Broadcasts live every Wednesday at 7:00p.m. uk time on Radio Soapbox: http://radiosoapbox.com
The Shelley Tasker Show is a dynamic, thought-provoking program hosted by Shelley Tasker every Wednesday at 7pm uk time. Hour 2 is Co-hosted with the great Mallificus Scott. The show offers insightful commentary, interviews, and discussions on current events, culture, and social issues. With a focus on honest dialogue and independent perspectives, The show provides an open space for exploring diverse viewpoints and tackling important topics with authenticity and thoughtfulness. Whether you’re looking for fresh takes on trending issues or in-depth conversations,
In this episode of the Shelley Tasker Show, Shelley reflects on the challenges of live streaming and technical hiccups, while sharing personal memories of the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on her life and career. She discusses the limitations imposed during the pandemic, such as attending a friend's funeral with restricted numbers, and how these experiences motivated her to speak out and eventually start her radio show. Shelley also touches on her family's history in radio and her journey towards becoming a voice in alternative media, inspired by her father's legacy and her own experiences during the pandemic.
Shelley is joined by journalist Richie Allen, who shares insights into the current state of media and the importance of challenging echo chambers. They discuss the role of alternative media in providing long-form discussions and the challenges of maintaining journalistic integrity in a landscape filled with misinformation. Richie reflects on his career, the importance of live radio, and the need for authenticity in broadcasting. The episode also features a conversation with Mallificus Scott, who delves into historical perspectives on Zionism and world politics, drawing from his grandfather's writings.
Good evening, ladies and gentlemen and welcome to the Shelley Tasker Show coming live out of radiosoapbox.com. It's good to have your company. Today's date is Wednesday 03/26/2025. Happy hump day everybody. Well hiccups have happened already and we haven't even started. I'd like to say that I'm also streaming live on rumble but crikey I think we're gonna have to look into this because you hit the go live button and it just says it's trying to stream and the circle's going and going and going around. So I think we might have to give rumble a miss tonight. I might try again a little bit later on. Anyway dear listeners I am here and in twenty seven minutes because I'm running slightly late now we've got the awesome journalist Mr Richie Al Anon. I I haven't spoken to him for what a few years now. I've been on his show, he was a guest a couple of times and I've had him on as a guest so it's gonna be nice to have a little chatter.
Good conversationist Richie, looking forward to having him on. So I know lots of people, lots of, radio hosts have been talking about the whole five year thing, COVID, and I know some people will say, oh, just get over it. Just get over it. It happened. It's gone. Let's move on. Well, we can, but it's a bit like history in a sense, isn't it? We talk a lot about history, and this is part of our history. And, you know, as much as I loathe and love Facebook at the same time, it does have that little thing that you can press your memories button. And today, not not a nice memory, I had to attend a funeral, of a dear friend that I went to school with.
So she would have been 42 at that time, just a few weeks off her 40 birthday, bless her heart, and Jenny was a dear soul who I grew up with, hang around with in secondary school, and of course we have the whole we'd just gone into lockdown about a week before and so the funeral crikey I was looking back at comments and stuff like that and who's going who's not going and people were like oh I'm self isolating, I'm really sorry I can't go and there's no point in going because only 10 people can go in any way and I felt like I was the only person that was like hang on a minute, stand up for what's right.
But I know I wasn't the only person, but so many people obeyed those rules and my dear friend Jenny, she never got the send off she deserved. That room would have been packed out, But instead, unfortunately, it was limited to 10 people. Now when I arrived I greeted her parents outside and her brother and there was a few other people there who I didn't really know, but one of them I don't I think he was more of a friend of the parents turned up for support, so it took us over the 10 limit. So there were 11 of us. Shock horror. So this kind man said you can go in in my place and standing in this massive crematorium room, social distancing, just 10 people at a funeral.
Pretty sad really, pretty horrendous. And you know looking back now you think that actually people should have turned up and even if they didn't think they could have got through the doors they could have turned up and waited outside, listened outside. They weren't actually doing the do you remember when they were doing people's funerals on lives? I think they still do that now but it was more prominent back then which was kind of juicy in a way because people would advertise funerals on Facebook because their loved ones have died and it's obviously you can't come because of social distancing, but we will be live streaming it here.
And it made you a bit nosy because I, being that nosy sort of person, decided to click on a couple of funerals for people that I didn't even really know. But it just came up as a memory today, and it's, it's sad. And these people didn't get the send off they deserved. So I just wanted to bring that up and a meme came up in the memories. I know you're not gonna be able to see it but I'm a great lover of memes and, you know, it was all the whole eat out, go out, help out, all of that kind of stuff. And it was showing a picture of a marquee outside because this is what people were doing, wasn't it? And it says, we can't eat inside, but we can eat outside.
But it's so cold we set up outside as inside. It's fine because outside is inside. Do you get that? I know it's, I found it hilarious at the time. And even now the crazy things that people were doing self isolating all of that. Oh my beloved, I think I may have COVID. I'm testing myself because I've been with somebody that's been in close contact, the whole track and trace thing, the whole scenario. It was a nightmare, and I was telling you my story last week while we were waiting for my guests to arrive. And this time five years ago, I wasn't actually doing radio, but it was the whole COVID movement that spurred me on to get my voice out there more.
And we ask ourselves what, you know, what have we got to say? Who are we to say anything? And it's one of those points in my life when I really was outspoken. I don't believe I'm that outspoken anymore to be honest with you, but when you're really passionate and fired up about something, it was like nothing could control me. And so it kind of was the whole start. For a few years I've wanted to get into radio because some of you that know me know that my dad was a host, Graham Hart, and I'm very much like my dad, very much like him, and you know he was a musician, a performer and I get a lot of my ways from him. And I used to tune in to his show and others on that station weekly and just enjoy listening to different conversations and until then I didn't really know about alternative media and it wasn't till until I got involved in the whole COVID shenanigans that I realized how big a platform it was and how long it had actually been going.
So I was quite, amazed really because I hadn't yet started my radio show. I believe I started in September, a couple of months before I did my whole public resignation speech and I don't think we got to that bit. So I was basically saying that I was working as a healthcare assistant on the bank in the hospitals in COVID times and I had no work. We were all sent a text to tell us all to sign on to Universal Credit. And I had worked in the hospital building up to this and it was just empty. And I believed it was the calm before the storm. It was eerily empty. You never see hospitals empty do you? You can't even get a parking space in the hospital if you need to go for anything. Lo and behold we could park more or less right outside the entrance of the hospital.
And I did my last shift there twelve hours with like four patients and they were all independent so I had nothing to do and I came home and I had a rage and a rant on Facebook telling people not to be scared, the hospitals are empty but you know who's gonna believe little Shelley Tasker? Little Shelley Tasker. That's the thing, I don't think I'm anything special and people at the time used to say you're so brave aren't you? But how can you when you're in that situation not speak about it as how it was? How can you not be honest? When I think back now there are lots of people obviously now and over the years who have spoke up and spoke out about what was really happening but people still wanted to believe the mainstream media.
I suppose that's what kind of got me on my soapbox, so to speak. It was like, right, I've got a voice and, you know, I can start sharing it. And a few years ago, I really wanted to do radio, but my parents put me off because they seemed to think, you know, it could be dangerous. And I think COVID times were particularly dangerous because, you know, if, if you didn't believe in the whole COVID jabs, and stuff like that you were an anti vaxxer and I am an anti vaxxer and I'm proud to say I'm an anti vaxxer. Not, you know, my first two were all jabbed, I followed orders, you get your little red book don't you, and you just do what you're told, take them to the doctors. You know, fortunately for them they were okay.
But with child number three and well a big thirteen year age gap and life unfolding and I was slowly awake, well not unawakening, I was slowly awakening because of the things I was learning, truth groups and stuff like that. I remember going to a talk in St Ives to watch Max Egan talk about Palestine and I finally felt that I was with my people because I was always the black sheep. When the mums would go out for dinner, I might, you know, my conversation was always the different sort of stuff and when it came on to vaccines, you know, but I accepted that. It was how it was.
And I came to the point because of my job and I was speaking out and people were actually showing videos of me around the hospital because I'd spoken at a couple of rallies, showing me, showing people videos of myself asking who I was. And fortunately, at the time, we were wearing masks at the hospital, so no one really knew who I was. And then a couple of days before we went into the second lockdown, I had put a post up about the numbers who had died of COVID and those that were in hospitals with COVID. And on that date, I believe it was the November 2, yeah, two doors two days before the second lockdown, throughout the whole of Cornwall, 70 8 people had died from COVID, supposedly, because we know the flu totally disappeared.
But seventy eight people in the whole of Cornwall and that was over ten months so you could work that out at roughly, I don't know, eight nine people a month had died from covid and you would usually have that amount that died from the flu anyway. So we were going into the second lockdown and we had organised a rally in Truro and the night before that rally I had had an email from work saying that they'd been sent a screenshot with my name on it, could I get into contact with them as soon as possible please to discuss my position? It was like, oh crikey crikey, what do I do here? Because I loved my job, I loved it, no denying that. But I knew the truth was more important.
So the next day, I drove to that rally in my uniform, I dropped my son off to my parents house in a big long cove tomb because I didn't want my mum to see me in my works uniform because I think she'd be like, why are you wearing that, Shelley? And she'd start panicking. And when we did the march, I spoke, and I wore that uniform so people would identify me as a healthcare assistant. Lots of people got it wrong and said I was a nurse, but I'm not being funny. All of those emails that were sent out to people, they would have been sent out to cleaners, and anyone with half a brain would surely be questioning this.
They're seeing the facts in front of their face and they're hearing the but they're hearing stuff from the news, but they're still believing that. Seeing is believing is a saying, but I think some people, like I say, they haven't got half a brain cell or they are so conveniently brainwashed that they do literally just believe everything they hear and they can't see the other side. And I suffer with that with a lot of things these days because I see two sides to everything. And then if somebody was to put me on the spot and say, oh, Shelley, what do you think of that? I'd be like oh I see that side, I see this side and actually I can just say I'm just gonna be neutral because I can't draw a conclusion unless I've gone into something in-depth and at the time I was going into the whole COVID thing.
I was keeping charts from the emails each week and I was actually getting excited, you know, it was a it was a strange but exciting time. And these charts, they weren't changing, if anything they were just staying the same. So I did my speech outside of the cathedral in Truro and I told everybody the numbers, which people could have found out about themselves if they had gone on healthcare websites and stuff like that. And, wow, that day kind of changed my life. I didn't think for one minute it would go viral, and it did go viral. And that was how I got to meet the awesome mister Ritchie Allen and a few other alternative media outlets, UK column and other people, and I was invited on their shows, and I'd never heard of Ritchie Allen.
