, mister Hitler said in 1945, the truth will one day be told by an Englishman. Perhaps that Englishman is you, Denis. What do you think? Or is it David Irving? Or is it somebody else? Or is it a combination of English? What do you think? To say, but
[00:48:59] Unknown:
I know a lot of the reactions were when people finally took it all in. And you gotta remember, a lot of people have watched this documentary, and they're actually researching while they're watching because they can't believe what they're seeing. Yes. And it certainly gets to a point where many, many, many people have quoted us as actually, once they realized what had been lost, it it it actually brought us into tears. Such was the, you know, the devastation of feeling when they look at today and they look at what could have been. Yeah.
You know, grown men being made to cry.
[00:49:36] Unknown:
Well, I was one of them, Dennis. And I often am, and I don't have a problem with it. I'm not surprised. It's, you know, the that was major. Reading Hellstorm by Tom Goodrich had a similar That's another one. Yeah. Effect on me. And it it opened up a can of worms which I knew was there, but it was opened up with such precision, what you did, to go into all the details of it. It's layered. You go it's not a simple story. I mean, it is at the heart of it, but in terms of the you require all that telling of it because people are dealing with a lifetime of lies.
So there's so many things that shake you up. There's obviously the information directly itself that you'd hitherto had never seen. You'd never seen this before. Suddenly, it's compiled in an easily accessible way. You get taken through the story and, of course, as minute after minute of it goes by, the impact is just increases as as you go through. There's that aspect of it. But the other one, of course, the hidden aspect, the one that we're dealing with and have been dealing with all our lives, but we're dealing with a lot, is the fact that your governments are your enemy and lie to you as a matter of course all the time.
It's irrelevant to them whether you know the truth documentaries, which we call the
[00:51:01] Unknown:
trilogy of truth, by the way. Yeah. 3 of the documentaries, which we call the trilogy of truth, by the way. Right. And it it it starts off with the the story of Anna Hitler and and the World War 2. Yeah. And like I said, people can research it as they go along, and they'll they'll see what they will see. The second one, communism by the backdoor, then explained the fact that communism and Western freemasonry joined together to defeat the Germans, And so as we talked about earlier on, this this slow communism, which is, you know, based on the favorite society, which creeps up slowly and surely.
Everyone talks about it. You go on the news, and and they're all talking about it, you know, the migrants and all this, but nothing's ever done. More migrants are piling in. And then in the 3rd documentary, I realized that the impact of freemasonry has around on the not just the world, but mainly in Britain, which has run us for 300 years. And It has. Yeah. The free masonry is is what people don't understand because they control left and right. So when Giersdair would turn around and says, I'm gonna do this when the Tories are out, he's only gonna do exactly the same of what the Tories did when they were in.
[00:52:14] Unknown:
Exactly. Yeah. It is. I mean, I was listening to Alan Watt, you know, the Scottish fellow who shuffled off this model coil a couple of years ago. Did you ever hear any of his work? Sorry. Who's that? Alan Watt. Not Alan Watts. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Alan Watts. Alan Watt. This is the he was I mean, okay. He didn't go into it precise. He didn't come to it with the framing that you do, and I think your framing is closest the way I think about it. But Alan Watt was brilliant, really a brilliant researcher, looking at the machinations of the power structures and he he found a way of talking about them without getting into too much trouble. I think he was completely conscious of that all the way through. But I had a clip from him just a few I mean, he died 2,022, I think it was or was it 21. So recently, there was nothing, untoward about it. He just, he just had a problem and and he shuffled off this mortal coil, but he was talking about masonry. And he said pretty much what you'd said that Britain is run by masonry and has been for a long time, and it has.
I mean, what's that book by Roberson, Truth of a conspiracy? He's talking about all of these things, you know. And if the judiciary is riddled with these creatures, which it no doubt is, this in part explains these ludicrous so called judgments. They're nothing of the sort, of course. They're just agenda pushers. As they keep nudge, nudge, nudge, softly nudging, nudging, nudging us towards a precipice. It's difficult to see any other sort of coherent reason and, you know, I'm coming to that Cudriano quote again. If I've got the enemy in front of me and a traitor and I view freemasons as traitors, as simple as that. He said the traitors get it.
I mean, is it not the case that with regards to the true law of these lands, which are based on and derived from and are of biblical teachings, that you don't add anything to the law nor do you take it away. So why do we need freemasons at all? We don't need them, do we?
[00:54:05] Unknown:
Well, we don't, and it's explained completely in the in the secret of a sorry victory.
[00:54:11] Unknown:
Yep. Yes. Obviously, a lot of privileges of being a member of that exclusive and elite club, Dennis. I've never been invited, so I've not even had the thrill of turning them down. Have you ever been invited to become an apron wearer?
[00:54:30] Unknown:
Not that I'm aware of. No. Well, then again, I'm oblivious to such things, so they may well they may have approached. We're we're even realizing it. Yeah. But yeah. But I think it's not There's only one there's only one website, actually. Not not just my DVDs, but but books and other DVDs on the subject, which, you know, we keep seeing it at monetarypublishing.com, which is only gonna be up for as long as as as we can fight the the enemy. Mhmm. Because the enemy of forever pushing to to wipe it off off off the website. But some fabulous work on there, like, say, Hellstorm, and, some other great great authors of books on there, fabulous.
[00:55:15] Unknown:
Yep. Yep. It is. It's a good gathering. Moneytreepublishing.com, everyone. I'm sure you know of it. I'll stick the link in end of the video afterwards because it's important. All your works there, isn't it? All your works available from Moneytree. Yeah. I mean,
[00:55:30] Unknown:
I was working on another documentary at one point before before I was ill, and it really take a lot out of it. You know, I mean, to do 6 hour documentary and to edit it, etcetera. If it really people can't understand quite, just what it what it does to your health wise. And I've done is it 3, 6 hour ones now? And I was I was working on another one, but I I was just too ill to complete it. And I Understood. I finally realized that, you know, I succumb to nature. You can't find father time.
[00:56:02] Unknown:
No. No. You can't. It required I mean, it's the mental exhaustion of people. What's that then? Well Oh, that's when you're thinking and your brain's melting because you're having to deal with all these things, you know. When when I'm researching these these documentaries,
[00:56:20] Unknown:
I find out things which which shocked me, which even I didn't know about. And so that has an acclimatial effect on you. Like, for instance, one of them, I didn't know about the the revolution down in Mexico when when all religion was banned, and, you know, people were being arrested just just for wearing a dog collar and even even shot. When was that? That When was that? Yeah. That that that was the the the the Cristeros. They're they're the revolution down in Mexico. Communist government took took over, banned banned our religions, and a war start civil war started.
You know, believes in Christ against the communist. So, eventually, the laws were put on the shelf just like, you know, a lot of laws are. They they can come back anytime, But Mexico survived it. But, like I said, you know, come come back anytime, and we go back into the same situation. Something like that should've been normal all over the world.
