Broadcasts live every Thursday at 8:00p.m. uk time on Radio Soapbox: http://radiosoapbox.com
Paul is joined by co-hosts Patrick and Paul B and discuss a range of subjects including the controversial HR 6090 bill, the French Revolution and the assassination of historical figures like Julius Caesar and Spencer Perceval. In the latter part of the show, the conversation shifts to the role of universities in shaping young minds and the potential implications of recent legislative changes on freedom of speech.
And hello. And, you know, it's, it's the start of the show. Isn't it? Look at that. The time's just gone. I made it on time. I just had a few little domestics to do just then, which was, a lot of fun. It is, Thursday the second May, but it wasn't the 1st May, although I think we're gonna talk about that a little bit in the show. This is Paul English Live here on WBN 324. We're with you for the next 2 hours. Welcome to the show. I hope you like the pretty ladies in the picture. Beautiful picture that. And, you know, I don't know who painted
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it.
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And I'm looking out the window here, and it's still sort of sunlight type stuff. Plenty of cloud though too. And we got a moving around sort of show tonight. Your chance to really participate and get in there. Quite a few little sort of it's a smorgasbord of a show. I've said that before, but it will be tonight. A few old things, maybe a little bit of reading, very brief, that kind of stuff from some old stuff, and some things that have been happening over the last 24, 48 hours, which are possibly very important. Look at that. I nearly missed the drum roll for the fight out at the end of, the end of there. Welcome to the show. It is, as I said, Tuesday 2nd May. You know, there's a little vulgar saying over here. Do you have it where you are? Hooray. Hooray. The first May outdoor begins today, you see. I used to hear that a lot when I was young. Unfortunately, it's the second May. What a pity. So we've missed out, so I can't say that and it mean anything.
But the 1st May, I think that's quite important to the commies, isn't it? Isn't it May Day? Don't they do all that kind of stuff? So there've been some sort of commie things going on, actually, which we're gonna touch upon in the show. And, today, we're going to have a a show I think this happened a couple of weeks ago, and I'm slowly I think in my own mind sort of building up a little rhythm or a format here. We, obviously, we had Thomas on last week. Thomas Anderson, that was a pretty mind bending sort of show. Kind of out of kilter really with the rest of them in many ways, because we, we were really sort of pushing the envelope with regard to Third Reich hidden technology, and I still haven't really got over that clock that he sent the photograph of because the and, I've been trying to explain it to people and I can't.
Well, you see, you go inside this thing and if you're inside this thing you melt unless you've got a pocket watch that's mechanical. Sounds a bit bonkers, doesn't it really? But it's very arresting and, rather enchanting as well. So, yeah. This, this week's show is a little team effort like we did a couple of weeks ago. I'm gonna be joined, in due course by, Paul b and Patrick c. How about that? And I'm Paul e. So we've got e, b, c. I guess if your name doesn't begin with p, it looks as though we're being a little bit exclusive here, but it wasn't by design. It's just sort of fallen that way.
So we're gonna be covering a few things. Oh, and a quick shout out to you if you're already in the chat on Rumble, and I can see a few of you roustabouts are already there. Good evening, Eric. Hi, Warren. And also, XO, nice to see you in the room. So early. We have one song lined up, but guess what? Not much else. So if you're feeling charming or you're gonna come up with a good song selection and you throw it in the chat and I get to see it, there's a very good chance we might play it later on in the show. So isn't that exciting? Always something to look forward to. Anyway, I'm gonna say again, I hope you liked today's picture. I have no idea who painted that.
It was sent over to me the other day by actually, by the graphic artist who preps all my stuff for me. And, I was told that I needed to find an image for the show and I said, I don't think I do. I think you've already found 1. So, we had it we had it all sort of knocked up into the show shape and, I won't mind being in that garden myself. It looks or by the sea or wherever they are. Anyway, it's really rather enchanting and wonderful, so we thought we'd bring a bit of beauty into your life here at the beginning of May, even if it's only the second May.
What I'm gonna do now, I'm gonna welcome on board, both Patrick and Paul. Paul, are you are you receiving this, and are you in the studio? Are you with us, as they say? I'm absolutely
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receiving this.
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Brilliant.
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Alright. Are you receiving me?
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I think we are. Yeah. We're receiving it. I'm just about to start choking on something. I'm trying to find out what it is. Hopefully, I won't. There's nothing worse than a choking radio host. And, Patrick, hi. Have you been able to get in on the microphone and get I can see you on screen, but are you here? Yeah. I'm here. Cool. Fantastic. Nice to be here. Yeah. It's nice to have you here. I thought we had a lot of fun a couple of weeks ago. I really rather enjoyed it actually, so I moved around all over the place. I'm expecting pretty much a similar sort of thing today. So, what was I going to start off with? I think we better go in on the deep end, really, with this thing, because I think we might keep coming back to this throughout the show.
So yesterday in America, that's where you guys live. Right? You being American types. Something got passed, didn't it? And I don't mean something in a toilet bowl, although it seemed to be sort of rather similar to that in many ways. There was a bill HR 6090 is the number I've got here. I think that's correct, isn't it? HR6090, and it's not particularly pleasant looking bill, is it? Have you had a chance to digest what was happening yesterday, and whether whether I'm fretting from afar over nothing at all and it's a storm in a teacup or it really is serious? What what do you guys think? And we'll explain this as we go through.
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What? I think it's, I think you're pretty much on the mark.
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Yeah. I'd take it I'm sorry. Go ahead. Take it seriously. No. That's okay. I'm just saying I'd I'd take it seriously. It's aimed at the colleges for now Mhmm. But that receive public funding, which is our tax money.
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Yep.
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In a country where we have this thing called the first amendment of the bill of rights. And,
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we'll see if it holds water, but, if it were up to the politicians, I'd suppose,
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they'd do even worse if they could.
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So, yeah. What I'll do is I'll try and clue you in as best I can. This is a shorthand, summary of it, which I received over Telegram, I think, from a little bit earlier today when I got up. So it says this, the house has passed HR. What does HR stand for? Is that a house rule? House House resolution. Hate restriction. House resolution. Okay. I thought it might be that. Hate restriction, as Paul said. Yeah. They've they've passed the Hate Restriction Act, because, you know, there's far too much hate going around. I think this act is a hateful act, but who I can't say that, because you when you when I go through it you'll see. So it says, the House has passed House Restriction 6090, 6090, which is loosely termed as the antisemitism Awareness Act.
So we're going in on the heavy end here right the beginning of the show. Okay? Here's what you can be prosecuted and put in prison for according to this post. And I don't know whether that's literally true but that's the post that I received. And it says, you are ruled not governed, but most people here kind of already sort of know that. It says, these are the things that can get you into trouble. Calling for, aiding, or justifying the killing or harming of Jews in the name of a radical ideology or an extremist view of religion. Well, nobody calls for that, but yeah. Okay. So that's what they're doing there. Making mendacious dehumanizing, demonizing, or stereotypical allegations about Jews, such as such as such, sorry, or the power of Jews as a collective, such as especially, but not exclusively the myth about a world Jewish conspiracy, or of Jews controlling the media, economy, government, or other societal institutions.
It says, accusing Jews as a people of being responsible for real or imagined wrongdoing committed by a single Jewish person or a group, or even for acts committed by non Jews, denying the fact, scope, mechanisms, e g gas chambers, or intentionally, or intentionality of the genocide of the Jewish people at the hands of National Socialism during World War 2, and on and on and on. Now as you were saying, Patrick, it's it looks as though this is a response to what's been going on on US campuses recently with demonstrations. I'll just use that word for now with regards to what's going on in Gaza. And now whilst I'm choking, it's probably best if one of you speak and say something.
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Sorry about that. Yeah. I've also heard that, they had plans for these protests, these student protests, in late 2023.
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Right.
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Heard that in regard to the planning phase of this, and it's almost like it's a problem reaction solution type of thing, the old Hegelian dialectic. Oh, go ahead. Go ahead, sweetheart. We have our synthesis in mind that we want already, so let's create a problem and then form a reaction that creates the synthesis that we want. Yeah.
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I think so. I think you're spot on with that. I actually wrote that down in a note to someone today who was a bit dubious about my assessment of it, and I said exactly that. So, for those not in the know, about what we're talking about with the Hegelian dialectic, it's a way of setting up a situation where you get the result and everybody thinks it it naturally occurred. So you basically have a thesis, then you have an antithesis or an antithesis, and in the end you end up with a synthesis, which is what you wanted all the time, and meanwhile everybody thinks that this is a genuine situation. So I think, Patrick, to back at what you were saying just there, there's been information floating around, actually not with regards to just this incident, but many incidents over the past x number of years, that George Soros is providing funding for these students on campus to rise up and cause a great big hullabaloo and stink, understandably so, I guess, with regards to what's taking place in Gaza. Have you have you seen that information, come across that too?
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I I yeah. I came across some of that. I don't I didn't really pick up in on any of the details of how it's done. I know there's a lot of planning that goes on somehow in the higher echelons of our government. Yeah. He was part of the open world society started by our old librar. We had a librarian of Congress by the name of James Billington Right. Who wrote an excellent book called Fire in the Minds of Men, which describes basically revolutionary thought from the time of the French revolution to the present day. His present day would have been 1979 when he wrote that book. Right. But,
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have you read it? I'm familiar with it. I know. I've read it. Yeah. Yeah? Yes. Okay.
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Yeah. It's quite good. Yep. It, basically goes into French Revolution and and the idea that communism actually predates Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, and it's was a term that was being used to describe agitators during the French Revolution. They were known as communists. Typically around, Sacred Heart Cathedral. I forget the name. Soccer Corps. I think that area in Paris.
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Right. But
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yeah. And then it goes up into the Bolshevik revolution and he would this Billington was a student of Russian history. Mhmm. And he ended up working with George Soros to create the open world
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Society. How nice.
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And, yeah, they've been up to all sorts of fun stuff. I know.
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I know. Listen, you've just given me an end to read something about the French Revolution. We're going to come back to this topic almost immediately. But, because you'd mentioned it, because I haven't mentioned it here for several for a couple of months now, A few months ago, actually, when we first started the series off, I must appear to be a very slow reader to people, but actually the number of books is now building up on my reading desk, and they're all interrelated. But I was reading things from the French Revolution by Nestor Webster, which I'm going to heartily recommend again for the umpteenth time if you're looking for something really rather engrossing to read and a tremendous insight into how a terrible horrific situation is organised and brought about because we're in one right now.
And, you know, when I talk to people about historical things, not that it happens too much, but I guess many of you have probably heard this. Yes. They say, oh, it happened so long ago, you know, but it didn't, in my view. It happened just now because we were just talking about it right now. And it seems to me that because human nature does not change at all, these lessons of old history are absolutely vital to be learned. But I want to read you this thing. This is gonna take a couple of minutes, and I'm just going to do this. This is, from the back end. This is really horrific stuff, but I want that's why I wanted to read it, to really get something across about the absolute hell that was unleashed.
So on August 10th, I think it's 17/93 or something, the dam finally broke in terms of the emotional turmoil of the people. They were finally whipped into a horrific frenzy, and there's a, the main chapter there is called the siege of the Tuileries. Now this is before, the reign of terror. This is the thing that initiates the reign of terror, which was probably and possibly even worse than this. I haven't read it yet, but I wanted to just go through this. So just relax. I'm gonna read a little a little bit from this then we're gonna come back to this topic because it's relevant, I think. It says this. It says, so they had burst into this same hall at the Tuileries, this big building where, Louis the 16th was ensconced. Was it 17th? 16th, I think. So they had burst into this same hall 7 weeks earlier.