And it just makes me wonder now. It's like how many people realize how much alternative media is out there and it's massive isn't it because when you are awake you no longer really listen to the MSN news, all you're listening to is podcasts and things like that and the alteria alternative media which is great. So I I was kind of doing radio for a couple of months and as I mentioned I was a little bit wary. Should I be doing this? My parents would say because of Piran, you know, because he was five years old. And, you know, my ex partner at the time was not impressed with what I was doing because they were fully isolating and, you know, we're around vulnerable people and stuff like that.
So he was not happy. And then you start worrying, well, actually, courts, if he decides for one moment to take me to court over this and then he could bring in the whole vaccination thing because he wasn't vaccinated, it was scary. But on the other hand as well, it's like, I've got to do this for my son. How can I sit back and say nothing when I know this stuff? And it kind of went from there, really. And here we are, what, four and a half years on, and I had a couple of breaks in and out. It's got to be done. It's, it's not easy.
I feel like I'm putting myself out of my comfort zone here this evening because it's like, right. Richie's not coming on till half seven. I've got half an hour to fill. So a couple of times when guests have been running late I've had to, like, twaddle on a little bit and actually I'm trying to prove to myself that I can do these things. But you do have these questions in your mind, who do you think you are to do this but who do you who are you not to do this? You know, confidence is a big thing, isn't it? And I am really at that point where more than often, even though I have these inner doubt voices, it's like, who gives a shit? I am me. If you don't like me, switch over. If you don't like me, don't speak to me. And I certainly went through that with the whole COVID thing.
When the kids were still at school, crikey, the amount of people that gave me evils walking into the school ground or would stop speaking to me. It's crazy when you look back about, you know, now people deleted me and it's funny now when you get the odd friend request and you think, 'Ah, so you want to be my friend again? What's changed?' And I think we can all say safely, you know, five years on most people can see that COVID is not what we were led to believe it was. If you've got COVID now, it's like you can still go to work as long as you're, feeling okay. But you might test positive, but you feel great.
No symptoms but you're ill. Crazy. Crazy, the absolute brainwashing that we were fed. So, yeah, I wasn't doing radio then, it was COVID that kind of got me onto this journey And since then, I've I've met so many wonderful people. I do feel like I wing it most weeks. It was my birthday last week, and my partner bought me a lovely new microphone and set up, and, crikey, it just overwhelms me. We did a sound check earlier on with, Patrick via Skype and rumble started late for some reason. Technology, it's, I hate it. I absolutely hate it, but I'm very thankful for my partner that will I could just scream up the stairs or send him a text, and he'll come down and press a couple of buttons, and we're away.
But I have no control over the whole rumble situation when you hit go live, and it usually does the whole five four three two one, you're in. Well, that didn't happen tonight. So, anyway, it is running now. So, if anybody wants to ask any questions for Richie or leave any comments in a minute please do so. Rumble channel is just Shelley Tasker. I'm gonna just I'm rabbiting away, rabbiting on I'm gonna play a little song a moment and, I ask you to relax, enjoy. This was a song that my dad wrote. Now I hope you can hear it through rumble because this was something that somebody said last week, but we have had a fiddle. So if you are listening via rumble and it's quiet for a few minutes, I will be back. So, yes, there's a storm coming. This was written by my father, Graham Hart.
[00:20:40] Unknown:
What's your won't hear it from up above. It's the clash of hate and love. No one can stop it this time I scum. There's no way to hide, you're taking the choice is yours. Or are you staying down on our phones? Get off your knees and be a man instead of a fight So much confusion as you put in our head. I wanna sort it
[00:22:52] Unknown:
my life in the
[00:22:53] Unknown:
sand. Your time is over. Your time has come. This time you're going. This time you're done. There's a storm coming. This
[00:23:31] Unknown:
There we are. And I hope you heard that if you're listening via rumble. If not, I'm back. So Richie will be joining us in a few minutes. So, yeah, back on to my dad. My dad wrote that song, the whole build up with COVID and stuff like that. And I was saying at the start of the show that I was inspired to do radio because my dad was a radio host, and he got in lots and lots of bother because he spoke about subjects we're not really supposed to talk about. He supposedly, well he had a bit of a rant one night, and they had to charge him.
And he was charged with eight counts of hate speech. So this was all going on in the COVID times. And I mean, I've never seen a courtroom so much in my life because I'd also gone to court to fight a £10,000 fine for organizing a protest, like I've got £10,000 But in the background of all of this going on, it was like everything was going mad wasn't it? Like I say, the fear of my son being taken off me just because of my political views. We just didn't know who to trust, if you could trust anybody, you know, and my ex as I said back then it was hard going because we disagreed on everything and he even bought a mask for my son.
Oh and I was so mad to find out that he'd been going out with my son and he was wearing a mask. And when I questioned him about this he said well he wanted one. Oh, he wanted one. Bless him. He needed to feel part of the whole COVID experience. So he would go, like, spend a weekend with his dad where it's, oh no no, we must listen to the rules, and then he would spend a week with me. No we must go against the rules, it's not true', so probably a bit of a controversial time for him really to find his own mind and you know he's quite proud to think now at 11 years old he's not really been vaccinated and stuff, he's got a little bit of an understanding about it. So yeah, back to my dad, he was charged eight pounds of hate speech and sentenced to three years.
And the guy that went in after him, it was his second offence for child grooming, he was a pedophile for grooming two sisters, he was given a ten month suspended sentence. Now just tell me how that works. Tell me how that works. You're not allowed to talk and say bad things about someone, but you're allowed to groom two little girls. And this seems to be happening quite a lot, doesn't it really? All of these pedophiles that get off on such light light subjects. Anyway, mister Allen is around now, so I'm gonna stop bickering on, and I'm gonna give the great mister Allen a call. Good evening, mister Allen.
[00:26:45] Unknown:
Can you hear me? No. I can hear you loud and clear. There you are. Oh, listen to that Irish accent. Wonderful.
[00:26:53] Unknown:
Good evening. Drama school.
[00:26:56] Unknown:
Drama school for you. Thousands of pounds in drama school. Lovely.
[00:27:00] Unknown:
We did have a gig earlier, actually, me and my cohost for part two because I did my introduction, tested my microphone, and then he pretended he was you and did an Irish accent. It was quite entertaining.
[00:27:11] Unknown:
Well, if you can do it for the next half an hour, I can sit here and have a drink.
[00:27:15] Unknown:
You can have a drink anyway. I can have a drink anyway. Did did you have a nice relaxing bath? I was listening to your show earlier.
[00:27:23] Unknown:
Bath?
[00:27:24] Unknown:
You said you were gonna have a quiet bath before your show.
[00:27:28] Unknown:
Oh, Jesus. I don't remember. Most of I I honest to god don't remember most of what I say ten minutes after the program. Did I say that? You did. You said that. I don't know why I would have said that. Yeah. Quiet bath because it's hot and sticky here in the studio. Alright. Yeah. Jesus. Yeah. No. There isn't a bath that that's been ever built that I could fit into, to be honest with you. No. They don't make them for people my my size, Shelley, sadly.
[00:27:52] Unknown:
What are you? You're, like, six foot two?
[00:27:55] Unknown:
Give over, will you? Six and a half foot. Six foot six and a half. Really? Six six. Two meters. Yeah. Just over two meters. I'd be looking up at you. And it's all in proportion, ladies. I I've I've been known to say after a few Guinnesses.
[00:28:13] Unknown:
Oh, the honesty. The honesty. I love it. Well, that's a like. Jesus, Mary and Joseph. No. No. So, well, listen, what are we gonna talk about anyway? Just gonna throw things at me. Wanted to have a chat with you because I listen to your show. I feel like I speak to you regularly probably because I answer back to the screen and what have you. Yeah. But, yeah. I mean, how are you doing? You had a bit of a break for a while, and now you're back going strong, and you're feisty at the moment mister Allen.
[00:28:38] Unknown:
Me? Yeah. Yeah. Ten years was a long time to be doing one program so I needed a break and, I didn't fancy being around as well for the inevitable success of, excuse me, of Trump and all of that garbage. So I just needed a break. Ten I've been doing the show ten years, nearly two and a half thousand episodes, and, live and producing it myself, and it was knackered. But it didn't last I think I was away I think it was six weeks or thereabouts I was look I've always been pissed off of echo chambers, I detest echo chambers and I think most of what we do sadly ends up being echo chambers, you know, I mean most of my listeners they listen because they agree with me, that's not healthy, I don't think it is anyway, and sometimes when I try to rile them up I'm doing it kind of half tongue in cheek trying to get a reaction out of them but, yeah we're we're we're we're at a we're in a very kind of interesting time for humanity and the reporting of it and discussing it I think is important, and, yeah, I've always felt strongly about that.
So that's, if I come across as feisty, I mean, I have a great sense of humor. Most of the time, even if I sound I'm annoyed, I'm I'm generally laughing inside. You know, I'm laughing at myself, really. But, yeah, these are interesting times, and I think, we need to challenge each other more and not necessarily on radio programs, but, generally, in in our daily lives, we need to challenge one another on the things we say and and think and believe and, I don't think we do it enough that's that's pretty much all I could say on that.
[00:30:23] Unknown:
No, I think you're probably right, I feel like I've almost been silenced because I just I don't want to fall out with anybody And it's just, I don't know, taking a step back, it's just, you know, everyday stuff. We know what's going on. We gotta live life, haven't we? But, you know, at these moments you'll feel more, strongly about stuff than other times, I suppose, than others. But I mean you're reaping it every day aren't you? You're up and your job as a journalist is to find out what's going on and it can't be good for you all the time because most of it's doom and gloom isn't it? Well it is, yeah of course, anybody who reads the daily press or listens to the morning
[00:31:01] Unknown:
news programs, yeah, they're they're hardly discussing good news or positive news or positive developments. It's generally one, you know, horribly negative report from Gaza where another dozen or two dozen children have been slaughtered, or we're off to Yemen where The United States has bombed, excuse me, or, we're talking Ukraine. So it is. Yeah. And I've always seen my job as, if I have a job, really, to take it apart, like, look at what they're reporting and look for any alternative explanations for it. You know, looking kind of into a bigger picture. We're not live right now, are we? Are we live now? We are live. Yeah. Oh, we are live. Alright. You could have given me a heads up. Yeah. Gangster. I didn't know we were live. I thought you were gonna tell me. We're live now, but we're live. That's good. Okay.
[00:31:53] Unknown:
Sorry.