[00:57:24] Unknown:
It should. I mean, I know that the I think South America isn't South America where the Jesuits first trialed communism? I've forgotten which country. It was in the 1800 or maybe even earlier than that. They trialed a a communistic approach to the Jesuits because, of course, the Jesuits aren't really they're not really good guys, you see. They're not really very good. Of tradition. Yeah. They do. I mean, they they are known as apparently being astonishingly good educators. I mean, and if anybody's got a copy of Tragedy and Hope by Carole Quigley, Quigley was educated by Jesuits and was a Jesuit. It's hard to argue with that. I mean, it's an astonishing bit of intellectual writing. I mean, it's just off the charts. And that was 1965.
He was Clinton's history teacher, wasn't he, at Georgetown University, I think, Quigley. Well, that's interesting because
[00:58:15] Unknown:
I I only found out every day like Oxford University, who I've always said, like, if ever I hear that word, then the red flag goes up. But I found out the other day that Oxford University, it's like 5 colleges, and they have, you know, you've got your elites that talk there, and they're obviously taught different to what we're taught. But, like, why they have in America, they have the skull and bones. In Oxford, they have a similar group called the group, which, you know, you have to be initiated to go into. Very fascinating and and mirrors what was on in America, you know, the leagues league colleges in America.
Yes. So yeah. It's,
[00:58:57] Unknown:
it seems to be a habitual thing. World. Yeah. It is a closed world. And you and I are not in it, thankfully. I mean, I'm serious as well. I mean, thankfully, I wouldn't want to be in it. Shout out to Chimom or Killmom, I think it is. The Jesuit missions in Paraguay. That's what I was thinking of, Dennis. It was Paraguay. Thank you for that. So, yeah, down in Paraguay. Yeah. They did a lot of sort of community work, you know, that word. Because, you know, I whenever sort of authorities start talking about building community, you can pretty sure they're what they actually mean is destroying it. They the organic community that occurs in the village is what we all want. That's why we all want to live in Hobbiton with a a pub and a village green and fields. That's why we naturally want to live like that because that is our natural undisturbed way of living. It's where wisdom can grow naturally.
But of course, power structure people are not into that at all. No. You've got to pay attention to me and my crap ideas, all that kind of stuff. Yeah. We're just at halfway we're halfway through, top of the hour here. You listen to Paul English Live here on WBN 324. We're here every Thursday 8 PM to 10 PM UK, 4 PM to 6 PM in the US today, but next week, as I've said, 3 PM to 5 PM is that finally our clocks go forward. I think it's time for a song, Dennis. So I'm gonna play I'm gonna play Which song are you gonna play? Well, do you want me to set I'm going to play the one by free. That's the one I'm going to Alright. Well, there's a bit of a story to the other one, but
[01:00:29] Unknown:
the reason I picked 3 Yeah. Was because, obviously, I think the last time I was on, people realized they were big Elvis fan. Well, I also believe that Paul Rodgers, the lead singers free, has the best rock voice in the world.
[01:00:48] Unknown:
He's very yeah. He's he's quite languid. He's got a certain range, but he does it really well. I just think he's never been in enough good bands, but I agree with you. I think you're right. Well, he probably haven't signed a full sell your soul contract. Yeah. You get the idea that he has. He's kind of part of that little sort of group out there. He was I mean, he was close with the guys from Led Zeppelin. I know you've made it, but they were on the he was on the same record label. Was it Bad Company was or something like that? Which were the later bands and they did some good stuff. This this track for is this with Kossoff on guitar? Yes. Paul Kossoff? Yeah.
He's, he was a good guitar player. Here we go. This is oh, you're this is Wishing Well by Free.
[01:04:59] Unknown:
34 radio.
[01:05:03] Unknown:
Attention all listeners. Are you seeking uninterrupted access to WBN 324 talk radio despite incoming censorship hurdles? Well, it's a breeze. Just grab and download opera browser, then type in wbn324.zil, and stay tuned for
[01:05:30] Unknown:
Thank you for listening to WBN 324 Talk Radio. Thank you for listening to WBN 324 Talk Radio. Hi, and, welcome back to the second hour here at Paul English Live on Thursdays. I'm with Dennis Wise. And both of us were just banging our heads listening to Free, weren't we, Dennis? Were you banging yours? What a vice. What a vice. It is good. It is good. It really is good. It's sort of smoky, isn't it?
[01:06:02] Unknown:
He's got that sore, hasn't he?
[01:06:04] Unknown:
Yeah. He's done some great vocal performances. But I I mean, the thing is I I just their material, the good stuff is really good and the rest of it is, you know, but I I grew up listening to that, playing cards. This is when I'm, what, 15, 16, 17. Playing cards. Couldn't get into the pub. Sat in my mate's room. That's on the record player. You remember record players. We had record players. Right? That coffee, playing risk or cards, eating a lot of ginger nuts. So that's that was my concern. Well, some of us have been around a bit, Dennis, you know, so yeah. You don't remember ginger nuts? I still buy ginger nuts to this day really. It's quite sad, isn't it? But it's the cheapest biscuit in the supermarket and it's the one I like the most. How about that? I'm just a northern tight wad. Some habits you just never get rid of, you know. Them and fig rolls.
Fig rolls and free. A fantastic voice. Really a fantastic voice. So, good good pick there. Yeah. Excellent. Where were we? Oh, yeah. We were mired in the in the fun and joys of freemasonry in the history of the 20th century, weren't we?
[01:07:12] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. Yes. We were. So I I found it fascinating. I really did. I didn't realize the control that that they had. I really didn't. I mean, it is like, obviously, during World War 2, Hitler would destroy freemasonry in every country he invaded. And it was, you know, a means a secret means of in infiltrating a country, infiltrating the government, and and, you know, putting in the policies of freemasonry, which has always been left wing. You look at, you know, the the French revolution, which, again, I cover, you know Yeah. In that third documentary. Yeah. It's it's it's a left wing revolution, free masonry behind it.
[01:07:58] Unknown:
Was it French days? The French revolution? Was it French? What do you think? Yeah.
[01:08:02] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. The French revolution. Well, what I learned the other day, I was listening to an old podcast of Diana Spingola. Yeah. And she actually, she cited that the the American civil war was a was a was the first Bolshevik revolution. So, and she explained it quite eloquently as she as she did. She said a lot of communist arrived in America, and all the tactics that they used, the north against the south, was typical of a Bolshevik army.
[01:08:33] Unknown:
I think so. Yeah. This pattern is repeated. I mean, certainly, in terms of prop the propaganda stage or the getting a hold of printing presses is a key part of the whole thing. Pamphleteering, I mean, it was rampant on the French revolution. Had a record of it. So I think it's in, The Nameless War by Archibald Moll Ramsey. That's a name you won't forget, even though I nearly did. He's talks about something like 30,000 pamphlets. This is in the mid 1600 to get people riled up to act and do things, you know. To become part of the designer mob that was wheeled out of the city, you know. And the French Revolution, is pretty similar. Pretty similar sort of thing because it took them an awful long time to get that rolling.