They so they had stormed at the great staircase breathing threatenings and slaughter, only to be brought to bay when they reached their goal. Now, with the ferocious Marsolais at their head, there was to be no pause, no relenting, and like a devastating torrent, they swept onwards and spread themselves all over the palace. A mad rage for destruction possessed them. Everything animate or inanimate fell beneath the blows of their pikes and muskets. Furniture was flung from the windows. The great mirrors, in which Medici Antoinette had studied the hypocritical airs she showed in public, flew into a 1,000 fragments.
The soldiers who had remained at their posts, even the wounded lying helpless on the floors, and the doctors bending over them to dress their wounds, were barbarously butchered. Rivers of blood flowed over the shining parquet of the great apartments. Everywhere the savage horde pursued their victims. The grey haired porters were dragged forth from their lodges. Fugitives were tracked down to the deepest cellars, up to the remotest attics, and put to death. In the queen's bedroom, women of the town tore open the wardrobes and dressed themselves in the Queen's gowns. 1, throwing herself on the bed, cried out that someone was concealed beneath the bedding, and the mattress, being torn off amidst drunken laughter, a trembling Swiss was discovered and massacred.
The scenes that took place were so unspeakably hideous that one would thankfully draw a veil over what followed. But if we are to understand the French Revolution as it really was, if we are to see this 10th August so vaunted by revolutionary writers in its true colors, we must look facts in the face. And in full justice to the people, one circumstance must not be forgotten. The mob that committed these atrocities was literally mad with drink. For in that first wild onrush, a band of insurgents had found their way down to the cellars and gorged themselves with wine and liqueurs. No less than 200, says Prudhomme, died of the effects. I'm gonna repeat that. No less than 200 of them died from swallowing down all these liqueurs.
Then, while some remained lying in helpless stupor on the cellar floors, others bore supplies to their comrades up above. The contents of 10,000 bottles were distributed amongst the mob. The garden and courtyards around the chateau became a sea of broken glass. The effect of this indiscriminate carousing on unaccustomed liqueurs, wildly mingled, was to produce in the people a condition of complete dementia, and it is, as creatures deprived of all reasoning faculty, of all semblance to humanity, no more responsible for their actions than Bedlam suddenly turned loose, that we must regard them.
So I just thought I would read that because I think it really gets the impact a bit across. That's Nestor Webster. It's towards the tail end of the siege of the Tuileries, which is about just over halfway through the entire book. And I understand it's about to get worse. But that was a very, very bad day. Napoleon was actually on hand that day and witnessed it. There's a comment which I was trying to find, but I couldn't find it before the show, saying that it was as bad as anything he saw in any battle after that. It was that bad. So, I hope we don't go into those. Anyway, I just thought we'd there we go. We went into a little sort of side road with regards to the French revolution and back to where we are, because you mentioned it, Patrick, so you gave me an in.
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Yeah. Proudhon, he he's talked about or written about in that Fire in the Minds of Men by Billington. Mhmm. James Billington. Who is actually the name James Billington, he was one of the, well known public executioners during the French revolution that ran the guillotines. That's for Really? For another odd yeah. It's kind of odd Wow. Odd name.
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That is.
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That is. Yeah. But he goes into Prudhomme. He goes into, what was it? Goodwin Barnaby? I'm trying to think of his name. Oh, I see. Englishman, and he had a yeah. Yeah. And he had the church of communism, otherwise known as the church of communitarianism. Oh, I'm sure. Whole buzzword of communitarianism goes back to that that time period just before or just Mhmm. During Marx in the the time period of the 18 100. But, yeah. Definitely drunk drunken
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Yeah. Drunken behavior. I mean, that's a lot of booze. That is a lot of booze. That is a lot of booze. That is a lot. So the idea that 200 of them literally drank themselves to death gives you some indicate. It must have been absolutely horrific. Has a party gone badly wrong? What were the I mean, I haven't read some of the other bits. The butchery is just ridiculous. I mean, it's it's just mad. Obviously, totally insane. But, you know, like I've said before, you run out of adjectives to describe this. But the the reason why I keep going back to the French revolution is that, personally, I didn't know a great deal about the details of it, although it fits the pattern that we see in all of these things, and just, you know, coming back to this thing that's happening with HR 6090, or whatever is about to happen with it.
If we look at the the sort of patterning, we've got you have Hamas, which is, as I understand it, a creation of the Israeli security services. They built it and paid for it. Then it apparently attacks them in, whenever it is, October 6th, several months ago. Apparently, commits these terrible things. I have no way of doubting or agreeing with them because we're receiving our stuff courtesy of a media that's completely bent out of whack, but something's obviously going on. There's then outrage or another build steadily steady increase in the outrage on US campuses, which has been fueled probably by something. It may be just quite natural, you know. I don't really know. I haven't got any students here to come on, but that's going on.
You've got Soros funding it to create, like we said, this dialectic. Why you know, the big question is why is George Soros funding people to, rally in support of Palestine, as it were, against his own people? Surely, shumashtaik, you know, does that not throw up question marks for people? It it should do. Don't you think?
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Yeah. Well, it could be organic and and they just, you know, are coming to a realization or it probably could be just a way to get this bill passed through. Yeah. Because it's it seems like it's what I think it is. Wanting to do a long
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time. Yes. That's what I think it is. I absolutely think that. I just look so now, you know that thing where if you want to trap pigs or sheep or anything in a field, you find out where they go. You'd know better than anybody, Patrick, actually. Not that I'm thinking necessarily need to do this anymore, but isn't that doesn't it go something like this? You find out where they turn up and feed. You leave some feed for them there. And then one day, you put a fence in just one line. They're a bit suspicious, but they come up for the 3rd, and that's all there is. And you leave them like that for a bit. Then you put up a second fence, and they come in, and they're a bit more suspicious, but they they see that they can get in and out. Then a third one, so they walk in and walk out. And then one day they go in, and you finally put the gate on the whole thing. And this process of incremental removal of liberties, which don't appear to be that, seems to take place all the time. And if we go back, I mean, it's literally, you know, the thing as well. That's what I was gonna say.
This got passed yet supposedly, it got passed yesterday. Yes? On May 1st? Supposedly.
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On May 1st of all yeah.
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Well. Well, well, well. Yeah.
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Big surprise.
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Which happened also to be the day in 1970 when Kent State took place, the incident where 4 students were shot. Yeah.
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Yes. Well, was that was that May 1st, the Kent State thing? Was it? Yeah. Yeah. It was May 1st.
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19th the day that the Illuminati was started.
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No. Are you sure? You mean Adam, Adam Weishaupt, the Jesuit Yeah. Who was a converso. Well well well.
[00:25:18] Unknown:
I don't know. We probably can't talk about All these interesting things happening on May Day. I know. May Day. You know why they call it May Day? May Day is what you what you call out on a radio when you're in trouble. Hello? You're all hollering mayday because they're circling the wagons.
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Yeah. If you look at the rumble notes, the Sedai, that's what hate it when I do this. I put that on. I put that on the thing. Mayday, Mayday. That's two words because it is, you know, we've just come past Mayday. But, yeah. It's a shout for help, isn't it? Oh, they want you to shout for help. Oh, dear. Sir Tyson. But maybe, we're just part of a, you know, a very special group that understand all this kind of stuff and see the patterns that they're weaving with all their sort of references, and many of the educated listeners here as well. But, of course, this will be lost on the vast majority of people. They still won't know that this is really, you know, all part of their little weaving of the spell, will they? I don't think they will.
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Well, they have they have they lack the capacity to, have evil to the extent that these globalists have. So they think it's it's not fathomable that anything or anyone could be that evil, so they don't expect it.
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Mhmm.
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Not that we're gullible. I think that we're blessed and that we are compassionate as a people, and we will be fine as long as we can root out the evil. Get rid of it. Taproot. Pull it up. Mhmm. Yeah. They they insist upon calling us monsters. The definition of human being is monster. Okay? Human is monster. That from? Give me the back on it. I I remember that. What's the what's the back on what's the back story to that monster thing? Where's that come from? What's the the definition? I I believe it's in black sticks black slot dictionary, I think. The definition of human is monster. And what's what's the definition of dictionaries. What's the definition of monster? Is it should I be thinking about Boris Karloff now? What should I be thinking about, Paul? I don't know what to I don't know what to say. Could be. I didn't I didn't work it backwards. I didn't I didn't think of it that way. But Yeah. And the definition of human is monster, and, the Bible is fraught with man is sinful, and it falls short of the glory of God.
And, the whole thing is an entire guilt complex at how horrible and terrible we are as humans, as beings, as creations of God. We're horrible. That's what they're telling us. But here, these are these are benevolent people. They're they're they're the lights. They're they're the Illuminati, the bringer of the light. Please,
[00:28:21] Unknown:
Yeah. Give me a break. They mean well, Paul, don't they? They really they want to look after their monsters. So everybody out there in in Rumble land and in WBN, if you're listening to this, just to let you know, I'm sorry. The bad news is you're a monster. I'm sorry about that. Don't blame us. We're just reading it out of the book. You know, we're just we're being obedient.
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But the good news is you're all monsters, and we couldn't be in better company.
[00:28:49] Unknown:
Yeah. Monster company. Yeah. It's fantastic.
[00:28:53] Unknown:
So welcome, monsters. We did have a song we did have a song request, so it's already,
[00:29:00] Unknown:
it's already on its way to you. Did did well, there's a song request that escaped my not so BDI. Did it what? Did it fly into the chat? And I missed it. Did it? Is that what happened? Yeah. Yeah. It's in the rumble chat. And,
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it it was a song that was requested literally weeks ago. So I had already
[00:29:20] Unknown:
obtained and recoded that. So all I had to do is go to my library, pull it up, and send it to you. Piece of cake. Oh, okay. Alright. Okay. Alright. Should we play it now? Should we just have a quick break? Anybody on for a quick break? Yeah. Let's Could do if you want. We're at the 5th of the hour. We could. Absolutely fantastic. We're 30 minutes in. You're listening to Paul English Live here on WBN 324. Look, we're playing a song already after 30 minutes. It's groovy tonight, isn't it? This is for all you monsters out there. We ought to really get the monster mash, actually, by Bobby Pickett and the crypt kicker, shouldn't we? But, we don't really have to do it. I wonder if this is gonna play. Let me just check my sound levels.
As he said, oh, it wouldn't have done then. It would have come up as a massive 0. I wonder if it'll just play straight from here. Hang on.
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Well, it's been building up inside of me for all. I don't know how long. I don't know why, but I keep thinking something's bound to go long. I told him, baby, when you race today, just take along my love with you. And if you knew how much I love you, baby,
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nothing could go wrong with you. Oh, what he does to me when he makes love to me and he says, don't worry, baby. 34
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radio. Stop them. Stop
[00:33:14] Unknown:
them. Stop them. Attention all listeners. Are you seeking uninterrupted access to WBN 3 24 talk radio despite incoming censorship hurdles? Well, it's a breeze. Just grab and download opera browser, then type in wbn324.zil. And stay tuned for unfiltered discussions around the clock. That's wbn324.zil.
[00:33:37] Unknown:
The views, opinions, and content of the show host and their guests appearing on the World Broadcasting Network are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of its owners, partners, and other hosts or this network. Thank you for listening to WBN 324 Talk Radio.
[00:33:54] Unknown:
And welcome back. This is almost beginning to sound like I know what I'm doing, guys. This is quite a thing. That was fantastic. I loved I loved the old Beach Boys, although their voice seems to have got a little bit higher there. No. Obviously, that was a recent cover. Who was that, Paul? Who was that masked lady singing that song? Do you know?
[00:34:12] Unknown:
That was the infamous Laurie Morgan.
[00:34:18] Unknown:
What was it? Why is she infamous? Yes. Is she just infamous, is she? Because
[00:34:24] Unknown:
because she's she's been in the music industry for decades, and she's been a love of mine since way back. Oh. She used to be married, and she was married to Keith Whitley when we lost him sadly to alcohol poisoning.