[00:31:54] Unknown:
No. No. I'm not I'm gonna teach you to be more professional, Shelley. You should have said to me, when when you answer, you're live, Richie. I take back everything I said earlier. No. I don't. Yeah. It is. It gets you down. Look. Most people doing what I'm doing are doing it working for a company, and they will have one or two, sometimes three people working with them, helping them prepare it and produce it, and I don't. And that's the only negative for me. It's, that's the tiring aspect of it, that's the the difficult part of it, is doing it by yourself because as you hinted out there, I would have started at 04:30 this morning reading the papers, listening to the programs.
I do it when I'm out with, with the dogs. Excuse me. And then I come back, and I start thinking about editorial, about content for the program, and that usually means audio I need to grab, edit, top and tail, all that sort of stuff, really. But, ultimately, I I do I I still love it, really. You know, I still love the the thrill of doing live radio, and, I've done between this and between my time in the mainstream, I've probably done 10,000 live radio shows, I would imagine. I'd say so, around about that number anyway. And nobody believes me when I say that at around about five, six minutes to five, I start to get butterflies, and I start to cross check everything that my playout system has got all of my clips in it, that the music is there, that the WhatsApp and Skype is where all of that sort of stuff. And people I I genuinely have it from friend from my close friends. How do you get wound up? Like and I'm like, I do because it still matters to me to do it properly.
Not saying I do it properly all the time, but, most of the time I do. So, yeah, I enjoy it. And, as long as and this is gonna sound really corny, but I do mean it. As long as people are still willing to tune into it, I'll do it because life is important. I I never want to prerecord ever because there's no danger in that and there's no fun in it when people can't react. Your joy right now is is that people can send you messages, and they can say that Irish agent is a shill or I liked what I heard on his program last week or whatever, but it's live and it's interactive and, I like that whereas a lot of content these days isn't live it's, pre produced and that's okay and a lot of it is is good but there's nothing like live I think you'd probably agree.
[00:34:34] Unknown:
Right, no absolutely because when people say I can do a pre record I think, ah but then I play it as a live show, I don't know, it's just like a lie, I hate lies, but it takes the whole and if you, you know, even if you upload a video and you've got people commenting they think it's live, I don't know it takes it, it does take the fun out of it and like you, I mean I can't believe you still get butterflies like five minutes beforehand because I do massively but you've been doing this for years you know I do it once a week and I've got headache tablets here at the ready now because I just get stress headache with it excited stress.
[00:35:12] Unknown:
Well it means it means you you give a shit really, that's what it means, it means that you want to do it properly and you want somebody listening to it to think, well some effort has been put into this, I I really appreciate that, Listen, I I I have done what I've done, which is neither here nor there, but I worked with and around some very well, known and very experienced presenters, and they would be antsy, and they would be on edge in the run up to, to the show, and I when I was younger, I was fascinated by that as well, and what it said to me was was it meant something to them to do it properly. I mean, I will occasionally misfire, a jingle or I will do something, and I might make light of it. They tell you in in, you know, in your apprenticeship, they tell you never to draw attention to it, but I think that's bollocks. Listeners are not stupid. You know? They know when you've screwed up, and I might joke and say something about it, but it will piss me off for hours later, be because I've done 10,000 shows, and I'll be thinking that's you know, it it's not good enough.
You know, you put yourself on a pedestal. We all do. We all have egos. It doesn't matter whether you're a radio presenter or whether you're a supermarket manager or a taxi driver. Everybody thinks they're better than everybody else, and I challenge anybody to deny that and say, oh, do you really think you're better than everybody else? In reality, I don't, but I imagine I am, and I want to be. And if I want to be, I suppose I'll try harder. And it doesn't matter because, ultimately, who's good and who isn't good is not for me to determine, is it, Shelley? It's it's for your listener to determine whether you're any good or not.
But but it's it's not a bad thing to be thinking of yourself along the lines of, well, I am good or, you know, I am better than that show I heard earlier on. I can do better than that. And I suppose I, over the years, would have been plagued with this type of thing going around in my mind. So but it's good. You know? It keeps you sharp, and, I listen back from time to time, and sometimes I smile, sometimes I wince, you know? Yeah. But, but but but I care. Yeah. I do care about it. Yeah. And, that's the the only advice I ever give. I I occasionally, somebody will say I'm starting a podcast, and I groan and I say another one to add to the 50,000,000 we've got already but, that's a joke when I say that by the way and I just say to them look, put everything into it and care about it, listen to it and and try to get better as you as you go on, and you can't go wrong with that and be honest with your questions and, you know, challenge your own ideas, your own viewpoints, your own worldview, challenge them, which I challenge myself, you know. I will ask myself a lot. Are you wrong about certain things that you're very, obviously, very strong, strongly opinionated on whether it be the MAGA movement or or anything. I will always leave room for, well, look, you could be wrong, you know, maybe you're wrong, you've been wrong before, and, I'm not wrong by the way when it comes to the MAGA movement or anything like wrong, but that's, that's another story.
But yeah.
[00:38:37] Unknown:
Yeah. I think authenticity is just awesome though. When people hear that you mess up and you you do accept it and stuff and I mean I hold my hands up most weeks, Richie, because I sit here and I press the wrong button and if it wasn't for my other half, like, checking switches and stuff, technology just goes over my head and I always think one week it'll go right. Yeah. But it is what it is and I'm not Ruchi Allen and I think when I first started listening to you it's like that's how big I wanna be and it's like, I don't think like that now because I was inspired by you and other hosts and stuff. And how can you, you know, all of your years of experience, all of your interviews, your learning, I haven't got any of that. This this is my hobby. This is once a week something I do. It keeps my brain busy, so to speak. But it sounds great, though. It's chatty and conversational,
[00:39:30] Unknown:
and that's brilliant. And you're talking a bit, ultimately not to to to kind of jump out of the mutual appreciation society for a minute. What you're doing is you're facilitating discussions around important, very important world events, and you're facilitating them in a way that isn't it's not available for people on the mainstream media. I met a guy only very recently. It's not often. It doesn't happen often to me at all, but I recently bumped into a chap who said to me, oh, I listen, by the way. And I said, lovely. It's very kind of you to listen. We had a bit of a chat, and I asked him, what what what is it? Why do you listen? And his answer was music to my ears.
He said, because the people you speak to, they get thirty, forty, fifty minutes to speak. And I went to in my mind, I went bingo. You know, long form interviews, which is not happening on BBC, ITV, channel four, where somebody might be interesting, but they're gone in six and a half minutes. So what you're doing tonight on Rumble and on Facebook and the other channels you're going out on is you're having a long form conversation where you have a bit of room for a bit of context and a bit of nuance. So what you're doing is really important, don't ever knock it, really. This idea that I won't be this person or I won't be that person.
I mean, it's all very subjective, really. You know? I mean, it really is. I was very lucky that I trained around wonderful broadcasters, like people like Carrie Crowley. She went on to present the Eurovision Song Contest on Irish National Television. These were Rolls Royce presenters, really, you know. I I don't bracket myself in that class, like, that's kind of rarefied air, but you pick up from people, you pick up things when you've when you've had that ability, you pick up how to handle people, how to get on with certain people, how to frame things a certain way and, no it's good Shelley, it's good, you know, I I do I misunderstood I think because I do sometimes do the whole Andy Warhol thing, you know, everybody will be famous for fifteen minutes like one of the things I do regret about how everybody seems to have a podcast is that for me it does tend to bring standards down a bit, not everywhere, but it does because not every podcast host is thinking along your lines, is thinking along like, you've said this to me before, you're thinking about how can I improve it, how can I make it sound better, I'll do a bit of research here, I'll look into this, I'll I'll look into the background of the topic, all of that sort of stuff, I'm not talking about you obviously, but there is that thing I think, you know, and I get a lot of sick for them and I get a lot of mail, a lot of mail from people saying you should be encouraging everybody to have a podcast? I'm like, well, I would do if everybody took it seriously and didn't just sit there and say, chemtrails are gonna kill us all, you know, and interview some guy who says the chemtrails are gonna kill us all and sit there nodding along, yeah, yeah, yeah. I've kind of had enough of that kind of a thing really. I don't know why we segued into this, but, yeah, it's just how I see it, but it but generally I do welcome any, excuse me, platforms where, boy, long form discussions are facilitated and you can really kind of flesh out an issue and explore it so,
[00:42:58] Unknown:
so kind of kudos, yeah. Yeah no it's great it's great I've got a couple of questions for you, Ritchie. Get in there with the questions. Come on, was Richie baptized Catholic?
[00:43:10] Unknown:
Oh yeah, yeah Waterford in The Republic Of Ireland of course was baptized with, probably hundreds of babies probably at the same time probably, in St. Xavier, no no no it wouldn't be in St. Saviour's, no, it would have been a church in the city center in Waterford, raised a Catholic, Shelley, yes.
[00:43:31] Unknown:
Ah, good old Catholic boy.
[00:43:34] Unknown:
Circumcised as well. Really? I don't say that to shock, but it might educate some of your listeners, it isn't just Jewish children, for some reason a lot of Catholic parents thought it was a good idea, when I challenged my mother on it years later, holding a shotgun at her, of course, what did you do that to me for? She said well, it was a hygiene thing apparently back in the day, so I had the circumcision and all of that, yeah. Can you remember that? Was that done when you was a baby? Luckily enough, no. It would have been done it would have been done probably only a week or two after birth, so a local doctor would have done it, a local GP would have done it. And what do you think about that now, about circumcision?
I can only imagine for a baby who is barely cognizant of where they are and only knows its mother I suppose at that stage, must be terrifying, it must be horrendously painful, I mean we know that in some cultures not just, Jewish culture, but in other cultures they do it when people are a bit older and they don't always do it with a local anesthetic and apparently it's, horrendously painful so to do it to a baby and then not long after that, I would have had the BCG vaccine, the polio vaccine, and we all, not not all of us, but some of us can still see the scars, the three scars on her left arms, That thing hit the bone when they did that to babies.
I mean, so yeah. And I suppose you could segue into some esoteric kind of rabbit hole now about, you know, trauma and stuff like that. Yeah. I don't know, but, yeah, circumcised and had these horrible BCG vaccines, but the BCG was the only vaccine I ever had. I'm two I'm 50 now. We never got measles, m MMR. We had none of that crap. It was just the polio vaccine.
[00:45:36] Unknown:
Yeah, back in the day where they were few and far between though, weren't they? Just a couple of jabs and very few ingredients compared to now.