The French actually weren't really interested but the high up masonic corrupted French, they were. They were the ones that were pushing it like mad. But whenever the fighting broke out, they always retreated pretty quickly back to their villas or wherever they were staying at the time. Well, I've actually said a comment, in in the comment on Rumble.
[01:09:45] Unknown:
Yeah. Where they're saying, the rituals of freemasons are identical to witchcraft, which they are. Yes. If you research that, you know what I mean? So it's it's it is a, you know, it's a satanic secret society.
[01:09:59] Unknown:
Yeah. I've got a document kicking around somewhere about the origins of freemasonry, masonry. And of course, I don't have it to hand right now because I wasn't necessarily, but I might dig it up when you're on again. It was to do with some meetings in some coffee houses in England in the early 1600 before it had sort of taken a hold in the actual masonry club as it were because, obviously, Freemasons were these Masons that, you know, made these cathedrals and things like that. But in terms of the origins, they were talking about it happening about 5 years after the death of Christ and I think it was Herod Antipater. I might have got the name wrong, so Dutch and Paul over me, But they were massively the power structure of the day, so it's no different. As we said, human nature never changes. It's the same thing. The form's different. You know, the technology's different, but the intent is always the same.
And they were concerned at the speed with which people were becoming reinvigorated, with understanding the message of Christ. His people were were becoming galvanized in that way. And therefore, their hold over them was diminishing rapidly. So they set up kind of a counterforce, which is the root of of the masonic masonic subversion of organized religion. Yeah. It's funny how you keep mentioning these
[01:11:18] Unknown:
these items of history, which which I do cover in that that third documentary. Mhmm. Harid was, possibly even before Herod, you know, to talk of Babylon as well. Yes. You know, Nimrod is is is said to have been the 1st freemason building the, the tower of Babel. Mhmm. So, you know, it is a a long long history hidden to us all.
[01:11:46] Unknown:
It is. I don't have oh, it's on my other bookshelf. If I my arms are 84 feet long. I can't reach it from here. I'm not getting they are I've got a little pamphlet from, a vicar. I think it's a vicar or a reverend or or whatever from Hull, I think it is. I forgot his name. It's an excellent little book. I got it last year and, it's talking about the Tower of Babel and about why God, according to the narrative, got so hacked off. And one of the reasons was the arrogance of these people, in saying we will how did he phrase it? I'm I'm trying to get up, at some point. I'm not gonna be able to do it for this show.
He's talking about the fact that they said, we will build a tower so high it will reach to heaven, Then we can talk to God but but whenever we need to we can call him down and he can come and see us when when we want to see him. And, the way he phrases it, God's response basically is I'm in charge. You're not. End of. That's it. You don't come at my bet. I don't come at your beck and call. You're going to do exactly how I've designed this thing and that's why they were smashed. So there is this condition, it seems to spring up in certain types of individuals. Maybe they are of a completely different spiritual background, you know, they're creatures from a different dimension. They're certainly from a darker one that most the most of us are at all interested in. Who who basically will not bend the knee to God. But isn't this the story you were mentioning the Nephilim earlier and this this isn't this the sort of crux of it, you know. We're not you're not in charge. We are. No. I don't think so. And it's these two factions that have been at war down here for 1000 of years, you know? Exactly.
[01:13:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Exactly. And it's all covered, like I said, in the in the secret of the sonic victory Mhmm. Of world war 2, which which the the title says, you know, the victory of world war 2, which it was, but I also go into, you know, the details of the Spanish revolution, you know, the the the French revolution. Even remember that there's a film, which, got banned, and the the director or or the the maker of the film had only just made a trailer, and they stopped him from making the film and why it charged all all of his family. They say it was a a a suicide, you know, of killing that he killed Rick Mayle? To get a suicide. No. It wasn't Rick Mayle. No. Oh. You know, I've done a documentary, and I can't remember his name now. Now. But, yeah, that film never got released, and he and and he he was showing what the government had become.
So that that's in the documentary, the the Mexican, the Spanish, the Russian.
[01:14:29] Unknown:
Which one? So which was that one in, Dennis? Which which one is that? The secret masonic victory is that one in? Secret secret masonic victory. Yeah. Yeah.
[01:14:38] Unknown:
When he when he got his family wiped out. And he actually left a clue in in the trailer where it shows right at the end of guillotine Mhmm. And, a guy with a mask on, but in an apron, a masonic apron.
[01:14:52] Unknown:
Right.
[01:14:54] Unknown:
David David is is called you know, I just can't remember exactly second name. What nationality was he then? Do you know? He was American. Right. Yeah. He's American. Don't worry. I'll probably I'll probably find him for Sean's.
[01:15:10] Unknown:
David. Is that I mean, is that relatively recently then, that one? That's quite recent. Yeah. It was, well, you know, maybe 5, 6 years ago.
[01:15:19] Unknown:
Maybe a little bit longer. Yeah. But, yes, his whole family, his wife was killed, his bit you know, his daughter was killed, his dog was killed, and he's supposed to commit suicide.
[01:15:32] Unknown:
You know, maybe they play for such high stakes because the the consequences for them, which I think they are not going to be able to avoid, are, exactly what they deserve for what they've been doing down here.
[01:15:47] Unknown:
Well, you know, if if there's any payback, any karma, they've certainly got a fair whack coming. I've just got I just got it up now in this this episode. Right. Grey State was the film. Grey State. Yeah? Yes. Yeah.
[01:16:07] Unknown:
Now that rings the bells. This is that is relevant. Crowley.
[01:16:11] Unknown:
David Crowley.
[01:16:12] Unknown:
Alright. Was it Unfortunate surname, I suppose, but there we go. Well well yeah.
[01:16:17] Unknown:
But, he only managed to get, like, a get the, trailer out. And that that was enough for him, I believe, anyway, for him to be, to be killed.
[01:16:29] Unknown:
Grey state. And is it do you is it available anyway? It never got released. Is that right?
[01:16:35] Unknown:
Never done. Supposedly. No. Well, like I said, I think it's part 17 where I cover that particular episode. It's it's, fascinating yet sad, you know. Yeah. Maybe that's the epitaph for the 20th century. I don't know. Just just just briefly, I'll I'll I'll just run through. German revolution, Ukraine genocide Yeah. You know, the Spanish, the Mexican, Luciferian doctrines, all this kind of thing. The British Empire, we talk about Spanish Armada and John Dee. Yep. Really it really shocked me. I mean, I think it's after the first two documentaries, it takes a lot to shock me. But, the third documentary shot me even even more.
[01:17:27] Unknown:
Yes. I guess it's the consistent, hideous intent of these people, if they are people or whatever they are, to continually ruin what without them would be would work an awful lot. But I mean, I never think we would be without problems, but you always feel I tend to feel that the problems that we have would be more rapidly identifiable by us and more easily resolved only to be replaced by another set. I do I I I do think that. I think that struggle is an inherent part really of of being alive, but then that could be just me being brainwashed my entire life saying that. Maybe it's nonsense what I've just said, but from the perspective that I've got, you know, and having lived whatever I've lived up to this point, that's the way it tends to look to me. I mean, it's, if we look at what they're seeking to do with the whole of this Russian thing, it is like watching a sort of carry on movie, albeit with people getting killed.