[00:34:44] Unknown:
Uh-huh. And,
[00:34:47] Unknown:
she's she's amazing. Look her up. Look her up on YouTube and,
[00:34:52] Unknown:
buy her records, buy her albums. Okay. So for me to do that that was a beat mix. Yeah. That was fantastic. It was absolutely brilliant. I love the the the what's the Beach Boys I really love? Do It Again. And the problem with Do It Again is only 2 minutes long, so I have to play it again and again and again because I absolutely love that one. How do you spell I do. Play it again. Oh, stop here. No. I want to play it again. What's how do you spell a name? How do you spell it?
[00:35:17] Unknown:
L o r r I e.
[00:35:20] Unknown:
Yeah. And surname again? O r g a
[00:35:23] Unknown:
n. Laurie Morgan. M o r g a n.
[00:35:27] Unknown:
Right. I've put it in the chat because I'm a Dimbo, and I forget everything as it's coming through. So Laurie Morgan. Hi. And quick shout out to everybody in the chat who's just been joined by Night and Day. Nice to see you. And, he's doing the same thing again, watching football so, I know that was jolly good. You know what? Whilst we're on music and I'm getting distracted and we're moving around, which is always fun isn't it? I read that unfortunately today, somebody shuffled off this model, the coil of whom I bet everybody likes, and that's Dwayne Eddy. I understand he's he's departed for Pastors New. Did you see that? Mhmm.
[00:36:10] Unknown:
No.
[00:36:11] Unknown:
Yeah. Yep. I think he was 86.
[00:36:14] Unknown:
Yeah. Not bad. Is is Dwayne Eddie? Oh, no. I'm I'm thinking now Rumble is Link Wray, isn't it? The Rumble is Link Wray.
[00:36:22] Unknown:
And Yep. And it's Raymond.
[00:36:24] Unknown:
Yeah. And is Dwayne Eddy really famous for playing the Peter Gunn theme, which was done by Henry Mancini?
[00:36:30] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. And what they would do to get that nice echo tone is they would take a microphone and put it in a big metal tank Yeah. On one end and then a loudspeaker on the other to create the reverb before that. And then he would also double up and triple up the the bass. He would Yeah. 3 bass players playing the same bass line and then 3 drum kits playing the same.
[00:36:58] Unknown:
Yes. 3 people playing drums. Dwayne my my mate who played guitar we had a we used to spend a lot of time listening to Dwayne Eddy. And, of course, he has a there's a big twang, isn't it? It's very twangy sort of sound, that kind of thing. And we used to sit around and talk about creating, a guitar or an amplifier, named after that. And the name we came up with, there's no there's no amplifier that's called this at all or guitar. It probably is for a guitar, but it's called a Twangalux. Yeah. It's not a very good name, is it? But we thought a Twangalux was a really good name for a guitar that would play just that sort of sound. It's very anyway, it's very evocative. It takes me back to being a teenager, really, because.
But he I mean, he was in the late fifties, early sixties, was his heyday, wasn't it really? I think he was, or in the sixties at some point.
[00:37:47] Unknown:
Anyway It would have been the early sixties.
[00:37:49] Unknown:
Yeah. I bet Paul's off shuffling around trying to find some Dwayne Eddy stuff right now. You know, he's gone all quiet. You know what's going on, don't you? No, not quite.
[00:37:59] Unknown:
Not quite. I was just checking the chat to see if there was another music request because Yeah. Somebody requests by Eddie or something, but it can't be Peter Gunn. Yeah.
[00:38:08] Unknown:
Well, it could be Peter Gunn. Henry Manson anyway, look, we can't go into music too much because we'll just get Rebel Rouser. Yeah. Yeah. We we'll get carried away. Well, we can go back to it a bit later. We can always come back to it. So that's fine. Where were we anyway before we started having fun? We were talking about very serious things, weren't we? Oh, yeah. The Mayday. Mayday. Mayday. Mayday. Yeah. Absolutely. Actually, I mean, that's interesting to know why it's Mayday. Why do why do you call Mayday? Is it it's m a y, shorthand for something? I mean, it's an acronym. Does it mean something or not? I don't know.
Hey, answers on a postcard, please.
[00:38:42] Unknown:
Yeah. I was just looking up in that Billington book, Fire in the Minds of Men, about the first, labor strike. Yeah. The first May Day for workers was proposed in Chicago in 18/86.
[00:38:58] Unknown:
Right. And 18/86 was the first May Day.
[00:39:02] Unknown:
Yeah. Which led to the Pullman strike in Chicago and then the the Haymarket riot, which, was they considered it to be like a revolution type scenario.
[00:39:15] Unknown:
Right.
[00:39:16] Unknown:
In America. Like another thing that was taking place. Mhmm. 1886.
[00:39:20] Unknown:
Yep. Eric's written in that he says, Twangalook sounds like a lady's suspenders. I think that really says more about Eric than it says about anything else, really, doesn't it? I think I think you've revealed hidden part of your character there, Eric. So not that I would know what those things are. This is not very manly talk, is it? I was on I'm sorry. I'm just moving it around a bit as things jump into my head. Here's, here's a pub quiz question for anybody in the chat if you're English. And, Paul, you'll know this because we were talking about it, earlier today.
The assassination of presidents. Okay? Now you we came up with 3 today, Patrick. How many are there that have been there's Lincoln, there's Kennedy that kind of bookends the thing, and there's was it McKinley in the early 19 McKinley? Yeah. I think it was like, no. 5. Yeah. Those are the 3 he was poisoned, wasn't he, or something in a restaurant? Is that what happened? No. No. He was shot in Buffalo, New York, I believe. Or no. Near, well, near Niagara Falls Right. I think. Okay. Any others? Are there any more than that? Or is that it? We got we're up to 3, are we? I think there was a duel in there somewhere, but that wasn't really an assassination.
[00:40:36] Unknown:
That might have been Hamilton.
[00:40:38] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Well, yeah. It was an assassination. Yeah. This is where RM Burr plugged the highly honorable Alexander Hamilton. Is that right?
[00:40:48] Unknown:
I think that's right.
[00:40:50] Unknown:
They say you shouldn't laugh at the dead, but let's face it, Hamilton was not a good deal, was he? He wasn't a good lad. He was a very very bad person. So the quick the pub question I have, is this, Have any English prime ministers been assassinated? That's the the and I put this I was out with some friends the other night, and, they didn't know the answer to this either. I have no idea. Yeah. No. It's an interesting question. I went to school, you see, and was taught things. And you'd think, of course, that if an English prime minister was assassinated, that we would know about it. Right?
Well, it turns out that one was assassinated. How about that? In 18/12. 18/12.
[00:41:38] Unknown:
That's famous.
[00:41:39] Unknown:
It is. 18/12 Overture. The 18/12 Overture. A chap called Spencer Percival was shot in the chest in the lobby of the houses of parliament in 18/12 on 11th May. In fact, it's it's 11th May, a week on Saturday. So that will be the whatever it is, 212th anniversary. 212. 212 years ago, this coming Saturday. Spencer Bercivel was shot in the heart and died there on the spot. Cried out, oh, foul murder or something like that. His assassin was, of course, a lone assassin. I guess this is when they were laying down the microphone called Bellingham, I think his surname was, or something like that, or Belton. He was put on trial, very fast trial. It it was, as I said, positioned as a lone nut gunman. Apparently, had some grievance for commercial reasons. He'd been based in Russia and all sorts of other things. So there was some kind of genuine backstory to it. But his trial was very quick. He was hung very very quickly before he could talk to the newspapers about anything too much.
Now 18/12 is actually quite an important year, certainly in terms of relations, if you can call them that, between Britain and your neck of the woods, isn't it? It's a very big year, 18/12, because there's the War of 18/12.
[00:43:00] Unknown:
The War of 18/12.
[00:43:01] Unknown:
There's the War of where the Brits turned up and burnt the White House then and turned it into a black house, I suppose, if they burnt it to bits. I don't know quite what happened. And they ran off with lots of documents and things. Well, the backstory to this is intriguing. And the reason why I'm sort of saying these things is the last few days, I I read I've read this about 3 times this document. And so me mentioning Spencer Percival is kind of embarrassing because I must have read it 2 or 3 times before. But it's Stephen Mitford Goodson's book, A History of Central Banking and the Enslavement of Mankind.
Now I'm assuming you 2 wise chaps know of it, but if you don't, don't be embarrassed and say, I don't know what you're talking about. But you I'm assuming you've probably heard of this document. Yeah? No? What which what is it again? So I'll say it again. So the author is Stephen Mitford Goodson.
[00:43:57] Unknown:
Oh, I know him. Yeah. South African banker.
[00:44:00] Unknown:
Yeah. I think Andy Hitchcock actually once interviewed him. And were he still alive, he would have been at the top yeah. I know. I I wanted to talk to him so bad. But they did kill him, in hospital because I remember reading, messages that were being sent out that he felt pretty sure they were poisoning him while he was in there. I think he was about 72 when he died. And he worked in the South African Central Bank. So this is a guy that absolutely knows stuff.
[00:44:26] Unknown:
And, He was leading a party called the Anti Usury and State Bank Party. Don't you like him? If I'm not mistaken. Yeah. Yeah. So a good guy.
[00:44:36] Unknown:
A really, really good guy. And his book is in part I mean, it's a fantastic book. I was telling some people before because it's one of those incredibly, lucid, books. I'm lucky. It's only 200 pages long and, good illustrations throughout. And he's he's basically alighting on these key trigger points up and down the history line, which reveal the pattern. And it seems to me we can't reveal this pattern often enough. You have to keep revealing it and saying it again. I sometimes feel like a broken record probably probably becoming a broken record now. Maybe it's not so bad. And, thanks thanks, Kaddy 7.
So if you're in the Rumble chat, Kaddy 7 has just put a link through to the document, which is where I got it from too, which is over on archive.org. I did have I've got a hard copy somewhere kicking around the attic. I don't have an attic. The loft is what I mean. It's excellent. I would heartily recommend it to you, even if you're familiar with what's in it. It's a blast of a reed. It's really well put together. It's energized. It's lively. It's a wonderful sort of abbreviation of things. And he's looking at this this pattern, and this also dovetails in Patrick with the work of, Michael Hudson, I feel.
Because he's talking in in the early stages. The ancient stuff is about this domination of land ownership, which leads to this superior class of landowners who ultimately form the basis of the usury issuing class. And it's not even going back all these times, it's not necessarily confined to one tribe of people. Greece succumbs to this. The patrician classes, they're, you know, recorded, basically destroy the the civilization from within because they gotta get paid. Right? They've gotta get paid. And, the money changers need to get paid. They do. They get paid first, and if there's anything left, you might get something. And, anyway, I've just been going through it a rate of knots. It's absolutely fantastic.
And Julius Caesar. Right? And I mentioned Julius Caesar because in a couple of weeks' time, 2 or 3 weeks' time, I'm hoping to have a chap on, and we're going to talk about Shakespeare. He's a Shakespeare expert. I had a fantastic he's called Jimmy Moggler. He's been a guest of Andrew, Carrollton, Hitchcock's on several occasions, and he contacted Andy and said, can he get on? So I had a wonderful call with him yesterday. It took a little while for us to sort of warm it up, but it lasted about an hour. And we're gonna have a few more calls. But I want to talk to him about Julius Caesar and several other things as well. Is this a Shakespeare expert? He really is. Not mistaken. He really, really is. Yeah. He has a website called, Your Daily Shakespeare.