[00:45:44] Unknown:
Yeah, and I wonder if the polio vaccine was necessary. I'm open minded. Many of the people we know would probably say it wasn't necessary. I'm sure they would say we didn't need it because the odds of you getting polio were were were slim, maybe, you know? That being said, Shelley, I remember going to school, and I remember, distinctively remember three boys across different years who did have polio and had to live with it, you know, one leg shorter than the other and mobility issues and so now I think back and I think well, did it do me any harm to pull your jab? I I don't know.
Might be the reason I'm so curmudgeonly maybe. I don't know.
[00:46:27] Unknown:
It's hard to know isn't it? But the whole like circumcision that you underwent as a baby, do you do you feel that you did suffer trauma later on in life because of that?
[00:46:36] Unknown:
I couldn't possibly answer that, Shelley. But you I know you you're you're you drop in and you listen to The Richie Allen Show occasionally. I know you do. You will have heard people on the show talking about it. I'm very open to it. Possibly. Possibly, yes. I mean, listen, I was it's very well known I was physically abused as a kid, by my father. Of course it leaves with, trauma it it leads to interpersonal problems or problems developing interpersonal skills, problems with abandonment where, you know, I was a very difficult guy to know when I was a teenager. Why would you let anybody get in? You know, you just wouldn't, and and that was that. I mean, you overcome it through a variety of ways, but it's an interesting one about the pain and and the the circumcision.
Yeah. Maybe. Maybe. I mean, we don't have children. I wish we did. If we did, the last thing in the world I would do would be circumcise a boy. I mean, why would you do it? But, she said to me at the time, she said, look, it was kind of trendy, which it was in the early seventies on Irish maternal wards. A few days after the baby was born, they did it.
[00:47:51] Unknown:
Oh, it makes me feel sick. Oh, yeah. That's an knee jerk reaction. Yeah. But,
[00:47:57] Unknown:
yeah. It's funny it's funny. You could describe any other number of penile injuries, Shelley, and I say this with a smirk in my face. You could describe any other number of potential injuries to the penis, and I would cringe and I would get a shiver down my back, but when people mention circumcision, it it doesn't have really any effect on me. You know, it's just one of those things that it was what it was. I mean, we laughed. I remember playing indoor football when I was 15 or 16. Can you imagine the testosterone? There's, like, ten, twelve lads in a changing room in, in a sports hall, and I brought it up, like, for the crack, and, of course, there was the usual gay jokes. You know? I brought it up because I was always interested in things, and there'd been something in the newspapers about it. This would have been 1990.
And I said to the lads, lads, how many of us are circumcised here? Of the 12 of of us there, 12 sorry. 10 were. 10 of us have been circumcised not a Jewish kid there It's amazing and I was like Jesus wept, you know, yeah, yeah Then we joked we joked about when we get old enough to you know meet a woman or whatever, when we go out on the town, women like it. Apparently, this is this this these are the gags we were telling each other, but, yeah, ten ten of the 10 there's no truth in that either. 10 of the dozen young Irish lads, Catholic, raised, had been circumcised, just bizarre, but yeah look it is what it is. It is, it is, crikey.
[00:49:23] Unknown:
Right, moving on. Moving on from the trauma. The vasectomies, So hang on. Patrick's got another question here. Oh, this is a good one. Go on, Patrick. What does Richie think of Gideon Volter from the campaign against antisemitism who prosecuted your father?
[00:49:42] Unknown:
I think he's a scumbag. I I think he's the lowest form of humanity. He's disgusting. You gave me a lovely interview about Graham, didn't you? Yeah. Some years ago. We had a good chat, and I I pushed you a bit, and, Graham was really nice afterwards. We we had an exchange on on on Skype. I think Graham's a is a good guy. I haven't met him. Your dad. These guys are scumbags. They're not interested in whether Jewish people are, being harmed or possibly harmed by people's opinions. I I it's it's difficult to find out about individuals, so I can't speak for Gideon Foulter's past.
I can't speak to his contacts because I don't know. But I strongly suspect that groups like the campaign against antisemitism, which amazingly were able to attain charitable status, which absolutely baffles me because this isn't a charity. It's basically a Zionist attack wing. It's a Hasbara organization which exists to try and destroy people who criticize the state of Israel in any way, and you've asked me that question, Patrick. I don't know how much you know, but I had a lot of dealings with them back in 2019, '20 '20, and not just them, but others.
They're horrendous people. It's not just him, Falter, either. And they're cowards. They're terrible, terrible cowards. I invited Falter to debate me many a time. I was able to send him the metadata for The Richie Allen Show to say I'll put you in front of a hundred thousand people on a Monday if you wanna talk to me about why you believe The UK is is beset on all sides with antisemitic, anti anti Semites, which it isn't, of course. It is not. Historically, this society is one of the most tolerant in the world. It continues to be, in my opinion. Falter is ugly, greasy, slimy.
He's a coward. I would say it to his face. I've said it to him on Twitter. I despise him. I don't know if that's answered your question.
[00:51:55] Unknown:
I think it's a good summary. Yeah. Horrible. Yeah. Horrible person. So moving on, we've got about nine minutes left, Ritchie. What have you started your new podcast yet? Because I know you've been talking about doing, like, an early morning podcast.
[00:52:11] Unknown:
Yeah. I fancy doing a kind of a bite sized mid morning thing for a bit of a laugh. It wouldn't be it wouldn't be much labor, but it's been a funny thing since I came up with the idea. My mornings have been taken away from me. Just a weird set of circumstances. I've got a health problem I'm dealing with at the moment, which is semi serious, And, and I'm it's it's a very private thing, but I'm dealing with nothing relation no no relation to my circumcision whatsoever. To say. You've shared your penis. No. No. It's got nothing to do with the penis. No. So that's taken up a bit of time, and just other stuff that's been going on, and it's kinda messing me around a bit, but I I I aim to do it next week. It won't be anything exciting. It won't be groundbreaking.
I'm just gonna while preparing the other program, I'm gonna just, do a quick browse of the news websites, what they're saying. It's kind of a way of just doing something a bit extra. I like to challenge myself and do new things. It was it was the same with the music program a few years ago. You know, I I I I've been doing the Rich Allen show for ten and a half years, and sometimes a break from it needn't mean needn't mean that I stop it. A break can be just doing something else, you know, to kinda fire up your imagination.
So, yeah, probably next week, probably.
[00:53:29] Unknown:
Ah, exciting
[00:53:30] Unknown:
stuff. I've I've got car trouble at the moment, which is a real, pain as well. So I'll be driving my car into a a garage near Oldham, and that would be messy, and then coming back and then going back the following day. And that's two mornings just gone, basically. So, I'd hate to begin something and then stop it. So when I get a kind of a clear run of mornings, I think I'll do it, but I wouldn't get too excited about it. You know, it won't be anything that's gonna shake the Internet to its foundations. It's just gonna be me gabbing on, which is kinda kinda what I do, really. But thank you for asking. Isn't it? Because you can just chat for hours.
[00:54:07] Unknown:
That's what you have. You don't you don't seem to have as many guests on that you used to have.
[00:54:11] Unknown:
No. Well, this week in particular, no. And that's that that's deliberate. I just need a break from interviewing.
[00:54:18] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, it's it's see, I'm like, I need someone to interview because I can't sit there for an hour
[00:54:22] Unknown:
Yeah. And talk.
[00:54:23] Unknown:
But no, it's wonderful. And this is where your opinions and everything, you can keep going, you rile people up. I love it. But you're kind of you set yourself a lot of targets. You're quite, what's the word? Oh, I don't know. But, like, you know, you're up early in the morning, aren't you? You walk your dogs. You go running and stuff like that. Yeah. You seem quite on
[00:54:45] Unknown:
it. Yeah. I've never been able to sit still. No. I I am incredibly active. Yeah. Yeah. And, the the thing about not having guests, it's a great challenge for me because to produce a two hour program with, say, 15 or 20 inserts with bullet point information that I've got to double check, that takes hours to produce, literally hours. It it it really does. It would be a bit less with, professional producers, but I'm never gonna have pro producers, so I like that. It challenges me. And the reason for the no guest at the moment is is and I I probably have a schedule full of guests next week, is I just don't want to be continually arguing with pro Trumpers or I just don't want to be doing that because I've done it to death it's a waste of time, you know, and you find yourself sitting there thinking there's no point in me interjecting listeners know how I feel about it I don't want to get into it so for the moment I don't see the value in repeating interviews I've done thousands of times over the last ten years, so today let's talk about vaccines, but how many more new ways can I find to talk about vaccines being potentially very dangerous?
Which they are. See do you understand what I'm saying, Sharon? So when you're doing it full time as a professional, there's a danger of fatigue. Like, I get offered all the time. Somebody said the other day, oh, you must be in that situation where nobody wants to talk to you. That isn't true. I get emailed all the time by people offering their services as a guest, and it'd be like, I wanna talk about vaccines. I I wanna talk about this, and I'm like, I I'm very I love these. I tell these people I love you. Thanks for reaching out, and, like, we will do something in the future, but I'm tired of talking about these things with guests and doing the devil's advocate thing, jumping in to put in the token objection. I'm just tired of it at the moment.
So what I've been doing this week is I've been having a bit of fun. You know I've been having a bit of a fun which which I did a lot in twenty twenty twenty twenty one which is, satirized the entire thing and I've had great feedback this week because of it I've been really kind of up in the ante with the, kind of trying to shock a bit with the comments and not shocking for shocking sake but just laughing at the sheer lunacy of everything. You know, yesterday it was Angela Rayner's interview on LBC which the greatest stand up comedians in the world couldn't have written that. It's fantastic.
And as I was hearing it in the morning, I was rolling around the floor in the studio laughing at it. At the moment, this is kind of what I wanna do.
[00:57:32] Unknown:
I'm delicious thing to like it because I've had no complaints anyway. No, I think people do, yeah, because you're like kind of ripping the piss out of it, so to speak, but at the same time getting
[00:57:42] Unknown:
a message out. Yeah. No. I think what I think you're skirting around something, and if you want to bring me back in the future and ask me, I I out of courtesy to you, I'll deal with it. One of the things you you're skirting around, I think, is this obvious elephant in the room. Most other significant content creators can't stand me, and that's for very good reason, because I don't like them. And I often not often. It isn't often, to be fair. But when they come out with egregious clickbait crap, I generally jump all over it. So I would be fairly persona non grata if you want to say there's a alternative media, I would be hugely unpopular, of course I'm quite happy with it, I have no problem with that, I've, very thick skinned and I've never cared too much about what what people who don't mean anything to me I don't care what they think about me, but I've been hugely critical over the years of the conduct of many content creators and if you wanted to jump in there, jump in anytime. I have no problems with that.