In the sense that there's nothing it's not real when that, you know, we mentioned it here before, when that British general came out a year ago and said, we've got to get geared up and we need to bring back national whatever it is, your service, because we might be fighting the Russians in 20 years. Who who does he mean by we? You're not gonna be doing it. Your mates won't be doing it, will you? What what are you talking about? You know, so terribly sorry, we've destroyed your nation. We're doing everything we can to remove all the cultural pillars of your nation which define you as a people and give meaning and give a great part of meaning to your life, we're doing that. We're allowing people in and calling them migrants but basically they're a proxy army that we're gonna use indirectly to threaten you if you step out of line. We're shutting down free speech.
You can't think certain things. The judiciary will be run by imbeciles who will make intentionally stupid decisions that are not based on justice but are based on demoralizing you even further. Oh, and by the way, you, would you mind fighting for us to protect all this? Hello? I mean, what's going on?
[01:19:24] Unknown:
Well, if you if you look at Britain today, and people can't understand, when you look at the the the two sides, Israel with the support of the Zionists Mhmm. And the Palestinians, believe it or not, have the support of the communists. Now, you know, I don't agree with we we won't country bombing and with with women and children for the last 3 or 4 months. Yeah. But I don't support communism either. So you've got this left right, which freemasonry, I mean, obviously, Israel is a a masonic state, and owned by the Rothschilds. Communism is born out of freemasonry from from the American bankers. Mhmm. So you've got the 2 conflicting sides, but with the same agenda.
[01:20:13] Unknown:
Yeah. It's that thing, but the best way to deal with the opposition is to lead it. And they've been doing that for an awful long time, haven't they? They really have been doing that for a long time. I accept, you know, and I've had people pitch this one at me. They say, oh, yeah. Hitler was a controlled agent as well and I'm I no.
[01:20:33] Unknown:
No. It's There's a big difference with with There is a difference. As any other historical figure there is well I can't think of any other historical figure what is fault free misery
[01:20:47] Unknown:
No. Maybe not. Yeah. Maybe not. I mean, I don't know about Napoleon. He had a very there were perils, but Napoleon was apparently a mason because he got his hand in his pocket in one picture. I don't know. Well But he had a it was a similar sort of thing or was he just a device used to usher in socialism, you know, the republic and all that kind of stuff. Was that what was Well, I I exactly. I mean, you know, he was passed that revolution. Yeah. And, you know, France had an enemy in England. Well, you got French freemasonry, you got English freemasonry.
[01:21:15] Unknown:
So there's another, you know, split. But, you know, when you look at Britain today, like, people, you know, there's you know, you have the left to your right, you have you have the, support Palestinians and stand with the communists Mhmm. Or you're a British nationalist and you stand with the Zionists.
[01:21:35] Unknown:
Is that it? Is that my only choice, Dennis? Is that all I've got on the box to choose him? That is it.
[01:21:41] Unknown:
Oh, I see.
[01:21:43] Unknown:
I don't want to be a communist, but I don't want to be a Zionist. Oh, it's it's very difficult. Get these minority parties, which we should never gonna win any anything.
[01:21:51] Unknown:
Yeah. No.
[01:21:53] Unknown:
Well, the monster raving loony party is not looking like such a bad option now, is it? In in the end, it was a joke, but it's sort of joke that most of us wouldn't mind too much. Of all sensible ones of of all. Yeah. Screaming lord such is no longer screaming, I understand. But, yeah. Well, the politics I mean, I did hear who was it talking about this? I think I heard this from Mark Collett on one of his broadcast. A good thought, I think, was to not not vote, but was to spoil the ballot because, supposedly, they have to I'm not taking issue with what he said. I understand that they're supposed to count those spoil ballots and report them.
I've never spoiled a ballot before, so I was thinking that I don't know when we're Are we going to have one at some point soon? No. I'm paying too much attention, but if we are, I suppose I'd have to ask the the officers in the in the booth. How do I spoil my ballot? Because I really wanna spoil it a lot. You know?
[01:22:51] Unknown:
I I imagine there's several ways. Can I can I just mention Kat, Katty 7? Katty 7? You can. Yeah. In the chat. She she said In the chat. I will I will rewatch Dennis's documentary about Adolf this weekend. Sure. It's a long Easter weekend. Oh, thank you, Kathy 7. That's, I'd like to I hope you enjoy it, but you know what I mean.
[01:23:16] Unknown:
Yes. You know, I might too. Oh, actually, I can't. My copy's out. My copy's out but I'll find it on I think, actually, there's the full version is on Rumble somewhere. I came across it the other day. So most of the comments were, this won't last long, but it'd been up there for about a year. So they're expecting it to get taken down, but I think it was the full six and a half hours. I know you don't wanna I don't want shouldn't be telling people that you should be going off and buying it. And if not, find some way to support Dennis and Military Publishing. But it is I think it's These things are out there, people. Yeah.
[01:23:45] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. Well, thank you to catch information on that. Mentioning
[01:23:52] Unknown:
that. Yes. Absolutely. It's actually about 5 or 6 years since I last watched it. I probably need to give it another once over, I think. Maybe that's everybody's Easter weekend viewing then. Maybe we're certain the agenda. If you ain't got a copy, get one ordered now. It might be here by Well, that's that's a thought, isn't it? Yeah. And you know what? It's it's quite an interesting thought. Maybe we should organize a a time once a year is the greatest story never told viewing slot. Wherever you are in the world, you got to watch it that day and then see what happens the day afterwards. How about that? Interesting. Interesting. Be a good promo, wouldn't it? Everybody get a copy and we you know, you you'd have to pick an appropriate day. Wednesday's birthday, April the what?
[01:24:35] Unknown:
30th, is it?
[01:24:37] Unknown:
That gives us less than 1 month. But it will, you know, I don't know. But it it could be a thing. Yeah. Mass viewing. Get yourself a copy and watch it. And, that's what we needed. Yeah. Maybe maybe it could be a thing. And then, we do a show the day afterwards. God, we're gonna do a radio show for for 6 hours. You'll have to be on it for 6 hours, same length as the video.
[01:24:58] Unknown:
And, we'll Can I just send greetings back to Kathy? Apparently, she's, greetings from Germany. Yes. Your documentary fills in fills in knowledge I was missing. Not a problem. And greetings back to you. And all those awake in Germany. Unfortunately, I know there's a a problem over there with with the with the laws and things, but grief is to Germany nonetheless. Yes.
[01:25:25] Unknown:
Absolutely. I mean, this show is turning into a German themed show. It wasn't by I don't mean this particular one. I mean, repeatedly. I had Thomas on the other week. He was from Germany. And, we were discussing more esoteric things back then but, I know his knowledge of this period of history is considerable. We just chose not to talk about it for the last couple of shows. But, it it tends it it can't help but Well, it follows me around, don't it? Yeah. Kindly. It does. It's you're you're you're embossed with it permanently. It's on your forehead, Dennis, really. Well, you know, that's my case. It's not a bad thing though. Most people don't have anything embossed on their forehead. They have nothing, if you know what I mean. I'm just being silly, but it's it's a it's a great thing.