But we were just talking about the effects of literature and communication and all of these things, you know, the richness of vocabulary, these sorts of things that I mean, because I'm still puzzled by Shakespeare. You see? He's puzzling. How did a man, if it is one man of course, there's all these theories floating around. How come he knew so much? I mean, it's it's off the charts what you know. You can't you can't just sit down and write all that stuff and not know that you about that stuff because you just happened to be in the Midlands. It's just weird, you know. It is when you step back and look at it. How do you know? I think he was I think he was a culmination of a number of people.
[00:48:08] Unknown:
I don't think it was one man.
[00:48:11] Unknown:
No. There's the Francis Bacon theory.
[00:48:13] Unknown:
I Yeah. There's will I am shake spear. Where did he get that name from?
[00:48:23] Unknown:
What do you got now? He he could be like the, Albert Einstein of of, English literature.
[00:48:30] Unknown:
He's off the charts. He's absolutely the thing about it is I was speaking to my sons about it the other day. They said, who? I said, yeah. And I've got a volume on the shell, the complete, you know, the complete works. Well, they don't teach it at school anymore. Right? And I can understand. I mean, I found it really hard going when I was a teenager. I mean, we did, Merchant of Venice, Hamlet, and Othello. Othello, I didn't care for much at all. Although, it's pretty Iago is worth knowing about, because we are facing armies of Iago's, who and Iago is like Wormtongue from Lord of the Rings. It's the same sort of thing. I mean, just, you know, to get a guy to actually strangle his own wife based on lies, That's quite a horrific skill set, isn't it? But, the others were it took me ages to be able to feel at ease with it because she if you read some of the sentences that the characters say, they're very short. There's about 16 ideas in it. It's just I go, woah. Do people really talk like this? I don't think they did but, yeah. So that's coming in a couple of weeks time. I'm I'm, not next week. We've got another guest on. So we'll maybe 3 weeks away, but that should be quite interesting if we can do it so that it don't become impenetrable, which is my a slight concern I've got about it. But Caesar, I just wanted to move jump over to Caesar. So it's going to be a jumping around sort of show.
Goodson's got a whole chapter on Caesar, and I want to read you a little bit about this because this is you see, everybody's got a bad impression of him. Well, if you read Goodson's little very short. It's only 2 pages. I suspect you might not have. Of course, it's worthy of more inquiry, but he says this. He says, Caesar, a 100 BC to 44 BC, so he lasted, what, 56 years, was born into an aristocratic family. He was tall, fair headed, practiced briefly as a lawyer before becoming a brilliant military commander who conquered Gaul. After his defeat of Pompey the Great in 48 BC, Pharsalus, Caesar became the undisputed leader of the Roman Republic, as we probably all know in general terms. On his return to Italy in 45 BC, he found the streets here we get into the whole thing again. It always comes back to this. The economy, the management of this of the nation, etcetera etcetera.
Caesar found the streets and cities crowded with homeless people who had been forced off the land by usurers and land monopolists. 3, and this is what Michael Hudson talks about as well, this this dynamic. 300,000 people had to be fed daily. So this is 45 BC. That's a lot of people. I mean, it must have been huge compared to the rest of the world. Had to be fed daily at the public granary. Usury was flourishing with disastrous consequences. Well, it's never flourished without disastrous consequences, has it? The principal usurers were charging interest rates as high as 48% per annum.
As Lucius Aeneas Seneca, we all know the philosopher would later remark in De Superstition, the customs of that most criminal nation have gained such strength that they have now been received in all the lands. The conquered have given laws to the conqueror. At that time, there were 2 main political parties, the optimates, centered around the nobility, the senate, and the privileged few. That's the land owning class. The creditor class, as Hudson would probably call them, or maybe he wouldn't, but certainly the creditors, and the populares who represented the citizens. Caesar immediately assumed leadership of the Populares.
He fully understood the evils of usury and how to counter them. He recognized the profound truth that money is a national agent created by law, same thing that Lincoln said, even though Lincoln's obviously an ambivalent figure as well in way many ways, for a national purpose, and that no classes of men should withhold it from circulation so as to cause panics, in order that speculators could advance the rates of interest, or could buy up property at ruinous prices after such panic. And then these are these things that he introduced and they're worth just going through because these would work, broadly speaking right now.
So he said, this is what he enacted. Restoration of property was done at the much lower valuations which had held prior to the civil war in 49 BC. Several remissions of rents, the forgiveness of debts, a jubilee as it were, of rents were granted. Large numbers of poor citizens and discharged veterans were settled on looking after your, army, your ex army. Free housing was provided to 80,000 impoverished families. Soldiers' pay was increased from a 123 to 225 denarii. The corn dole was regulated. Provincial communities were enfranchised. Confusion in the calendar, and Thomas Anderson was talking about the calendar before, was removed by fixing it at 365 and a quarter days, although I personally do find that rather confusing, from the 1st January 44 BC.
His monetary reforms were as follows, and there's just 7 of them. So this is not a long list. Here we go. State debt levels were immediately reduced by 25%. Controls of the mints, this is the big one, was transferred from the patricians, that is the usurers, back to the government. Cheap metal coins were issued as the means of exchange. It was ruled that interest could not be levied at more than 1% per month. It was decreed that interest could not be charged on interest, I. E. No compound interest, and that the total interest charged could never exceed the capital loaned, unlike a mortgage today, where if you borrow a 100,000, you pay $350 or $300 back or something.
Slavery was abolished as a means of settling debts. And number 7, aristocrats were forced to employ their capital and not hoard it. These measure these measures enraged the aristocrats and plutocrats, I. E. What's that in modern terms? The City of London. Okay? Bear Stearns, all those banks during the long term capital management ruin in 2008, enraged them, whose livelihood was now severely restricted. Yeah. Right. They therefore conspired to murder Caesar, the hero of the people. And on that fateful morning 15th March 44 BC, only 4 years after assuming power, he arrived at the senate building unarmed, having dismissed his military guard Who had previously been in constant attendance surrounded by 60 conspirators, he was stabbed to death and received 23 wounds.
So Caesar goes into that same column as Napoleon, as Gaddafi, as Hitler, anyone that has sought to put the economic strength of the nation at the disposal of the people and cut out the usurers. It's tricky getting rid of these buggers, isn't it?
[00:55:20] Unknown:
Thanks for listening to that, bud. It is JFK. Yep. J JFK wanted to do away with that too. Yeah. He wanted to print it print money through the treasury rather than the Federal Reserve Banks.
[00:55:34] Unknown:
Yeah. The money changer. What was Roger talking about this morning, JFK, 2 weeks to a month before he was assassinated? He, as you said that JFK wanted the city of was it city of Israel or or who to be on the foreign agent on
[00:55:56] Unknown:
APAC. On APAC. The American Israeli Political Action Committee. Yeah.
[00:56:03] Unknown:
So To have them register as a foreign agent. Yeah. He wanted them to register as a foreign agent and well, son of a bee. He, he gets assassinated a month later.
[00:56:17] Unknown:
Yeah. And and that same group is still is responsible for the legislation in the house that just passed, the antisemitism Right. Act.
[00:56:26] Unknown:
That they just passed through the house. Which which coincidentally is a shopping list of all of the things that they have done throughout history. No. I mean, they indicted themselves. Yeah. It's a shopping list of everything that they have they've been guilty of doing or It's just repeats though. That anyone has said to them all about. Why does it keep repeating?
[00:56:49] Unknown:
What you see, here's a great let's say that Caesar was a great man. I know there'll be other history accounts that say he was a rotter. I I accept that. I haven't read those things. But here's a guy that basically is restoring the strength of the Roman people. Anybody that does that for their people, they get destroyed by this usury virus, by the agents of the usury virus. There's a great quote here. Is chapter 1 by the way. How usury destroyed the Roman Empire. Then it talks about Caesar. Here's a little quote from Aristotle from politics. I know you all know this backwards. You all learned this at school. Right? But this is spot on. He says, money being naturally barren, to make it breed money is preposterous and a perversion from the end of its institution, which was only to serve the purpose of exchange and not of increase. You like this last bit. Men called bankers we shall hate for they enrich themselves while doing nothing. Well, they do do something. They destroy the civilization in which they operate.
Don't they?
[00:57:51] Unknown:
Yeah. Paul They do. I, sent you in Telegram, song request. Did you? So you know. Yeah. I can put it in the rumble chat too if you want. Oh, no. Is that is that the actual song there that's recorded?
[00:58:05] Unknown:
The do I play that audio?
[00:58:08] Unknown:
Yeah. It's the Monday in May, it's called.
[00:58:12] Unknown:
Monday in May. I sent it earlier. Did you? Where did you send it? Let me go look and First personally to you. Did you? Well, personally? Yes. Like, from you to me.
[00:58:23] Unknown:
From you to me in the in the Telegram.
[00:58:27] Unknown:
3rd condition, the Kent State tragedy. Is that what you're talking about? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We'll play that. Okay. So this is I'm waiting for the Now what year is this? Because we're gonna take people back 1970. 1970. So this sounds like I listened to a bit of it and this does sound like 1970. So get ready. We're gonna play this now. Look, we're at the top. Look, good timing, actually. We're just coming up to the end of the first hour, so it's time for another song. Whizzing by, isn't it? I have got this ready, by the way. Sometimes when I load them up too early, they kind of disappear. Okay. What's this is the band. 3rd Condition, is it? That was the name of the band? Yeah. It's kind of an indie band. An indie band. Monday in May is this is about the Kent State tragedy, which we were talking about. And what was the date of that again, Patrick?
[00:59:11] Unknown:
May 1, 1970. Okay. Kent State, Ohio.
[00:59:15] Unknown:
Right. I this is the one where,
[00:59:18] Unknown:
state troopers shot and killed 6 students, was it? 6? Yeah. Yeah. There's a more famous song by Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young called Ohio that's more well known that kind of
[00:59:30] Unknown:
overshadowed this song. But this song was fairly popular before that song came out. Well, we want to be eclectic, an esoteric, and show refined taste, and you're adding to that. So that's brilliant, Patrick. Here we go. This is 3 minutes long. We'll be back after this. Monday in May by 3rd condition. Your record collection, Patrick. It's the only one of its type in the world, I expect. Or maybe I'm exaggerating a bit. What do you think? That's interesting. Yeah. It's yeah. When you start digging into these things, it's it is quite interesting. It is.
[01:03:01] Unknown:
Especially when when you look into the old catalogues of of the charts and all that when they would Yeah. Would, write down. You know, it's the you can tell history kind of by it. It's a good way to chronologically go through historical events. It's like what was popular
[01:03:16] Unknown:
Mhmm. In people's song at the time. Yes. What was what was it? You know? It is. And so it sounds very very different, you know, that's what, 54 years ago now, that song. And it sounds like a very different age in songs like that. Certain things have got a time stamp in them, and that's definitely got one of them.
[01:03:34] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. And that's that event, led to the ending of the draft for military recruitment. Did it?
[01:03:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I remember as a kid on TV when it ended. What year did that end for you? Was it 72, 74? When was it? It must have been somewhere around there. I think might have been 71. Right. Okay.
[01:03:55] Unknown:
I don't I'd have to look it up. I don't know. I know I had a coworker of mine today, yesterday that he was talking about how he was concerned about being drafted into the Vietnam War. And what they used to do then was they did it by your birth date on your birth certificate. That's right. It would be a lottery. And if your your date was chosen, you you were drafted.
[01:04:22] Unknown:
You had to report for duty. So everybody say that was born on February 15th, if that date came out, there was they they'd be drafted?
[01:04:30] Unknown:
Yeah. Wow. Based on their birth certificate.
[01:04:33] Unknown:
You know, during World War 1 over here, they thought, I don't know what they did over in your neck of the woods, but they thought, oh, all these little villages, we'll put all the guys from the village in the same platoon. That way, they'll have esprit de corps because they all know one another. This, they changed very very quickly because of the mechanized slaughter of the nature of the conflict. Because entire villages lost their entire men. All of them. The lot. You know, they because they they put a division in or a platoon or whatever it was in one part of the battlefield, it just get completely wiped out. So there were villages where they were ringing the bells for each man lost for, like, a week and a half.