I'm often asked, why do you not have this person on, or why do you not endorse this or that? And I say, because it's crap. It's clickbait nonsense. A lot of it. It's lies, you know, about, one thing or another. I believe we we should aspire to a standard ethically to tell the truth and to not spin fiction even if the fiction might get you 500 followers and it might, make your post go viral. So, yeah, if you if you ever wanna get into that, yeah, because you kind of I think, anyway, maybe I'm wrong, you've been kinda kinda hinting around that. Do you think? I don't think I have. Yeah. I don't it's not a criticism of you. I would. If I if I was in your position, I'd be saying to me, why do you not seem to like anybody, or why do they not like you? And I'd say, well, here's the reason, you know. Yeah. So I suppose that's just the difference. I'm I'm really non
[00:59:41] Unknown:
judgmental and when I like to speak to people, I don't often argue with them, which because I I don't see myself as a journalist like you are trying to get the information and stuff. I kind of sit back and just listen, throw in a few comments, and at the end of the day, if people like it, they like it, they don't. And I love that you say, you know, who you don't like and what have you. Good good on you. Because there's plenty of people that we don't like, but people are too scared to say it, aren't they? Yeah. And to be honest, look, it it's a very rare thing for me to name anybody. It wouldn't be. It would be in the past, it would have been,
[01:00:14] Unknown:
people claiming that babies were being eaten in Hampstead Heath schools, for example. A woman claiming to be a Middle East Journalist who was clearly, covering up, torture committed by Bashar al Assad's army, this sort of stuff. Like, I won't put up with it, you know, I'll call it out where where I see it. And I'm very precious about journalist, journalist, and I don't like, you know, people calling themselves journalists and listing their profiles, listing themselves as journalists when they're not. They're they're basically propagandists or clickbait merchants, and I'm I can be precious about that. And I've been you know, friends of mine have said you are precious about that, but it's important to me. Journalism is important. And,
[01:00:59] Unknown:
so I stand by it. And, And that's the way it should be, you know, like, I'm, you know, when you get your guests on and you debate with them and no one asks what makes good listening as well and that's what you don't really get much of these days, do you? No. I don't seem to have many strong opinions about stuff anymore and I'm quite happy to sit and listen and just, yeah, okay. I'll take what you said and what have you. I'm not out to argue with anyone, but then I wouldn't say I'm a journalist like you. I'm not journalist. I just I just do a little radio show each week, Richie, just for fun. Yeah. But there's room for both. There's room for I need to grow. I know that, you know. It's like four and a half years on. I've got you never stop learning, do you? If it doesn't sound right, I'll tell you something. Not a single day. I agree.
Well, look. It's been half an hour, mister mister Allen. I won't keep you any longer, and thank you so much because it's lovely just to have a chat about nothing really. Well, thank you for inviting me. For reasons I've given already, I don't get invited to do very much. Oh. But thank you. I know loads of people that would love to speak to you. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Watch this space. Thanks, Shelley. Thank you very much, Mr. Allen. You take care. None at all, and to Patrick.
[01:02:08] Unknown:
Thank you. Take care. Bye bye.
[01:02:10] Unknown:
Bye bye. Wow. There we are. I do think he's awesome. I love the way that he's so opinionated and stuff and, crikey, I'm gonna be analyzing myself in a minute, dancing around questions. Anyway, we have reached part two of the show. It's time to get that awesome mister Milaficus Scott on. We are going to be talking more about his granddad's book. So let's get, and I must say that we're live now. He knows that. Let's phone mister Scott. Bear with. Ring. Silence. Deadly silent. Malefika Scott has joined. Are you there, mister Scott?
[01:02:59] Unknown:
I think I am. Can you hear me okay?
[01:03:02] Unknown:
Are you alright, my lovely?
[01:03:04] Unknown:
I am. Hang on two secs. I've just got to, shut off your feed because I was listening to your, interview with Richie. That was a it's it's nice to, it's nice to hear him roar and opinionated as he always is. Yeah. But he's he's he's very insightful when it comes to, obviously, the, you know, the the the line of work that he's in, and he's been in for so long. He's, he's a font of knowledge, isn't he? He is. He is. Yeah.
[01:03:28] Unknown:
And, I you know, I'll never tell a lie and say I don't you know, that's not my job. That's not my role. I don't listen to the mainstream, really. I catch snippets for, like, a minute when it comes on on the news. You know?
[01:03:40] Unknown:
Yeah. So,
[01:03:41] Unknown:
that's about it. The mainstream, I avoid like the plague. We stopped paying our you know, as listeners probably already know, I stopped paying my TV license in 2020. Apart from the fact that there's really nothing worth watching on TV anyway. I mean, people come home and they get addicted to their soaps and they, oh, I can't miss an episode of Coronation Street or EastEnders and this is a and all of it's just full of misery and agenda pushing. But, no, the biggest thing for me, obviously, was the whole COVID nonsense. And when I, I called up the BBC licensing office and just said, look. You know?
I wanna cancel my license. Oh, oh, well, I'm sorry to hear that. Can I ask why? And I said, yes. Because the BBC are filling everyone full of utter nonsense, and I'm not paying for it. And he kinda went, oh, kind of went quiet and just processed my my, yeah, processed my cancellation. You know? That that was that. He didn't ask me to elaborate any further. I don't think he needed to. No. So yeah. No. It's it's always good to hear people like Richie and, obviously, your good self and all the other great hosts. I mean, there are some fantastic hosts out in the independent media. I just think people don't people don't give themselves the time to go and listen to it, because, well, it's just easier to come home, stick dinner in the microwave, and sit down in front of the TV.
You know? Yes. It is. I mean, I I'm pretty privileged in the respect that I I'm a gardener, as I've said so many times. And one of one of the best things when you're doing mundane tasks like weeding flower beds and and trimming hedges and stuff is to have some little earphones in and listen to a podcast while you're doing it because you you know, it doesn't I've been doing I've been working in horticulture, agriculture, that kind of thing for years and years and years, and it's all of it is mundane now. Don't get me wrong.
I enjoy working with nature, but you've gotta keep the gray matter going while while you're doing it. You know? I spent years working as a KP when I when I was really young, and you just think in fact, when I worked in the care industry, first off, I was just working in kit in the kitchen and just, you know, that kind of thing, because I was in between jobs because I'd been fired from my from my other job, because they took a disliking, I think, to my studies. And, you know, I I wish back in those, you know, years when I was doing the other mundane tasks that I'd got given myself a a head start and I rung up the ladder by listening to this stuff that was out there back then. You know? It's it's been out there for as long as, you know, as long as there's been a mainstream media, there's been independent voices shouting and screaming from the sidelines. It's just their voice isn't as loud as as the mainstream and not as easily accessible.
But, crikey, I could be light years ahead by now if I'd have started listening to that sort of stuff back when I And that's the thing, isn't it? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. Where was Richie Allen when I was, like, 18 years old? Could've done with that.
[01:06:54] Unknown:
He was He was probably in Spain. I don't know. He worked in Spain a lot of the time, didn't he? I don't know. He's he should have sent that question in mess in Messenger. Alright? Oh, sorry. I was so intently listening, and there were already questions being fired in, and I just I didn't I didn't want on one, wasn't he? I can't skim that. What's how does he earn a living from it? That's really rude.
[01:07:19] Unknown:
Well, I'm sure he would have given you a very honest answer. So, you know, and it's it's probably through through merchandise and subscriptions and that kind of thing. You know? People people chipping in, people donating. And I'm not being funny. I've always said that mister Scott, Maleficus, whatever you wanna call me, has always been a a a nonprofit entity. I received one donation, while I was on Andy's show. And as soon as I I didn't realize I'd received it at the time. And as soon as I, received it, I the next show I did, I went on air and said, look. I really appreciate the donation, but I don't I had no way of giving it back.
Do you know what I mean? So I just spent it as what I considered wisely, and that is I bought myself a nice guitar. And and the rest went to the family to do whatever they wanted with. You know? There wasn't much change left after the guitar, but, you know Hey ho. Well They had 50 p or something to spend. You know? I'm joking. But, no, I've always done it. For me, personally, it's vitally important for me that people don't lose touch with all the sacrifices that have been made for them in the past. All as I've said so many times on this show, you know, all those people that went to war and died in the trenches, I'm twice as old as most of them at least. Yeah. How lucky. You know, and, you know, why should that sacrifice be in vain? You know, why should everyone sort of say, oh, yeah. But we've got iPads now and stuff, and it's like, you know, you know, this is just an absolute spit in the face of all those people that have literally given their lives so that we can have the society that we're supposed to be living in, not the society we're living in now, I might add.
[01:09:08] Unknown:
Yeah. But I'm kind of also now, like, you know, things are always changing, aren't they? Things are always progressing, and we all seem to want things to be like how they were when we were kids. But then our parents, they would say that their times were the best times as well because they had nothing.
[01:09:27] Unknown:
I have to say, I wish so that's a that's a really interesting point you've brought up there, really. You know, everyone sort of says, oh, I wish it was like it was when I was a kid. Yeah. Well, your kid your child most people's childhood was pretty carefree. You had your parents looking after you. I know there are exceptions to that rule, but I'm saying as a general rule of thumb, most people's child my kids' childhood has been relatively carefree. I would like to think, yes, they've had their worries and stuff, but, everyone looks back to that with rose colored spectacles because they don't actually realize what was happening to their society during that time. And I would like, you know, I would go one step further. I'd like to go back to the era that my granddad grew up in, you know, the early nineteen hundreds, where people actually where we had a responsible society and we had, a really good level of education, you know, whereas now we just have a great level of dumbing down for most people.
And, you know, I'll give you a perfect example. My son, because you have to carry on your education until you're 18 now or whatever, he had to go into the sick form. And one of the, one of the, subjects he chose was travel and tourism. I mean, why would you do it? I chose that, Maleficus. Yeah. Well, do you know what? Because it's something to do. I'm not knocking it because obviously down here in Cornwall, Travel and tourism, that's that's a major industry down here. I get it. But he was the the subject matter, the tasks that he was set out to perform, by the end of his year of doing it, there were apps, Shelley, on your phone that would do all that for you. You don't need to learn any of that stuff anymore. If we're gonna progress, technology in that way, at least progress education in a way that it's valid by the end by the time you've got your qualification.
And he got so disheartened with it and so he was so disheveled about the whole thing. But in the end, I said, just, mate, just drop out and go to college and go and play your guitar, which is exactly what he did. And we got, I phoned up the school and said, look. He's quitting. And they were like, well, you do realize we've signed him up for the exams. I said, well, when did you sign him up for the exams? He said, well, we we signed him up as soon as he started the course. Oh, yeah? Two years ahead. So you've signed him up for all these exams two years ahead. And, so what's what's what's the score then? And she said, well, he said there there may be a charge.