Apparently, I have good taste in music as well. Well, that's that's nice to know. Oh, stop that. Is someone trying to butter you up? What they what are they talking about? Were you here the other week when he put George McCray on? You won't be saying that after that. I'm
[01:26:20] Unknown:
not sure. I still can't get over that. It's amazing. No. I love it. I actually loved it. I've I've I've told the tale about you coming on and doing that to so many other people. I said, oh, yeah, Dennis, you know, he makes these videos about this and he turns up George McCrane in his back pocket. It was outrageous. It was very funny, actually. I like I like that. I liked it a lot. I don't know if it was a birthday. April 20th.
[01:26:41] Unknown:
Okay.
[01:26:43] Unknown:
April 20th. Thought you got less than what I thought you had.
[01:26:47] Unknown:
Oh, why it's me now, is it? Listen, it's all you listeners out there. Right? All of you. Somebody get it organized. We're too busy. I've gotta go to the toilet and things. I gotta go shopping and stuff like that. But if if someone's got some spare time, let's do it. We need, so what day is April 20th? Let's just get carried away.
[01:27:05] Unknown:
Get get in the calendar.
[01:27:06] Unknown:
It's a bit like, hey, don't worry about it. We can put on the show right here. It's like one of these Hollywood Hollywood things. Let me have a look. It's, it's a Saturday. Hey, at least it's the beginning of the weekend. So it could be the greatest story never told weekend viewing all over the place. Maybe we,
[01:27:24] Unknown:
see what we could do. I don't know. Need a website when you ever get So people have watched the old 6 hours all in one go off. Have they? And all that for a fact. Oh, yeah. I know that for a fact. Yeah.
[01:27:34] Unknown:
I think I watched it in sort of 3, 2 hour chunks when I went through it because I wanted to digest it after each little bit. I've gone through each, you know, 8 or 9 episodes or something like that.
[01:27:45] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, yeah, they had a lot of watches, but, I mean, apparently, some people like are are so engrossed. And I think the music has a big big parts of play in that where you do kinda get sucked in because because the music I use wasn't traditional German war music. It was more up to date, kind of, I don't know, like, more more it was more rock than anything, but but it wasn't the, you know, the really crazy rock. Yeah. And and it fitted perfectly. It fitted perfectly in the tank fights and and then there was a soft music for the, for the sentimental bits, the quiet bits. Yeah. And it really sucks you in.
[01:28:25] Unknown:
It does. Yeah. You did a brilliant job with that. The comment here from Bobby Fischer. Hi, Bobby. Hope the chess is going okay. Enoch made his speech on Hitler's birthday. So that would have been April 20th when? 68, was that? That is was that 1968? I was a
[01:28:42] Unknown:
I was a I was a you were alive, though, mate. Well You're a yeah. You're a lot younger than us lot than people like me. Well, again, you see, he he he's not gonna get anywhere. I mean, he just kicked him out in the party, didn't he? He would you know, which is what he said. He was he was lambasted by the press.
[01:28:59] Unknown:
It's that what we would it's not really a soft power, is it? It's an interconnected power between the press, the political class, the banking class, absolutely, the judiciary, and probably the heads of universities, those 5 branches that are all part of the they all come out of these same clubs probably from Oxford and Cambridge, you know, in great part. I mean, because as we've men I think we talked about this before, you know, the whole of the education system is in fact a sort of let's identify the really bright guys and gals when they're young, get them over to our side because we don't want all their intellectual resources being put at the disposal of normal people. They're for us. We're gonna use them. Exactly.
[01:29:38] Unknown:
Can I just say this? I'm just gonna chat again. Eric von Essex. Yep. If only my late father, who was in World War 2, could have seen Dennis's fantastic documentary, he knew the truth though before he when he died in 2010 before the documentary came out. Yeah. Obviously, he he would have fought for for England, but now, you know, but always knew the truth, which is very similar to John Emery, who who left left England to go fight for the Germans, as as did other, English nationalists. They they fought against communism.
[01:30:22] Unknown:
I know. Only only for only by becoming familiar with all the material that you put in the film and these other attendant pieces of information that we're talking about. Can anybody have any idea of what was really taking place during that period? Up until that point Is that well you're in Hollywood's version, aren't you? Oh, London's version. That's the version that you're in. And it's jolly exciting, you know. It's got lots of action scenes, and the good guys win in the end according to this story, and blah blah blah. But then someone like you tells them, excuse me.
[01:30:54] Unknown:
I think we need to have a look over here. What do you think? You know? I had an argument once with a guy on YouTube Yeah. When when the when the doc documentary came out, and it it kinda broke the spell, what have been cast all over the world, really, since 1945. And we we were arguing backwards and forth, and I said, look, at the end of the day, you've got your £100,000,000 blockbusters when I've constantly came out over the years. Yep. You know, condemning Germany. And my little old documentary comes out and shakes up everybody Yes. Which he he wasn't too pleased about. But it actually did shake up the Internet.
[01:31:36] Unknown:
And I'm not saying that from a bragging point of view. It's an actual fact. No. It did. I remember it at the time. I remember all those reviews, many of the ones that I read on IMDB at the time that you're talking about and the fact that you got top rated first. Yeah. Yeah. It was a top rated history documentary for x number of years. I can't remember how many, but it was more than 1. Probably more than 2 or 3 until they got cross about it and decided that people can't see this thing anymore. But Yeah. But I You see, I think part of it as well, just going back to that same point, is that you're dis We all need to have our thinking disrupted because much of it is based on false information. So you have to be a person that says to yourself, I'm probably wrong.
I'm I'm open to the fact that I've probably been mistaught stuff and I'm willing to take a look. And if you've got that attitude, nothing can be hidden from you. But if you're going around generally with a thing like, no, I went to university and I learned all this stuff from history and, this is correct. You see, I know all this stuff and this is accurate. You're kind of doomed really. And those are the people that will react very badly to an alternative view. Let's just put it like that. I don't think it's just an alternative view. I think it's the more thorough view and it's far closer to it because it because it is so distasteful and so distressing, this kind of sends a signal back to you that it actually is the truth. It could not not be. What's the point of it?
[01:32:52] Unknown:
Well Yeah. I'm gonna slip I'm I'm gonna slay you now. Oh, yeah. Go on. Slay. Yeah. Somebody in the chat has just somebody in the chat has just recommended it should be a national holiday in my name.
[01:33:05] Unknown:
I don't know. I quite like that. What have you got? Wise day? Well, I quite like that myself.
[01:33:10] Unknown:
I can't see that.
[01:33:11] Unknown:
Why instead of calling it Wednesday, why do we turn it to Wise Day? So it's Monday, Tuesday, Wise Day, Thursday, and every once a week, Dennis, people can be reminded of I don't mind. You can have do you want a statue? If we get a statue of you, we can use your statue to replace all the ones of Churchill. They need boiling down and turning into toilets. Your idles, really, I think is the only fit use for those that It says here, a century from now, biographies will be written about Dennis. There'll be a national holiday in his name, which I I thank him very much.