There were no men left. So they realized that they needed to mix them up so that villages didn't get devastated and lose all their men in one blow, which is horrific, you know.
[01:05:21] Unknown:
And back then, they wouldn't have had birth certificates to do that with necessarily.
[01:05:26] Unknown:
Well, we're all gonna get into the process of getting rid of ours, Patrick, aren't we? We've got to get rid of those silly certificates and we're gonna have birth records that we keep within our families. We have to disengage from their centralized certification system, I guess. It's part of it. Yeah. I I remember my certification system, I
[01:05:39] Unknown:
guess, as part of it. Yeah. I I remember my great grandma. She never had a a birth certificate and I think she was born around 1907. Mhmm. So it didn't become common until later.
[01:05:50] Unknown:
Yeah. Who knows it? Your mom and dad know who you are. What else do you need? He's he's my lad. That's my lass. Good comment here from Billy Silver with regard to the book. Talking about the publishers. He writes, History of Central Banking. This is the book I've been reading from by Goodson. A must, read book, I guess. Absolutely. Goodson, very brave man. He was Black House Publishing Limited here in the UK. Their website's still up. You can order the book from them. A physical copy. Subsequent subsequent editions forced to remove a certain word. So the publishers told me, well, I can't imagine what that word is. Answers on a postcard, please. But even if you say, I'm gonna have to beep it out because, you know.
So we're gonna have to have these imaginary conversations. Well, of course, it was all because of beep and beep and beep. That's what's going to be coming up in the future, but I'm sure we'll all work it out. But, yeah, that is a good comment. Absolutely. And, it's a tremendous book. It really is. And, of course, that's where, I just reacquainted myself with the assassination or the murder of Spencer Perceval in the House of Commons on May 11, 18 12, right at the peak or the beginning. And, basically, as I said, he was being told to up the war with Yulot by certain financial interests who were very keen to reestablish a national bank in your backyard at that time.
This is before the so they did the same thing to Jackson, but the gun misfired. But, basically, they accosted Jackson, didn't they? Where did where did they try and kill Jackson? Andrew Jackson? Similar similar sort of Sure.
[01:07:28] Unknown:
I know. Yeah. Hey. Come to think of it now, I think maybe there was an attempt on Grant. Ulysses s Grant. Yeah. If I'm not mistaken.
[01:07:37] Unknown:
Right. Failed. Abraham Lincoln.
[01:07:40] Unknown:
There's some somebody shot in the gut in a railway station.
[01:07:44] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Well, not good. Yeah. Not good. I is there a way of actually getting rid of this menace?
[01:07:55] Unknown:
Well, I remember Goodson talking about state banks, and he used what I learned from him one example in here in America of one of our states, particularly North Dakota, who actually has a state bank. And North Dakota is You mentioned this the other week, didn't you? You mentioned this. There's a lot of farming and a lot of oil exploration out there now. Right. But the farmers are, like the the farmers that own land out there, they're like billionaires almost. You know? So it would make sense that they would wanna keep their money tight. You know? And not but, yeah. I remember him mentioning that that they could actually coin their own money if they wanted to.
And essentially, they can through loans. I did that. They do student loans. Now this is another interesting thing that talks ties into what happened recently with this anti semitism bill. Yes. And the student loans. Right. Because they're tied together. Not only that and and also Kent State for that matter. Yeah. Because of the draft. As a consequence of getting rid of the draft, they had to recruit soldiers based on a lot of them are, based on student debt debt forgiveness. Mhmm. And by means of forgiving that debt, the only way that you can forgive student debt is by joining the military.
Otherwise, there's no way of them getting that debt remitted. And there again, there's that whole Michael Hudson, forgive us our debts. And that is the main recruiting tool that they use for the US military since the draft was abolished is that and also it's a motive for keeping inflation high and keeping people in debt because then they have to borrow money and then they join the military in order to get out of debt, which they can never pay back. Mhmm. Because of the compound interest. And a lot of this, with the new war go you know, the massacre going on in Palestine, I think a lot of people could use that as an excuse that I don't wanna fight in, in another one of these Jewish wars Yeah. That,
[01:10:11] Unknown:
You can't say that apparently.
[01:10:13] Unknown:
No. You can't say that. It's censored, I guess. You didn't say I didn't hear what you said. What did you say? It was all it came over bad then.
[01:10:20] Unknown:
So Yeah. Yeah. Well, I guess it's kind of a challenge to this new act that took place in our house. But
[01:10:28] Unknown:
But you see also the way they phrase the the the the thing with the wording on these things as well is still part of the problem because it's not it's it's really the best focus for us is on the money power and to forget the aspect of it altogether, not because it's not important. I know it's a part of it. But not all those people from that tribe are involved in this. I I just that's just simply the case. Right? But that's the popular that's the popular perception it seems. Of course. Because the Why else would it be? Absolutely. Their criminal class, which happens to sit in positions a good many positions in central banking systems, I view them as their criminal class. I mean, people have asked me about this. I said, look, have the French got a criminal class? I go, yes. Okay. Have the Scots?
Yes. What about the English? Do we have criminal? Yeah. You do. How about the Americans? Yes. The Italians? Of course, they got the mafia and the Russian. So every single sort of tribal group in the world have got people that form what you would call a criminal class, for want of a better phrase. There might be a better phrase, but I'm using that one for now. Do those people have a criminal class? Yes. They do. They're not exempt from that. The problem is is that criminal class is controlling an aspect of civilization which wreaks so much havoc, Not because I say so, but you only have to read Goodson's book to see it, and it's not the only book of its type. I mean they're difficult to get hold of, I suppose, unless you're keen.
Who would want to read about that? Well, anybody that's kind of interested, want to know why the world is massively pear shaped and doesn't work out all that. Why is, you know, the boom and bust, all these classic things that you're familiar with. There's a causative reason for it and there's a criminal element at work and it's high level bankers and I don't care where they come from. I mean, they had it they've had it everywhere where it started. Right? It may be that a certain tribe are the chief exponents of it right now, but I don't think that that's even relevant. I mean, it might be. We could go into another thing, but we probably better not because of where I live. I don't really want to go there because it's a it's tricky.
But the broad brush stroke is that, that mechanism seems to subdue anything that comes into contact with it. You know, we've mentioned here before that look at Caesar, for example. Not that we can, he's dead, but look at him. All these people. They're massively gifted in so many ways. They they have all these phenomenally admirable qualities about them. They're able to lead men. They understand the common man. They understand what it takes to win a battle, something that you and I are probably never going to experience, thankfully, in our lives, or maybe we're in one it just looks weird compared to the way we view battles from the past, which of course it is. They and they bring all this skill to bear and yet they get undone. It's this coterie of turncoats, as it were, within the inner circle that seems to do for these people time and time and time again and practically every time.
So it's this, you know, what is it? The worldwide criminal class of usurers, wherever they come from, work together to effectively, you know, suck the goodness out of all the nations that are trying to help their people. So, you know, if great people come along, how do we protect them from being poisoned, bumped off, shot, killed, stabbed, whatever, you know, because these guys are able to find people to do it because they induce them either with money or they have the means of hiding them. I mean Wilkes Booth, who's supposedly the guy that shot, Lincoln.
I've read several reports that he was basically squirreled away and ended up living out his life in Cornwall or Devon down here in the southwest of England because he was an agent of the same crew. I don't you know, there's several other stories. I I I'm aware of that, but that's certainly one of the The one with Simon Wolf, who looked very much like him. Yes. He was the head of the
[01:14:21] Unknown:
ADL. Yeah. Or the no. No. Excuse me. The Bani Berith.
[01:14:26] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. Which was a thank you. You're in a By the way, if you're out there listening to this, show, which is great, very, very excellent taste. If you're out and you want to call in and pitch in and shout off or have a question or an observation or something you just like to contribute, you can. You can call into the studio. If you go to paulenglishlive.com if you go to the wall the bottom of the page there, you'll see a link that's, something like call the studio when the show is live. And guess what? We're actually we're alive, aren't we, Patrick and Paul? Paul's being very quiet at the moment, but we are alive. Yeah. We're live. Yeah. Yep. We're live. At us live. We're 3 monsters here. And if you're a monster out there, you can call in on the monster line. Come into the monster studio, and we'll, we'll plug you into the chat. You can do the Monster Mash. Yeah. You can say your bit.
You can we you can say your bit. So Nice. Yeah. I've been rather as a Well, you've got 22 people.
[01:15:20] Unknown:
Have you? I've got 22 people in the Radio Ranch Conference, and I just want to let them know that if they wanna join the show, all they have to do is raise their hand, and I will connect their line to the studio.
[01:15:33] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. This is when we get these disembodied ethereal voices coming through. I say that. Of course, that's not literally the case, but I don't see anything on the screen here. So suddenly, this voice turns up. It's really rather freaky, actually, but probably pretty cool. Maybe it's one of the only shows where, oh, who's that? I quite like it. It's good, Paul. It's good. So you're brave. You're brave. Not many actually take in calls like that.
[01:15:57] Unknown:
Yeah. A lot of these network talk show hosts, they're afraid to do it. They don't know what they're gonna say.
[01:16:04] Unknown:
Well, I don't know what I'm gonna say, Nick. Do you know what you're gonna say? I've never I don't know what you're
[01:16:09] Unknown:
gonna say. I hope these guys are. These guys are my my extended family. I know what to expect out of them.
[01:16:17] Unknown:
Well, when you said it at first, I thought you meant that there were 22 people in your flat. They've all come around to your house. No. No. I know. I like the idea of that. Oh, yeah. We're all here in Paul's kitchen, which is where they should be, you know. Absolutely. Yeah. What yeah. I'm gonna do Do you need to do a top of the hour break? Or I mean, not a break, but a station No. I've done my breaks. Well, we might do another one. It's what we're up to. Yeah. I'm just told to play 1 one or something, I get carried away. I probably could get some new breaks. I get some new sort of little things. I need to put a few things together. Maybe we get that horse winning all the time, Paul. I don't have it on hand right now. But, the winning horse could be a signal for some new event in the show. So that would be that would be pretty good. We What else was that? That was good. We could. We could. I've got a big board here that I'm supposed to fill up with loads of clips and things. I know I just don't have any time during the week. It's a pathetic excuse, but I can't find it at the moment. But I need to sit down for a couple of of hours and just fill it up with lots of, you know, pointless distracting sounds and noises and bloops and things. They kinda work, don't they? What now, Paul,
[01:17:27] Unknown:
regarding regarding these student protests Mhmm. It's kinda interesting because you can't say it's just one group because a a lot of the people on these campuses are of the tribe themselves of the Jewish persuasion. I know. Yes. And it's like yeah. And I I was I've even read about Kent State that 3 of the 4 that were killed were themselves Jewish. Yes. So it's it's very interesting that it's like
[01:17:55] Unknown:
It's their it's their leadership class, this criminal class that are the cause of the problem. It has to be. Just like ours is for us. It's not it's definitely seems to be more pre They've got more in common in terms of subduing the plebs, the monsters, with one another irrespective of whatever religious, cultural, or ethnic background they think might come from than they do with their own people. Is it not that I mean, the history is being put, you know was it you that was saying this, Paul? I can't remember. Someone sent it recently. When they want you to go to war, it's not for your benefit.