You know, if he doesn't we we we've paid for his seat in the exam. There may be a charge. And I said, alright. What's the charge? And she said, well, I'm gonna have to get back to you on that. Got back to you. I well, actually, they didn't I pestered them. I said, come on then. What's the charge? Well, it could be as much as a hundred and £60. I said, oh, really? Oh, what what a shame. So I went up to Luke, my son, and I said, right. You got two choices. You can you can jack this in and potentially face a bill of a hundred and £60, which I will pay. And the first job you get, you owe me a hundred and £60. Alright?
Or you can just knuckle down and get the course done. He looked at me and he went, I'll just pay the hundred and £60. Adult decision right there. You know? He he learned more out of that experience than he would have for the whole of the travel and tourism course. So yeah. Yeah. Interestingly as well, I just wanted to bring up something you mentioned earlier at the beginning of your show because you were talking about how you got into doing what you're doing and and all that. And you you came out with a statement. Yeah. Who am I to be going and doing this? And then you followed it straight up with who am I? You know, bearing in mind your son and and the the the your children that could be affected, by all the things that these powers that should not be are are trying to put put upon us. You followed it up by saying, who am I not to do this? And that's it. You've you've hit the nail on the head. And every you know, the more people that thought like that, we'd be winning the game by now.
Yeah. You know? Who, you know, how has anyone got the audacity when they've got skin in the game? And what I mean by that is children. When your bloodline is in the game, who are you not to stand up and shout from the rooftops as soon as you find out the truth? As soon as you you know? And I don't care. I know everyone's truth, quote, unquote, is different. But if it's something that you believe in, if it's something that rings true to you and and reverberates with your soul, if you want to put it that way, who are you not to do it?
Because, you know, what you know, it's all very well sort of saying, oh, well, I don't want
[01:14:10] Unknown:
to do this. I don't want to get into trouble with anyone. I don't want to upset anyone.
[01:14:13] Unknown:
So what are you gonna do? Just just just live a lie. Yeah. Why don't we all just why don't we all just queue up for our death certificates now if that's what you're gonna do? You know? So,
[01:14:26] Unknown:
yeah, there you go. There you are. I thought it was a great point. I thought it was a great point. Thank you. Thank you.
[01:14:34] Unknown:
So yes. I was gonna say we ought to crack on earlier this evening with granddad's book we should. Than we did before because we we're we're still on chapter two. But, again, you know, I've just lost a picture behind me. Again, you know, my granddad writing his book, did he have did he have things to lose? Could he have could his life have been threatened? Yes. It could. My grand used to say to my mom after he died, she used to say, you know, I used he used to someone would turn up in the middle of the night, and I would you know, a car would pull up outside. And she wouldn't know who it was, but he'd get up and collect his things, and he'd be off.
And he'd just say, I'm off up to London or I'm off up you know? Because he had important business to deal with. And, this is political business. You know? This is this is League of Empire loyalists, and this is, you know, that kind of thing. And she would worry who had picked him up and why he was going and whether she'd even see him again. Did granddad keep going? Yes. He did. Granddad saw most of his mates get blown apart on the Battle of the Somme. Why would he compromise that? Why would anyone compromise that? We've all got members we've all got ancestors that, you know, should have a long we should have and what many more cousins, etcetera, etcetera, than we've actually got.
But all these bloodlines and all these, branches of the family tree got wiped out in things like the Battle of Somme, things like the Iraq wars, things like, you know, for the Americanists, things like Vietnam, your career, all that kind of thing. Why would you not honor that? What you know, it's it's for people to turn around and go, oh, well, I might get into trouble or I might go to prison for something I've said. You know what? You're gonna let that stop you. You know? Because that's exactly what they want. That's exactly what they want. We want we want you silenced, and we will use any means possible to do that. And fear is a great motivator for most people. Look at what happened during the COVID era.
You know? So, yeah, great comment, Shelly. Loved it. Best comment of the first hour, I think. Bless you. Okay. Right. Let's, I'm just gonna pour myself a little bit of refreshment here, and it is very low alcohol. I will I will stress. It's a it's only 14%. No. I'm joking. I'm joking. And I poured myself a very mild cider. So, hat off to you folks listening and hat, you know, hat off to, anyone listening to the podcast at a later date. I'll just reiterate what Granddad said at the very beginning of the book. And I think it's probably a a a a great little way to start each thing.
And that is pray thee, take care that taste takes my book in hand. To read it well, that is to understand. Okay. So quick disclaimer before we start. This book was written in 1950 published, it should I say, in 1954. We're literally going over the text of the book. And, if there is anything that is, not in, the public mind in these years, obviously, because it was written so long ago, nearly eighty years ago. Or yeah. Actually, it was written more than eighty years ago. So, if there's if there's anything that people might struggle with, like certain, things that he's talking about in the book that have disappeared from the public mind, I'm trying to elaborate on those as we go. Alright?
So we will go back to so, this is chapter part of chapter two, what that is called entitled what is the plan, and he's talking about the protocols of the learned elders of Zion. So we're up to speed. We are at the end of next week's show. So I'm just gonna start a couple of, paragraph back. So the plan Scott. You're thinking something, aren't you? Oh, I'm sorry. Sorry. Okay.
[01:18:48] Unknown:
There we are.
[01:18:49] Unknown:
Vigorous this week. Like it. Like it. Okay. So the plan has been discredited as a, quote, unquote, forgery, though how a plan which has materialized in such detail can be a forgery would challenge considerable ingenuity to explain. As witness, the following significant incidents and events, all of which seem to be too apt just to be coincidental. Number one, the release of the Jew Bronstein, better known as better known as Trotsky, from arrest in Halifax, Nova Scotia, went on his way to have millions of helpless Russians butchered 1917.
The suppression, so this is where we got to last week, the suppression by the British Foreign Office of a vital passage in the report on Bolshevism of The Netherlands Minister Odenek or Odenek depending on where you are in The Netherlands. Represented he was the representative of the Netherlands government at Saint Petersburg when the reign of Bolshevist terror began. The passage reads as follows. The danger is now so great that I feel it my duty to call to the attention of the British and all other governments to the fact that, if an end is not put to Bolshevism at once, the civilization of the whole world will be threatened.
This is not an exaggeration but a sober fact. I consider the that the immediate suppression of Bolshevism is the greatest issue now before the world. Not even excluding the war still raging. He's talking about World War One. Yeah. And unless the above as above stated, Bolshevism is nipped in the bud immediately, it is bound to spread in one form or another over Europe and the whole world as it is organized and worked by Jews who have no nationality and whose object is to destroy for their own ends the existing order of things. The only manner in which this danger can be averted will be a collect will be collective action on the part of all the powers.
The above passage was contained in a British white paper and issued by the War Cabinet in April 1919. It was subsequently removed from circulation and became officially unobtainable. A later addition appeared with the passage by Udenek removed. One is forced to ask why the original white paper was suppressed and by whose authority and for what purpose is there indeed a hidden hand, a government within a government. So the point three he makes is the Balfour Declaration. Now just very quickly Balfour Declaration was the declaration made by Britain that they would, uphold the mandate to look after Palestine in order that Jews could have a homeland in Palestine.
Notice the name, Palestine. So, if if anyone is interested in, the Balfour Declaration, there is a great, great, speech made by, a guy called Benjamin Friedman at the Willard Hotel in 1962, which you can find probably, you can still find it on YouTube, I believe. It has been reuploaded and has been upheld. So you can find it on YouTube. Go and have a look at that one. Benjamin Friedman speech, Willard Hotel. That's what you need to put in. Number four, Berlin made an island in a Russian Bolshevist ocean. So you you grew up, Shelley, remembering that there was a Berlin Wall and there was an East And West Berlin that is a direct result of World War two, because we allowed the Russians to take Berlin.
We we had to hold back our allied forces. The the Americans and the British had to hold back and let Stalin take Berlin. Why? I don't know. All I do, but that's for listeners to go and, investigate. So, and five, the Nuremberg trials. So, if anyone's not familiar with the Nuremberg trials, they should be. But if they're not, that was the trials to do with the high ranking Nazi government. And, incidentally, all but one of them was hanged after the trial was over. They were all found guilty of, all kinds of atrocities and genocides, which will some of which were later found out to be the responsibility of allied forces. And by by allied forces, I mean, the Russians included.
Okay. If anyone is actually interested in the Nuremberg Trials, David Irving's website, go and have a look at that, and you will find a brilliant audiobook narrated by our good friend Paul English, on the Nuremberg trials. Well worth a listen. Well worth a listen. Or a read if you can be bothered to read through it. It is therefore clear that the details of the plan dovetail too closely into those of world events and legislation to be merely a fantasy or a forgery. Those most concerned with the plan have denied authorship, but world events confute them.
It is most, it it is most striking character its sorry. Its most striking characteristic is seen in the shape of things not only to come but which have come. Unless ordinary people rise up and assume their right of personal initiative and indeed their right to self preservation until then to look for an escape from all the frustrations around is to look for a miracle of grace. Consider these further excerpts from the various protocols if still in doubt. So, a, our right lies in force. The word right is abstract thought and proved by nothing. The word means no more than give me what I give me what I want in order that thereby I have proof that I am stronger than you.
Protocol one. B. We have included in the constitution such rights as to the masses appear fictitious and not actual rights. All these so called people's rights can exist only in idea. From the premier so that's protocol three. C, from the premier dictators of the present day, the Goyim suffer patiently and bear such abuses as for the least of them, they would have beheaded 20 kings. Protocol three. So d, dictators whisper to the peoples through their agents that they are inflicting injury on the states with the highest purpose. Like, we have to make these cuts, Shelley. We've got to make these cuts because you're all gonna have to tighten our belt for the greater good. Yeah? Okay. So dictators whisper into whisper to the peoples through their agents that they are inflicting injury on the states with the highest purpose to secure the welfare of peoples.
Naturally, they do not tell the people the peoples that this unification must be accomplished under our sovereign rule. Thanks to the state of, thanks to this state of things, people are destroying every kind of stability and creating disorders at every step. E. Putting aside putting aside fine phrases, we shall speak of the significance of each thought. By comparison comparisons and deductions, we shall throw light on surrounding facts. Our system from the two points of view that of ourselves and that of the goyim and that is non Jews protocol one.