[01:33:42] Unknown:
Whether that happens remains to be seen.
[01:33:46] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah.
[01:33:50] Unknown:
Well, that is the power of the documentary as as much as I mean, you know, it's my documentary. That is the power. It it it was the only one, really. You you wrote it came out shortly after, which which had a powerful effect. But that was the one, you know, the the greatest story was the one which which turned everybody's world upside down.
[01:34:10] Unknown:
It was. Which you can get from moneytreepublishing.com, everybody. Both documentaries. Yeah. Yeah. You know, Europa as well. Yes. Yeah. Oh, yeah. That's right. Yeah. Moneytree are carrying that as well right now, aren't they? Yeah. So that's that's cool. Yeah. I've had people come up to you, this is really awful. I'm gonna I know. I know. I know. I mean, I don't shout at them, but I go, yes, it is. But I'm glad and, you know, I'm very glad when people come up and say, I've watched this. Fantastic. Well done. Whether they agree with it or not or think it's good or not is not the point. The fact that they've exposed themselves to it is the start because you never know how long it takes for ideas to percolate through any given brain and sort of start landing, you know, more major blows in terms of understanding what's taking place. So
[01:34:56] Unknown:
can you just ask people in the chat if if they've seen communism by the backdoor or Secret of Sonic Victory and what their thoughts of it, if if that's possible. Yeah. You just Like I said earlier, you know, we do we do call it the trilogy of truth and although it was the big one, you know, the the other 2 documentaries are pretty powerful as well.
[01:35:16] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, do you know from figures that the most people, you know so of a 100% of people that watch the first one, The Greatest Story Never Told, are you aware of how many go on to watch the others afterwards? I I was I don't know how you would be, to be quite honest. Yeah. I've no idea how you would be. Dude, good enough comments. You know, you do get,
[01:35:37] Unknown:
a feel that obviously after the first talk, I mentioned people were looking forward to the second one and the third. But one comment well, I do remember is is one guy who really enjoyed the, the first documentary. When he watched the second, he couldn't get his head around when I touched on the music industry in Hollywood and how satanic it was. He just couldn't get his head round yet. And now you look around today and you see the things what's what's been going on. Even Pete Diddy's house has been raided. He's been dumped for sex trafficking. The music industry is a dark, dark place as is Hollywood. Run by freemasonry again, with rituals, you know, satanic rituals, which this guy, like I said, he couldn't get his head very well. I think people who received that documentary today will will realize exactly where I was coming from.
It's wherever crowds Well, Crowley is the man that's caused it all, ain't it? Sorry. I guess he's a key part of it. Yeah. Absolutely. Key part of it. OTO.
[01:36:41] Unknown:
Yeah. He seems to be in the line going back to John Dee. Although I'm I still don't know enough about John d. I mean, it was fascinating when we were talking about the multiple armadas. I've seen that coming up everywhere, actually. I don't know if you were the first person to introduce it into the space. I said that you were. I was. Yeah. Because I've seen other people picking up on it now and and and good on them. They should. It needs amplifying now. So that's the whole purpose of these things. It's wonderful. But, yeah. I mean, wherever there are crowds, it's like wherever these crowds, like in churches and then in rock concerts and at sports stadiums.
The creating these huge, I suppose you would call them demonic bread and circuses events now. They're getting worse and worse. Off, they introduce these, iconography, these actions, these behaviors, these perversions into the space to effectively continue the demoralization and ruination of our people. So that, you know, lowering the standard of thought, lowering the frequency of thought. People aren't talking enough about beautiful buildings because they're surrounded by so many hideous garbage buildings as I bang on about here regularly and will continue to do so. Mhmm. So that that they are mass sort of ritual events. They they certainly look that way. I mean, I know when that claim first came out, I was gonna I don't I think that's a bit of stretch. But, the more you look at it people people can't get their red round in. That's the thing.
[01:38:04] Unknown:
That the people can be so evil.
[01:38:07] Unknown:
Crowley was evil. There's no doubt about it. Oh, yes. He was. Yeah. He was evil. Yeah. He died not a 1000000 miles from where. And was he tunneled out by syphilis, wasn't he, or something? Wouldn't surprise me. Yeah. But wherever he is now, I would imagine it's he's he's he's probably worse if there's any if there is a thing called cosmic justice or whatever it's called, obviously, none of us know, but we operate towards a standard, don't we? Do you think it's time for a noisy song, Dennis? What do you think? Well, there's a story to this one, actually.
[01:38:38] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay. Yeah. What it was, I went to see, for those people listening there, the the actual track is a deep purple track, you know, the rock band deep purple. And I went to see them live with a friend.
[01:38:52] Unknown:
Yep.
[01:38:53] Unknown:
And my friend actually had an hearing aid. Right. He suffered from a loss of hearing. Yes. Anyway, went to the concert, and on the way back, I had no car in them days, I had to catch a bus. So, we caught the bus back, and and I I'll never forget. As we got on the bus, a friend turned to me and he said, boy, that was fucking hilarious.
[01:39:23] Unknown:
Did he really say that? He did. What year was that, Dennis? What year was that?
[01:39:28] Unknown:
Seventies. Seventies. Okay. Seventies. Yeah.
[01:39:32] Unknown:
So okay. We're gonna play this in a second. I'm just gonna give a shout. The last song I got a report back from Paul that it was overdriving everything. So we still got to work a little bit on the music mixing stuff. I'm not a master of this, so we were kind of overdriving. I'm I'm turning the volume down a little bit on this to make sure we kind of don't do that again. So if it's If I turn it down too low, you're gonna have to turn it up. Okay? It's a bizarre sort of thing when you're in the radio thinking you're supposed to get this right. But guess what? I can't do that today necessarily. Okay. So here's a 4 minute break with one of Dennis's head banging songs.
Here we go. And welcome back, to the last quarter of an hour of the show. Hi, Dennis. Yeah.
[01:44:05] Unknown:
Great track. Even even better, louder.
[01:44:08] Unknown:
Did you turn it up louder? I turned it down, actually. I had to turn it down at this end. I, Well, yeah. It was just a technical You turned it out, did you? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Well, the my very first the very first rock track I ever heard that registered in my head was, Black Knight by Deep Purple, I think it was. Yeah. I remember that one. Yeah. What year would that be? 72, 71?
[01:44:33] Unknown:
Yeah. Mid seventies. I never did like, Ozzy Osbourne, which was satanic for me.
[01:44:40] Unknown:
It was a bit satanic. All those dark satanic mills from Birmingham. Actually, that's from up north really, but still. Yeah. Yeah.
[01:44:47] Unknown:
And, of course, he married a witch.