It's never for your benefit. You know, people have been induced to do these things, to go off and kill another bunch of innocent people who are also being abused by their government as well. I know I'm only saying things that many people know but they need to be repeated. We got to sort of find a way, I guess, of of cashing these things and repeating them and getting them simpler and bang, you know. We can't keep like we had this guy over here, the head of the British army, about 18 months ago banging on about the fact we've got to prepare to go to war with Russia. You prepare. You get on with it. You and your mates go if you're that keen. We're not interested. What am I fighting for so that you can continue to rob me and my children and grandchildren? I don't think so. That's really what's required. They need to be addressed firmly, verbally, and then ignored for the rest of their lives because these people have got literally nothing to offer except ruin for us as their history shows. They're not very good at what they do, but you can't that get that across to them because they're full of hubris.
Here we are the we're the special people. We really know what we're doing, you know. And, no, you don't. You don't. I'm not impressed with them. So,
[01:19:39] Unknown:
And the only authority the only authority they have over you is the authority you believe they have over you. Yeah. Yeah. People need to start thinking that. They need to they need to stop acting like slaves and start acting like people.
[01:19:59] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[01:19:59] Unknown:
The people that created the government by and for the people. Yes. Those people. Yeah. How can a creation be greater than the creator? It cannot be
[01:20:10] Unknown:
the people created government. It's time to whack them back into shape. I like that phrase. Let's whack them back into shape. They do. There's no consequences for their vile actions. They don't even get a kick in the shins and that really hurts, you know. And I mean it literally. Right? It's one of the most painful things ever. If someone kicks you in the shins, it's really bad. Well, they need that in all sorts. They don't pay any price. I remember the guy that I stood that taught me the banking stuff back in the nineties. He said, we pay for their mistakes all the time.
They make us pay for their mistakes. And they're a walking 247 mistake as a class of people. They're a complete mistake. They're totally out of order. They've got this, you know, self referencing cult. They think they know best. You say, I don't think you do. They don't even hear that. I don't listen to you. You're a pleb. Yep. It's a massive problem.
[01:21:05] Unknown:
I've I have I have a, a test for you. And I'm sure you know the answer to this because the actual name of the guy that said it escapes me at the moment. But it is compound interest. Those who understand it, profit from it. Those who do not, pay it. Yep. It's the same thing that we're dealing with.
[01:21:30] Unknown:
It is.
[01:21:31] Unknown:
Who wants that?
[01:21:34] Unknown:
I don't know. There's a lot there's a lot about there's a lot of quotes, but I don't know that specific one. It didn't ring a bell with me. It's almost like you have to get used to poverty in order to do anything to avoid it. That's grim, but I think probably true, Patrick. Yeah. You have to it's like you have to feel the rough edge of life before something fires you up enough to go, this is absolutely out of order. And, you know, one of the things that they've it's not so much that they've hit upon, but one of the things that's happened to us, it seems to me, is we do live a very comfortable life. I know we can people like us can find a lot of things to pick apart and we should because we're right to pick these things apart. But if you look at the way we live, in spite of all the attacks through the so called pharmaceutical industry, the rotten food or the food being depleted of goodness and things getting worse, we've been in a generation that's managed to many of us to make seventies eighties and even many people into their nineties.
So we've most of us have lived longer than the King of England would have lived 500 years ago. He wouldn't have made that at all. They're all dying at 50 if they were lucky, and 40, most of them. So I'm not trying to say I looked up who said that. Who said it?
[01:22:42] Unknown:
I looked the underlying wisdom of the adage derives from the power of compounding what Albert Einstein called the 8th wonder of the world. He who understands it, earns it. He who doesn't, pays it. Mhmm.
[01:22:58] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Because I'm always a bit icky when people I love Einstein. Do you like him? Well, I often think of him as a plagiarist ripping off the things from the patent office. Office. It's very difficult for me to get that picture out of my head. Well, okay. Yeah. He ripped off he ripped off things from the Patent Office, and he had this thing going on with Tesla.
[01:23:18] Unknown:
Like, he was at William Shakespeare. Thrilled to be the smartest man in the world. And he says Yeah. I don't know. You'll have to ask Nikola Tesla. But I I used to celebrate his birthday. It's, like, in March or something like that. Yeah. Used to.
[01:23:34] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:23:36] Unknown:
It's kinda sad when all your heroes turn out to be it's it's pretty sad when all your your past heroes turn out to be the problem in the past too, you know. Fight. Like Churchill and all these the roles of Will. No. No. No.
[01:23:51] Unknown:
No. It's true. And what about your favorite movie actresses that turned out to be hims? Good grief.
[01:24:00] Unknown:
Oh, I don't wanna go there. That's just too much. It's Thursday night. I'm actually I don't wanna go there either. We try going to that pit as well. We've been into a few, but you're you're right. The problem with Churchill, right, is I hate this. Many of his turns of phrase are absolutely they're brilliant. This is this is one of the things about he he's a he is an absolute master of language. I remember someone, which is, you know, it's what it would have to be considering how he rewrote his own legend. What was that thing he said? He said, people are gonna think great of me because of the history of me because I'm gonna write it. And he did, you know. Although, there is a lot of evidence suggesting there's a whole team of writers working with him on his history of World War 2. I'm not really ad I'm not advertising and say you should go there, but,
[01:24:45] Unknown:
I've just the importance of the media.
[01:24:48] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I've got a little announcement to make as well, because I might as well make it now. So, David Irving, who people will know of, I'm, I've been engaged and have begun working on an audio book of 1 of David Irving's books, courtesy of working with Irving Publishing. Wow. Yeah. Congratulations, Paul. Well, I wasn't going to say anything about it, but they've put it out on Twitter. There's about 15,000 people sitting there, so I kind of figure the cat's out of the bag. We're just gonna, you know I shouldn't say this because the work's not finished yet. It should be finished in about 4 or 5 weeks time at current speed rates, unless they call me up and say we need it yesterday, in which case I'll have to stay up all night and speak like a rabbit. But, you come across it's, there's certain phrases in there because Churchill's in one of these books. So, and one of them was he's talking about Clement Attlee, who was another I think it's Clement Attlee he was talking about, another British politician. He said, he was a modest man with much to be modest about.
Which I thought, I just going, You bugger. That's so good. It is good. It's really really good. These, you know, these aphorisms, these little turns of phrase that he came up with. So and, another one which I really like by him. I don't like him. I mean, actually, basically, I kind of like him up to about 1921, and then something happened to him in the twenties, and he was basically induced over to the side of the usurer class. That's simply what happened in simple terms, and they paid for him. You know, they paid for his living throughout the 19 thirties and kept him in abeyance to and wheeled him out at the end, to effectively shatter everything.
[01:26:29] Unknown:
That was like Roosevelt in his first for his first, presidential run. He was anti war. People were all for him. Yep. And then he turned.
[01:26:41] Unknown:
And what turns them? Why are we not in that conversation? Why is it not recorded when this series of meetings or coffee gatherings or, some a bar, and and some proposition is put to these people that they can't refuse. It's like a mafia thing. I'll make him an offer he can't refuse.
[01:26:55] Unknown:
There's something there. I know why it is. Yeah. Why is it, Paul? I know why it is. What they ultimately wind up doing in their second term of the presidency, like, for presidents, alright, they can be elected to 2 terms, 4 years each. Right? Mhmm. Well, what they ultimately wanted to accomplish with their presidency, they always accomplish in the 2nd term. The 1st term is simply campaigning for the 2nd term. That's it. Yeah. Yeah. That's the deal.
[01:27:28] Unknown:
Your terms are so short. They're only 4 years. We used to make this it almost seems like America's permanently in sort of electioneering mode all the time. It's nonstop. Very, very I think Roosevelt had 2, 3 terms,
[01:27:40] Unknown:
and then they changed the law with Truman in the fifties Right. Yeah. Saying that they could only have 2 terms.
[01:27:47] Unknown:
It's a bit strange though if you get someone really good. But then Yeah. Are you gonna get someone really good now? Are you? Is it possible? It's like put Vladimir Putin and Lukashenko
[01:27:59] Unknown:
Yeah. Are are examples of, long term presidents that are more or less rulers in that regard.
[01:28:07] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I can't I'm thinking of all these things from Churchill now. It's actually, I don't know so many. There was a great thing he said about I've been listening to Yeah. Go on. I've been listening to all of these old recordings from World War 2 broadcasts on the BBC and NBC, ABC, CBS. Well, you sent didn't you send me a file link or something? Yeah. You should you should start listening to some of those other ones. Yeah. You're gonna have to keep reminding me because I do want listen to those. We can use them and drop them into the show here from time to time. I was looking up Walter Winchell
[01:28:36] Unknown:
yesterday. He was one of these radio announcers, and he was instrumental in, in, getting us amped up to go to war and his, his, coverage of Charles Lindbergh, basically calling him an ostrich hiding his head in the sand as an isolationist, not wanting to go to war to fight, fight the Nazis and the access powers. Yeah. Yeah. But they shame they shame their opponents and they're very good at it and getting it to become a popular perception.
[01:29:19] Unknown:
Right. You know, so it's this bombardment of the mind with these sentences, this emotive hook string that people don't check. Once you've moved them into a notion, the ability to analyze thing from a logic and factual point of view is massively reduced, and people then just a bit like those people in the French Revolution. They start ripping each other apart, because it was fueled by a lot of booze, but there's never a shortage of that either. And then it's tied to to,
[01:29:44] Unknown:
advertising to get people you know, they they draw in labor as, you know, talk about strikes and how they've diverted strikes from happening in order to meet a common goal the common good. And then they have all of these commercials. You listen to these old commercials for, like, Barbasol shaving cream or Jergens lotion or, you know, all these different things that Yeah. We we know about today Yeah. That still exist as products for advertising. That whole idea of advertising is part of that whole psychology of getting people to accept what they're doing and making it mainstream is because they they incorporate that advertising scheme, the huck string into it as well that that makes it seem legitimate.
[01:30:32] Unknown:
It does. I love those old adverts. I caught the audio one the other day. This has traveled over to this side of the pond as well. That wonder I I remember it first seeing as a sort of magazine advert, where what is it? More doctors smoke, was it camel, than any other cigarette? I think it was. The implication being, if you want to smoke healthy cigarettes Yeah. Merle. Edward Merle or or Merle. Yeah. He he would smoke a camel cigarettes. Camels. They're delightful. You should smoke them too, and you'll be like me, a doctor. You know? It's nonsense. I heard the radio version of it. It's fantastic. It made me want to start smoking again. It was that good. No, it didn't. But, you know, I I love the what we I'd call it sort of slightly cheesy.
This sort of tremendous authoritarian and sort of very sincere approach. I find it charming and wonderful, and it must have been devastatingly powerful at the time. I mean, they managed to get women smoking, didn't they? Like, chimneys, you know, with berets in the twenties and getting all that going. And Ed Edward r Murrow was this famous CBS correspondent
[01:31:39] Unknown:
over there. His real name is actually Egbert. It's not Edward. It's Egbert.
[01:31:43] Unknown:
I'm I'm glad I know that. He's the guy. Isn't he the one that did the radio broadcast from London when it was being bombed? Yes. I think there's a yeah. Yes. He's look I'm looking through the smoke or something like that. I remember certain lines. Yeah. He did a line He was also against Joseph McCarthy when they were going after the the communists in our government. Right? Yeah. And he was
[01:32:06] Unknown:
he was there to protect the the good communists Mhmm. And in the
[01:32:13] Unknown:
media. So Yeah.
[01:32:16] Unknown:
Yeah. Oh, wow. Basically, they they they create heroes. They create these you'll hear these in these old war reports about this soldier that did this the flu, you know, 40 missions of bombing and comes back to report and how the boys are doing and and then they they bring in the feminism with the women soldiers, you know, the women's brigade. The Mhmm.
[01:32:44] Unknown:
That they had.