So have you heard the word communitarianism bounded around? Okay. So communitarianism, there's there's a lot of people that talk about it. I think Lark in Texas is probably the most prominent. Mark Windows, I've had him on the show before, and we've spoken about it. Yeah. So communitarianism communitarianism is essentially, it was described to me by Lark as an entire lexicon of language that has one meaning for us and a different meaning for those using the language. So things like sustainability, diversity, those are two examples that were brought forward at the time during the conversation. So so that is you know so we will shed light and we will throw light on the surrounding facts, our system from the two points of view, that of ourselves and that of the goyim, that is non Jews. So that would explain communitarianism right there. It's right there in the protocols. Okay? The word goyim or goy is a Jewish term meaning cattle or non Jews, and it's used throughout the plan.
The clue to how all this is accomplished is suggested by Douglas Reid in his well known book, From Smoke to Smother. Now folks, if you go onto archive.org, you can find, just just put in Douglas Reid 'From Smoke to Smother'. It's an intensive read. We're talking about the mass hypnotism technique. He says the bludgeoning and intimidatory effect of mass propaganda on the mass mind is staggering. It should now be clear to even those most obtuse and skeptical amongst us that some superworld force or government is at work in the world's affairs. And whether we prefer to call it Satanism or the Antichrist or just the plain old fashioned devil, it operates coldly, ruthlessly, secretly and unceasingly according to some plan in its onward relentless march towards its goal of world dictatorship.
Furthermore, it will be seen that the policy of the plan is now reaching its zenith. That means its peak for for those of you who aren't used to those old school words. The supreme test is approaching, and it has to be decided whether human life is to be centrally controlled by a supreme and political and economic world dictatorship, World Economic Forum, anyone, or by the or by the operation of man's free will in accordance with the precepts of natural law. The plan reveals the hidden purpose the hidden purpose the establishment of Judaic world domination.
It explains in brazen detail the methods to be employed and that are being employed now with effect for for securing dominion, so domination over all peoples. Looking around the world, but one need not look beyond one's own borders, the people should be able to see what regimentation and political promises means. They mean we will promise you, some of you, paradise, but all of you will eventually get hell. That is the gospel according to Karl Marx, the Jew, German, Polish, Russian, professional agitator, nihilist, revolutionist, consciousless social parasite, and flagrant plagiarist.
God, you try saying that after. I'm just thinking. Crikey, I'm gonna do this. I'm not reading this. His notorious Das Kapital, which he compiled in the British Museum under the protecting wing of this country to which he'd fled with the French security police at his heels, was merely the prototype for the Judaic communism that is set as set forth in the plan. Perhaps but perhaps Das Kapital is a forgery also? Both are atheistic and grossly materialistic, rejecting all concepts of moral law and denying the inviolate rights of humanity while, of course, enjoying and insisting on the benefits of both. Oh, yeah. We're centralizing everything because it's for the good of everyone.
We all wanna go to Amazon and get stuff delivered the next day, don't we? Sod the sod the people that are trying to run businesses just down the road from you that grew up around you. Anyway, we should reject the authenticity of the plan at our peril for the doubtful satisfaction of joining the parrot cryer forgery might well prove to be our swan song as a nation. For God's law, the law of nature cannot be violated with impunity. It is within our reach and power to right this satanic wrong that is being deliberately, fiendishly and incessantly done to us and mankind.
By destroying the plan before it destroys us and our loved ones and our country as well as bit by bit civilization itself, The most powerful admonition and weapon for its protection ever placed in the hands of humanity is 'ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free'. But if only the truth is understood and acted but only if the truth is understood and acted upon, not merely known and left at that. The admonition implies a universal resolute change of outlook without which there can be no material change for all the political parties wholly or in part come within the orbit of the plan.
You are therefore confronted with these vital decisions now. We've made it to the end of chapter two, Shelley. Look. And we still got half an hour to go. How about that? Wow. Done, Maleficus. Have you got any questions on that last section? No. I haven't. No. That's that's fine. If I haven't got my eyes on, Rumbles chat, but if anyone has got any questions that they wanna throw at me interrupt. Don't you worry. Yeah. That's okay. It's not a problem. I'm quite happy to just, you know, iron out any creases as we go. So number three, the Zionists and the plan. So your your your good friend, Richie, was talking about the Zionists earlier.
So there it comes here with a quote from protocol three. We have made a gulf between the far seeing sovereign power and the blind force of the people so that if we've had we've we've made a huge gulf between the State, the organized State, the government and the people. Okay. So that both have lost their meaning for like the blind man and his stick both are powerless. Today, I may tell you that our goal is now only a few steps off. There remains a small space to cross, and the whole long path we have trodden is ready now to close its cycle of the symbolic snake by which we symbolise our people.
When this ring closes all states of Europe will be locked in its coils as in a powerful vice. Protocol three. So this was published the the the protocols themselves, were first published as we said in nineteen o five. All the states of Europe locked us in a powerful vice. As granddad said earlier, you know, it would it would require considerable ingenuity to to explain how this is a forgery. So anyway, Zionism is the militant branch of worldwide Jewry and is therefore their instrument for world subjugation, masquerading behind a pseudo religious name designed to allay suspicion and indeed arouse sympathy and support among Christians ignorant of its true nature and objectives.
Zionism pretends to be concerned only with the establishment of a homeland for the poor scattered homeless Jews of the world. Only that. Which cunning plea might have greater substance were the truth not known that the Zionists are fanatically committed to the establishment of a world empire with Palestine at its center? Where's Palestine folks? Anyone find that on a Google map? Anyway, that's my caveat there, by the way. From that fact radiates all the agitation, conspiracy, and ferment that have been bedeviled and wracked the world for the past fifty years. Many would say longer.
However, all Jews are not Zionists and a rift in the ranks of Judaism has begun. Thus, we read that just before the end of World War II or at any rate, the breathing space we are now being given before the next lot, in the city of Houston, Texas, a protest meeting was held by the reformed Jews. They and they were promptly denounced as traitors by the Zionists led by their high priest Rabbi Wise of New York, arch agitator for the Zionists and their schemes, apologist for their deeds, however revolting and then, however revolting to unbiased onlookers.
So we see there are really two types of Jews, the political Zionists, relentless, militant conspirators against the world's peace and for the world's mastery, and those Jews who oppose their excesses. We'll come to a very interesting chapter after this one that that goes further into that. They see in the British Commonwealth a world power based on decentralization. So the British Commonwealth being, you know, we had an empire that the sun never set on and and all that. So they they see a world power based on decentralization and therefore in direct opposition to their conception of world power based on rigorous centralization.
So they use the doctrine of communism which has been spread through schools and through youth organization organizations to undermine the youth of the nation, using them in turn to undermine the British Commonwealth and the British way of life. It has been remarked that the characteristics of the British people have undergone a lamentable change since the war amounting to character degradation. So to put that into perspective, look at all the things that Britain ended up accepting and putting up with after the war. All the things that, you know, you don't have enough workers, so we're gonna import all these people over because, you know, Britain needs its infrastructure rebuilding and blah blah blah. Start of the, oh. Empire Empire Windrush was one of them. Windrush. Yeah. That's what I was just saying. So the the Britons from the Britains from the '19, you know, 1900 and 1910 would have not have accepted that as an excuse, but two world wars have so thinned the bloodlines of the aristocracy who would have actually stood up against those sorts of actions.
But again the centralization of power and the government within a government. So again my caveats and my observations only you don't have to agree with me. They see the idea of world organize they see in the idea of world organization like the League of Nations and the UNO a further opportunity and means of gaining their goal of world world mastery. Thus, we have the president of the Zionist Congress boasting that the League of Nations is a Jewish idea. Well might he so boast since only a year before speaking at Copenhagen in 1931, the well meaning professor Arnold Toynbee let the cat out of the bag when he said in his official capacity as secretary of the Royal Institute of International Affairs whose headquarters are at historic Chatham House, the League of Nations as contemplated postulated the undermining of the sovereignty of our respective nations.
So quick quick footnote for you here won't be in the original book but this is in the new edition. Thank you Rob Black. Arnold Joseph Toynbee eighteen eighty nine to '19 '70 '5 was a British historian, philosopher of history, research professor of international history at the London School of Economics. Oh there's the London School of Economics again. And the University of London and author of numerous books. He was regarded as a leading specialist in international affairs between 1918 and 1950. Again thank you Rob Black. Upon with which rapturous declaration, it would be difficult to concoct a more cognant comment than that of the eminent social creditor, the late CH Douglas, when he remarked, the underlying meaning of this is so important that little space is needed a little space is needed to deal with it.
The ostensible reason for the League of Nations is the abolition of force as a means of settling disputes, but it is essential to notice that that the advocates of the abolition of the use of force by nations assume that the exercise of force by institutions upon individuals is natural, lawful and ought to be extended. That is to say there is no suggestion that the sovereignty of a government over its citizens should be decreased. If one nation has a grievance against another that is a matter to be settled by negotiation as between equals.
But if a tax or any other decree national or local is imposed upon an individual it is imposed and paid under the threat of overwhelming force. Prison? Is that that's overwhelming enough force for most people to pay their council tax isn't it? Council tax I might add that we don't actually know what it's spent on. So the undermining of national sovereignty of which professor Toynbee is so proud means simply that omnipotent institutions are removed further from the control of individuals as such until for him their decrees, however harsh and oppressive, leave no possibility for appeal.
Thus, the national sovereign sovereignty of all nations is to be destroyed so that upon their ruins, the Zionists in accordance with the plan may rear the monstrous edifice of their own world government. A pretty scheme indeed you may well think, but thoroughly unlikely. Until you stop to think how insidious can be the appeal to mankind's yearning for brotherhood and peace, a noble yearning that is being cunningly exploited by the Zionists working through idealistic bodies like the League of Nations and the more innocent starry eyed Toynbee such bodies attract.
Nor is the worst aspect of this foul conspiracy against human happiness, freedom and dignity, sorry nor is that the worst aspect of this foul conspiracy against human happiness, freedom and dignity, there is actually one there is one that actually plumbs even lower depths, the corruption of the human soul. How otherwise can you account for this remarkable confession by the same Professor Toynbee when he remarks, however naively, we are doing what with our hands, what we deny with our lips. Such a remark makes one almost despair of human hope in the, in the emergence of the human race from this abysmal night of its own self deception.
For while there are plenty there there is a plentiful supply of fools, there must be at least an equal supply of knaves to exploit them. So while there's plenty of people willing to go out and buy toilet roll, you have to have plenty of Matt Hancocks and the like to tell them that that's really what they should be doing because, you know, COVID's a bad thing. You need to stock up on toilet roll. Suffice it now to quote their own words from the third protocol. Far back in ancient times, we were the first to cry among the masses of the people the words liberty, equality, and fraternity.