[01:44:49] Unknown:
Well, he did marry a witch. Yeah. There is that, of course. That does stand against him. Oh. He's still he's still alive. You know that apparently there's a gene or something that enables you to sort of absorb or deal with alcohol and I actually don't have that at all. It literally wreaks havoc with me. I don't cope with it at all well. So I think he's got mine and everybody else's or did have. I mean, the fact that he was still alive was just Yeah. Me. Yeah. I don't know how you can do that, but maybe it's a different type of energy that goes into your body and it just copes with all this stuff. I mean, there's probably a reason why they call them spirits, isn't there? Don't they kind of push your spirit out of your body? Isn't that what's really going on? There's something taking place with that chemical, the alcohol stuff. Yeah. Well,
[01:45:31] Unknown:
Somebody just said here, I have seen all of Dennis's documents. He's there. Fantastic. Communism by the back door says it all.
[01:45:41] Unknown:
Very It does. You. It
[01:45:44] Unknown:
does. Yeah. And, of course, if if you do happen to buy from from the website, they they are shipped out immediately if people are are in a rush to see them at all. They they do get seen straight away.
[01:45:56] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:46:00] Unknown:
Somebody says, Richard Blackmoor, a stunning riff, which I totally agree. Why don't you get terrorist? Oh, another thing I noticed in that same concert, which when I went with me, my deaf friend, who was more deaf at the end of the concert than it was before.
[01:46:18] Unknown:
I was gonna ask that.
[01:46:20] Unknown:
That was loud or so loud or anything ever again. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I I noticed the power the power of being in a group because I've never seen as many groupies in my life on that front row. My god.
[01:46:34] Unknown:
Yeah. It was it was a powerful, yeah, powerful thing. Well, everybody back then, if you're wanted to be in a band. Every everybody did, really, I think. Yeah. They switched to DJs in it later on for some Oh, I'm afraid I didn't follow music into that arena. That was just silly. I still don't. I just think it's deaf. If you're angry if you can't actually play something with your fingers and get it wrong live, I'm not coming. But it's getting it wrong that's actually part of the magic of it. It's not that you're targeting them getting it wrong, but it's gonna go wrong. If you play music live, there's gonna be bits where you just gonna lose it a bit. And it's how the band copes to pull a song back together again. It's fast I loved all that kind of stuff. I loved it. So
[01:47:14] Unknown:
yeah. But Oh, yeah. Well, I certainly did. Well, like like I said, I love me, Elvis, but I also love me rock, and I also love me rock.
[01:47:23] Unknown:
Yeah. Look. There's nothing wrong with having, diversified. See the let me see what I did there. So how can a guy with with with such,
[01:47:31] Unknown:
eclectic taste? Extreme musical taste Yes. Do do the 3 3 documentaries proclaiming the trilogy of truth. It's not possible. Must have been divine intervention, I think.
[01:47:46] Unknown:
I don't know. I think I think your backstory with regards to the information of the energy or the intensity of these communications that you receive from your uncles with regards to that conflict must have been major. Uncles are massively important when you grow. They were to me. I had several. And they were like, they were always much they were more interested than your dad because they were rougher than your dad and they didn't have to pay they were sort of like a bloke, you know, whereas your dad, of course, is your dad, and he respected your dad and deal with it, but they're different. So the naughty uncle was always part of it. So you had part of the vision.
[01:48:18] Unknown:
You know? I I was fortunate because not many people knew the allies of the Germans down in the Balkans. If if I had gone to school with a German name, I would have had, you know, probably fight every day. But because nobody actually knew about the Balkans war Yes. During World War 2 Yeah. I kinda got a I kinda got a pass on that, which I I was quite grateful for.
[01:48:47] Unknown:
It's inter we had, my school in the seventies, there was a guy there, my age, obviously, my year, who was German, and his father was a prisoner of war and had stayed on in England afterwards and he was great. I think he moved to Australia. I haven't spoken to him in a long time. I love the love of Australia. Yeah. Yeah. He was well, he was in Yorkshire, obviously, up until a certain age. And I I remember bumping into him, a few years later about 1984 or 85, something after we'd all left we'd been out of school for about 6 years or something and he hadn't yet gone to Australia, but the interesting turnaround was that whilst at school, he was very sort of, artistic lit in in a literary convention. He would write things. In fact, he wrote a play, a whole play, which was like a sort of variant of Rings of the Niobelong and all that kind of it was It was a sort of thing. And, I thought, oh, obviously, you're a theatrical impresario. You're a playwright. And he got into accountancy or something. And I understand that he's has sparkled and done really well, but I've not spoken to him for nigh on 40 years now. So, let's have a conversation with him. Yeah. I I sometimes think I I think of these people think, right, we got the Internet. It should be a way to make connections and, of course, it's kind of weird because you'd speak to people like 40 years just disappears bang after the first couple of sentences. It just evaporates, which is fascinating really, Yeah. Yeah. Strange silly sort of way.
Hey, I'll tell you what, I had, we still got a few minutes left. You know, I was telling you a clip about Eulads that I had. Okay? Oh, yeah. I got we got a I gotta play you this clip. Everybody, you're about to learn something about bats. Seriously, this is quite epic. I think it is when I heard this a little bit earlier today. Today. Get your logos around this.
[01:50:31] Unknown:
London's blade runners. Well, this is nothing short of pure and utter genius. What the anti Ullis protesters are doing now is installing bat boxes on top and over the broken U Less cameras. Because once they're up there, under UK law, they can't be removed. Because all bat species, their breeding sites, resting areas are all fully protected by law. UK legislation actually dictates, and I'm gonna read this so I don't get it wrong. Legislation dictates that any structures or places which bats use for shelter or protection are protected from damage or destruction whether occupied or not.
Now I'm sure you'll agree with me, and I'm sure everybody will. This is just bloody genius. Absolutely genius. Whoever came up with this deserves a well done sticker. It's just outstanding. I mean, what's your views? I mean, I don't live in London. I live up in Manchester area, but that crap is just absolutely out of order. Sadiq Khan, all he wants to do is rip everybody off. Even those farmers that are down there today protesting. Some of them who work who work just outside London, they're getting hit by that surcharge, that U Less charge, that 12 pound 50 charge every single day because their fields on the outskirts of London. It's just absolutely shocking.
This is just pure and utter. It's outstanding.
[01:52:18] Unknown:
Hey. So bats, Dennis. Bats.
[01:52:23] Unknown:
Yep. Yeah. Them cameras are the biggest rip off coin, aren't they?
[01:52:27] Unknown:
Well, we've been they've been saved by the bats. The batman have turned up. And, so amazing. So UK law says you can't disturb a bat sanctuary. What what do bats live in? I always thought it was a cave, but then I'd be watching too many batmen. What's it called? Well, yeah. So maybe that sort of modified caves. I mean, that came from a video, so there was a picture of it, but they've put these big wooden structures like a housing box over the top of the Euless camera and it's a bat sanctuary. That's it. Can't touch it. It is good.
It's good. See, so I put that in just to let you know that we're not done yet. It may be that we work. We form a union with the bats, and we we restore the nation via batology or something like that, you know, and become the Batman, but not in the way that, know, blah blah blah blah blah. But, that's tremendous stuff. More than that myself. But I I do too. I'm being slightly fooling and trite about the whole thing. But any I'll take anything these days. And so the idea that some guys actually come up with that and get, this is what we do, you know, and use their own rules against them. Fantastic stuff. It is. It's very it's very British. It's very witty, actually.