[01:32:46] Unknown:
Yeah. I I guess as a time of propaganda, during warfare must I can assume it's very effective because people are in a heightened state of fear, anxiety, bravado, all those sorts of things that that would only come up in a period like that where potentially you're facing the imminent loss of your life at short notice or way before your due date. Yeah. And so people must be highly susceptible in that condition. We all would be.
[01:33:12] Unknown:
They sold a lot of radios, you know. They'd have like, oh, buy buy admiral radio because, you know, then they'd have some story of somebody hiding from the gestapo, and they happen to have in their cellar a radio that they could then advance the signal over to the the good guys Yes. Covertly. And it's all brought to you by Yeah. Admiral
[01:33:37] Unknown:
Well, you know what? Someone's written here, Exo, the British have always been masters at making real events fake and fake events pretty real. I think this kind of you know that sort of received British accent, Hello. This is the voice of the BBC. That thing, right, it's like a treat. It's like a dog whistling or a woman. Yeah. Oh, here's the here's mister authority. He knows what he's talking about. Look, he's got a bow tie. Hello. My name is Charles, and I want to tell you all about what's been happening today and blah blah blah blah. And you go, this is yeah. Okay. Must be true because look, he's got a he's got a bow tie. What's that line from Monty Python? Yeah. He must be good because he's not covered in shit or something like that. He's not like us, you know.
It works. I mean, it has worked. And of course they're doing more things. There's a great phrase as well. I shouldn't say this, but there's a very there's a phrase from Churchill I like. It's not directly addressed to this. This, but it's about the use of language, which I'd not forgotten, which is he said, with regards, I think, both to writing and speaking, but certainly with writing. He said the short words are best and the old short words better still. And that as a sentence is fantastic. It's so clear, and it's this lack of the really good guys, they don't have it's not florid writing.
It's not, you know, swimming in adjectives. It doesn't do that. It does something else. There's a more directed purpose to it. I think I've I might have mentioned here, you're talking about advertising there, Patrick, and there was a guy in your neck of the woods. His book became very popular on the Internet again about 20 years ago, when everybody was into sort of using direct mail and email marketing and all this kind of stuff. But this guy, worked for an ad agency in New York called Lord and something or other, which wasn't the real names of the owners either, and he was called Claude Hopkins, and he wrote a book called Scientific Advertising, which although dated because he wrote it in 1926, it's definitely worth skimming a bit and reading a few pages because I don't think there's one sentence in the entire book that's longer than 16 words.
It's like being hit by a machine gun bullets as you read through it. And it's, there's no sense to try and warm you up. You just stop getting hit by facts and pointed things, and it's very effective. It's, it was at the time. He he was the, he championed these long copy ads where they would like the New York Times. It's a what? Broadsheet is it? I don't know what you call it over there, but it's a big paper, you know, physically big. And the whole page will be just full of text. I was fascinated by these things. And, well, people actually read that. Well, probably back then they did because maybe they didn't even have radio, so they had a lot of time to sit on the train going to work and read these extremely long copy ads. It doesn't run these days, but fast netting stuff, nonetheless. I guess the the advertising industry is always a reflection, I guess, of the technology of the age and the condition of the times you live in. So
[01:36:42] Unknown:
those things are happening, you know, all the time. There's a lot of psychology that goes with advertising too to get get into the feel of whatever you're you're trying to convey Mhmm. To the people. And they use a lot of buzzwords. It's it's like psychological warfare, you know? You're you're essentially psychological warfare is not so much about communication as it is about preventing communication between 2 subjugated groups. You're trying to keep the your enemies from communicating with each other, so you create a diversion for them to Mhmm. Contemplate Yeah. That they otherwise wouldn't think of.
[01:37:19] Unknown:
Don't you think Patrick that this is a skill set that we need to employ more here than on this side? Should we do that? Or is or do we Yeah. That's why we need to study
[01:37:28] Unknown:
it thoroughly.
[01:37:30] Unknown:
Do you think inherently we tend to view that stuff as jiggery pokery and not playing on a, you know, proper it's not fair play. It's wrong to try manipulate people. Do you think there's a part of our character that's like that? I think there is, to some degree. We want fair dealings.
[01:37:43] Unknown:
But I I think So, like, for instance, like the word indoctrination, you know, it's got a negative connotation to it, doesn't it? You don't wanna be indoctrinated, do you? You know? It's kind of become negative in our culture, but it's good to have solid doctrines that you live by, principles, but not false doctrines, not lies. When it when I think of doctrine, I think of truth Mhmm. What you regard as the truth. Yeah. And just changing words to to mean certain things that that aren't necessarily bad in and of themselves. Like, conspiracy theorist is one of them. Yes. Like, that's that's a perfect example of buzzwords, you know, put together.
It is. Just create a menacing sounding phrase, you know, you use it in the wrong way. Yeah. Right. It's true.
[01:38:39] Unknown:
Yeah. I need to get some echo that because we could do some real good monster echo, cackling evil laughing in the background. I must get but, I like conspiracy analysts, you see. If anybody not that I get called that. Oh, you're a conspiracy theorist? No. Analyst. Just really clear, straight, direct You're like a news analyst. Yeah. I'm an analyst. What you're on a back end? I know what I'm talking about. Monster. You monster you. So,
[01:39:06] Unknown:
yeah, I haven't called anybody a monster in ages apart from you 2 guys here recently on a And that's why these the universities are attacked because that's kind of the the hub of culture. You know, what we perceive as the highest form of learning is in these universities. And that and it teaches young men and women how to associate themselves in the world and kind of present themselves in the best foot to get ahead.
[01:39:29] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[01:39:29] Unknown:
And Speaking of indoctrination.
[01:39:33] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:39:36] Unknown:
Universities. You know that. Yeah. Oh, yeah. It's interesting you went there.
[01:39:41] Unknown:
Oh, that's yeah. It's all part of it. It's all part of that whole, you know, getting people to think the way you want them to think. That's why they have to create these bills to make you think the way they want you to Mhmm. With the force of law so that you feel like you can't think certain things because he'll be punished by it. It's the whole reward. Like Pavlov's dogs, you know? Don't touch that button. Touch this button. You'll get treats.
[01:40:06] Unknown:
Oh, I just want and you'll get an electric shock. No. I don't want an electric shock. Don't make me touch the button. Yeah. But it works, doesn't it? I mean, universities what to say about them? I don't really I mean, these days, I don't know whether there are any really existing. I suppose there must be still a few left, but not in the way that I used to feel about it or think about it. I mean, I remember I never wanted to go to one because I was pretty clear I wasn't I wasn't oriented towards that intellectual type of life. I just, it wasn't for me. But there were peep I've said before, there are people I went to school with who were and did, and there were people from my school that went to Cambridge and Oxford, about half a dozen of them in my year. There's about a 120 students, half a dozen, maybe not so bad. But the the thing it taps into what you're saying as well, Patrick, that they use it. It has become a recruiting channel to pull the brightest out of the great mass of people, and we do produce exceptionally bright people.
You just you just do. You produce them. And they cull them and pull them into their side through that university culture and all sorts of other things and mark them out and open pathways up for them that they want them to take and close other ones off and so on and so forth. I've no doubt that this goes on. Did you see did anybody see here the interview with Pavel Durov, the guy that originated Telegram? He was interviewed by Tuka Carlson about 3 or 4 weeks ago. Did anybody catch that? Did you see any of that? Only heard about it. I'd I mean, I haven't got a link here, but I'd I'd recommend it. You don't have to watch all of it. It's an hour. I think I watched about 35 minutes and I'm, you know, something came up and I don't know. Probably had to boil an egg or something.
And, so I never finished it off, but the thing that really leaps out about him is how ridiculously bright he is. And, if I've been in the presence of people that you go, oh, yeah, their intellectual capacity is just it's in a different league. You can tell. It's a bit like if you play sport and you go up against someone who's way way better than you, you have to go,
[01:42:06] Unknown:
I'm probably not So you're saying he's the Russian Mark Zuckerberg,
[01:42:10] Unknown:
I don't no. I'm not saying that. He's genuinely bright. I I don't think Zuckerberg's anything other than an actor, you know, and a thief, really. I mean, it's a bit strong, really. But he acquired that technology from others. But he he was talking about their education. So he's got a brother who appears to be even brighter than him. His brother has won some kind of World Mathematics Championship. And he was talking about the Russian education system in the nineties when they were both there. So they'd gone to Italy, when they were young, and then they'd gone back to Russia, and then they were he at one time, he was learning as part of this sort of accelerated intense education system in Russia.
Six languages were being learned all at the same time. They were learning 6 languages all at once. Yeah. Because there there is an emphasis over there on learning multiple languages other than Russian. Yeah. But he was also doing mathematics, science, physics at degree level. This is when they started teenagers. He said it was really heavy. But he's the way that he just I I mean, it's difficult to know. Obviously, people will know that he was recruited into or was absorbed into or was seduced into the World Economic Farters Forum, those people, but he left it. Now, of course, we're then left with some kind of strange decision to make. We go, well, did he leave now as an agent to come out here and, posit, you know, Telegram as a tool for the masses, which has secretly got trillions of backdoors in it and all this, that, and the other. But he was talking about that with Carlson that they actually originally were gonna set the company up in, Silicon Valley. Why wouldn't they? And they came over and, 2 things put him off. 1, he was mugged, which he didn't like.
Somebody 3 guys tried to rob him of his phone and he fought him off and got injured a bit, but they didn't get his phone. So that was quite an an an interesting an an an anecdote that he told there. And the but the other thing he mentioned was that from the minute they arrived, they were just being followed by spooks all the time, non stop, who wanted to meet them and ask them what they were doing and whether they could do deals. Then he was approached to put back doors into the back end of Telegram. And so they went, I don't think we're gonna do that. Bye. But of course, we have you and I have got no way of knowing whether there's a backdoor in the back end of Telegram or not. There's no point even pretending that you do those things. Yeah. See, I have I have studied him in particular and he was part of,
[01:44:34] Unknown:
starting v contact day, which is the Russian Facebook. Mhmm. And it's based off of an Israeli type soft. I forget the name of the software company, but both of them, both Facebook and VK were based off of the same software. But Mhmm. What what Durov did or not, I don't I don't I'm not too familiar with how he ended up, creating Telegram. I know he was based in Saint Petersburg. Yeah. It was his brother.
[01:45:03] Unknown:
Without his brother, he was saying His brother. His brother. He couldn't have done it without his brother. I think he's very much the tech front. He he realizes it. But the obviously, the, the strength of that software from a layman's point or a semi educated point of view. I'm not a coder and don't want to be 1, and haven't got the skills to be 1, to be quite honest, at that level. But he he came up with all these encryption, because he was When I first started When I first started using it, I think I sort of joined got on to Telegram almost immediately because I was in the hoovering the new things on the tech market all the time. I've stopped doing it for a bit because,
[01:45:44] Unknown:
but Telegram is is an amazing bit of kid. I I think a lot of their servers are based in Germany,
[01:45:49] Unknown:
if I'm not Yeah. Well, they're out in Dubai now. I think that's where he's based. He was asking, he said, why are you in Dubai? He said, because they don't stick their nose into our business. We do pretty much what we like as long as we don't go over certain things, he said. So we're very happy with the level of autonomy that we've got. We don't have to answer to people or fill in forms, and all that kind of stuff, you know. So yeah.
[01:46:11] Unknown:
Yep. Well, it's probably run by supercomputers and server farms, you know, the big conglomerate, big complexes. Cause in order to store that much data, you have to have a lot of physical storage in order to do that. Yeah. And so
[01:46:28] Unknown:
I mean, there's a comment here from Ether and I'm I'm completely with you, Ether EMF, who writes, none of the internet is private. Even if you use a VPN or any type of blockchain, that's to be clear. None. I think it's the best stance to take. I wouldn't be able to agree or disagree with you, I suppose, fully, but I operate on that basis. I operate on the basis that it was designed, you know, as an ever incremental surveillance system to actually micromanage every sort of decision that you're taking. That's the that's the negative way. But the positive is that we're doing We're doing this. Look at what we're doing. This is I mean, maybe they're going, yeah, we want you to do that so we can listen to you as something with that important. I mean, I don't really operate under that delusion.