Words many times repeated since those days by stupid poll parrots who did not see that in nature there is no equality, cannot be freedom, and that nature herself has established inequality of minds, of characters, and capacities. In all corners of the the earth, the words liberty, equality and fraternity brought to our ranks thanks to our blind agents. The whole, whole legions who bore our banners with enthusiasm. Now I can't think of any particular I don't want to pinpoint any particular movements carrying banners that, you know, personally, I don't want any truck with, but there are certain movements in this day and age that I'm sure everyone thinks, well, hang on. That's an absolute load of nonsense. I mean, Extinction Rebellion, I wasn't gonna do it, but Extinction Rebellion is one for me.
So, you know, while there is a plentiful supply of fools, there has to be an equal supply of knaves to exploit them. Okay? So, so they bore our banners with enthusiasm enthusiasm. And all the time, these words are like canker worms at work, boring into the well-being of the Goyim and putting an end everywhere to peace, quiet, solidarity, and destroying all foundations of the Goya state. Surely this cynical boasting, pregnant with diabolical intent, should lay to rest any doubts that may remain in an unbiased mind concerning the pressing and overwhelming danger that confronts us as individuals and as a race.
For here is the very root of ruin for us as a people or as members of a community. What is more insidious or destructive what more insidious or destructive influence could be spread amongst us than the perversion of values and standards whereby liberty becomes the revolt against discipline, equality, the stupid denial of obvious divergent human qualities and the immutable laws governing all forms of animal life, especially mankind, and fraternity becomes the shibboleth of the self seeker the self seeker and the social parasite.
Surely nothing more is needed to adorn this sorry tale. Well, for good measure, let us still cut another fragrant bloom from the devil's lush garden of deceit and conspiracy. In the third protocol, we read these candid words about freedom itself. The word freedom brings out the communities of men to fight against every kind of force and against every kind of authority even that even against God and the laws of nature. For this reason we, when we come into our kingdom shall have to erase this word from the lexicon of life.
That is the word freedom. Yet we are supposed to have fought two world wars for freedom, grandad says. Twice within living memory we've saved civilization by our exertions and our example. For what? Because nations cannot come even to an in because now quote unquote the nations cannot come even to even an inconsiderable private agreement without our secretly having a hand in it says protocol five. Now the wonder no wonder the United Nations spends its time in endless and barren argument and has already become merely a sounding board of abuse by the Zionist speaking through the mouth of the Kremlin. We do not need to ponder the meaning of the prolonged delays in arriving even at minor decisions hastily abandoned almost as soon as they were reached under the ceaseless bickering and nagging and oriental abuse characteristic of the Zionists.
No longer need we read into these obstructions some cunning plot on the part of Russia to gain time while she feverishly prepares for open war. For the same protocol five tells us in the following plain words, we shall so wear down the Goyim that we they will be compelled to offer Us international power that will enable us without violence to absorb all the state forces of the world and form a supergovernment, beginning with the federal European government cherished by Churchill et al. In light of this, it is now easy to understand the whole technique and tactic of the Cold War as exemplified by the Berlin blockade.
So the Berlin blockade, are you familiar with that? That was basically, there was a thing called the Berlin Airlift whereby because we were responsible for West Germany, but they were surrounded by Russia. So Russia Berlin became an as granddad said before, Berlin became an island, in a in a Bolshevik ocean. So but the British still had responsibility for West Berlin because Berlin was divided east and west. So we actually there was a blockade on West Berlin by the Russians because of the cold war, and we actually had to airlift in supplies to West Germany in order that people wouldn't starve.
K? Wow. Where did I get to that? Oh, yes. There we go. In light of this tactic, it's easy to understand the whole technique of the tactic of the cold war as exemplified by the Berlin blockade. In the light of these words taken from the seventh protocol, throughout all Europe, in other countries also, we must create firmaments and disorders and hostility. Quote unquote. Is it not easy to understand the reasons for Korea, Malaya, Egypt, Tibet, Persia, India, and all the other trouble spots that have plagued us like Job's boils since we foolishly saved our tormentors once again.
They see in the trade unions a happy medium for their propaganda and plots which have almost disrupted an entire trade union movement. Fortunately, the TUC woke up in sufficient time to condemn and to some extent outlaw the more blatant forms of communistic sabotage in their midst. Sadly, the TUC doesn't I don't think even exists anymore. I think that was kind of abolished in the mid eighties, I think. But the trade unions were, you know, you we still have trade unions now. But as Andy Hitchcock always says on his show, the the trade unions, you know, if you if you have to strike, then if you're a member of the union, you gotta strike. You haven't got any choice. You have to go in and you you sign in to say that you are striking, and then you leave work again.
But the trade unions, when they when they when they work with the, the people who are trying to put the thumbscrews on, so I, a a company says, right, we're gonna have to have to have this many redundancies. That's when the trade unions step in and say, oh, no. You can't have that many redundancies. Well, as Andy says on his show, I said quite on his show quite often, the decision or or the outcome has already been decided by the trade unions before it all comes to a head. So when they turn around and say, well, you're not allowed to, you know, you're not allowed to, you know, make 4,000 people out of your company unemployed.
You can only make 2,000. That was already agreed before they threw out the 4,000 figure, you know, in most cases. Unfortunately, the unions are still ignorant of the far more dangerous elements still operating among them and through them. Until they become aware of the identity and true purpose of these elements, they will continue to be a hotbed of dissonance and strife in the national life instead of what they were originally formed to be, a negotiating body on behalf of their members in industrial and business life. Not until the TUC, learns and declares the truth about the moral and social economic sabotage coldly practiced in their name and under their protection at the instigation of the Zionists can the unions rise to their full stature of dignity and influence as the third pillar of the state.
At present, they are in the workings of the plan, merely the political blackmailers for their unseen and omnipresent Zionist masters, which if the ordinary rank and file of the union members decent law abiding men for the most part but knew, they would soon put paid to that account. But until but until they do know the truth, which will set them free once more, they will continue to carry out the directives of the plan along the dangerous lines secretly laid out for them. Zionists see in the ordinary peoples of the earth their best chance of success by playing upon their miseries, their appetites, and their desires by stirring up strife and accentuating grievances, This they can do easily because they have agents everywhere.
For says protocol five, the nations cannot come to even an inconsiderable private agreement without us secretly having a hand in it. Now, Shelley, me and you have, been at rallies, and I've been to other places, and you've been to other places where Antifa show up. And, you know, these these these paid clowns are just there to agitate, And, you know, they they boy people, and people turn up because they think they're doing it for you know, people turn up for Antifa because they think they're doing it for the right things. You know, Nazi scam off our streets. I've had that chanted at me several times. You know? I'm not a Nazi. How dare they? You know? I I dare say most of the the children, regardless of their age, most of the children in those groups have got really no idea what a Nazi actually was. It's just a nasty sounding word. In fact, it even rhymes with nasty. How about that?
Well, I mean, this is the mentality that we're dealing with, all of those puppets on the other side, honestly. On the other side of the road, I meant, not the other side. We got five minutes left, mister Scott. Okay. I'm gonna try and rattle through this as quick as I can without butchering it, hopefully. Furthermore, the work of their secret agents is made easier by encouraging the natural apathy of most people in political affairs. So, you know, encouraging people to be, I can't bothered. Voting don't make a difference. By their very indifference in action, the ordinary masses unknowingly forge the chains of their own enslavement as laid down in the plan. The power behind Zion Zionist militancy resides, strange as it may seem, in dispersion.
Protocol 11 declaims, God has granted us, his chosen people, the gift of dispersion. And in, and in this, which appears in all the eyes in all eyes to be our weakness, has come forth all our strength, which has now brought us to the threshold of sovereignty over the world. Nothing could be written explaining more clearly the militant nature of Zionism which uses its non national status throughout the nations to gain control. Your friend Richie was talking about the campaign against antisemitism earlier in Zionism. On every side, the the bewildered peoples are asking for guidance and enlightenment. On every side, on every side, one hears the question, what can be the reason for so much trouble?
No one trouble itself is the cause, but an effect, the cause is clear enough if the nature of the plan is understood. If it can be seen how men and women, Jews and non Jews, are being handled by satanic influences leading them to self destruction. We are rapidly becoming the ostriches of doom in our individual and national drifting, bemused and benumbed. This drift in place of determination is the very essence of the conspiracy to keep us enthralled. Ask yourself, who are the rulers of Russia? According to the defender published in Kansas USA, the central committee of the communist party in Moscow Nineteen Thirty Six, the center of international communism, consisted of 59 men. 56 were Jews, and all, the other three married duesses. At the same time sorry. At that time, 14 ambassador ambassadors, including those appointed to Great Britain and The USA, were Jews.
After the nineteen seventeen revolution in Russia, those appointed to govern the Russian people, 25 in number, were all Jews but one, Lenin, who was a Russian. All changed their names to Russian ones. For example, Bronstein became Trotsky. Afelbaum became, Zivanev. Steinman became Maisky. That's taken from the rulers of Russia by the reverend Dennis Fay. I I have to put a caveat there. I read an article in Herets, only a few year handful of years back, boasting that Lenin was Jewish. So there's another thing there. We are entering upon Armageddon's final act. We have seen the first and second acts in the first two world wars. The curtain is slowly rising, but surely on the climax seen in the cold war, the threat of another war hanging over us. For what purpose? Or nowadays, the Russian Ukraine.
The men in the Kremlin operating through their chosen medium are reaching out for world domination and the slavery of the human race to Judaic to to Judaic communism. Whatever may be the reason for such recent purges in Russia, it can be discounted. The leopard cannot change its spots, neither can the dictators afford to change established policy. We are therefore mere mutes before the act. We are consciously or unconsciously in one camp or the other. Let us take our places now, Christians or Zionists, on either side the stage on either side of the stage and prepare to play our respective parts. By the way, there is no such thing as Christian Zionism.
End of chapter three.
[01:58:43] Unknown:
Wow. Oh, you. A whole chapter and a bit.
[01:58:50] Unknown:
If anyone has any questions, please feel free to email me [email protected].
[01:58:55] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Well done, Maleficus. Right. Well, that brings us to the end of, this week. It's gone quick, and we will be back same time next week. So have an awesome week. You too, mister Scott. I will. And dearly Take care, folks. Yeah. Thanks for listening, guys. Have a great night. Toodle loo.
Introduction and Technical Issues
Interview with Richie Allen
Reflections on COVID and Media
Personal Stories and Challenges
Richie Allen on Journalism and Media
Discussion on Circumcision and Childhood
Critique of Media and Content Creators
Interview with Maleficus Scott
Reading and Analysis of Grandfather's Book