[01:53:32] Unknown:
Yeah. It's amazing how many billions that they are making from their US cameras, even the ones who are standing up. Unbelievable.
[01:53:40] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I I think, you know, there are there are paths to be pursued as quickly as we possibly can and everybody needs to pursue their own particular one to see if we can keep hitting little Well, I don't know, bat sanctuary moments. Something a bit bigger than that would help, you know. Maybe I could turn my house into a bat sanctuary and then tax collectors come in there. So you can't come in here. I keep bats, you know, they're protected species. Maybe we all start keeping bats. Yeah? I don't know. Even before me. Yeah. Britain goes bats, says sun. You know?
[01:54:11] Unknown:
I wonder if any of them politicians have watched my documentary.
[01:54:15] Unknown:
I don't know. I didn't I didn't realize they had the attention span long enough to watch things more than 3 or 4 minutes, actually, Denis. I I thought that was a I don't know. I don't know. You know? I mean,
[01:54:24] Unknown:
it did cause a lot of attention. I'm pretty sure 1 or 2 would have had a had a sneak look.
[01:54:29] Unknown:
Why don't we, maybe we should invite them all to a special political screen. That's right. Yeah. All 600 of your, you know, are canapes. For Rothschilds as well. Yeah. Canapes. I'll serve champagne. I'll put on a, you know, tuxedo sham and and pints of mild for the men. Yeah. Turnip, roll up, roll up. It's a, you know, proper premier, all that kind of stuff, and, you'll have a a wonderful time out Kate, Keith, Cameron, front seat.
[01:54:58] Unknown:
I I can just imagine Keith to the opening tune of Unchained Melody. Yeah.
[01:55:06] Unknown:
And Kia, what did you think about it I don't know comment.
[01:55:13] Unknown:
As it was pounding over the the the World War one trenches. Yes.
[01:55:21] Unknown:
The You never know. You never know. No. You never know. You you don't know. Well, maybe some of them have. But, you know, the thing that I think there's that obvious point. You mentioned about Enoch, you know, making a statement, and it came to nothing because the bulk of them are in that space already gagged and trussed up and, you know, part of the process. And they're not gonna come with you no matter what. They can't because it's the ruination of them utterly if they did. So what happened? So, you know, any good man or group of men and women or whatever you wanna call that tries to go into that arena to change it internally, it's unlikely to succeed because it's gonna be the other way around.
[01:56:08] Unknown:
They find ways to I'll ask another question. You know? I'll ask you another question. Do you think Enoch was a free medicine?
[01:56:16] Unknown:
Probably. Wouldn't surprise me if he was, but I Well, he he he joined the the the Ulster
[01:56:22] Unknown:
MP, didn't he? He he left out he got kicked out of the tour party Yeah. And joined the orange men over in Ulster. Yeah. So the odds are he was probably a free again. Probably. So they've got they've got holes on both sides.
[01:56:40] Unknown:
I don't know what to do to stop it, Dennis. This is a kind of a lozenge we could give them all that just make them forget about it or, you know, what do we have to do? Is there anything that could be done? It's not. It's a virus that replicates down through the line, doesn't it? It is. It is. It is. It's it's a tricky one to actually deal with. By the way, we're, oh gosh, we're nearly at the end of the show. Look at that. It absolutely flew by, we only got 3 minutes left. That's preposterous. I can't believe it.
[01:57:09] Unknown:
Yeah. I see in the chapters, 1 or 2 about about the documentary while we're talking, which is interesting.
[01:57:18] Unknown:
Hey. Fantastic. You know what? Promotion and advertising works, Dennis. This is really good. No. Brilliant. That's absolutely brilliant that they've done that.
[01:57:26] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:57:31] Unknown:
Enoch was a soil slammer. I don't know what that means. Is that vulgar? I don't know what that means. Well, it probably means he's a freemason.
[01:57:38] Unknown:
Alright. Okay. Probably Probably could be the word, Fred. But, I mean, the orange lodge is out there. The old staircase are well known, and it's it's not no great secret.
[01:57:51] Unknown:
Yeah. Are are we supposed to join it and change it from within? Is that what you're supposed to do?
[01:57:56] Unknown:
Is that is that one of the tactics? Well, I think I I think Bill Bill Cooper, who who didn't realize just what Adolf Hitler was doing with Freemasonry, suggested that Freemasonry had to be destroyed. That that was Bill Cooper, which is what exactly what Allen Allen Fiddler was doing. But because there was no Internet in them days, it's it's hard to find out what was going on in the war, only what the BBC and CNN were were were telling everybody. Mhmm. Yeah. So, yeah, I think the first thing is for Freemasonry to be sorted out and then, take it from there.
[01:58:32] Unknown:
Yeah. I think it is. Oh, there we go. We got the fade out music, Dennis. I think I'd just say really with the masonry stuff, I reckon it's pretty much what a part of it is that the vast majority of people are innocently part of something bad. And it's just like all these other structures, you know, most of the people that work in banking don't understand the true nature of it and they're just honorable decent people doing the best they can with the information and noise they've got at the time. It's just unfortunate that the purposes some of these organizations are lethal, to the way of life that we would like to have anyway. So
[01:59:06] Unknown:
website, just before we go?
[01:59:09] Unknown:
Moneytreepublishing.com. Get yourself get your eyeballs over to moneytreepublishing.com to see all of Dennis' videos and a lot of other great books and other stuff that's over there. We're winding up. We'll be back again. We've got 30 seconds. We're back again same time next week. Actually, in the US we're at 3 PM next week, back to our normal time because of the clock's taking. There will be an after show here on Rumble, so head on over to Rumble if you wanna chat with some of the other people. I don't know how long it'll last. It might be 10 minutes. It might be 6 hours, who can say? But, wonderful. Dennis, brilliant for having you this week. Look forward to you back again soon. Paul. Yeah. Have a good Easter. Have a good Easter, everyone.
Bye for now.
Introduction and Greetings
Weather and Personal Updates
Time Change and Show Schedule
Wildlife Sighting Story
Guest Introduction: Dennis Wise
Discussion on Stephen King Movies
Trey Smith and Biblical Narratives
Big Bang Theory and Conspiracies
Crane Sighting and Omens
Political Satire Clip
Voting and Political Cynicism
Great Yarmouth: A Local's Perspective
State of the Nation Discussion
Freemasonry and Historical Influence
David Irving on Churchill and WWII
Reactions to 'The Greatest Story Never Told'
Freemasonry's Historical Roots
Music Break: Free's 'Wishing Well'
Freemasonry and Revolutions
David Crowley and 'Grey State'
Listener Comments and Feedback
Proposed Viewing Event for 'The Greatest Story Never Told'
Music Break: Deep Purple's 'Highway Star'
Bat Boxes and ULEZ Cameras
Closing Remarks and Farewell