But if we can reach other people and find life finds a way, doesn't it? There's always things that you can't fully plan for, thankfully. I hope not. Otherwise, it's all kind of over if it's all sort of pre planned. But, but yeah.
[01:47:24] Unknown:
Yeah. It's interesting how they censor things. Like like on these platforms like Yes. YouTube is the perfect example, Google, any of these other places.
[01:47:35] Unknown:
Shadowbanning.
[01:47:36] Unknown:
Where are they? Shadow, shadow banning. You know, not not letting you go to people that otherwise would want to find you.
[01:47:43] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:47:45] Unknown:
Buzzwords to to, use to ban you. Yeah. That sort of thing. It's it's it's quite something
[01:47:53] Unknown:
to to learn. Like an he's a nationalist. Oh, okay. I better not go. Yeah. Well, extremist.
[01:47:59] Unknown:
Yeah. What's that? What's an extremist? Get rid of, I mean, they they can it ends up being a lot of these places end up, allowing just completely obscene material on their platforms. Yes. But if it's a political realm Yeah. They'll censor that.
[01:48:15] Unknown:
That's that's the thing that is bog mind boggling. It's like Well, it's not I mean, if you look at the weaponization of pornography, it's not, is it? I mean, this is an old thing. It it demoralizes a people in a way that they can't understand, but it does. I mean, it's just, you know because we're trying to build something finer. We want tomorrow to be better than today. We don't want a wall around in things that are just sort of like, what, really? At the level of a beast all the time? I accept that it's part of your drive when you're growing up. Yeah. Okay. So we know all that. But to wallow in it forever, it's just nuts. It's nuts.
[01:48:50] Unknown:
It actually activates the primal part of the brain. So when that is when that's taking precedence, the intellectual part of the brain, the logical part of the brain
[01:49:01] Unknown:
Yeah. Gets it forward. Anti Semitism bill. How are they gonna police that? You know, are they gonna police it the same way as they police obscenity?
[01:49:11] Unknown:
Oh, sorry about that. That's alright. That just pops up.
[01:49:15] Unknown:
Yeah. Are they gonna police it the same way they police obscenity where they'll just totally ignore it? You know, they'll, oh, well, we got a law here, but we're just gonna ignore it. Or are they gonna police that? Oh, no. They're definite.
[01:49:27] Unknown:
They're definitely not going to ignore it. Well, how are they gonna police that? And as and as far as freedom of speech as far as freedom of speech, you can say anything that you want to. You have freedom of speech, but you don't have freedom of reach.
[01:49:41] Unknown:
And that's where the shadow To the students. Yeah. And these are the people that you want to reach. Say what you want. The young the young people who are bright and attentive and want to change the world, and those are gonna be in the universities. You know? That's why they they're pushed into them by their parents. Like, we want you to have a better life than we had, so here you go. We'll we'll put our money down on you, and we we want you to thrive. And that's those are the people that are gonna shape the future. Right.
[01:50:12] Unknown:
Yep. You're right. I've had another we've had another request for a song, by the way. I had a request for a song. Do you actually
[01:50:19] Unknown:
do you actually think that the real reason behind the aptitude and intelligence testing that they give high school students prior to, graduation is for their own benefit or for their own good? No. They don't give a shit if, if a child that's graduating from high school goes into the perfect job. They wanna know what that person's IQ is and what their capacity for logical thought is because they may want to recruit them.
[01:50:51] Unknown:
Exactly. That's where the officer class of the military would typically be drawn from the universities.
[01:50:57] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:50:58] Unknown:
Exactly. It would. We do have Rebel Browser and Skype if you want that.
[01:51:03] Unknown:
Rebel who's that by? Dwayne?
[01:51:06] Unknown:
Is it? Mister Dwayne.
[01:51:09] Unknown:
Okay. So Warren Warren gave a shout out for Pinball Wizard by The Who, but it's not gonna happen this week, Warren. It was just about to happen. But now you can blame Paul b for this, Warren. So if you cross, I'll I'll send you his home address. You can send him terrible things, but he's he's brought this through.
[01:51:25] Unknown:
So let me find it. Rebel Rouser. I one one thing about one thing about Dwayne, Dwayne Eddy. Have you ever heard of Mary Baker Eddy? Yes. I think so. I have. Yeah. She was the foundress of the Church of Science. Right. The, or the, what did they call themselves? The Christian Science. She ran the Christian Science Monitor newspaper out of Boston.
[01:51:52] Unknown:
Okay. Yeah. I wonder if he's related. Just just I don't know. We had a Christian Science shop down here in my little village. I'm gonna play Rebel Rowser, by the way, because we're running out of time. We've only got 8 minutes left. So let's get this tracking, and then we can all shout at one another for the last 5 minutes. Here we go. And that was the great and now late Dwayne Eddy with Rebel Rouser. Or is it Rebel Rouser? Rebel Rebel Rebel Rouser. I enjoyed that a lot. That was good. I haven't heard that in years. Oh, hang on just a minute. Where's that? Oh, this is this is me telling something else. No. No. It's it's just Skype jumping from one song. I've got so many songs in here. So that was fantastic. That was brilliant. I love that. That was I almost like wanna make it the genuine outro music. It's so buoyant.
If you all got reminded about what it's like to be happy, that song probably was helping because it made me feel that way. That was great.
[01:56:10] Unknown:
And and full disclosure, the Who Pinball Wizard is coded and in the library. We'll catch it next week. We're gonna catch it next week. We'll do a bit of pinball wizarding
[01:56:21] Unknown:
next week. Okay, Warren. So that's fantastic. We're down to a couple of minutes. We've got about 4 or 5 minutes. By the way, I did write in the chat. Now tell me, that guitar that he was playing, that was really a Twangalux guitar. You see what I mean about the sound? We've sent it. Okay. It's a Duane Eddy Twangalux. I'd buy one. It should be all glittery and full of false crumb bits and just cheesy. Great. I like that a lot. Lovely simple tune. Brilliant.
[01:56:43] Unknown:
Metal Flake. Yes.
[01:56:45] Unknown:
Anyway, are you guys gonna have some freedom of speech tomorrow, or what? Is it all gone? What's going on? Well, that's only on college campuses, you know. Well, you don't wanna be there. You get brainwashed. Yeah. You don't wanna go there. Well, exactly.
[01:56:59] Unknown:
Should avoid those places. No. It'll be
[01:57:02] Unknown:
it'll be rubber stamped across the whole country. That's what they do. What they do is they take a small subset of the population. They say, we have a bill. It's gonna be good for everybody, but it's only going to be, effective in a small subset of the population. It probably won't affect, you at all. And as soon as it's signed, then people find out that they're rolling it out to everybody. It's all inclusive, and it's infinitely worse than anybody ever thought it was gonna be in the first place, which is pretty bad for this one
[01:57:35] Unknown:
already. That may backfire. That may backfire because it it just draws attention to it then, and people will be like, oh, yeah. It's because of this this group. You know? If it if it becomes like that Yeah. Where it's too authoritarian, then it could have a backfiring effect is all I'm saying,
[01:57:55] Unknown:
if it were rolled out like that. Yeah. But then guys do the really care of what it says. It's been brilliant. I'm gonna do the wind up thing because we're down to a couple of minutes. It's been really good. We moved it around all over the place, and, this was better than the last one from 2 weeks ago. The more we do this, the groovery it's gonna get. So, you know, keep bringing songs along and stuff. And thanks. Good shout out to everybody in the chat, for little comments and stuff like that. I'm just going to mention as well, I'm back on WBN this Sunday. What time would it be? So I'm Ria's flagship show, Sunday Long Live Radio runs on Sundays from, in UK time, 11 AM to 3 PM on WBN 324, which is Eastern, 6 AM to 10 o'clock in the morning, Sunday. So it's for you early risers, and stuff like that, but there are many out there, which is fantastic.
And I'm on in the last hour, so that would be 9 AM to 10 AM Eastern or 2 PM to 3 PM here in the UK. I'm on as a guest, during that show. So I look forward to that. Next week, fingers crossed, the guest is going to be Christopher Sparks, who's, spent the last 25 years writing a new version of the Bible. And, you guys are welcome to come along for that as well. So, Chris is hopefully gonna be here. I've got to do some tech tests with him a little bit later. Oh, I better play some SORDA music here at the end because it's just all winding up. So if you can join us, next Thursday, Christopher Sparks here, a big feat, writing a brand new Bible or translating a new one should be very interesting, and I'll probably say the word banking once or twice next week as well because I like to say it every week. It's important. So, great. Fantastic.
Yeah. Of course. Thank you, Patrick. Thank you, Paul. Yeah. Thank you. Yeah. Thank you. Brilliant. And thanks everybody at GVN listening in. Thanks everybody on Rumble. Be back here next week. See you then. Okay. And we're off WBN. We're still here rumbling along briefly on Rumble. I wasn't planning to do any after show unless I'll tell you what, if you want an after show, this how about this as an idea? If somebody calls in into the studio in the next minute or so and wants to say something, we'll keep running it. But if not, I'm kicking these reprobates out of the studio. You you gotta go home and get on with your life. I thought trying to end it in a hostile way. Yeah. I love you I love you lots. But it's it's the English way. We have to be rude to one another. It's important, you know. You've got to pull up we can't be nice all the time. It's exhausting, isn't it? You know what I mean? So, lots of good stuff covered tonight. That was great. That was really I enjoyed myself a lot tonight. So that's fantastic.
Thanks everybody in the chat. Thanks night and day for your closing comments. And Warren, we'll get pinball wizarding next week, and, that's what we're gonna do. So, let's see how Yes. How this resolution goes and what's actually gonna happen and whether it is what we think it is, which is the beginning of a sort of ring fencing operation to solely shut you down and, you know, divest you of your first amendment, which none of us want. I don't want that. It is. I want Is it
[02:01:07] Unknown:
yeah. I was just gonna say, isn't it ironic too that Dwayne Eddy died on the on the on the day, and he's he's best known for Rebel Rouser. So
[02:01:17] Unknown:
I think that's a great point to end on. Yeah. Let's be rebel rousers. We're gonna have to really get roused up. So wonderful, everyone. Okay. That's it. We're kinda out of here. We'll be back next Thursday, same old time, same bat channel, maybe with more Duane Eddy, certainly with the pinball wizard, we hope. And, hopefully, Paul and Patrick, you might be around. As I said, Christopher Sparks is the main guest next week. He's written a book called, Keys of the Kingdom Bible. It sounds as though he's written it from scratch. He hasn't. It's a very interesting tale of rewriting that document so it might be more intelligible and a more literal and direct translation. He's got a lot to say about that. So if you're into that kind of thing, I hope you are.
We're gonna talk about it because it's very important and relevant to our situation, in my humble estimation. Fantastic. Okay. So, what do I do now? I think I count 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and then we're gonna cut the feeds off. So we're gonna say goodbye to you on Rumble, goodbye on d live, and, we'll see you next week. 54321, and bye for now.
Introduction and Show Overview
Show Format and Participation
Discussion on May Day and Historical Significance
Welcoming Guests Patrick and Paul B
HR 6090 and Its Implications
French Revolution and Historical Parallels
May Day and Historical Events
Music Break: Laurie Morgan
Julius Caesar and Economic Reforms
Music Break: 3rd Condition
Discussion on University Protests and HR 6090
Advertising and Media Influence
Telegram and Internet Privacy
Music Break: Dwayne Eddy
Closing Remarks and Upcoming Shows